0:00
I got burned with the quantum dots, man,
0:02
I got burned.
0:03
Adam Curry, John C.
0:05
DeVora.
0:05
It's Sunday, May 11th, 2025.
0:07
This is your award-winning Gitmo Nation Media
0:09
Assassination Episode 1763.
0:12
This is no agenda.
0:14
Celebrating moms all around Gitmo Nation and broadcasting
0:18
live from the heart of the Texas hill
0:20
country here in FEMA region number six.
0:23
In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry.
0:25
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where we do
0:27
say Happy Mother's Day, I'm John C.
0:29
DeVora.
0:29
And it's crackpot and buzzkill.
0:31
In the morning.
0:33
Yeah, we do say Happy Mother's Day.
0:35
You do, do you say?
0:36
You do say Happy Mother's Day.
0:37
We do.
0:38
We do, we do, we do.
0:39
How did, you know, when we were going
0:42
through COVID, people loved their moms.
0:47
Everybody was crazy about moms because moms became
0:50
mama bears and the moms that were showing
0:53
up to the show, moms everywhere.
0:54
How do you think it is?
0:55
What is the state of motherly love today?
0:59
Not so good.
1:00
Why is this?
1:02
This is beyond me.
1:04
It's just the way it is.
1:06
It was this way before COVID and it's
1:10
this way after COVID.
1:11
It makes no sense.
1:13
We need moms now more than ever.
1:15
And more than, I mean, I want my
1:17
mom.
1:18
Do you ever miss, I miss my mom.
1:19
Do you ever miss your mom?
1:20
I know it's been a while since she
1:21
passed, but do you miss your mom?
1:24
I see her in dreams.
1:26
Really?
1:27
Oh yeah.
1:28
Comes up, shows up every once in a
1:29
while, makes a fuss.
1:30
Does she make a fuss about the Chinese?
1:32
Tells me to clean up.
1:33
Does she make a fuss about the Chinese
1:35
taking over everything?
1:36
When she says, where's the toilet paper?
1:38
Get this, Chinese are buying it all up.
1:41
Well, that's nice.
1:43
My mom doesn't show up in my dreams.
1:44
I read an interesting etymology of the word
1:48
mother today, which kind of, yeah.
1:55
Why would anyone even look that up?
1:57
Okay.
1:57
No, I didn't look it up.
1:58
I came across it.
1:59
In Hebrew, mother consists of two words, eleth
2:03
and mem.
2:05
And eleth is an ox head and mem
2:08
is a water.
2:10
And so this is, in ancient Hebrew, this
2:13
would be strong water.
2:15
And here it comes.
2:16
The ancient Hebrews used to boil animal skins,
2:19
ox skins, to get this gooey substance.
2:21
They used this glue.
2:23
Hence, eleth mem, mother, is glue.
2:26
The glue that keeps the family together.
2:30
How about that?
2:32
Sounds like a cock and bull story, if
2:34
ever there was.
2:36
You know, somehow, oops, oh boy, what happened
2:40
there?
2:40
Somehow, I knew you would not be buying
2:42
it.
2:43
But you didn't say it.
2:44
You didn't say, I'm not buying it.
2:45
You say, cock and bull story.
2:46
No, I tried to avoid that phrase.
2:51
Well, then let me get you on a
2:53
different track.
2:54
As we know, I'm very disappointed about picking
2:57
the wrong pope.
3:00
I mean, I'm not laying awake at night,
3:02
but I feel like, oh man.
3:04
And the more I look at this Leo
3:06
XIV provost, the more I'm thinking, if he
3:10
was even on the radar, I might have
3:14
seen that he could be the guy.
3:16
Okay, so you're reverse engineering your mistake.
3:20
Yeah, I think so.
3:21
To prove that you probably could have picked
3:23
it if it was even, if the guy
3:25
had somehow cropped up, if it passed your
3:27
threshold of knowledge, you would have seen him
3:32
and said, you know, that's it.
3:34
That's the guy, that's the guy.
3:36
But it doesn't matter, because this morning.
3:38
I want to hear the rest of the
3:39
rationale.
3:40
Well, no, no, the rationale, no, that's not
3:43
as important as what I need to say
3:44
next.
3:46
You're not gonna believe it.
3:49
This came over the transom this morning.
3:52
You're related to the guy.
3:54
From PubMed, the effects of anti-diabetic drugs
3:59
on erectile dysfunction.
4:03
In conclusion, GLP-1s demonstrate an advantage over
4:08
metaform in improving erectile dysfunction in patients.
4:12
Baby, I nailed it.
4:17
Wegovy and Ozempic are now good.
4:20
There's two studies.
4:21
I knew, by the way, when you said
4:23
it to begin with, that it was an
4:24
obvious end point for the sales pitch bull
4:29
crap that they're pulling.
4:30
But the fact that they would.
4:33
I nailed it.
4:34
That it's come so soon is kind of
4:35
surprising.
4:36
Two studies, two studies.
4:39
Two studies, not just one.
4:41
Two studies.
4:42
They're going all out.
4:43
Where do these studies come from?
4:45
Okay, the first one is PubMed, which I
4:47
think is pretty.
4:49
Yeah, but PubMed doesn't do studies.
4:51
They publish them.
4:52
Yes, okay.
4:53
So they, all right.
4:54
They published it.
4:56
Do they publish bogus studies?
4:57
Yes.
4:58
Yes, the Kennedy's mentioned that.
5:01
But that's not the point.
5:02
The point is they want this stuff into
5:04
everybody's system as soon as possible.
5:06
The second study.
5:09
I guess the COVID vax didn't kill enough
5:11
people.
5:11
It's actually, so it's both.
5:14
It's NIH, the National Library of Medicine, PMC.
5:19
It's both PubMed, two of them in PubMed.
5:23
So this is a bonanza, baby.
5:26
And it's too bad we don't have the
5:28
morning shows.
5:28
Maybe tomorrow they'll be all over this.
5:30
I'm sure.
5:30
Oh, there'll be a tomorrow's show, yeah.
5:32
I'm sure they got the script by now.
5:35
We have clips for Thursday.
5:37
The script is in.
5:39
Oh, everybody.
5:41
It's amazing.
5:42
It's like, it's time to retire.
5:44
When it becomes that easy to see where
5:46
the things are going, it's like, might as
5:49
well just quit.
5:50
So that what you did there was to
5:53
show that you used, you obfuscated your bad
5:59
pick for poll.
6:00
Correct.
6:01
By bringing in a kind of the long
6:04
shot, which seemed like a long shot, but
6:06
not to me necessarily.
6:08
Long shot pick for a marketing scheme, which
6:12
you predicted accurately.
6:15
And then you just kind of glossed it
6:16
over as though there's some somehow makes you
6:19
better.
6:19
I don't know what you're trying to do
6:21
there.
6:21
It makes me feel better.
6:23
That's all that counts, as long as I
6:25
feel better.
6:26
I still like to know, you didn't say,
6:29
because you don't have it in front of
6:30
you, where these research papers actually stemmed, where
6:34
from did they come?
6:38
Okay, I do have it in front of
6:39
me.
6:39
Okay.
6:40
This is a lot of Italians here in
6:43
the first one.
6:44
Guiseppe Lisco.
6:45
Let me see.
6:46
Let me see what the...
6:48
Hey, Giuseppe, hey.
6:49
Hey, Giuseppe, what about my ED?
6:53
Giuseppe.
6:55
Okay, let's see.
6:58
Doesn't...
6:58
And by the way, with these drugs in
7:00
play for at least a decade, you'd think
7:02
they would have figured this out earlier.
7:03
So this was a systematic review and meta
7:06
-analysis, is where this...
7:10
A systematic review.
7:11
This is not research, then.
7:12
This is a review and a meta-analysis.
7:15
That's not the same as a research paper.
7:17
Right, so, but they cite all the other
7:20
papers, including exploring the potential impact of GLP
7:24
-1 receptor agonists.
7:29
No, that's not the one I'm looking for.
7:32
Yeah, this looks like a smoke and mirrors
7:34
to me.
7:34
Good work, though.
7:36
I don't think it's...
7:37
Here.
7:37
Look, look over here.
7:39
Here it is.
7:41
GLP-1 therapy boosts erectile function in diabetic
7:44
obese men.
7:47
Now, a lot of people...
7:49
Not a pretty sight.
7:50
No, a lot of...
7:52
A lot of people sent in other ideas
7:55
that if your wife uses Wagovi, you automatically
7:59
lose your erectile dysfunction.
8:01
Yeah, I got that joke, too.
8:02
So that joking came a couple of times.
8:05
Yeah.
8:06
Let me see what this is.
8:07
This is, this one is...
8:10
Okay.
8:12
Let me see, let me see who did
8:13
this.
8:13
This is actual research.
8:15
That's very long.
8:17
Oh, man.
8:18
You'll have to forgive me if I didn't
8:20
read through all the formulaic reasoning that they
8:23
believe.
8:23
My goodness, this thing is eight football yards
8:26
long.
8:28
If football fields...
8:29
Well, we'll work on it and we'll get...
8:30
That's okay.
8:31
The morning shows when you have Dr. Jen
8:34
and Dr. Bill and Dr. Fred and all
8:37
these other phony balonies come on the networks.
8:40
They will tell us.
8:40
They will tell us new research.
8:42
That's what they're going to tell us.
8:43
It doesn't matter if it's true or not.
8:45
It just matters that they have something to
8:46
point to to once again, you know, throw
8:49
in a little ad for the big boys,
8:52
for the big boys.
8:54
Yeah, while they can.
8:56
Well, what do you mean while they can?
8:58
Oh, well, they're going to pull the plug
8:59
on this eventually, I hope.
9:00
Oh, please.
9:01
RFK Jr., what have you done for me
9:03
lately?
9:04
Well, it looks like Bill Cassidy, according to
9:07
our buddy, Glenn Greenwald.
9:09
You're buying that?
9:10
You watch that and you buy that?
9:12
Yes.
9:13
Oh boy, do you have a clip?
9:15
No, I just got it this morning.
9:17
I didn't do any bonus clips this morning.
9:19
So I'm going to, I'm looking at it.
9:21
I still haven't fully bought it, but I
9:23
have kind of, because it makes sense.
9:25
But this guy, this Cassidy guy's a bad
9:28
actor in a lot of different ways.
9:30
He's been a Trump hater, he's one of
9:31
the few Republicans that voted for his impeachment
9:33
in the Senate.
9:35
Well, we had Bill Cassidy clips when Kennedy
9:42
was going through confirmation somewhere.
9:44
I'm pretty sure we have one.
9:46
And he was saying, you know, well, you're
9:47
going to have to talk to me.
9:49
You have to have conversations with me.
9:51
You got to meet with me every month.
9:53
Yeah, and then we had Shanahan's clip.
9:55
You had it recently.
9:56
It was a post.
9:57
It wasn't a clip.
9:58
It was just a post.
9:59
It was a post that she said that
10:00
she thinks he's not working for the president,
10:03
but he's working for some alien force.
10:07
She?
10:07
Oh, you mean Kennedy?
10:10
Yeah.
10:11
Yeah, all because the president appointed Casey Means
10:17
as Surgeon General.
10:18
That's the whole reason why everyone's all, as
10:22
you would say, has their tit in the
10:23
ring over this.
10:26
That's what I'd say.
10:27
And a couple of people got their tit
10:28
in the ring over your newsletter.
10:29
A rare, rare apology.
10:32
A rare apology.
10:34
Well done, though.
10:35
It was, I mean, rare because you don't
10:36
usually, you have to make apologies.
10:38
Oh, I felt bad about it.
10:40
Yeah, I could.
10:41
Wow.
10:42
Who are you?
10:43
You're like saying, I was wrong, mea culpa.
10:46
The past month has been nothing but Honest
10:48
John.
10:49
Honest John, it's always been Honest John.
10:52
It's my old nickname.
10:53
They used to call me that in high
10:54
school.
10:55
Sure.
10:56
I'm sure.
10:58
So what happened?
10:59
What happened for the dumbos who don't subscribe
11:02
to the newsletter and could be a part
11:04
of this wonderful double newsletter day?
11:09
Well, I had to, I was going over
11:11
the records of all the people that were
11:12
Surgeon Generals and they were all in the
11:14
Navy, it looked like, because they're all admirals,
11:16
but they got that assignment later.
11:18
And then it became even, there's a secondary
11:20
controversy over whether the fact that they're given
11:23
the admiralship when they become a Surgeon General
11:26
because they work for public health services, but
11:29
whether that's officially, whether that's a Navy position
11:32
or not.
11:33
And, you know, the argument is no, and
11:36
the Navy guys are all bent out of
11:37
shape about even considering, I think because of
11:40
Rachel Levine, they have enough trouble in the
11:42
Navy without that guy.
11:44
Right.
11:44
And so- What happened to that dude
11:46
anyway?
11:47
I don't know.
11:49
Probably on a board of some Kleiner Perkins
11:52
company.
11:53
So, when it began, when the Surgeon General
12:00
began in 1871, it wasn't, my understanding, it
12:03
was a Navy position and then it kind
12:06
of devolved into one thing or another, but
12:08
they kept this idea of keeping the title
12:10
of Admiral.
12:11
It's kind of hard to follow, to be
12:12
honest about it.
12:13
And there's a few people that never took
12:15
the title of Admiral.
12:17
It started off as Commodore, by the way,
12:19
just for all you Commodores out there.
12:20
Oh, wow, that's interesting.
12:22
Yeah, it was Commodore, Commodore, you can go
12:23
look up the list of Surgeon Generals in
12:26
Wikipedia, it's all Commodores.
12:28
And then all of a sudden became Admirals
12:30
because the Commodore thing was dropped by the
12:32
Navy.
12:33
So, gee, a coincidence, the Navy drops Commodore.
12:36
And so do these guys, they wear a
12:38
Navy uniform.
12:40
And my challenge to the Navy guys out
12:42
there, they say that it's not part of
12:43
the Navy or they have nothing to do
12:45
with the Navy, let's say, I'll give them
12:47
that.
12:49
If you're a Navy Lieutenant and you run
12:52
into one of these Admirals, do you salute
12:54
them?
12:56
Oh, interesting question.
12:58
I would say yes.
12:59
I would say yes too.
13:02
But they're not part of the Navy, you
13:03
don't have to salute them, do you?
13:05
But they're an Admiral, what would you do?
13:07
What would you do?
13:09
I would salute and say, how you doing,
13:12
buddy?
13:14
Good morning, good morning to you.
13:17
So the whole thing is sketchy, but this
13:21
is beside the point, the whole thing, it
13:22
was a botch on my part.
13:24
And so I had to send an apology
13:25
note out.
13:26
It's okay.
13:27
So no sooner had we- And I
13:30
got a lot of notes, and here's what
13:31
the big, you know what the big complaint
13:32
was?
13:34
Amongst the complaints, everybody complained about that.
13:37
You know what the actual real complaint was
13:39
when it came down to it?
13:40
John, what was the actual real complaint when
13:42
it came down to it?
13:44
Thanks for asking, Adam.
13:48
I said surgeon generals instead of surgeons generals.
13:53
Surgeons generals, oh no, oh, what a faux
13:56
pas.
13:57
It was a botch of the highest order.
14:00
Epic proportional botch.
14:02
And everybody brought that up, whether they thought
14:04
about the admiralship or not.
14:07
Brings this up.
14:09
See, what if we got a bunch of
14:10
grammarians out there worried about this sort of
14:12
thing?
14:13
Crack me up.
14:14
Well, we also called out other people on
14:17
the news for saying that.
14:19
So it's kind of a taste of our
14:20
own medicine.
14:20
That's the irony, of course.
14:22
We have done that.
14:23
So no sooner had we ended the show
14:26
or I start getting threads, X threads to
14:31
look at Laura Loomer calling out Callie Means
14:34
as a shill, a big pharma shill.
14:37
And Callie Means saying, you are the shill.
14:39
You're getting paid.
14:40
No, you're a shill.
14:42
No, you're a shill.
14:44
All about disappointment.
14:45
And it's, I mean.
14:48
Which brings us to the Megyn Kelly clip,
14:51
which I have, which discusses this to some
14:53
degree.
14:55
You might bring it up to speed.
14:56
Yeah, no, I'd like to do that.
14:57
Started thinking about the things that would ultimately
14:59
wind up in the book.
15:00
Good energy would be at the center of
15:02
the Maha movement.
15:04
Her brother Callie was going through his own
15:05
evolution and realizations, having worked for Coca-Cola
15:09
and came out hard as almost like a
15:12
whistleblower against what companies like that are doing
15:14
to us with the sugar and the food
15:15
supply and the SNAP program and so on.
15:18
And they've become very important and essential Americans,
15:22
especially when it comes to Maha.
15:24
Great.
15:25
So why is she getting mercilessly attacked right
15:29
now by some within the Maha movement and
15:33
by Laura Loomer, who I don't know if
15:36
she considers herself Maha.
15:38
And I really don't dismiss Laura Loomer because
15:42
people call her a conspiracy theorist.
15:43
She's been right about a lot.
15:46
She's really taking aim at Casey.
15:48
And I have to say on this one,
15:49
I really disagree.
15:51
I'm just gonna tell you some of the
15:52
allegations, okay?
15:53
She said that Casey means, her dad wrote
15:57
a pro-trans children's book back in 2020.
16:00
Well, he did write a book that was
16:03
about like a weird, an odd duckling or
16:06
goose.
16:07
And how it wound up, it basically wound
16:10
up being gay.
16:11
Wait a minute, you're telling me Callie Means
16:12
is a trans guy, is a dude, is
16:14
a woman in pants?
16:17
No.
16:17
And in the opening to the book, he
16:19
does say that this is, it's about Felix,
16:23
a unique bird.
16:24
And he says, it's a story for children
16:27
and adults alike.
16:28
And says, it's for, I'm trying to find
16:31
the exact quote, but it's about, oh, coming
16:33
of age is challenging for most children, but
16:36
it can be especially tough for those grappling
16:37
with their gender and sexual identities, gender.
16:41
So he mentions it.
16:43
And I've looked at the book, at least
16:45
what I can find, if I have like
16:46
four pages.
16:48
And it's really about a gay goose.
16:50
Oh my goodness.
16:52
All of these people, Megyn Kelly, Laura Loomer,
16:56
all these- By the way, I am
16:58
never gonna clip her again.
16:59
That clip that you played there is actually
17:02
about a half an hour.
17:03
Oh, I know.
17:05
She repeats herself.
17:07
She's like a radio person.
17:10
These old radio people and TV people, they
17:14
talk and then they wrap it around and
17:16
they talk it.
17:17
I had to cut out so much where
17:19
she just reiterated and came back and did
17:22
this and that and put a sides in
17:24
there.
17:25
It's like, when I have to clip Jesse
17:26
Waters, it's the same thing.
17:28
He's got his sides, a little one-liners
17:31
and things that aren't relevant.
17:32
A little mockery, a little mockery.
17:34
It's a mess.
17:35
It's all of these people.
17:38
And I mean, so first of all, the
17:39
whole controversy really stems from the fact that
17:43
Casey, not even, Kelly, not even Casey.
17:46
Of course, she's so controversial because is she
17:49
really a doctor?
17:50
Did she quit her residency, blah, blah, blah,
17:53
blah.
17:54
They came out of nowhere.
17:55
They had this book.
17:56
It's a best-selling book and they will
17:57
not, and this is really what it's about.
17:59
The core of this is the trauma that
18:03
I would say MAHA have, as in MAGA,
18:06
MAHA, about President, MAGA, MAHA, about President Trump
18:11
not saying, hey, that vaccine sucked.
18:16
This is what it's about because neither of
18:18
those two, the brother-sister combo, will actually
18:22
say, yeah, that thing was not a good
18:24
idea.
18:25
They keep hedging around it like, well, you
18:29
know.
18:29
Actually, Kelly addresses this exact point in the
18:33
next clip.
18:34
No, excellent.
18:35
As a gay goose, okay, whatever.
18:37
By the way, it's her father.
18:39
It's not her.
18:40
Like I don't, okay, so like if she
18:42
had written this, maybe it would lead to
18:44
a follow-up question at the hearings, like
18:45
what do you think about children grappling with
18:49
their gender identities?
18:50
That's really the question, isn't it?
18:51
What does Casey Means think?
18:53
She is where I am on this.
18:56
She is not pro the transing of children
19:00
at all.
19:01
Her brother, Callie, right now is out there
19:03
calling it demonic.
19:04
They're very close.
19:05
That's number one.
19:06
Then she points out, Loomer does, that she
19:09
never completed her residency.
19:11
That is true.
19:12
I just gave you the context.
19:14
She points out she does not even have
19:16
an active medical license in Oregon.
19:18
That's true because she decided to stop practicing
19:20
medicine a couple of years into her private
19:22
practice and to do, she has this company
19:26
now that offers like all-day glucose monitoring
19:30
and explains to people how to read their
19:32
blood levels when they get their lab test
19:34
back and so on.
19:35
It sort of helps more millions as opposed
19:38
to like individuals.
19:39
And I can speak this as a lawyer.
19:42
I passed the bar in New York, in
19:44
Illinois, and in Massachusetts.
19:46
Okay, so I was admitted in all those
19:47
states.
19:48
I practiced at length in New York State,
19:50
in Chicago, in Washington, D.C., for that
19:53
matter.
19:54
And I wound up going dormant on all
19:57
of my law licenses many years into joining
20:00
journalism full-time because A, it costs money,
20:04
and B, it's a lot of continuing legal
20:07
education.
20:08
Okay, but she didn't talk about the vaccine
20:10
there.
20:10
Only about- Oh, you know, I got
20:11
left on the cutting room floor because I
20:14
got sick of it.
20:16
Okay, I'll tell you what she said.
20:18
She said that if Callie, or is it
20:20
Casey?
20:21
I can never remember.
20:22
They're both girls' names.
20:23
I know, Casey, Casey, we're talking about.
20:25
Callie is the one who's been on all
20:27
these podcasts, people have been firing at him
20:29
for hours and hours, and he will not
20:32
denounce the COVID vaccine specifically.
20:34
Okay, she says the following.
20:37
Because I was supposed to be in that
20:40
clip, I cut it out because I couldn't
20:41
take it anymore.
20:42
Cutting, cutting, cutting, cutting.
20:44
So she said that if she, Casey, says
20:49
she was anti-vax, she would never get
20:51
approved in a million years, and so they
20:53
can't say it.
20:55
So in other words, she's implying that they
20:57
believe it, but they can't say it because
20:58
then she would never get approved.
21:00
Okay, the bottom line is, well, actually, before
21:04
I get to my bottom line- Is
21:05
there a bottom line to this?
21:06
Yeah, I think there is.
21:07
This is RFK Jr. on the Casey Means
21:10
appointment.
21:11
This was him on the Friendly Fox &
21:12
Friends.
21:13
Yeah, I'm very, very happy and grateful to
21:16
President Trump for nominating Casey as the Surgeon
21:19
General.
21:21
The industries that are threatened by her nomination
21:27
are mobilizing and they're actually paying a lot
21:30
of bloggers, we've learned now, to attack her.
21:36
They're attacking her on the- Where's our
21:39
money?
21:39
Mainly on the critique that she- Where's
21:43
our dough?
21:43
Where's our check?
21:44
Where's our money?
21:45
Just at least offer it.
21:47
Interesting medicine.
21:48
Yeah, at least.
21:49
Come on, I feel really left out.
21:51
We got a million people listening.
21:52
We've been left out of every bribe possible.
21:56
Every good deal.
21:58
Gold, gold, no gold, we got no gold.
22:01
She was at the top of her Stanford
22:03
class.
22:03
She was president of her Stanford class.
22:06
As a resident, she won every award that
22:08
you could get for the kind of surgery
22:11
that she was doing.
22:13
But she realized very early on that she
22:15
was not healing patients.
22:16
They were coming back again and again because
22:19
the surgeries were treating the symptoms and not
22:22
the underlying causes.
22:23
And she decided to devote her life to
22:27
figuring out what those underlying causes were and
22:30
to ending those exposures.
22:32
She wrote a best-selling book that really
22:33
galvanized the Maha movement.
22:36
Maha?
22:36
Rachel, I'm very glad to you, I'm very,
22:39
very grateful to you for the leadership that
22:42
you've shown in telling this story to the
22:45
American public.
22:47
But Casey is an incredible storyteller.
22:50
She is a pregnant mom right now, so
22:52
she has a touchstone with every mother in
22:57
this country.
22:58
Okay, so what RFK Jr. is doing here
23:00
is he is debunking and clapping back at
23:05
Laura Loomer because Laura Loomer posted that there's
23:11
no evidence she's pregnant.
23:12
Why are we hiring pregnant women?
23:14
They have to go on pregnancy leave.
23:17
And these people are being paid.
23:20
And as I said, Callie was like, no,
23:21
you're being paid.
23:22
So RFK Jr.'s basically saying, you are being
23:25
paid.
23:25
This is the funny part of it, by
23:26
the way.
23:27
There was some clips of that.
23:28
Well, there's no clip.
23:29
The back and forth.
23:30
There's no clips.
23:31
It's just, it's on X.
23:32
No, it's just the two of them bickering
23:33
on Twitter.
23:34
All of these people, and then we can
23:36
move on.
23:36
All of these people, Megan, let me just
23:39
get my thought out.
23:40
All of these people, Megan Kelly, Laura Loomer,
23:43
all the influencers who keep coming back to
23:46
this thing, which really doesn't matter that much.
23:50
I mean, the Surgeon General, did we stop
23:52
smoking because the Surgeon General, because Coop said
23:55
it's gonna kill you?
23:56
No, the Surgeon General is the Surgeon General.
23:59
And in your original newsletter, you pointed out
24:01
no one even knows who the last Surgeon
24:02
General was.
24:04
These influencers, and I'll put Laura Loomer and
24:07
Megan Kelly in there, they're like dogs returning
24:09
to their own vomit.
24:11
They just keep coming back.
