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February 14, 2025 • 32 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
At time time, Luck and Load Michael Very Show is
on the air for more detail.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
Because of the obvious threat to untold numbers of citizens,
and because of the crisis which is even now developing,
this radio station will remain on the air day and night.

Speaker 3 (00:32):
There are warnings that the US is dangerously close to
a constitutional crisis.

Speaker 4 (00:36):
I mean, what we are witnessing is a constitutional crisis.

Speaker 5 (00:40):
The media is convinced that the actions of President Trump,
like executive orders and Department of Government efficiency, have created
or will soon create a constitutional crisis.

Speaker 6 (00:50):
Those that have said that we may face.

Speaker 7 (00:53):
A constitutional crisis, I want you to know that the
crisis is here.

Speaker 8 (00:59):
Constant, tuitional crisis, gross sleep unconstitutional.

Speaker 1 (01:03):
This is a genuine constitutional crisis.

Speaker 9 (01:06):
I think this is the most serious constitution crisis the
country has faced, certainly since Watergate. The president is attempting
to seize control of power and for corrupt purposes.

Speaker 10 (01:17):
Well, you can cry, Riva, I do not vote to
elect Elmo as a Bond villain as our president of
the United States.

Speaker 11 (01:29):
We have to uphold the constitution.

Speaker 12 (01:31):
That's what we're here to do now. Republicans have attacked
us time and time again because we model the values
of diversity and inclusion. Well, that is what America is about.
Don't let us then tell us we're not American. We
are the true Americans here. America is about us. We
have to reclaim our country, USA, USA, USA.

Speaker 10 (01:54):
Well, you can cry.

Speaker 11 (02:01):
This is all about taking over the government in order
to advance the interests of Elon Musk and the billionaires
at the expense of everybody.

Speaker 1 (02:12):
Else in America.

Speaker 11 (02:15):
It was the big lie and the big betrayal.

Speaker 3 (02:18):
We have got to tell Elon Musk, Nobody elected your ass,
Nobody talk to you can.

Speaker 11 (02:26):
Get all of our private information.

Speaker 13 (02:29):
Nobody told you you could be.

Speaker 6 (02:31):
In charge of the payments of this country.

Speaker 1 (02:33):
We have told you you've.

Speaker 8 (02:35):
Made enough money off our government yourself. Elon Musk is
seizing power from the American people.

Speaker 1 (02:45):
Why Robert F.

Speaker 3 (03:03):
Kennedy Jr. Is our new Health and Human Services Secretary.
That's fantastic. Make America healthy again. I'll get to that
in a moment, But first let's start with some good news,
shall we. And by the way, Cash Mattel has been
moved out to a vote, and so we will have

(03:24):
a new FBI director in short order.

Speaker 1 (03:27):
My goodness, folks, this.

Speaker 3 (03:30):
Is like Marvel super hero comics level stuff. We got
everybody in place. This is the A team. This is
the A team. They're gonna try to gum up the words.
They're gonna claim sexual harassment, they're gonna claim meanness.

Speaker 1 (03:47):
They're gonna claim this.

Speaker 3 (03:48):
They're gonna have some girl that comes out from twenty
years ago that says Trump did this, or Pete said this,
or somebody did that.

Speaker 1 (03:55):
They're gonna do whatever they can do.

Speaker 3 (03:57):
They're including Robert Garcia, congressman, calling for taking up arms.
They're gonna they're gonna get one of these crazies to
take a shot at somebody.

Speaker 1 (04:05):
They're gonna do.

Speaker 3 (04:06):
Whatever they can because what is happening is too good
for the nation and they cannot let it continue. And
I'll get to that in a moment, but first and Fogel,
the sister of Mark Fogel, told CNN that President Trump
promised her mother. Remember, Mark Fogel was held as a
as a prisoner in Russia for a half ounce of marijuana,

(04:29):
she said. The sister of Mark Fogel said that President
Trump promised her mother in Butler, Pennsylvania, just before he
was almost assassinated, was shot in the head that if
he won the election, he would bring her son home.

