Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, let's take the next month off, director Ryan Nigel,
you want to go to roam with me. I don't
worry about how we're gonna fund it. Let's just say
we're gonna do it. It will happen. Wow. Yeah, realizing
real quick about capitalism. There the mayor elect of New
York City that President Trump had a get along meeting
(00:23):
in the White House. What do we want Do we
want him to act like they act or do we
want him to have some respect and be cordial? He
did say some kind of weird things like, there's no
difference in the party. Said, are those his moments where
he really doesn't know what he wants to say? He
just says some stuff and he's like not thinking about
what he's really saying. No, there's a big difference because,
(00:45):
mister president, just a few weeks ago, you were saying,
it's not just socialism, it's a communist in there. No,
we got quite a different view with communists. But anyhow,
they had a backslapping momently. Time they act that way,
you got those on the right will be like a
little bit, how I'm acting right now? And then you
(01:05):
got those on the left look at him. Chull meing
up to Trump. I guess that's a no winner. They
tried to get mom Dommy, well, do you still think
he's a fascist in President Trump cut it off, said no, no,
you don't need to answer that. That takes too long.
Let's just move on. But you heard right there. That
was the mom Dommy spokeswoman. New York will always be
(01:28):
a city of immigrants. Mom Dommy said it as well.
So I guess until an illegal alien, he should never
be here in the first place. What is it murder
somebody in New York City or or violently rape somebody?
Or I just said violently rape somebody? How about just
rape somebody? It's it's violent to begin with. What murders
(01:53):
a little kid on the street. Then then you'll move
to protect That was mom Dommy's incoming chief of STAF said,
made clear, we're gonna uphold our sanctuary laws in our city.
All our immigrants will be safe in our city. You're
not gonna come in here with your inhumane practices. They
will all be safe. We will hide law breakers again.
(02:17):
We allowed them to get along away with us for
way too long. The first time that the first armpit
hair woman and wherever the first sanctuary was said out loud.
We should just put her in jail. No, you're defying
the United States government. Here, you're gonna harbor a criminal.
(02:38):
Mom Dommy said, they'll tell uh, just tell nice to
pound sand. Oh you're driving under the influence. Now you're
not gonna come after them. They just told something. Oh
they just committed fraud. Oh they just vantaized somebody. Oh
they're just in possession of horse tranquilizer. Oh, they're just
trafficking the horse tranquilizer. No violent crime. What about what
(03:03):
is reference to as some of the smaller crimes? What
would you say that would be stealing a citizen's Social
Security number. You're not taking their life, you're not hurting them.
Let me tell you here about Dan Clover. He's a
married father of two in Minnesota, an illegal alien worked
(03:27):
hours in another state until his arrest by DHS back
in March. He's from Guatemala. He is Clever's id to
get a job. Employer reported the wages to the irs,
then demanded extra taxes from the Clover family. The other
fake Dan Clover had earned more than his own salary
(03:47):
at a local sugar beat factory. The guy from Guatemala,
which pushed a total income under the real clever family
social Security number into a higher tax bracket. Se how
that happens, So twice he contacted law enforcement, filed identity
therapy port with the federal government, where Sad end up
(04:09):
probably in a big old pile with tens of thousands
of others that are filed each year. He said. His
father in Minnesota waited for relief. The IRS docked his
annual tax returns, garnished paychecks, he said. Finally, a few
months before their wedding, his soon to be wife decided
to pay off the balance, emptied her savings, send in
(04:31):
a check for six thousand just to get out of it.
That lasted until the next tax season when a new
tax bill arrived, this one for twenty two thousand. Because
of the illegal aliens income. So Daniel Daniel Klover up
there in Minnesota and his family spent so much time,
(04:53):
so much I didn't think of all the amount of
energy to go through that. He went to the IRS,
He visited the so the security offices around the state.
