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March 7, 2025 • 50 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
The Uncle Henry Show weekday afternoons from five till seven.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
Okay, Henry, are you on the air?

Speaker 1 (00:11):
Now?

Speaker 2 (00:11):
What time do you come on?

Speaker 3 (00:13):
What time is it, Henry? What time is it?

Speaker 2 (00:20):
Past?

Speaker 4 (00:20):
Message deleted?

Speaker 5 (00:22):
And time holds the answer to everything. In time, we'll
all know.

Speaker 6 (00:31):
Wonderful town, wonderful people, places to go, thanks to see.

Speaker 1 (00:39):
My love is mo me.

Speaker 5 (00:41):
That's my wonderful time.

Speaker 7 (00:45):
Beautiful homes, schools and churches, entertainment places to shop.

Speaker 5 (00:52):
My heart's in more. That's my wonderful time.

Speaker 6 (00:58):
We'll be listen, have transportation, business and industry set the
bace o'bile's got the junior.

Speaker 7 (01:06):
Miss clepration, Oh no party growing.

Speaker 2 (01:10):
Senior ole game.

Speaker 5 (01:12):
Oldfield's great to live in and work in.

Speaker 7 (01:15):
Good Finement's ideal for progress. You see. My love is
mold deal.

Speaker 8 (01:22):
Ma's my wonder ful.

Speaker 9 (01:52):
This.

Speaker 5 (01:53):
There's the Uncle Henry Show here on news Radio seventy
ten WNT. Thank you so much for listener to the
el Quinn. I appreciate that. I do. I look forward
to our time together where I can talk and you
just listen. I enjoy that telephone number. If you'd like

(02:14):
to jump in on the show. Two five one four
seventy nine two seven two three. That's two five one
four seventy nine two seven two three. Email address Uncle
henrytiheartmedia dot com. I will accept your communications on virtually
any topic as long as it's not about pornography. Pornographic things.

(02:35):
You know what I'm talking about. No filth, please, no filth.
Please phoned into the program. Let me start. Let me
start off with this this message that came into the
Unk Cleander show.

Speaker 6 (02:47):
Duck.

Speaker 2 (02:48):
Well, let's go. Here's a reminder for you. The absurdity
continues this weekend. That's right, Bring forward with the clock,
Lord of Mercy. I hope in my lifetime they change
that word. It just stays in one. I don't even

(03:08):
care which one they do. No more, you know what
I mean. Yes, just put it on one and leave
it there.

Speaker 5 (03:14):
Yes, exactly exactly. Look, I'm with you, sixty seven year
old Chris Now, I enjoyed daylight saving Time. We're going
into daylight saving time Sunday, where we'll have more light
at the end of the day due to the adjustment
of the clock as the government mandates that we flip forward,

(03:35):
and then later in the year in the fall, we
flop backwards, and I'm with you. I'm tired of the
flipping and flopping, and most Americans are tired of it too. Now,
Americans do disagree on whether they'd like to stick with
daylight Saving time all year or standard time all year,
but most Americans agree that they're tired of flipping and flopping.

(03:56):
Every time you read about it, there's a new list
of what people are claiming our negative side effects, that
our health, that Americans are so fragile, that people have
heart attacks and more wrecks and stuff like that simply
from flipping their clocks ahead one hour. In fact, if
we ever wanted to go to a war with another country,

(04:18):
one thing we could do to them is somehow force
their clocks ahead. If we could hack their clocks and
set their clocks ahead, everybody in that country be grouchy,
having heart attacks and car wrecks. Now, the Senator, you know,
Senator Coach Tuberville, up in Washington yesterday, he gave a

(04:39):
lengthy speech on all this. I don't want to share
all of it with you because I want you to
continue to listen and not doze off and get into
a wreck or something. But Coach Senator Tommy Tuberville.

Speaker 7 (04:50):
That time again.

Speaker 5 (04:51):
He gave a speech yesterday on this.

Speaker 7 (04:53):
I've given this speech three or four times.

Speaker 5 (04:57):
And I wanted you to hear one thing he said
in the speech.

Speaker 7 (04:59):
This week in all of America and my constituents back
in Alabama will spring forward.

Speaker 5 (05:07):
Yes today, I don't know if I'm still able to
spring I.

Speaker 7 (05:11):
Will lean forward that savings time.

Speaker 5 (05:13):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (05:15):
I'm working very hard to make this, hopefully possibly the
last time that we move our clocks. I recently joined
my colleague Senator Rick Scott to reintroduce for the third
time the Sunshine Protection Act to make daylight savings time
permanent at the federal level. Out of all the legislative

(05:40):
efforts that I've been part of my four years here
in Congress, the thing I hear about the most from.

Speaker 5 (05:48):
The thing he hears about the most. Listen to this.
I find this kind of a shock. He says. The
thing he hears about.

Speaker 7 (05:55):
The most my people in Alabama is their desire to
lock the clock.

