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October 22, 2025 • 39 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:02):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load.

Speaker 2 (00:10):
Michael Very show is.

Speaker 3 (00:12):
On the air.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
What goes up must come down.

Speaker 4 (00:21):
Spinning wheel got to door round.

Speaker 5 (00:24):
The bottom line is the White House was lying not
only to the press, not only to the public, but
they were lying to members of their own cabinet.

Speaker 4 (00:30):
A painted pony, let the spin and wheel spin.

Speaker 5 (00:34):
They were lying to Democratic members of Congress, to donors
about how bad things had gotten. And then after the
election we found out all of these things that when
you looked at what was going on with President Biden
at the time, it probably doesn't surprise you the extent
to which he was to.

Speaker 4 (00:50):
Right, a painted pony, let us spin and wheel.

Speaker 5 (00:54):
So the White House position, Doctor Kevin O'Connor was telling
White House aids that President Biden's deterioration of his spine,
the degeneration, was so significant that if he fell one
more time, that he might have to be in a
wheelchair and serve in a wheelchair.

Speaker 3 (01:11):
I talked to President Biden, you know, regularly, or sometimes
several times in a week, well usually several times in
a week. His mental acuity is great, it's fine. It's
as good as it's been over the years. I've been
speaking to him for thirty years, since we worked on
the Brady Ability Assault Weapons Band when I was a
young congressman. And he's He's fine.

Speaker 6 (01:33):
All this right wing propaganda that his mental acuity is
defined as wrong.

Speaker 3 (01:38):
He's been winning elections on his way.

Speaker 2 (01:41):
Jen tell you.

Speaker 3 (01:44):
Spinning?

Speaker 4 (01:45):
Will you spinding true? Are you trouble on the river side?
Catch a paid it ponent on the spinning wheel?

Speaker 7 (01:59):
Have you tested for some degree of cognitive decline?

Speaker 2 (02:04):
I've been testing on, constantly testing. Look all you.

Speaker 8 (02:08):
All I gotta do is watch me, and I can
hardly wait to.

Speaker 9 (02:12):
Compare my cognitive capability to the cognitive capability of.

Speaker 2 (02:17):
The man I'm running against.

Speaker 9 (02:20):
I've changed in the way that now you're in a
situation where there are forty fewer people coming across the
border illegally. It's better when he left office, and I'm
going to continue to move until we get the total
band on the total initiative relative to what we're going
to do with more border control and more I'm going
to sign.

Speaker 10 (02:42):
I really don't know what he said at the end
of this, and I don't think he knows what he
said either.

Speaker 4 (02:49):
Just for you, span in weird span into all your
trouble a painted pony.

Speaker 2 (03:03):
The reason Charlie Kirk was so valuable in addition to
promoting faith, was that he was able and willing to
talk to a younger audience that almost nobody on our
side was willing or able to connect with. And that

(03:25):
was important. We have to be able to connect with
young voters to get those voters. And Trump's campaign did
a great job in twenty twenty four. That's a recipe
for success. Look at what Trump did that Republicans hadn't
done before him. Romney didn't do that in twelve, McCain
didn't do that in eight. Bush didn't do it. No

(03:48):
far Bob Dole And think about that, George H. W. Bush.
Those folks did not appeal to younger voters. But if
you add add to your repertoire, your offerings of commentary
that you are, you add comedy. You're seeing more comedians

(04:10):
now who are coming out and basically calling themselves conservative.
And I think that's a wonderful, wonderful thing. Oh I
said we were gonna get to Portland. Don't have time
in this segment to lay it all out, which I
want to. So what I'm gonna do is I'm gonna

(04:31):
do Crazy Bernie, and then we'll come back to Portland.
It'll be all of the entire next segment because I've
been overdue. What's going on there? Let's talk about Crazy Bernie.
Sandy Sanders for a moment. He was on CBS Mornings
and he's talking about this is what Bernie Sanders does.
He just lists problems. People can't afford their healthcare, people

(04:52):
want to make more money, people want to eat more food,
people want to drive a nicer car. Okay, what does
that have to do with anything, Bernie? That that's not
a basis for you taking over all the power of
the government are what are How long can he do this?

