Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time time time, Lock and load.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
The Michael Very Show is on the air. Unlock this
door with the key of imagination. Beyond it is another dimension,
a dimension of sound fully Fourth Amendment, Wait for.
Speaker 1 (00:30):
Career by passenger.
Speaker 3 (00:33):
Set sail that day for a three hour two three hour.
Speaker 1 (00:38):
Two houst Chronicle posted about the Democrats who fled the state.
Strategic retreats are in the Texas tradition. With Santa Anna
in pursuit, Sam Houston ordered one from Gonzales. They have
in one fell swoop compared the Texas democrats quorum break
(01:03):
to Sam Houston's strategic retreat at Gonzales. But I would
warn you because I read your emails. The Houston Chronicle
is a bunch of stupid, sissified white liberals. Of course
(01:24):
they're going to make these Democrats out to be great.
Of course they're going to trash Trump. Stop your subscription
if you're going to pick up the paper tomorrow and
read it. And they're going to say Trump's meeting with
Putin wasn't even really any good. We're not even sure
why he did it. He's not gonna accomplish it. And
then you go, you're gonna hyperventilate. Well, how come they're
(01:46):
not giving him credit? How come they never criticized Biden.
You're the fool, not them. You the fool. You're letting
these people ruin your life. That's what they're gonna do.
That's what they're always going to do. That's what CNN
is going to do. That's what the Democrats are going
(02:06):
to do. Once you understand who and what they are,
then you can live your life. No reason to let
them drag you down. You have this abiding belief that
they're going to change and think about things the way
you do. Because at the end of the day, you
still can't understand that they operate on a different system.
(02:28):
They're on Linux and you've moved on to whatever the
post Linux thing is, Cobalt or whatever it is. They're
on a different operating system. That's just it. You can't
understand why a grown man would rape an eight year
old girl or boy, so you don't believe it happens,
or you spend a lot of time being upset about it. No,
you don't know. You just murder the bastard. That's it.
(02:50):
You can't fix him. You can't understand why he does
what he does. That's just what he does. That's what
they do. They're going to say stupid things like that,
That's what they do. I did get a kick that
they called Lena Hidalgo Linda gonz Linda had dog in
the paper today though. That was fun. Let's go to Brie.
Speaker 4 (03:10):
Brie, it's the laid yep.
Speaker 1 (03:13):
You are the first person who shares a name with
a cheese to be on the show today.
Speaker 5 (03:20):
Yeah, for Brian. I'm named after my dad.
Speaker 1 (03:23):
What's your dad's name, Brian?
Speaker 5 (03:26):
Brian?
Speaker 1 (03:27):
Oh, I didn't even think about that.
Speaker 5 (03:31):
Yeah, Brian is the semon version of Brian's.
Speaker 1 (03:35):
You know what's funny, I have never once considered that.
I'm going to ponder that moment. Now, what'd you call about, sweetheart?
Speaker 5 (03:47):
I called it out. You're talking about home home birds,
birth centers and hostel settings and doctors. There can be good,
it can be bad. My own personal experience with both
of my kids were different with emergencyy sections in both
cases not because the doctor said I needed one, because
my midwife both times said that something was very wrong
(04:09):
and that he was time birthy sections. So I've had
good midwives. I've had great midwives when I've had really
bad doctors.
Speaker 1 (04:16):
How did you find your midwife?
Speaker 5 (04:21):
I had some friends that had recommended a birth center
over in Katie, so I did that with my first son,
and it was for me, not the grace of experience.
They were okay, but I ended up with a lot
of health problems that they kind of kept themselves, and
so that was part of why I with the emergency sections.
My son when he was born was in distress. Second,
(04:46):
I'm sorry, Oh, yeah, they're great. My son is now,
he's nine and doing a fantastic and yeah, he's great.
And so is my daughter, she's four.
Speaker 1 (04:55):
Okay, are you a stay at home mom?
Speaker 6 (04:58):
I am?
Speaker 5 (04:59):
We also home.
Speaker 1 (05:00):
That's awesome. What does your husband do?
