Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. The
Michael Varry Show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
As a guy who spent thirty four years to boarding
illegal aliens, I got a message to demands of illegal
aliens that Joe Biden's released in our country and violation
of federal law.
Speaker 3 (00:27):
You better start packing novels. You're damn right because you're going.
Speaker 4 (00:39):
Home well, Tom Holman a full and thorough security team,
because the cartels are going to want to take him out.
Speaker 5 (00:52):
The Chinese Triad's gonna want to take him out. See, folks,
illegal immigration is it's not just about fruit pickers and grassmowers.
Speaker 3 (01:06):
It's about sex trafficking.
Speaker 5 (01:09):
Sex trafficking is big, big, big business. It's in every
aspect of American life. There have been safe houses that
you are not safe houses, but they're stash houses in Houston,
and officers will tell me stories that don't go public.
(01:30):
They'll tell me about cases, or they go in and
they'll be twenty girls inside there. People are paying a
lot of money to go in and rape those girls
all day long. The drug trade, the cartels and the
(01:50):
triads have collaborated on. The Mexican cartels are more powerful
then most nations armies.
Speaker 3 (02:04):
Don't doubt me on that.
Speaker 5 (02:06):
They are well funded, well trained, well equipped, and they're
fighting wars all day every day, so they get experience
doing it.
Speaker 3 (02:19):
So closing the border.
Speaker 5 (02:21):
Is bad for business for some very powerful people. Now
let's turn to Elon Musk. I told you the story
about David Sapristin and bright people coming into government. You know,
Ross Perot was brought in by Jimmy Carter to help
solve some problems.
Speaker 3 (02:44):
And then Governor Mark White of.
Speaker 5 (02:46):
The State of Texas in the eighties brought ross Perot
in for some educational reforms. Because Ross Parot, I mean
a lot of people may think he's kooky or whatever else.
Ross Perot was a face, a nominal businessman, very visionary
and innovative problem solvers. You know, when you give somebody
(03:12):
something to do, there's two types of people. The rare
person who, no matter what, accomplishes the mission and the
other ninety nine percent of the people. That's what Navy
seals are all about, That's what all the Special Forces
training is all about. Is an indomitable spirit that cannot
(03:36):
be stopped.
Speaker 3 (03:38):
You can't possibly know.
Speaker 5 (03:41):
What the inside of Osama Bin Lauden's compound is going
to look like, or who's going to be waiting around
what door or what weaponry they're gonna have, or what
room he's going to be in, or what the construction
materials will be, or what obstructions will prevent you from
moving easily up and down the stairs or down the hallway.
You can't know every ounce of terrain in Afghanistan or
(04:05):
a rock, or every house going house to house, or
what language is. It is the idea of the spirit,
the indomitable spirit that says I will not be deterred.
This mindset is rare, and the problem is most people
(04:30):
don't have it, and they hate it. There's an interesting
documentary on Netflix right now called Martha about Martha Stewart,
and one of the things you will learn, look, I
wouldn't want to be married to Martha Stewart. I think
Martha Stewart I think, you know, if you're sleeping in
on Saturday morning, which I like to do, I think
(04:51):
she might kick you and say get up, you lazy bum.
Speaker 3 (04:56):
But one of the things that is.
Speaker 5 (04:57):
Clear about why many people don't like Martha Stewart is
because she's not nice.
Speaker 3 (05:07):
You know what nice is.
Speaker 5 (05:10):
Nice is what mediocre people use as icing on their cake.
Speaker 3 (05:17):
Nice.
Speaker 5 (05:18):
Everybody must be nice. The reason people don't like Donald Trump.
That don't like Donald Trump is he's mean, which means
he's not nice. They don't like Bill Belichick, they don't
like Nick Saban. Well, I got news for you. If
you want to win the game, you don't want a
(05:41):
nice person coaching or calling the snaps. If you want
to win the game on the D line, you want
a guy like Aaron Donald or Warren Sapp or Me
and Joe Green or Jack Lambert and White.