(05:14):
I mean, the dude's one hundred years old. He stands
there wagging that crooked finger, just listing off things that
are bad, and no one seems to know. Well, what
have you done to solve anything? You've personally become very
rich out of the process, But what have you done?
Pray tell. Here's Bernie Sanders with John Stewart, and to

(05:39):
his credit, John Stewart pushes back. When the government promises
endless funds to insurance companies, prices rise beyond the rate
of inflation. By the way, it's also what happened to
the cost of education at universities. When you made so
much money available at the universities, sudents just kept paying it.

(06:04):
And so tuition has outpaced inflation dramatically. Quality of education
didn't get better. I bet you there are fewer professors
in class teaching now than when I was there, and
it costs three or four times as much to go.
It's all teaching assistance now. Anyway, credit to John Stewart
for making this point.

Speaker 11 (06:23):
With regard to healthcare, again, this gets to the Democratic
solutions have never been to directly provides.

Speaker 12 (06:34):
It's always been a.

Speaker 11 (06:36):
Subsidy total man. But what happens is when the government
promises endless funds to insurance companies or private universities without
any cost controls. And Trump seems to understand this, Prices
rise far beyond the rate of inflation. And we've seen

(06:56):
it in tuition, and we've seen it in pharmaceutical and
we've seen it in healthcare. So my question is will
Democrats recognize the poison pill that they've often placed into
well intentioned policy.

Speaker 7 (07:16):
What they end up doing is coming up with very
complicated proposals. If you make forty eight, nine hundred and
sixty four dollars, yes you will get this thing.

Speaker 2 (07:25):
You make a dollar more, you finished, and blah blah
blah blah.

Speaker 7 (07:27):
Look, we have got to make it simple in the
wealthiest country in the history of the world.

Speaker 2 (07:32):
Should healthcare be a human right, Yes it should be.

Speaker 7 (07:35):
Should we have the best quality education in the world
from childcare to graduate school, Yes we should.

Speaker 2 (07:44):
And then there is Bernie Sanders saying this, oh boohoo.
There are people in Congress who can't afford to go
without a paycheck during the shutdown, so they've got to
get paid during the shutdown. You understand they have to
get paid nothing else, they have to get paid.

Speaker 13 (07:58):
It's easier for the politicians in DC to go away
from each other and say we will win this way
while people are losing their paychecks. If Congress just said
we're not going to take our paychecks so we figure
this out, that would be a noble step in the
right direction.

Speaker 2 (08:13):
Not everybody kind of full through. You got some young people.

Speaker 13 (08:15):
There with kids there, the people that aren't getting paid
though I fled out.

Speaker 2 (08:19):
Are you got something point?

Speaker 14 (08:21):
Listening to the Michael Berry Show podcast is Sexy Be Sexy.

Speaker 2 (08:28):
I was promised for our friends in Portland, one of
my favorite places in the country. I don't go back
now because I don't want to be disappointed. So Marshall Burgess, sorry,
I haven't been to see you, Jin Schrder, Robert Dove,
all my old friends, k e X eleven ninety, Pete Landry, Sorry,
I haven't been back to visit. You folks are wonderful.
Benson Hotel, I miss you, but I'm afraid to go

(08:49):
back and ruin it for me. I'm afraid they'll absolutely
ruin it for me. So when Ice went in, you
really got you got the sense of how liberal and
violent the left is in Portland. But please don't blame
the people of Portland. The people of Portland are wonderful people.

(09:13):
In fact, our listening audience in Portland is there are
fewer people living in Montnomah County than there are out
in the suburbs and out in the rural areas, and
it's glorious out there. My friend Lars Larson, God bless him,
he hangs in there and keeps the fort down. We're
on competitor stations, but we're friends and We really like

(09:35):
each other. We both love cigars, and we both love Portland.
He gets to live there, Lars Larson is a funny story.
You're supposed to in this industry hate your competitors. I
think that's ridiculous. Lars Larson texted me one day years
ago and he said, Hey, I hear you're coming up
to Portland for the summer with your kids, with your

(09:57):
wife and kids. I said, I am, And he said, well,
I've got a cabin in it was it Oregon Beach
about an hour away, and you're welcome to have the
keys to it. It's by yourself. Nobody will bother you.
You say, there as long as you want. Who does that, right?

(10:19):
Who does that?

Speaker 6 (10:21):
Well?

Speaker 2 (10:21):
Lars did? He said you needed you need a place
to smoke cigars? You got you got a place? Do
you need a you need a place to buy your cigars?
Anything you need?

Speaker 6 (10:30):
Let me know.