Speaker 5 (05:04):
My husband right now is technically a firearms instructor, but
he also is in the police academy.
Speaker 1 (05:12):
Oh great, where does he want to work.
Speaker 5 (05:16):
He's got a contract with Missouri Piddy.
Speaker 1 (05:18):
That's fantastic. That's that's uh, that's awesome. That's awesome. You
said something about bursting, darn it. I can't remember. Okay, sorry,
my mind wandered at that point. Let's go to Jennifer
(05:41):
Rihanna had a cute little voice, didn't she. Jennifer you're up.
Speaker 7 (05:48):
All right?
Speaker 6 (05:48):
Michael Clad calls calm to let you know that I
had gave birth to six children. Uh, first and last
we're in the hospital with doctors in the middle. Four
were with midwives that are thing center.
Speaker 1 (06:01):
Why was the last one with a dog?
Speaker 6 (06:03):
It's a big difference, if I tell you it was,
it was a little bit different. I didn't have a
choice to have a midwife, so I went in there
ready to drop him on the floor when we got there.
Speaker 1 (06:17):
So why did you not have the choice to have
a midwife if you had done it four times already?
Speaker 6 (06:24):
There weren't any available, and I usually have The births
are about two hours start to finish, and I knew
there was no way that the midwife would make it
to the house. And I really didn't feel like having
to clean up after having a child, because it's a mess.
Speaker 1 (06:40):
Can you imagine, well, I mean, can you imagine throughout
history that's what one did? Well, yeah, yeah, but for
me that's hard to a woman's gone through this thing
and then you know, and maybe maybe the husband's off
to war, maybe he's out in the field. It happened fast,
and there she is by herself cleaning things. Up. I
mean women were taught. Oh yeah, they were tough. They
(07:02):
didn't they didn't have time to feel sorry for themselves.
Speaker 8 (07:07):
Nope.
Speaker 6 (07:08):
And then when that process starts, you don't have any choice.
You just got to go along for the ride till
it's done.
Speaker 1 (07:13):
You know, I've said many times before and I'll say
it again, I have the deepest admiration for women who
go through the childbirth process because I think it is
so brutal. And I had I had a distant relative
who after pregnancy, she had an ec topic, she lost
another baby, a birth to a baby, and then she
(07:36):
lost she had one ovary removed after her child was born,
and then she got full blown diabetes, and it was
it was a gestational, but it stayed with her. And
I have noticed, you know, for how natural reproduction is
(07:57):
and how necessary for the continue of the species, it's
it's rather interesting to consider. It's all in God's plan,
But my goodness, women take a beating. There are women
who give birth and develop in the process a condition
that stays with them for the rest of their lives.
And we're talking about you know, in most cases, you're
(08:18):
in your late teens or twenties when you give birth. Uh,
it's a wonder and in a lot of species the
mother dies upon giving birth, and mothers didn't survive. You know,
long beal throughout most of history. It's a tough process,
simple man.
Speaker 9 (08:37):
Now it's just sap Houston, just stop fifty nine. We're
special through people call gay and spend the time. There
ain't no formal sits ericson.
Speaker 1 (08:52):
You should know myers.
Speaker 9 (08:54):
Yes, they don't tolerate fools. So you best leave that
at Hume home.
Speaker 1 (08:59):
Middle rights are. I stayed on the phone, I got
cut off. But my reason for calling is Sandra McDonald.
Number one, you had her on, You had her on
during the COVID hoax. Number two, she's a midwife. She
delivers babies at home. Number three she raised two girls
on her own, homeschooled both girls. Three A Rachel who
(09:20):
has a BS from ut uh three B Michayla bs
from A and M. And then there's some w h
O O P. I'm not sure what that's supposed to
be remon Note both girls are successful, smart and her
great girls, just like their mother. I think she would
be a great guest and role model. Just my opinion.
(09:41):
Keep it up with me, though, let me get tenamu. Oh,
Michael the whoop. That's an aggie thing, and uh what
that was supposed to? That's uh, that's like, uh, that's
an aggie thing. Chris, you're on the Michael Berry Show.