Speaker 3 (06:01):
You want the Manster. He is not nice. You want
Bob Lily. You want somebody that'll run through a wall.
That's what you want. Well, what they.
Speaker 5 (06:15):
Want to do is destroy the spirit of the entrepreneur,
the inventor. Who is John gall iron RAN's deep question.
You know, if you read Atlas Shrugged, you will read
(06:37):
in the last one hundred and twenty pages. Unfortunately, you
got to get there. You can't just pick it up
or read that. You will read her lament, her defense,
her apologia really for the guy who accomplishes something, And
she tells a story so beautifully, so powerfully. When you
(07:01):
walk onto the grounds of a company, that is a
place that was started by an individual out of a
garage when nobody believed in him.
Speaker 3 (07:10):
He didn't go take a paycheck.
Speaker 5 (07:14):
That was started by an individual at some point when
nobody believed he could accomplish anything. It was much simpler
to just go to work for someone else. But he
started on his own. Steve Jobs. What was a knock
(07:34):
on Steve Jobs? He wasn't nice, He didn't play nice
with others. Do you want the greatest phone in the
history of mankind? Or do you want the same old,
same old phones that we've always had and a corporate
executive who makes a fat paycheck or a crappy phone
(07:58):
that you have to click three times to get to
a letter because it doesn't have its own screen, and
it can't serve the Internet, and it doesn't have your music,
and it doesn't have your cameras. Trump is an outsider
to government and that's why he and only he in
government understands why we need the elon musks to come
(08:20):
in from outside.
Speaker 3 (08:21):
And I am fired up about it.
Speaker 6 (08:24):
With the Michael Barry Show, Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 3 (08:29):
There is a shadow government at play. You know it.
I know it.
Speaker 5 (08:33):
The media knows it, and they are the people who
are running the government, and you don't know who they
are because it is not Joe Biden, right, Who was
it that said that. Whoever is loading the teleprompter with
(08:55):
the words that Joe Biden is supposed to say that
are supposed to come out of the mouth of the
puppet that is the president that they own. Whoever is
loading that teleprompter is the powerful man, not the guy
who's reading the line. You know, in the making of
a movie, it's the guy who writes the script and
(09:17):
directs it, not the person who mouths the lines who
determines the direction of the movie.
Speaker 3 (09:25):
The actor gets all the glory. The actor is.
Speaker 5 (09:28):
Who you recognize. But if you want your story told
in film, you've got to have the writer director. That's
where everything is. Well. The thing about it is Donald
Trump is bringing in some bright people from the outside
to save America, to literally make America great again. And
(09:51):
he's very upfront about it. Here's Elon Musk, this guy's great.
Here's Robert F.
Speaker 3 (09:55):
Kennedy. He's devoted his life to this.
Speaker 5 (09:57):
We're going to ask these people to help solve problems
for the It's a volunteer spirit. That's nothing more American
than that. Well, ceen N's Caitlin Collins, she can't stand it.
Speaker 7 (10:09):
Logo has basically been brimming for the last two days,
I'm told, with two kinds of people, those angling for
a job and those who are trying to influence Trump
into hiring their picks. But one person has loomed over
all of that. His name is Elon Musk. Multiple sources
tell me tonight that Musk has been seen at mar
A Lago nearly every single day since Donald Trump won,
(10:31):
dining with him on the patio.
Speaker 3 (10:33):
At times.
Speaker 7 (10:33):
Today they were seen on the golf course together. Musk
has been in the room when world leaders have called Trump,
and tonight we've learned he's also weighing in on staffing decisions,
making clear his preference for certain roles.
Speaker 3 (10:44):
Even publicly.
Speaker 7 (10:46):
Tonight, Elon Musk is backing Florida Senator Rick scunn is
the next leader of the Republican Conference to replace Mitch McConnell.
