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March 4, 2025 • 32 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time, time, time.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
Luck and load.

Speaker 1 (00:11):
So Michael Varry Show is on the air.

Speaker 3 (00:14):
You're gonna make a lot of money, right, yeah right,
it's not yours?

Speaker 2 (00:18):
Well it becomes ours. How is that not stealing?

Speaker 4 (00:25):
I don't think I don't think that I'm explaining history.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
Well, it's seven to eleven.

Speaker 5 (00:30):
Right.

Speaker 2 (00:31):
You can take a penny from the tray.

Speaker 5 (00:33):
From the crippled children.

Speaker 6 (00:35):
No, that's the job.

Speaker 4 (00:36):
I'm talking about the tray the you know, the pennies
for for everybody, oh, for everybody?

Speaker 5 (00:40):
Okay, yeah, well those are whole pennies, all right.

Speaker 6 (00:43):
I'm just talking about fractions of a penny here, okay.
But we do it from a much bigger tray, and
we do it a couple of million times, So what's.

Speaker 7 (00:51):
Wrong with that?

Speaker 1 (00:55):
Has this been good?

Speaker 8 (01:02):
As this been?

Speaker 9 (01:05):
In a post on X, Doge said the Department of
Health and Human Services had terminated a contract paying family
Endeavors eighteen million dollars a month to operate an empty
facility in West Texas. Doge also claims Endeavors received its
HHS contract in twenty twenty one after a former ICE

(01:26):
employee and Biden transition team member joined the nonprofit endeavors.
Government disclosure forms show its revenues shot up in twenty
twenty one from fifty million to six hundred and fifty
eight million.

Speaker 5 (01:41):
Has this been.

Speaker 6 (01:49):
As this been?

Speaker 3 (01:54):
And when you see people there in Tennessee paying fifty
percent of their income to state, federal, and local taxes
through other you know, through everything else, fees and everything else,
and then they see us sending literally billions overseas to
our enemies. You know, I've uncovered forty million dollars going
to the Taliban. A guy named Sean Ryan over Middle Tennessee,

(02:17):
former Navy seal podcaster. He and another guy named Legend
had brought this to my attention. And you know, last
term I could not even get the Democrats to bring
it up in the Senate. It passed unanimous in the House,
not even a question because they're going to have to
admit they made a mistake, and they've continuously made a mistake,
and they did it on purpose is the worst part

(02:38):
about it. And this graph that you're seeing, and that's
one hundred percent what it is, I think you're going
to see a paper trail come back to Washington, d C.
And that's why I think a lot of people are nervous,
and you'll see a lot of retirements because they are
stealing from the American taxpayer. And now they've got their
handcott in the cookie jar, and all they can do
is attack elon us.

Speaker 10 (03:26):
President Trump has suspended aid to Ukraine.

Speaker 2 (03:32):
They're about to feel the heat.

Speaker 10 (03:33):
And today the tariffs go into effect on Mexico, Canada
and China. I read yesterday a guy who wrote, I
supported Donald Trump, a big fan, wanted him to win,

(03:58):
was excited when he did. But if I had known
he was going to impose tariffs, I never would have
voted for him.

Speaker 2 (04:12):
If you hear me say one thing, let it be this.

Speaker 10 (04:17):
Donald Trump has had a metamorphosis in some of his
political opinions. It's not a criticism, so fact, he has
changed some of his opinions. At one point he supported
far more Democrats than Republicans. He was the toast of

(04:38):
the Clinton crowd. He socialized with them. He wrote checks
across the country to Kamala Harris for Senate Nancy Pelosi
for her House seat. Of course, the Clintons, the Democrats,
and the relatively one party city of New York and

(05:03):
the Democrat majority state of New York. He has consistently
supported far more Democrats than Republicans. But if you tell
me that you have a problem with Donald Trump's tariffs,

