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August 11, 2025 • 31 mins

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

Speaker 2 (00:07):
Luck and load. So Michael Verie Show is on the air.

Speaker 3 (00:14):
It's simple but fundamental pillar of our democracy that the
rule of law employs to all of us equally, fairly
and justly.

Speaker 4 (00:27):
The US Justice Department is opening an investigation into the
New York Attorney General Leticia James's office. This comes as
part of a criminal investigation into James, who previously prosecuted Trump.

Speaker 5 (00:39):
There are now two Grand Jurisa poenas issued by the
US Attorney's Office for the Northern District of New York
looking to get information about James's office, basically trying to
see if there was any criminality by her office when
she filed that civil lawsuit against the Trump organization. If
you remember that lawsuit going to trial and the Trump
organization being found liable having to you, oh, now at

(01:02):
this point because of interest about a half a billion
dollars in penalty.

Speaker 1 (01:06):
That is clear.

Speaker 6 (01:08):
I'm focused, I'm prepared, I'm ready.

Speaker 7 (01:13):
I've been trained by the best.

Speaker 8 (01:15):
I went to Howard University.

Speaker 3 (01:19):
That overturned legal segregation in this country. I've been taught
in those classrooms with third Good Marshall once taught.

Speaker 6 (01:27):
I'm not afraid of no.

Speaker 3 (01:28):
President Donald Trump.

Speaker 6 (01:30):
We're ready for you.

Speaker 3 (01:31):
We're coming for you, We're standing up for you.

Speaker 6 (01:34):
We're fighting on.

Speaker 3 (01:36):
We're not going down.

Speaker 8 (01:37):
Sailing victory, my friends, is clear.

Speaker 9 (01:41):
It's now, and I'm not waiting for years. I'm waiting two.

Speaker 3 (01:45):
I tell us speak about the name of how King Jeffries.

Speaker 2 (01:49):
Comes to bring us some rest.

Speaker 10 (01:51):
Come on, ladies, it's up to us.

Speaker 3 (01:54):
We saved this democracy before, we'll save it now.

Speaker 11 (01:58):
Let's go made the decision to bring a civil lawsuit
because I don't think PAM has the budget right now
to feed Tiss James in prison. So I think we're
gonna wait until we get a supplemental from Congress for
the prison food budget to feeder fat ass in prison.

Speaker 12 (02:14):
And I think that's going to be the step mentioned before.

Speaker 6 (02:16):
I am the executive producer on a movie about the
horrible flood that occurred in Kerrville, Texas on July fourth.
It's called River of Angels and it'll be ready this fall,
and a lot of shooting is going on. Our crew
has been spending a lot of time on the Guadalupe

(02:39):
River where that happened, where lives were lost, talking to
rescue workers, and volunteers and recovery workers and volunteers. And
I know you know the difference. But rescue is for
a person who is still alive. Recovery is for a
person who has passed. And recovery as a whole lot

(03:01):
harder to muster volunteers for than rescue. There is an
immediate gratification sense of I mean, you're powerful, you're a
hero when you rescue a living person. To go out
into the waters and do recovery when you know there

(03:24):
is no chance of survival, simply so the families will
have the bodies to bury. Boy, that's a that's a
special person can do that anyway. That's what our movie
is about. It's called River of Angels. It will be
this fall. I'll tell you about it then. And it
is not a movie that is intended it's not documentary

(03:46):
that is intended to cast blame. I do think there
is a time and a place to ask questions about
how things happen, Could deaths have been mitigated, could better
preparation have occurred, What should be done going for I
think those are questions that you do have to ask,
you know, just you know, like wet there was a
concert here that Travis Scott did called Astral Concert, and

(04:07):
people died, and there was this sort of well, you
don't want to cast blame because people have died, you know,
wait till we bury them. And I think that's true.
But once you bury them, you move on to the
next thing, and then nobody ever goes back and says,
how did this crowd crush these people? How did this happen?
Who failed in their job? I do think there was

(04:29):
a time and place for that. That's not our documentary,
but I did want to bring something up, and it's
something that I think is worth discussing the issue of
cloud seating. I think it's called silver iodine, but I
can't remember exactly what they put in. They put an
element into the cloud and it makes the cloud generate
more rain. It's like a steroid for a crowd or

(04:53):
a cloud. This is not a conspiracy theory. This the
CEO of the company that was doing this. Any scientists
have said this, it's this isn't a this isn't a
wacko you know, crazy people thought. Everyone knows cloud seeding
is being done. It's not denied. It's been in the
news of late because of these floods and how fast

(05:17):
these floods came out and how much rain dropped in
such a short period of time. Well, back in twenty thirteen,
CBS News talked about how the government uses lasers to
influence the weather. I'm not saying the government does that.
CBS News was, now, you don't have to believe the story,

(05:37):
but I do find it rather interesting.

