to see who can be seen. Now on 105.9 FM and streaming worldwide on the W M a l app O'Connor and company. M A l. It is 707 here on this Wednesday morning. Good morning to you. Thanks for tuning into O'Connor and company. What a day ahead of us. What a date we just had. Frankly coming up in 30 minutes. Sean Spicer will make It's Enred Adolfi, Lieutenant Colonel Tony Schaefer, CIA trained intelligence officer retired. We'll get his perspective on the situation in Iran. That's all coming up. It's Larry O'Connor and joining us all morning is Kerry Lucas of Independent Women. Good friend of the program and well, friend of human beings everywhere. Good morning, Kerry. Good morning. Thanks for having me. Also more important to this conversation we're about to embark on. Kerry Lucas is a Virginian. Yes, absolutely. You appreciate living in a district that at least has a chance to be represented by a Republican now and again. Yeah, I appreciate that there are other districts that have a chance to be represented by Republicans. Exactly. Yes, existentially threatened right now is the concept of Virginians being properly represented in the House of Representatives. As you know, with the gerrymandering scheme that Democrats and Abigail Spanberger trying to cram down the old dominion's throat. Joining us right now representing the Republican Party of Virginia and joining the effort to try to get out the vote on this one is John Reed. John, good morning. Always good to talk with you. Good morning. I'm at Virginia Beach this morning and I'm going to be in Williamsburg a little later and then in Giles County at the end of the week. I mean, I'm really trying to barnstorm everywhere to move these Republican votes. A lot of people who live normal lives unlike us don't know about this referendum. Amazing. Every day. Like, wake up. Right. Well, or if they do know anything about it, they know because Barack Obama has been on their television telling you that things have been unfair up until now. And finally, Virginia is bringing things back to fairness. But I got to ask you, John, most Virginians should remember a constitutional fight a couple of decades ago over this where where the voters overwhelmingly said enough. Get the politics out of redistricting and give this to a bipartisan commission. So the hypocrisy involved in doing this and trying to amend the constitution again, that's got to bother people. They've got to recognize where this is coming from. I would hope. Yeah, there's several stories, I think, that move the undecided into the vote. No camp. And when you remind people that Virginia did what should be a model for the entire country by saying we're going to take this power away from the politicians and try to make something that is political as fair as possible. That does it. When I tell the story about the Speaker of the House, who was a Republican in 2013, Bill Howell, who singlehandedly said, Hey, Republicans, this is not the way to win. We're not going to take advantage of a momentary absence by Democrats to try to redistrict against Democrats. Republicans upheld some sort of integrity and said, let's win the old fashioned way by winning over the people with good ideas. That moves people. I mean, it shows that Republicans in the past in Virginia have stood up for the values that we're now advocating. And when you show the hypocrisy of Barack Obama, who was very much against Gary Mandarin, the hypocrisy of Abigail Spanberger, who just a few weeks months ago, when she was a candidate was saying she had no interest in this, then that really angers people too. John, first, as a Virginian, I just want to thank you for being out there and doing the hard work of trying to raise awareness about this and get people engaged. You know, I think one of the things that's also just so alarming is the really misleading language that's going to be on the ballots. Do you feel like there's like an education gap that you need to overcome to make sure people know even how to vote on this because it's been such a misleading presentation of the issue? Yeah, I mean, this is one of the things that makes me really angry with the Democrats in Virginia. I don't mind being in a fight. You know, if you're in politics, it's always the battle of ideas and it gets kind of rough. But when you deliberately rig the situation and you write language, which is not neutral and you don't offer both perspectives on the ballot, but you lead people to make a decision that they may not want to make. And you're doing that very deliberately, like trying to get somebody to sign a used car contract that has some sort of outrageous balloon payment in it or for, you know, finance charge. I mean, this is not right. And I think people, once they go, wait a minute, I thought that voting yes made things more fair. And then they realized that voting yes is actually taking five of the districts and anchoring them in Fairfax County. The reaction I've had once you get to explain that to people is that they really resent it. And I think that's why Abigail Spanberger was booed at the opening of the new baseball park in Richmond. Yeah. That was a big, big, big. Yeah, we played that audio a little earlier. It was really something to see in deep blue Richmond. I do think to be fair, her staff was applauding. I did hear that in the background. They want