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March 27, 2025 33 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. So
Michael Verie Show is.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
On the air.

Speaker 3 (00:14):
Trump can't handle strong successful women.

Speaker 1 (00:18):
You can't handle women, particularly strong women.

Speaker 3 (00:21):
Donald Trump, you never see him around strong intelligent women.

Speaker 4 (00:24):
I am woman. Here.

Speaker 5 (00:31):
We will undertake a large job and a large duty
that we have to fulfill that the American people expect
us to do by securing our border, to make sure
that our nation is a nation with borders or we're
no nation at all, and that we are making sure
that those criminal actors that are perpetuating violence in our
communities and in our in our cities and towns and states,

(00:53):
are removed.

Speaker 1 (00:54):
From this country.

Speaker 5 (00:55):
That there's consequences for breaking the law in our country. Again,
there has to be consequences, because when American break the law,
there's consequences, and that will be the priority. And that
is one of the reasons that today the American people
have lost their trust. President Trump will build it back
and know that their federal government is accountable to them.

Speaker 1 (01:14):
Long how long.

Speaker 4 (01:24):
They got here?

Speaker 1 (01:25):
Right on, don't need any guns.

Speaker 6 (01:36):
Long just the American people delivered quite an incredible mandate
for change in this election with the popular vote and
the electoral vote overwhelmingly saying hey, we want Donald Trump
as president and we've had enough of the Harris Biden regime.
Of course there's going to be resistance to change from

(01:58):
the swamp in Water, Washington. I think that's kind of
the point the American people are saying, Hey, stop looking
at yourselves, Stop focusing on your own power, your own position,
your own bank accounts. How about we have leaders in
Washington who are actually looking out for the American people
and on every issue across the board. That's really what
it comes down to with what President Trump is trying
to accomplish is we have to make sure that our

(02:21):
government puts the interests of the American people first.

Speaker 1 (02:24):
Jesus, not long, not long right in hide seven.

Speaker 7 (02:37):
To nine, not long, don't need guns long.

Speaker 8 (02:49):
I will fight every day to restore confidence and integrity
to the Department of Justice and each of its components.
The partisanship, the weaponization will be gone. America will have
one tier of justice.

Speaker 7 (03:06):
Calling lady, some call name, but you won't have a
call it. Let around me my name.

Speaker 1 (03:24):
There are brewings afoot in the US Senate race for
next year. John Cornyn posted picture of himself reading the
art of the deal. Hence McLean made a parody meme
of that, which had him reading a book How Not

(03:45):
to be primaried. It is too little, too late. All
of the attempts to defeat Ken Paxton, the impeachment, the
George P. Bush race, all the things they've done, have failed.
Past and is more popular than ever, Corning less popular
than ever. I was advised of a poll that has

(04:11):
not been released, and I'm not going to say too
much more about this other than to say the number
was sixty three Paxton, twenty seven Cornin. So I wanted
to ferret out who knew about it and has been

(04:32):
avoiding it that were in the Corning camp and the
Cornin folks, the institutional folks. These are the folks that
held the fundraiser for Nicki Haley during the Republican primary
last year to try to defeat Trump. This is the
this is the Karl Rove and the Bush wing of
the Republicans in Texas, the establishment guys, and they haven't

(04:54):
had a good ass whipping, a real good Texas ass whipping.
Yet they weren't for Trump. They fought against Trump. They've
the Dade feeling thing was a real, real punch in
the face for them. They lost the Speaker's office, but
they kept Burroughs, So it's okay. I'm gonna tell you,

(05:15):
this Corning thing has snuck up on them. They did
not realize how unpopular John Cornyn is among the Republican
primary base, and there are strategies being formulated right now
to try to coax Democrats, just as they did for
Dad Feeling in his primary, Democrats to move over and
vote for John Cornan in the primary, the message being

(05:41):
Paxton is so right wing that you'd rather have Corning
than Paxton. Now, they did it with a thousand votes
in Jefferson County, the state rep seat that is Jasper
Jefferson in Orange County, Jefferson being the biggest of those
three as a part of that state up district. They

(06:02):
were able to get a thousand votes to go over.
Did they pay them? I don't know. I have suspicions.
You don't get a thousand Democrats who've never voted in
a Republican primary before to vote in a Republican primary
runoff with only one seat on the ballot. How does
that happen? But it did, giving him a three hundred

