Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time. Time time, time, luck and load.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
The Michael Very.
Speaker 1 (00:12):
Show is on the air, and now a totally random
week in review from the past. Take a guess when
this was.
Speaker 2 (00:32):
If an eighteen wheeler blew their horn, it was the
best day ever. No amount of ice cream, nothing could
be better. He just blew the horn in reaction to you.
But no good deed goes unpunished. You were like done,
aget get just leave me alone. The final countdown to
(00:53):
opening statements and former President Donald Trump's historic hushmeny trial
is the wich. It's a shape, and it comes out
of Washington. It's in coordination with Washington everything. Think about it.
We can't even impeach Joe Biden. They doubled impeached Trump,
and they've dragged him to court in five different venues.
(01:13):
A horrifying scene outside the Trump hush money trial today,
a man set himself on fire. Stunned reporters who are
live on air covering the Trump trial reacted in disbelief.
Speaker 1 (01:26):
Can't see in any way how any human being can
survive this.
Speaker 2 (01:30):
You know, setting yourself on fire. I mean, I realize
it gets gets some attention, but what's going through your head?
How long into that do you wish you hadn't have
done that? Because I bet that happens.
Speaker 3 (01:41):
A woman is not an object.
Speaker 2 (01:43):
Your mother's right, Sean. Listen to what it says, Peta.
I didn't say that, Lee Majors did what women are things?
Lee Majors? Look at my cheat sheet? Okay? Oh you're
reading you script, Joe Biden.
Speaker 3 (01:55):
Okay, I got I like to call on Michael Barry
Mike worried.
Speaker 2 (02:01):
Do you know you are four years older than him
and fifty years more lucid? It's true, and you look great.
You look fantastic, jealous, pretty good. Between you and Pastorni,
you both make me feel awful because I'm no, you're not.
You're considerably younger, but I just own your mind, your
devilish good looks.
Speaker 1 (02:24):
Well.
Speaker 4 (02:24):
I'm not kind to kiss antil, but I've been seen
with tar Up. I've never been with anything less than
than none so fine. I've been on fire with silent
Field down past, with the girl named Boy, but somehow
they just don't end up as mine. Chance that the
(02:46):
fine lively, I take my chances.
Speaker 1 (02:51):
I've died for.
Speaker 5 (02:52):
Living in the movies at me, the gardist thing, I
other do it's wat my leading ladies, some of the
guy out of Manda in Minday, I'm my fall from
the tall building, new car.
Speaker 2 (03:12):
Because I can tell you what week that was. I
don't know what the Friday was birds, just because that
day was Lee Major thirty. That was his eighty fifth birthday,
which was April twenty third, so spent lunch time in school.
It has to be so if twenty third was Monday,
twenty fourth, twenty fifth, twenty six, twenty seven, it has
(03:35):
to be one of those April twenty sixth. Okay, then,
so his birthday was on Tuesday of that week. You know,
when I'm around one of those guys that was my
hero when I was eight, Lee Majors, Dan Pastrini, Nolan Ryan,
(03:56):
I feel kind of this urge. Now hear me out
a homo. I don't think it's homo, but I feel
this urge to hug him. Now hold on, hold on,
And I think the reason is bear with me. I
told Terry Pool this. I think the reason is that
(04:17):
in my mind, I'm still eight, right, And if you're
eight and you go running up to Nolan Ryan and
you hug him like, I don't feel the urge to
hug Roger Clemens, right, because we're the same age, or
Warren Moon or you know somebody else that's But I
think what happens is a little bit you know, when
(04:39):
you're a little kid, you run up and give that
you know, big athlete a hug, and you're like, yeah,
sure must Pastorina, you're number seven and I'm number seven
for the mac Lewis Bob Kittens, and you know, And
I think that's what ends up happening in my mind
is later. Okay, So I got to speaking of Lee Majors.
I got a quick story and then we'll go to
these calls. So I'm flying to Japan at Christmas. I've
(05:02):
never been. I've always wanted to go, and my wife
and kids, everybody's fired up about this. But we're under
a lot of stress because now my wife has planned
these excursions and all these things, and my boys and
I our idea of a good vacation is to go
somewhere and sit on our butt and preferably not have
(05:26):
to get out of the bed most of the time.