to keep that job, I bet. John reads our guest and we're trying to raise awareness and get the vote out here. No, vote no two weeks from yesterday. Vote no on this referendum, this gerrymandering scheme. John, last time you were on, I gave you a bit of a rough time in terms of the influx of cash that we're seeing over on the other side. And what appears to be a lack of financial support from national organizations, because this is an existential threat to the Republicans chances in the house. I have to say, we've seen a bit of a reversal. We had a $5 million infusion from an unknown source. It's one of the super PACs last week. And yesterday was reported another $9 million. So it seems like a few fires have been lit. You tell me, what's it looking like now? Yeah, I think money is coming in. The people in DC are seeing motivation from the grassroots. They're seeing the work that people are putting in. You know, former elected officials are getting out and talking to groups all over the state, which is, which is terrific. And you and I both know, Larry, because I was so happy that you did what you did the last time I was on. You didn't give me a hard time. But, you know, so many of the people in DC listen to your program in the morning. So I was glad that you kind of turned up the heat because there's a lot on the line, not just for Virginians, but for national Republicans and for the future of the Trump administration. John, it goes to that saying if the president, if the White House wants to avoid two years of impeachment hearings and investigations, then they need to defeat this in Virginia. That November will not matter, Kerry. Nothing will have nothing will matter in November. If they lose Virginia two weeks from yesterday, it is over. Lawyer up. Get ready for impeachment hearings. Yeah, this is, this is a remarkable moment to test Republicans in Virginia and across the country. And sometimes what happens in other states really does have a tremendous impact on you. And I, I'm hoping that once we defeat this, this will be a wake up offer people all across the country that we've got, we've got to come up with some sense of normalcy. Going forward instead of the constant battles. John, thank you so much again for doing this. Where, where are you heading, heading next? Well, I'll be in Williamsburg today and then I've got Giles County for the Stafford Morris Center. So that's about a five hour drive. Yeah. And, and I am enjoying getting back out into parts of the state that a lot of politicians and a lot of political people from Richmond and DC ignore, you know, folks in Southwest Virginia feel completely dumped on. Yes. And well, because they are an insult to them. Yeah, it is. This process is an insult to them. So I'm, I'm excited about talking to, to folks over the next two weeks. Out to the Hastings, as they say, you're beating the, we need to way overperform in all of those areas. And then we do need to get, I mean, listen, North, North Virginia, you know, it's, it's, it's vote rich. There's a lot of people here and we need to start converting some of the people with a basic sense of fairness here who are not radical partisans. And to that end, if you're looking for no offense, John, because you're a big name, but you're not as big as this one in Rockingham County, there's going to be a, a rally on Saturday, April 11th. We're talking Speaker Mike Johnson, Glenn Yonkin, Jason Meares and Ben Klein all coming out there for a rally on April 11. That's a big one. It's going to, and I love to see that the speaker is engaged in this too, because he knows how important this is. Yeah, everybody is waking up and we're going to work really hard for the next two weeks. And I think we may just pull this thing off. It might eat through. It might eat through. What, and what a stunning, stunning repudiation to Abigail Spanberger, the Democrats in Virginia, and frankly, completely stop the momentum that national Democrats want going into November. This could be a huge thing. And I'm glad that national Republican money givers are starting to catch on to John Reed. Keep up the great work. No doubt we will speak again before Election Day. Thanks guys. Bet it's 7 16. Vince Colonies is redefining news talk. I'm Vince Colonies host of the Vince podcast. I'm bringing you the truth beneath the headlines of all of the nation's top stories in depth interviews. We feature newsmaking interviews with the top guests on the whole planet. And I'll ask the questions you only dream of other interviewers asking. And a front row seat to the most important conversations of the day. There's a show with an obsessive focus on what's good for America. You are going to love Vince. The Vince show. Follow and listen on your favorite platform. Critter news time here on O'Connor. Here, look at how happy you are to hear the Critter News theme. I love Critter News. Who doesn't? It's a fan favorite, I'm told. Did you know that today is National Zoo Day? I did not know that. Do you have a favorite animal to go check out when you go to the zoo? Is there like, does everyone, like in my family, every kid, every adult has, you know, one must see animal. Everybody gets to pick. Okay, the one animal you have to see and then the rest are just gravy. Do you have one? You know, I don't personally have one, but we recently went to a zoo