While Musk himself is still not expected to take any
kind of formal position inside Trump's administration given how complicated
it would be with his companies, what's becoming clearer tonight
is that he doesn't really need to with one source
telling me Elon Musk is having just as much influence
(11:08):
from the outside.
Speaker 3 (11:12):
There is a term in the tech world that is
it is kind of the highest compliment you can give
a person or a company, and that is that you
are a say it disruptor.
Speaker 5 (11:35):
Disruptors are people who disrupt the normal flow of things,
turn them on their head and make it better. Right, So,
the cell phone was a disruptor to the old landline,
the automobile was a disruptor to the buggy whip, the
(12:00):
horse carriage. But disruptors in the age of technology can
disrupt overnight. Well, Musk is a disruptor to the very
thing that these people are their rights on debt though
(12:23):
legacy media. Elon Musk has taken to writing something on Twitter,
you are the media now and you are see you're
the all powerful now.
Speaker 3 (12:37):
The power has been taken.
Speaker 5 (12:41):
From the all powerful CNN and ABC and NBC, and
they can't bear it because power is a zero sum game.
It has been compressed downward and democratized. For you to
gain any power over your life and over the narrative,
(13:02):
they have to lose some and they've lost it all
any who else had to lose power, Hollywood, when you
stop and think about all the people that were doing
everything in their power to elect Kamala Harris and they lost,
and they lost bad.
Speaker 3 (13:23):
You won.
Speaker 5 (13:25):
You drew power away from them toward yourself. It doesn't
mean you're going to win every time, because you have
to do the things you did. You have to have
a compelling candidate who's fearless. You have to have a
compelling candidate who's tireless, and you have to be tireless,
(13:45):
and you have to disregard when they tell you he's
a rapist and murderer at tax cheet of this or
this or this, And you did it. You won over
your communities at their expense and they can't have that.
So what you're watching all over these stations, what you're
(14:06):
watching is like Cornell Belcher, a Democrat strategist on MSNBC
with Katie Turr, ridiculing the very people they claim to
care for, and that is people who no longer get
their news from these idiots. You're a low information voter
because you're getting your news from Twitter and not from them,
(14:31):
because they know everything and Twitter is not professionals. They
don't have editorial standards. Neither does the New York Times,
ABC News, the Washington Post or any of you other nonsense.
Speaker 3 (14:45):
The marketplace worked.
Speaker 5 (14:49):
The marketplace disrupted this social media crowd sourcing of information
and perspective Trump, which Elon turned over to the people
and took away their restrictions and fired ninety percent of
the people and it got better.
Speaker 3 (15:06):
And they can't stand it. What does all this disinformation
do in a moment like this, when we are less
than a month away.
Speaker 8 (15:16):
From an election.
Speaker 9 (15:18):
If you if you look at some voters that we
call low information, which I really don't like to call
them more information, but voters we're just not paying a
great deal of attention to us on mainstream on mainstream
television and mainstream cable news, you know, and they're getting
most of the information from from social media site that.
Speaker 3 (15:36):
That are that aren't filtered.
Speaker 9 (15:39):
I do worry that that that they don't turn out
or vote, or that they vote in a way that.
Speaker 3 (15:44):
Is just misinformed. So we'll see on election day.
Speaker 9 (15:48):
But at this level of misinformation, I've been around a
long time, I've not seen anything quite like it.
Speaker 3 (15:52):
It's it's a disease in our system. I mean, I
deal with this with my kids who send me, you know,
things they see on YouTube at this saying, oh my god,
And I have to say, who is this person? Why
do you trust them? Where did this information come from?
Speaker 6 (16:07):
Have you read you?
Speaker 3 (16:09):
Why should we trust you? That's just it.
Speaker 5 (16:12):
You're no more trustworthy than Nancy in Nashville or Larry
in Los Angeles. That's just it.
Speaker 3 (16:21):
You're no longer the anointed to Michael Berry show. People
forget that.