(06:24):
vote victory. In a runoff against a candidate, you know,
an upcoming, startup candidate. So it became one of those
things that they had to pull out everything. The lobbyists
were down, The lobbyists were in Beaumont standing out in

(06:46):
front of the polling places. They had to drive down
from Austin to stand in the streets that they'd never
been in and campaigned for Dad, feeling it was humiliated. Well,
they don't want Kim Paxton. This goes back well over
ten years. They had their candidate for the state Senate
and State Rep. Ken Paxton beat him. Paxton ran for

(07:11):
the speaker against the institution and exposed what was going
on which is exactly what's still going on with Burrows
and failing after before him and the big money guys
have hated Paxton ever since and he all he does
is keep winning. All he does is keep winning. And
they destroyed. They split the party last year with an

(07:35):
impeachment which they rolled through at the very end, really
really despicable thing, and a bunch of them, over over
ten of them lost their seats, didn't go back. Ernest
Beales running his mouth in Liberty that you know, we
were criticizing his vote for the impeachment. But he's still
the state rep. Not anymore, are you, Coliny Ridge, You're

(07:58):
not anymore. Well, there's Cornan who has never been a
supporter of Trump's initiatives, who has always been cutting deals
with Schumer and Mitch the Turtle McConnell. And at some
point this poll will be released. Cornn is in deep

(08:20):
doo doo. Expect the mud to start flying. It's coming. Oh.

Speaker 9 (08:25):
I know what's the name you say, Michael Goddy?

Speaker 1 (09:01):
Noo ooh.

Speaker 10 (09:04):
I want to congratulate Michael Berrer on the interview and
George Farming grill yesterday.

Speaker 1 (09:08):
That was good.

Speaker 10 (09:10):
Uh, he got a lot of information out of him
I had not knowed before and things and wha.

Speaker 1 (09:16):
Tusa was over here just.

Speaker 11 (09:18):
Watering it the mount know you was she was wadding
at the mountain.

Speaker 1 (09:23):
You know you ain't heard the end of that, honey.

Speaker 10 (09:25):
They gonna be looping that over and over and every advertisement.

Speaker 1 (09:28):
You remember how they wore out Elba woods.

Speaker 10 (09:30):
Oh my god, I was so tired of hearing about
how they did that.

Speaker 4 (09:33):
Man, bless it's hard.

Speaker 10 (09:35):
But come on six months later, quit thinking yourself, Come
on right, oh wa, Tucy was mocking Michael Berrery this morning,
wh choos the commere do your.

Speaker 1 (09:46):
Michael Berry versonation? Come here?

Speaker 11 (09:51):
What is your passion? Go find your passion? And that's
what you need to do for it would always be
picking up people.

Speaker 1 (10:04):
Y'all.

Speaker 11 (10:06):
Go ahead, hug yo to track my wife smoking Hi.
If you don't think that's funny, I can't be your friend.

Speaker 1 (10:17):
Who she nailed it?

Speaker 4 (10:18):
Your lord?

Speaker 10 (10:19):
Ooh, Artista got that Shirley q Mount liquor flowing in
her blood stream? All right, and now back to Michael
Beer program.

Speaker 1 (10:28):
It doesn't feel like there's enough of a fuss being
made for the life and now ascension of George Foreman.
This is not just a Houston story. I'm proud it
is a Houston story. But this is a story for
the nation. This is a story for humanity. You know,
Barack Obama was not the symbol that anybody could become president.

(10:52):
That was not the best symbol. He was chosen, he
was placed there. George Foreman is an inspiration to all
of humanity. Whatever your struggle, and there's a struggle for
everybody is I went back the other night and watched
our our first big interview, which I did by film

(11:15):
at his house as the day he gave me George,
and I just walked away from there inspired was I
wanted to be a better person because of what he
said and what those words meant, and how he's approached
the world. I myself wanted to be a better person
and do more good and be an inspiration to others

(11:37):
in my own way. And yet I'm not seeing the
call to name things for him, to honor him. So
very impressive life, the very impressive life, including being the
patriarch of a very close knit, big family's. Yeah, I

(12:00):
hope that will be rectified soon. I hope that that
mantle will be carried. There was a movie made of
him about a year or two ago. That is it's
pretty good. It's not I don't I would have There
are things I wish could have been done differently and
in my opinion, better, But it is a biopic. It

