Cover for No Agenda Show 1813: Lunchbox
November 2nd • 3h 19m

1813: Lunchbox

Transcript

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0:00
None.
0:01
Adam Curry, John C.
0:03
Dvorak.
0:03
It's Sunday, November 2nd, 2025.
0:05
This is your award-winning Kimmel Nation Media
0:07
Assassination Episode 1813.
0:10
This is no agenda.
0:13
Nuking the North Sea Nexus and Broadcasting live
0:16
from the heart of the Texas hill country
0:18
here in FEMA Region No.
0:19
6 in the morning, everybody.
0:21
I'm Adam Curry.
0:23
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where we've determined
0:26
that the Democrats are lunatics.
0:27
I'm John C.
0:28
Dvorak.
0:30
Broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas
0:31
hill country here in FEMA Region No.
0:31
6 in the morning, everybody.
0:32
Oh, have we now?
0:33
Ha, ha, ha.
0:35
You mean the, uh, everyone who's a Democrat?
0:38
Or just the, the representatives who are Democrats?
0:40
I mean, people who, there can be people
0:42
who are misguided and, and vote Democrat, but
0:45
they may not be total lunatics.
0:48
And your point?
0:49
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
0:52
Yeah.
0:52
How was that extra hour of sleep for
0:54
you?
0:56
I didn't take it.
0:57
What do you mean you didn't take it?
1:01
I didn't take it.
1:02
I got up at the right, I got
1:03
up with, over this, with the same cycle,
1:05
left the clock.
1:06
I do, going this way, I leave everything
1:08
the same and I get up at the
1:10
time allotted that was original.
1:12
And then, then I turn the clocks back
1:14
and say, oh my God, I, I'm up
1:16
an hour early.
1:18
Oh, it's interesting how you were still grumpy
1:20
though.
1:21
That's, well, I, I'm just, I, hey, I,
1:23
be happy.
1:25
I know.
1:25
Ha, ha, ha, ha.
1:26
Okay.
1:27
I know why you're grumpy.
1:29
It makes the show a lot better.
1:30
I know why you're grumpy.
1:30
And so the, so the other, so on
1:32
the other way, when it goes the other
1:34
way, I, I set the clocks the night
1:36
before.
1:38
Hmm.
1:38
So I can kind of gear myself up
1:40
for the fact I'm going to lose an
1:41
hour.
1:41
Ah.
1:42
Well, as always, there's a report on what
1:44
the elites are doing to kill us this
1:46
time.
1:47
Most Americans are not in favor of daylight
1:49
saving time.
1:49
The American Academy of Sleep Medicine is among
1:52
groups urging lawmakers to eliminate seasonal time changes
1:55
and enact permanent standard time.
1:58
On permanent standard time, we have more light
2:01
in the morning and we know that morning
2:03
light is best for our mood and for
2:05
our health.
2:05
Exactly.
2:05
The second reason is that darkness in the
2:08
morning actually has some safety risks.
2:10
The third reason is because the alignment of
2:13
the rising and setting of the sun is
2:14
more consistent with our internal clock, people sleep
2:17
better.
2:18
Poor sleep contributes to chronic health issues, including
2:21
cardiovascular disease, diabetes, obesity, as well as anxiety
2:25
and depression.
2:27
While some experts say the autumn change can
2:29
be easier to manage, there are still some
2:30
tips to make falling back feel a bit
2:33
better.
2:34
That starts with getting at least seven hours
2:36
of sleep at night before and after the
2:38
time change and maintaining a consistent sleep schedule.
2:41
Adjust the timing of your daily routines and
2:44
time cues right away starting on Sunday.
2:46
Set your clock back one hour in the
2:48
evening before the time change so that when
2:51
you wake up, it's easy to get on
2:52
that new schedule.
2:54
And then spend some time outdoors, get that
2:56
morning light.
2:57
Bright light will help set your internal clock
2:59
to the time change, which will help with
3:01
sleep and being alert.
3:02
I was actually quite happy that we had
3:06
a party last night that we went to.
3:08
Woohoo!
3:09
Yeah, a murder mystery party.
3:11
Oh, no.
3:15
Hello, 1990s.
3:16
Yeah, it was good.
3:17
This was Maverick, you know, my periodontist.
3:21
He had it at his house.
3:22
This is the house that's on the airport
3:24
that has the hangar with the plane in
3:26
it that I think I paid for the
3:28
door at minimum.
3:30
It was kind of cool, though.
3:31
It was Old Wild West.
3:37
And I was Billy the bartender.
3:39
Tina was Poker Alice.
3:42
So, first of all, these people are younger.
3:45
They're in their 30s.
3:47
Some maybe, maybe early 40s.
3:49
So, we were just happy we were invited
3:51
to anything.
3:52
And you know that you're dealing with no
3:55
agenda listeners because everyone's in character.
3:59
And so, this one character comes up to
4:02
me and says, you know, that Poker Alice,
4:04
she's no good.
4:05
I said, what do you mean?
4:05
He says, she's an op.
4:07
I'm like, okay, in the morning?
4:08
Yeah, in the morning.
4:11
It was good.
4:12
I love it.
4:13
It was so good.
4:13
She actually wrote a really naughty note to
4:16
you that she gave me.
4:19
You want to hear it?
4:22
I guess.
4:23
So, here's the deal, cowboy.
4:26
You tell that naughty little Dvorak that even
4:28
though he ain't used to the dusty, sweaty
4:30
women you find around these parts, he wrote
4:32
it in character.
4:33
I promise he'll hear the way we bite
4:36
harder than a rattler.
4:37
And if he buys me a drink and
4:39
whispers words in my ear like it's an
4:41
op or she's a spook, I'll offer him
4:43
something far warmer and wetter than whiskey.
4:46
You should have been there.
4:51
That's disgusting.
4:54
I'm just happy there's young people listening to
4:57
our show.
4:57
That's all I'm happy about.
4:58
Oh, we get a lot of, yeah.
5:00
Well, they're here because they want to learn
5:05
something that's real, not all this nonsense that
5:07
they're getting everywhere.
5:08
Oh, by the way, one of the people
5:10
there, the guy's deep into Argentina with his
5:15
work.
5:15
He says this deal was so great, this
5:18
swap and having Millet win.
5:21
So, first of all, the $20 billion that
5:24
we swapped for Argentine pesos, which we made
5:26
a bundle on, by the way, because the
5:29
minute Millet…
5:30
Yeah, the minute you do that, it goes
5:31
up immediately.
5:31
Yeah, and he won and it went up
5:33
even more.
5:33
It basically was a swap out for $18
5:37
billion of Chinese dollars, whatever.
5:42
So, President Trump basically kicked out…
5:44
I don't know if it was a yuan
5:47
swap or a Chinese dollar swap.
5:49
That's possible, isn't it?
5:50
There is no Chinese.
5:51
It's a yuan.
5:52
But don't they have dollars?
5:55
No, they use the yuan and they also
5:57
call it the renminbi.
5:58
No, I understand, but they own dollars.
6:01
Yeah, yeah.
6:02
So, I think it was an $18 billion
6:04
swap.
6:05
You think they took American dollars, the Chinese
6:06
did?
6:06
I wouldn't.
6:07
I would do it with the yuan, personally.
6:08
It would be a better idea.
6:10
Either way, the big deal is that now
6:14
there's an Argentinian oil bonanza rivaling the Permian
6:18
Basin.
6:21
Where did they find this?
6:22
I don't know.
6:23
We were too busy in the game.
6:25
I didn't get the details, but I have
6:27
his number.
6:28
I'll get the details from him.
6:30
And his company is there.
6:32
He's like, this is going to be great.
6:35
It could be off the coast, I guess.
6:37
Maybe.
6:38
There's been a lot of oil off of
6:40
our coast in California.
6:41
If you recall those old pictures from the
6:43
20s with all those oil rigs that are
6:45
off the Long Beach area coast.
6:48
Yeah, replaced by windmills now, right?
6:51
There's nothing there.
6:52
The windmills are all in Palm Springs.
6:54
Oh, okay.
6:57
Anyway, it was good.
6:58
It was a lot of fun.
6:59
And it all fallen over.
7:00
And I also set up the stream.
7:02
I set up our AI slop stream.
7:06
Well, from the sounds of today's songs, there's
7:08
going to be plenty of slop to put
7:10
on there.
7:11
Well, yeah.
7:11
But, you know, when you hear them kind
7:13
of in context and interspersed with other end
7:16
of shows and our jingles, it's kind of
7:18
interesting.
7:20
I'll bet.
7:21
You know, I got a whole format.
7:22
So right now we have two slops an
7:24
hour.
7:27
We're doing two slops an hour.
7:29
You have a clock?
7:30
Oh, yeah.
7:31
I have a rotation clock.
7:32
Sure.
7:32
We got two slops an hour in rotation.
7:34
You have a clock that has promotions for
7:35
the various shows on the No Agenda stream.
7:38
Well, of course.
7:39
If they send me promos, I'll promote them.
7:42
I'll put them in.
7:42
You heard it, boys.
7:43
And I just put the stream URL because
7:46
I figured, you know, we have all these
7:48
names like Gitmo Jams, pre-produced pop, lots
7:53
of slop, the emo algo, the human input,
7:55
the touring test tunes.
7:57
There's too much.
7:58
So why don't you all just take that
7:59
stream.
7:59
It's out of control.
8:00
Yes.
8:01
Take that.
8:01
It's in the show notes as well.
8:02
And just do something with it.
8:04
Build your own website, whatever you want.
8:07
Send me your promo.
8:08
Send me your slop.
8:09
Minute 30 max or they get deleted right
8:12
away.
8:12
If you're sending me anything over a minute
8:14
30, it's out.
8:15
Not interested.
8:17
And we'll turn this into a dynamite exit
8:19
strategy.
8:20
The whole world will be bopping to our
8:22
stream, baby.
8:23
It's going to be fantastic.
8:24
I'm telling you.
8:25
It's going to be great.
8:26
If we can sell the stream off to
8:27
some sucker.
8:28
Well, yeah.
8:28
You know, it's possible.
8:30
It's possible.
8:31
Paramount.
8:34
Oh, well, that brings me right away to
8:37
the self-hating Jew, Glenn Greenwald, which will
8:40
actually lead into your, I think will lead
8:43
into your, I was surprised.
8:44
I see that you watch the Tucker Fuentes.
8:48
Oh, you know, I watched the whole thing.
8:49
And I have to say, and I'm not
8:53
pre, I'm not, how would I say it?
8:56
I'm not pre-programmed to like or dislike
8:58
Fuentes.
8:59
I've never seen or heard of him.
9:01
Well, so you, you don't know how he's
9:03
somewhat different on his own shows.
9:06
No, I have no clue.
9:08
I'm just going by what he did on
9:10
Tucker and his discussion with Tucker and Tucker
9:14
and him, I guess, had a beef.
9:16
I told you they were going back FBI
9:19
versus the CIA.
9:20
Yeah.
9:21
They had a beef of some sort.
9:22
Yeah.
9:23
And so Tucker invited him on the show
9:24
and they became, I'm surprised they weren't kissing
9:26
at the end, to be honest about it.
9:28
Yeah.
9:29
Well, I think, honestly, I think we're looking
9:32
at North Sea Nexus with the Pilgrim.
9:34
I mean, there's something going on here.
9:36
There's a couple of clips I have.
9:38
You want to do them?
9:39
Collection.
9:40
Well, first you had some, some intro clip
9:43
of some sort.
9:44
Well, well, it's a, it's a series of
9:46
four, if you can handle it.
9:47
About what?
9:49
It's Glenn Greenwald.
9:50
Oh, yes.
9:51
I definitely want to hear it.
9:53
Yes.
9:54
I think setting us up with Glenn Greenwald
9:55
is always good.
9:56
Always good.
9:57
I hope you've cut him back a bit.
9:59
Oh, no.
10:00
Chatterbox.
10:01
Jeez.
10:01
Well, even worse, he was on Valuetainment.
10:04
This is, this is why.
10:05
Oh, my God.
10:06
He just, he'd be on forever.
10:08
The Valuetainment guy, by the way, he has
10:10
the exit strategy of all exit strategies.
10:13
I got to give this guy props.
10:14
PDB.
10:15
He's not a dummy.
10:17
He has high end shoes.
10:19
Yes.
10:21
Made in Italy.
10:22
$5.99 a pair.
10:25
And yeah, and they're handmade in Italy.
10:28
Yeah.
10:28
Yeah, I know.
10:29
I know.
10:30
Exactly.
10:32
Are you telling me that PDB or PBD,
10:36
I can't remember the.
10:38
Valuetainment guy.
10:39
Yeah.
10:39
Valuetainment.
10:41
Bet Davis or whatever.
10:42
Yeah.
10:42
Patrick Bet Davis.
10:44
Patrick Bet.
10:44
Yeah.
10:45
He's selling shoes.
10:47
For $5.99. And I have to say,
10:50
they're handsome.
10:51
Oh, I'm sure they are.
10:52
It's nothing like a good Italian shoe.
10:54
They look great.
10:54
And he has a whole factory video of
10:57
them putting the shoes together.
10:58
He owns a factory there or is he?
11:00
No, no, no, no.
11:01
He's jobbing it out.
11:02
He's an OEM.
11:03
Oh, yeah.
11:04
He's an OEM for shoes.
11:05
Yes, but so I was thinking, we've got
11:07
a guy doing shoes in America with American
11:10
workers in Northwestern Carolina.
11:13
They got wiped out.
11:14
He's doing boots.
11:15
I think we could do a no agenda
11:17
boot.
11:17
Or a boot guy.
11:18
Yes, we can do a no agenda boot.
11:20
We could.
11:21
Yeah.
11:22
High end, baby.
11:24
High end.
11:27
All right, let's play these clips.
11:28
I knew I got your attention with that.
11:30
Okay, so Glenn Greenwald is on to talk
11:34
about Barry Weiss, CBS, the Jews, the Jews
11:40
controlling the media, the whole thing.
11:42
And it was just like, I mean, it
11:46
seemed, because this is one of the big
11:50
online kind of talking points about TikTok and
11:53
about CBS and Barry and Israel and the
11:57
Jews.
11:58
And it was just fascinating.
11:59
So I wanted to bring it in.
12:01
And then I saw that you have Tucker
12:04
and Nick Fuentes.
12:05
This might actually work together.
12:08
I'm not thinking it will, because this is
12:10
the segment about porn.
12:14
Listen, porn is always good in any mix.
12:18
Well, yeah, that might be true, but I
12:20
don't see the segue is lacking.
12:22
Well, do you want to start?
12:24
No, no, no.
12:25
I want to hear these clips.
12:27
We'll get to that eventually.
12:28
So first of all, it's not like he's
12:31
mad or anything that Barry Weiss got this
12:34
huge buyout for $150 million.
12:36
He doesn't care.
12:38
I mean, he believes that to be true.
12:40
Oh, he's a done deal.
12:42
Oh, yeah.
12:42
Oh, you know, 100 percent is done.
12:44
But he doesn't care if she made $800
12:46
million.
12:48
So first of all, I know Barry.
12:50
Anyone who knows Barry will say what I'm
12:51
about to say, which is she's an extremely
12:52
charming, nice person, like interpersonally impossible not to
12:57
like Barry Weiss.
12:58
Same with her wife, Nellie, like just great
13:01
people.
13:02
However, I'm also a huge proponent of independent
13:05
media.
13:05
I like when independent media succeeds.
13:07
I like when it grows and thrives.
13:09
I think more competition, the better.
13:11
No issue at all.
13:12
Barry Weiss can get, you know, $800 million
13:14
if she can find somebody to give it
13:16
to her for the free press.
13:17
Don't care about that at all.
13:18
Uh-huh.
13:18
Uh-huh.
13:18
Sure.
13:19
That's why he's talking so fast.
13:20
I mean, he talks fast, but he's out
13:22
of control there.
13:23
But when he goes, I don't care about
13:24
that at all.
13:24
I don't care about that at all.
13:25
I don't care about the $150 million.
13:26
I do not care.
13:27
I don't care.
13:28
Look at my face.
13:29
I don't care.
13:29
What I care about is the following.
13:32
We're talking about David Olsen.
13:33
It's really Larry Olsen.
13:34
Ah!
13:35
Ah!
13:37
Now the monkey comes out of the sleeve.
13:39
It's really about Larry Olsen.
13:41
Not David Olsen, his kid, but Larry Olsen.
13:44
This is all—we're talking about David Olsen.
13:46
It's really Larry Olsen who's behind all this.
13:48
Larry Olsen is either the richest or second
13:50
richest person in the world, depending on his
13:51
and Elon's fluctuations in net worth.
13:53
He's really rattling me off.
13:54
Larry Olsen, he has one main political cause,
13:58
and that's Israel.
13:59
He's an American citizen.
14:00
He's the single largest owner, private donor to
14:03
the IDF.
14:03
I don't know why it's legal for an
14:05
American citizen to donate money to a foreign
14:06
army.
14:08
I don't even know why it's legal for
14:09
an American citizen to go fight in a
14:10
foreign army.
14:10
A lot of Americans go fight in the
14:11
IDF.
14:12
He donates to the IDF.
14:13
Again, again, another one of these guys that
14:15
forgets that there's a lot of other armies
14:17
that people and Americans have been fighting in,
14:19
including Ukraine.
14:20
Never heard Glenn about that, but OK, Israel.
14:23
It's legal for an American citizen to go
14:24
fight in a foreign army.
14:25
A lot of Americans go fight in the
14:26
IDF.
14:27
He donates to the IDF.
14:28
How much does he give to the IDF?
14:29
He gave, you know, just on one night,
14:31
he gave $20 million.
14:32
It's, you know, over the years.
14:34
Now, you know, in the scheme of his
14:35
wealth of like- Is it direct to
14:37
IDF or went to somebody that went to
14:38
- It's called Friends of the IDF.