Speaker 5 (06:02):
So Senator Coach Tubberville says, the thing he hears about
the most from his constituents in Alabama is about daylight
saving time. Really, that's the thing you hear coach, please
please visit back, come back Tey Alabama every now and
again and visit because there's many other things I'm sure
that we could provide you with feedback on. I've got

(06:23):
a lot of ideas of my own. In fact, I
don't know if this would be in my top fifteen,
top twenty. If I had a senator to share my
concerns with, this would be. Now. It annoys me. It
annoys me to no end that we're flipping and flopping
the clocks back. But I don't know that it would
be a top priority that I would want to tell
coach Senator Tuberville about this. But you heard what he said.

(06:47):
He said that's the top thing that his constituents are
saying to him. So Coach Tubberville, Coach, Senator Tubberville, spend
some more time here, come on back, talk to more people.
I think you'd get other things. You'd hear other things. Now, briefly,
just he talks and talks and talks. Just a little
bit more from him.

Speaker 7 (07:06):
Daylight savings time should be a thing of the past,
because it literally is a thing of the past. First
introduced as a temporary measure during World War One, daylight
savings time was originally called quote wartime, and it was

(07:26):
a way to help conserve fuel during a very different
time in this country. Following the end of World War One,
in nineteen eighteen, Standard Time Act was enacted that discontinued
daylight savings time nationally, but individual states continued to spring
forward and fall back. Then, during World War Two there

(07:47):
was a renewed federal push for full time daylight savings time,
which then was repealed in nineteen forty five. Finally, in
nineteen seven sixty six, Congress pass legislation to establish national
standards for daylight savings time.

Speaker 5 (08:05):
All right, so we have argued about We've argued about
it since World War One.

Speaker 7 (08:09):
All this to say changes to our clock might have
made since when it first began many many years ago.
For one, the American workforce work cost.

Speaker 5 (08:23):
Well, look you can if you want. He's I'm sure
you can find this on YouTube if you want to
go listen to Tommy Tuberville read a speech to you.
He goes on and on to talk about negative health consequences, etc.
But I'm wondering what will what will happen? First the release,
the release of real Epstein files, or the end of

(08:48):
springing forward and flopping back. I did not include the
building of the bridge. Maybe I should have thrown that
then there as well. Uncle Henry Show News Radio seven

(09:17):
ten WNTIM It's five twenty news headlines coming up in
ten minutes here on the unc C Henvery Show. Telephone
number two five one four seven nine two seven two three.
That's two five one four seven nine two seven two three.
Hello Color, Hey Henry, how you doing, Cliff Cliff, you
are live on the radio.

Speaker 6 (09:39):
Look, Henry, did you see the new skit that they
used and to try to get the young Democrat voters going.

Speaker 5 (09:50):
A new skit the fight?

Speaker 6 (09:53):
It was, uh some of them women they got them
off with like uh this this show pick you pick
your uh pick or something. They were doing this fight dance.
All I could think of was, uh, maybe they got
it off one of these these new game shows, uh

(10:17):
klung Fu or something like that, pick your victor. And
then they were said, there was the stupidest thing I
ever said, Well.

Speaker 5 (10:24):
What is it? Was? Who was doing this? Some who
was doing this?

Speaker 6 (10:28):
The Democratic players, but they put the old ladies into this.

Speaker 5 (10:33):
Now was it women dancing.

Speaker 6 (10:37):
Pick your champion? Like you was looking at Uh that
kung fu game that you had that zero on. And uh,
well I'm too older, you know, because I never played
these games.

Speaker 5 (10:52):
Right me either? So no, I have not. I guess
I haven't. I guess I haven't seen this. So they're doing.

Speaker 6 (10:58):
Yeah, you going Nintendo and you pick your champions to
fight on tendo.

Speaker 5 (11:03):
Oh okay, yeah, okay, I've heard of that stuff.

Speaker 6 (11:06):
Man, this was the most poorest and visitable things I've
ever seen. Hendry.

Speaker 5 (11:15):
Well, so it didn't. It didn't make you want to
vote Democrat.

Speaker 6 (11:20):
No, and I don't think any idiot would do that.
But what we got here, Uncle Henry, is they can't
do anything, Coach. They got what they call the ignorant
masses and the uh useful idiots. But the people on

(11:43):
seeing that like, uh what the Al Green?

Speaker 10 (11:47):
Yeah?

Speaker 6 (11:48):
And do you understand that they got a thing where
you fall on your sword. Yes, Sololesky, you got to
have somebody that's gonna do that. But but uh, you
got to remember where the money comes.

Speaker 2 (12:06):
Froump.

Speaker 5 (12:06):
Now, wait, I want to understand what you're saying. You're
saying that Al Green, the representative that shook his cane
at President Trump, that that is uh he is following
uh some blueprint where you've got You've got to have
somebody that's willing to take the hit for everybody else.

Speaker 6 (12:23):
Yeah, Okay, follow Lisky and then you follow on the sword,
and then George Soros will put you in place like
even the last UH Press Secretary for what is Joe
Biden Sheld MSNBC. You understand that everybody that falls on

(12:43):
their sword gets the job somewhere else doing something else stupid. Yeah,
all these jobs, all these jobs there do something stupid
and you're stupid of the prize, But they don't care
because the money's coming from somewhere. For these folks to

(13:05):
actually go along with castrating children for money, it's money.
You know how much money it costs to castrate an
eight year old child?