What would you like to offer the.
Speaker 7 (10:01):
Hey, hey, Mike Groo's gonna be hard to follow childbirth
and poopy diapers, but I'm gonna give it a shot.
Speaker 5 (10:09):
Uh.
Speaker 7 (10:09):
You were talking about a dog that is kind of
underrated and not known. Well, Uh, have you ever heard
of the Blue Lacey, the Texas Blue Lacy.
Speaker 1 (10:19):
Yeah, they kind of have the coloring of like a Wamaranean.
They got the they got the light eyes and the charcoal.
Speaker 7 (10:27):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (10:29):
Uh is that a Is that a hunt It's like
a pointer. It's like a hunting dog, isn't it?
Speaker 4 (10:35):
Yes, sir, well, I don't know.
Speaker 1 (10:37):
I've heard of it, but I don't. I don't. I'm asking,
I'm not suggested.
Speaker 4 (10:42):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (10:42):
Governor Rick Perry back in the day made it the
state dog of Texas and uh, they're actually crossed with
a scent hound for the nose, a greyhound for the speed,
and a coyote for the endurance and the play prey
drive they're incredible dogs. They're just took, they're beautiful, they're
easily trained, and my daughter we we we trained these
(11:07):
dogs for blood tracking and obedience and stuff like that.
Soistant well, it's it's leading to the professional part. My
daughter is actually a dental assistant and Katie and she'd
rather work with dogs than put people hands in people's mouths.
Speaker 4 (11:26):
But uh, you know that's that's her claim the same.
But we do real well with the dogs.
Speaker 5 (11:31):
You know.
Speaker 4 (11:31):
She charges quite a bit to get these dogs ready
to hunt.
Speaker 7 (11:37):
Her dog she was fifteen and had a six month
old dog named Hank out of our own bloodline, and
they qualified for the Level one United Blood Tracking qualification.
Speaker 4 (11:50):
And it was kind of funny. Everybody's like, oh, look
at this cute little fifteen.
Speaker 7 (11:53):
Year old blondheaded girl with her little puppy. Well, it'll
be a good learning experience for it. And then she
went and smoked that trail man in about twenty minutes.
She was coming back and they give you two hours.
Speaker 5 (12:03):
To pass it.
Speaker 7 (12:04):
We do real well, and our bloodline is really good,
and it's just there's there's just a majestic dog and
they're smart and they're I mean they're good for cattle,
they're good for sheet uh. They hunt birds uh, and
they do the tracking. They're good hog dogs.
Speaker 4 (12:21):
I mean, you name it. They can do it all.
They're they're I just didn't know if you're familiar with that.
A lot of people don't realize it's a state dog
in Texas.
Speaker 1 (12:31):
Yeah, I uh, I have heard of them, and I
had an image of them. That's the dog I was
thinking of. I looked it up when you were talking.
I didn't I didn't know that. Do you breed them also.
Speaker 4 (12:46):
Yes, sir, yeah, you sell them. As a matter of fact,
we're going, uh we.
Speaker 5 (12:51):
Do, we do, we have.
Speaker 7 (12:53):
We're going to pick up a new puppy tonight down
in Hellodas, Texas. One of the best bloodlines. We were
fortunate to get it. So you saw our great bloodline
with their great bloodline.
Speaker 1 (13:02):
I think that's where John T. Flores's is, and they looked.
Speaker 7 (13:05):
This it is, as a matter of fact, the place
we're going tonight. You can look down off the side
of the hill and watch the show.
Speaker 4 (13:13):
At John T Floor. There's gonna be a guy there tonight.
Speaker 7 (13:15):
So we're gonna go have Margarita's on the deck and
pick up our puppy and hang out with the lady
that we're selling a dog from.
Speaker 4 (13:21):
She is actually the president of the Blue Lacy Association.
Her her.
Speaker 7 (13:28):
Great great grandfather was Frank Lacy in Burnett, Texas in
the middle eighteen hundreds.
Speaker 4 (13:34):
They developed this dog.
