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April 4, 2024 • 28 mins
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(00:00):
And the Merry Go Round goes roundand round and round. My friend on
Mick Marr's birthday, Motley Crue.He's sixty nine and a very handsome guy.
I want to start the show today. And by the way, we
are brought to you by the KentuckyOffice of Highway Safety. Buckle up,
put the phone down, pay attentionwhere you're driving. And by the way,
it's been nice not having every Everyoneis in Florida getting drunk and embarrassing

(00:22):
themselves on beaches and that leaves theroads to us. That's true. There
is no traffic anywhere, and it'sfantastic and that's helped getting through Prospect the
last few mornings with all Right,I saw the damage. That's where I
want to say. I just wantto say some words for the people that
are have trouble with their houses anddestruction. Is that we see you,

(00:44):
okay. I you forget the everyday basics that you use that if you
just take one piece away, howit disrupts your life, like a long
power outage, like a power outageor no roof or water if you have
plumbing issues and you have to turnoff the water in your house. There

(01:07):
are so many times that you don'tthink about how much water you're using in
a general way, right No,uh sorry, I had tod wpe some
no bathroom. No, no bathroom, No water out of the sink to
wash dishes, no water to drinkunless you're prepared to go to Kroger or
publics and buy out every bottle ofdistilled water that they have to refill the

(01:32):
tank in your toilet right at whichI've had to do before when we had
a water main break at our housein an Etown. You just go buy
up all the water you can affordat the time and refill it. It's
so little things taken away from you, and it uproots your your entire life,
especially with your family. So weget it. We get it.
And if you're having issues, andbecause I'm watching all of this coverage yesterday

(01:56):
and how there were tree companies everytheir house, the sound of the treaders
were going, and the sound ofroofers trying not to put a roof on,
but to put the blue tarps onthe roof just to say, hey,
we need to shore this up fornow because we can't get to you,
especially with more rain coming yesterday andtoday, and you're thinking that.

(02:21):
You think, if that's your house, you're going Okay, everything that was
on the top floor now is ruined. And I think it's so much fun
to deal with insurance adjusters. Thisis where you find out just how good
or bad your home. Oh boy, after the deductible and then they you
know, and then you have tohave the discussion how much stuff was worth?

(02:43):
Right? It was priceless to me. Yeah, but they'll tell you
that, you know, a differencebetween a two month old well back in
the day because we got broken intoonness DVD player and a five year old
DVD players how much we're gonna py? Yeah, you know. Yeah,
I've had I have had my housebroken into in Texas and stuff stolen,

(03:04):
and it's no fun. No inthe insurance company. What I thought something
was worth was definitely not what theinsurance company. No, no, no,
no, yeah, there's no doubt. And you never use it.
I mean, you never use yourhome insurance. Really you should have it.
I'm not saying don't get it,but is anybody here on this show
ever known someone that needed the entiretheir entire house replaced. Well, I
don't know any of the people thathave been affected by the tornadoes the last

(03:27):
couple of days. But they're definitelyneeding all of it. But I'm just
saying through your life. Of courseyou have home insurance and it's by law
you have to. Actually, yes, I do. My parents had a
fire in their house two days beforeChristmas, destroyed their entire house with the
smoke. Yes, my mom hadMy mom had a This happened back in
eighty nine early Yeah, Christmas,of Okay, it doesn't matter the details

(03:51):
there go. No, she hadan Advent candle holder on the table,
lit the candles all the Advent candlegot it before we went to church.
Little baby Jesus burned your home.Then candle holder got it. We went
to church. She forgot to blowthe candles out before we went. Forgot
to go to the house before wewent to dinner. I went off with
my then wife to my in law'shouse. They went to the house to

(04:14):
find the smoke, alarms going offand smoke rolling out of the house.
Yeah, they needed all of theirhomeowners insurance to take care of the smoke.
They had to get all the clothesspent, the special dry cleaners,
the carpet, the paint, everythingthey needed all up, so we see
you. Prospect. Middletown, Indianagot hit hard. There's some of the
video of the worst videos in Indiana. Yeah, where there's a swathe kind

(04:34):
of taking out. So good luckand we pray for you and we are
thinking of you for sure. Okay, all right, we're beryling towards basketball
here for the final four Yukon versusAlabama, Purdue versus NC State. We
really haven't touched on that all weeklong, and it's barreling towards a double

(04:55):
header on Saturday night. The PurdueNC State game is first at six point
thirty and then that will followed byYukon in Alabama. And right now,
the carousel of players that are tryingto negotiate their own worth as they go
to new schools, and some ofthe numbers you don't know are accurate or

(05:15):
not. And welcome to free agencyit is, and what we have his
free agency I understand because the argumentis, hey, coaches can pick up
and go whenever they want, soI get it. A player can transfer
once without having to sit, butyou can't have roster upheaval because a player
turns into a superstar as your leadingscorer plays thirty eight minutes a game.