(12:21):
is an understanding that this is a complete and thorough
life worthy of the big screen and with enough twists
and turns and unique details. This is not an everyday story.
You know, this guy pulls himself up from the streets,
wins the Olympic gold, goes in, Down goes Fraser. I mean,

(12:42):
if you were to ask the five biggest golf, five
biggest boxing calls of all time, If that's not the biggest,
it's certainly top three. And you know he would knock
Fraser down. That first knockdown was shocking, but he would
knock him down four times. The fourth time Fraser can't

(13:03):
get up. I went back and watched that fight a
couple nights ago, and wow, you see he is rearing
back like Nolan Ryan for a fastball and he is
just knocking the snot out of Fraser. Hats off to
Fraser for taking the beating. Just wow, what he did.

(13:26):
And then of course George Foreman goes on, he takes
his lumps, has his difficulties in the ring, and we're
all going to be there, none of us are going
to be physically what we were. And then at thirty
eight he's I think he's three hundred and fifteen pounds
out of shape, old now and broke, and what does
he do makes a comeback. There's a montage of all

(13:50):
the folks, general media, Morning shows, the pundits of pugilism,
all of them saying this is a joke, this is
making a mockery. Comes all the way back. He's the
champ again, unheard of, stays in the ring well into
his forties.

Speaker 4 (14:12):
It really is.

Speaker 1 (14:13):
It's an amazing, amazing human spirit story. What's that You
got a form of tribute that we made? Yeah, I
hit it.

Speaker 10 (14:28):
That's a hard thing to live with losing something like
the championship of the world.

Speaker 1 (14:32):
I'd have to fight that fight most nights and I'd
be winning, winning, winning.

Speaker 3 (14:37):
Did I get knocked down and by the time I
jumped up, I will up out of the dream again.

Speaker 1 (14:43):
I could not win that fight, not even in my dream.
That fight.

Speaker 11 (14:48):
Puting through a lot of soul searching days where he
had to deal with making decisions on.

Speaker 1 (14:55):
Who he was.

Speaker 3 (14:56):
Fast forward to nineteen ninety four in the moment when
Michael Moore wins.

Speaker 1 (15:00):
The heavyweight championship.

Speaker 3 (15:04):
Michael Moore is another fresh faced, brand new heavyweight champion.

Speaker 1 (15:07):
What does he want to do?

Speaker 3 (15:08):
He wants to make money, so he does the same
thing that Holyfield did.

Speaker 1 (15:14):
Let's go straight to George. That's the way to get
the biggest audience.

Speaker 3 (15:17):
And I'm sure that Moore, at age twenty six, unbeaten,
having just beaten Evander Holyfield, didn't really believe in his
heart that there was going to be that big a
challenge in fighting George flat Sun up on the top floor.

Speaker 4 (15:31):
Mac, he's falling up.

Speaker 11 (15:32):
The man.

Speaker 12 (15:34):
Michael mor is working as though he's less.

Speaker 1 (15:36):
Thank you, fall in class. The Brown were out come
there thin flad.

Speaker 4 (15:40):
Person, the World's fire, the old man.

Speaker 12 (15:46):
The old the old times, the old Dad.

Speaker 7 (15:52):
There's a way he's fad he made get off.

Speaker 11 (15:57):
Maybe the movement.

Speaker 1 (16:00):
Play about to those way.

Speaker 4 (16:03):
I don't believe that so close overacle, No one's but buckhol.

Speaker 7 (16:17):
Working with teas aname.

Speaker 1 (16:24):
Activate the Michael Verie Show, Oops, Steam Clean. Very interesting
things are happening within the Democratic Party nationally, particularly the
Senate and the House. There are forces at play. These

(16:46):
are not organic. AOC didn't just all of a sudden
wake up as a congressman from a district in Brooklyn
and go on a nationwide tour with media appointments, appearances,
with media coverage. They're not able to generate a crowd yet.

(17:09):
But I did see that it's her and Bernie Sanders,
and I did see that a GPS you can now
track these sorts of things you probably know through your
cell phone and many other things. Eventually you'll be chipped
like some damn dog, sooner rather than later, and many
people will be delighted to have it happen. They've already

(17:31):
given up every other aspect of their own personal identity.
Their whole life is a data breach, and they don't
care if it makes if something is slightly more convenient
than here. Take my soul seems to be the big daddy,
big data. Take the wheel seems to be the approach.

