All Episodes

May 8, 2026 31 mins

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Listen
Watch
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. The
Michael Very Show is on the air.

Speaker 2 (00:18):
Shut off to my ear.

Speaker 1 (00:20):
Fact, take this job and shove it.

Speaker 3 (00:23):
Joyce.

Speaker 1 (00:24):
You like movies about lad heats. He's down on the pone,
my yankee, my lanky. Well, sometimes I get the minstrel
crabs for your hard.

Speaker 4 (00:32):
This time you pack on tupacs.

Speaker 1 (00:35):
You wanna sit down in the kitchen and pix me
something good to eat?

Speaker 5 (00:40):
Egg my head a little high in the whole day.

Speaker 6 (00:43):
There is such a bitterness and helplessness in America over
the idea that American citizens are just sitting ducks for
people in our country and abroad, fraud committed on a
grand scale. You open your mail, snail mail or email,

(01:10):
and there's some reference to you owe money for a
toll road that's a big one, or for a medical payment,
or for whatever else. And especially older people, they don't
know is this legit or not. It looks legit, So
you either pay it and it's a scam, in which

(01:30):
case nobody helps you get out of it. They don't
prosecute these people, or you don't pay it, and now
it's going to collections. But then you get a collections notice,
you don't know if that's real, and so there's no
integrity left in the system. And that's the breakdown of
the rule of law. And that's what's been allowed to happen.

(01:52):
But even worse than that, it's not just that we're
being preyed on for our money and our credit cards
and attacked by email and letter and inundated and frustrated
and text messages. You better pay that you're gonna and
you don't know what's real and what's not, and there's
no way to verify. You can't even walk the streets

(02:14):
of much of this country because some guy's gonna come
up and knock you in the head or shoot your
stab you in the worst part. You won't be the
first person nor the last. He not only will have
done it hundreds of times, he will have been arrested.
He will have been arrested and convicted, and he's back
out on the street doing it again. A man in

(02:37):
the McKinney area, which is in the Dallas area of Texas,
North Texas, is facing capital murder a capital murder charge.
He's been freed on bond and ahead of his murder trial.
Hey come back, we want to try you for murder, okay,
I promise, I will pinky swear. They're not going to

(02:58):
hold him in jail till then. So he cuts his
ankle monitor and goes on the run. He's vanished. He's
now one of the ten most Wanted fugitives. His name
is Hassan Heitem Lussin and here is the story from
CBS DFW.

Speaker 7 (03:19):
Hassan Musin's status on the Texas Most Wanted. This has
not brought him back to Colin County, even with the
reward on his head. According to the Texas TPS, they
got notified Friday around noon that he cut his ankle
monitor off in the capital murder of the Sinte Segoviano.

Speaker 2 (03:37):
How do I feel about this? I feel unprotected. I
feel like my son's story is not seen.

Speaker 7 (03:45):
Christian Davis is Segoviano's mother.

Speaker 1 (03:47):
He was her first child, the oldest son. McKinney.

Speaker 7 (03:51):
Police say he was shot and killed on January twenty ninth,
twenty twenty five.

Speaker 1 (03:56):
She says it was.

Speaker 7 (03:57):
A robbery where they took his backpack and shoes that
shot him in the chest. Muson and Connor gap Part
were arrested on a charge of capital murder.

Speaker 1 (04:06):
The next day. I feel like.

Speaker 2 (04:10):
As a mother, I'm broken Ordre for the things that
he had to endure and then attempting to get any
type of justice. I don't see where the judicial system
has played a significant part in.

Speaker 1 (04:31):
Keeping us safe.

Speaker 7 (04:32):
Newson made bond in October. One of the conditions was
the ankle bracelet. What police said, he cut it off
nearly six days ago, and they don't know where he is.
We stopped by his address at Frisco. No one answered
the door.

Speaker 1 (04:47):
And I realized that with all of this, it's not one.

Speaker 2 (04:53):
Person, it's the system, and it's a system that fell
in a way that they cannot fix.

Speaker 7 (05:03):
A judge granted emotion for an insufficient bond on Sunday.
It amounted to the twenty year old suspect abandoning his
bond obligations. But by then the victim's family says they
were on edge.