Speaker 7 (04:44):
He went to the Trump rally and saw President Trump
shortly before he.

Speaker 1 (04:50):
Was shot, and Butler but.

Speaker 13 (04:54):
Just crazy of events.

Speaker 7 (04:57):
And he told her then that if he if he
was elected, he was going to get him out.

Speaker 5 (05:02):
And the man.

Speaker 1 (05:03):
Was true to his word.

Speaker 3 (05:07):
Did you know that the President when he went out
to greet him, bad weather and all brings him in
and Mark Fogue has got an American flag around his neck.

Speaker 1 (05:17):
He's very emotional.

Speaker 3 (05:18):
He's been kept in some very very bad, very bad
conditions and basically tortured, and the President just very subtly
informs him that you're going to be sleeping in the
Lincoln bedroom tonight.

Speaker 1 (05:32):
Folks.

Speaker 3 (05:32):
I don't get very emotional about politics because I know
the games that are played. But this guy's been in
a prison and Donald Trump got him out and he
came home.

Speaker 1 (05:44):
He's been in a prison for over three years. This
is what it's all about.

Speaker 14 (05:50):
And then Secretary Rubio, who met my son a while back.
I'm a middle class school teacher who's now.

Speaker 6 (06:05):
In a.

Speaker 14 (06:07):
Dream world.

Speaker 1 (06:09):
We're going to show you the Lincoln Bedroom.

Speaker 5 (06:12):
It's very special, special place appropriate for very appropriate and.

Speaker 1 (06:22):
Thank you all.

Speaker 14 (06:23):
And I love our country and I'm so happy to
be back here. And I wish I could articulate it better.

Speaker 6 (06:36):
You've done beautifully.

Speaker 1 (06:37):
And he's got a great mother.

Speaker 5 (06:40):
And when I saw the mother at a rally, she said,
will you if you win, will you get my son out?
And I promise, She's ninety five years old.

Speaker 1 (06:49):
And I said, we'll get him out. And we got
him out pretty quickly.

Speaker 14 (06:53):
She told me that that exhausted that you.

Speaker 3 (06:55):
Said when I saw her at a rally, at a rally,
the rally where he got shot in the head, the
rally where God spared him. Just saw her at a rally. Folks,
these are such wonderful times. Drink it in, enjoy it,
make a memory toast it.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

Speaker 3 (07:17):
Who opposes the clock shot and who is willing to
blow the lid off of what the poisons are that
are being sold to you to put in your body
by food companies. I am so excited about the opportunity
for our people to be healthy again. Look at a
picture of people at the beach in the sixties. Just

(07:38):
look at how different it looks. But my challenge to you,
and I spent more time on this this morning, I'll
maybe tomorrow. My challenge to you is, don't wait on
Donald Trump to make America great again. Make yourself great again,
make your family great again, make your company great again.
Invest in your good health, inst your relationship with your spouse,

(08:01):
with your parents, with your children, with your employees, your clients,
your vendors, your neighbors, your fellow congregants at your church.
Do your part to make America great again. Put your
own first one hundred days, and do it at break
neck speed. Change your whole life. Don't pace yourself. Do
what Trump and Elonor did.

Speaker 15 (08:22):
Is the Michael Berry Show that I read you a
piece last week that a fellow had written and it
went viral, and it was about how football fans know
the term flooding his zone.

Speaker 3 (08:36):
It was about how Trump is flooding his own He's
doing too much, too fast for them to be able
to draw.

Speaker 1 (08:44):
A bead on him. You know, you'll see the movie.
You'll see the.

Speaker 3 (08:49):
Scene in a movie where a guy can't get stopped
long enough to take a good shot to aim. He's
having to move. I know what Trump's doing. They can't
fire back at him. And the editorial was about how
Trump is doing this and it's leaving the left. The

(09:10):
way they work is the New York Times is the
coordinator of this thing, and they decide what's the big story,
and everybody reads the New York Times and then they go.