and spent a lot of time with monkeys. And they were so entertaining. You know, I don't know. There was a bunch of different, some must have been orangutans and I know they aren't actually monkeys, but they all look like monkeys to me. And they were, it was quite fun. We went to the zoo and we spent a lot of time with monkeys. There we go. That's the beginning of a joke of some kind, but I don't think we can get any further with it. Well, we've got it. Might, by the way, my go to is the red panda. Everyone else can stand in line for the big giant pandas from China, if you want. I think that they're a communist op going on in this country. But I like our red pandas. Those red pandas are amazing. We've got critter news of a different sort here in Washington, D.C. It doesn't really involve the zoo. It involves the reflecting pool. Workers currently are doing an operation at the reflecting pool just off of the Lincoln Memorial and the Washington Monument, where they are removing a year's worth of goose poop. This is. I wasn't expecting that. This is just in time, of course, for the 250th celebration. You know that iconic scene from Forrest Gump. Of course. When Forrest gets in, Jenny, Jenny, who knew that Jenny was actually waiting through a bunch of goose poop? Well, she was going through that iconic moment. Yeah. Yeah, that's not a pleasant thought. No, no, there's goose poop everywhere. I've got an idea. Instead of having to go through this process, and by the way, stinks and it's gross. There's a super scrubber that goes through this. The National Park Service has been showing videos of this special Bobcat that has an attachment that specifically scrubs up a bunch of goose poop from the bottom of the reflecting pool. And then they will fill it up. But here's the thing. Geese tend to poop and they'll be back and they're everywhere. They look like marauding gangs. I've got a better idea to solve this problem. Goose season. Just let every single Maga Republican come into Washington for America's 250th. Let them have a quota of three or four goose geese, goose's, and the problem will take care of itself. I promise you. Yeah, that's, I don't know, Larry, I feel like that could go won't go over so well. I feel like, but I feel like we should be enlisting good old Mike Rowe to come in and cover this as part of the dirty jobs. Because I think this is seeing the kind of behind the scenes and some of the pictures. It's pretty impressive. And one of those things that you don't realize is really necessary for society. But somebody's got to do that job. And I'm glad it's not me, but, but yeah, geese, this is what they do. And by the way, goose, it's not like, you know, like your typical bird dropping that, you know, might, you know, hit your windshield or something. Or while you're driving, saying, no, this is like serious. Big boy stuff. Yeah, this is serious. It's like a small dog, you know, and it's all over the place. It's a one-year cleaning and they're getting it done right now. It is worth a go check out their social media feed. It's actually kind of interesting. Trump actually spoke about this the other day. Trump, Trump, he makes a big deal about when he sees things in a city that are gross and disgusting and dirty. This has been a thing of his since his time in New York. And he wrote a true social post saying, Secretary of the Interior, Doug Burgum and I are working on fixing the absolutely filthy reflecting pool between the Lincoln Memorial and the Washington Monument. The work was supposed to be done by the minus by the administration, but sleepy Joe. Doesn't know what clean or proper maintenance is. The president and secretary do. He went on to say a Burgum confirmed this and said, unlike the by-administration, President Trump knows how to get things done. Interior is working to make DC safe and beautiful again. Proud to work with you on this important task. So while he's like, you know, ridding the world of radical Islamic terrorists and denuclear programming Iran and dealing with NATO and getting ready for a summit in China. He's also rolling up his sleeves metaphorically speaking and getting in there to clean up the goose poop in the reflecting pool. Yeah, it's kind of amazing. You can tell that the president, Trump really does have a passion for kind of, I think it's that golf club and builders. He likes to have things beautiful and clean. And this is, you know, he knows that this is a task somebody, some manager has to do to make it nice for folks. You know, they put these little like metal spikes and stuff on gutters of buildings. So pigeons can't roost there, right? You see them all the time and around statues and stuff like that to mitigate the pigeon droppings because that can be very destructive to us. Can we do something about the geese? Can we just, can we, can we, can we poison them? Can we, can I hate these animals? These are terrible, horrible animals. They bring nothing to the table. And may I remind everybody they're Canadian. So what's not to hate? I feel like there's a flaw in that with just like the liability of potential people. You know what, Kerry, I'm a big picture kind of guy. Okay. People can work out the details, but just get rid of the geese and everything will be fine. And we won't have to deal with this. There, I've done it. It's 723. Now on 105.9 FM and