All Episodes

December 12, 2024 • 33 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time. Time, time, time, luck and load. So
Michael Arry Show is on the air. Are you going
to fire the current FBI director, Christopher Ray? Who you appointed? Well,
I can't say I'm thrilled with him.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
He invaded my home. I'm suing the country over it.
He invaded mar Laga. What you sir?

Speaker 3 (00:32):
Don't you come.

Speaker 4 (00:36):
The room?

Speaker 1 (00:37):
And don't you come.

Speaker 2 (00:41):
The FBI director just resigned.

Speaker 1 (00:44):
Christopher Ray announced a moment ago that he will leave
by the end of the current administration, three years before.

Speaker 2 (00:50):
The end of his ten year term.

Speaker 1 (00:51):
Last night, don't you come back.

Speaker 2 (01:00):
To come back?

Speaker 1 (01:02):
What your side?

Speaker 4 (01:03):
Hit the room?

Speaker 1 (01:04):
Jack, and don't you come back? No?

Speaker 4 (01:07):
No, hit the room.

Speaker 2 (01:10):
And don't you come back.

Speaker 3 (01:14):
After weeks of careful thought, I've decided the right thing
for the bureau is for me to serve until the
end of the current administration in January and then step down.

Speaker 1 (01:25):
Well, like here, Steve, you say so, I'll have to
time with th That's might be the rule, Jed, don't
you come back? No?

Speaker 2 (01:34):
No, hit the room and don't you come back? No?
What you side?

Speaker 3 (01:42):
Here the room?

Speaker 1 (01:43):
Jack will be our guest.

Speaker 4 (01:47):
Hit the room.

Speaker 1 (01:49):
In just a few moments, recovering alone, hard recovery, I'm
told from open heart surgery, not exactly elective ramon. This
ain't an eyelid lift or a tune up on the boobs. No, no,
this saint this aint lip filler. No no, no, it's not.

(02:17):
I asked my dermatologists, because they do botox there, I said, Uh,
how come these people keep Why can't they stop? Don't
they realize they all start looking like a cat. You know,
if you're a mongoloid. There's something about mongoloidism that no

(02:41):
matter where people are from in the world, the shape
is always the same. You ever think about that. You
put a North African, South African, a rav Chinaman, Englishman,
uh chaparito from Guatemala, you line them up and you

(03:03):
can't help but notice there will be different facial structures,
and you know, everything will be different, eyes knows. I mean,
it's the differences that make us interesting. Otherwise it looks
like China. So I find it fascinating that with Down

(03:25):
syndrome there is this uniformity too. I'm sure the people
who've dealt with it from medical perspective, well, yeah, you
dumb ass, because we flapplems will deal f appems because
that's how people that deal with is how they talk.
But I don't know, I find it interesting otherwise people

(03:46):
will come out looking so very different. Well you ever
notice that when these women, once they get it's an addiction,
it's a mental addiction, once they fall in this cosmetic
surgery thing that the plumper and the filler and this
and that. And I said, what does it start with?

(04:09):
And my dermatologist, who also does the botox, she said, well,
it starts with what they call a lip flip. What's
a lip flip but just a little shot.

Speaker 2 (04:18):
You know.

Speaker 1 (04:19):
That's for people that just they really just don't have lips.
They just have like a little single liner. And the
lip flip is just to give it, just to give it,
you know, like a butt lift. You know, like Billy
Bob Thornton don't have an ass and Landman, so his jeans,
you know, they kind of sagged down in the back.

(04:39):
Here's a lot of dudes don't have a butt and
so you know, their jeans they hold them up and
then in the back it's just it's like it's got
pushed in. They got and the funny thing is it's
compensating on the front because they got a little pooch belly.
They always have a little pooch belly and no butt. Right, Yeah,
So anyway, this is not a cost many surgery. What

(05:03):
Mike's doing. To get back to the point, I talked
to a buddy of mine. I like to see what
people are thinking before the day starts, because you learn
a lot more because once you get to the office,
it's just I put on my desk and most people
are running around like a chicken with their head cut
off based on what was handed to them that morning,
as opposed to taking the day focus and kicking its ass.

(05:28):
And somebody buddy of mine in New York, it's his
fifth time to have COVID, is it? Can you believe it?
How many times have you had COVID? Four? Oh? Really? Yeah?
And I'll probably never have it five? And you know
it's I get the common cold too. I had I've
had a pretty nasty pneumonia for the last few weeks.

