Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
Michael Varry Show is on the air. Let's go for it.
Speaker 3 (00:18):
Body, you ain't got no job.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
You're young and you got your hail. What do you
want with the job?
Speaker 3 (00:29):
I believe we drove around all day and there's not
a single job in this town.
Speaker 2 (00:33):
There's nothing, not a second.
Speaker 4 (00:35):
Yeah, unless you want to work forty hours a week, really.
Speaker 2 (00:39):
Should quit that same job.
Speaker 5 (00:40):
Man, Hey, man, I wish I could man if I equipment.
Speaker 3 (00:43):
The whole place would fall apart with them, and I.
Speaker 1 (00:45):
Don't need it there, man, responsibility is a heavy responsibility.
Speaker 4 (00:48):
Man.
Speaker 2 (00:48):
I don't like my job, and I don't think I'm
gonna go anymore.
Speaker 4 (00:53):
He's not gonna go?
Speaker 2 (00:54):
Yeah, won't you get fired?
Speaker 1 (00:56):
I don't know, but I really don't like it, and
I'm not gonna.
Speaker 4 (01:11):
The older boy blessed So is preparing for his career
Colic Carnival.
Speaker 2 (01:17):
He's gotta be proud. Oh yeah yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:19):
Last season he was adrifty dust spreader on a Teltic
world and he thinks that maybe next year I'll be
guessing people's way or marketing for the act woman.
Speaker 2 (01:28):
I need a different job. I'm having real trouble in
a confined indoors space. How do you feel about working outdoors?
What else do you have? I'm gonna lose my job, Pilot,
I just calm down. I killed the boss.
Speaker 4 (01:42):
You think they're not gonna fire me for a thing
like that?
Speaker 2 (02:01):
I mean, please, do not let me forget the weekend
review again. Please.
Speaker 3 (02:09):
Tilman Holloway is our guest. We are talking about bitcoin.
And if you find yourself thinking, well, I keep hearing
bitcoin talked about.
Speaker 2 (02:20):
And I don't even know what it is, and you're
in the.
Speaker 3 (02:23):
Right place, or as is happening with a lot of
my friends, Ramon, do you mind if I mentioned pickleball
just one time? So I've got some guys I play
pickleball with who are rather aggressive investors, and it often
comes around to the discussion of pickleball and of of bitcoin.
(02:48):
And I am amazed how many people have gotten into this.
Tilman Holloway is our guest archa ar chpublic dot com. Tillman,
why is there a run up? Last I looked at
it was one hundred and nine thousand. Why has there
been a run up in the cost? What's driving that?
Speaker 2 (03:07):
Inflation? Yeah?
Speaker 4 (03:09):
Inflation. We have to inflate our currency because we're a
debt driven society and you have to continue to inflate
to make the debt cheaper. And so when you inflate
fiat currency across the globe and you you don't know
the true.
Speaker 2 (03:25):
Denominator against the dollar that.
Speaker 4 (03:27):
You hold, well, bitcoin only has twenty one million, So
it's a it's a hedge against inflation, but not just
our inflation, but the global inflation that we see. And
that's why everybody has kind of piled in or seen
it as a safe hayden. Even people from the traditional
finance space like Larry Sint have latched onto this premise
(03:48):
and kind of seen that as its primary driving force
of value. So, yeah, being a hedge against inflationary environments
is the primary use case for bitcoin.
Speaker 2 (03:58):
Man Fink is an unfortunate name, isn't it.
Speaker 4 (04:05):
Well, it's unfortunate enough of me. He's got eighteen trillion
under management.
Speaker 2 (04:09):
Yeah, but he's got enough to change his name.
Speaker 3 (04:15):
My wife went to My wife went to law school
with a girl named Beth Dick, and she changed her
name when they graduated. But first and last year, true story,
and uh, well, Michael Michael Savage was Michael Wiener. He
changed it to Michael Savage. The uh the publisher I
got more publisher of National Inquirer Bob Pecker, Dude, you
(04:39):
got enough money change your name.
Speaker 4 (04:44):
I don't disagree. It seemed like solid Joyce's right there.
