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November 1, 2024 • 32 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:02):
It's that time, time, time, time, lucking load. Michael Arry
Show is on the air.

Speaker 2 (00:19):
It's Charlie from BlackBerry Smoking.

Speaker 3 (00:21):
I can feel a good one coming on. It's the
Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 4 (00:24):
Oh yes it is, Yes it is. We're glad you're here.

Speaker 5 (00:31):
Two six packs Shiner, ninety nine cent Putee ladder, look
as track cent a fifth of patrol. I stand at
his blue cooler, take a guess at all to do?
I can feel a good one coming on, throwing Rey

(00:56):
Wiley Hubbard sing along the Red Day Mother, any blues
I had before gold Another working week is over, No
chues to stay sober. I can feel a.

Speaker 3 (01:14):
Good woman coming on.

Speaker 5 (01:17):
From in the.

Speaker 4 (01:20):
Man.

Speaker 1 (01:21):
We're gonna get the feed ride, We're gonna keep this spider.

Speaker 5 (01:26):
I can see the break of the.

Speaker 4 (01:30):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:31):
I can feel a good one when.

Speaker 6 (01:33):
Coming doll.

Speaker 5 (01:46):
Three blocks in a wreck top Mustang followed us down
to the lake and didn't have to think about.

Speaker 3 (01:54):
That too long.

Speaker 5 (01:57):
Skinny Dimon and the bride moon situation couldn't be more.

Speaker 2 (02:05):
One coming on.

Speaker 4 (02:12):
We want to get we want to keep it d
on Fridays here. Everything I don't get to can be
in a good rush. Used to talk about the bar
that there wasn't enough time to get to every story
you wanted to get to, and I often feel that way. Well,

(02:38):
this is a story that I am meant to get
to every day. We've been telling stories using more audio
during this election cycle than we typically do than we
ever have in the past, and so part of that
means less of me talking, but it also means there's

(03:01):
certain things that I think when you hear it yourself
with your own ears, it has more punch. So I
try to make sure we get to all that stuff. Well,
this story has just sort of lingered, and I'm going
to let you decide how important it is or is not.

(03:24):
But it tells me a lot about Tim Wats's decision making,
and with that I'll get to the story. Story comes
from the Free Beacon, very well respected paper. It's about
the fact that Tim Waltz his administration, he is the

(03:45):
governor of Minnesota, and he's done a lot of harm
to that state. Mogadishu is Minneapolis has become Mogadisha. I'll
remind you that's where the whole George Floyd riot happened.
His administration gave taxpayer to a nonprofit organization that hands

(04:05):
out kits that are known.

Speaker 2 (04:07):
As booty bump.

Speaker 4 (04:09):
Kits bot y bump booty bump kits to drug users.
I'm not making this up. There's no punchline here. This
is a true story. They gave booty bump kits to
drug users who want to ingest their drugs through their bunghole.

Speaker 2 (04:34):
I'm not joking. I'll read you the story directly.

Speaker 4 (04:37):
On May fourteenth, Governor Waltz announced one hundred million dollars
in funding for one hundred and thirty five nonprofit organizations
to provide quote unquote vital services to homeless people.

Speaker 2 (04:52):
Quote.

Speaker 4 (04:53):
The money is supporting a number of services, including street outreach, shelter,
and harm reduction for drug users, the Waltz administration said.
At Southside Harm Reduction Services, a Minneapolis based nonprofit, featured
in Waltz's announcement, the quote harm reduction services include the

(05:17):
provision of kits that contain syringes, sterile water, drug cookers,
and lube that allow users to ingest drugs quote through
the rectum open parin anus comma butthole closed parent end quote.

(05:41):
The organization has touted the paraphernalia called booty bumping or
boofing kits in social media posts and on its website
as both a safer method to ingest some drugs and
an efficient way to get taxpayer dollars money. Junkies may

(06:04):
booty bump because drugs quote reach the bloodstream quickly, allowing
users to reach a high faster than some other routes
of administration. South Side Harm Reduction says, now here's the
advice they give.

Speaker 2 (06:22):
This is not a joke. There's no punchline.

Speaker 4 (06:25):
This is real. This is what the Waltz administration used
one hundred million dollars of taxpayer funds on just a
few months ago. They advise in a pamphlet which they
give to the drug users as they give them their drugs. Quote,
try to poop before this is so your drugs are absorbed.

