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October 9, 2025 • 32 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, Luck and load.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
Michael Very Show is on the air.

Speaker 3 (00:13):
Yeah, I was just given a note by the Secretary
of States say they we're very close to the deal
in the middle of.

Speaker 2 (00:19):
The real key is President Trump. He's the one that
made this happen.

Speaker 4 (00:22):
Certainly, Envoys Witkoff and Jared Kushner were a very big
part of sealing the deal, bringing it together. But this
would never have happened without the leadership of President Trump.

Speaker 2 (00:32):
We've heard it against Trump a number of holding an
Antifa roundtable this week, cabinet meeting earlier today, but Antifa
roundtable earlier this week, and he's dealing with a domestic
terror organization that is undoubtedly a domestic terror organization. In
the left keeps denying this and playing foot seats with them,

(00:57):
and between Antifa and BLM, they can't control their own
foot soldiers. These are the people that CNN had to
say it's mostly peaceful as they were trying to burn
down the CNN office building. The left is playing with
fire and when you do this, eventually it's going to

(01:18):
burn you. So here's CNN Aaron Burnett saying that compared
to right wing extremists. Antifa violence is rare and limited.
These people have no shame. I mean they are literally
able to say anything with a straight face.

Speaker 5 (01:35):
And Trump's Secretary of Homeland Security actually took that further.
This network of Antifa is just as sophisticated as MS thirteen,
as tda as Isis, as Hezbola, as Hamas, as all
of them.

Speaker 6 (01:48):
They are just as dangerous. That's pretty incredible, right.

Speaker 5 (01:51):
Hamas has just been engaged in a two year war
that we just announced the first stage of a peace
plan to a few moments ago, and isis These are
things to say. And obviously I'm not going to sit
here and defend anybody who considers themselves part of an
Antifa movement such that it is, but such that it
is is the operative part of that sentence. Antifa is
far from a major sophisticated terror organization like Hesblah, Hamas

(02:15):
or isis. In fact, it's not even like our right
groups like the Proud Boys and Oathkeepers, which have had
national leaders. Unlike Antifa, there is no organized hierarchy to
the group, and according to the Center for Strategic and
International Studies, compared to right wing extremists, Antifa linked violence
is rare and limited.

Speaker 2 (02:33):
That is a lie. Everyone knows it's a lie. And
I hope Antifa shows up on your doorstep and you
can tell us how sweet and wonderful they are, because
the people who've been exposed to them, they are violent,
they are organized, they are vicious, they are well funded.
The CEO of Citadel, Ken Griffin, told those at the

(02:54):
Future of Global Markets twenty twenty five event that asking
his employees to uproot their lives in Chicago or New
York and move to Miami has not been difficult. This
is how bad those cities have become. Like not one people.

Speaker 7 (03:15):
There's always noise about this or that, but by and large,
people love being in a city where your kids can
jump in an uber and you're not worried about.

Speaker 2 (03:25):
It, where you can walk the streets tonight and not
worry about it.

Speaker 7 (03:28):
And Chicago, you know, over the last unfortunately, over the
last six or seven years, has been engulfed in a
series of problems, which is our headquarters for years. Asking
people to leave for Chicago and New York or Miami
has not been hard. We've gone from probably thirteen hundred
people in Chicago to a few hundred from being the
primary tenant of one of the largest skyscrapers to I

(03:50):
think will be down to two floors in a year.
I think that the more interest the sad part of
the story was how many people who had built lives
in Chicago we're willing to walk away from that and
move to Miami or New York just given the.

Speaker 2 (04:07):
Challenges that Elinoy has faced.

Speaker 7 (04:09):
I mean, the governor Illinois has overseen a state that
literally is there are more murders in Chicago on a
dad weekend than there is in Miami in the year.
There are fifty some schools in the state of Illinois.
We're not a single child is at grade level. No
one child is at grade level. Fifty schools in Illinois.

(04:33):
And I was with the governor of the state of
Florida just a few days ago. We welcome a success
academies to South Florida. They're going to open several new
schools in the Miami area. There are hundreds of thousands
of kids in the state of Florida.

Speaker 2 (04:44):
Who are in charter schools.

Speaker 7 (04:46):
And I know Eva Moscouz was blown away by one thing.
Everybody everybody sended her the warmest of welcomes We want
her in Miami. We want our children to have the
future that success academies will prepare them for. I mean,
these will be kids that will go on from every socio.

Speaker 2 (05:07):
Economic background that will go.