14:40
It's for people to donate money.
14:42
They provide services to the IDF, you know,
14:44
like new this for the IDF, new housing,
14:46
new benefits for the soldiers, whatever.
14:48
But yeah, it's supplementing and funding the IDF.
14:52
Like, why not do that?
14:52
He's an American citizen.
14:53
Why not do that for American soldiers?
14:54
But he's choosing to do it for Israeli
14:55
soldiers.
14:56
Whatever.
14:57
That's not my issue.
14:58
That's not my issue.
14:59
Yeah, it sounds like.
15:01
He's like, so this is already not America
15:03
first.
15:04
You're Jew first.
15:05
This is no good.
15:06
No good, Larry Ellison.
15:07
Why are you giving money to the IDF?
15:10
And she goes, I don't understand.
15:11
You live in America.
15:12
And of course, this is great because this
15:15
is the Jew Glenn Greenwald.
15:18
Glenn Greenwald.
15:19
Glenn Greenwald.
15:20
He'll get it.
15:21
Who is like now saying, well, now the
15:23
Jews want to control the media.
15:25
What?
15:26
Okay, so he's the single largest donor to
15:27
the IDF.
15:28
But beyond that, you know, he's a major,
15:30
major, major fanatical supporter of Israel.
15:33
Even though he's an American citizen in the
15:34
country that gave him his wealth is not
15:36
Israel, but the United States.
15:39
He keeps saying whatever.
15:41
You know, I don't know Ellison to the
15:44
point where I'm a friend of his because
15:45
I haven't been to his house, although I
15:48
know where his house is.
15:50
You could TP it if you wanted to.
15:53
But I have worked with him on one
15:58
occasion.
15:59
I've run into him a number of times
16:00
and I've seen him talk a lot, including
16:07
the new version of him.
16:08
He looks like he had some work done.
16:12
Yeah, some.
16:13
Some.
16:14
And I have never heard this.
16:18
You know, most of these guys, they make
16:20
a big fuss.
16:21
I mean, like the Adelson's did, they would
16:23
talk about it.
16:24
Right.
16:25
Ellison doesn't talk about.
16:26
What is he?
16:27
What?
16:27
Where does Greenwald get this?
16:29
So Larry Ellison was my client at Think
16:33
New Ideas when Ray Lane was running it.
16:36
This is before Ray Lane later was my
16:38
main VC partner at Kleiner.
16:42
And I found him to be nothing but
16:44
an incredibly nice, actually very because, you know,
16:50
he was at that point the chairman and
16:52
he was really letting his people run the
16:54
show.
16:55
He just came in to sit and watch
16:56
the commercial we made for the Super Bowl.
16:58
But yeah, it was respectful.
17:00
It was a nice guy.
17:01
I can't.
17:02
I've always thought him to be a nice
17:03
guy.
17:03
Caught him at the airport once and had
17:05
a chat with him.
17:06
And he is a really nice guy.
17:09
And his main passion always seemed to me
17:12
not to be Israel, but sailboats.
17:16
Exactly.
17:17
It was upside down and sailboats.
17:18
Sailboats.
17:19
He had sailboats here.
17:20
Sailboats there.
17:21
Yes.
17:22
Sailboats.
17:22
Racing.
17:23
Formula One.
17:24
Racing.
17:25
Big sponsor.
17:26
Racing and more racing.
17:26
Yeah.
17:27
Yeah.
17:27
Which I think was a lot more money
17:28
than the 20 million to the friends of
17:30
the IDF.
17:31
But OK.
17:32
Guys, I'm never going to get it.
17:34
Glenn Greenwald.
17:35
Glad you're stuck.
17:36
You're going to always screw up Glenn Greenwald.
17:40
Glenn Greenwald.
17:42
He keeps saying, I don't care, whatever.
17:43
Then why bring it up?
17:45
I don't like that part.
17:48
He's obviously obsessed with.
17:50
Yes.
17:50
This is the point.
17:51
I'll start this one over.
17:52
That's why he's talking so fast.
17:54
I mean, he talks fast normally, but this
17:55
is really.
17:57
Yeah.
17:57
A little unpinning the meter.
17:59
OK.
17:59
So he's the single largest owner of the
18:01
IDF.
18:01
But beyond that, you know, he's a major,
18:03
major, major fanatical supporter of Israel, even though
18:06
he's an American citizen in the country that
18:08
gave him his wealth.
18:09
It's not Israel, but the United States, whatever.
18:11
But that is his cause.
18:12
Right at the moment that public opinion polls
18:15
are showing an unraveling of support for Israel
18:19
in the United States, unlike anything I certainly
18:21
ever anticipated or expect to see in my
18:22
lifetime, especially with the younger generation.
18:24
And he had Nick Funches on your show.
18:26
I think I interviewed him like a week
18:27
before or after he was on your show.
18:29
He was just on Tucker Carlson's kind of
18:31
representative of not everybody, but, you know, like
18:34
kind of under 30 conservatives who for the
18:36
first time are questioning Israel.
18:37
It's a big threat.
18:38
As we talked about, Israel needs the U
18:40
.S. And they look at public opinion polls
18:42
where.
18:44
So when I heard this, I'm like, this
18:46
is some kind of massive hopium that Nick
18:51
Fuentes and Tucker Carlson and Candace Owens and
18:56
maybe Megyn Kelly, they're going to create a
18:59
new America first right or something with major
19:02
Marjorie Taylor Greene.
19:03
You know what I mean?
19:04
That's what it sounds like.
19:05
Oh, yeah.
19:06
Nick Fuentes, you know, he's he's under 30.
19:08
And young people don't vote.
19:10
Bernie Sanders would be our president if they
19:12
did.
19:13
No.
19:14
So.
19:15
OK, so.
19:16
And what are you trying to say here?
19:18
There's an unraveling of support for Israel and
19:20
major conservative influence, not just people on the
19:23
left, which has been a case for a
19:24
while, but major conservative influencers and politicians are
19:27
now saying, why are we giving all this
19:29
money?
19:29
This is a they're panicking over this.
19:32
Larry Ellison had exactly.
19:33
I tell you, Larry Ellison panics over nothing.
19:36
I can tell you that for sure.
19:37
Larry Ellison does not panic over Israel, over
19:40
America or anything.
19:42
I just don't see it panicking over this.
19:45
Larry Ellison at exactly that point goes and
19:48
buys CBS News, one of the most storied
19:51
news outlets or brands in the United States
19:53
history.
19:54
Not a lot of people watching these days,
19:57
but still has that imprimatur, but also paramount
20:00
imprimatur.
20:02
What is imprimatur?
20:04
Imprimatur means it has a significance, a symbolic
20:11
significance.
20:12
So what what I hear Glenn saying here
20:15
is because of amazing new people on the
20:18
scene like Nick Fuentes, Larry Ellison freaked out
20:22
and went, I better buy Paramount, which has
20:25
been that.
20:25
How long has that deal been in process?
20:27
Five years.
20:28
It was ever, ever, ever since.
20:30
What's her name?
20:31
Sherry took over.
20:33
When she took over, she put it up
20:35
for sale.
20:36
She wanted to get everything out from under
20:37
Sumner.
20:38
I mean, Sumner.
20:40
You know, lost the company to her.
20:43
Pretty much.
20:44
She hated the old man so much that
20:48
she's going to she's going to sell it
20:50
all.
20:50
Yeah.
20:51
So yeah.
20:52
But now but now what Glenn has in
20:54
his mind is this scenario where everyone's panicking
20:57
because of Nick Fuentes and the Pilgrim.
20:59
And and now, you know, we better we
21:04
better buy the station that nobody watches.
21:07
Yeah.
21:07
That makes a lot of sense.
21:09
Yeah.
21:09
Let's buy CBS News so we can.
21:11
Who are you propagandizing with that?
21:14
Seventy five.
21:15
Seventy eight.
21:16
Seventy nine.
21:16
Eighty year olds.
21:17
Who's watching that?
21:19
Except for us to maybe grab one clip.
21:23
Not a lot of people watching these days,
21:25
but still has that imprimatur.
21:26
But also Paramount, which is a major entertainment
21:30
company.
21:30
Massive purchase.
21:30
Eight billion bucks.
21:31
Massive.
21:32
Take somebody who has never run a newsroom,
21:34
never even been a reporter.
21:35
Barry Weiss is, you know, an opinion columnist.
21:37
She's worked in the opinion page of The
21:38
Washington Post, New York Times, which I love
21:41
opinion journalism.
21:42
I do opinion journalism.
21:43
I have a lot of respect for it,
21:44
but it's not really I wouldn't expect anyone
21:46
to make me the editor in chief of
21:47
CBS.
21:48
And I think I have a lot more
21:49
accomplishments in just hardcore journalism than Barry.
21:51
I think she would say that, too.
21:52
But still, I would consider myself unqualified.
21:54
A major reason, obviously, is because she's fanatically
21:58
pro-Israel and that aligns perfectly with the
22:00
Ellison agenda.
22:01
OK, right.
22:02
So Ellison agenda.
22:04
So.
22:05
So, OK, let me just get this straight.
22:07
So it's been it's been for sale for
22:09
five years.
22:10
But now everyone's panicking over Nick Fuentes and
22:13
Marjorie Taylor Greene and whatever.
22:16
And so now we're going to get Barry
22:18
Weiss because she's a Jew and she's and
22:23
she's a propagandist for Israel.
22:25
This makes a lot of sense.
22:27
Is Barry fanatically pro-Israel?
22:28
Oh, my God.
22:29
Is she Jewish or something?
22:31
Barry's totally Jewish and her main cause is
22:33
Israel.
22:33
OK, I didn't know that.
22:34
Oh, Barry is.
22:35
You wind Barry up and she she spouts
22:37
pro-Israel propaganda.
22:39
Oh, so first she was a great journalist.
22:41
Now she just spouts propaganda.
22:43
OK.
22:44
She grew up in an Orthodox Jewish household.
22:47
She, you know, is she's not Orthodox now.
22:49
She's married to a woman, obviously, but she's
22:51
still very Jewish, very pro-Israel.
22:52
Wait, wait, stop.
22:55
She's married to a woman and then he
22:57
throws in the word obviously.
23:00
He says she's married to a woman, obviously.
23:03
Well, it's not obvious to me.
23:04
Well, I think I think let me listen
23:06
again.
23:07
She grew up in an Orthodox Jewish household.
23:09
She, you know, is she's not Orthodox now.
23:11
She's married to a woman, obviously, but I
23:13
think it obviously points back to not being
23:15
Orthodox.
23:17
Also, if you're not an Orthodox Jew, you're
23:20
a gay woman.
23:20
Is that what he's saying?
23:21
What is he implying?
23:22
I think he's implying that you can't be
23:24
Orthodox if you're gay.
23:28
No, I don't know.
23:29
It just seemed odd.
23:31
You can pass it off.
23:32
Well, it's the pot calling the kettle black
23:34
here.
23:34
I mean, come on.
23:36
Well, there's that.
23:37
Yes, that's true.
23:38
This is the gays and the lesbians at
23:40
war.
23:40
She grew up in an Orthodox.
23:41
It's like a gay battle.
23:42
Yeah.
23:43
Jewish household.
23:44
All I can keep hearing is why did
23:47
it have to be a gay woman?
23:48
This could have been a gay man.
23:49
I could have done this.
23:49
I think he definitely is thinking that he
23:53
should be, if anybody.
23:55
Yes, because he's a straight shooter, you see.
23:58
Orthodox now.
23:59
She's married to a woman, obviously, but she's
24:00
still very Jewish, very pro-Israel.
24:02
The Free Press, pro-Israel, too.
24:04
That's part of what David Ellison likes about
24:05
her.
24:06
By the way, it wasn't like Israel was
24:07
owned previously by Palestinians or Muslims.
24:10
It was owned by Sherry Redstone, who also
24:11
was Jewish.
24:12
Israel was owned by Sherry Redstone.
24:14
That's interesting.
24:16
Did you hear that?
24:17
I think he's talking.
24:20
His brain is going so fast and he's
24:22
talking so fast that he's running things together
24:25
oddly.
24:26
Kind of funny, though.
24:27
Play it again.
24:28
Play it again.
24:28
That's part of what David Ellison likes about
24:29
her.
24:30
By the way, it wasn't like Israel was
24:32
owned previously by Palestinians or Muslims.
24:34
It was owned by Sherry Redstone.
24:35
Just so you know, people, Israel was owned
24:38
by Sherry Redstone.
24:39
And now Larry Ellison wants to own Israel
24:42
because he loves Israel.
24:45
That's what he said.
24:46
By the way, it wasn't like Israel was
24:48
owned previously by Palestinians or Muslims.
24:50
It was owned by Sherry Redstone, who also
24:52
was Jewish.
24:53
How could PBD not catch that and say,
24:56
you mean Paramount, right, not Israel?
24:58
It's because he's talking such a rapid clip.
25:02
He's doing a Ben Shapiro on us now.
25:04
He's doing a Ben Shapiro and he's deluging
25:09
poor PBD with so much stuff that his
25:13
head is spinning.
25:14
All PBD wants to do is sell shoes,
25:17
man.
25:17
Just get to it, Glenn.
25:18
I want to sell my shoes, baby.
25:19
By Palestinians or Muslims.
25:21
It was owned by Sherry Redstone, who also
25:23
was Jewish.
25:23
The daughter of Summer Redstone, who was also
25:26
very pro-Israel.
25:27
Did he say summer?
25:31
Let's listen again.
25:32
By Palestinians or Muslims.
25:34
It was owned by Sherry Redstone, who also
25:35
was Jewish.
25:36
The daughter of Summer Redstone.
25:38
Yeah, summer.
25:40
Summer's Eve.
25:41
Summer.
25:41
Summer Redstone.
25:42
Summer Redstone.
25:43
A transsexual woman.
25:46
Summer.
25:46
His name was Sumner.
25:48
Sumner.
25:49
All right, let's keep going.
25:50
Was also very pro-Israel.
25:51
In fact, Sherry Redstone, the previous owner of
25:55
Paramount CBS, said the reason she decided to
25:58
sell Paramount CBS is because after October 7th,
26:01
she lost interest in journalism and she only
26:02
wants to devote herself to Israel.
26:04
Bullcrap.
26:05
She was selling it for years before October
26:08
7th.
26:08
That's just not true.
26:09
I mean, did we not establish this already?
26:15
He's just making it up now.
26:17
Yes.
26:18
That's the point of the clips.
26:20
We'll finish this.
26:21
And this is where you have the problem
26:23
with the Valuetainment boys is that it's a
26:27
team of people.
26:28
It's not just, you know, Patrick.
26:30
Yeah.
26:31
So this should have been called out.
26:34
Somebody should have called it out.
26:35
But it's going so fast.
26:37
It's like hitting you in the face with
26:38
a wet salmon.
26:40
It's possible that even if he was right
26:43
now with us doing this bit of his,
26:45
we couldn't catch it.
26:46
It was just too much.
26:47
Well, I heard the Sherry owns Israel right
26:50
away the first time and while I was
26:53
watching.
26:53
So it was odd.
26:54
Anyway, let's go.
26:55
She only wants to devote herself to Israel.
26:57
So it's not exactly like it was a
26:58
hotbed of Palestinian activism before.
27:00
But now they're taking over that.
27:02
He also wants to buy Warner Brothers, which
27:05
owns Discovery and CNN.
27:07
So CNN could also be under the control
27:09
of David Ellison.
27:10
Oh, wow.
27:10
Another ratings bonanza.
27:13
The Jews are so smart.
27:15
They're going to buy up all the media.
27:16
Nobody's watching.
27:17
We'll control it all.
27:18
And maybe we should get to something on
27:19
the Internet.
27:20
And in this deal that Trump engineered, Larry
27:23
Ellison is one of the major players in
27:24
the consortium that just took over TikTok.
27:26
Even though nobody watches CBS, obviously huge numbers
27:29
of people get their news from TikTok.
27:31
Oh, OK.
27:33
So here we are.
27:34
He's all over the map.
27:36
He's like a drunk driver.
27:37
He's all over the road.
27:39
He's lost it.
27:41
So now we go to the TikTok bit.
27:46
This is the last clip.
27:47
The TikTok bit, which I am still convinced,
27:52
based upon the money that was flowing that
27:54
we saw, based upon the Republican who introduced
27:59
the bill, that TikTok, the problem with TikTok
28:02
was not because of China.
28:04
The problem with TikTok is they were eating
28:07
Google and Meta's lunch.
28:09
They were gobbling up billions and billions of
28:11
dollars a quarter in advertising.
28:14
And I think you agree with me.
28:16
You know, we know it had nothing to
28:18
do with spying.
28:19
That's bullcrap.
28:20
Yeah.
28:20
What would be the point?
28:21
You can spy a million different ways.
28:24
So no, no, no.
28:25
Now you have to understand it wasn't China
28:27
either.
28:29
It was the Jews.
28:30
The ADL was a major.
28:32
You missed it.
28:34
Yes, listen.
28:35
You said you gave me the punchline before
28:37
the joke, but I already see how the
28:40
joke would develop.
28:41
Yeah.
28:41
The ADL was a major advocate in shutting
28:43
down TikTok.
28:44
But you know, this is so important about
28:46
TikTok.
28:47
Trump was the one who originally proposed shutting
28:49
TikTok.
28:49
The argument was because of the influence of
28:51
China.
28:52
It went nowhere.
28:53
It didn't get anywhere near the votes.
28:55
No one wanted to close TikTok.
28:56
The only reason why the TikTok ban ended
28:58
up succeeding, Biden White House got on board
29:00
with it, was after October 7th, Democrats became
29:02
convinced that a major reason why American young
29:06
people were turning against Israel was because there
29:08
was too much pro-Palestinian content permitted on
29:10
TikTok.
29:11
Wait a minute.