(17:51):
So they have done a GPS study on the people
showing up at the Bernie Sanders aoc rallies, and on
the occasions when they do have a crowd of say
five hundred people, they're able to pull cell phone data

(18:12):
and compare that by overlaying it with other cell phone data.
You won't believe this. It is exactly the same people Minneapolis,
or Miami, Los Angeles or quit. Give me an East
coast L city, Ramont, Baltimore's not an L. But you
know what it's going to have to do. You don't

(18:33):
have any city starting with L on the East coast?
What Lake Placid? Okay, yeah, that don't have to work.
So that means these people are being paid. This is
called astro turfy and them We know the Democrats have
done this. We know they've paid people to show up
at crowds because because they need to give that to
the media to show that they're they're generating a crowd

(18:54):
the progressive left under the direction of the Soros folks
and some brain power and some muscle, some logistical support.
This is not just a candidate saying I might run,
Let's see how it goes. They are mobilizing the forces.
A candidate, just like you and me, only has so
many hours per day. They can only make so many

(19:17):
phone calls, It can only personally write so many checks.
It can only generate so many appearances, flights, media speeches, interviews.
You have to have an entire team, and a single
congressman doesn't have that, And having not yet been a
presidential candidate, AOC wouldn't have the machinery for that. You

(19:40):
walk into the offices of a desantist running for president
or Obama or bullsh or Cruz or anyone else, and
you realize there are a lot of phones being worked,
a lot of emails being sent, a lot of web
programming being undertaken. You can't do that out of a
congression office. Can't do it you don't have the you

(20:01):
don't have the bandwidth for it. Well, this reflects the
fact that they are They smell blood in the water.
Nancy Pelosi is just too drunk, too often, too old,
too weak, too tired, and doesn't have the support she
once did, and they're going after her, and they're going

(20:23):
after Chuck Schumer, and they are exposing the ugly underbelly
of the under confident Democrat elite. There is real concern.
Kim Jeffrey's job is to be the gatekeeper for the
party to keep to keep the cattle wrangled, and he's

(20:44):
not able to do it. AOC now has a bigger
and more powerful profile than him, and it happened overnight.
And the only thing he had going for him was
he was black enough to hold the position. He's not
very smart, he's not very well spoken. He does not
have any charisma or charm. And never underestimate the power

(21:07):
of that. That's not the basis of Donald Trump's power,
but it helps. It's icing on the cake, to be sure,
it might be more than that remonent. It might be
icing on the cake and a little chocolate drizzle that
you know where they draw things on the exterior of
the plate. What are we getting cake? No, it'll spike

(21:31):
your blood sugar. I don't want to do that this morning.
But Kim Jeffries, the biggest failing is not Nancy Pelosi.
For the Democrats in their leadership, it's a Kim Jeffries.
Jeffries can't keep this thing together. And in the Senate,
Chuck Schumer is desperate. You can see it, but I'm
also hearing it. He is absolutely desperate. Bernie Sanders is

(21:55):
not likely his replacement because he's not the consensus candidate
for the Democrats in the Senate. But you've got and
he's not up for reelection Schumer for four years. They
have to find someone emerge, and Sanders is not the guy.
And Sanders would not be really a Senate Democrat leader anyway.

(22:16):
That that's not the kind of thing he does. He
gives a speech and then you know, goes off and
lives in one of his many Vermont homes and the
millions of dollars that he and his wife have drifted.
Today is opening day for your Houston Astros. Such a
wonderful time of year will reign outside. But I think
they can figure that part out. It's I hear some

(22:38):
people complaining. Now, I don't like the idea of moving
a Hall of Fame second basement out to the to
the outfield. I did that with Vigio and it wasn't
I don't think it was fair to him. But I
hear people knocking Altuve, and I think to myself, have
you no loyalty? Fifteen years, two championships. He's done everything

(22:59):
we could have asked him to do. I mean, I
don't want to elevate him to godlike stature, but let's
show them in some respect.

Speaker 4 (23:07):
I'll tell they were the driver left me.

Speaker 2 (23:13):
Come over, often called a little man, always had a
monster plan.

Speaker 4 (23:21):
Many thought he.

