Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
So Michael Very show is.
Speaker 3 (00:11):
On the air at a summer job at McDonald's Sali.
Speaker 1 (00:15):
It's a total I she never worked at McDonald's, but
she lies about everything.
Speaker 4 (00:19):
I love you.
Speaker 3 (00:22):
The nice people we meet him.
Speaker 2 (00:23):
I'm loving don together, Grimace. We could own this town.
It's a happy birthday, Gama. Maybe I'll get her surprise.
I love you this guy. I'm not gonna mess with him.
Uh but I could do this all day. I wouldn't
mind this show. I love you, Gonch.
Speaker 5 (00:55):
I've now worked for fifteen minutes more than kabala Oh.
Speaker 6 (01:03):
President Trump had a day at McDonald's where the golden
arches became a stage for genius political theater.
Speaker 2 (01:12):
Picture this.
Speaker 6 (01:13):
Trump donned in what could be described as maga casual,
a business shirt, red tie, and an apron that might
as well say the Apprentice fast food edition. He stepped
into a McDonald's in Pennsylvania not just to grab a
big Mac, but to man the front station. This wasn't
(01:34):
just any visit. It was a political statement wrapped in
a quarter pounded burger bun. Trump flexed his reality starchops,
diving into the deep end of fast food service with
pictures of the event. Even Norman Rockwell would be proud
of this Visit wasn't just about flipping burgers. It was
about flipping the narrative for a moment. He wasn't just
(01:56):
the former president of the United States, but the new
guy at Mickey Di's, bringing into question Harris's relatability by
turning himself into the everyman, albeit with a billionaire twist.
And at the end of his well shift, Trump left
with a grandfatherly smile. The internet exploded with memes, debates,
(02:21):
and probably a few new fast food theme political slogans.
It was politics, it was entertainment. It was Trump at McDonald's.
Of course it was. And you can bet Kamala Harris
is grimacing. I'm Thornton Finch reporting for the Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 2 (02:40):
Good Day. It was Kamala Harris's birthday yesterday. And she
can cry if she wants to, because it was perhaps
the greatest single day for the Trump campaign after the
day when he was shot in the head, because that
made a lot of people stand up and say, I'm
(03:02):
going to support him. There's a lot at stake here.
This was a day like none other. Let's start with
the McDonald's case. Wow was this ever big? First some context.
(03:25):
It all stems from a story. Kamala Harris lies. Tim
Walls lies. Tim Walls claims he saw comeback. He didn't.
He claims he was the coach of the team that
won the state championship. He wasn't. He claims he's a
head coach. These people tell lies, and they tell lies
(03:45):
to try to for self aggrandizement and to try to
identify with people, to try to be something they're not.
Why do they do this because you wouldn't do this
because everything about them is a fraud. So when you're
in a position that you're already a fraud, then there
(04:06):
is no real boundary. So we start here. Kamala Clint
Harris claimed during one of her little rallies that she
had worked at McDonald's.
Speaker 7 (04:18):
Think about it, two middle class kids. Wan a daughter
of Oakland, California, who was raised by a working mother.
Speaker 3 (04:30):
I had a summer job at McDonald's.
Speaker 2 (04:36):
Well, she didn't have a summer job at McDonald's. McDonald's
does an amazing job of keeping employee records because one
of McDonald's charming little marketing ployees is the idea that
McDonald's is all American, that McDonald's is a first job
(05:00):
for a lot of people. Eight years ago, there was
a book that our executive producer, Chad Nakanish, she read
and he told me all about it. It's called Golden Opportunity,
Remarkable Careers that began at McDonald's. And it was about
of Jay Leno, the founder of Amazon dot Com, Jeff Biso's,
(05:21):
Leroy Chow's a congressman, I mean, who's a former astronaut,
Marcia Fudge who's a congressman, Actress Anny McDowell, and many others,
the golden of the golden opportunity to being the golden archest.
And everybody has a story of their first job. You know,
this menial, entry level job. But the lessons you learn,
(05:43):
maybe you got fired because you weren't mature enough, or
maybe that's what gave you the sense of discipline. It's
an important part of what they do. So she picked
the wrong company. See she could claim she was the
regional vice president of Radio Shack, and nobody know the
difference because they don't exist anymore. Just don't try that
(06:07):
on McDonald's. Well, the Trump people went to McDonald's and
said did she work there? They said, Uh, we don't
want to get involved in this. Did she work there?