29:11
So now, now the Democrat Party who promoted
29:15
all of the pro-Palestine stuff, now they
29:19
were the ones that didn't want TikTok, that
29:22
wanted TikTok shut down because of the Jews?
29:26
Really?
29:26
Really?
29:27
Especially since we know that Biden was no
29:29
friend of Israel and actually kind of him
29:32
and Netanyahu, if Biden was a younger man,
29:35
he would have taken him behind the barn
29:36
and beaten him up.
29:37
Yes.
29:39
So this is bull crap.
29:40
Israel was because there was too much pro
29:42
-Palestinian content permitted on TikTok.
29:44
The sponsors of the TikTok ban will say,
29:46
that's the reason it finally passed.
29:48
Biden got behind it.
29:49
The ADL demanded TikTok be closed or forced
29:53
a sale to it.
29:53
So they forced a sale to it and
29:55
it ended up in the hands of Larry
29:56
Ellison, who now controls CBS, now controls, is
30:00
about to control CNN and also TikTok along
30:02
with others.
30:03
The Jews control the media that no one
30:05
cares about.
30:07
This is amazing.
30:08
And the only thing I can think of,
30:10
because why is Glenn doing this?
30:13
Because he wants to get on this hot
30:15
train, baby.
30:16
He wants to get on the hot Nick
30:17
train or something.
30:21
It's just ridiculous.
30:22
This is very disappointing.
30:24
I like Glenn Greenwald in general.
30:26
It might just be simple.
30:28
It might be a jealousy because I think
30:30
I think you're from the very beginning.
30:33
I think you're right about his just being
30:36
galled by the one hundred and fifty million
30:39
dollar deal for Barry's operation, which I still
30:44
believe is bull crap.
30:45
I know you do.
30:46
I know you do.
30:46
Because I because I've seen these deals happen
30:48
where you see these guys that go and
30:51
I don't I've never been in the room,
30:53
but I can just imagine I'm going to
30:55
sell.
30:55
Adam, I'm going to sell you my Dvorak
30:57
website.
30:58
Only if you have the password.
31:01
And you're and you're going to say, OK,
31:05
it's what are you?
31:06
What's it worth?
31:06
It's worth.
31:07
I don't know.
31:08
I'll take a hundred grand for it.
31:10
OK.
31:10
And then you'll say, OK, that sounds reasonable.
31:13
And then I say, but but but but
31:15
but we're going to have to make an
31:17
announcement that you paid me 50 million.
31:20
Yes.
31:20
And then when you give me the password,
31:22
I'll actually give you the hundred thousand that
31:24
or if you might even renege on that.
31:27
Probably.
31:28
But the point is, is that what's these
31:31
announced prices and with a giant corporation, which
31:36
you're not or I'm not, but with the
31:38
giant corporation, let's say Disney, you can hide
31:40
that phony baloney number anywhere in the books.
31:44
Good bookkeepers can take care of that.
31:46
Nobody could ever track it down.
31:48
Say, hey, wait a minute.
31:48
You guys didn't really pay that.
31:50
I can't find it.
31:51
I didn't.
31:52
I didn't clip it.
31:52
But in the beginning, they're talking about the
31:54
hundred and fifty million.
31:56
And and Glenn is going, oh, yeah, no,
31:58
we're close.
31:58
It's close.
31:58
It's done.
31:59
It's a done deal.
31:59
It's done.
32:00
Oh, yeah.
32:00
No, she got a hundred.
32:06
Yeah, I'm always surprised by the number of
32:08
people.
32:08
And I know a few of them that
32:10
supposedly did these, you know, hundred million dollar
32:14
deals and they're driving around an old Volvo
32:16
and they got no money.
32:18
How does that happen?
32:21
Well, I mean, you're still driving a Lexus
32:23
from 19.
32:24
So I have a 20 year old car
32:26
that I drive because I I just that's
32:29
all I can afford.
32:30
Exactly.
32:33
Exactly.
32:34
Yeah.
32:34
So people should donate to the show.
32:36
Let me get a new car.
32:38
Now, I like my car.
32:39
You love your car with the dashboard.
32:41
Don't crack, baby.
32:42
You love that car.
32:44
In fact, I have the older version of
32:46
the car that did.
32:50
It's almost I don't know.
32:51
It's from 93.
32:53
So it is.
32:54
Although it's kind of not being used.
32:57
But there's not one bulb in the entire
33:00
car.
33:00
And all those years have burned out.
33:02
No headlight.
33:03
No tail light.
33:04
I know.
33:04
No interior lamp.
33:06
I know.
33:07
It's amazing.
33:07
This tells you something.
33:09
Tells you that everything's a scam.
33:10
But in 20 years, you probably had 50
33:13
computers.
33:14
And let me tell you another thing since
33:16
I'm on.
33:17
I have when the LED lights first came
33:20
out, there was some company producing it.
33:22
And you heard, well, they're going to last
33:24
forever.
33:26
Bullcrap.
33:26
At least 20 years.
33:28
Yeah.
33:28
Bullcrap.
33:29
You say 20 years ago, I bought a
33:32
light bulb for the porch, the front porch.
33:35
And it does get turned on and off.
33:37
That light bulb, which was an American made
33:39
LED light bulb.
33:40
They cost me like 25 bucks for this.
33:43
They're very expensive.
33:45
That light bulb is still working.
33:47
Every single Chinese LED lamp I've bought has
33:51
burned out, blowed up, or started to flash
33:54
or flicker.
33:55
This is bullcrap.
33:56
These LED lights should last forever.
34:00
Yeah.
34:00
Well, we had when we bought this house,
34:02
there was a pool light LED.
34:05
And it went out.
34:05
And it's been impossible to replace.
34:08
Do I just have a dark hole at
34:11
night?
34:11
Dark hole.
34:13
You can't replace it.
34:15
It's horrible.
34:16
The point is that there's a scam going
34:19
on.
34:20
Well, it's called planned obsolescence.
34:22
Those things are timed to go out, so
34:24
you buy more stuff from China.
34:26
Of course.
34:27
The same thing with your light bulbs, actually.
34:30
OSRAM and Philips and who's the American GE?
34:34
Well, actually, that brings me to another complaint,
34:37
if you don't mind me moaning and groaning
34:39
on the show.
34:39
I am here for you.
34:40
So there used to be a bulb that
34:42
Philips came out with.
34:43
And then there was also these little devices
34:45
you could buy.
34:45
This was 30 years ago.
34:49
The bulb had a computer in it, a
34:52
little chip, that if it was left on
34:54
for more than 10 minutes, it would just
34:55
automatically turn itself off.
34:57
And it also had a way of turning
34:59
itself on that was gentle to the filament.
35:01
I still have one of those.
35:04
They were called turtle bulbs or something.
35:06
They had some name and they had a
35:07
funny shape.
35:08
And nobody even knows about them anymore.
35:11
But I had one of those bulbs.
35:13
I have it in a downstairs closet.
35:17
It's been there for 20 years and it
35:20
still works.
35:22
They had to take those off the market
35:24
because you buy one, it lasts forever.
35:26
They can't.
35:27
No, no, no.
35:27
We can't have a business like that.
35:30
Yes.
35:30
Well, you know, the light bulb conspiracy is
35:32
real.
35:34
That was a real consortium where they all
35:36
determined how many hours a light bulb should
35:39
last.
35:39
And they were all in collusion with each
35:41
other.
35:41
Yeah, they got the exact right type of
35:43
tungsten filament that had just the right number
35:45
of flaws.
35:47
So it turned on and off and on
35:48
and off.
35:48
I'm looking up the turtle bulb, you said.
35:51
I think it was.
35:52
I don't remember the actual name.
35:53
It just comes to mind.
35:55
Because every search engine, every AI is talking
36:00
about a special bulb for turtles.
36:04
No, the AI won't find it either.
36:07
Turtle safe bulbs for wildlife.
36:11
Yeah, AI is useless in some of these.
36:14
Pretty much.
36:15
I had, for example, Brunetti and I have
36:17
gotten into a discussion about this because he's
36:20
a big AI nut.
36:21
And he's, you know, he's wired, this guy.
36:25
He's got everything's hooked to his phone.
36:27
He's got robots all over the place.
36:29
It's unbelievable.
36:30
Oh, goodness.
36:30
He's a prime, prime optimist buyer.
36:33
Yeah.
36:34
I told him, hey, yeah, find a recipe.
36:38
The AI is so good, it can't cook
36:39
basmati.
36:40
It can't find a recipe.
36:41
Basmati rice.
36:43
And he went and when he found truth,
36:45
he went to Jack Grock.
36:46
He wasn't made of, he's obsessive.
36:49
So he did this.
36:50
And so he came up with all these,
36:52
all wrong.
36:53
Yes, of course.
36:55
It's not in the corpus.
36:57
John C.
36:57
Dvorak is corpus free.
37:01
If you want, if you want John C.
37:02
Dvorak, you got to come here for the
37:04
real deal.
37:04
You can't get it in the corpus.
37:07
That's why we love you.
37:09
We love you.
37:10
All right.
37:12
So, yes.
37:13
Where do you want to go now?
37:14
Well, we could go to the Fuentes material
37:17
if you want.
37:18
It's very entertaining, but it's something we use.
37:20
We've tried to broach on this show a
37:22
number of times, which is the Zeds, the
37:25
young people in porn and their inability to
37:29
have normal relationships with each other.
37:34
So I have a bunch of clips because
37:35
Fuentes discussed this with Tucker, and I thought
37:39
it was quite revealing.
37:40
It also reveals some stuff about Tucker.
37:42
Tucker had, I noticed this.
37:44
I don't watch him that much, but I
37:46
mean, I like, we both, I think, agree
37:48
that he's a great guy in terms of
37:51
a professional interviewer, and he's really talented.
37:55
And he's just slick in his own way.
38:00
And he, but he has a bunch of,
38:03
I think, I think he has these little
38:05
subtle grudges against people and things, and he
38:07
just brings things in that he shouldn't, just
38:12
to give people the needle.
38:15
He might be a mean guy.
38:19
Oh, interesting.
38:20
I just think he just might be, but
38:22
first let's start off.
38:24
This is not part of the porn thing.
38:25
This is something I caught earlier in his
38:27
interview that I thought was interesting because it
38:30
was, it was, this is the Fuentes Charlie
38:33
Kirk info.
38:34
This is the one where they bring in
38:37
Charlie Kirk, and I never knew this little
38:42
factoid.
38:43
Tucker didn't either.
38:45
And I don't know if you did.
38:46
Patient, decent man.
38:48
Yes.
38:49
And yeah.
38:50
So whatever their perception of him was to
38:53
see him get his, his face blown up
38:56
in front of everybody like that.
38:58
And your first, the first reaction of someone
39:00
in the crowd who is present, some guy
39:03
with the beard jumps up and celebrates.
39:06
Did you see this?
39:08
No.
39:08
Some liberal kid in the audience jumps up
39:11
and says, all right.
39:12
I literally can't handle it.
39:13
I'm so upset by it.
39:14
I haven't looked at anything.
39:15
It's disgusting.
39:16
And you see, I saw that and said,
39:18
yeah, like there's no putting the genie back
39:21
in the lamp here.
39:24
Okay.
39:24
So I saw the clip of the shooting
39:27
because some people insisted to look at it.
39:30
I never saw this part of it.
39:32
They cut it.
39:32
It was cut.
39:33
I didn't know this.
39:35
Did you see the clip and it had
39:37
to see some maniac jump up and cheer?
39:39
No, I have not seen that.
39:41
I'm sure Candace Owens has it.
39:47
Yeah.
39:48
Well, that's probably true.
39:49
I just, it was just a no effect
39:51
to me.
39:51
But I mean, there's so much is like,
39:53
and this guy was calm and this guy
39:55
was filming.
39:56
I'm not talking about all the conspiracy stuff.
39:59
I just thought that was like some guy
40:01
jumping up and celebrating isn't conspiratorial.
40:04
Well, I'm just saying there's a guy jumps
40:06
up and I just didn't know that happened.
40:09
It's just sick.
40:10
Yeah.
40:10
Well someone's put the link in the, in
40:12
the troll room.
40:13
I want to see it.
40:14
I don't want to see it.
40:16
It's not for you.
40:17
It's for me.
40:19
So if they have it, I mean, I,
40:21
it may be obscure.
40:23
So they go on a tangent.
40:25
There's a second tangent I didn't record or
40:27
put in here, which I might do where
40:29
we talk about marriage and the failure of
40:32
the social society to put men and women
40:34
together.
40:35
And Fuentes has a great rant about liberal
40:38
women, why nobody wants them.
40:40
And they're all fat.
40:42
It's quite, quite amusing.
40:43
It's quite funny.
40:45
They're all fat.
40:46
They're all fat.
40:48
And so here he is on point.
40:51
Now this, now they started talking about porn
40:52
and I thought this would be worth exploring.
40:55
What is porn exactly?
40:57
Like describe, I remember listening to this going,
41:00
what, what is your question here?
41:06
What is porn?
41:07
What is porn exactly?
41:08
Like describe how available is porn?
41:12
What is it?
41:12
Oh, please.
41:14
But like, oh, please.
41:16
So Tucker's now telling us that he, how
41:18
do I get it?
41:19
How do I, this is the kind of
41:22
question.
41:22
This is what I, I don't like doing
41:24
this by the way.
41:26
People do interviews like this.
41:28
And I know guys who do interviews like
41:30
this, where you play the dummy when you
41:32
know, well, that's all of Tucker's questions are
41:36
asked this way with the answer.
41:38
Clearly in it.
41:39
And then when he gets the answer he
41:41
wants, he goes, oh, wow.
41:43
Wow.
41:43
Wow.
41:44
I didn't know this.
41:47
Yeah.
41:47
This bothers me.
41:48
Yeah.
41:49
You said it's a huge factor in the
41:50
lives of young men and a bad factor.
41:52
Why?
41:53
Well, this is another thing where it's, it's
41:57
reality distortion.
41:59
That's kind of the theme, just like psychedelics
42:01
distort reality, just like a kind of internet
42:04
society is a form of delusion.
42:07
So is porn in the sense that, you
42:10
know, a lot of people maybe don't realize,
42:12
and we, we talked about this a little
42:13
bit.
42:14
People are getting turned on to porn when
42:16
they're like 10 years old.
42:17
When you are going through puberty, when you're
42:19
developing your sexual faculties, how could you stay
42:24
away from that?
42:25
Every kid has a phone.
42:26
Every kid has an iPad and every iPad
42:29
and phone is, if you, you know, if
42:32
you know what it is loaded up with
42:33
porn and it's infinite and it's ubiquitous.
42:36
And it's, you can get every kind of
42:39
it you want whenever you want.
42:40
It's in your pocket.
42:41
And so something that is almost never talked
42:43
about is that this is a generation that's
42:45
totally sexually dysfunctional.
42:48
I think because of pornography and some people
42:51
are able to cope with it.
42:53
Some people don't have a problem, but I
42:55
think a lot of people and maybe even
42:57
a small minority have a serious problem with
43:00
that.
43:00
And the problem people sexually dysfunctional.
43:02
I think that it's impossible for a real
43:06
woman to compete with the availability and the
43:11
novelty of pornography.
43:12
A real woman, uh, you know, like without
43:15
getting graphic is she's only one person.
43:19
And, you know, she's, maybe she wants to
43:23
do something sexual.
43:24
Maybe she doesn't.
43:25
Porn is you could have a hundred different
43:28
women in one sitting.
43:30
Okay.
43:30
I, I agree with Flint as here.
43:33
Yes, I do.
43:34
I agree with him generally in the whole
43:35
thing.
43:36
And it's something that, that needs discussion.
43:39
And, uh, even, uh, Tucker felt that he
43:42
should have done a show on this.
43:44
If I can just interject, and we had
43:46
a men's breakfast at church.
43:49
Yes.
43:49
Uh, yeah, yesterday.
43:52
And, and I've been to a lot of
43:53
these and it's, you know, men get together.
43:55
We talk, we talk about stuff.
43:57
The probably the number one addiction men talk
44:01
about that they've, that they've kicked or trying
44:04
to kick is pornography.
44:05
And these are grown men, uh, of all
44:09
different ages, but it's the number one thing.
44:11
That's always like, I had a real porn
44:13
addiction.
44:14
It's, it's, it's rampant.
44:16
I doesn't surprise me.
44:18
And I, people keep talking about when, when
44:21
did this begin?
44:22
Cause it used to be illegal.
44:24
And, uh, I'm going to tell you when
44:28
it began.
44:29
Clinton.
44:30
Yes.
44:31
With the, with the Lewinsky and he made
44:34
it.
44:34
Okay.
44:34
No, no, no.
44:35
And that Lewinsky, he was, that was just
44:36
going on Clinton, Clinton during his.
44:40
And I, the reason I remember this is
44:42
because this is the era when Clinton was
44:43
in office was the, was the roaring nineties.
44:46
This was the best time you'd have in
44:48
your life.
44:48
It was fantastic.
44:50
Uh, Connie was cooking, money was flying all
44:53
over the place.
44:54
We had limos, we had money in brown
44:57
paper bags.
44:58
It was great.
44:59
Hey, you want to go for a ride
45:00
in my jet?
45:01
Kind of thing.
45:02
Exactly.
45:02
Good times.
45:03
So, so this was the period that I
45:06
had, uh, just in the late eighties, I
45:08
had finished this telecom book, uh, instant bestseller.
45:13
That's right.
45:15
And it sold a quarter of a million
45:16
books.
45:16
It was pretty successful.
45:19
And I remember that era of the BBS
45:23
is, and there was a guy who was
45:26
very famous, in the mid, it was probably
45:30
maybe early to mid eighties.
45:32
This is probably around 84, maybe, uh, with
45:36
some of the early, uh, uh, software that
45:39
you could get that was running on DOS.
45:41
You could download stuff and you could go
45:43
through this.
45:44
BBS is us from people at all these
45:46
lines.
