Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time, time, time, luck and load.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
Michael Berry's show is on the air.
Speaker 3 (00:20):
It's Charlie from BlackBerry Smoke.
Speaker 2 (00:22):
I can feel it good one coming on.
Speaker 3 (00:24):
It's the Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 4 (00:26):
This seems like a perfect time to check the Michael
Berry Show answering Machine?
Speaker 3 (00:31):
Shall we?
Speaker 2 (00:32):
Before we do so?
Speaker 4 (00:33):
A reminder if you ever call when we're not on
the air, you can leave us a voicemail day or night.
It helps if you tell us your name and where
you're from. You don't have to say your last name.
You can be Bob from Burbank or Bill from Buffalo.
But and then you just make your point. Let's start
(00:56):
with Lonnie from Birmingham, Alabama. Birmingham is turned in to
being over the years one of our favorite markets. Birmingham
has been very, very good to us. He says that
his ancestors were indentured servants in a penal colony and
it hasn't affected his life, not one bit.
Speaker 1 (01:16):
And Michael and Fannie from Birmingham. Yeah, you're talking about
slavery and how people use it as a cudgel. First
of all, politicians are all driven by self interest, and
so I'm not worried about them, and then other people
that are ignorant to try to talk about slavery and how.
Speaker 5 (01:33):
People should be guilty for and all that.
Speaker 1 (01:35):
I'm never on the slave in my life. And I
actually did the family research and went back to several
generations and found out that my parents, I mean, my
great grandparents.
Speaker 5 (01:43):
Were basically slaves.
Speaker 1 (01:45):
They were indentured servants in a penal colony in Georgia,
which is you know, stud of your history. You know
all about that, I'm sure you do, but I mean
they were no better than anybody else back, white or
any other color. So no, I don't feel bad about
any of that at all. I wish it had to happen,
and it's part of history, but it shouldn't have any
bearing on what happened in my life and the people
(02:06):
a lot of people around me today. I've taken everybody
and I'm listening to you diligently, and I don't feel
bad about stuff like that at all. I've worked really
hard for everything I've got in my life, and I'm
going to continue to do so. Thanks man, I appreciate you.
Speaker 5 (02:20):
A good job you do.
Speaker 4 (02:22):
Next up on the Michael Berry Show, Answering Phone Answering
service line, which is seven one three one thousand, seven
one three nine one thousand. Robert is sent in tone
he's glad that we've been talking about, as he calls it,
the Muslim thing.
Speaker 6 (02:39):
Hey, jar, Robert san Antonio, Uh, I'd like to submit
I agree with you one hundred percent and talking about this,
the whole Muslim thing.
Speaker 7 (02:52):
And I'm so glad you're talking about it. You had,
you know, the awareless we need to talk about it.
It's it's already so far gone. But I'm sure there's
some in the useful idiot category that you know, they
think they're fleeing, are there.
Speaker 6 (03:13):
They're not actually fleeing.
Speaker 5 (03:15):
It's a Jihati invasion. The use of refuge status is
just a ruse an excuse entry tactic. They're not fleeing.
They're coming here for the reason of jihad, and there's
no such thing as a people must them. Jihatt is
(03:38):
part of their whole deal from the get go. There's
some of them that can ignored that part.
Speaker 7 (03:45):
But have you ever heard anyone denounce it?
Speaker 8 (03:49):
No?
Speaker 5 (03:50):
Loving Michael, keep talking about this.
Speaker 4 (03:54):
And finally this week we have Polly in Portland, nice
and illiterative. We're like that she thinks we should read
the list of terror attacks perpetrated by Muslims every single week.
Speaker 2 (04:07):
I don't know if we'd have much more time after that, Paulli.
Speaker 9 (04:11):
Pauli from Portland. That's Michael. I really did not realize
how consistently and how many Muslim attacks, and so you
put that list because and read it on and on on,
and so my religion, my call is I'm hoping that
you will repeep that list, maybe at least once a week,
(04:35):
because the news that we hear, you know, every half
hour around the clock, leaves that kind of detail out
and doesn't make it proud of conclusion. And we get
so used to as you say, those poor Muslims, yes, crap.
But also in addition to fact that it's not so obvious,
(05:00):
I don't think well, I certainly don't know how to
respond in a better way. You know, do you start
thinking you have a good module or something, some way
to respond better than you know, shutting up so that
we don't. I don't know. I just don't know. So
(05:20):
that's why I'm so grateful for you. I am really grateful,
Michael Berry.
