Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. So
Michael Verie Show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
Congressman Eric Swawell officially suspending his campaign for governor. He
wrote on X to my family, staff, friends, and supporters.
I am deeply sorry for the mistakes and judgment I've
made in my pass. I will fight the serious false
allegations that have been made, but that's my fight, not
a campaigns Again. It was Friday when CNN and the
(00:37):
San Francisco Chronicle both reported on these allegations.
Speaker 3 (00:42):
Well, tell that long tongue liar, go and tell that
midnight writer, tell the rambler, the gambler, the macviider, tell
him mcguards gonna cut him down, sell him mcgards gonna
cut them down.
Speaker 4 (01:01):
A lot has been said about me today through anonymous allegations.
I thought it was important that you see and hear
from me directly. These allegations of sexual assault are flat false.
Speaker 1 (01:12):
They are absolutely false.
Speaker 4 (01:13):
They did not happen, they have never happened, and I
will fight them with everything that I have. They also
come on the eve of an election where I have
been the front runner candidate for governor in California.
Speaker 3 (01:25):
To tell that long tong liar until that midline writer
tell the rambler, the gambler that better, tell them the
gods got them. Well, tell him the gods go get
them down.
Speaker 5 (01:41):
The truth's going to come out, and I hope everything
you've done so far is clean, because if it's not,
there's going to be a reckoning for that. As far
as public accountability that's going to come. What are the
chances that three or four women independently who never met
each other would have similar experiences with one person.
Speaker 1 (01:58):
So either ari this.
Speaker 5 (02:00):
Person committed these horrific acts or he is the single
unluckiest person in the world for these people to conspire
and make up lies against him.
Speaker 1 (02:07):
But it's a very hard case to make. The more
allegations that.
Speaker 3 (02:10):
Come in, you can run alone full run a folone.
Speaker 6 (02:18):
Eric Swalla uses the standard template. I'm a good person.
There are bad people assembled against me, a vast right
wing conspiracy. Hillary Clinton called it. There are terrible, sinister creatures,
(02:42):
forces out there that wish to stop me on my
mission to do good. They are anonymous but powerful. Actually
they're not anonymous. They're not anonymous at all. They're coming forward.
The staffers didn't want to sign, but one of the
(03:03):
staffers did saying she was raped, not assaulted raped. There
are various points in the sexual act where a stop
sign can be put up. It could be a yield,
and he doesn't yield, and he keeps pushing, and afterwards
(03:25):
she said he should have known that's a sexual assault.
And then there is a full blown She's bawling and
begging and he keeps going. I think this is a
(03:46):
manifestation of a man with a god complex, surrounded by
staffers executing his every whim, who has this idea that
he is so important that nothing can stop him, and
(04:07):
other people are just vessels for him to finish in.
I think that becomes a mindset where other humans are
not really human. It's representative of their mindset, of their
role in the republic. We saw this with Elliott Spitzer.
(04:30):
We saw this with Bill Clinton. Yeah, put some ice
on that after a bit of woman's lip till she
says it swoll up and was bleeding. Put some ice
on that little spot there, Clean yourself up, and go
back downstairs. And these stories are consistent across the whole
(04:51):
of them. These stories are consistent again and again. What's
interesting is Madison Cawthorne you will remember, in a wheelchair,
said that part of his problem, and Madison had his
own problems, was that he had been invited to these orgies,
(05:13):
drug fueled, sex fuelled orgies by congressman and when he
did that, he was dismissed by a bipartisan cadre of
congressmen who, for the dignity of the institution, needed to
destroy him. A couple days ago, we find a Utah
congressman coming out and saying he was a porn addict. We've,
(05:37):
of course seen what happened with Walwell. We've had scandal
after scandal after scandal, and we're not just talking about
an affair here. We're talking about sex imposed upon underlings
for whom saying no is difficult and beyond the stop sign,
(06:02):
and that may cause him some problems. In Manhattan, where
the Manhattan District Attorney has announced an investigation after a
woman says she was raped, not assaulted, raped. NBC News
with a story.
Speaker 7 (06:12):
Tonight the Manhattan District Attorney announcing an investigation involving Democratic
Congressman Eric Swalwell after multiple women have come forward alleging
sexual misconduct by the California gubernatorial candidate, including one allegation
of rape in a New York hotel room. Swawell is
denying the accusations, calling them absolutely false in his video
he posted late Friday night.