Speaker 3 (04:48):
Tilman Holloway is our guest archpublic dot com. Why do
people I wrote some questions down, so if it sounds
like I'm ready, I am. Why do people call bitcoin
freedom money? And nobody wants to call it no money?
Speaker 4 (05:07):
It's the only money that's permissionless. So if if, for example,
I write a check, that check can bounce. The instant
settling of money is a problem that society has not
solved yet. Bitcoin solves that problem. When I send you bitcoin,
I can't get it back. There is no clawing it back.
(05:28):
There's no saying, oh well, I changed my mind. It's
a final settlement of value and it's trustless, so I
don't need to meet you in a parking lot with
cash or gold coins. I can do it geographically from
anywhere in the world, and I can do it with
anyone else in the world wherever they are, So it's
it has unique properties that no other instrument has that
(05:52):
make it more valuable than other instruments, no different than
you know, gold has has value because it has certain characteristics.
Bitcoin has those same characteristic kind of a two point
zero version or improvement upon them.
Speaker 3 (06:06):
So the idea is that it stores value in an
alternate way, and in a time of inflation, where people
are scared, they're looking at things like gold, they're looking
at things like bitcoin.
Speaker 2 (06:19):
Is that fair to say, correct, that's exactly well.
Speaker 4 (06:22):
When price of eggs and milk are going up, bitcoins
price is also going up, but it's going up faster
than those other products. So your purchasing power is preserved
by owning bitcoin versus owning anything else. You have more
power to buy things in the future. Five years ago,
(06:43):
you could buy the average US house with thirty bitcoin.
Now you could buy it with three bitcoin. So it's
continuing to provide a hedge against the inflation that we
see or the rising of prices. And we don't meet
anybody ever that says I wish I had a bought bitcoin.
That's not the common complaint. The common complaint from everybody
(07:05):
is I wish I had bought bitcoin when I heard
about it, or I wish I had bought more bitcoin
when I heard about it. And so that's what arch
Public did is it solved those problems with software. We
created software that buys bitcoin on your behalf, but doesn't
do it in some random way, does it on the deps,
does it in the most prudent, appropriate manner that financial
(07:28):
geniuses have ever come up with, which is an intelligent
dollar cost averaging way. And so this is a set
it and forget it, hands off approach that gets you
to your goal and gets you where you want to
be in terms of accumulating bitcoin. But you don't have
to become an expert.
Speaker 2 (07:44):
You don't have to.
Speaker 4 (07:45):
It's completely hands off. You set it and forget it,
and when you check it, the next time you check it,
you'll be headed towards that progress of the goal that
you set out when you set it in motion.
Speaker 2 (07:57):
Have you ever heard the name Ed Bosarge? I have
not so. Ed Bosarge he's still alive. I don't know him,
but I know his son. And they came.
Speaker 3 (08:11):
I think the company was called Quantusaphria, but they basically
did this trading in Houston, and they made billions of
dollars for their clients. But before there was bitcoin they
were doing. I mean, I get what you're doing and
hold on prosen putting on a stake show.
Speaker 4 (08:30):
Yellow brand pudding pops maybe the goodness of real jello pudding.
Speaker 6 (08:35):
I'm following out the spiral desination or no yellow Pops messager, hang.
Speaker 2 (08:46):
Hang it foo Where I.
Speaker 3 (08:54):
Asked my CPA firm for some guidance on the tax
cuts that President Trump has proposed. It was originally called
the TCJA, and when Trump was elected, one of the
first things he did was the TCJA, which was lowered
(09:16):
the tax brackets, more generous child tax credits, twenty percent
deductions for pass through businesses, which was the Qualified Business
income deduction. All of that is set to expire next year.
My CPA say, that would mean that more than sixty
percent of taxpayers we'll see higher taxes in twenty twenty
(09:39):
six if the TCJA is not extended, if the Trump
tax cuts are not extended, and if we don't have
time today, I'll get into those on Monday. But these
are very interesting times. If you do not have a
good CPA firm and your business is growing and maybe
you've outgrown your original CPA or they've retired or died
(10:02):
or moved out of town or whatever else. Email me,
and I'll connect you with my guys because there's a
lot of brain power under that roof.
