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January 18, 2025 • 35 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Yesterday, I started the show with joined enthusiasm over the
upcoming inauguration, and I thank to everyone who fought so
hard to get President Trump back and happy days again.
I went somber when I mentioned the fear of the
upcoming major public event inauguration, my fears of the skies
and the protection and Trump safety, and I was really

(00:22):
relieved breaking mid morning that Inauguration's going to be held
inside Theresa sub freezing temperatures. I think also has to
do with we don't have to worry as much about
what might happen. But in nineteen eighty five it was
like seventeen degrees or colder, and Reagan did it inside.
So it's happened before, and I'm glad, and I'm going

(00:44):
to talk more about moving it inside at five, going
inside at five. But it really plays into how we've
all moved more inside indoors our living rooms. I finally
found research that shows that not alone in my isolation,

(01:06):
who I thought something was wrong with me, it's all
of us. MSN dot Com said we are the antisocial century.
And I guess when I say isolation and we're all alone.
If you're a couple, maybe you just stay together more
as a couple and don't go out as much. If
you live alone, of course you're alone, but you don't
go out as much. You could be a family unit

(01:28):
that doesn't go out as much. We or have other
people into our domain. People knock at the door, dang dong.
It's like, what in the world is going on? This
is I've had twice now I guess with my old
man by night as ears or something in the kitchen
and the TV too loud and the perfect replica of

(01:51):
the sound of my doorbell goes off on the TV.
And if I got the microwave going in the air
fryer going and the sincom of the water going, sh
I think, who's at the door? I've had that thought,
like ah, it's always ah, where was it? A Sebastian
Manuska called a comedian, compared what it was like in

(02:12):
the when he said, when he grew up in the
seventies eighties, everybody'd be excited. The case said. The kids
would be sliding across the floor in their socks. Mom
would get the crumb cake and sanka out. It was
a big event. If somebody came by your house today,
it's offensive, right, you how dare you just show up?
Show up like this? A lot of us have become

(02:33):
the antisocial century. And that's what this article on was
in dot com was entitled. And I said, well, let
me read about this. And I started thinking about we
don't even have like movie nights anymore. And these are
things I remember in my life that I did. Our
favorite restaurant you loved to go to and sit down
on our favorite waiter who tells we, hey, the usual

(02:56):
is that is that there? My landlord owns Mama me is.
He's always talking about the abundance of takeouts and to
goes and how many people are doing it, and how
many people are eating at home. It's all over the place.
We've become that way, have we not. In twenty twenty three,

(03:18):
seventy four percent of all restaurant traffic came from off
premises customers, takeout and delivery. That's up sixty one percent
before COVID. That's from the National Restaurant Association. More of
us are eating alone. This misimicon dot com article said,
the shriff of you US adults having dinner and drinks
your friends on any given nights to climb at more
than thirty percent in the past twenty years. People feel

(03:39):
uncomfortable in the world. Today, they've decided their home is
their sanctuary. Hence the phrase I coined, leaving the living
room is overrated. Yeah, we're not Deacon and Doug hanging
out having beers and going bowling with the wives Hollywood.
They even took it back to the nineteen thirties and

(04:00):
what really that was unless you wanted to put on
a phonograph get that, going the theater was the only
other place other than the radio or the vinyl that
you might have had that was I don't know, made
out of something that if you drop it, it shatters
like a champagne glass. Right, So most people went to

(04:24):
the movies quite a few times a week. That was
the place to go. That was always the first date place.
Today typically they say Americans buy about three movie tickets
a year. We watched nineteen hours of TV. That's eight

(04:45):
movies on a weekly basis. So we're spending more time
than the people would have been going and watching the
movies during the week when they didn't have TV, and
we're spending less time with other people. They got data
going back to nineteen hundred and sixty five from two
thousand and three to twenty twenty three, it plunged by
more than twenty percent. Spending time with other people married men,