Speaker 7 (05:08):
On to have great careers and great lives because they've
had a great K through twelve education.

Speaker 2 (05:15):
This is tragic to me. I don't celebrate this. To
hear companies talking about the decision as to where they
relocate their company being based not on is there a
good airport, there is there a good labor base there.
We have companies who say, I can't operate in the

(05:37):
United States in a certain city because it's like a
third world country. You know, when you travel throughout Africa
and Asia, in the Middle East, and I have in
South America, you learn that there are places where the
people want to improve their lives, but they simply can't

(05:59):
because the people who make decisions as to where companies
locate and do business and grow and develop and spend
and donate, those people don't want to be in places
of instability. Stability attracts capital and people. One of the
things that made America so so seductive to the rest

(06:24):
of the world was its stability. The idea that we
didn't have civil war, we didn't have coups, we didn't
have dictators who who turned one tribe against the other.

(06:44):
And if you were setting out on a multi year,
multi decade plan to destroy the country, you would do
exactly that to make us like a third world country.
And this is why inn ilhan Omar fits in perfectly.
Her family were very bad actors in Somalia, very corrupt
people who were driven from power there, and then she

(07:08):
comes to this country supposedly as a refugee. She is
not a refugee, far from it. She is in exile
from justice. Her family are a bunch of criminals in Somalia.
And you get these people in AOC. You get these
people that are what Castro was in fifty eight, or
going back to fifty six fifty seven, you get these

(07:31):
people who are what Kadafi was in sixty seven in Libya,
what Saddam Hussein was in Iraq. You get these people
who are rabble rousers, who were talking about revolution, who
were promising will kill the rich and will take what
they have so that they can become dictators themselves. And

(07:52):
that's what we're witnessing. It does not make me happy
to see Chicago collapse. That was one of the greatest cities,
not just in this country but in the world. But
it has collapsed. What these people have served years of
jail and their lives have been ruined and in many
in many Joe, listen to me for a second step interrupting.
And so you have the governor of Illinois Fat JB.

(08:15):
Pritzker and the mayor of Chicago, Brandon Johnson, who are
determined they're not going to let Trump make that city safer.
They will not let it happen. And they remind me
of Hammas so much I can't believe it. They want

(08:37):
the violence, they want the misery. They are unwilling to
do what it takes to make that city safe. And
if somebody from the outside says, you know what, I'm
not just gonna let you create a breeding ground for
domestic terrorists, criminal thuds, gangs on American soil just because

(08:59):
you're the mayor of the and I'm not gonna do it.
I'm gonna stop it. And that's when they say, well,
we'll stop you from stopping us. Here's Fat JB.

Speaker 8 (09:08):
Pritzker hinged, he's insecure, he's a wannabe dictator.

Speaker 3 (09:14):
And there's one thing I really want to say to
Donald Trump.

Speaker 2 (09:17):
If you come for my people, you come through me,
So come and get me. Well, that's kind of saying
something because that is one big fat tubble lord right there.
That's not a skinny cellist fellow. Say you come through me.
I mean, you know this, this is like, this is
like the killdozer. This is not going to be an
easy takedown, right. This is like speaking of Chicago. This

(09:39):
is this is like the refrigerator, William Perry. I mean
when they handed when when Dicka enjoyed the irony that
the pure showmanship should I say of handing the ball
to number seventy two in a short yarded situation, I mean,
there was something enjoyable about watching that. This is enjoyable,

(10:01):
but it is equally serious. If he says he's standing
in between ice and them doing their jobs, You're gonna
need to bring a killdozer. You're gonna need to bring
some heavy, heavy equipment to get him out of the way,
because that's a that's a wide load, you know. In
in in the on the rural streets of on the

(10:24):
rural roads of Texas, the farm, the market roads. They'll
be moving a trailer. A lot of people live in trailers,
manufactured homes they call them now. And when it's a
big wide one double wide, they'll have a big sign
on the back wide load and that is what JB.
Pritzker should wear that at all times along with Chris

(10:48):
Christy and Lizzo. Since we're on the subject of wide loads,
I just you know, economy of scale here, Let's just
go ahead and get a wide load sign for everybody
that needs it. Ramon President Trump as the as the
shut down continues, it's not affecting my life, how about you?
President Trump posted this video on the Schumer shutdown.

