Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time time, time, time, Luck and load.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
Michael Very show is on the air on every Friday.
Marcus a trail turned fifty, which was the culmination of
a forty day fast, no food, only water and when
he was feeling indulgent every morning, some coffee and a
(00:33):
touch of salt in the evening. I told that last
night that if there is anything anyone wants to ask
about that, because you want to try a two or
three day fast, let me know and I'll pass it off.
And amaze how many people will say, you'll die. Well,
he hasn't died. He hasn't died. Best I can tell.
(00:56):
He's he's still alive. But when you when you do
something like this Marcus, and you are a person who
likes to have a goal, you have a you have
a lot of intestinal fortitude. You're somebody who sets a
goal and can push through pain and things like that.
Have you set another goal for yourself? Is there something
on the horizon.
Speaker 3 (01:18):
I'm trying to be a deacon in the Catholic Church,
so that's my overall big picture goal. And then I'm
trying to be I want to be a great father
to my kids. In an example, one of the things
that I learned in here is behavior is always a
better example than a lecture, and to lead by that,
don't say one thing and do another. And it's kind
(01:38):
of brought me closer to the realization of how I
need to do that. I understand people are worried about
how it makes you. F's a scary thing to give
up food, but you can't. I mean, I feel amazing
my focus and I've never had this kind of energy before.
My bones don't creaker ache anymore. It's an amazing thing
that transpired while I was going through it.
Speaker 2 (02:01):
When I was a kid, we had a mini bike.
We hadn't bought it new. I don't know. We probably
got into garage sell or something. There's just a couple
of pipes with a little tape and duct tape over
that in a little I believe it was an Indian
brand motor, just a tiny little and you would you
(02:21):
would crank it, and I wasn't strong enough to crank it,
but my older brothers would, And I mean it was
a very rudimentary little mini bike we called it. And
every few years my dad would would spend the time
to get it running again. And it was amazing to
me how important it was to get the junk out
of the engine, because that was what caused it. And
(02:43):
I've come to view foods as this is fuel in
the purest sense. And you look at what Robert F.
Kennedy Junior is talking about constantly and what's happened to
our food supply and what we're putting into our body,
and in many cases people don't know any better. They couldn't.
You can't imagine how corrupted our food supply has become.
(03:03):
And it's not until you get all of that stuff
out of your system that you begin feeling pure and
clean and happy and healthy and as you said, focused,
it's amazing what a difference it is, and that that's
kind of scary because our food supply should be good
for us.
Speaker 3 (03:21):
That's what going overseas is so great. The food they have,
like Grease and Italy. The food is so good, as
much of it as you want to still these weights. Do you
have any idea what happens if you put sugar in
the gas tank of your cards and people shove sugar
in their mouth and their think, I mean, your body
is your car, it's your you know, your avatar, you
have to live in your spirits tucked in there. Everyone
(03:41):
knows that it's completely separate from your body. And when
you when you feed your body, what kind of body
do you have? You have a race car, put great
fluid in their fuel in there and it will run
like that.
Speaker 2 (03:51):
And when you do.
Speaker 3 (03:52):
These fast which it talks about in the Bible, it's
talks throughout generations before us, and we just kind of
got to this point in our life. We're in our
Arab decadence where we all love to eat, and who doesn't,
but you're actually design to go without food. And then
when you do eat and you put it in there,
it gives you a different kind of energy, I mean
a substantial energy and your focus. Once you clean all
(04:12):
that stuff out and give it a try. Everyone else
cleans your house out every now and again, a spring cleaning,
You clean your car out, you run good fluids to it.
Just try it one time and see what happens, and
you'll be surprised what it does for you in your
mind and your body and your spirit. I mean, difficulty
strengthens the mind as labor does the body. So when
you're doing this stuff, when you go through one of
(04:33):
these fats that actually strengthens all of those things.
Speaker 2 (04:39):
As your systems begin to adjust to the fact. It's amazing,
you know, there's a brain within a brain. It's amazing
how our body prepares. You know, we crave food, we
prepare for what we're going to put it through. What
did you notice your systems were doing now that they
weren't getting food which they were so accustomed to.
Speaker 3 (05:00):
Well, so most of the time I can run off
my adrenal glands now and when I'm making katosis. So
normally you only feel your adrenal glands fire when you're afraid.
I have that all the time. I can feel that
energy going through my body when I get up and
I start moving around, and for whatever, if I get
into something difficult, I got to list something heavier, I
have to move fast, I can feel that firing, and
(05:22):
then I don't have the My bones used to hurt
all the time, and I join, my knees would crack,
and my elbows and stuff like that were cracking all
the time every time I stand up. That's all gone now.