(05:10):
and people younger than twenty five, the decline was more
than thirty five percent. These numbers, they categorize a person
as being quote alone if you're the only person in
the room, even if you're on the phone or in
front of a computer. They said, men who watch TV

(05:30):
now spend seven hours in front of the TV for
every hour they spend hanging out with somebody outside of
their home seven hours to one hour. They said, the
typical female pet owner spends more time with the pet
than they spend in face to face contact with friends.
Since the early two thousands, the amount of time that
Americans spend helping or caring for people outside their immediate

(05:54):
family has to climb by more than a third. They
NYU sociologists said, most Americans don't seem to be reacting
to the biological queue to spend more time with other people.
That it right, and I've thought that. When I read that,
I'm like, oh man, I need to go sit around

(06:14):
in a circle and some Hi. My name's Trevor. I'm
getting these biological cues that I should hang out more
with other people. But I don't know anybody else. Tell this,
what do we do? Huh see anti social century. They're
saying America's on an anti social streak. And they said

(06:36):
two of the most important factors when this started in America,
they can they nailed it down to the car and
the TV. They said, is it's that's when the decline started.
And it took a long process, and you're going, well, okay,
nineteen fifties people started moving away from hanging out on
the stoop, you know, knowing everybody, the butcher, the baker,

(06:59):
the candle stick maker, right there in the in the hood,
the neighborhood, all around everybody. Everybody knew everybody. Suddenly you
were out in the just planted out suburb houses and
where and what do all the ads of that? I
collect all these old magazines and papers and what all
the ads show people in their private backyards, their own patio,

(07:22):
their own grill. More people, Boy, if you were really
making it, you had your private pool, and it was
all about private life and home and enjoying all these
things that we that we have. And when you're not
out there, oh grilling you're Oscar Myers. You're in front
of the TV. MSN dot comcept. From sixty five to

(07:46):
nineteen ninety five, the typical adult gained six hours a
week and leaves your time three hundred hours a year,
and we funnel most all of it into watching more TV.
Nailing me, you're nailing me. I'm being failed all over
the place here in nineteen seventy I just highlighted some
of these facts in this in this article, it's MSN

(08:08):
dot Com called the antisocial Century. If you want to
go look at it, there's more facts. But in nineteen
seventy six percent of six graders had a TV in
their bedroom. Wow, that would have been a lucky sixth
grader nineteen seventy sitting there watching Mannix at night in
their own room. In nineteen ninety nine that had grown

(08:29):
to seventy seven percent. You think today with the phones
of tablets, the laptops and computers, everything that's hooked to
a flat screen that you just flash over from your
iPhone and it's up on your flat screen. Almost one
hundred percent of sixth graders have multiple screens in their room,
the car, the TV. They say, video killed the radio, sir,

(08:53):
the car and TV killed us hanging out with people,
they said, it really accelerated, but then smartphones came along.
The typical person today's awake for about nine hundred minutes
a day, American kids and teenagers spending averages two hundred
and seventy minutes on weekdays and three hundred and eighty

(09:15):
minutes on weekends looking at their screen at a nine
hundred minutes two hundred and seventy minutes you're in the week,
three hundred and eighty on the weekend. It's about more
than thirty average percent of their waking life looking at
a screen, and they're less likely to get a driver's
license in past decades getting some of these stats here,

(09:38):
or go on a date, or have more than one
close friend, or even hang out with their friends at all. Well,
I kind a driver's license. If I didn't have that, boy,
you got me in there, I'm getting nailed a kid,
they said. The share of boys and girls who said
they met it with friends almost daily outside of school
hours as they climb fifty percent since the early nineties,

(09:59):
with a sharpest downturn occurring in the twenty tens, when
smartphones and social media and all that really really got
really going, and we can chart this now, we're charting it,
and I'm not pointing the finger. I'm saying I'm nailed
on a lot of this stuff as well. They said
it can't be shrugged off as a generational change, like

