Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
Luck and load, So Michael Veri Show is.
Speaker 3 (00:13):
On the air.
Speaker 4 (00:14):
There is no denying that the Russians interfered in the election.
Whether or not they had willing or unwitting help from
the Trump team, they interfered, and they did so to
help him and hurt me.
Speaker 5 (00:28):
The implications of this are frankly nothing short of historic.
Over one hundred documents that we released on Friday really
detail and provide evidence of how this treasonous conspiracy was
directed by President Obama just weeks before he was due
to leave office, after President Trump had already gotten elected.
(00:51):
This is not a Democrat or Republican issue. This is
an issue that is so serious it should concern every
single American.
Speaker 6 (01:07):
And sing it away.
Speaker 5 (01:14):
Creating this piece of manufactured intelligence that that claims that
Russia had helped Donald Trump get elected contradicted every other
assessment that had been made previously in the months leading
up to the election that said exactly the opposite, that
Russia neither had neither the intent nor the capability to
try to quote unquote hack the United States election for
(01:37):
the presidency of the United States.
Speaker 7 (01:49):
It away when you.
Speaker 6 (01:58):
Look at that for those Bakers.
Speaker 8 (01:59):
They have a stone calt and it was President Obama.
From what Chelsea told me, She's got thousands of additional
documents common so President Obama it was his concept, his idea,
but he also got it from Crook and Hillary Clinton
cooked is a fleet dollar bill.
Speaker 1 (02:29):
So Roniellis does not have complete control over the Commissioner's
Court right now. It's unclear what has made Leslie Brioni's
and Adrian Garcia break free, but I like it. They
have joined with Republican Tom Ramsay and they comprised a
(02:49):
three to two majority to pass a budget that was
not to Lena hid All goes liking well. She took
to social media and she wrote, quote, after the Harris
County budget faced significant problems in twenty twenty two due
(03:15):
to the two Republican members of court at the time,
I held my nose and voted to redraw precinpt boundaries
because that civil court judge promised she would be a
careful steward of taxpayer dollars. Do you waled what she
(03:37):
just confessed? So she says she didn't draw the boundary,
she held her nose and voted for it. The person
who drew the boundary is Rodney Ellis. Rodney Ellis is
a county commissioner redrawing boundaries so that his colleague Cactus
(03:59):
Jack Kegel would be kicked off the court. But she
says after the Harris County budget faced significant problems in
twenty twenty two, due to the two Republican members of
court at the time, she Rodney and Adrian Garcia, comprised
a three to two majority, the minority couldn't do anything
(04:22):
to them except for one thing, raise questions that might
if not covered by the Chronicle. Because Rodney's already covered
that he rides bicycles are used to at least once
often twice a week with a fellow who was the
(04:45):
publisher of the Houston Chronicle at the time. Well, that
fellow then went to Arnold Venture's. Well, I understand he
may not be there anymore either, But they had complete
hegemony over the County Affairs and the Houston Chronicle, writing
(05:09):
gushing articles and catch and kill articles about Rodney when
they came out like, oh, I don't know the African
art he was storing in the county taxpayer funded warehouse
(05:29):
and hiding it. We now know that it's some sketchy
Nigerian dude who says he doesn't own it, when that
was who supposedly owned it, and that guy is highly questionable.
Fortunately he's gone through a divorce where this woman has
pointed out all the stuff that he did, which is
how this stuff comes to light because he used a
(05:49):
chronicle in about put any resources into it. But Lena
had all go says, we couldn't have two of the
five members, even though they're the minority and they can't
change the vote. We can't have them asking questions and
causing problems for the budget. So I held my nose
and voted to redraw precinct boundaries. Why did you do that?
(06:15):
Because that civil court judge promised she would be a
careful steward of taxpayer dollars. See, they had put her
on the county court to get her ready for Commissioner's court.
That's Leslie Brioni's and that was Jeff Cohen, the publisher
of the chronicle, and then went to Arnold Venture's and
(06:37):
Rodney Ellis's buddy. So they had put her on the
county court and then ran her for county Commissioner's court.