He filed police reports three times. Then he said it
stopped for a few years, probably because the illegal ailing
got deported or something, or maybe it wasn't working. He said,
(05:14):
my taxes were normal. I thought the problem was over,
And he said a few years later it started all
over again. This was the story was in the New
York Times. What the editor of this story did not
disclose as how much that this man and his wife
and kids were required to pay the IRS due to
(05:37):
the fraud by the illegal aliens. They admitted IRS oversight
was backlogged with millions of suspicious numbers eighty thousand reports
of Social Security fraud in just the last six months alone,
But they had little sympathy for him, they write. By
the start of twenty twenty five, the Guatemalan was preparing
for another graveyard shift in Saint Joseph, Missouri, his work
(06:00):
boots in the darkness of his drafty rental while his
wife and five children slept. He packed their school lunches
for the next day, drove to the dog food factory,
and gathered with his coworkers to say their nightly prayer,
and he swiped his badge to begin another twelve hour shift.
As Daniel Clover, sinking deeper into an identity that wasn't
(06:22):
really his own. By the time, Trump was elected to
a second term. There were five children in Perez Bravo's
house who also dependent on the money. They came each
Friday in Clover's name. They didn't talk about the employee
or the employer that accepted. The Guatemalans clearly fake ID numbers.
(06:49):
How many times as the GOP stepped up to stop
this in the last twenty years, Think how many people
have been affected like this. They arrested him in March.
They arrested the illegalho had stolen his identity and created
all of this in his life. He faces a mandatory
minimum sentence of two years in prison followed by deportation
(07:11):
O in the Guatemala. But that's not the end of
the story. When the illegal alien was here stealing mister
Clover's identity, messing up his whole financial world, he killed
an illegal The illegal killed an elderly American in a
car crash. Court ruled to death was not his fault,
(07:38):
but that elderly American was killed because the illegalien was
in the United States. This needs to be handled now.
You know what else needs to be handled, not with
executive order but codified into law by Congress. The question
of birthright citizenship This is one of the most well,
I'll say misunderstood that the Fourteenth Amendment guaranteed citizenship anybody
(08:02):
born on US soil doesn't matter. Doesn't matter if your
mom snuck into the country and you were born in
a Denny's bathroom, You're an American. It's not whether the
Constitution protects the rights of kids born to ill legal
as it does. There's the equal protection clause, But the
question is the citizenship clause. They were never the parents
(08:24):
were never legally part of any kind of policy in America.
They were not under the jurisdiction thereof, which is stated
right there. Clause reads, all person born or naturalized in
the US and subject to the jurisdiction thereof are citizens.
That never meant just being physically present here. I can
(08:46):
be physically president in China by breaking into it, But
does that immediately make me under the jurisdiction thereof, and
I have rights and all of that, I'd be under
the jurisdiction of a court. They were ratifying this. The
children of Native Americans were excluded, even though they were
born within the US borders, So you know what they
(09:07):
were talking about. Then, so were kids of foreign diplomats
jurisdiction meant full lawful under US authority, and if you're
here illegally, that's not you. You don't meet that definition. Just
like somebody from another country is a diplomat, they can't
(09:30):
come here and have a baby and claim that that's
an American. Eighteen seventy three, Chief Justice Samuel Miller wrote
that subject to the jurisdiction did not apply universally to
everyone born within the nation's borders.
Speaker 2 (09:45):
It was always told to me that you needed a
constitutional member. First one amendment.
Speaker 1 (09:50):
You don't do it.
Speaker 2 (09:51):
Number one, Number one, you don't need that. Number three,
that's superjefinit Well, you can definitely do it with an
Act of Congress. But now there's I can do it
just with an executive order.
Speaker 1 (10:02):
Yeah, but how long will that stay? We already saw
judge overturn it. He tried it with the executive order
and they got overturned. This seems to be codified in
the law. As many as a quarter of a million,
two or fifty thousand kids of illegals are born in
the United States each year, and this, guys, that incentivizes
Think of all the conversations happening in foreign languages, but
(10:25):
you're pregnant. Yes, I'm pregnant. All right. Great, let's sneak
into America and we're anchored there. So it's called anchor babies.
Birth tourism huge from China. Birth tourism. Hey, let's go
to Disneyland and I'm eight and a half months pregnant.