24:13
Oh, wow.
24:14
Yeah, thank you.
24:14
I like it.
24:15
Thank you.
24:16
Oh, you worked on that one.
24:18
I worked on that one.
24:20
Oh, brother.
24:20
But that's what it is.
24:22
Who cares?
24:24
It's another thing.
24:27
The Fredericksburg rumor network is in high gear.
24:34
Oh, oh, they're building a, but why?
24:39
No, your point is well taken.
24:41
Why?
24:42
Who cares?
24:43
It's the Surgeon General.
24:44
No, it's not like, you know, the Secretary
24:46
of State.
24:48
Because of the, that particular part is because
24:50
of the trauma of COVID.
24:53
And they're all secretly very mad that Trump
24:56
has never said, he said, yeah, I don't
24:59
think that vaccine was so good.
25:01
He says the opposite.
25:02
Although he's dialed that back even.
25:04
It's a trauma.
25:05
It is a trauma amongst people who voted
25:09
for Trump.
25:10
It's trauma.
25:12
That if he would, it would all end
25:13
if he just said that.
25:15
And I think his ego's in the way
25:17
on that one.
25:18
Or maybe he knows something we don't.
25:20
Anyway, the next thing, and we talked about
25:24
this months ago.
25:26
Oh, oh, they're building an entire Sharia law
25:31
city in Texas.
25:33
Oh, yeah.
25:33
Well, before we go into that, I do
25:35
want to get the, I do have one
25:37
more case he means.
25:38
Oh, I'm sorry.
25:39
I didn't, I thought we were done.
25:41
Oh, okay.
25:42
I got you.
25:42
You were making moves and I wasn't paying
25:45
attention.
25:45
I'm sorry.
25:46
You weren't.
25:46
You were taking the cue.
25:48
I was trying to get my one-liner
25:49
out.
25:50
That's why.
25:50
I was focused on that.
25:52
Yes, you develop these things about once a
25:54
month.
25:55
Oh, once a month that you catch it.
25:57
Yeah, okay.
25:59
Well, that's probably true.
26:01
It's probably twice a month and I only
26:02
catch one.
26:03
Yeah.
26:04
And then you add Lib at least, you
26:07
add Lib twice as many as you actually
26:09
developed.
26:10
So I give you credit for that.
26:12
Thank you.
26:14
Casey Means was on the Bill Maher show.
26:18
Oh, this past Friday?
26:20
No, no, it was like a month ago
26:22
or longer.
26:22
Oh, okay, all right.
26:23
After her book came out and she was
26:25
the special guest.
26:26
Oh.
26:28
This is when they used to have, when
26:30
Maher had the two guests on his right
26:32
and then he'd have one special guest on
26:34
his left.
26:35
Yes.
26:36
Which he's kind of backed off of.
26:38
Yeah, well, the special guest is the guest
26:41
in the beginning who then comes out later
26:43
for the panel discussion.
26:44
Sometimes.
26:45
During overtime.
26:46
Sometimes, sometimes not.
26:47
It's all.
26:48
It's strange.
26:49
It's a variation.
26:49
He changes his model a little bit.
26:51
It's a strange format.
26:52
I don't particularly like it.
26:54
So she is on, but these clips have
26:55
nothing to do with her except for the
26:57
fact that they triggered something that I had
27:00
to make some commentary on before we talk
27:02
about Sharia law in Texas, which I think
27:05
is also a Fredericksburg freak out.
27:10
No, it's bigger than that, but we can
27:13
get to that.
27:14
Well, it could be, it could be, but
27:15
let's go, let me get this out of
27:16
the way.
27:17
But you, hey, you brought it back up.
27:18
It does involve a rant, which you enjoy.
27:22
Okay.
27:25
So here's Bill Maher and the topic changes
27:29
out of the blue as he has Chris
27:32
Cuomo and some other guy and Casey Means
27:36
on, and then it slowly twists.
27:39
Where is these clips?
27:40
What are they called?
27:41
Means.
27:41
Means on Maher.
27:43
Means on Maher ones, yeah.
27:44
There's a lot of stuff in our food
27:46
that probably shouldn't be there.
27:48
And every time they look, the more they
27:50
look, the more they find that can kill
27:52
you.
27:52
Gambling.
27:53
Everybody's head is going like this.
27:54
Yeah, I think the food's a problem.
27:56
My question to you is, if everybody's head
27:59
is nodding like this, what is keeping anything
28:03
from ever happening that moves us in the
28:05
direction that you're going?
28:06
The food is delicious.
28:07
That's the problem.
28:08
I would say, I would say.
28:11
That's what it is.
28:12
I'll tell you.
28:12
Who comes back from Italy saying, I can't
28:15
wait to get some ragu?
28:16
That's right.
28:17
I mean, Italy, the food is all, it's
28:18
more delicious.
28:19
But we don't live in Italy.
28:20
We live near McDonald's.
28:21
Not yet.
28:21
But I can't.
28:24
That was Casey jumping in there?
28:28
Yeah, she's trying to get a word in
28:29
edgewise, but Mara's out of control.
28:31
And then he says the following things, which
28:33
got, I didn't record any of her.
28:35
I didn't care.
28:36
It's mostly, this is the issue.
28:39
This is not rocket science.
28:40
Why don't we get our food safe?
28:41
I'm not talking about like, you know.
28:43
The food is delicious.
28:44
It is.
28:45
In America.
28:46
If I had six months to live, You
28:48
mean the lousy food.
28:48
I'd eat McDonald's every night.
28:49
Are you serious?
28:51
And if I ate McDonald's every night, I'd
28:53
have six months to live.
28:54
Yes.
28:54
So look, I was on his team.
28:56
McDonald's isn't delicious?
28:57
Who are we fucking kidding?
28:58
I'm sorry, it's delicious.
29:02
See, it's so, I mean, we should talk,
29:04
but.
29:05
I never have it, but it's delicious.
29:06
And how do you know?
29:08
I've had it.
29:09
Oh, okay.
29:10
Have they changed the formula?
29:12
I don't think so.
29:13
And here comes the rant.
29:14
That's what got my attention.
29:16
The formula change, yes.
29:18
So I have stories, because I used to
29:21
work as an air pollution inspector, and I
29:22
got to inspect all these places.
29:24
A number of them were McDonald's jobbers.
29:27
They changed the formula all the time.
29:29
And if he doesn't think they changed the
29:30
formula, somebody should tell him about the difference
29:33
between the tallow fries that they used to
29:35
make, which are famous, and oh, delicious McDonald's
29:38
fries to the crap they make now, which
29:40
are soggy.
29:40
Seed oil.
29:41
Seed oil fries.
29:42
There's a formula change, isn't there?
29:44
I'd say.
29:44
But the original McDonald's formula for the sauce
29:49
on the Big Mac was largely developed by
29:53
Morehouse Mustards, which used to be headquartered in
29:57
Emeryville.
29:57
And I used to inspect that plant a
29:59
lot, and I got to know this guy,
30:00
George Ladder.
30:01
Wait a minute, that's their secret sauce.
30:05
Isn't it secret, the sauce?
30:07
It's a secret, yeah.
30:08
Yeah, okay.
30:09
Isn't it Thousand Islands dressing?
30:10
Doesn't everybody already know that?
30:11
No, no, no.
30:12
The kicker was, Ladder told me that the
30:15
original blend was with fresh horseradish, and that's
30:18
what made the original Big Mac so tasty,
30:21
because of the horseradish that was in there.
30:24
And he says, as soon as they went
30:25
into full production, within a year, they changed
30:28
the horseradish to a powdered horseradish, which was
30:31
bland.
30:33
Formula change, by the way, for poor Bill
30:36
Maher, who thinks these burgers still taste like
30:38
they used to.
30:39
I've also tasted the McDonald's burgers in Paris,
30:43
because they have a McDonald's, or they used
30:46
to have one on the Champs-Elysees, and
30:48
it doesn't taste anything like these burgers.
30:51
They're totally different, the bread's different, everything's different
30:53
about them.
30:54
Also, the bread used to be made, another
30:58
inspection I made was the Kirkpatrick's, or Kilpatrick's
31:03
Bread Factory in Oakland, which the company went
31:06
out of business during the era of balloon
31:08
bread, where you had, if I remember, Kilpatrick's,
31:12
Wonder Bread, Langendorff, Sunbeam, Blue Seal, there's all
31:19
these different bread companies that all made this
31:22
same kind of fluffy white bread.
31:25
And they made the McDonald's burger buns.
31:30
And the guy noticed about it, he says,
31:33
yeah, he said that they had to have
31:36
a special, they had a template, so the
31:39
bun would be, as the bun was just,
31:42
after it was, before it was being tempered,
31:44
they smashed the bun with this like temp,
31:48
like these little blades, they weren't blades, they
31:50
were just pushers, and they put a crosshatch
31:53
pattern on the bread, and the guy's manager
31:56
says to me, he says, that's to make
31:58
it look as though the bread was folded.
32:01
It's just fake.
32:02
Whatever happened to Wonder Bread, by the way?
32:04
I love my Wonder Bread.
32:05
Wonder Bread's still around, but the other balloon
32:07
breads are all gone.
32:08
If you want to, there's a fun movie
32:11
to watch.
32:13
Michael Keaton in The Founder, it came out
32:16
in 2016.
32:17
Yes, about Roy Croc.
32:18
Yes, and what triggered, because we watched this
32:21
maybe two weeks ago, what triggered me is
32:24
that they went to the powdered horseradish.
32:27
That was one of the ways he got
32:29
the company going is by using powdered milk
32:32
for the milkshakes in the early days.
32:36
And I'm sure, and they changed that, of
32:38
course, later as well.
32:39
So yeah, Bill Maher doesn't know what he's
32:42
talking about.
32:42
Yes, Maher's going on about they don't change
32:43
the formula.
32:44
So just to top it off, as you
32:46
know, I have been tasting McDonald's Big Macs
32:49
on the show.
32:49
At least once a month.
32:50
Once a month.
32:52
Once a month.
32:52
And I stopped a year ago.
32:54
Because you were getting sick?
32:56
No, I couldn't eat, I couldn't finish one.
32:59
They were so, the latest version is so
33:02
unedible, and for Maher to say it's delicious,
33:06
he obviously doesn't eat there.
33:08
It's not even close to delicious.
33:10
It's not edible.
33:15
No, if I have a stomachache, I'll go
33:17
to McDonald's so I can poop it out.
33:19
That stuff never, that stuff, I mean, he's
33:21
just the middleman at McDonald's.
33:23
He just like eat it and he's right
33:24
before, I'm not even home, like, I gotta
33:26
go.
33:28
Okay, enough about nasty food.
33:30
I just had to get that off my
33:31
chest.
33:32
Well, hopefully the new Surgeon General will unveil
33:36
all things unhealthy.
33:38
And I will take RFK Jr. at his
33:41
word that there's all kinds of money floating
33:45
around.
33:45
Look, Big Pharma is big.
33:48
They know the media is changing.
33:50
They know that their phony baloney CBS morning
33:55
show segments that that's not really, you know,
33:57
it's really not gonna last much longer.
34:00
Five years, 10 years, I don't know.
34:02
Maybe five months.
34:03
People are moving towards- Actually, if you
34:04
ban advertising- There you go.
34:07
You have to ban the native ads.
34:11
You have to ban the native ads.
34:13
There's no native ads for smoking.
34:16
They won't even let you smoke in a
34:18
movie half the time until it's bent out
34:20
of shape.
34:21
Yeah.
34:22
Well- So if they're gonna ban advertising
34:24
on television for prescription drugs, they have to
34:29
ban the native ads.
34:31
Well, my point is they know change is
34:34
coming one way or the other, and they're
34:36
fighting it, and they're fighting it in the
34:38
correct ways.
34:39
What I would do, we'd have the meeting.
34:41
Hey, let's cut some checks.
34:44
Is Rogan doable?
34:46
No.
34:46
Okay, what's next?
34:47
Loomer.
34:47
Okay, we'll start with her.
34:50
Megyn Kelly.
34:54
You know?
34:55
Oh, you know, I could run it by
34:56
her.
34:58
Bob.
35:00
I could run it by her, Bob.
35:02
I could run it by her, Bob, if
35:03
she's gonna say anything, if you run it
35:05
by her.
35:06
No, I know her.
35:07
She's not gonna say anything.
35:08
She's not gonna do it.
35:08
She'll assure me she's not gonna say anything.
35:10
So I can run it by her.
35:11
If she doesn't do it, she doesn't do
35:12
it.
35:12
If she does it, she does it.
35:13
I don't know.
35:13
We'll find out.
35:15
So there- You know this exactly what
35:16
goes on.
35:17
Of course, of course.
35:18
And part of the meeting is always, how
35:20
about those No Agenda guys?
35:21
Nah, they're no good.
35:22
Those guys.
35:23
Those guys.
35:24
They'll fuck it up anyway.
35:27
Exactly, they'll deconstruct themselves.
35:29
And before you know it, everybody's on to
35:31
us.
35:31
We can't do that, Bob.
35:32
Can't do that.
35:36
No, I was just saying the, it was
35:38
kind of related to the influencers that the
35:40
Fred Freakoff, and I'm calling it that now,
35:43
the Fredericksburg Freakoff, everyone's all bent out of
35:46
shape because influencers are out there again.
35:50
Like, they're building an entire Sharia law city
35:54
right outside of Plano.
35:58
We know that they've not built anything.
36:00
There's a mosque.
36:02
Well, they got some nice drawings.
36:03
Yeah, you can drive I-10, you'll see
36:05
a hundred mosques.
36:06
If you drive it long enough, there's mosques
36:07
everywhere.
36:09
But it's not like this city has been
36:11
built and it's being projected now as it's
36:15
here, it's Sharia law, they want to take
36:18
over.
36:19
And so it got so- That's probably
36:21
true.
36:22
Well, that may be true, but you know,
36:24
so, Abbott had to come out and say,
36:28
hey, they're not going to, they can't even
36:32
start construction.
36:33
They have no permits.
36:35
They don't have the authorization.
36:37
Yeah, so they're playing it illegally because obviously
36:40
in America, you know, if you want to
36:43
have a big campus for your Scientology, you
36:48
can do it.
36:48
If you want to have a big campus
36:50
for your Islam, you can do it.
36:53
Now, you can't all of a sudden have
36:55
different rule of law.
36:57
And that's really what he's focusing on here.
36:59
But it's just amazing how there's so much
37:03
going on in the world and somehow these
37:06
things just get spun up, just spun up.
37:10
And like, calm down.
37:13
I'm tired of being the guy who say,
37:15
calm, people are starting to not like me.
37:17
You're no fun, Curry.
37:18
I thought you were a conspiracy guy and
37:20
you're just debunking everything.
37:21
Yeah, what happened to you anyway?
37:22
You're like debunk bot.
37:24
What happened is I got burned.
37:26
I got burned one too many times.
37:28
That's what happened.
37:29
I got burned with the quantum dots, man.
37:31
I got burned.
37:32
The quantum dots, yeah.
37:33
Actually, that did change you.
37:35
Oh yeah, it burned me.
37:38
Because- Quantum dots.
37:39
Well, how do you think Pachenik feels?
37:42
He went on Alex Jones' show and brought
37:44
this out.
37:45
He act about it and Alex was laughing
37:47
in his face.
37:48
Yeah, but Pachenik never contacts me anymore.
37:52
No, not even a, hey, how you doing?
37:55
Aw, it's too bad.
37:56
No, but he knows- I mean, he
37:58
should have been able to snap out of
37:59
it.
37:59
I think he was really burned bad, but
38:01
he's just kind of like- I don't
38:03
even know if- He should be able
38:04
to snap back from that.
38:05
I don't even know if he does anything
38:07
anymore.
38:07
I think he just kind of retired, like
38:09
slunk back into the shadows.
38:12
Yeah, he needs to snap out of it.
38:15
Anyway, yes, I still love Steve.
38:18
He's got good stories.
38:19
He's a funny guy.
38:21
Oh, he's a great guy.
38:22
He's got good stories.
38:24
So lots of action in Europe because, you
38:29
know, now that President Trump is trying to
38:31
get things to calm down between Russia and
38:34
Ukraine, the Mod Squad had to get together.
38:38
That's Mertz.
38:39
And yes, thank you, everybody.
38:41
We know that Friedrich Mertz indeed has the
38:43
same initials as Fred Mertz of I Love
38:46
Lucy.
38:47
That was a big email I got.
38:50
You never got that one.
38:51
I can't believe you missed it.
38:52
Fred Mertz.
38:52
I can't believe you missed it.
38:55
Yeah, how'd you miss that?
38:56
How'd you miss that one?
38:57
Mertz, Macron, Stormer, and Tusk.
39:01
Bro.
39:02
Tusk of Poland.
39:04
That guy?
39:04
Yeah, Tusk in Poland, yeah.
39:06
They all went to Kiev, to a little
39:11
meeting.
39:11
Four European allies of Ukraine on Saturday vowed
39:15
to impose more sanctions on Russia and increase
39:18
military aid to Kiev if Russian President Vladimir
39:21
Putin does not accept an unconditional 30-day
39:25
ceasefire.
39:26
The leaders, under the umbrella of the Coalition
39:29
of the Willing, said that their proposal for
39:31
a ceasefire starting on Monday was supported by
39:34
U.S. President Donald Trump.
39:36
So we are clear, all five leaders here,
39:41
all the leaders of the meeting we just
39:43
had with the Coalition of the Willing.
39:46
I'm sorry, I should have said the leaders
39:48
of the Coalition of the Willing.
39:50
Anybody else in Europe, just listen up, because
39:52
these are your new leaders.
39:54
An unconditional ceasefire, rejecting Putin's conditions, and clear
40:01
that if he turns his back on peace,
40:04
we will respond.
40:06
The move appeared to have ramped up pressure
40:08
on Russia, as President Putin, hours later, called
40:12
for direct talks with Ukraine without preconditions.
40:16
Now, I'm pretty sure you have some stuff
40:18
on that, too, but I just want to
40:19
get through what happened in this 24-hour
40:21
period.
40:21
Then Fred Merz, he came out and kind
40:28
of wishy-washy talked about, well, you know,
40:31
you can put it, we'll get you into
40:33
EU, and then after that, maybe NATO, I
40:35
think, if, you know, something like that.
40:39
I share the assessment of the Secretary General
40:41
when it comes to membership for Ukraine.
40:45
I would like to add that Ukraine has
40:47
an accession perspective for the European Union.
40:50
I think, in terms of timeframes, this will
40:53
be before accession to NATO, if it happens
40:56
one day, and it needs to be clear
40:58
that Ukraine decides, in a sovereign way, on
41:02
the path it wants to take.
41:04
It has decided to file for membership of
41:07
the European Union.
41:08
You know the criteria for such an accession,
41:10
and if Ukraine fulfills these criteria, it is
41:14
a welcome member within the European Union.
41:17
Ukraine is and has to remain a sovereign
41:20
actor, deciding on its own political and military
41:24
alliances.
41:25
In other words, no.
41:27
That's just a big, fat no.
41:28
No, you're not gonna get in.
41:30
You're not gonna get in NATO.
41:32
You can file, you can file, but you
41:33
have to be sovereign.
41:34
No, that's a big no.
41:36
He's standing next to, while he's doing this
41:39
speech, of course, if you've got the coalition
41:42
of the willing, our boy Mark Rutte is
41:44
right there.
41:45
Well, the whole of NATO agreed on the
41:48
irreversible path for Ukraine into NATO, but we
41:51
never agreed that as part of a peace
41:54
deal.
41:55
Ho, ho, ho, ho, Volodymyr, Zelensky, we've never
41:59
agreed you can get into NATO's.
42:01
There would be guaranteed NATO membership for Ukraine.
42:05
No, no.
42:05
That was never agreed.
42:06
That was never said, dude, never, never.
42:08
But in the long term, NATO alliance has
42:10
said, yes, there will be this perspective of
42:12
NATO membership.
42:15
Perspective, yes, maybe, if you're a good boy.
42:17
For the longer term, not for the peace
42:19
negotiations ongoing at the moment.
42:22
No.
42:22
As I said before, I'm happy that the
42:24
American president and glad that he- My
42:27
boss.
42:27
Broke the deadlock, that progress is being made,
42:30
and I completely agree with the German chancellor
42:33
on the 30-day ceasefire, and that the
42:36
bull is now clearly in Russia's court.
42:38
Oh, no, oh, no.
42:39
It is the half court, not the full
42:41
court.
42:42
What are you talking about, Mark?
42:43
That will piss off John C.
42:46
On the side, Russia's.
42:48
Who on the side?
42:49
You put it.
42:50
That's exactly true.
42:53
And at the moment, there is a close
42:56
cooperation between NATO and Ukraine.
42:59
We have the command in Wiesbaden, which is
43:01
organizing the military aid into Ukraine.
43:04
We organize together and jointly the training for
43:09
the Ukrainian armed forces.
43:11
We are catching all the lessons, which we
43:14
are gathering in Ukraine, together with the Ukrainians
43:16
in our center in Poland.
43:18
So there's a lot happening at the moment.
43:20
So no to NATO, you're not going to
43:22
get in, but we gave you some NATO
43:24
goodies, man, so shut up a little bit.
43:26
And of course, of course, Rutte could not
43:30
leave the meeting without a little sales pitch.
43:33
I know there are many rumors floating around.
43:35
It's true that we are having internal discussions
43:37
now within NATO, what will be the best
43:39
way to make sure that we can fulfill
43:42
all our tasks as NATO are going forward
43:44
in the future.
43:45
Money.
43:45
Including of course, given the fact that we
43:48
acknowledge the long-term threats Russia is posing.
43:51
So it will be an absolute increase in
43:55
defense spending.
43:55
So I'm not going to confirm the figures.
43:57
So don't worry about the truce or ceasefire,
44:00
they're long-term threats, you need to spend
44:01
your money.
44:02
Obviously, when you increase defense spending, you have
44:05
to think about all the enabling tasks.
44:08
Oh yes, oh yes, it's not just bullets.
44:09
It's a lot of stuff, man.
44:11
Connected to defense.
44:13
And yes, I've always said this, if we
44:16
stick at the 2%, we cannot defend ourselves.
44:18
So we have to really increase defense spending,
44:22
but that is not enough.
44:23
We also have to build a defense industrial
44:25
base.
44:26
They go hand in hand, because for a
44:28
strong deterrence in defense, we can defend ourselves
44:31
now, but to be able in five years
44:33
time, to also be able to defend ourselves
44:36
and to keep the deterrence in defense at
44:38
the level we need, we need only to
44:41
spend much more, but also to build that
44:43
defense industrial base across the Atlantic, across the
44:47
whole Euro-Atlantic area, including United States and
44:50
Canada and all the European countries and NATO.
44:52
It's crucial, we need to do both.
44:55
I said it before, the Russians are producing
44:57
in three months in ammunition, but the whole
45:00
of NATO, which is 25 times bigger, 25
45:02
times bigger than Russia in terms of the
45:05
overall economy, we produce in one year in
45:08
ammunition, but they produce in three months.
45:10
So that's not sustainable.
45:11
So just both spending and more production.
45:14
The message is clear.
45:17
That guy getting like working on commission?
45:21
No, he's not smart enough for that.
45:23
It's all for him.
45:24
I don't know, he seems pretty smart to
45:26
me, the more I hear it.
45:26
Well, according to our president, he's a great
45:28
guy.
45:28
He was a great prime minister of the
45:30
Netherlands.
45:31
He's just awesome.
45:32
He's just, Mark, Mark, you were the best.
45:35
You just did a great job, man.
45:38
Just great.
45:39
That's a typical show business thing, typical of
45:40
Trump too.
45:41
I'm a big fan of your work, man.
45:43
Big fan of your work.
45:44
I've worked with a lot of different people.
45:46
You're absolutely the best.
45:48
It's unbelievable.
45:49
I really feel privileged to be here in
45:51
your presence.
45:52
The line is big fan of your work,
45:54
man.
45:54
Big fan.
45:55
Big fan.
45:56
Big fan of your work.
45:56
Big fan.
45:57
Big fan.
45:58
Big, big fan of your work.
45:59
Whenever you hear that, that's a Hollywood bullcrap
46:02
slide.
46:03
Yeah, pull up your trousers.
46:06
Stepping in it.
46:07
So, of course.
46:08
Putin!
46:10
Is what everyone's looking at right now.
46:12
You have a Putin clip here?
46:13
You got something?
46:13
I got a couple of Putin clips.
46:14
I got two clips.
46:16
One's a shorty from BBC World News, or
46:19
World Service, sorry.
46:21
Let's start with that.
46:22
In the past few minutes, President Putin has
46:24
appeared live on television saying Russia seeks serious
46:27
talks with Ukraine to remove the root causes
46:30
of the conflict.
46:31
He said he was offering immediate direct talks
46:34
with Ukraine to take place in the Turkish
46:36
city of Istanbul next Thursday, the 15th of
46:39
May.
46:39
He said he had never rejected dialogue with
46:42
Kiev.
46:42
Details are still coming in.
46:44
By the way, while the BBC's waiting for
46:46
details, whenever you're ready, I have a bullet
46:49
point translation of Putin's speech in his press
46:52
conference.
46:53
I only have one more clip, but you
46:54
can go right after that.
46:55
I just thought that that particular BBC clip,
46:58
which was kind of to the point, just
47:00
countered everything.
47:01
But okay, let's go to NPR, and this
47:04
is the Russia-Ukraine little bitty.
47:07
European leaders in Ukraine today pressed Russian President
47:12
Putin to accept a 30-day unconditional ceasefire
47:15
or face more sanctions.
47:16
And here's Joanna Kikis' reports.
47:18
The leaders say President Trump also supports this
47:20
proposal.
47:21
The leaders of France, Germany, the United Kingdom,
47:24
and Poland traveled to Kiev in their first
47:26
joint appearance.
47:27
They joined Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky for a
47:30
meeting of Western nations supporting Ukraine.
47:33
Other leaders participated online via video link.