(05:24):
and if you'd known that you would have voted against him,
I will tell you. And this is not an exaggeration.
There is not an issue that Donald Trump has been
more steadfast and consistent on, going back to the eighties
than tariffs. In twenty sixteen, there were people who were

(05:50):
very upset that I was not supporting Trump, and they
didn't know one thing Trump stood for. They didn't know
anything about Trump more than two years before that. I'd
studied the man of my entire life. The man he
is today is not politically the man that he has
been since the eighties. Hey, I'll say I was wrong,

(06:16):
because I have never seen a person have such a
transformative change in their career as he has, and I
love it. He is the best president of my lifetime
by far. Some of you wait to hear if I'm
going to put a butt in there, There's no butt.

(06:39):
He is the best president of my lifetime by far,
head and shoulders. And it was critically important for the
nation that he get reelected. And I think we all
took that call very, very seriously, but tariffs have been
something he has believed in and spoke out on consistently.

Speaker 2 (07:03):
For over forty years. I was reading yesterday that the.

Speaker 10 (07:11):
The Honda Civic. I think it was a Honda Civic.
They don't make the Toyota tarsel anymore, do they. It
was a dumb name, the Honda Civic. They are moving
production from Mexico to Indiana on one of their biggest
selling items. Honda the second largest Japanese automaker behind only Toyota.

(07:35):
And Honda and Nissan got very close to doing a deal.
I think they eventually will because Nissan can't survive without it.
Nissan is on a rather steady decline, but Honda moving
production to Indiana will be a boon for that economy.

(07:55):
I don't believe government should be in the business of
creating jobs. I do believe that government policies should favor
our nation. Now, we are a nation both of employees,
or of three things. Employers, employees that's one, investors, and consumers.

(08:16):
You might pay a little more for your Honda Civic.

Speaker 2 (08:19):
That's just a fact. Anyway. The terriff's going to a
fact today. That was the point of that, you old it.

Speaker 1 (08:25):
The interiois the butterflies with the Michael Berry.

Speaker 8 (08:29):
They're all Duncans, and you know Duncan means yo yo.

Speaker 10 (08:39):
On this day in eighteen sixty one, it was the
first national flag of the Confederate States of America.

Speaker 2 (08:50):
It was.

Speaker 10 (08:53):
What we referred to as the Stars and Bars. For
many years, there were several Confederate flags. For many years,
I thought that my favorite of those flags was called
the Stars and Bars. The Stars and Bars. The first

(09:15):
flag was had in the top left just like the
US flag now a blue box in the top left corner,
and it had stars inside. The original Stars and Bars
had seven stars who represent the seven states who had

(09:37):
joined a confederacy, which was a loose affiliation of independent states.
Because remember this was states' rights, this was statehood, This was.

Speaker 2 (09:47):
The anti federal government.

Speaker 10 (09:50):
This would be much like the Soviet Union breaking up
and the Baltic States being independent nations. But these independent
states understood they could not survive alone against the powerful Union,
so that they would have to create a loose affiliation
called a confederacy.

Speaker 2 (10:12):
The Stars and Bars had well, I think that's right.

Speaker 10 (10:19):
The Stars and Bars would eventually have sorry, thirteen stars.
It would end up with thirteen stars, and it had
a red bar on the top and a red bar
on the top in the bottom and a white bar
in between. For many years, I thought that what you
see as the what came to be known as the

(10:41):
Confederate flag that was still part of Mississippi Georgia, the
flag that you saw on the top of the General Lee.

Speaker 2 (10:55):
I thought that flag was called the Stars and bars.
I was wrong.

