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 Very Show is on the air. We won't take
a lot of hate we want. We're gonna be sued
every day and numerous times. I think you will see
the left try to control the media. They're going to
show the first crying female, first crying child, and say
how inhumane we are.
Speaker 3 (00:25):
I just wouldn't say that. I have show a story.
Only people are getting attacted. The children. They don't understand.
They're so story. I wish I could do something.
Speaker 4 (00:46):
That they can't.
Speaker 3 (00:47):
I don't know what to do. I'll try and be there.
Speaker 2 (00:56):
But they won't talk about three hundred and forty thousand
children they failed to take care of. They're not going
to talk about the young women who have been murdered
in this country to the hands criminal cartel. They're not
going to talk about the hundreds of angel moms and
dads who bury their children. Want to talk about family separation,
they bury their children, their children are killed by a
(01:17):
member of a member of criminal cartel, or someone's not
supposed to be here. They'll tadd one side of the story.
They'll try to villifies, but they're not going to stop it.
Speaker 5 (01:25):
It's weird, he lifts the Martina fights through her pained
and tears after she says her father, Andreas Martina, was
arrested from his wake Gan home early Sunday morning by
Immigration and Customs enforcement agents. She sent us, the forty
four year old grandfather team to the US from Mexico
nearly thirty years ago.
Speaker 6 (01:43):
They will open the door because date that maybe one
of us where in some paters looking habits.
Speaker 3 (01:49):
Was they been nice?
Speaker 2 (01:53):
And we go to find that priority tiger versus the
criminal alien. If he's were with others in the United
States illegally, we're going to take enforcement action. I guess
we're going to forest immigration.
Speaker 7 (02:01):
I helped the curtain and saw that it said police.
When I saw the agents get out, they had the
building surrounded, so they entered. They went up and started
knocking on the doors really loudly. My children started crying.
Speaker 1 (02:15):
A Houston woman has been arrested with twenty five illegals
crammed into the back of a box truck in South Texas.
That's a lot of illegals crammed into a box truck,
Texas DPS, says forty three year old Sylvia Patricia Santa
(02:36):
Maria was arrested and charged with twenty five counts of
human smuggling and has since been booked into the Live
Oak County Jail. Late Wednesday morning, a person approached a
DPS trooper at a truck stop along Interstate thirty seven
in George West regarding a minor crash that happened in
(02:57):
the parking lot.
Speaker 3 (02:59):
When the trooper contacted.
Speaker 1 (03:01):
The driver of a white two thousand and five International
box truck involved in the crash, later identified as Santa Maria,
she told the law enforcement officials she was driving to
Houston after picking up mattresses in Alton, Texas. The trooper
noticed inconsistencies in her travel plans and asked for consent
(03:23):
to search the truck. The trooper discovered twenty five illegal
aliens in the box truck who were attempting to hide
behind thirty mattresses and inside a crawl space within the
truck's wall. The group of illegals comprised twelve males, twelve females,
(03:47):
and an eleven year old child.
Speaker 3 (03:50):
The illegals were from.
Speaker 1 (03:51):
Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, India, Cuba, Venezuela and the
Dominic can Republic. That's quite a Noah's arc crammed in there,
isn't it. Twenty five illegals crammed into a box truck. Now,
I know what you're thinking. It's a box truck, not
(04:13):
a car. It's you know, it's bigger. That's a lot
of people jammed into a box truck. If one dude farts,
you're in trouble.
Speaker 3 (04:24):
You are.
Speaker 1 (04:25):
And if one dude's got the bo and you know
from some of those countries at least a few of
them do. Who boy, it's hard to breathe inside there.
Twenty five illegals in a box truck, My goodness, kind
of reminds me of that story that George Lopez told
about going to the Dodgers games as a kid.
Speaker 3 (04:49):
You ever take your own food to Dodger Stadium.
Speaker 8 (04:55):
You see them making food, You're like, oh man, I
don't want to go, don't go, And.
Speaker 3 (05:06):
You tell them I have hot dogs over there. Grandma,
I have Local two fifty two for weeding.
Speaker 6 (05:14):
At that.
Speaker 3 (05:14):
With two fifty you.
Speaker 9 (05:15):
Can get a loaf for bread and baloni cout on that.
We can all league, not just you, mister selfish?
Speaker 3 (05:25):
Why are you crying?
Speaker 9 (05:25):
But you didn't get a wheenie.
Speaker 3 (05:32):
You go with the.
Speaker 9 (05:32):
Biggest safeway sacked man in them, two gallon punch and
two slurpee cups.
