Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, Time, Luck and load. The
Michael Verie Show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
Chans are passed on from parents to offspring, often determining
traits like her color, personality, leave and eye color.
Speaker 1 (00:23):
My gens are blue. Sidney Sweeney has great keynes.
Speaker 3 (00:26):
We begin with the backlash of our new ad campaign
featuring actress Sidney Sweeney.
Speaker 4 (00:31):
The ads are for American Eagle and the tagline is
Sidney Sweeney has great genes.
Speaker 5 (00:35):
Now. In one ad, the blondehair.
Speaker 6 (00:37):
Blue eyed actress talks about jeeves as in DNA, being
passed down from her parents.
Speaker 1 (00:42):
The play on words is being compared to not. The
propaganda with racial undertow.
Speaker 3 (00:49):
Upon good genes activates a troubling historical associations for this country.
The American eugenics movement and it's prime between like nineteen
hundred and nineteen forty weaponized the idea of good genes
just to justify white supremacism.
Speaker 7 (01:09):
Should we be surprised that a company whose name is
literally American Eagle is making fascist propaganda like this?
Speaker 1 (01:16):
Probably not, but it's still really shocking.
Speaker 5 (01:19):
Like a blonde.
Speaker 7 (01:21):
Haired, blue eyed white woman is talking about her good
genes like that is not seeing propaganda.
Speaker 2 (01:31):
In the past, we've seen her with her family members
who are all clearly.
Speaker 1 (01:34):
Red hat people.
Speaker 2 (01:35):
In the moment, some people gave her a pass for that, obviously,
because you can't choose your family, but her silence since
then and this campaign with American Eagle now really seals
the deal with where she's at. Obviously, the campaign goes
beyond just a bunch of photos and videos in which
she's wearing jeans where none of them seem to fit,
which was an odd choice, but every single ad is
specifically emphasizing this double entendre with the word genes, saying
that Sidney Sweeney has great genes. That is said throughout
(01:58):
the ads over and over and over again. And they
could have chosen a number of angles to go about
this campaign, but saying that about a blonde hair, blue
eyed woman right now who's dressed all like yeha Amrita,
that says a lot. It's pretty obviously promoting European centrism,
and it has everyone up in arms about it.
Speaker 1 (02:16):
Oh Man, Sydney Sweeney and American Eagle have some of
these black women on CNN and MSNBC ready to beat
her up. I mean punch her in the face, get
a bunch of them and kick her, knock her down. Boy,
if one thing they hate it's a white woman. Who Boy,
(02:38):
do they hate a white woman? My goodness alive. It's
on full display. Say Losa does not look good on you, sister.
Your jealousy is not pretty. My goodness. We got wigs
coming off of basketball play in the w n b A.
(03:02):
We got Corey Booker having a melt down, Ramon, do
we do we have us watching Corey Booker have a
melt down at another Democrat on the floor of the Senate.
I think Corey Booker came out and had some things
to say. What's a spatterment? Pediman?
Speaker 5 (03:21):
Fu?
Speaker 1 (03:22):
Democratic Party needs a wake up call.
Speaker 4 (03:27):
I see law firms bending a knee to this president,
not caring about the larger principles.
Speaker 1 (03:36):
Speech right, take on any client? Why are you bending
the knee? I see university who she should make friends with?
His stress and.
Speaker 6 (03:45):
Maybe he'd calm down if he could see a child's behind.
Speaker 4 (03:51):
Pastored free speech bending at the knee to this president.
I see businesses taking.
Speaker 1 (03:59):
I talked saw there because they dare to insult a president.
Speaker 4 (04:04):
I see people who Wantn't mergers suddenly think that they
have to pay tribute to this president?
Speaker 1 (04:11):
Not dude have bubs? My goodness, a lie. I am
certain that American Eagle stoked this fire. I am certain
that American Eagle paid a publicist to create the controversy
(04:35):
behind this campaign Sidney Sweeney. I didn't know this morning
who Sidney Sweeney was. I mean, I saw the adn't
I didn't know she was in a couple of things.