Speaker 10 (11:00):
Stars and bars is a rather boring flag, to be
completely honest about it. The flag that's so cool, which
is the two ex which is the big X, the
blue X with the white stars inside and four red
panels around the exterior of it, is what came to

(11:22):
be known as the battle flag, and it was the
flag that was carried into battle by the Army of
Northern Virginia. And maybe it's my Shelby Foot appreciation, but
if you study the Civil War, you can't help but

(11:44):
walk away with a great deal of respect for the
Army of Northern Virginia under the command of Robert E.
Lee and the men who fought for their homeland, and
they fought for concepts that we still fight for today.
That the government, the federal government in Washington, d c
cannot make us take a clot shot. The federal government

(12:07):
cannot send our money to Ukraine. The federal government cannot
conscript our boys to send to Ukraine or anywhere else.
The federal government cannot take our money and give it
to Middle Eastern countries or leave our borders wide open,
and the problems that causes. And of course they have
a weak argument, so they would say things like, well,

(12:27):
y'all just want slavery. It's a it's an interest, such
an interesting time, such a misunderstood time. That is not
to say that slavery is a good institution.

Speaker 2 (12:42):
It's evil to its.

Speaker 10 (12:43):
Core, always has been, always will be. But it's important
that we be honest about things. And sometimes honesty causes discomfort,
and people when they feel discomfort.

Speaker 2 (12:55):
Begin ad hominem attacks.

Speaker 10 (12:57):
Because that's that's that's more comfortable to them than actually
discussing things. That sometimes you have good people who do
bad things, and sometimes you have bad people who do
good things. And sometimes people are not entirely good nor bad.
And I think that's much of what we're dealing with
in Ukraine, is that you can demonize putin all day long,

(13:21):
in an attempt to elevate Zelenski. But it's not a
zero sum game. They can both be bad. They can
both have dictatorial tendencies, they can both be governing without
the consent of the government. They can both be engaging
in abuses against people under their control and stealing money

(13:41):
and doing all sorts of other things.

Speaker 2 (13:43):
But in any case, it was on.

Speaker 10 (13:44):
This day that the Stars and Bars, the first national
flag of the Confederacy, was adopted, and I felt like
I should point out that I was wrong on that flag,
because when I say I was wrong about that flag
for quite some time, that included up until probably ten
years ago, maybe fifteen years ago, and as much as

(14:07):
I've studied of it all, I don't know how I
never figured that out. There was a second national flag,
which came to be known as the Stainless Banner, and
that was the battle flag in the top left corner
of an otherwise white flag. It doesn't really not my favorite.
And then there was a third national flag called the

(14:28):
Revised Banner, revised Stainless Banner, which is that same white
background with a red panel on the side going north
and south, and in the top left corner the battle
flag But to my mind, the most awesome of the
Confederate flags is what we see on top.

Speaker 2 (14:47):
Of the General Lee and you.

Speaker 10 (14:49):
Still see as a part of some state flags, I believe,
and that is that the blue X with the stars
inside and the red around the outside.

Speaker 2 (14:59):
I love flags. Question, Michael Mary, I think that there
might because I got nothing going on down there.

Speaker 10 (15:05):
Probably Billy Ocean had recorded, I believe, for a five
album Queen seventy five and eighty four. He had one
hit that came in at thirty eight or thirty nine
on the top four. Let's just say his career was

(15:28):
not blossoming blossoming, and Suddenly was actually.

Speaker 2 (15:32):
The hit that did it for him.

Speaker 10 (15:35):
Noles, I'm sorry. I think Suddenly came first. Could be
this Caribbean Queen. But what's interesting is everyone knows he
later did African Queen and it felt like such a
sellout After Caribbean Queen. He did African Queen to get
some airplay in Africa and it worked. But this song

(15:56):
was not originally called Cribbian Queen. Leotian was born in
I believe Trinidad.

Speaker 2 (16:05):
I'm pretty sure it was Trinidad was and he went
to uh, you know, He was moved.

Speaker 10 (16:11):
By his parents to London before his tenth grant, before
his tenth birthday, so you know there's a distinct English
flavor to what he does. Oh at Home, I know

(16:31):
you're waiting on a punch line long, there's punch true story.

Speaker 2 (16:36):
He originally wrote this song as European Queen. True Story.
It's awful.

Speaker 10 (16:41):
You could probably find it.