Speaker 4 (05:25):
Thank you, And I reminder you can always leave us
a voicemail seven one three nine one thousand. You can
send me an email directly through our website, Michael Berryshow
dot com. It says, send Michael an email, It'll go
straight to me. You can buy Michael Berry's show gear.
If you do, make sure when you get it you
take a photo of yourself in it, or on your
truck or on your car or whatever you put your
(05:48):
your sticker or your cars or your caps or whatever else.
We love it when people wear our gear and travel
and you take a picture atop a mountain or a
bridge or wherever it is that you're going. That's all
at Michael Berryshow dot com. Reminder, I'm on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram,
not TikTok yet. I don't know that I ever will,
(06:11):
but I do get people who ask why we don't.
Speaker 2 (06:13):
It's like, well, I can barely keep up as it is.
Speaker 10 (06:17):
It's from the King of Ding and this other guy,
Michael Berry.
Speaker 6 (06:23):
These you're the kind of guy you like to smacking
air ass.
Speaker 4 (06:27):
Two of the biggest scams in American life today that
take a lot of our money or the education system
in healthcare.
Speaker 2 (06:33):
Captain cam Let's.
Speaker 4 (06:34):
Look at healthcare and how we fund it and who
gets rich. Insurance companies and pharmaceutical companies are getting rich,
Americans are getting sicker. Democrats are saying that Republicans want
to raise healthcare costs for Americans when they set the
Obamacare subsidies to expire at the end of the year.
(06:57):
Shouldn't shock you. Democrats have been lying about Obamacare since
before Obamacare was even passed. The bill was so bad,
I'll remind you that Nancy Pelosi said, we've got to
pass the bill to find out what's in it. And
(07:18):
John Lewis, no mental giant, said, how love would these
Republicans say, read the bill? Read the bill. How I'm
supposed to read the bill when I can't read? No,
he said, how I'm supposed to read the bill when
it's over two thousand pages long, so you don't know
what's in it. At least he was honest enough to
(07:39):
admit that. But remember how Obama claimed that it would
save the American family twenty five hundred dollars per year.
I don't need to tell you that didn't turn out well.
Speaker 11 (07:53):
A system where we're going to work with your employers
to lower your premiums, perhaps to twenty five hundred dollars
per family per year, we will sir by reducing premiums
by as much as twenty five hundred dollars per fam.
Here's what changes, saying to people who already have health
insurance and the employers who are providing it, will work
to lower your premiums by up to twenty five hundred
(08:14):
dollars perfe.
Speaker 4 (08:14):
Right there, A lie told often enough starts to create
a sense of certainty. There gets to be a reinforcement
and affirmation if you stick to that same number.
Speaker 2 (08:29):
He could have said twenty five thousand dollars two hundred
and fifty thousand dollars.
Speaker 4 (08:33):
As long as he keeps consistently saying that same number,
that's the talking point. We're gonna save you up to
twenty five hundred dollars a year. And what you're hearing
in this montage and you'll hear more, was he said
it consistently over and they had tested that. They might
have started with a thousand, or maybe they started with
(08:54):
five thousand. It had to be enough that was believable,
but not so much that people would say, Ah, yeah,
Barack Obama, he's gonna save me twenty five hundred dollars
a year. Sadly decent people, low information voters. It's important
to remember Rush didn't think low information voters were bad people.
(09:19):
He thought they were busy people. They go wing to
sporting events, They're punching the clock at work, they're staying
up late with their kids. Maybe they were at the
hospital last night with their kids. They're fixing their own cars,
they're cutting their own grass. They're just trying to hold
it all together. They don't have time to figure out
(09:40):
what Obama Care is going to do to them until
it is imposed upon them. But they have hope. That's
why Democrats always sell them hope, because so hope's all
they've got, and they can't seem to realize, like Charlie
Brown kicking that damn football, that Lucy's gonna move, because
(10:01):
with such earnest sincerity, at least it sure seems like it.
They keep promising them, we're going to save you money,
We're going to help you out per year.
Speaker 11 (10:13):
I also have a health care plan that would save
the average family twenty five hundred dollars on their premiums.
And if you already have health care, then we're going
to reduce costs. An average of twenty five hundred dollars per.