Do you have an employee record of hers? We don't
have a record of her ever having worked at a McDonald's.
(06:27):
Do you have a record of everyone else who ever
punched in? Yes, well, then she didn't work there. So
her campaign now that, first of all, imagine how devoid
of accomplishment you are to have to claim you worked
at McDonald's when you didn't. What have you done your
(06:51):
entire life? Well as I know you know, what have
you done your entire life that you have to claim
you worked at mc donald's when you didn't to have
something interesting about you that you can tell in public. Now,
that's sad, isn't it. That's pitiful. So the Trump campaign
(07:14):
catches her lying and then her response. Her campaign's response
was that a friend of hers remembers her mother telling
her friend that her daughter was working and her mother
is dead now that her daughter was working there. Wait,
what how about you just prove it? Just find one
(07:36):
person you worked with something. So MSNBC Stephanie Rule tried
to help her with this little exchange. First one, just.
Speaker 4 (07:48):
A fact check, because your opponent, there is a little
to day. Oh, there's no such thing as a little okay,
fair fair, because your opponent almost every day seems to
be talking about this. So I just want to ask you,
yes or no, At any point in your life have
you served to all these patties especial cut it short.
Speaker 2 (08:05):
I know we've got to go to break. She's trying
to help her by making her more reliable, relatable, But
what she's forcing her to do, sadly is double down
on the line, and that leads to Trump's weekend. We'll
get to them out the.
Speaker 1 (08:17):
Worst president, the worst vice president in the history of our.
Speaker 8 (08:21):
Question, the Michael Ferry.
Speaker 2 (08:23):
We can't afford four more years of this, so MSNBC,
which is all in for Kamala Harris, especially Stephanie Rule
after the question arises. Look, nobody really cares if Kamala
(08:43):
Harris worked it McDonald's or not. That's why her lying
about it is so creepy. But if she did lie
about it, that's important because it speaks to character. We
teach our children not to lie. Now, look, if your
wife says, does this dress make me look fat? That's
(09:05):
a little white lot. But it's not like somebody asked her, Hey,
everybody in the room has worked at a fast food restaurant,
have you? Yeah, And just to make people feel comfortable,
she said it out of nowhere, I got a summer job.
(09:26):
It was her attempt to be something that she is not.
Trump's not out there, how y'all doing, folk? I'm out
here shocking and dive and I'm poe like you els
vote for me. Trump was born wealthy or born well
(09:50):
to do, and he makes no bones about that. But
he loves working people. You can see it. You can
see it in his eyes. You can see it long
before he was in politics. You can see how much
he loves the grit of people, and people can feel that.
(10:14):
You know, I've always had a rule, if my dog
doesn't trust you, you're an untrustworthy person, because the dogs
always have a sense. So back to it, Kamala lying
about this is a bigger issue than whether or not
she ever served fries or milkshakes or you know, did
(10:37):
a bone que que. It is about why she lies,
because that is important. So MSNBC Stephanie Rule is trying
to make her relatable. She's trying to get her over
the finish line. This is Bill Clinton trying to help
Hillary in two thousand and eight when she loses in
(10:58):
the primary to Barack Obama. He was trying so hard
to make Hillary relatable and he just couldn't do it.
It's what ended up costing her that primary, is what
ended up costing her the election in twenty sixteen. But
when Stephanie Rule does that what she's doing, Listen media, listen,
legacy media. You can lie all day. You can do that,
(11:21):
and you do and we all know you do. But
when you lie and it gets picked up outside of
your network, now you get people in trouble. You can
lie on your station, but when you create news that
gets covered elsewhere, that's when you have done more harm
(11:42):
than good. So here's the double.
Speaker 7 (11:43):
Down, and let us recognize that when we shine the
light in moments of darkness.
Speaker 4 (11:49):
First one, just a fact check because your opponent there.
Speaker 6 (11:52):
Is a litter day.
Speaker 4 (11:54):
There's no such thing as a little jokay fair fair
because your opponent almost every day seems to be talking
about this. So I just want to ask you yes
or no, At any point in your life have you
served to all these fatties, special sauce and let us cheese,
Pat his onions on a same seed, but looking at
a McDonald's. Yes or no, that's it I have Okay,
Now the other job, it was not a small.
