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January 27, 2025 32 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time time time lucking load. So Michael Very.

Speaker 2 (00:12):
Show is on the air.

Speaker 1 (00:20):
Go get into Mica. We gotta feed a beard.

Speaker 3 (00:24):
I don't plan to shave, and it's good thing, but
I just gotta see.

Speaker 1 (00:30):
I'm done, all right, we'll.

Speaker 3 (00:33):
I'm mega support me. It's I'm beating verdict. That's the truth.
It's neither drink, no drug and noo.

Speaker 1 (00:44):
I'm just done.

Speaker 2 (00:45):
Alright.

Speaker 1 (00:47):
It's a great dead. I know the sun's still shining
in a close Did you know that Marvin Gaye used
to own a sofa repair shop. I guess it was
called Sectional Healing. Who you shaved your head? That's good? Yeah, okay,
it's nice and clean. You ball look?

Speaker 4 (01:09):
Yeah? I like that.

Speaker 1 (01:09):
Tell you of aalis. You know it's easy to forget.
How good Telly Savalas was I. Doctor said to the patient,
the results aren't good. Patient said, can I see him?
I doctor said probably not. The man's wife said to him,

(01:33):
I'm leaving you for twenty nine reasons and your obsession
with tennis. He said, that's thirty love. You know when
Trump said You're gonna get tired of winning, I thought
that was a joke and I ain't tired. But I

(01:55):
really didn't believe as much of as a believer as
I am. I didn't believe that he was do what
he's done in the first year. And he's done it
in the first week. It was a week ago he
took the oath. My goodness, this is the most glorious thing.

(02:21):
Let's take Columbia. Two planes of deportees taken back. These
are bad guys, rapists, pedophiles, murderers. The policy is worst first,
because at some point it's going to be bus boys
and nannies and you'll lose a lot of public support.
So you got to have the really, really bad guys first.

(02:47):
So they load up the first two planes and they
send them back to Columbia. And when the plane enters
Colombian space, the president is socialist Petro says, no, you're
not landing the plane. You're not leaving them here. Well,
that creates quite a problem. President Trump's out on the

(03:10):
golf course. My understanding is he was on the third
hole and he issued the order, and more importantly, he
went to social media, because if you issue an order,
you gotta wait on the media to tell what the
order is. You gotta wait through the lines you gotta
wait through the channels for that to be conveyed. He

(03:32):
went straight to social media so everybody would see it immediately.
This is a man who understands messaging, and he said,
I'm slapping a twenty five percent tariff on Colombian goods
coming into this country. And immediately there's a group of Republicans,
former Republicans, but they're still Republicans who are paid a

(03:54):
lot of money to just sabotage. They're the resistance and
all they do is whatever is done, they insult it.
So they started saying, we're gonna pay too much for coffee.
Y'all aren't gonna like this with to pay too much
for coffee. Well, we can get coffee in plenty of
places other than Colombia. I'll have you no, Ethiopia, Indonesia.

(04:16):
There are many many coffee growing regions around the world.
If you won't take the illegal aliens that are terrorizing
our country. And the president slaps the twenty five percent
tariff and in a week it goes up to fifty
you just priced away your coffee. People will find alternatives.
That's how the market works. Oh, but almost every cut

(04:39):
flower in the United States comes from Colombia. That's what
they claim, not true. A lot of it comes from
Thailand through Amsterdam. Anna Navarro said, yeah, we at Valentine's
Day coming up in two weeks. You're not gonna have
any flowers. We're not gonna either. That's a trade will

(05:02):
be Did you know we used to have a booming,
booming flower business in this country, in California, and that
business was destroyed when George W. Bush entered into what
was referred to as a free trade deal with Columbia

(05:27):
that absolutely devastated California's West coast. I mean they are
not mostly California flower industry from Pescadero to Monterey, California.
I've read a regional economy built on flowers intended to
be cut and presented. You have dilapidated old greenhouses, now

(05:54):
you've got non fallow fields. It was once a four
billion dollar into and California alone accounted for sixty five
percent of America's cut flower consumption. Then George W. Bush
pushed a quote free trade deal that destroyed the way

(06:18):
of life for tens of thousands of citizens, which meant
people who worked there, people who owned it, people who
transported the flowers, people who arranged the flowers. People who
what are they called, the AG experts, the Texas A