Speaker 4 (10:11):
They have.
Speaker 3 (10:14):
Become a huge resource to me on tax matters and
they're fantastic. Tilman Holloway is archpublic dot com? Are you
the founder, Tillman?
Speaker 2 (10:26):
I am. I am the founder and the CEO. Okay, So.
Speaker 3 (10:31):
If you're in an elevator and you've got one minute
to explain to someone, and I don't mean someone that
has no knowledge of the markets, no knowledge of gold
and where its value is, and precious metals and these
sorts of things. Somebody has a pretty good understanding of
our financial system and monetary policy and all that. And
(10:52):
you're explaining what bitcoin is to them, knowing that they
have some knowledge of it.
Speaker 2 (10:59):
You have one man in it, go.
Speaker 4 (11:04):
Dick.
Speaker 3 (11:04):
If you don't have it, dude, you took three seconds
taking a breath. You burned three seconds.
Speaker 4 (11:12):
It's to finish this thing up in in twenty five seconds.
We can sit around and wait for another thirty seconds
then I and still get it in.
Speaker 2 (11:19):
Okay, hold on, I got to restart the clock. Restart clock. Okay,
here we go.
Speaker 4 (11:24):
Diversification is the best strategy that anyone's ever come up with,
as it pertains the financial futures and planning them, and
bitcoin has made it sixteen years with an average return
of forty plus percent.
Speaker 2 (11:39):
It has the highest.
Speaker 4 (11:40):
Upside and the lowest downside risk that it's ever had
based upon the adoption of the banks and Wall Street
as a whole. There's etf products, there's option products, there's
all sorts of ways in which you can engage with
the engage with bitcoin. So to fear bitcoin and to
not engage with it because you don't understand it, those
days are going on. It's time to engage, and we've
(12:02):
created a suite of software that will make you engaging
with bitcoin as easy as it's ever been. Hands off,
completely thoughtless. Will walk you through setting up the software,
We'll show you exactly.
Speaker 2 (12:14):
What it will end up looking like at.
Speaker 4 (12:16):
The end of the term, and you'll be exactly where
you want to be at the end of that term.
So there's no reason to hold off any longer on
getting involved with bitcoin because there's no other asset like it,
and it gives you an upside that no other asset
gives you.
Speaker 2 (12:34):
It was a minute twelve, but that's fine.
Speaker 3 (12:41):
How many times did you get called for holding at
ut would you guess?
Speaker 2 (12:44):
Just estimate?
Speaker 4 (12:47):
Well, this was back when they let us play. I
didn't get called very much. Off sides was probably the
most common offense. And then I, you know, maybe five
or six times in my career I got called for holding.
Speaker 2 (12:59):
And how many times you think I was holding on
every play? Let's get let's get how many times you
think you got out of the game. How many times
you think you were off sides?
Speaker 4 (13:08):
Uh?
Speaker 2 (13:09):
Maybe, Chen, that's aggravating, isn't it.
Speaker 4 (13:14):
Oh Man, Yeah, it's listen. There's nothing that gets you
chewed out more on the sideline than offside. Simultines.
Speaker 3 (13:21):
I don't cheer for teams anymore, although I have to admit,
and I did not intend this to happen, but I've
gotten too emotionally invested in the Texans. But I made
a decision years ago. I made some kind of mental
health check up, decisions things I would do to make
sure that I stayed a stable human being. And I realized,
you know what, you have enough pressure. I don't want
(13:43):
to say stress. You have enough pressure in your life.
Let's not sports are a diversion for you. Let's just
enjoy them and not root for a team. So my
kids will come in and they'll go, whoever's losing, they'll go.
They I always root for the underdog, so I like
whoever's behind to try to come back. That's what I
started doing, and it makes it a lot more fun
(14:04):
and I don't get my feelings hurt. But when so,
I watch a lot of games that I don't have
a dog in the hunt, so I don't have to
get mad at some offensive lineman for being off side.
But when you see some big galot and he's off
side and they're they're they're marking it back, and it
feels like forever for that poor guy from the call
(14:26):
to marking it, especially if it was a good play
as a you know, productive play, and now they're bringing
it all back and they'll they pan in on his face.