Speaker 2 (05:17):
There's no apology that the DA's office, that the clerk's office,
or anyone else that could could give me that would suffice.
They go home, they clock into a job, they clock out.
It was a weekend for them and for me, this
is a nightmare. I'm living a full own nightmare. My

(05:40):
son is gone. That does not change after this interview.
It did not change after January twenty ninth. But what
I did expect was for the judicial system not to
fail us.

Speaker 6 (06:00):
Your heart goes out to that lady. Your mother should
not have to bury her child. So the Democrats have
very carefully, at the direction of George Soros, successfully created
the narrative that cops and law enforcement are bad. Our

(06:23):
laws are evil, they're modern day slavery. What they're trying
to do is just run around looking for black people
to grab off the streets and throw in a cage
because of racism. And so you black people need to
vote Democrat because these cops are out of control.

Speaker 1 (06:46):
They're a bunch of Nazis. They're horrible, okay.

Speaker 6 (06:52):
And so then what happens is you get black on
black crime, the most common type. You get a young
black man shoots another young black man in the hood,
and the mother of the now deceased young man says,
I need the system to work for me. I'm sorry,

(07:12):
but mucking up, gunking up the system is exactly what
the Democrats have done on purpose. Because you see that
young man who killed your son, your black son, that
young man is black and we've managed to get in
the inner.

Speaker 1 (07:28):
Cities a judiciary.

Speaker 6 (07:32):
That releases young black men because they're all victims, not
their fault. They're poor, they're poor and racism, and so
we're going to keep putting them back out on the street.
So your son won't be the first. It wasn't the first,
and won't be the last young black man he'll kill. Now,
he might have five baby mamas, and he'll beat one
of them to death and knock three of them out,

(07:52):
and the other one will have her teeth knocked out
and she'll be hospitalized. But what we won't do is
punish him, because Sorrows is trying to sew seeds, to
destroy weeds in our garden, to destroy this country. And
one of the ways you do that is you make
the entire country feel unsafe and you turn person against person.

(08:15):
And it's working because the Democrats will do anything for
the cold, hard cash it takes to win elections, and
George Soros.

Speaker 1 (08:21):
Understands that hardest time.

Speaker 6 (08:27):
For your Mother's Day tribute, Sharon, you're a first sweetheart.

Speaker 1 (08:30):
Go ahead, mister Barry.

Speaker 8 (08:33):
I wish you hadn't played that song.

Speaker 9 (08:36):
It's beautiful.

Speaker 1 (08:37):
I appreciate that this is going to be tough.

Speaker 8 (08:40):
I was listening to.

Speaker 1 (08:43):
A little bit, a little bit tough.

Speaker 8 (08:46):
When you were talking about your mama, you could have
been talking about my mama because she was It goes
to a hospital through the emergency room. She did have
your mamma and Buzzlan, but she had some other years.
She had a ninety two year old body that she
could do things that she did when she was forty two.

(09:10):
We were not able to bring her home. We had
her to buy celebration on Monday and that song along
with Reabs seven minutes.

Speaker 10 (09:22):
In Heaven, we're part of.

Speaker 8 (09:24):
Our tribute to mama. And my baby sister delivered her
eulogy and everyone should be as blessed to have a
mama like ours.

Speaker 1 (09:37):
Everybody. I love it.

Speaker 6 (09:39):
Thank you, Ray, You're old. On Michael Berry Show, What
is your Mother's Day Tribute?

Speaker 11 (09:44):
Well, it goes a little like this. About nineteen sixty six,
I was born to Helen Vandeiga. She was not married
to give in for adoption. Two years ago we got reconnected.
Last weekend we had a bury my father.

Speaker 9 (10:02):
It was just a sad time.

Speaker 11 (10:03):
Went all the way back up to Canada and buried
him and been reconnected with all of the family. I
have a brother who's younger than me.

Speaker 10 (10:13):
He was the oldest brother. Now he's not.

Speaker 11 (10:15):
I have a sister, she was adopted. I have another
brother and he has down syndrome. I call it the
United Nations of families. We've got one that we picked,
one that has.

Speaker 12 (10:25):
A bit of a disability. But my father always said
he was a blessing. He showed us the other side
of the world. He showed us the other side of
the coin. My mother's just so special.