Speaker 2 (12:16):
Job like I do tries. I mean, you know, so
this was supposed to be her saying there is no
small job. I don't look down on the people who
scooped the fries. Well, let me tell you something. Tim
Watz can say he cares about veterans, but his case
(12:39):
of stolen valor, which is now documented, nothing is more
insulting to a combat veteran than someone else, even if
they were the uniform. Claiming to be a combat veteran
when you're not, claim to have worked at McDonald's when
(13:02):
you didn't is not caring about the little people, which
is how that was designed to come across. But she
messed up by picking McDonald's. She played into Donald Trump's hands.
Do I need to remind you of a commercial back
in two thousand and two, long before he was a
candidate for office. I don't know how you do it,
(13:25):
I really don't.
Speaker 1 (13:26):
I put together some really impressive deals, but this thing
you pulled off, it's amazing, a big and tasty.
Speaker 8 (13:32):
For just a dollar.
Speaker 2 (13:34):
How do you do it. What's your secret? You're a
man A few words.
Speaker 7 (13:41):
I like that you.
Speaker 2 (13:42):
Got a buck. You're in luck because you can get
a delicious, beaty, big and tasty, i'm chicken sandwich and
lots of your other favorites. I McDonald's dollarakeing.
Speaker 1 (13:49):
Every day together, Grimace, we could own this town.
Speaker 2 (13:53):
That's twenty two years ago. So when Kamala Harris claimed
she had a summer job at McDonald's.
Speaker 3 (14:01):
Think about it.
Speaker 7 (14:02):
Two middle class kids want a daughter of Oakland, California.
Speaker 4 (14:11):
Who was raised.
Speaker 3 (14:12):
By a working mother. I had a summer job at McDonald's.
Speaker 2 (14:17):
You're a liar. President Trump knew she was lying. He
knew it, and I think the reason he knew it
is because a major newspaper was doing a story that
that was a lie.
Speaker 1 (14:36):
I always get criticized because they agreed that up to
But why would I bring it up so much? Because
it's so simple. It's not a horrible plot. It's not
a complex thing that people get bored.
Speaker 2 (14:47):
With, Uncle Sam.
Speaker 1 (14:48):
It's just basically, she said she worked so hard she
sweated over french fries at McDonald's, and.
Speaker 2 (14:55):
She never worked there.
Speaker 1 (14:57):
It turned out to be a lie, and the fake
news doesn't want to talk about it, although I heard
a major newspaper is doing a big story on it.
It's a lie, It's a total lie. She never worked
at McDonald's, but she lies about everything, and we can't
let her get into office. And that's why I'm a
little bit rougher than I would normally be.
Speaker 2 (15:20):
This turned into President Trump going on to Fox and
Friends and telling them he was going to work at
a McDonald's. Now, what Trump does is very clever. He
uses these rallies as a test market. You know, national
companies before they roll out a product, they'll try a
(15:41):
product in one market to see how. He does this
with ideas. So he started saying, I'm a good work
at McDonald's. And he saw that yesterday was going to
be big. And that's why Bird, I'll.
Speaker 6 (15:55):
Get her a McDonald's Amber Michael Berry, I'll get her surprise.
Speaker 8 (16:01):
Love.
Speaker 2 (16:04):
For those of you that are new to the show,
and that's a lot of you, because we just went
syndicated a few weeks ago, and I fair you will
note in the coming years, and I hope you're with us,
you will note that I don't talk about politics as
much as we are right now. I talk about culture.
(16:25):
I talk about adoption, it's very important to me. I
talk about parenting, and I talk about our veterans, our
first responders, talk a lot about business and personal health.
These are things that I think are important. And I
always say that when I start talking politics, you'll know
(16:45):
that's the time that this is important. It's voting time.
We started today early voting in Texas for that manner.
Early voting started today in Alaska, Arkansas, Colorado, connetic Could, Idaho,
and South Carolina and some counties not all in Florida.
(17:08):
This is when it's important. So for me to focus
on this McDonald's story, which I did this morning and
I will much of today. And we need to understand,
I'm not bored or lack things to talk about. When
you go back and talk about a campaign years later,
(17:29):
there are little things that can turn an election. This
McDonald's story right now now, I'm not going to predict
it's going to be the most important thing, because my goodness,
the president's been shot in the head recently, and most
people have forgotten that, and that alone would have been
(17:51):
the most important thing to happen in a two or
three year period before this story connects across to pull platforms, ages, demographics.