Speaker 7 (13:35):
They actually came to Burnett, the four brothers did in
a cupboard wagon and they needed a good working dog,
and so they started putting their heads together and they
came up with this. So it's it's amazing how it
all came together.
Speaker 8 (13:47):
But now it's.
Speaker 7 (13:50):
A it's a hell of a dog. It does everything
you wanted to And you know, they're they're rough and tumbled.
Don't get me wrong, they're they're good for outdoors. But
well they're big old lap dogs too.
Speaker 3 (13:59):
You know.
Speaker 4 (14:00):
Our stays in the house quite a bit. We have
three dogs. Rugers are breeding male.
Speaker 7 (14:04):
He's about twelve, and Whiskey is our female and she's
about six and Hank is about four. And Hank is
one of their pups and so he's gonna take over
the breeding program as soon as our new puppy is
old enough for that in about eighteen months. So it's
a business. She does real well you know, she charges people.
(14:26):
You know, it's it's amazing how much people will pay.
But these big ranches and stuff, they want good dogs.
When you go pay ten or twenty thousand dollars to
shoot a buck, you know that scores two hundred and
you see you can hang it in your wall in
an excell on exact and you don't really know how
to shoot. You know, they when they find it or
(14:47):
when they shoot the day and it's a bad shot.
That's when we start getting to call and you know,
we don't. You don't she dropped the tailgate for less
than five hundred dollars.
Speaker 1 (14:55):
What is your what do you have a website for this?
Speaker 4 (15:00):
We really don't. We're getting into that.
Speaker 5 (15:03):
You know.
Speaker 4 (15:03):
It's really word of mouth right now. But the name
of our little business that we started, it's my daughter's business.
She's nineteen right now. It's called find Them and we
do the game recovery, the breeding.
Speaker 1 (15:14):
Would somebody find y'all?
Speaker 7 (15:16):
And well, really, right now, it's just you can get
on the Blue Lacy website and look for tracking dogs.
We are in the process of getting that set up,
and once we get it set up, I think it's
going to explode.
Speaker 4 (15:30):
A little bit, and so I don't know that we're
quite ready for the explosion yet.
Speaker 1 (15:33):
H No, I got you. Let me give you a
little bit of advice, Chris, And I tell everybody this,
don't let the great be the enemy of the good.
On the website, they got little website packages or whatever.
And I'm not saying I could do it, but most
people could. She probably can and spend a couple hundred
dollars on a very basic template. All you need is
(15:54):
a good url, a good name. So whatever that's going
to be, those blue Lacy's or whatever that's going to be,
create a very very simple web template. Put a picture
of her and the dog on there, your phone number,
your email however you want to be reached, and a
couple of little basic things. It's just caught a landing page.
Most people will five ten years into the business, it'll
(16:16):
still say under construction. Nobody's spending a lot of time there.
You want to talk to them, but I would get
a website put up if you want to develop them
like you will need a place to go for it.
You know what, you got me to thinking about something.
(16:37):
So yesterday in between shows, I'd already put the evening
show together. I felt good about where we were, and
so I said, we'll make a run out Northwest. Have
a new show sponsor, and we've had multiple phone conversations,
many email conversations, but I had not met him, and
(17:00):
I hadn't actually seen the shop, seen a lot of photos.
I've seen everything you'd need to know to know that
they've got a lot of cool stuff. And I've already
started sending listeners there who have reported back they had
a good experience. But I wanted to go spend some
time myself with old boy. So his name is Philip Orange,
(17:24):
which I figured was a good omen right, And I said,
Philip Orange, you know I'm from Orange and he said yeah.
So our first conversation never said anything else. I said,
that's crazy. And you got a four O nine number.
He authorized me to give out a cell phone number
(17:48):
four O nine seven eight one thirty thirty five Houston
Motorsports dot Com. So I said, well, you got five
locations Cypress Creek Parkway in Houston, Pasadena, Webster, Angleton, and
College Station. I'd like to come visit you at one
of your locations. I'll eventually get to all of them.
Made that promise on Ace Hardware Texas. That was a mistake.