Speaker 1 (09:23):
Off and do what they're supposed to do. But the
New York.

Speaker 3 (09:26):
Times is having this challenge because they've always been the
ones that broke news and covered the news as it's happening. Well,
you can't do that if there's five news stories happening
at one time. And Trump knows this and that's why
he throws stuff out there like We're gonna buy Gaza,
and well, they got to cover that because that's what

(09:47):
people want to read. They want to read the sensational stuff.
So then what they try to do is get him
to back off of that so they don't have to
spend any time on it. So the next day, Hey,
when you said you were gonna buy Gaza, you're not
really going And by gods, are you just saying that, I'm.

Speaker 1 (10:01):
Absolutely gonna do it. Oh my god, I do it again.

Speaker 3 (10:04):
So the New York Times, which is where all of
them go for the playbook, You know, when you go
into the huddle, the quarterback calls a play. The quarterback
of this movement, the offensive coordinator and quarterback of this
whole movement, is the New York Times. Sometimes the offensive
coordinator is a deep state of It's sometimes it's Democrat leadership,

(10:26):
and they give that to the New York Times, and
that the New York Times calls the play for everybody
else to run off of. Well, they don't know what
to do now Trump keeps doing this. So what they've
tried to do now is they've taken a step back
and they're trying to unite under one banner, and that
banner is constitutional crisis. Now they don't know what it means.

(10:52):
Constitutional crisis is yesterday's threat to democracy. But you will
notice they all read off the same script. It's quite impressive.
I mean, they may be lemmings, but they're good little limmings.
They go off the cliff right like they're supposed to.
And there is an effectiveness to that, an incredible effectiveness
to that, and it's worked for a long time. And

(11:13):
what it does is it creates a selection bias. You know,
when you buy a white truck, you start all of
a sudden noticing all the white trucks. You know, everything's
a white truck. I never noticed we're all buying white
trucks at the same time. No, you didn't have a
reason to notice it. So if they're all saying constitutional
crisis at the same time, then it must be a

(11:35):
constitutional crisis, because.

Speaker 1 (11:37):
That's all I'm hearing.

Speaker 3 (11:39):
It was on the View, and it was on CNN,
it was on MSNBC, and then I saw Truck Schumer
say it, and I saw Jasmin Crockett say it, and
Nancy Pelosi said it, and the local newspaper had a
headline it.

Speaker 1 (11:49):
It must be true. And everybody's going out and talking
to me about it at the parties.

Speaker 3 (11:53):
Hey, what's going on? We have on a constitutional crisis? Yeah,
how'd you know her? Everybody talking about it. It's construors
of crisis.

Speaker 1 (12:00):
So it's really not. It's really not.

Speaker 3 (12:03):
But Scott Jennings is doing such amazing work at seeing
and I feel like I say that every day, but
I'm going to say it because it's true. He says,
we do have a constitutional crisis. It's caused by these
Democrat judges. And by the way, that is true. These
judges are stepping far beyond the powers that the Constitution
imbues them with.

Speaker 7 (12:25):
Well, I think there's a difference between saying whether you're
complying with the law, and then you have these individual
district court judges setting effectively broad federal policy that is
specifically reserved for the president of the United States. I
think we do have a constitutional crisis, and it's being
caused by these judges.

Speaker 1 (12:41):
They're not here.

Speaker 7 (12:42):
They're not here to tell us how to spend the money.
They're not here to set broad federal policy. That is
the president's job, as elected by the people. These judges
are supposed to be settling discrete, specific matters, not policy setting.
I think Vance is right. I think Trump has a point,
and these judges want nothing more to continue the law.

Speaker 16 (13:00):
I don't think anybody is an executive branch saying no,
I don't feel like it, and the court say you
have to.