45:46
And there is this very famous guy who
45:48
had poor at a porn site.
45:51
There were these porn sites.
45:53
And they were all, um, a mixture of
45:57
mediocre and sometimes interesting porn.
45:59
If you wanted to look at him, but
46:00
I knew this one guy in particular who
46:02
I was, he was one of the customer
46:05
of mine.
46:06
And just in the end of the, of
46:10
the Bush administration, I think it's the Bush
46:11
administration.
46:12
Uh, yeah.
46:14
Uh, he got the HW Bush mystery.
46:17
He got arrested, thrown in jail, the slammer
46:19
for porn because he had online porn.
46:21
And he was arrested and jailed.
46:24
And I remember this Clinton came into office.
46:28
And this is why I remember that it
46:29
was Clinton.
46:30
Clinton relaxed all the restrictions on point.
46:33
He relaxed all these rules and laws.
46:35
And next thing you know, these porn sites
46:37
are cropping up all over the place.
46:38
And it evolved into what it is today,
46:41
which is a ludicrous situation of wall to
46:45
wall porn.
46:46
Everywhere you go, you can go on any
46:48
search engine and find anything you want.
46:51
You can find that on X.
46:53
I haven't seen it on X, but it
46:55
wouldn't surprise me.
46:56
Well, it doesn't show up in the search,
46:58
but there's tons of direct links on like,
47:01
I'm not surprised by any of it.
47:04
I'm what I'm surprised with is there's not
47:06
as many streetwalkers as you'd expect, but this
47:11
is ridiculous.
47:11
And it's all stems from Clinton and people
47:15
never want to trace it to him or,
47:17
or blame him, but he's the, he's the
47:19
responsible party.
47:20
So there were two comments.
47:22
One, uh, early on the internet, we had
47:25
a use net.
47:26
I just need to bring it up from
47:27
time to time.
47:28
And you had alt dot binaries dot fill
47:32
in the blank dot fill in the blank.
47:34
You could get anything.
47:35
Of course it would download 20 parts and
47:37
yeah, and it took all night and then
47:39
it would have to, you have to have
47:41
a program to assemble all those bits.
47:44
And then later we had websites and it
47:46
would take one hour to download a one
47:49
megabyte picture and you could just see it.
47:51
Click line by line.
47:53
Click, click, click, click.
47:56
Now as a part of that, well, you
47:58
were on an awfully slow connection.
48:01
No, I had a website.
48:02
The websites came in at 93.
48:04
Well, hold on, hold on, but I'm no
48:07
baby.
48:08
I'm talking like, uh, 89.
48:11
I had a 56 K frame.
48:13
There was no websites in 89.
48:18
I'm trying to think now.
48:20
Maybe it was nine.
48:21
Websites were invented in 92, 92.
48:23
Okay.
48:24
And then they, then they became Dan.
48:26
The mosaic browser came in 93 and that's
48:30
when they became popular.
48:31
I had a 56 K frame relay at
48:34
the house.
48:35
That should kick ass.
48:36
They did not kick ass.
48:38
I'm telling you, it took a long time.
48:40
in divided 89.
48:42
Anyway, anyway, the other thing is that once
48:45
we got, so the deregulation that was interesting,
48:48
which I think was mainly during Clinton, I
48:51
think you have to correct me on this.
48:53
One is there was no tax on internet
48:55
sales.
48:56
That was to, to juice the machine, which
48:58
I think was a really good idea during
49:00
the nineties.
49:00
It's all Clinton.
49:01
It was a good idea because that really
49:03
spurred, you know, spawned the, uh, the use
49:05
of e-commerce.
49:06
Cause at that time, people like who would
49:08
ever put their credit card on the internet.
49:11
Okay.
49:12
So we knew that was going to change.
49:14
And then pretty soon, pretty soon.
49:17
So my, I have to go back to
49:18
another story.
49:19
Cause I, I wrote a column about the
49:20
ludicrousness of this idea.
49:22
Jen Zedders, Jen Zedders, you're here for this.
49:24
Okay.
49:25
This is the kind of history you didn't
49:27
get this in school.
49:28
Okay.
49:29
So in the early nineties, uh, actually probably
49:32
again, around 93, uh, when the, when the
49:36
web was just evolving, there was, uh, this,
49:40
this kind of a meme.
49:42
It was the way you know, you do
49:44
not put your card on.
49:45
You'd never put your card on the internet.
49:48
You call, you use the 800 number.
49:51
So there's all these 800 numbers.
49:52
You'd call the number.
49:53
Yeah.
49:53
And so I found out from somebody that
49:55
worked at 800 number bank, that you call
49:58
and you give your credit card number.
50:00
They'd bring up a website and they'd put
50:03
your card number into the website.
50:06
Anyway, hold on one second.
50:09
Boomer talk on the AIDS.
50:13
Just so you know, this boomer talk on
50:15
the AIDS, everybody.
50:16
Yes.
50:17
We have lots of these stories.
50:19
Yes.
50:19
So, and the other thing, but this came
50:22
later was, and that was the, uh, that
50:26
was the section three 20.
50:29
Is it three 20?
50:31
I don't know.
50:32
Two 30.
50:33
I'm sorry.
50:33
Section two 30.
50:34
And that was to protect all of the
50:37
providers of internet services.
50:39
And that way we got UGC.
50:42
Yeah.
50:42
The rationale for that was, Hey, it's like
50:45
a bulletin board in the store.
50:47
Yes.
50:48
Yes.
50:48
UGC.
50:49
It's a bulletin board in the store.
50:50
So if you pin something up on the
50:52
bulletin board, the store, the store is not
50:54
responsible for something you pin there.
50:57
And so there was a lot of user
50:58
generated porn, UGP actually a lot.
51:02
And that's what you porn, uh, is it?
51:04
No porn tube, whatever.
51:06
That's, that's kind of how they played that.
51:09
And then later, you know, we got exceptions
51:11
in section two 30, all kinds of things
51:13
are happening all under the guise of, porn,
51:15
but you're right.
51:16
Porn is everywhere.
51:18
It's rampant and it's on all the websites.
51:22
I mean, it's on all it's it's on
51:25
Facebook.
51:25
It's on Instagram.
51:27
All thank you.
51:28
All platforms.
51:29
It is every, you can't find it in
51:30
the search, but it's, yeah, you can.
51:34
No, no, it's yeah.
51:37
No, it's not.
51:37
the search specifically, they de-list all that
51:40
stuff.
51:41
And you know, when they find it, there's
51:42
a lot of, there's more than you can
51:44
imagine on searches.
51:45
If you, well, I'm not going to, I
51:48
don't know what for anybody.
51:49
I'm watching C-SPAN.
51:50
All right.
51:51
I don't know what you're doing with your
51:52
time, but I come here to the show
51:53
prepared.
51:54
I'm doing experiments.
51:58
So here we go with Fuentes.
52:00
Did I think that was clip one?
52:01
Yes.
52:02
We're finally clip two.
52:05
Here we go.
52:06
Dad, whatever, whatever niche or idiosyncratic thing a
52:10
person might be into, it's there.
52:12
And so I think that novelty combined with
52:14
that availability, it makes it so that, you
52:17
know, when you think about courting a woman,
52:19
juice isn't worth the squeeze.
52:22
Yeah.
52:22
Well, then this is eventually good.
52:24
The punchline to this, I'm sure, is going
52:25
to be sock hops.
52:26
I mean, that has to be the punchline.
52:28
Well, I mean, I guess would be always
52:29
what I'm going to bring up, but this
52:31
juice isn't worth the squeeze, he says.
52:33
Now, this is a bad attitude by the
52:36
Zeds.
52:36
Women aren't around.
52:40
They're not floating around the world.
52:42
I wish we had more women listeners, but
52:44
they're not floating around as sex toys.
52:47
I mean, yeah, maybe there's one or two
52:49
that like to think of themselves that way,
52:51
but there's more to it than that.
52:53
Yes.
52:54
I mean, they're useful people.
52:58
And they come in handy with a minute
53:01
with the dumb guys.
53:02
They're good as partners in life.
53:04
It's amazing how that works.
53:07
They're a perfect, they're a perfect compliment.
53:11
It's like someone planned it.
53:13
It's amazing.
53:15
Yeah, it's unbelievable.
53:16
But he sees it that way.
53:19
He's very, which bothers me a little bit
53:21
because he's, he's Zed dissociated.
53:24
I don't have it in these clips, but
53:26
he talks about women in a way where
53:30
they're, he doesn't really, it's brought up when
53:34
he, when he, when Tucker asked him if
53:36
he's ever lived with a woman, he says
53:37
no.
53:38
And that is, and at the end, I
53:43
don't want to give the whole thing away,
53:45
but the way I see it is that
53:47
he is one of those guys.
53:49
And it's always your mind.
53:50
And I always tell, you know, I've told
53:52
me, me, I tell everyone, I know the
53:53
story.
53:56
I was at, when I was at, uh,
53:58
it was after I graduated from Cal, but
54:00
I was still going to the football games
54:01
and I'd go into the, I'd get, I
54:04
had a way of getting, I was, I
54:05
was like to be in the card section,
54:07
by the way, for people who know what
54:08
I'm talking about, the card section.
54:10
Oh yeah.
54:10
You always want to be in the car.
54:11
Can you just tell me briefly what the
54:13
card section is for those who don't know?
54:15
It's a section in the, right in the
54:17
middle of the field, uh, between the 40
54:19
yard lines on both sides.
54:21
And you have, you, you sit there as
54:23
a student or if you can get in
54:25
there as not a student and you have
54:27
a deck of cards, these, these large cards,
54:30
there are like 15 by 15.
54:32
I don't know what the size is anymore.
54:33
And it was, there's a, there's a, and
54:36
there's an instruction sheet and there's somebody down
54:39
at the bottom telling you which cards to
54:41
hold up.
54:42
And you hold up the card a and
54:44
you hold it up and the guy next
54:46
to you has this, you know, they all
54:47
have different cards and it forms the letter
54:49
C or, Oh, okay.
54:51
So fuck you on, on the, to the
54:56
other team that Stanford games would always have
54:58
some obscenity.
55:00
Yes.
55:00
And so, uh, and the card section is
55:03
always fun cause you get something to do
55:04
during the halftime.
55:06
But I was, I'm walking up to go
55:08
get something to drink up the aisle and
55:10
there's this guy and he's sitting there and
55:13
he's kind of an old man.
55:14
He's in a trench coat.
55:15
He's hunched over.
55:16
He's got a little TV set in his,
55:19
in his hands.
55:19
He's got some earphones on.
55:21
He's disheveled.
55:22
He looks and I look at him.
55:24
I, and I, it dawned on me that
55:26
this was an old fart that never had
55:29
a woman in his life.
55:31
There's no way you can get to that
55:33
point with any female in the vicinity.
55:38
This is rather interesting because when I was
55:40
listening to this interview, I, the incel came
55:44
to mind with, with Fuentes.
55:48
I, I see a little bit of that.
55:51
There's no doubt about it, but he's, he,
55:53
he's going to be this guy.
55:55
Yeah.
55:55
One day you'll be that guy.
55:57
He's going to be this guy.
55:58
And that guy, it was, as soon as
56:00
I saw him and it dawned on me
56:01
what this guy was, it scared the crap
56:04
out of me.
56:05
I said, this could happen to anybody.
56:08
Be careful, kids.
56:10
Go find Jen's head.
56:12
Yes, this is very important.
56:14
And it brings to mind, and I don't
56:16
want to belabor this, but it brings the
56:17
more boomer talk, but it brings to mind
56:19
the old saying that behind every successful man,
56:22
there's a woman telling him he's wrong.
56:25
And that old joke, I always thought was
56:27
kind of a joke, but then over time
56:29
it's dawned on me.
56:30
It's absolutely true.
56:32
Even if you're successful, there's a woman telling
56:34
you you're wrong.
56:35
She might not be right.
56:37
You know, bingo, you nailed it.
56:41
You nailed it.
56:42
Absolutely.
56:43
I have one of those.
56:44
I love her for that.
56:46
That's one of the many reasons if anyone
56:49
can give me crap, it's Tina Curry.
56:53
And women are notorious for the following comment.
56:56
You're not going to wear that.
56:58
Are you?
56:59
Oh, that's a daily occurrence.
57:01
Not another hoodie.
57:05
Yeah.
57:06
So that's more important than juice and squeeze.
57:10
I mean, come on.
57:11
All right.
57:13
Clip three.
57:14
Yeah.
57:15
And so there's also a problem of erectile
57:17
dysfunction.
57:18
People that can't enjoy regular sex because it
57:21
does not compare to the intensity, the novelty,
57:24
and the availability of porn.
57:26
It's hyper stimulation.
57:29
And so I think that's sabotaging a lot
57:31
of normal sexual relationships.
57:33
It seems like it's making a lot of
57:34
people gay too.
57:35
Yeah.
57:36
And trans.
57:37
You think that's true?
57:37
Yeah.
57:38
And trans.
57:38
A hundred percent.
57:39
What is that?
57:40
I think that the novelty is a huge
57:43
part of that.
57:44
I think that if you are somebody that
57:46
uses pornography multiple times per day, which many
57:49
people do.
57:49
Actually?
57:50
Oh, absolutely.
57:51
That's a lot of jerking off.
57:52
It's a huge problem.
57:54
Yeah.
57:55
And, you know, if you're doing that multiple
57:57
times a day, every day for years, since
57:59
you're a kid, well, eventually you get bored
58:03
and you want to move on to something
58:05
more extreme.
58:06
And it operates, I think, similar to like
58:10
a drug.
58:10
You kind of have the same kind of
58:12
resistance to it that you would to a
58:14
drug or a tolerance for it.
58:16
And you're always chasing that initial feeling the
58:19
first time you used it or the first
58:21
time you saw a certain thing.
58:22
And I think eventually you just chase more
58:24
taboo, more transgressive.
58:26
And I think maybe some people are more
58:28
prone to that than other people going in
58:31
a really extreme direction.
58:32
This is how Charlie Sheen got AIDS, actually.
58:34
Yeah.
58:34
Yeah.
58:35
Through just being jaded and looking for something
58:37
more transgressive.
58:38
That's just a fact.
58:39
I took this as a confession from Nick
58:42
Fuentes.
58:43
I really did.
58:45
And maybe he's moved beyond it, but that's
58:48
pretty detailed.
58:49
And man, I think it's spot on because
58:52
I've seen this over and over again with
58:54
young men who have never been with a
58:56
woman.
58:58
And before you know it, they got black
59:01
lipstick and black nail polish.
59:03
Yes.
59:04
Yes.
59:06
Yes.
59:07
That clip also ended with the thing, which
59:10
is another thing I dislike about Tucker's style,
59:13
where he brings in the Charlie Sheen having
59:17
AIDS.
59:17
But that was unnecessary because that that really
59:20
was totally unnecessary.
59:21
There's no reason to drop that little tidbit
59:24
in there because not everybody knows that.
59:26
And why should they know?
59:26
It's none of anybody's business.
59:28
Well, Charlie Sheen, he just did a whole
59:31
Netflix, like four part documentary about himself.
59:35
So that's why it was.
59:36
Yeah, but it's still again, it's just like,
59:38
why do you bring that in?
59:39
It had nothing to do with the conversation.
59:42
OK.
59:43
And it was bothersome to me.
59:46
All right.
59:47
Onward with I think we're on four.
59:49
And there's something, too, about what it does
59:52
when you look at it, when you because
59:54
people don't realize that it is a fundamentally
59:56
different experience being involved in intercourse versus watching
1:00:02
other people have intercourse.
1:00:04
And I think that actually does something to
1:00:06
you.
1:00:06
Tell me, what do you mean?
1:00:08
I think that, you know.
1:00:11
Hold on.
1:00:12
You know what that reminded me of?
1:00:13
Hold on.
1:00:15
I know exactly what you're going to play.
1:00:17
You know what I'm going to.
1:00:18
Yes, it's.
1:00:22
Here it is.
1:00:23
Let's see if I can play it back
1:00:24
to back.
1:00:25
Here we go.
1:00:26
People have intercourse, and I think that actually
1:00:29
does something to you.
1:00:30
Tell me, what do you mean?
1:00:31
Tell me about this sexuality.
1:00:33
It's in your DNA.
1:00:35
Yeah, you knew it, right?
1:00:36
It was coming.
1:00:37
You knew that was coming.
1:00:38
Oh, yeah.
1:00:39
No, no.
1:00:41
Watching other people have intercourse.
1:00:44
And I think that actually does something to
1:00:46
you.
1:00:46
Tell me, what do you mean?
1:00:47
I think that, you know, for example, I
1:00:50
think Steve Saylor has written about this, that
1:00:52
there's multiple kinds of transsexuals.
1:00:55
And he says that one kind of transsexual
1:00:56
is somebody that likes the idea of seeing
1:00:59
themselves as a woman.
1:01:00
It's autogynephilia.
1:01:01
Yes.
1:01:01
And I think that, you know, one of
1:01:03
the theories for that is you watch a
1:01:05
man having sex with a woman that isn't
1:01:07
you so much, you kind of achieve an
1:01:10
identity with the woman in like a weird,
1:01:12
sick way.
1:01:13
You almost identify with the woman.
1:01:15
Yeah.
1:01:15
And this is he's right about this.
1:01:17
And this is where the hypnosis porn comes
1:01:20
from and all this grooming of young men.
1:01:24
He's spot on about it.
1:01:25
And so there's weird things that happen when
1:01:27
you're watching that and having such strong emotional
1:01:32
and sexual experiences with it.
1:01:35
That's fascinating.
1:01:36
I have always been, I've sensed for a
1:01:38
long time, having had a lot of young
1:01:39
male employees mentioned porn as a problem.
1:01:42
I mean, the big porn companies give visibility
1:01:46
to foreign intel services on the back end.
1:01:49
So that means people know what you're looking
1:01:52
at.
1:01:52
There's likely video and audio of you watching.