(18:10):
They got thirty three or thirty four old. That's not
easy to do anyway. So I said where should I
come see you? And he said, oh, Cypress Creek Parkway'd
be great. So I head out there. What are you doing?
Jim Mudd was in here for two weeks. Never once
(18:33):
was the wrong audio fire never once. Now was there
too much van Halen played for bumps? Yeah, there was.
There was too much van Halen. I put out brown
Eminem's just to make them leave. Anyway. So I'm pulling
up and I get confused. I didn't grow up in Cypress,
So I get confused because the northwest quadrant of Houston,
(18:55):
more than any other part of the area of the region.
I get if I'm going east, west, north, south or
on an angle right. So I'm using ways and I've
put in his address on Cyber Street Parkway, and I'm
turned around and turned around, and then I'm pulling up
(19:18):
and I see, oh, nineteen sixty. I'm pulling up on
nineteen sixty. So I call Paul Ambert because he's friends
with the owner of Kevin of the owner of Fixed
Auto Houston Kevin Taylor. First, I called Kevin Taylor because
if I'm headed that way, I'm going to try to
if I'm in that region, he'd probably around there somewhere.
(19:38):
I don't tell him where I'm going. I say, he,
I man, maybe in the reason you in there? I
maybe dropping in because he's expanded. They do all the
They have one hundred and fifty cars on the lot
at one time they're doing bodywork on that's seventy Amazon trucks.
They got the contract to do all the Amazons in
this area. Well guess what, Amazon drivers are constantly running
(19:59):
into something get run in. So it's turned out to
be a good client. They do fleet they do fleet work.
So there's you'll see, you know, twenty moving trucks for
this company or whatever. They're doing all the bodywork on that.
So anyway, I'm pulling up and I'm at nineteen sixty
in the circle K. I don't remember what the street was.
I'm at nineteen sixty and I'm talking to Paul Amer
(20:20):
and I said, oh, I just spoke to Kevin at
fix Otto Houston. He's very happy. We're sending him a
lot of people. He's picking up some fleets out of
the deal, which is what they want. They want people
that have a lot of bodywork, a corporate account. Okay,
I said, you know, I'm somewhere near him out here,
(20:41):
but I can't remember where he is exactly, but this
the last time I came out to see him, they
were under renovation. It looked like that. I'm parked right
in front of his shop. When you pull up on
nineteen sixty and you look across the circle. K I
can't remember what road I'm coming from, but I'm literally
(21:02):
directly across the street from now. So I go in
and I say hello, and he said, what are you
doing out here? I'm going to see Houston Motorsports And
he goes, They're five buildings down, just kind of crazy,
as big as Houston is. What are the chances that
I have two show sponsors that are one thousand feet apart?
All right? So move on from Kevin, do my thing there,
(21:23):
Go down turn into Houston Motorsports. So I'm talking to
this old boy. He's a big fellaw he's about six five,
two eighty five. He's a big fellow, and I'm taking
the tour. We're talking about what they sell the most
of room on. They got jet skis now that are
(21:44):
basically like a jet boat. It's a jet ski that
I think you could put an entire football team on.
But at the end of your at the end of
your bench seat on the back facing outward, there's a
whole separate seat and it's wide, like a glider you'd
have on the porch. And they got that whole. I said,
(22:07):
you mean you can put somebody on the back of
one of these things now and go riding around the lake.
And he said yeah. Or what people do is they
tie down their ice chests. So they had some others
made out like that. I was just I was rather,
it's amazing how jet skis have changed. You remember when
jet skis first came out. You had to stand up,
You have to had a stand up and it had
(22:28):
the handles that would go up and down and they
were little bit things. And now it's basically a boat.
It's just an open air boat. It's sort of like
how we went from you know, the motorcycle to the
sling shot and yeah, anyway, so what oh you like
(22:49):
some sling shots? Okay, so anyway we're going through his
whole business. You know, what's for you as a dealer.
