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July 29, 2025 36 mins
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Yeah, new them over in China came out. He did.
He was doing a little Harlan glow trotter, spinning of
the ball of his finger. All right, impressive. He did
a bounce between his big old giraffe legs. I thought,
all right, he's got some dribbling skills and uz around
the back a little bit and then tried to take
off and then tumbled over and almost broken eight year
old Chinese boy's leg. It's really surprising at it didn't.

(00:20):
The way they fell, Newsom did go into a defensive
tuck and roll under. Yeah, he had to do that
or he would have crushed the kid. But there he
is talking about how lego aliens are crushing the construction
industry in California. He says, well, Texas in California forty
one percent. He didn't say which state is what, but uh,
they at the Office of Day of Polling in California

(00:41):
say it's about twenty six percent of lego aliens in
the construction filled in California. That's well, that's over a quarter,
Newsom said, forty one percent. And we're hearing about now
how ice is out here and it's it's going to
break down California's construction industry at a time when we
need to be No Democrats rope down the California construction

(01:01):
industry decades ago. We know that happened. I come across
this article personalbeat dot com how one personal business owners
prioritizes Latino construction workers mental health. And I'm sure this
lady Karina in here, she co owns this Panos Concrete
with their mom and dad, it says, and she's been

(01:22):
running it for thirty years. She's talking about the mental
health and construction because you're on work, you're off work.
Set around substance abuse a concern. And then I read
down and I'm thinking current social and political climate around immigration.
It's taking a serious toll on undocumented individuals. Many in
the construction workforce. You have people that don't want to

(01:44):
go to work because they're afraid to get in a
company truck. They think I can get pulled over. It's
a reality that can happen again. This is this lady
speaking here that owns a concrete company. A lot of
construction workers really stress out, have a lot of anxiety.
And I have to say, yeah, I agree there. I
would too if I'd broken a nation's immigration laws. And
I was in there trying to run around in a

(02:05):
construction work truck, afraid that maybe law enforcement might pull
me over and I get caught. Yeah, that's stressful. So
this lady, and I'm sure her heart is good. I do,
and she's going to create a mental health app. She's
going to release it. I'm sure a lot of the
illegal alien construction workers that are afraid to get pulled over,

(02:26):
but you know all that, I'm sure they're going to
want to do yoga and mental health therapies. Good idea,
probably wrong test market. I'm just trying to help the
lady out here. It's probably not going to be your
field worker out there, you know, taking off their flannel
to lay down on the dirt to do some yoga.

(02:47):
No it's not. It's not gonna have but good idea.
Give it a shot. But she said she's focused on
understanding how everything happening around immigration is affecting people. Well,
you know what's affecting people mentally with this, it's an
easy cure. Caoued self deport get that get that monkey
called fear off your back. Then you won't be need

(03:07):
a yoga app. Right, Being a criminal breaking the law,
being somewhat on the run. It's not a good way
to live. That's I mean self induced. You got the
CEO of San Francisco based pro Lodges. They're the largest
industrial real estate firm in the world. They they were

(03:29):
quoted in Bloomberg they said, construction costs are going to
go up radically of all this immigration stuff put more
pressure on construction. Well list, and there's no secret out
here about construction. Democrats have spent decades trying to, I
guess cover it up. But newsome now blurting out forty
waltersoner right, those are jobs Americans don't want to do.

(03:53):
We've been told. Now you want, you want to play
truth or dare? Okay, pick one? All right, he picked truth,
Thank you. I answered for him. I want going to
let you say dare. The truth is that the illegal
immigration it is a system that has been rigged that
has shut out legal American workers. That's that's your truth

(04:18):
right there. Now, these are jobs that Americans do do
and did did La Fresno, Oakland. This was this was
quoted in this article. They're talking about illegal alien labor

(04:39):
has become the backbone of construction. Well, yeah, according to
the Bay or Accouncible Economic Institute. Again, here's his quota,
twenty six percent new some I'm saying forty one. But
I these crackdowns by ICE, you're not causing developers to
lose workers. What it is is these developers now will
not have access to illegal in labor that will work

(05:01):
for less that you were never ever meant to ever
rely on. In America. It's simply amazing to me now
that you two knows I'm into. You know nineteen hundred,
the parish fair they did, and how quickly they built
buildings that are still up today in three years beautiful.