Speaker 3 (10:24):
Family on premiums.
Speaker 2 (10:26):
We're going to work with your employer to lower the costs.
Speaker 11 (10:30):
Of your premiums by up to twenty five hundred dollars
a year, and we'll cut the cost of a typical
family's health care by up to twenty five hundred dollars
per year.
Speaker 3 (10:38):
And if you've got health care, we're going to work
with your employer to lower.
Speaker 11 (10:41):
Your premiums by twenty five hundred dollars per family per years.
And we will lower premiums for the typical family by
twenty five hundred dollars a year and cut the cost
of health care by up to twenty five hundred dollars
per family. And if you already have health care, then
we're going to work with your employer to lower your
premium by up to twenty five hundred dollars per family
(11:02):
per year.
Speaker 6 (11:04):
Barox policies will provide health care cost reductions of about
twenty five hundred dollars for the typical family.
Speaker 11 (11:10):
It's time to bring down the typical family premium by
twenty five hundred dollars, and it's time to bring down
the costs for the entire country.
Speaker 2 (11:19):
And if you already have health insurance.
Speaker 11 (11:21):
We will lower your premiums by twenty five hundred.
Speaker 2 (11:24):
Dollars per family per year.
Speaker 11 (11:27):
We're going to work with your employer through a catastrophical
reinsurance plan to lower premiums by about twenty five hundred
dollars per family per year.
Speaker 3 (11:34):
The only thing we're going to try to do is
lower costs so that those costs savings are passed on
to you. And we estimate we.
Speaker 11 (11:40):
Can cut the average families premium by about twenty five.
Speaker 3 (11:43):
Hundred dollars per year.
Speaker 11 (11:45):
And we'll work with your employer to lower your premiums
by twenty five hundred dollars per family per year.
Speaker 4 (11:51):
Barack Obama will provide rural America will affordable health care
and say the typical American family twenty five hundred dollars
a year.
Speaker 11 (11:59):
And reduces every family's premiums by as much as twenty.
Speaker 5 (12:02):
Five hundred dollars.
Speaker 11 (12:03):
If your employer does offer your health care, then we're
going to work with your employer. It's a lower premiums
by up to twenty five hundred dollars per family per
year and cut the cost of a typical families premiums
by up to twenty five hundred dollars per family per.
Speaker 4 (12:16):
Year, and they just kept saying it. They passed it
in twenty ten, but it didn't go into effect for
years because they didn't want it to go into effect
before the twenty twelve reelection. They wanted Obama to be
in his second term so you couldn't punish him at
(12:38):
the polls.
Speaker 2 (12:40):
They knew what it would do. He was never meant
to be an improvement on healthcare. Hell, it didn't have
anything to do with healthcare.
Speaker 4 (12:48):
It had everything to do with the financial control of
health care. And what are we left with now Till
we're left with, We're left with a system that is
not as good as it used to be. We should
be making progress, not going backward. Every doctor out there
practicing knows that the insurance company is taking control over
(13:12):
the delivery of health care has destroyed it. How many
times a doctor says, I'd like to run you, I'd
like to get a test done for that, but the
insurance won't pay for it, or worse, they send you
for a test or they perform a procedure. Insurance company
says they'll pay it, and then they come back and decide, no,
(13:36):
we won't. So now the doc says, I need you,
the patient to pay it, and you say, I wouldn't
have paid it. I can't afford to pay it. And
the doc says, the insurance isn't paying it, and I've
done the work. It's like if you're a construction company
and the city permitter gives you a permit for the work,
(14:00):
and so you begin to work and then they come
back and say, uh, that's a violation. No no, but
but you agreed, see, and so I did all that
work in reliance on that. Here's your stamp right here.
We've changed our mind. This sort of stuff has undercut
(14:20):
and rotted our healthcare system. And God help you if
you need it. You don't realize how important our healthcare
system is until you need it, and then it's too late,
because by that time you're probably too old to be
politically involved. You're probably too old to do anything about it.
Speaker 2 (14:39):
And that that's a real tragedy. And Michael Berry's show.
Speaker 4 (14:45):
Seeing Ends Andrew Kazinski, I would put him probably personally
politically on somewhere to the left of center, but I
don't know that.
Speaker 2 (14:53):
I can just tell you based on his.