Speaker 2 (16:43):
It is awful.

Speaker 10 (16:45):
It's the same song, but European Queen just doesn't have them,
and he needed a hit in the States, and they
decided that European that Caribbean. The Caribbean had more flair
to the American audience.

Speaker 2 (17:00):
What's crazy about that is? My first thought is why
not American?

Speaker 10 (17:06):
It still four syllables.

Speaker 2 (17:08):
It works out just right. America don't have queens and
the Caribbean does. Okay, if you say so, uh.

Speaker 10 (17:19):
Project Veritas investigation shows two sales reps at Colony Ridge
admitting to an undercover journalist that they do not check
the citizenship status of those buying land there here it is,
I don't.

Speaker 11 (17:36):
Check anybody's citizenship status.

Speaker 8 (17:39):
That's that's backs illegal.

Speaker 11 (17:40):
So yeah, I don't mess with it.

Speaker 3 (17:42):
We sell to anybody who fits that criteria perfect doesn't
matter who they are.

Speaker 6 (17:47):
So if they're undocumented, because.

Speaker 12 (17:52):
We're not check that, you don't check that, We not
check that, that's good.

Speaker 7 (17:57):
You know, as long as they have it too to identifications,
valid identifications.

Speaker 9 (18:03):
You know, we're concerned about people that are coming here
that might not have the documents.

Speaker 11 (18:09):
They still want to have a home exactly.

Speaker 7 (18:11):
That's why we helped that way, right, But we do
when they coin s out with and already they will
ask them their residential They want to ask proof.

Speaker 13 (18:22):
They want Okay, fifty people in Mexico that want to
come over here and you know, start settling here and
Colony Ridge can buy buying book. We can really two
hundred families that come here among.

Speaker 14 (18:42):
From Mexico, maybe the biggest it's going to be.

Speaker 15 (18:45):
It's going to be Mexical.

Speaker 10 (18:50):
This attempt at a SOB story about CBS News is
not really having.

Speaker 2 (18:54):
The effects they intended.

Speaker 10 (18:56):
They highlight an Atlanta grocery store owner that basically rely
on slave labor illegal aliens, pointing out that their future
is murky.

Speaker 2 (19:05):
Now hmm.

Speaker 4 (19:10):
Inside this Atlanta grocery store, the price of a gallon
of milk can at times be what brings in or
drives customers away. How many customers do you think you
see here on a regular day.

Speaker 15 (19:25):
About sixty five customer Hundry.

Speaker 12 (19:30):
Louse.

Speaker 4 (19:30):
Fernandez opened eight Puro Deso Supermarket in twenty twenty, one
of her four grocery stores across the Atlanta metro. So
the price of food right now, would you say is
the number one problem that your customers are dealing with?

Speaker 15 (19:44):
Why they used to come in buy a food for
the rack with hundred dollars and now it's three hundred dollars.

Speaker 4 (19:53):
At El Progresso, essentials like milk and cheese are staples
for her, mainly Latino customers, and a taste of home
for Hernandez, an immigrant from El Salvador. She crossed the
US Mexico border in nineteen ninety six at just sixteen
years old. She became a citizen in twenty twelve. Now

(20:14):
a business owner, Hernandez says she's focused on what's ahead.
You voted for President Donald Trump because of his stance
on the economy.

Speaker 15 (20:24):
Yet, because economy is one thing and immitation is another thing,
and you have to, like an owner.

Speaker 16 (20:33):
Decide.

Speaker 15 (20:35):
What is more affect right away.

Speaker 4 (20:38):
To my customer, But more than half of Hernandez's employees
are undocumented. How difficult is it for you to balance
your feelings on both of these issues?

Speaker 15 (20:52):
If you don't Trump say he's going to think the economy,
I don't think so he's going to think the economy
without my customer and my employee.

Speaker 4 (21:05):
So you don't see a world where he can fix
the economy and deport many immigrants.