(05:25):
I can't think of the names of them right now.
To two museums that basically face each other. The first
one was built for the train station to come in.
They did that in three years underground in Paris in
nineteen hundred, and we can't do it now. America doesn't
know how to build things. Well, we know, I don't
know where the drive went. You can't even build a costco.

(05:48):
We know where the drive went, driven underground by environmentalists.
And they don't want us to be successful, they don't
want us to thrive. But American workers have been shut
out of opportunity and construction. It's obvious, and Ice is
out here doing their job, and Democrats are throwing tantrums screaming,

(06:11):
you're destroying the industry. Yeah, that's what they've that's what
they've been talking about, that it's being destroyed. How can
that be you out here attacking Ice. This was down
in southern California. It was a younger in her stretch outfit,

(06:32):
you know, yoga looking, kind of tight kind of thing,
blonde hair woman and another kind of quasi early Hippiist
looking lady in her sixties. Both white women out here
yelling and screaming at Ice because they were arresting somebody
that obviously was invented, somebody they were looking for, somebody
they had tracked down to that exact parking lots. You're

(06:54):
taking him afore I can.

Speaker 2 (06:55):
Take a phone number from him.

Speaker 1 (06:56):
You need to stop.

Speaker 2 (06:59):
You need a not kidnapping people up the streets.

Speaker 1 (07:04):
I'm you just rake him away when I'm hold his
family for him. Showant, then show me your restaurant. They
need to show you.

Speaker 2 (07:13):
Not because you're a flier, you're not an interesting party.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
You have no right to see that. Just macer and
put handcuffs over throw her in the back in an
unmarked car. Get out of the way, honey. He kidnapping
people up. You guys are kidnapping people up the street.

Speaker 2 (07:31):
Because what because someone came over to help them.

Speaker 1 (07:33):
You after rush and get them in the park.

Speaker 2 (07:36):
Not being obstructed. You're being abn option this.

Speaker 1 (07:41):
Guys have no conscience, classic classic dames. Some Democrat dames
out there classing up the neighborhood. You're doing something right.
Take your knots off that you know you made cowards
and unmarked cars and you have to hurry. Oh correct?

(08:03):
Has that aoc shrieked to the voice that that decibel
level that it goes up to where it just gets
on the inner ear and then makes your spine kind
of jump. The back of your teeth hurt, like chewing
on aluminum foil in the rain with lightning. One of

(08:26):
the two illegals you home depot yelling white women, one
of them that allegedly shot the board of Troy's in
New York City. He was one for arm robbery in Massachusetts.
What's happening on parking lots like that? That's one of the
main reasons that America voted for Trump last November and
they're delivering. Ice agents arrest Mexican illegal alien with twenty

(08:51):
one prior criminal convictions. Twenty one Ice arrested thirty four
year old illegal and sanctuary city of smell A, convicted
of nine times to crimes in the US. I mean
the list here at them feed. I mean, this is
another guy in Texas, another guy in Maryland. John Binder

(09:11):
at Breitbart just sent an article with a long list
of him, and he probably could have. He could probably
still be writing right now and he'd probably put that out.
Two days ago and illegals accused of murdering a fifteen
year old boy in Kentucky after the team tried to
protect his mother from being raped. Gildardo Martinez, thirty six

(09:32):
year old from Mexico, wrested by police, charged with murdering
fifteen year old Luis Lopez and also assaulting the boy's
three year old sister and attempting to rap the boy's mother.
It's fifteen year old about to begin a sophomore year,
died trying to save his mom from this criminal illegal
alien attempting to rape her. Oh well, yeah, I said criminal,

(09:56):
and I said the word illegal. Who wanted to be
called the barber. Yeah, he's back. I'll tell you what
nobody wants to be called an illegal alien. That's the
meaning a transvestide illegal alien who is a dude but

(10:20):
acts like he's a woman. Appeared in court in New
York last week on child rape charges again New York City,
New York Manhattan, A Sanctuary City Suarez, a thirty year
old illegal from Columbia, charges he raped a fourteen year
old boy in the bathroom of a bodega near and
he's Harlem. Well he's now in Rikers Island. Quarter million