Speaker 7 (13:04):
Well, I answer to as simply is it is the
executive branch's job to figure out how to spend money
once it is appropriated by Congress, and sometimes they spend
money that's not been appropriated. But the correct political controls
between the executive and the count I want to random,
I want you there are not repercussions, you get away,
I get it. You want you want individual federal judges

(13:25):
who hate Donald Trump?

Speaker 1 (13:26):
I don't you tie him up for four years?

Speaker 6 (13:28):
No?

Speaker 1 (13:28):
I don't.

Speaker 7 (13:28):
If you want a big policy questions decided, let the
Supreme Court do it. But in the interim, the executive
has to.

Speaker 1 (13:34):
Be allowed to go. Well, am I wrong about that? Well,
you're supposed to comply.

Speaker 13 (13:37):
But Scott's absolutely right in that the court cannot say
you have to spend these dollars today. So as a
governor I dealt with this. We got things challenged in
state court and federal court. It's all judge shopped by
the way. Judges don't randomly get these cases. There's the
reason that these cases are filed in Boston, the Boston Court,
or a certain district Rhode Island, because they know they're.

Speaker 7 (13:55):
Going to get a judge the right point. Should the
president and the sul presidentially? Should he have to share
Should he have to share the presidency with three hundred
district court judges?

Speaker 14 (14:04):
No?

Speaker 1 (14:04):
Absolutely.

Speaker 16 (14:05):
But the point though, you made a really good point
that there have been judges that sat down some of
President Biden's executive actions and they understand the bright administration understood.

Speaker 7 (14:13):
That he ignored balanced the Supreme Court to stop if
they never will.

Speaker 16 (14:22):
He actually didn't ignore it.

Speaker 1 (14:24):
He did they continue to.

Speaker 13 (14:28):
Let me see the record.

Speaker 4 (14:31):
I hated the stone forgiveness policy.

Speaker 1 (14:33):
Did he say? I thought?

Speaker 4 (14:35):
I thought it was a ridiculous policy. I thought it
was unconstitutional. I predicted it would get struck down. It
did get struck out, and I didn't want it. He
did not ignore it, though he went and tried under
a different law.

Speaker 1 (14:50):
But let me just understand where you where you stand.
If a district court judge.

Speaker 4 (14:54):
Rules in a way that the president dislikes, should the
president listen or should the president defy?

Speaker 7 (14:59):
If they district court judge tries to usurp the authority
of the chief executive this country, he should absolutely defy it.
There's a difference between broad policy decisions and discrete disputes
between parties.

Speaker 1 (15:11):
That's the difference.

Speaker 7 (15:12):
If I want to policy decided, I'll take it to this.

Speaker 1 (15:14):
What about checks and balances?

Speaker 7 (15:15):
So you're saying that a judge should decide how and
when money is judge is saying for years and not
the president.

Speaker 1 (15:21):
Of the United Scott's.

Speaker 16 (15:23):
Let me explain there a little bit more let me
explain it a little bit more slowly.

Speaker 1 (15:26):
A judge is saying, you don't have to talk to
me like Congress. I have a position on this, and
you have an opinion.

Speaker 6 (15:30):
We can do that.

Speaker 16 (15:31):
But I'm saying you listen to me, because you're not
listening and you're making claims that are not connected to
the facts. The judge is saying, maybe you, Congress appropriated
a certain amount of money.

Speaker 1 (15:41):
We need to litigate this.

Speaker 16 (15:42):
While we litigate this, we're going to put a hold
on the actions that you took that might be unconstitutional.

Speaker 7 (15:47):
So while we litigate, While we litigate, Judge, I'm in
charge of the executive branch, and you're not forgetting.

Speaker 13 (15:52):
It is I totally compel the executive branch to spend
the dollars.

Speaker 1 (15:57):
You can't do that.

Speaker 13 (15:57):
They can't say we're going to start the US.

Speaker 1 (16:01):
Have you heard the no matter who the president.

Speaker 3 (16:03):
Have you heard of the imp And also, manufacturing is
not for women because it has man in the title
of it.