Speaker 4 (14:54):
Reporting, no one would ever argue that he's an Obama
basher or a Trump fan, that's for sure. He says
that the person who had the most contact with Jeffrey
Epstein was a woman named Kathy Rumler or Rumbler or
(15:15):
Rimbler and spelled r u E M m I E
r oh rim. I thought it was I thought it
was Eli. Or anyway, let's call her Kathy for now.
She was a white House counsel to Barack Obama. Epstein
referred to her as this very powerful person who was
(15:40):
very friendly to him and very protective of him.
Speaker 2 (15:47):
Well, of course she was. She was Obama's White House counsel.
She could move mountains.
Speaker 4 (15:56):
I suspect Epstein was counting on a residential pardon if
the case had been brought while Obama was president.
Speaker 2 (16:06):
Remember he'd already been convicted in.
Speaker 4 (16:08):
Florida, but now the bigger case would not occur until
Trump was president. And we're supposed to believe that Trump
is involved in all this. But Trump could have given
him a pardon and made all this go away, but
he didn't, which is why Epstein was calling a Democrat
(16:33):
member of Congress, communicating constantly and trying to get her
to ask the right questions to bring Trump down because
Trump wouldn't pardon him because he wasn't involved with him.
The story from Andrew Kazinskif CNN.
Speaker 8 (16:51):
One of the most powerful people in the Epstein files.
Speaker 3 (16:54):
Is somebody you may not have heard of.
Speaker 8 (16:56):
Her name is Kathy Rumler, and she is one of
the people who communicated with Jeffrey Epstein the most, according
to emails released last month from Epstein's estate by House investigators.
Speaker 3 (17:06):
She's a former White House counsel of.
Speaker 8 (17:07):
Barack Obama and now top lawyer at one of the
world's most powerful banks, Goldman Sachs.
Speaker 3 (17:13):
Records show that before she joined.
Speaker 8 (17:15):
The bank, they exchanged more than one hundred emails, and
epstein schedule lists them having more than fifty planned meetings
between twenty fourteen and twenty nineteen, long after he read.
Speaker 4 (17:28):
Fifty five zero meetings in five years. That's ten meetings
a year. It's almost a meeting a month. I don't
know how many people you meet once a month, but
(17:48):
I don't meet anybody that much. Nobody. I go to work,
I go home. We've got friends I see three times
a year. Ten meetings a year. It's almost like they
don't want to communicate anything in a format that can
(18:11):
lately later be discoverable. It's almost as if she needs
to convey by spoken word what he needs to know. Hey,
don't worry. President's got you taken care of here. Hey,
don't worry. We snuffed out that person over there. Hey
don't worry, And don't speak to this person. This is
(18:36):
the White House Council to Barack Obama. This woman Kathy,
who is over here canoonling with Jeffrey Epstein, who's an
absolute monster. What are the chances that all these people
(18:58):
that are so close to Obama who were going to
Orgy Island to have sex with children and Epstein is
in communication with Obama's lawyer? What are the chances? And
the question nobody can answer, why did Epstein put together
(19:25):
trips for other people to have sex with children, which
is highly illegal and immoral outside of American jurisdiction. Why
did they all go? How did they know they could
trust each other? Prince Andrew? What by the way, Prince
(19:51):
Andrew wasn't compromised by anyone else on that trip. He
was compromised by the young lady. You ever noticed none
of these people have ever turned on each other? What
do they have in common? What oath did they take?
There are people that turned on Diddy. The people say yeah,
(20:15):
they got butt raped, bind or they watched someone else
get butt raped. There are people that turned on Sandusky,
said yeah, he was butt raping boys in the shower.
Why is it that, Epstein? Why is that none of
them come out and say of the others. Bill Gates's wife,
(20:39):
Melnda's lawyers use that case against him to get a
whole lot more money in the judgment in the in
the divorce, he didn't seem to fight back, And then
when asked about Epstein, he just said he's dead. That's
an odd statement to make hibout a guy who was supposed.
Speaker 2 (21:03):
To be your friend. You sure acted like he was.
We'll continue.