And my wife has got us crawling all over everywhere
all the time, doing things, and so I'm stressed about
the fact that we're supposed to go there and have
a good time, and there's going to be a moment
where she's going to say, well, fine, y'all just lay
(05:48):
in the bed. I'll go do all the stuff I
plan for us. I sent it to y'all and you
didn't say no. Well, we didn't say no because we
didn't read it. And we didn't read it because Michael
was in finals, Crockett was in finals, and I'm doing
the award winning Michael Berry Show and she's over here painstakingly.
(06:11):
We're going at one point where she picked some Japanese
whiskey bar where there's some special whiskey that the Japanese
or world famous bar. And so my thought is, man,
I hope I'm in the mood for some whiskey at
that moment, you know, because that's a mood thing I got.
It might be in a beer mood. So anyway, in
(06:34):
preparation for that, I knew a lawyer in Times, a
criminal defense attorney named Bob Sussman s U SSM A
N and Bob Flew. I think it was to the
Middle East. He had a client who was a criminal
defense attorney and he gets off the plane and as
he's walking through the airport, and this is not uncommon,
he collapsed and he had a stroke and he died.
(07:01):
So I'm conscious of this at fifty three now, having
had my own little episode. So I call Stan Dutman,
my cardiologist, during the break, and I said, hey, how
many aspirins should I take before I get on this
flight to Japan? And how long before it? And what
(07:23):
else should I do? And so he gave me. He said,
here's my advice. You're not going to tell this on
the air, are you? And I said, well, I would
like to, and he said, well, I don't want to
give it medical advice on the air. So here's what
I would do. I would tell you to tell people
to go see your internal doctor, your internist, or your
(07:45):
cardiologist if they're getting on a flight of six hours
or more for Christmas, because a lot of people are
going to go to Europe, They're going to go home
to Puerto Rico or wherever you're from. And he said,
what you want to what you want to educate people
on is that most people need an anti coagulant because
(08:06):
you don't want your blood thickening on the flight, right
that will lead to a DVT, which, as you know, Ramon,
is a deep vein thrombosis, which is basically a big
old clot clogging up your covert and then the water
can't get through, which is exactly what happened at your house.
Ramona had a flood in his living room this week
(08:29):
because the pipes in his house are old, and I
guess the plaque the rust and sediment in the pipe
broke loose and kind of jammed up. So then I said, hey,
you have any new thoughts on the carnivore diet because
(08:51):
I'm always passing up and he said, which is where
we reached interesting to the colonial house aquirements and received
a three recorded. So I asked Jukman the cardiologist Mary
Tally Boden, my upper respiratory breathing sleeping doctor who's breathemd
(09:17):
dot org. She's been crazy over this carnivore diet, and
I've told her to stop talking to me about it
because it's all she wants to talk about. So I
am constantly sending my doctor's emails with studies, asking them
what they think of things so that I can share
it with you, and all she wants to just talk
(09:41):
with this stupid carnivore diet. And so you know, she says,
you know you'd end up. You don't crave alcohol, you
end up, you don't crave French fries, you don't crave
all this stuff. It sounded like to me, you're dead.
But whatever, and so uh, but she's a very, very
very big fan of it. I have my hesitation because
(10:05):
Rogan went deep in the Carnivore and he said he
was just pooping himself. Oh did you do you ever
hear him talking about that? Oh? He was raving about
carnivor and raving about carnivor until one day he wasn't.
And he said he was sitting there doing the show
and he's just blowing dirt like you couldn't trust anything,
And he was blowing dirt every day, and he said,
(10:26):
I just I got tired of it. I don't know
if you remember, but at the station years ago, remember
there was a product called Olestra. So there was a
product that they were using to fry things and it
was a no cholesterol, no cavalry. I don't remember what
(10:49):
all it promised to be, but it was the ozimpic
of fried foods, and so like Fredo Lay had patented
this thing or marketed this thing, and so they were
sending out chips under the name Wow. Remember, and they
(11:09):
were they were they were ruffles potato chips, but under
the name Wow. So they sent it to the station,
and that stuff was supposed to go to the on
air talent because the way it's supposed to work is
it's a little bribe. You eat the chip that you
(11:32):
know in the kitchen every day. I literally never once
ate in that kitchen because and I had to walk
through the kitchen to get to the restroom from my studio.