Speaker 13 (05:39):
Lasers really to change the weather?

Speaker 14 (05:42):
That's right.

Speaker 15 (05:43):
Well, as Mark Twain once famously said, everyone complains about
the weather, but no one ever does anything about it. Well,
instead of doing a rain dance, we physicists are firing
trillion want lasers into the sky to actually precipitate rain
clouds and actually bring down lightning bolts.

Speaker 13 (06:02):
Well, this fascinates me, and part because two I remember
reading the stories that China had used this during the Olympics,
that the USSR had used this after Chernobyl to create
rain clouds.

Speaker 2 (06:12):
I mean, do those really work?

Speaker 13 (06:14):
Then we have some of these capabilities now inconclusive.

Speaker 15 (06:17):
Even in the sixties, the CIA used this to bring
down monsoons during the Vietnam War to wash out the
viet Cong. Governments have been alleged to alleged to right yeah.
Now we realize that for decades now these governments have
been alleged to have experimented with weather control, but nothing conclusive.

Speaker 2 (06:36):
This time we're begging.

Speaker 15 (06:37):
In the laws of physics. Rather than simply waving our
hands and adding mumbo jumbo, we're actually using trillion watt
lasers now and in the laboratory, sure enough, they precipitate
rain out of water vapor. Sure enough, you can actually
bring down electricity down the beam. Finding trillion watt lasers,
we rip apart. The electrons created what are called ions.

(06:59):
These ions actually like seas, like dust particles, bringing down
rain and even lightning.

Speaker 16 (07:05):
We're going to be changing the name of the Gulf
of Mexico to the Gulf of mit and michael Berry,
which has a beautiful way.

Speaker 14 (07:13):
I gothered here today to pay tribute to the greatest,
most divine creation in all of history, the Federal Government.
Blessed be his name, My children, May we walk into
the valley of the shadow of the unemployment line. For
governments so loved the poor that it decided to keep
them that way forever. Blessed is the government. And now

(07:38):
a word from the Book of Pelosi, please kneel before
the effigy of Obama, our father Whart in Washington. Pallow
be thy name, Thy monthly checks, come, thy free lunch
be done in the States as it is in Washington.
Give us this day our government cheese, and forgive us
for trying to keep our own property, as we forgive

(07:59):
those who leach off the government. Lead us not into independence,
but deliver us from having to make our own decisions.
For Thine is the government, and the power and the glory,
forever and ever. Amen.

Speaker 6 (08:17):
New Mexico Governor Michelle Luhan Grisham was on face the
nation when we learned, ready for this, that forty percent
of New Mexicans are on Medicaid. You know what that means.
That means you're paying for all their health care because

(08:39):
they're not taking care of themselves. Brandon Johnson, the mayor
of Chicago, this past week, I can't remember Wednesday or
Thursday or so, he made the statement that Chicago's not
going to be able to take care of itself and
the federal government's going to have to help out. Nope,
we're not helping out. Do you remember I think it

(09:01):
was Abe Beam who the City of New York had
bankrupted itself and trash was piling up. Police officers were
being laid off, and I can't remember who the president was.
Maybe it was Gerald Ford, but whoever the president was
said no, no, no, we're not coming in to help you.

(09:23):
And the next day I think it was the New
York Post headliness one of the most famous headlines that's
up there with Dewey defeats Truman. The headline was forward
to New York dropped dead.

Speaker 8 (09:36):
Well.