47:37
Zelensky and the four European leaders in Kiev
47:39
also called President Trump.
47:42
Zelensky told reporters Trump supports the ceasefire proposal.
47:47
It's quite possible to monitor this ceasefire in
47:49
coordination with the United States, Zelensky said.
47:52
The ceasefire could start as early as Monday
47:54
if Russia agrees to it.
47:56
However, the Kremlin says it will oppose a
47:59
ceasefire unless Western countries stop providing military aid
48:03
to Ukraine.
48:04
So very poor from NPR and BBC.
48:09
I mean, we have the best producers who
48:11
speak Russian and translate stuff for us.
48:15
So here's a bullet point bullet point of
48:19
Russian President Putin's press conference in order of
48:25
appearance.
48:26
The Kiev regime has repeatedly violated the 30
48:29
-day moratorium on attacks on energy facilities.
48:34
The Easter truce was violated more than 5
48:36
,000 times.
48:38
Moscow has repeatedly put forward ceasefire initiatives.
48:42
Kiev has sabotaged them.
48:46
Russia has considered a further ceasefire based on
48:48
Kiev's behavior during previous ceasefires.
48:51
Since May 6th, the Kiev authorities have launched
48:53
large-scale attacks on Russia, 524 drones.
48:58
During the days of the declared ceasefire, Ukraine
49:00
has repeatedly attempted to attack the state border
49:03
of the Russian Federation.
49:04
All attacks have been repelled.
49:06
The attacks were carried out solely for political
49:08
reasons.
49:08
The enemy suffered heavy losses.
49:11
The Kiev authorities not only rejected the ceasefire
49:13
proposals, but also tried to intimidate the foreign
49:15
leaders gathered in Moscow.
49:17
That was on the 8th.
49:19
Who were they trying to intimidate?
49:20
The leaders who came to us were not
49:22
leaders by position, but by character, and they
49:24
were threatened by those who elevate former SS
49:27
men to the rank of heroes.
49:30
Russia is grateful to all foreign leaders for
49:32
their efforts to end the Ukrainian conflict.
49:34
The Kiev regime has repeatedly violated the 30
49:36
-day moratorium on attacks.
49:39
Hold on, I got that part.
49:43
The Ukrainian armed forces should not rearm and
49:48
dig in during the ceasefire.
49:49
The decision is up to the leadership of
49:51
Ukraine and their curators who want to continue
49:54
the war with the hands of the Ukrainian
49:56
nationalists.
49:57
President Putin proposes Ukraine resume direct negotiations without
50:01
any preconditions.
50:03
We propose to begin Thursday, May 15th in
50:06
Istanbul, the very place where they are interrupted
50:09
in 2022.
50:10
Our offer is on the table.
50:12
Now it is up to the Ukrainian authorities
50:14
and their handlers.
50:17
This brings me to, this is interesting.
50:20
But the interesting part is the 524 drones,
50:23
which brings me to a clip that I
50:25
had produced about a month ago.
50:29
Maybe you can try looking it up.
50:31
Which we never played on the show, which
50:33
was about drones, drones being produced in Ukraine
50:36
by a factory there.
50:39
And they've got, they're making drones and they're
50:42
not using Iranian drones or anybody else's drones.
50:44
They're actually making drones by the tons.
50:48
And this is like their new business that
50:50
they do.
50:51
And it's never been talked about since.
50:54
I have the, this is from last month.
50:58
Yeah, two clips.
51:00
Could be.
51:01
Now, during recent talks in Saudi Arabia, both
51:04
Kiev and Moscow confirmed their commitments to stop
51:07
attacking each other's infrastructure, energy infrastructure.
51:10
But Ukrainian president Zelensky has already accused Russia
51:14
of violating that agreement.
51:18
And Ukraine, it's also- It says Ukraine
51:20
drone maker.
51:22
Oh, well, maybe it is.
51:24
I think it is.
51:24
I just don't remember.
51:25
It's so long, I can't remember how the
51:27
clip's structured.
51:29
Question, is it willing to ground its long
51:31
range drones used to strike oil facilities?
51:33
Now, the BBC's Abdul Jalil Abdurasulov has visited
51:37
a secret Ukrainian facility where they make them.
51:40
At a secret location, Ukrainian engineers work on
51:44
the development of new long range drones.
51:47
They drill, glue, and assemble parts of a
51:49
model called a RayBird.
51:52
This drone can cover a distance of more
51:55
than 1,000 kilometers and stay in the
51:57
air for up to 28 hours.
51:59
Wow.
52:00
So it can easily reach cities like Moscow.
52:02
RayBird is effectively a spy aircraft.
52:05
Roman Knizhenko, the head of SkyTone, the company
52:08
that develops these drones.
52:10
The idea was to create the system that
52:12
can control and monitor big areas or extended
52:18
areas like borders of the country and so
52:20
on.
52:21
And it's one of the most advanced system
52:24
in the world right now in terms of
52:26
reconnaissance.
52:28
It's not too many aircrafts able to work
52:32
so deep on the enemy territory.
52:35
RayBird identifies targets and directs fire.
52:39
Among the targets are Russia's oil refineries and
52:43
fuel depots.
52:47
Okay.
52:49
Yeah, that brings us to the point that
52:51
was just made when Putin, according to the
52:53
list of talking points, said that they're still
52:56
attacking the energy infrastructure.
52:59
These drones are the ones that are responsible
53:01
and that also connects to the 524 drones
53:04
that were launched against Russia, whether they're ballistic
53:08
or not.
53:08
I just found that's where that information triggered
53:12
my thoughts on this old clip that we
53:15
never addressed.
53:17
Right.
53:18
Well, so he refers to the 2022 talks
53:20
in Istanbul.
53:21
Isn't that where Boris Johnson thwarted everything or
53:25
was that before Boris Johnson- I thought
53:27
Johnson went straight to Kiev to do that.
53:29
I'm not sure, but I don't really remember.
53:33
I honestly don't remember them doing the talks
53:35
in Istanbul at all.
53:37
I have one more clip here.
53:38
This is a former Ukrainian negotiator, Volker.
53:41
A meeting between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin
53:44
is clearly on the radar, the Kremlin spokesperson
53:47
said, but as Moscow seems to be sending
53:49
the signals about its willingness to meet the
53:51
US president.
53:52
What is the response from Washington?
53:55
Former US special representative for Ukraine negotiations told
53:59
Euronews Donald Trump would want to meet Putin
54:01
as well, but under certain conditions.
54:04
I do think he would like to meet
54:06
Putin, but after there's a ceasefire.
54:08
He wants to end the war and then
54:10
he would like to rebuild a relationship with
54:13
Russia.
54:14
He thinks that you could reintegrate Russia into
54:16
a global economy.
54:17
You could do business deals with Russia, but
54:20
Putin has to stop the war first.
54:22
And as Putin is not doing that, the
54:25
prospects for a Trump-Putin meeting are looking
54:29
farther and farther away.
54:32
It doesn't seem to me that the EU
54:35
and their aspiring entrant Ukraine really want peace.
54:41
It just doesn't feel like it.
54:42
Well, I think we've determined that already on
54:44
this show.
54:45
Yeah.
54:45
That the EU is a bunch of warmongers
54:47
and they don't want peace.
54:49
They want- And they're gonna do anything
54:50
to stop it.
54:51
They want to spend more money on military
54:54
stuffs.
54:59
Sad.
55:01
You know, they get their tit in the
55:04
ringer for doing stuff like this.
55:07
You know, we were talking about the, about
55:10
a big fan of your work, just staying
55:13
in Europe, but really this is more about
55:15
tariffs with Queen Ursula.
55:18
This is our president complimenting the queen.
55:23
Are you planning to meet Ursula von der
55:25
Leyen, the president of the European Council anytime
55:28
soon?
55:28
Oh, she's so fantastic, Rick.
55:30
She's so fantastic.
55:32
I hope we're gonna meet.
55:33
Yeah, the answer is yes.
55:34
I saw her, actually, I saw her a
55:36
few days ago.
55:37
And I think that we'll definitely meet, yeah.
55:41
The European Union is a big thing.
55:43
They want to make a deal very badly.
55:44
You know, everybody wants to make a deal.
55:46
Look, everybody wants to make a deal with
55:47
the United States and we're doing that and
55:49
we're making, we're gonna make fair deals.
55:51
I'm just honored that this was the first
55:53
one.
55:53
I just love her, man.
55:55
I'm a big fan of her work.
55:56
Ursula, Queen Ursula, she's the best.
55:58
Well, as you remember from the Cochran clip,
56:00
where he looks, Trump is a natural at
56:03
finding weak spots.
56:05
It's obvious by her hairdo and the way
56:07
she handles herself that she would love to
56:10
be flattered.
56:11
Well, it's funny you say that because they
56:14
asked Queen Ursula about this.
56:16
If after Trump, President Trump yesterday said that
56:19
yourself, you're a fantastic leader.
56:22
Do you think that now you are closer
56:24
to visiting the White House and what could,
56:26
when, that could that be?
56:29
So, thank you very much.
56:35
I like compliments in general.
56:39
So, negotiations, as always, nothing is negotiated till
56:45
everything is negotiated.
56:46
So, it's against the simple rules of negotiations
56:49
if you give in between details which are
56:54
not totally agreed now with the whole package.
56:56
Therefore, unfortunately, I will, of course, not go
56:59
into any kind of details.
57:02
But this is all, all the negotiations in
57:06
the very end have to be concluded.
57:08
We were always transparent from the very beginning.
57:11
We always said we prefer negotiated solution, but
57:15
we also develop countermeasures.
57:17
And this is now the process where we
57:18
have to develop these countermeasures to put this
57:21
instrument on the table.
57:22
We have other instruments on the table.
57:24
We will not take anything off the table
57:26
till we have a satisfactory result.
57:29
Blah, blah, blah, blah.
57:32
But I, for me, it's important that if
57:35
I go to the White House, I want
57:37
to have a package.
57:38
I've got instruments on the table and I
57:40
want a package.
57:42
You're gonna get a package.
57:43
She probably wants a package bad.
57:45
You're gonna get the package.
57:47
I'm pretty sure you get the package.
57:49
So you're right.
57:50
She must be easy to, she must be
57:52
an easy sell because she's the one, even
57:54
though, I mean, she's good at covering it
57:56
up, but that deal that she made for
57:58
the vaccines.
58:00
Oh, that's gonna come out?
58:01
No, the, what's the- I don't know
58:03
if that's ever gonna come out.
58:04
Well, the crazy, not crazy, but the German
58:07
woman in the EU parliament with the black
58:09
hair, the short black hair, what's her name?
58:11
You know who I'm talking about.
58:12
She's like, rah, this is no good.
58:15
She's finally got her commission together.
58:17
What's her name again?
58:19
I don't know.
58:20
Yeah, she's a bulldog.
58:23
Hold on a second.
58:23
EU Commission Vaccines, COVID.
58:28
Come on, what is her name?
58:29
You know her name.
58:32
I can't, come on, troll room.
58:35
Anyway, she finally has her commission or committee,
58:42
commission, whatever it is.
58:44
And she's out on the social saying, it's
58:49
all gonna come out.
58:50
We're gonna get to SMS gate.
58:54
Yeah.
58:54
Because yeah.
58:55
I'm predicting nothing's gonna come of it.
58:58
Well, you're so skeptical.
59:00
The Epstein docs are gonna drop any day.
59:03
I'm waiting for that one.
59:05
And the millions of tapes.
59:06
Have you noticed Bill Gates starting to show
59:08
up all over the place talking about his
59:09
$200 million?
59:11
Interesting you say that.
59:12
First of all, just the background.
59:14
First of all, he shows up on NPR's
59:16
news hour, sorry, PBS news hour with a,
59:20
and he's interviewed by the woman there.
59:22
And he's going on and on.
59:23
He's sitting there with some douche that is
59:25
the head of the new guy.
59:27
Never seen him before.
59:28
The head of the Gates Foundation.
59:31
And they're going on about he's gonna drop,
59:33
I'm gonna drop 200 billion.
59:35
I'm gonna drop it.
59:36
And then he shows up on Colbert all
59:40
of a sudden.
59:41
And then all this came, coincidentally all came
59:44
up after Pam Bondi shows up with her,
59:47
oh, I got, we got 10,000 videotapes
59:49
of all these guys screwing girls.
59:51
What are we gonna do with it?
59:52
We're going through them one by one.
59:54
It'll take a while.
59:55
So he's gonna close the foundation.
59:57
Yeah.
59:58
He's gonna give away all his money.
1:00:00
And that's, yeah.
1:00:01
He's gonna twilight it or something, moonlight it,
1:00:04
or I forget the term he uses.
1:00:06
I don't think, I'm looking at the, oh,
1:00:09
well, let's see what his social media post
1:00:10
was.
1:00:10
I'm looking at Bloomberg talking about it.
1:00:13
Bill Gates plans to give away virtually all
1:00:15
his $113 billion.
1:00:17
Here's the impacts.
1:00:19
It doesn't say it.
1:00:21
But I don't understand.
1:00:23
This guy's given away all his money a
1:00:25
hundred times.
1:00:27
With Buffett and then Buffett again.
1:00:29
And then he's really, he's made this a
1:00:31
profit center somehow.
1:00:34
Big time.
1:00:36
Yeah, I agree with you.
1:00:38
I thought that was really interesting.
1:00:40
The minute it kind of heats up in
1:00:43
Epstein land, he's like, I'm gonna give away
1:00:45
all my, there's no money.
1:00:47
There's no money.
1:00:47
Look at me, look at me, I'm great.
1:00:48
Nobody's gonna hate a guy who can give
1:00:50
away this kind of money to help the
1:00:51
poor.
1:00:52
Well, how about that?
1:00:53
And I'm closing it down so I can
1:00:55
take some and get on my yacht and
1:00:57
sail away.
1:01:00
That's what you wanna do.
1:01:01
Get on your yacht.
1:01:02
You got people investigating non-extradition countries as
1:01:05
we speak.
1:01:07
Yeah, what's a good one to go to
1:01:08
for him?
1:01:10
Argentina.
1:01:13
Speaking of the South, this kind of slipped
1:01:17
by us, but did you even follow this
1:01:21
story from Rubio and the Venezuelan hostages?
1:01:26
No.
1:01:27
No, yeah, he listened to this.
1:01:28
Right now we're following breaking news.
1:01:30
Breaking.
1:01:31
Secretary of State Marco Rubio is announcing the
1:01:32
rescue of five opposition members from Venezuela.
1:01:36
Rubio posted on X saying that following an
1:01:38
operation, all the members are on US soil
1:01:40
tonight.
1:01:41
The opposition group had been taking shelter at
1:01:43
the Argentine embassy in Caracas for more than
1:01:46
a year to avoid arrest by the Maduro
1:01:48
regime.
1:01:49
It's still not clear how the opposition members
1:01:51
exited the embassy.
1:01:53
This is language, this is setting up for
1:01:56
something.
1:01:56
When you say he rescued them, the operation,
1:02:00
what was this?
1:02:00
Was this like with helicopters and black ops?
1:02:03
What happened here?
1:02:05
I've gotten nothing since this report.
1:02:07
Some sort of black op where you have
1:02:09
the guys in disguise.
1:02:10
What is it though?
1:02:11
Or is it just setting up Venezuela?
1:02:14
Yeah, that's what I'm thinking.
1:02:15
That Venezuela is being set up for something,
1:02:18
possibly.
1:02:19
Possibly.
1:02:22
Well, they do have to find these mechanisms
1:02:24
to sneak people out of the embassies around
1:02:26
the world in all countries.
1:02:29
You got somebody in there trying to get
1:02:31
out of there.
1:02:32
That's another thing.
1:02:33
I just love the Fred Freakoff networks.
1:02:37
So the latest, you know, USAID never went
1:02:41
away.
1:02:42
By the way, that Freakout network in the
1:02:46
nearby communities there is a goldmine.
1:02:48
It's the best.
1:02:49
It's the best.
1:02:50
And I tell them flat out, I'm talking
1:02:51
about this on the show.
1:02:53
They're like, yeah, you should because it's important.
1:02:55
You should.
1:02:56
That's exactly what you would say to that
1:02:58
type of person.
1:02:59
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, but get the word
1:03:01
out.
1:03:01
These are my friends.
1:03:02
I love them.
1:03:03
But I laugh at them, right?
1:03:04
I'm like, oh, come on, man.
1:03:06
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
1:03:08
So the latest is USAID never went away.
1:03:13
It just all got folded into the State
1:03:15
Department and Rubio's not to be trusted.
1:03:17
To which I actually had to say, well.
1:03:19
No, that's reasonable thought.
1:03:22
I mean.
1:03:22
It's not out of control.
1:03:24
They actually did close down USAID and the
1:03:27
people like Samantha Powers are no longer in
1:03:29
control of it.
1:03:30
But yes, of course, USAID was a CIA
1:03:32
slush fund and the State Department is the
1:03:36
CIA home.
1:03:38
Well, the State Department has their own agency.
1:03:40
They're not the CIA's home necessarily.
1:03:42
They work together.
1:03:42
But all the embassies is where the spook's
1:03:44
going.
1:03:45
I mean, let's just be honest about it.
1:03:46
They work very closely together.
1:03:48
And Rubio, yeah, okay, yeah.
1:03:51
Who knows?
1:03:52
We'll find out about Rubio.
1:03:54
So that was one.
1:03:55
What was the other one?
1:04:00
Oh, Suzy Wiles.
1:04:03
Yeah.
1:04:04
Snake.
1:04:05
She's a snake.
1:04:06
Snake?
1:04:06
She's a snake.
1:04:07
She's not to be trusted.
1:04:09
She's the chief of staff, Suzy Wiles?
1:04:12
She's, there used to be a football announcer
1:04:14
named Summer Hall, Summer Hill, Summer Hall.
1:04:17
What the hell is his last name?
1:04:19
Very famous.
1:04:20
He used to work with John Madden on
1:04:21
the NFL broadcasts.
1:04:23
That's her dad.
1:04:25
Oh yeah, I think we knew that somehow.
1:04:27
Yeah.
1:04:28
So yeah.
1:04:29
So she had broadcasting chops.
1:04:31
I guess my overall observation is, is that
1:04:35
there's a lot of, you know, now everyone's
1:04:38
looking, who can we trust?
1:04:39
Who can we trust?
1:04:40
Who can we not trust?
1:04:42
There's snakes everywhere.
1:04:44
There's stuff going on.
1:04:45
There's lots of things.
1:04:46
Now, of course, you know, so then they'll
1:04:48
ask me like, what do you think about
1:04:50
the chemtrails?
1:04:50
Like, well, that's real, obviously.
1:04:53
So, you know, I'm on their side too.
1:04:56
But the Fred Freak Out or Freak Off
1:04:59
network is amazing.
1:05:01
I love it.
1:05:02
I love them.
1:05:04
I love it.
1:05:05
And they always come to me if they
1:05:07
need to be calmed down.
1:05:08
Except chemtrails, like, no, that stuff's real, man.
1:05:11
Don't calm them down about that.
1:05:12
I'll jack them up.
1:05:14
They're spraying us like bugs, baby.
1:05:15
It's worse than you think.
1:05:17
Now this, I made a call.
1:05:20
I made a big call out and I
1:05:21
called out our producers.
1:05:23
I'm like, where are you people?
1:05:25
Where are you people?
1:05:26
And it happened again.
1:05:27
I hope you, I know what you're going
1:05:29
to go into.
1:05:30
And I would hope that we have some
1:05:32
information.
1:05:33
I think this whole thing is a fraud.
1:05:35
Delays mounted again at one of the nation's
1:05:37
most important international hubs today.
1:05:40
If only they could blame it all on
1:05:41
the weather.
1:05:42
Our scopes just went black again.
1:05:44
If you care about this, contact the airline
1:05:46
and try to get some pressure from them
1:05:47
to fix this up.
1:05:48
Sorry to hear about that.
1:05:49
FedEx 19, I am switching.
1:05:51
Good luck, guys.
1:05:51
For the third time in two weeks, radars
1:05:53
failed at a facility in Philadelphia where controllers
1:05:56
managed the airspace in and around Newark Airport.
1:06:00
They were unable to see where planes were
1:06:02
in relation to one another.
1:06:03
And it lasted for 90 seconds.
1:06:06
The so-called Philadelphia Tracon has been the
1:06:08
center of controversy since the FAA forced controllers
1:06:11
who handle Newark to move from a similar
1:06:13
center on Long Island.
1:06:15
It's their new digs loaded with technology that
1:06:17
was state of the art in the 1970s
1:06:19
that have failed repeatedly, leaving controllers traumatized and
1:06:23
taking leave, thus reducing the number of flights
1:06:26
allowed to fly to Newark, a necessary safety
1:06:29
restriction that's led to hours-long delays.
1:06:32
Governor, it's been almost two weeks since the
1:06:33
Newark Airport incident.
1:06:34
Today, New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy ignored questions
1:06:37
about the situation at his state's most important
1:06:39
airport.
1:06:40
Yesterday, U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy used
1:06:42
Newark as Exhibit A in his multibillion-dollar
1:06:45
push to overhaul the entire nation's system.
1:06:48
You will see Newark's, not just in Newark,
1:06:50
you'll see Newark's in other parts of the
1:06:52
country because it's an aging system.
1:06:56
And so we have to actually upgrade it.
1:06:58
But that coast-to-coast project will take
1:06:59
years to complete.
1:07:01
The White House stressing temporary fixes are already
1:07:03
underway to strengthen the resiliency of the Philadelphia
1:07:06
facility that's caused all this chaos.
1:07:09
The FAA are working to address this technical
1:07:12
issue tonight to prevent further outages, as well
1:07:15
as install new fiber from Newark Airport to
1:07:17
Philadelphia.
1:07:18
And the goal is to have the totality
1:07:20
of this work done by the end of
1:07:22
the summer.
1:07:22
Okay, so that report actually buried the lead
1:07:26
of our girl in the White House, Levitt.
1:07:30
I need to play her entire one-minute
1:07:33
segment on this crisis.
1:07:36
Yes, I'm glad you asked about the FAA.
1:07:38
There was a glitch in the system this
1:07:40
morning.
1:07:41
I got 99 glitches.
1:07:42
Glitch.
1:07:45
Glitch.
1:07:47
Interesting.
1:07:50
And put a goatee on there, will ya?
1:07:52
So I do not accept from as much
1:07:55
as we like you, Ms. Levitt, saying it's
1:07:57
a glitch is a cop-out, it's bullcrap.
1:08:01
And of course, not a single one of
1:08:03
the journalists in the briefing room, including whoever
1:08:07
was in the new media seat, said, what
1:08:10
exactly is a glitch?
1:08:13
Okay.
1:08:14
Yes, I'm glad you asked about the FAA.
1:08:16
There was a glitch in the system this
1:08:18
morning, especially at Newark Airport.
1:08:20
As you all know, I spoke to the
1:08:21
Department of Transportation.
1:08:23
That glitch was caused by the same telecoms
1:08:25
and software issues that were raised last week.
1:08:27
Everyone, everything went back online after the brief
1:08:30
outage, and there was no operational impact.
1:08:33
DOT and the FAA are working to address
1:08:36
this technical issue tonight to prevent further outages,
1:08:39
as well as install new fiber from Newark
1:08:41
Airport to Philadelphia.
1:08:43
And the goal is to have the totality
1:08:45
of this work done by the end of
1:08:47
the summer.
1:08:47
There's a four-part infrastructure plan that was
1:08:51
released by the Secretary of Transportation yesterday to
1:08:53
improve communication, surveillance, automation, and their facilities.
1:08:57
They want to replace the antiquated telecom systems
1:09:00
with new fiber, wireless, and satellite technologies, replace
1:09:03
more than 600 radars, which have gone way
1:09:06
past their life cycle, and address runway safety.
1:09:09
They want to build six new air traffic
1:09:11
control centers for the first time since the
1:09:13
1960s, and replace towers as well.
1:09:16
They want to implement, excuse me, new modern
1:09:19
hardware and software for all traffic facilities to
1:09:21
create a common platform system throughout the towers.
1:09:24
Okay, well, John, you already guessed it, of
1:09:27
course.
1:09:27
They just happen to have this six-year
1:09:30
plan for all these new radar systems, and
1:09:34
everything, I just released this today.
1:09:38
It's coincidental.
1:09:39
This is a total setup, total bullcrap.
1:09:42
And I cite from our boots on the
1:09:44
ground from not one, but two air traffic
1:09:46
controllers.
1:09:47
They happen to live together, the anonymous controller
1:09:50
and his anonymous controller wife, because we have
1:09:53
the best producers in the universe.
1:09:55
And they said, hey, okay, we heard you.
1:09:57
We thought it was such a non-event,
1:09:58
we didn't even bother to talk to you.
1:10:00
But yes, of course, it sounds like a
1:10:04
couple of things, possibly.
1:10:05
A scheduled outage, a work of sabotage to
1:10:09
grab headlines for money.
1:10:11
The controllers taking leave is nothing.
1:10:13
Sick leave is abused by controllers regularly.
1:10:17
Rarely are there any questions asked.
1:10:19
So right there, we already know that part
1:10:22
of this recording is bullcrap.
1:10:25
On the scheduled outage side, if there was
1:10:27
a headline for every time an aircraft went
1:10:29
nordo, and what is nordo?
1:10:32
No operations radio something or other.
1:10:36
And frequencies went out momentarily, it would be
1:10:39
as often as the weather segment on your
1:10:41
local news station.
1:10:43
An example of this, when the Nashville RV
1:10:46
bomber happened a few years back, that explosion
1:10:49
affected our main frequency standbys and backups in
1:10:52
four sectors, I believe affecting Memphis Center frequencies
1:10:56
as well, which is very busy.
1:10:57
Mass chaos ensued after, however, regardless of what
1:11:00
the Trump administration is trying to sell on
1:11:02
the clips provided, the United States is the
1:11:05
best ATC system in the world, and we
1:11:07
are the best controllers in the world.