streaming worldwide on the WMAEL app, O'Connor and company. It's 737. You're listening to O'Connor and Company on this Wednesday morning in your nation's capital. The day after we came to the brink of Armageddon. And we all survived. Worldwide disaster. Honestly, honestly, Kerry Lucas at this point, after 10 years of Donald Trump in our lives with the tweets and the true social posts and the statements and the this and the, how is it people are paid for a living to analyze this man and they consistently misread him and get him wrong? I literally don't understand it. It boggles my mind. Or they're just purposely being morons just for their own political. I think you got something there. Yeah, I think that may be the secret sauce. All right. Coming up at 805, Lieutenant Colonel Tony Schaefer will give us his insights on what's going on behind the scenes over the next two weeks for the ceasefire. But Kerry Lucas, we are joined by one of the finest political pundits and observers and analysts, smartest man that I've ever met in the political realm. And oh, we didn't get, we didn't get him. We got Sean Spicer instead. Oh, all right. All right. Well, that no Sean's good to Sean's good. He's the host of the Sean Spicer show. Of course, evenings at six p.m. on every video streaming platform as well as the DC huddle every morning at eight 30. That's while we're still on the air. So I don't know why you would watch that. Sean, good morning. Thanks for joining us. Well, Jack Diamond, it's an honor to be with you. I've been here in the DMV for decades. Always want to be on with Jack Diamond. No, thank you for having me. It's the other radio show. It's not Jack. That Jack's Jack's has not been on the air for like 10 years now in this town. That's what Sean. Yeah, is this WMZQ? Anyway, Sean Spicer joins it. By the way, Sean's got a new book coming out called Trump 2.0. And he's the perfect person to analyze the second Trump term versus the first Trump term, because obviously he was involved in the first one first go around. And I'm wondering you've already gone to press. So you are you going to write like some addendum on the whole around situation? Because this has been a remarkable thing to witness over the last five weeks. Isn't it? Yeah. First of all, the funny thing is I literally got the book yesterday. So it is, you know, I have it in hand. Wow. Well, I'll tell you, when you actually get it in your hand, you know what this is like, it's sort of like a Christmas when you realize, wow, there are presents under the tree. But and before we end this segment, I think we will tease a little event that may be coming up. But I want to the funny thing is to your exact question. After I get by, if I open the book that I now have from 2.0, and I get beyond the four words that a guy by the name of Donald J. Trump has written for the book. And I get to the introduction. This gets to your question. It says one of the difficulties of writing a book named Trump 2.0, is that the president is constantly making America great again. By the time this book goes into production, there will be new people, policies and processes that are making the United States once again, works for the American people. And it's true. I mean, I was writing it. And the funniest part about this is we were literally like final, you know, at the dead double, double their deadline. And Kristi Noem was fired that day. And the editor goes in and says, I have like an hour. I can go get her out of the, you know, because I talk about the different cabinet members. Amazing. And I'm like, look, we need to get it. If we can, let's keep it the most up to date as we can. So I got Kristi Noem out. Pam is still in. So you do it. Yeah, that's pretty amazing. Sean, you know, I'm really looking forward to reading this book. This is, and it really is, it's such an interesting topic to focus on like the legacy that will be from, from this part of the administration or this, this term. And what do you see as the groundwork? What's the big takeaway that you were able to preview in the book as one of the, you know, the big differences between this term and term Trump 1.0? So I love that question because this is not like, I looked at this as like, a research project and tried to analyze the difference. And here's the central premise. And I literally had the honor to talk to the president in the Oval the other day about this. He is the second president ever in our history to have two terms in office that weren't sequential. And the first one in modern history, right? And part of the premise is the book is if you, if you just keep going every day, so you actually have a normal second term sequentially, then Tuesday becomes Wednesday, the chief of staff keeps going, whatever projects it was on your desk, you pause, you go to the inauguration, you do a twirl at a ball. And then the next morning you continue on that project. When you have four years out of office, you actually have time to stop and reflect and think, what will I do different? And the funny thing is the president said to me in the Oval the other day, he was shown, you know, we had a great first term. And I said, Mr. President, this isn't about undermining or demeaning the great achievements of the first term. But I talk about the examples. We mentioned some of the people, right? The president, I