And so Lena's point was Lena's not making any the decisions.
That's the funny party. We all know she's not making
any of the decisions. Rodney is. But she's trying to
(06:58):
take credit that she did. But that decision having been made,
now she's angry. So she says, after I held my
nose and voted, why'd you have to hold your nose?
Because it was a horrible thing you do you did.
But today she balanced a budget on the backs of
working people, and she supported mechanisms like a hiring freeze
(07:20):
that should only be used in dire economic times like
the Great Recession. She joined the far right Republican in
funding massive pay increases, including sixty percent, for elected constables,
while cutting programs for children. You ever noticed how many
(07:40):
times women in politics claim to speak for the children
when they don't have any. It's very, very creepy. You
think she started cussing Ramon. Don't forget Lena the sailor mouth.
Speaker 9 (08:04):
She's Leana the Saale her mouth dot com, Queen of
the South. She's bad at koram in a formal forum,
she's clean on the same her.
Speaker 10 (08:15):
Mouth interruptors to be watching this and fearing you they
can't do their jumps, because then they're gonna be the.
Speaker 9 (08:21):
Olympic gets shot.
Speaker 2 (08:21):
And then there's the production the love Bug Dean Joe.
This has been race driver Michael Barry, funny Hacker. That's
Ramon the King of Dean suggested for general audiences.
Speaker 9 (08:41):
She's Leana the same her mouth dot com Queen of
the South. She's bad at decorum in a formal forum,
she's clean of the same her.
Speaker 10 (08:51):
Mouth sterruptors to be watching this and fearing you they
can't do their jumps because then they're gonna be the
Olympic gets shot. And if my colleaues want to put
this in the inches strict Attorney's office, in the Sheriff's office,
let's take a vote. Let's be on the record. Who
wants it to go were so that I can then
go explain to my community what else we're doing, because
some of us are wrapped around the little finger of
(09:14):
a woman who I don't know what the she's threatened
you with.
Speaker 1 (09:17):
She's Lea of the same.
Speaker 9 (09:19):
For com me, Queen off the South, She's bad at
decorum in a formal forms lean.
Speaker 6 (09:26):
On the same.
Speaker 1 (09:31):
Yeah, that pretty much does it. That that pretty much
captures what we're going for there. I think that'll I
think that'll do. Indeed, I get a report every morning
from Camp Hope, and one of the things I get
is someone or some organization who has done something nice
(09:53):
for our veterans helping veterans at Camp Hope of the
PTSD Foundation, and and it was Weatherford. Weatherford has done
a lot for Camp Hope over the last ten years.
And Weatherford's twenty twenty five walks just raised one hundred
and twenty five thousand dollars for Camp Hope and the
PTSD Foundation of America. A special thanks was given for
(10:18):
sponsors like Salesforce, Wells Fargo, Barclays, Jay. But how many
of these do you know who they are? You do
Salesforce know who that is?
Speaker 6 (10:30):
You know?
Speaker 1 (10:31):
That's the software that iHeart uses for the selling program.
That's what your live endorsements are put into Salesforce. That's
how they know who's handling what client, how much that
client has been built, whether they've been paid. It's a
big I don't know if it's the biggest sales management software,
but it's the biggest one I know of. No, no,
(10:54):
if they skip your pay that's payroll, that's workday that's
a whole different software Wells Fargo. And by the way,
they skip your pay because you don't remind him to
put it in the system. You ever know, they don't
skip my pay because guests who doesn't fail to remind them.
Speaker 5 (11:06):
Me.
Speaker 1 (11:07):
See, Ramone's thing is he sits around and doesn't want
to speak up and make sure he gets paid and
make sure his stuff gets taken care of him. I
don't want to bother him, but then it doesn't get
handled and he comes to me, and so I end
up having to crack the whip on people. So Ramone
sits over there because he doesn't want to stand up
for himself, whereas I'm all over I'm making sure I
get every penny it's supposed to have. But I digress.
(11:29):
So that's Salesforce. But you're talking about workday Wells Fargo.