And the inflammation and the swelling that I would carry,
that's all gone now. It's pretty amazing. I feel great
(05:44):
I feel brand new.
Speaker 2 (05:45):
You looked ten years younger. I told you Friday night,
you looked ten years younger. You had a youthful zest
about you. And I know, folks remember, but you have
a for a fifty year old man. You have a
lot more miles than that, most of it chronicled on
TV and even more than that in the book. So
you have lived in relative pain for twenty years. So
(06:09):
the fact that a fast could make you feel that
much better. You look lighter on your feet, you you
had a skip to your step. It's nice to see.
It's amazing. And the thing that I tell people, I
do a little pedidly two and three day fast. But
the thing that I tell people is I can't do it.
You can do it. It's that first part and pushing
(06:31):
through that first part. Once you get through that, you
have complete command of yourself. I suspect you could have
gone much longer than forty days had you decided to
do so.
Speaker 3 (06:40):
My mind had already shifted over. Something happened to me
on the twentieth twenty first day.
Speaker 2 (06:47):
It woke me up. I woke up. I felt it
in my body.
Speaker 3 (06:50):
It's like somebody hit me in a chest and I
kind of shut up real fast in bed, and my
arms and my legs were not, Oh this happened to me.
My sleep. I wear one of those garments to track
my sleep, and I scored with the lowest score I
had was a ninety three.
Speaker 2 (07:05):
Most of the night it's one hundred. I have three hours.
Speaker 3 (07:08):
Of rim sleep now and two and a half hours
and three hours of deep sleep registered all my watch
every morning when I wake up, and it says full recovery,
complete balance, all of that. And on that twenty first day,
I woke up and I and once my arms kind
of moved around a little bit and I could get
the blood flow because I was in such a deep
sleep that everything my body was falling asleep, and and
(07:30):
my orrians and everything had slowed down so much that
I was completely out. And then I could feel that
thing in my chest and I tried to fall back asleep,
but it just kept growing and my energy levels kept
spiking up or I had to get up. It was
four o'clock in the morning and I just started moving
around and it hasn't gone away since then. I was
(07:51):
the one thing about it was got sleep and I
Good Lord will not hit me that was the on
mid twenties, and so the thirties were nothing. When I
got to day twenty something and I had day thirty
in my sight and today thirty three, and then I
just shifted into sixth gear and.
Speaker 2 (08:06):
It was one. You've got a different gear, that's for sure,
Marcus Atrel. We love you, brother, Happy fiftieth.
Speaker 3 (08:12):
Love you guys.
Speaker 2 (08:12):
God black yell fifty years old after a forty day fast.
That's not for the light of heart to tell you that.
Speaker 4 (08:20):
Yeah, little time, Michael berrys George, good to sleep.
Speaker 3 (08:26):
I can't.
Speaker 5 (08:26):
You're excited.
Speaker 2 (08:30):
Sixty minutes did a profile on an interesting newsport, chess boxing.
It's just what it sounds like, alternating rounds of chess
and then boxing. You can win either by knockout or checkmate.
Here's the story.
Speaker 4 (08:49):
In sixty minutes, fighters from eighteen countries are here trying
to knock each other's heads off. Here's the bell. But
wait now, the fighters strip off their gloves and sit down.
It's chess time and competitors have three minutes to vanquish
their enemy on the board. If they don't, fit's back
(09:11):
to the slugfest for three more minutes. It's gloves on,
gloves off until checkmate, knockout or judge's decision.
Speaker 2 (09:20):
I had the body of a chess player. I was
just like a scrawny kid.
Speaker 6 (09:23):
You know.
Speaker 4 (09:25):
Meet William Gambitman Graef the New York State Chess chap.
He's been playing competitive chess since the age of five. Yeah,
we saw his take no prisoner's approach. How'd I get
in this horrible position? When he demolished four of us
at once.
Speaker 2 (09:41):
Just for fun?
Speaker 4 (09:42):
Checkmate check me? Graef told us he added thirty pounds
of muscle to become a chess boxer.
Speaker 2 (09:50):
He's still only one hundred and sixty pounds. Are you
even scared in any way?
Speaker 7 (09:55):
I'd be a little crazy not to be terrified.
Speaker 4 (09:58):
But why are you willingly deciding to step into a
ring where you can get your head beaten in?
Speaker 2 (10:04):
Yeah, you sound like my mother.