It connects on a very deep level, much deeper than
the surface of the story. So Trump knew he had something,
(18:14):
and he had been teasing this out there before he
did it because he didn't want it to flop here.
He was on Fox and Friends. Either today or tomorrow.
You're going to McDonald's. You're gonna be working the friar.
Are you gonna wear the paper hat. I'm gonna do everything.
I tell you what you're gonna do.
Speaker 5 (18:33):
A friend of mine, I'm gonna do it McDonald's simpless.
Speaker 2 (18:37):
Oh, I'm going because she lied. You don't think she
ever worked at McDonald's.
Speaker 5 (18:41):
I know she did. We checked it out. Unless somebody
comes up with out. We checked it out. They said
she never worked here. She even picked it stewer. We
went to the manager. The manager's been there forever. Do
you remember, No, she never worked here.
Speaker 9 (18:53):
They know.
Speaker 2 (18:54):
Okay, So will you wear the paper hat you want?
Speaker 5 (18:56):
And you know us stop talking about it the press.
If I said I worked it McDonald's and it turned
out not to be true. The front page of that
stupid New York Times, the worst paper, it is the
worst rag. The New York Times is the worst bustess.
They would have me front page for months.
Speaker 2 (19:14):
Nobody I can.
Speaker 5 (19:15):
I can't get any That's what I.
Speaker 2 (19:17):
Have to do it myself. That's right. Do you to
get trained and you go to make French frig get well.
I don't know how much the training will be. Not
too much, salt, not gonna be. Oh so Trump can
win the White House without winning Pennsylvania. Kamala cannot. So
(19:37):
her her window is closing. She has, according to the
oddsmaker that is probably most trusted on this particular aspect.
If she loses Pennsylvania, she has only a seven percent
chance of winning. She has to run the table that
means Wisconsin, Michigan, North Carolina, and she's trailing in all
(20:02):
of those right now. It is so bad for her
right now that Casey the senator, the Democrat senator in
Pennsylvania is running ads. He's running statewide in Pennsylvania, which
she is as well. He's running ads hugging Trump. I
say hugging, and not figurative, not literally, but figuratively. He's
(20:23):
running ads about how well he gets along with Trump
and how Trump's plan will be his plan. That's also
true of the Democrat senator in Wisconsin, Tammy Baldwin. That's
also true of Sharrod Brown in the Democrat senator from Ohio.
All three of them statewide are now hugging Trump. They
(20:46):
are promoting Trump, praising Trump as a way to say
to moderate voters, I'm not one of those crazy Democrats.
I can work with Trump. That tells you what their
polls are telling you in that state. John Tester, the
Democrat in Montana, has said when they said why are
(21:09):
you not campaigning for Kamala, he said, because I want
to win my election. He's toast. Casey won't be seen
in Pennsylvania. The elected senator in Pennsylvania, who is a Democrat,
will not campaign with her. Josh Shapiro, the governor of Pennsylvania,
(21:29):
who's a Democrat, will not defend her corporate tax increase,
her death tax increase. He said, you'll have to ask her.
He can't defend it. So Trump shows up. Pennsylvania is
the swing state that they're throwing all this at. So
(21:51):
Sunday morning, her birthday yesterday, he arrives in Bucks County, Pennsylvania.
And not only did he arrive, you know you see
these goofy tours, people tap and they put on the
plastic or hard hat and it looks so dumb. Oh
my goodness. He owned the moment. Here's what he said.
Speaker 6 (22:10):
I'm looking for a job, and I've always wanted to
work at McDonald but I never did.
Speaker 2 (22:14):
I'm running against somebody that said she did. But it
turned out to be a totally funny story. So let
you talk.
Speaker 1 (22:20):
But that's that good looking through the follow everybody.
Speaker 2 (22:25):
I had a lot of fun here. Everybody, I don't think.
Here's Evan. So they had him at the front. That
was the plan was he'd be at the front, but
Trump wanted the froestation. He loves McDonald's fries. I'm not
even McDonald's fan, but I love their fries. So he
(22:46):
goes over to the frestation. He understood that moment, and truthfully,
deep down he probably kind of really really on a
personal level, wanted to work frestation.