You me with Wells Fargo. What do you know about
Wells Fargo? The stage go. It's good branding. Maybe they'll
do a cracker barrel and put you know, a dude
with no wiener or something. I mean, I don't know.
If I don't, I don't know that Wells Fargo's whoa
got just saying that's what one hundred and sixty year
(11:50):
old logo, and it's it's probably better today than it's
ever been. Very smart Barclays, you know what that is? Okay? What? Okay? JLLL.
JLLL is a big real estate company. And I don't
know where JLL came from, but they just all of
(12:12):
a sudden started building managing a lot of properties around now.
They've probably been around one hundred years, and I just
didn't know them. Just all of a sudden, I started
noticing project. The first first one I noticed was RCC.
They started building, you know, like four hundred apartments, nice
apartments right across from the RCC, and I start checking around.
(12:34):
I knew the folks that had been around all the
time that I've been around, Moody, Rambit for instance, trans Western, Cushman, Wakefield,
companies that I had heard of over the years. But
JL I think JLL is the biggest now not positive,
but I think so KPMG. You know who that is?
(12:54):
That is? See what k It's one of the big
used to be a big six accounting firms, I think
is only four now. Pete Marwick the pm is Pete Marwick.
Let's see it used to be Arthur Anderson, ernstin Young,
which I think was ernstin Winnie, Ernst and Young, Arthur Anderson,
(13:15):
Pete Marwick and Deloitte and Touche, and I guess, let's see,
there was deal with there were some more, mind you,
I'm talking about early to mid nineties. I want to
say there were six, but I'm not thinking of Deloitte,
Pete Marwick, Arthur Anderson, who was ernstin Young. I can't
(13:48):
think who the others were, but I think there's four
left now Mustang Seal Solutions, you know them. I don't either. Anyway.
These are the folks who sponsored the the Weatherford Walks
at one hundred twenty five thousand dollars. Weatherford began supporting
our mission in twenty fifteen and have now raised well
over a million dollars during this time. They continue to
(14:09):
be big supporters in helping combat veterans save combat veterans lives.
You can go to pt SD USA dot org and
become a monthly member pt PTSD Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
(14:31):
ptsdusa dot org. If you can't find that, you can
email me and I will send you the link so
that you can go on there. You can become a
monthly partner a few bucks a month. You can make
a one time donation. You can find out about upcoming events.
My birthday weekend about November tenth, eleven twelve. Somewhere around there,
(14:53):
they're having the big event. They do a Friday night
event and then an all day Saturday event. It's a concert.
A lot of the are out there. They have a
barbecue contest, hook off raises. It's the biggest fundraiser for
Camp Hope through the course of the year. It's a
pretty cool deal. President Trump has announced that he is
directing Pete Hegseeth, the Secretary of Defense, to send troops
(15:17):
to Portland to protect ICE facilities under siege by Antifa
and other domestic terrorists.
Speaker 11 (15:24):
Well, it's not being received very well by Oregon's governor
and leaders there, who despite the scenes we have seen
playing out night after night of the protesters camped out here.
Speaker 1 (15:35):
You see it right now.
Speaker 11 (15:37):
That is not a peaceful protest. These protesters have been
assaulting ICE officers and federal law enforcement out there. But
yet the Oregon leaders are upset at President Trump for
the deployment to try and get this under control.
Speaker 12 (15:51):
Listen, there is no insurrection, there is no threat to
national security, and there is no need for military troops
in our major city. Military service members should be dedicated
to real emergencies. The members of the Oregon National Guard.
(16:11):
Their mission is to stand up and protect Oregonians and
they will do that every day. But they are not
needed in the city. They are not needed here.
Speaker 13 (16:20):
We have a place at the table for everyone willing
to lend a hand, including the federal government. However, we
have no tolerance for anyone in Portland who uses this
difficult moment.
Speaker 1 (16:34):
To hurt others or our home.
Speaker 13 (16:38):
Those wouldn't Those with bad intentions should take a hike
because they'll be held responsible for their actions.
Speaker 1 (16:51):
Who would have reading When I'm bummed my because I
have to look across at everything. You wants rain damage?