Speaker 5 (16:35):
The legacy media is first and foremost a business. Pharmaceutical
companies are first and foremost a business. Most churches, sadly,
are first and foremost, if not.
Speaker 3 (16:49):
Solely, a business.
Speaker 5 (16:53):
Business has to survive, and it has to be profitable.
Speaker 3 (16:59):
To survive.
Speaker 5 (17:01):
Without the eyeballs watching the TV, the value of a
thirty second spot diminishes dramatically.
Speaker 3 (17:10):
They've got to keep you engaged.
Speaker 5 (17:13):
And one of the ways they kept you engaged was
you went there to find out what the heck was
going on. You know, I would love to know. It's
hard to know, but I would love to see the
numbers on the extent to which are what percentage of
people watching, say CNN or MSNBC are grudge watching what
(17:38):
percentage of people are watching the View for the sole
purpose of ridiculing them. And I honestly believe this. You're
gonna get mad at this, Trust me. I honestly believe
that the View is now counter programming, that what they're
doing is they're in on it, and they understand that
(18:02):
the crazier, more ridiculous, more controversial things they say, the
more shelf life it'll give them, the more sorry, the
more marketing it will give them. If those if that
Hen party was reasonable, respectable, rational women offering varied women
(18:26):
perspectives on issues.
Speaker 3 (18:28):
Of the day, it would be dead in a month.
Speaker 5 (18:32):
But by being ridiculous and absurd and rude and obnoxious
and saying really nasty things, they.
Speaker 3 (18:39):
Get talked about.
Speaker 5 (18:41):
The New York Times is Frank Bruno on MSNBC. Hey,
legacy media isn't as important as you think it is.
Speaker 10 (18:52):
Ben served the leading edge of where media is going
with Politico, now with Axios. You understand the environment so well.
How do democrats and frankly, how does legacy media need
to change the way it thinks about getting information? I mean,
a lot of the voters who went out and voted
for Donald Trump, that so many people are wondering what
happened here. They're not watching frankly this show, They're not
(19:12):
reading the New York Times, they're not.
Speaker 3 (19:14):
Consuming media that way.
Speaker 10 (19:16):
And the Trump campaign found those voters where they live.
So how do democrats need to change the way they
communicate to voters?
Speaker 3 (19:24):
If you think that's part of the problem, for sure.
Speaker 8 (19:27):
I mean, I think all of us have to come
to grips with legacy. Media is just not as important
as it thinks it is. It is to you, it
is to me. That's a relatively small group of people
who rely on us for their information, and you have
to go into the world as it is, not as
you wish it to be. And basically the way people
get information is shattered into twenty thirty different pieces.
Speaker 3 (19:49):
And so if you just look empirically at the.
Speaker 8 (19:51):
Numbers, Joe Rogan's more important than any of us. He
just has a much bigger, hyper connected audience that listens.
Speaker 3 (19:59):
To us every word.
Speaker 8 (20:00):
So maybe listen to Joe Rogan and kind of understand, like,
what is he talking about, what are the guests that
he has on, what are the issues that they care about.
Realize that the gravity of right wing discourse is now
taking place on X. It's not Fox X is what matters.
Elon musk is now I wrote about this yesterday. Arguably
(20:21):
the most powerful civilian in the history of the country.
Speaker 3 (20:24):
He controls information flow, he.
Speaker 8 (20:26):
Controls multiple businesses, he has the President's here, he's going
to be in charge of some new fangled organization to
gut a government spending. We've not seen a person with
that kind of clout across those sectors. But whereas real
power comes from is X. People thought he was an
idiot when he bought X because he lost a lot
of money.
Speaker 3 (20:44):
He's got a lot of money, and now.
Speaker 8 (20:46):
He happens to have the most powerful platform on the right.