Because if you if you once you break the seal
and one time eat the food there, you'd be you'd
be eating it every day. Doug Pike had what's the
(11:53):
donut people's names, Shipley Donuts. I'm gonna say Shipley's. I
don't care if you like it or not. I'm say
that savings time. Shipley's doughnuts would be in there every
day every day, and if you eat it one time,
then you're gonna eat it every time, you know, you'd
have no So I just never touched it. Well, sometimes
the food didn't make it up to our floor because
they were on four we were on five and three
(12:16):
was the public floor. So all the ladies that worked there,
who did the back office to make the radio station run,
they had squirreled away and hoarded bowguarded these chips that
had come in. Or maybe it was a pill you
could take, No, it's a weight loss pill. Maybe well
(12:38):
what it caused you to do was sharps and so,
but nobody knew that, so all the ladies. One day
in the afternoon, I go strolling down to the fourth
floor where all the sales assistants were, and there was
a whole bullpen where there would be these ladies, and
they were all cleared out, and so I asked somebody, Hey,
(13:01):
where's Irene, Where's and they said, well, they took this
pill that came in and it's supposed to be this
you know, wonder drug, weight loss pill, and it causes
you to poop yourself. And so apparently everybody had pooped
themselves and gone home. And that story still amuses me
to this day. So anyway, I asked Dukeman, I said, hey,
(13:25):
what are your thoughts on the carnivore diet? And he said,
you always say you have Joe Biden early on set,
We've talked about this. I said, okay, well, remind me
what we said. And he said, all right, here is
the issue with the carnivore diet for some people, particularly
many men, and it's the majority of them who reach
(13:47):
a certain age and cannot get rid of their belly fat.
No matter what they do, they cannot get rid of
their belly fat. The carnivore diet because of the way
that your body begins sort of eating itself. The fat
of your body becomes its fuel source. You It's like
a Remember Matt Thomas did that thing, the ice sculpting,
(14:09):
Remember the cool sculpting. He talked about it. So I'm
not saying anything else. Remember, and they would supposedly go
in and melt away your belly fat. Well, he describes
it kind of like that, and he said, their LDLs
do not go up, their HDLs remain the same, and
their inflammatory markers remain consistent. So, because Dukeman's whole thing
(14:34):
is you want to avoid inflammation at all costs, I
think some of you will remember me telling the story
over the years when I asked him if somebody wants
to stay off the table from being your patient as
a cardiologist, and not having a heart attack. What's one
thing you can tell them? And he said, avoid inflammation.
(14:54):
Inflammation is your enemy. And it turns out the the
more you read, Mary Telly Boden says, it's so many,
so many wellness doctors, so many people that I respect.
Peter Attia, whose daily newsletter I read. The more and
more and more you see is no matter people can
argue over or carbs good or carbs bat is red wine? Good?
(15:15):
Is red wine bat? How much sleep do you need?
How much energy do you need? Is strength training good?
They're all for strength training, they're all against inflammation. And
these things come up again and again and again. Petru
sent me a messages Morin and he said, I signed
up a fifty seven year old man in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania
(15:39):
today loves your show, thinks you're hilarious. His doctor, his
heart doctor, recommends that he starts strength training to combat
his soft plaque build up in his arteries. He said
his doctor was a big fan of him starting training
with us immediately. So we've got some listener in Phoenixville,
(16:01):
Pennsylvania that he does those training sessions by zoom. So
Dukeman said, there are men for whom the carnivore diet
is perfect. It will achieve things that nothing has ever
achieved for them without medicine. And their LDLs don't go up.
Their HDLs remain the same, and they have no inflammatory
(16:22):
inflammatory marker increase. All right. However, there are other men
their ldals do go through the roof and their inflammatory
markers begin setting off, and this is a bad thing.
This is heading on a path toward a heart attack
(16:43):
or stroke. And I said, well, how do you know
the difference, And he said, that's just it right now,
we don't. So if somebody tells me they want to
start on carnivore diet, I say, let's get your levels.
This is him talking, not me. I don't really need
to see levels. Let's get your levels of LDL. Let's
check your inflammatory markers, and let's start into this, and
(17:09):
then let's check this because if that's happening, you got
to get off this and we got to get you
to try something else. Because his point is, I'm all
for watching what you eat, eating better, drinking less, strength training.
He's a former college football player. He's big into strinth training,
but he's not against red wine. He owns Dutland Vineyards.
He loves red wine. He actually thinks in moderation red
(17:30):
wine is a good thing. But anyway, so that is
your advice to those of you. I say that because
January first is when a lot of you are going
to make a new Year's resolution. And I'll just go
ahead and say it now so I don't have to
say it again, even though I will say it again.