Speaker 5 (13:18):
I do not know. I've never looked that up.

Speaker 6 (13:22):
Well, when you can get the plastic surgeon, they ain't
even making this kind of money. Okay, And these kids
go on to commit suicide when I find out that's
a lie, I can never be. You know, there's something
in your genetic makeup that tells you you can never

(13:44):
be that.

Speaker 5 (13:47):
Well. Yeah, and they I think they had some research.
They came out with this week saying that it makes
people that go through these surgeries actually have increased mental
health problems, are more like to take their own life
than they were before.

Speaker 6 (14:04):
But the fact is the Democrat Party is so evil
back by the lift that they don't care who they
hurt or who they put in poverty, who is not
eating lunch, who is on the street, who is derelict.

(14:27):
They do not care because the prime agenda is to
get control and power. This is the thing that I'm
trying to say. If the black voters and the poor voters,
if anybody had any sense, there wouldn't be a lefty
progressive socialist Democrat Party. People like AOC is so stupid,

(14:51):
she didn't know that she wouldn't even know the blow
or note if snot would run out. But they listen
at them. They shouldn't understand. These people don't care about them.

Speaker 5 (15:00):
Ok Andrew, well, they've not walken there they I don't
know that anyone is going to wake up to that cliff.
I think some a few are. But for whatever reason,
we live in in bizarre times. W people are willing
to go along with this stuff.

Speaker 6 (15:15):
Hey man, okay, you have blessed heve, But what I
want to say now is the worst thing I ever
heard and the stupidest thing I ever heard in my life.
You got a black man say here angry left it.
That's the stupidest thing I ever heard in my life.
You have blessed they.

Speaker 5 (15:33):
Okay, Cliff, thank you very much for your phone call.
Two five one four seven nine two seven two three.
That's two five one four seventy nine two seven two three. Hello.

Speaker 10 (15:42):
Color you that live? Henry?

Speaker 5 (15:45):
Yes, sir, you are live on the radio.

Speaker 10 (15:48):
Good good, good fall of Cliff again today. It's my
third time following him, and he was right on the
money again today. Green is definitely a fall on sword guy.
I agreeed what Cliff said. It was all in the plans.
It's all been drawn up. He was the one chosen
and he was one to agree to it that this time.

(16:09):
But my reason for my call, though, mainly is Tubbleville
made us all look like complete buffoons in Alabama by
that statement. I agree with you. It's not on my
top fifteen. I don't know if it comes in my
top fifty turns that I have about the time, you know,
and my wife and I were talking, why not make

(16:29):
this a true test? You know, of where we are,
Let's let's let's let's split the middle and do thirty
minutes to see if if the Congress and the Senate
and everybody can can agree on thirty minutes and just
put it down the middle. What everybody? I don't leave everybody?

Speaker 5 (16:44):
Yeah, and I don't. I don't know that. That would
be even worse than where we are now. People would
be upset ten times.

Speaker 6 (16:53):
Be too simple, Yeah.

Speaker 10 (16:54):
That'd be too simple to my other question is I
didn't get a chance to call you the night after
the speech, uh, and I haven't heard anything about it.
And I kind of like these little fact towards along
is your is your fact chickers, your fact kicking team?
UH looked into how many applauses and how many standing
ovations we had the other night? We just even close

(17:16):
to uh to a record.

Speaker 5 (17:18):
My team has not looked into that. Do you know
the fact? Have you heard a number?

Speaker 11 (17:23):
I have not.

Speaker 10 (17:23):
I I'm always kind of interested in that little little
fact towards and you know, kind of these speeches and things.
So I have not heard that. I was just assuming
your team and already looked into that.

Speaker 5 (17:33):
Well I will, I will get them on that.

Speaker 10 (17:37):
Thank you. Sir, hey, thank you.

Speaker 5 (17:38):
Thank you so much for listening to the Clamorer Show
and calling it in my team. Team get on that.
You heard the man's request, Please now fulfill his research request.
Team right more after the break. Uncle Henry's Show, News

(18:05):
Radio seven ten WNTM. It is five thirty five here
on this Friday. A programming note, The Uncle Henry Show
will be live on location a week from today. I'll
be doing this radio show live on location at Greer's
Saint Louis Market in downtown Mobile. So we'd like to

(18:27):
stop in and say hello. Please do so a week
from today, next Friday, at Greer's Saint Louis Market in
downtown Mobile. I believe Johnny Gwinn is going to be
joining me, and I don't know, maybe some other folks
will be joining me as well on the microphone. That
is a week from today here on news Radio seven

(18:50):
ten WNTM, The Uncle Henry Show, Live from Greer's Saint
Louis Market. Teleophone number two five one four seven nine
two three two five seven nine two three email address
Uncle Henry at iHeartMedia dot com real quick. I brought
this up maybe in January. I saw that the generation

(19:13):
of children. We now name generations baby boomers, gen X,
the millennials. Generation Alpha is those born between twenty ten
and twenty twenty four. I think, UH the next generation's