And politics is downstream from information, and there's just a
whole new information ecosystem out there. So for us, for you,
for Democrats, for Republicans, you have to understand that you
now are going to have to basically navigate twenty or
thirty different parts of the ecosystem if you want to
connect with the American people who vote.
Speaker 3 (21:09):
The Titanic is listing and the water is rising.
Speaker 5 (21:14):
They see it, they know it. The person that guest
who just said that is not a TV personality. He
was talking about the decline of television like CNN and
MSNBC political programs. Do you know why, because he's part
(21:37):
of the newspaper industry who went through this thirty years ago.
People moved away from the newspapers gradually and now in droves,
so that the only thing left reading the newspaper is
people just like them. So what happened, this is what
(22:01):
happened in major urban areas, is when you had white
flight out of say Detroit, Philly, Chicago, what you were
left with.
Speaker 3 (22:15):
Was mostly the poor inner city.
Speaker 5 (22:20):
As you had the white flight followed by black flight,
Hispanic flight, Asian flight, it became a socioeconomic and less
of a racial thing. People who could afford to leave
did because the crime was so bad. Well, as they left,
you decreased the market for the properties, and you changed
(22:40):
the demographic and now the people who were there voted
very differently because you changed the sample group. So now
you went from your first black mayor who was offering
leadership who happened to be black, to people just saying
I'm black, vote for me, Black power. And that's when
(23:01):
it went to hell, because now you're not talking about
city services anymore.
Speaker 3 (23:05):
You just talking about race. And that's that's the destruction.
Speaker 5 (23:10):
Well, what's happened with these newspapers, which Frank Bruoney's at
the New York Times. They lost people like me who
read the paper to be well informed. It was a
little higher brow, better informed. Speaking of higher brow, we
got a segment for you coming up. You're gonna enjoy
a better informed audience to It became pure advocacy for activists,
(23:37):
and I don't want to be a part of it.
I didn't withdraw my subscriptions solely for the purpose of
trying to hurt their bottom line. I withdrew my subscription
because I lost interest in being a part of that.
It wasn't entertaining, it wasn't interesting. And that's what happened.
(23:58):
They creeped people out. We started the show talking about
his Panics Latinos in Texas. The Democrat Party creeped them out.
They lost men. The Democrat Party creeped them out. They
lost married women. Well, guess what, married women are far
more likely to have children. You weirded the kids out,
(24:19):
You transitioned the kids. You sent cps to take the
kids if they didn't let them transition the kids. You
creeped people out. Knock it off. Are you gonna like
this next second?
Speaker 3 (24:32):
Captain? Something wong? Well, something must be right. You're listening
to Michael Berry. So on this morning show, I gotta
give you real quick background.
Speaker 5 (24:43):
The Michelin folks came to Houston and they bestowed some
Michelan stars on the Houston restaurants. And Houston has a
big hang up. I live in Houston. If you're new
to the show, Houston has a big hang up. Houston
wants to be La in New York. Houston wants to
be told that we're okay. We've got all the money
in the world, but we need to be told we're okay.
Speaker 3 (25:00):
It's sad.
Speaker 5 (25:01):
So they came in and bestowed a Michelin restaurant on it.
And so what we decided to do was the anti
Michelin restaurant, which is foods we grew up on for
poor people. And we took calls and these were some
of the folks that didn't make it on the air
that we shared. We saved to share with you this evening.
This is low brow, non Michelin foods that we love.
Speaker 3 (25:24):
Leonard, you're on the Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 5 (25:25):
What is your beloved low brow and time Michelin Star Food.
Speaker 6 (25:30):
Well, I'm really hungry, and I know I got a
big meal come in about two hours, but I can't wait.
Go grab me my bottle of peanut butter, a big tablespoon,
fill it up full, throw it in a coffee mug
and pour log cabin syrup on it. Mix it up.
(25:52):
Grab some about seven or eight.
Speaker 4 (25:56):
Ritz crackers, put them on.
Speaker 6 (25:58):
A paper plate, and grab a u a glass of milk.