Speaker 9 (10:35):
For fifty five years.

Speaker 1 (10:36):
She didn't know where I was.

Speaker 9 (10:38):
I love her so much.

Speaker 11 (10:39):
She's just the strongest woman.

Speaker 13 (10:41):
Right.

Speaker 6 (10:41):
That's a great story. And you have, you know, a
great voice and a great delivery. It punches through the airways.
You talk right into the microphone. On the microphone. It
came through my speakers loudly. From a purely technical sense,
that is a fantastic call.

Speaker 1 (11:02):
It's a treat to my ears for somebody to do that.

Speaker 6 (11:05):
Joel Joel to Michael Berry show, what is your Mother's
Day tribute?

Speaker 14 (11:09):
Well, I lost my father in nineteen seventy three. My
oldest brother had just completed the year and Uteen had
to do sisters in high school and I had just
started junior high and at forty one years old, she
pulled up her footstraps and just kept everybody together and

(11:30):
raised us kids. And I was so thankful that I
got to have just four years my mom and myself
before I went to school, and she taught me how
to be a man and to have a conscience and
make good decisions in my life. I didn't always live

(11:51):
up to that, but that little voice in the back of.

Speaker 1 (11:54):
My head, your conscience, that's what it's there for. That's
what mamas are.

Speaker 6 (11:57):
God gives mothers superpower because they don't know how to
do that. All that God gives them that plant sit
in them row. What's your mother's date tribute?

Speaker 14 (12:07):
Sir?

Speaker 9 (12:10):
Thank you uncle. I just want to talk a little
bit about the most courageous woman that I've known in
my life, and to my mom. I was born in Havana, Cuba,
and my mother brought me over to the United States
in the nineteen sixties to get me away from Castro communism,
and to do that, she had to leave everything behind.
She brought me I was five years old, and my
little sister that I was two years old, and we were
able to come over the clothes on our backs and

(12:31):
the nextrapair of underwear. She could barely speak any English
at all. She is a mathematic teacher, and she left
my father behind, all the siblings behind, my mother and
father behind. Everybody behind becomes our country, but she does nobody.

Speaker 13 (12:44):
And through the years we're blessed.

Speaker 9 (12:46):
He was able to get his jobs. She was a
college professor's college professors, and she sacrificed not just for
hat that provided me with the best education that I
could have over the years, but I also sacrificed to
bring the rest of our siblings over, siblings, my mother
and father, and of course my dad from Cuba during
very difficult time. She's always been very encouraging for me.

(13:08):
She's a hesitator, that's kidd p. I encouraged me to
get a good US station, and I was able to
go to the best schools uh you know in Dallas
where I grew up, and also the best medical school
my country helps some medical school.

Speaker 1 (13:19):
Look at you, look at you?

Speaker 6 (13:22):
Hold on. I want to get one more in on
this segment. A guy's been holding forever, Doug, what's your
mother's day? Tribute.

Speaker 10 (13:30):
Hey, Mike, what are you doing. Uh, I just wanted
to call and talk to about my mom.

Speaker 9 (13:34):
Uh.

Speaker 15 (13:35):
She was this, uh you know, the kind of lady
that would just be all my ball games, dude, brother,
you know, never missed a game, and you know, just
a wonderful mom. And she was taken from me in
nineteen ninety three and she.

Speaker 10 (13:45):
Was murdered and it was such a tragic event that
was just you know, just a terrible thing. And and
I struggled a lot because I found her and uh,
I was such a victim of gangs. I dove into
alcoholism and just really yeap of my life. It was
wasn't a mess for about thirteen or fifteen years, and

(14:06):
uh then I decided, you know, got into a program
and I sobered up. And one of the things that
somebody asked me that that deal was would your mom
be proud of the way you're living their life? And
I was like, absolutely and not. And uh, you know,
I missed her a lot. She never saw my kids
grow up, and she would have been the great, greatest
grandmother in the world. But I miss her a lot, and.

Speaker 13 (14:29):
I'm just thankful for the time I had with her.

Speaker 1 (14:32):
Hey, man.