(10:50):
Let's ride that roller coaster a lot. Please please get
this baby out. Whooo ah and labor. Look at that,
you're anchored to America. Meanwhile, we got people doing it
the right way. Those are the people that we want
in America, some of them that will do it the
(11:12):
right way. You know, pay your fees, get vetted. We
know who you are, we know your record, you come here,
you do it the right way. Yes, we're proud of
people when they become you as citizens. How happy they
are and hugging and you know, it was just something
that you know, I guess maybe I take it for
(11:33):
granted because my soul was dropped here. But they love it.
They did it the right way. Now to me, people
doing it the wrong way. And if you want to
use the fourteen Amendment against birthright citizenship, the reason that
came up it was to give the rights of freed
slaves and prevent states from denying their citizenship.
Speaker 2 (11:54):
Now, how ridiculous. We're the only country in the world
where a person comes in, has a baby and the
baby is essentially a citizen of the United States for
eighty five years with all of those benefits. It's ridiculous.
It's ridiculous, and it has to end.
Speaker 1 (12:07):
Yeah, can you imagine somebody breaking into your house. You
wake up in the morning and she's cradling a baby
in your kitchen, blood on the floor of birth that
happened in your kitchen overnight. You didn't know it. They
broke in. And then the father of that child is saying,
you're now responsible. You're gonna raise it, you're gonna feed it.
(12:29):
And since we had the baby right here in your house,
we're anchored here, so we're also going to live in
your house. Wouldn't that affects your finances? Of course? So
how does birthright citizenship? Well, that seems insane to tell
somebody that they have to accept somebody like that in
their house. Well, America's nothing but a bunch of houses,
(12:50):
that's all we are.
Speaker 3 (12:51):
This is the Trevor carry Show on The Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (12:57):
We're protesting ice down at Home Depot down in Monrovia,
southern California. What were they doing. They were buying ice scrapers,
but they don't sell them, so they were buying plastic
putty knives. Over and over. There were over one hundred
of these smell a leftists at the Monrovia Home Depot
a protest ice. They lined up, they bought their putty knives. Guys,
(13:20):
they're not icecrapers. They were like less than a dollar,
and then they lined up to return them all and
then go back get it again and get in the
check out line again. What are you proving? You're upsetting everybody.
That's like when they closed down freeways, shut down bridges.
(13:44):
I wish we reacted when they shut down roadways, like
the whatever the Native American tribe tribal land that they
were on out there, was it burning man, it was
some festival out in the desert and it was it
was a reservation. And that law enforcement they plowed right
through it, you know, those law enforcement pickup trucks with
(14:07):
the big guard on the front. They were like they
moved the people out of the way and then they
opened up the road. Remember when they chained themselves on
the Golden gate Bridge. HB had a hard time unlocking it.
They were all chained. Yeah. I would have dangled them
over the side on that chain. They're not gonna fall,
they're locked in. Yeah, you're not gonna do this again,
(14:27):
are you? No?
Speaker 3 (14:28):
Sir?
Speaker 1 (14:29):
Swighing out there, anti ICE protesters just disrupting home depot
thinking they're buying ice scrapers. They had They literally had
nothing better to do, don't they. They call these buy ins? Now,
who had that idea? Yeah, that's the way you're gonna
You're really gonna get corporate's attention there. Why were they
(14:53):
protesting at this story? It was in the area where
ICE had tried to apprehend at a home depot and
illegal Ali wanted over crime, and he was out there
as a day worker, and he took off running and
then he took off across the two ten freeway. What
happens when you take off running across the two ten
freeway in the middle of a workday, Yes, that happened.
He was struck and hit by traffic. I said nobody
(15:16):
was pursuing him. So to protest that, they blocked off
the entrance of the home depot parking lot and then
went in and started buying putty scrapers. Home Depot released
a statement in response, stop it, stop it now, that's
what they said, please stop it. All capital letters. They
(15:40):
should put an eighty percent restocking fee on those things.
Restocking fee on putty knives. Now, if you got some
pain on you, we're gonna go ahead and give you
your money back. Just a dude in there, he's gonna
go back for a putty knife. You're doing whatever they
can do. In other news, an illegal release into the
(16:03):
country by Obama who was provided driver's license by a
sanctuary state eventually ordered to be deported arrested. Earlier this month,
we're killing an eight year old girl car crashing Boise.