What's the difference because he has all these brand see Doo, Polaris, Yamaha,
Honda and Kawasaki, Sling Shot CF, Moto Rocks or high end,
low end, mid end service, the whole thing. And I
(23:12):
have to admit it, it's kind of cool because everything
on the showroom floor is something that you've been on
before and you had a good time, right, So it's
just like a happy memory kind of thing. So I said,
you want to run up to Gringos and get a
quick bite because there's the Gringos at two forty nine
ninety nine now three sponsors one segment just see you know. Yeah,
(23:36):
it was so smooth he might not notice it. And
then he said, well, I can't my brother is here.
And I said oh. He said, I'd like you to
meet my brother. I said, what is your brother, dude?
He said, he's a preacher where Deuiyville Pentecostal Church. I said,
he's a penny preacher. He started laughing and he said, yeah,
(24:00):
that's where I grew up. My father was a preacher there.
I so where did you grow up Deuiyville. I was
born in Deuiyville. We've had all these conversations. You're a
new show sponsor. We've had all these conversations. If your
brother hadn't been here, and I hadn't asked what your
(24:20):
brother did, I wouldn't know. We grew up two miles apart.
He's ten years younger than me. But here's a Deweyville boy.
Made very good five five shops, number ten, top ten
volume leader in the nation. So I came home and
I told my wife, I'm so excited. There's a guy
from Deweyville. He owns Houston Motorsports. They're so successful. And
(24:43):
she made a comment that suggested he was more successful
than me. That's been bothering one. Listens Michael Arry Show.
I take a documentary and so it goes about Billie
Joel on Amazon, HBO did it. And I'm going to
(25:05):
go ahead and tell you ahead of time because some
people are going to get very upset. He makes a
very ill informed statement criticizing Trump over what he perceived
to be the there are good people on both sides
in Charlottesville discussion. And then he went through this phase
(25:27):
where he was wearing a Star of David and he
was embracing his jewishness, and that now that he's Jewish,
there are white nationalists and Nazis, and I think somebody
had the good sense to edit out whatever he said there.
(25:49):
And my response to that is, Billy Joel is like
a lot of other low information people who are put
into a position where they are asked questions by let's
in this case, music journalists who don't want to talk
about music, they want to talk about politics. It's like
all the sports reporters, in sports announcers, not just Steven A. Smith,
(26:10):
all of them, Bob Costas, they all want to talk politics.
They're bored of sports. So if you go to sports
to get away from politics, you can't because they keep
dragging it back in because they're not interested in sports.
They really want to be the super Bowl now is politics.
That's the thing. That's the national sport. Now, that's the celebrity.
(26:32):
It has replaced Hollywood, it has replaced the sporting world.
Politics is everything now. It's not healthy. It's not healthy
even a little bit. But so if you're going to
get really really upset over him making that statement, then
don't watch it, because I don't want to get the
email that says Michael I watched it, but he said
something bad about Trump. He did, he did. I'm going
(26:53):
to tell you right now he did, he really did,
and it's ill informed. And that is how a lot
of people come to conclusions about Trump or you, or
Maga or this country or racism or anything else. And
then what they will do is they will decide that
(27:16):
the greatest threat to this nation is white guys with
tiki torches, and I have to devote my whole life
to destroying white guys with tiki torches. And so I'm
going to help the Democrats, the same Democrats who will
open the borders to people who will rape your daughters,
the same Democrats will do all these horrible things. But
you've decided that tiki torch die guys the thing that
(27:37):
upsets you more than anything else. So you white liberal
are now going to spend all this time opposing everything
that is Trump, Maga, and everything else, because you've decided
that you're going to be a good little lefty advocate
and you're going to be against Charlottesville, and that's going
to inform everything you do. So you'll end up with
(27:58):
Kamala Harris as your president, Gavin Newsom as your governor,
Sheila Jackson Lee as your overlord, because you decided that
the greatest threat to all mankind throughout history is guys
with tiki torches at Charlottesville in Virginia saying we won't
be replaced by Jews, and that will be how a
(28:19):
lot of low information neighbors among us, including and especially celebrities,
Billy Joel is not a well informed guy. He's not
a guy who understands policy or politics, or government, or
representation or much of culture. He's a really, really good
(28:40):
poet of the common man and of things like anger
and vindictiveness and love and lust and wistfulness and separation
and when a relationship begins to sour or when a
relationship is beginning to blow. He's a wonderful, wonderful poet
(29:01):
who gives voice and word to emotions in a way
that are incredible. Same could be true of Eric Clapton.