(10:46):
dollar bond. He allegedly stalked those young boy in the bedega.
Those are like those little stores there that they have
and he likes saying, stalk the young boy into the
seven eleven that's on a city street and gambling in
the back and prostitution in the apartment above. Yeah, they
followed him as he entered the restroom in the alleged

(11:09):
sexual assault. The boy went running to tell nearby witnesses.
This dude was arrested following day charge at first degree rape.
He was wanted in New Jersey and Manhattan on other charges.
Ice had a detainer on him, but no he was
let back out onto the streets. Right we have Don't
you even say secure border? Don't you even for the

(11:29):
life of me, I can't bring myself to even being
close to understanding way everyday people vote Democrat? What benefit
does it offer you? Flabbergasted? When is enough enough?

Speaker 2 (11:47):
The assistant Tremor Jerry Show, London Valley's power.

Speaker 1 (11:51):
Dog my favorite baseball players during my years of high school.
Second baseman Ryan Sandberg died at sixty five. Cubs started
out with the Phillies a few years and then there
was a trade in eighty one from the Cubs from
the Phillies to the Cubs, and Ivan Dehesus went to

(12:12):
the Phillies. Nineteen eighty two was Ryan Sandberg's first year
of the majors. He went on with nine Golden Gloves,
seven Silver Slugger Awards, won the nineteen eighty four NL MVP.
He died after a battle with prostate cancer. He spent
sixteen years in Chicago with the Cups. You don't have

(12:35):
that kind of long jet longevity in the sports these days.
Garvey Lopes, Russell say Enfield were together for eight years
that it was still the longest in Major League baseball
history that an infield has stayed together. But yeah, he
was a big second basement too tall. Yeah, hit with power,

(12:56):
but he could turn the he could turn two. Also
said here Dion Sanders Revill. He's battling bladder cancer. Over
the last few months. They said they removed the tumor.
Doctors did. He's cancer free. Cancer was detected during a
routine vascular scan. Said he dropped twenty five pounds. He said,

(13:21):
I can't pee like I used to. It's totally different.
I had to make a will. That's not easy at all.
He's gone. He's gone under the knife quite a few times,
fourteen times since twenty twenty one. One was to repair
a dislocated toe that led to a discovery of blood
cloths and an artery, and that forced doctors to remove

(13:41):
two of his toes. He said, my sons have not
left my side. That's good. Dion is fifty seven. He
signed a fifty four million dollar extension with Colorado. I
remember nineteen, had to be nineteen ninety four working at
hot ninety seven to seven in San Jose and Deon

(14:04):
during the offseason had its rap career going. So they
took him to all the radio stations around the bay
there he rolled through. I didn't get to interview him
because he came through at a time when somebody else
was on the air. But we all got to meet
him out there and say hey and all of that.
But it wasn't that good of us. We were all like, hey, man,
sounds good. Yeah, what do you tell Dion Senders? Hey,

(14:25):
you're a good football player. But this is crap. No
that he was in. He was out. So pray for Dion,
And if you don't believe in prayer, you should because
God is real. Because they just found markings, etching etched
on the walls and an ancient Egyptian mind. They're saying
I proven the Book of Exodus to be true. Daily

(14:50):
Mail UK said researchers claimed a thirty eight hundred year
old inscription found in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula may read zolt
in moshe a Hebrew for this is from Moses. I
just try to pronounce that like the best of my ability.
Zt m hyphen moshg zot zod ma moshi. This is

(15:15):
from Moses, they said, likely created around eighteen hundred BC,
he led them out of slavery in Egypt, you know,
the whole Ten Commandments on Mount Sinai thing. They say,
no evidence has ever been found that he existed, but
you might want to go look this one up. I
find this truly fascinating, isn't it. It's one of those like, wow,

(15:39):
look at them they were tagging back then. Independent researcher
re examined the markings in Egypt. He said could be
the first words of Moses. He said, it reads, this
is from Moses. Academic advisor, doctor Peter Vanderven. Anytime there's
a vander there, you gotta trust them. They're smart. He
confirmed the reading, stating, your absolutely correct. I'd read this

(16:01):
as well. It is not imagined. So again, Daily Mail UK,
go go go look this up. The researchers also identified
texts dedicated to an ancient Egyptian god that appeared to
be scratched off and replaced with the Hebrew God. Look
at that. They were tagging test like gangs today and