Speaker 3 (05:40):
The security guard. Can I look in there? Miss? You
started laughing home Jesus, Yes, the we nex section is
over there.
Speaker 10 (05:48):
Over there, all the Mexican sat on the left field pavilion.
That's where all the Mexican sat that film. And you
sit there and you go, how come we don't sit
over there? You're not playing cattle me not with them.
They're gonna say away seem.
Speaker 9 (06:13):
And they would always tell me, take your glove.
Speaker 6 (06:15):
Me.
Speaker 9 (06:17):
Take care of what they One day they don't hit
it where we sit. No, you can sneak some liquor
in me down that glove because you're later.
Speaker 3 (06:29):
They're not gonna check you. Hold that glove like that.
Why are you crying? Why are you crying?
Speaker 9 (06:35):
Hold that glove while you're crying, But you have liquor covernom.
Let them find it and see what's gonna happen to you?
Speaker 3 (06:42):
Hold that glove?
Speaker 11 (06:48):
Act natural?
Speaker 3 (06:49):
What natural cover on?
Speaker 9 (06:54):
Oh, they're gonna find them, and let's stay back that way.
Speaker 11 (06:56):
They want to get him. We have a young boy
here named Jorhank. If I don't look over there, man,
don't look over it. Don't let him go, don't let
him go, don't.
Speaker 3 (07:08):
Look over.
Speaker 1 (07:10):
I believe George Lopez used to actually be funny. He
would actually tell jokes that would make you laugh. And
then he had some sort of crush on Barack Obama.
Speaker 12 (07:22):
And he got stupid, just stupid, talk about crashing and Burnie.
Speaker 10 (07:34):
Ramon, the King of Dan and this other guy, Michael Barry.
Speaker 1 (07:42):
That's for Jateau Blow. That's his rap name. His real
name is Kurt Chance. He performs under the name for
Jatteau Blow. He's an American rapper who is a huge
fan of Donald Trump. He is a self proclaimed pioneer
(08:03):
of the hip hop genre that supports Donald Trump, which
he calls maga rap. Now, I fully understand that most
of our folks, including me, if there's any rap that
we like, it was run Dy and c and we
(08:26):
really liked the collaboration with Aerosmith. But when rap, which
was rhyme and meter morphed into hip hop, which was
cop killing and misogyny, they left us behind. And so
(08:49):
it's I think it's important when you look at cultural
influences that we see cultural influences that that restore values
or speak to certain values and positions and movements across genres.
This doesn't appeal to me because I'm too old. I
(09:17):
don't really care for hip hop. Now, you know, there
there are a few things. I will admit I actually
like Tupacs, California, California.
Speaker 3 (09:27):
Love is it called?
Speaker 1 (09:28):
There are a few things, but by and largest, I'm
a classic country guy. But if that can appeal to
some younger folks, it's a good message. Don't burn my
flag and raise up and support your country.
Speaker 3 (09:42):
I like that.
Speaker 1 (09:44):
In the next segment, we'll play another one that that
he's done. That that got some attention called boycott Target,
which accused Target of grooming children with pride merchandise, and
it went to number one on iTunes. Now, what's interesting
about that is that Target's in the crosshairs from the
(10:07):
left and the right. Last week, if you wondered what
was happening with Jesse Jackson, well he's still out there.
His little extortion racket is still going. He looks really bad.
He looks Joe Biden. He looks worse than Joe Biden.
They had him in a T shirt that said push,
and he was in a wheelchair and they wheeled him
(10:30):
along and it was it was they were blasting Target
because Target has done away with their DEI policies and
they need the EI. That's how they get paid. I mean,
Jesse Jackson's gotten paid for years in an extortion, extortion
racket by places like GM where he goes in and
(10:53):
does a press release and a big press conference that
says the target is a bunch of racists, and Terry says,
oh no, please tell saying that we'll put you on
the board and give you a bunch of cash. And
he says, okay, I guess we'll do that. And that's
how it works. It's an extortion racket. A lot, a
lot of the racial complaints in this country are an
extortion racket. Sometimes the person benefits directly, sometimes they are
(11:17):
paid by others. That's how folks get hired, promoted, the
whole deal. That's how you encourage and continue racism against
white people. That's how you pick women over men and
blacks over whites. It is prejudice, bias, discrimination, all in
(11:37):
the name of virtue.
Speaker 3 (11:39):
What an amazing thing.
Speaker 1 (11:41):
I mean, I mean, you got to really be good
to say, we're going to pick the black guy over
the white guy, and we're going to act virtuous while
we do it. What do you how do you think
the white guy is gonna feel? You think he's not
going to have some opinions? You think that doesn't create racism?