(06:40):
and M graduates that went in and made sure that
there weren't any bugs and all that. You're talking about
billions and billions of dollars every year gone because of
a free trade deal that gave Columbia all that business. Good,
we'll shut them down. Third hole, He issues his edict
on social media. By the sixth hole, the President has said,

(07:03):
we'll fly a plane up and take them, We'll take
them back. And by last night, before I went to bed,
the White House was reporting that Columbia had consented to
everything the President had asked for. The flights will resume.
And it's worse. First. So these are guys that I

(07:24):
don't care who your maid is, your yard made. These
are people you want gone because the longer you do it,
you're going to start to lose some people around the edges. Right,
everybody loves you know, the Fort Sumpter phase. But you
start seeing somebody you know or somebody you knows, no,

(07:45):
then you lose some of your support. But when you
start with the bad guys, which is what they're doing,
the plan is twelve to fifteen hundred people per day.
Third hole, he issues the edict. By the sixth hole,
we've got resolution. He had also announced that he was
rescinding the visas for Colombian diplomats in the United States

(08:06):
and closing the American embassy. They're fifteen hundred people in
Colombia that had appointments already to walk into our embassy
and get a tourist fees that have come here to
do business, to visit Disneyland. All of that would have
been gone. He did that in three holes.

Speaker 2 (08:22):
That's why.

Speaker 1 (08:24):
Guitar probably out of tune. Now you might have to
edit that. This is Mark Chestnutt and jar the czar
of Talk radio him. It's bigger than Colombia's what President
Trump is doing, and he knows this. He's very very
clever in this. The rest of the world is watching.

(08:44):
In every parliament, in every presidential palace, in every Third
world country, in the salons of the most expensive hotels
in the capital city of the poorest countries, where the
elite gather, they're deciding what they're going to do. They're

(09:09):
not just going to fall in line to Donald Trump.
They're going to all the titans of industry, there are
very proud. We're not going to take the people. We're
gonna take them, but we don't want those people back here.
We'll tell Trump we're not gonna do it. We're gonna
do this, and we're gonna do this. There are lots
of little Saddam Husseins down there who confuse the fact

(09:29):
that they have a power base that they live in
with what that is visa vis the United States. So
they're all watching and they saw Columbia capitulate. You know,
the choice of Marco Rubio as Secretary of State was

(09:51):
with the full understanding that the first two years of
the Trump presidency, your biggest issue is going to to
be repatriating people who broke into this country, and that's
going to be Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, and then
it goes smaller and smaller as you go down further south.

(10:15):
And Trump knew that, and Trump knew it was important
that it be someone who was going to look to
that part of the world like he could speak directly
to them. He does speak with a distinctly Cuban accent
when he speaks Spanish. His Spanish is very very Cuban accented.
And then of course you've got relations with China, and

(10:37):
I don't think that Rubio will be the point on that.
And you've got relations with Russia, and I truly believe
that the President himself will be to an extent a
man demand negotiator with Vladimir Putin. Very interesting times, fascinating times,
so many things that we're going to get to. As
I've told you for years and years, we're not a

(10:58):
news program. We don't break news here. We analyze once
things have become news, how they were reported and what
the truth is and what the bigger meaning of them is.
Otherwise you're just breaking news, breaking news, breaking news. There
are so many meaningful things that have already happened in

(11:18):
just this first week alone that I couldn't get to
all of them. But the pardon of the January sixth hostages,
the people who are political prisoners to the left, the
harm that was done to these people, the injustice right
before our very eyes, it is so damned egregious. It

(11:43):
was a story from ABC thirteen, and it's important to
get down to get granular to the individual and who
these people are. Channel thirteen. ABC thirteen had a story
about a marine VAP from Cleveland, north of Houston, and
he was pardoned and he talks about having no regrets

(12:04):
for what he did and that he didn't hurt a soul.
I'll play this, but some of you are going to
know him. I'd like to visit with him. His name
is Daryl Youngers, and if you know Darryl Youngers, you
can either email me his cell phone number, or what
would be better is if you know him well enough,
call him and ask him to call us. I'd like
to have him on the air right now and talk
to him. And our numbers, you remember, is seven one three,

(12:26):
nine nine, nine one thousand. You can always email me
through our website Michael Berryshow dot com. But I would
like to talk to him as soon this morning as
somebody can connect him. And the way this works is somebody,
If not him, if he's not a listener, then somebody
in his orbit will be. And I'd love to have
him on the air and just tell his story. I
think the more you hear of these stories, the more

(12:48):
these stories get out and are not silenced, the more
oxygen we give them, the more powerful it's going to be.
I think that's going to be very important. We'll take
this story to the break if somebody could connect me
with him again. Number is seven, one, three, nine, nine,
one thousand. His name is Daryl Youngers. Here's the story
by ABC thirteenth seventeen.