(05:35):
You think, well, he's comingback now someone else is going to pay
him. Yep. So if youwant a second transfer, you sit out
a year. And this isn't hardto fix. I think normally, when
the entire roster leaves, it setsa program back five ten years. Right
now, it's going to be thenorm. Now there's a possibility you lose

(05:56):
every player every year. And whatjumped out of me yesterday was the Hatfield.
What's the center's Hatfield? McCoy's,no, the kid that played center
for Louisville this year. Oh,Huntley Hatfield. Huntley Hatfield. Good player,
I mean, good player, butmid level. Right, he's not
a first round draft pick center.Right. We used to talk about Col's
one and done and then Koschewsky alittle bit. Every team now is one

(06:19):
and done. So so my pointis he's a mid level center. Right.
Yeah, they're saying he's gonna geta million dollars. He says he's
asking for a million dollars to playbasketball for someone next year. Let's put
him with a good coach. Okay, understood, But didn't he come from
Tennessee first? Wasn't he a Tennesseefor a year and then here Okay,

(06:41):
but again I'm talking about market valueat this point because you start to pull
back away from I really stop caringabout these kids because it's pissing me off
now that they just they're just Youwere the captain of the team. You
score twenty points. Again, I'mnot talking about Huntley Haffield. I'm talking
about in general what Dave said.You were captain of the team. Yeah,
you you led the team in minutesand points. That city loves you.

(07:06):
Yeah, but I'm gonna get sevenhundred thousands instead of three hundred and
fifty thousand, And you're like,what it turns into? Show me the
money. So how many people withdeep pockets for how many years are going
to keep paying players a year afteryears? They're not going without a Final
four because it doesn't pay off.This is timing well for the kids early

(07:27):
in this system. Yes, yes, and again, let's not forget the
colleges, the actual universities. Theyget to take all the money in and
they don't have to spend any oftheir money for these kids. Let's start
this nil initiative. You mean thefans are gonna have to buy the tickets,

(07:49):
the merchandise, give to the program, and now pay the players for
your benefit. Oh it's much better. Now makes me? Now this is
but this is why you know,I don't know for those of you that
might have missed it. Terry Minershad Mitch McConnell in here the other day
on his show and the subject ofNIL came up and mccon Senator McConnell said

(08:13):
he's had representatives from at least fourI think of the Power five conferences come
to him and say, hey,we need to get some national uniform regulation
on this nil. Sure, yeah, what it's lack of leadership from the
NC Double eight again again they haven'tcared about the fans for a long time.
This started when with with bad scheduling, so more and more cost licenses.

(08:39):
And then you looked at it andsaid, wait a minute, why
is Kentucky North Carolina in Indianapolis?Why is correct? Louisville Marquette in neutral
game? So all the best gameswere neutral site correct? And then you
look down at your at your ticketsand go, there's not a game I
want to see until January fourth.I just it's such a college athletics is
such a grift. It is andit's getting work and the fans are David

(09:03):
and I we looked at each otherat the end of the afternoon Underdog's run
we did sports were like, whereis this going? Like we saw this
coming. We said, they're goingto blow up the entire system for a
handful of plays. A. Yeah, that could probably make money. That's
right, that's right. So andbecause it really only came down to two
or three kids that could really jumpto the NBA or like we're talking about

(09:24):
too and if the NBA would allowit, then that would have Whatever happened,
well, here's the deal, though, the eighteen year olds can go
to the if craig me, ifI'm armer, did it change? The
eighteen year olds can head to theNBA like no Sean camps and no,
no, they can go to thethey can go to the G League,
or they can go to the GLeague, or they can go to or
Europe. Well, if they wantto make money, go do that and
then and then hit the NBA.Yes, but the universities like the University