(10:22):
bell bottoms over skinny genes. They said the human brain
grows ninety percent of its full sized by age five,
and it takes a long time to mature. And they're
not being physical, they're not kids. They're talking about kids
today earn outdoors with other kids and unsupervised and pushing
their limits and managing conflict. And it's everything's funneled into

(10:43):
a device. I think a Russell George and myself, my
friend in Memphis. You know, we'd be down at the
boys Club, the whites and blacks, playing together, learning, riding
bikes all over town. I remember in nineteen seventy eight,
Union Planners Bank had some kind of kiosk. I don't

(11:04):
know if it was ATM they had that or not yet,
I don't know. Maybe it's a place where you would
just drop off a deposit or something goes a kiosk.
And we saw they had cameras in there and the
door just opened. He didn't have to have a bank
card to get in. And I remember we be riding
our bikes around and we would do fake robberies in there,
thinking they'd see it on the camera. You know, we're
twelve years old, you know, out adventuring, going around having

(11:27):
a good time. That's why the NFL has to push
out Play sixty now. Trying to get them to play
sixty minutes, you got teen anxiety depression at record highs.
They found more than half a teen girls said they
felt persistently sad or hopeless. They've done scientists have done

(11:50):
these the research on rats and monkeys, and they've I
don't even know if I agree with this, but you know,
if you want to do testing on them, that saves lives.
But when they do things like mascara and cosmetics, I
don't know if this is even fair to do. But
they said they did rat I don't care about rats,

(12:10):
go ahead and be cruel. I really don't what monkeys.

Speaker 2 (12:12):
I do.

Speaker 1 (12:13):
But they deprived both of those of playtime. They isolated them,
and they said they came away severely impaired. And I
think it'd be kind of odd if we were any different, right,
but we feel like in this article said that we

(12:34):
have this haunting out there that something more interesting is
happening somewhere else, and it's a search using the social
media and all the outlets we have today. It's a search,
and you we never really find it, right, It's so true.
But anyhow, this article went on with so much more

(12:55):
about free time and all the stats that are that
are out there, and you know, they emphasize that it's
nothing wrong with being alone. They even see, you know,
like a night alone away from a crying baby is
one thing. You know, a decade of social disconnection is
something else. And I do have to say, I guess

(13:17):
if I'm picking up what they're throwing down, maybe teenagers
should choose to spend less time on their phone, and
maybe parents should choose to invite friends over for dinner
more often, you know, the dinner parties. I say that
like I've been to one. I mean couples have gone

(13:38):
over to you know, as a couple. Sometimes I can't, Okay,
that's a dinner party. Didn't have to be the white
gloves showing up with the bottle of wine or both,
you know, bow tie on. But I mean, granted, I
actually have a picture in my kitchen that's framed on
top of a nineteen fifties bread box, and I just
cut it out of an own fifties magazine of the

(13:58):
people with the pool table, the Martinis. It's a black
and white picture of the dinner parties that they used
to throw in the nineteen fifties. Fascinating time period, right, Well,
it led me to coin the phrase leaving the living
room is overrated. Today we can just ask Michelle Obama.

(14:19):
Here's kid Rock proving a point here. I heard.

Speaker 3 (14:22):
You know, Michelle Obama's not attending. I would kindly remind
her that years back, when Obama was first elected, I
did not vote for him, but they asked me to
play the inauguration and I played it and I went
had a good time. I went for out of respect
to the presidency. So I would kindly remind miss Michelle
about that.

Speaker 1 (14:42):
Yeah, she's not going to be coming to Trump's inauguration.
See see Antisocial Century.

Speaker 4 (14:47):
It is when they go low, we go high.

Speaker 1 (14:49):
Yeah, leaving the living rooms overrated, Michelle, I.