Speaker 9 (11:08):
The Party of open Borders, transgender for Everybody, lawlessness in
our streets are shutting down the government in an effort
to appease the radical left. These Democrats are coordinating their
strategy with outside leftist groups and are demanding nearly one
point five trillion dollars in spending for an agenda that

(11:31):
includes healthcare for illegal aliens and much much more. Democrats
for years have railed against government shutdowns, claiming a shutdown
would mean much chaos and pain and needless heartache for
the American people. Democrats are out of control, and you

(11:52):
know who it hurts.

Speaker 7 (11:53):
You everyday people and the most vulnerable seniors, veterans, work
for families, hungry kids, y'all.

Speaker 9 (12:01):
Tell Congress to avoid the Democrat led government shutdown.

Speaker 2 (12:07):
So it's a blame game at this point. Who gets credit,
who gets blamed? And the Schumer shutdown is very clearly
a Democrat construct, and the American people understand it. And
what they chose to fight on the hill they chose
to die on was free health care for illegal aliens

(12:28):
in a nation of people with inadequate healthcare who are
unhappy about their health care. That is a loser. It's
I don't know who picks their choices for them, but
that is a loser. Yesterday I told you about we're
talking about race baiting and silliness. I didn't know who
had made the video. I'd only seen the video. It's

(12:48):
from Blaze TV. I encourage you to go go get
it. It's called Firemen, and Glenn Back's Blaze TV did it.
In credit to them. It's hilarious, it's brilliantly written, it
includes Shane Gelli, and it is perfect satire for how
the media seeks to destroy good people in the news,
not just famous people, every day Americans. This is a

(13:11):
fireman who was saving a family from their burning home.
And then you'll see how this goes sour. You really
ought to see the video. It's with the video, it's
even better.

Speaker 10 (13:22):
The firefighters worked tirelessly the Tapple, the blaze that engulfed
an entire three story townhome.

Speaker 6 (13:27):
In West Philadelphia.

Speaker 10 (13:28):
The family of four was saved thanks to the efforts
of one firefighter, Shane McGillis.

Speaker 6 (13:32):
Shane, you fought this fire for three hours.

Speaker 2 (13:35):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it was Uh it was pretty brual
up there.

Speaker 6 (13:38):
Can you confirm this is you?

Speaker 10 (13:43):
Yes, we had an unnamed source claiming you may in
fact be a white supremacist.

Speaker 1 (13:49):
So white, I'm not a white I just seemed an
entire family up there, and not that it matters at all,
but those were Mexican.

Speaker 2 (13:58):
Those were Mexicans.

Speaker 6 (13:58):
The family was in fact on a malin.

Speaker 2 (14:02):
Uh. Well, I didn't go to college.

Speaker 6 (14:05):
So are you saying on the record that all his
fanics were the same.

Speaker 2 (14:09):
What are you doing?

Speaker 6 (14:11):
Let's see some more footage.

Speaker 1 (14:16):
Dude.

Speaker 2 (14:17):
I love Trump. I love Donald Trump so much.

Speaker 6 (14:19):
Soon was this you last night?

Speaker 2 (14:22):
Is this We're not talking about the fire.

Speaker 10 (14:24):
This is about whether or not you were fit to
be fighting fire the night after a bender.

Speaker 6 (14:28):
There was no I was not on a bend breaking
news with.

Speaker 10 (14:31):
A local conservative firefighter too intoxicated to be doing his job.

Speaker 2 (14:35):
There's nothing, there's no break.

Speaker 6 (14:36):
We now have Shane's best friend, Barry on the line.

Speaker 2 (14:39):
I got Barry.

Speaker 10 (14:41):
Barry shared a screenshot of your text with him last night.
At one thirteen am, you texted him, y'all want to
get pancakes?

Speaker 6 (14:50):
What the berry?

Speaker 2 (14:51):
They told me they were the FBI. Why would they
be the FBI? I don't know, man, I'm still drunk.

Speaker 10 (14:56):
At two fifteen am, escorts escorts my area.

Speaker 6 (15:01):
I know what happened. Shane thought he was on Google,
but he was actually still texting very shut the f up,
all right, no, no problem.

Speaker 2 (15:09):
Oh guy, my family. Yeah, saved his entire family up there.

Speaker 6 (15:13):
Excuse me, sir? Are you aware that this man is
a known racist?

Speaker 2 (15:16):
That's not true. That's not true. No true.

Speaker 10 (15:19):
Oh, most developing story about the racist firefighter who touched
Guatemalan children in their home after breaking down their door
with an assay like that?

Speaker 6 (15:28):
Where was he when the fire started? Surely not at
his home at twelve four.

