Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is a podcast from wor Now the wr Saturday
Morning Show.
Speaker 2 (00:06):
Here's Larry Minty, Hello and welcome this Saturday Morning. On
this week's show, high profile criminal defense attorney Jeffrey Licktman
unloads on the candidates running for New York City mayor
and specifically Zurhan mom Dani. Fox News star Joe Kancha
unloads on the mainstream media trying to blame Trump for
(00:28):
the floods in Texas. Star sports writer Christine Brennan talks
about her new book on the WNBA, superstar Caitlin Clark,
and the producer and writer of a new off Broadway play,
Rolling Thunder, that combines the experience of the Vietnam War
with some incredible music from the time. But let's start
(00:49):
with high profile defense attorney Jeffrey Licktman on the New
York mayoral race. Jeffrey, let's talk about the mayoral race
for a second. Because there's a lot of people out
there giving advice, and most people seem to think that
they're the people running against Zora and Mamdanni. Two or
three of them have to coalesce and unify to take
(01:13):
him on. Somebody has to drop out of the race.
Who what would you like to see if you could
pick one of them to run against Uram Mamdani, who
has the best chance.
Speaker 1 (01:25):
Well, Larry, first of all, thanks for having me, and
I think what has to happen? And I'm not a
Cuomo fan, but what Cuomo said makes the most sense.
There has to be polling done sometime in September among
what I believe, not just Adams Mushmouth mayor in the hood,
mayor in the club, excuse me and Cuomo, but also
(01:47):
with Curtis Sliwa. All three of them have to have
polling done. They should agree upon one polster and whoever
is ahead in a purported head to head against Mom Donnie,
the other two have to drop out because there's a
very high probability right now Mam Donnie is leading all
(02:07):
of them in a poll if it's head to heads,
if it's the three of them against him, and I
would include Jim Walden this even though he's got one
percentage point. No one knows who he is and he's
an obnoxious, humble bragger. He should also be subject to
this and drop out because the states are too high. Larry,
And when I think about how much I hate politicians.
Speaker 3 (02:28):
This is exhibit A.
Speaker 1 (02:29):
They're so selfish, they're so narcissistic. All they really care
about is power. They try to tell you how much
they care about the people and they care about the
city and they just want to do the right thing.
Yet all of them, and I'm talking including Curtis who's
running as a Republican, who's the only one who really
has a meritorious reason to run because he won his
(02:52):
primary and he is the Republican candidate. The other one,
the other two are just the Democrats who couldn't beat
mom Donni, which is one they're even able to run
at all. There should be there should be a polling
dun whoever remains of the of the three of them
should run against Mamdani Loan because the stakes are so high.
If we lose this to Mamdani, and we will, if
(03:15):
all of the rest of them do run, then we're
gonna be having our city run by a far left,
insane socialist who's so insane that he doesn't even try
to hide what he is. I mean, this guy is
an open maniac, a lunatic. He's a guy who's praising
Hamas in New York City. Did you ever think, Larry
twenty four years after nine to eleven, that we would
(03:39):
be electing the guy as mayor who supports the very
ideology that took the two towers down in New York
City and killed nearly three thousand people. It is so revolting,
so appalling, so stomach churningly disgusting. If that's where we are,
and we've got guys like Eric Adams and Cuomo and
Sliwa too saying no, no, you have to drop out.
(04:01):
I wouldn't there. They want power so bad they can
taste it so badly that they're willing to sell our
city down the river. It's absolutely disgusting and a pox
on all of them.
Speaker 2 (04:13):
Yeah, very well said. I've never put that together before
about the towers, but that was extremely well said. I've
Curtis Lee was said something the other day that I
was really impressed by. And he was talking not only
to the other candidates but also to Donald Trump, and
he said, stop attacking this guy for the wrong reasons.
(04:33):
State of policy. His policies are horrible. His policies are
going to hurt the city. We need to state to
that because you're making him a martyr and you're getting
him more votes, and especially Donald Trump, because the number
one issue for the Democrats is just being against Trump.
If Trump keeps speaking out, I think it makes zurhim
Mamdani more powerful. What do you think?