Why are you doing that? It's not like he's gonna go, eh,
glad you'allow watch. It's the only time we ever see
the guy or hear his name and number sixty one
Tillman Holloway all sides on the play. I mean, that's
(14:47):
that that that's gotta suck, because nobody ever calls your
name when you blow open a hole and they run
to daylight.
Speaker 4 (14:54):
Of course not no, and the defense only has to
do one place.
Speaker 2 (14:58):
Right right hold on the sim.
Speaker 3 (15:01):
Public dot com, The Michael Barry Show, simple.
Speaker 5 (15:09):
Man Silman Holiday, Holiday, Holloway, archpublic dot com.
Speaker 2 (15:24):
Are you Moravian?
Speaker 4 (15:28):
Not?
Speaker 2 (15:28):
What are you? I think I'm English? I don't really
know that.
Speaker 4 (15:33):
I've never done one of the DNA.
Speaker 2 (15:35):
Tasks because you didn't want to be in the system
something like that.
Speaker 3 (15:44):
So, so what do you do for people? If somebody
calls or somebody goes to archpublic dot com and then
do they call you or email you?
Speaker 4 (15:53):
From there, they can book an appointment with us our software.
If you want to just get your feet and learn
about automated trading and learn about bitcoin, you can book
an appointment with us and we'll get you set up
with our free version of our software, which allows you
to trade up to ten thousand dollars a year. There's
no cost to that software at all. It's just an
(16:13):
educational tool so that we can introduce people to the technology.
If you, after using it, find it something that fits
inside your goals and you want to take it to
the next level. We have a concierge program that we
can walk you through that gives you exposure to futures
market trading as well as pretty much any crypto, not
just Bitcoin, and so we can get you set up
(16:35):
with a customized set of tools that will help you
get where you want to go. So it's all about education.
It's all about booking a demo with us, talking to
us about exactly what your journey looks like and how
you want to approach bitcoin to how you want to engage.
Speaker 2 (16:51):
That's pretty heavy stuff for a former meathead.
Speaker 4 (16:55):
Well, you know you've got to do something with all
the concussions that you put me through.
Speaker 2 (17:01):
I called Chance Monk during the break and I said, man.
Speaker 3 (17:04):
This guy, this guy's pretty pretty smart guy for where
I would have expected for a guard on a college
football team. He says, smart scout the team, one of
smart people who met in my life. The guy is
legitimately brilliant. I said, wow, okay, because Chance doesn't brag
on anybody but Chance.
Speaker 4 (17:25):
Well, I appreciate the compliment, but I don't know how
valuable it is coming from Chance.
Speaker 2 (17:31):
Well, look, you'd rather that than than you know, the alternative.
He could tell your Beef.
Speaker 3 (17:35):
Bowl story, He could tell your beef bull story or
he can tell how smart you are and you came
up with his software.
Speaker 2 (17:42):
So I remember the name of the company.
Speaker 3 (17:44):
It's quant Labs was bos Art's company, And without going
too deep into the weeds, my understanding is they figured
out a They figured out that the big that the
big trading houses would have to batch their trades late
in the day and they intercept that trade and it's
down to the nano second and they would make the
(18:06):
pep so you'd go to buy at eighteen and they
would step in and get it, and then you'd have
to buy from them. And it was literally a couple
of pennies per trade, but it was pure volume and
they made billions of dollars.
Speaker 2 (18:20):
As I understand it, it's.
Speaker 3 (18:21):
A legendary Houston story for people that know those sorts
of things. And I don't know if quant Labs is
the powerhouse they once were. Mister Bosarch is quite a
bit older, but my understanding is in the day they
did something that obviously you're wanting to do, which changed everything,
which added the technology to make it happen. So it's
(18:43):
a set it and forget it because most of us
can't sit there, like my buddy Ate Claypool and day
trade all day.
Speaker 2 (18:50):
Most people are running a business.
Speaker 4 (18:52):
Well, yeah, you don't have the time, the expertise, and
the emotional stress that it puts you on under is
not fun.
Speaker 2 (19:00):
This is the exact opposite.