Speaker 10 (15:31):
To zero seven Apple Blossom Lane and zip code nine two.

Speaker 2 (15:35):
Four zero on the screen. Don't put that on that.

Speaker 10 (15:37):
We're getting word right now that fire Chief Brian Connelly
will be here shortly. I'm a press conference about this
racist firefighter.

Speaker 2 (15:45):
Oh hey, hey, pal, hey, great job, Thank you very much.
We decided to.

Speaker 8 (15:49):
Terminate firefighter Saan mcgillism man has a zero tolerance policy
on intolerance and this is gonna go on the effect immediately.

Speaker 2 (15:57):
All right, all right, let's get back to this port
of rerecord flames. So that's a.

Speaker 10 (16:02):
Fantastic day here at the Plorable News Network.

Speaker 6 (16:05):
We'll see you soon. Amazing. You got the guy, fie.
You're hungry. All the flames take me in the mood
from Mexican Lock and Lock.

Speaker 10 (16:19):
Can you You got to make a very show.

Speaker 2 (16:23):
You can slug this segment Michael Berry choosing to play
Rush Limbaugh again because I do that at every turn possible.
We found audio of Rush Limbaugh talking about Jim Comey.
There will come a day when there will be players

(16:47):
on the national stage that Rush will not have known about.
They will have emerged after his passing and uh February seventeenth,
twenty twenty one is a dark day in our land.

(17:09):
There will be people who emerged after that, and they
will run for president and they'll be evil, But there
are still the immutable laws of humanity are still true.
And Rush had such a gut for things. It was
just delightful when Charlie Kirk was assassinated September tenth. Shortly thereafter,

(17:34):
we and a lot of other people unearthed Rush bragging
on Charlie Kirk on how impressed he was by this
young man, and it's just his judgment. His gut was
so good, and just to hear his voice, I'll be
honest with you, it makes me happy. So so much
time I spent. I don't know how many of the

(17:56):
views I have today or views that I have because
of Rush, because we don't always know. We don't know why.
If we grew up in Asia we like rice with everything,
if we grew up in Louisiana we like rue on everything,
or you know, if we grow up in one country
we like pickled fish. We didn't choose to like that.

(18:16):
We were exposed to it, and it became almost a
part of our DNA. It becomes baked into who we are,
and we don't even realize it consciously, we don't even
realize it. Well, former FBI director James Comy pleaded not
guilty to perjury charges. As you recall, he was indicted.

(18:38):
But did you know that he's a communist? Did you
know that in the past he has been? Rush Limbaugh
said he wasn't the only communist in Obama's administration. Listen carefully, how.

Speaker 8 (18:52):
Many of you have thought, I mean, if you've thought
about it, how many of you have heard or thought
that James call Me was lifelong Republican.

Speaker 2 (19:02):
I have.

Speaker 3 (19:03):
I've always thought that James Comey was a lifelong Republican.
I've been told that James call me as a lifelong Republican.
Turns out not to be true. Are you wearing that
James Comey used to be a Communist? In a two
thousand and three interview with New York Magazine, James Camy

(19:24):
said before voting for Jamie Carter Jimmy Carter nineteen eighty,
he'd been a communist. He admitted, I'd moved from communists
to whatever I am now. Now we know that John Brennan,
Obama's CIA director, was a communist or at least had
voted for the Communist Party.

Speaker 2 (19:46):
But I had never heard this about Koby.

Speaker 3 (19:50):
Now we find out that under Obama, the CIA director
and the FBI director both had histories of not just flirtation,
but serious immersion into Communism. And like the KGV always said,
no one ever leaves the KGV, nobody ever leaves this

(20:14):
way of thinking.

Speaker 2 (20:18):
Can you play that again? Just hearing Rushta gives me
such comfort and little things that I forget about the
sounder with the Doppler effect closing out the segment. It
just makes me happy to hear it. Go ahead.

Speaker 8 (20:36):
How many of you have thought, I mean, if you've
thought about it, how many of you have heard or
thought that James call Me was a lifelong Republican.

Speaker 2 (20:47):
I have.

Speaker 3 (20:47):
I've always thought that James call Me was a lifelong Republican.
I've been told that James call Me as a lifelong Republican.
Turns out not to be true. Are you wearing of
James Coby used to be a Communeist. In a two
thousand and three interview with New York Magazine, James Comy

(21:09):
said before voting for Jamie Carter Jimmy Carter nineteen eighty
he'd been a communist, he admitted, I'd moved from Communists
to whatever I am. Now now we know that John Brennan,
Obama's CIA director, was a Communist or at least had
voted for the Communist Party.