Elvin Cabe Arrow was driving a pickup truck legally via
driver's license given him by the state of Oregon. Now
(16:24):
they didn't say this, this wasn't a dui. A lot
of times it is a dui. An American driver could
have turned a right instruck the little girl crossing the street.
But when Elvin hit the little girl, he had an
outstanding federal warrant with Ice for failure to appear for
an immigration hearing that ordered resultant in judge ordering for
(16:45):
him to be removed, and he should have been. He said,
I don't need to go to immigration hearing, well he didn't.
Oregon set him up. Man, keep cruising around. This little girl,
eight year old little girl life taken by an illegals,
and there been in our country. Let alone issue or
driver's license by the sanctuary state of Oregon. Oklahoma's taking
(17:07):
care of it with ice. They're pulling over big rigs.
Isn't that amazing? If you're driving a Thanksgiving here? Do
know California? They'll give out commercial driver's licenses to no name.
Ye had a no name drivers that do not know English.
(17:29):
Secretary State Marco Rubio, he made a big statement on
mass migration. This is from the Department of State here.
Mass migration poses an existential threat to Western civilization. Underminds
the stability of key American airlines allies today. The State
Department instructed US embassies to report on the human rights
implications and public safety impacts of mass migration. He said.
(17:55):
In the UK, thousands of girls have been victimized by
grooming gangs involving my men. These girls were left to
suffer abuse for years before authority stepped in he said,
in Germany, nine men migrants convicted to the game rape
of a fifteen year old girl. A German woman didn't
(18:16):
like that that happened, so she insulted one of the
rapists online. And do you know in Germany she was
given a harsher sentence than the rapists themselves. This is
summer release from our US State Department for Secretary of
State Marco Rubio talking about the abuses of vast migration
around the world. I played audio. It seems like the
(18:37):
end of the week. It was last week of Bill
Maher with Pat Oswald, the actor on there. And Bill
Maher went't having any of it. He goes, this is
one of you're wokeism. You don't even know what's going
on with the abusive girls in the UK. Oh you
mean the royal family. No, no, no, he had no idea.
Bill Maher was upset and rightfully so it's abuse that's
going on, whether it's our highways or we don't even
(19:01):
know where the missing well, I guess it's less than
three hundred thousand. Now Trump administration and Tom Hollman have
found many of these missing kids. Guys, you don't hear news.
I'm talking about it. You don't hear our city council
talking about You know a lot of those kids are
right here in this valley.
Speaker 3 (19:14):
You know that.
Speaker 1 (19:17):
It's too close to Thanksgiving to be this angry me.
Let me drop it down here a little bit, all right,
lower the shoulders. Let's laugh at President Trump, even though
the auto pin's not funny. But he's funny, isn't he
too handsome?
Speaker 2 (19:29):
Thanksgiving turkeys and this is their lucky day. This is
a lucky day for them. But before going any further,
I want to make an important announcement because you remember
last year, after a thorough and very rigorous investigation by
Pam Bondi and all of the people at the Department
(19:50):
of Justice, the FBI, the CIA, the White House Counsel's Office,
and the Apartment of Everything. We have a Department of
Everything that is I think that's called the White House
into a terrible situation caused by a man named Sleepy
Joe Biden. He used an autopen last year for the
(20:11):
Turkey's pardon. So I have the official duty to determine,
and I have determined that last year's Turkey pardons are
totally invalid. Think about as are the pardons of about
every other person that was pardoned other than Where's Hunter?
No hunters was good. That was the one parton pamp
(20:33):
that was good. Right. The rest of them are all invalid.
I don't know what the hell you're going to do
about that. But that's now We're going to take a
little of the joke and that is a mess. Stop
but there hereby nol and void. The turkey is known
as peachin blossom last year have been located and they
were on their way to be processed, in other words,
to be killed. But I have stopped that journey and
(20:56):
I am officially pardoning them and they will be served
for Thanksgiving dinner. How's worth an applaug?