Speaker 4 (19:02):
You get all of the benefits of somebody watching the
market for you twenty four to seven, waiting for the
dips to happen, waiting for the math to be done
and the criteria to be met in order for that
trade to be executed. And so you have expert traders
waiting on your behalf to execute exactly what you set
into motion. Before there was emotion, before you were in
(19:23):
a losing position, before you were up a bunch and
had to decide when you were going to start selling.
Automation is the future of retail trading. It just hasn't
gotten mainstream yet. And that's exactly what we're here to do,
is show people how easy it becomes to manage your
own trading activity when you have essentially robots sitting there
(19:45):
doing it for you.
Speaker 3 (19:47):
So maybe not a good analogy, but kind of like
what E trade was for stocks many years ago, empowering
an investor to do things on their own, engage.
Speaker 2 (20:00):
In a way they couldn't before.
Speaker 4 (20:03):
Yes, it's technology tearing down the walls of access, and
so you know, in order to if I said to you,
if you said to me, hey, I'd like to own
one bitcoint over the next two years, and I would like.
Speaker 2 (20:18):
To buy it, you know, I don't know when to
buy it.
Speaker 4 (20:21):
Well, if you picked today to buy it, you could
be incurring a lot of risk because there could be
significant price fluctuations off of today's price. But if you
set a schedule to purchase five hundred dollars increments of
it over the next year and a half two.
Speaker 2 (20:37):
Years, you're going to get a really healthy curve. You're
going to get a very prudent.
Speaker 4 (20:43):
Price entry point because you're going to be dollar cost averaging.
So then the next question then becomes, well, what are
you going to be looking for for those purchases in
those five hundred dollars increment. Well, the software is looking
for dips, and so you can program the software to
define what you think a dip is. So if you
think a dip is when the price of bitcoin goes
(21:04):
down by ten percent in a week, well then it'll
trigger that five hundred dollars trade. If that criteria is met,
and so you set these purchasing schedules into play, not
just blindly, but you have historical performance that you can
pull over the last sixteen years to see what the
future would hold if the past essentially it holds true.
(21:26):
And so you can set these up and forget about
them in multiple instances, both for kind of a four
to one case style, set it and forget it automatic
savings account. But then let's say you have the sale
of a car and you want to take a certain
portion of the proceeds and invest it into bitcoin. Well,
you can say I'm allocating X number of dollars and
(21:46):
I want it to be placed in the market over
this period of time, and the software will not just
blindly or dumbly.
Speaker 2 (21:53):
Enter those trades.
Speaker 4 (21:55):
It's actually monitoring the market and making very wise decisions
as it pertains to volatility and the depths, and you're
essentially buying on.
Speaker 2 (22:03):
All the depths.
Speaker 3 (22:06):
President Trump spoke at the Bitcoin Convention a few months ago,
and it was amazing to me how many people started
emailing me about bitcoin that had never shown any interest before.
And I'm not talking about thirty year old kids in downtown,
you know, businesses that are traders, and I'm talking to
people that own a family farm. Folks were all of
(22:28):
a sudden very interesting because President Trump is very interested.
Has that affected your business and how much is that
of how much has that affected bitcoin?
Speaker 4 (22:36):
Generally a huge amount. Your Bitcoin is making a metamorphosis
right now as it pertains to who it's appealing to.
It used to just appeal to kind of, like you said,
the younger generation that was trying to make a lot
of money exponential growth. It's now appealing as a hedge,
(23:00):
serious financial tool for people to hedge against inflation. So,
for example, if you are a high net worth individual
and you're looking to hedge against the nine percent inflationary
cost of holding cash, well, you can put a very
small amount of your net worth into bitcoin, and because
it's performed as well as it has and continues to,
(23:23):
it will outperform, even at a small percentage, the entire
inflationary impact that you have on your cash balance. So
it's an incredible tool to offset the economic environment that
we find ourselves in. As everything's going up in price.
Bitcoin's going up in price a lot faster because it
(23:45):
has proven scarce scarcity. So there's twenty one million that
can ever.
Speaker 2 (23:50):
Be created, no more, no less.
Speaker 3 (23:53):
And so as everything up, somebody wants to talk to him,
Email me and I'll connect you, or go to archpublic
dot com.