Speaker 5 (13:06):
People from there to then for the story who had
to answer for their actions on January sixth, Darryl Youngers
is among them. In his plea agreement, he had admit
the saying things like he stormed the capitol and that
it was a revolution. He eventually pled down to one misdemeanor.
This week, he says, brought relief.

Speaker 6 (13:24):
I was really fortunate I was for with my judge.

Speaker 5 (13:26):
Since March of twenty twenty two, Darryl Youngers has had
a criminal record.

Speaker 6 (13:31):
I just knew that was as good as I was
gonna get.

Speaker 5 (13:32):
Pleading guilty to a federal misdemeanor parading, demonstrating or picketing
in a capital building. He still had nine months left
on a thirty six month sentence of probation.

Speaker 1 (13:43):
Monday, he was pardoned.

Speaker 6 (13:44):
It was a big relief. I was really excited. It
was like one of the better days in my life.

Speaker 5 (13:49):
Youngers is among the roughly fifteen hundred people pardoned by
President Donald Trump for their roles on January sixth, The
government included pictures of him both outside and inside the
cap In his indictment. He said he knew he wasn't
supposed to be there.

Speaker 6 (14:04):
I knew for a fact, like I said that this
building is going to get logged down and everybody's getting arrested.

Speaker 1 (14:08):
But that's all he says he did wrong. The record
state he called it a revolution.

Speaker 6 (14:13):
I was fortunate that I kept my head on while
I was at the Capitol because I knew not to
cross a lot of lines, and I didn't.

Speaker 5 (14:19):
The Marine Corps veteran was arrested in June of twenty
twenty one, charged with three charges and three mister surjects
they have. Unlike other January sixth defendants, he did not
lose his job and says he has felt supported. The
breach of the Capitol has torn families apart. Jackson Refitt,
who turned his own father in, told ABC News Live
that he fears his father's release after the party.

Speaker 1 (14:42):
He needs help, and this pardon is not going to
help him.

Speaker 7 (14:45):
This is going to validate him and justify every action
that he has taken leading up to this point, and
that's what scares me.

Speaker 5 (14:52):
But youngers who's from Cleveland, Texas, sees it differently.

Speaker 6 (14:55):
I would rather a couple of people that maybe deserve
to be in jail be out of jail than anybody
that doesn't really be in jail and has no regrets.
Had I done something to hurt somebody, had I done
something to cause damage or to contribute to the chaos,
they may have contributed to somebody else being harmed, then
I would have regret.

Speaker 2 (15:12):
But I did it.

Speaker 1 (15:13):
There's none of that, you know.

Speaker 6 (15:15):
I entered the building with the intention of helping it possible,
and in the small little ways that I thought I
could while I was there, I did. And then I
got out of the building as soon as I was
told to.

Speaker 1 (15:26):
These are our neighbors, our sons, our daughters, our mothers
and fathers, our grandmothers. They broke down the doors of
people at five o'clock in the morning, put guns in
the faces of their kids and grandkids. This can never
be forgotten. We have to dig deep into.

Speaker 2 (15:45):
Vis Tracy Blair and Welcome to the lifestyles of the
not so rich and famous are as.

Speaker 1 (15:50):
I call it the Michael Berry Shows. My wife has
long said that one of the traits of Americans that
she admires most that the rest of the world simply
does not have is the ability to forget and move on.