Speaker 1 (16:11):
Can you believe a female congressman actually said that. You
think I'm joking?

Speaker 10 (16:16):
Watch from a King of Dan and this other guy,
Michael Barry.

Speaker 3 (16:26):
So I'm not even gonna say her name because she's
too stupid. A woman who's a congressman had the audacity
to make reference to the word man inside man you facturing.

Speaker 1 (16:41):
I this makes some of you so crazy. I read
your emails. You're so crazy and so angry. I got
to tell you you're missing the boat here.

Speaker 3 (16:51):
When the other team strikes out, do you go dad,
Duma and I came to watch them get a hit? No,
you go, good pitch, Buddy, good pitch. I love that
they're swinging it pitches that are breaking five feet in
front of the plate. I love that they're swinging it
outside pitches. I love that they can't hold over their
bat when they swing it flies all the way down
to third. I love that they swing at pitches above

(17:12):
their head.

Speaker 1 (17:13):
I love that they.

Speaker 3 (17:14):
Send the catcher to try to steal and we throw
him out with five feet to spare. I don't go,
oh my god, well is he trying to steal.

Speaker 1 (17:21):
And we threw him out. That's horrible.

Speaker 3 (17:23):
These people are enabling you to take back your country.
Do you think you're doing it all on your own?

Speaker 1 (17:29):
Because you're not.

Speaker 3 (17:32):
They're mistakes in your to our benefit. You've got a
lot of neighbors that are not as smart as you,
they're not as informed, they trust the government. Fauchi tells
them to take a shot. They take a shot. Fauchi
tells them to take a booster.

Speaker 1 (17:47):
They do it. They're on booster number twelve, and they
might make a joke book. I guess there's gonna be
twenty boosters. I don't know, but they said to take it,
so I did.

Speaker 3 (17:57):
I just you know, you start to wonder at some
point you're all you crazy conspiracies, like oh my god,
people are dying from the shot, But you know, you
gotta wonder, like it feels weird, like how many time
we gonna do a booster on top of a booster.
I had one guy at work. I can't remember all
all the stuff he said, but he had the quotations
and the numbers, and he heard that this person said this,

(18:17):
And you start wondering when maybe the guy at work,
I mean sounds stupid, but the guy at work knows
more than doctor Fauci, you know, because he's a doctor.

Speaker 1 (18:24):
How well you know does he not know? And so
I don't know, But you got.

Speaker 3 (18:28):
A lot of your neighbors who whatever is spoon fed
to them, they believe it because they were taught to
believe as children, trust your parents. Well, do you realize
some people have parents who abuse them. Some people today
have parents who little boys get their weeder cut off,
and a lot of them are now getting to the
age where they try to what's called de transition. Well

(18:49):
that's not so easy if they've gone to cutting. That's
why it's called mutilation. It's not natural, it's not cosmetic surgery.
You just imagine fellas you imagine having the whole thing
cut off. Aside from the pain involved, imagine five years
from now you're old enough to start having feelings for

(19:11):
the opposite sex and you ain't got anything down there.
This is why there's such a high rate of suicide
among these kids. I mean, you're dealing with some real
issues and you have the wrong people trying to help them.
This is the kind of folks we're talking about. This
is the kind of nonsense. But when they say stupid stuff,
don't get angry, don't celebrate it, because the good thing

(19:34):
is if you show this to anybody you know, anybody
you know, and you go, hey, what do you think
of this? You think this is crazy? There's no doubting here.
There's no two sides to this argument. This is crazy
cat lady. Crazy jd Vance is weird. They tried that line,

(19:56):
remember what he talked about the crazy cat ladies, and
a bunch a bunch of crazy cat ladies came out.
He called me crazy cat lady, ma'am. You got the
cat's milk on the side of your mouth. Hey, like
that was a great moment. Sure, there were a few
Republican women who have thirty eight cats, and they got

(20:17):
mad because he's talking about the crazy cat ladies. Uh okay,
So if we had to spare a few crazy cat
ladies on our side in order to make the point
that the leaders of their party are all crazy. If
you speak in robody, you know, people say. I just
want people to speak directly, say what they mean, and
mean what they say until they say it and you

(20:37):
don't like what they have to say. And that's when
it gets weird, isn't it. It always seems to be
that that's when it gets weird. Anyway, here's what she
said yesterday.