Speaker 6 (14:32):
Noough, that's a hard thing to call up and say.
I appreciate you sharing that story. A lot of people
heard it and that will affect them. Remember me, Remember Scott.

Speaker 2 (14:42):
I love him out loud.

Speaker 6 (14:49):
So you're going to have a bile reaction to this
story when you first hear it. But I'm going to
ask you to pause and let's think about the nuance
behind this. It's not easy to overcome your original position.
I get that, but work with me here, Okay, I understand.

(15:10):
I'm fighting uphill battle. This is the story of a
boy fourteen years old in California and he's accused of
striking and killing an eighty one year old man on
an e bike. And these bikes can get going pretty fast.

(15:35):
The popos say that the mother had been warned in
the past about allowing her underage.

Speaker 1 (15:41):
Son to ride the bike. It's dangerous. He's a very.

Speaker 6 (15:47):
Fast He doesn't need you cleaning it again, weren't you?

Speaker 1 (15:51):
You don't.

Speaker 6 (15:52):
He doesn't need to be doing this. Somebody's going to
get hurt. And until the point that somebody gets hurt,
he's cop it's so ridiculous, Yeah, overreacting their Nazis. And
then someone does get hurt. In fact, they die. But
this isn't a story. The reason we bring you this story,

(16:15):
it's not because we're debating whether the fourteen year old
should be punished. In this case, the mother is facing
an involuntary manslaughter charge. Now, remember, manslaughter is a reduced
crime from homicide, so manslaughter is almost well, I don't

(16:40):
want to say, but involuntary refers to the fact that
she didn't drive over the old man. She didn't if
you will pull the trigger, but she left the gun.
I'll continue with the metaphor so that the son could
take it and kill someone, all right. The question is

(17:00):
to what extent should parents be punished for the crimes
of their in this case, fourteen year old. Now the
immediate reaction is should I get to death penalty? Because
people love to talk about the death penalty, because that's
how you show you're mad. Death penalty for everybody? Should
I get to death penalty? Okay, she got to go

(17:22):
to prison for a long time. She's a bad mom,
are you sure? Yeah, there were some bad moms at
the store the other day and it made me mad,
and I'm mad at bad moms. So she ought to
go to prison for life. Okay, so that's the system, right. Okay,
Well pause for a moment, because once we once this
is the practice, let's think about how it's gonna work out.

(17:47):
I know some very good people who it seemed to me,
were very good parents, but they had kids in various
circumstances that the kid had something wrong. That kid was
born with a defect, a kid was born with anger issues.
That kid was causing problems from the earliest ages. A

(18:08):
kid was a foster kid, for instance, and the kid
had had and they took in a foster kid at
twelve years old that had been through a lot, and
they did their best to just love that kid through it.
And that kid was getting in fights, pulling the knife,
cussing the teacher out.

Speaker 1 (18:25):
That kid was stealing.

Speaker 6 (18:26):
From his parents. His parents were doing everything they could
to rain that kid in, but the kid went on
to do very bad things. If you don't know anyone
in that situation, trust me, you know someone who does.
So now we're going to charge the mother. Why are
we going to charge the mother? Because of this ridiculous,

(18:48):
antiquated notion that we're not going to charge the young
pers The mother didn't run over the eighty one year old.
The mother wasn't driving like a maniac. The fourteen year
old was. But you see, we have decided that we're
going to play this game that we're not going to
charge you. We're not going to make you responsible for

(19:10):
a crime that you commit. If you're seventeen years three
or sixty four days, we're going to charge you the
next day because now you check the box, you're a
day older. Oh no, Michael, we can try them as
an adult. Now what does that mean. They're not an adult.

(19:32):
That's just a number of days they've lived. I can
show you a sixteen year old with the maturity of
a thirty year old. I can show you a thirty
year old doesn't have the maturity of a sixteen year old.
These numbers are completely arbitrary. An arbitrary enforcement of criminal
justice leads to an erosion in respect and trust in

(19:54):
the criminal justice system.

Speaker 1 (19:57):
Here's the story out of KTLA. He was a very kind,
loving person.

Speaker 15 (20:02):
He always told me stories of his war stories because
he's a veteran.

Speaker 1 (20:06):
He was very homeo, very kind.