Speaker 8 (21:07):
Then, fifty planned meetings between twenty fourteen and twenty nineteen,
long after he was a registered sex offender. Across the
many messages, Rumler emerges as a confidant and friend to Epstein,
and he turned to her for help for managing his
public reputation after he was convicted of soliciting prostitution from
a minor. In one twenty nineteen message, for example, Epstein
(21:28):
wrote that Rumler helped him craft a statement in response
to a forthcoming Washington Post editorial that was calling on
Congress to investigate him. He referred to it as the
Rumler proposal. The statement defended Epstein and denied that he
ever received a sweetheart deal. This is what Kathy suggests
we tell Washington Post, Epstein said. While Rumler told CNN
(21:49):
that she did not represent Epstein and was not compensated
by him, she did not directly answer whether she ever
crafted pr statements for him or advise.
Speaker 3 (21:57):
Him on media strategy.
Speaker 8 (21:59):
Rumler said she had no knowledge of any new or
ongoing unlawful activity by Epstein. In an email to Epstein
in June twenty eighteen, Rumler dismissed a Daily Beast story
about allegations against him, describing it as a quote novella
of rehash crap now. Rumler told CNN she was referring
to the article, not the allegations against Epstein, and said,
(22:20):
I have deep sympathy for anyone victimized by Epstein, and
as I have said many times, I regret ever knowing him.
But at the time, Rumbler's correspondence with Epstein often appeared
to go beyond professional matters. They gossiped about current events,
arranged celebrity lunches and dinners.
Speaker 3 (22:36):
Epstein even appears.
Speaker 8 (22:37):
To have coordinated some of her personal beauty appointments. In
her statement to CNN, Rumler referred to Epstein as a
business referral source and said she knew him in a
quote professional capacity when she worked in private practice. Rumler
told CNN, I did not travel with him, go out
to dinner with him, or spend time with him one
on one except in a professional setting. As has well established,
(23:01):
Epstein's calendars and schedules often do not reflect reality. What's
so interesting about Rumler is that, unlike other Epstein associates
like Larry Summers or Prince Andrew, who have paid a
steep price for their association with Epstein, Rumler has.
Speaker 3 (23:14):
Managed to fly under the radar.
Speaker 8 (23:16):
She remains a golden Sacks which so far has chosen
to stand by.
Speaker 6 (23:21):
Almost went the lawless to myself.
Speaker 2 (23:23):
The Michael Barry Show.
Speaker 4 (23:25):
This next story, we play the sixty minutes Report. I
need to let you know that Texans are mildly obsessed
with cockroaches. That may be because we have very large cockroaches.
I don't know what sas cockroaches you have in your state.
But I've been told that Texas cockroaches are bigger. But
(23:48):
Texans have a tendency, and I'm as guilty as the
next guy. We have a tendency to think everything in
Texas is bigger and better, even if it's not necessarily
But we are modely obsessed with cockroaches, and even al
Pacino's pronunciation of cockroach in in scarface is perfect cockroach.
(24:09):
We love to talk about cockroaches some women, because they'll
fly around, we'll freak out. So any story that involves
the cockroach we're probably going to share with you, and
this one is no different. Sixty Minutes reports cockroaches fitted
with tiny backpacks could be part of the future of
(24:31):
spycraft search and rescue missions thank you thanks to a
German startup, swarm Biotactics, a German startup is working to
fit Madagascar hissing cockroaches with tiny backpacks that could carry cameras, microphones,
(24:54):
and Doppler radio. The species is small enough to fit
almost anywhere and resilient enough to survive environments it could
be dangerous to people.
Speaker 2 (25:06):
The story for sixty Minutes that's Klipner fifteen.
Speaker 12 (25:12):
The Defense Ministry is thinking outside the box, way outside
the box. It's funding tests to see if these giant
Madagascar hissing cockproaches can be repurposed from repulsive pests to
miniature battlefield assets.
Speaker 13 (25:29):
This is a left turn, and this is a right turn.
Speaker 12 (25:32):
Stephen Wilhelm's year old startup, Swarm Biotactics in central Germany
is working with the Bundesverer to develop technology that can
steer the creepy critters autonomously and send them on reconnaissance missions.
Speaker 2 (25:47):
He let me take control.
Speaker 13 (25:50):
Wow, they're super resilient and as you can see, I
mean there can crawl through tiny spaces, can go up
the wall, into pipes on the ground and rubble.
Speaker 12 (26:01):
You know, this is really bizarre. It swarms insect Neuroscientists
attach electrodes to the roach's antennae. They insist this doesn't hurt,
stimulating their natural ability to navigate. The electrodes are hidden
in these bug sized backpacks, along with the battery and microchips.
(26:25):
They're working to shrink the technology to soon look like this.