Speaker 4 (06:33):
I do not suggest to you in any way that
I'm perfect or that I'm a saint. I've certainly made
mistakes and judgment in my past, but those mistakes are
between me.
Speaker 1 (06:42):
And my wife.
Speaker 7 (06:43):
Swawell is accused by several women of varying degrees of
sexual misconduct, detailed and reports in both the San Francisco
Chronicle and CNN. The outlets corroborating the allegations through interviews
with people the women confide it in and reviewing text
messages and medical records from the time. His former staffer
says her relationship with Swalwell consisted of sharing nude images
(07:04):
and photos on the messaging app Snapchat, a sexual encounter
in a car, and two instances where she says she
was sexually assaulted after a night of drinking with the congressman,
leaving her too intoxicated to consent. Her attorney declined to
comment or issue any statement to NBC News. NBC News
has confirmed she did work for Swalwell. The accusations have
led to a swell of Democrats and key labor unions
(07:26):
to drop their endorsements of the forty seven year old,
many urging him to end his campaign for governor, though
notably not saying he should quit Congress. But on the
GOP side, reb Anna Paulina Luna says she plans to
introduce emotion to expel Swawell.
Speaker 2 (07:39):
It is unacceptable for him to just index his campaign
for governor in California but still sit in the House
of Representatives.
Speaker 1 (07:48):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (07:48):
Well, you know, we don't want him to be the
next governor because he's not useful anymore. But he say
in Congress, you know, I mean it's part for the
course there.
Speaker 1 (07:56):
Interestingly, of all the awful things.
Speaker 6 (07:58):
Eric Swalwell has done, it's not until a woman says no,
and he continues that that's the one thing that will
destroy his career.
Speaker 1 (08:06):
Of all the things Bill Clinton did, that was the
one thing.
Speaker 8 (08:11):
To come to politics.
Speaker 3 (08:13):
Do you enjoy a harsh chemical lactative where you have
came to the right place?
Speaker 6 (08:18):
Because Michael Berry, get on him, blow it all out, baby,
Just listen to I'll Just Read Him Faster top twenty
songs of I'll Just Read You The few of nineteen
seventy two start with number one, working Down First time Ever.
Speaker 1 (08:36):
I Saw your Face ROBERTA.
Speaker 6 (08:37):
Flack Flack Alone again Naturally, Gilbert O'Sullivan American Pie.
Speaker 1 (08:43):
Don mcclan was the third best song.
Speaker 6 (08:44):
Candy Man Sammy Davis number five, Lean on Me, Bill Withers, Baby,
Don't Get Hooked on Me, Mac Davis, Brand New Key Melanie,
Let's Stay Together.
Speaker 1 (08:53):
Al Green Algreen had three of the top one hundred
that year. He had the best year of everyone.
Speaker 6 (08:58):
Brandy, You're a fine Girl by Looking Glad, What a song,
Old Girl by the Shylights, My Daneling Chuck Berry classic
at number fifteen. If loving you is wrong, I don't
want to be right luther Ingram bet You by Golly Wow,
the Stylistics, I'll take you there, The Staples Singers, The
Lions Leaves Tonight Robert John Long Cool Woman in a
(09:18):
Black Dress, The Hollies Song Sung Blue Neil Diamond, A
Horse with No Name America three Days They rode that
horse and didn't bother to name it. Everybody plays the
fool a main ingredient, precious and fud climax Too late
to turn back now. Cornelis's Brothers and sister Rose backstablished
the Ojays. That was only the thirty fifth best song.
Rocket Man Elton John was only the fortieth top song.
(09:40):
Rock and Robin Michael Jackson Morning is Broken, Cat Stevens,
City of New Orleans, Arlo Guthrie Garden Party, Ricky Nelson
I can see clearly now. Johnny Nash was forty seven
for the year Timeless Timeless Song, Burning Love forty eight.
Elvis Presley, Hold Your Head Up, Argent from the Well
Its Rule album was number fifty.
Speaker 1 (10:03):
Jungle Fever, The.
Speaker 6 (10:04):
Chakatchas, Chuck Cock Chuck Katchas at fifty one. Everything I
Own by Bread at fifty two. I could go on.