(16:11):
She grew up in a family home while she was
in the military, so she moved all around. But her
family home was several hundred years old, nothing fancy. It
was a mud formed into a concrete and land is
so expensive that multiple families will live in a tiny
little space that would be too small for one family

(16:34):
in the Greater Houston area, especially if you were in
the suburbs. She says, what's amazing about Americans is our
ability to level something and build something better, to move
beyond that. Now, this fetish for the astronom is a
real it goes against that. But we are at people

(16:59):
that are constantly looking forward and not backward, and I
think that is a sign of why we're so successful.
But one thing that always concerns me is that we
don't learn the lessons of what has just happened because
so many people prefer to look away. A lot of

(17:23):
people don't want to talk about the clock shot. They
don't want to talk about what happened. Let's let's just
put that behind us. There is a wonderful movie I
watched this weekend at the recommendation of a number of listeners.
I first watched The Day of the Jackal Frederick Forsyth novel,
and all the same folks, a lot of the same

(17:44):
folks from that movie, which was about an assassination attempt
against French, the French leader Charles de gaul And then
I posted that I watched it and was wonderful. The
early seventies version seventy one, seventy two, that era, and
several listeners on Facebook said, oh, you got to watch Sedessaphiles,

(18:06):
and I did, and again ForSight novel. John Voight in
just this incredible role. He speaks with a slight German
accent because the whole thing is set in Germany. I mean,
it's it's it's how they pull this off. I mean
it's John Voyd, you know, a role. I've seen a

(18:27):
lot of his movies, and wow, was he ever amazing
in this movie. But it's about the Nazi, the concentration
camp leaders who have returned to Germany and are living
in society. And he's a reporter who wants to expose this,
expose these people for who they are because they fled

(18:48):
when when the Americans and the Russians came into Germany.
And these were the guys at Riga and al Schwitzen,
and people keep telling him, we don't want to talk
about that. Put it behind us. Put it behind us.
Today's Holocaust Remembrance Day. One thing international Jewry does that
I think is very effective is a constant reminder of

(19:13):
what happened, lest it happen again. The Armenians would love
to be able to accomplish that, but it has not happened.
The idea that you cannot simply move past something that
you didn't do a post mortemon, Well, we've got to
understand what happened on January sixth, And it's not what

(19:37):
you've been told, it's not what your nice neighbor has
been told, it's not the truth. Callers, hang tit. I'll
get you in just a moment seven three, nine, nine, nine,
one thousand. But I want you to understand what then
happened to these hostages, these political prisoners of the left.
The father of a pardon January sixth prisoner tells the

(19:59):
story about how bad the conditions were that his son
was in. This is from the Heritage Foundation his father's
name is ned Lange, and he's talking about his son.

Speaker 8 (20:12):
So what they'll do is they'll when they first picked
my son up on January sixteen, twenty twenty one, they
scooped him up and then they started taking them from
prison to prison, sometimes two hundred and two days down
in the bowels of the DC prison is the conditions
they're so egregious. He was actually sifting water through a
sock because of there's so much rust in the bottom
of that prison that you can't drink the water. And so,

(20:34):
and they would laid them on it's caught the lights.
And this is like Vietnam where they had lights on
all the time. You had two blankets, they call him
suicide blankets, and to just laid them on a on
a basically a block and not even you didn't even
have a mattress. So and then what they do as
soon as you start to get communications with your attorneys
and your family, they scooped you up and they take
you to another prison and then so you'll be there

(20:57):
for two weeks. You're usually a week to two weeks
you're in solid harry where they're transitioning you into the
new prison. And then you're there for oh god, maybe
three to five months they ship you out again. And
there was there was a time that two Christmas ago
we didn't know where he was for like I want
to say, almost three weeks. How is that possible? How
come you can't, you know, call his family. Nobody knows

(21:19):
where he's at. When you can't talk to your attorneys,
you can't are even talk to your family, and you
can't possibly, you know, make a defense. And then when
you do get your attorneys, you talk to you attorneys,
and then they.

Speaker 1 (21:29):
Scoop you up in a movie. So the prison, all
your notes and stuff they take so they know exactly
what your defense is.

Speaker 8 (21:34):
Just like playing cards with your apportent looking over your
back and looking at your hand, it's impossible to win.
What has happened under the Bidon machine was so egregious,
so anti American, unconstitutional.

Speaker 1 (21:45):
They walked all over a Bill of rights.

Speaker 8 (21:47):
Thank god President Trump came in here because not just
for our patriots but and our families, but for all
of America. Because if they didn't like you, they would
do anything.

Speaker 1 (21:55):
To shut you up.

Speaker 8 (21:56):
They tried to shut down my businesses. They had the local,
the state agencies come after my companies. I got a
bunch of companies, my restaurants, and so they'll stop it.
Nothing to shut you down. And I've listen right.