(19:33):
Generation Beta. And I talked on the air in UH
in January about how I thought that was a terrible name.
Nobody wants to be called beta. It's not people don't
want that. In fact, it's an insult. If you're a
male and somebody calls you a Beta male, that's an
insulting thing. Well, the New York Post now reporting that

(20:02):
there are already people worried about the stigma attached to
the name generation Beta, and that they're expressing concern that
this is offensive, and so other people are picking up
on this, So look for a new name. They will
come up with something new for Generation Beta. As I

(20:23):
said months ago, that it ought to be something like
Generation Liberty, Generation Liberty, or Generation Freedom. Those are the
kind of you should lean toward those kind of names
instead of Beta. And I know it's Greek alphabet, but
still there's no there's why would we have to do
Why do we have to go by that? Two five
one four seven nine two seven two three. The telephone

(20:45):
number here on the Uncle Henry Show. Hello color, Oh Hendry,
LD the Mad Trucker, because are.

Speaker 1 (20:52):
Going to be free food down there next week?

Speaker 5 (20:55):
Uh No, there will not be free food.

Speaker 3 (20:57):
Is Lucy going to be there?

Speaker 5 (20:59):
I do not know yet.

Speaker 6 (21:01):
I've never met her.

Speaker 2 (21:02):
I would like to.

Speaker 10 (21:02):
I want to buy her cook book.

Speaker 2 (21:03):
If she said, is.

Speaker 12 (21:05):
Your mother going to be there?

Speaker 5 (21:06):
I don't believe so. Is that because she that's because
she would have something else to do?

Speaker 10 (21:15):
I thought you shouldn't fit.

Speaker 5 (21:16):
No, the only reason would be why is that she
would have other things to do? And then LD disconnected thing.
LD thank you very much for your live call about
Greer's Saint Louis Market and my family possibly showing up
there for that Friday broadcast. Now LD called in coincidentally
when I actually wanted to share an LD message because

(21:40):
this is a topic that I've thought about a little
bit this week, the Mad Trucker phoning in about this promise.
You may remember that we were I think the Attorney
General of the United States went on Fox News and
was talking about I've got the Epstein files on my
desk right now, and then we don't. We we're waiting,

(22:03):
we don't, we don't see the Epstein files.

Speaker 2 (22:05):
Hey, uncle Henry L. D.

Speaker 1 (22:09):
You know, I hope the Republicans know what they're doing.
It doesn't sound like it really doesn't sound like under
this Epstein stuff, she didn't get all that half of
us been thrown away.

Speaker 2 (22:21):
You'll never see it again.

Speaker 1 (22:22):
There we No, there won't be a single video in there.
Bill Clinton, Barack Obama, Oprah, winfy Winfrey, Uh, Clinton, Clinton's wives.

Speaker 10 (22:35):
Oh, you name it.

Speaker 1 (22:36):
All those videos have been destroyed. Why how do we
know that?

Speaker 12 (22:39):
Because they've had them.

Speaker 2 (22:40):
For four years.

Speaker 9 (22:41):
They're not there.

Speaker 1 (22:42):
They're not there anymore. She's gonna trot out some worthless
piece of paper.

Speaker 2 (22:48):
But but uncle Henry, that being.

Speaker 1 (22:51):
Said, they do have a witness that is still alive,
Gizille whatever her last name is.

Speaker 5 (22:57):
I think I think their name is sell Maxwell.

Speaker 1 (23:01):
They better get her under custody before she slips on
a banana peel or commits suicide.

Speaker 5 (23:08):
I believe she's in custody.

Speaker 1 (23:10):
Vin's Foster done to her.

Speaker 2 (23:12):
Let's think about this, uple Henley.

Speaker 1 (23:13):
Let's think about what the Democratic Party.

Speaker 2 (23:16):
Vince Foster was.

Speaker 1 (23:17):
Going to spill the beans and suddenly he ended up
in a rug dead. What about Barack Obama's suspicious cook
going out in their drownding in.

Speaker 2 (23:31):
The in the in the in the river or whatever.

Speaker 13 (23:34):
I mean, that's pretty suspicious. What about Bill Clinton's cook
cook drowned or something, end up dead if you don't
like the Democrat or if you say you're gonna say
something about the Democrats, you might end up in a rug.
So they better get that Giselle, whatever her name is,

(23:54):
they better get her where two Republicans at.

Speaker 1 (23:56):
All times can see her, because she's gonna just a
fear mark my words.

Speaker 5 (24:02):
Min ld, thank you for bringing that up. And also
you're gonna you say you're gonna end up in a rug?
You know. I if anybody decides to take me out,
please don't please use a rug not from my house.
I'm just saying because I've got two dogs. I mean,
I've got two dogs. Do I have to go into
the details on this just to use a different rug

(24:26):
for me? Please? If I need, if I end up
in a rug, please use In fact, go to go
to some place and get a cheap rug. Get it
just a nice, brand new cheap one. Don't put me
don't take my rug at home. I've got two dogs
and they're big, and I don't want to get into it.
But this Epstein stuff telling us that they're going to
release the files, and the files is on my desk,

(24:47):
and then what whoops, don't have the files. They're up
in New York. And now we've got a truck has load,
a truck has brought some files. There will be I
don't I'm with the LD that the there were so
many powerful people already named in this, and this guy
ran around and did what he did for so long.