Speaker 16 (20:07):
Two weeks after a teenager on an e motorcycle slammed
into him, eighty one year old Ed Ashman has died
of his injuries, and tonight the teen's mother is facing
felony charges, including involuntary manslaughter.

Speaker 3 (20:21):
She absolutely knew and that she could have prevented this
horrific incident from happening.

Speaker 16 (20:26):
Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer says fifty year old
Tommy Joe Mayhair has been contacted by law enforcement in
the past warned that her son was not legally old
enough to operate the two hundred pound e motorcycle with
the top speed of almost sixty miles per.

Speaker 3 (20:42):
Hour, absolutely illegal. He was not allowed to ride it,
and she was warned that in the event he continued
to ride it, she could be charged with child in danger.

Speaker 16 (20:52):
Maente Witnesses say the fourteen year old was doing really's
outside Al Toro High School on April sixteenth when he
collided with Ashby, a substitute teacher and Vietnam veteran. The
teenager fled the scene. Tonight, the community is mourning and
has already donated more than one hundred thousand dollars to
Ashman's family.

Speaker 2 (21:12):
It was really sad what happened because like it was
his last year teaching year.

Speaker 16 (21:17):
The tragedy is the latest incident involving teens on e
bikes and motorcycles endangering others.

Speaker 3 (21:24):
This is a pandemic, This is incredibly serious.

Speaker 16 (21:27):
Tonight, the Orange County District Attorney vowing he will aggressively
go after parents.

Speaker 3 (21:33):
If you know, by engage, modify, facilitate, eat in a
bet your child to ride an illegal e motorcycle or
e bike that's been modified, We're going to prosecute you
to the fullest.

Speaker 1 (21:46):
Extent of the law.

Speaker 16 (21:47):
If convicted of the most serious charges, mayhere could face
more than seven years in prison. Her fourteen year old
son also facing separate charges.

Speaker 6 (21:57):
So what are we to do. Well, let's start with
this premise. We've got a real problem with non adult
that is minor, we say children minors committing crimes that
result in death or serious bodily injury. So, because our

(22:25):
system is unwilling to deal with the people causing this crime,
we start looking for other people. Ah, let's go get
the mom, all right. Well, is that really the responsibility
of the mother? It is, Michael, she should be a
better mother, all right. So if you were charged every

(22:48):
time your kid is driving ninety miles an hour during
the road on the road. If you were charged for
every dumb thing your sixteen seventeen year old did, would
you like that? No, I was away on work. My
kid's driving ninety on the freeway, told him not to
do that. Well, somebody ended up dead and he's your kid.
This is what happens when you don't punish a criminal

(23:11):
or committee a crime, even if the criminal is under
the age of eighteen, You start getting stupid and going
to look for the mother.

Speaker 1 (23:19):
At that moment, I just keep doing this great show.
I missed Russ and Bob right now.

Speaker 10 (23:23):
You right there was a place with Michael Berry show you,
Shan Hanley and Mark Via some of the best in
the words.

Speaker 17 (23:30):
My name is Chance McLain and I'm the resident song
smith and architect of chaos on the world famous Michael
Berry Show. My mom is Miss Rebecca Hall. I'm going
to talk for just a sec about a pivotal point
in my life. I wish the world knew how strong
my mom was and is her husband. My dad bailed
when I was in high school. We were penniless. House

(23:50):
got foreclosed, so homeless for a little bit, just destitute.
Cars got repolled. Behind the scenes. It was an absolute
pitiful mess. But my mom didn't complain. Shear roled up
her slieves, she went back to work. Her devotion to
me and my brother made us feel normal despite all
the crap going on around us.

Speaker 1 (24:07):
She encouraged us.

Speaker 17 (24:09):
Never missed a game, never missed a play, never missed anything.
Always there. She was always there, and she still is.
She's the definition of supportive, no matter what mayhem I
throw at her. So from Disney World right now, I
want to wish you a very happy Mother's Day.

Speaker 13 (24:25):
Mom.

Speaker 17 (24:25):
I love you, and I can't wait for the next adventure.