I didn't read them all. There are others I could
have read. So President Trump institutes a blockade in the
(10:25):
Strait of Hormuz. The Irani's were running a toll booth there.
Oil has spiked to over one hundred dollars a barrel.
Oil stocks are up. Energy is the top performing sector
for this calendar year. Something had to get squeezed, so
(10:45):
it's been technology that has dipped. I think technology will recover.
Tech stocks have a future. It will just be a
question of which tech stocks. I'm not your stock BROKERA
do on intend to give you financial advice. I do
get good financial advice, and I read a lot. I
read a lot on wellness, and I read a lot
(11:06):
on finance. By the way, on the subject of wellness,
I have been rather obsessively studying the heart over the
last year or so, much to the chagrin of my
cardiologist Dan Dupman, who's probably had about enough of me
sending him studies and articles and quotes and treatments and
(11:31):
all sorts of other things that I study. I am
really interested in the front end game of what should
you tell? You know, what habits can I help my
children who are nineteen and twenty with. You know, what
are good foods to eat? What are foods to steer
(11:51):
clear of as much as possible? You should You should
also have some fun the types of diets if you're
going to clump, you know, the terranean diet or carnivore
or you know, fill in the blanks. The types of
foods that will lead to long term plaque in your arteries,
(12:13):
in the types of foods that don't, types of foods
that stimulate circulation, and types of foods that's slow it.
That's kind of the front end of the heart arguably,
if not the most important organ in the body, certainly
after the brain. I think you'd have to say so,
but I don't know that it matters that you rank them.
Speaker 1 (12:32):
It's important.
Speaker 6 (12:33):
It's the one that takes most Americans all the way
to the end and treatments towards the end to extend life.
Speaker 1 (12:44):
Or improve the quality of life.
Speaker 6 (12:46):
Amazingly, my dad, who's had diabetes since he was twenty,
which was the reason he had to leave the Coastguard,
my dad has pretty good heart lung problems because of
asbestosis at DuPont, which a lot of people did a
lot of people didn't survive it. Diabetes obviously, so his
(13:07):
pancreas is for crap, some skin issues, but he still
has pretty good cognitive abilities for a man eighty six,
particularly a man who's had these swings in blood.
Speaker 1 (13:21):
Sugar levels all his life.
Speaker 6 (13:23):
But his heart, because he's eaten right and taking care
of himself. His ticker's pretty darn good anyway. So I've
been on a study of the heart for quite some
time and talking to different My tried and true trusted
cardiologist is Stan Duckman, I love him, adore the man,
his friend, he and his wife or dear friends of ours.
(13:45):
But also I like his approach to medicine. He's not
afraid to criticize conventional medicine. He's not a person who
believes you should continue with the treatment because it's better
to keep you alive and sick than healed, and because
he practices what he preached preaches. He played ball at
Iowa State and he has maintained a lifetime of good health.
(14:09):
He was actually on the research team at Iowa State
as a master student before medical school that was studying
what came to be out of the University of Florida
gatorade and sports drinks, in the elements and electrolytes that
go into it. He's made a lifelong study of it.
I love to talk about foods and exercise and all
those things with Stan Dukman, but I've gone back to liver,
(14:34):
which I had studied about I don't know five years ago.
And ktr ch is in Houston's lucky to have one
of the nation's best, a fellow by the name of
Joe Gillotti, who is a liver specialist, and I've been
I told him I said, well, bad news is I'm
moving from Dukeman to you. You're about to start getting
liver studies. So I've been I've been reading and studying
(14:58):
liver health, and about several years ago, Joe Glotti said
called it the silent killer, and I thought, oh, when
you're a nail, everything looks like a when you're a hammer,
everything look like a nail.
Speaker 1 (15:12):
And I always thought he was overblown on that.
Speaker 6 (15:14):
But I've known several people in the last eighteen months
who have been diagnosed with advanced cirrhosis or some form
of liver disease. Some of them were not drinkers, and
that is a fatty ascid.
Speaker 1 (15:31):
I think they call it nald.
Speaker 6 (15:32):
I might get the term wrong, but I have been
reading for the last few weeks studies, reports, alternate treatments,
choline and all these various things for good liver health.
I just like to study the body the way some
people like to study cars or guns or anything else,
(15:53):
because we all have one.