Speaker 1 (04:54):
I suppose that's true. But the things that Trump are
attacking him on or are the policies. And look, I'm
not a Trump accolade where I follow everything that he says,
but he's one hundred percent right here. But it shouldn't
have to be the fact that we're even in a
position where we're concerned that an open socialist in America
(05:15):
and New York City, Jew hating socialist, a guy who
is literally gonna run the city into the ground. He's
telling us that he's gonna do it. The fact that
he's so close to becoming mayor tells us if it
doesn't happen in November, Larry, Oh, it's coming. It's coming
sooner or later. This is what the liberals have done
to America. They are creeping, getting larger, and eventually they're
(05:39):
going to turn us into Europe if we're not Europe already.
Because if you look at New York City, you've got
Hamas running around. Nobody seems to care Eric Adams, I mean, respectfully,
has the effing balls, the balls to suggest that he's
done so much for the city and he's the one
that turned this worse than Deblasio has turned it into
(06:00):
a toilet bowl. His approval rating is at eighteen percent.
He's even polling behind Sleiva. The balls of him to
suggest that he should be staying in the race. This
guy should be in a jail cell, and you can
you can ask Donald Trump why he didn't allow it,
because he would be in a jail cell and he
wouldn't be running. Now, taking him out, taking Adams out
(06:21):
is not the solution, because you've still got the other
two dunderheads. One of them has to drop out. All
three of them have to collete and say, listen, we
love this city too much to care about our own
personal greed. They're filthy greed and the fact that we're
gonna have to pay them off. You know that they're
not dropping out until they make generational money. You know
(06:44):
that's all this is about, Larry. They want money. Do
you know how many more friggin' earrings does Eric Adams
have to have in his ears? He's only got two ears.
Speaker 4 (06:54):
I'm worried about your health at this point, we have
to I'm gonna Jeffrey Lickman, high profile criminal defense attorney,
host of Beyond the Legal Limit podcast found on the
iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 2 (07:06):
Still to come on Saturday Morning. She is one of
the biggest sports stars in the country. And now there's
a new book out about the impact of Caitlin Clark.
We'll talk with its author, Christine Brennan.
Speaker 5 (07:18):
Next.
Speaker 2 (07:19):
Now more of the WOOR Saturday Morning Show and Larry Minty,
Welcome back. Caitlin Clark has changed the WNBA and women's sports,
and now there's a new book out about her meteoric
rise on her game, Caitlin Clark and the Revolution of
Women's Sports, written by the award winning USA Today columnist
(07:42):
Christine Brennan. Good morning, Christine, Well, good morning Mary.
Speaker 5 (07:45):
Thanks for having me.
Speaker 3 (07:46):
Sure.
Speaker 2 (07:46):
I was fascinated by your title because you took this
maybe further than I would have taken it. But I
agree with you the revolution in women's sports. You think
she's leading a new revolution in women's sports.
Speaker 6 (07:59):
Oh, I absolutely do. And in the book I talk
about all kinds of stories and basically it's it's you know,
your interest in love in Caitlin Clark and everyone listening.
I think people are probably nodding their heads, going yeah,
yeah that. You know, you wouldn't have paid much attention
to women's basketball. And then you're watching the logo threes.
You know, she's chucking it from the parking lot, from
(08:19):
the next county and it's going in and like you're saying,
as I know, I was in my kitchen watching some
of these games early on.
Speaker 2 (08:26):
What am I seeing here?
Speaker 6 (08:27):
You know, I've covered a lot. I've been so fortunate
in my career, the Tiger Woods, you know, Olympic Super Bowls,
and I was kind of like, oh, this is something
new and different, certainly to see a woman playing that way,
with reckless abandon with the speed, the passes. She's really,
of course a basketball player, Larry, but she's really an entertainer,
the high wire act. And I think that's what I
(08:49):
try to get at throughout the book, and I think
that is the allure for so many millions of people.
Speaker 2 (08:54):
Yeah, and her story reads like a novel, and even
the way she's playing now, in the fact that she
doesn't get along with certain players, and there's a bad
person and there's a good person, just like in a
good novel and there's someone that comes to her defense.
It reads like a story, but it's playing out almost
like a Broadway play. That's why. That's part of the reason,
(09:17):
aside from her immense talent, that's part of the reason
everybody's fascinated in this.
Speaker 6 (09:22):
Actually, I like that idea. You and I we can
collaborate on what you think, you know what people would come.
I'm in Ohio, my hometown, and we just had unbelieve
people were parking on like the soccer field hockey fields
to come in last night in the suburbs of Toledo.