I saw she was in white Lotus, which I watched
with my wife. That's one of those things you watched
with your wife.
Speaker 5 (04:52):
And.
Speaker 1 (04:54):
She was in What else was she in that we
watched from home? Only one other thing? She was in
a bathing suit. Apparently Sidney Sweeney is known for her boobs.
She got big old boobs, but in this ad the
boobs are covered, which is rare. When you go searching
for Sidney Sweeney ads. Now every dude that's with his
(05:15):
wife is making a mental note go check on Sydney Sweeney,
so what she looks like and see those big old knockers.
But they can't, they can't act like it. I wish
you'd stop talking about stupid stuff and being pere Isle
and Sophomoric good grief. I mean talk about serious stuff.
Michael mental note Sidney Sweeney pictures boobs. Sidney Sweeney pictures boob.
(05:41):
I mean, honey, don't you hate when he talks like this?
It's like guy talk or something. It's so beneath him.
Should I change the channel? Reminder of Sidney Sweeney later
boobs Sidney's how to Myself Spell? Sidney is s y
R s. I so American Eagle makes this ad and
it has upset all of the white liberals and the
(06:01):
black women on team. You've got this whole crew of fat,
ugly black women who are on CNN and MSNBC every night,
and all they do every night is is crib complain,
whine about white people and how put down they are.
(06:21):
And I'm like, sister, girl, you're getting paid to be
stupid on national TV and your only credential is you're
really really jealous of and hateful toward white people. Seriously,
in half of you are married to a white dude.
That's the funniest thing. Ilhan Omar's criticizing white dudes, and
(06:43):
then she got the nerdiest white guy out there, Alexandria
Casil Cortes, same, same, and they're not even pretty black women.
Sage Steele, that woman if fine, you put her up
against Sydney Sweeney or anybody else. If they're going to
put a black astress in the American Eagle Jean's commercial,
(07:07):
put Sage Steal in there. Not only is she fine
as frog's hair, she's got great politics, she's smart, she
knows sports. I don't normally like to hear women talk sports,
but I listen to say Steell talk sports all day long,
Jamail Hill kick her out of bed, loud, obnoxious, angry
(07:28):
and doesn't know sports. The worst crime for a woman
on a sports is that you don't know sports. Where
I can't believe he just said that happens to Michael
Varry show. It's several of you suit emails yesterday when
we played David Caskidy in The Partridge Family to say,
(07:50):
I'm assuming you know that the Partridge Family was patterned
after a real family vocal group, and that was the
cow Sils, which is true, six siblings and their mother
who came to be known as many Mom because she
was so little Barbara. They went on to quite a
(08:11):
bit of success. They started Houston Connection on Johnny Nash's
label of I can see clearly Now fame. It was
Johnny Nash who discovered Bob Marley performing in a little
joint in Kingston, Jamaica, and got Bob Marley his first
(08:32):
big contract. The Cowcials song is Hair, which leads to
the greatest w NBA highlight ever. There aren't many angel
reethes loud in mouth. Who's demanding pay me what I'm owed?
Went up for a layup yesterday and the ball hit
(08:53):
the bottom of the backboard. It's just awful. It's like
a highlight film of awful. Well, the greatest highlight film
ever occurred this week when the wig of one of
the players came off. She was so embarrassed she just
went running off the court and then a fan who
(09:16):
was clowning her. A fan was kicked out of the stadium.
You don't make fun of our players when they lose
their wig. Here's the story. They went through the roup.
Speaker 5 (09:30):
Oh no, oh no, oh no, she's gonna go ahead
to the back.
Speaker 8 (09:36):
Oh time out, caulled or proper to deal with the malfunction.
Speaker 1 (09:49):
And now they have an issue with a fan.
Speaker 8 (09:55):
As the officials and as Phoenix has done tin issue
there having a list of Thomas and Nate Tibbets point
out which fan it is, so that security here at
care First Arena can have that if you're.
Speaker 5 (10:11):
Dealt with.