(09:50):
of Louisville has reported made one hundredand forty six million dollars Broady in one
hundred and forty six million dollars intwenty twenty three. It's wholehilarious that everyone
just accepted the fact that, oh, yeah, we're not paying for the
players that we make the money offof. You're gonna have to do that
anymore. And the fans are like, ok oh, I'll give five thousand

(10:13):
dollars to the NIL initiative. Yeah, wait a minute, so you're gonna
I gotta buy the merchandise the ticketsalso give to the program to get better
seats. When I want to getseats and I have to pay your players
that you're making money off and don'tforget pay for the expensive conson is It
is like the NFL telling the fans, I'm sorry, we're not paying the

(10:35):
salaries anymore. The city of Clevelandor wherever is gonna have to pay the
city, and the city's going okay. Not that they wouldn't like there's some
cities that will go okay, we'llpay it. Yeah, but that's what's
happened with this NIL. The universitiesare still cashing all the checks and they
got the fans to pay for theplayers. Wow, it's just legalized booster
activity, is all it is.Yeah, they've they've legalized the boosters used

(10:58):
to do under the table. ButHatlee Huntfield, whatever the damns named.
Million dollars come on, doesn't meanyou'll get it. I'm not Look yeah,
uh neft. The old show partnersaid, uh, there is no
such thing as overpaid. We hada long argument about it. Said,
no, you're worth what someone's willingto pay. One's no one's ever overpaid.
And we used to argue about it, and he said, and he's

(11:22):
in. He's right by saying,look, if someone's willing to pay you
for it, that's what the marketvalue, whatever it is. If they
pay you, then that's what itis. Me my brain goes to,
no, that guy's not worth ninemillion dollars, like I did. Somebody
go that dude's not worth nine Andsometimes teams find out the hard way they
pay that price, and then theperson gets there and you find out if

(11:45):
it's like, Okay, let's saya running back, twenty nine year old
running back, got nothing left ofthe tank, but we just signed him
for nine million dollars a year forthe next three years, and it's gonna
and if even if we dump himnow, it's gonna count against our cap.
But it's skewed, isn't it.I mean very you look at you
look at every so all of womensport, all the women basketball players now
want to get paid with what CaitlynClark got paid because she's reported at five

(12:07):
million some crazy, some crazy number. But she's worth it because she's she's
you know, more people watch thatgame against LSU than any NBA game in
the last ten years, So Iget it. But every girl's gonna walt
that. Now, why are notgetting that because you're not that good?
Because you're not You're mid level.You're a mid level player. The market

(12:28):
takes care of all of this.We'll see, but again you're correct,
the market will adjust after maybe gettingliterally Carjacker, because not every player is
getting paid. Louisville's punter, ut, I think you're making any money.
It's just no one's going to payhim to do that, and the numbers
will be way overblown. Yes,you know that kid's not making seven hundred

(12:52):
and fifty thousand dollars this year.And now let's just say that Huntley Hatfield
had five hundred thousand from Louisville lastyear. I don't know what it was
or if it was even that.But isn't there an expectation from sponsors that
you're going to be around for alittle while, or is just five hundred
thousand dollars for the year if Iwant to stay, you only five hundred
more. I don't know many businessesor people that would put up that kind
of money that just have it thatthey just light it on fire and burn

(13:13):
for one and done year. Well, you're also hoping that the narrative for
the player doesn't change mid season,right, you know, like the quarterback
is amazing. You just you're payingfive hundred thousand dollars for an advertising campaign
and then let's say the team goeszero to four in the next four weeks
and it's because of him. Okay, you've invested four hundred thousand dollars,
and now what a talent is like, you know, run that kid out.