Speaker 4 (14:52):
Guess this is the tremor Chary show. On the Valley's
Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (14:58):
When I was on vacation in Tennessee, and even when
I got back here to Fresnow, time seemed to go
real slow, and I was like, that's beautiful. Ah, it
even went slower than when I was in lockdown with COVID,
that kind of slow. And I tried to continue it.
That was my goal, you know, starting work a few
weeks here, try to continue it did not work. Can't

(15:21):
believe it's Friday went so fast. I didn't get done
when I needed to do that I could do, so
I need to do what I needed to do. Does
that need to make any kind of sense, The stuff
that you needed to get done so that you could
actually on the weekend do what you need to do.
I didn't even get that done. So it's you know,
talking about the antisocial century alone And when you do

(15:45):
live alone, you're either a wife and a husband, or
a husband and a wife and a cook and a
cleaner and a bill payer and a moneymaker. And it's
one hundred percent. But I will say on the flip
side of that, I don't have arguments in my house. Else,
I don't have any any mood changing out of out
of nowhere. You know, you like having a great day.

(16:09):
I don't know what the percentage is. But I'm going
to say it's rather high of women that really don't
like to see guys having good days for some reason,
they want to change it. They come along, they're not
going to have a good day. Well, it's up to
me when you live alone. So that's you can't put
a price tag on that. Well, people that have been
divorced say, yes you can, Yeah you can't. I kind

(16:32):
of like when my plans get canceled. Now, I don't
know what. It's like a little rush, a little yes, Yes,
canceled plans are like a gift. And also I think
I now have Also I've analyzed why I. I think
I enjoy procrastination because it gives me the Is it

(16:54):
the endorphin rush that?

Speaker 5 (16:56):
Ah?

Speaker 1 (16:56):
Now I'm freed up? You know that that feel when
you when you delay something that you know really is
not gonna change that much. Let me go get my
DEBK Carr. I'm gonna call do my car payment on
the phone. It's fine to Mark, Yeah, I'm good. Oh
then just stay right here. Ah, I gave myself a gift.

(17:19):
Feels good. What they got camped? I get that time back.
It was canceled. Yes, where it kind of used to
see them in my life. Hey, I got something to do, yes,
And I used to think that it was because of
just getting older. You know, you normally don't see, you know,

(17:44):
a group of you know, eighty four year old men
in the car drop pulling by to pick everybody up
at at nine o'clock at night to start to go out. No, no,
I thought that's what it was. I'm in that phase.
I'm not wanting to go out anymore more at all.
But it seems that it's kind of prevalent across society.

(18:05):
Not to say that places aren't out and entertainment's not happening,
but it's just a change in society and it's I think,
very very noticeable. This is the news now.

Speaker 6 (18:18):
There is precedent for this, this hit has happened before.
I remember being in high school in President Reagan was
sworn in inside the capital rotunda. The high temperature in
Washington that day was seven degrees fahrenheit, and they made
the decision to move in. You know, they used to
do the inauguration on the fourth of March until nineteen
thirty seven. They changed that in the Constitution and moved

(18:39):
it to January and that's why we sometimes get this
very inclement weather, especially in Washington, d C.

Speaker 1 (18:45):
All Right, I'm glad it's going in because I don't
want people to freeze. I sat through a Bronco Bingals
game at Malhai, thinking I dress correctly with layers and
multiple socks. Now it's cold out there. That to stay
out there like that. So the inauguration head nis.

Speaker 7 (19:04):
Swearing in and the inaugural address will happen inside the
US Capital Dome and then President like Trump is confirming
on truth social that everything else is going to move
into Capital One Arena. We knew that on Sunday there
was going to be a Capital One Arena rally with JD.
Van speaking, Donald Trump speaking, the village people, and Kid

(19:24):
Rock We're going to perform. Now, that is going to
be a viewing party for a lot of the folks
that are in town. But that sets about twenty thousand
or fewer of the attendees. That is a much smaller
crowd than they would be expecting on the entire National Mall.