1:11:09
Foam finger number one.
1:11:12
No one knows what this magic- Can
1:11:14
I stop for a second?
1:11:15
Yes.
1:11:16
This is the reason nobody wrote in right
1:11:18
away.
1:11:19
They thought it was, like this is-
1:11:21
This is, he's expressing what it was.
1:11:24
What, why?
1:11:24
Oh, should we send something in?
1:11:26
No, this is common, this happens all the
1:11:29
time.
1:11:29
Well, why are we writing a note to
1:11:30
Adam about this?
1:11:31
Because he wants- So you had to
1:11:33
bitch and moan and bitch and moan and
1:11:34
bitch and moan, you finally got somebody to
1:11:36
say, okay, here's the reason.
1:11:37
Yes.
1:11:38
Yeah, so that makes sense.
1:11:40
Referring to Secretary Duffy, and I have the
1:11:42
clip here.
1:11:43
What is this magical system Duffy is talking
1:11:46
about?
1:11:47
No one knows.
1:11:48
Reality is, even if it's passed tomorrow, it
1:11:50
won't be implemented for 10 years, and by
1:11:53
then it's out of date.
1:11:54
That's how government works.
1:11:55
Again, you wanna help ATC system?
1:11:58
It's no keyboards or fancy screens.
1:12:00
It's weather, ground, radar updates, and comms.
1:12:03
That's how you improve the system.
1:12:05
Side note, we're huge Trump supporters, still don't
1:12:07
understand what all this means or what it
1:12:10
even looks like.
1:12:12
And they listen to you, John.
1:12:14
The antiquated radio systems, that's part of the
1:12:17
problem.
1:12:17
If the Trump administration is detailing plans for
1:12:20
what it calls the biggest overhaul of air
1:12:22
traffic control in the country's history.
1:12:25
NBC's Tom Costello is in Washington.
1:12:27
Tom, it's a pretty tall task ahead.
1:12:29
Whoa, Tom!
1:12:29
Yeah, it really is, and Secretary Sean Duffy
1:12:31
says it will take three to four years
1:12:33
and cost many billions of dollars, but the
1:12:36
country must upgrade from its 50-year-old
1:12:38
ATC systems that really suffer serious glitches every
1:12:41
single week.
1:12:42
The plan calls for a brand new radio
1:12:44
system, fiber optic data feeds, and new radars.
1:12:48
Radios and radars recently went down in Newark,
1:12:50
leaving controllers in the dark.
1:12:52
The DOT also wants to build new towers,
1:12:54
new tracons, new runway safety systems.
1:12:57
The nation's airlines, controller, and pilot unions all
1:13:00
support the plan, saying air travel needs an
1:13:02
urgent upgrade and a safety fix.
1:13:05
Keyword unions all support the system.
1:13:08
Yeah, okay.
1:13:09
Yeah, it'll happen.
1:13:11
They'll get them something.
1:13:14
But the other shoe that will drop, I'm
1:13:16
just waiting for it is, this is because
1:13:19
Pete Buttigieg did nothing.
1:13:23
That's the main thing to try to push
1:13:25
that a lot.
1:13:26
That's coming.
1:13:26
Did you get the clip of Trump talking
1:13:28
about him and his husband on the bike?
1:13:31
No, no, I didn't.
1:13:32
I didn't.
1:13:33
Oh, damn it.
1:13:33
I should try to go back and find
1:13:35
that clip.
1:13:35
Because Pete was too obsessed with EV charging
1:13:39
stations.
1:13:41
That's the kicker.
1:13:41
Well, of which they built one.
1:13:42
Oh.
1:13:43
Well, Colorado was joining 16 other states suing
1:13:45
the Trump administration to free up funds to
1:13:48
build electric car chargers.
1:13:50
Now, the money was approved by Congress, but
1:13:51
then President Trump froze it with an executive
1:13:54
order.
1:13:54
Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser argues that's illegal
1:13:57
for the administration to block the distribution of
1:13:59
already approved funds.
1:14:01
The state already had plans to spend tens
1:14:03
of millions of dollars, and he says without
1:14:05
the money, it's gonna be difficult to build
1:14:08
out electric vehicle infrastructure.
1:14:10
And I can just remind everybody why the
1:14:13
billions of dollars was not spent on EV
1:14:16
charging stations is because it was all earmarked
1:14:19
for minority-owned businesses.
1:14:22
It was a DEI bill in disguise, and
1:14:25
they couldn't find any businesses that qualified to
1:14:28
do the work.
1:14:29
That's why the money was never spent.
1:14:32
So.
1:14:32
Well, that's a good point.
1:14:33
Yeah, yeah.
1:14:34
It makes sense.
1:14:35
But still, it's more fun to blame Pete
1:14:37
Buttigieg.
1:14:37
Now's the time not to do these things,
1:14:39
by the way, especially if, you know, I'm
1:14:41
still skeptical of the Toyota solid-state battery.
1:14:47
But there's a battery, supposedly, solid-state.
1:14:50
They call it solid-state.
1:14:51
It's just a different engineered style of battery
1:14:55
that supposedly goes, supposedly.
1:14:59
And it's not a super cap.
1:15:00
No one's gonna make those.
1:15:02
Super capacitive.
1:15:03
Unless you wanna see somebody blow up.
1:15:06
Can you imagine?
1:15:07
You're looking out at the freeway, and there's
1:15:09
just a car just blows up.
1:15:10
For those of you who have never blown
1:15:12
up a capacitor, it's a lot of fun.
1:15:19
A super capacitor could create quite the explosion,
1:15:23
I'm sure.
1:15:24
A regular little capacitor, I've had it happen
1:15:26
to me once in a computer.
1:15:29
Oh yeah, like one of those little blue
1:15:30
ones or the yellow ones?
1:15:31
It was a little, I don't know which
1:15:33
one it was, and I don't know what
1:15:34
the capacity was because what was left of
1:15:35
it, you couldn't tell.
1:15:36
Yeah, it's like paper wound, and it stinks.
1:15:38
It's like a cherry bomb going off inside
1:15:42
the computer.
1:15:43
And it's frightening.
1:15:47
Yeah, because they pop.
1:15:49
They really pop.
1:15:50
Caps pop, baby, they pop.
1:15:52
So this new battery in Toyota, supposedly leading
1:15:54
the pack, even though BYD and these other
1:15:57
guys wanna try to keep up, BYD is
1:15:59
probably to do it.
1:16:01
But it's supposed to have 10-minute charging.
1:16:05
Oh yeah, as long as you're connected to
1:16:08
a power station.
1:16:09
Yeah, well, there's always that.
1:16:12
The other, yes, the whole thing has got
1:16:14
issues.
1:16:15
You need a megawatt to charge it, but
1:16:16
otherwise it's fine.
1:16:18
You got one of those, just plug it
1:16:20
into your outlet.
1:16:21
It'll work.
1:16:22
It's gonna melt the wires.
1:16:25
Hey, what's your propaganda clips?
1:16:26
I've been looking at those all morning.
1:16:28
I'm like, it says cool propaganda.
1:16:30
That's a series of clips of NPR.
1:16:32
This, if you're ready for it.
1:16:33
I'm ready.
1:16:34
I don't know how much time we have
1:16:35
before the break.
1:16:35
No, but we got plenty of time.
1:16:36
We got oodles, oodles, oodles.
1:16:39
This is my NPR trying to, NPR and
1:16:43
PBS is trying to do anything they can
1:16:46
to kind of make it clear that Trump's
1:16:48
no good and that they're trying to take
1:16:51
our money and they're trying to ruin broadcasting
1:16:55
as we know it.
1:16:56
But before we play that, I do want
1:16:58
to play, for example.
1:17:00
You do, you do want to play.
1:17:01
You do want to play.
1:17:02
I do.
1:17:04
Now this clip is a mess because it's
1:17:08
titled Untitled, so that's always a giveaway.
1:17:12
And this was, I'm just, this is a
1:17:13
very short, these are all short clips, by
1:17:15
the way, so this'll go pretty quick.
1:17:17
This is an example of NPR at its
1:17:19
finest.
1:17:20
This is a woman comes on and she's
1:17:22
going to discuss horror films and their effect
1:17:25
on children and they're gonna bring these experts
1:17:28
on and talk about horror films and what
1:17:30
can they do to children and then I
1:17:33
had to cut it for obvious reasons.
1:17:35
What's a healthy little scare for kids and
1:17:38
what is potentially scarring?
1:17:41
Well, we wanted to talk to two people
1:17:42
who have had broadly different experiences when it
1:17:45
comes to thinking about horror movies for kids.
1:17:48
All Things Considered producer and film buff, Megan
1:17:50
Lim.
1:17:51
Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey,
1:17:55
hey.
1:17:55
And NPR music and pop culture critic and
1:17:57
father of two young adults now, Stephen Thompson.
1:18:01
Hey, hey.
1:18:02
Hey, hey, it's great to be here.
1:18:04
Great to have you both.
1:18:05
Okay, so I don't have kids.
1:18:08
So, okay, she doesn't got kids, so who
1:18:11
cares?
1:18:14
So then we go to listen to NPR
1:18:17
and this is another example of this kind
1:18:19
of thing.
1:18:20
This is another seven second clip.
1:18:22
This is NPR house ad.
1:18:25
This is a house ad for the kind
1:18:26
of programming that we're gonna get that we
1:18:28
need government money for.
1:18:30
Imagine if you will, a show from NPR
1:18:32
that's not like NPR.
1:18:34
A show that focuses not on the important,
1:18:36
but the stupid.
1:18:39
Wait, let me hear that again.
1:18:42
Imagine if you will, a show from NPR
1:18:44
that's not like NPR.
1:18:46
A show that focuses not on the important,
1:18:48
but the stupid.
1:18:51
Yeah.
1:18:52
Well, you cut it off, so I'm a
1:18:54
little suspicious.
1:18:55
You know, it's stupid.
1:18:56
It wasn't anything, no, believe me, I didn't
1:18:58
cut it off like a Michelle Obama type
1:19:02
clip.
1:19:02
Okay.
1:19:03
So we'll go to NPR leveraging FedCut.
1:19:06
Now here's where they start to bitch.
1:19:08
Oh, you've got a huge NPR thing today.
1:19:11
This is good, I like it.
1:19:13
Well, if you just trying to show people
1:19:16
that they send money to the Noah Jenner
1:19:18
show is well spent.
1:19:20
Yes.
1:19:20
As opposed to this.
1:19:22
You may have heard that President Trump has
1:19:24
issued an executive order seeking to block all
1:19:27
federal funding to NPR.
1:19:29
This is the latest in a series of
1:19:31
threats to media organizations across the country.
1:19:35
Whatever changes this action brings, NPR's commitment to
1:19:39
reporting the news without fear or favor will
1:19:42
never change.
1:19:44
Your support means that we'll be here for
1:19:46
you tomorrow and the next day and the
1:19:49
day after that.
1:19:50
It's time to join the movement to defend
1:19:53
public media.
1:19:54
Yeah, get the plus, get the bundle, get
1:19:56
the bundle.
1:19:57
Become a concierge member.
1:20:00
So after complaining about them, so first, so
1:20:02
they go after Trump by, you know, how
1:20:04
else can we go after him?
1:20:06
Radio Free Europe.
1:20:07
So this starts with, before we get to
1:20:09
the propaganda clips, this is a RFE, this
1:20:13
is a promo, this is a teaser for
1:20:15
their RFE, fighting RFE clips.
1:20:18
I think a lot of mainstream press might
1:20:20
see us almost like primary source material.
1:20:24
RFA's reporters have a history of uncovering genocide,
1:20:28
war crimes, and disinformation campaigns.
1:20:31
They don't just follow the news cycle, they
1:20:33
often lead it.
1:20:35
And now, they're fighting to survive.
1:20:37
Oh, that's, but hold on.
1:20:39
Your No Agenda Show has actual people who
1:20:42
work in the places where the bullcrap is
1:20:44
taking place, like air traffic controllers.
1:20:47
Support your No Agenda Show today.
1:20:51
Yes.
1:20:52
So now, this is another promotion.
1:20:55
This is RFE promotion, Radio Free Europe promotion
1:20:57
number two.
1:20:59
Most of our media are owned by a
1:21:01
handful of tech billionaires, but there's one claim
1:21:04
- No, no, that's not true.
1:21:05
It's owned by Disney, Soros, or at least
1:21:10
he has ownership in it.
1:21:12
There's a lot of billionaires that own media,
1:21:14
but not, I mean, the New York Times
1:21:15
is owned by a Mexican billionaire and some
1:21:18
other billionaire from Saudi Arabia.
1:21:20
The LA Times is an Asian billionaire.
1:21:23
Asian billionaire, a doctor.
1:21:24
They're not tech billionaires.
1:21:26
What tech billionaire owns major media, a major
1:21:29
media company?
1:21:31
Well, it's the only- Elon Musk owns
1:21:33
Twitter.
1:21:34
That's it.
1:21:35
Well, the Washington Post, yeah, Washington Post.
1:21:39
Those are, no, that's not every single one.
1:21:44
Are you calling this fake?
1:21:47
Go back to that clip.
1:21:48
Start it over.
1:21:49
Most of our media are owned by a
1:21:51
handful of tech billionaires, but there's one place
1:21:54
that still operates like the internet was never
1:21:57
invented.
1:21:59
On the new season of The Divided Dial
1:22:01
from On The Media, we're exploring shortwave radio,
1:22:04
where prayer and propaganda coexist with news and
1:22:07
conspiracy theories, and where an existential battle for
1:22:11
the public airwaves is playing out right now.
1:22:14
Listen to On The Media wherever you get
1:22:17
your podcasts.
1:22:18
Wow, okay, first of all, this has been
1:22:21
queued up in my podcast player for like
1:22:23
four days, and I didn't know what it
1:22:26
was about because I saw The Divided Dial.
1:22:29
They're really doing an in-depth dive on
1:22:32
what's on shortwave radio?
1:22:34
As if.
1:22:36
Anyone listens to it.
1:22:37
This is the joke of it.
1:22:38
As if everybody in Europe has got a
1:22:40
shortwave radio and they're holed up in some
1:22:43
attic and they're tuning in to the illegal
1:22:47
broadcast coming in.
1:22:48
Vrooom, vrooom, vrooom, vrooom, vrooom.
1:22:50
The Dutch, Wereldumroep, the Dutch World Service, they
1:22:54
shut down all of their broadcast transmitters and
1:23:00
towers in Bonaire because no one was listening
1:23:03
to it.
1:23:04
Everyone's on the internet.
1:23:05
Nobody listens to shortwave radio.
1:23:08
It's 2025, nobody is tuning in, looking for
1:23:11
the broadcast to give us the truth.
1:23:14
This is bullshit.
1:23:16
I'm sure there's a couple of pastors there
1:23:18
doing this thing.
1:23:21
They're probably out there.
1:23:23
So here we go.
1:23:24
So now we have- I am, this
1:23:26
is shortwave coming to you from Texas.
1:23:30
Vrooom, vrooom, vrooom, vrooom, vrooom, vrooom.
1:23:33
The Muslims are coming to take over.
1:23:37
So they moan and groan about Radio Free
1:23:40
Europe and Voice of America being shut down.
1:23:43
They're gonna have to go broke.
1:23:44
But then they go on to this propaganda
1:23:46
series, which is the clips that you saw.
1:23:49
About Radio Free Asia.
1:23:53
Now, I never heard of Radio Free Asia,
1:23:56
but they make it sound as though this
1:23:58
is the big deal.
1:23:59
Is it on shortwave?
1:24:01
Yeah, it's a shortwave.
1:24:03
All these Asians are all over Asia and
1:24:05
Vietnam.
1:24:06
Radio Free Asia.
1:24:08
And they're in China, in the outskirts of
1:24:10
the rural China.
1:24:11
And they've got the antenna that's out there.
1:24:14
They hope they don't get caught.
1:24:15
And they're tuning the dial on the shortwave
1:24:18
so they can get the truth.
1:24:20
This is nonsense.
1:24:22
Wait a minute.
1:24:22
So what they're saying here, just so I
1:24:24
get it straight, they are trying to protect
1:24:27
their own bacon by saying, they're not just
1:24:31
killing our funding, they're killing this critical information
1:24:34
source for the rest of the world in
1:24:36
these incredibly dictator-led suppressed countries like, I
1:24:39
don't know, South Korea, Japan, who now can't
1:24:43
get the truth on shortwave.
1:24:46
Exactly, you nailed it.
1:24:47
That's exactly what they're trying to do here.
1:24:53
But it's like a vision of the 1940s
1:24:56
or 30s where the guy, again, is in
1:24:59
the attic trying to tune in the radio,
1:25:01
the truth that's coming across.
1:25:03
So let's listen to this propaganda which came
1:25:06
across NPR, Radio Free Asia, part one.
1:25:11
From Recorded Future News, this is Click Here.
1:25:13
You may not remember, but COVID began as
1:25:16
a mystery illness.
1:25:17
Stop the clip, stop the clip.
1:25:19
Am I doing it wrong?
1:25:20
No, no, you're doing it right.
1:25:22
I just had to, I forgot I had
1:25:23
to set this one up.
1:25:24
They start off, this is what's a great,
1:25:27
this is a great clip.
1:25:27
They start off, this is gonna be a
1:25:29
COVID, I'm listening, so this is gonna be
1:25:31
interesting.
1:25:32
It's gonna be a retrospective on how they
1:25:34
screwed up the COVID coverage.
1:25:36
And all of a sudden they switch gears
1:25:40
in just like you did earlier in the
1:25:42
show when you switched over from the fact
1:25:44
you didn't pick the right pope to your
1:25:47
prediction about the erectile dysfunction.
1:25:50
Beautifully, they do the same thing.
1:25:52
And it's not about COVID, it's about Radio
1:25:54
Free Asia.
1:25:55
I don't know how they got that.
1:25:58
From Recorded Future News, this is Click Here.
1:26:00
You may not remember, but COVID began as
1:26:03
a mystery illness.
1:26:04
Growing concern about a new and rare pneumonia
1:26:07
-like virus that has caused at least two
1:26:09
deaths and has spread from China to other
1:26:11
countries in Asia.
1:26:12
We suddenly noticed that there was a surge
1:26:15
of pings, people trying to reach us from
1:26:18
inside Wuhan.
1:26:20
And this was because they were getting no
1:26:22
- Oh man, hold on, pings?
1:26:24
You mean someone was sending them email or
1:26:26
a WhatsApp message?
1:26:27
What kind of pings?
1:26:29
A ping, it was a ping.
1:26:29
Was it like ping, like a radar, like
1:26:31
a sonar or something?
1:26:34
People trying to reach us from inside Wuhan.
1:26:37
And this was because they were getting no
1:26:40
information from their own government about what was
1:26:43
happening around them.
1:26:45
And they knew that something was happening.
1:26:47
The Chinese government was trying to cover something
1:26:49
up.
1:26:50
Turns out it was COVID deaths.
1:26:52
Wow.
1:26:53
They reported a few thousand at the time.
1:26:57
And our reporters called the crematories in the
1:27:00
Wuhan area and got the numbers of urns
1:27:06
that they were putting out, talked to people
1:27:07
on the ground, and basically found that the
1:27:10
number was 100 times that.
1:27:12
And they put that out.
1:27:15
And it was not until a couple of
1:27:17
weeks later that US intelligence reports actually confirmed
1:27:21
that.
1:27:22
And it was reported by CNN.
1:27:24
Hold on, John.
1:27:26
I'm getting some pings.
1:27:27
I'm getting a surge of pings.
1:27:30
They're trying to contact you from Wuhan.
1:27:32
So you think that this is a, oh,
1:27:34
this is going to be interesting.
1:27:35
It's going to be a expose or something
1:27:38
or other.
1:27:38
Here we go.
1:27:39
Here's what it really is about.
1:27:41
And it was reported by CNN.
1:27:43
Base says that Radio Free Asia has had
1:27:46
that kind of impact, not just on policy
1:27:49
and world events, but in fighting against China's
1:27:51
dis- and misinformation.
1:27:53
How do you make that switch?
1:27:57
Let me hear that again.
1:27:58
That was pretty quick.
1:27:59
That was, I mean, it took me at
1:28:00
least a minute and a half.
1:28:02
They did it in like 30, 15 seconds.
1:28:04
And it was reported by CNN.
1:28:07
Base says that Radio Free Asia has had
1:28:09
that kind of impact, not just on policy
1:28:12
and world events, but in fighting against China's
1:28:15
dis- and misinformation campaigns.
1:28:17
Which, by the way, everybody was all in
1:28:19
on.
1:28:19
It was xenophobia to even suggest it came
1:28:22
from China, but okay.
1:28:24
So when the news came that the Trump
1:28:26
administration was trying to pull the plug, they
1:28:29
was surprised.
1:28:30
It was on a Saturday.
1:28:33
What was that laughter about?
1:28:38
Trying to pull the plug.
1:28:41
They was surprised.
1:28:43
It was on a Saturday.
1:28:45
So I was just at home and got
1:28:49
this email from Carrie Lake saying that our
1:28:55
grants had been terminated because we no longer
1:28:58
effectuate the priorities of the administration.
1:29:01
And so what was the first thing that
1:29:03
went through your head?
1:29:04
The first thing that went through my head
1:29:06
was how is it that we don't effectuate
1:29:08
the priorities of the administration anymore?
1:29:12
And, you know, when everything I've heard, especially
1:29:15
in the national security space and the administration
1:29:19
is that we are very impactful and important.
1:29:29
This grant, $60 million, is our annual budget
1:29:33
that we're given.
1:29:34
And it's peanuts compared with the billions of
1:29:38
dollars that China puts in every year into
1:29:40
its global media influence campaign.
1:29:44
After the news about ending RFA's funding was
1:29:47
announced, the state-owned media in China sent
1:29:50
off a flurry of posts.
1:29:51
Flurry.
1:29:52
With, you know, social media posts celebrating this
1:29:56
decision.
1:29:58
You know, basically they are happy because one
1:30:03
of the strongest voices that challenges their narrative
1:30:07
is gone.
1:30:10
Wow.
1:30:11
This is really interesting.
1:30:13
I'm sure they won't talk about it, but
1:30:15
just to bring in the Obama era overturning
1:30:20
of the Smith-Mundt Act, it was specifically
1:30:24
for these types of operations, for voice-free,
1:30:29
radio-free Europe, radio-free Asia, voice of
1:30:33
America.
1:30:34
It was specifically modernized, i.e. didn't count
1:30:39
anymore, because the US government is not allowed
1:30:42
to propagandize its own people.
1:30:45
And they realized that with all the stuff
1:30:48
they were doing on the internet, that they
1:30:50
would probably be propagandizing the American people, and
1:30:54
they needed to do it, because they really
1:30:56
need to do it.
1:30:58
And it was actually a bonanza for them.
1:31:01
And so we all know that this is
1:31:04
bullcrap.
1:31:06
And now they're all high and mighty, like,
1:31:09
well, you know, this is important stuff.
1:31:11
This is like Tokyo Rose, America style.
1:31:15
Who are they kidding?
1:31:16
It's totally Tokyo Rose.
1:31:17
Who are they kidding?
1:31:19
Yeah, yeah, and they think the Chinese are
1:31:21
dumb, I guess.
1:31:22
And by the way, what influence does the
1:31:25
Chinese propaganda arm have?
1:31:28
I mean, it's not NTD.
1:31:30
What do they have here?
1:31:32
Well, they have CGTV, which used to be
1:31:34
CCTV, and they have a new show, and
1:31:38
it's kind of like the BBC, only it
1:31:42
doesn't have a lot of stuff on it.
1:31:44
BBC is actually- They don't even have
1:31:45
any podcasters on their payroll.
1:31:48
Like Russia, Russia had some podcasters.
1:31:52
Oh, they might, but they're doing a better
1:31:55
job.
1:31:55
Again, again, again, no offers.
1:31:59
Where's our money?
1:32:01
Where's our offer?
1:32:03
All right.
1:32:04
If Radio Free- Sorry.
1:32:06
I'm sorry, it's just, it's laughable, this whole
1:32:09
thing.
1:32:10
If Radio Free Asia stops broadcasting, lots of
1:32:13
important news will go uncovered.
1:32:15
Not just a mystery virus in Wuhan or
1:32:18
detentions in Xinjiang, but more immediate events, like
1:32:21
what's going on in the streets of Burma
1:32:23
right now.
1:32:24
These are all things that the authoritarian rulers
1:32:30
of these countries would like to hide, because
1:32:34
the Chinese Communist Party is most afraid of
1:32:38
is its own people.
1:32:39
And for their people to lose the knowledge
1:32:42
of what their government is doing, what's happening
1:32:47
around them, it's hugely beneficial to the Chinese
1:32:53
Communist Party and to all of these authoritarian
1:32:56
rulers around Asia.
1:32:57
Do they provide any proof of how incredibly
1:33:00
beneficial it is to these people who have
1:33:02
better internet technologies than we do?
1:33:06
They provide no proof, and there's a contradiction
1:33:09
in what she said, which is that the
1:33:12
Chinese government's afraid of its own people.
1:33:16
Well, if that, yeah, maybe.
1:33:19
I mean, every government should be afraid of
1:33:21
their own people but what have these guys
1:33:23
done to stir up the masses?
1:33:25
I don't see any evidence of it.
1:33:28
No, they- Well- The Uyghurs are
1:33:29
still imprisoned if they're there.
1:33:31
We don't know any details.
1:33:33
The Wuhan virus is a scam.
1:33:38
Yeah, and since when- You know, it's
1:33:40
always a wet market.
1:33:41
Where'd that information come from?
1:33:43
And what did Radio Free Asia have to
1:33:45
do with it?
1:33:45
The pangolins.
1:33:47
Now we go to clip four, which has
1:33:49
got a, what I call a WTF moment.
1:33:54
And the situation for Radio Free Asia has
1:33:57
gone from dire to devastating.