(05:49):
And I don't you know, I don't need anybody to
shut their businesses down or don't come around anybody. I
don't feel the need to call on anybody. A friend
of mine having a surgery and I'm not a big
hospital guy. But that was my excuse, so you don't
need me at the surgery. And I told Mac, I said, look,
I'm not coming to see you at the hospital because
I got the pneumonia, and you do not need to

(06:13):
add that to your list of woes. They just they
just took the crack in your sternum quite open. So
my body's driving in and once you get outside the loop,
I really don't know where I'm at very well, especially
when you get outside Beltway and when you get on
up there a little way like Champion Forest in that area.

(06:34):
I kind of have a general idea, But what I
don't understand is how you go from being in those
areas to be in the woodlands where the Woodlands is
in my mind, you know, the Woodlands is Chicago and
you're in Seattle. And you said, like Chance McLean lives
in the Woodlands and has his studio is in old
Town Tomball, And in my mind, there's Seattle, that's Tomball

(06:58):
up northwest, and then there's Chicgo that's due north. And
he's like, oh, it's twelve minutes to get for him. Anyway,
So my buddy says, it normally takes me an hour
to get to work. It has taken me over an
hour and I'm less than a third of the way.
I said, well, give me your route, and he stressed,
going kirkandall Louena. That's well, what is the reason? And

(07:23):
he said, well, to start with, you got school buses
that stop every forty forty feet because every apartment complex,
the school bus stops in front of them, even though
they're literally starting open the door. Kids come on, close
the door, go up forty feet to the next one.
And he said, do you know what happened in your day?
I said, yeah, I know what happened. They didn't even

(07:44):
come down my road. We had to walk all the
way down to the main road. Everybody collected at one
spot and that was it. You didn't you didn't get
the personalized service and all it. He said, oh yeah.
And then you got the moms that are out front.
He said, single moms. But he doesn't know there's single moms,
but he'd probably right there, probably single moss. And he said,

(08:07):
they're all out there. And as each kid gets on,
the mom sits there yammering with the school. But because
she doesn't work, she waiting on our right SSI check. Yeah,
I might not be here this afternoon. Oh okay, they're
flirting away and it's on to the next one. He said,
you can be ten minutes and not make it one
block because of these school buses. It's the most ridiculous

(08:29):
thing in the world. And then you got the construction
crews and they're all standing around, not one of them
doing any work. There is no concern with construction crews
about getting the roads back. It makes me crazy. You'll
see for a week a construction site has no work done.
A private business would never But yep, all right, we're

(08:49):
gonna check in on Mattress back. I'm going up the
Michael Berry's showing. Oh he's the magic Man. It's doctor

(09:12):
Laurie Methodist, very well regarded Max buddies with a guy
named Bud Fraser who's very very famous, uh doctor trained
under the under the Big Boys, and they're very very
close friends. And you know that, Laurie, because we've been
talking about it, and you know in the medicals were
Basker going to bed the night before. You know, he's

(09:34):
laying there and he can't go to sleep, and he's like,
I should have had my usual bottle of wine with magnesium. Here,
I am laying here at two o'clock in the morning.
He's twisting and turn he can't go to sleep. Dang,
it is his horrorble sweating. Jim macinveil mattress Mac, how
are you, sir?

Speaker 2 (09:54):
The broadcasting lives from me, Night four, Texas Medical Center,
And how are.

Speaker 1 (10:01):
How are you generally? How are you feeling well? Then?

Speaker 2 (10:06):
The first day, right of the second day, and I'm
feeling good today.

Speaker 1 (10:10):
So what is the first memory you have post surgery?

Speaker 2 (10:17):
I think probably waking up? Ask me who my name was?
I said, John Kennedy. I said, what's your date of birth?
I said eleven twenty two fifty three.

Speaker 1 (10:29):
Oh, it is pretty good. At that day, anything it
was funny, No, they didn't, you know, speaking of Red Duke.
I was texting with Linda and the surgery had gone well,
and they were stitching you up and they were putting
you into ICU and she said, he'll be awake after that.
And she said, now we begin the long, hard recovery.