Speaker 2 (10:31):
I'll take care of you. I'll send you there. I'll
call ahead. First class, just first class, dude. Love the guy. No,
we are not with the same company, but he's a
good man anyway. Lisa Rubin MSNBC. After the appellate court
gives Trump a victory that yeah, you can send in ice.

Speaker 15 (10:48):
This is a stay of Judge Immigrant's opinion, and that's
why it reached the Ninth Circuit as soon as it did,
because this is an emergency motion to essentially pause for order.

Speaker 16 (10:58):
But as a.

Speaker 15 (10:59):
Funktional matter, you are absolutely correct. It has the function
of overturning her order and thereby allowing the President to
send the National Guard back onto the streets of Portland.
And Katy, I want to read if I can, just
from a little bit of the beginning of this ninety
three page opinion, it says, after considering the record, and
by the record they mean all the factual evidence at

(11:21):
this preliminary stage, we conclude that it is likely that
the President lawfully exercised his statutory authority under ten USC.
Section twelve four oh six. That's the statute we've been
referring to as Title ten when we have conversations about
the National Guard deployments, which authorizes the federalization of the
National Guard when the President is unable with the radulo

(11:44):
forces to execute the laws of the United States.

Speaker 2 (11:46):
And this is the important part.

Speaker 15 (11:48):
The evidence the president relied on reflects quote, a colorable
assessment of the facts in law within a range of
honest judgment. We thus conclude that defendants are likely to
succeed on the merits of their appeal, basically saying that
when and if a court considers all of the record
in this matter is tried and it gets back to

(12:10):
an appellate court through an ordinary process where they have
full briefing and full evidence, that they still think Donald
Trump is likely to prevail there because he has the
discretion to determine as the president within a range of
honest judgment when it is reasonable.

Speaker 2 (12:27):
Are you and then here we go. This is the
cry bully Nick Mirov, Atlantic staff writer. That's the magazine
that Steve Jobs his widow is funding. That's awful. He's
on MSNBC and he says that the activists are worried
the government will target them. You mean the activists who've

(12:51):
been violently attacking the ice officers. They're now they're victims.

Speaker 8 (12:58):
I was in LA for the the National Car deployment
in June, and one of the things that really struck
me about Chicago was the degree to which both the
kind of street level activists and all of the city leaders,
you know, all the way up to Governor Pritsker are
kind of working together in this mass you know campaign
against you know, resisting ICE. And so these activist groups

(13:23):
have been very effective with their rapid response you know brigades.

Speaker 3 (13:26):
They are able to you.

Speaker 8 (13:29):
Know, to put people out on the street, you know,
filming these interactions, filming arrests, and and then sharing you know,
the license plate numbers and and you.

Speaker 2 (13:37):
Know vehicles of of you know, the of the rental.

Speaker 8 (13:41):
Cars and other you know plane, closed cars, unmarked cars
that ICE officers are are using to to pick people
up along the streets. And so there's just a very
well organized, you know response that's making ICE's job a
lot more difficult. And I think that's why you're seeing
some of this frustration particularly boil over when when activists

(14:03):
you know, shouted ICE officers and agents and try to
confront them on the street, you know, at the risk
of potentially being arrested or something worse.

Speaker 2 (14:11):
They worried about legal action.

Speaker 17 (14:13):
Donald Trump has issued an executive order classifying people, I
mean potentially classifying people who are helping fight back against
these federal enforcement scenes as terrorists. Are they worried about
the Yeah, Are they worried about legal action?

Speaker 2 (14:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (14:32):
I mean what I found when I was you know,
reporting there was that people were really on edge, and
a lot of people who are activists were even just
showing up to protest or worried that they're going to
be targeted, that the government is going to look them
up and sort of you know, single them out and
take action against them. So, you know, yes, there's a
great deal of tension, there's a great deal of fear,

(14:54):
but there are also people that are that are are
pressing forward and going out and you know, they say
they're going to continue these these technics. They think that
they have a real chance of you know, of making
it so hard for Ice to operate there that the
the ICE mission starts to break down.

Speaker 2 (15:11):
Congressman Janelle Bynum, Democrat from Oregon, was on News Nation
and they show her video of the protest they called
the riots against Ice, and they should you know, she's, Oh,
it's so peaceful, it's so calm, there's such a nice people.
Well look at this video. Oh you cherry picked that video?