1:33:59
On May 2nd, RFA told its staff that
1:34:02
it was eliminating 280 positions in the United
1:34:06
States.
1:34:07
That's about 90% of its domestic workforce.
1:34:09
And it's also cutting 20 more jobs overseas.
1:34:16
Okay, let's look at the, what is-
1:34:18
Let's do the numbers here.
1:34:20
KCBS, which does news 24-7 in the
1:34:24
San Francisco Bay Area, just news, news, news.
1:34:26
It's only- They got 18 people.
1:34:28
No, they got a hundred, about a hundred.
1:34:30
Yeah.
1:34:31
But they don't have, for example, this is
1:34:34
Radio Free Asia and they're bragging about all
1:34:36
their coverage.
1:34:37
Is there, do they have reporters over there?
1:34:39
Because they said they laid out 280, which
1:34:41
is 90% of their workforce, that were
1:34:44
all in the United States.
1:34:45
What are they doing?
1:34:46
They're receiving surges- Making phone calls?
1:34:49
Receiving ping surges of pings.
1:34:54
They're looking- I mean, the Daily Newspaper
1:34:56
has maybe a major, major giant paper that
1:34:59
produces tons of material like the Los Angeles
1:35:02
Times.
1:35:02
80 people, 80 people.
1:35:03
No, they got about a thousand.
1:35:05
Go.
1:35:06
A thousand at the Los Angeles Times?
1:35:07
Yes.
1:35:08
Actually, I think the Los Angeles Times is
1:35:10
probably closer to 1,500 to 2,000.
1:35:13
But that includes printing press people, sales people,
1:35:18
editors on top of editors.
1:35:20
The number of reporters is probably a couple
1:35:23
hundred max.
1:35:24
People who organize meetings.
1:35:26
Meetings guys.
1:35:28
AV people for the meetings.
1:35:31
Copy editors, typesetting systems.
1:35:33
Catering, catering, yes.
1:35:35
People to polish the microphones.
1:35:36
It's more than a new, you know, compared
1:35:38
to a radio station like KCBS is, I
1:35:41
think, more apt.
1:35:42
And that's maybe 150, maybe 200.
1:35:46
And that includes sales guys.
1:35:47
And these guys don't need sales people.
1:35:49
That's a lot of people.
1:35:51
Well, question.
1:35:52
Do they have any video products?
1:35:54
Or is it just all audio?
1:35:56
No, it's just all shortwave.
1:35:58
Well, wait.
1:35:59
Shortwave.
1:36:00
Well, they do websites too.
1:36:01
I'm sure they do that.
1:36:01
Yes, they do websites.
1:36:03
You're right.
1:36:03
They all have to have gone to websites.
1:36:04
So there's websites here and there.
1:36:07
And I guess it takes a webmaster.
1:36:10
Remember that term?
1:36:11
Yes.
1:36:12
Who's your webmaster?
1:36:14
Oh, we don't use that term here.
1:36:16
We have a webmistress.
1:36:18
Remember that?
1:36:20
I only remember that vaguely because there was
1:36:22
some people were uppity about using the term
1:36:26
master.
1:36:27
Yeah, I'm looking to see if they have
1:36:28
any video products.
1:36:29
They have any video?
1:36:30
Let me see, video.
1:36:32
Yeah, video.
1:36:33
Let's take a look at their video products.
1:36:36
Dalai Lama in New York.
1:36:40
Yeah, that's going to free the people in
1:36:42
China.
1:36:42
Yeah, they got some- Talking about the
1:36:43
Dalai Lama.
1:36:44
They're doing, they got some guy in a
1:36:46
webcam here.
1:36:48
Okay, so not a lot of video products.
1:36:49
So yeah, so it's mainly audio and web
1:36:51
stuff.
1:36:53
Man, think about what we could do with
1:36:56
that kind of budget.
1:36:57
And what was their budget?
1:36:58
60 million?
1:36:59
In some other clipboards they don't have on
1:37:01
this series, they said, we're going to go
1:37:03
bankrupt.
1:37:04
All right, so let's play the, this is
1:37:07
the last clip, which has a kicker.
1:37:09
Beifong called it an unconscionable situation.
1:37:13
And it's unclear what will happen next.
1:37:15
But a May 6th announcement might provide a
1:37:18
clue.
1:37:19
Senior presidential advisor, Carrie Lake, the person who
1:37:22
told RFA in an email back in March
1:37:24
that their grants had been canceled, said Voice
1:37:27
of America, another federally funded broadcaster, would be
1:37:30
taking in a new newsfeed.
1:37:32
She said, One American News Network, a reliably
1:37:35
pro-Trump television channel, would be providing newsfeeds
1:37:39
for Voice of America's foreign audiences at no
1:37:41
taxpayer cost.
1:37:43
Wow.
1:37:43
It's unclear whether outlets like Radio Free Europe
1:37:46
and RFA will be swept in that move
1:37:48
too.
1:37:50
Wow.
1:37:51
Unreported.
1:37:52
Tells you a lot a bit about that
1:37:54
outfit, doesn't it?
1:37:55
You heard it here first.
1:37:57
Wow.
1:37:58
Yeah, One American News, the schlockmeister, the girl
1:38:02
with too much makeup, and the other guy
1:38:04
who's always angry, and then Chanel Rihanna and
1:38:09
some of these other people that do interviews.
1:38:12
And by the way, they have a OAN
1:38:14
feed here in the Bay Area that comes
1:38:16
over the air.
1:38:17
It's always a week old.
1:38:20
Wow.
1:38:21
Everything that comes over is a week old.
1:38:23
It's like, it's very strange.
1:38:25
I don't know why they do a week
1:38:27
old news, but so OAN, which is, you
1:38:31
know, it's sometimes fun to watch, but it's
1:38:34
fourth rate.
1:38:36
Well, let's see what OAN has today.
1:38:38
They've got top news.
1:38:40
They got multiple Dem lawmaker arrests on the
1:38:42
table after storming ICE facility.
1:38:45
Let's see, report.
1:38:49
Online users praise photo of Carolyn Levitt feeding
1:38:52
baby while working.
1:38:54
Uh-huh.
1:38:55
Okay.
1:38:57
Yeah, look at her.
1:38:58
Super mom, she's super mom.
1:39:00
Gold rush 2.0, record prices, jewelry meltdowns,
1:39:04
and a Bitcoin boom.
1:39:07
U.S. Postal Service 3.3, this is
1:39:09
good news.
1:39:11
It's good stuff.
1:39:13
Well, it's news.
1:39:14
Well, if it's free, and you're going to
1:39:16
give it to Voice of America, you don't
1:39:17
have to pay all these characters, all kinds
1:39:20
of extra money.
1:39:21
Well, yeah.
1:39:22
They have my favorite story, front and center.
1:39:25
Apple's plan to offer AI search options on
1:39:28
Safari, a blow to Google dominance.
1:39:32
Who could have seen that coming?
1:39:35
Alphabet shares dropped 7% after Apple says,
1:39:38
after Q, Eddie Q is now the spokeshole
1:39:41
for this stuff.
1:39:42
You remember Eddie Q?
1:39:43
Well, yeah.
1:39:44
Eddie Q used to be in charge of
1:39:45
podcasting.
1:39:47
He was the iTunes guy.
1:39:50
He's now the senior vice president of internet
1:39:52
software and services.
1:39:54
And he said, yeah, I'm pretty sure we're
1:39:57
going to have artificial intelligence services instead of
1:40:00
a Google search.
1:40:01
They pay, or Google pays them $7 billion
1:40:05
a quarter, I think.
1:40:07
Some astronomical amount.
1:40:09
How come Apple shares didn't sink?
1:40:12
Yeah, it's saving Google money.
1:40:15
Yeah, but Google shares go down.
1:40:17
Well, it's because those advertisements have ads.
1:40:21
I mean, I'm sorry, those searches, results have
1:40:24
ads which Google monetized.
1:40:26
And so Google probably makes them three times
1:40:28
the $7 billion that they get.
1:40:30
I wonder, you've really got to wonder about
1:40:33
Apple.
1:40:34
I've always thought that these guys, for some
1:40:37
reason, they really want to be in the
1:40:39
advertising game.
1:40:42
They've always kind of dipped their toe in,
1:40:44
taken it out.
1:40:45
I think they really want it.
1:40:47
They really, someone must irk them that Google
1:40:50
has all that advertising money.
1:40:54
Where- Oh, that could be.
1:40:56
You know, they definitely, you know, once you
1:40:58
start putting all this AI on your phone,
1:41:01
I don't think it's a good idea.
1:41:03
Because, you know, it's not about displaying-
1:41:06
Those guys are making money off of our
1:41:07
backs.
1:41:08
Yes, because it's not about, they are, literally.
1:41:12
Because all of the apps, the apps are
1:41:14
the things that are tracking, they're tracking your,
1:41:16
how you hold the phone, where you're walking,
1:41:18
or driving, or all of this stuff.
1:41:21
So they're like, well, we can sell that
1:41:22
data.
1:41:23
And, but don't worry, we'll keep it on
1:41:25
our exclusive little secure chip on your phone.
1:41:28
It'll never leave your phone.
1:41:31
I got to wonder, got to wonder.
1:41:34
I mean, to give up $20 billion a
1:41:36
year, give or take, to integrate someone else's
1:41:40
AI products into your phone and not take
1:41:43
the money from Google, there's got to be
1:41:45
something else to it.
1:41:46
Even Eddie, Eddie Q's not stupid.
1:41:49
Let me see.
1:41:49
Give him a call.
1:41:51
Hey, Eddie.
1:41:52
Hey, Eddie.
1:41:53
I bet you- Adam.
1:41:55
I bet you wouldn't take my call.
1:41:57
I bet you would.
1:41:58
Yeah, I don't think I have his number.
1:42:01
But I'm sure it's E.Q. That's Apple
1:42:05
.com.
1:42:06
Well, that brings me to a couple technology
1:42:08
items of note.
1:42:10
First of all, we laughed and I certainly
1:42:14
had, I was unaware of the new definition
1:42:18
of raw dogging.
1:42:20
We've talked about this, came up.
1:42:23
Was it in one of your clips that
1:42:24
this came up, the raw dogging?
1:42:26
Yeah, raw dogging.
1:42:27
And I still think that this has been,
1:42:29
this is a plant to get that, the
1:42:35
bonehead that who's done it before on NBC,
1:42:37
that guy who's, they were CBS, that character
1:42:41
that was on there, he was busted before
1:42:44
for saying stuff that was, he's just naive.
1:42:47
He doesn't know it when he says, he's
1:42:49
the one who introduced it.
1:42:50
Yeah, okay.
1:42:51
Now all of a sudden this has been
1:42:52
the definition.
1:42:53
I saw that.
1:42:53
Well, the thing is, of all the people
1:42:55
who should know about this new definition of
1:42:58
the term raw dogging, it should be you
1:43:00
because it is a TikTok trend.
1:43:03
This is where it comes from.
1:43:05
It's called raw dogging.
1:43:07
I'm reading this from Travel Week.
1:43:10
A new trend that's blowing up on social
1:43:12
media, particularly among males requiring people to sit
1:43:15
through a long haul flight with zero distractions
1:43:18
or forms of entertainment.
1:43:20
This means no phones, movies, music, books, or
1:43:23
even sleep, food, or water.
1:43:25
If people can just sit there for hours
1:43:27
without any stimuli, they get instant bragging rights,
1:43:31
i.e. raw dogging.
1:43:35
What bragging rights are there?
1:43:37
Who are you bragging to?
1:43:39
Well, I was on the plane and I
1:43:41
was like putty in that Seinfeld movie or
1:43:44
Seinfeld show where he sat there next to
1:43:46
Elaine and he didn't move and didn't say
1:43:48
anything.
1:43:49
It doesn't make any sense.
1:43:51
So here's a TikTok clip that I see.
1:43:53
It's like, what do we see?
1:43:55
Just raw dogged a seven hour flight.
1:43:57
No headphones, no movie, no water, nothing incredible.
1:44:00
The power of my mind knows no bounds.
1:44:03
Yeah, it's like a fast.
1:44:04
It's like a fast of water and technology.
1:44:08
Well, in general, a good idea.
1:44:11
Not to not drink water for hours on
1:44:13
end.
1:44:14
Well, no, but to not use technology, I
1:44:17
think that's a good trend.
1:44:19
I'm all for it.
1:44:20
I like this trend.
1:44:21
It's good.
1:44:22
It's a good trend.
1:44:23
Stinks.
1:44:25
Like you care.
1:44:26
Like when's the last time you were on
1:44:28
an actual aircraft?
1:44:29
I mean- I'm not flying around.
1:44:31
It's too dangerous.
1:44:32
The air traffic control is down.
1:44:33
It needs to be modernized.
1:44:35
Yours had propellers.
1:44:37
When I was a kid, you had to
1:44:40
go out and start the engine with a
1:44:42
shotgun.
1:44:44
That's the line I was looking for.
1:44:46
Shotgun shell, start that DC-3 engine.
1:44:50
Anyway, in the technology sphere, never let a
1:44:54
good United Nations development report go to waste.
1:44:57
The new UND report is out 2025 and
1:45:01
Queen Ursula is all over it.
1:45:04
It's a real pleasure to speak to you
1:45:06
today and to welcome this vital report on
1:45:09
artificial intelligence.
1:45:11
The UNDP helps millions of people every year,
1:45:14
but a lot has changed in the 60
1:45:16
years since the UNDP was created.
1:45:18
Now, where do you think she's going with
1:45:20
this?
1:45:20
What do you think is in this new
1:45:21
United Nations development plan report for 2025?
1:45:25
Climate change.
1:45:25
No, well, partially.
1:45:28
It's part of the kicker, but no, no,
1:45:30
no, no.
1:45:30
The world is facing many new challenges and
1:45:33
artificial intelligence is one of the biggest.
1:45:37
This is it, baby.
1:45:38
AI coming to Europe.
1:45:39
EU is going to be the AI continent.
1:45:42
This new report- What?
1:45:45
Can I interrupt a clip completely?
1:45:47
I know you hate this idea, but I
1:45:49
want to interrupt that clip with an AI
1:45:52
clip.
1:45:53
Okay.
1:45:53
You go right back to the clip, it'll
1:45:55
be fine.
1:45:55
Sure.
1:45:56
Because you didn't really get that clip going.
1:45:57
No, because you kept jumping in front of
1:46:00
it.
1:46:01
Yes, you can.
1:46:02
Of course you can.
1:46:02
This is Linda McMahon.
1:46:04
Oh, she's the secretary of the now defunct
1:46:09
education.
1:46:10
Yes, education.
1:46:12
This is unbelievable.
1:46:15
She's talking about AI in schools, but she
1:46:18
doesn't really, well, maybe she's talking about, I
1:46:21
don't know, what is she doing?
1:46:24
Letter or report that I heard this morning.
1:46:26
I wish I could remember the source, but
1:46:27
that there's a school system that's going to
1:46:29
start making sure that first graders or even
1:46:33
pre-Ks have A1 teaching every year, starting
1:46:37
that far down in the grades.
1:46:39
And that's just a wonderful thing.
1:46:41
Kids are sponges.
1:46:43
They just absorb everything.
1:46:44
And so it wasn't all that long ago
1:46:46
that it's, we're going to have internet in
1:46:47
our schools.
1:46:48
Whoop.
1:46:49
Now, okay, let's see A1 and how can
1:46:52
that be helpful?
1:46:53
How can it be helpful in one-on
1:46:54
-one instruction?
1:46:55
How can it be helpful?
1:46:57
Wait a minute.
1:46:57
Is she talking about AI?
1:46:59
She's saying A1, is that what I'm hearing?
1:47:01
Yep.
1:47:01
A1 steak sauce in schools?
1:47:03
They just absorb everything.
1:47:05
And so it wasn't all that long ago
1:47:07
that it's, we're going to have internet in
1:47:08
our schools.
1:47:09
Whoop.
1:47:09
Now, okay, let's see A1 and how can
1:47:12
that be helpful?
1:47:13
How can it be helpful in one-on
1:47:15
-one instruction?
1:47:16
How can it be helpful in absorbing more
1:47:18
information for those fast learners?
1:47:21
It can be more one-on-one directed.
1:47:23
And those are the kinds of things and
1:47:25
innovations that I want to see continue to
1:47:27
develop.
1:47:28
All right.
1:47:29
All right.
1:47:29
You deserve this one.
1:47:31
♪ Clip of the day ♪ Thank you
1:47:33
very much.
1:47:34
A1 in school.
1:47:35
So she's reading off a piece of paper.
1:47:37
She has apparently never listened to anything in
1:47:41
the media.
1:47:42
At all.
1:47:43
At all, ever.
1:47:44
This is the series of tubes clip of
1:47:45
our day.
1:47:47
Remember the internet?
1:47:48
It's a series of tubes.
1:47:49
Yeah, the tubes.
1:47:50
Oh man, do we still have, who was
1:47:51
that guy?
1:47:53
Oh, it was the senator that got killed
1:47:55
up in Alaska.
1:47:56
Wasn't it?
1:47:57
Because of the series of tubes?
1:48:00
No, because he was in a plane wreck.
1:48:02
I think they tried to kill him for
1:48:03
some reason.
1:48:04
He's the one who built the bridge to
1:48:05
nowhere.
1:48:06
Ted Stevens, you're right.
1:48:07
Ted Stevens.
1:48:08
Yes, Ted Stevens.
1:48:09
Yeah, can you believe that?
1:48:10
A1, that's what we're calling it from now
1:48:13
on.
1:48:13
Hold on, let's listen to it.
1:48:14
Is allowing all of these entities that support
1:48:17
this to provide streaming stuff going on the
1:48:23
internet.
1:48:24
Now the internet, you know, let's go back.
1:48:26
Internet started with a concept of local to
1:48:30
local connections across the country.
1:48:33
And you could go for Air Alaska, but
1:48:36
you only had to go through local connections
1:48:38
to get there.
1:48:39
Industry wisely provided for a streaming for, in
1:48:43
effect, a new kind of long distance.
1:48:45
And that's what we've got.
1:48:46
We've got a service that's immune to distance.
1:48:50
And it's there for the consumer.
1:48:53
But when we take and- Where is
1:48:56
it?
1:48:56
Sign up and you've got a movie delivered
1:48:59
to your house, or muscle, you change your
1:49:01
order.
1:49:02
It's delivered to you, and this delivery charge
1:49:04
is free, right?
1:49:06
Why?
1:49:07
Because it got tangled up with all of
1:49:09
these things that are going on the internet
1:49:10
commercially.
1:49:11
And here we have this one situation where
1:49:14
enormous entities want to use the internet for
1:49:17
their purpose, to save money for doing what
1:49:20
they're doing now.
1:49:21
They use FedEx, they use the deliveries.
1:49:24
The internet is not something that you just
1:49:26
dump something on.
1:49:27
It's not a big truck.
1:49:28
It's a series of tubes.
1:49:31
And if you don't understand, those tubes can
1:49:33
be filled.
1:49:34
They're filled.
1:49:35
When you put your message in, it gets
1:49:36
in line.
1:49:37
It's gonna be delayed by anyone that puts
1:49:39
it in that tube.
1:49:40
Enormous amounts of material.
1:49:42
Wow.
1:49:43
He was not wrong though.
1:49:44
He was talking about streaming TV and, but
1:49:48
it was the series of tubes that we
1:49:49
all focus on.
1:49:50
Not a truck.
1:49:51
No, it's a series of tubes.
1:49:53
Yes, from now on, AI is A1.
1:49:57
And new people to the show will think
1:49:59
we are crazy.
1:50:01
What are these guys?
1:50:01
These guys don't know what they're talking about.
1:50:03
They think AI is A1.
1:50:05
Well, okay, so before I get to my
1:50:07
Ursula AI clip, A1 clip, I have to
1:50:11
play this.
1:50:11
This is the latest TikTok craze.
1:50:14
Yes, I'm not playing a TikTok clip.
1:50:16
I'm playing- No, no, I noticed you're
1:50:18
stealing my material.
1:50:20
No, no, this is a clip about TikTok
1:50:24
and what kids, those crazy wacky kids are
1:50:27
doing in school.
1:50:28
This TikTok shows a new and concerning trend
1:50:31
among students.
1:50:32
It's more than just a trend.
1:50:35
It causes a lot of disruption.
1:50:37
Last Thursday, a student at Newington High School
1:50:39
did just that.
1:50:40
It became clear that the damage was done
1:50:42
intentionally, that it wasn't a malfunctioning Chromebook, but
1:50:45
rather a student had intentionally done things to
1:50:48
it that caused it to smoke and eventually
1:50:51
melt.
1:50:51
The school was evacuated as smoke filled the
1:50:53
classroom.
1:50:54
The batteries that are essentially catching on fire,
1:50:58
once they burn, they're producing this toxic smoke.
1:51:02
And the same thing happened in both Derby
1:51:04
and Cromwell High Schools on Monday.
1:51:06
The hallway's filling with smoke.
1:51:07
We went in and ended up finding a
1:51:10
laptop in a classroom that was pretty much
1:51:15
out but on fire at one point.
1:51:17
The back cover where the battery cover was
1:51:18
melted away and the battery was smoking.
1:51:22
Investigations are underway across the districts.
1:51:24
And while no one was injured, firefighters say
1:51:26
these incidents could have been much worse.
1:51:29
The small ones like cell phones and laptops,
1:51:32
they can cause an explosion.
1:51:33
They could have potentially burned somebody.
1:51:35
A shrapnel could have hit other people if
1:51:37
it exploded.
1:51:38
Newington Superintendent Dr. Maureen Brummett says she plans
1:51:41
to hold those responsible accountable.
1:51:43
So the kids now on TikTok, they're learning
1:51:46
how to jam some metal into the charging
1:51:49
USB port of their school-issued Chromebooks.
1:51:52
And of course, they start to smoke, burn,
1:51:55
and often can come- They short them
1:51:56
out.
1:51:57
Yes.
1:51:57
This is the new TikTok trend.
1:52:00
It's part of the raw-dogging trend.
1:52:03
It's got to do with raw-dogging.
1:52:05
But you got to get rid of your
1:52:06
technology, babe.
1:52:08
I'm going to blow it up.
1:52:10
This is a Luddite thing.
1:52:12
I'm digging it.
1:52:12
The new Luddites.
1:52:13
I'm digging it.
1:52:14
I'm digging it.
1:52:15
Neo-Luddites.
1:52:16
Yes, I'm digging it.
1:52:17
Well, none of this will happen in the
1:52:20
European Union because Queen Ursula is all in
1:52:22
on A1.
1:52:24
It's a real pleasure to speak to you
1:52:26
today.
1:52:26
It's a pleasure!
1:52:27
And to welcome this vital report on artificial
1:52:30
intelligence.
1:52:31
The UNDP helps millions of people every year,
1:52:34
but a lot has changed in the 60
1:52:37
years since the UNDP was created.
1:52:39
The world is facing many new challenges and
1:52:42
artificial intelligence is one of the biggest.
1:52:45
As this new report says, the world is
1:52:48
pulsing with a powerful new technology.
1:52:52
Pulsing with a powerful new technology.
1:52:55
AI has moved from fantasy to fact.
1:52:58
From fantasy to fact.
1:52:59
She likes the alliteration.
1:53:00
Two thirds of people around the world expect
1:53:03
to use AI within a year.
1:53:05
Areas like health, education and work are being
1:53:08
transformed.
1:53:10
And the revolution has only just begun.
1:53:13
So how should we deal with this crucial
1:53:15
issue?
1:53:16
How can we make sure that countries and
1:53:19
people benefit from the AI revolution?
1:53:22
Oh, I think it's going to cost the
1:53:24
taxpayers money.
1:53:25
Now let's look at what Europe is doing
1:53:28
at home and in partnerships around the world.
1:53:31
Here in Europe, we want to be leading
1:53:33
as an AI continent to improve lives, promote
1:53:37
our values and help humanity.
1:53:39
We're investing.
1:53:40
We're building 13 AI factories and five giga
1:53:44
factories.
1:53:45
Whoa, five giga AI factories.
1:53:48
I don't know exactly what they're going to
1:53:50
do, but it's not just a factory.
1:53:51
It's a giga factory.
1:53:53
To unlock 200 billion euros in overall investment.
1:53:57
200 billion euros of your tax money, Europeans.
1:54:01
But with artificial intelligence, there are risks as
1:54:04
well as rewards.
1:54:06
So we have brought in a new set
1:54:08
of rules for a European approach to safeguard
1:54:12
our citizens and maximize benefits.
1:54:15
Because AI needs to be safe to have
1:54:18
the confidence of Europeans.
1:54:20
We will control your AI and we are
1:54:22
going to deploy it everywhere and it's going
1:54:25
to be good for you.
1:54:25
Just listen.
1:54:26
But our focus must also be broader than
1:54:28
Europe because there is a danger that AI
1:54:31
will grow the digital divide.
1:54:33
Oh, they care so much about the poor
1:54:35
countries.
1:54:35
Between wealthy nations and the global South.
1:54:38
And that's why Europe is also working with
1:54:41
partners so that everyone can take part in
1:54:44
this AI revolution.
1:54:46
Yeah, slaves and data centers.
1:54:48
Let me give you five examples.
1:54:50
Firstly, our global gateway strategy is investing in
1:54:53
infrastructure and capacity in partner countries.
1:54:58
For example, a satellite AI factory in Morocco.
1:55:02
What is an AI factory?
1:55:04
I have to ask you, do you have
1:55:06
any, an inkling of idea what an AI
1:55:09
factory is?
1:55:10
I think it would be a server farm
1:55:12
is what I think it is, but her
1:55:14
concept is so 18th century that she thinks
1:55:19
everything's a factory.
1:55:21
Get to work, you poor slave.
1:55:23
It's a hamburger factory.
1:55:24
A satellite AI factory in Morocco that is
1:55:28
thus helping tech startups across Africa.
1:55:31
Second.
1:55:32
So wait a minute, my money's going to
1:55:33
go to Africa?