Speaker 15 (21:13):
How the economy is going to growing. Maybe it has
to close. No customer, no business.

Speaker 4 (21:22):
You worry, there's a chance you might lose.

Speaker 15 (21:23):
I cannot handle it with no employee, and I cannot
handle it with no customer. Impossible, impossible.

Speaker 2 (21:37):
You know this idea, this uh.

Speaker 10 (21:42):
Idea of of the the the slave labor, the illegal immigrant,
and we've got to have it.

Speaker 2 (21:51):
And it's so important.

Speaker 10 (21:52):
It feels like we've heard that argument before.

Speaker 4 (21:55):
You voted for President Donald Trump because of his stance
on the economy.

Speaker 15 (22:00):
Yet, because economy is one thing and immigration is another thing,
and you have to, like an owner, decide what is
more affect right away to my customer.

Speaker 4 (22:16):
But more than half of rnandez His employees are slaves.
How difficult is it for you to balance your feelings
on both of these issues.

Speaker 15 (22:29):
If you do not trus say he's going to fix
the economy. I don't think so he's going to fix
the economy without my customer and my employee.

Speaker 4 (22:42):
So you don't see a world where he can fix
the economy and deport many slaves.

Speaker 15 (22:49):
How the economy is going to go in Maybe it
has to close. No customer, no business, you.

Speaker 9 (22:58):
Bory, there's a chance I lose.

Speaker 15 (23:00):
Can not handle it with nice slaves. I cannot handle
it with no postom. It impossible.

Speaker 5 (23:07):
The greatest moment your life, it's the formal war.

Speaker 14 (23:11):
We have all your formal wear needs, from morning suits
to coordinating accessories.

Speaker 11 (23:24):
Man, I hate calling that pizza place. They don't speak
English and they always mesh up the order. It's like
trying to give my cell phone number that a housekeeper. Okay,
I'm expecting a very important delivery at the house, so
could you please call me if it arrives, I'll give
you my cell number.

Speaker 12 (23:36):
Okay, yes, no problem, give me number.

Speaker 1 (23:40):
Okay four oh one five five five one one two five.

Speaker 17 (23:45):
Four four zero four four zero.

Speaker 1 (23:53):
No, I was just repeating the.

Speaker 12 (23:54):
Four one four one four All.

Speaker 17 (23:59):
Right, let's try over four zero one four zero zero
one one four zero one, yes.

Speaker 1 (24:09):
Five five five.

Speaker 11 (24:12):
Five five five That was pailesh Okay one one two five.

Speaker 12 (24:19):
One one two five.

Speaker 1 (24:22):
There you go, you got it, one five five.

Speaker 2 (24:25):
What you say?

Speaker 12 (24:27):
One one two five one five five No.

Speaker 1 (24:31):
Not one one and two fives two ones.

Speaker 12 (24:34):
Two, one one one two five. Oh my god, Okay,
how many one.

Speaker 1 (24:41):
I'm not giving you quantities of the numbers. I'm giving
you the numbers one, one, two five. Those are the
last four numbers.

Speaker 12 (24:47):
Okay one one one one one two two five five.
Oh I see one one two five.

Speaker 1 (25:00):
Yes, one one two five. All right, now read the
number back to me.

Speaker 12 (25:04):
Let me get my pen.

Speaker 8 (25:07):
Mhm m.

Speaker 2 (25:12):
That's pretty good.

Speaker 10 (25:13):
Uh that is uh, that is pretty darn good.

Speaker 2 (25:19):
It Uh.

Speaker 10 (25:20):
It brings to mind something that Ramone did a few
days ago, and he just sent it. It wasn't it wasn't.

Speaker 2 (25:32):
Even recorded for airplay.

Speaker 10 (25:36):
But you have to understand Ramone's lifelong fascination with an
occupation by the medium of radio and spoken word. Before
you had all the production and all that, this is
this is the great spoken word tradition of entertaining and
retaining and connecting. And so he wrote this and sent

(25:59):
it around to the team, and he said, maybe Zorro
will play this on the show at some point, or
if nothing else, maybe it'll be the first broadcast from Mars.