(06:48):
Better stand, squat or lay on your side in a
comfortable position. It never hurts to have a boofing, buddy.
I know y'all think I'm joking.

Speaker 2 (07:05):
I'm not.

Speaker 4 (07:08):
The Waltz administration has given three million, one hundred and
four three hundred and sixty five dollars to south Side
Harm Reduction Services since twenty twenty for syringe exchange programs
and other harm reduction initiatives. According to state spending records,
the WATS administration awarded four hundred and thirty two thousand

(07:28):
more dollars to them in twenty twenty three to provide
low barrier access to harm reduction supplies. Low barrier access
to harm reduction supplies means drug money to put drugs
in your butthole. That those are the terms. South Side

(07:49):
Harm Reduction Services is able to give away booty bumping
kits and other products thanks to a Bill Walts champion
in May of last year that expanded access to harm
reduction services and made it legal for nonprofits to give
away drug paraphernalia. The director of the program called it

(08:11):
a fantastic move in the right direction.

Speaker 3 (08:14):
Now they have.

Speaker 5 (08:15):
Pledged to carry out the largest deportation, a mass deportation.

Speaker 4 (08:20):
Michael Ferris, imagine.

Speaker 2 (08:22):
What that would look like.

Speaker 3 (08:23):
He's true.

Speaker 4 (08:27):
Political candidates hire strategists and consultants and people to help
them with what to wear and what to say, what
issues to champion, and which to stay away from. One
of the many reasons the establishment hates Donald Trump. One
of the reasons Carl Rove hates Donald Trump is that
Donald Trump doesn't need him Donald Trump. See George W. Bush,

(08:51):
whose daughter, by the way, has been working in Pennsylvania
for Kamala Harris, tells you a lot. George W. Bush
didn't know what to say or do, so Carl Rove
had to tell him. Karl Rove had to go out
and do this. Let's put you up on top of
the rubble heat. Let's fly you in on a plane
and a leather jacket, and you.

Speaker 2 (09:09):
Act real tough, all right, real tough. Trump doesn't need that.

Speaker 4 (09:13):
That's why that garbage truck moment, just like the McDonald's moment,
just like the fight fight, fight after shot in the
head moment. That's why they they really resonate so authentic.
This was after Donald Trump the night of the garbage truck,
which was what night before last.

Speaker 2 (09:32):
I thought I played this, but I guess I didn't.
Ramon tells me I didn't. This is a story of
him that he's telling the.

Speaker 4 (09:38):
Story of how he gets in the garbage truck, how
it all came about. And what I love about if
this is is Trump doesn't do self deprecating very often,
so when he does, it has a little extra punch.

Speaker 7 (09:51):
One of my people came in and said, sir. No,
the word garbage is the hottest thing right now out there,
the honest thing out there. Sir, would you like to
drive a garbage truck?

Speaker 4 (10:15):
Now?

Speaker 3 (10:15):
We're about, you know, thirty minutes from landing.

Speaker 7 (10:17):
We had to do this pretty quick. I said, it's
sort of cool, though, isn't it, because you know? And
I said, you know, I think that's okay, but you know,
I don't feel comfortable wearing a suit. And they pulled
up this garbage truck. I don't know how the hell
they did it so fast. I have very capable people.
They put a big sign on the de truck. Did
you see it? I think they showed. And then they said, sir,

(10:46):
we have a vest. I said, wow, should I leave
my suit on and put it over the vest?

Speaker 3 (10:51):
But that doesn't look very good?

Speaker 4 (10:53):
Right?

Speaker 7 (10:54):
That doesn't look good? So I said, look, let me
take it off. And then I actually said I've climbed
into the truck. But he so, I said, how the
hell do you get into this truck?

Speaker 3 (11:02):
It's way up high, it's a big one. This was
a beauty. I said, you didn't have to buy it
that big, right, you have to get it that big.

Speaker 7 (11:09):
They brought this brand new, gorgeous truck. Wonderful driver. He
looked like Carrie granted his prime you know that, this
beautiful driver.

Speaker 3 (11:18):
And he drove that big thing.

Speaker 7 (11:20):
Up and I said, man, this is bad because now
I have all the cameras that all what it look
look at all the fake news they were most of them,
now most of them, many of them were there, and
I'm saying, oh boy, you know, one little mistake with

(11:40):
these guys and your political career is over. You can't
even So I said, man, if I don't get.