(10:52):
And as you know, that's going to be the hardest
part for Mac. You are you psychologically ready for this?

Speaker 2 (11:01):
I'm getting more ray for every day I didn't realize
this was gonna be such a brutal surgery. But I
realize it now.

Speaker 1 (11:10):
I guess it's better. They didn't tell you there wasn't
anything you could do.

Speaker 2 (11:14):
Yeah, so uh, but I've got I've got. They got
a recliner up here that I'm sleeping in. It's not
as good as the famous Mac the recliner. I'm asking
if I can bring one up here today.

Speaker 1 (11:26):
Mac, you had Carrie Strugg brought into her gold medal
ceremony in a mattress Mac recliner. Surely you can get
a recliner into into Methodists.

Speaker 2 (11:39):
I'm working on it, yes, sir, so.

Speaker 1 (11:41):
Uh, describe for me each body part that is in
some level of numbness or pain.

Speaker 2 (11:49):
From my top of my neck where you're you know right,
well you're Adams Apple all the way down to the
groin is cut and it's very sensitive to coughing and
moving around that sort of thing. But it's getting better.

Speaker 1 (12:11):
Can you see the wound right now or is it
all covered.

Speaker 2 (12:14):
Up my body? Doctor ed Young called me don't look
at the woman to scare you too much?

Speaker 1 (12:22):
Really? Yes, okay, is anything else hurting?

Speaker 2 (12:28):
Oh? You know, I got I'm retaining water. So my
fingers full, my fears foll and my toes is full.
But I'm grateful to have these great doctors and great care,
so I'm good.

Speaker 1 (12:47):
Do you have to get up out of the bed
to go to the restroom or are you stuck right
there in the bed?

Speaker 2 (12:53):
I've got this cathere, so I can't worry about restroom.

Speaker 1 (12:56):
Well that's you know, I guess in the grand scheme
of things, headache, what is your is your head foggy?
What's your mental space?

Speaker 2 (13:05):
You know? They gave me that fetanol. I didn't do
so good on that, so now they give me something
called narkhan. It seems to be better. So my head's
sign I uh, the probably the hospitals, so you go
to sleep to come and do another test wake up.

Speaker 1 (13:26):
That was my mother her last two years. That was
her complaint is can't we do all that at the
same because you cannot get any sleep. If you can't
get any sleep, that's half the healing. You just you
you want to not keep being woken up in the
middle of the night.

Speaker 2 (13:42):
I agree, you know, but that's that's the way it is.
And we're lucky to have the greatest doctor of the
world here in Houston, so I'm very thankful for that.

Speaker 1 (13:51):
Yes, we do. You know one time I was at
at Gallery Furniture and you went around and you showed
me on certain tables. The guys have to come around
every hour whatever it is, and sign because they have
to know what's on the on the floor at that
moment because the floor inventory is turning. That's how you

(14:12):
keep them moving through the store. How do we make
sure they're they're checking out all the inventory while you're out.

Speaker 2 (14:18):
That's Roy's job. Okay, Well Roy's doing that in Jeremy,
so they're they're on top of it, and they they're
probably glad to get me out of there for a
few days.

Speaker 1 (14:28):
I will tell you something, we'll make you happy. A
friend of mine's father in law needed a living room
suit of furniture and he only wanted to buy it
from you. He knew you were doing the surgery and
all that, and he said he would wait till you
got out. And I said, no, no, no, no, no no,
Mica will be checking those numbers, uh every day. I said,

(14:49):
let me put the guy on it that he put
on for me, which is Roy or Tega. So I
had I had Roy call him and I think they've
made their deal, and they got the whole thing, and
he sold me actress. He goes, if I felt a
little awkward that I'm buying furniture while while Maxx in
there in the middle of his surgery, and I said,
I assure you, nothing would make.

Speaker 2 (15:07):
Him happier, nothing, nothing whatever make me have here. So
all those listeners out there in need furniture this week
and go buy it, and I will feel a whole
lot with all these sticks in me.

Speaker 1 (15:19):
Ramon was thinking it would be nice if you did
a over under on how many days you were in
the in the hospital. You know, if it was eight
days or less, you get it free. If it's more days,
you can have all.

Speaker 2 (15:34):
I would encourage me to say, I'm gonna try to
get out of five days. I'm surely not gonna let me. Mac.