So you know, I think that there might be something
here with this woman. But you know that's the thing too.
Speaker 5 (09:43):
Think about this.
Speaker 6 (09:44):
We're watching someone from the University of Iowa, the heartland
taking over the nation, including the two coasts right and
and you could see this when she was in college
those last two years where there were lines in January
February in the cold, you know, really cold weather in Columbus, Ohio,
in uh outside of DC and Maryland, in Michigan and
(10:07):
Indiana waiting to get into a huge college basketball arena
to watch a woman play basketball, kind of like it
was a Springsteen or a Taylor Swift concert. Again, that's
what I thought. I thought, My goodness, you know, having
been around a while, you know, I'd never expected to
see this in my lifetime, which then led to my
(10:28):
fascination starting to write columns, meeting her, and then eventually
the book, and and even just a year ago right
now is when I was talking with my editor at
Scribner just to begin the process. So so we really
scooted along and its current goes up till April. So
lots and lots of anecdotes and stories about college and
also that first year, that rookie year, and of course,
(10:50):
as you said, the drama, all of that's in there.
The WNBA Angel Reeves, Caitlin Clark, the Kennedy Carter hipcheck,
you know what I mean. That's all the because that's
all a part of a journalistic look at one of
the most famous, not only athletes in our country, one
of those famous people in our country.
Speaker 2 (11:07):
She's raised attendance, she's raised salaries, she's got them all
private planes. But there seems to be, as has been
reported several times, a jealousy in the league.
Speaker 6 (11:18):
Can you understand that I do a little and I
really try to explain it. I have some great voices
in the book, lots of voices in the book throughout,
but in this particular case, Briana Scurry, the goalkeeper from
the ninety nine women's soccer team, the first black superstar
of that team. I quote her about exactly that, about
the issues, like you know that the players need to understand.
(11:38):
This is the moment seventy four percent black league. I
think we can all understand. A white woman comes in
there could be tension in this polarized society of ours, right,
that's not a surprise. So what someone like Briana Scurry
is saying is that it's time to work through it
and everyone makes more money. The rising time less all boats.
Doctor Harry Edwards, great civil rights leader, the man behind
(12:01):
the Black Power, saluted the nineteen sixty eight Mexico City Olympics.
Same thing.
Speaker 1 (12:05):
He said.
Speaker 6 (12:06):
There should have been seminars and conversations, get people in
sociologists to talk to the players. Last year in preparation
Larry of Caitlin Clark's arrival, not because they're damsels in distress, No,
there are college graduated great athletes, but because this was
just so unusual for majority Black League. I deal with
all of that, and unfortunately, the WNBA, to me anyway,
(12:29):
just did not seem to be prepared for the moment,
wasn't anticipating it, and certainly wasn't anticipating the national scrutiny
that they have received.
Speaker 2 (12:38):
In defense of them. How could they? I mean, this
is a phenomenon that we haven't seen in a long time.
Can you explain it? Can you explain why her story
when there's been so many superstars in all the sports
is such a phenomenon.
Speaker 6 (12:54):
And you know what you said, Yeah, how could they?
I mean I understand that maybe they didn't believe it
would be possible for a league that always got short
shrift right from the male dominated mainstream sports media. I tried,
others tried to get coverage of women's basketball back in
the nineties and in the early part of this century.
Didn't happen. But they also could have seen those crowds
and those TV ratings and four million more watching the
women's final in the NCAA in twenty twenty four, four
(13:16):
million more people than watch the men the next night.
We'll never see that again. At least I'd love to
see it, but probably not. It is the entertainment value.
People who don't know anything about basketball will tune in grandmother's, grandfathers,
you name it. The guy who said he'd never watched basketball, right,
that guy's now wearing a twenty two jersey not only
the games, but to the grocery store and you know,
(13:38):
the dad station. It's because, as I've got a chapter
title on her game, you can't take your eyes off her.
That's a quote from Curtis Strange, two time US Open
Men's golf champion.
Speaker 2 (13:51):
He will not leave the room.
Speaker 6 (13:52):
He said, if that ball's coming up the court, if
she's bringing up the court, you have no idea what's
going to happen. You have to watch. And that's it again.
I think it's much more than basketball. It is about
entertaining everybody. And as you said, she sure's doing that.
Speaker 3 (14:06):
Well.
Speaker 2 (14:07):
I'll tell you what. You sound excited about the book,
which is really great to hear. I'm excited about the book.