And that'll hold me over till my good meal comes
and I'm not full later and it's healthy.
Speaker 3 (26:09):
Okay, hold on, let me go back.
Speaker 5 (26:10):
So you'll get a tablespoon of peanut butter, is that right?
Speaker 6 (26:15):
Heaping tablespoon butter?
Speaker 3 (26:17):
Throw it in and then I'll put some log cabin syrup.
And then what did you say.
Speaker 6 (26:24):
Yeah, that's easy to mix it up?
Speaker 3 (26:26):
Well that that was just oh.
Speaker 5 (26:27):
My goodness, my mind had you making some sort of
a coffee concoction, and I didn't hear anything being okay.
So the peanut butter, log cabin maple syrup, and then
you mix all that up and then you take it
out and you put it on a ritch cracker, and
is that it?
Speaker 3 (26:43):
You just eat it just like that that seventh rate.
Speaker 6 (26:46):
I'm on a ritch on a paper plate, and you're
good to go with a glass of milk if you
like milk, and that won't fill you up too much,
and you can have your good meal two hours later
and you'll be a happy camper.
Speaker 3 (27:00):
You know, Leonard.
Speaker 5 (27:01):
I grew up my parents stretched a penny as far
as you possibly could. God bless them. They had to.
It wasn't because they were cheap. It's because they didn't
have any money. My dad was a maintenance worker and
a bunch of kids, and my mom stayed at home
with us and took care of us. But there were
always staples in the house that if no matter if
we couldn't quite make it to his next paycheck, you
(27:22):
always had certain staples. And it was things that were
shelf stable and could be used a lot of different ways,
and one of them was peanut butter. And man, the
number of ways we used peanut butter. Looking back now,
I absolutely love peanut butter. In the pantheon of great
(27:47):
food items in this country, I think it was George
Washington Carver. Now, some of that is kind of a
Black Lives Matter black revisionism, but I think he I
think anything to do with peanuts pretty much. George Washington Carver.
He didn't invent a peanut fool. No, he did not,
but he did some pretty amazing things, that is true.
(28:09):
You know, there was a movement there for a while
to elevate these black inventors and businessmen and all that
and make heroes out of them so that young black
people could say, hey, you know, black people can be
and then they decide, no, no, let's just make it
Lebron James and George Floyd. I'm serious, and that's terrible. Michelle,
(28:30):
you are on the Michael Berry Show. Welcome to the program, sweetheart.
Speaker 11 (28:35):
Yes, our favorite was taking a piece of bread, pouring
some picture upon it, a little bit of a Regino
and a little bit of the Permersan cheese that came
in the plastic container, and shove it in the oven.
Let it toast, and that was our homemade pizzas.
Speaker 5 (28:52):
Hold on, I got confused because ramone distracted me. Okay,
take that real slow, What was it again?
Speaker 11 (28:59):
Oh that I'm ramote. Okay, a piece of bread with
ketchup oka, sprinkle a little of recado on it, and
then some of that pre studded craft Parmisian cheese, yeap
just a little bit and throw it in under the broiler, okay,
and then that it was pizza.
Speaker 5 (29:19):
You know what, Hey, it works for me. It's a
lot closer to pizza than other things that get cold pizza.
Speaker 3 (29:26):
So so why not?
Speaker 5 (29:28):
Well, there are no bad calls on this subject, Michelle.
I do have to read a little exchange that was
going on a minute ago between our team and I
can't find Oh.
Speaker 3 (29:40):
Here we go.
Speaker 5 (29:41):
Okay, So Jim Mudd, our creative director, said, take leftover pizza,
scrape off the toppings into an omelet pan, warm the
toppings before adding your eggs for an omelet. You're welcome.
And Jim said, but the pizza. I mean, sorry, Ramone's,
but the pizza. And I think I don't wanna speak
(30:03):
for you. I think the point was if you take
the scraps of something you don't like that much and
make another dish, that's good. But why would you take
pizza that's already pizza and do all that you don't
have to improve upon pizza?