(16:21):
going back and xing out, crossing out the other gang
and writing the Hebrew God over that ancient god. Who
knew tagging was such a thing back then? Yeah, well
it was. I found that truly fascinating and I'm sure
I could go home tonight and after my trying to
cut down on the carb kind of dinner, I'll go

(16:43):
upstairs with my trying to cut down on the carb dessert.
Here's what I've been doing. Those carb low carb I
think three gram total net carb like strawberry ice cream bars,
they're the low carb bars. Three I scrape it off
the wooden handle into a glass. I have my Ackins
chocolate dark chocolate up in the freezer, the low carb

(17:05):
Accin shakes, so it kind of comes out. I gotta
squeeze it because it's almost ice screaming. So then that
goes over the top of that ice cream bar. All
low carb. But when you add up all these low carbs,
I'm probably eating quite a few. But anyhow, in my
mind this is working. And then I take the sh
with cream that low carb s try and build as

(17:30):
high as I can that it won't fall over when
I walk up the stairs with it. That's that's been
what I'm doing so tonight, when I get to that state,
I bet you YouTube will already have something up about Moses.
You know this is probably if it's already out like
this at somebody. Isn't that the beauty now of what
we have with I mean, I say YouTube all the time,

(17:50):
and there's so many other areas that we can go
and see, and it's like we just kind of now
take it all for granted. No, there was once a
time where I would have had to wait for what
to find out anything about this for sixty minutes to
do something on it in four months after I'd already
forgotten about it. Where would you have gone down to

(18:10):
the library to look up New York Times newspaper to
see if there was anything in there about it. You
couldn't go look at an encyclopedia. It was brand new,
breaking news. It's just like you would read one article
and that was it. You didn't even know what emails
commented about it. You need to know what Embael's had
an opinion about today. A story like this, I could
probably go into the Daily Mamail UK read all the

(18:31):
comments about see how we're all just information spreading like
this and it can be good and it can be bad.
And I think we've realized that. I think it was
good to take care of college athletes, but it can
be bad to turn it in. I think what we've
done with name image and likeness and pay for play.
I think in college sports, probably a year long ago,

(18:54):
and Paul Leffler voiced Forslo Stadan here. I was like,
are we going to have like a rich league in
a not real richly And it seems exactly that President
Trump the White House has made a statement and actually
he's pulled the sharpie out. Yeah, we've got it going on.
I'll tell you about college name, image and likeness.

Speaker 2 (19:14):
Next, this is the Trevor carry Show on the Valley's
Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (19:19):
Wouldn't it be nice if you woke up in the
morning and it was a drizzle You heard it off
your gutters falling the rain, a light drizzle, and it
was kind of cool like that, Yeah, hey, but it's coming.
We got one big long fall here. Let me remind
you we don't have to go through that winter wonderland.
And you're like, yes, it's nice. Winter Wonderland is nice

(19:40):
between December twenty second and January second. That little break
right right there. If it was winter Underland, I'll take it.
But any other time, you can't even make plans a
week or two or three in advance in the really
cold winter areas because you make the plans yeah, we'll
drive over there. We'll have the boys, so we'll get
the hot key game going and we'll go out and

(20:02):
ice fitt. No, you're not. The freeway's closed down or
the Thruway is closed down. It's ice everywhere. No, it's not.
You can't drive. Our temperature right now nothing. I mean, man,
the Mid South and Southeast. My mom and dad in Tennessee.
Let's see, it's ninety five degrees right now with a

(20:23):
heat index. It feels like one hundred and nine. My
mom said, even in the morning when it's like seventies,
and you know early morning that you walk out and
it's just like wham. And I remember that two years
ago when they moved back there. It was just unbearable
for me. I hadn't been around it in a long time.
And you know what I'm thinking about. Let's just say,

(20:47):
guy that grew up in Presno is gonna go down
and play for Mississippi State somewhere in the southeast, somewhere
in the mid South, and they're out there practicing right now.
That shockits of the body with that humidity. I was
thinking about that now the other way around. If you're
used to that humidity and you're out in California, You're like, hey,