(15:32):
What what what part of it is? Cherry picked? It's
not ai what part of it is Cherry picked?

Speaker 18 (15:40):
I disagree on his assessment of the situation.

Speaker 19 (15:42):
I was just in Portland a few days ago, observing
the ICE facility and the protests there, and it was
nothing is what you just portrayed.

Speaker 2 (15:51):
I would I would challenge.

Speaker 14 (15:53):
What you're you're posting here because it is not general debt.

Speaker 19 (15:58):
Did you take issue with the video that we're show
I take issue with the cherry picking of that particular video.

Speaker 2 (16:04):
Now, when I was there, it was very peaceful.

Speaker 19 (16:08):
It was very calm.

Speaker 2 (16:09):
And the thing is, here's what you have to remember.
It's we can agree on the what and disagree on
the how.

Speaker 20 (16:18):
Jackie, you're here, Chris Jackie a crash that killed Congresswoman
Jackiel or.

Speaker 2 (16:28):
The aforementioned Christy Noam Partment Homeland Security secretary with a statement,
this is what I voted for. You know, every time
Trump does something, the left will say, is that what
you voted for? Every time? Yeah, that's what I voted for.
This is what I voted for. Right here, four hundred
and eighty thousand illegal aliens arrested. Absolutely, that's what I

(16:51):
voted for.

Speaker 19 (16:52):
Today marks nine months since President Trump has been in office,
and since he began his work to restore American safe
for our families that live here. What he has accomplished
for the American people is nothing short of extraordinary. We
appreciate what he has done to make us safe again,
to secure our borders, and to make sure that he's
protecting our people. Since January, the Department of Homeland Security

(17:16):
has arrested over four hundred and eighty thousand.

Speaker 2 (17:19):
Criminal illegal aliens.

Speaker 19 (17:21):
Seventy percent of those individuals have criminal charges against them
or have been convicted of those criminal charges. Across the country,
we're making communities safer so that families can thrive and
they can prosper, and they can enjoy the kind of
freedom that this country.

Speaker 2 (17:38):
Was established to provide.

Speaker 19 (17:41):
Unfortunately, many times we see the news distorting the truth
and not bringing the real facts of the stories to
the American people. And that is one of the reasons
why we're here today, is to make sure that we're
focused on what this office has done, our HSI officers,
our ice officers, wminals that they've taken off the streets

(18:01):
here in the city and also this state, and what
we can do to get many of these items like
you see on the table in front of me out
of our communities. You see in front of us illegal rifles, handguns,
you see drugs that have been taken off of our
streets that are saving the lives of Americans every single day.

Speaker 2 (18:23):
Here is Dan Bongino. Dan and I are not friends,
we're not enemies. We don't really know each other. But
Dan was a very very successful podcaster and radio show host.
And I will say this, he doesn't get enough credit
for putting that aside. In joining the government, That's not

(18:45):
an easy thing to do. It's not an easy thing
at all. You don't know that your job will be
there when you get back out. You don't know if
your audience will have gone somewhere else. You don't you know,
taking a pay cut. I just think it's worth noting,
whether you're a listener or not. I think it's very

(19:08):
admirable that Dan Bongino took a position, and not a
real high profile position. From what I'm told, he rolls
up his sleeves and he gets to work, and you
know what, I admire that and he deserves credit for that.
So bully to you, Dan Bongino. Bully to you. So

(19:28):
here is the assistant FBI Director Dan Bongino on Fox
News talking about the fact that the President was very
clear I hate crime, go get those boys. Let's save
our country.

Speaker 6 (19:41):
The President early on with regards to this crush and
violent crime, whether it's in San Francisco, Chicago, any other
major city, early on.

Speaker 2 (19:49):
This is kind of the untold story of this op.

Speaker 6 (19:52):
I get a pointed announced in February, committed in March,
cashes hare a little bit earlier. President brings us in
early and essence, this is kind of the behind the
scenes guys. He says to us, you know, listen, I'm
a builder. I'm in a lot of these big cities.
He has this zero tolerance for violent crime.

Speaker 2 (20:10):
He just does. He drives around Washington, d C.

Speaker 6 (20:12):
On these OTRs, off the record movements. He sees homelessness, crime,
he can't stand it. He says, what do we got
to do to fix this? And we basically lay out
a bunch of things and his answer is very simple.