Speaker 7 (10:08):
One of the things is sort of the opportunity to
tell my story here of like a kid who played
chess growing up throughout school and was to an extent
ridiculed and ostracized.
Speaker 4 (10:21):
For being a scrawny chess player.
Speaker 2 (10:23):
Exactly.
Speaker 7 (10:24):
Okay, you know I've been doing chess for a very
long time. What better time to sort of try something
new and challenge myself.
Speaker 2 (10:33):
Why would you say doing chess ins did to plague chess?
That's weird. Ridiculous sports ideas that actually exist. Fireball soccer
a game in which players use balls made from coconuts
for about a week before the match. The coconut balls
(10:53):
are immersed in gasoline to make them easy to ignite
for the game, and it's played without shoes. Okay, show
me that you have no value for human life. You
have very short lifespans to start with, you have no
(11:15):
money to establish a real sports league, and you still
want to entertain yourself with feats of daring. Do oh,
I'm impressed. Yes, you you understood the assignment. Then there
is something on Chile's Easter Island called Hakeapey. It is
a perilous race that originated on Chile's I say Chile,
(11:39):
said Chile, I say Chile, and really accident it up.
But do it as if you you don't bring attention
to it, you just do it, So I'll do it
like that. This perilous race originated on Chile's Easter Island.
Young people, often under twenty years of age, race down
a volcano's edge on a sled made of two nana
(12:00):
tree trunks while only wearing a loincloth. When they koreene
down the steep hill, participants frequently reached speeds of about
fifty miles an hour, which can occasionally cause serious injury.
This letter, who makes it the furthest from the launch
point is declared the winner. Apparently, Hakape was once used
to test young people's maturity and fortitude in preparation for adulthood.
(12:24):
That might be where great Balls of Fire originated. It
could be, you don't know, remember doing COVID. Are the
COVID shutdown when ESPN had nothing to watch because they
had nothing to put on because there were no live
sports being played. Remember that, and ESPN was just grasping
(12:45):
for straws, trying to get any viewers they could find.
Speaker 1 (12:50):
We have a full day of action right here on
ESPN Sinco tonight at six eastern.
Speaker 2 (12:55):
We kick it off with Chess Box where Radiac meets Madiac.
Speaker 1 (12:59):
Then we go prime time with an debut of Basketbowl
All you can eat Inchilados one throne.
Speaker 2 (13:06):
Contestants shoot threes while dropping a deuse.
Speaker 1 (13:09):
Then starting at ten, it's late night action.
Speaker 2 (13:11):
A little Drinko with the sinko as we go back
to back.
Speaker 1 (13:14):
First, it's Beer Mile Run contestants chugging four beers throughout
a one mile race. This competition is set to make
any liver quiver. Then it's curling and hurling. The Olympic
Trials begin. Contestine slide heavy stones down a sheet of
ice and the prize is.
Speaker 2 (13:30):
Luke Warm Chief to Keep.
Speaker 1 (13:32):
And then wake up with us tomorrow morning for a
brand new episode of Tic Tac Donut Contestants Graham twenty
four donuts in twenty four minutes, no milk, all while
playing Human Tic Tac Toe sponsored by Wilford Bemley's Diabetes Foundation.
Speaker 2 (13:46):
ESPN Sinco. When there's nothing else to watch, to red
us ramon, do you know who Ryan Wedding is? I
didn't either, So I keep a screen on in my
in my studio, and there was a headline that said
(14:08):
Olympian arrested PAMBONDI was doing a press a briefing and
it said Olympian arrested in some sort of a ring.
So I looked him up and I expected to see Okay,
because I want to see what his sport was. So
I expected to see Ryan James Wedding is former Olympic snowboarder.
(14:30):
That's what I expected to see. But here's what it says.
Ryan James Wedding is a Canadian drug trafficker and former
Olympic snowboarder. They put that as the first thing. Okay,
So he's in the two thousand and two Olympics, and
then he moves back to Vancouver, becomes a bodybuilder and
(14:51):
starts working as a bouncer and looking at pictures of him,
he gets pretty jacked. So that's probably you know that
that's doing certain things to his brain. And then he
joins up with the Irani and Russian cocaine smugglers. Okay,
like the Olympics yesterday. Now you're in an Internet, you're
an international drug smuggler. Then he's buying coke from a
(15:11):
US government agent in two thousand and eight, goes to
prison for four years. Then he gets out and he's
charged with leading a transnational organized crime group. Dude, like
you went from normal, dude, like Olympic winter. Olympic people
are like really white milk toast, and he's now he's
(15:33):
a high ranking member of the Sinaloa cartel. True story
known by E hefe a giant or public image. That's
his nickname.