Speaker 1 (15:42):
The day the day of the surgery, I had people
emailing me through our station webs or through my website,
Michael Berryshow dot com that they were in the hospital
and you were there. And one of them said, I
don't think they're paying much attention to me because all
the nurses are talking about his mattress. Mac is coming
in for his for his surgery. But I was getting reports.

(16:05):
One lady was visiting her brother at the hospital and
Mac was being wheeled down the hallway. I said, you
get a photo and she said no. I wanted to though,
So you were you were apparently quite the story at
the hospital.

Speaker 2 (16:17):
Well, yeah, the hospital is great. The nurses, doctors are great.
So you know, again, we're in a great place in Houston,
having all these great hospitals, and nothing's better than Texas
Medical Center. And that's why I'm still surviving. You know,
they had a they could fix this heart scent. I

(16:38):
had a oric valve where they could put a pig
valve in me. So thank god the skill surgeon was
able to fix the valve.

Speaker 1 (16:48):
He was able to do it. And was that Laurie
or was Laurie or was that someone else?

Speaker 2 (16:51):
Doctor Laurier, Yes, sir, and uh so that means I'm
good for the rest of my life. Take valves has
to be replaced, so I'm good.

Speaker 1 (17:04):
Okay. So this is a synthetic valve.

Speaker 2 (17:08):
Now it's a real thing.

Speaker 1 (17:10):
Oh okay, repaired it? Okay? And what is your expected
time in the hospital. Have they have we discussed that
seven days, seven days, and then you'll go home, and
then within ten minutes you'll be up at Gallar Furniture.
Maybe put you a convalescence right out in the middle.

Speaker 2 (17:30):
If they want me to stay home along or buy
more by more, we need sale. As soon as I
get off the famous Michael Berry Show, I have to
take some laps around the hallway here, So good friend,
or well, give me a morning.

Speaker 1 (17:45):
There are you? You are being lifted by many, many prayers.
There are a lot of folks who we've been out
here praying for your successful surgery and now your recovery.
And we know you'll be back soon than ever. We
love you, Bud, Take care.

Speaker 4 (18:03):
Dam is very great to have a good day.

Speaker 1 (18:18):
The Michael Berry Show. You ever wanted to go sit
through a law school class. See what it's like. See
the Socratic method in practice. See what the students look like,

(18:41):
study their demographic, the kind of questions they ask, kind
of questions the professor asks, it's curious you saw paper
Chase and you're wondering how much like that it is. Well,
our friend, Professor Josh Blackman, is making that opportunity available
to you. We were visiting by text the other day

(19:07):
and a woman had emailed in that she was considering
going to law school and could I give her some advice?
And I said, well, I don't really have the time
to give you the advice, but here's what I would do.
And she had a couple of questions for Professor blackmhen
I forwarded them to him and he said, Michael, I

(19:29):
will extend this offer to any of your listeners who
ever want to come and sit through my class, that
they are welcome to do so. Now listen carefully, folks,
because I get a bunch of emails unfocused. And I said, okay,
well that's a very generous offer, but I don't want
you to regret it. So how do we make that happen?

(19:55):
And so he sent me a link which I will
post to our Facebook page. Is the only two places
I'm doing. I'm not responding to a bunch of individual
emails on this. It takes too long. And I will
post this to our daily blast that goes out. So
if you want to sign up for our daily Blast, Jim,
we'll put this in there. And it is the website

(20:16):
where you go to you click the link and then
you put in the note section that you would like
to attend Professor Blackman's constitutional law class, and you will
go there and hopefully be as unobtrusive as possible and
simply sit in the back of the room and observe.

(20:36):
But it'd be a neat thing to do it thought.
It was very kind of Professor Blackman to offer to
make that happen for people. And this doesn't mean that
you are a potential law school student. You can be
seventy years old and a retired truck driver and go, well,
kind of like, do that, and he will be more
than happy to help you do that. He'll be our

(20:57):
guest coming up at nine o'clock. What what now? You
won't be a lawyer at the end of it, but
you could play one on TV. You could. You know.
The funny thing is being a law student is quite
unlike what most people think because a lot of professors,
most professors. In fact, the most frightening professor at the