Speaker 8 (10:16):
As waiting to get back to play here, you know the
officials are now talking to arena security here as you
can see, so a fan said something the Phoenix Mercury
(10:44):
bench hurt it and they did not like what was said.
Speaker 1 (10:48):
They're taking exception to it.
Speaker 8 (10:49):
So Amy Bonn or Crue chief is trying to have
this sort it out with the arena security here as
person it was, and that way they can get it
taken care of.
Speaker 1 (11:04):
He called her a wigger, a person wearing a wig,
and apparently that was very very upsetting. Tell you something, Congress,
what Sheila Jackson Lee did not fight, fight for the
Crown Act just to have WNBA players losing their weaves
and being ridiculed.
Speaker 9 (11:25):
Different hair styles should not be the definition of your dignity.
And so personally, I say give us the Crown Act
not because we want to be different. It's because we
want to be the same. We want to be given
respect who we are. And as Essor King often.
Speaker 1 (11:45):
Said, yes the content of our character, Yes, the content
of our character and the composition of our weave. A
man and a man, Ramon, Do you remember the story
about the lady from Ohio who had the mishap with
her weave. She went to get her hair dead and
took her weave off so she could have a different
(12:06):
weave applied, and unbeknownst to her, some of the weave
was hanging out. So naturally people called nine one one.
They thought she had somebody kidnapped in the back. This
is the police knocking on her door.
Speaker 5 (12:20):
Hello, are you Jesus? The craziest thing. You're not gonna
believe what happened, So we got to call. Somebody's concerned?
Are you.
Speaker 10 (12:30):
So there's.
Speaker 5 (12:32):
Jesus though, you gotta see it.
Speaker 1 (13:00):
Oh my Jesus. I agree, Ramona. If you listen to
the play by play, room makes the point. If you
listen to the play by play, call, you have no
idea why Cooper's going to the back. Oh he fixed it.
Oh here it is, Room fixed the audio.
Speaker 5 (13:14):
It went through the rem Oh no, oh no, oh no,
she don't go ahead to the back.
Speaker 1 (13:23):
Oh no. Nobody had more fun with the WNBA than
Norm McDonald.
Speaker 11 (13:28):
After closing out a successful first season. The WNBA is
considering several changes to improve the level of play in
the league next year. Among the proposals extending the playoffs,
increasing salaries, bringing back the three point line, and replacing
all the female players with guys. The WNBA officials expanded
(13:50):
to ten teams this week, adding franchises in Detroit and Washington,
d C. But before you get too excited about the
new additions to the league, remember all of the players
are still women. They think a basketball that's a problem.
Speaker 1 (14:06):
Other than that'd be a good, yea good game. But
they're they're how horrible I make for a foreign game.
It's so true, It is so incredibly true, and they're
angry that men won't watch it. The reason women aren't
(14:27):
really sports fans. Have you ever actually been to games?
How we decided or how these angry lesbian women decided
that this was what was going to be representative of
goal powers that everybody would have to How silly is
that is? Will Michael Ferry show enjoy it? You remember
(14:51):
who was beating the pets of Springfield, Ohio. That's right,
the Haitians, the who were brought into the country by
the Biden administration as Byron Donald says the left's approach
is always first to deny that something is happening, and
(15:12):
then when you followed through and they hope that that'll
make it go away. But then when you show that
something is happening, they say, yeah, it's a good thing
that is happening. We want it to happen. It's good.
I mean, we got too many as tray animals as
it is. We need them eating the dogs and cats. Yeah,
(15:33):
but they're stealing people's pets. Well, I mean, you know, yeah,
but you got too many. You know, nobody listened to
Bob Barker and Spade new to their dog. They listened
to Bob would not do this. Well, you recognize that
the problem extends beyond just the Democrats. We've got a
lot of Republicans that are a problem. Like Republican Ohio
(15:56):
Governor Mike DeWine's very worried about enforcing our immigration laws
because we got Mexican illegals in Texas. Well, they got
Haitian illegals in Ohio. And guess what. The cartels, the
(16:17):
drug dealers, the traffickers, they rely on these people, you see,
and the businesses of Ohio. He says, they don't want
to hire Ohioans. They don't want to follow our labor
laws and pay the minimum wage and have payroll taxes,
Social Security might get sued. They don't want that. They
(16:39):
want to hire illegal aliens just so happens it in Ohio.