(25:08):
You can't get away with what he was apparently getting
away with without a lot of people, very powerful people,
knowing about it and being implicated in it. So we're
not ever going to get the real whatever they tried
out to us. There's a high degree of chance that
it's made up, or they've picked one or two people

(25:29):
that they feel like they can scapegoat, maybe one big
name or something, and the rest of it, we're just
never gonna We're not going to know about it. We're
not going to know about it. Hello Color, Hey, O, Henry,
are you doing snake trapper? Snake Trapper? You are live
on the radio, Uncle Henry.

Speaker 11 (25:49):
LB's owned to something. I mean that may be the
only thing that saves that Maxwell's wife. And now you
got me old record of saying that I do believe
that that p D will never stand trial, Uncle Henry.
He's not he's not gonna make it to ever make
it to a court room because he knows too much

(26:09):
on too many powerful people unless the stuff that he's crimes,
he's committed is had the light shined on them. But yeah, man,
I also want to let you know over Henry, I'm
gonna get out there to see you Friday, and I'm
on attempt to try to drag a few people out
of their shell like that that young Bay George David Johnson.

(26:30):
And I'm calling old maryon Dorgon.

Speaker 5 (26:32):
Now now what are you now? The list people listening
on the radio are wondering what you're talking about. Snake Trapper.

Speaker 11 (26:40):
Okay, Henry, I know you announced that you were gonna
be at Greer's right next Friday. Yes, and uh man,
I've met some wonderful people through your show on Henry,
and now that George David Johnson is one of them.
Uh maryon Dorgon. I ran in and him and Walmart
I had my snake Trapper shirt and had on and
he recognized me and come over. You know, I mean
I've chatted him many times online.

Speaker 5 (27:01):
But are you're talking you're talking about people that you
have chatted with online?

Speaker 11 (27:06):
Uh no, sir, I've actually met these people. Okay, but
you know they tell me they longed to get out
there and meet some of your callers and your listeners.
And so this is our chance. Okay, So if they
can make it, mister Bill O'Dell, I mean he's in there,
you know, just about every day. He needs to come
out and let people see the man behind the words

(27:28):
to all right.

Speaker 5 (27:29):
Well, the Snake Trapper, thank you. I would love for
you to bring all these additional people in.

Speaker 11 (27:35):
Yes, sir, buddy, and you take care.

Speaker 5 (27:37):
Thank you Snake Trapper for your phone call. More show
after the break here on news Radio seventy ten Uncle

(28:05):
Henry Show, News Radio seven ten WNTM. It is five
point fifty news headlines coming up in ten minutes. Here
on the unc Clenburg Show. Telephone number two five one
four seven nine two seven two three, Hello.

Speaker 4 (28:19):
Color, Hey, Uncle Henry is almost almost famous, Steve almost famous?

Speaker 5 (28:26):
Steve, how you been.

Speaker 4 (28:28):
I've been doing good?

Speaker 12 (28:30):
Hey?

Speaker 4 (28:30):
A few minutes about twenty years or some minutes ago
you said it was five thirty five. Yes, and five
thirty five is a number that follows me around. When
I was a kid, my daddy his truck for the
company you worked for, the number was five thirty five,
and I had a model remote control airplane in the sixties,
one of those guests link gas pirate engines, and the

(28:53):
tail number on it was five thirty five. My first
job out of high school, I drove a service truck
and we had a two way radio in it, and
my call number was five thirty five. And just throughout
my life, that number five thirty five follows me wherever
I go.

Speaker 5 (29:10):
It seems like, well, how about that? How about that
I wish I were I wish I were like a
fortune teller or something, and maybe I could give you
some type of insight on this.

Speaker 4 (29:21):
Hey, that would be great.

Speaker 5 (29:24):
Well, uh, I you know what, I'll think of you
now every because I give that time out during every
Uncle Henry show. I'll think of you each day as
I say that it's five thirty five, almost Steve time.

Speaker 4 (29:38):
So I'll be almost famous for that.

Speaker 5 (29:40):
Yes you will.

Speaker 4 (29:42):
Yes, Hey, that's great. I've got more ways I'm gonna
call you. I keep say hey, you, I'm gonna call
you and tell you some more more ways. I'm almost famous, okay,
so I'll do that in the coming weeks and months.

Speaker 5 (29:55):
Well, I'm looking forward to it. Almost famous, Steve.

Speaker 4 (29:59):
Well, I enjoy your show always.

Speaker 5 (30:00):
Well, God bless you. Thank you very much, and I
always enjoy talking to you and you too, almost famous Steve.

Speaker 6 (30:07):
Hello color Hey, huh, Yes, sir, I want to put.

Speaker 3 (30:14):
My Nicholas Worthy in on this daylight saving time stuff. Yes, sir,
it don't matter me one way to the other. This
day it's daylight. When the sun comes up, it gets
dog anyway, so I don't see no big deal about it.
Whatever makes that might happen makes me happy.

Speaker 5 (30:35):
So you don't care what we decide to do.