(21:08):
I can you know it probably feels a little more
relaxing than not have that humidity. It just SAPs energy
and strength. It's I said to my mom on the
phone earlier today. I said, you know, it's right up
there with why did God make flies? And why did
he make humidity? No one's ever like, hey, this humidity
feels great, doesn't it. No one ever says, wouldn't it

(21:28):
be nice where you just have a nice humid day? Nah?
So imagine those you know two a days. Well you hear,
you know, high school football players in Texas, because that's
like a David Koresh religion down there, you know, dying,
passing out. I love it. Former Alabama head coach Nick

(21:52):
Saban praised President Trump's executive order at the pay to
play payments to college athletes. He said. Coach Saban said,
something needs to be done. It's wild cost now. President
Trump signed an executive order to set restrictions on payments
two athletes from third party sources, stating and I read
any revenue sharing permitted between universities and collegiate athletes should

(22:15):
be implemented in a manner that protects women in non
revenue sports, he said, I think it's one of the
things people need to understand about college sports. They say
it's a business, but truly not a business. It's revenue
producing and two sports have created the revenue to have
twenty other sports. And I think that's why it's important
we have a system in place. That was Nick Saban

(22:36):
talking about at the end there. So, yeah, that's true.
We know that. Right you go to a Fresno State
even though they're doing well baseball game that might be
what twelve hundred good good good pack. Then I don't know,
I'm guessing you could even go down further with women's softball.

(22:59):
You can probably, I don't know what soccer brings. I
don't know what. You know, water polo? Do we have
water polo? All the other sports that we have, not
that water polo. That's one of the toughest things man
tread and water having to be a volleyball player at
the same time. You know, volleyball players get to like,
you know, kind of rest and put their hands down
on their knees and get a breadth that you're constantly swimming.

(23:21):
I don't know. So anyhow, they're saying football basically and
basketball to a certain degree, the two sports. I've created
twenty other sports. So they're admitting, yes, it's revenue generating,
but it's funding all these other great things that we
have at universities. Here's what Trump signed by the authority

(23:43):
vested in me as president by the Constitution and the
laws of the United States of America. I think we
need something to add to this. It is hereby order.
College sports are uniquely American institution that provide life changing
education and leadership development opportunities to more than a half
of the million student athletes through four billion dollars in
scholarships each year. College athletics also provides substantial support to

(24:07):
local economies and form an indelible part of family activities, pastime,
and culture in many communities. Yes, I love the road games,
sitting there and well quite a few of the home games,
be honest in my living room, taking part of that

(24:28):
pastime and that culture. Hearing Paul Leffler with the call
as I sit there and I color in my chair.
When my mom and dad were out visiting, my mom
jumped in the game and color with me for a
couple of days or a few hours at a time.
We had fun with our colored pencils there, and I
was flashing back, Okay, it's coming, falls coming. I'll be
sitting here with this little spotlight on door open up

(24:50):
front because it's cool temperatures. Yeah. But President Trump said
the future of college sports is under an unprecedented threat.
You got guys making so much money, some players, some
university is gonna get more than fifty million dollars a year.
I call that revenue generating. They said. Entering the twenty

(25:14):
twenty four season. Last year, players on the eventual college
football National champions that team were paid around twenty million
dollars annually. By twenty twenty five, we're talking about being
reported up to forty fifty million dollars with revenue sharing included. Wow,
well that's some hustlers. That's some agents. Yeah, that's somebody

(25:37):
that's that's out there now. That's also a lot of
donors contributing. Like we have bulldog bread here. I think
it took me about four months so it clicked, Oh
money bread. Okay, yeah, I think it's a nineteen twenty sort.
Hey man, you got some bread. Yeah, let's go cut
a rug. They said, it's the policy of my ad

(25:59):
Minister that all college sports should be preserved, and we're
possible expanded. We're going to therefore provide the stability, fairness,
and balance necessary to protect student athletes, collegiate athletics, scholarships
and opportunities, and the special American institution of college sports.
It's common sense that college sports are not and should
not be professional sports, and my administration will take accent accordingly.

(26:24):
So they got thirty days of that order and I
don't even really I read it all, and I'm still
trying to understand what it's actually going to mean. No
third party would that mean? Like a car dealership can't say, Hi,
I'm quarterback filling the blank. For filling the blank and
you should go down. Then well, it's all. It's all confusing,

(26:48):
isn't it. Just like the rest of society. Everything used
to be the same, normal, normal Smarts Illustrated had pretty
women on the cover of the swimsuit issue. Now we
got pretty dudes trying to act like they're women, and
Martha Stewart, thank you, and Martha Stewart on there. Everything's crazy.