Speaker 3 (11:46):
Up to this is going to be very embarrassing these
stupid people.

Speaker 7 (11:50):
They'll say he's cognitively and physically appaired.

Speaker 3 (11:58):
And I can't do that when I'm alone. Out of
this great athlete. I got to get up to that.

Speaker 7 (12:02):
So so look, so the stairs, the first stair is
like up here, I'll say so.

Speaker 3 (12:13):
So I had the adrenaline going and I made us here.

Speaker 7 (12:24):
I made it, and then I gave a little news
conference from the front of the you know, they asked
their wise guy questions and everything, and then uh, if
we drove about two feet, I got got into the play.

Speaker 2 (12:38):
We drove about two feet and I got out.

Speaker 3 (12:41):
I love it.

Speaker 4 (12:43):
I absolutely love it. If you see him getting in there,
you see he's a big guy. Trump is a tall man,
and if you're in his presence up close on he's
broad shoulder.

Speaker 2 (12:56):
He's a big guy.

Speaker 4 (12:58):
I mean, if he was Michael Dukok, because you know
Robert Rubin or you know one of the little bit
of guys, he would have never been able to get
up in there. But he's conscious when he walks up
there's a big, heavy door. He's he's gonna have to
crawl up in there. Anyway. I love that story. I
feel like he's relaxing. I feel like he's he's really
letting people see the Donald Trump. That is charming because

(13:21):
the bad guys don't have a hold on him anymore.

Speaker 2 (13:23):
It's like he's pushed through all right.

Speaker 4 (13:25):
Ramond reminded me that we did not do what we
like to do in the first segment, which is our
week in review. So we will do that now herd
to see of the greatest executive producer in all the land,
chatted Cooney NAKANISHI. You'll react.

Speaker 2 (13:47):
There's a little old lady out there right now there.

Speaker 4 (13:50):
I say, probably quite a few who I just said,
Fox Trot have boon I said.

Speaker 2 (13:56):
Love letters in the sand, and they're thinking, now.

Speaker 3 (13:59):
This is my kind of show. This right here.

Speaker 4 (14:02):
All that other stuff, y'all carry it on and all in,
but this do more shows like.

Speaker 2 (14:07):
This, Michael Cole.

Speaker 8 (14:08):
But that jamboree happening right now, you see it there
on your screen in that place is particularly chilling because
in nineteen thirty nine, more than twenty thousand supporters of
a different fascist leader, Adolf Hitler, packed the garden for
a so called pro America rally.

Speaker 4 (14:24):
There's a direct parallel to a big rally that happened
in the mid nineteen thirties at Madison Square Garden.

Speaker 2 (14:29):
And don't think that he doesn't know for one second
exactly what they're.

Speaker 4 (14:32):
Doing there, white nationalist, Nazi type rally. We're trying to
equate Trump expelling illegal aliens, murderers, pedophiles, sex traffickers out
of this country as he's just like Hillary. There's literally
a floating island of garbage in the middle of the
ocean right now. I think it's called Puerto Rico. He
got his rally called Puerto Rico, a floating island of garbage.

Speaker 2 (14:55):
Well, let me tell you something. The only garbage ice
you floating out there as your supporters in Green Bay, Wisconsin.

Speaker 4 (15:00):
Trump in a garbage Trump in a garbage truck.

Speaker 7 (15:03):
And I have to begin by saying two hundred and
fifty million Americans are not garbage.

Speaker 4 (15:10):
I mean, there appeared to be a stumble with the
pile of garbage Puerto Rico jets.

Speaker 2 (15:15):
The recovery was dramatic.

Speaker 4 (15:18):
She said, Hey, do you know that at the Trump rallies,
President Trump is playing this audio of your show.

Speaker 7 (15:23):
They've even taken over recently Times Square in New York.

Speaker 4 (15:27):
Please take them open borders, deadly consequences.

Speaker 2 (15:29):
What are crisis high crossings?

Speaker 4 (15:32):
Are putting a street on the cities in cross America?
Use a food blown invation. Go back, go back.

Speaker 2 (15:40):
We are going to support. We've been to supporter.