And oh, by the way, what about the job that
(12:02):
needs to be done? You don't care if the person's
qualified for that. You know where we don't need DEEI
professional basketball. That's what we don't need d I in
professional basketball. Here's a clip of Jesse Jackson in twenty fourteen,
who was confronted when he was confronted in Ferguson, Missouri
(12:25):
by a black by a Black Lives Matter activist.
Speaker 3 (12:30):
Hey, Jase Jackson, how you doing.
Speaker 10 (12:33):
Up the lot?
Speaker 3 (12:34):
They're going, Hey, let's go. Are you are you here
to support us? You are walking? Then you've been watching?
We haven't seen you watching, and we haven't seen you.
Speaker 6 (12:47):
Hey are you going to are?
Speaker 2 (12:50):
Hey?
Speaker 7 (12:50):
The bond and those brothers has been locked up.
Speaker 6 (12:54):
You've been with the brown family all day? What about
the 'all the brother of family? All Eric murder or
you're going to uh closes his mind and you watch it.
Toda ain't with us you just because we haven't seen
you watching it out Jesse March So we got sitting
we ain't seeing yours.
Speaker 3 (13:11):
Where where're you gonna when.
Speaker 9 (13:12):
You're gonna stop selling us out? Jesse.
Speaker 3 (13:14):
We don't want you here, Saint Louis.
Speaker 9 (13:15):
Where are you gonna stop selling us out?
Speaker 6 (13:17):
Jesse?
Speaker 3 (13:18):
Now, Bro, no, I ain't no, Wait a minute, brother,
this is real. We have to fiss out here, Jesse.
Speaker 11 (13:23):
We have to fis out here.
Speaker 3 (13:24):
Brother, this is real. We don't want you here. You're
not a leader. You're not a leader. We don't want
you here. Brother. Matter of fact, you're not even the brother.
You could keep moving. They get the brothers out of jail.
That's what you could do. The Southern Pride, Southern Pride,
the Michael Barry Show.
Speaker 1 (13:42):
That is the self proclaimed MAGA rapper for Jatteau Blow. Now,
I love to get emails, but they can't respond to everyone.
I can read everyone. Anytime you hear something on the
SHO Show, a song, for instance, you want to know
(14:04):
what it is, the easiest way to find that song,
just go back to the podcast and use Shazam and
he'll tell you. Borgiado Blow is an American rapper who
supports President Trump and is trying to use his art
to tell stories and expand the bass. And whether you're
(14:29):
a rap fan or not, it's so it's amazing to me.
I'll invariably get emails tonight people go, that song is terrible, Okay,
I got that. I could play you Polka music and
you might say that's terrible. Or I could play you
(14:49):
Japanese music and you might say that's terrible. Or I
could play you Hindi music that was, you know, part
of the biggest movie of the year last year, the World.
Or I could play you a Spanish tune or Elvis,
depending on who you are, and you might think it
was trash. But I am of the opinion that you
(15:12):
win the hearts and minds of people by meeting them
where they are in that style of beat and delivery.
While it may not appeal to your or my cultural history,
it might not push our buttons, it might work for
someone else.
Speaker 3 (15:32):
And I think it's important that.
Speaker 1 (15:37):
We promote our cause at every turn as best we can,
right and that's important to do.
Speaker 3 (15:47):
For those of you who have.
Speaker 1 (15:49):
Emailed our Palm Beach trip, we'll be visiting mar A
Lago in late October. This will be the third time
we've done this in Palm Beach, and we've done it
twice in Aspen.
Speaker 3 (15:59):
This we visit mar A Lago and have a great time.
Speaker 1 (16:02):
In Paulm Beach if you are it's the first time
we've opened it up to our nationwide audience. In the past,
it's always been just our Houston group, but this year
we decided to expand it a little bit and open
it up outside of Houston. If you are interested in
the details, cost, date, and all of that, send me
(16:24):
an email through the website Michael Berryshow dot com and Emily,
my assistant who coordinates the trip. We'll send you back
the details and you can decide from there if you
would like to join us. It ends up being a
whole lot of fun because you're there with me and
fellow listeners and it's an absolute, absolute blast. And President
Trump the last two times I can't promise this, has
(16:46):
come in and visited with us.
Speaker 3 (16:48):
The first year, he invited us down to.
Speaker 1 (16:52):
His nightclub to hang out with him, which if you
didn't know there's a nightclub, but mar A Lago Ramon
was there, I can tell you was a whole heck
of a lot of fun. So the big drama at
Fox News was a woman named Rebecca Koffler. I don't
know her, and I don't know that it's terribly important.