Speaker 8 (15:42):
Show He's damn shame. It's a damn shame. It's a
damn shame. It's a damn got the cover, got the
booster team. They're keeping me down even get riding back
(16:23):
on that beam.
Speaker 2 (16:29):
Congress often attracts the wrong kind of people, and when
they get there, it instills in them a belief that
they are better than everyone else. A Florida Congressman, Sheila
Cheerfullest McCormick, a Democrat, has been arrested and charged with
(16:53):
stealing five million dollars in COVID FEMA funds, laundering that
money which ended up in her twenty twenty one congressional campaign.
The indictment says that Cherfilis, McCormick and her brother conspired
to steal a five million dollar overpayment they received from
(17:17):
FEMA for a COVID vaccination staffing contract in twenty twenty one.
Oh what are the chances that a Democrat congressman would
put her brother in the vaccine staffing business and that
(17:42):
they would accidentally get overpaid and steal the money? The
story from WPLG TV in Miami, everybody feels like they're
under attacked.
Speaker 6 (17:53):
Tonight, a federal grand jury indicting Congresswoman Sheila Scherphilus McCormick
and several associates accuse them of stealing millions and federal
disaster funds, laundering the money, and using part of it
to support her twenty twenty one congressional campaign.
Speaker 2 (18:09):
The money we invest in is to make sure that
we can touch the people in the community. But the
money didn't determine this election.
Speaker 5 (18:14):
Because most people put a lot of money in the
community in the campaigns, they.
Speaker 6 (18:18):
Don't win, Federal prosecutors say Cheerfalus, McCormick and her brother,
Edwin Shurfless ran a FEMA funded COVID nineteen vaccination staffing
contract through their family healthcare company. Prosecutors say in July
twenty twenty one, the company received a five million dollars overpayment.
Prosecutors say the group diverted that money and tried to
(18:40):
hide it through multiple accounts. The indictment says a large
portion of those funds was used for campaign contributions and
personal expenses. Prosecutors alleged to the South Florida Democrat in
nadiez le Blanc arranged additional donations using straw donors, funneling
money to friends and relatives who then donated to the
(19:03):
campaign as if using their own money. Investigators say the congresswoman,
with the help of her tax preparent, David K. Spencer,
filed a false federal tax return, allegedly disguising political spending
and personal costs as business deductions. The US attorney Jason
reading kenyonas writing, public money belongs to the American people
(19:26):
when FEMA funds are diverted for personal or political gain
in a roads trust and harms us All attorneys for
the congresswoman writing, she is a committed public servant who
is dedicated to her constituents.
Speaker 2 (19:39):
We will fight to clear her good name.
Speaker 6 (19:42):
If convicted of South Florida, congresswoman could face up to
fifty three years in prison. The co defendants could also
face decades behind bars.
Speaker 2 (19:53):
She may have her lawyers write threatening letters to the
media to them to stop questioning her. How there you
question her? Un what she's doing?
Speaker 8 (20:08):
Now there you.
Speaker 2 (20:10):
You ever notice how many of these programs end up
with fraud as part of them. It's not by accident.
There is a Somali leaed welfare fraud that is being
uncovered daily and prosecuted daily. More and more of them
(20:35):
are taking deals. And you've got a bunch of Somali
immigrants in Minneapolis and it's the large, supposedly the largest
welfare fraud in American history to date. And it all
happened right under Tim Waltz's nose. That's really too kind
(20:55):
of Tim Waltz, because if you actually look at the
tells what happened. The governor not only should have known
what happened, but I suspect may have, which makes this
story much more interesting. What if he did know? What
if he didn't know and didn't Dare do anything about it?
(21:19):
It didn't Dare do anything about it because he needed
the Somali support. Very interesting question. California has revoked the
commercial driver's licenses they issued to seventeen thousand illegal aliens.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy says, after weeks of claiming they
(21:42):
did nothing wrong, Gavin Newsom and California have been caught
red handed now that we've exposed their lives. Seventeen thousand
illegally issued trucking license licenses are being revoked. So your
first question is, wait a second, why is news I'm
revoking something he did. He loves illegal aliens, he does,
(22:06):
but they're spending a lot of money on his presidential
campaign right now, and they're going out into swing states
like Pennsylvania and Michigan, Wisconsin, North Carolina. Hey, do you
think government should issue a commercial driver's license that means
you're driving around an eighteen wheeler to an illegal alien?