Speaker 2 (24:00):
Thanks, But is Michael Verry show enjoy it?
Speaker 4 (24:24):
Here was where I said, don cloudy and this with
the dream of hottles line everywhere.
Speaker 6 (24:30):
You gotta get down my.
Speaker 5 (24:32):
Hand and the Western Oil can under my uncle level chair.
Speaker 1 (24:38):
It's a little Friday no till.
Speaker 3 (24:43):
My buddy, Jimmy Pappus is kind of a Hawaii file.
Speaker 2 (24:48):
He lived in Hawaii. He loves Hawaii.
Speaker 3 (24:53):
He wears Hawaiian shirts every day. But also you we
wear Hawaiian shirts because they're big and blousy and they're
more comfortable if you're corpulent. But if I speak over
Aloha Friday, like I just did, he loses his mind.
(25:14):
It makes him crazy. So I read a number of newsletters.
There's one of them I get from the Wall Street Journal.
It's called Morning Brew and Today's it's always kind of.
Speaker 2 (25:26):
A little quirky story.
Speaker 3 (25:27):
At the beginning, he said, if you're spending an entire
paycheck on eggs, you might as well prepare them to perfection.
And scientists now say they have discovered the recipe to
cook the best possible boiled eggs. Oh, I got your attention.
Well here's the problem. It takes thirty two minutes. I
don't care how good a boiled egg is, it ain't
(25:48):
worth thirty two minutes. In a study published in Communications Engineering,
the scientists recommend putting eggs in a steamer basket, then
transferring them between two bowls of water every two minutes.
So this is thirty two minutes of engage, because you
can't do anything in two minutes. You're just gonna sit
(26:10):
there and eyeball these eggs, two bowls of water, switch
them between the two, one of them boiling and the
other set to eighty six degrees fahrenheit, which is considered
lukewarm until the thirty two minutes are up. So you're
doing that sixteen to what technically fifteen times thirty two
(26:31):
minutes every two minutes, moving them back and forth. This process,
known as periodic cooking, yields a velvety yoke and a
meaty but soft white.
Speaker 4 (26:46):
Man.
Speaker 3 (26:47):
I'm craving a boiled egg right now. You know, boiled
boiled as a preparation method of eggs does not get
its due and I will tell you why my wife used.
My kid's loved boiled eggs. Because my wife used to
make boiled eggs for them, and when they brought their
lunch to school, she would make two of them. She'd
(27:07):
make two boiled eggs apiece and send those boiled eggs
with the boys, and they that was a highlight. If
something happened and she forgot the boiled eggs, oh she'd
have to hear about it in the evening.
Speaker 7 (27:18):
Well, it wasn't no boiled egg at my lunch today.
Speaker 2 (27:22):
They love boiled eggs.
Speaker 3 (27:24):
But the thing about boiled eggs that doesn't get it
to do is it keeps right. You don't want to
eat coal scrambled eggs. You don't want to eat a
cold Frida egg. Ramona and I a couple of saturdays
ago had to work on a weekend, which we never
have to do. So I said, well, before we have
(27:46):
to work on a weekend, let's go have a big breakfast.
Because I don't ever get to eat breakfast because I
do intermittent fasting. And if I'm not gonna you don't
want to know why. But anyway, so I said, let's
have breakfast. Oh he was excited. So we went to
Buffalo Grill and I had my usual three eggs over
(28:07):
medium white toast, grits bacon. They're bacon. I don't normally
like bacon that crispy, but they're bacon is like hard,
It's almost like jerky, and I don't know why I
don't ever eat it that way accept at Buffalo Grill.
And then and then the oatmeal I do. Their oatmeal
(28:31):
is fantastic, and then a cup of coffee and grapefruit
juice and that. When I first started intermitting fasting, I
would eat.
Speaker 2 (28:42):
I couldn't go till evening.
Speaker 3 (28:43):
It took me a while to build up to that,
so I would just skip breakfast. And just skipping breakfast
was a big deal. So what I would do is
in between shows, I would go there for lunch, so
i'd go eat lunch. I'd go eat breakfast at noon,
and then I would eat dinner when I got home.