Speaker 1 (23:23):
Couldn't ever do me.

Speaker 2 (23:29):
Grabbed his hat, he swung the back wall would fly
high in the sky, the crowd chanting up to be
He throws up, how to.

Speaker 4 (23:55):
Oh see?

Speaker 8 (23:56):
How to.

Speaker 1 (24:01):
Five field? Let me stop.

Speaker 12 (24:10):
Si first pitch, swag on, drill deep to center field,
all the way back near the wall.

Speaker 4 (24:18):
It is up the rack.

Speaker 12 (24:19):
Patter to yes, it's gonna store. Tell me peg is
gonna store. I'm saying out is gonna get the third absence,
retake the lane. It is five to four out two bay.
What's too rmy on trouble.

Speaker 4 (24:32):
Makes way for posting out two bay who say how.

Speaker 1 (24:54):
Or to Lena, wait a minute, you've got Kirpop was
a bad dude the Michael Berry Show. You don't even
need to be in the market for a custom handmade.

Speaker 2 (25:11):
The issue.

Speaker 1 (25:12):
Hi agency people who jump in, fixed problems, solve problems,
refuse to be told no, cannot be deterred. That person
you call if you are wrongfully or maybe even rightfully,
thrown in a third world jail and want to get
out fast, that's the person of high agency. That's the
Elon Musk, That's the Tillman for Tita, that's the Donald Trump.

(25:32):
You want to be that person. And the skills that
the person has that you call are what we want
to emulate, what we want to teach, what we want
to inspire. Jessica Ewing wrote yesterday CSAR, I think a
lot of successful small business owners have high agency. My
husband started his steel service business from the ground up,
literally taught himself everything but all his machines used, learned

(25:56):
every single one. He's survived in the economic down turns
that devastated the bigger company's doing exactly what he did
because he was willing to do what they would not
and willing to say the things they wouldn't to the
people they were afraid to say them to. He takes
risks in his business that seem insane and intuitive at
the same time. People think he's a jerk, and he

(26:19):
kind of is. But he'd give his shirt office back
until and unless he feels that it's not serving you.
He's very aggressive, opinionated, has a loud voice, of dry
sense of humor, and he absolutely hurts people's feelings all
day long. But he is who I call for anything anytime.
It took a long time for me to adjust to
his personality and we still get crossways sometimes. But on

(26:41):
April fifth, we'll celebrate our twenty second wedding anniversary. The
world needs high agency people, and I'm so thankful to
be married to one. The next time somebody tells you something,
when you ask them a question that you don't like,
you should take a moment from your nat reactions, a

(27:01):
human reaction of being defensive. You should take a moment
and thank them. So many times I've gotten out of
the advice business for nine to nine percent of the cases.
So many times people will ask me for advice, and
I say I don't want to give you advice, You're
not going to take it, and your feelings WI get hurt. No,

(27:23):
please tell me I'm helpless, and so I do, and
I will tell them. You're being a big titty baby.
You're being weak, you're being pathetic, you're being sad. Your
business partner's pushing you around. You don't work as hard
as you think you do. You spend way too much money.

(27:44):
You drunk most of the time. You don't spend any
time at the office. You've not built a good culture. Oh,
I've got people spend there a long time. Tell me
who your top person is. Travis, I've met Travis. Travis
is a loser. He's not a decision man. Every time
I go in there are customers waiting to be helped,
and he's playing Solitaire on his computer. He doesn't have

(28:06):
a sense of ownership. He doesn't strike me as a
guy that if tomorrow you went into a coma for
three months, you wouldn't have to worry when you came
out because he kept the business running. He's there, he's
got the keys, he can lock up when he leaves.
But he's not the guy. Well it's hard to get No,
it's not hard to get good people. It's not hard
to get good people. It's hard for you because you're lazy.

(28:30):
You don't want to go get good people. You don't
want to pay them. Well, it's expensive, all right. It's
also expensive to lose customers. It's also expensive to try
to get them back. It's also expensive to keep fixing mistakes.
Because your guys keep going out to the houses you're
called to perform a repair and they can't do it right.