I'm sure a lot of people are. I haven't been
able to dive into it yet, but I promise you
I'm probably going to read it this weekend on the beach. Christine,
congratulations on the book. By the way, you can buy
the book on her game, Caitlin Clark and the Revolution
in Women's Sports right now at any place you buy books,
(14:28):
including Amazon. Christine Brennan, Award winning USA Today columnist and
television commentator. Thanks a lot for your time, Christine, my pleasure.
Speaker 6 (14:36):
Larry, thanks so much.
Speaker 2 (14:37):
Still to come, we'll talk about a new play based
on the experience of soldiers in the Vietnam War. That's
still ahead on Saturday Morning. Coming up next on Saturday Morning,
Joe Kancha from Fox News on how embarrassing the mainstream
media was in trying to blame Trump for the Texas floods.
That's after the News. Back now to the Saturday Morning
(15:02):
Show with Larry Minti. Welcome back. The Democrats and their
partners in the media quickly blamed Donald Trump for the
Texas floods, and Fox News contributor Joe Conscia says they
just embarrassed themselves. But Joe, this is exactly what you
were talking about in your column.
Speaker 3 (15:19):
Yeah, and Larry, and thanks for having me. There's an
Axios piece out just yesterday where they spoke to seven
different Democratic lawmakers, and these lawmakers, the most off the record,
said that they're being told by their grassroots supporters that
they're not doing enough, that there needs to be a
willingness by lawmakers to get shot while stopping ICE officers
(15:41):
in order to draw more media attention and to put
the pressure on Trump. As far as stopping these deportations,
I mean just imagine this, you know, literally calling for blood,
looking for like the Roman coliseum. As far as anarchy,
and again, this is something that I saw a CNN
segment yesterday Harry Enton showing that there's four major polls
(16:02):
out where Americans support deportations, not systems. Those here are
llegally committing crimes, but all illegals. ABC News, Quinnipiac I
could go down the line. So Democrats once again are
dying on this hill where a majority of Americans are
saying no, actually we want this to be done, especially
blacks and Latinos who are having jobs taken away from
(16:23):
social services. And Democrats not only are saying, you know,
maybe we're not doing enough, Maybe we have to actually
call for ICE stations to be hurt or more. Now,
as you just played, we had snipers in woods outside
of ice facilities, and this is only going to get
worse before it gets better.
Speaker 2 (16:39):
Now and you that was organized, That was absolutely organized.
I would not be surprised if that's a cartel. And
so the Democratic Party in putting down ICE officers, in
calling on standing up to ICE officers and calling as
you just mentioned, to go violence against ice officers, they're
the one that's attracting this. Who knows who's going to
(17:00):
respond to that. They might think that they have support,
So you might be actually inviting the cartels to come
into this country to commit violence.
Speaker 3 (17:08):
Joe, just amazing. And we see what did the leading
candidate to be the next mayor of New York and
Zoran Mandani, who says, we will absolutely not cooperate with Ice.
They'll be expelled from the city. Good luck doing that.
And this is the guy who currently in New York
is leading in the polls. So there is an appetite
for this. Granted it's the far left that has the appetite,
(17:31):
but still the fact that this rhetoric is excused and
our media isn't calling out people when Democrats go on
the air and say you condemned this, right like, you
wouldn't actually resort to violence in order to stop federal agents.
That's the thing. As long as the media just kind
of doesn't wink at a nod and doesn't really cover
this the way they should outside of Fox, outside of
the Larrimente Show and WR. Then you know they're going
(17:51):
to continue to talk this way and people will get
hurt or killed.
Speaker 2 (17:54):
Right, It's going It's eventually going to happen if this
rhetoric continues, if the Democrats don't pull back a little bit.
You mentioned zorin Mom, Donnie, what do you say? I
know you covered New York politics extremely well. What do
you think has to happen? Do they have to consolidate
candidates or or they can they run like it is
(18:16):
right now and still defeat him.
Speaker 3 (18:17):
Nope. If it stays this way, then then Donnie will win,
probably with something like thirty five percent of the vote,
you know, not exactly a mandate. We saw it in
nineteen ninety two with Bill Clinton where he won the
popular vote with just forty three percent of the vote,
but because Ross Pro pulled in nearly twenty percent, that
was enough to muddle the waters and Clinton was able
(18:38):
to win that election over George H. W. Bush Because
I remember Pro was from Texas. Hw Bush was in Texas.