Speaker 2 (21:30):
But I had never heard this about Komy.

Speaker 3 (21:34):
Now we find out that under Obama, the CIA director
and the FBI director both had histories of not just forirtation,
but serious immersion into Communism.

Speaker 2 (21:51):
And like the KGB always.

Speaker 3 (21:53):
Said, no one ever leaves the KGB, nobody ever leaves
this way of thinking.

Speaker 2 (22:02):
You know, there is something to be said for that.
There's a lot to be said for that. I as
a Southern Baptist, as a Christian, a rather literal Bible
following Christian, I believe in redemption for your soul. But

(22:24):
I would tell you if you meet somebody who has
committed murder in the past, maybe they become a Christian,
they do their time, they get out. I am always
going to be wary of that person. Doesn't mean I

(22:49):
want to associate with it. I'm always going to know
that person was capable of committing murder. I'm not saying
killing someone in battle. I'm saying committing murder when someone
has an addiction to heroin, for instance, or crack. God

(23:12):
bless them if they can manage to beat it and
stay sober. But I'm always going to say there's two
types of people, the type of person who would experiment
with heroin and everybody else. And I'm well aware you

(23:33):
might be listening and saying, why is he judging me?
I was a heroin addict and I kicked it. He
should be proud of me. I am very proud of you.
But if you're honest with yourself, there is a certain
personality flaw that says I'm going to experiment with something

(23:55):
that i've heard is extremely deadly and destroys lives. But
I'm not going to trust that one people tell me that,
I'm going to test it out for myself with the
full understanding whether you admit it or not, that that

(24:16):
might mean I get hooked and ruin my life and
take everyone down with me, because it's never about just
your life or well, I'll leave it there. Yeah, I
hope you recover. I hope you have a good life.
But if someone is once a communist, I'm always always

(24:37):
going to keep an extra eye on that first show
it turns out. That's coomy. Please clap, please, police clap.
I need to find the clip of Kenny Rogers telling
the story at a I don't know if it was
Kenny Rogers tribute to Versulano Richie tribute, but he tells

(25:01):
the story with Lionel Richie on the front row about
Line Richie writing that song, and he tells it better
than I will, but I'll give you the abbreviated version. Kenny.
Whatever Kenny Rogers whispered into a microphone was going to
go to the top ten and sell a bunch of songs.
At a certain point in the eighties, he was the

(25:24):
hottest thing in the market. So they had to find
songs for him, and they bring in Linel Richie and
Lono Richie. Much like Barry Gibb, his career has kind
of dropped off with the end of disco, but he's
a great songwriter. Not his greatest songwriter as Barry Gibb,

(25:45):
but Dad Gumman, he's pretty good, and so they realized
that his style is perfect for Kenny, so they bring
him over. The label brings him over to write songs
and they've got to write a song and Lionel they've
just thrown this on line in and he's not he
doesn't have a song there. Studio time is very expensive

(26:07):
and it's precious. You know. When you have studio time,
you got it. A lot of songs were rushed because
they were running short on studio time and they got
to get this thing finished. And Kenny Rogers talks about
Lionel Richie not having anything, and then he goes to
the restroom and he stays in the restroom for quite
some time, which of course means he's sitting on the pot,

(26:31):
and he comes bounding out and he says, I've got it,
and Kenny Rogers, okay, he's got the song. He said,
all right, give me, you know, sing it for me,
and he sings the word lady in that key just
like that. He said, okay, what else, That's all I
got so far. But he built the song around that,

(26:53):
and obviously it ends up being a huge, huge hit
for Kenny Rogers. But it's just kind of a funny
moment that Donald Ritchie knew he had the song because
he had the concept, I don't write my speeches out.