(28:50):
It's reputational risk for you and me. People don't want
to hear that. They didn't want to hear it because
they've fallen into a pretty good system. It's pretty good,
simply not perfect. It was pretty good and Travis shows up.
At least Travis hadn't quit. We'll keep Travis. Travis's the
mad up name. I'm gonna end up with eighty five
shows mons or somebody's got a Travis in their shop.
I assure you it's not you. I don't think I'm

(29:11):
somehow passive aggressive. If I wanted to call your name,
i'd call your name. But people rarely say wow, thank
you for taking the time to be honest. I asked
for your honest opinion.

Speaker 12 (29:25):
So what do I do?

Speaker 2 (29:26):
Man?

Speaker 1 (29:26):
I think you got it all figured out, and like
I said, you're doing great. Really it means a lot.
It shouldn't because it doesn't mean a lot to me.
It doesn't mean a lot to me. It means I
don't feel like arguing with people who don't really want
good advice. If you want real tutelage, you're gonna have
to hear some things that make you uncomfortable. And building

(29:48):
a team, building a culture, saving money even when you're
making it. Those are tough things to do. Solving a problem.
When there's two types of businesses, there's the business that
you're trying to sell people something they don't already have,
so you have to convince them why they need it.

(30:09):
That's one challenge. There may be zero or very little
market share to be had because nobody's doing it yet. Hey,
that's a challenge. Then there's the flip of that, well,
that business is already saturated. Why is it saturated? Well,
everybody's in it. Why is everybody in it? Why was
everybody opening a vape shop ten years ago? Because high

(30:32):
school kids were ripping vapes all day long, paying good money.
It was a high profit margin. You could get into
the business with no barrier to entry. You didn't need
any particular licenses. I mean I must have been a
basic license. Why is there beer served on every street
corner because people buy a lot of beer? Why are they?

Speaker 11 (30:50):
Why?

Speaker 1 (30:50):
Why is there a woman's boutique purse shop on every
other corner. We can't get into that market saturated. Well,
the reason there's one on every corner because women buy
a lot of these stupid bags, and they make the
bags in China for twenty dollars and sell them for
two thousand. Your challenge is to make your bag some
name that, for whatever reason, is what Prada used to be,

(31:12):
or Louis Vautan or fill in the blank. You have
to build a brand where there's so many brands out there.
You're a loser. Don't ask my advice ever again, because
you don't want it. You want to tell me all
the reasons you don't succeed. Trump can't win. He's never
run for office before, he's never held office before. He
doesn't have a structure, he didn't have the people. Jeb

(31:36):
Bush's got all the money, Ted Cruz got all the organization,
there's seventeen people running. Every one of them has a
bigger organization across the country. Trump's never been to Iowa.
If you're a prevailer, if you're a winner, if you're
a doer, if you're a high agency, you assess risk
and then you go in fearlessly. That's a small business owner.

(32:01):
Next time you walk in someplace and service is imperfect,
help them make it better. Person at the front desk,
clearly not very helpful, Clearly not an owner, no sense
of ownership, no pride. Go to the website and send
an email saying, hey, can I talk to the owner?
Get on the phone, keep your calm, don't be a fool. Hey,

(32:25):
just let you know I'm not mad. I'm just giving
you some advice. Give a wonderful place. It's two blocks
from my house, it's all my way to work. I
could drop my dry cleaning off here once a week,
and i'd like to. And you're an owner operated small
business in the neighborhood. I'd like for you to succeed.
I'm just going to tell you I had an experience
this morning that suggests to me, y'all don't align with

(32:47):
my values. So my question is do you think y'all
might because I'm giving you some good advice on how
to succeed. You tell him his shop is crap. He's
going to argue, you know, it's not. I've worked hard,
it's my shop. Get away, go go away. I don't
like you. Hey, I'd like to come back and try
it again. And I'd like to know if that is
of interest to you. And this is what I would

(33:09):
expect when I walk in the door of Hello, not
the employee to be giggling on her phone with her
back to me for ten minutes because she's going out
with a boyfriend tonight. She's the only one in the shop.
That's high agency, that is taking the bull by the horns.
That's a small business owner. Most people show up at
a company, everything's already taken care of. Sign these documents.

(33:30):
Move over here, here's your keys. Sit over here, perform
this report. This is when you get in, this is
when you leave. These are your benefits. This is the
phone calls you make, this is the meetings you sit in,
and more meetings you sit in. The more meetings you
sit in, the more meeting you sit in. Because sitting
in meetings looks like work. If you don't know any better.
What about that guy that has to make all those decisions,
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