Speaker 3 (30:39):
It don't matter to me one way too, all right,
So I ain't working no more. And uh, I get it.
When I want to go to bed when.

Speaker 5 (30:49):
I want to you're in your own time zone.

Speaker 3 (30:53):
That's right.

Speaker 5 (30:54):
Well, congratulations on that, Thank you, sir.

Speaker 10 (30:59):
Have good ease you too, Thank.

Speaker 5 (31:00):
You, Thank you for listening to the show. Thank you
for phoning that in. Because I'd also thought about that.
I thought about the the the prison that some people
feel like they're in because of their clock. They feel
like they're in a prison. I gotta wait until the
I gotta wait until the numbers are the right numbers

(31:23):
before I can do what I want to do. I
gotta wait. I gotta wait in a prison because of
the clock. And I thought about daylight saving time and
flipping forward and flopping back with our clocks, and how
there are two ends of the spectrum that do not care.

(31:45):
You would have the the somebody that has just about nothing,
They don't really have to pay attention to the clock.
And then there's the extremely wealthy. They might even be
able to afford to buy their own time zone. They
don't have to worry about it. So both ends of
the spectrum not held back in a prison by their watch.

(32:10):
Let's see, is there any anything else?

Speaker 1 (32:12):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (32:12):
Yeah, yesterday I shared with you a story about a
man that spent eighty eight thousand dollars at an auction
to buy a flaming hot cheeto that looked like a Pokemon.
Eighty eight thousand dollars this person paid for a flaming

(32:33):
hot cheeto that looked like a Pokemon. And I did
get a voicemail on that topic.

Speaker 12 (32:39):
Hey uncle Henry nasco Bill, if you're asking about that
cheeto shape like a Pokemon.

Speaker 6 (32:44):
Yes, well what you.

Speaker 12 (32:45):
Do is you put it on the wall next to
your banana with duct tape. Now, it's a Cheeto, so
you probably put it next to the banana with duct tape,
but instead use a piece of scotch tape to tape
it to the wall and then turn around to tell
it for one hundred and eighty seven thousand dollars.

Speaker 5 (33:03):
Oh, it's an investment.

Speaker 12 (33:05):
But in the meantime, if the Cheetos people strike a
deal with the Pokemon people and come out with Pokemon
shaped flaming hot Cheetos, your investment's gonna go to a
heck and a hand basket. Anyway, talking later on, Henry,
have a good weekend.

Speaker 5 (33:20):
Thank you very and nav Cobil thank you. I didn't
realize when because I did ask the question yesterday. What
do you do with it? You spend eighty eight grand
on a flaming hot Cheeto that looks like a Pokemon?
What do you do with it? You don't want to
eat it? What are you gonna do with it? Nav
Coobil told me you you look for somebody dumber than you.

(33:42):
You look, yeah, you look for somebody dumber than you
that has more money than you. Problem solved, then you've
made an excellent investment in that flaming hot cheeto. Right,
there's more to come. I've got just I've got more
stuff to get to, but it will have to wait
until after the top of the hour news break here

(34:02):
on news Radio seven ten WNTM, The Uncle Henry Show,
and I do appreciate you listening to the show. Listen
to all of this week's shows as podcasts on the
iHeartRadio app or at NewsRadio seven ten dot com. This

(34:35):
is the Uncle Henry Show here on news Radio seven
ten WNTM, and this half hour of show, gonna check
some voicemail messages and perhaps address a news item. Voicemail
number is two five one two one six nineteen seventy six.
That's two five one two one six, nineteen seventy six. Now,

(34:55):
I've had voicemails stacked up all week along here on
the unk Leander Show. I want to get to some
of these voicemails that has just that's just been stacked up,
kind of like my dirty clothes. Now, last week I
think it was a week ago today Navco Bill called in,

(35:17):
or maybe a week ago plus a day. We were
talking a lot about raccoons on the Uncle Henry Show,
Different stories of raccoons, and Navco Bill called the show
and talked about how he had dealt with his own
raccoon issues, I assume in the Navco area. Now this

(35:40):
inspired a call from the mad Trucker. Mad trucker hearing
from Navco Bill of.

Speaker 1 (35:47):
Any inquiring the inquiring minds want to know Navco Bill
is talking about raccons and I don't want to talk
about raccons.

Speaker 2 (35:55):
I want to ask.

Speaker 9 (35:56):
I want to ask.

Speaker 1 (35:57):
Navco Bill if he lives on Napco or he lives
off Napco. Does he have a like a fifty caliber
machine gun attached to his car, maybe a bazooka on
the on the hood of the car.

Speaker 9 (36:13):
Maybe he's got spikes.

Speaker 3 (36:14):
In the front.

Speaker 1 (36:15):
Because man, I'm a brave man, and I don't believe
i'd go down Napco Road at night. I know you
wouldn't walk down it. You find me one person that
would walk from the trade tracks that Navco all the
way up to what is that Macpay MCPAI Boulevard or
whatever you find me one man that'll do that, and

(36:36):
I want to shake his hand because I believe me,
Napco Road has become a very very shall we say,
interesting place to live or drive it through.