I think January first resolutions are a good thing. People
will say, oh, those are dumb. Well, I think markers
(17:53):
in life are important. Births, graduations, first day, marriage, engagements, funerals, births.
I think these things are very important. This is how
we mark life, and it's also a great opportunity to
take stock of where you are. And for a lot
of people that can be you know, my wife always says,
(18:15):
why do you have to start your programs on Monday,
because I'll blow it out the weekend before me. It's
just what I do.
Speaker 6 (18:21):
Lake Macaberry Shop.
Speaker 2 (18:26):
And we made ourself a pack this right here we
were heading and I said this before Charlie died, never
coming back. This is the gold standard of Texas country
red dirt music. There are other songs you can put
alongside it. But this is as good. It's at the
(18:49):
very top, and I will tell you why. Because Nashville
songs are about love from betrayal or lust and drunk.
This is about working in the hayfields, going to college
(19:10):
to play football, but they didn't ask your buddies because
your buddy weren't that good, being real proud of your
athletic prowess back in the day, and traveling around the state.
This is as good as it gets. This is this
is an anthem. I mean, this is front port song
level anthem. And I love my nationale music, don't get
(19:31):
me wrong, but this is what Texas country music gives
me that Nashville can't front port song, a song about
sitting out front and aggravating the Presbyterians, a monkst a
bunch of beer cans all around you and strapping your
guitar on and irritating them on their way to out
(19:53):
of church to the loobies. Nashville can't do songs like that.
I mean, you get your Roger Miller King of the
Road kind of fun songs, but nothing like that, nothing
that speaks to you like that. Vince says in two
thousand and seven, I entered a contest with the Houston
Chronicle to win a new Ford f one to fifty
(20:15):
truck from Legacy Ford in Rosenberg. I got a message
on our phone recording machine that I was one of
ten contestants to pick a key to see if it
fit this new truck. On the appointed day, I went
to the dealership and ten of us were lined up
and we picked our keys. I was nine out of ten,
and my key fit. I drove my new truck home
(20:39):
and it took me the rest of the day to
convince my Swiss wife that I did not buy a truck,
but won it. We sold it and bought new furniture
and flooring for our home. Photo attached. So I thought,
Legacy Forward, Rosenberg, well that used to be a fellow.
(21:00):
I am Ron you were, and Ron you were was
one of our biggest supporters at the RCC when we
were I didn't take loans for the RCC. We paid
as we went along. I paid it, Other people paid it,
people bought memberships. Ron yours came in maybe yours, maybe
(21:21):
with an S, and he said, how can I help you? Well,
I am not afraid to ask. I said, you can
be our Ford truck spot. You can be the official
Ford truck sponsor of the RCC twenty five thousand dollars
a year, three years up front, pay it all now.
(21:42):
He said, I can't pay it all now, but I
would have agreed to the deal. Well thank god he didn't,
because at twelve months, in one day we had another
twenty five come in. Man that AC went out, Oh,
yours is about to be. He also donated a van
for us to use for a catering van. He is
a prince of a man. I don't know whatever became
(22:03):
of him, but when I clicked on that picture, I thought, huh,
that was ron Ewers Dealership. I wonder who owned it
back then, and there was ron Yours handing him the
keys back in two thousand and seven. Prince of a man,
just a super super nice guy. Carolyn, What did you win?
Speaker 3 (22:21):
There was a radio contest where you had to identify
a voice, and so one day in I think it
was the late sixties, maybe early seventies, on a Friday
the thirteenth, I won thirteen half gallons of Bluebell ice cream.
Speaker 2 (22:41):
I have mercy.
Speaker 3 (22:46):
Yeah, that was kind of fun. We were just first
married and lived in an apartment, and of course we
didn't have a freezer big enough for that, so we
took it over to my in laws and put it
in their big deep freeze. It lasted a long time.
Speaker 2 (23:04):
Yeah, what year was this?
Speaker 3 (23:09):
It must have been the early seventies because we were
newly married. Actually we married on your birthday nineteen seventy three.
Speaker 2 (23:20):
Yeah, and are y'all still married? No?
Speaker 3 (23:26):
My husband passed away about four and a half years ago.
How old are you he had I'm seventy seven.
Speaker 2 (23:36):
How old was he when he passed four and a
half years ago?