Speaker 2 (20:24):
President's like, go get them boys, Go get them. That
was it, Like, you do what you have to do.

Speaker 6 (20:31):
So we got in there, Cash and I and we
brought in the best SAC special agents in charge across
the country, guys who had forgotten more about crime and
enforcing you the most people ever know they've done this
their whole lives.

Speaker 2 (20:44):
One of them.

Speaker 6 (20:44):
We pulled in from Phoenix. He had an amazing job
out there. We said, hey, name's Joe. I said, Joe,
you tell me what we need to do to go
get these demon savages.

Speaker 2 (20:55):
Off the street.

Speaker 6 (20:56):
Tell me what we need to do. We brought in
a violent crime round table of the best crim agents
in the country. We figured out a battle plan. How
to kind of water balloon. You know, when you squeeze
a water balloon you get a bold. How do we
bulge agents here and the bulge agents there, and we
cleaned up at the President's direction, the Director and I
with the sacs and the agents in the field, we

(21:17):
water ballooned around the country and made get old of this. Guys,
this is going to trip you out. Twenty eight thousand
violent crime arrests in twenty twenty five in the year's
not even over. You say, well, what does that mean?
Put in comparison prior three to four years the FBI
and the prior leadership, but average about fifteen sixteen thousand.
We're at twenty eight thousand. Twenty eight thousand. We're not

(21:39):
even done with the year. We haven't even hit Thanksgiving
or Christmas yet. Shows you when you get a president,
an attorney general, a deputy attorney general, and an FBI
leadership team that lets the FBI do FBI work instead
of getting into other nonsense in the past. Look what
happens Your cities get cleaner.

Speaker 2 (21:57):
Next, we've got State Representative On Old Parkinson, Democrat from Tennessee,
on News three in Memphis, and I want you to
hear that there are behavioral differences that are happening and
it is evident.

Speaker 21 (22:15):
So what's your overall take though on the Memphis State
Task Force? Because some or of course are talenting saying
the client numbers are really dropping down. Other folks are saying, well,
I think they were already dropping before they got here.

Speaker 2 (22:26):
How do you see it? Reference?

Speaker 12 (22:27):
You know they were already dropping before they got here,
and apparently they're dropping more.

Speaker 2 (22:32):
You know you can't argue that.

Speaker 12 (22:33):
I mean, you know, you know you can see behavioral differences.
You know in our communities. You know, you know people
are rushing out to get their tags now right. You
know you can switch lanes without a thin thin almost
knocking you off the freeway, you know, zipping past you
at a thousand miles per hour. There are behavioral differences

(22:54):
that are happening, and it's evident.

Speaker 2 (22:55):
It's hard for people to believe this. Memphis was once
a great city, Detroit was once a great city. Of Chicago, Baltimore, Portland, Philadelphia, Seattle,
the left between the Antifa, which is the white crazies
and BLM, which is the black crazies or the black violence.

(23:16):
They've destroyed these places. Nobody wants to live in those
places anymore. And it's sad, it really is. It's sad.
It's downright tragic, because we once had more great cities
than anywhere else in the world. The cities were amazing,
they were centers of culture and food and commerce. They

(23:39):
were glorious. And now and now what are we looking at.
It's awful, just it's awful, and it's sad. I saw
a commentary about Somali's in Minneapolis, and now they've charged
the seventy fifth person now in a scheme three hundred
million dollar fraud case, welfare fraud and government fraud from

(24:02):
Somalis who came to the US. And I read that
twenty five percent of Somalia's gross domestic products comes from
product comes from remittances being sent from the US to Somalia.
So in other words, our welfare fund is going to
fund Somalia. And this has got to stop. It is

(24:23):
time for Americans to take care of Americans. I'm not
a xenophobe. I'm not a transphobe. I'm not a homophobe.
I'm not a racist. But I don't care what I'm called.
I want to be clear. We're going to make better
policies and we're going to take care of Americans. And
that's going to happen. And if you think calling me
a bad name is going to stop me, it's not.

(24:44):
Because no other country sends their money to the rest
of the world, and we're not going to do it anymore.
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Speaker 1 (28:39):
When the power goes out in a storm, the last
thing you want to learn is that it could take
days to get restored.