1:01:55
So that, you know, that's like, so, so
1:01:58
such a deal killer for me.
1:02:00
What?
1:02:01
That's a deal killer for me.
1:02:03
Wait, wait, well, a couple of things here.
1:02:06
One, how does he know this?
1:02:09
Well, this is well known.
1:02:10
This was one big company.
1:02:12
He's like right on it.
1:02:14
Yeah.
1:02:14
And that's the deal killer because he thinks
1:02:17
they're watching him watch porn.
1:02:19
That's a deal killer.
1:02:20
I'm telling it's a deal.
1:02:21
And so the deal killer is that they're
1:02:24
going to know he's watching porn.
1:02:27
Well, because you're going to have the video
1:02:29
blackmail, blackmail.
1:02:31
Yes.
1:02:31
Yes.
1:02:32
And it's probably, he got a camera pointed
1:02:34
at his dick.
1:02:35
Probably Israel, baby.
1:02:37
I'm so not to belabor, not to belabor
1:02:43
the point, but when I see young men
1:02:46
and, and, and young women, but I don't
1:02:48
talk like teens and, and they don't have
1:02:51
their parents here.
1:02:52
It's around here.
1:02:52
This, this is lovely.
1:02:54
They don't have phones.
1:02:56
So there's just no access to it.
1:02:58
And it's like, it's so beautiful to see
1:03:00
you got these young men.
1:03:01
They're playing guitar in the, in the worship
1:03:04
team, which is Christian for band.
1:03:07
And, you know, and, and the girls like
1:03:08
swooning and then they have, they do have
1:03:10
dances and they have interactions together.
1:03:14
And that's why you see Jen's editors who
1:03:16
are in their mid twenties.
1:03:18
They got their, they got their crap together
1:03:20
and they have a girlfriend, boyfriend married to
1:03:24
think that they're getting their family underway, saving,
1:03:28
saving our country as far as I'm concerned.
1:03:31
And it starts with the stupid phone, John.
1:03:33
It really does put it in the drawer.
1:03:35
People follow uncle John's advice, but yes, it's
1:03:39
not as easy as it looks.
1:03:40
No, I mean, cause I talked to people
1:03:43
and they all talk a big game about
1:03:45
putting in the drawer and they never do
1:03:46
it.
1:03:47
Even though I wasn't a big, heavy phone
1:03:50
user, when I did it, I noticed it
1:03:52
took about two months for me to get
1:03:55
over it, not having the phone with me
1:03:56
all the time.
1:03:57
So I go, well, what if I get
1:03:58
into, what if I get a flat tire
1:03:59
or, you know, sort of, how many flat
1:04:02
tires have you had since you put the
1:04:03
phone in the drawer?
1:04:04
How many flat tires I've had since I've
1:04:07
owned a Lexus?
1:04:09
None.
1:04:10
Yeah, of course.
1:04:10
In 30 years, I knew when I was
1:04:12
a kid, we used to have flat tires
1:04:14
all the time.
1:04:15
Yes.
1:04:15
It was a known problem.
1:04:17
They don't even give you a tire.
1:04:19
No.
1:04:21
Anymore.
1:04:21
If you got a donut, you're almost, you
1:04:23
know, no.
1:04:25
And with the current Lexus, they give you
1:04:28
run flats and they run for 50 miles
1:04:31
flat.
1:04:32
Only at 50 miles an hour though.
1:04:33
You can't go over 50 or they start
1:04:35
to smoke.
1:04:37
Why?
1:04:37
They haven't had to get problems.
1:04:39
So I'm not worried about it.
1:04:40
We gotta be careful.
1:04:41
So we're on what?
1:04:42
We're on five.
1:04:43
Five.
1:04:43
Here we go.
1:04:44
I'm not a huge expert on the topic,
1:04:46
but I have always sensed this was a
1:04:47
huge deal, but I've always been too embarrassed
1:04:49
to do a show on it.
1:04:50
But it sounds like you're describing something that's
1:04:53
everywhere that affects everybody.
1:04:56
And that is, do you think it's related
1:04:57
to the, you know, the huge decline in
1:04:59
like actual sex and relationships and marriage, screwed
1:05:03
up dating?
1:05:05
He knows the answer to this question.
1:05:07
This is what I don't like.
1:05:08
He knows the answer.
1:05:09
Oh, Nick Fuentes, you're an expert on porn.
1:05:12
I really don't like that style of interview.
1:05:18
No.
1:05:18
Arrives in part from porn, do you think?
1:05:20
I think it's a huge part of it.
1:05:21
It's a huge factor.
1:05:22
Wait, he's going to go.
1:05:23
Really?
1:05:24
Really?
1:05:24
Oh, really?
1:05:25
That's so interesting.
1:05:26
And it's even on the other side too.
1:05:28
It's become so destigmatized for women to actually
1:05:32
participate in porn.
1:05:33
Only people don't even recognize that OnlyFans is
1:05:36
a whole separate category.
1:05:38
It's a new, it's an innovation in the
1:05:41
realm of pornography because you have what everyone
1:05:45
considers, what everyone knows as porn, which is
1:05:48
like videos of porn stars, like dedicated career,
1:05:51
sex workers having sex in a relatively controlled
1:05:56
environment or something like that.
1:05:57
But then you get OnlyFans, which is like
1:06:00
Patreon for nudes or sex.
1:06:03
And basically there's now a very large subculture,
1:06:07
much larger than people want to admit, of
1:06:09
women who the moment they turn 18, that
1:06:12
is what they do is they make an
1:06:13
OnlyFans account and they become an amateur porn
1:06:16
star.
1:06:16
And it is completely casual, because you could
1:06:20
say that maybe 10 years ago, even at
1:06:22
the heyday of internet porn, to be in
1:06:25
porn, you got to be a porn star.
1:06:27
That's your life and that's your career and
1:06:28
that's who you are.
1:06:29
And it's very shameful.
1:06:31
With OnlyFans, it's like it's like having a
1:06:34
TikTok.
1:06:34
It's like, here's my link tree.
1:06:37
Here's my Instagram account.
1:06:38
Here's my Facebook account.
1:06:39
Here's my YouTube.
1:06:40
And here's my OnlyFans.
1:06:41
Oh, I give you no agenda evidence.
1:06:45
Exhibit A, Bobby Eden from 15 years ago.
1:06:50
She was telling us how men would give
1:06:54
her their password to their bank account.
1:06:57
Take whatever you want.
1:06:59
Would just shower her with gifts continuously.
1:07:04
And she was just a, quote unquote, webcam
1:07:05
girl.
1:07:07
Yeah, I mean, that's pre OnlyFans.
1:07:10
The amount of money that's going.
1:07:12
Well, I know for a fact, because Alex,
1:07:17
Alexis Brunetti's wife, is a OnlyFans girl.
1:07:23
Oh, I thought she was OnlyFans girl.
1:07:25
No, she's a copyright attorney.
1:07:28
And she has a client who's an OnlyFans
1:07:30
girl.
1:07:31
Oh, and make him bank.
1:07:33
10 mil.
1:07:34
Wow.
1:07:36
Exit strategy.
1:07:41
Well, we probably could with the artificial one
1:07:44
if we get Scaramanga to do it.
1:07:46
And there's other examples.
1:07:49
There was some woman on that, what's that
1:07:51
show with the guys there with all with
1:07:53
the surrounded by women?
1:07:54
It's got some girls going wild?
1:07:57
No.
1:07:59
Hello, ladies.
1:08:00
Oh, I know what you're talking.
1:08:02
Yeah, I know.
1:08:02
Yeah, with the podcast and the women are
1:08:05
sitting there and then they said, Oh, yeah,
1:08:07
and I do 100 guys a day and
1:08:09
all this stuff.
1:08:10
All this stuff.
1:08:10
And there was one girl on there that
1:08:12
made $35 million.
1:08:15
I don't know if it's total or what,
1:08:18
but it was dirt.
1:08:18
But that's what she had.
1:08:19
Wow.
1:08:20
35 mil.
1:08:21
And she was going moaning and groaning about
1:08:24
it because she felt, you know, humiliated.
1:08:27
I don't know what her problem was.
1:08:29
It's the oldest business in the book, brother.
1:08:30
But this is but it's just like, it's
1:08:32
not the problem.
1:08:34
Yeah, it might be.
1:08:35
But this is just a video feed.
1:08:38
I mean, come on, people.
1:08:40
Well, jeez.
1:08:41
Okay, again, I'm happy with the Jen setters
1:08:45
who are showing up here and looking for
1:08:49
worldly advice.
1:08:50
And the best part of a piece of
1:08:52
advice we give them today is stay away
1:08:54
from it.
1:08:57
Yeah, well, stay away from a lot.
1:08:58
You can stay away from everything.
1:09:01
Okay, so we're I think we're at the
1:09:03
last.
1:09:04
So now this clip, I find this clip
1:09:05
to be fascinating because I kind of think
1:09:07
this would be pre Clinton thinking.
1:09:11
And I think it's it's, you know, it's
1:09:14
not none of this is going to happen.
1:09:15
There has to be other solutions, but I
1:09:18
think this is a funny solution.
1:09:19
Why would any of this be legal?
1:09:21
I think that well, there's like you indicated,
1:09:24
maybe there's an intelligence benefit to that.
1:09:27
Yeah.
1:09:27
Maybe there's a political benefit to that.
1:09:29
I think that why wouldn't you arrest the
1:09:31
people who run something like that should be
1:09:33
if you had a Christian government or how
1:09:35
much the government cares about its people?
1:09:37
I mean, is Iran a bigger threat or
1:09:39
is only fans of Iran's not turning my
1:09:41
daughter's to prostitution that I'm aware of.
1:09:44
Right.
1:09:44
Right.
1:09:45
I mean, that seems like one of the
1:09:46
worst things that could happen to any society.
1:09:48
Oh, absolutely.
1:09:49
So how big is the support for that?
1:09:51
Like if a candidate were to come out
1:09:52
and say we ought to arrest the guys
1:09:54
who own Mind Geek, which is the biggest
1:09:56
I think is the biggest porn supplier in
1:09:58
the world or the guys who run the
1:09:59
clip fans.
1:10:00
What would.
1:10:01
Yeah.
1:10:01
Mind Geek.
1:10:02
That's those.
1:10:03
I never.
1:10:04
Okay.
1:10:04
So if Tucker's playing dumb this whole time,
1:10:06
I've never heard of Mind Geek.
1:10:08
Oh, we've talked about it on the show.
1:10:10
Well, I even then I've obviously lost track
1:10:13
of it.
1:10:14
I did.
1:10:14
But it wasn't top of mind.
1:10:16
So when he said it, I said, wait
1:10:17
a minute.
1:10:18
Yeah.
1:10:20
No, those would you.
1:10:21
Those guys.
1:10:22
Tucker knows this.
1:10:25
Tucker knows more than he's letting on.
1:10:26
That's for sure.
1:10:27
And he probably shook.
1:10:29
Anyway, let's back it up and go continue.
1:10:31
Yeah.
1:10:32
And you know who runs Mind Geek, don't
1:10:33
you?
1:10:34
No Mossad.
1:10:37
Right.
1:10:38
I mean, that seems like one of the
1:10:39
worst things that could happen to any society.
1:10:41
Oh, absolutely.
1:10:43
So how big is the support for that?
1:10:44
Like if a candidate were to come out
1:10:46
and say we ought to arrest the guys
1:10:47
who own Mind Geek, which is the biggest
1:10:49
I think is the biggest porn supplier in
1:10:51
the world or the guys who run only
1:10:52
fans.
1:10:53
What would the reaction be among people under
1:10:56
50?
1:10:57
I think there would be broad support for
1:10:58
that.
1:10:59
Really?
1:10:59
I do actually.
1:11:00
Yes.
1:11:01
I hope someone will say that.
1:11:02
Someone needs to.
1:11:03
I hope someone arrest them like right away.
1:11:05
Yeah.
1:11:05
That was actually one of their assets and
1:11:07
puts them in prison.
1:11:08
Seizes their bodies and puts them in jail.
1:11:12
Yeah.
1:11:12
I mean, the owners of that people who
1:11:13
are I mean, talk about human trafficking.
1:11:15
Yeah.
1:11:15
Oh, yeah.
1:11:16
I thought we were against human trafficking.
1:11:17
Yeah.
1:11:18
So you but you think that young people
1:11:20
because you always think of young people as
1:11:21
so liberal, but like, no, they wouldn't think
1:11:24
that was crazy.
1:11:25
No, I think especially among young men, they
1:11:27
know it's a problem.
1:11:29
It's ruining their lives and they know it.
1:11:31
So what are the other factors that prevent
1:11:33
I'm sorry, I called you gay, by the
1:11:34
way.
1:11:39
So I think that.
1:11:42
OK, so first of all, Larry Flint fought
1:11:44
his entire life to make porn legal.
1:11:50
And I believe under the First Amendment, he
1:11:53
has a valid point there.
1:11:55
Yeah.
1:11:56
And and so that's what that is, what
1:11:58
everybody is probably just hiding behind.
1:12:01
By the way, MindGeek, I think is a
1:12:04
is owned by Canadians.
1:12:08
Here it is.
1:12:10
Ethical Capital Partners.
1:12:12
That's that's a great name.
1:12:14
That's funny.
1:12:15
The good capital partners to porn.
1:12:18
Yeah.
1:12:18
I'm pretty sure that if you want to
1:12:20
talk about Epstein level blackmail, that there's more
1:12:25
people who have been who are being blackmailed
1:12:28
currently in positions of power over porn that
1:12:31
someone is entrapped them with than any other
1:12:35
Mossad operation.
1:12:36
I really, truly believe that it doesn't sound
1:12:40
like it would be that difficult, especially with
1:12:42
the only fans.
1:12:44
In fact, you'll remember to be called lonely
1:12:45
fans.
1:12:46
But well, you remember you remember a former
1:12:48
employee of mine who was a friend, Brigham,
1:12:51
for a while until I talked on the
1:12:53
show about how he had this fabulous beach
1:12:56
house in Malibu and a brand new Ferrari
1:12:58
and his whole business.
1:13:00
He had, you know, was that like a
1:13:02
real high end porn, like, you know, beautiful
1:13:06
models and great, great cinematography.
1:13:12
And what they would do is they would
1:13:14
wait until someone downloaded it, get their IP
1:13:17
address and then send them a legal notice
1:13:19
saying, OK, we're going to sue you.
1:13:22
But if you give us five thousand dollars,
1:13:24
we won't tell anybody about the lawsuit.
1:13:28
And he did quite well off of that.
1:13:32
So imagine what you what kind of power
1:13:34
you could you could garner for yourself if
1:13:37
you have a similar operation and the exact
1:13:41
same system, actually.
1:13:42
And then you say, well, you know, I'd
1:13:44
like you to vote this way.
1:13:46
And, you know, I'm sure there's some a
1:13:49
lot of people in the government.
1:13:50
All potatoes compared to what the guy only
1:13:54
fans, the guys who own that operation.
1:13:56
Yeah.
1:13:56
Who owns all potatoes?
1:13:58
Who owns that?
1:13:59
I don't know.
1:14:00
Some character.
1:14:01
There were so much more.
1:14:04
They have to be beyond billionaires by now.
1:14:06
Oh, I would hope so.
1:14:09
Let's see.
1:14:10
Let's see.
1:14:15
Anyway, it's taken a long time to get
1:14:17
the answer to that.
1:14:18
Well, this is a we could have always
1:14:21
just asked.
1:14:23
I am.
1:14:23
But I'm asking her in text.
1:14:25
And when you ask her in text, she
1:14:26
goes off and scours the entire Internet.
1:14:29
Ukrainian-American.
1:14:30
Hello.
1:14:31
Ukrainian-American billionaire Leonid Radvinsky acquired a majority
1:14:37
stake in the company from its founders in
1:14:39
2018.
1:14:40
He is the sole shareholder of its parent
1:14:43
company, Phoenix, with an F, Phoenix International Limited,
1:14:47
which is offshore, I'm sure, and has been
1:14:51
described as the site's elusive owner amid reports
1:14:53
of substantial dividends going ongoing sale to sale
1:14:57
discussions and blah, blah, blah.
1:14:59
Oh, originally, the platform was originally founded in
1:15:02
2016 by British entrepreneur Timothy Stokely and his
1:15:06
family.
1:15:07
Hmm.
1:15:08
The Brits again, huh?
1:15:10
Yeah, there you go.
1:15:11
There's your North Sea Nexus cropping up.
1:15:18
Yes.
1:15:19
Interesting.
1:15:21
Huh.
1:15:23
Well, it's a problem that needs to be
1:15:25
addressed.
1:15:26
And I don't think, you know, arresting these
1:15:29
guys are is going to work because it's
1:15:32
already the horses out of the barn.
1:15:36
Now, keep it.
1:15:36
You've got to come up with something.
1:15:37
And the public's not going to stop buying
1:15:40
in this.
1:15:41
No, no.
1:15:41
These girls aren't going to stop doing this.
1:15:43
Well, there is why would there is one
1:15:46
way which gives the government a lot of
1:15:48
power, and that is to go straight to
1:15:51
the money and control the money that is
1:15:54
being used.
1:15:55
And I would say the EU is well
1:15:57
on track because hello, good news.
1:16:00
Hello.
1:16:01
I have good news for you on the
1:16:03
digital euro front.
1:16:05
Today, the governing council has decided to move
1:16:08
ahead on the next and final phase of
1:16:12
the preparatory work for the digital euro.
1:16:15
The other good news is that on October
1:16:17
23rd, the European Council has asked us and
1:16:21
all those involved to accelerate the process so
1:16:25
that we can roll out the digital euro
1:16:27
as early as possible.
1:16:29
OK, so the digital euro is coming.
1:16:31
Wait, don't forget this is good news.
1:16:33
Hello.
1:16:34
Good news.