(22:31):
And the polls are coming back saying not no, but
hell no. Only eighty six percent of Americans said they
don't want members of Congress trading stock. They're probably a
higher percentage that don't want illegal aliens driving eighteen wheelers
on the roads that we're all on. That case of
(22:51):
the Indian illegal alien that came through Canada, which is
how it happens when they're from India on the freeway,
killing the family, that has received a lot of attention
and got a lot of people thinking hard about this
issue and the real consequences because that was a commercial
(23:11):
driver's license issued in California to an illegal alien there
on the West coast of the United States, and the
death he caused was on the East coast. Because they're
driving all over the country without proper training. In many cases,
without the ability to speak our language. So if there
is a problem, if there is a problem, you see
(23:35):
these cases where somebody calls nine to one one. They
can't they can't take direction, they can't give direction. It's
the Tower of Babel. It's just insane. It's terrible. We
don't want our country to fall into this. We can
stop it. There's no shame in stopping it. Oh you
(23:59):
think so? Ramone thinks the driving test, where do you
come up with stuff? Ramone thinks that the driving test
for illegal aliens before they can get an eighteen wheeler
commercial driving's license, was to have them drive slowly on
the highway. Sure seems like it, doesn't.
Speaker 9 (24:17):
It, Dad, that's been drives slow on a driveway every Saturday.
Of course, the seats were originally brown leather. Now they're
pitiful red.
Speaker 2 (24:24):
Are these seats were brown?
Speaker 3 (24:25):
On?
Speaker 8 (24:25):
There?
Speaker 2 (24:26):
Do you know this car? I know this car? How
do you know this car? Definitely know this car?
Speaker 9 (24:33):
Ninety for on Buick road Masters Straight eight, Fireball eight.
Only eighty ninety five production models. Dad, let's been driveslow
on a driveway.
Speaker 2 (24:41):
But not a Monday. Definitely not a Monday. The Michael
Arry Show. There's a scene in No Country for Old
Men where the sheriff is explaining to his mentor. You
just can't understand what's become of the world. These don't
(25:05):
make sense anymore. Things you witness. And if you read
the headlines of inner city major city America today, you
see a cultural rot and the results of it that
you can't actually imagine are happening, but they are. The
(25:31):
story a mother and her son brutally attacked by a
mob of elementary students outside of school in Chicago. Does
anyone else help them houting the other kids. No, they
record it and they taunt the mother and the son,
(25:52):
because that's what they do in these videos, You taunt
whoever's fighting. The mother has a bloated stomach, which early
observers of the video Assuon meant she was pregnant. She's not.
She has sickle cell anemia. Chicago pastor Corey Brooks, who
(26:13):
knows the kids who were beaten, tells Jason Whitlock on
his show, one of the sad things about it is
none of those other fathers of these children who beat
this woman has spoken out or said anything. I've seen
interviews with the mothers, with some of their children, but
no fathers trust me. This pastor knows there are no
(26:34):
fathers around. Here's the story from NBC.
Speaker 5 (26:38):
Five, Anger and frustration outside of orbal Tea Write Elementary
School as parents rallied around for Shonda Hatter and her
nine year old son.
Speaker 10 (26:49):
I can't sleep because I wake up in him in
order tonight with that vision in my head and my
son calling my name to help him, and I can
do nothing for him.
Speaker 2 (27:00):
Is everybody hiring.
Speaker 8 (27:01):
Me the most?
Speaker 5 (27:02):
The thirty three year old reported to police that she
was walking with her son when they were attacked by
a group of kids. It happened near one hundred and
six and Bensley Avenue around three pm Monday, just blocks
away from school.
Speaker 8 (27:13):
No mother, no mother should be die helpless.
Speaker 2 (27:17):
I'd be targeted, not children.
Speaker 8 (27:19):
It's out of whole community.
Speaker 5 (27:20):
State Senator Willie Preston met with the victim and her
son as they called for a meeting with school administrators.
The victims told NBC five the incident stems from bullying
at school. Meanwhile, Chicago police launched an investigation. Parents and
other concerned residents demand answers. They say this points to
a deep rooted problem in the community.
Speaker 11 (27:39):
We need more help out of health, Trump saying troops
just not by here today.
Speaker 8 (27:43):
Tom sent Trumps for these kids.
Speaker 4 (27:44):
We need these kids.
Speaker 8 (27:45):
Open up more programs for my kids.