Speaker 2 (28:44):
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Speaker 1 (28:47):
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Speaker 2 (29:07):
I push my friends who are lethargic, little belly fat,
they've just kind of giving up on life, mild depression.
I say, your problem is very likely low testosterone. At
least get your testosterone checked. Low T Center and synergetics
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do from there. Go to fixmilow t dot com. Fixmilow

(29:29):
t dot com personalized dosing, not just standard dosing for
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Speaker 20 (29:37):
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Speaker 24 (29:52):
So what are you waiting for?

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Speaker 25 (30:18):
Sun I.

Speaker 16 (30:23):
Was dread.

Speaker 2 (30:26):
Excuse me? We conclude the show. It's not like we're
always very structured anyway, but I try to make sure
that we don't ever get too structured, that something fun
that I want to share can't be shared, and that
I have to worry about pivoting or setting things up properly.

(30:46):
So this last segment, there's a few things I've been
wanting to get to and I'm just gonna give you
a quick introduction of them, and we're gonna let her rip.
The first one is twenty twenty one Joe Biden. This
is four oh two, Jim. Joe Biden said, if you
get vaccinated, you can celebrate the fourth of July. Does
this sound like a king or what telling us whether

(31:08):
we can and cannot celebrate, and if so, under what circumstances?
What authority does he give himself to do that?

Speaker 16 (31:15):
It needs you to get vaccinated when it's your turn
and when you can find an opportunity and to help
your family, your friends, your neighbors get vaccinated as well.
Because here's the point. If we do all this, if
we do our part, if we do this together, by
July the fourth, there's a good chance you, your families

(31:38):
and friends will be able to get together in your
backyard or in your neighborhood and have a cookout and
a barbecue and celebrate Independence Day. That doesn't mean large
events with lots of people together, but it does mean
small groups will be able to get together.

Speaker 2 (31:54):
Here's the ESPN host stephen A. Smith admitting that NBA
star Kyrie Irving was right about not trusting the vaccine,
the vaccine that killed my brother.

Speaker 26 (32:05):
You see who Kyrie Irving is. Kyrie is a good brother, man,
Kyrie's a good brother. We used to butt hands because
he misworked too damn much. And I'm like, yo, man,
this brother's electrified. I want to see this brother dancing
on a basketball court. I want to hear about no
COVID vaccine get chanced on the court. And you see
you now, obviously, in hindsight, the brother right, because we
see all the conspiracy theories that come out, and props

(32:28):
to him for look for seeing, for having the first
sight to see that we didn't see that at the time.
And then but you also have to understand, I'm living
in a world where you got cats making thirty eight
forty forty five million, you got gms and owners complaining about.

Speaker 2 (32:45):
It, and you got billionaires.

Speaker 26 (32:47):
Look at me in the face of saying, yo, Stephen A,
I took that damn vaccine.

Speaker 2 (32:50):
Who the hell of they not to take the vaccine?

Speaker 26 (32:52):
And we're living in a country where the government was
imposing all of.

Speaker 25 (32:56):
That on us.

Speaker 2 (32:58):
And now for some just and them audio. I don't
know how many we'll get in before the show is over,
but when I'm looking for audio or anyone on our
team is, we'll share stuff that we never used just
because it's interesting. So here's for our friends in New
Orleans and the old NFL fans. This was from nineteen
ninety six. It's one of my favorite interviews. In fact,

(33:18):
they've made a spoof on it in a commercial that's
airing right now on Jim Mora. But just listen to this.

Speaker 25 (33:24):
Well, what happened was that second game we got our
ass kicked or the second half. We just got our
ass totally kicked. We couldn't do it dittally too offensively.
We couldn't make a first down, we couldn't run the ball.
We didn't try to run the ball. We couldn't complete
a pass.

Speaker 2 (33:40):
We sucked. The second half. We sucked. We couldn't stop
the run.

Speaker 25 (33:44):
Every time they got the ball and went down and
got points. We got our ass totally kicked in the
second half. That's what it boiled down to. It was
a horse performance in the second half. I'm totally embarrassed
and totally ashamed coaching art we are coaching did a
horrible job. The players did a horrible job.

Speaker 2 (34:00):
We got our ass kick in that second half. It sucked.
It's stunk. Robert de Niro, bless his heart. Someone needs
to turn his microphone off and say, Pauppoa, you are
destroying the legacy of a great actor. And he was
a great actor. You cannot say he wasn't a great
actor just because you hate his politics. But he's lost

(34:21):
his mind now and he thinks he's still on set
and he can boss people around here. He is on MSNBC.
He has become so bitter. He's just raging. He's talking
about Stephen Miller, who is the brains of the Trump
White House, and he calls him a Nazi and then
he says, yeah, I know he's Jewish, but he's a Nazi.