Speaker 6 (24:29):
True story Chances sweet mother Becky remarried much later in
life to a nice man named Sam, and Sam worked
with my dad. They knew each other at DuPont, and
we didn't know that until several years into knowing Chance
that his stepdad, who was from Marge, who he loved.

Speaker 1 (24:50):
He considers his.

Speaker 6 (24:50):
Stepdad his dad, even though he came into his life
when Chance was in his forties, and unfortunately he passed away.
The last time I saw him, we did a we
did a heritage film. He laid on the couch in
the green room, he stood up, he sat up. We
did the interview about two to three hours. It's the
only heritage film interview I've done the where I did

(25:13):
the interview because Chance didn't think he could hold it together.
And at the end of it, he said, are we finished?
And I said, yes, sir. If Chance says we're finished,
we're finished. He looks a Chance and he said, you
don't need to record anything else, and he said no.
He was supposed to live in another three weeks. He laid
down on the couch. He said, I need to lay
down a minute, and he passed to and a half
days later he knew he was waiting for to be recorded,

(25:36):
to share what he had to say with his family
and then head to heaven. That's how it happened. Did
we go to Clyde already? Why are you miss Clyde?

Speaker 13 (25:48):
Hey Barry? How are you? Michael Berry? How are you doing?

Speaker 1 (25:50):
I'm sorry, we're all spelled your name C L I
D E. I'm sorry about that. Well go ahead, Oh
that's right.

Speaker 13 (25:56):
Well, I'm wondering as to give a child. This my
first heavily Mother's Day for my mom. She just passed.
She was a great mom. She did a lot of
things even after she couldn't get around. She always made
sure that she did things special for people that you
a crafts things and stuff. She went to the grandkids'

(26:18):
school and did crafts and just make sure people felt special.
And even when we were growing up we were can enable.
My brother and I always fighting. She always had the referee.
I can't explain how we had to fire a refrigerator
in the front door. Had to put up with us
that much stuff. But I wanted to give a job

(26:38):
for her. She had a lot to put up in
a waterbough to get for us.

Speaker 6 (26:42):
But that's why you are who you are, brother, Red.
You're on the Michael Berry Show, Sweetheart, go ahead.

Speaker 5 (26:49):
Yes, I have an unusual story. I wanted to just
relate that my mother had me after hiding her pregnancy.
I was number four when she was twenty one, and
she packed her bag when she gave birth and left
me behind at the hospital. I ended up having two

(27:10):
mother figures in my life growing up, and I'm sorry
this is hard. And what they taught me was how
to be a good mom. Not because they were good moms.
They taught me to be a good mom. Inadvertently, I

(27:31):
met my mother who gave birth to me when I
was thirty six years old, and I had no idea
that she was my birth mom. And I am so
grateful that she left me behind, because even though I
had a bad growing up, it would have been so
much worse with her. She had nine children from eight

(27:54):
different fathers, and I was the first that she left behind.
Last year, I found the last of us, a brother
who was the last one to be given away, and
he was very hard to find. But we're all back
together as siblings. My mother and the two mother figures

(28:17):
have all passed away, and my daughter wrote a piece
about me several years ago, and one thing that she
said was that I broke the chase and you did.

Speaker 1 (28:31):
You know what?

Speaker 6 (28:32):
And by telling this story, you're going to change somebody's life.

Speaker 1 (28:35):
Don't underestimate that, Ramon.

Speaker 6 (28:37):
Do you remember that scene in Goodfellas when Tommy, Henry
and Jimmy were on their way to bury Billy Bats
but they needed to get a shovel. I love that movie, guys,
I love it. So they stopped at Tommy's mom's house.
You remember that. Yeah, in the middle of the night,
they stopped at Tommy's mom's house. Like every good mom,
she got out of bed and made him a full meal.

Speaker 1 (29:00):
Loved you know, they loved making that. See he's so true.
We'll go see.

Speaker 8 (29:06):
What happened.

Speaker 1 (29:08):
I think something out of road? Mean, what happened?

Speaker 13 (29:11):
What happened?

Speaker 9 (29:12):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (29:13):
I was seeing you so long?

Speaker 14 (29:15):
What happened for you?

Speaker 4 (29:15):
I hate to see him that? And you you what happened?

Speaker 1 (29:20):
Well, he came in.