(27:09):
You know, college stars in football, they knew not to
drive the corvettes around. Eric Dickerson. They knew what would happen,
but no, you made it to the pros and you
could drive usould be normal America. Now do I think
that they should be paid something? Well, listen, you think
about it, living life. A lot of these people don't

(27:32):
have a whole lot of money, maybe coming in from
back at home or mom and dad live. So they're
going to school full time. Who goes to school full
time and works full time? Very few? Some boogie, some hustle. Okay,
but let's just say you're going to school full time
and you're working part time, and you don't have funding
coming from anywhere else. You're working part time and you

(27:54):
live in California. Now, I guess with the scholarship, you
can live in a dorm and get your meals. But
still you're going to live life. You're going to get
tired of gumming that food down all the time. You're
going to want to go out, you have dates, You're
going to want to go out, you want to go
do things, and not every yet, not everybody gets a scholarship.

(28:16):
But I'm just saying about football players on there. And
so then you're also having to keep your body healthy,
so you can't run out and eat junk food. They
can probably get away with it at that age, but
a lot of't merm in training and take it seriously.
And you're trying to do school and study and all
of that and work a job and you can't. That's it.

(28:39):
I mean, think about all that right there. And now
let's say that you're really good at what you do,
really good, and there's a lot of people coming in
and buying jerseys and jackets and alumni and all of this,
and you're seeing all this money being made by people
with diamond rings and cigars that are patting you on
the back, and you're like, I'm out there risking. Yeah,

(29:02):
I might become a wide receiver for the Jets. I
might not, yeah, and if I do, I might last
three years and get hurt. But I'm generating money right
now with the exact same talent that in a few
calendar months is gonna bring me millions of dollars. So
I might just want to go to school, finish it out,
then go do a tryout or something, right, I mean, really,

(29:25):
your legs are your value your hands as a wide receiver.
So you're going, huh uh, I got one more senior year,
and am I gonna get hurt in Michigan. There's a
big house gonna bring me down and I'm gonna be out.
And I really wasn't paying attention in school that much.
I wish I would have, well, you know what, they

(29:45):
should not have to stress, in my opinion. So I
don't know what that financial figure should be. I always
thought it was okay for third party to fund it.
I thought that was really the wheelhouse to generate it
because fill in the blank car dealership is they're going
to pick the person that's really good that everybody knows
their name, normally a quarterback, a running back, a big

(30:09):
old defensive guy, you know, for a refrigerator company making
money that way like we see the professional athletes making
their money. I'm gonna interesting to talk to Paul Leffler.
I don't know how much detail I want to go
into it, or a new athletic director class. He would

(30:29):
be good, good individual because he's quoted in here in
sur Freso b Racle about with few options for asident,
State can partner with investors for football stadium. It's called
public private partnership and they've been doing this a lot
to fix up stadiums across because you know, we've had
our sales taxes where this was going to go to
this and a percentage was going to go to the
nursing thing, and a percentage was going to go to

(30:51):
the to the stadium too. I actually think the direction.
And again I'll get more into this later with somebody
that can really go into detail with this, but Coach
Jens was talking about the multi use facility, like Shakira's
gonna come out and play at Valley Children's. I don't know.
I would think, Uh, with the weather, we don't you know,

(31:13):
you know, it's hit and miss in the in the winter,
you just never know when rain might hit something. But
it's real hot. So why don't we just do a
multipurpose dome. Let's build us a dome that can open
up to sunshine. Now, let's build us. Here's what we do.
We do a stadium just like the Roman Colisseum, and
we do these those big cloth things that they had
to come out that would shade everybody. Yeah, they'd roll

(31:33):
them out. I just watched this. Guys. If they did
it back in the Roman days, we can do it. Yeah,
the big cloths that rolled out to almost the middle
of it, almost like Texas Stadium where the Cowboys used
to play. There was a little hole in the middle
of the stadium, right. But I would say, instead of
trying to, you know, to doll up what we currently have,

(31:57):
a rebuild would be an investment in the future. I
could get it to way more than high speed rail.
Where where should we do it? Maybe right there? Say
just yeah, just do it the same location. Where do
we play in the meantime? I see, I don't know,
I'm just the idea guy. You guys go figure it out.
But to have a place that would be a draft
now Satmart Center would be like, hey, what's going on here?