Speaker 8 (22:55):
I got it that time. Er, bring that one up.
I'm gonna take care of these okay.
Speaker 9 (23:09):
Right there right there, yet.
Speaker 2 (23:19):
Give it that right far right, hang it right up there.
Speaker 8 (23:22):
And then you want to do this song over here?
I did these ones that raise they're good. You just
gotta do that one right there.
Speaker 2 (23:27):
So I grabs that give extra.
Speaker 8 (23:30):
Yep, look good right there, and then we're gonna grab
the surprise group right here, put it into there and
give him its worm that way.
Speaker 2 (23:40):
Okay, where's that little thing. While he's working at the
frestation getting all this goodwill, he reminds people that Kamala Lotte. See.
He stays on message.
Speaker 1 (23:55):
Everybody, that's a big one out there, that's up a
big crowd.
Speaker 8 (23:59):
Huh, mister Trump, what did you feel it was important
to come here? Job?
Speaker 1 (24:03):
I love McDonald's, I love jobs. I like to seek
good jobs, and I think it's inappropriate when somebody puts
down all over the place.
Speaker 5 (24:12):
That she worked at McDonald It was a big part
of her resume that she worked at McDonald's.
Speaker 2 (24:16):
Have tough a job, it was.
Speaker 8 (24:18):
She specifically worked at the.
Speaker 1 (24:19):
French fry for it makes the French fries.
Speaker 8 (24:23):
She talked about the heat.
Speaker 2 (24:24):
It was so tough. She never worked at McDonald's.
Speaker 1 (24:26):
McDonald's just concurved that again by the never.
Speaker 9 (24:29):
Worked at McDonald.
Speaker 2 (24:30):
Donald's is a master surprise. A lot of the President
Trump takes off his jacket for those points there. She's
in his trademark blue suit red time takes office jacket
and puts on the apron. The apron. You know Benjamin Franklin,
(24:58):
who was one one of my favorites of the founders.
Franklin didn't have the education that Jefferson particularly had. But
with Jefferson and Hamilton and Madison and Monroe, you had
very learned men of the Academy which was prestigious academic success.
Speaker 8 (25:23):
And you had.
Speaker 2 (25:24):
Hamilton, who was this very pretentious, showy but brilliant man,
and Jefferson, who was revered for his mind and his
language and his turn of phrase. With Franklin, he referred
to himself as a leather apron man. And the reason
(25:48):
for that is Franklin ran away from home at a
young age, went to work for his brother, who at
a printing press. If I re call correctly, and Franklin
was in his mind a lowly merchant, a printer, and
he was a guy who worked with his hands. Now
worked with his hands printing pamphlets and the like. And
(26:11):
he developed a very uh anir of voice in which
he wrote. He would write under aliases because he was
very cheeky. He would he would ridicule the the town's
mayor who was having an affair with another woman, and
(26:34):
he would ridicule it under the name of you know,
one of these characters he created. Of course, he did
Poor Richard's Almanac, which which was him. He would often
use other names, and he would get into trouble because
he would go too far and he would offend powerful people,
(26:54):
as it turns out, Kamala Harris and Joe Biden, Barack Obama,
and these aren't the first powerful people with very thin
skin who want to censor in silence other people. This
has been going on a very long time. But Ben
Franklin referred to himself as a leather apron man, and
(27:15):
what that meant was, I'm not a man who. I'm
not a lawyer, I'm not a fancy well to do philanthropist.
I work for a living. The power of the apron
is conveyed and he knows this. I have always said
(27:39):
that Trump has the instinct of an animal in the wild.
They know who's out to harm them, and they know
who they can harm. They know the difference between predator
and prey. And he has these instincts that nobody else
has the way he does. So he takes off his jacket,
(27:59):
he puts on the apron and he keeps that apron
on the entire time he gets over there on the
fries because he knows that's important. He also knows it's
important that we get a shot of him at the
drive through window. Every American can identify with this, because
twenty million Americans have worked at McDonald's, but most of
(28:23):
us don't have the view out of the drive through window.
We have the view looking in. Right. So Trump did McDonald's.