1:16:35
And I have a second clip to add
1:16:37
to this good news.
1:16:38
So this is a pure central bank digital
1:16:41
currency, a true CBDC.
1:16:44
She is the president of the European Central
1:16:46
Bank.
1:16:47
They are doing a central bank digital currency,
1:16:50
and she had a little forum going on.
1:16:53
And in the forum was Fabio Panetta, who
1:16:56
is the president of the Bank of Italy.
1:17:00
And so this just is under a minute
1:17:02
and you kind of focus because the Italian
1:17:04
speaking English in a European forum.
1:17:07
But listen to what he says about how
1:17:09
great this is going to be and what
1:17:11
it actually will do for the owners of
1:17:15
the money.
1:17:15
European Bank did not agree until now on
1:17:19
ways to provide their services to the entire
1:17:23
euro area.
1:17:24
They don't have what is called in technical
1:17:26
terms a rail.
1:17:27
A rail.
1:17:28
You need a rail.
1:17:29
It's called a payment rail.
1:17:31
The infrastructure to provide, to offer their digital
1:17:35
payment services to all European citizens.
1:17:38
One of the main benefits, advantages for banks,
1:17:42
there are many benefits for consumers.
1:17:44
There are benefits for the stability of the
1:17:45
financial system.
1:17:46
One of the main benefits for the banks
1:17:48
in the euro area is that once the
1:17:51
digital euro infrastructure will be built, they will
1:17:55
be able by using this so-called open
1:17:58
standard infrastructure to use that rail and compete
1:18:02
at European level, thus generating additional business, additional
1:18:06
revenues.
1:18:07
And there will be many implications in terms
1:18:09
of sovereignty for the euro area, in terms
1:18:12
of control of the information that travels with
1:18:15
your payments.
1:18:16
Control of the information that travels with your
1:18:20
payment, i.e. what are you sending money
1:18:25
to OnlyFans for, friend?
1:18:27
What are you sending money to this person
1:18:29
for?
1:18:30
Man, they are going to lock that down.
1:18:33
It's going to be great to watch.
1:18:35
And my daughter has exactly three years to
1:18:38
get out.
1:18:40
They think it'll be 2029.
1:18:42
Oh, yeah.
1:18:42
Oh, they're insane.
1:18:44
That is.
1:18:45
And they're nefarious about it.
1:18:48
Oh, it's going to be great.
1:18:49
Less paperwork.
1:18:53
It's less paperwork.
1:18:55
It's a good one.
1:18:56
Yeah, it's happening.
1:18:59
It's going to be phenomenal to watch.
1:19:02
Phenomenal.
1:19:05
Just I want to talk about Europe.
1:19:08
I have a couple of clips from St.
1:19:11
James.
1:19:12
St. James.
1:19:13
Oh, girl.
1:19:14
Oh, oh, Eva St. James.
1:19:18
Now available on OnlyFans.
1:19:21
Eva St. James.
1:19:23
She'd do well on OnlyFans with that hair.
1:19:25
Holy mackerel.
1:19:26
Eva Flaerdingerbroek, who we have given a new
1:19:28
name, Eva St. James.
1:19:29
Three minutes?
1:19:30
Is that your first clip?
1:19:31
Three minutes?
1:19:32
What's the, how long is the second clip?
1:19:34
125.
1:19:36
Ah, the first clip has got both clips.
1:19:38
Damn it.
1:19:38
Okay.
1:19:39
Well, you tell me when to stop it.
1:19:41
Oh, I can actually probably see it in
1:19:43
the waveform.
1:19:44
I wouldn't even worry about it.
1:19:45
Just stop it when you feel like it.
1:19:47
You can stop it two or three times.
1:19:49
Hey, everyone.
1:19:49
This is about the Dutch elections.
1:19:51
Yeah.
1:19:52
Okay.
1:19:52
Hey, everyone.
1:19:53
As you guys can see, I'm in Washington
1:19:54
right now.
1:19:55
I was here for a panel on the
1:19:57
importance of independent media organized by General Mike
1:20:01
Flynn.
1:20:03
I just got to see.
1:20:06
You stopped it already?
1:20:08
Yeah.
1:20:08
I'm very, I'm very worried about this because
1:20:11
I know that my neighbor was there too.
1:20:14
Oh, who is Laura?
1:20:16
Yes.
1:20:17
Yes.
1:20:18
They're doing forums.
1:20:19
Let's stop for a second and ask the
1:20:21
question.
1:20:22
Cause I felt the same way.
1:20:23
Yeah.
1:20:24
What does Mike Flynn have to do with
1:20:26
independent media?
1:20:27
Mike, I really wish I understood.
1:20:30
I mean, he has this America.
1:20:33
Um, what's the name of it now?
1:20:36
Uh, saving America.
1:20:38
Hold on a second.
1:20:39
Uh, you know, I get the sense that
1:20:41
he's, you know, he was so, he was
1:20:42
like head of the, of the defense intelligence
1:20:45
agency head.
1:20:47
He wasn't like some slouch and America's future.
1:20:50
Here's America's future.
1:20:52
I think he's been brought back in.
1:20:54
So it's yes, for sure.
1:20:58
America's future.
1:20:59
And this is what's interesting.
1:21:00
They claim the nonprofit was founded in 1946,
1:21:05
which is really when he was born.
1:21:07
And, and, and if you look at it
1:21:09
and I've looked at it extensively, like what
1:21:11
exactly are they doing?
1:21:12
And it's really run by his sister, Mary
1:21:14
O'Neill.
1:21:15
She's the executive director and they provide, uh,
1:21:19
you know, information education.
1:21:21
That's the, that seemed now they, they provide
1:21:24
information and education about child trafficking, uh, trafficking
1:21:29
of women.
1:21:30
Okay.
1:21:31
But I've seen, I've seen him speak.
1:21:33
I've, I've been to speeches and like, well,
1:21:34
what are you really doing?
1:21:36
And it just seems to be funding things,
1:21:40
you know, funding, funding funnel.
1:21:44
It's not a lot of money.
1:21:45
It's a couple of million dollars a year,
1:21:47
you know, here and there, you know, but
1:21:49
it's, it's really, you know, he takes some
1:21:55
of it obviously.
1:21:56
I mean, but that's okay.
1:21:57
I mean, that that's, that's how you run
1:21:59
a nonprofit, but it just, I don't understand.
1:22:02
All I know is that a lot of
1:22:03
nonsense that, that circles around the Hill country
1:22:06
eventually comes from him one way or the
1:22:09
other.
1:22:09
So I'm concerned when he's bringing in people
1:22:13
from all over the world, including Eva St.
1:22:16
James, uh, and travel is their biggest expense
1:22:19
on their form nine 90.
1:22:21
It's like, it's like big, it's like, number
1:22:22
one is travel.
1:22:25
And, you know, and, and I'm pretty sure
1:22:27
I'm just going to say, and I, and
1:22:28
I love my neighbor.
1:22:29
I love all my neighbors, even the crazy
1:22:32
one.
1:22:32
But you know, when Laura goes to Moscow
1:22:35
to interview Kirill Dmitriev, who's paying for that,
1:22:38
I'm pretty sure it's America's future, you know,
1:22:42
and they do these, they do these amazing
1:22:44
fundraisers at Mar-a-Lago.
1:22:47
We talked about this and they bring in
1:22:50
Mike Tyson, you're getting an American freedom award.
1:22:53
And, uh, you know, they do an awards
1:22:54
gala and people pay $5,000 a ticket.
1:22:59
There'll maybe two for two and a half
1:23:00
thousand, 5,000 per couple to go to
1:23:03
Mar-a-Lago.
1:23:03
And, you know, maybe Trump will be there.
1:23:05
Maybe, maybe the president will be there.
1:23:06
Let's say Mar-a-Lago and people buy
1:23:09
into this, you know, like, oh yeah, I'm
1:23:11
going to Mar-a-Lago.
1:23:11
Oh yeah, we're going to Mar-a-Lago.
1:23:12
Oh yeah.
1:23:13
And, you know, and, and, uh, O'Keefe
1:23:15
is there and it's all these independent journalists
1:23:18
who always surround this.
1:23:20
And it just has, I don't know.
1:23:22
I can't, I don't want to accuse anybody
1:23:24
of anything that has an icky feel to
1:23:26
it.
1:23:26
I know that you and I would say,
1:23:28
no, no, I'm not interested.
1:23:30
I'm not going to come to DC for
1:23:31
your panel on independent journalism.
1:23:36
Or would you?
1:23:39
No, I wouldn't go unless if I had,
1:23:41
okay, here's what would happen.
1:23:42
I do have some people to meet in
1:23:44
DC.
1:23:45
If I had a first class round trip
1:23:46
ticket and it was a convenient time of
1:23:48
the week and I didn't have to worry
1:23:50
about missing the show or missing my prep.
1:23:52
Yeah.
1:23:53
I would shoot over there and do the
1:23:55
thing real quick and then go hang, hang
1:23:56
out with different people that I know in
1:23:58
the area that, and then go back.
1:24:00
But I wouldn't probably go because they're not
1:24:03
going to, no one's offering me that.
1:24:05
It, I just, I don't know what it
1:24:07
is.
1:24:07
And I really, I'm a little afraid to
1:24:09
touch it, but it feels like, you know,
1:24:12
there's information being funneled through people, influencers, podcasters,
1:24:17
et cetera, to get certain messages out there.
1:24:20
And what, that's what it sounds like.
1:24:22
And what eventually winds up happening is everyone's
1:24:24
talking about the grid going down, no election.
1:24:26
So I don't like it.
1:24:27
I don't like it.
1:24:28
Yeah.
1:24:28
I like, yeah, that's exactly what happened.
1:24:30
I'm not pointing any fingers.
1:24:31
I just, it feels off.
1:24:33
Okay.
1:24:33
So she.
1:24:34
You're pointing fingers, but continue.
1:24:35
No, wait a minute.
1:24:36
Isn't Eva.
1:24:36
But go ahead.
1:24:37
But go ahead.
1:24:38
Hold on.
1:24:38
But go ahead though, Laura.
1:24:39
By the way, I saw her do that.
1:24:41
She was with, it was with Camilla or
1:24:44
something.
1:24:45
And she was doing it over and over
1:24:46
again.
1:24:48
But go ahead.
1:24:49
You're talking about Kara Swisher.
1:24:50
Kara Swisher.
1:24:52
But go ahead.
1:24:52
Yes.
1:24:52
It's unbelievable when you, when you notice it.
1:24:57
So she's married to Eva I'm talking about
1:25:01
now.
1:25:02
She's married to, is she married to some
1:25:05
Spanish guy or something?
1:25:08
Hold on a second.
1:25:09
It's worth looking into this for a second.
1:25:12
Yeah.
1:25:12
You're the only one that could look into
1:25:13
it.
1:25:13
Cause you're the only one who could actually
1:25:15
spell her name to look into it.
1:25:18
I couldn't, if I had the Google thing
1:25:20
up, I would never get it right.
1:25:22
Uh, the God, there's like some, maybe it's
1:25:26
Italian Sicilian family.
1:25:32
Then.
1:25:32
Yeah, here it is.
1:25:35
Francesco Gargallo di Castell Lentini.
1:25:40
Right.
1:25:41
She should change her name to Latini.
1:25:43
So, uh, and her dad is case flooding
1:25:46
a brook.
1:25:47
Let me see.
1:25:47
What does he do?
1:25:49
Well, anyway, um, musicologist and former concert director.
1:25:55
Okay.
1:25:57
Elitist circles for sure.
1:25:59
And in light of that, I wanted to
1:26:01
talk to you guys a little bit about
1:26:02
the Dutch election results.
1:26:04
Cause the final results are in now and
1:26:06
the PVV lost the elections, the worst of
1:26:08
the worst, the most liberal globalist party that
1:26:11
we have these six, they won the elections.
1:26:14
And now we are looking at a government
1:26:16
that is more left wing than the government
1:26:18
under Margaret ever was because also the, the
1:26:21
far left and the centrist party did a
1:26:24
good job.
1:26:24
They won quite a lot of seats.
1:26:26
So it's not looking great for us, let's
1:26:28
say.
1:26:28
And the reason I wanted to tie that
1:26:30
to the importance of independent media is because
1:26:33
I think that the result that we see
1:26:34
now in the Netherlands is the result of
1:26:37
media manipulation.
1:26:38
The party leader of these X, he's a
1:26:41
very openly, very woke gay man.
1:26:44
And he was on TV.
1:26:46
I kid you not every single day before
1:26:47
the elections, he had a budget.
1:26:49
Their party had a budget of 2 million
1:26:50
euros to spend on their media campaign.
1:26:53
Whereas most other parties had an average of
1:26:55
200,000 euros.
1:26:57
They didn't get the same type of airtime,
1:27:00
like not even close to the type of
1:27:01
airtime that they got.
1:27:03
And he was on all these feel good
1:27:05
shows, you know, talking about how we can
1:27:07
make the Netherlands great again, which is like
1:27:08
so funny, because they are pro EU, they're
1:27:11
pro mass immigration, they're pro the climate regulations,
1:27:14
they are going to destroy this country, or
1:27:17
my country, even more than than Margaret has.
1:27:20
And we don't have that much left to
1:27:22
lose.
1:27:23
So it just goes to show that the
1:27:26
people can still be manipulated very, very successfully
1:27:29
through the legacy media, because...
1:27:31
Okay, I'm gonna stop it there for a
1:27:33
second.
1:27:33
She's, yes, first of all, you have to
1:27:36
understand that the big talk shows, etc, in
1:27:39
the Netherlands, are funded by the government, public
1:27:43
media.
1:27:44
They're all leftists, very leftist throughout the throughout
1:27:48
the public media sphere.
1:27:50
But there's something else that Robot Rob did,
1:27:54
they call him Robot Rob.
1:27:57
The guy who won?
1:27:58
Yes.
1:27:59
He's very...
1:28:00
The gay guy?
1:28:00
Yeah, he's very stiff.
1:28:01
He's very stiff.
1:28:02
And I want to play this from I
1:28:05
think this is this F24.
1:28:08
Yeah.
1:28:10
Most of it's explained here.
1:28:12
But there's something very interesting.
1:28:14
And it also is what has to do
1:28:15
with what's happening here in the United States.
1:28:17
With a smile and a sunny attitude, Rob
1:28:20
Jetten charmed his way into the hearts of
1:28:22
Dutch voters.
1:28:24
His belief, as per his campaign slogan was,
1:28:27
it is possible.
1:28:29
My message to everyone is that if we
1:28:31
run on positive platforms and positive campaigns, it's
1:28:34
possible to...
1:28:35
If we run on positive platforms, positive campaigns,
1:28:38
it is possible to make things very, very
1:28:40
good.
1:28:40
Defeat the populist and to work together with
1:28:43
the broad, middle and the centrist parties to
1:28:45
show people that we can deliver real results.
1:28:48
The 38-year-old representing the socially liberal
1:28:51
D66 party is tipped to become the youngest
1:28:55
prime minister for the Netherlands.
1:28:57
He grew up in a small Dutch town
1:28:59
as a self-confessed politics nerd.
1:29:01
At the age of just 29 in 2017,
1:29:04
he was first elected as an MP and
1:29:06
served as climate minister under Mark Rutte's government.
1:29:10
But all has not gone smoothly.
1:29:13
During the 2023 election campaign, he earned the
1:29:16
nickname Robot Jetten for his stumbling media personality.
1:29:21
And his party suffered a catastrophic defeat under
1:29:24
his leadership, winning just nine seats.
1:29:27
This time he turned things around.
1:29:30
He made big promises such as tackling the
1:29:33
housing shortage, building cities and boosting green energy.
1:29:37
He also took on the far-right Geert
1:29:39
Wilders head-on.
1:29:42
Most Dutch people understand that the economy needs
1:29:45
talent from abroad.
1:29:47
They want to properly accommodate people fleeing war
1:29:49
and violence while also being strict with those
1:29:52
who abuse the system.
1:29:53
We can choose to listen to your grumbling
1:29:55
and hatred for another 20 years, or we
1:29:57
can choose, with the positive forces, to simply
1:30:00
get to work and tackle this problem and
1:30:02
solve it.
1:30:04
In another first, Jetten would become the country's
1:30:07
first openly gay prime minister.
1:30:10
Critics say it was his positive can-do
1:30:12
attitude that appealed to voters, in contrast with
1:30:16
Wilders that sowed division.