Speaker 5 (36:54):
All right, well, ld, thank you for that observation. That
your impression of Nabco, which I'm sure people that live
in that area don't like hearing your impression of Navco.
I'm trying to visualize where you're talking about train tracks
up to McVeigh. I'll tell you that I had family

(37:17):
that lived off Navco. Probably it must have been thirty
years ago, and then it was, well, it was about
twenty years ago that I had family that lived off
of Navco. That that determined what you have observed. They
determined that they needed to relocate, and so I had

(37:38):
found I guess it was about twenty maybe about fifteen
years ago. They left, and they left all of Mobile
County but Navco. I back in the day, I spent
some time around that area and still physically beautiful. I
know there's some blight here and there, but still the

(38:00):
hypography of South Alabama is very beautiful. We live in
a place I consider all of our local flora and
fauna very beautiful and so Navco does have natural beauty.
Maybe one day it will bounce back LD Maybe maybe
it won't be dangerous to walk around late at night.

(38:21):
Not that any of us need to be walking around
late at night, but thank you for the voicemail voice
one number two five one two one six, nineteen seventy six.
That's one two five one two one six nineteen seventy six.
Now let's see. Sixty seven year old Chris of West
Locksley did something I love, which is where he finds

(38:44):
news items and reads them for me and tells me
about it so that it saves me time. I don't
have to read the news myself. Sixty seven year old
Chris found something almost a week ago that he wanted
to tell me about.

Speaker 2 (38:59):
Oh, Tyler Coumble of Perus and the Internet. On this
Saturday morning, Saturday morning, read across this here article HGTV
list This Alabama town is the most charming in the state.
It's also top fifty in the US.

Speaker 5 (39:17):
All right, So this town you're going to tell us
about you've found is allegedly the most charming in the
state of Alabama. All right.

Speaker 2 (39:27):
This comes from the Montgomery Advertiser and they say that.

Speaker 10 (39:33):
I'm not going to read all of it.

Speaker 2 (39:34):
It's pretty good, lengthy, but it begins with nestles along
the shimmering shores of Mobile Bay. Fairhope, Alabama is a
charming town where blooming flowers, art galleries, and breath taking
sunsets create an inviting haven for locals and visitors alike.

Speaker 5 (39:53):
All right, now, I pause the voicemail just to reflect
on the the imagery that the writer packed into that sentence.
Charming town where blooming flowers. What did you say, breathtaking
sunsets and inviting haven for locals and visitors something like that.

(40:16):
I suppose that is true. I suppose that is an
accurate description of fair Hope. What else did the article say?

Speaker 2 (40:24):
And it goes on talking about what a great place
it is mentioned Fair Hopes, France Quarter Fablus. In nineteen
ninety four, the Grand Hotel, Golf and Resort, SPA and
Page and Palette bookstore thought you might find that interesting, uncle.
They said, if you go to Page and Palette, stop

(40:47):
in and enjoy a cup of coffee and live music
on Saturday, you may find a signed book by local
authors Rick Bragg and Fanny Plague. How charming.

Speaker 5 (41:00):
All right, sixty sixty se of you, Old Chris. Thank
you for reading me the story from the Montgomery Advertiser again,
and you the listener, if you'd like to read me
news articles or summarize them for me. Two five one
two one six, nineteen seventy six. That's two five one
two one six, nineteen seventy six. Yes, Fair Hope. I've
always found fair Hope to be charming, but over the

(41:23):
past ten years or more, many thousands of people have
come from other places to enjoy the charm of that area,
and of course that has changed the character of the town.
I still love going over there. Most of my family
lives there. I will end up there one day if

(41:44):
I don't drop working in Mobile Now, there's always the
chance I may never make it back to Fair Hope.
I may be I may get a call from somebody
attacking my mother on the air, and I may just
finally drop. I may just who knows. You never know.
You never know when you're gonna go. But if I
have a choice in it, I'll eventually end up over there,

(42:05):
simply because that's where most of the biological family is
and I want to be around them. I'm going to
need to be around them so that when I need
to be wheeled into a doctor's office, I'll have somebody,
some some nephew or niece to wheel me in there.
But it is changing, It is definitely changing. I've noticed

(42:26):
a lot of the people that I know that were
born and raised there. They grumble quietly. Yes, they grumble
quietly about the new folks that have come in and
tried to change this and try to change that. But
it's still very charming. Again, thank you for reading that
to me, Chris again, Voice my number two five one,

(42:47):
nineteen seventy six. I've got more to get to, but
first I must take a time out for traffic. We're
gonna get a traffic report, I hope, a weather report,
and then words from the gorgeous spompus of the Uncle
Henry Show, which I appreciate very very much. All right,
back after the break with more Uncle Henry Show here
on news radio seventenld.

Speaker 8 (43:12):
Hold hold, hold, hold.

Speaker 5 (43:22):
It says the Uncle Henry Show here on news radio
seven ten w NTM.

Speaker 8 (43:28):
Hold.