Speaker 13 (29:21):
You just came in.

Speaker 4 (29:21):
I figured, you know, I'm so happy to see him. Look,
go inside, make you some stuff. No, I can't see something.
I haven't seen him so long. I want to see him.

Speaker 1 (29:32):
Just to stuff was great. So tell me, tell me
where have you been? And I haven't seen you.

Speaker 12 (29:37):
I haven't even you haven't even called or anything.

Speaker 1 (29:40):
Where you've been.

Speaker 10 (29:41):
I've been working nights and well tonight we were out light,
were right on the after the country and we hit
one of those deers.

Speaker 13 (29:49):
I tell you at the blood came from.

Speaker 4 (29:50):
I tell you, Jimmy tell you before.

Speaker 8 (29:52):
Anyway, I'll remind mine.

Speaker 3 (29:53):
He just not.

Speaker 9 (29:54):
I'm gonna take this.

Speaker 10 (29:55):
It's okay, okay, you know, well the poor thing, you
know we got he hit him, We hit the deer,
and it is poor.

Speaker 13 (30:02):
We call it. That's poor.

Speaker 7 (30:06):
Got caught the girl.

Speaker 1 (30:07):
I gotta I gotta hang it all, oh am, I
just sit You're gonna.

Speaker 10 (30:11):
Leave it to you know, so anyway I'll bring you
knife back if anyway, thank you.

Speaker 1 (30:16):
Why did you get yourself a nice girl?

Speaker 11 (30:18):
I get a nice one almost every night.

Speaker 14 (30:20):
Mo.

Speaker 4 (30:20):
Yeah, we get yourself a girl so you could settle down.

Speaker 1 (30:23):
That's why I know Ol'donald Stovery and I put that
in the morning on Free I love you. Her son
was a gangster, but she loved her baby boy, her baby.

Speaker 6 (30:37):
Her love for her baby boy never wane, and neither
did her nurturing instinct because she was a mother.

Speaker 1 (30:44):
That's what moms do.

Speaker 6 (30:46):
No matter how old you are, no matter what you've done,
you will always be your mama's baby girl or baby boy,
and she will go to the ends of the earth
for you. Just remember you might be short with your
mom because she getting on your nerves talking about her
medical appointments or talking about whatever you find she's droning
on and on about those people around you don't love

(31:08):
you the way she does. I guarantee you that other
than your wife or husband and kids, even your best
friends don't love you like your mama does. She will
do without to this day so you can have She
would die so you don't have to. You get cancer,
She'd rather she just take it herself. She will eat
last when the food is cold, so yours is hot.

(31:31):
She just wants her baby girl, her baby boy, to
have a full belly. There's nothing on earth like the
godliness of a nurturing mother.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Ding dong! Join your culture consultants, Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang, on an unforgettable journey into the beating heart of CULTURE. Alongside sizzling special guests, they GET INTO the hottest pop-culture moments of the day and the formative cultural experiences that turned them into Culturistas. Produced by the Big Money Players Network and iHeartRadio.

Bleep! with Ana Navarro

Bleep! with Ana Navarro

Fear thrives in silence and confusion. Ana Navarro rejects both. Her voice is an antidote to today’s chaos. Her new podcast, Bleep! with Ana Navarro, takes on today’s most pressing issues with the voices most connected to it: decision-makers, political leaders, cultural shapers, and people on the frontlines of the story. The conversations acknowledge the emotions we all feel—despair, sadness, fear— but emerge with knowledge, perspective, and hope. The belief is simple: fearless dialogue can transform fear into courage, and courage into change. When fear dominates the headlines, this show digs deeper. Because information, debate, and conversation don’t just ease fear, they give us power to shape the future.

Hey Jonas!

Hey Jonas!

Hey Jonas! The official Jonas Brothers podcast. Hosted by Kevin, Joe, and Nick Jonas. It’s the Jonas Brothers you know... musicians, actors, and well, yes, brothers. Now, they’re sharing another side of themselves in the playful, intimate, and irreverent way only they can. Spend time with the Jonas Brothers here and stay a little bit longer for deep conversations like never before.

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

Connect

© 2026 iHeartMedia, Inc.

  • Help
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • AdChoicesAd Choices