1:30:18
Okay, so first of all it's funny that
1:30:19
she says first openly gay prime minister because
1:30:22
of course everyone was like Rutte is a
1:30:24
closeted gay when he was prime minister for
1:30:27
gosh how many eight years what he did
1:30:30
and this is it's very much like no
1:30:32
king's day lots of Dutch flags lots of
1:30:36
nationalism a lot of no no we just
1:30:40
hate that guy you're grumpy you're a grumpy
1:30:42
old mean guy you're just talking about negativity
1:30:45
we want positivity we're gonna we love holland
1:30:49
we love america we just don't like kings
1:30:52
well of course that doesn't work in holland
1:30:53
but it's it's some kind of globalist it's
1:30:56
some kind of globalist movement that is being
1:31:00
coordinated in let's attack the the right the
1:31:04
far right let's attack them with flags and
1:31:07
nationalism and positivity and because that's the same
1:31:11
when when we had the no king's day
1:31:13
here in Fredericksburg um you know even if
1:31:16
you said you know you know i think
1:31:17
i think if i recall tina went was
1:31:20
in her car and she did a thumbs
1:31:22
down uh towards some of the protesters you
1:31:26
know the 40 people in front of city
1:31:28
hall in Fredericksburg who had flags and everything
1:31:30
and they went god bless you have a
1:31:33
great day you know it's something that is
1:31:36
is it's some kind of coordinated effort as
1:31:39
a new way to unseat populist right politicians
1:31:44
and i think that eva is partially correct
1:31:49
uh well maybe completely correct that the media
1:31:53
you just can't you can't the the dutch
1:31:57
listen to radio i mean even young people
1:31:59
listen to the radio they watch their television
1:32:02
um you know the the big talk shows
1:32:05
it's all it's all very scripted coordinated very
1:32:08
you know ussr kind of vibe to it
1:32:11
if you look at it as an outsider
1:32:13
uh so i'm not surprised at all that
1:32:15
this worked on the dutch you know remember
1:32:19
it's like you know here's my bike you
1:32:21
know all right she's fine my bike i'm
1:32:25
being mean all right you are being mean
1:32:28
to the dutch i love the dutch here's
1:32:30
the i hey believe me the dutch have
1:32:33
a lot of uh a lot of spirit
1:32:35
but uh you gotta wonder how many young
1:32:38
people voted so here's your second clip the
1:32:41
people can still be manipulated very very successfully
1:32:44
through the legacy media because the average dutch
1:32:47
voter doesn't want mass immigration you know they
1:32:50
they actually had that on top of their
1:32:52
list for these elections and yet all these
1:32:56
other parties left-wing parties they won like
1:32:59
this is the result of legacy media manipulation
1:33:02
and as much as we are gaining ground
1:33:04
of course thanks to x of course thanks
1:33:06
to elon and with the independent media on
1:33:10
these platforms this shows you that the legacy
1:33:14
media's power is it's not gone you know
1:33:17
it's not it's far from over and we
1:33:19
can already tell now that the institutions that
1:33:22
were still even during wilders's government ridden with
1:33:27
uh with marxists that they now have this
1:33:29
renewed confidence they have they have regained their
1:33:32
arrogance and they're already talking like okay you
1:33:35
know we're gonna we got our country back
1:33:37
in in the rest of europe in italy
1:33:39
the liberals are talking about how they can
1:33:42
do the same with the maloney government they
1:33:44
you know they are going to be able
1:33:45
to let her government fall as well and
1:33:48
that they're going to regain power so i
1:33:50
really foresee nothing but bad things coming from
1:33:54
this i hope it's going to strengthen the
1:33:57
right wing but it's again it's bad it's
1:34:00
bad and uh don't underestimate the power that
1:34:03
the legacy media still has because this is
1:34:05
the proof of it yeah i i don't
1:34:06
think i don't think it's the legacy media
1:34:09
and i don't think mike flynn is going
1:34:11
to fix all of this with his his
1:34:14
little gatherings you need a guy like trump
1:34:17
you need a mega movement that's that's the
1:34:20
only way to do it and builders wasn't
1:34:23
like that at all yeah i'm playing this
1:34:26
clip largely because of that at this attitude
1:34:28
that you're expressing uh because i have more
1:34:32
confidence that the legacy media here i don't
1:34:35
know about holland which is controlled by the
1:34:37
government it seems uh still having a massive
1:34:40
influence because all the people i know including
1:34:43
some big shots that are uh trump derangement
1:34:48
syndrome prone they all read the new york
1:34:51
times well they're all in the new york
1:34:53
times but they also go out and vote
1:34:55
young people don't go this is this is
1:34:58
why as i said dyslopium about nick fuentes
1:35:01
oh oh we finally we have someone new
1:35:04
on the scene no bernie sanders would be
1:35:06
your president if young people young people really
1:35:09
got unvoted it's a joke oh you can
1:35:11
vote at 16 fine they don't they just
1:35:14
don't surely we can agree on this that
1:35:19
the the average age voter has got to
1:35:21
be at least 50 plus i'm not sure
1:35:27
what the average age voter is or what
1:35:29
the median age voter is it would be
1:35:31
worth somebody telling us because it's got to
1:35:33
be in the literature you you could ask
1:35:35
the robot she should know uh for american
1:35:37
uh for american elections what's the what's the
1:35:40
median and average ask for both okay um
1:35:44
error in the united states elections of 2024
1:35:48
what was the median age and average age
1:35:51
of the voting public i would think that's
1:35:59
a quick lookup wow i don't know what
1:36:03
her problem is are you online i am
1:36:07
she's not talking to me no response it
1:36:12
says well that's nice hold on let me
1:36:14
try that oh you know what let me
1:36:16
go to fast hold on a second error
1:36:19
in the united states elections of 2024 what
1:36:22
was the median age and average age of
1:36:24
the voting public hey so for the 2024
1:36:30
u.s election the voting public skewed older
1:36:33
thanks to higher turnout from folks over 45
1:36:35
based on census data the average age of
1:36:38
actual voters was around 51 while the median
1:36:41
clocked in at about 48 younger crowds just
1:36:44
didn't show up as much turnout for 18
1:36:46
to 24 was only 48 percent versus 75
1:36:50
percent for those 65 and up kind of
1:36:52
wild how that pulls the numbers kind of
1:36:54
wild no it's not wild just i don't
1:36:56
need your idiot so there you go okay
1:37:03
the average is 51 the median is 48
1:37:05
which is interesting but that that means that
1:37:08
tells me because the average was 51 and
1:37:10
the median is 48 that tells me that
1:37:12
there was a lot of pull toward the
1:37:14
48 number and less down further down or
1:37:17
the average would have been lower than 48
1:37:19
so um so it's so it's yes i
1:37:23
would say the average the most voters are
1:37:25
over 40 is yes more or less what
1:37:28
that means which is yeah you're right and
1:37:30
the public if you look at the cross
1:37:32
-section of the public there should be more
1:37:34
younger voters um okay bernie sanders would be
1:37:39
president yes definitely because he was the lovable
1:37:42
grandpa all right so now let's move so
1:37:46
thank god for this this this skew i
1:37:49
guess who the hell needs bernie sanders as
1:37:50
president i want to hit the shutdown for
1:37:53
a second as the government shut down in
1:37:55
the united states barrels toward becoming the longest
1:37:57
in history potentially surpassing the 35-day mark
1:38:01
reached during president trump's first term everyday americans
1:38:04
are paying the price like those depending on
1:38:07
critical food assistance programs there's only so much
1:38:10
we can do from the charity sector like
1:38:11
i'm incredibly concerned with each and every customer
1:38:14
that that we're fortunate to serve friday two
1:38:18
federal judges ruled the trump administration must pay
1:38:20
for the supplemental nutrition assistance program known as
1:38:23
snap which helps over 40 million americans feed
1:38:26
their families the rulings come after the u
1:38:29
.s department of agriculture announced it would halt
1:38:31
food assistance set to go out november 1st
1:38:34
because congress hadn't allocated funds for the program
1:38:37
for the current fiscal year if you are
1:38:40
in a position where you can't feed your
1:38:42
family and you're relying on that 187 a
1:38:46
month for an average family in the snap
1:38:48
program that we have failed you but one
1:38:52
of the judges says there's no reason to
1:38:53
halt the payments as contingency funds are set
1:38:56
aside to fund snap years in advance just
1:38:59
in case of a government shutdown in a
1:39:01
truth social post trump challenged whether he could
1:39:04
legally fund snap with available money blaming democrats
1:39:07
for the delay in food assistance the democrats
1:39:10
just don't know what they're doing all they
1:39:12
have to do is say let's go let's
1:39:14
open up our country and everything snaps back
1:39:17
into shape so far democrats have refused to
1:39:20
budge over price hikes in health care that
1:39:22
could leave millions uninsured because of exorbitant premiums
1:39:26
travelers are also feeling the effects as some
1:39:30
2200 flight delays have been reported so far
1:39:33
due to staffing shortages of air traffic controllers
1:39:36
who have been working without pay trump is
1:39:38
now calling on senate republicans to get rid
1:39:40
of a rule to allow the budget to
1:39:42
pass with a simple majority causing further strain
1:39:45
on fragile negotiations between democrats and republicans to
1:39:49
reopen the government so i want to start
1:39:51
with the boots on the ground from the
1:39:52
controller and his anonymous controller wife these are
1:39:57
atc professionals i know them we have a
1:40:00
lot of them in our uh listening producing
1:40:02
public general feelings around the atc is dependent
1:40:06
on your political affiliation unfortunately trump voters are
1:40:10
not surprised by what's happening and our financially
1:40:13
sound decision makers some of us save three
1:40:16
months of bills just for this instance once
1:40:18
trump got elected how about that others of
1:40:22
the more libtarded affiliation are up oh jeez
1:40:26
no bias there yeah let them go are
1:40:30
up in arms and very complaining about them
1:40:32
not being able to make their car payment
1:40:34
for their eighty dollar lexus eighty thousand dollar
1:40:36
lexus or tesla trucks the general consensus of
1:40:39
the libtarded group is why can't we just
1:40:42
give everyone free health care we're the richest
1:40:44
country in the world a fascinating and heard
1:40:46
of message from left-leaning communist federal workers
1:40:49
trump voters such as myself are simply laughing
1:40:53
through this while working occasionally doing a trump
1:40:55
impression calling other co-workers gay in the
1:41:01
area of airspace my wife and i work
1:41:04
in morale is generally up even while staffing
1:41:06
is still terrible and working six days a
1:41:08
week unpaid isn't necessarily ideal i think we
1:41:11
realize as a group that when it comes
1:41:12
down to helping the guy sitting next to
1:41:14
you embrace the suck if you will however
1:41:17
this is important news flash to get monation
1:41:20
without us you don't get your amazon packages
1:41:22
or go on vacation it may be wise
1:41:25
to cancel your vacation or drive the deeper
1:41:28
or drive the deeper into this it goes
1:41:31
the more mile in trail increases the angrier
1:41:35
and more sick controllers get causing cancellations and
1:41:39
delays my prediction is this will go until
1:41:42
after the holidays if you have holiday flying
1:41:45
plans i suggest you drive it's only going
1:41:49
to get worse i thought that was a
1:41:51
stark but a necessary warning for gitmo nation
1:41:54
now regarding the snap benefits that was a
1:41:58
good note just for that for that advice
1:42:00
exactly now just so we understand how snap
1:42:05
the supplemental nutrition assistance program works it's authorized
1:42:09
and funded through the federal farm bill which
1:42:12
gets reauthorized periodically by congress and annual appropriation
1:42:17
so this is the u.s department of
1:42:18
agriculture and nutrition service usda fns they oversee
1:42:22
it so they make funds available as an
1:42:25
open-ended entitlement meaning spending spending adjusts automatically
1:42:30
based on participation levels in fiscal year 2024
1:42:35
this totaled 100 billion dollars for benefits nearly
1:42:40
all i had the number low and i
1:42:41
was no it's a hundred billion yeah i
1:42:45
noticed that because i have some clips coming
1:42:48
yeah hold on i'm going to get into
1:42:49
it i was going to say i in
1:42:51
one of the clips it says they they're
1:42:53
not going to have it for november that
1:42:55
because it's going to cost them nine billion
1:42:57
i'm thinking wait a minute i thought it
1:42:58
was 70 total not quite right hundred billion
1:43:03
yes so it's ridiculous so but they're talking
1:43:07
about oh we said we sent some aid
1:43:08
to israel but it's yeah right three billion
1:43:12
it's real but it really comes down to
1:43:15
the states and now the usda provides state
1:43:21
agencies electronic letters of credit so it's it's
1:43:26
really the states that have this money and
1:43:28
could have saved up this money and could
1:43:30
and they can move money around they can
1:43:32
do a lot of different things to make
1:43:35
these benefits still go through so it really
1:43:38
is a huge political theater but here's the
1:43:44
interesting part that i didn't realize the retailers
1:43:47
they get the ebt cards they get processed
1:43:53
in real time to the ebt system it's
1:43:55
not the regular credit card system so the
1:43:59
retailer submits the transaction to the ebt processor
1:44:03
and then the the processor credits the retailer's
1:44:07
bank account within 24 to 48 hours and
1:44:11
then they draw the equivalent amount from the
1:44:14
state's letter of credit this is a huge
1:44:16
quagmire so wouldn't you know it that i
1:44:20
have producers sending me pictures of chicken in
1:44:23
walmart and the price has dropped by 30
1:44:26
to 40 cents a pound the minute this
1:44:29
ebt was was off the off the table
1:44:32
exactly what we talked about now once you
1:44:35
get government money in this the price goes
1:44:38
up for everybody this is what the point
1:44:40
you made about tuitions yes tuitions any yeah
1:44:44
insurance and let me just say again get
1:44:49
out of that system get out this insurance
1:44:53
the the the um obamacare subsidies only goes
1:44:58
to bankers and they are jacking up the
1:45:01
rates because they don't want to look bad
1:45:03
on wall street that's all that this is
1:45:05
about and by the way it's not for
1:45:07
health care because you don't get any health
1:45:09
care for it you've got huge deductibles and
1:45:13
and you know you're paying 12 13 1400
1:45:17
a month for a family it's insane americans
1:45:22
have banded together and i finally figured it
1:45:25
you know so tina at curry.com if
1:45:27
you want to know about her system and
1:45:29
what i found out about those guys the
1:45:30
crowd health guys what they actually did is
1:45:33
when and i heard about them five years
1:45:34
ago they have um so they take i
1:45:38
think it's like 99 for the per month
1:45:41
for the first three months and you pay
1:45:43
the first 500 yourself and then they go
1:45:45
out and take care of the rest of
1:45:46
it for you through this crowdfunding and they
1:45:49
have a treasury some of which they smartly
1:45:51
put into bitcoin five years ago so that's
1:45:54
why these guys are doing well now you
1:45:56
can't smoke and so i i'm not on
1:45:59
her plan i i go through uh chm
1:46:03
christian health ministries which is the same type
1:46:05
of system there of course you have to
1:46:08
profess that jesus is your lord and savior
1:46:10
you don't want to lie about that because
1:46:12
you know what happens then you're going to
1:46:14
hell you can't lie about that um but
1:46:18
there's many of these systems wouldn't you be
1:46:20
going to hell anyway why if you don't
1:46:24
if according to the theory if you lie
1:46:27
about if you're lying about that you're going
1:46:31
to go to hell no but it no
1:46:33
but if you don't believe that you're going
1:46:34
to go to hell no no that's the
1:46:36
catholic system no yeah no yeah we we
1:46:39
catholics like to send people to hell at
1:46:41
the drop of a hat exactly exactly sorry
1:46:44
catholics out there that's just my that's just
1:46:46
no we're just joking around nanu nanu um
1:46:50
but get out of that system seriously it's
1:46:52
ridiculous and it's it's like a cycle it's
1:46:57
an op the whole thing is an op
1:46:59
and that's why they keep calling it health
1:47:00
care it's not health care well that best
1:47:03
part is they call it the affordable health
1:47:05
care even funnier like here like the patriot
1:47:08
like the patriot acts no yeah i said
1:47:10
but not for patriot day obamacare are killing
1:47:13
us p npr this from npr this is
1:47:15
a little offshoot clip open enrollment started today
1:47:20
for health insurance on healthcare.gov the aca
1:47:23
marketplace and pierre selena simmons duffin has more
1:47:26
on what people enrolling this year need to
1:47:28
know their premiums might be significantly higher and
1:47:32
that is because something called enhanced subsidies that
1:47:35
congress first passed in 2021 are expiring and
1:47:39
that extra help to buy health insurance is
1:47:41
something that millions of people have relied on
1:47:43
in the last few years in fact 24
1:47:45
million people have these plans they're small business
1:47:48
owners farmers ranchers and as open enrollment begins
1:47:52
this year the federal government is shut down
1:47:54
and these subsidies are a central issue and
1:47:57
again you get one of these programs and
1:48:02
they go directly to the hospital to the
1:48:05
doctor they say hey doc guess what uh
1:48:08
you have this uh this bill we're gonna
1:48:12
pay you cash no paperwork we're gonna give
1:48:14
you 20 cents on the dollar and they
1:48:17
negotiate a little bit on your behalf and
1:48:20
the doctor in the hospital go yeah actually
1:48:22
that's great let's do it you can do
1:48:25
it yourself but it's a hassle and you
1:48:27
pay into the system and then once in
1:48:30
a while they say hey do you want
1:48:31
to give you got any extra cash you
1:48:33
want to help everybody and then when you're
1:48:35
in a real bind people help you it's
1:48:36
a very interesting fun way to not go
1:48:42
broke for nothing for not getting any benefits
1:48:45
young people listen to me did you tell
1:48:50
your kids did you tell the kids to
1:48:52
do this to look into this they have
1:48:53
some something going on well one of them
1:48:56
had chevron so that's oh well so he's
1:48:59
he's good to go he's got some but
1:49:01
that'll end eventually no the whole thing's a
1:49:04
scam it did this affordable health care and
1:49:06
then when you hear about well it's always
1:49:08
been it's being subsidized by the taxpayers yeah
1:49:10
i thought the whole idea of affordable health
1:49:13
care was that it was going to be
1:49:16
affordable yeah it's not now they're going on
1:49:19
and on they're all freaked out that's why
1:49:21
the democrats get won't open the government again
1:49:23
because they're going to make sure there's more