Speaker 6 (09:36):
The problem is you got Gavin Newsom in California piling
on to bad mayors in San Francisco and Los Angeles.
You've got Pritzker in Illinois piling on to Brandon Johnson
as the mayor of Chicago. You've got these idiots in

(09:57):
New York and it's about to get a whole lot
worse with commune. And then you've got Kathy Hokel the governor.
So between the cities and the governors, you've got spind
thrifts for stupid causes that are wasteful, and crime goes
through the roof, and people are moving out, and they're
moving to Texas, and they're moving to Tennessee, and they're
moving to Florida, and they're moving to Louisiana and Mississippi

(10:19):
and Alabama and Arkansas, in Kentucky and West Virginia and
Georgia and so these city it becomes a snowball effect,
and these cities and states are going bankrupt. And now
they want the rest of us who disagreed with their policies,
and we knew where they would end up to bail
them out, and we're not doing it. But listen to this.

(10:41):
We're basically subsidizing New Mexico to a massive extent already,
and they're bad decisions.

Speaker 13 (10:47):
Two out of five New Mexicans are on MEDICAI.

Speaker 5 (10:51):
You've got a lot of rural hospitals. Have you figured
out how to implement everything doctor Oz just laid out?

Speaker 8 (10:57):
Absolutely not.

Speaker 17 (11:00):
Is no real way to implement this. It's more paperwork
for everyone. It's more paperwork for federal government, for state governments,
for county governments, for local hospitals, for independent providers. And
you know what Americans really hate, Margaret, When you go
to your primary care physician and you spend twenty minutes
sitting at a chair, not even on the exam table,

(11:22):
while they are inputting data into a computer. So this
doesn't make any sense. We should be a society and
a country that is connecting people to healthcare providers.

Speaker 5 (11:36):
I think the one thing.

Speaker 17 (11:37):
That doctor Oz represents that's a fair representation is we
should be healthier as Americans.

Speaker 1 (11:45):
All right, then we.

Speaker 17 (11:46):
Need to be moving out of poverty. We need drug prices.
We should talk about that to come down. So go
after insurance companies do manufacturing here, make sure we can
negotiate fair prices. Let states do that, because I guarantee
you will do a better job in the federal government.
And lastly, get people early easy access. Today more than

(12:07):
half or about half, our small businesses don't even offer
healthcare coverage so you can get a job.

Speaker 6 (12:14):
But now what Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont said his state
doesn't ask for immigration status and that they do it
on purpose. You know why, because they don't want to
have to help ICE deport illegals, not eagles illegals. If

(12:35):
they ask a person's immigration status, then there would be
a burden upon them to report them to ICE. So
don't ask, don't tell. They don't want to know whether
someone is an illegal alien or not because they don't

(12:55):
want those people deported.

Speaker 8 (12:57):
Here's what we do is, Arlena, we don't ask people's
immigration status when they're going to school, when they're going
to worship, when they're going to the courthouse, when they're
going to the hospital. We make sure that we don't
know their immigration status so that nobody can come to
us and say turn this person over. You know, that's

(13:17):
not our job. We're doing everything we can to keep
our people safe, getting criminals off the street, and protecting
the rest of our population.

Speaker 6 (13:26):
Redistricting has been in the news the Big subject, and
NBC Nightly News says that New York Governor Kathy Hokeel
is pushing her state to redistrict to counter Texas. Well,
that's funny. I don't know how you could jerry mander
the state of New York any worse. And by the way,

(13:49):
Boston's governor, what's certain name, Mara Healy, I believe is
her name. She said, we're going to We're going to
redistrict of Massachusetts so we can elect more Democrats. You idiot,
You only have Democrats in Congress. You haven't had a

(14:10):
Republican elected to a congressional district in the state of
Massachusetts in thirty three years. You can't redistrict and get
any more Democrats than you already have dumb dumb.

Speaker 18 (14:21):
In New York flanks by Texas Democrats. The governor said
she'd pushed her state to consider redistricts in response to
what's happening in Texas.

Speaker 17 (14:29):
This is a war. We are at war, and that's
why the gloves are off.

Speaker 18 (14:35):
Governor Greg Abbott today ordering state troopers to find an
arrest the Democratic lawmakers who today dared him to try.

Speaker 17 (14:43):
Subpoenas from Texas do work in New York.

Speaker 2 (14:45):
So he gonna come get us.

Speaker 17 (14:46):
How subpoenas in Texas don't work in Chicago.

Speaker 1 (14:50):
He's gonna come get us.

Speaker 18 (14:51):
How the decisions that come from this chamber could reverberate nationwide.

Speaker 19 (14:55):
We're gonna add a little bit about these war houses.

Speaker 6 (14:58):
I know all about. Ramon wants to know what around
the world is.