Speaker 3 (21:05):
This is the Trevor Chary Show on the Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (21:10):
We're out of money, out of ani money. California doesn't
live in reality though reality is. We got a little
bit of a but budget but but but but budget problem. Yep,
we do went from bad to worst. States Legislative Analysis
Office release the twenty twenty six twenty seven budget eighteen billion,
eighteen billion in there in the hole man five billion
(21:35):
more than what they originally said back in June. What
are you using high speed rail mathematicians, how do you
mess up five billion? It's a lot of money. I
know it doesn't sound like as much with all the
big numbers that we play with nationally. In twenty twenty
three to twenty twenty four, we had a twenty seven
billion dollar deficit, twenty twenty four to twenty twenty five
(21:58):
fifty five billion, twenty twenty five, twenty twenty six, fifteen billion,
and now we're talking about the additional added on. Okay,
it's gonna be about eighteen billion. Well, I guess he
can go out and campaign across America on that. I'm
lowering our budget deficit in California, I'm doing good. Have
(22:21):
you noticed Newsom's found some Bible verses? Recently? Even the
San Francisco Chronicle noticed started reporting on newsom string of
Biblical references and speeches in public statements headline, San Francisco Chronicle.
As Gavin Newsom's national profile grows, his rhetoric is getting
more biblical. We'll look at the Jesus quoter. He's even
(22:45):
going back quoting the Old Testament, and he said Trump's
religious rhetoric. This is to a clip on social media
in which President Trump noted that caring for vulnerable children's
and orphans is so important in so big in the Bible.
Newsom said, you literally fought in court to shrip families
of food assistance. They tried to turn it into a
(23:10):
to a God thing, like you're not being godly. You've
ever read the Bible, you do know that feeding the hungry,
that's right in the middle of God's heart. He tells
God's people to care for the poor. You cannot deny that.
But what Newsom is talking about a little unbiblical there,
(23:32):
governor Satan government programs. That's not what we use to
fill in what God tells us that we need to
do and to love our neighbor. Never liked that. Knewsom
when he was down in Brazil said, in the spirit
of Isaiah, we want to be repairers of the breach
he's going around. Okay, that that's good. That was talking
(23:56):
about Israel rebuilding their walls. But what what cause the devastation? Gavin,
That's what we need to talk about. What calls that well?
Because the Israelites were sacrificing their kids to the God
molik it's abortion man. God told Israel he was he
(24:18):
was mad at him and caused some devastation because of
their their lust, all their sacrifices, the false gods and religions. So, Gavin,
if you really want to go this way, man, you
might want to consider your your pride parades that you
made so famous. You might want to consider your support
of sending souls back to the creator who knitted them
(24:40):
in their mama's womb. Let's let's let's let's go with
the Bible, Gavin, Because when Jesus talked about feeding the
hungry and welcoming the stranger, he's talking to his followers,
not to not to Caesar's administration. No, it was nuver
Caesar expending the welfare state. You have to give him
(25:03):
something to eat. Remember the Bible story of the good
Samaritan that went by and helped the guy that was
heard on the side of the road. Even though their
two factions didn't get along. The hat bill was going
to help the McCoy out. Did he pull over with
his donkey and go, well, there's some kind of tax
funded program for people like this. No, he took it
(25:25):
out of his own pocket. Charity helping people that comes
from the heart, that does not come from snap now,
m before you go. He is just evil. No, I'm
glad we have social nets that help Americans. I'm not
against having food assistance for those that need it, but
(25:46):
that's our money. We have the right to say, Okay,
if you need it. Yes, Have you ever ever in
traffic or anything gone up to a BMW Mercedes Windoe
and octiment? Hey can I give you some money? No,
I don't want to give money to people that do
not need it that could work. And I'll say government
(26:08):
assistance to the degree that it's allowed, and so it
goes against what God tells you to do to you know,
you're going to go hungry if you don't work. I
paraphrase something in the Bible, but I know that's in there.