Speaker 8 (20:45):
I met with a manufacturing company, but they also are
engaged in getting young people more engaged in manufacturing. So
I asked them, so, how many of those students that
are signing up and want to do this, how many
are women? And they said, well, I know there's at

(21:09):
least thirteen percent or something. It was a low number,
and you had mentioned trying to engage more women in manufacturing.
I'm just wondering if just the name manufacturing sounds like
a guy.

Speaker 1 (21:28):
Yep, because it's got man in it. And what is this?
What is this? What is this? Mister mechanic, don't talk
to me like.

Speaker 3 (21:41):
I'm a girl. Okay, I brought my hair. I brought
my car for you here to fix. Brought my hair
for you to fix. My grandmother would say that so
and so was wasting money because she was going into
town to get her hair fixed. My mother, my grandmother,
cut her own hair. She was poor and just part
of it. But she would say, you know, miss Beverly,

(22:01):
she's up with me because she got all the money
in the world. She can go down there and get
her hair fixed.

Speaker 1 (22:05):
Once a week. She's gonna get her hair fixed.

Speaker 3 (22:08):
There's a line in the song Atlantic City, put your
makeup on, get your hair fixed pretty so so this
crazy cat lady, congressman, you know, she takes your car
to the mechanic and he comes out. You know, Bill's
gonna be eight hundred bucks and she says that's too

(22:30):
much and don't pay it. You crazy cat lady, you
brought it here. I didn't come knocking on your door.
You came to me. I'll be here to market. I
got Look, they're always backed up. I got twenty cars
and I'm not gonna argue with you. I got twenty
other cars that need to get to You don't want
to do the work that's the bid, don't do it? Well,
tell me what's wrong, open the hood and tell because

(22:50):
I could do the work myself. Oh really good you
now I could do the work myself if I wanted to,
but I just don't want to. You crazy cat lady,
Democrat politician, You're making laws about things you don't even understand,
which is ninety nine percent of the world. The only
thing you understand is how to be crazy. You don't

(23:10):
know how to fix being crazy, or you'd stop being crazy,
but you understand how to be crazy and how to
lash out anyway. So can't you just see this crazy
cat lady manufacturing that sounds like a dude, it's got
man in it, So you tell me, what's wrong with
my car? And why it's going to be eight hundred dollars?
You tell me, because I know cars, I know engines
and things. Well, right here, you got your manifold, and

(23:36):
it's uh, you want to keep the air from coming
through here, but your manifolds.

Speaker 1 (23:42):
You've got a real problem on that.

Speaker 3 (23:44):
And so you got a lot of what we'd call
gunk inside your engine and your manifold.

Speaker 1 (23:50):
What is it?

Speaker 3 (23:51):
What is the manifold? Where is the manifold? You said
you knew engines. This is this little part right here.
That's what manages the flow of your air and your
exhaust and manifolded?

Speaker 1 (24:03):
What I don't like that? It's called it. See, that's
a problem with you people. You know y'all y'all are
disrespectful to women. How am i, ma'am?

Speaker 3 (24:13):
I'm sitting here getting showed on by you, and I
got other people waiting to get their car finished, and
you don't want to pay for the what is it?

Speaker 1 (24:20):
Manifold? Manifold? What had to be a man? I have
such penis Indian? Could you maybe autimbly laugh when I
tell a joke like that? So I know you thought
it was funny.

Speaker 14 (24:31):
Michael Berry.

Speaker 7 (24:32):
Oh no, I won't do that.