Speaker 7 (17:04):
Oh, come on, hell, you can't do that.
Speaker 14 (17:08):
If you do it, I'm then you're gonna have more hell.
Speaker 15 (17:09):
Over than a little bit co bom Zellers.
Speaker 6 (17:12):
And you listen to the Michael Berray show.
Speaker 16 (17:15):
Football here we come.
Speaker 7 (17:17):
Here's the order number one.
Speaker 16 (17:25):
Houston has the orders.
Speaker 7 (17:27):
The greatest football team.
Speaker 3 (17:30):
We take the ball.
Speaker 7 (17:31):
From pool to Gold like no one's ever seen. We're
in the Airwa're on the ground always and control.
Speaker 1 (17:39):
And when you say the Boilers.
Speaker 7 (17:41):
Get talking super Bowl, because we're the U stun Bilers.
You the overs use the oilers number one.
Speaker 5 (17:52):
Yes, we're the U Stern.
Speaker 7 (17:54):
However U stern overs use then over's number. We got
(18:21):
the offense, we got the deepense we give the other team. No,
that's where the U stunt oilers.
Speaker 16 (18:33):
Oil.
Speaker 1 (18:33):
Let's say moment keep the fond memories of love your
Blue alive, so we would open the phone line seven
one three, one thousand. You may call, and you have
twenty seconds for any love you Blue memory you want
to share. You can simply state the name of a
player that you loved or who lived next door to you,
(18:55):
or who you went to school with, or a play
or a game. But you have twenty seconds and then
you'll be dropped. So everybody gets a chance to play
your love You Blue fond memory seven one three nine
nine nine one thousand, seven one three nine nine nine
one thousand seven to one three nine nine one thousand.
The phone lines open them on. Okay, he'll sit in
(19:17):
there and turn them off so he didn't have to
be bothered with the phone ring. Okay, thank you, appreciate,
appreciate your efforts. The big four accounting firms I couldn't
remember are Deloitte e Y which is El ernstin Young, KPMG,
and PwC, which was Price Waterhouse Coopers. Until probably about
(19:41):
two thousand or so, there were eight. I said big six.
There were big eight, and they were Arthur Anderson, which
in Run took down when they certified the financials for
n RUN and it was clear that in Runs financials
were not showing, say sound. It took Arthur Anderson down,
(20:04):
Arthur Young, which along with Ernst and Winnie combined to
become Ernst and Young, Cooper's in librand Deloitte Haskins and Sells,
Touche Ross Deloitte Haskins and Sells combined with Touche Ross
(20:26):
to become Deloitte Touche, or as we used to say,
Deloitte douche and think it was the funniest thing ever,
not because we had any problem with anybody in Deloitte Tousche.
We just thought it was funny to double d Deloit douche.
Sounded so much funnier. Pete Marwick Mitchell, which is what
became k p m G, and Price Waterhouse. So Arthur Anderson,
(20:50):
Arthur Young, Cooper's and librand Deloitte Haskins and Sells, Ernst
and Winnie, Pete Marwick, Mitchell, Price Waterhouse, and Tooche Ross
Price Waterhouse UH combined with Cooper's and Librand to become.
Speaker 3 (21:07):
P w C.
Speaker 1 (21:08):
So let's see, Deloitte Touche was a consolidation of Deloit,
Haskins and Sales and Touche Ross, and then e Y
Ernst and Young was a amalgam of Arthur Young and
Ernst and Winnie. And then you have KPMG, which was
(21:31):
Pete Marwit Mitchell and I don't know where they I
don't actually know what the K is.
Speaker 10 (21:37):
Do you know what the K is?
Speaker 7 (21:39):
What?
Speaker 1 (21:41):
It's not kryptonite? But you said it so, so as
if you said Arthur Anderson went under and then you
got Price Waterhouse Coopers, which is what you got from
Price Waterhouse and Cooper's. So of the eight one went
under Ernst and Young Cooper's liver. See, so it feels
(22:02):
like we got an extra one hanging around here. Pete Morrowick,
Price Waterhouse. Oh, Price Waterhouse became Price Waterhouse Cooper. Okay,
hold on, I got to work this out in my head.