(13:35):
He's terrible. He's not even starting. Yeah, the second place guy
is the second string guy is playing. So yeah, that jumped out of
me yesterday. It's all over socialmedia that he's he is wanting a million
dollars to play, and I'm like, and apparently sky Clark got triple tripled
his value by going to UCLA.I don't know. Good for them,

(13:58):
good for them, but fans areyour suckers. This is y'all are suckers.
Good luck. I'm not giving adime, not giving one dime for
a kid to play basketball or footballat u of L. It's crazy.
You should be paying. The budgetof the athletic department was one hundred and
forty six million dollars. Well,didn't we talk on here one day about
the the endowment for u of Lis like one of the top teams in

(14:20):
the country at all? No goit was it was siphoned and run wrong
for a while. It was Tom'sATM machine. Well it was. It
was a lot of people's ATM machine, and they did not invest. Well,
so it's less it's just at abilityalmost not that wellw no, no,
they're not that indowed. And thenthat always baffles me. So you

(14:43):
have billion dollar endownments, multi billiondollars at some universities, and yet they
still raise tuition without tapping into thismythical endowments. Well, it's a scam
like endorment and uh and endowments area scam and they're like Venette's an idiot.
He's on there saying endowments her ascam. Okay, well, Dwight
or Dave and I got into this, and women are going to amen because
you know these guys talk about theirendowments all the time and it's never never

(15:05):
true. Okay. So but wewould have management people, university people on
and ask the same question, whatis an endowment and what's it for?
We would get a different answer fromevery single person. Now that always triggers
me in my head to say,when you get a different answer like that,
it's a scam. It's a scam. It's it's made for, it's

(15:28):
it is, there's no rules,you can steal from it and not go
to prison. And then what's itsupposed to be for? Because somebody will
answer and say, well, it'ssupposed supposed to be you can build new
science buildings by using that is collateraland pay right, so you the endowment
helps build new buildings. This islike the gold reserves that are supposed to

(15:48):
be behind our currency hasn't been behindour currency since Nixon is But yeah,
it's funny you say that the theendowments are going to build buildings, then
why do you get the rich youdonate the money to build the building and
get it named after. They don'teven touch the indicts. I'm telling you
every expert we had on and thensome experts went to tell you truth.
I'm not sure it's a slush.At least they're honest about it at that

(16:11):
point. Slush, it's a whatis it? What does the endowment do?
Now, we've talked about some universities. Harvard's is number one, Texas
is number two. Like Harvard couldHarvard's endowment is so large, it's like
forty billion dollars. Texas got likethirty five billion. These are numbers from
we could pay everybody's tuition for decades. Yeah, I think Harvard could pay

(16:33):
everybody tuition for one hundred years,for one hundred years. Yeah, and
uh and still have money in thein the bank. Uh oh, I
know what that means. All right, but I'll leave it with this college
fans. Your suckers. You aresuckers just walking into the wall. I'll
pay for your players, alright,you go ahead. And then that theme,
Yeah, I got an aggie joke, oh Texas? All right?

(16:57):
Hey, yeah, Sieman, Johnny, so did you hear about the aggie?
He was watching the news one evening, a story came on about the
fact most accidents occur within one mileof the home. Yeah, oh man,
you know what his solution was.What he moved? All right,
is your joke of the day.That's not bad? April fourth, twenty

(17:21):
twenty four. So I's still onsuspension for his bad joke. All right,
back after this, we'll talk toDenise Pelagrini with the Bloomberg Money Manute
in just a minute. Just hangout on news Radio eight forty wa chance.
Oh that sound makes me feel sexyinside. For those on the podcast,

(17:41):
isn't it possibility paparazzi are looking somewhereelse? No, no, no,
it's not possible. All eyes on, Tony, Oh, thank you,
thank you. This is click ator skip it where I hit the
gossip headlines read you guys a headlineor you in this case, tell me
if we're gonna learn more or skipit. Okay, let's do it.
Sky We've been watching on Reacher headline, Alan Richan says sexual assault drove him

(18:06):
to quit modeling. What click onit? Oh my gosh, who sexually
assaulted that dude without getting their headremoved? The guy that played Jaws?
What Richard Keel. If there's anythinggood that can be taken from the explosive
documentary Quiet on the set The DarkSide of Kids TV, it might be

(18:26):
the openness that it's encouraged in Hollywoodsince Drake Bell and others came forward with
stories of their abuse. Reacher starAlan Richon becomes the latest. The forty
one year old, who began hiscareer as a model, describes an incident
with a quote very famous photographer.He chose not to name him. He
said it was so uncomfortable he quitthe business all together. Oh. He

(18:48):
claims he was sexually assaulted. Quote. I left and drove straight to the
agency. His agent told him tocalm down and even knew what was going
to happen. Oh boy. Richardsaid he was sent to the shoot and
then asked to do nudes in exchangefor a very lucrative campaign. He also
alleges fashion photographer Mario Testino reportedly gropedand propositioned him at Paris Fashion Week in