Swarm's AI generated videos shows how they might be deployed,
carrying cameras, microphones, and Doppler radar into war zones.
Speaker 2 (26:45):
It's kind of cool. Backpacks aren't just for school anymore.
Speaker 4 (26:50):
Ramon, you see adults carrying backpacks around everywhere.
Speaker 2 (26:56):
I guess it's a good way to try your laptop
or you.
Speaker 4 (27:00):
Can you imagine seeing a cockroach carrying around a backpack.
Now that that's a visual. A little Stanley water bottle
in his in his side pocket. On Monday, he has
his blue one. On Tuesday it's a gun metal black.
He got a little different one for everyone. The little
(27:21):
cockroach in his backpack? What kind of training do you
give a How do you train a cockroach like that?
How do they not scatter when the lights turn on?
I mean, I got.
Speaker 14 (27:31):
A German dude with his German accent and his prototypically
German self, incapable of catching a joke, training the roach.
Speaker 2 (27:42):
I could just see him there, just coaxing the roach.
Speaker 4 (27:51):
You think little roach parents are disappointed with their little
roach doesn't want to take over the family business. Wire
roach is so damn funny. Daddy Roach is very disappointed
that baby roach doesn't want to go to medical school.
(28:13):
He wants to be a spy. Can you imagine the
disappointment well, little jeth Roach, Little Jethroach Bodine comes home
and announces he doesn't want to be a brain surgeon,
and Daddy Roach has to deal with that.
Speaker 15 (28:31):
Could jet I decided I ain't going to be a
brain surgeon.
Speaker 2 (28:36):
I can bear up under that.
Speaker 6 (28:38):
Joe Croie, you got granty.
Speaker 16 (28:40):
Maybe one doctor in the family's enough.
Speaker 2 (28:43):
I you're glad you're taking us so good?
Speaker 16 (28:45):
What made you change your mind?
Speaker 15 (28:48):
I've seen another one of them double out spy movies,
Uncle Jed.
Speaker 2 (28:51):
That is what I was meant to be.
Speaker 15 (28:53):
Non seven has got the world by the tail.
Speaker 16 (28:57):
Yeah, I remember you was all fired up over him
a while back. He's one does all that fighting and loving?
Speaker 3 (29:03):
Does he? Ever? As well?
Speaker 2 (29:07):
As you're working on shoes?
Speaker 15 (29:09):
Would you mind hollering out the heel so I can
put a little radio in there.
Speaker 2 (29:13):
Radio and the heel of your shoe.
Speaker 15 (29:15):
Her that's where double knot seven carries is?
Speaker 16 (29:18):
It seems like a mighty unhandy place to carry it.
Why don't he just carry in his pocket? Well?
Speaker 15 (29:24):
I can't tell you that secret, No, sir, I just
ain't sure.
Speaker 8 (29:53):
I don't.
Speaker 3 (30:01):
You like you gottery? Don't where they got me out?
Speaker 8 (30:06):
Okay, Okay, they.
Speaker 6 (30:12):
Who my monna fight?
Speaker 3 (30:18):
Who haven't done me?
Speaker 2 (30:25):
Let me go out my monna pay wo.
Speaker 3 (30:32):
Look, matters matter, ye don't blather.
Speaker 8 (30:36):
They got eat working, Yeah, they bleed myles.
Speaker 3 (30:42):
You matter, you gotter.
Speaker 2 (30:46):
Ya don't play, they got you do working o the fo.
Somewhere in Mexican history, some dude PLI drown Brachando the.
Speaker 4 (31:04):
Some drunk Mexicans said, Hey, I had a new song
we need to record.
Speaker 2 (31:11):
Is it a love song?
Speaker 3 (31:13):
Is it a balad?
Speaker 11 (31:15):
No?
Speaker 2 (31:16):
No, it's about a roach. We can't walk. It's a metaphor.
It's an allegory.
Speaker 4 (31:27):
What's it's Yeah, what's it called karacha? You want us
to record a song called the roach? We got one
hour studio time, and you want us to go in
and cut a song called the roach?
Speaker 9 (31:41):
Yeah?
Speaker 10 (31:43):
He's good, it's really good. Yeah, And he did, And
here we are ninety nine point nine percent of maackisine
songs ever recorded. I don't know, but luck, lupachia, thank
you and good night.
Speaker 16 (32:05):
Yeah