Speaker 1 (22:10):
These people and what was done to them, because it
had to be done to them to stop Trump. It's unspeakable.
I used to believe that things like this didn't happen
in our country. This happened in Cambodia, This happened in

(22:33):
Stalin's Russia, Stalin's in the Pilgrims. This happened in Nazi Germany,
this happened in Rwanda after their takeover. But this happened here,
and it just happened. And the people who did it,

(22:54):
the people who were so eager for it, the people
who were howling to add fuel to the to the
fly to burn. These people are people who were still
parading around. This is why Biden had to pardon Adam Schiff,
This is why Biden had to pardon Liz Cheney and

(23:17):
Adam Kinsinger and Thompson from Mississippi, because this was all done.
This crime, these series of crimes were committed in front
of our very eyes, and nobody has been held accountable.

(23:37):
And I feel certain from what I've seen so far,
that Trump's going to fix that because a lot of
people didn't get pardoned. A lot of people did horrible,
unspeakable things, and they're going to be punished. And part
of the punishment is being exposed and charged long before.

(23:59):
All right, I know we got the folks on the line.
I'll get you and just go hey, time time that
Baris show. You're on the Michael Berry Show, Jake, go ahead, sir, Hey,

(24:23):
I'm Michael.

Speaker 2 (24:23):
I'm you know, making another people's pardons and stuff, and
just kind of hitting me out of the blue. All right,
drop part of received his pardon on July thirteenth from God,
and not only him, I think the whole country and
the whole world got a pardon on July thirteenth from God.

Speaker 1 (24:42):
Well that's why he called it Liberation Day, because it
is truly the day that we are out from under
the totalitarianism, the authoritarianism, the evil, the socialism. I think
you're right, and and that's how it feels.

Speaker 2 (24:57):
You know.

Speaker 1 (24:59):
I get aggravated because I've got listeners and some of
them that are actual friends, and they will send an
email because somebody's trying to impeach Trump or Al Sharpton's
done this, and they're they're clearly boiling. I mean, they're
to the point that they're gonna, they're gonna, they're gonna
twist off, they're gonna blow out, they're gonna have a

(25:20):
stroke or a heart attack. And I don't even I've
stopped trying. I think that they're not happy unless they're miserable.
Being happy would not be We cannot actually enjoy what's happening.
That's not they've they've they've got so wound up by

(25:41):
the left that they have become just like the left,
and it it It's made them crazy, it's made them unlikable.
I don't want to experience that. I don't want to
be part of that. I don't want to live my
life like that. If you can't be happy this first week,
if you can't see that, the job of some people

(26:04):
is to sabotage what's going on and still enjoy the parade,
because somebody on the back row a mile down through
the parade is going all I ain't liking. Isn't I
good parade? That's just pray was better? This praise is
not even good. I don't like this parade. This is
no good. Hey, somebody back there's not enjoying themselves. I mean, yeah, yeah.

(26:25):
If we can't enjoy this moment, this is what we
worked for, then I don't know what you can't enjoy.
I really don't. Brett on the Black Line not a
very black name, but although there was Brett what was
the guy played center field for the Cleveland Indians, Real
light skinned black guy. Brett what was his name? Real fast?

(26:46):
I think he was a lefty. I think he bat left,
crew left. Brett was a b maybe do you remember
he was a leader? Was the lead off guys? Real fast,
super fast, Ricky Henderson level fast, light skinned black guy.
He played with the with the Indians for you, he
was an all star when they were no good? Brett

(27:08):
what was his name anyway? Go ahead? Bred on the
Black Line, Yes, sir, he's going good.

Speaker 8 (27:20):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (27:20):
I don't really remember what you were talking about it.
I bet all all, but I listened.

Speaker 7 (27:25):
To you man every day.

Speaker 4 (27:26):
Brett Butler, Yeah, Bret Butler played for LA for the
Dodge ms.

Speaker 1 (27:33):
Yeah, but he also made for the Indians. He played
for I just know only for five teams from eighty
one to ninety seven. Led the league in triples and
runs scored. Twice n L All Star in ninety one,
retired in ninety seven.

Speaker 7 (27:49):
Yeah, a wife didn't have one of those wife that
was what one of those one of those wife that
was uh see the guy's fame as like a model
or something.