Speaker 2 (26:10):
So I have a note into Elon.

Speaker 8 (26:12):
You tell me what you think.

Speaker 16 (26:26):
Baseball the American game, a diamond of dirt and chalk,
where legends rise and stories are told. It's a simple game.
Hit the ball, catch the ball, run. But simplicity is
an illusion. The best things always are.

Speaker 6 (26:45):
The same is true for radio. The best radio is simple,
two voices, a microphone, an idea. But an idea in
the right hands becomes something more. It becomes rhythm timing
music without a note, it becomes history. I was a
kid the first time I heard it, didn't see it,

(27:05):
didn't need to just a radio, a warm summer night,
in the feeling that something magical is happening. Two voices,
one joke, and a routine so perfect it might as
well have been carved into stone. They say comedy is timing.
They say genius is knowing when to stop. Ab and

(27:25):
Costello didn't stop. They built something that didn't just make
people laugh and made them listen. It became part of US.
Presidents quoted it, schools taught it, even astronauts carried it
into space. But all of that, every bit of praise,
every echo through time, means nothing compared to what happens
when you hear it yourself, because in the end, it's

(27:48):
just two guys talking, and somehow it's the greatest radio
bit ever made. Here it is Abin Costello's who's on first?

Speaker 5 (28:00):
Yeah, what do you want? Castallabit? I understand that you're
going to be the manager of the Lou.

Speaker 14 (28:04):
Costello Junior Youth Foundation baseball team.

Speaker 5 (28:06):
Yes, we just organized this name.

Speaker 1 (28:08):
Oh you did, sure, well.

Speaker 14 (28:09):
I'd like to play on the team myself. You know
I know something about baseball.

Speaker 5 (28:12):
Well, those we accomplished.

Speaker 14 (28:13):
Well, I'd like to know some of the guy's names
on the team. So wh i'man on my street on
the ballpark, I'll be able to say hello to them twice.

Speaker 5 (28:18):
Surely I'll introduce you to the boys.

Speaker 14 (28:19):
Did you know strangers may seem they give these ball
players nowadays very peculiar name You mean, funny name nicknames,
bet names like Dizzy Dean.

Speaker 5 (28:25):
It's Feta daft Daffy Dean. And I'm their French cousin.
French cousin, Gooffe well, let's see we have on the bags.
We have who's on first? What's on second? I don't
know he's on third?

Speaker 14 (28:34):
That's what I want to find out.

Speaker 5 (28:36):
Silly name, I say, who's on first? What's on second?
I don't know he's on third?

Speaker 14 (28:39):
You're the manager? Yeah, you know the fellow's name? Well
I should then who's on first?

Speaker 5 (28:42):
Yeah? I mean the fellow's name. That's it, that's who. Yeah,
and tell me who the guy on first? Who the
first base? Who have you got a first base? Who
is on first? I'm asking you who's on first? That's
the man's name, that's whose name? Yeah? Tell me who's
on first? That's right. I want to know what's the
guy's name on first? I don't know what's on second?

Speaker 1 (28:59):
Who's that?

Speaker 5 (28:59):
Who is on fury? I don't know he's on third?
Now we're not recing. Sorry, now let's get together. How
did I get off third? Thing? You have to mention
his name?

Speaker 14 (29:06):
If I mentioned a third basis name, who did I
face fan third?

Speaker 8 (29:09):
No?

Speaker 5 (29:09):
Who is playing firs?

Speaker 14 (29:10):
I'm not asking you who's on cot, who is on
I'm asking you what's the guy's name on third?

Speaker 5 (29:14):
While it is on second?

Speaker 14 (29:15):
Who's on who's on first?

Speaker 5 (29:16):
I don't know he's on third? And I go back
on third again. I can't tull the name.