Speaker 5 (43:32):
We have news head lines coming up in ten minutes
on WNTM. We go back to some voicemails. Voice one
number two five one two one six, nineteen seventy six.
That's two five one two one six nineteen seventy six.
Earlier this week had messages about Marty Gras voicemails about

(43:54):
Marty Gras, and LD called in and said people didn't
didn't like beads anymore, that they didn't want to catch
them in Mardi Gras parades, and that the city should
discourage the use of beads. And I just didn't see
that when I was When I was in the few
Marti Gras parades I went to this year, I saw
people still trying to catch the beads, and I mentioned

(44:15):
that I noticed people are investing more time and effort
and even cash into getting elaborate fancy beads, elaborate fancy beads,
and l d LD called back about the elaborate fancy beads.

Speaker 1 (44:34):
Hey, uncle, Henry LV, you hit the nail right on
the head, sir, right on the head. It's those cheap beads.
Just those did Derek look at these people just would
not they didn't want them. But you're right, the high
end stuff that they were fighting for. That I've gotta
I gotta recant that story. I saw a lot of

(44:55):
marijuana beads thrown off the clothes. I saw a lot
of people fighting for.

Speaker 2 (44:59):
Them, the beads.

Speaker 1 (45:02):
With the little beer can in them, or the little
corn and what else. I say, I saw a crawfish
I saw, oh man, you've named it.

Speaker 2 (45:12):
I saw one with nuns.

Speaker 1 (45:13):
And I'm not gonna say anything about that, but you're right.
The high end beads they want.

Speaker 5 (45:18):
Hey, by the way, somebody gave me the nun beads,
and I would like to thank you for not saying
anything about the nun beads.

Speaker 1 (45:28):
Oh Man, you've named it. I saw one with nuns,
and I'm not gonna say anything about that, but uh,
you're right, the high end beads they want. The cheap
stuff they don't want anymore.

Speaker 5 (45:38):
So I stand corrected, all right, Thank you very well,
l D. Thank you for that. I'm thinking about we
do a lot of things to raise money for Saint Jude.
At ninety five KSJ and also here at iHeartMedia and Mobile.
I mean thinking about next year of wondering if we

(45:59):
could put together some kind of Saint Jude fancy bead
that we could use to raise money for Saint Jude.
That's something we're thinking of here, and I'm you know.
And by the way, if you run a charity, a nonprofit, uh,
look into that. Look into coming up with your own
special fancy beads that people could purchase for morti gras

(46:20):
and throw that could earn money for your for your
nonprofit or your charity. I think people would go for that.
All right, let's see I've got another message here. Let
me go to longtime caller Buford. Buford heard l D
talk about setting up game cameras in his backyard and Beuford,

(46:45):
I think Buford has done this.

Speaker 9 (46:48):
And hey, listen to mail these morse mails about him
putting the game camera in his backyard where he used
to live. Hen I've done that much. Well, I had,
uh when I started trapping all these dag um raccoons.

Speaker 3 (47:04):
That got me a daggum game camera.

Speaker 9 (47:07):
And uh, i'd put it where I watched them traps
and henry them things. They picked up some freaky stuff
at night. I ain't gonna lie. It'd be weird lights,
shadowy figure types and uh, but I mean it's interesting.

(47:30):
He was kind of what walks through your backyard? Man?
I mean found out I got a family of foxes
that lived back there, and I don't even know where
they live.

Speaker 10 (47:41):
I don't live.

Speaker 9 (47:41):
Next to any type of woods of any substantial size
at all.

Speaker 5 (47:46):
But yeah, okay, you know, but you've still got a
gigantic raccoon problem that.

Speaker 9 (47:53):
Hanry I caught one image of look like a feller
was climbing. I got this old, broke down, old dog fence,
and it looked like some old fella was climbing over
it getting into my yard. And boy it was creepy looking.
But after further inspection, it was just another dag on,

(48:16):
big old raccoon climbing that dagon fence to get a
god knows whatever it is in my yard. They like
to get at so much. But uh, anyway, it is interesting.
He is right about it. I mean, it is very
interesting to put a little game came out in your
backyard and just just to see what happens, man, see

(48:37):
what critters pass on through. But man, him having a
dagum fella just standing there staring at your trailer at
two in the morning. I mean, that's how horror movies start.
And in sometime, man, I want who that might have been.
That's that's serial killer behavior right there.

Speaker 5 (49:00):
And uh yeah, I don't want to belabor the point,
but yes, yes, most of us would be very disturbed
by such a thing.

Speaker 12 (49:10):
Man.

Speaker 9 (49:10):
It's either that or someone's got a boyfriend he don't
know about. But uh man, I couldn't imagine how freaky
that would be. I mean that that would get to me.
I just blashed off several rounds in the middle of
the nine, just to keep everybody honest. Anyway, Henry, you
have a good day.

Speaker 5 (49:28):
Thank you Beuford for your voicemail. The voicemail number two
five one two one six, nineteen seventy six. That's two
five one two one six, nineteen seventy six to reach
the Uncle Henry Show voicemail. I'm at a time for
today in this week. Thank you for listening to the
Uncle Henry Show. As they say in Sarahland, have a

(49:51):
good one and as they say in Theodore, take it easy.

Speaker 3 (49:57):
All right later

Speaker 10 (50:00):
I'll write later
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