So Arthur Anderson went away, Arthur Young and uh Ernst
and Winnie made one firm. Then you've got Cooper's Librand
(22:33):
combined with Price Waterhouse to make pe w C, Deloitte,
Haskins and Cells and Touche Ross combined to make Deloitte
Touche leaving Pete Marrowick Mitchell. What is the KPMG. I
(23:01):
gotta find huh what Kellogg? It's Kellogg? No, I don't.
I mean maybe kind of bothers me that I don't
know that I've ever known. All Right, it's time for
your oiler's memories. You got twenty seconds wrong since I can't. Oh,
(23:23):
we have a new phone system being put in. I'll
be able to control the phones in a couple of days,
maybe even as soon as tomorrow. But you'll have twenty
minutes from the time of twenty seconds from the time
you start, So make it quick. Don't ask how I'm doing,
don't ask if you're on the air. Just assume you're
on the air. You got twenty seconds. Get to it.
This is very, very important. The rules. It's a procedural game. Ramon.
You have twenty seconds for you love your blue memory
where you know down the list even gonna be interesting
(23:45):
ONNYE Matthew Drew, Larry Andy all the way down and
then we'll start back over seven one, three, nine, nine, nine,
one thousand. If you can't get through, just keep calling.
When one line opens the other one. You know, owny,
you're up, Go.
Speaker 6 (23:57):
Okay.
Speaker 3 (23:57):
So I went to school with Earl Campbell.
Speaker 12 (24:00):
I'm homkie Houston.
Speaker 3 (24:01):
Watched Monday night football against Miami with a friend of
mine coming in from Alaska.
Speaker 5 (24:08):
To watch the Oilers with lovely blue pomp pomps.
Speaker 1 (24:13):
And this guy was floored.
Speaker 15 (24:15):
He'd never seen Houston.
Speaker 1 (24:17):
This gung oh for Do you remember who we played
that night?
Speaker 15 (24:23):
Yes, Miami dlphin that's correct.
Speaker 1 (24:25):
Good call, Matthew, you're up, go ahead, brother.
Speaker 15 (24:29):
Yeah. My favorite memory was my seventh grade English teacher
that happened to be a Derek Dall at the time.
So I don't remember her name. I don't think I
remember anything from that year because I didn't learn much.
Speaker 3 (24:41):
But you know why, Oh, I.
Speaker 1 (24:43):
Bet Dan Pastorini will know there were rumors there. He
gets mad when I bring it up, like, dude, why
are you? Oh God, you know he got out of
a limbo with a Derek Dall on each arm. Yeah,
what is dude? You should be happy that. Forty five
(25:05):
years later people are still talking about it. Let's go
to Drew. You're up, Drew, go ahead, you at twenty seconds?
Speaker 6 (25:12):
Anything Earl Campbell. Earl was my hero.
Speaker 3 (25:16):
He was my hero.
Speaker 6 (25:17):
I was playing freshman football at bel Air.
Speaker 15 (25:20):
Earl was the baddest dude out there at that time.
Speaker 1 (25:23):
Anything Earl, Bro, how you gonna be black? And played
football at bel Air?
Speaker 3 (25:29):
Hey, I'm hey, I get.
Speaker 16 (25:31):
Around, bro.
Speaker 15 (25:32):
I love all races.
Speaker 6 (25:33):
I love everybody I know.
Speaker 1 (25:34):
I just didn't know that had they made black at
bel Air?
Speaker 3 (25:38):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (25:38):
I was black at bel Air. I wasn't the only one.
Speaker 3 (25:41):
Bro.
Speaker 1 (25:41):
Oh you were black?
Speaker 3 (25:42):
Kicked anybody is?
Speaker 1 (25:44):
I was black?
Speaker 13 (25:45):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (25:45):
Okay, I didn't know if you were black back then?
Larry go, you go. You gotta be quick.
Speaker 6 (25:52):
I'm an old motorcycle cope. I used to his story.