Speaker 5 (27:47):
Police say had her and her son were taken to
the hospital to be treated. Those who came out to
support the family calling out the parents of the kids involved.
Speaker 11 (27:56):
What actually needs to be taken is the parents needs
to be held accountable.
Speaker 10 (27:59):
Child should the charges should be pressed, and these kids
should be a spalfic school.
Speaker 5 (28:04):
Chicago Public Schools said it prioritizes the safety and well
being of students the district, and a statement said, in
part quote, we are horrified by the attack on this family,
and we are working collaboratively with city departments and agencies
to provide support to the victims of the attack. CPS
is coordinating closely with the Mayor's office, CPDCHA and other
(28:24):
city departments to provide additional support to the family. As
for the case, area two detectives are still investigating. So far,
no one has been arrested.
Speaker 2 (28:35):
Did you hear what that woman was screeching? We need
more programs. Yes, that's always the answer to the problem,
isn't it more programs? If we just had more programs,
but tim Republicans, they don't want to pay for no
more programs because programs would have solved this problem. Pastor
(28:57):
Corey Brooks talking to Jason Whitlock, Well, it's a very
sad story.
Speaker 12 (29:03):
Anytime you see a mother trying to protect her child
and then being totally beaten by a group of children,
that is one of the most unfortunate things that you
could witness. One of the things that I've noticed is
I look through a bunch of video footage and I've
looked at a lot of interviews, is that there's only
(29:24):
one father that I've seen that's been present, and that's
the father who was standing behind the sister that was beaten.
I know that father because they're members of my church.
I know the young boy that was beaten because they're
in our after school program. His grandmother is also our church,
so I'm very familiar with that family. But one of
(29:47):
the sad things about it is that none of these
other fathers of these children who beat this woman have
spoken at or said anything. I've seen interviews with the
mothers with some of the their children, but no fathers,
and I think that is a major problem that we're
faced within our community, the lack of presence of fathers,
(30:08):
and anytime you get to a point to where the
kids can get it, it's a sad day.
Speaker 2 (30:18):
It is a sad day, and I'm certain it's getting
worse now, not better. And to be careful that we
don't assume that what we see in random videos, which
is usually the worst or the worst, is not assuming
that is the new norm may not be accurate. Maybe
(30:41):
we're seeing a resurgence. The problem is primarily within city
limits of major cities, where you have this breakdown of
the nuclear family on a level that is not easy
to re establish. And then they're being sent to schools
(31:05):
where the staffing at the school is ill equipped to
train anything, can't take care of themselves, don't care about it.
It's more like a prison. So those kids miss out
at home, they miss out at school. The churches have
changed to the extent that they're in the church. So
no more programs isn't the answer to this problem. It's
(31:27):
so much deeper than that. But first there has to
be recognition that there is a problem and whose fault
it is and isn't. We're not there yet. Unfortunately, we
are just not there yet. And that's unfortunate. Did you
see that Hooters is starting a delivery service ramon, Yeah,
(31:52):
they'll bring the food to your house. It's called Knockers.
Earlier this week, Late Night hacking Jimmy Kimmel President Trump
for telling a female reporter quiet piggy as she went
on and on and on questioning him about the Epstein Files,
Quiet Piggy. Of course Kimmel had to jump on this
(32:13):
because it's the only content that he can come up with. Hey, Jimmy,
what have you done in your life? Because there's some
videos out there. So he's up in arms that Trump
would call a reporter piggy. You know who's really upset
about it, Our old friend, poor key the pig.
Speaker 8 (32:33):
You have a nap.
Speaker 2 (32:35):
Now, just wait a minute here.
Speaker 11 (32:36):
If anyone's a fit in here, it's me.
Speaker 2 (32:39):
Fellow pigs.
Speaker 11 (32:40):
How dare you? How dare you compare reporter who was pigster?
The media of the media has been bad mouthing us
for years. Work is bad, but none of my pigs
are disgusting. We've had a tough life. I remind you
of that big bad wolf. My four to three little cousins,
have they been of a perfect house or straw. They
(33:01):
the big bad wolf, the huff they need, they hoff,
they need to be blue with their house down. But
I still have pepend PTSD. You get just a few,
a few bad piggies to get slashed in mud like
Dan Crimshawn, but tear up some land and it gives
us all piggies have a bad name. No read that,
read that that that really burns my tender loins. Go,
(33:22):
I'm getting too worked up A bit a bit.
Speaker 2 (33:24):
That's all, folks, Drank you and good night.