(27:15):
I haven't. It comes back to debating. In high school.
You learn how to communicate and present in a way
with you keep certain things in your head. Now I
do it much more extemporaneously. But I always have a
concept that I'm going to work with, and finding the
concept is not a nine percent of the work. It

(27:36):
is the idea. I've read books about people who like
Walter Isaacson, who writes these tomes, you know, a thousand
page biographies of Steve Jobs and and Elon Musk and others,
and he says, the biggest challenge for me is finding
the subject I'm going to write about. The writing itself

(27:58):
is on autopilot. I know how to dig in and
do the research and talk to the people I need
to talk to and begin to formulate the story. It's
figuring that out. It's just interesting that a song like
that that appears out of that air. I am amazed
by the songwriting process because we know that songs are
an important part of our lives. You know, you go

(28:20):
to a wedding and you see people come off the
wall and start dancing that haven't danced in forty years
because that's their song. Songs are very powerful. They are
embedded deeper. They're not surface level. They're like the smell
of Grandma's corn bread or cake, or a certain fried

(28:41):
chicken or a place that you've been. They have that
incredible power over you. And we don't celebrate songwriters today
the way poets were one. You know, you ever think
about that. Who's a modern day poet that you know? Oh,
they elevate some black women because we have to have,
you know, a Tony Morrison so often or Amaya Angelo,

(29:01):
and that makes everybody feel good. And that's nothing wrong
with with their writings, but we don't have we still
have people putting words down that reflect our emotions. Right.
I've said before how much I hate the view and
everything those dumb broad stand for. But sometimes they say
stuff so stupid. Whoopy Goldberg says, everybody get your makeup

(29:22):
creams and paint your faces brown so they can't tell
who to round up. Well, when there's a chance to
apply makeup. You know, our good friend Timmy Wats got
excited and just had to comment.

Speaker 1 (29:34):
Let them my Minnesota Dominion it's you boy, Jimmy Walls
with a reminder, you're listening to the number one podcast
in Traverse County between midnight and three am, and do
we have a big announcement tonight we've been picked up
by our first ever affiliated.

Speaker 4 (29:54):
Who's got the flag up, who's got the plan? Yeah?

Speaker 6 (29:57):
Walls the man any man.

Speaker 1 (30:00):
He did not expect this welcome in his new Shoreham
Road Island. Now you might be the tiniest little tiny
point the way upper East Coast, But a.

Speaker 2 (30:10):
Big applause to those four families that could be listening
at this very moment at Dame.

Speaker 1 (30:18):
Okay, we've got a big topic today that involves my
girls from the view that are liked by just a few.
I know, I know, Joy and my girl Whoopee are
in the news because they said that Satan's spawn of
a woman, Christine Oham, would be going to the Super
Bowl with her meat ugly.

Speaker 2 (30:38):
Bullies from Ice and rounding up people.

Speaker 11 (30:40):
To deport all because of my eye bad Bunny here, this.

Speaker 2 (30:45):
Is what they said. She's threatening to go to the
super Bowl when bad Bunny is there and round up
all these people though that are illegal immigrants. Do you
think that she would.

Speaker 11 (30:54):
Go if it was Gothbrooks, Brandon low Places or Eminem.

Speaker 2 (30:59):
Wade a minstrel minute? Is he even white boys tailors
sweat or any of the white men.

Speaker 3 (31:03):
Understand what you say, because she's going to go to
the Super Bowl and round up how she gonna.

Speaker 6 (31:10):
Know who's who? Because the Supreme Court has given permission
to question anyone who has a Spanish Alexandra has a
dark skin.

Speaker 2 (31:17):
Yeah, so here's the wife. Here's the whoop ass whoopy,
everybody get a little color butter.

Speaker 6 (31:24):
Set in the sun. That's the first thing.

Speaker 2 (31:27):
And then and this is the only time.

Speaker 10 (31:28):
You can probably ever do this, give yourself a Latin accident.

Speaker 6 (31:33):
You know. Whoopy, that's such a good idea. And see
if she can tell who's who?

Speaker 2 (31:40):
Now you see that's a big millibi end my girl.

Speaker 4 (31:43):
Whoopy.

Speaker 2 (31:44):
I love this idea.

Speaker 11 (31:46):
Now I am sitting in front of my wife's vanity,
which she spends so much time away from me but
seems to love it. And I am picking through some
of her facial creams that I can wear to the
Super Bowl.

Speaker 2 (31:57):
Let's see. Here, we've got nutter butter. Oh, and then
there's tooty fruity.

Speaker 11 (32:02):
Look at this, I could layer on the mounds a
brown Oh.

Speaker 2 (32:07):
And what is this here? Shimmy shimmy cocoa nuts. Hmmm,
smell so nice to avoid the ice. Oh, I'm in heaven. Oh,
we're out of time again.

Speaker 1 (32:19):
Join us next week with our special guest, Ted Dancing
and his thoughts.

Speaker 2 (32:23):
On making a WHOOPI with whoopy Nice, thank you and
good night,
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