(32:20):
We do a lot of things in here as well. Yeah,
but this is a whole different vibe, a whole different dynamic.
It could be a big valley drawing. Of course, that's
where the Bulldogs play their football games, and then why
couldn't you turn it into where the Bulldogs play their
baseball games. I wonder how much bigger a stadium has

(32:40):
to be to incorporate a football because we see it
all the time. A baseball field is normally larger though,
because you can you know when games would be played
in October. You would see on baseball field sometimes the
football field imprint was still there as well, candlestick, thank you. Yes,
So it would probably have to be bigger for baseball,
different you know, dimensions there, And I don't know if

(33:02):
that would be a big enough draw to actually, you know,
state Championship CIF at the Fresno Dome, you know, at
the Fresno Nuthouse, brought to you by corn Nuts, since
it's made here, you know, the corn Nut Dome. Now
we're on to something.

Speaker 2 (33:19):
This is the Tremor Charry shown on the valley. He's
tower talk.

Speaker 1 (33:23):
I'm gonna give you a good laugh right now. It's
always better to laugh when you're hot outside. James Carville,
Democrat strategist. Eh, yeah, we're taking yeah, talking about the
He's not worried in twenty twenty eight. They got a
strong Democrat bench out there. I guess there's a ton
of Democratic political talent in the wings for twenty twenty eight.

(33:44):
I am not remotely worried about that. Oh boy, punks,
look at Pinocchio's nose grow. Hook that guy up to
a light of textare tests to let him say that again?
There's a ton of democratic political talent in the wings
for twenty twenty eight. I am not remotely worried about that. Hey, James,
it's Gavin. Gavin's on the phone for you. Yeah, Hey, Gavin,

(34:05):
help is on the way. Yeah. It sure was an
extensive search for resnel. Police found the family of a
special needs child who was found wandering here in Fresno.
Eight year old boy special needs. He was found on
the street wearing only a T shirt and underwear, and
the child was nonverbal, and that really complicated finding out

(34:27):
where his family lived his home, they said. The family
said the home was equipped with door alarms and locks,
but the boys still manage to get out. Nobody was
cited for the incident. You're saying it was a very nice, clean,
safe neighborhood. Nice neighborhood. Yeah, well, hey, I'll never forget
the time that the wife x ye now, but the wife,

(34:50):
the mother of my five kids, were sitting in the
backyard at put the kids down. It was maybe dusk,
sun still barely setting a little bit, you know, mosquito
time in the summer, and suddenly in our sliding glass door,
we were sitting in the backyard, front door locked, chain
all the way up and everything locked up. Kids a bed.

(35:11):
There's our neighbor standing in our kitchen trying to open
the sliding glass door. That's weird to begin with. What
is Jerry doing in here? He opened it up. He said, hey,
DeMarco is out front and he's about four. He got
out of bed, got a chair, got over there, climbed up,
did the chain unlocked the front door, went out. Where's

(35:33):
mom and dad? Looking for us? Out there? Wandering next
door neighbor, it was out front. What are you doing out?
I'm trying to find my mom and dad but they're
not in the house. No, So a good neighbor took
him back in, went through the house, opened the sauce
in the backyard and let us know. So he could
have been down the street. He could have continued on

(35:53):
and reminded this kid had special needs, so that could
have gone really bad. Presidental Police also investigating a kidnapping
and stabbing. It happened early Sunday. Guys don't believe them
when they're like, hey, do you want to get back together? Uh,
victim told officers. This ex girlfriend called him at two
thirty in the morning. First of all, warning sign asked

(36:13):
to meet Motel six at Blockson and Herndon. He arrived,
he was handcuffed assaulted by two suspects. Yeah, nice ex
girlfriend guy, There's a reason she was an ex There's
a reason why you weren't with her, police said. One
of the suspects grabbed a box cutter and stabbed the
guy all over his body, put him in a car.
Cherry feared for his life.

Speaker 2 (36:34):
The assistant Trevor Cherry show monda valley's power dog.
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