Speaker 4 (19:39):
This is the Trevor Carry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (19:44):
People are fed up, sick and deadburn, tired of it. Yes, indeed,
this has not been a good smooth ride out here,
and I'm just going to remind you with all the
victories that we seem to be having here, it feels good,
but we got so much fight ahead of us, and

(20:04):
they're they're not gonna hold back and get ready for
all their same crap. But right after January sixth and
what happened at the Capitol with some people choosing to
actually create a riot, there was not an insurrection, a riot.
There was my show the day after and I said,
it's not about a person. Let's put your faith in truth.

(20:27):
The truth, and the truth is coming out everywhere now.
I mean, now you look like an idiot for being
somebody that mandated somebody out of a position because they
didn't want to get in line for an experimental mr
NA injection. Starting to kind of look stupid being an
environmentalist and a green New Deal, build back better person.

(20:48):
It's not it didn't work it. See, the truth is
out there, the tide is turning, and now's the time
to turn it up. Now's the time to demand that
these are Republicans finally that are empower and imposition, do
the job right, and remember where the bosses. We're gonna

(21:08):
go through the inauguration love affair. We went through the
election love affair. It's all good. Now's time to win.
Now it's time to say down, set hook, and then
celebrate the end zone and spike the ball. That's what
we need to have happen. Now. I understand there. It
might be a ground game at times. You know, three

(21:31):
yards here, first down here. I might be ready for
the seventy five yard bomb on the first play to
get it down the field. Let's get this going. So
I know there's an in between there with the game plan.
I know we all wanted to happen a whole lot
quicker than it's probably gonna happen. Let's just be realistic.

(21:53):
This country is a big battleship. It's not a speedboat.
It's going to take a second to turn it around.
How do you turn it around quicker? Get rid of
the dead weight, and that's going to take a moment.
And for the left to win a national election, I
want it to be so overly impressive that the possibility

(22:16):
of winning the electoral college of the White House ever
again for these leftist Marxist is becoming more and more unlikely.
That's what that's what our mission needs to be. You
got California losing population, New York's losing population, New Jersey's
losing population. Say it's like Texas and Florida and Tennessee.
They're picking up votes and that that's going to lead

(22:37):
to shifts coming up here as we get to the
twenty thirties. There'll be states going from blue to red
for a reason, a reason, their life has been negatively affected.
And they'll quote back to James Carville economy stupid. Yes,

(23:00):
if the estimated new map was in place for twenty
twenty four, with all the seat changes going around, let's
see trumpet of one ten additional electoral votes, this opponent
would have won ten fewer. That's what the change is
going to mean. And we'll get to a point where suddenly, though,
like they'll had to win like three additional states or

(23:21):
something that they always used to say were in their
column because they always were so.

Speaker 5 (23:29):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (23:29):
That brings me to local politics, which we learned during
the man made COVID lockdowns that were so important. We
had a county board of supervisors, we had a city council.
Outside of Bretdefeld on the city council then that and
uh Brendall and Maxig supervisors Maxig and Brenda they at
the time were down there at the you know, don't

(23:52):
lock us out rallies. Early on they were on that side.
And but when the it turned into year one, year two, yeah,
we didn't have a defense here. Local politics very very important.
And GeV wire dot com. I assume this is David

(24:12):
Tobb because he's been following this story. The headline said, well,
state GOP have to determine who is the rightful leader
of the fres No GOP. Liz Colestott, it starts out,
says she's the chair of the Fresne County Republican Party,
and then Pete Alasian Elajian says he's the chair of

(24:33):
the Fresne County Republican Party. Let's take you back as
this article does. They had their meeting January seventh. It
appeared the party's executive committee re elected Liz Coldstott to
another two year term by a fifteen to fourteen vote
over Peter Peter's supporter said two voters, you'll can't enter,

(24:55):
show us your papers please. They couldn't get in and
it made the vote ill legitimate. So what they did
is Hey, y'all, let's go to Denny's have a grand Slam,
and we're gonna do another vote. Guess what Peter won
sixteen to nothing. Well, you're right, Gohmer, go ahead. They

(25:19):
said the issue may be decided by the state party. Now.
Peter transmitted his vote result to the California GOP. He
wants either recognition of the voter that the state party
oversee a new election, Peter said. The state responded they
received the documentation. He's willing to go accept a state ruling.
Peter quoted said, we don't believe that this election was valid.