Speaker 1 (25:55):
Hold on, Larry, we're gonna We're gonna hold it over
to the next one. I got it quick, feeling that
one not gonna be a short at all.
Speaker 16 (26:02):
Barry dam had a ten foot and he showed it
to the leg next to she thought it was his name,
so she made it feather Ray.
Speaker 13 (26:23):
Now it's only three feet, dam, that's the movie had
a ten foot queen, and he showed it.
Speaker 10 (26:31):
To the lady next to.
Speaker 16 (26:34):
She thought it was his name, so she made it
the Ray. Now it's only three feet and that's the
Ready had a ten foot baby, and he showed it
to the lady next door. She thought it was his name,
so she did it father Ray. Now it's only three
feet and that's the.
Speaker 1 (26:57):
Ready had a ten foot All right, you quick right
from Aron regularly playing programming for twenty second vignette memories
of your love you Blue, your favorite player, How you
knew him, You lived next door to him, You spotted
him here or there, You sat on the front row
(27:17):
of the game, whatever that may be. You have twenty seconds,
so get right to it. Seven one, three, nine, nine, nine,
one thousand. We'll start from the bottom and work up.
Let's start with Andy.
Speaker 16 (27:28):
Andy, go.
Speaker 3 (27:31):
All right. So I moved to Quell Valley in Missouri
City in nineteen seventy six. I was ten years old
and about four houses down.
Speaker 6 (27:39):
Mike Barber lived right on the street from me.
Speaker 3 (27:41):
And I used to go down there and play catch
with him. And then also one of my best friends
that i'd met early on when I was ten, his
dad was an Oiler coach with Bomb and then when
I was sixteen, I got to go to training camp
in San Angelo and be a ball boy. So when
you're sixteen years old.
Speaker 1 (28:01):
Of course it is, of course it is.
Speaker 2 (28:04):
You know.
Speaker 1 (28:04):
The amazing thing, my great grandfather, Charlie Preston Seeber. Charlie, Yeah,
Charlie Preston Seber, was a security guard for the Oilers
at that San Angelo facility. Now that's cool, don't get
(28:25):
me wrong, But at the time he was a security guard.
You ever see those pictures from the World War Two
era that Brady or one of the famous photographers took
and the person's kind of standing there like like calladja.
That was my great grandfather. He was about five eleven,
(28:47):
one hundred and five pounds he was. He had a
lot of American in and him, so he was very
very very dark skin and wizard features and he looked
like if you blew him he'd fall over. So I'm
not sure how serious they were about security per se.
(29:09):
He wore a security outfit. It was kind of cute.
He were a cute, little little security out. He felt
so happy, but he was so frail at that point,
and he was standing there with a big stick. I
don't know what he was gonna do with that stick
and whoop somebody, I suppose. I mean, I can just
imagine Randy White coming over and I'm tearing boys up,
and there's my grand my great grandfather. I don't know
(29:31):
what he was gonna do at eighty years old, but
he loved to be the security guard at the front
and gate.
Speaker 14 (29:37):
I think he was really more access control, pre computer era.
Maybe you had to show your credentials, but we were
so proud, still proud. I think it's the greatest story ever. Larry,
you're on the Michael Berry Show. Give us your twenty
second oilers memory love your blue era.
Speaker 6 (29:57):
Memory of the Older. That is actually about the coach
because I was a little motorcycle cop back in the
day and your radio station used to have him escorted
from the stadium area back over to wherever they were
broadcasting remote and the limo ran out of Guess, off
(30:20):
the west loop over there. I had to turn around,
go back, gave mister Grant Lanville my helmet and said, okay,
hang on, brother, Here we go. So we got to
the broadcasting area and walked in, and I actually didn't
walk in. They wanted him to ride in on the
back of the motorcycle into the hotel lobby. So that's
(30:42):
my story about the Houston Olivers.
Speaker 1 (30:46):
Are you on a motorcycle right now? Because there's like
a wind, It's not like you're in a wind tunnel.
Speaker 6 (30:52):
I'm setting in my truck waiting to walk in for surgery.