I would imagine if we have better analysis like we
do now in terms of voter trends that pulled more
from Bush than they did from Clinton. But the point
is that, yeah, if you have multiple candidates in a
race like this, especially like two so called establishment candidates
like Cuomo and Adams, they're going to split their boat.
(19:00):
One will get more than the other, but in the
end it won't take any votes away from men Donnie,
so Cromo and Adams to figure out exactly what they're
going to do here. Cromo seems to be pulling better
than Adams at this point, who has his own problems
in terms of some legal stuff. But overall, yeah, I
think that Adams probably would have to drop out, he
would have to endorse Cuomo, and then from there you
(19:21):
have to see what happens with Curtis Leewa, who again
you know Republicans. It's a very very difficult thing to
win in the city, and Curtis has run before and
it's an uphill challenge. So if it's one on one,
I think then Donnie can be defeated. If not, then
you're looking at an anti Semitic communist as your next mayor.
Speaker 2 (19:38):
Yep, and it's very depressing because really none of them
seem like they're going to pull out. They're all very stubborn.
It gets to be very depressing. Joe Kantcha, Fox News
contributor new book The Greatest Comeback Ever, Inside Trump's Big
Beautiful Campaign, which you can buy right now.
Speaker 3 (19:56):
Thanks a lot, Joe, great show, Larry, thanks again for
having me.
Speaker 2 (19:58):
When we come back. A new off Broadway play with
personal stories about the Vietnam War that's next.
Speaker 4 (20:07):
Here again is Larry Minty with the woor Saturday Morning Show.
Speaker 2 (20:12):
The story of the Vietnam War is a complex one
and for many people it's very personal. Their stories are
in a new off Broadway play called Rolling Thunder. Let's
meet the show's writer Bryce Hallett and producer Rebecca Blake.
Why don't we start with you, Bryce, since you wrote this,
tell us what people when they go to this would
(20:34):
expect off Broadway.
Speaker 7 (20:36):
Well, as you mentioned, it's definitely the songs of that era,
and you often hear that catchphrase, you know, the songs
or art that defined a generation. But if there was
ever a phrase that can actually describe that prodigious output
of songwriting in that late sixties and early seventies, it's
this song this show, and so it embraces like a
(20:57):
huge catalog of songs from Paul Simon to you know, ROBERTA.
Speaker 5 (21:02):
Flack and on it goes step Steppenwolf.
Speaker 7 (21:05):
And so and then you sort of marry that to
the words and the intimate stories of based on many,
many interviews I did with veterans and their family members.
And so that adds to this intimate sort of aspect
to this epic, as you say, complex picture of war.
Speaker 5 (21:23):
So it's a very dynamic experience.
Speaker 2 (21:26):
Yeah, it's you said compelling, and that's absolutely the case.
And the fact, Rebecca, that these are personal stories. You know,
this isn't just from somebody's imagination. This is what really
happened makes it even more fascinating and makes it even
more compelling.
Speaker 8 (21:46):
Look in Australia, we had veterans that would come and
see this show again and again. They contributed to the show,
not only with stories but with photography. We had like
the Groupie veterans that just were so honored that we
were even doing this show. And to bring it here
to New York is a dream of mine. We've been
(22:07):
touring it in Australia for ten years now. We've readapted
the script for the American audiences, and it is compelling.
It has heart, it has many many aspects to the show,
and this amazing music weaves in and out of the story.
So and all the songs have strategically been placed.
Speaker 2 (22:30):
Yeah, I'm listening to them. I've listened to some of
the music, and I saw some of the music you're
going to put in there. I mean, it's a great
album if you were able to get all of that
on an album. I mean, it's the soundtrack of many
of our lives.
Speaker 8 (22:43):
I know, and during this tumultuous period, the best music
came out of this time. You know, these songwriters were
writing these songs that are still played today. So younger
generations know this music. So I would just love as
many Americans to see the show. I mean, we used
to get comments you've got to take this to America.
(23:05):
You've got to see let the us see this. And
it's your music.
Speaker 2 (23:09):
Yeah, you know, yeah, our music. You're absolutely right. But
it's the best of that music. I mean, when you
go down the list of what is in there, it's incredible.
I love that you have bridge over troubled waters. And
I'm sure we got to get out of this place.