And that got me kind of trained up till I
could hold out till, you know, we eat. We had
some people over for dinner last night, and the well
(29:05):
one of them was my cardiologist, and they're always surprised
at how ravenous I am because when you eat dinner
at seven thirty and you haven't eaten since seven thirty
the day before, you're you're like a hyena. You're it's serious, okay,
So that I don't forget. By the way, I do
love to Oh, let me say something real quick. I
(29:26):
do love to hear from you. Michael berryshow dot com.
You can also buy your show gear there.
Speaker 2 (29:31):
And.
Speaker 3 (29:34):
You can send me an email, and you can sign
up for our daily blast. Let me say this before
I go. I talk to my show sponsors every day
in between shows. I'll call one or two every day,
just check in on how business is doing.
Speaker 2 (29:49):
And I'm telling you you might you might have seen
this yourself.
Speaker 3 (29:51):
Businesses are hurting right now. Christmas was not what it
was supposed to be the Biden administ The toll the
Biden administration took has been greater than I think a
lot of people realize.
Speaker 2 (30:03):
We are exuberant over the Trump victory.
Speaker 3 (30:06):
So I am asking you support businesses in your community
that you love, support our show sponsors. If you need
help connecting with someone, I will gladly whatever you need
to buy, email me and I will connect you directly
with the owner. Because folks are hurting right now, and
they have been. I'm hearing that across the economy, all right,
(30:27):
courtesy of the greatest executive producer and all the land
CHATTICONI Nakanishi your week in Review, and I'm one of
these peopol that likes to blow my nose and then
look at it and see what color it is. Sweet, Mama,
you don't need to send me an email.
Speaker 2 (30:41):
And say it's gross. Don't talk about.
Speaker 3 (30:43):
We talk about snot and boogers and pooh and pee
and pretty girls.
Speaker 2 (30:49):
And I'm a dude. You're not a dude.
Speaker 3 (30:51):
You don't need to be bothered by the things I
talk about. Google Map said it will be changing the
name of the Golf of Mexico to the Golf of America.
Speaker 2 (30:59):
Pilots are making.
Speaker 3 (31:00):
Reference to the Gulf of America because you know, they
love to talk. Man, Pilots love to Oh, I think
a lot of them. If sat and thought, man, I
wish I had a captive audience of a couple hundred
people who had nowhere to go, a microphone and speakers,
you are not going to ignore that them talking. Well,
(31:21):
we're going to be uh, We're about to be cleared
for take off.
Speaker 2 (31:26):
Hearing about plenty minutes.
Speaker 3 (31:28):
We got a couple of pine in front of the
foes at night, and I keep you man, that seatbelt
becomes like one of those things that they obsess over.
We're talking live sea scalps. Not many people really know
what a sea scuff looks like.
Speaker 7 (31:43):
With Alaskan king crab legs, scallops and sea bass.
Speaker 3 (31:47):
Order scallop. I have something else to order other than scallops.
I don't understand why anybody would order a scallop. What
would be the purpose of eating a scallop? A scallop
is like tofu. It's the tofu of the sea. It's
really just there to give substance to things. You know
what scallop is. Scallop is the baby breath of the
floral world.
Speaker 6 (32:07):
His soothing voice was the soundtrack for the Groovy seventies.
Speaker 7 (32:11):
He wrote songs of a band that mesmerized the me generation,
and I should end the genre of soft draw nobody mind.
Speaker 3 (32:16):
The other day and out of nowhere, probably bands and
artists were like, I really like bread, and I said,
you don't know anything about it.
Speaker 2 (32:21):
The only thing you really need to know about bread
is that they're moving, Because that doesn't happen.
Speaker 6 (32:27):
Very have You have track really riching up for the sun,
a baby, climbing n rail, but by dreamss, the zoo, sleep.
Speaker 7 (32:56):
Livest I'm embarrassed how much I look forward for the
Weekend Review.
Speaker 3 (33:08):
When I'm driving in on Friday morning, I genuinely look
forward to it, and I think to myself, I wonder
what things we talked about he's gonna put into. It's
like a little treasure trove. It's almost like Christmas.