(25:40):
We don't believe it was right. We want to ensure
that Republican voters know that, hey, we did all we could. Actually,
if all the Republicans were working together, you would have
already been doing stuff and won't be tied up with
this kind of stuff. Okay, Liz colsat says, and I'm
not blaming Liz over this. I would think that the
vote that happened at the meeting is the vote that

(26:02):
happened at the meeting, And it kind of seems weird
to go have one at Denny's. I never heard of that.
Colstott says she's too been in contact with the state party,
who told her they don't have purview over the matter.
She interpreted a state party by law that says county
parties operate under their own bylaws. So while while wis
we'll do what we want out here with our own

(26:23):
buy and straight laws, we're moving forward, said Liz Colstott.
Gregory Ganrudd, the state treasurer, is quoted in this GV
wire article. He said the state party holds its spring
convention March fourteenth and Sacramento, and the county chair's appoint delegates.
They said any credential challenge, such as a dispute about

(26:44):
who's the county chair making the appointment, would be decided
by the Proxy's and Credentials Committee. Okay, so how do
we read into that the people that are mailing out
your name, badges and your contact information and here's where
he can get a good deal on a hotel wherever
that gets mailed to, that will be the chair, I

(27:08):
guess said the state's treasurer, Peter called the vote that
Colestot won illegitimate. Now, Liz Colstop put out a news
release called the dissidence complainers, called the Dennys meeting happy
hour activities. She's quoted here saying the second meeting has

(27:29):
as much merit as five people getting together at ihop
and voting themselves in as a new president County Board
of Supervisors. I think that's a solid point. Let's see,
at the first meeting, Peter's supporter said, Liz excluded committee
member Connie Brooks because she was late, and excluded Austin Gilbert,

(27:49):
who was an alternate representing former state Senate candidate David
Shepard because Shepherd had moved out of California. Woo, who's
the person that's supposed to be sitting in the chair.
Can we just figure that out? Polstott explained that the
Roberts Rules of Order, a guideline used to conduct meetings

(28:12):
public and private preventive voter participating after the vote has started.
Polstott said, mister Gilbert was not even there to be excluded.
So yeah, how do you keep out somebody who's not
even there to be kept up? Okay, well, there's where
we stand at a time where well, you know what,

(28:33):
we Democrats are idiots, but at least they stick together.
It's hardly ever do you see and when one of
them leaves the Now that's group think as well. I
understand you got to have your own views, and Republicans
are more like that. We're more individually minded, which is
a great thing to make the bedrock of a country be.

(28:56):
But got throw that butt in there. But we don't
need stuff like this. A vote is a vote, and
I guess if there has to be some kind of
an appeal process, I guess everything has to kind of
have some kind of an appeal process. If I made

(29:19):
director Ryan Nigel upset or he made me upset, there's
an appeal process we have here where we have somebody
that would go settle that. There has to be something
there that would settle it. And I guess they would say,
all right, can we recount the first votes? Oh all right,

(29:39):
it looks like she was This.

Speaker 4 (29:41):
Is the Trebortary show on the Valley's pour talk.

