Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
All right, we got a question from American mama's, your
(00:01):
mama's did you see that Michelle Obama's on the cover
of People magazine again? But Milania isn't.
Speaker 2 (00:06):
Well, let's ask our American mama's.
Speaker 1 (00:20):
And joining us now our American mamas Terry Neediville and
Kimberly Burlison. Okay, So Michelle Obama, who apparently has wonderful arms,
I've been told she's again on the cover of People magazine.
Milania Trump, who correct me if I'm wrong? She was
a supermodel wasn't she a legitimate, actual super model before
she came First Lady?
Speaker 3 (00:39):
She's not been on the cover of Vogue or People
or nothing.
Speaker 2 (00:45):
Yeah, she's actually been on the cover of Vanity Fair
in Vogue more times than any other first Ladies combined.
Talking about Michelle a million Yeah.
Speaker 1 (00:54):
Wait, wait, Michelle Obama has been on the cover of
Vanity Fair and Vogue more than all the other first
Lady combined.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
Yes, yeah, all right, but she's still.
Speaker 1 (01:05):
Laura Bush was a very attractive lady.
Speaker 2 (01:07):
Well, Milania's like, you can't even Milia level. Yeah, she
has how to work the camera.
Speaker 4 (01:13):
I'm so so funny because she's on it's always sharing
the same stuff. I mean, this is two presidents ago,
She's still on the cover on People and they're asking
all these questions. What I thought was kind of interesting
to me is during the election, people were so even
I was kind of worried about Michelle Obama, you know,
going up against Donald Trump because from what everything everybody's
(01:34):
saying to me, she's the most influential person in the
entire country like this with and I was fearful of
her stepping in. She has a podcast that barely gets
a thousand watchers or viewers a day, So I'm like,
are we being lied to even about her?
Speaker 2 (01:51):
Yeah, I don't believe anything. I don't believe anything. And
if you watch the podcast, she wins and complains, well.
Speaker 1 (01:57):
If you watch the podcast, you're one of the okay.
Speaker 2 (02:00):
When you watch the clip the other right, right, when
you watch those clips that other people share, all she
does is wine and complain and talk about how they
were not treated as other first couple because of their race.
Speaker 1 (02:15):
Wait, how many times has she been on She's been
on Vote Yes and Vanity Fair more than all other
first ladies combined. Yes, she says she wasn't treated.
Speaker 2 (02:23):
As nice as this, she says. She says, this is
a quote She and Brock faced harsher scrutiny as the
first black couple receiving less grace than others. We extended flag.
We extended grace to her when her husband refused to
lower the flag for Chris Kyle, yet Trayvon Martin got
the flag lowered. We have extended grace to them when
(02:45):
there were rumors about what they were doing in the
White House to President Trump spying. The grace has been extended.
And then she complained, She's like, we can't even go
out because you know, when you're famous, you know, the
table next to you is talking about you. A lot
of first ladies, when their time is up, they go
off into the sunset. You don't really see them again
(03:06):
unless it's these special occasions. So she has a podcast,
she has a new book out with about her style.
She's on the cover of People magazine. These people they
have three mansions, a helicopter, a yacht, and what was
the other thing, a jet, private jet, And she complains
that we are still systemically racist in America. And she
(03:27):
continues to say that we are. We did not treat
them fairly. They were heralded as a king and a queen.
They were elected twice, not once, but twice.
Speaker 1 (03:38):
So there was a time in my life when I
was let's say, locally famous, shall we And every time
we went out to dinner you can ask my wife this,
the people at the table next to us would be
talking about, right, And you know what we did.
Speaker 3 (03:52):
We ate our dinner and had a lovely time. And
if they wanted to come by and say hello, I
said hello. If they wanted to take a picture, we
took a picture. All of that, we just went on
with our lives. And actually, frankly, knowing that everyone in
that room either knew who I was or had an
inkling about who I was, I liked that because it
(04:14):
made me be a better version of myself. I never
wanted the one time when they could actually see me
to be the time when I was behaving badly, and
so I never, basically I referred to as I never
have a bad day now, because I'm just I don't
ever want to go out in public and have a
bad day in front of other people. And who wants
to have a bad day anyway, So for you to
(04:35):
be complaining that, you know, as the former first, lady,
the people at the table next to you will be
talking to you. Get over it and don't have a
bad day.
Speaker 4 (04:44):
Well, she's also an example to other people. She's dwelling
in victimhood. Yeah, that's her, that's her position, that's her topic.
And to me, if you are an elevated person, black
woman that other people look up to, why is that
what you're pushing? Why not push something positive, good with.
Speaker 2 (05:01):
Both white people and black people and Latinos that help
make you and your husband powerful and wealthy. I think
about Oprah Winfrey in the same vein I used to
absolutely cherish her. Now biggest oh yes, she said, was
the Bible. But she's on that same victimhood rainbow where
they just want to constantly let you know that they've
(05:23):
had it harder. You know, it's so funny because Michelle
Obama talks on her podcast about when she went to Harvard.
She you know, she didn't take She said, if it
weren't for de I, she probably wouldn't have gotten in
because she wasn't a good test taker. And then she
gets there, she sees others like her, but she understands
that they wouldn't be there if not for the DEI.
Everything she promotes is why I think she only has
(05:45):
a few viewers every day because she she absolutely knocks
her husband every chance she gets. She said, I want
to smack him across the face because of the way
he chews across the table. She makes him look terrible.
She's just not a good person.
Speaker 1 (06:00):
Herself look terrible by saying that she shouldn't have been
in Harvard.
Speaker 2 (06:03):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (06:03):
Yeah, if you'd like to ask our American mama is
a question. Good to our website American ground Rader dot com,
slash mamas, A click on the ass the Mama's button.
Terry Nediville, kim me brothers, and thank you so much.
Speaker 4 (06:11):
Thank you,