Speaker 1 (28:01):
Oh you know what. Looking at him, I'm not sure
he is black.

Speaker 4 (28:05):
No, he's not black.

Speaker 7 (28:07):
He's a white guy.

Speaker 1 (28:08):
Okay. Then, so I was thinking of Brett Butler. But
there was a guy that was a light skinned black guy.
He was a switch hitter, base stealer, centerfielder. About that.

Speaker 7 (28:23):
That stunted like me, man, but I just talked at.

Speaker 4 (28:28):
Gody.

Speaker 1 (28:28):
What was this guy's name? Anyway? What do you call
about Brett?

Speaker 7 (28:34):
Father wanted the tall man and here's some support man.
Everything you talk about, all right?

Speaker 2 (28:38):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (28:39):
I started listening to.

Speaker 7 (28:40):
You in prison, and uh the first time I heard
you was about when Obama was coming in and I
used to listen to you because I listened to the
assholes game and I was like, man, who was just
doing this crazy? Like he's out of there?

Speaker 4 (28:55):
Like I couldn't understand anything he was talking about. But uh,
this time listen to you, I was already have a
fad and everything he was talking about now. I just
became a fan that I said.

Speaker 7 (29:06):
One day when I had him Ana talk to that guy,
and I thought the black line was a different line,
but I called because.

Speaker 4 (29:15):
I just how did you call the number? I called?
I was like, well, one is the black line? I
want to call it?

Speaker 1 (29:21):
Well, Brent, we had it was David Justice as well.
I was seeing up. Uh we had a black line.
When we were at the studio at the station. We
had a separate line that was called it's called the
warm line. You have a warm line in a hot line,
and so a hot line is the back line you

(29:42):
give to your guests when they're calling in. So President
Trump's calling in, you don't want him trying to get
in and all your lines are blocked up. So you
have a hot line, which is the back line that
you just give to a guest that you want to
make sure nobody's on that line. So when that call
comes through. Then you have a separate, dedicated line called
a warm line, and that would be where you'd have
your your your guests for the day and they would

(30:04):
call in. But it's okay. If one of them doesn't
get in, you're waiting, you know, in case you stacked
them because sometimes people call in early when you're talking
to somebody else, and then you have your regular phone
lines and you generally have about ten of those. Well,
we took our warm line and made that the black
line and gave it out as a separate number. Right,
But then when we moved, our new system is all

(30:24):
a web based system, and there wasn't the ability to
separate out the lines. So we just asked that when
you call in, you tell Ramone I'm black, and he
puts you on the black line. WHOA, yeah, yeah, yeah,
Well you know what, people are so much happier to
talk to Ramone than me. You know, Ramona and I.

(30:47):
Ramona and I both do endorsements, and some of our
endorsements are the same, and some of them are He
has his company and I got my company, And people
get so excited. You mean, Ramone could speak for me,
and I'm thinking to myself, Ramone, what about me? I'm
right here, Brett, what were you in prison for?

Speaker 7 (31:04):
Uh?

Speaker 4 (31:04):
This time is for uh possession with intent.

Speaker 1 (31:09):
Possession?

Speaker 4 (31:10):
I had a couple of possessing narcotics in.

Speaker 1 (31:16):
Brett. I'm gonna need some details what narcotic?

Speaker 4 (31:20):
Oh? I got covered a whole bunch of them.

Speaker 7 (31:24):
Uh I cold, uh extis need whatever they want to
call you pay only things uprolling that I never had.

Speaker 4 (31:32):
It was heroin.

Speaker 1 (31:34):
How come you didn mess with that?

Speaker 4 (31:38):
Because I fell in my mind what.

Speaker 6 (31:41):
I was doing.

Speaker 4 (31:42):
I felt like I was like filing a deal with
the devil because I said that that's the people.

Speaker 1 (31:49):
You know what I just realized when I said David Justice,
David Justice is married to halle Berry. That's who you
was thinking of, And that's what I was thinking of
when I said Brett Butler, the light skin left because
he was in he was in Moneyball. That was one
of Billy Beans cous is. He brought in a guy

(32:09):
that would kind of be a clubhouse leader that that
that was on the back end of his career. Nobody
wanted him, but he could bring a lot to that
team and he could still actually contribute. Hold on, Brett,
everybody else, y'all, hold on, stay right there, h
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