Speaker 1 (15:55):
And it is interesting.
Speaker 6 (15:57):
Somebody posted last night that you, as an adult, a
high functioning adult, very successful that he was. He just
came off of adderall and you know, he wanted people
to share their perspectives with him about coming off of AfterAll,
which is which is a low grade myth and a
lot of people are on it, even including uh and
I said, well, I'm I'm gonna wait on that for later,
(16:18):
but if you have a liver story, I would love
to hear those, and your identity will be protected.
Speaker 1 (16:23):
On this one.
Speaker 9 (16:24):
EHS, the four Hour System from The Michael Barry Show
and other leading companies.
Speaker 6 (16:31):
Our interview with doctor Joe Gilotti will be next Thursday
from nine to ten am and we will post that
to the podcast. If you miss it, you can go back.
If you follow our Daily Blast, you'll know when you
miss a show what we talked about that day with
a link to the podcast of that subject. And that
(16:51):
is easy to sign up. It's Michael Berryshow dot com.
Just click on sign up for the Daily Blast and
you just put in your email. We will know ever
sell your email, never have, never will, and we will
never share your email so you won't get a bunch
of other spam. You'll get one email per day with
a wrap up of what we talked about and a
link to the podcast.
Speaker 1 (17:12):
And if there are any.
Speaker 6 (17:15):
Dad jokes I tell that day, that will be included,
and usually a funny meme if.
Speaker 1 (17:19):
There is one worth sharing.
Speaker 6 (17:22):
Best sign in all of Galveston from my favorite is
at the poop deck on the sea wall, where it
says where the elite meet in bare feet.
Speaker 1 (17:33):
I love that. I've always thought that was just such
a such a clever deal.
Speaker 6 (17:38):
So President Trump implements the blockade aggressive move. That's the
getting in the face and asking someone to hit you.
He is getting as close to war as you can get,
seemingly provocatively engaging the Whatever you may think of that
(18:01):
stupid idea, great idea. I will tell you from the
emails I read, and I figure at least sixty percent
of our audience is pure blown maga. The other forty
percent is some combination between Democrats who listen, may not agree,
but they want to know what we're talking about, and
(18:22):
Republicans who may not be as pro Trump, but they
do consider themselves Republicans. You've got oil at over one
hundred dollars a barrel, so there's been a pretty nice spie.
If you're in the oil and gas business or oilfield
services business, you're seeing the oil companies now rushing. We
(18:44):
have a show sponsor our longest serving on Lena. I
did not realize this. PERCENTO Technologies they do. They do
the technical components, technological components of business, and right now
their hottest industry is oil and gas, and so people needing,
needing to scale up quickly from a technology perspective in
(19:06):
Percento Technologies is getting those calls.
Speaker 1 (19:08):
But there are lots of others. I read an email,
I mean I read a post.
Speaker 6 (19:12):
It was sent to me actually, and I've not been
able to verify this, but I'll just read it as
a launching point by a guy named hayesus Enrique Rosis
who calls himself the body language guy. And it's a
map of the Straight of Hormuz and that region, and
he says, I honestly thought this map was made up
of hundreds of super tankers, the kind that carried two
(19:34):
million barrels each currently racing toward the US Gulf Coast
from every direction, Atlantic, Indian Ocean, around Africa, the scenic
route that we were heading to Saudi Arabia, but never mind,
Route Iran closed the Straight of Hormuz and everyone panicked.
Oil hit one hundred and twenty six dollars a barrel.
Gas hit four dollars a gallon. Cable news did the
(19:56):
thing where they put a red banner on screen and
say crisis in a font that's suggests you should be
hoarding toilet paper. And then something happened that nobody in
the media seems interested in reporting for obvious reasons. The
world just switched suppliers, like changing your internet provider, except
the internet provider is the entire fing global energy economy.
(20:19):
American oil exports are approaching record levels. Gulf Coast refineries
are running at ninety five percent capacity. Supertankers that were
mid ocean on their way to the Persian Gulf literally
turned around and headed to Texas.
Speaker 1 (20:33):
That's not a metaphor.
Speaker 6 (20:35):
Ship tracking data shows them doing U turns in the
Indian Ocean.
Speaker 1 (20:40):
Meanwhile, China, which.