Speaker 1 (29:45):
But it's going to be inside. Now. I've calmed down
about the skies. Yesterday on the show, I was worried
about the skies and the drones. Director Ryan Nigel. I
went to Fox News dot Com, couldn't find it. Then
he told me he saw it on the TV over
there in the studio that Trump's gonna lease investigation into
the drones as soon as he becomes president. Yeah, thanks

(30:06):
Joe for telling us what's been flying around up there.
Next week, I have an author on about Christian neuithology.
You heard that, right, I've watched some of this, not his,
he's written a book on it. He was actually, he
said a few years back. He was on coast to
coast and interviewed and I had a phone interview with him,
and I'm going to tell you right now, he's a

(30:27):
very sane man with a very sane job, and he
wrote a very sane book. I haven't read at all.
I've just seen some of the excerpts there. But we're
going to have him on. I think, what is it
next Friday? Next Friday? I think for I set aside
a whole hour because it seemed like something that was
so deep that it would be taking some time to
get into. Next TRITI thank you director, right, Nigel, Yes,

(30:50):
indeed he's going to be on. So I'm very interested
in having that conversation you had. Michael Schellenberg said, out
with Tucker, they were talking about the drones and the
orbs and all of that, and again. You've had the
military sit down with Congress and watch the videos of
these eighteen thousand mile an hour orbs that they can't track,
don't with it, don't know what they are. You've heard

(31:11):
airplane pilots and the control tower talking about what they've
seen up there, and we've all heard about it, really,
our entire entire lives. You think back to when War
of the Worlds was aired and everybody thought it was
a real alien attack, and that was just radio reports.

(31:31):
We're now looking up in the sky and seeing things
that are unexplainable. I can explain a drone. I can
explain a drone that has FAA lights, big drones, small drones,
fast drone, slow drones, but not what people are filming,
and not what the military is filmed. Unexplainable. So we
can all come up with our own theories however we
want to. We want to look at them. Right. Hey,

(31:54):
here's the theory that I'm gonna play you.

Speaker 2 (31:59):
You know him, well, what does it say to you
that he spent so much time in this farewell speech
as a warning as much as a victory lap.

Speaker 5 (32:06):
Well, thank you very much for having me. You know,
I always say and in fact, it was a title
of my memoirs, Blessed Experiences, And I say in that
book that all of us can be no more, no
no less than what our experiences allow us to be.

Speaker 1 (32:26):
Well, who's that Kamala's granddad little word salad? Now, no,
that's Congress And James Clyburn, the guy that kept Joe
Biden's career going when the primaries and Joe Biden one
went in any primaries, and suddenly he stepped into the
scene in South Carolina, made sure Joe Biden won, and
everybody else dropped out one, two, three, four, five, Just

(32:50):
drop on out. But okay, we've had some crazy stuff
already in the first seventeen days of January. I'm going
to say this is one of the funniest things. It
will end up being one of the top ten funniest
things of the entire year. I Byrne was asked about
Joe Biden.

Speaker 2 (33:06):
Listeners, how do you think history will judge this presidency?

Speaker 5 (33:10):
I think that he will go down as one of
the greatest presidents we ever had.

Speaker 4 (33:22):
Stop it, stop it now, Well you all were just
really deal.

Speaker 5 (33:37):
I think that he will go down as one of
the greatest presidents we ever had.

Speaker 7 (33:49):
Stop it now your.

Speaker 5 (33:59):
Dog, the greatest presidents we ever.

Speaker 8 (34:03):
Had in laughter infectious. That's I just went on YouTube.

Speaker 1 (34:13):
I knew I needed some laughter in there, and that
was Channel four LA anchors over a model that they
were showing who got wobbly heels and went down. You
knew what it was, man, you knew what it was.
And I went, that's the perfect laughter there for Joe
Biden's going to go down as the best president history reversion. Wow, man,

(34:35):
one of the greatest we've we've ever had. That was funny,
and yeah, I'm going to say, there are there are
times where we need to uh really, nah, you need
to see this. This is one of these that's gonna
be a little bit harder on the on the radio
to come out with here. But this was Kathy Hochel,

(34:56):
New York State of the State and they had these
dancers called all Over forty Dance Troupe. I'm gonna say
they were all over sixty one.

Speaker 4 (35:04):
This is the Trevor Carey Show on the Valley's Power
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