Speaker 3 (23:41):
He was almost seventy eight. I'm sorry, he was almost
seventy four. Oh, almost seventy.
Speaker 2 (23:49):
I know, Carolyn.
Speaker 3 (23:51):
Yeah, Parkinson is terrible.
Speaker 2 (23:53):
If you were here, yes, I was going to hug
you even before your husband passed. How I would hug
you ever?
Speaker 3 (24:02):
Oh, I would take it.
Speaker 4 (24:04):
You know.
Speaker 2 (24:07):
I have not done it, but I have. I have
a lot of great ideas. But my problem is I
start stuff and I don't finish it, and then I
get aggravated with myself because if you can't do something well,
then you just don't don't do it. But I have
thought about doing People like you have made me think
about doing a Michael Berry Show singles night and people
(24:30):
would come out and it would be real low pressure. Right,
maybe we have a speaker and we make up something stupid,
you know, we'd have a speaker on some subject that
nobody really cares about, and then people would, you know,
kind of gravitate around, like not speed data or anything.
Because I hear from people. You know, my dad is
widowed and he's, you know, eighty seven years old, and
(24:52):
he's so lonely. My mother is widowed and you know,
she's seventy six, and you know, she just needs somebody there.
And if I feel like, you know, because if people
share the same values and I can tell you're adorable,
and somebody would just be so happy.
Speaker 3 (25:15):
You're very sweet.
Speaker 2 (25:17):
Well I'm serious, Caroline. I think somebody would be so
happy to have Carolyn in their life. Well, thank you,
But what would you say? Are the three things about
you that a man would really appreciate? Oh my gosh, yeah,
don't be.
Speaker 3 (25:36):
Shy, so I can cook, So I bet okay, everybody
everybody needs to eat.
Speaker 2 (25:43):
Yeah, I like the way you think. What else do
you keep a good house? As a mother would say, Yeah,
that's important to me. I mean, I'm not saying they're
all Duncans, and you know Duncan Deans.
Speaker 1 (26:01):
Yr Yo. Never know.
Speaker 2 (26:05):
If you've never seen this video, go to YouTube or
wherever you watch your videos and watch this.
Speaker 1 (26:13):
It is so good.
Speaker 2 (26:14):
It's black and white. Earl Thomas comes home and he
passes out in his truck and his girl. He doesn't
come home for the night. This girl's worried about him.
She calls down at the shop. I don't remember the
(26:34):
guy's name, Joe is Earl Thomas, Sarah, he didn't come home,
never mind, I just saw it. He has staggered out
of the truck and gone into the detached shed garage
whatever it is. And he's got an old motorcycle, like
(26:56):
an Indian brand, and it hadn't run in along time,
and he starts working on it, and of course he
knuckle busts. He busts his knuckles while he's doing it,
and then he's got a cigarette dangling because he's etc.
And he's freaking awesome when he showed Miss Shingles. And
(27:18):
then eventually he gets it cranked and he gets on
there like a bad ass, kicks it down, kick starts it,
and he pulls up and she can't help herself. She
has the biggest smile and she goes running out there
and gets on the back of the motorcycle, because that's
what you do if you're Earl Thomas Connolly's girl and
(27:41):
it's nineteen seventy eight and y'all are going on a
ride and you're not even mad. I can't be mad
at you, Earl Thomas. My favorite cover version of that,
Michelle Bird sent to me years ago, over ten maybe
ten years ago. Tracy Bird was at home off a
tour and he was sweeping their bedroom and he didn't
(28:06):
see that she was filming him, and he got under
the bed and he had a broom and he's down
there like a good housewife. He is down there, he
is sweeping underneath there and he is singing this. Well,
it's Tracy Bird, so of course it's beautiful. And she's
recording this while he's doing it. She sends it to
(28:26):
me and you have to know what my first question
is gonna be, Can I post this? And she said
he's gonna kill me, but yeah, and I guarantee you
every woman out there was thinking, man, I like to
being married to Tracy Bird. He would sweep the bedroom
and get up. I mean, he got up under the
bed where you know all the what my wife calls boujou,
(28:49):
where all the you know, the dried up roaches, And
just Bouju's the best word I can think for it.
Everybody should have a nickname, kind of word for just
that clunky. You know, there's probably some leaves up under there,
there's some cobwebs, and he's up under just getting after
it while he's singing Once in a Blue Moon beautifully
(29:10):
of course, perfect pitch. And he never sees that she's
filmed this whole thing and it was just money. And
I always imagined the number of women going to be
married to Tracy byrn. He sings lights out, he looks good,
(29:31):
and he cleaned the bedroom when he comes back from tour.