remember we were at Bedminster and Jim Mattis had been floated as a potential defense secretary. He flew up, he met with them. And then on December 5th, we picked them up on the plane, flew to North Carolina and announced them at a rally. But that was the extent of the interaction. You can grasp that to Pete Hagsett, who the president's known for like 15 years. This is, there is, and I can go through the instances. You think about just the staff, right? Stephen Schoenck, he worked with me on the first campaign and in the first president, now he's the comms director, Caroline Levitt. She worked with Kayleigh in the first term. He has a familiarity with these people that didn't exist in the first term. All right. And secondly, they understand the mission very differently. We had a lot of people in the first term that checked a box. Oh, they're qualified to be the assistant secretary for water evolution at the department of HUD. No offense. I mean, I'm sure that's a, I don't want any of your listeners that worked at HUD, but like people are just recommending people for the president and say, okay, if you say so, that's great. This time he's intimately involved in the people. There was a lot of vetting done that wasn't done in the first term. There were organizations like the Heritage Foundation and America First Policy Institute that helped craft things. So on day one, they were ready to go. And like I said, I think if you're a student of politics, we're just a political geek and really into this, like part of what I want people to do is not like, you know, when sometimes someone wins a game and you go, oh, that's a great game. And if you're the coach of the game, you go, it wasn't just a great game. Like you, we put so and so at, at forward and we move this person around and we instituted this play, like understanding the nuances of why we won and why we're successful. I think is important whether you love Trump or not, uh, because I think understanding the game is critically important. I know people who listen to WMAL, this is why you listen. You guys have bring insightful guests on like me and then, and you, uh, and, and, so I, but this is exactly the point is that if you love politics, this is going to be a book that you'll want to under, you'll read to get a graph of why this is different and historic. Well, to be fair, people are buying it because Donald Trump wrote the forward. And that's fine. That's why you, uh, Hey, listen, whatever, whatever, I know, I know, whatever works. If you had this experience where people say, Hey, Sean, I bought the book. I haven't read it. I've been like, Hey, good, good. Break free. You had me. I bought the book. Right. You had to have bought the book. You know, or I went on Amazon and I'm like, okay, that's all I need to know. Like, uh, and that's the beauty. Now I hope you do read the whole thing, but. Yeah. No, so Sean, can you, again, I tease you all the time because you're a friend and a friend of the program and you, but you are one of the most insightful and your mentor and my mentor in every possible way, um, especially in, uh, fashion choices. Sean, um, what do you make of, I've been really focusing on the last 24 hours. I've just checked your social media feed. You have not been running around with your hair on fire. You have not been wringing your hands that the president is about to nuke Iran and devastate the civilization. You, you sort of appeared to recognize the president's hyperbolic rhetoric and take it for what it was. It seems like this, this has been the narrative over the Iran campaign. Oh, it's a disaster because the Strait of Hormuz is closed. Trump needs to do something about the Strait of Hormuz. Trump then threatens Iran with a devastating escalation unless they open the Strait of Hormuz. Everyone says that he's a warmonger and he's guilty of war crimes and needs to be removed with the 25th amendment. Then he announces a ceasefire that results in the opening of the Strait of Hormuz and all of his critics are now saying that he chickened out. Can you please explain that, that progression in how people analyze what just happened? There's two sides that the people who hate Trump, no matter what he does, if Iran literally came abandoned me and said, here's everything you've asked where they'd say, you know, look, you made them kneel and they hadn't stretched yet. They would have some critique of whatever he does. So I don't really care about what his critics say. I've said this from the beginning of Trump 1.0. Worry about the results. And the question is, is Iran less of a threat than it is today? Yes. Would I, in fact, I will be honest with you, I actually want him to finish the job. I want to make sure that they never threaten us again. I think he has been right about this issue and not just recently, right? Go back to Trump's warning about Iran since 2015. And I think he's absolutely right. And I want to keep terrorism, you know, on someone else's shores, not ours. So I actually have been a big believer that frankly, the bigger issue, in my opinion, was the lack of messaging on the threat as opposed to like economic issues. Because that's, I think if Iran, Iran, you know, not just a threat to its region and to our service members and embassies and assets in the Middle East, but they chant to death to America, I take them