Speaker 14 (29:20):
You got a first baseman? And so when you pay
him off every month? Who gets the month?

Speaker 5 (29:23):
Every dollar of it? Why not? The man's entitled it?

Speaker 6 (29:28):
Do it?

Speaker 5 (29:29):
Yes? So who gets? Sure? He does? Sometimes his wife
comes down and clackson, who's white? Yes? Well, I'm trying
to find out.

Speaker 14 (29:40):
Is what's the guy's name on first?

Speaker 5 (29:42):
Face? Listen? What is on second?

Speaker 13 (29:43):
Name?

Speaker 5 (29:43):
Not asking you?

Speaker 14 (29:44):
Who's not?

Speaker 5 (29:45):
Who is on firs? I don't know? Third day? I
pick it up? Wait, wait, you got our field for
surely the left feeler's name.

Speaker 14 (29:54):
I just thought of that. Well, I just thought i'd
tell you and tell me who's playing left field?

Speaker 5 (29:59):
Is playing first day? Out of the infield? I want
to know what's the left field? What is on second?
I'm not asking you who's that? Things on first? I
don't know? Third days? Look the left field? His name?
Why becall? Oh he's center field? Now you know these
plays as well as I do.

Speaker 14 (30:18):
Look, you gotta picture on the women's be a fine
team without a picture. The picture's name Tomorrow you don't
want to tell me today.

Speaker 5 (30:23):
I'm telling you, manhead tomorrow, what time?

Speaker 15 (30:26):
What time?

Speaker 5 (30:27):
What? What time? Tomorrow?

Speaker 14 (30:28):
You're gonna tell me who's Pallas?

Speaker 5 (30:29):
Who is?

Speaker 8 (30:30):
Now?

Speaker 5 (30:30):
Break your arm? You say who's on? I want to
know what's the pictures? I don't know.

Speaker 14 (30:39):
You gotta catch it, Charley, catch his name today, today,
and tomorrow's picking.

Speaker 5 (30:42):
Now you have got it. Now, I've got it. I
don't even look. We got it.

Speaker 14 (30:45):
A couple of stays on it. I tell how fast
the day you're excited? Who's down next side?

Speaker 5 (30:50):
And you take it these you know, I'm a pretty
good touch of my salad. Tell me now I'll catch.

Speaker 14 (30:54):
Today myself, all right? And tomorrow's pitching on the team.
As now, Tomorrow throws the ball, and the guy up
bunch the ball, yes, and when he puts the ball,
meeting in a good kick. But I'm gonna throw the
guy out of first base. So I pick up the
ball and throw with the hole.

Speaker 5 (31:05):
Now that's the first thing you've said.

Speaker 14 (31:06):
Right, I don't even know what I'm talking about.

Speaker 5 (31:09):
Well, that's all you have to do is to throw
the ball the first pace. Now, who's not it? Naturally?

Speaker 14 (31:16):
If I throw the ball at first base, somebody's gonna
get up.

Speaker 5 (31:19):
Now, who's got it? Naturally? Naturally? Naturally? Oh, so I
throw the ball in that?

Speaker 14 (31:24):
Why you do nothing of the cry and you throw
them all the whole naturally, lad, That's what I said,
you did it. Now that I throw the ball in
that with you know, I throw it a hole, naturally,
That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 5 (31:33):
We're not closing that way. I throw them all the
hole naturally. You ask me to throw them all the whole. Natural,
I'm saying, it's good place. Man, I throw the ball
the whole.

Speaker 14 (31:42):
Actually, Now, whoever it is tops the ball, So the
guy runs a second who picks up the ball and
throws with the what throws it the I don't know,
I don't know, throws it back.

Speaker 5 (31:50):
To tomorrow, triple play man. Another guy gets up in
it's the long flight ball to be paused.

Speaker 6 (31:56):
Why, I don't know.

Speaker 5 (31:58):
He's on third and I give a time
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