1:55:34
Okay.
1:55:35
To support these efforts, the European Union is
1:55:37
joining the executive steering board of the AI
1:55:41
Hub for Sustainable Development.
1:55:44
The AI Hub for Sustainable Development.
1:55:49
Wow.
1:55:50
This is a vital initiative led by Italy,
1:55:53
the G7 and the UNDP with a strong
1:55:56
focus on Africa.
1:55:57
Thirdly, we have formed a powerful digital alliance
1:56:01
with Latin America and Caribbean partners.
1:56:04
Fourthly, we're working with Asian partners on global
1:56:08
cybersecurity.
1:56:10
And finally, we're developing super accurate AI weather
1:56:13
forecasts to warn about dangerous tropical storms, for
1:56:17
example.
1:56:18
Wait a minute, super accurate AI weather forecasts.
1:56:22
I cannot wait for that.
1:56:24
What a crock.
1:56:26
And of course, to help rescue efforts around
1:56:28
the world.
1:56:28
Yeah, go find that Malaysian Airlines flight.
1:56:31
So you see, AI can be a gift
1:56:34
to humanity.
1:56:35
It's a gift, it's a gift to you.
1:56:38
Hey slaves, hey, you in the factory, it's
1:56:41
a gift.
1:56:41
This important report shows that the future is
1:56:45
in our hands.
1:56:46
The choices we make now will determine our
1:56:49
tomorrow.
1:56:50
With the right choices, we can open new
1:56:52
pathways, helping everyone to thrive in a world
1:56:56
with artificial intelligence.
1:56:58
Boondoggle, boondoggle.
1:57:00
Money, there's money in Europe, everybody.
1:57:03
There's money if you're a scientist and you
1:57:06
want to run away from the evil America.
1:57:09
There's money if you want to work in
1:57:10
an AI gigafactory.
1:57:14
I just shudder to think what that really
1:57:16
is.
1:57:19
These people are nuts.
1:57:20
They're talking.
1:57:20
This woman is delusional.
1:57:23
She doesn't know what she's talking about and
1:57:26
she just rambles.
1:57:28
She must really think she's something special.
1:57:30
Well, President Trump likes me.
1:57:32
He thinks I'm awesome.
1:57:34
Yeah, Trump is already on his way.
1:57:35
He's just working her already.
1:57:38
She's falling for it.
1:57:40
Hey, with that, I want to thank you
1:57:41
for your courage in the morning to you,
1:57:42
the man who put the C in your
1:57:44
name.
1:57:44
In the Chromebooks that explode.
1:57:46
Say hello to my friend on the other
1:57:47
end, the one, the only, Mr. John C.
1:57:51
DeMora.
1:57:54
Yeah, well, in the morning to you, Mr.
1:57:55
Adam Curry.
1:57:56
In the morning, it's just the C.
1:57:58
Yeah, folks on the ground, feet in the
1:57:59
air, subs in the water, and all the
1:58:00
dames and knights out there.
1:58:01
In the morning to the trolls in the
1:58:02
troll room.
1:58:03
Hold on, trolls, here, I'm moving.
1:58:04
Morning, John, but I don't care, I don't
1:58:05
care.
1:58:06
Two trolls.
1:58:08
Everyone's hanging out with mom.
1:58:09
2041 trolls, peak trollage for us today.
1:58:12
It's Mother's Day.
1:58:13
Wow.
1:58:14
Wow, what wow?
1:58:16
That's wow low.
1:58:17
It's wow, it's wow low, man.
1:58:20
It's wow, but people love their moms, but
1:58:23
they don't want.
1:58:24
Well, the ones that love their moms don't
1:58:25
donate to the show.
1:58:26
No, there's that, there's that.
1:58:28
But they love their mom.
1:58:29
We do have a few mom call-outs,
1:58:31
call-outs.
1:58:32
Oh, luckily, luckily, this is good.
1:58:35
All the moms, you are the glue of
1:58:37
the family, fact.
1:58:40
So the trolls are in the troll room
1:58:42
at trollroom.io, which is our 24-7
1:58:45
live stream and chat room.
1:58:48
You can call it a chat room, but
1:58:49
I think everyone calls it a troll room
1:58:50
because people troll.
1:58:52
They're just there to troll all the time.
1:58:54
Only 130 real trolls.
1:58:56
These are trolls that are listening.
1:58:58
We have quite a large listening audience.
1:59:01
Not everyone is trolling, but you can hit
1:59:04
that trollroom.io or use the Modern Podcast
1:59:07
app.
1:59:07
I can't say it often enough.
1:59:08
One of these days, you're gonna be like,
1:59:10
I'm disappointed in my podcast app.
1:59:12
If only I had listened to Adam.
1:59:14
What was that thing called again?
1:59:16
By the way, it is not podcastapp.com.
1:59:19
That'll take you to a piece of junk.
1:59:21
It is podcastapps, plural, .com, where you can
1:59:25
see all of the Modern Podcast apps.
1:59:27
Is it one P or two?
1:59:29
It's two Ps.
1:59:31
And it says podcastapps.
1:59:33
Yes, podcastapps, .com.
1:59:38
Yes, or you can go to podcastindex.org
1:59:41
and click on the apps tab.
1:59:43
It's all the same place.
1:59:45
And so these give you all kinds of
1:59:47
benefits besides not spying on you, not giving
1:59:52
you ads.
1:59:52
I'm sure some apps out there do that
1:59:54
or try to give you ads.
1:59:57
And you can always upgrade to the concierge
2:00:00
package for extra features.
2:00:02
They give you chapters with chapter images.
2:00:05
They give you alerts when we go live.
2:00:07
They have live streams.
2:00:08
You can't get that from Spotify or from
2:00:11
Apple Podcast apps.
2:00:13
So grab one of those.
2:00:14
It's compatible with all of your podcasts.
2:00:17
You can even import your current subscriptions.
2:00:21
The trolls are there contributing to the show.
2:00:23
We have a value for value model.
2:00:25
Clearly, we have taken a route that we
2:00:29
can never get out of.
2:00:30
We're not getting any checks from Big Pharma,
2:00:33
not getting any checks from China.
2:00:35
We get no checks.
2:00:37
We get checks from people who want to
2:00:39
support us because they value what we do.
2:00:42
And that's- Checks from coffee guys.
2:00:44
Yeah, we get checks.
2:00:45
Where is my new coffee?
2:00:46
I need some new coffee.
2:00:48
We get checks from coffee guys.
2:00:49
That's pretty much it.
2:00:50
In the mail.
2:00:50
Yeah, that's pretty much it.
2:00:52
But we appreciate everyone who supports us.
2:00:55
Value for value means time, talent, or treasure.
2:00:57
And we do have a plethora of artists
2:01:01
and A1 prompt jockeys who like to, I'm
2:01:05
going to try to keep it in there.
2:01:09
She should be called out for that, by
2:01:11
the way.
2:01:12
Well, she was with that clip, but she
2:01:14
should be called out.
2:01:15
Somebody should bring it up at the press
2:01:17
conference.
2:01:18
Yeah.
2:01:19
What do you know, lady?
2:01:21
What do you know?
2:01:21
Go back to wrestling.
2:01:26
One of the ways people contribute is through
2:01:28
providing us art.
2:01:29
We love to select a piece of art
2:01:30
right after the show.
2:01:31
These are people who are listening on the
2:01:33
fly, just listening live, and on the fly
2:01:35
are making art.
2:01:36
Yes, it's a tool if you use AI,
2:01:42
but you still have to have a concept.
2:01:44
And it has to be a no agenda
2:01:45
concept.
2:01:46
It has to have the humor of Gitmo
2:01:48
Nation.
2:01:49
Otherwise, AI is just not going to take
2:01:51
you anywhere.
2:01:52
And so we have a combination of traditional
2:01:55
artists using Photoshop and clip art, and yes,
2:01:59
some AI stuff.
2:02:01
Well, we want to thank the artist who
2:02:03
brought us the artwork for episode 1762, titled
2:02:06
Stick Fight.
2:02:07
By the way, I think there was an
2:02:09
errant, or it was a mistake about the
2:02:11
stick fight that we discussed.
2:02:13
It is in fact not India and Pakistan
2:02:15
who fight with sticks at the border.
2:02:17
It is India and Chinese, who of course
2:02:21
pretty much own that region of Pakistan, if
2:02:24
I understand it correctly.
2:02:25
Well, I know they fight on the border
2:02:27
too.
2:02:27
I don't know if it's to or or.
2:02:31
I couldn't find any evidence of Indians.
2:02:33
Okay, well maybe it's just the Indians and
2:02:35
the Chinese fighting with sticks.
2:02:36
But in London, there's a lot of videos
2:02:38
in London with Pakistanis and Indians yelling at
2:02:41
each other.
2:02:42
And they don't really get into fisticuffs, but
2:02:44
they just yell at each other.
2:02:46
And it's, if you, if you, get out
2:02:47
of here, man, you Paki, you Indian.
2:02:52
London, they're fighting each other there.
2:02:54
The whole thing, it's spreading.
2:02:56
It's contagion.
2:02:58
Well, they were invited there to fight, obviously.
2:03:01
Why else would they be there?
2:03:02
That's right.
2:03:05
So we want to thank Sir Shug, aka
2:03:07
Foe Diddley, for the artwork for 1762.
2:03:10
A nice US born Pope with a foam
2:03:14
finger number one.
2:03:17
A lot of people like this art.
2:03:19
I got good feedback on it.
2:03:20
Yeah, nobody sent us any, hey, that's sacrilegious
2:03:22
or any complaints from our Catholic listeners.
2:03:25
No, I got no, no, the Catholics, they
2:03:27
like it.
2:03:28
They're all the Catholics I know.
2:03:29
They're like, jury's still out, man, jury's still
2:03:32
out.
2:03:32
But I think there's also a lot of
2:03:33
propaganda against this Pope, just right off the
2:03:37
bat.
2:03:38
And like, oh, he's LGBT friendly, he's woke,
2:03:42
he's this, he's that.
2:03:44
And there's a lot of anti-prop, you
2:03:45
know, it's propaganda on both sides.
2:03:47
We don't know.
2:03:48
We don't know what this Pope is going
2:03:50
to do.
2:03:51
We don't know yet, but we'll see.
2:03:54
I hear a lot of, well, he's a
2:03:56
registered Republican.
2:03:57
It's got to be good.
2:03:58
How can he, he's not a, he's living
2:04:00
in Chile.
2:04:01
He doesn't even.
2:04:01
In the elections that he voted in when
2:04:04
he was in the United States, he voted
2:04:06
Republican.
2:04:08
God, I mean, this is all just, it's
2:04:10
out there, you know.
2:04:11
I'm just telling you what people are talking
2:04:13
about.
2:04:14
I question this.
2:04:16
As I said, it's propaganda.
2:04:17
What I love the most, I heard this
2:04:19
one the other day, that a lot of
2:04:24
the M5M talked about this particular Pope, Leo
2:04:28
XIV, as the dark horse candidate.
2:04:31
Did you hear this anywhere?
2:04:33
No.
2:04:34
Okay, so he was the dark, well, of
2:04:35
course I did, because I'm looking everywhere, like,
2:04:37
how did I miss this guy?
2:04:38
He was the dark horse candidate.
2:04:41
And then of course that picks up as,
2:04:43
aha, white horse, President Trump.
2:04:47
Red horse, China.
2:04:50
Black horse, Pope.
2:04:51
We're just waiting for the pale horse.
2:04:54
And then, and then the Armageddon kicks off.
2:04:57
No, no, this is classic.
2:05:00
That has to be a Fredericksburg thing.
2:05:02
You got it, baby.
2:05:05
Of course it is.
2:05:07
I'm telling you, this is the best move
2:05:09
I've ever made in my life.
2:05:10
I'm never leaving.
2:05:11
I am never leaving Fredericksburg.
2:05:13
It's a goldmine of crazy people.
2:05:16
The best part is that we talk about
2:05:19
this and we laugh about it and we
2:05:20
have a good time.
2:05:21
And I tell him, I'm gonna talk about
2:05:22
it on the show.
2:05:22
I'm like, yeah, you should do that.
2:05:24
That's good.
2:05:25
Like you said, there's gotta get this information
2:05:27
out there.
2:05:28
Get that information out.
2:05:29
Yeah, talk about it.
2:05:30
You can ridicule us if you want, we
2:05:31
don't care.
2:05:32
As long as it gets out.
2:05:33
No, hey, listen, we're good hosts.
2:05:34
We have people over, we cook, we have
2:05:36
a good time.
2:05:37
And they're all our friends, we love them.
2:05:38
We love our friends.
2:05:40
So looking at the artwork that we had
2:05:41
that you saw.
2:05:42
You loved your friends in Austin, too, until
2:05:44
you rousted a couple of them.
2:05:46
But they were really not good, let's be
2:05:49
honest.
2:05:50
I mean, they got all spun up.
2:05:54
They got really spun up, but over the
2:05:56
wrong things.
2:05:57
You know, like Trump is Hitler.
2:06:01
Yeah, we don't have that here.
2:06:03
Biden is Hitler.
2:06:05
Obama was the Antichrist, that kind of stuff.
2:06:09
Doesn't fit with the show.
2:06:11
Anyway, we're looking at the art at noagendaartgenerator
2:06:13
.com.
2:06:14
Another fine piece of value for value from
2:06:16
Sir Paul, who put that together for us.
2:06:19
Been up and running for over a decade
2:06:20
in multiple versions.
2:06:22
Because it was VE Day, we did stay
2:06:25
on Darren O'Neill's VE Day piece of
2:06:29
art.
2:06:29
We discussed it for a while.
2:06:31
We didn't stay on it long, because you
2:06:32
nixed it faster than a, no, I don't
2:06:35
have a lot.
2:06:36
No, you don't have a lot.
2:06:37
I said, I like the idea of supporting
2:06:40
VE Day, but I didn't think this was
2:06:42
a great art.
2:06:43
It was an old dude looking up in
2:06:44
the clouds.
2:06:45
Yeah, I wasn't pushing back too hard.
2:06:48
I liked the piece, because it was for
2:06:50
the day, but then again, the piece was
2:06:53
a little bit funky.
2:06:55
The piece that you said right off the
2:06:56
bat was, I love this one, noagenda, please
2:06:59
send free stuff, Adam Curry and John C.
2:07:02
Dvorak.
2:07:03
That was the one you liked.
2:07:05
I mentioned it was funny.
2:07:07
I didn't know who was gonna pick it.
2:07:10
We had a couple of, what was that?
2:07:12
The one I liked a lot, just for
2:07:14
its composition, and I just liked that that
2:07:17
was the prettiest piece was, again, Darren, who
2:07:20
gets a hair up his ass every so
2:07:22
often and just produces a lot of good
2:07:24
stuff.
2:07:24
A lot of it, yeah.
2:07:25
New and improved noagenda from Alcatraz Prison.
2:07:28
I think that piece was gorgeous.
2:07:30
That was a very nice piece.
2:07:32
Why didn't we choose it?
2:07:34
You didn't like it.
2:07:37
I think I said- I think the
2:07:39
Pope with the foam finger was just too
2:07:41
good.
2:07:41
It was too good.
2:07:43
Oh, no, I know what you said.
2:07:44
We're not gonna pick another Darren O'Neill
2:07:46
and that's what I said.
2:07:48
Yeah, that's what I said, exactly.
2:07:50
Those guys, they gotta stop.
2:07:54
This is classic.
2:07:55
This is what you do, by the way,
2:07:57
when you're judging for the Pulitzer and everything.
2:08:01
No, you can't have another award, no, no.
2:08:05
That guy's already got too much.
2:08:08
No, we're not gonna do it, exactly.
2:08:09
And that's what happens in the back room
2:08:12
and it happens constantly.
2:08:13
People can't take these awards too seriously.
2:08:15
And that goes for the Oscars, too.
2:08:17
And that goes for the noagenda art picking
2:08:18
process.
2:08:19
It's exactly the same.
2:08:20
It's just the way, it's human nature.
2:08:23
It's just what it is.
2:08:24
Thank you, Sir Shug, a.k.a. Pho
2:08:27
Diddley.
2:08:27
We appreciate it.
2:08:28
We appreciate the work of all the artists
2:08:29
who support us with their time and their
2:08:30
talent.
2:08:31
And we always love the people who support
2:08:33
us with treasure.
2:08:34
And we will thank every single person who
2:08:36
supports us with $50 or above for every
2:08:39
single episode at this moment.
2:08:40
We'd like to thank what we credit as
2:08:43
our executive and associate executive producers, because we
2:08:45
realize just like Hollywood, it's really the people
2:08:47
who fund the show who get those titles,
2:08:50
those credits.
2:08:50
And these are equal to Hollywood credits wherever
2:08:52
Hollywood credits are recognized.
2:08:54
These work as well, including IMDb.
2:08:56
You can put it in any resume, your
2:08:58
LinkedIn profile, and it looks kind of cool
2:09:00
and people will question you about it.
2:09:02
And if they do, send them to imdb
2:09:03
.com.
2:09:04
You see that it's for real.
2:09:05
And there's over a thousand other executive and
2:09:07
associate executive producers.
2:09:08
So here's how it works, $200 or above,
2:09:11
you get the associate executive producer credit.
2:09:13
And we'll read your note, $300 and above,
2:09:15
you get an executive producer credit.
2:09:17
Who doesn't want that?
2:09:18
And we will read your note as well.
2:09:20
And we kick it off with Sir Kevin
2:09:21
Dills from Huntersville, North Carolina with 512.
2:09:25
And he says, in the morning, this is
2:09:27
my annual birthday donation.
2:09:29
Yes, after a while, you kind of come
2:09:31
to recognize these things.
2:09:33
And he will be turning 39 on May
2:09:35
12th.
2:09:35
Please add me to the birthday list, of
2:09:37
course.
2:09:37
No jingles, just karma.
2:09:38
Thank you for your courage, says Sir Kevin
2:09:40
Dills.
2:09:41
He is the Duke of North Carolina and
2:09:43
we thank you for your contribution.
2:09:45
Duke.
2:09:45
You've got karma.
2:09:51
We have, what is that, Dixian?
2:09:58
Dixian Craig is what I have, yeah, Dixian.
2:10:01
Dixian.
2:10:02
Craig, he's in Alberta, Canada.
2:10:04
He sent a check in for the Gray,
2:10:06
500 bucks, but we don't have a note
2:10:08
or anything from him.
2:10:10
And I don't know what this is.
2:10:12
Oh, this is, by the way, this is
2:10:14
500 Canadian.
2:10:15
So it's, well, it's 500 Canadian.
2:10:18
Hey, we still honor the Canadian dollary dues.
2:10:21
And so he gets his executive producer, but
2:10:24
he didn't say anything about it.
2:10:25
And so we're going to give him a
2:10:27
double up of karma.
2:10:27
We roll it up for all.
2:10:29
You've got, karma.
2:10:33
Moving on to Victoria Protovsky in Newark, New
2:10:36
Jersey.
2:10:37
Actually, she says from West Orange.
2:10:39
Hello, West Orange.
2:10:40
I used to live near West Orange, Montclair.
2:10:44
333.33, one of our favorite numbers.
2:10:47
ITM Adam and John says, Victoria, this is
2:10:49
Victory Day donation, May 9th.
2:10:51
God bless you both.
2:10:52
And for more years, please call out my
2:10:54
husband, James, as a douchebag.
2:10:57
Douchebag.
2:10:58
I hit him in the mouth on our
2:10:59
second date.
2:11:00
And a few episodes later, he scolded me.
2:11:03
Scolded me for skipping donation segments.
2:11:05
I knew he was a keeper right then
2:11:08
and there.
2:11:10
Baby-making karma, please.
2:11:11
And I love my truck.
2:11:13
You go first.
2:11:22
You've got, karma.
2:11:28
And remember, with every baby-making karma, if
2:11:30
you're successful, and you will be, you have
2:11:32
to name the kid after us.
2:11:34
Austin Bradshaw's up.
2:11:35
He's in Centennial, Colorado, 333.33. And he
2:11:40
says, thanks, John and Anna for all you
2:11:41
do.
2:11:41
Happy Mother's Day, Jess, my smoking hot wife.
2:11:45
If any listeners need a real estate agent
2:11:47
who is not a douchebag, email me at
2:11:52
austinmichaelbradshaw at gmail.com.
2:11:57
You know, you could have made a shorter
2:11:58
email address than Austin Michael Bradshaw, but okay.
2:12:02
Yeah, it's pretty long.
2:12:03
A Home Smart Realty, Colorado.
2:12:05
That's austinmichaelbradshaw at gmail.
2:12:07
I will help you buy and sell real
2:12:10
estate here in Colorado, thanks.
2:12:13
And we thank you, we thank you.
2:12:15
Philip Wirth, Lebanon, Pennsylvania, 333.33, and says,
2:12:20
dedicated to my fiercely intelligent and kind mother,
2:12:24
Joy Wirth.
2:12:24
Now, is that a switcheroo?
2:12:27
No, it's just dedication.
2:12:28
Just dedication.
2:12:29
Dedication, okay.
2:12:30
Call up to the mom.
2:12:31
Yeah, beautiful.
2:12:32
You got it taken care of.
2:12:34
Jim Cushman in Durango, Iowa.
2:12:38
Wow.
2:12:39
23375, associate executive producer.
2:12:42
Row of ducks plus fees.
2:12:45
James Evan, what is that, Palato donation?
2:12:49
What's the James Evan Palato?
2:12:51
I have no idea who James Evan Palato
2:12:54
is.
2:12:54
Yes, I listened to the donation segments.
2:12:57
Check out, what is this, media more, what
2:13:02
is it, media monarchy, mediamonarchy.com.
2:13:06
Old school radio style broadcast with a great
2:13:09
community.
2:13:11
Trans Resister Radio.
2:13:12
Okay, that's the James Evan Palato is on
2:13:16
that media monarchy thing.
2:13:18
Ah, okay.
2:13:19
Got it, got it.
2:13:20
John, you're a lovable curmudgeon.
2:13:23
Might be lovable, but I don't like being
2:13:25
a curmudgeon.
2:13:26
Love and kisses.
2:13:30
Douglas Schneider, Austin, Texas.
2:13:33
Hello, Austin.
2:13:33
Row of ducks, 222.22. This donation represents
2:13:36
the third Mother's Day installment towards my mother's
2:13:39
daming.
2:13:40
Only one more to go.
2:13:41
And she's sitting at the round table.
2:13:43
Well, that'll be a celebration.
2:13:44
Mom, you've always been there for me through
2:13:47
life's up and downs.
2:13:48
You truly are the best mother in the
2:13:51
universe.
2:13:52
Happy Mother's Day from your devoted son, Doug.
2:13:55
Two times karma, please.
2:13:57
It's a lot to ask.
2:13:59
You've got karma.
2:14:03
You've got karma.
2:14:07
Baron Sir Casey, nine, YJM.
2:14:12
And he's in Elgin, Illinois, 212.72. And
2:14:15
he wants jobs, karma.
2:14:17
Baron Sir KC9YJM, Green Knight of Hams.
2:14:24
Yes, and I will tell you it's Elgin.
2:14:26
I'm pretty sure it's Elgin.
2:14:27
I thought it was Elgin.
2:14:28
Nah, I think it's Elgin.
2:14:29
But who knows?
2:14:30
What are we gonna do?
2:14:30
Who do we know?
2:14:30
We're podcasters.
2:14:31
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
2:14:35
Let's vote for jobs.
2:14:37
You've got karma.
2:14:40
And we have a switcheroo coming in from
2:14:42
Daniel Lipinski, Cold Spring, Minnesota, 210.60. He
2:14:48
says, Mother's Day switcheroo for my smoking hot
2:14:50
wife, Amy Lynn.
2:14:52
She's not a stripper.
2:14:53
Happy Mother's Day.
2:14:56
That, Amy Lynn is kind of totally a
2:14:58
porn name.
2:15:00
Happy Mother's Day.
2:15:01
We love you, and we love that you
2:15:03
still buy eggs for us.
2:15:04
Double up karma, please.
2:15:06
We got that for Amy Lynn.
2:15:07
You've got karma.
2:15:14
Sir Farmry Todd in Wellsboro, Pennsylvania, 210.60.
2:15:22
And he says, John, I'm going to send
2:15:24
you the Penn State Wrestling National Championship memorabilia.
2:15:28
Woo!
2:15:29
That's great.
2:15:30
The biggest dynasty in sports in recent history.
2:15:34
It was also the University of California rugby
2:15:36
team.
2:15:38
We had 10 All-Americans in 2025, second
2:15:43
time in history, and was the 12th NCAA
2:15:47
team title in 15 years, so they just
2:15:50
beat everybody.
2:15:51
Wow.
2:15:52
Yeah, well, good for you guys, good.
2:15:54
That's what happens when you get the right
2:15:55
coach and you get the right recruiting.
2:15:59
Sir Farmry Todd.
2:16:01
And there he is, 205.11, Eli the
2:16:05
Coffee Guy from Bensonville, Illinois, and he says,
2:16:07
I would like to dedicate this donation to
2:16:09
my wife, Jen.
2:16:10
She is a rock star of a mother.
2:16:12
Our family is lucky to have such a
2:16:14
great mom.
2:16:15
A happy Mother's Day to all the moms
2:16:17
out there.
2:16:18
It's one of the most challenging and rewarding
2:16:20
jobs anyone can ever have.
2:16:23
Remember, if you didn't get mom anything, it's
2:16:25
not too late.
2:16:27
Visit gigawattcoffeeroasters.com and use code ITM20 for
2:16:30
20% off your order.
2:16:32
Send some coffee right to her door.
2:16:34
I guarantee she'll be pleasantly surprised.
2:16:37
Stay caffeinated, says Eli the Coffee Guy.
2:16:40
And finally, well, not finally, but next to
2:16:42
last is Linda Lupatkin, our buddy in Lakewood,
2:16:45
Colorado.