That's that's that's exactly the story for a lot of
people that were there. I'm interested brace about an Australian
(23:32):
writing this story because this is such an American experience because.
Speaker 7 (23:38):
Of my background and my background as a journalist. You know,
it's sort of that, you know, as a matter of
earning the trust of many veterans and talking to their families,
and that took a while and over many many drinks
in many cases, and so that yeah, so it was
sort of, yeah, you were sort of earning their trust
and getting into the interior of their lives. And you know,
(24:00):
several people I interviewed were like American Marines and gis
and so you know, we have in Australia quite a
world view of events, and you know, we were part
of the Vietnam War. So it's you know, to actually
adapt the work wasn't as difficult as you imagine because
and dramatically, it's set in nineteen sixty eight, which, as
(24:22):
you know, is considered one of the worst years in
the twentieth century, the termoil for assassinations of Martin Luther
King and Robert Kennedy, and so to have that dramatic
arc in the show as much as all of this
great music that does make for a pretty powerful experience.
Speaker 2 (24:41):
Yeah, Rebecca walk us through it. Like when people go
to see this, what are they going to see?
Speaker 8 (24:45):
Well, most of the comments are, it's so insightful. We
had no idea. It's just so much more than a
jukebox musical. It's a love story. It's joyous, uplifting. It's not,
you know, oh my god, we don't need to see
another story about war right now when everything's happening in
this timeframe. But it's a show where people come in,
(25:09):
they're dancing, they're singing the songs. It's a journey of
three boys lives through letters because back then that was
the only way to communicate back home, so that the
letter writing is a big aspect. We cover protests, history
(25:29):
schools were coming in Australia because of the history.
Speaker 1 (25:34):
We cover.
Speaker 8 (25:34):
It was the first televised war, the assassination of Martin
Luther King, and as Bryce said, you know, Robert Kennedy,
it was a powerful time. So we cover all that
and we keep saying it's this, you know, killing me
softly helped me make it through the night. These ballads
that Cassidy Pope, who won the Voice. She was the
(25:55):
winner of the Voice. She is one of our leads.
And it's just brings tears to your eyes. And then
you know, everyone's I don't know. Veterans come and they
thank me, they hug me after the show, they say
thank you so much, And I think, what makes this
so different from anything else running at the moment? It
(26:16):
has purpose. We have partnered with American Legion. A percentage
of our merchandise is going back to American Legion. And
veterans come, they bring their grandchildren, and they bring their brothers,
their sisters, and they keep reappearing every night and I go,
oh my god, you're back again. We just can't get
enough of this show. It encapsulates so much. So it's
(26:39):
very hard for me to sit here and describe it
because you know, it's a journey and it's in the
late sixties, and it covers a lot of history.
Speaker 2 (26:51):
And I can't imagine brace that you took all of
what she was just talking about.
Speaker 5 (26:55):
It's a manse.
Speaker 2 (26:56):
It's years and years and years of experiences and got this.
Speaker 7 (26:59):
And yeah, but you know, to reawaken the pulse of
that generation in the sixties and to make it feel
so current as well, so it's not this nostalgia piece.
Speaker 5 (27:09):
It actually talks to young people.
Speaker 7 (27:10):
It talks to people of every age and ultimately at
a firm's peace and a real sense of anti war
protests through the show, which just seems a natural fit
for what's going on in the world today.
Speaker 8 (27:24):
And we're only here for such a short time, so
you know, we're closing September seven, so we don't have time.
And it is a word of mouth because once it
hits people will be talking about it. We're in you know.
We have the first preview this Thursday. We open the
twenty fourth of July. But we're not here for a
(27:44):
long time. So if I would just say to those
New Yorkers, come and have a great night, you'll come
out of the theater singing and it'll be insightful. It's
an era we don't want to forget.
Speaker 2 (27:56):
No, it sounds compelling, and it sounds amazing, the music,
especially you were talking about. I don't know the rest
of it yet until I see it, but the music
is amazing. If you want to get tickets, you go
to Rolling Thunder us dot com. That's Rolling Thunder us
dot com again. Preview start July tenth. It opens on
the twenty fourth. Thanks so much for being here. Can't
(28:18):
wait to see it.
Speaker 5 (28:19):
Thank thank you, Thanks so much.
Speaker 2 (28:20):
That wraps up Saturday morning for this week. Thank you.