(34:45):
This is as awful a thing as you can say.
And he just keeps saying it. Bitter, angry, awful human being.
We see it, we see it, we see it, we
see it all the time. He will not want to leave.
He set it up with his I guess he's the
gebbles of the Sabinets. Stephen Miller.

Speaker 11 (35:08):
He's a Nazi, Yes he is, and he's Jewish that
he should be ashamed of himself.

Speaker 2 (35:15):
This was was this yesterday five ZHO two Jim. President
Trump talking about an additional thirty one billion dollars that
has been recovered from the tariffs. They told you the
tariffs were going to end your life, The tariffs were
going to destroy the economy. They haven't. I talk to
people all the time. They keep worrying that the economy's
in trouble. We're going to have They're waiting on the

(35:37):
other shoe to drop because they keep being told the
economies suffering because of Trump. But it's not. But the
consumer confidence is down because people are told to be afraid.
If you could just inject some exuberance and people would
relax get back to work, things are being done, things
are happening. The fear that they wanted you to have

(36:01):
has worked. If people would relax and look at the
fundamentals of our economy, they're solid. Energy costs are down,
stock market is up. We need to see that. I'd
like to see a full percentage points, but fifty basis
points will make a difference. Not as much as it
needs to, but it will make a difference. We've got

(36:22):
to see the mortgage rate drop. Did you hear Trump?
He said, he said, yeah. Gas prices are down, Energy
prices are down, mortgage rates are down, not as much
as they should be. We got to stiff over there.
But we'll be rid of him soon, and that's true,
we will.

Speaker 10 (36:37):
The Democrats are Kamakazi's right now, the Kamakazie piloce right now.
They have nothing going, they have no future. They have
in company candidates. I mean, I looked at Crockett, Jasmine Crockett.

Speaker 2 (36:50):
She's a low, very low IQ person.

Speaker 10 (36:53):
She's pulling okay in the Democrat party. I can't even
believe it.

Speaker 4 (36:57):
Aoc IS.

Speaker 10 (37:00):
Lecture the other day. It's like, you gotta be kidding.
This is not going to make our country good. And
for us to have a communist man looks like we're
going to a New York. He's not a socialist, he's
a communist.

Speaker 2 (37:13):
And finally, how about Jimbo. We closed the show. I
won't get to all the fun audio. I just like
to share randomly with you. You're getting an insight into
a as Hunter S. Thompson called him, a jangled mind.
This is a flashback to March twenty sixteen. This is
I'm signing off with some Chodin freyd for you. This
is Hillary Clinton on MSNBC with Rachel Maddow, laughing at

(37:38):
the idea that Donald Trump could ever beat her. Donald
Trump could never beat Hillary Clinton? Well he did. Oh
was she ever arrogant? Oh do we dislike her? Don't
be bitter to hear her voice? Laugh, laugh, indulge yourself
in her misery, Drink up of her salty tears. She

(38:01):
sold her soul for the White House and came up short.
Give us a listen and have a great weekend, folks.
Oh great? Did I just say a great weekend, have
a great evening, folks. Is it only Wednesday? I thought
today was Thursday.

Speaker 18 (38:20):
Let's say it all does go pear shaped. Let's say
it is November eighteenth, twenty sixteen, and for whatever reason,
it's President Alex Donald Trump. In that circumstance. Is Hillary
Clinton moving to Canada? Well, first of all, I do
not think that will happen, and I have every confidence
if I'm the nominee it.

Speaker 2 (38:41):
Certainly won't happen.

Speaker 15 (38:42):
I would never leave our country, but I would certainly
be spending a lot of time yelling at the TV set.

Speaker 18 (38:48):
Sol fair enough, Secretary Clinton, thank you so much for
your time, and I know it's an incredibly busy time.
I really appreciate you making time to be with us.

Speaker 24 (38:55):
Great good to talk to you.

Speaker 6 (38:56):
Neanxt a lot.

Speaker 18 (38:57):
Thank you, presidential candidates, they're just like us.

Speaker 15 (39:00):
Hey, hell at the TV too.

Speaker 2 (39:03):
Zilan Elmis has left for building. Thank you and good night,
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