(21:20):
University of Texas School of Law I signed up for
his class for this very reason because he's a legend,
was Professor Charles allen Wright. And Professor Charles allen Wright
was at the end of his career when I was
there in the mid nineties, and he had a leg
that was all jacked up, so he would put his
leg up on the table in front of him. And
if you've seen the movie Paper Chase and the tough
professor with the bow tie that wrote the textbook, that

(21:44):
was Charles Allen Wright. He was if you look him up,
and you look up the Nixon administration and what he
did during that time, the Saturday Night Masater and all that.
The guy Charles Allen Wright walked the hallway of the
University of Texas School of Law, a legend like the
seas parted. When he walked, you did not you didn't know, Hey,

(22:07):
what time's party on Friday? In front of Charles Allen Right,
you conducted yourself with decorum and dignity. And you you
know he was he was older when he was tall,
and he was very rigid. If you had to have
someone from Central Casting play him, you'd say, uh, here's

(22:28):
here's h William F.

Speaker 2 (22:31):
Buckley.

Speaker 1 (22:32):
He's very William F. Buckley. And so it was very
difficult to get into his civil procedure maybe its con
law or civil procedu, I don't remember. It's very very
difficult to get into his class and he had years before?
Is this another great example? Years before, the women in

(22:57):
the class had complained that he was too harsh when
he called on the students. Now you go to law school,
you want to be with the big boys, and he
would absolutely shred you. It was a rite of passage.

Speaker 2 (23:11):
You know.

Speaker 1 (23:12):
You you made it through Charles allen Wright's class. Some
girls went and complained to the dean. So Charles allen
Wright said, fine, I won't call on anybody again. And
so you would walk into his class and you kind
of look at the women, you kind of hiss that

(23:32):
you ruined it for us, because it isn't isn't that
really the greatest example? I mean, isn't that the metaphor
for everything? They're plenty of the right kind of women
would walk in there and go bring it. I'm here,
I won't be with the big boys. Right. But isn't

(23:52):
that how many people feel the desperate need to go
into an environment that is established for that and then
bust it up. You know what, I don't understand women
that want to be part of a men's social or

(24:16):
country club. You know, there were for decades women would
desperately try to get into locanvar why it's a men's club.
Women don't understand this, or they do understand makes them mad.
There are times that men want to get away from you. Now,
most of the time they want to chase you. But

(24:36):
there are times that there there is no need, desire,
or tolerance for the feminine essence. Guys want to get
together and scratch ourselves and tell stories and blow stuff
up rib each other, and then there will be another

(24:56):
time that we come together with the ladies. If if
you set a ladies only club, if you were to
do that, there wouldn't be a single man. I guess
there would now, But no dude is going. Man. Can
you believe those ladies they gather together and they don't
let us join them. Nobody would say that, and it

(25:20):
would not happen. Yep, y'all, go off, do your thing,
Go ahead, we'll go over here at the guid's Club. Well,
we want to come to the guy's club anyway. Charles
all night. He was a legend. One of the highlights
of my law school career was hitting to be in
his class. That and being under the tutelage of the
great Leno groya Michael Berry show. Hi, I'm a jugent

(25:44):
you completing the seat. I want to be wrong to
last check on the mail, because we want people to
have their voice. Lisa writes, good morning elt to Sino.
My daughter has down syndrome and I don't ever see
it until she gets around other people with it. Your
point on that was great, Love your show. Walter writes.

(26:07):
At the old Ben Top emergency Room building in the eighties,
we didn't have enough beds or chairs. Matt gave us
six recliners to fit in a room not big enough
for stretchers until we moved to the new er That
room was known by all as the Gallery Room. It
made patience much more comfortable and helped us take care
of them. God bless you, Matt. Brian writes, Brian Deer

(26:33):
is a listener of ours. He's gone on some of
our trips. He's one of these guys. He's he's kind
of a high functioning Forrest Gump, a high functioning rain Man.
He's got multiple degrees, multiple careers, very very he's out
there on the spectrum, just absolutely brilliant. But he always

(26:54):
writes good emails and yeah, so anyway, he packed up
his wife and kids and they moved to Andorra a
couple of years ago, and so he sends me reports
on it, and so this morning was thoughts on Andorra.
Number one, you would love Andorra if Aspen were a