Speaker 4 (15:42):
You haven't been with the Michael Berry and I haven't
been to Europe. If you were to say to people,
what's the most important thing to you in casting a vote,
whatever they say might seem important. Sometimes people will say
what they think they're supposed to say, but that's not

(16:04):
what actually drives them right. For instance, people will tell
you that they hate when there's an accident on the
other side of the road and the traffic slows down
because of rubbernecking.

Speaker 2 (16:16):
But it turns out that person does the same.

Speaker 4 (16:20):
They don't admit it, you know, otherwise we'd all be
blind today, you know what I mean. So one of
the things that troubled me in twenty twenty was that
the way the Democrats got the election close enough that

(16:40):
they could steal it was to make Trump unlikable. When
a guy is unlikable, that has a tendency with two
types of voters, really three, with three types of voters
to affect their vote.

Speaker 2 (17:02):
First of all is blacks. If you can convince.

Speaker 4 (17:05):
Blacks that that guy is unlikable and does not like
you for being black, a lot of blacks will internalize
that because I can tell you my kids are black.
There have been times when we've gone somewhere and I
can tell someone who doesn't know who they are will
be just a little harder on them, or a little
more crass because that person's had a bad day, or

(17:28):
that person knew somebody black that they didn't like, or whatever.
And sometimes it's a black person. That's just the way
it is. So many times blacks will internalize, Oh, every
bad experience I've ever had with someone that I think
maybe it was because I was black. This person is
that person. They conflate that and it'll cause them to

(17:52):
vote Democrat. Another group that if you're not likable, will
vote against you is women. Democrats have played this card
for a long time and it worked with Trump. They've
made Trump into that guy who didn't marry you, That

(18:13):
guy who, when you asked him to dance said never
with you, you're gross. That guy who you wished you
could have and you couldn't, That guy who is douchey,
that guy everything you don't like about men, Single women
the one demographic that do well with everything you don't
like about men.

Speaker 1 (18:34):
He's that.

Speaker 4 (18:36):
So the problem for Trump, who is a very charming
person on a personal level, very charming. We had an
event at mar Lago, and we've had several, but at
one of them he burst in while I'm giving a
speech and I had invited Buck Sexton and Carol Markowitz

(19:01):
who's on Fox, and we had a little panel and
we were talking about things, and President Trump had said
he might come in, but I didn't tell my crowd.
I brought a group from Houston. I didn't tell my
crowd because if he didn't then it would be disappointing.
But if he did, they'd be shocked. And in the

(19:22):
middle of me speaking here he comes bounding in and
he starts into the I love people from What's that? No?

Speaker 2 (19:31):
I didn't tell him holding on talking.

Speaker 4 (19:34):
Uh even Ramone went a little bit super fan giddy. Anyway,
so he hangs out for a while, and Lee Majors
was with us, and I said, mister President, Lee Majors
is here, Dolly I had done. He goes on it
was the sight of Trump that the public doesn't get
to see. And then he said, can I ask you

(19:54):
all a favor. I've got a discotheque downstairs. We all
come down and join when y'all are done, Michael, and
I'm looking like, well, we're done now, and so he
talked for law wall longer and he goes, well, I'm
going to go down to the discotheque if y'all want
to join me, and he puts our crowd in between

(20:15):
him and the Secret Service. It was a show of
incredible trust and it was very likable, very charming. Charm
matters should it I don't know, honestly, I don't care
if the quarterback. My football team is charming if he
throws touchdowns. I don't care if my CPA is charming

(20:38):
if he does a good job. Bedside manner, people will
tell you that their doctor's a great doctor, and I'll say, oh,
how come, Oh he's great, He's really nice. We can't
help it. We are social animals. Trump could be the
greatest president in history by his policies, but if people

(21:00):
don't like him because they've been taught not to like him,
it will affect his ability to be elected. So Trump decided,
I've got to win the charm offensive, and he's a
task master. He's set about to charm the nation. Harder

(21:25):
to do than you'd think, because the media is out
to tell you he's a Nazi and a fascist. Well,
if you're going on a first date with a girl
and everybody's told her that you're a Nazi and a
fascist and a woman hater and a drug user and
an abuser and everything else, you're going to have a

(21:47):
real tough time on this date. And that's what Trump
starts with. Remember the first JD. Vans debate or the
JD Evans debate with Tim wats the reason JD Vance
quote unquote won the debate. Is he went in there
with the whole nation thinking he was weird because Tim

(22:09):
Waltz is weird. He was weird. He's horrible, He's terrible,
and all of a sudden, No, actually, he's very charming
and very knowledgeable and a great guy and very accomplished
and overcame an amazing a difficult childhood. He wrote a
book about it. He'll be the elogy. So Trump managed
to charm the nation despite the media. When he put

(22:32):
that safety vest on and got in that garbage truck,
he changed everything. So he didn't take it off. He
went to the rally that night and he's wearing the
safety vest and here's what he had to say about it.