It's just kind of funny story. The allegation is that
(17:13):
she was drunk when she appeared on Fox News to
discuss the military parade on Saturday. And she was on
with Lawrence Jones and Emily Campono, who she's fine, by
the way, and they're talking to her. She's a former
Defense Intelligence Agency officer, and they're talking to her about
the military parade, the Army's two hundred and fiftieth on Saturday,
(17:34):
which also was President Trump's birthday. And the allegation is
that she was slurring her speech and rambling. What you
will hear, whether you agree with that or not, is
both of the hosts separately trying to interject, and it
seems like they're trying to cut her off, so maybe
(17:54):
they're trying to do her a favor. After about a
minute of this, they do her off and they thank
her for her time, clearly cutting it short, and they
shut off the interview and neither one of them address
address it at all. Well, she posted on Twitter Political
(18:17):
warfare Alert number one. Now the propagandist came for me,
aiming to silence me as I speak the truth, exposing
warmongers and corruption. Allegations against me related to my Fox
News appearance are false.
Speaker 3 (18:33):
Well, here is the audio. You can hear it for yourself.
I am so excited, Emily and.
Speaker 4 (18:43):
Lucas, Tomlinson, everybody like this is incredible. Finally the United
States is back. I want to really thank all of
our Army, Navy, and Air Force officers who have been
(19:05):
sacrificing their lives. Literally, their families have been contributed to
the missions most of the time for the past quarter
of a century because of the mismanagement of the the
(19:28):
administrative States, they've been fighting these foreign roars.
Speaker 3 (19:32):
But with our new.
Speaker 4 (19:37):
In chief doledging trap, they're proticing America first. And I
want to thank these officers for all of these sacrifices
and all of the hardships that their families have been doing.
Speaker 3 (19:59):
This is Michael Barry's show.
Speaker 1 (20:01):
It's a little shaken all over by Johnny Kidd and
the Pirates. If you don't know it, ask your grandmother,
because at the sock hop this is what she was
dancing too, just the way it always grossest people out
when I refer to the fact that your grandmother and
your grandfather used to dance at the sock hop, and
(20:25):
they might have gone out back and been necking, yeah, necking, kissing.
They might have gotten in the backseat of a car
at some point. That might be how you ended up here.
That's gross, Michael. Oh, it's gross when Mamma and Papal
did it, but it's not gross when.
Speaker 3 (20:42):
You did it. How does that work? How do you
think we ended up here? Young love?
Speaker 1 (20:49):
They've been making songs about young love since long before
you were in this world. And every old person today
was young at once. And you know what you should
take from that. You're going to be old at some
point too. I go to the old Folks Home every
day to see my dad. Trust me, nobody ever expected
(21:13):
to be old. Nobody ever expected to be shriveled up
in a wheelchair have memory loss. If we don't see
it coming, I got news for you. It's coming. We're
marching to the grave. And I don't say that to
depress you. I say that to make you strategically spend
(21:34):
that brief moment on this earth, that.
Speaker 3 (21:36):
You have.
Speaker 1 (21:38):
To spend it being joyful, to spend it mindfully. You
know how many times have we taken something for granted
until it's gone, And once it's gone, we wish we
could have it back. But truthfully, while we was there,
we didn't appreciate it. If I could go back to
my childhood, I'm sure you too have given this thought.
(22:02):
I think of things I would have done differently. I
just I think of things I would have said. I
think of appreciation I would have stated. And that's true
for all of us living mindfully. That's not to say
that we're paralyzed with fear that we're not getting any healthier, healthier,
(22:23):
we're only getting We're not getting strong, we're only getting older.
It is to say, to be mindful of today. For
as much as your back hurts today, in ten years,
if you're still alive, it's gonna hurt worse. For as
old as you feel today, you're going to feel worse
in ten years. My dad's eighty five, and I'm lucky
(22:46):
he's still with me. Lost my mom September nineteenth, lost
my brother January twenty fifth of twenty twenty two. I
can tell you, you know you watch the human body age.
Speaker 3 (22:59):
And it's tough to watch much. I'm very fortunate my
dad is not in memory care. He's not in need
of memory care. His body has broken down.
Speaker 1 (23:07):
He has severe diabetes, so you know, he's in his
constant physical problem, but he has his mind. And at
his particular old Folks home, most folks don't. There's one
fellow who's there who I knew twenty five years ago
when I was first running for office, who was very
supportive of me. And I'll sit down and have dinner
(23:27):
with him and my dad at the Old Folks Home there,
and he'll ask me how I'm doing and how things
are going, and.