(27:16):
country but had low taxes and slightly less pretension. Though
I did see a Lamborghini with snow tires in a
bike rack yesterday. So number two, no graffiti anywhere. Graffiti
to me is a trailing indicator of a society's health.
Number three spectacular skiing and amazing summer mountain piece. Number
four actually saw some Ford F one fifties? Can you

(27:39):
believe it? I'd really love to answer the question why
can't all countries be like Andorra crazy good business environment,
low taxes, high quality services, streets squeaky clean, no migrant issues,
strict immigration requirements, highly educated, multi lingual. It's kind of

(28:00):
a Catalan Singapore anyway. I know you're a student of
such things, so I thought you'd appreciate my observations as usual.
Of course, I do what you have an Andorra Andorra. No,
that that's that's a you gotta ant my soul as well.
Greg writes, what do you call a Filipino contortionist? A

(28:22):
Manila folder. You heard that one before. Comes down to people, folks,
It comes down to people. If you want to take
a great place and trash, it won't take long to
do it. Dump a bad bunch of bad people in it.
Just the reality of it. Most of America's migratory patterns

(28:47):
right now of the citizenry. The citizenry is trying to
flee crime and socialism. The creeping socialism brings with it
crime because when you destroy the individual through statism, you

(29:08):
eventually destroy the ability of the individual to protect himself,
his family, his assets, his property. Group ownership means no ownership.
We had a public pool in Orange was the one
pool you never wanted to set foot near. Stabbings, beatings fights.

(29:31):
We were verboten. It was verboten in our family to
go to the public pool in Orange. Of course I'd
have stuck out like a sore thumb, but we were
not allowed to go there. It was known as a
bad place until eventually the residents in the area said,
we've had enough. We'd rather the young thugs find somewhere

(29:54):
else to congregate. So what are we to do? Because
nobody wants to talk about it, we just call it racism.
What are we to do about our crime problems in
this country? What are we to do about failing schools?
What are we to do about people who live amongst
us with seemingly no job skills or desire to get

(30:20):
a job. How much are we to spend? Should we
send a check every month because that's not enough? Should
we allow our truck to be stolen and not need
to recover it. Should we hire people who don't have
job skills or maybe can't get along once they're hired
under the job, some of whom will file false lawsuits,

(30:44):
some of whom will be toxic to the work environment.
What are we to do? Let's stop for a moment,
say you're king for a day. You want this place
to be great? What would you do? These are very
very complex, complicated answers. So what are we do in
the meantime? Because you're not king, you're an individual, Well,

(31:05):
you start leaving communities where this is a problem. It's
not a secret why people are moving to Republic Grand
Ranch not a secret why Montgomery County is booming and
Harris County is bleeding. It's the same thing that's happening
with California. To Texas. It's the same exact thing. We

(31:26):
are a nation constantly fleeing the problems. No one wants
to admit it. Oh, you'll get your random gay couple
that'll want to go into a bad neighborhood and turn
it around. And if they talk some of their friends
in to do it, they will, they will, They'll stick
it out. Gabors are the first side of the recovery

(31:46):
of an inner city neighborhood. And give them about five years,
where now, all of a sudden, the homes are repainted,
not rebuilt, repainted, and they're nice, and there's flowers planted
out front and not cars parked there, and that house
doesn't emanate any gunshots. You know what will happen in
very short order. There will be people who lived in

(32:09):
that crime riddled, filthy neighborhood whose values are shot up
should they decide to sell, and they will start complaining
that those people are taking over our neighborhood because there
are certain people who are comfortable in the corruption in
the crap. No secret that Sheila Jackson Lee was elected

(32:31):
for thirty years to be a congressman wasn't an accident,
Michael Old. People understand they understand. You understand, So what
are you to do? What are you to do? You
save those who want to be saved. You give opportunity
to those who want to have opportunity. But if you're
the king and you're actually trying to trying to fix

(32:52):
this place, trying to make this place great, what do
you do? It's complicated, it ain't easy. And the very
people you think, I think you're going to help are
the very people who will work so hard against you.
That's tough. And in order to prevent this conversation from
ever being held, we shall call it racist and brand

(33:13):
the racist an outcast who must never speak in public.
And before long you have created an intransigence, an environment
in which it will never be fixed. And so here
we are. Professor Josh Blackman will be our guest coming up,

(33:33):
and he will also discuss the fact that if you
want to visit the law school sit through a class,
you can
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.