Speaker 7 (22:44):
And they come into the arena and I say, where's
my jacket? I want to get out of this sage
And they said it would be unbelievable if you could
wear it on Sage Jon.

Speaker 3 (23:11):
And I said, no way.

Speaker 7 (23:13):
I got twenty five thousand people standing out side, I
got all these people here. There's no way I'm wearing
it on stage. They said, oh okay, sir, I said,
get me my jacket. But if you did, you know
it actually makes you look thinner, I said, and they
kept me. I said, I want to wear.

Speaker 3 (23:34):
It on stage.

Speaker 7 (23:36):
When they said I looked thinner, I said, in that case,
I'll wear it.

Speaker 2 (23:41):
I said, I.

Speaker 3 (23:49):
May never wear a blue jacket again. I may go,
I may go in this I said that. That was
my that was the word. That was the key. So
you look dinner.

Speaker 7 (24:01):
So anyway, so he had a little fun about a
very serious subject. We had a little fun about a
time where a country is not having a lot of
fun because we're not doing well as a country.

Speaker 3 (24:12):
But we're going to be doing well very shortly. I
promise you that.

Speaker 2 (24:17):
Many times I will talk a lot.

Speaker 4 (24:19):
I will get caught up.

Speaker 2 (24:20):
In the rhetoric the Michael Very Show.

Speaker 3 (24:22):
I'm a knucklehead at times, and a number of.

Speaker 2 (24:27):
Folks have asked me.

Speaker 4 (24:30):
Why Joe Rogan is so important in this election cycle.
Why do people talk so much about him?

Speaker 2 (24:36):
It's a fair question. Let me try to answer that.

Speaker 4 (24:38):
If you're asking that question, then you don't know what
I'm about to tell you. But to give you some context,
let's step back for a moment. In the year two thousand,
the Vice President Al Gore was running against the governor
of Texas George W.

Speaker 2 (24:57):
Bush.

Speaker 4 (25:00):
Bill Clinton was finishing his second term and he had
created a lot of rancor by having sex with his
intern Monica Lewinsky, and as it turned out a series
of indiscretions. Al Gore was not a popular guy. He's

(25:21):
very stiff, very sanctimonious. George W. Bush was a rather
popular governor from Texas, and he was fashioning himself as
a compassionate conservative. So a guy that's going to cut
the government, but he's got a heart, and I think

(25:43):
he probably could have had a much better term had
Cheney not been so determined to go to war.

Speaker 2 (25:49):
But they were nine to eleven.

Speaker 4 (25:53):
Did not occasion the war because the opportunities to catch
the man respond pile were overlooked, and I think because
Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney wanted to go to war.

Speaker 2 (26:06):
What a different subject for another day.

Speaker 4 (26:09):
That year, those of you who followed these things for
this loan, it's almost twenty five years ago. That year
brought out a demographic that was kind of the Pennsylvania
of this year. Whoever won this demographic was going to win,
and that was what was called the soccer mom. So

(26:34):
this was moms of young kids who lived in the
suburbs whose husbands would be voting Republican, and then you
had the Democrat constituent groups, and so the question was
going to be could you peel the wives of the
husbands who were voting Republican?

Speaker 2 (26:55):
Could you peel their wives away?

Speaker 4 (26:58):
So this has been the battle for Democrats every election.
And the way you do that is suburban mommies are
determined to raise sweet little children who are very polite
and very respectful and very nice. And so they've been

(27:18):
taught this, and they teach their kids this. And so
what you do is you say, you know, little Billy
or Cameron or Cayden or whatever the name is, Morgan
got to be sweet, and you really got to be
sweet since you're a white kid to the non white kids,
because poor things they never had the chances you did.