And then truth be told if women are honest after
a while, and he leaves for four days at a time,
you know, because I think I think the ladies like
us to not be around one hundred percent of the time,
you know what I mean? Yeah, how can I miss
you if you never go away? So there's an air
taxi company that has applied for a license. It's jetson
(29:54):
style to run a little air taxi. I guess this
thing is an electric helicopter. It looks like a train wreck.
I mean, I can imagine it being the train wreck.
And they're talking about running it between Sheila Jackson Lee
Terminal and Hobby Airport, Ellington and Energy Corridor and Sugarland
Regional Airport in downtown Houston. It's a subsidiary of Boeing
(30:18):
called Whisk. So buddy mine had to fly to San
Diego yesterday two hours and twenty five minutes I think
is what the flight was, and they had to wait
an hour and five minutes on a They taxied for
an hour and five minutes. And he said that everybody
(30:41):
is saying Bush Airport in Houston has completely collapsed, which
makes it the Sila Jackson Lee Airport renaming just perfect,
just absolutely perfect. And when you walk up to the airport,
they can jerome you fat bastard, you didn't get the flight,
and that could be kind of like you're welcome to
the airport. I would rather drive than fly. I've just
(31:07):
gotten to that point. I'd like to have a nice
pre Vost bus and I'd rather just just get on
the bus and go and go all over the country,
Shirley que liquor style. Just go all over the country
and never have to get on a plane again.
Speaker 6 (31:24):
I was dragging my bags alone a lonely ignorant highway
when I came upon this lady in a lime and
yellow Cadillac Seville. She said, if you just going to
the Promised Land with me, you could ride. So I
had climbed it up into that sansy car and set
(31:47):
it down insad. She asks me, the girl, where are
you being with your wig A dusty and ignorantized saying,
look here, woman, I travel every road in this here lane.
I've been everywhere, girl, I've been everywhere, girl, like crossing
desert bear girl, breathe that mountain a girl, that traveling
(32:11):
is my life. Girl. I've been a away. I've been
to Reno, Skygo, Fargo, Minnesota, Buffalo to Rondo windows Heisota
Witchitartus out of While, Oklahoma, Tampa, Anama, Matawhi Lepelo, think
about tomorrow, Savage over Amerillata Wikuilabaron del amerill I mckill
I've been everwhere, girl, I've been everywhere. I crossed him
(32:32):
old desert girl and breathed that mountain. Ah, that traveling
is my life, honey. I've been ever a Whey has
been to Boston and Charleston, Dayton, Louisiana, Washington, Houston, Texan, Texana,
Monta Ray, Fairy, Santa Fe, Telepitture, Glenn Rocks, Fat Rock,
Lily Rock Hospitals, Tennessee, Hennessey, Chi can Be Spirit Lake,
(32:52):
Grand Lake, Devil, l A Cray Lake Piece Sink. I've
been everwhere, girl, I've done been everwhere. I've breathed both
kumid and nasty as had traveling been my life, Honey.
I've been ever where, Oh Lord, I've been to it.
Been to Louisville, Nashley and Knoxville on Back, Sherville, Jacksonville,
(33:13):
Waterfield Coast, Threek of Richvid, Springfield, beg and c Street,
Boat Hacks that cantellect fund like that for Dela. Go
ahead your eterestin domes the Gatlina Canady and see what
I mean.
Speaker 1 (33:21):
Good.
Speaker 6 (33:22):
I've been everywhere. I've been there.
Speaker 2 (33:24):
I where a girl.
Speaker 6 (33:25):
I crossed the old desert touney and breathed that nasty ass.
Just traveling been my life good. I've been aver wh
been to Pittsburgh, Parkersburg, Randsburg, Colorado, Eillsburg, Vicksburg, Vicksburg, Eilsbrody
and Larry mar Having Star, Johnny Nascar, Nebraska, Naska, Nasty Water,
(33:46):
Louke Cannabis, who Can't City, Sioux City, Cecity dot See.
Speaker 1 (33:49):
It's an ignorant.
Speaker 6 (33:50):
I've been everywhere. I ain't know why I hadn't been good.
I've briefed that nasty A. Traveling is just in my blood.
I've been every way and now I'm ready to sit
down