It's Haitians, and some of those Haitians will eat your
cat or your dog. But we got to have them
in the work force c because we can't make our
businesses have to hire the people of America.
Speaker 12 (16:56):
I'm concerned about the Economic Campaign Act on Clark County, Springfield,
Clark County, in the Miami Valley and this this whole really,
this whole whole part of the state. That's a that's
a massive change of all those individuals. One day no
longer can work in those companies, and those companies can
(17:17):
no longer employ them, and they have to go out
and then try to figure out how they go from there.
Speaker 1 (17:24):
They brought the expression to you concerned about expansion and
operating challenges that come with losing that size of their
wild worse because its owners.
Speaker 12 (17:34):
They're expressing to me concern about, you know, suddenly losing
a large number of their employees. One company company in particular,
was talking about rather large.
Speaker 1 (17:49):
Uptick in employees. John C. Calhoun served in both the
House of Representatives and the Senate. He was at one
point the Secretary of War and at one point the
Secretary of State. John C. Calhoun was considered a statesman
in the United States. He was considered one of the
(18:13):
great American leaders. He would go on even to be
the Vice President. John C. Calhoun's legacy, however, is marred
by the fact that he did not just defend states' rights.
He was a vocal, adamant proponent of slavery, and this
(18:44):
was a real problem. By the way, he was the
first of the vice presidents in this country to resign
from the position, the second being spureau Agnew over a scandal.
Calhoun did many great things in the course of his career,
but his legacy is marred by his advocacy of slavery.
(19:10):
He didn't just accept or tolerate slavery. He was a
vocal proponent of it. And Calhoun famously uttered the sentiment
that if you don't want slavery, you have to ask
yourself the question, are you going to pick the cotton yourself?
(19:34):
Are you going to pull the tobacco? And roll the
leaves and dry them yourself. Are you going to push
the plow yourself, dig the ditches, plant the seeds. No,
you're not. And therefore we must enslave people and trade
(19:58):
them like property so that they will do it for
merely the cost of keeping them alive. Well, that's not
America's ideals. I can say that John C. Calhoun was
a very influential and important American statesman, but this particular
(20:22):
opinion I cannot condone and will not. And what's so
interesting about that is how many people in the Republican
establishment and the Democrat Party today, how many of them say,
you can't enforce the laws that are in effect, will
then change them. You can't change them because American people
(20:45):
won't them. You can't enforce the laws that are in
effect today because who will cheaply wash my dishes and
put my baby to sleep and mow my grass? I
want to do that for myself. I don't want to
have to pay an American in those wages. I want
(21:05):
a slave. These are the John C. Calhouns of the day,
except they don't have anything else they've done to commend them.
That's what Mike DeWine is Mike DeWine is the guy
who says, just as the Democrats do today. And you've
heard them. You've heard Jasmine Crockett, you've heard AOC, You've
(21:26):
heard the Left, you've heard the white Lululemon Karen.
Speaker 4 (21:31):
If y'all deport the illegal aliens, who's gonna make my
Lottee and wash my clothes.
Speaker 1 (21:39):
At my home? I don't know the novel idea. How
about you hire an American and comply with America's labor laws.
I don't know, just an idea.
Speaker 2 (21:51):
It's from all he's a king of dem and this
other guy, Michael Barry.
Speaker 1 (21:57):
These are the kind of guys you're like a smacking
their ass. The President of Media Matters, Angelo Krusone, was
on MSNBC where he said that we're at the beginning
stages of a massive transformation and closure in civic spaces.
(22:17):
We're in the middle of something massive, all right, Yes,
we are definitely in the middle of something massive.