Speaker 1 (24:34):
It's too much for money. She won't go that. That
was so funny.

Speaker 3 (24:39):
You know, it's fascinating to me. The hypocrisy. And they
don't care. I mean, all they care about is winning.
The hypocrisy of media and Democrats when it comes to
women who or nominated, appointed, elected, And these are the

(25:05):
people who tell women, hey, men want to take away
your abortions.

Speaker 1 (25:09):
They're evil.

Speaker 3 (25:10):
We want you to get abortions, so vote for us
because we're the only ones that care about women. That's
every woman doesn't want abortions, and many women are against abortions.
And they're not one issue voters. Not if they have
a brain. They care about a lot of things, but

(25:33):
they try to make them into one issue voters.

Speaker 1 (25:35):
Men hate you.

Speaker 3 (25:36):
They all want to rape you, and they appeal they
appeal to single women, which is the only demographic of
the four in the box married women, single women, married men,
single men. The only demographic Democrats are still winning is
single women, and even that has narrowed dramatically. But the
way they do it is to say, hey, has have

(25:59):
you ever had sex with the guy on the first
night and he kicked you out next morning and said
I'll call you later, and he didn't. That's the Republican
Party vote against it. Hey, have you ever been real
serious about a guy and you realize he wasn't as
serious about you. You were just kind of a sex

(26:19):
partner and you felt cheap and you spent years with
him and now your clock is tiktoking and you hate
him for that.

Speaker 1 (26:28):
Well, that's the Republican Party. Vote for us. That's how
they appeal to women. Right. There is a woman named
Mindy Hildebrand.

Speaker 3 (26:39):
In Houston who has been nominated to be the ambassador
to Costa Rica.

Speaker 1 (26:45):
Great nation, by the way, great people. The Ticos are
John Keelow.

Speaker 3 (26:50):
Great people. That's kind of their motto. Put Oh, they're
wonderful people. I learned to speak Spanish in Costa Rica
when I graduated high school. I went down there to learn.
You don't meet a lot of Costa Ricans here, oddly enough,
but anyway, the newspaper in Houston posted as a headline,

(27:14):
donut shop owner nominated for Costa Rica Ambassador. Donut shop owner.

Speaker 1 (27:23):
Well, it's true. A little background.

Speaker 3 (27:28):
She and her husband built a business, making them the
richest Houstonians. They are also prolific givers to great causes.

Speaker 1 (27:38):
Very very philanthropic couple.

Speaker 3 (27:44):
They are insanely successful in business, and her husband gives
credit to her as being a part of that. But
they didn't choose to say successful businessmen, or if they
wanted to say business woman, successful business woman to use

(28:04):
their terminology. Nominated to represent Houston.

Speaker 1 (28:10):
This is a Houston chronicle. You think you think you'd
be proud, right.

Speaker 3 (28:15):
She opened a donut concept, an independent donut concept, to
have fun.

Speaker 1 (28:22):
She not there serving.

Speaker 3 (28:23):
Donuts all day. She didn't pair rent with donuts. She
thought it'd be fun to create this whimsical donut shop.

Speaker 1 (28:32):
Do that make a profit? I don't know.

Speaker 3 (28:33):
I don't think she cares. They're billionaires, she doesn't need
the money. I think she honestly did it because there
was no donut shop around the corner from her, and
she likes it. The guilty pleasure of a donut, I mean,
is there a guiltier pleasure that won't get you divorced
then a donut and a cup of coffee.

Speaker 1 (28:57):
You can't do it every day, some of you probably do.
I don't wish I could.

Speaker 3 (29:01):
But is there a guilty or pleasure than having a
donut and a cup of coffee. You know, you walk
into this particular donut shop in Houston, and it's an independent.
You go into the donuts, it's kind of more of
the crispy cream type model. They're more almost cakes. They're delicious,
they're delightful. I used to stop because I lived right
next to it. I used to stop on the way
to the studio. No, you don't need to go get donuts.