Speaker 20 (15:01):
Whistling bungholes, spleen splitters, whisker biscuits, honkey riders, hooskerdoos hoosker,
don'ts nips the dazers with it without the scooter stick
or one single whistling kiddy chaser.

Speaker 8 (15:13):
Houston, we have a problem.

Speaker 11 (15:17):
We have a main bus be under bolt. We've got
a lot of thrust us here.

Speaker 5 (15:21):
In Houston just went offline.

Speaker 8 (15:24):
There's another master alarm, Houston.

Speaker 19 (15:26):
I'm checking a quad has no repressed Babby tick quad.

Speaker 18 (15:29):
We've got a computer read we get big of the rcs.

Speaker 11 (15:32):
We've got a lady's rye fires and many shi got
multiple continent warning Houston. We've got to reach that rease dark.

Speaker 1 (15:38):
All right, I'm going stn.

Speaker 8 (15:43):
Like you've hurt Richard, start record.

Speaker 17 (15:45):
Well, look it won't work, get me another one.

Speaker 21 (15:48):
My son's supposed to be all. I know, miss, they
can't fix the damn thing in this place.

Speaker 7 (15:57):
Planchland, my grandma.

Speaker 21 (16:02):
I was going to see Jimmy. I know, I know,
we came to tell you something. There's been an accident.

Speaker 7 (16:14):
To me, it's okay, he's all right, but he's not
gonna get to walk on the mountain.

Speaker 21 (16:23):
Well they said he was.

Speaker 7 (16:26):
I know, I know.

Speaker 2 (16:31):
That was before.

Speaker 7 (16:33):
Now there's been an explosion and they're all okay, they're
all right, But now they're just going to try to
figure out a way to get them home. And and
it's a little bit dangerous. Are you scared? Why don't

(17:02):
you worry? Honey?

Speaker 21 (17:05):
If they could get a washing machine to fly my
Jimmy could land.

Speaker 6 (17:11):
Another astronaut, Jim Lovell GISs me, famously portrayed on the
big screen film His time in Houston as an astronaut
made him world famous. He of course would return to Illinois,
where they ran restaurants and the family had retired, but

(17:36):
he uttered the famous line, Uh, Houston, We've had a
problem that is often misquoted during the Apollo thirteen mishap.
Jim Lovell has passed away last week at the age
of ninety seven.

Speaker 2 (17:56):
Accepted into the NASA Space Program in nineteen sixty two,
Jim Lovell is first of four space flights in nineteen
sixty five on Gemini seven. In December of sixty eight,
Level commanded the historic Apollo eight mission, the first manned
spacecraft to orbit the Moon, the crew famously reading from
the Book of Genesis, God have heard.

Speaker 14 (18:21):
To me, APOLLOWA was a bigger deal.

Speaker 2 (18:23):
Pollow eight was the epitome, the high point of my
space ventures. But perhaps it was as commander of the
ill fated Apollo thirteen that Level will be most remembered. Okay, Houston,
we have a problem. That famous phrase depicted in the
nineteen ninety five film version Apollo thirteen, starring Tom Hanks

(18:45):
as Jim Lovell. In April of nineteen seventy, an explosion
in the spacecraft caused a loss of oxygen. Astronauts Level,
Jack Swiggert, and Fred Hessey moved into the lunar module.
As it traveled around the Moon, the nation and the
world collectively killed its breath. The crew successfully returned to
Earth on April seventeenth, touring an exhibit in Chicago. Level

(19:08):
recently reflected on his experience with the Gemini and Apollo missions. Now,
I spent two weeks on another four days of this
type of a spacecraft, and then of course of the
Apollo spacecraft. I know this is a very important part
of my life. Lovell retired from NASA in nineteen seventy
three and went to work in the private sector. Jim

(19:29):
Lovell one of the early pioneers of spaceflight to complete
NASA and the world into the front tier of space travel.

Speaker 6 (19:40):
You know, we think of astronauts as celebrities because that's
what they became. They became these sort of rock star celebrities,
and then the movies were made about them. There's such
an interesting blend romon of physical willingness to undergo difficulty

(20:05):
and potentially death, and we know that some did die,
but the mind, the brilliance, the intensity of these human
beings very very special. And Jim Lovell, we haven't interviewed

(20:29):
a lot of astronauts, but Jim Lovell really struck me.
On the fiftieth anniversary, actually, a few days after the
fiftieth anniversary of the Apollo thirteen, we had the honor
to speak to Jim Levell about that mission. I'd like
to play the audio of your transmission telling Houston that

(20:50):
we've had a problem, and then have you respond go ahead.