Speaker 6 (20:42):
Was getting forty five percent of its oil imports through
Hormuz and paying basement prices for sanctioned Irani crude, is
now competing with Japan and Europe for the same expensive
American barrels. Chinese manufacturers are already raising prices twenty percent
on goods headed to the US. So, to summarize, Iran
(21:03):
played its biggest card, and the main result is that
the United States became the world's emergency gas station and
China's cheap energy subsidy evaporated. This is either the most
elaborate coincidence in the history of geopolitics, or someone planned
the sequence Venezuela Iran profits. I'll let you figure out
(21:24):
which one. That's not my words, that's the words of
Jesus Enrique Eurosis. So what I try to do, which
I consider to be what a good steward of public
opinion should do and every citizen, for that record matter,
(21:44):
is I take my natural reaction to a situation, and
I think through what my reaction is to data points
that I receive, understanding and trying to constantly remind myself
that every bit of information I give, unless I'm observing
at firsthand, and sometimes even then, every bit of it
(22:06):
is spin. Every bit of it is being delivered by
someone with an agenda to make me think that this
is good and that is bad, whatever that may be.
And so I try to be careful, to be mindful
as I filter that information like the like deliver purifying
(22:27):
products running through our body. Like any other filter, I
try to say, well, what can I see as an
obvious spin? And I try to say, because you know,
we have natural reactions to things. I try to say,
all right, who wins and who loses from this? Who
might be getting some leverage in this situation? Why would
(22:49):
the Iranis do this? Why would Trump do this? Why
would Europe do this? Why would the Saudis do this?
Why would the Chinese and the Russians respond in this manner?
And that is often far more complicated than might meet
the naked eye. But then I try to do something else,
(23:10):
and that is to take the exact opposite position than
what comes naturally to me, and to make that argument.
And sometimes I find when I do that that maybe,
just maybe that position is the position that if I'm
(23:32):
trying to give myself the heckle and gide a jackal
and hide two sides two shoulders, maybe that one makes
more sense. It's at least an exercise I find worth
doing realizing that I'm no different than everyone else. I'm
like a dog on a bone. There are people who
(23:55):
know the buzzwords that are most likely going to make
me react when a foreign government or a foreign organization
brazenly attacks or insults my culture, my people, my faith.
My immediate reaction, just like a dog is to bite,
(24:17):
to snap, to want to see them destroyed, to want
to see them knock to their knees. But I also
recognize that there are people who know that and who
will create that situation. It becomes a very complicated play.
I think the strait of hormones. I think Israeli relations,
I think Irani relations. I think Saudi relations are a
(24:37):
lot more complicated than what first meets the eye, and
they require a great deal of study. And at the
end of it, I don't have a good solution. The
President is in the unenviable position that he has to
make a decision. I don't I get to review and study.
But it is worth noting that this activity is.
Speaker 1 (24:59):
Harmful to China.
Speaker 6 (25:01):
This does hurt the Chinese economy. This does help the
Gulf of America. The Gulf Coast economy in the short.
Speaker 7 (25:08):
Term values a million dollars record sales.
Speaker 6 (25:12):
Now, President Trump posted the horrific surveillance video of a
Haitian illegal alien murdering a female gas station convenience.
Speaker 1 (25:24):
Clerk in Florida with a hammer, just brutal.
Speaker 6 (25:33):
Writing quote, this animal was allowed to stay here because
the Biden administration granted him and all Haitians Temporary protective status,
a massively abused and fraudulent program which my administration is
working to terminate, but deranged liberal district court judges are
(25:53):
standing in our way. It is not true that every
illegal alien who comes here is a murderer, rapist, child trafficker, pedophile, assailant,
(26:14):
car thief, fraud. That's not true. It is even true
that some will come here and do good things. It
is also not true that none of them come here
and do these sorts of things. So where on the
spectrum does it lie? Is that even the question to
(26:37):
be asked? Is it the case as long as we
kind of like the people who come here, that we
should just allow our laws to be broken without regard
to our own law because we like cheap labor and
the Democrats like the voters.
Speaker 1 (27:01):
Alex on the black line, you're on the Michael Berry show.
Speaker 8 (27:03):
Go ahead, sir, you know, you know, please forgive him
for calling your lady Michael. But you know, I have
a sister in law. She's so liberal that she will
allow just people like that to run amok in her town.