Speaker 13 (22:24):
I mean we're at the beginning stages of massive transformation,
of an enclosure, of a reduction in civic spaces, whether
or not Trump and you know car who's the SEC chairman,
and the rest of Project Twin twenty five zacolytes.
Speaker 5 (22:39):
Will be able.
Speaker 13 (22:40):
To execute and fully implement that change.
Speaker 5 (22:43):
Is up to all of us.
Speaker 13 (22:44):
But we are at the beginning of that, and there
are plenty of examples, one after the other. As Goon
has described it, cowardly capitulation. And you know, I mean
that trend isn't going away, it's only increasing.
Speaker 1 (22:56):
And on the flip.
Speaker 14 (22:57):
Side of that capitulation has been an increase in threats,
not just from Commission to car but elsewhere to leverage
the power of government to pressure business entities into caving
or giving.
Speaker 1 (23:11):
Them what they want.
Speaker 13 (23:11):
I'll give one example for a turn over to Cornell.
You know, the FTC recently improved a merger between two
of the largest media buyers, and one of the conditions
of that approval was that the media buyers would no
longer remove as or place advertisements based off of political
or ideological considerations. I mean, that's an outrageous action for
(23:33):
them to do, totally unprecedented, but they made it clear
that if they wanted that deal to go through, no
more saying you want you won't advertise on.
Speaker 1 (23:40):
Certain extremist kind of content. And that's one small example.
Speaker 13 (23:43):
So we're at the beginning of a larger change, and
right now we see a lot of examples of it happening,
not a lot of not a lot of backbone.
Speaker 1 (23:50):
The chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, Brendon car Trump's appointee,
told Newsmax that President Trump is taking it out on
the legacy. It started taking out the legacy media. That
his fighting back against PBS, NPR, CBS with lawsuits, with
(24:17):
a change in public opinion, with administrative action, that he
is transforming American journalism and he is punching them in
the pocketbook to do what no one has been able
to make them do before. That is be fair, be honest,
(24:40):
be transparent, even if you don't want to.
Speaker 10 (24:45):
Something really significant is happening right here. And it goes
back to President Trump. When he ran for office again,
he ran directly at these legacy national broadcasters. And for
years people cowed down to the executives behind these companies
based in Hollywood in New York, and they just accepted
that these national broadcasters could dictate how people think about topics,
(25:07):
that they could accept the narrative for the country. And
President Trump fundamentally rejected it. He smashed the facade that
these are gatekeepers that can determine what people think in
everything that we're seeing right now flows from that decision
by President Trump, and he's winning me. Look, PBS has
been defunded, NPR has been defunded, CBS is committing to
restoring fact based journalism.
Speaker 5 (25:28):
You see it.
Speaker 10 (25:29):
You know, everything from you Joy Reed has gone at MSNBC.
All these things aren't isolated pinpricks. They go back to
this emperor has no closed moment where President Trump stood
up to these legacy media gatekeepers, and now their business
models are falling apart.
Speaker 1 (25:41):
You know, most people don't remember this now that he's
been or he's being kicked off the air, but before
he developed a really nasty case of Trump arrangement syndrome.
Stephen Colbert had them candidate Donald Trump on as a
guest on The Late Show. And does he sound like
(26:02):
he despised Donald Trump? Or does he sound to you
like he's hoping he might get to rat on Trump's helicopter.
Also got a great show for you tonight. Donald Trump
is here.
Speaker 4 (26:13):
Yeah, everybody loves him.
Speaker 1 (26:18):
There's no other way to say it. Ladies and gentlemen,
Donald Trump, thank you so much for being here.
Speaker 10 (26:27):
Thank you speaking of doing a fantastic job.
Speaker 1 (26:30):
You are setting the world on fire right now. We
have a lot of.
Speaker 11 (26:33):
Fun and I think we're hitting some pretty good issues.
Speaker 1 (26:35):
Steven, and I want to thank you not only for
being here, I want to thank you for running for president,
because I'm not gonna say.
Speaker 11 (26:47):
I'm not gonna say this stuff rights itself Blampshire and Iowa.