Speaker 2 (20:53):
And Mom, okay, man, go ahead.

Speaker 1 (20:59):
We've had a hard one my racetime.

Speaker 8 (21:01):
I don't know what it was. It may be both
cuticle you see an a C bus undervolt their guidance,
or become negatify. I leave.

Speaker 15 (21:13):
The crew reported it, we got a name be under.

Speaker 3 (21:17):
We may have had an inspitation compliant.

Speaker 6 (21:21):
What's going through your mind at that.

Speaker 1 (21:23):
Point, Well, essentially what went through my mind at that
particular time was what happened, What is really going wrong
and how does that affect the flight?

Speaker 6 (21:37):
What was your worst fear at that moment.

Speaker 1 (21:40):
I didn't have a wish fear that this was disastrous.
I had a fear that how can we recover from
this particular problem? Is it serious or not? And it
took a little time for the you know, the brain
to function and to figure out what we're going And

(22:03):
of course, as soon as that occurred, then I saw
that we lost two out of two out of the
three fuel cells, which meant that most of electricity was
going to be gone. And then, of course, as time
went on, as we looked around to find out what
the situation was, and I examined the instrument panel, and

(22:26):
I finally ambered my way over to the window, and
when I looked out at the window and saw gas
is gas escaping at a high rate of speed from
the room of my spacecraft. And then going back and
look at the instrument panel and seeing that the gages
on my two ohygen tanks one was empty and one

(22:47):
I could see the needles had to go down. Then
the thoughts on my brain said, hey, this is really
really serious. The landing is off and can we get
home because the command module is now dying.

Speaker 14 (23:07):
That was a.

Speaker 6 (23:11):
Difficult interview to coordinate, felt, but well worth the time
to hear his perspective and not.

Speaker 16 (23:19):
Just as a as an astronaut and that experience and
how the movie affected his life and his celebrity and.

Speaker 2 (23:29):
Which he did use. He he did you he did.

Speaker 6 (23:34):
Monetize that level. And I'm not mad at him for that,
but it's interesting how that that that the course of
that changed his life.

Speaker 2 (23:45):
Hey, what did you do with ballot?

Speaker 11 (23:47):
If he was saying right now, you're listening to the
Michael Berryson.

Speaker 6 (23:53):
All right, so you've got that, you got that net
in your mind. You go to an Astros game, They've
got the net along there because they hit foul balls
in a slice of foul ball, right handed hitter down
that first base line. If you're behind the dugout, it

(24:17):
takes somebody's head off, right, got to keep the fans
safe from the game. Well, now, CNN after green dildos
have been thrown onto the court, horror of horrors, not
just dildos, green dildos. I'm not sure the meaning of

(24:41):
the green, honestly not. But whatever CNN reports, the WNBA
is cracking down. This is the sort of thing up
with which we will not put. They're cracking down on
dildo's being thrown onto the court. While ESPN reports to

(25:01):
a crypto group is claiming responsibility for the dildos tossed
onto the court at w NBA games. So at football games,
we used to have a dude at the Super Bowl
run necked across the field for a million dollars from
a casino for the pr Now at w NBA games,

(25:24):
we've got people throwing green dildos. CNN with a serious
bit of journalism.

Speaker 10 (25:34):
The WNBA is cracking down on dildo's being thrown onto
the court during games. The sex toys have shown up
six different times from Atlanta to la posing a risk
to players.

Speaker 12 (25:47):
It's ridiculous, it's dumb, it's corny, it's stupid. It's also dangerous,
and you know, player safety is number one respecting the game.
All those sames, I think it's really stupid.

Speaker 1 (26:02):
So what is this?

Speaker 10 (26:03):
Who's responsible for starting this trend? Apparently a crypto meme
group which calls them pranks, But those pranks have so
far resulted into arrest and it raises the debate. Is
it this sexis stunt? Is it some sort of rite
of passage that every league experiences something like this? What
is going on?

Speaker 2 (26:21):
What is this?

Speaker 6 (26:23):
Yes, it's quite the existential question mark. What are we
to make of this?