I think Kamala did five guys, but Trump did McDonald's,
and he made sure to create the moment. There's nobody
(28:45):
on his campaign saying get to the drive through window
now and wave it people from there and taunt the
fake media, which of course he did both because he
loves it, and that's his way of constantly delegitimizing them
as the frauds that they are. So he goes to
the drive through window and he works the window. Okay,
(29:09):
he's a nice people made him. Look at this guy.
I'm not gonna mess with him. How you doing fantastic?
Speaker 5 (29:20):
God knows, but you boy, and you gave me hella right,
So this is document.
Speaker 1 (29:27):
Okay, all right, you don't have any kind, don't eat
too much?
Speaker 6 (29:30):
Right, well, every day's acums.
Speaker 2 (29:33):
You take one, have a good time.
Speaker 9 (29:36):
Thank you.
Speaker 2 (29:38):
One of the customers asked President Trump, she's from Brazil,
and she says powerful words. Listen to this. A lot
of fun here, everybody. Oh my god, I don't thank
you news.
Speaker 5 (29:53):
Hello, everybody, I know this is compliments of Trump.
Speaker 2 (29:58):
Okay, yes, the president.
Speaker 3 (30:01):
Please don't let the United States become brazille my native persill.
Speaker 6 (30:04):
We'll keep it good.
Speaker 2 (30:06):
Please, You're gonna make it better than ever. Okay, thank you,
thank you a pleasure. Yes, you're so thank you. So next,
President Trump says, hey, your order is on me, and
(30:30):
then he turns to the woman working with him in
the drive to and asks if he can do that. Okay,
let's say you believe this. He's a maga guy all
the way. Okay, So for his first order.
Speaker 8 (30:46):
Yep.
Speaker 2 (30:47):
Well that's a good looking group.
Speaker 1 (30:49):
Hello, everybody, This is not a normal situation, isn't huh?
Speaker 2 (30:57):
What a good looking family? How did you produce as
good looking kids?
Speaker 8 (31:01):
Here?
Speaker 5 (31:01):
They look like they look like how are you nice
to see you? Yes, thank you, man, appreciate, thank you
very much, thank you.
Speaker 2 (31:10):
And there will be no charge. Trump is thank for
it is that.
Speaker 9 (31:12):
Okay, oh you're.
Speaker 2 (31:14):
Going to some extra stuff.
Speaker 5 (31:16):
Okay, this is this is all I'm Trump.
Speaker 2 (31:19):
I'm allowed to do that, right Yeah, shock a picture.
Everything you said it better. But it's going to be
the best you ever. I made it myself.
Speaker 8 (31:28):
Thank you man, Thank you, thank you.
Speaker 2 (31:30):
Have a good time.
Speaker 6 (31:32):
Have a good time.
Speaker 2 (31:33):
That's that's great. And ok okay, next car. Do you
like them both at the same time?
Speaker 8 (31:41):
Yes, how are you here?
Speaker 2 (31:44):
A good looking guy?
Speaker 8 (31:46):
We love you.
Speaker 5 (31:47):
Give me on.
Speaker 3 (31:48):
Thank you very much, Thank you very much.
Speaker 8 (31:50):
I will I promise, sweet you.
Speaker 6 (31:52):
Thank you very much.
Speaker 9 (31:54):
That's on me.
Speaker 2 (31:54):
Okay, have a good time. Thank you very much. The
wed has.
Speaker 7 (32:02):
So here is.
Speaker 2 (32:05):
One of those moments that is so powerful.
Speaker 6 (32:10):
A guy.
Speaker 2 (32:11):
Thanks President Trump for being accessible to the ordinary man,
to the ordinary person. This is something that is hard
to quantify. It's a feeling. But I hear this from
so many of you. You feel that President Trump cares
about you and people like you. And the thing that
(32:34):
goes unsaid is Kamala doesn't. This is incredibly important. But
I could do this all day. I wouldn't mind this, YEF.
Speaker 8 (32:44):
I think I might come back and do it again
to many posits, but all many people like us.
Speaker 2 (32:57):
I mean, I can see you, pray for you die,
and you want the night of person we want to
be the president than my own. Thank you, thank you
very much. We will look back at this point unless
there will be more things that happen. Trump getting shot
(33:19):
in the head and Trump working at McDonald's are the
true biggest days of this show.
Speaker 6 (33:24):
Yeah, yeah,