Speaker 6 (26:50):
No matter where we go, it seems that the response
it just gets better and better.
Speaker 1 (26:54):
And the polls have been phenomenal. Thirty three today right
on the Jersey three percent. Incredible. I'm not surprised at all.
I'll tell you why.
Speaker 6 (27:04):
It is because I'm liking him a lot.
Speaker 1 (27:08):
I'm liking you too. I'm liking you too.
Speaker 10 (27:11):
I'm not surprised at all because, especially in the Republican field,
because of the country.
Speaker 1 (27:15):
We have to create. Number one, We're gonna build a wall.
Number two. It's okay, listen to this. Even with your.
Speaker 13 (27:21):
Crowd, I hear though they love me wall, they love
people love the wall.
Speaker 1 (27:25):
Well, Donald Trump, thank you for being here.
Speaker 3 (27:28):
Donald Trump, he's the leader for the Republican nomination.
Speaker 5 (27:34):
We'll be right back. Gog you go on, Donald drag
you good luck. Donald Trump, everybody.
Speaker 1 (27:41):
Earlier in the week, the President, while in Europe, was
talking about the issue of Gaza, and he made the
point that the United States has given sixty million dollars
in food to Gaza and Europe hadn't sent anything. Now
steals the food and then they sell the food and
(28:02):
that's what pays their bills. But his point was, don't
try to shame me on the United States doing more.
You folks, don't do your part. You folks don't do anything.
What does you say Israel? Should Israel be doing more
to llow food into.
Speaker 6 (28:16):
Cause, well, you know, we gave sixty million dollars two
weeks ago and nobody even acknowledged it for food. And
it's terrible. You know, you really at least want to
have somebody.
Speaker 5 (28:30):
Say thank you.
Speaker 6 (28:30):
No other country gave anything. We gave sixty million dollars
two weeks ago for food for.
Speaker 1 (28:36):
Gaza, and.
Speaker 6 (28:39):
Nobody acknowledged it, nobody talks about it.
Speaker 1 (28:43):
And it makes you feel.
Speaker 6 (28:44):
A little bad when you do that, and you know
you have other countries not giving anything. None of the
European countries, by the way, gave I mean nobody gave
but us, and nobody said, gee, thank you very much,
and it would be nice to have at least to
thank you.
Speaker 1 (28:58):
And I took a lot of heat, you know when
I want, can I do that?
Speaker 6 (29:01):
A lot of people aren't happy about that because they say, well,
why are we doing it and nobody else? But I
think we had a humanitarian reason for doing it.
Speaker 1 (29:10):
What's going to happen? I don't know. President Trump was
talking about Iran, and I think he's really flabbergasted. How
on earth we just hit you pretty hard and now
you're out there talking about enrichment. You know, you ever
watch videos of a guy who's mauling off to another guy?
(29:32):
I mean, how he what he's about to do? He's
about to whip him, and maybe he goes into his
rocky stance and he man, he's about to whip this
other guy. We'll beat you, beat you in the next week.
Disst boom, and then the fight starts and he gets
knocked out and a certain number of people get back up.
He's like, let's go, I'm go mose some more, dude.
(29:53):
We just stopped the fight because you got knocked out.
Stop yammering, stop smacking. Well that's kind of how Trump
feels about you. Ran running the mouth.
Speaker 6 (30:04):
Now, I think Iran's been very nasty with their words,
with their mouth. I think they've been very nasty. They
got the hell knocked out of them, and they I
don't think they know it, you know, I actually don't
think they know they really do.
Speaker 1 (30:21):
All things are conjob. We have a lot of conjobs
going on. But Iran was beating up very badly.
Speaker 6 (30:30):
For good reason, we cannot have them have a nuclear weapon.
But they still talk about enrichment.
Speaker 1 (30:37):
I mean, who would do that.
Speaker 6 (30:38):
You just come out of something that's so bad and
they talk about we want to continue enrichment. Who would
say that? How stupid can you beat to say that?
So we're not going to allow that to happen. We're
not allowing that to happen.