But that doesn't mean they understand anything about the type
of governance system that would be best for our country.
That's where we go wrong. But we went wrong before
(29:23):
that when we decided somehow they were an expert outside
of their field, and ask him about the Middle Eight
and the Coda and the key change and those sorts
of yeah, he's good at that, just don't ask him
his opinion on Charlottesville or Trump and expect to give
(29:45):
it any credence. And the dangerous thing is when you
give one credence, you give all credence. The idea is, listen,
you monkey, go back and bang your keys. I really
enjoy when you do that. But that's what you are
is a monkey who performs. You are not absolutely not
(30:07):
a thoughtful person. If I wanted that, I'd go to
Thomas Soul. If I want a monkey to bang on
the keys and sing me songs, I want Billy Joel.
Once you understand that, then you can enjoy the monkey's
music because that's what you're doing, and you can enjoy
his dreadful life. And shocking it's will come across the bay.
This is always. It's always as if the person asking
(30:29):
the question is surprised by this and the person answering
it's going to come as a shock. But Billy Joel's
life is way different than you would expect. It turns
out that he has made babies that he wasn't there
to raise. I never saw that coming. Wow, And that
he regrets it. And now that he's one hundred and
five and he's got little babies. He's going to be
(30:50):
a really, really good daddy for them because he's retired.
Oh wow, I never seen that. And then in the
back of your mind you think, well, what about the
one that that he wasn't there for their child and
they're having to watch him going.
Speaker 3 (31:02):
I'm really enjoying being a daddy because now I'm at
home all day and here I am with a broken hip,
crawling around for these kids, and now I'm being a
really good daddy and getting to take them to school
and be in a full time daddy anyway, So there's
a lot of that.
Speaker 1 (31:19):
I'd rather crap on the Billy Joel documentary, and here
people email me that they enjoyed it rather than say
I enjoyed it, and people pick it apart because he
made a Trump statement. So just TwixT me and you,
it's a really good documentary. Ted, you're on the Michael
Berry Show.
Speaker 8 (31:41):
Michael, good morning. How are you, sir?
Speaker 1 (31:43):
I'm good?
Speaker 4 (31:44):
Go ahead, hey real quickly.
Speaker 8 (31:48):
I know you don't have a lot of time. I
just want to give you some praise.
Speaker 2 (31:50):
Man.
Speaker 8 (31:50):
I agree with everything he just said. Now, Billy Joel
and a lot of the similar celebrities say. Hey, I
want to give you a quick shout out. I'm I'm
from the other side of the river. You grew up
and I'm from like Charles and uh I live in
Sulfur now and uh I actually am delivering today for
a major I don't want to say which, one of
the one of the major package companies. I'm on the
other side of the river of here delivering in Denton
(32:12):
in the stock series. I'm sure you're pretty.
Speaker 1 (32:14):
Familiar with the Denton I'm very, very familiar.
Speaker 8 (32:17):
And he grew up in Orange. Yeah, no, I'm I'm
That's where I'm at listening to your show five days
a week. I'm listening to your show out of here.
You're doing a great job, Michael.
Speaker 1 (32:27):
Thank you, buddy. I appreciate that. Are you Calcushoe Parish?
What parish?
Speaker 4 (32:32):
Are you? A?
Speaker 1 (32:33):
Yes?
Speaker 8 (32:34):
Yes, Yes, they're born and raised in Calculshoe Parish. That's right,
all right.
Speaker 1 (32:38):
There's a there's a there's a kind of a naive
boob Englishman and he's really fat girlfriend or wife who
are traveling around the United States and they're they're touring
different places and they're insanely charming, just insane because there's
no Polish to any part of what they're doing. And
(32:58):
they end up in Orange and I think they went to,
if not Lake Charles Baton Rouge where they go next.
But it's it's really good. It's on YouTube.