Speaker 3 (30:20):
Right? Hum?
Speaker 5 (30:23):
Ramo, you worked at Pizza Hutter Pizza in so do
you remember when the personal pan pizza came out?
Speaker 11 (30:30):
That.
Speaker 5 (30:30):
I mean, in my life, that was one of the
twenty five biggest moments. It's hard you're laughing. I'm serious,
it's hard to put into perspective what a big deal
the personal pan pizza was.
Speaker 3 (30:43):
Was that, y'all?
Speaker 5 (30:44):
That was pizza Hut. And I'm sorry, I'm not making jokes.
You were pizza Hut, right, I get the too confused.
You were a pizza hut and that was y'all that
came out with that. Okay, y'all are the ones that
have the kind of red glasses, the Coca Cola glasses,
and y'all had to and y'all had the carpet in there.
They were all built and they y'all all, y'all the.
Speaker 3 (31:04):
Ones that have the roof.
Speaker 6 (31:07):
Right.
Speaker 3 (31:08):
You know, there's websites. I don't know if you know this.
There's websites.
Speaker 5 (31:12):
There's a website that you can go to and it's
conversions of pizza hut restaurants, two different concepts and different things.
Speaker 3 (31:21):
Do you know this?
Speaker 5 (31:22):
You can go there and like in you know, Boise, Idaho,
there's an old Pizza Hut that has now become a
Timmy Chans or you know, Captain Kangaroo whatever, And there's
in fact, there's one in Houston over on bel Air
next to the Gold Ribbon Bakery. I say that for
our Filipina nurses, the our listeners who are Filipino nurses,
(31:44):
because that's where they all go. They go there and
get that there's a certain kind of bread that Filipinas eat. No,
they don't eat What is that called the duck egg deal?
Robert Reese likes that. What is that darn thing called?
Speaker 10 (31:57):
What is it?
Speaker 3 (31:58):
No it's not sma, it's.
Speaker 6 (31:59):
Called but.
Speaker 3 (32:03):
I can't think of the word. Hire them the fourth
you're on the Michael Berry Show, Go ahead, sir, red gravy.
You can take a loaf of bread, make some red group.
You can take a low of bread and do what
make red gravy? Okay, you never had red gravy? Well,
I mean, what what a.
Speaker 9 (32:21):
Little bit of flour, a little bit of a tomato paste,
salt and pepper, and make a gravy out of it?
Speaker 3 (32:28):
Yeah, and it is amazing. No, No, it's not that elaborate.
Speaker 5 (32:33):
I mean, look, if you got flour, you can make
a gravy out of most everything. And if you lived
in a poor southern home, probably poor northern home too,
or West coast home.
Speaker 3 (32:43):
But I tell all I know is.
Speaker 5 (32:44):
Before you made gravy out of everything and you like
it all right, Danny, we got just a second left.
Speaker 11 (32:49):
You're up?
Speaker 3 (32:50):
Go ahead?
Speaker 6 (32:51):
How long?
Speaker 5 (32:51):
A yeah?
Speaker 3 (32:55):
Well, we don't have time for Danny, but we do.
Speaker 6 (32:58):
We do.
Speaker 5 (32:59):
Thank each and every one of you for joining us.
You have so many options of how you could spend
your time. You could be on the phone, you're turning
phone calls, listen to other stations, listening to other podcasts,
or just daydreaming, and yet you spend the time with us,
and we appreciate that. Hey, thanks for telling other folks
about it. That's how our show has grown over the years.
Thanks for listening to the podcast when you miss something
(33:20):
on the live broadcast. Thanks for telling the stations that
you wanted our show. And I do love reading your
emails to me through the website that Michael Berryshow dot com.
Speaker 3 (33:29):
Tell hell uSens look gooding me, Thank you, and good night.