at their word. So I think the end result has to be, did we get them to be less of a threat and stop worrying about the tactics? Who cares? I mean, look, if you threaten somebody and then, and from at least some of the actions reporting this morning, I'm not sure I entirely buy it by the way, but Khomeini was very much like fine, cut a deal, make a deal. And if they felt threatened enough that they knew that there could be an uprising or whatever, it doesn't really matter if they felt like, hey, he's going to go through with this and that's what caused an act, then great. Who cares? Why? Yeah. Who cares indeed? All right. Sean, real fast, you said something about an event that we should know about. What's going on? What do you tell me? Yeah, listen, I don't have the link set up yet, but I am, I, this is a WMAL garagedoorrepair.com exclusive, but I am hosting a book event at the Kennedy, Trump Kennedy Center on Friday, May 15th. And after going, and I, I did actually talk to Jack Diamond and Bert and, and all those, and no one can do it. The drive. I forgot about Bert. Thanks for, thanks for reminding us of Bert. Bert was always such a joy in the coffee room. I'll tell you. I do. I love Bert. Anyway, so, so here's the deal. We are going to do a discussion about the book and a little reception afterward at the Trump Kennedy Center with Larry O'Connor. That's you. Wow. On the 15th. And I'm excited because look, even again, this goes back to the book thing. You know, even if you don't care about the book, but you want to see the Trump Kennedy Center before it closes for a couple of years, come out on a Friday night, the event is free. We'll have some more information. But if you go to Sean, if you just go to SeanPiccer.com and send us a note at contact, there's a little thing there. We'll put you on the list. But, but look, go check out the Trump Kennedy Center. Come here about the book. Listen to Larry. I mean, I'll bring candy. Let me do, can I do, can I do this for you, please? Cause you're just, you're all over the place. Here's what you need to do. Come hang out with Larry O'Connor at the Kennedy Center on May 15th. It's free to all. And Sean Spicer. And Sean Spicer will be hanging out with his book while you're there. There. That's how you get people out. Okay. Oh gosh, the publisher is going to get so mad now. We totally, uh, that we're trying to. May 15th, Trump Kennedy Center, Larry and Sean, Sean and Larry. It's going to be a great. Michael Shelton, are you there? Michael's, Michael's telling me we got to go to traffic. Goodbye, Sean. Take care. SeanSpicer.com for everything as well as the Sean Spicer show and the morning huddle at 748. Full send golf. You guys know how much I really, really love golf. And I think every week would be dope to post on the golf channel. Want to get a lot of guests on here. So Liam's going to take a leap. I'm down to be in it. It's not really work to play golf. Join the party on the golf course. I was like, let's go to the range. So what are we putting on it? We said 10 K, right? 10 K. All right. We probably bet more than all the other golf channels, right? 10 K. Nine O'Ls. Those guys bet for like cookies. So like I'm going to shank it. This guy's been trading like a Navy seal when it comes to golf. I'm very, very excited. You excited? Yeah. Full send golf. Follow and listen on your favorite platform. One thing I've always said about Washington, DC, Kerry Lucas is that there's just there aren't enough museums here. There aren't enough choices for people. I don't know about you, but when you're around the National Mall with your kids, I'm sure that they're always arguing. Half your kids want to go to the Air and Space Museum, but the other half, it's always at the top of the list. The EPA Museum, right? Yeah, I don't know, Larry. I've never heard of this before, but yeah. I have first now heard that we have a environmental and protection agency museum and learning about it came at the same time I learned that Lee Zeldin is closing it. I had never heard of the damn thing before. Four million dollar EPA Museum funded by the Biden administration. It is now over. Rest in peace. Lee Zeldin, thank you very much. I mean, I don't know what people are going to do. You know, people come from all around the world to come to DC just for the EPA Museum and now, you know, once again, thanks a lot, Trump. You know, this is the kind of thing that I think all Americans are going to applaud when they see, you know, this is just the tip of the iceberg of what the the EPA has been cutting unnecessary garbage. That's just wasting people's money. So good riddance. Yeah. Lee Zeldin posted yesterday, quote, I came all the way to DC just to see the EPA Museum said nobody ever sorry to ruin your weekend plans. America. It's seven fifty three. Hi, I'm Joe Salci. Hi, host of the stacking Benjamin's podcast. You know what? A lot of us get taxes wrong. Filing your taxes is basically data entry. There's been this trend of people going, oh, it's so cool to file my taxes in August. It's so awesome. Don't worry. I have an extension. It'll be fine. I like totally do it later. Stop. Do your frigging taxes now. That was a really good fashion voice. Did you like it? Do that more frequently, please. Yes, every show for now. Stacking Benjamin's. Follow and listen on your favorite platform.