So welfare programs to the extent that we have allowed
it to go. From Lyndon Johnson's Great Society, well, all
(26:30):
the War on Poverty, all of that, it's not it's
Newsome can't use that from the Bible. I mean, what
God asked us to do things to give that that's
a personal sacrifice that you're giving. But where is that
sacrifice when the government taking care of the job. Hmm.
(26:55):
Never thought of it. That way, you got some good
coming from the government shut down, and it showed us
all the fraud. Again, there's millions of media Americans that
were deprived, and they had children and didn't want them
to go hungry. But all those other people that dip
into this program at the expense of everybody that works hard,
that's what people are up set about. You had one
(27:18):
instance a guy getting snapped in six different states. Another
person had fifty thousand dollars loaded onto a card our money.
Secretary of ag Brooke Rawlins set over half a million
people were taking SNAP benefits twice getting it twice. Five
(27:40):
thousand dead people were getting it. Last year, Snap costs
ninety nine point eight billion dollars. Monthly benefits average one
hundred and eighty seven dollars a participant, So at one
hundred and eighty seven dollars a month, you're not ripping
off the government, but there's a lot of people that
are doing it that way. Arry Robins said states have
(28:01):
to share data right after taking office. Twenty nine states
are the only ones that got that. Mostly Republican complied
with the request. How do they get away with not
complying Half a million people getting benefits in more than
one state. That's that that's our money, and you need
to look at it that way. Let me ask you
(28:24):
that I don't know if you'll remember this. When's the
last time that that you went to the movies? I've
been once in like the last ten years. And that
sounds so weird to say once in the last when
when about five years? Okay? In that weird? Was that?
That's weird? I used to go frequently. You would go
(28:45):
every weekend, all right? See, I remember when they had
the like the three dollars movies. To get it. After
it's been out a while, you could go and maybe
watch two, or if you had a long day, you
might bounce to a third. One man, you go get
lost in the movie theater? Can't take you know that,
that feeling that we only get in the day in
a movie theater. And then you walk out to the
(29:06):
parking lot and it's bright sunshine and the world feels weird.
You know that feeling? Right, that's that's gone that because
that means you really got lost in a theater. I
don't know. Did I change? Did we all change? I'll
tell you why I think it's changed.
Speaker 3 (29:23):
Next, this is the Trevor Cherry Show on The Valley's
Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (29:28):
Took a lot of time to watch movies. I love
going to the movie theater sometimes to today, and I
guess I stopped going to movies for the same reason
that I don't know. So I watch a network TV,
the Internet, all the apps, all the different It changed
us all, didn't it. The fact that we have bigger
TVs at home, it's just not the same thing. Even
(29:51):
if you had one of those high end sound system
room maybe some of those would be better than the
movie theater. But the average American, I mean, we have
TVs now, we could not imagine twenty five years ago.
Twenty years ago the price now that I remember two
thousand and four flat screens and they were like three
thousand dollars. You'd see a flat screen like wow, right.
(30:13):
We had that kind of that phase there in the middle,
from the big furniture TVs to the to the big
screens that you had to get like seven people over
to help you move. Then we had the what were
they called the they were flatter screens. They didn't call
them flat screens. But we kind of had a little
(30:33):
curve to it a little bit, you know, those kind
of they were still kind of big in the back.
I just recently went from dumb TVs to smart TVs,
so I was moving my dumb TVs up, and I
had the one in my bedroom. I've had that in there.
Speaker 2 (30:47):
Well.
Speaker 1 (30:47):
I bought the flat screen in two thousand and nine.
That's how long that thing. But when I moved the
one out of the living room that I had bought
like six seven years ago, that was way lighter than
that two thousand and nine flat screen that I had there.
That thing felt heavy Compared to how TVs are now,
all those new ones. I could pick the biggest one
(31:07):
I got. I could easy move that by myself. You
ever gone back and looked at some of the old
ads and realize that if your mom and dad had
a color TV in the living room that was kind
of big, that that was a big purchase then. I mean,
those suckers were like seven eight hundred dollars. The social
(31:33):
media though that you would think maybe that would increase
some kind of interest in movies, and maybe it did.
Uh they said movies hit their peak in twenty eighteen.