(19:14):
twenty fourteen. He compared modeling tolegalized sex trafficking. Let me tell you,
you gotta be very brave to sexuallyharassed a six foot five, two
hundred and seventy pound muscle bound dudethat looks like he can take care of
himself. Yeah, okay. Andhe's in the new one, the whatever,
the gentleman the un whatever, gentlemanlyBritish story. It's a true based

(19:37):
on a true story in the SecondWorld War. Churchill put together these ex
cons and criminals and said, justgo kill Nazis. He's also in the
movie that was based on the storyhere right with the helicopter in the snowstorm
and heyes, angels in the snowor something like that, something like the
snow angel in the parking lot,I think is what it is. I

(20:00):
like him, by the way,I too when he the first season or
Reacher, I was like, whoeverthis actor is? I'm in thousand.
He's like just good enough of anactor, but he's playing that character perfectly.
He's supposed to be a beefcake that'snot super bright and knows what he's
doing. Oh no, I thinkhe's super super super bright. Right.
The character is brilliant. No.I mean he's the smartest guy in the

(20:22):
room, every room he's in,right, isn't he. I have to
go back and check that he's smartwhen it comes to getting out of situations.
Headline on Boy Jax Taylor slams vanderPumper Rules, claims it scripted,
Skip it. I have no interestin vander Pump Rules. I still don't
know what it's about. I don'twant to know. I think it's a

(20:44):
shoe store in Nashville. I don'tthink that's true. Headline. Jill Zarin
defends herself after below Deck allegation.Okay, so click on it because Dwight
watches this show. It is abouta group of people that work those So
you see these yachts all the time, right, yes, so someone has
to work these yachts like they haveto have a team of people a captain,

(21:07):
a chef, and the waiters andthe people that take care of everything.
So just like a hotel. Soclick on it. See what's going
on. Man. I need topronounce it slowly in case Dwight's listening,
Dwight. It's below deck, belowdeck, below deck with a knee.
As we previously told you, RealHousewives of New York star Jill Zarin caught

(21:29):
flack after what many were labeling divabehavior on below Deck. But the Bravo
celebrity isn't taking that criticism lying downor is she I know? Ah.
In fact, she's called in oneof the show's cast to speak out on
her behalf. Quote. You guys, I watched the show back and I
don't think that Jill was as badas it looked, admitted stewardess Barbie Pasqual.

(21:56):
The cast member did not call ordid call zeron demanding but not rude,
even asking for normal yacht requirements thatwere pretty logical. We made a
great show together. She said,yeah, that was lame. I seriously
think that they do these stories onpurpose, like someone calls their agency,
calls and says, look, wegot to get some talk about this show.

(22:18):
The ratings are tanking. We gotto get something going. They tell
her already, look, we're justgoing to make you as the difficult person,
and then it'll end up being thatyou weren't that difficult, but it'll
make some headlines. And then theactor goes, yeah, okay, because
it puts her name in the headlinesand the show's name. Yeah, I
think you've got and see if she'sdifficult. I think, right, I

(22:38):
think they plan all this, andI think the actor goes, you know,
okay, yeah, well I'm inI don't know who this guy is
headline Jonathan Major's motion to toss criminalcharges rejected, will be sentenced Jonathan Majors.
Is he not the actor that playedin Creed three or two? Oh?
It is? And then he wasalso a six million dollar man?
No, he was also the thebad guy in one of the ant Man

(23:03):
series. Ah, he was thebig shoe. No, he was the
really super bad guy. Oh no, yeah, yeah, he was the
bad guy in that movie. Arewe clicking on the store? Yeah?
I really like him as an actor. But he's got some possible domestic but
you don't know. The Creed threeactor was found guilty of harassment and sexual
assault against his ex girlfriend, GraceJabbari. Lawyers for Majors had tried to

(23:26):
argue that charges were not justified,but a judge didn't agree. The actor
will face up to a year behindbars or probation once his sentence is handed
out, depending on what the judgedecides. Yep, he had that star
that was I mean, who playedCreed? Gosh darn it, what's his
name? Oh? Oh Carl Weathers. No, the Creed's kid, hmmm,