Speaker 3 (23:37):
Then he'll ask me what I'm up to these days.
Speaker 1 (23:40):
And ten minutes will pass and he'll ask me how
I'm doing and what's going on, And he'll ask me
what I'm up to these days, and I'll just reach
out and put my hand on top of his and
I'll tell him what I'm up to. And about the
fourth or fifth time I have to do this, my
dad will say all right, and he'll get up because
he's probably been asked every evening at dinner how he's doing,
(24:02):
what he's been up to, and he's just down the
hall in his in his apartment. I think he's heard
me tell five times in a row and he's had enough.
But you know, it's it's a very humbling experience. I
must say, it's a very very humbling experience. That song
shaken all over and Johnny kidding the Pirates. He was
a great influence on led Zeppelin. I'm not the biggest
(24:28):
led Zeppelin fan ramon Is.
Speaker 3 (24:31):
I don't.
Speaker 1 (24:32):
I don't say led Zeppelin's terrible or overrated. I don't
believe they're overrated. They just don't appeal to me personally.
I think Stairway to Heaven is one of the greatest
songs of all time. It's it's truly magical. But most
of the rest of what they do, I don't dislike it.
I don't turn the radio when it's on, but I
don't go seek it out.
Speaker 2 (24:52):
I don't.
Speaker 1 (24:53):
I don't never put on you know, led Zeppelin the
way I would Leonard Skinner.
Speaker 3 (24:56):
I love Leonard Skinner, Skinner's Peace to Me. I love CCR.
Just led Zeppelin never spoke to me. But there is a.
Speaker 1 (25:05):
Segment in the Netflix has a has a movie out
right now called Becoming led Zeppelin, and it's interviews with
John Paul Jones, Robert Plant, Jimmy Page, and rare footage.
Of course, he died in eighty of John Bonham, who
apparently didn't like to do interviews and didn't do them.
(25:25):
So they they play that I had never seen him
interview before, ramon, had you I'd never Yeah, So well
if you hadn't, then that's really saying something because I
don't looking for it. But you dig into into their
work anyway. What I like about the film the film
never actually covers Stairway to Heaven, which is my opinion,
their greatest song certainly the most influential and most widely known,
(25:50):
you know, in the in the rock pantheon.
Speaker 3 (25:53):
That's a top.
Speaker 1 (25:53):
Five song that you know, you got Freebird, you got
Bohemian Rhapsody, I mean, you've got You're in the category.
Speaker 3 (26:03):
The top top, top, top, top tier.
Speaker 1 (26:06):
And the film is about how they arrived at the
point to sing that song without ever making reference to it.
Speaker 3 (26:13):
But I say all that to say this.
Speaker 1 (26:16):
What I like about the way they've done this is
they spend as much time on their influences as they
do their actual movie. I mean, the movie, their music,
in the movie and they talk about what made them
want to do what they do, and I think it
is very good for all of us. And this is
(26:37):
my admonition to It's my challenge to you to tonight,
if not tomorrow morning. If not tonight, then tomorrow morning,
to just sit down and make a list of the
ten people who influenced you the most. Hopefully it's your
mother and father influence you positively, because you know it's
(26:59):
not your quirks, your habits, the way you turn your head,
the way you laugh, the way you speak, but you
know there may be a coach who made you the
way you are. With regard to this, it may be
how organized you are, or how much you believe in cleanliness.
It may be your willingness to forgive somebody for their failures.
(27:24):
It may be your willingness to invest in people and
help make them better because your grandpa did that to
you or your first boss did that to you. Led Zeppelin,
the members of led Zeppelin are very clear on the artists,
musicians and people who influence them and they pay tribute
(27:45):
to that. And I think that is a sign of
great maturity, that is a true virtue when you do
that and I try to always do that myself. But
that is my challenge to you write your list of five, ten, fifteen,
keep going, and then pick up the phone and call
and say, hey, you know, I was making my listener
people who influenced me the most.
Speaker 3 (28:06):
You know, I got Michael Berry.
Speaker 1 (28:07):
He's from Texas, He's got a nationwide show.
Speaker 3 (28:10):
He was talking about the people who influenced you. Ms Hardy.
Speaker 1 (28:13):
Oh, by the way, June Hardy just turned eighty eighth.
She was a great influence on me and my passion
for literature. And she was my mother's teacher and my teacher,
and I loved them. And then call that prisoner, email
him and thank him.
Speaker 11 (28:26):
Right, element Els has your play, Thank you, and good night,