Speaker 1 (29:25):
But that's the other thing. I need to donut any
time of day.

Speaker 3 (29:27):
And I would stop there and get Ramone Donuts. And
the first time I brought him in, he said, River
Oaks Donuts, What is this?

Speaker 12 (29:32):
Never heard of it?

Speaker 3 (29:34):
And then it was, hey, I never heard of Rooty's
donut And where's is your nice placement?

Speaker 1 (29:38):
Didn't get any one he does, he's talking.

Speaker 14 (29:40):
One he's doing.

Speaker 3 (29:41):
They're fantastic, but everyone knows that's not how she makes
her living.

Speaker 1 (29:46):
That's not her greatest accomplishment.

Speaker 3 (29:48):
But they act like her husband's the only one that
owns the business and she's not part of it. They're
very successful people, just as Elon Musk is very successful, just.

Speaker 1 (29:56):
As Donald Trump is very successful.

Speaker 3 (29:58):
And here's the Houston chronicle who should be celebrating the
fact that a Houstonian is going to be the ambassador
to Costa Rica, and said, what do they do?

Speaker 1 (30:05):
What do they do? Well, you see what they do.

Speaker 3 (30:09):
They trashed today Linda McMahon, who Linda McMahon is a
woman in her own right. She happens to be Vince
mcmhon's wife. Yeah, she also happens to be a white woman.
She might be right handed.

Speaker 1 (30:21):
You know, this is your hair.

Speaker 3 (30:22):
That's not who and all she is, but that's what
they want to be the case.

Speaker 1 (30:27):
And may I say.

Speaker 3 (30:30):
It was pretty cool to see over her left shoulder
Paul Michael Levec there supporting her, or as you may know.

Speaker 1 (30:39):
Him, Triple H.

Speaker 14 (30:43):
John blame.

Speaker 6 (30:45):
For anybody thinks this is the beginning of a new era,
you horrod. Do you think this is a start up
the Batista era?

Speaker 1 (30:57):
You horrong?

Speaker 6 (30:59):
Because Bautiste was great one night, one night in this
ring WrestleMania twenty one, the biggest stage.

Speaker 1 (31:12):
Of all time.

Speaker 6 (31:14):
But he stuff was awesome. I will admit it. He
was on, but it was one night. I am great night, Kurt,

(31:34):
you didn't get a concussion?

Speaker 1 (31:36):
I can't your ass a concussion?

Speaker 6 (31:39):
What I do to you in this very ring will
most definitely be criminal.

Speaker 3 (31:45):
You know, President Trump was very involved with wrestling, as
I like to call it, for years. He loves the
pageantry of it, He loves the intrigue of it, he
loves the theater of it all.

Speaker 1 (31:56):
He gets it.

Speaker 3 (31:58):
And it's one of the ways that he put together
a coalition to win in sixteen and to win again
is meeting people where they are. There are a lot
of I call him sports bros. They listen to sports.

Speaker 1 (32:09):
Radio all day. Nothing's wrong with that.

Speaker 3 (32:11):
White guys twenty five to thirty five.

Speaker 1 (32:14):
They're in a job. They're not really yet engaged in
the job. They're kind of dating, but they're not sure
she's the one.

Speaker 3 (32:19):
They just all they really care about his sports on
and they love wrestling.

Speaker 1 (32:22):
They love Rogan and Trump.

Speaker 3 (32:25):
They have grown to love Trump because he's more accessible
and relatable. I mean, Kamala Harris imagine, Joe Biden, imagine.
And I think there's a lot to be learned from
that because all the other Republicans and Democrats are so stiff.

Speaker 1 (32:40):
And people don't you know.

Speaker 3 (32:41):
So you got a lot of voters, if they're voting
what's best for their pocketbook, for their company, for their country,
for their family, for their kids. They would vote Republicans,
but we've never had candidates who appealed to them where
they are.

Speaker 1 (32:53):
Trump gets that triple h in the Senate here. You
got to love that
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