(27:39):
So it's a very guilt ridden thing and it works,
it works mightily. And what you don't want to be
is an arrogant male. So they try to fashion every
Republican presidential candidate as this arrogant male.

Speaker 2 (27:59):
He's not nice, Okay, he's not nice.

Speaker 4 (28:04):
And this is why you get people jumping on the
garbage term that a comedian used for instance, because it
plays into a narrative they've already set. Okay, well, the
problem is Biden goes and ruins it. And the other
problem is every woman knows that woman who doesn't belong

(28:30):
in the position she's supposed to be in and she's
getting ahead because her daddy's in charge of the company.
Everybody knows that. Everybody knows that person. So when people
ask me about why Joe Rogan is so important, it's

(28:50):
because he speaks directly to and is trusted by a
demographic that is very hard for the parties to reach,
and that is young, primarily male, mostly white.

Speaker 2 (29:06):
Dudes.

Speaker 4 (29:08):
Now, in the past that's been sports radio dudes, folks
that I mean, they're in a fantasy league, they're big
into sports and the like. But now there's a group
that are into mma and they're sizable and they're hard
to get to. They don't watch NBCABC, CBS. They may
make money, they have jobs, have college degrees, they're in

(29:31):
the process of dating, they may be gamers, and they
tune into Rogan and that's where they get their news.
Rush used to say that he was America's newsman because
a poll had suggested that more people said they got
their news from Rush than any of the quote unquote
news organizations that weren't really about news anymore. So when

(29:54):
Trump goes on Rogan and since for three hours, talking policy,
talking seriously and blows Rogan's mind, that matters. And then
and we'll be playing some of this for you this week.
Jd Vance sits down with with Rogan. But before we
get to that, I want to play you something. After

(30:15):
Trump went on Rogan for over three hours, Kamala's people said, well,
Kamala will come on with you, but you have to
come to her. No, everybody goes to Rogan. They go
to his studio in Austin, and only for an hour.
They were trying to minimize the amount that she could
screw up. And Rogan's had enough of the media calling

(30:38):
him out for the lowered expectations of Kamala Harris.

Speaker 6 (30:42):
I knew you guys flew from England, and I wasn't
going to cancel on you because she had an opportunity
to come. It's almost you could look at this and say, oh,
you beat a diva. But she had an opportunity to
come here when she was in Texas, and I literally
gave them an open invitation.

Speaker 2 (30:57):
I said any time.

Speaker 6 (30:58):
I said, if she's done at ten o'clock, we'll come
back here at ten o'clock.

Speaker 2 (31:02):
I go do it.

Speaker 6 (31:02):
At nine in the morning, I do at ten pm.

Speaker 2 (31:04):
I'll do it midnight.

Speaker 6 (31:05):
She's up.

Speaker 4 (31:06):
She wants to you know, drig a Red Bull party on.

Speaker 7 (31:09):
Yeah, but I think this idea that you're being a
David silly because you're asking her, you're offering her the
opportunity to do exactly what the other candidate did.

Speaker 4 (31:17):
Right.

Speaker 6 (31:17):
Well, she actually reached out when she found out that
he was coming on. So their camp reached out to me.
So I said, great, I would love to talk to her.
But it was very difficult to tie it down, and
a lot of they wanted to travel and see. The
thing is like, you can't if I go somewhere, then
there's going to be other people in the room, and

(31:37):
they want to control a lot of things. I'm sure
according to the Brett Bryer interview on Fox, like people
were waving them off. That's a distraction people in the room.
Like my whole goal with her and with him was
just talk. Just have a conversation like a human being.
You find out things about people. You get a sense
of them, at least in real sense. That's it. I

(31:58):
don't give a fuck what we talked about. I really don't.
I just I just want to talk to you. Who
the heck are you?

Speaker 4 (32:04):
What you're witnessing? There is a setup. Yes, we'll do
the interview under these conditions. And then they know he
won't accept that, and then they go, huh, we tried.

Speaker 3 (32:20):
You know.

Speaker 4 (32:21):
Sometimes you got one ticket left in your group to
go to the game. You're like, well, I don't invite Bob,
but he's going to be out of town, so I'll
invite him and get the credit for it. But I
really want to invite Sam. If i'll invite Bob, he'll
say no one, and I'll invite Sam, and then Bob says, yes,
this was a setup. Kamala Harris can't sit for three
hours and talk about eating
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