Speaker 1 (30:56):
Oh my goodness, what are you having done, Larry?
Speaker 6 (31:00):
I'm having a little or work done so you know
I can talk better. Does that sound better? I turned
fan off?
Speaker 1 (31:07):
Oh I don't care what what it added to the authenticity?
I thought it was post production, you know, some some
element that what are you having done to your mouth?
Speaker 6 (31:21):
Well, I've got a tooth that's broken off. It's a
gum and the surgeon's got to cut it out and
sew it up and say, you know, have a nice nap.
Is he going to do? I guess they take everything
because they like say he cuts it out and then
sews it up. And they wanted to know if they
(31:43):
wanted to put a stem in or an implant while
there's not a tooth over the top of it. So
I don't I don't need need that area. We just
make it part of the gumming life in an old age.
Speaker 1 (31:55):
Yeah, I.
Speaker 6 (31:57):
Retired thirty five years ago, so I've been going a while.
Speaker 1 (32:00):
How how old are you? I'm seventy seven, seventy so
you retired early. Did you go do something after that?
Speaker 6 (32:11):
I did? I was I went over to another office
there in Harris County and was the chief for a
while and retired from there and live in the country
and then enjoy a life on my sweet thing.
Speaker 3 (32:25):
There you go?
Speaker 1 (32:26):
Where are you living?
Speaker 6 (32:30):
Live in Needville? Oh?
Speaker 2 (32:31):
Right on?
Speaker 1 (32:32):
Okay, I got a comment on a pastor.
Speaker 6 (32:35):
Now everybody's going to who this is?
Speaker 1 (32:37):
Is that right?
Speaker 6 (32:38):
Yeah? I'm sorry.
Speaker 1 (32:41):
How will they know? Do you go to the same
cafe every morning or something?
Speaker 10 (32:47):
No?
Speaker 6 (32:48):
You know, there's not a lot of police officers moved
out the area. There are a few, but we live
on forty acres out here and belong to my wife's
grandfather else built nineteen six.
Speaker 1 (33:02):
Is that sweet?
Speaker 6 (33:06):
Yes, she's sitting over here. I've known her since she
was ten years old?
Speaker 1 (33:10):
So how were you at that time?
Speaker 6 (33:15):
I was ten and she was ten. We were five
days apart.
Speaker 1 (33:18):
Oh my goodness. All right, and what are what's her families?
The family that owned the land. What's their last name?
Speaker 6 (33:26):
Rachler very German?
Speaker 1 (33:31):
What is her name, Larry, you know it Rachler?
Speaker 6 (33:36):
Well you asked, well, she wanted an opportunity to talk
to you, you know, such a famous person this time
of morning.
Speaker 1 (33:43):
We just That's what all my friends, I don't know
how they how they hear it, but all my friends wise,
while I'm talking to them, they're wives will throw things
in from the side, and I'll hear some comments here
and there, and finally I'll say who is she talking to?
And they'll say, oh, she's in on our converse?
Speaker 6 (34:04):
Yeah you home, Yes, Yeah.
Speaker 1 (34:09):
Nice summer.
Speaker 6 (34:11):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (34:11):
Y'all been together sixty seven years?
Speaker 6 (34:13):
I won't take not quite that long.
Speaker 3 (34:18):
We know we've been together.
Speaker 6 (34:21):
That would that would have been something to report to
the CPS. We've been that long, honey, Michael, I met
you in the football suite at at the n r G.
What one of the Texans games I worked for, Bob McNair, Oh,
what is your name, Linda Fox Fox?
Speaker 1 (34:49):
I'm trying to remember which game it would have been.
Speaker 4 (34:52):
Uh was Bob a long time ago because I retired, Yes, sir,
I retired in two thousand sixteen, so I'm no longer there.
Speaker 5 (35:02):
But I did meet you that one time.
Speaker 6 (35:04):
Huh.
Speaker 1 (35:04):
How about that. It's nice to see you again. Take Caro, Larry,
please all right, hanging tack. We got a couple of
coffees a month.