2:16:46
200 bucks, always wants jobs, karma, and she
2:16:49
wants to say, for a competitive edge with
2:16:51
a resume that gets results, go to ImageMakers
2:16:54
Inc.
2:16:56
Email.
2:16:58
I was doing okay for years on end.
2:17:01
ImageMakers Inc.
2:17:02
For all your executive resume and job search
2:17:05
needs, that's ImageMakersInc.com and work with Linda
2:17:10
Lou, Duchess of Jobs and writer of resumes.
2:17:13
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
2:17:16
Let's vote for jobs.
2:17:20
You've got karma.
2:17:21
If you keep screwing up those reads, we're
2:17:24
going to lose the client, man.
2:17:27
Give her a make good.
2:17:30
Give her a make good.
2:17:31
She gets make goods from other listeners.
2:17:33
She does, she does.
2:17:34
It's beautiful.
2:17:35
Finally on the list, $200.
2:17:37
I guess that's a check that came in.
2:17:38
No note.
2:17:39
E.
2:17:39
Maynard Throne from Tracy, California.
2:17:42
$200.
2:17:43
I have nothing.
2:17:44
I don't think we have anything.
2:17:45
So a double up karma for you, E.
2:17:47
Maynard.
2:17:47
You've got karma.
2:17:51
And that concludes our executive and associate executive
2:17:54
producers for episode 1,763 of the best
2:17:58
podcast in the universe.
2:17:59
We will be thanking the rest of our
2:18:01
supporters, $50 and above in our second segment.
2:18:04
And of course, you can always come up
2:18:05
with any number, anything you want to do.
2:18:07
We love the numerology.
2:18:08
We love all the different things you come
2:18:11
up with for us to read on the
2:18:12
show during the donation segment for executive and
2:18:15
associate executive producers.
2:18:16
And as always, at noagendasdonations.com, you can
2:18:19
set up a recurring donation.
2:18:20
Any amount, any frequency.
2:18:22
We'll take it all.
2:18:24
noagendasdonations.com.
2:18:25
Thank you for the support.
2:18:26
Our formula is this.
2:18:28
We go out, we hit people in the
2:18:30
mouth.
2:18:35
We go out, we hit people in the
2:18:36
mouth.
2:18:38
Order.
2:18:39
Order.
2:18:48
Okay.
2:18:50
I don't want to get Lauren Wood off.
2:18:51
No, I have a couple of clips from
2:18:52
more complaining from NPR.
2:18:55
Oh, you really you're really on the NPR
2:18:57
tip today Oh, yeah, today's NPR NPR is
2:18:59
NPR day.
2:19:00
This is them.
2:19:00
Did I guess AmeriCorps?
2:19:03
They're gonna cut the funds for AmeriCorps.
2:19:06
What is AmeriCorps?
2:19:08
Well, I didn't even think about AmeriCorps, you
2:19:10
know, they still have the Peace Corps I
2:19:12
guess like the AmeriCorps, but it's kind of
2:19:14
like the Peace Corps, but it's not There's
2:19:17
a lot of money and you know, I've
2:19:19
you know, I've concluded that some time back
2:19:22
that I Don't know how this is gonna
2:19:25
turn out for Trump But all these programs
2:19:28
all these things except for the USA ID
2:19:30
and the stuff that's going overseas But most
2:19:32
of the stuff that's not going overseas.
2:19:34
In fact, a lot of it that's going
2:19:36
overseas is not going overseas either It's just
2:19:39
jobs programs.
2:19:40
Yeah, we may have been in a depression
2:19:42
since 1970 and Everybody's working on the dole
2:19:47
in some way shape or form and people
2:19:49
who actually do something that pay taxes They're
2:19:52
picking they're picking up the slack for everybody
2:19:54
else.
2:19:54
I'm not sure but it's AmeriCorps, I'm looking
2:19:57
at it right now They focus on six
2:20:00
key areas disaster services economic opportunity education environmental
2:20:07
stewardship Healthy futures and veteran and military families.
2:20:12
Yeah, if this doesn't sound like a crock
2:20:13
of crap Just from what you read nothing
2:20:17
does China.
2:20:18
Yeah.
2:20:18
Yeah crock of crap Okay Well, let's go
2:20:21
with clip one and it's pushed to shrink
2:20:22
government.
2:20:23
The Trump administration has gutted AmeriCorps That is
2:20:26
the federal agency created three decades ago as
2:20:29
a way for young Americans and seniors to
2:20:31
serve their country Now most of the agency
2:20:34
staff has been fired and more than 30
2:20:37
,000 people Have been ordered to stop their
2:20:40
service work immediately Wow Are they where are
2:20:44
they are they overseas?
2:20:46
30,000 people and by the way three
2:20:48
decades ago.
2:20:49
That means this was founded this thing began
2:20:51
in 1995 within recent memory of most of
2:20:55
our listeners Wow, it's not like something that's
2:20:57
been around forever.
2:20:58
It's just bullcrap and 30,000 people that's
2:21:03
a lot 30,000 But again, I'm thinking
2:21:08
this is job a jobs program for them
2:21:11
is not to benefit anybody else Onward and
2:21:15
here's Jennifer Ludden reports until last month 25
2:21:18
year old CEO Foshay was an AmeriCorps team
2:21:21
leader He and ten others got a small
2:21:23
stipend for building affordable homes in Virginia Removing
2:21:27
hurricane debris in Florida and repairing National Park
2:21:30
trails in West, Virginia That's where they were
2:21:33
when Foshay got shocking news pull your team
2:21:36
off the work site Pack up your camp
2:21:37
hit the road tonight if possible.
2:21:39
The Trump administration had ended nearly 400 million
2:21:43
dollars in grants yanking funding from more than
2:21:46
a thousand organizations Saying it no longer fits
2:21:49
the agency's priorities People were upset Foshay says
2:21:52
he calls AmeriCorps a patriotic program That's good
2:21:56
for the country and good for the young
2:21:58
adults 18 19 year olds would never left
2:22:00
home who weren't really sure what they wanted
2:22:02
to do with their lives Or what was
2:22:03
the right call for them?
2:22:04
Just travel the country with people.
2:22:06
They never met before It's a personal growth
2:22:08
and agency and confidence.
2:22:09
I saw on these members was massive all
2:22:12
of a sudden to have that opportunity ripped
2:22:13
away from them It's just unconscionable really Kyra
2:22:17
eskate heads America's service commissions a nonprofit that
2:22:21
supports National Service programming She admits there have
2:22:25
been issues AmeriCorps failed eight consecutive audits a
2:22:30
White House spokeswoman cited the same thing and
2:22:33
pointed to 45 million dollars in improper payments
2:22:36
last year Eskate says the agency found that
2:22:39
in its own review and AmeriCorps is upgrading
2:22:43
a clunky IT system to better track money
2:22:48
Yeah, okay, so they can't be the eight
2:22:50
failed audits for an agency give me a
2:22:53
break we can't take the money And then
2:22:56
they all we go computers don't work.
2:22:59
You know if you put if the computers
2:23:00
are 1995 which is when this thing began
2:23:03
Would work to do tracking the money.
2:23:06
I mean, it's not like We had Excel
2:23:09
back then we had Lotus one two three
2:23:13
we had You could do it on an
2:23:15
Apple two from the from the late 70s.
2:23:17
I mean I had Apple bullcrap.
2:23:19
I had Lotus jazz Do you remember that
2:23:23
product yeah, I know Lotus jazz Lotus jazz
2:23:26
never really worked Would never oh they had
2:23:30
all the software keys and stuff never really
2:23:32
worked Lotus jazz yeah, well, that's a scam
2:23:34
Let me it's not a scam.
2:23:35
It's just something that's grown into a money
2:23:37
sink a money hole.
2:23:39
It's a jobs program.
2:23:40
Yes, you're correct It's a jobs program Yeah,
2:23:43
it's just giving money away.
2:23:44
You might as well have like the Works
2:23:46
project administration, let's set that back up again,
2:23:50
and we knew she's paint murals It would
2:23:54
probably be more beneficial to the American prettier
2:23:59
I have manga news since we're in the
2:24:01
second half here manga manga manga news make
2:24:05
Africa manga manga make Africa news great again.
2:24:08
This is interesting because it's white people in
2:24:10
manga The first group of white Afrikaans speaking
2:24:15
South Africans is reportedly due to arrive in
2:24:17
the United States early next week They claim
2:24:20
to be persecuted in their home country and
2:24:22
have been granted refugee status by President Donald
2:24:25
Trump The u.s. Leader in February signed
2:24:28
an executive order halting all aid to South
2:24:31
Africa accusing the government of doing Terrible things
2:24:34
to Afrikaners.
2:24:35
He described them as the victims of unjust
2:24:38
racial discrimination Saying the land was being taken
2:24:40
away from them Trump's views appear to stem
2:24:43
from a recent law that allows land expropriation
2:24:46
without compensation in extremely rare cases South African
2:24:50
officials say the policy is part of efforts
2:24:52
to address land ownership Disparities that are one
2:24:55
of the starkest legacies of apartheid and that
2:24:58
to date no land has been seized Many
2:25:00
prominent Afrikaners and other South Africans have shouted
2:25:03
down Trump statements saying they patently false This
2:25:07
will be interesting who shows up and what
2:25:09
their story is.
2:25:10
There's been so much missing disinformation about this
2:25:14
but the Afrikaners What's the misinformation?
2:25:20
Well, all were the only news we're getting
2:25:22
is it's not true.
2:25:22
It's not true.
2:25:23
It's not true It's just not and there's
2:25:24
no white people being killed here.
2:25:26
That's not true And these people they're showing
2:25:29
up with signs.
2:25:30
They're like, thank you.
2:25:31
We love you President Trump.
2:25:32
Thank you for saving us.
2:25:33
Yeah Yeah, they're killing white people there.
2:25:36
That's what they're doing.
2:25:37
Yeah Well, they they there's a lot of
2:25:39
people there in South Africa who disagree with
2:25:41
that statement Well, they're not white No, oh
2:25:48
I'm sorry.
2:25:49
I missed these I have a to Pope
2:25:51
Leo the 14th clips.
2:25:53
I have one Pope Leo the 14th But
2:25:56
why don't you go first with your Pope
2:25:57
Leo clip?
2:25:58
Okay, you could see it on there Yes
2:26:00
He makes a comment Pope Leo has made
2:26:02
an unannounced visit to the Roman Basilica of
2:26:04
Santa Maria Maggiore Where his predecessor is buried
2:26:07
Walking slowly to shouts of long live the
2:26:10
Pope Leo laid a white flower on Francis's
2:26:12
tomb and knelt in prayer for a few
2:26:14
moments Earlier, he confirmed to Cardinals that he
2:26:17
chosen his pontifical name in homage to Leo
2:26:20
the 13th a 19th century Pope Who defended
2:26:23
workers rights during the Industrial Revolution?
2:26:25
He said there was a place for the
2:26:27
modern church to meet similar challenges To In
2:26:33
our own day the church offers to everyone
2:26:35
the treasury of her social teaching in response
2:26:38
to another Industrial Revolution And to developments in
2:26:41
the field of artificial intelligence that pose new
2:26:44
challenges for the defense of human dignity justice
2:26:47
and labor Hey, that's the second time I
2:26:52
hear a Windows alert sound in one of
2:26:55
your clips Mm-hmm.
2:26:57
Where's that coming from?
2:26:59
I had something running in the background.
2:27:01
I was making a racket Okay Well, I
2:27:06
got the the Pope Leo the 14th Chicago
2:27:10
Welcome with Leo's ascent to the papacy the
2:27:13
city of Chicago is celebrating one of its
2:27:15
own Chicago famously a sports crazed town.
2:27:18
So the new Pope is getting a full
2:27:20
city treatment online One of the most
2:27:30
popular videos circulating is the Pope coming out
2:27:32
to the Chicago Bulls entrance music Meantime a
2:27:35
host of Chicago themed t-shirts about Pope
2:27:38
Leo have flooded Etsy shops in the last
2:27:41
24 hours But about the big question asked
2:27:45
by every Chicago native Cubs or white socks
2:27:48
the Pope's brother John Prevost to confirm to
2:27:52
local media Leo the 14th Cheers for the
2:27:55
Southsiders.
2:27:56
He is a white Man, there you go.
2:28:00
Oh as long as he's a White Sox
2:28:01
fan.
2:28:02
Oh, that's good.
2:28:02
However Actually, that's not good.
2:28:05
No, of course, it's not gonna be a
2:28:06
Cubs fan.
2:28:07
Of course is not good But there's more
2:28:11
that Pope Leo said Chicago born Cardinal Robert
2:28:13
Prevost Saying he chose his papal name in
2:28:16
part to honor Pope Leo the 13th a
2:28:18
proponent of fighting for social issues and workers
2:28:20
rights He also says he plans to follow
2:28:22
Pope Francis's lead on his church reforms and
2:28:24
commitment to social justice In the meeting Pope
2:28:30
Leo asking other senior church leaders to uphold
2:28:32
their commitment to the Second Vatican Council responsible
2:28:35
for sweeping church reforms in the 1960s he
2:28:38
also identifies artificial intelligence as a top challenge
2:28:41
for working people human dignity and justice Sister
2:28:44
Natalie Becker a pioneering French nun and the
2:28:46
Pope's neighbor reacting Saturday I think you can't
2:28:49
just look at him as an American.
2:28:51
It's true He was born in Chicago, and
2:28:53
I remember once we talk about Chicago because
2:28:55
he studied in the same place I spent
2:28:57
one semester despite the Pope's strong ties to
2:28:59
Chicago Becker says his rich background makes him
2:29:02
a universal Pope He's also making the papacy
2:29:05
his own appearing in his first outing since
2:29:07
the election traveling to a sanctuary in Rome
2:29:09
Significant to his namesake Yes, his roots are
2:29:14
from Chicago but then he has been so
2:29:17
many time as a missionary in Peru and
2:29:19
he has the Peruvian citizenship and as Superior
2:29:23
General 12 years here in Rome a mass
2:29:25
will get underway here shortly just about 515
2:29:29
at Holy Name Cathedral now as you all
2:29:31
know because of the Pope's strong Chicago ties
2:29:34
Upbringing in Dalton, Illinois.
2:29:35
It's caused a lot of excitement for people
2:29:38
here in Chicagoland over the last few days
2:29:40
Especially Sox fans after they learned from the
2:29:43
Pope's brother that he was indeed a Sox
2:29:45
fan growing up and has been a lifelong
2:29:47
Sox fan Yeah, she can't go she can't
2:29:51
go doesn't know what she's talking about.
2:29:53
Oh, no.
2:29:54
She don't call them the Sox No, they're
2:29:57
the White Sox because there's the Red Sox.
2:29:59
You don't say Sox fan, but you say
2:30:01
Bo Sox You could say Bo Sox I
2:30:05
would make more sense of saying Sox So,
2:30:08
I don't know that anybody I lived in
2:30:09
Chicago when I was a kid I don't
2:30:11
know anybody that would call the White Sox
2:30:13
the Sox necessarily especially in a report like
2:30:16
this Let me see where she is.
2:30:18
I just I think it's just a mistake.
2:30:20
I could be wrong Somebody could correct me
2:30:21
some Chicago.
2:30:22
Well, she's Chicago in this work in there
2:30:25
now That was they can send me a
2:30:26
note and I'll pay attention to it.
2:30:28
She can go That was a WGN report.
2:30:32
So it was a Chicago local report Huh,
2:30:36
yeah, no, I could be wrong.
2:30:37
Okay, I probably made another mistake some space
2:30:40
junk came down.
2:30:41
Oh, yeah The space junk I had a
2:30:43
clip from the last show.
2:30:44
Well, I have a clip from this show
2:30:46
Hey Soviet era spacecraft has plunged to earth
2:30:49
more than half a century after its failed
2:30:52
launch to Venus Russia's Space Agency believes the
2:30:56
cosmos for eight to lander made an uncontrolled
2:30:59
reentry over the Indian Ocean But European and
2:31:03
US agencies say they're still unsure of its
2:31:06
exact location the shuttle weighing half a ton
2:31:11
malfunctioned during its failed launch to Venus in
2:31:14
1972 it never made it out of Earth's
2:31:18
orbit instead circling the planet in an irregular
2:31:21
pattern for decades Yeah, I was watching the
2:31:24
the live stream and they don't even know
2:31:27
where it crashed down It's a piece of
2:31:30
junk up there floating around it's got no
2:31:32
radio it's got no it's not signaling anything
2:31:35
It looks like a big curling thing.
2:31:38
Nobody knows what to do with it.
2:31:39
It was a lander or something It's just
2:31:41
floating around for since 1972 yeah Yeah, we're
2:31:47
still just doing that kind of stuff go
2:31:49
to the moon again already Put some people
2:31:51
down.
2:31:52
I'm ready for it.
2:31:53
I'm ready to become a believer I'm ready.
2:31:57
Well, I'm ready to play some clips from
2:31:59
by the Pakistan India situation Yeah, can I
2:32:01
kick you off with a little overview an
2:32:03
overnight overview?
2:32:05
It's very short.
2:32:05
It'll bring us up to speed Oh, it's
2:32:07
actually not that she it's it's not short
2:32:09
But it'll bring us up to speed mere
2:32:11
hours after a ceasefire was announced between India
2:32:13
and Pakistan.
2:32:15
It's fragility was revealed Explosions lit up the
2:32:19
sky above Indian administered Kashmir Authorities claimed was
2:32:23
a violation by Pakistan of their bilateral agreement
2:32:26
The armed forces are giving an adequate and
2:32:30
appropriate response to these violations and we take
2:32:33
very very serious notice of these violations we
2:32:37
call upon Pakistan to take appropriate steps to
2:32:41
address these violations and Deal with the situation
2:32:45
with seriousness and Responsibility Pakistan said it remained
2:32:50
committed to the truce We have acted as
2:32:55
a responsible state for the world and regional
2:32:58
peace stability and for the lives of millions
2:33:02
of people in the region who gave a
2:33:04
positive response to the ceasefire suggestion the Violations
2:33:08
tempered the enthusiasm of those on both sides
2:33:10
of the border who earlier had taken to
2:33:12
the streets to celebrate the news In Mumbai
2:33:15
students had even painted artwork of Prime Minister
2:33:18
Narendra Modi alongside the US president After Donald
2:33:23
Trump first announced Saturday that a complete and
2:33:26
immediate ceasefire would come into effect following a
2:33:30
night of US-led negotiations Pakistan's foreign minister
2:33:33
had confirmed the deal saying three dozen countries
2:33:36
were involved in the mediations including Saudi Arabia
2:33:39
and Turkey He celebrated on social media adding
2:33:42
that Pakistan has always strived for peace and
2:33:44
security in the region without compromising on its
2:33:47
sovereignty and Territorial integrity minutes later India confirmed
2:33:51
that both militaries had agreed to hold fighting
2:33:55
Bismillah if sustained the ceasefire would bring an
2:33:58
end to the biggest military conflict between the
2:34:01
two nuclear-armed states in decades There you
2:34:05
go, that's the update we have on the
2:34:07
overnight seems like things are doing pretty poorly
2:34:09
there I Guess what?
2:34:12
Yeah, I got a bunch of clips, but
2:34:14
I'm only the only to it work after
2:34:16
that or the the India-pakistan bogus ceasefire
2:34:21
clip Is where India and Pakistan appeared locked
2:34:25
into widening conflict President Trump announced that the
2:34:27
two countries had agreed to a ceasefire And
2:34:30
with that it appeared that the worst conflict
2:34:33
in more than 50 years between these nuclear
2:34:35
powers had come to a halt Has it
2:34:38
though late Saturday?
2:34:39
Both sides have been accusing each other of
2:34:41
violations of the agreement And PR Zia Hadid
2:34:44
has been covering this conflict with all of
2:34:47
its whiplash she covers South Asia and joins
2:34:49
us from Mumbai Hi Scott.
2:34:51
So there's a ceasefire for now between Pakistan
2:34:54
and India Well just hours after it was
2:34:56
announced by President Trump.
2:34:58
It seems a ceasefire is being violated in
2:35:01
Kashmir That's the Himalayan territory that's divided between
2:35:04
India and Pakistan and claimed by both Residents
2:35:07
tell NPR there that they've been hearing the
2:35:10
sounds of blasts over two major cities Jammu
2:35:13
and Srinagar NPR producer Bilal could chase in
2:35:17
Srinagar And he told us at first that
2:35:18
people thought these were fireworks to celebrate the
2:35:22
ceasefire But pretty quickly people began rushing home
2:35:25
to shelter in place He sent us videos
2:35:28
of the city entirely blacked out plumes of
2:35:31
smoke was streaming down and people could hear
2:35:33
sounds like these And Then the chief minister
2:35:41
of Indian helped Kashmir who's in Srinagar posted
2:35:45
on X what the hell just happened to
2:35:47
the ceasefire well, so nothing's changed and Onward
2:35:56
they're gonna have sorry back up and talk
2:35:58
about what the American role was in brokering
2:36:00
this agreement Yeah for days analysts were saying
2:36:03
that the Americans were not being serious Secretary
2:36:05
of State Marco Rubio is just making phone
2:36:08
calls He hasn't come but experts tell me
2:36:11
as a situation escalated America did intervene directly
2:36:14
as well as through Arab allies to convince
2:36:16
both parties But again, let's get back to
2:36:18
where we started this conversation.
2:36:20
It seems like this ceasefire is looking incredibly
2:36:22
rocky right now Yeah, yeah, and it's not
2:36:25
clear whether this is a violation or a
2:36:28
great unraveling We'll catch us up to speed
2:36:30
on how these two countries got to this
2:36:32
dangerous moment right now Yeah, these renewed tensions
2:36:35
They really fled in late April when gunmen
2:36:38
opened fire on tourists and Indian held Kashmir
2:36:41
and killed 26 people India said the group
2:36:44
that claimed responsibility was a proxy for Pakistan's
2:36:47
army something Pakistan denies overnight Wednesday India began
2:36:52
military strikes and the two countries have been
2:36:54
exchanging fire every night since on Saturday this
2:36:58
morning Some Pakistani airbases including one near the
2:37:02
capital Islamabad and that prompted Pakistan to announce
2:37:06
an intensified military Operation the fighting was ongoing
2:37:09
until about 3 p.m. India time And
2:37:12
then the ceasefire was announced a little bit
2:37:14
later And Scott just to give you a
2:37:16
sense of this more than 70 people have
2:37:18
been killed on both sides.
2:37:20
Most of them in Kashmir.
2:37:22
I Gotta say once okay twice I get
2:37:25
it, but for Windows alerts being eclipses Bit
2:37:29
much.
2:37:30
Oh, no Yeah, I feel so sorry about
2:37:33
it.
2:37:34
Well Maybe you should just upgrade to Windows
2:37:37
11 already.
2:37:37
It's clearly telling you to do that is
2:37:39
Windows 11.
2:37:40
That's the problem What is it telling you
2:37:42
to do?
2:37:43
What is the problem?
2:37:45
There was something disconnecting constantly?
2:37:49
Well, just so you know when you're recording
2:37:50
clips it picks it up, well, I know
2:37:53
I would normally not I would go back
2:37:55
and rerecord But generally speaking when I record
2:37:57
a long series of clips like a show
2:37:59
like a complete NPR show I just set
2:38:02
it up.
2:38:02
Let it record.
2:38:03
I come back later and then do the
2:38:05
Listen to the show Otherwise, I'd have to
2:38:08
listen to it twice.
2:38:10
No, no one deserves that punishment By the
2:38:13
way, have you heard anything about?
2:38:16
The president going to Saudi Arabia this week
2:38:20
he's going to Saudi Arabia and Qatar and
2:38:25
I guess he's kind of given a cold
2:38:27
shoulder to Netanyahu.
2:38:29
He's done some kind of deal with the
2:38:32
Houthis I haven't been able to pick up
2:38:34
anything on this I've I've kind of heard
2:38:37
the same thing, but I'd without any detail
2:38:39
I haven't seen any any real reports just
2:38:42
nothing nothing of any substance Expect reporting.
2:38:46
Oh, yeah, I guess you're right.
2:38:48
No instead we get riveting news like this
2:38:51
She threatened legal action against Google back in
2:38:54
February over its labeling of the Gulf of
2:38:56
Mexico as the Gulf of America on Google
2:38:58
Maps for US users President Claudia Shane Baum
2:39:02
has now announced that Mexico is following through
2:39:04
on that warning.
2:39:05
Google is already being sued There has already
2:39:08
been a first resolution And it is being
2:39:11
awaited Donald Trump's executive order in January to
2:39:15
rename the Gulf applies only to the US
2:39:18
section of the continental shelf What we are
2:39:22
saying is that Google should put the Gulf
2:39:24
of America where it is the Gulf of
2:39:27
America Which is the part that corresponds to
2:39:29
the territory of the United States and then
2:39:32
put the Gulf of Mexico to the territorial
2:39:34
part?
2:39:35
That corresponds to Mexico and Cuba Google has
2:39:38
previously argued that it made the change in
2:39:40
line with a practice of following name changes
2:39:42
when altered by official government sources Shane Baum's
2:39:45
announcement comes after the Republican-led House of
2:39:47
Representatives Voted earlier this week to formalize the
2:39:50
name change for federal agencies The measure is
2:40:00
unlikely to be given the green light by
2:40:02
the Senate Trump has contended that his order
2:40:05
was justified as the why is that?
2:40:07
Why is that?
2:40:08
Why does she say this?
2:40:09
Why is it unlikely to be given the
2:40:11
green light by the Senate is the Senate
2:40:12
against this?
2:40:14
They hate America The measure is unlikely to
2:40:19
be given the green light by the Senate
2:40:22
Trump has contended that his order was justified
2:40:24
as the u.s. Quote do most of
2:40:26
the work there and it's ours Argue the
2:40:29
move is in line with his expansionist aims
2:40:31
which include threatening to seize control of Greenland
2:40:34
The water has been referred to as the
2:40:36
Gulf of Mexico for more than four centuries
2:40:38
and is internationally recognized as such I love
2:40:41
that.