She lives up in Indiana. And we asked a one time,
you know, if they needed a place to state. We
(27:26):
could just bring him New York place. She had a fit.
But anyway I wanted to say, is you know President Trump?
He truly he absolutely I believe he believed that he
was saved to get our country back on track because
he is the only man that would have that, that
(27:50):
has done what needed to be dead since the eighties
because Iran wasn't never gonna make These people haven't stuck
to a deal ever since Tola come into Uh to play.
Absolutely never they've They've just these people never got to
(28:12):
do anything. America tends to get a week president all
the time, and the people do not want wars, so
they'll just pass it on down to the next guy.
And then I bring this up because after I heard
with Vice President Vance had said about he wasn't for
(28:32):
sure he wanted to really do this. Guess what if
it hadn't been for President Trump, this never would have happened. This,
this needed to happen. I know we don't want wars.
We don't have to gut for it anymore, we don't,
but it truly needed to be done because if the
(28:54):
if the Democrats get into office, look at Swowhill. Everybody
known this. Think about it. The man was sleeping with
a spy, never kicked out of office. Now all of
a sudden, Oh, he's you know with these women as
(29:15):
who said no, and now they're gonna kick him out.
Look at old stupid hal Green walking around with the
king that he never uses, acting a fool, constantly saying that,
you know, he wants to impeach the president for what.
I'm glad the President doesn't listen to all this. I
(29:35):
know he's kind of takes it to heart sometime. And
I hate when people speak about our president bad because
he truly is the right man for the job, because
he truly believes that when he was saved from the
assassin's bullet, he is the right man to get this
on track. And if it was enough for him, this
(29:58):
Iranian deal, which is gonna be continually be kicked down
the road, and we truly would honestly be dealing with
a nuclear Iran wondering when they would fire. They lied
about having uh.
Speaker 9 (30:12):
The uh the missiles that could reach Europe or go
across the ocean. They lied about that they never would
let nobody know. What about how much uh the nuclear.
Speaker 8 (30:29):
Of formula or whatever. I'm getting off track.
Speaker 1 (30:34):
All say your case, you're doing finalis, You're doing great.
Speaker 8 (30:38):
But it is absolutely amazing how they will constantly, constantly
accuse him of any and everything, but never hold to
what they have done. And it just seems like the
Democrats can say and do what they want and never
(30:58):
be accountable for it. Absolutely, and I'm so mad. I
know Grand Paul was a huge favor of mine, but
I think he just then lost his mind.
Speaker 1 (31:09):
I really do.
Speaker 8 (31:10):
Why can't we stick together and just do what needs
to be done too, for what's right. It's not like
we don't believe what's not right, it's just we don't
push to do it. And it just blows my mind
that you have people You said it before, and I've
heard you said a hundred of times. How do Democrats
(31:33):
get votes? If both mine? Look at the woman over
that was running against Winston Sears, I forget her name,
the governor she she was running with the guy who said,
you know, he would pee on the braves of his
opponents children. He still was voted in. People would people
(31:58):
vote this? They voted for her.
Speaker 1 (31:59):
She couldn't even say.
Speaker 8 (32:04):
That men couldn't go into little girl's restrooms. But yet
she was still voting. How do they do it? They
stick together, They even and it's dead wrong, but they
stick together. So please, please, people, just give our president
(32:28):
just a little bit, just let's just hang in there
with him just a little bit. Come on. I truly
believe this man is the man to get this done
in his last few years, and it's gonna happen. These
people needed to be knocked just down to the ground
(32:50):
because they're not gonna do nothing but make it miserable
for the rest of us. Michael, I'm good man. Thank
you so much for letting me up get ub and
trying to get this out for months, and thank you
for letting me do it.
Speaker 1 (33:06):
Youre bet.
Speaker 6 (33:08):
The beauty of this format, in this great country, in
this great culture, at this great time is that whether
someone was cheering for you or calling you an idiot
in their truck, in their office, in their living room,
(33:29):
the beauty is that we get to flesh these things out,
We get to express our opinions. I mean, it's hard
to believe how rare throughout history that is. To get
to do that. It's a special thing. I think it's
very healthy, it's a glorious thing. Do you agree with Alex,
send me an email, and tell me through the website
Michael Barryshow dot com.