What did we see happen? Then? We had a lot
of actors and celebrities start to get real mildy about
Trump and picking their side a lot of celebrities, would
(31:57):
you say, they're not completely irrelevant, but nowhere near what
celebrities used to. Yeah, I'm talking about movie stars.
Speaker 3 (32:04):
Now.
Speaker 1 (32:04):
There's still some big names around, but these big studios,
they don't have the monopoly. It's easier to produce content.
And maybe that's what happened. Boy, quality's gone down, hadn't it.
The quality is garbage. You watch a movie from two
thousand and four or something, and you can just tell
it's so much more quality. Box office had it's worse
(32:27):
October sales in thirty years this year, and it's the
quality they're cranking out movies. People don't want to watch anymore.
What you want to see another Kung Fu Panda? I guess.
I guess Top Gun that did good when that came out.
But I would say, I don't remember Tom Cruise maulden
off about politics. I think he respects his audience a
(32:50):
whole lot more. I don't even know what a movie
ticket costs now. Is a twenty bucks? Is it fifteen bucks?
Somewhere in that range? Maybe I don't know. I guess
you can blame. Okay, society changed, but also the actors.
They get a lot of blame for their decline. They've
they've always been liberal. But we know we put up
(33:11):
with them because we wanted to see their their acting abilities.
Sixteen o eight that's the average for a ticket now,
all right, sixteen bucks. But they were good storytellers, they're
great actors, you know, keep them, keep the politics to
yourself for the most part. Go ahead, But boy, they
have just plunged deep into it. And the number one
(33:33):
that pops the mind is Robert de Niro. Every time
I seem now, I go I didn't used to do that.
All his attacks on the president. Boy, they got an opinion,
and they make sure that you know it. Think about
all the woke lgbt q IA stuff in Disney flops.
(33:54):
The public is tired of it. It's been too much
for the general public out there. Even had Snoop Dogg
bringing it up before they came and attacked to him
and he turned back. Oh no, right, the Hollywood still
they still act like everybody owes them something. So if
I sound a little bit mad at Hollywood, maybe that's
the reason I haven't gone. Maybe that is down deep
(34:16):
in there. But the real reason is is I think, well,
if it's a good movie and I hear a lot
of people talking about it, and it'll be on Prime
and while I'll just watch it, then why not why
not do it that way? Yeah? I don't know why.
But as a kid, of course, I went to see
Star Wars with my buddy. That was a big one.
(34:36):
That was a big one. But I never got into
the sci fi stuff never, never did. I remember Christmas
of nineteen seventy eight, Christmas Day, Remember how that used
to be at movies were big around Christmas. Remember that
our whole family in Memphis went to go watch Christopher
Rees in the first Superman. Boy that right there was
a theater memory of Superman. It was so loud and
(34:58):
woa the effect that they had something else, And I remember,
let me see movie. Yeah, movie theaters go. I remember
visiting my grandmother's town and my cousins were older and
they were like sixteen, seventeen whatever, and Greece was playing
and it was playing at the local theater in that
little town in Tennessee. And I remember that I was
probably like, I don't know, eleven or twelve, and it
(35:21):
was the first like I felt like a big kid
because mom and dad weren't with us. I was with
other older teenagers, my cousins, and we were at the
movie theater by ourselves. That was a big That was
a big deal right there. But yeah, hadn't been in
a while. Well, I've been to one and I can't
even remember the name of It was a military movie
that I would to see about three or four years ago.
(35:43):
Why can't I remember? I guess it didn't. Yeah, I
remember walking out going that wasn't worth going to the
theater to go see? How many times you done that?
How many times of people? Because we get used to it?
Now now Netflix, Now, I'll watch it now. No, you're in.
You paid, You paid sixteen bucks. How many movies have
you sat through and watched because you paid for it.
I'm not like that. I've been to the movies with people.
(36:05):
Let's say it might get better. No, we've only got
so much weekend time. This movie's horrible. I don't want
to stay. Well, we already paid, granted, but I I
feel like they've taken more from me if I stay
here and watch this crap. H I sound difficult, don't
I This the
Speaker 3 (36:23):
Trevor Jerry show Monda Valley's Power Talk