(23:51):
the one that plays the second inthe Second Guy I haven't seen the
Creed movie. He played the badguy in the Black Panther. Oh well
he is. He has that starright, like superstar. This Johnny Major's
was right behind him, like hewas starring in some good roles and some
big roles, and he was nextlike he had next. And then he's

(24:11):
got this domestic thing going on andhe could derail all that. But hopefully
they'll all figure it out. HeadlineDave Coolier shares voicemail left by Bob Saggitt.
Oh click on it, Click onit. Dave Coolier's podcast Full House
Rewind featuring Kelly Rizzo Bob Sagget's widowin the latest episode. For most of

(24:33):
it, there were reminiscences is,but the most emotional moment was perhaps saved
for the very end. As Coolierwrapped up, he provided a bittersweet moment
that showed how deep his friendship withSaggot. Ran quote. When my brother
Danny took his own life in twentytwenty one, Bob was the first person
who called me and left a voicemail. It was an audio hug. I

(24:53):
love Bob and he loved me too. I'd like to close this episode by
playing that voicemail message that b Ileft for no Way. Maybe somebody you
can pass along the same kind ofcompassion for someone you love. He actually
played the actual audio. YEP.I don't have the audio, but you
can get to it somewhere out there. So I'm glad how that story ended.

(25:15):
It started with me going thinking Iwas halfway paying attention to what you
were saying, but also in myhead, I'm thinking, how many of
these former TV stars, like theSopranos cast is doing that. They do
a podcast and they just talk aboutstuff that happened on the set and the
actors, and they're talking about aTV show they were in twenty years ago.

(25:36):
And I guess there's enough people thatare interested in that to watch watch
it, right of course? Imean sports teams have hat Green Bay Packers
Roundtable podcast. I might check thatout. That's your team. I just
don't I don't know. I mean, I'm you and I aren't doing a
podcast about the Afternoon Underdog Dame.Oh heck, no boy. We could
tell some stories, no doubt.Oh oh headline. Molly Ringwald was fairly

(26:00):
certain her oldest daughter was conceived atStudio fifty four. What click on it.
I thought Studio fifty four closed waybefore. I don't know. Oh
boy, that means she was young. Molly has revealed that her oldest daughter,
Matilda, was probably conceived there,being that Molly is too young to
have been a part of the decadentdrugs and disco days of the night Spot.

(26:22):
How is that possible? She brokethe news in an interview with the
Time, saying that Matilda, who'snow twenty, was most likely brought into
being years after that kind of thingwas the norm for the night Spot.
I believe Matilda was conceived in thedressing room at Studio fifty four, right
at the end of my run playingSally Bulls and Cabaret in two thousand and
three. Ah so to her husband, right, I don't know, how

(26:48):
doesn't saying okay? And it couldhave been anybody on the cast. I
don't know Matilda. I don't evenknowa Matilda. Have you ever met a
Matilda? Have not call her?Mel? I would right, think right,
mil mel Matilda? I think melis Peggy, well mel Melissa,
mel Yeah, that makes sense,but not Matilda. It's like maw you

(27:11):
name me Matilda. You could beMaddie with like two tea's. Oh yeah,
you can be. That's the onlyway you can get out of it.
Yeah. And finally headline Gene Simmonsdigs Joejoe, see what's new?
Bad girl? Look whatever. No, I'm not clicking on that. Okay,
I'm not even there's your clicking.Let's go. Last night, speaking

(27:33):
of clicking on, Becky finally hadthe goat cheese ravioli from wats apasta.
Thank you, she said, Tonydid not over sell it. Oh delicious,
made it with some broccoli, littleolive oil. It's like geez candy.
It's so good. It is sogood. Ready, in four minutes,
the water boils and then they float. You're done. I set my

(27:56):
Apple watch to four minutes. Idump it. I go four minutes and
then and usually right before that,I just whoop little alvoil, some parmesan
cheese, actual parmesan cheese from lotsof pasta, and then that's the meal.
It's done. Imagine trying to makeyour own ravioli and putting those little
pillows together and lots of pasta.It was like a dozen different flavors.
Are more, yes, already madefour minutes. Tortellini too, uh,

(28:18):
Tortellini, Tortellini. You can haveit in the middle of the day.
In the middle of the day,thirty seven to seventeen Lexington Road in the
heart of Saint Matthew's is lots ofPASTA short break, we'll come back.
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