Speaker 2 (26:31):
Is this pure.

Speaker 6 (26:34):
Unadulterated evil, misogynistic cave Man era hate by men toward women,
or is this the right of passage, a moment of
transcendence for a league coming into its own. Is this

(26:56):
an existential question facing all women and men across the universe?
Or is it merely the sophomoric silliness of people going
to games that are so boring that they're trying to
do something to spice it up. Is there a sinister
plot by the league to generate interest when the girls

(27:22):
don't have any talent after making the ball smaller and
the lines shorter? What? What exactly is she really raises
the right questions? Doesn't she remonte play that again? I mean,
is this a right of pace?

Speaker 10 (27:41):
He's cracking down on dildo's being thrown onto the court
during games. The sex toys have shown up six different
times from Atlanta to la posing a risk to players.

Speaker 12 (27:52):
It's ridiculous, it's dumb, it's corny, it's stupid. It's also dangerous,
and you know players safeties number one, respecting the game,
all those things. I think it's really stupid.

Speaker 10 (28:07):
So what is this? Who's responsible for starting this trend
apparently a cryptomean group which calls them pranks, but those
pranks have so far resulted in too arrest, and it
raises the debate, is it a sexis stunt? Is it
some sort of write of passage that every league experiences
something like this?

Speaker 21 (28:25):
What is going on?

Speaker 2 (28:26):
What is this?

Speaker 6 (28:27):
What is this? Could maybe we can open the lines
and y'all call this was a ESPN and tell us
what is this? I mean, we've got to find meaning
in this? What is this? Where do we? I don't
know where to put this?

Speaker 1 (28:46):
Where?

Speaker 6 (28:47):
What is this? John wrightes Czar the answer to the
existential question. The ESPN crowd is all gushing over what
is this? What phenomenon is this that is transpiring here
in our league? Sometimes a dildo is simply just that,
a dildo, nothing more, nothing less, Not everything has to

(29:09):
have such a profound meaning, Greg wrights Zar. If the
WNBA had any marketing skills, which they don't, they would
start having dildo night. Let everyone hold them up, maybe
turn off the lights and have dildos that light up. Well,
we're just imagining the meeting and how that goes. Sex

(29:34):
toys being hurled onto the court, hitting fans in the face.
What screams family more than that they've been trying to
attract families to the Lesbian League. Nothing says full on
family quite like dildo's being thrown onto the court. Imagine
the genius ideas that were developed as a result of

(29:54):
that meeting.

Speaker 2 (29:56):
By folks.

Speaker 19 (29:57):
Attention, I'm here from the corporate office to address the
biggest cont since we found out Cheryl Swoops came out
of the closet. We've got an issue where the rubbers
finally meaning the road. So may call it free throw dildo.
I've heard it called dildo from downtown. Let's stop the giggling, folks.
This is a real problem for a league that makes
no money. Now, I'd like to welcome more people that

(30:19):
make no money. Our board of directors, Rosie O'Donnell, Ellen
DeGeneres and Wanda Sykes. Let's open the floor to the
entire group now on an action plan to stop these
dildos on the court.

Speaker 14 (30:32):
Lesbian Linda here.

Speaker 19 (30:34):
What if we approach it like MLB, which I think
stands for Men's Lesbian Badgers.

Speaker 2 (30:40):
They have next buck their balls.

Speaker 19 (30:42):
What if we have an iud iron uteristone.

Speaker 6 (30:47):
Originally I thought that was a little butcherly. That does
sound incredible.

Speaker 19 (30:52):
Can you imagine a foul dildo being caught in the
stands like a jose Al two v home run pot
it with my fate, Kate Clark, Sophie Cunningham scoring all
those points, being pretty and loving men. They are cancers
of our league.

Speaker 6 (31:07):
We're the w NBA white Never be alright?

Speaker 17 (31:18):
Did you?

Speaker 9 (31:21):
By the way, the net is a fake story, the
Moon said. People don't realize that's a fake story. They're
not really putting up. I assume that that would be obvious.

Speaker 17 (31:36):
You know what.

Speaker 6 (31:37):
It says a lot about the.

Speaker 2 (31:38):
League when.

Speaker 14 (31:41):
You do think that that might be the.

Speaker 6 (31:45):
Real story, because it's the sort of thing that could

Speaker 1 (31:48):
Best Thank you and good night.
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