2:40:41
She's she's so mad at Trump.
2:40:43
She's gonna sue Google Gonna sue Google over
2:40:51
it.
2:40:51
I wonder what I wonder would be that'll
2:40:53
be an interesting lawsuit And and what court
2:40:55
is that?
2:40:56
Is that the International Criminal Court the International
2:40:59
Court of Mapping?
2:41:02
Enters a fourth round of nuclear negotiations with
2:41:05
the Trump administration saying it's right to enrich
2:41:07
uranium is non-negotiable Oh, it rules out
2:41:10
a zero enrichment demand made by some u
2:41:13
.s Officials now Steve is putting his talents
2:41:15
to work u.s. President Donald Trump special
2:41:17
envoy Steve wick off said just that on
2:41:20
Friday Speaking to Breitbart News, he said that
2:41:24
an enrichment program can never exist in the
2:41:27
state of Iran ever again That's our red
2:41:30
line No enrichment the Tehran Times headlines that
2:41:34
wick costs comment dims the prospects for a
2:41:36
nuclear agreement The article sites are sourcing Iran
2:41:39
has been lured in to talk So Washington
2:41:41
could subsequently provide a justification for escalating pressure
2:41:44
and potential aggression.
2:41:46
This is really crunch time Tell you for
2:41:48
a US president withdrew Washington from a 2015
2:41:52
deal between Tehran and world powers its nuclear
2:41:56
activity Threaten to bomb Iran if no new
2:41:59
deal is reached Iran insists its nuclear ambitions
2:42:02
are purely for civilian purposes And we want
2:42:06
it to be a great country Cinema and
2:42:08
take place ahead of Trump's visit to the
2:42:10
region next week APs reporting that his trip
2:42:13
to Saudi Arabia raises the prospect of nuclear
2:42:16
cooperation with the kingdom That's what I don't
2:42:19
understand.
2:42:20
That's the only details I had His trip
2:42:24
to Saudi Arabia signals a nuclear What do
2:42:29
they call it Nuclear APs reporting that his
2:42:33
trip to Saudi Arabia Raises the prospect of
2:42:36
nuclear cooperation with the kingdom wait with with
2:42:40
Saudi Arabia And nuclear I guess they're gonna
2:42:45
give Saudi Arabia's a bomb in case of
2:42:47
Ron gets it.
2:42:48
Oh not nuclear power, but nuclear nuke Oh,
2:42:51
well the president.
2:42:52
I don't know.
2:42:53
I mean, I'm just guessing well he did
2:42:54
say And I'm sure it wasn't the so
2:42:57
-called UK trade deal which as far as
2:43:00
I'm concerned this is there even a trade
2:43:02
deal Have we seen anything?
2:43:03
It's a top secret, but he said I
2:43:06
was a big thing coming.
2:43:07
This is the biggest news ever This is
2:43:09
the biggest it's not the UK thing was
2:43:11
the biggest news.
2:43:12
I don't think that's what it was was
2:43:13
that big news We're all falling over each
2:43:16
other.
2:43:16
Oh wow that what a big deal There's
2:43:20
got to be something bigger than that I
2:43:23
Think there's something big big big.
2:43:24
Well, then it would be tomorrow Yes Because
2:43:28
it said he was gonna be Friday now
2:43:29
the UK deal was on Thursday, but the
2:43:31
big deal supposed to be Friday or Monday
2:43:34
Okay, and everyone assumed that the big deal
2:43:36
was The UK deal on Thursday that he
2:43:39
jumped the gun on Friday and Monday because
2:43:42
he had other things to do Mmm, I'm
2:43:44
skeptical.
2:43:45
That's what I'm just you know, just I'm
2:43:46
surmising from the reportage.
2:43:49
I'm skeptical Well, we'll have to see Anything
2:43:53
else you want to play before we go
2:43:56
into the most important part of the show
2:43:58
Which is your tip of the day and
2:44:00
and other interesting tidbits Well, we got the
2:44:04
the Yeah, just play this is get out
2:44:09
of the way the Bangladesh mess Boy, I
2:44:12
didn't even follow that the interim Bangladesh has
2:44:16
temporarily banned the country's oldest political party the
2:44:19
Awami League of the exiled former Prime Minister
2:44:21
Sheikh Hasina The party is in court over
2:44:24
its alleged role in the deaths of almost
2:44:26
a thousand people in an anti-government uprising
2:44:29
last year Sanjay Dasgupta reports the interim government's
2:44:33
advisor on law and justice Asif Nazrul told
2:44:35
reporters that all activities of the Awami League
2:44:38
including its online presence were being declared illegal
2:44:41
The suspension will hold till its trial is
2:44:43
completed The country's oldest political party has been
2:44:47
charged over its alleged role in countering mass
2:44:50
rallies last year Against its leader and the
2:44:52
former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina the nationwide protests
2:44:56
led to her ouster But not before a
2:44:58
large number of demonstrators were killed in a
2:45:00
crackdown She ordered the Awami League has rejected
2:45:03
the government's move calling it illegitimate Well, I
2:45:08
don't know man.
2:45:09
I got distracted by that windows bong.
2:45:11
I can't I don't know what the clip
2:45:12
was about You're messing me up.
2:45:15
You're messing up with that stuff.
2:45:17
I couldn't understand a word the guy said
2:45:20
All right I'll take us out with the
2:45:22
most important news of the week Knew it
2:45:24
for the Pentagon has ordered all military leaders
2:45:27
and commands to pull and review library books
2:45:30
addressing diversity Anti-racism or gender issues the
2:45:33
deadline is May 21st according to a memo
2:45:35
issued today It's the most detailed directive so
2:45:38
far on Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's campaign to
2:45:41
rid the military of Diversity and equity programs
2:45:45
and materials they have a library at the
2:45:47
Defense Department.
2:45:48
That's the thing that I didn't know I'm
2:45:50
sure it's dynamite the The Idea that there's
2:45:55
anti-racism books.
2:45:56
No, they're talking about Critical race theory books,
2:45:59
but they have to change that the way
2:46:01
they describe it.
2:46:02
So they make it sound like ah, he's
2:46:05
a racist I'm gonna show my salute by
2:46:08
donating to no agenda.
2:46:09
Imagine all the people who could do that.
2:46:11
Oh, yeah Well, it was a mainstream news,
2:46:21
so yeah, you're probably right He was a
2:46:23
racist time now as we prepare for John's
2:46:25
tip of the day everyone stick around for
2:46:27
that of course we have meetup reports and
2:46:29
We have some end of show mixes.
2:46:31
We got lots of stuff still to come
2:46:32
for you But first as promised we will
2:46:34
thank the rest of our supporters for episode
2:46:37
1763 which includes a knighthood $50 and above
2:46:41
go ahead John Yes, and no racist here.
2:46:44
We start off with Christopher Ebert Spartanburg, South
2:46:47
Carolina hundred five dollars thirty five cents, sir.
2:46:50
Stewart is Stafford Staffordshire UK 105 35 And
2:46:57
he's got a call to his mom.
2:46:59
I was 91 recently passed away She was
2:47:02
mom and granny to all of us Jason
2:47:09
with a spell funny Jason Dunn in Flagstaff,
2:47:15
Arizona 105 35 Which I guess these are
2:47:18
$100 donations that have been jacked up.
2:47:20
Yes $100 donation puts them over the top.
2:47:22
He's got a birthday Verse dad look for
2:47:25
the way you want Well, I read these
2:47:26
once you look for the mom call outs
2:47:28
in case I miss any well Remember we
2:47:30
have to read this one because this brings
2:47:32
him over the Yeah, you go ahead read
2:47:36
this with this $100 donation brings me over
2:47:38
the threshold for knighthood However, I want to
2:47:40
give this knighthood to my dad for his
2:47:43
birthday on May 22nd He doesn't know that
2:47:46
after my first donation in 2022 I started
2:47:48
a small recurring donation and this $100 will
2:47:52
allow him to become a knight I will
2:47:55
let him write in to ask for his
2:47:57
knight name But you know for now, you
2:47:58
can dub him.
2:47:59
Sir.
2:47:59
Mike of the mountain.
2:48:00
I would also like to request a deducing
2:48:03
for myself You've been deduced and then he
2:48:09
asked for a clippity-clop Which is actually
2:48:12
I have a clippity-clop for him here.
2:48:15
And can you see that juice?
2:48:18
okay, I think we determined that one and
2:48:24
A karma.
2:48:25
Yeah, you got it Oh My
2:48:35
gosh, can you see that juice?
2:48:38
You've got karma Done MFD X of Anju
2:48:47
8698 He says donation node boobs on my
2:48:52
knees 86 okay, I get it Birthday wish
2:48:58
to MF MX of London his 18th.
2:49:02
Okay, you know bought the mom there Commodore
2:49:06
Dame early turtle in Topeka, Kansas 84 30
2:49:14
Kevin McLaughlin 800 a's the Archduke Luna of
2:49:18
boobs lover America and boobs Archduke of Luna
2:49:26
Might as well be yeah Brandon handy handy
2:49:30
in Glencoe, Alabama 7344 Jason Shepherd in Trinidad
2:49:37
Colorado 6006 Michael Henry Henry in Nellville, Georgia
2:49:46
5945 and it's a happy VE did a
2:49:49
donation.
2:49:50
He's got Mingala Mingala Ming Mingal Mingal Mingal
2:49:55
Mingala Not that he's got no scalpel Mingala
2:50:00
Scott Mingal In Exton, Pennsylvania 55 55 in
2:50:05
memory of my mom Leslie Leslie Rosen Ball,
2:50:11
what is the Rosenbaum?
2:50:13
Yeah in West Bloomfield, Michigan 52 72 love
2:50:16
your show No I'm expecting more mothers call
2:50:20
outs here, but I'm not getting them They're
2:50:23
not on the spreadsheet.
2:50:24
Anyway, no Jim Eating in Dallas 51 25
2:50:31
Bad idea.
2:50:32
Oh bad idea supply is back 50.
2:50:34
Oh five You can look them up on
2:50:36
the internet.
2:50:37
They make anything you want to burn stuff
2:50:39
get a hold of bad idea supply Roderick
2:50:43
Brown in now these are all $50 donors.
2:50:46
We're already there.
2:50:47
We're almost done These are names and locations
2:50:50
of $50 donors.
2:50:51
Is there a mom call out?
2:50:52
I don't see one yet Roderick Brown in
2:50:56
Mermaid, Florida.
2:50:58
I'm sorry mermaid Where's PE?
2:51:02
Oh It's Canada What's PE Canada Our province
2:51:10
P Maybe said northern province.
2:51:13
I have no idea but he's in Canada
2:51:16
And in town a mermaid William Spain and
2:51:21
Springdale, Arkansas Rene Kidney I think can make
2:51:30
a can make a can make a can
2:51:32
make a trashed Netherlands Steven shoemake in Xenia,
2:51:40
Ohio Mike Mike moon in Athens, Georgia Andrew
2:51:47
Grass Oh Andrew Grasso.
2:51:49
We haven't heard from him for a while.
2:51:50
He's an eel in New York.
2:51:52
Yeah, Tom Del Vecchio in Blandon, Pennsylvania John
2:51:56
Ford in McKinney, Texas and last on our
2:51:58
list is our favorite Dame Rita over there
2:52:01
in Sparks, Nevada And she says thank you
2:52:02
for your courage when I thank these people
2:52:05
for making show 1763 a good show good
2:52:09
show Prince Edward Prince Edward Island, maybe Prince
2:52:13
Edward Island Yes, thank you to these donors
2:52:16
$50 and above we appreciate every single person
2:52:19
who supports the best podcast in the universe
2:52:21
We don't mention anything under 50 for reasons
2:52:23
of anonymity, but we always look at the
2:52:25
list We see you 49 99 is and
2:52:27
we appreciate you very much Go to know
2:52:29
agenda donations comm supports the best podcast in
2:52:32
the universe is value for value If you
2:52:34
get anything out of the show, if there's
2:52:36
anything that you said, oh, you know That's
2:52:37
kind of good to know then support us
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send us something back time talent treasure.
2:52:42
No agenda donations calm It's your birthday Pretty
2:52:50
short list.
2:52:50
I only see three today.
2:52:52
Sir.
2:52:52
Kevin Dills turns 39 on the 12th.
2:52:54
Jason done Happy birthday to his dad Mike
2:52:58
celebrating on the 22nd and MFD X of
2:53:01
Anju says happy wishes MFM X of London
2:53:05
a happy birthday MF MX of London is
2:53:09
turning 18 years old.
2:53:10
Happy birthday from everybody here at the best
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podcast in the universe And we have one
2:53:16
night that would be the the dad who
2:53:19
is going to enter the Roundtable of the
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Knights and Ames.
2:53:23
So grab your dad blade there for second.
2:53:25
All right here the dad blade Support
2:53:36
of $100 over many many moons and months
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you are hereby Pronounced hated as a knight
2:53:43
of the knowage in the roundtable you are
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to be called Sir, Mike of the mountain
2:53:47
until you tell us differently for you, sir
2:53:49
Oh boy, what a treat hookers and blow
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red boys and Chardonnay We got diet soda
2:53:53
and video games fish pie and fellatio.
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We have redheads and rise.
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We got beer and blunts We have Ruben
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s women in Rose a case a sake
2:54:00
vodka manila bong hits a bourbon spiked Escorts
2:54:08
I'm sure you'll like this Mike sir Mike
2:54:10
Mudden and me right here at the roundtable
2:54:13
of the knowage and the Knights and Ames
2:54:15
and you sir can head over to know
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Agenda rings calm You'll see the ring that
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you will soon be sporting on your ring
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finger and whatever finger you give us a
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measurement for there's a handy Ring size guide
2:54:26
on the website and let us know where
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to send it Your official knowage in the
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night ring and thank you very much to
2:54:31
your son and welcome to the no agenda
2:54:33
roundtable They
2:54:44
happen all around get my nation they are
2:54:46
a global phenomenon This is where you hang
2:54:48
out with people who once you meet them.
2:54:50
You'll go back to these meetups.
2:54:51
I guarantee it Your first responders in any
2:54:55
emergency will come from the people you meet
2:54:57
at the knowage in the meetup They are
2:54:59
connection that gives you the ultimate protection and
2:55:02
we have a nothing today on Wednesday the
2:55:05
royal visit the ultra special amygdala checkup meetup
2:55:10
in Leiden at 733 and Dutch time at
2:55:15
locale 1650 in Leiden the Netherlands Baron Rob
2:55:19
is organizing that and on Thursday our next
2:55:21
show day Charlotte's thirsty third Thursday monthly meetup
2:55:24
seven o'clock Edge Tavern in Charlotte, North
2:55:27
Carolina Sir, Kevin Dills will be sponsoring that
2:55:31
for you on the way.
2:55:33
We have let's see the 16th We have
2:55:35
Whitfield a Whitefield, New Hampshire Then the 17th
2:55:38
Bedford, Texas, Colorado Springs, Colorado, Fort Wayne, Indiana,
2:55:42
New Kent, Virginia Springfield, Oregon, but maybe most
2:55:45
importantly the Fredericksburg meetup Matt long is is
2:55:49
is hosting that with his lovely wife and
2:55:53
Let me see.
2:55:53
It's gonna kick off at 333 until the
2:55:56
cows come home That'll be at 1776 and
2:56:01
Lukenbach right outside of Fredericksburg go to knowage
2:56:04
in the meetups calm for more information And
2:56:06
we have a promo for the Kansas City
2:56:09
meetup You Attention Kansas City producers you're invited
2:56:17
to another KC meetup based baseball and barbecue
2:56:21
edition Meet us at Maple Hill Park and
2:56:23
Overland Park, Kansas on Saturday, May 31st at
2:56:26
333 p.m Bring a bat and glove
2:56:29
for some fun on the diamond and enjoy
2:56:31
some hometown barbecue If you're gonna go let
2:56:34
us know at no agenda meetups calm Well,
2:56:40
there you go the Kansas City meetup, it's
2:56:43
gonna be a hootenanny That is just one
2:56:45
of the many no agenda meetups taking place
2:56:47
all around the world go to no agenda
2:56:49
meetups calm to find one Near you if
2:56:51
you can't find one near you.
2:56:53
Don't worry.
2:56:54
You have an obligation to start one yourself
2:56:56
It's easy and it'll be guaranteed You
2:57:18
Always a party guaranteed a party This is
2:57:22
the moment in the show where we do
2:57:23
not let up.
2:57:24
No instead of letting up We just continue
2:57:26
with more fun and shenanigans of finding the
2:57:29
perfect isolated clip for the end of show
2:57:32
I am loaded for bear today I've got
2:57:35
what do I got here?
2:57:36
I got like five of them.
2:57:38
Oh So let me have them.
2:57:40
Okay.
2:57:41
Do not mock us.
2:57:42
There's one dude.
2:57:44
Okay second one It's done.
2:57:46
We're all done Okay in the morning ends
2:57:52
with good night No, no, yo, yo, yo,
2:57:57
that's the show Kind of like that one
2:58:00
myself Oh These guys are Uncomparable, huh?
2:58:07
I like the yo-yo-yo the best
2:58:09
of that group.
2:58:10
It's so good Okay.
2:58:12
Oh yo, yo, yo, so you like the
2:58:13
yo-yo-yos This one yo, yo, yo,
2:58:16
that's the show.
2:58:18
Okay.
2:58:19
All right.
2:58:19
Well, we have a contender at least.
2:58:21
What do you have?
2:58:22
I like that.
2:58:23
Well, I've got a couple once I get
2:58:24
one of them's not under ice Typed it
2:58:28
wrong us I loved it u.s. I
2:58:31
loved it, but I loved it, but I
2:58:33
loved it a little short.
2:58:35
Yeah Then I have Iso donate, please use
2:58:43
the button below now to donate a lot
2:58:46
of music Sorry, I got a cough now.
2:58:49
So swoon that show made me swoon.
2:58:52
It was so good As no woman talks
2:58:56
like that Well, then I can't play the
2:59:00
last one which is not safe for work
2:59:01
and people are gonna put their kids aside
2:59:03
if you want to play because I actually
2:59:05
Programmed as I can say, I don't know
2:59:07
if it was got sentient, but I had
2:59:10
it to design its own The AI design
2:59:13
is what was the prompt?
2:59:14
What was the prompt you put?
2:59:16
I'm not gonna give it away again people
2:59:17
give it.
2:59:19
Oh, people might want to do this for
2:59:20
themselves at home Yeah, okay So wait, wait,
2:59:25
I gave it say I think that I've
2:59:27
got it to become self-aware and give
2:59:29
us it This is not safe for work,
2:59:31
and I'm embarrassed that it even showed up
2:59:34
this way But this is the way the
2:59:35
clip came out after I cut loose the
2:59:38
AI.
2:59:39
I really really want to fuck these two
2:59:41
guys Horrible yo, yo, yo, that's the show.
2:59:48
That's what we're gonna go with man.
2:59:50
That is just horrible I can't believe you
2:59:52
did that.
2:59:53
I can't believe it.
2:59:55
I Can't I didn't that's the point.
2:59:57
Oh, yeah I
3:00:13
didn't mean to do that the AI did
3:00:15
it for me.
3:00:16
Mm-hmm.
3:00:17
Yeah likely story.
3:00:19
I Know Does not not sound so bogus
3:00:25
I know so I had I was gonna
3:00:31
do the booth some more boozy stuff But
3:00:33
I just I got this note from crystal
3:00:35
bogs one of our producers Yes, gave me
3:00:38
a tip.
3:00:39
That was just like And I looked over
3:00:41
the thing.
3:00:42
I can't I haven't used the product.
3:00:44
I looked over all the features like down
3:00:46
I've got it set up to use it,
3:00:48
but it's nothing I would use But I
3:00:51
can see it being something that would be
3:00:52
very valuable to a lot of people Especially
3:00:54
especially after listening to that horrible AI clip
3:00:57
that created itself For people that want to
3:01:01
keep movies and other productions clean This is
3:01:06
a censorship product That I'm gonna read the
3:01:09
note from her and this is the gonna
3:01:11
be the product the product is vid angel
3:01:13
VID Angle.com ITM John and Adam on
3:01:18
the last show you mentioned that some TV
3:01:20
shows are absolutely unwatchable now because of the
3:01:23
stuff thrown in To them these days.
3:01:26
I think we're specifically referring to the Horrible
3:01:29
show black whatever it was.
3:01:31
It's got the gay sex scene.
3:01:33
We've been using the $9.99 per month
3:01:36
service vid angel for several years several years
3:01:40
and love it It filters out whatever you
3:01:42
want.
3:01:43
You can customize show or movie using preset
3:01:46
filters You can watch most titles by linking
3:01:49
your streaming services We originally got it so
3:01:51
our kids could watch shows they otherwise couldn't
3:01:54
with us with us But my husband and
3:01:57
I have used it just as much for
3:01:58
our own shows We don't have to be
3:02:00
surprised by anything unsavory like you both experienced
3:02:04
and if a kid comes downstairs for water
3:02:07
They're not gonna catch a glance of anything.
3:02:09
We have to talk about later.
3:02:10
We have to talk about Use it to
3:02:14
watch Jack Ryan the agency the diplomat and
3:02:16
more I can also enjoy the office with
3:02:19
my team with all the hilarious social awkwardness,
3:02:22
but none of the adult jokes It's got
3:02:25
like 300 filters in it.
3:02:26
I don't know how it even works, but
3:02:28
that's interesting It's a very interesting product for
3:02:31
people out there that really want to use
3:02:33
theirs.
3:02:33
What's the leery of what's it called again?
3:02:35
Okay, it's under WWWvidangel like video Vidangel.com
3:02:43
and I will say this This I have
3:02:46
mixed feelings about censorship products like this Although
3:02:49
I can see their their I can see
3:02:52
their value for sure.
3:02:53
That's why I'm recommending it, but I remember
3:02:57
one time I was on a flight and
3:03:00
And Movies on airplanes are censored back when
3:03:03
they started the engines with a shotgun shell
3:03:06
This is way after that.
3:03:08
Yeah, okay, so they have the in-flight
3:03:10
movie and I got I watched get shorty
3:03:13
Which I thought was a Larry's film, but
3:03:16
there's some of it just for some reason
3:03:17
I was unsatisfied at the end of it
3:03:19
because it's I don't know what it was,
3:03:21
but it the movie made no sense Huh,
3:03:24
but it was funny So then I saw
3:03:27
it on TV like years later and in
3:03:30
the movie which is a key element within
3:03:32
the movie There's an airplane crash And they
3:03:36
had they left that in No, they took
3:03:38
it out.
3:03:39
They had them airplane movies will never have
3:03:41
an airplane crash in the movie It's a
3:03:43
policy of all the airlines.
3:03:45
I understand that yeah for good reason Yeah,
3:03:47
but if you don't know about the airplane
3:03:49
crash the movie doesn't make a lot of
3:03:52
sense This is the irony of this coming
3:03:55
from the guy who just played and not
3:03:57
safe for work I so is not lost
3:03:59
on me that this is your tip of
3:04:01
the day.
3:04:03
I Thought it would make up for the
3:04:05
clip.
3:04:05
Not at all Interesting.
3:04:08
This is just vid angel vid angel vid
3:04:12
Angel calm check it out.
3:04:15
It sounds like vid buzzkills what it sounds
3:04:17
like to me All right, it could be
3:04:19
if you'd put the enough filters on you
3:04:21
can go check it out And if a
3:04:23
reminder of all of John's tip of the
3:04:24
day is tip of the day And
3:04:36
here's a tip for you come back on
3:04:38
Thursday for more media deconstruction, you're no agenda
3:04:42
show find out what's happening Maybe we'll know
3:04:44
what the big announcement is by then I'm
3:04:47
sure something will happen I'm hoping something will
3:04:51
happen.
3:04:51
That's for sure something always happens something always
3:04:54
happens and sometimes it's on a show day
3:04:56
But right now a lot of his Trump
3:04:59
John Trump so we just try to make
3:05:01
you smarter if you get any value from
3:05:03
this show Please consider sending some value back
3:05:06
to us time talent or treasure No agenda
3:05:08
show net is where you can get all
3:05:10
the information in the latest episodes and the
3:05:12
back episodes Search the show notes at bing
3:05:14
it dot IO and support the show at
3:05:17
no agenda donations calm Nick the rat is
3:05:23
up next on the no agenda stream followed
3:05:25
by end of show mixes from Brian long
3:05:27
an echo classic from him and Brand-new
3:05:29
from David Keck that was up all night
3:05:31
struggling with his Windows machine We appreciate that
3:05:34
coming to you from the heart of the
3:05:36
Texas Hill Hill country right here in the
3:05:40
Fred freak off Everybody I'm Adam Curry and
3:05:45
from Northern Silicon Valley.
3:05:46
I'm John C.
3:05:47
Dvorak.
3:05:47
We'll be back on Thursday everybody until then
3:05:50
Remember to tip your waitress and support us
3:05:52
at no agenda show.net and no agenda
3:05:55
donations.com We are finally going to lead
3:06:01
again You see what's happening.
3:06:04
You see the Rockets going up left and
3:06:06
right you haven't seen that for a long
3:06:07
time Very soon.
3:06:09
We're going to Mars You wouldn't have been
3:06:12
going bars of my opponent one Space
3:06:41
Force We
3:06:54
are finally going to beat again We are
3:07:01
finally going to We are finally going to
3:07:05
Lead again You see what's happening.
3:07:09
You see the Rockets going up left and
3:07:11
right you haven't seen that for a long
3:07:13
time Very soon.
3:07:15
We're going to Mars Space Force Air
3:07:36
power space power.
3:07:38
Yes force space force force Space force We
3:07:47
could have been jerks and just build your
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credit card automatically, please press one now to
3:07:54
enter your credit card
3:08:14
I
3:09:01
Org slash a yo-yo yo, that's the
3:09:07
show