1:49:25
money in there it is you know to
1:49:27
continue this scam that makes it and somebody
1:49:30
analyzed it to say look they were trying
1:49:32
to keep this phony baloney obamacare system going
1:49:36
long enough to put all the independents out
1:49:38
of business oh interesting anyway which is it
1:49:44
makes some sense i got some snap clips
1:49:45
snap all right first of all there's this
1:49:50
this just a standard clip the snap and
1:49:52
food banks which everyone should know about food
1:49:54
banks say they're seeing an immediate uptake in
1:49:56
demand despite two judges orders yesterday that the
1:50:00
trump administration provide funding for the snap food
1:50:03
assistance program from member station kqed in san
1:50:06
francisco dana cronin has more food banks here
1:50:09
in the bay area are ramping up efforts
1:50:11
in response to the hundreds of calls they
1:50:14
say they've received so far from people seeking
1:50:16
relief caitlin sly is the ceo of the
1:50:19
food bank of contra costa and solano she
1:50:22
says it's unclear what happens next after the
1:50:25
trump administration was ordered to fund snap either
1:50:28
way we're looking at at least a week
1:50:31
probably more that are the hungry in our
1:50:35
community are going to go without food sly
1:50:37
says her organization is opening additional distribution sites
1:50:41
and deploying more food and personnel to meet
1:50:44
the increased demand yeah there's another great american
1:50:47
institution your local food bank if you got
1:50:49
some extra food drop it off now there's
1:50:52
a npr general reports they this this thing
1:50:56
about the judge who said you got to
1:50:57
pay this this bill and trump administration trump
1:51:02
has actually said we'd love to yes show
1:51:05
me how and and they and the thing
1:51:07
is that the reporting is going to the
1:51:09
trump it's unknown whether the trump administration is
1:51:12
going to you know take this to a
1:51:14
higher court or they're going to you know
1:51:16
uh push against it's the same type of
1:51:19
federal judge that tells trump you can't do
1:51:22
this with ice you can't do that you
1:51:23
can't do this yeah but the thing is
1:51:26
trump's what trump's actually going to do he
1:51:28
sent his people back saying we'll be glad
1:51:31
to do it but you have to tell
1:51:33
us how to how we can do it
1:51:34
legally yes that's the kicker yes of course
1:51:38
and so so this reporting stinks on this
1:51:40
stuff but let's let's listen to our best
1:51:43
friend oh no oh no suffering succotash i'm
1:51:47
scott simon there are no snap food benefits
1:51:54
for millions of americans today for the first
1:51:56
time since the country's largest anti-hunger program
1:52:00
began six decades ago on friday two federal
1:52:03
judges said the pause was likely to be
1:52:06
unlawful president trump says he's open to keeping
1:52:08
snap going despite the government shutdown but it
1:52:12
is not clear how or when that might
1:52:14
happen and because jennifer ludden joins us jennifer
1:52:16
thanks for being with us hi there hi
1:52:19
there trump administration says there's just no money
1:52:21
available to fund snap what did both of
1:52:23
the federal judges say about that well they
1:52:26
said congress has provided more than five billion
1:52:30
dollars in emergency funds and it's for exactly
1:52:32
this kind of situation they rejected the administration's
1:52:36
argument that it cannot legally use that they
1:52:39
said it not only can but must in
1:52:41
rhode island judge john mcconnell jr called for
1:52:44
this to happen as soon as possible the
1:52:46
other judge indira talwani in boston said officials
1:52:49
could also tap more money from customs revenue
1:52:52
but she left that decision up to them
1:52:55
both judges gave the administration until monday to
1:52:58
come back with a plan for how it
1:53:00
will proceed but does this mean that people
1:53:02
who count on this assistance might see it
1:53:04
sometime soon that is a good question and
1:53:07
the only answer right now is we really
1:53:08
don't know i mean first will the administration
1:53:11
appeal a second if they agree to only
1:53:14
tap the contingency funds that falls well short
1:53:17
of snaps november budget which is nine billion
1:53:21
dollars so the people would not get the
1:53:24
full amount they qualify for and in that
1:53:26
case the administration has said you know calculating
1:53:29
partial payments is a logistical nightmare that could
1:53:33
take time especially in the middle of a
1:53:35
shutdown and then for as for president trump
1:53:38
a few hours after these rulings he addressed
1:53:40
them in a social media post he said
1:53:42
he's instructed his lawyers to clarify with the
1:53:45
court how they can legally fund snap and
1:53:47
if they do he said it will be
1:53:49
my honor to provide funding just like i
1:53:52
did with the military and law enforcement pay
1:53:54
this is very interesting first of all trump
1:53:58
has to play pay the military and customs
1:54:01
border patrol otherwise his whole ice gambit falls
1:54:04
apart but if we get to a point
1:54:06
where the government the federal government can pay
1:54:09
certain things entitlement programs the ones that they
1:54:13
want to fund well why don't we just
1:54:15
keep the government shut and that's what i
1:54:19
know i mean now and i'm getting reports
1:54:22
from producers who are saying something really odd
1:54:26
is happening like we're processing payroll and it
1:54:29
seems like you know like it's back to
1:54:32
normal even though it isn't there's something going
1:54:36
on and at a certain point you're gonna
1:54:37
have to now your social security check still
1:54:39
going out i don't know well you you
1:54:43
get one i don't get one no and
1:54:46
i don't get a social security check they're
1:54:47
all direct deposit in fact i'm surprised anyone
1:54:50
gets one but you get money because they
1:54:52
told us at least 10 years ago whenever
1:54:54
i turned 60 i was one of the
1:54:57
lucky ones i get to be 65 uh
1:55:00
they said uh no we're not sending checks
1:55:04
out anymore okay but you know what my
1:55:06
question is is yeah i don't know i
1:55:07
i don't look at that account okay well
1:55:10
it would be interesting to know i think
1:55:12
tina got hers what'd she get it for
1:55:15
how old is she 63 2 oops sorry
1:55:18
babe no she is 63 what am i
1:55:20
talking about she took early she took early
1:55:24
yes you know why calculate no she no
1:55:28
why she she she takes it early and
1:55:30
puts it into bitcoin oh that's probably a
1:55:33
good idea yes i think it's a great
1:55:35
idea as long as things hold up well
1:55:38
there's always that but you know hey i
1:55:42
can be spitting in this mic till i
1:55:44
keel over baby just keep on going no
1:55:47
eggs gonna happen anyway yeah probably but i'm
1:55:50
just saying it's an interesting thought that if
1:55:52
the judge says well you can do it
1:55:53
this way well then can we just selectively
1:55:57
open parts soliciting it for maybe that's what
1:55:59
it comes up to feels like it yeah
1:56:01
let's say okay well you know i don't
1:56:03
like that decision but if you could tell
1:56:05
us how to do it your way because
1:56:09
that's what he's asking for it's like okay
1:56:11
yeah we'll do it but you have to
1:56:13
tell us how to do it yeah and
1:56:14
then once we know how to do it
1:56:15
then we can select outside of congress who
1:56:18
was supposed to hold the purse strings then
1:56:20
we can select what we want to fund
1:56:22
and what we don't want to fund very
1:56:24
yet another trap if the administration decides to
1:56:28
pay people uh at least some part of
1:56:30
their regular snap food benefits how would that
1:56:32
break down how would it work we really
1:56:35
don't know again this has not happened before
1:56:37
i've not seen a public plan for how
1:56:38
to do it i did speak though with
1:56:40
an agriculture department employee who works on snap
1:56:43
and they agreed it would be challenging and
1:56:46
even beyond logistics this person asked me not
1:56:48
to use their name for fear of retribution
1:56:51
and also they're not authorized to speak with
1:56:52
media but they said for one thing if
1:56:55
you have partial funding do you give it
1:56:58
only to the most needy or do you
1:57:00
give people you know half their regular amount
1:57:02
maybe three quarters and states would want to
1:57:05
say in that but also how do you
1:57:07
divide partial funding among states i know the
1:57:10
employee wondered if this administration might decide to
1:57:13
give some states more snap money than others
1:57:15
and jennifer where does this leave the millions
1:57:18
of people who aren't getting federal food aid
1:57:20
beginning today um scott it leaves them in
1:57:23
need you know it is a lot of
1:57:25
money that is disappearing from people's food budgets
1:57:27
we don't know for how long um food
1:57:30
policy experts say no amount of amping up
1:57:32
food banks can come anywhere close to making
1:57:34
up this difference but of course it does
1:57:36
help and we see more states and cities
1:57:37
shifting money for it um soon after yesterday's
1:57:40
rulings oklahoma's governor announced a vote to send
1:57:43
a million dollars a week to food banks
1:57:45
for snap recipients for up to seven weeks
1:57:48
if needed and pierce jennifer ludden thanks so
1:57:50
much up to seven weeks well i just
1:57:53
thought it was fascinating to see the prices
1:57:56
drop at walmart yeah that is interesting because
1:57:59
i never shopped but i want to play
1:58:01
just an odd just off a little off
1:58:03
script here there's scott simon he played there's
1:58:08
he's been on the air for 40 years
1:58:10
or something and he was bragging about it
1:58:12
and he played an old clip of himself
1:58:14
yeah before he you know this voice he
1:58:19
has is new oh really yeah listen i
1:58:22
don't know if these are both the same
1:58:24
clip i got oh yeah yeah they're the
1:58:25
the same timing yeah same time it's the
1:58:28
same clip yeah here is here's scott simon
1:58:31
in the 80s 40 years ago this weekend
1:58:33
i'm scott simon and we're glad you're with
1:58:36
us for this first program on saturday november
1:58:38
2nd 1985 wow how did that happen he
1:58:43
sounds like uh in fact if you play
1:58:46
it again he sounds like somebody else he
1:58:47
sounds like a modern i can't think no
1:58:49
you know what he says one of those
1:58:51
guys on the pirate ships in the north
1:58:53
sea in the 70s no no way he
1:58:55
starts with his regular voice and then he
1:58:56
plays the clip but that clip that voice
1:58:59
he has in that clip is sounds like
1:59:02
somebody else that's current uh and i can't
1:59:04
let's listen again 40 years ago this weekend
1:59:07
i'm scott simon and we're glad you're with
1:59:09
us for this our first program it sounds
1:59:11
like he's hosting a game show it sounds
1:59:14
like john dickerson oh on saturday november 2nd
1:59:17
1985 let me see if i have a
1:59:20
dickerson comparison clip uh dickerson let's see okay
1:59:25
oh well here we go nearly 2 000
1:59:28
guard members will be on the streets many
1:59:30
from six republican-led states i'm scott simon
1:59:33
we're glad you're with us for this our
1:59:35
first program maybe yeah a little bit maybe
1:59:39
a little bit hey but he doesn't sound
1:59:41
like scott shiren no he does not but
1:59:43
hold on a second yep the show is
1:59:45
too long it's a time to take a
1:59:47
break john and with that i want to
1:59:49
thank you for your courage say in the
1:59:50
morning to you the man who put the
1:59:51
sea in the affordable care act say hello
1:59:53
to my friend on the other end the
1:59:55
one the only mr john yeah well good
2:00:03
morning to you we see adam curry in
2:00:04
the morning our ship seagulls at the graphene
2:00:05
the airships in the water and all the
2:00:07
dames and knights out there in the morning
2:00:10
do the trolls in the troll room 1949
2:00:19
there you go trolls in the troll room
2:00:21
listening live to our show everybody it's our
2:00:24
live studio audience we love you trolls good
2:00:26
to have you here you can listen live
2:00:29
at noagenda stream.com join in there you
2:00:31
can hop right into the troll room if
2:00:33
you want or you can grab one of
2:00:34
those modern podcast apps these are the ones
2:00:38
that will alert you when we go live
2:00:39
and you can listen to a live program
2:00:41
in your app how amazing is that many
2:00:43
other features transcripts chapters locations just a million
2:00:49
i'd like 27 new features that you don't
2:00:51
get from your legacy app what are you
2:00:52
waiting for podcast apps.com our 19th year
2:00:56
on the air this is what well to
2:01:00
be fair when we play clips of what
2:01:01
we sounded like 10-15 years ago it
2:01:05
sounds very different you sound kind of the
2:01:08
same you have you have call it burrs
2:01:11
berkeley nasal accent yeah oh there it is
2:01:14
yes it's like a hum you're a hummer
2:01:15
berkeley hummer well not a hummer numbers talk
2:01:19
with long noise never goes away where is
2:01:23
our hummer we haven't heard from the hummer
2:01:25
in a long time let's see berkeley hummer
2:01:28
here she is chief among many no that's
2:01:31
not it hummer what is hummer how come
2:01:35
it's so uh you know obviously i read
2:01:38
i read new york times like all day
2:01:41
long mainly on my ipad app not ai
2:01:46
people that is actually real that was uh
2:01:51
who was she again who was that woman
2:01:52
that was the uh editor-in-chief of
2:01:54
the new york times for a while his
2:01:56
name for some reason since we haven't talked
2:01:58
to her for years and years eludes me
2:02:00
i can come up with it it's okay
2:02:02
it's okay uh we uh we run our
2:02:05
show as independent journalists value for value so
2:02:09
there's no audience capture here it's impossible it's
2:02:12
impossible it just doesn't work that way nope
2:02:15
and we're happy about it because we sleep
2:02:18
well at night and we don't have to
2:02:19
travel to mar-a-lago and dc it
2:02:21
makes life it makes a lot in the
2:02:24
s that would be makes life a lot
2:02:26
easier you gotta pay to park yeah wait
2:02:31
in dc or at the white house everywhere
2:02:33
mar-a-lago you probably gotta pay to
2:02:35
park at mar-a-lago wouldn't surprise me
2:02:36
no i'm sure you do uh maybe they
2:02:39
just wave you through so time talent and
2:02:42
treasure is how we have been running this
2:02:44
show and that means it's value for value
2:02:47
so whatever you get out of it if
2:02:49
you're thinking you know i learned something today
2:02:51
then how about this what you can do
2:02:53
is you can uh send some value back
2:02:56
you can do it by organizing things by
2:02:59
hitting people in the mouth um of course
2:03:02
we love the treasure part of the time
2:03:04
talent and treasure there's people who do websites
2:03:07
for us people do amazing amount of things
2:03:09
for it uh let me see no agenda
2:03:12
notes uh where am i this is weird
2:03:15
na show notes here we go um we
2:03:19
have oh this is strange why is i've
2:03:23
not seen this happen what well i'm trying
2:03:26
to get na shown i go to nashownotes
2:03:30
.com and for some reason it takes me
2:03:32
to no agenda stream now all of a
2:03:34
sudden oh that that seems mark that seems
2:03:40
like a dns issue we have all of
2:03:42
a sudden and yeah na bed no he's
2:03:46
awake na show notes.com that's weird yeah
2:03:51
it takes me to no agenda stream so
2:03:54
uh that's not very handy hmm let me
2:03:58
see if i go to 1812.noagendanotes.com
2:04:04
i can probably get that okay oh there
2:04:07
we go people make artwork for us or
2:04:11
better yet they prompt things some make some
2:04:14
actual artwork from time to time by the
2:04:16
way our no agenda gitmo nation ai slop
2:04:21
stream ooh slop stream i like that is
2:04:24
available you can create any kind of website
2:04:26
around it the actual link is in the
2:04:28
show notes so copy that link and you'll
2:04:31
get 24 7 the best ai slop music
2:04:35
on the clock and it'll be more it'll
2:04:38
be lots of end of show mixes but
2:04:40
at a certain point it'll be more and
2:04:41
more of these slop songs and before you
2:04:43
know it we'll have a hit radio station
2:04:45
so go podcasting um we love the uh
2:04:50
the artists or the the prompters who create
2:04:52
art for us and i think was this
2:04:55
a new uh a new entrant rocket boy
2:04:57
all of a sudden shows up how long
2:04:59
is it boy no rocket boy's been around
2:05:02
for a year he was thinking about a
2:05:05
name and he had no agenda beats as
2:05:07
uh as a great name except he spelled
2:05:09
it b-e-e-t-s and created
2:05:12
some artwork with three beats his first artwork
2:05:15
was at the end of 2023 yeah on
2:05:17
december 20th he hasn't really submitted much has
2:05:20
he had any wins has he had any
2:05:21
win i'm looking i don't see any other
2:05:23
wins he won this time yeah yeah rocket
2:05:27
boy we appreciate that rocket boy very good
2:05:29
we thought that was funny uh certainly because
2:05:32
there just is so little because you know
2:05:35
it's easy to prompt it's hard to prompt
2:05:38
something funny and of course it was a
2:05:40
lot of a lot of halloween art we
2:05:42
didn't even talk about halloween that we didn't
2:05:44
mention it once on the show i don't
2:05:46
think so no why i don't know it
2:05:50
wasn't anything that came to mind and it
2:05:51
wasn't halloween on the show no it was
2:05:54
the day before halloween we had no one
2:05:56
show up it wasn't a halloween special we
2:05:58
didn't put it in the newsletters halloween but
2:06:00
all everyone took assumed it made it they
2:06:03
assumed you know what that means yes ass
2:06:05
on you and me yes in fact there's
2:06:07
a lot of butt uh there's more than
2:06:09
one it was a blogger making pumpkins into
2:06:11
butts which is like something about that yeah
2:06:15
i think he needs to go see someone
2:06:18
only fans he needs only yeah only fans
2:06:21
get it out of your system um i
2:06:24
kind of like the freedom tunnel that was
2:06:26
that was kind of cute oh by the
2:06:28
way you did like that i think that
2:06:29
brings me i think i have a bonus
2:06:31
clip about that i we want a uh
2:06:33
a bonus clip yeah we always want a
2:06:35
bonus i got a bonus clip so we
2:06:37
were talking about let me see where is
2:06:40
it we were talking about um what's his
2:06:43
face um uh dimitrieff and he was talking
2:06:51
about the tunnel that would go between russia
2:06:56
and the united states and that would be
2:06:59
uh you know part of the arc the
2:07:01
america russia china project that we are we
2:07:04
are investigating and keep looking out for and
2:07:07
then scott besant our uh our secretary of
2:07:11
the treasury our money guy the guy with
2:07:13
the wallet he was on with the money
2:07:15
honey and what do you think the wallet
2:07:17
guy with the money honey and he threw
2:07:19
out this little ditty in terms of the
2:07:21
japanese buying russian oil they buy i think
2:07:26
a substantial amount of lng about 10 percent
2:07:29
of their needs from russia and i believe
2:07:33
over time they will be weaning off of
2:07:36
that and they will be part of a
2:07:38
very large pipeline project that the u.s
2:07:42
is constructing in alaska the koreans may be
2:07:46
part of it and president xi unilaterally in
2:07:50
the meeting today brought up that the chinese
2:07:52
might like to be part of it what
2:07:54
what i thought that was excellent well that's
2:08:00
been not discussed well why would it be
2:08:03
we can't have that now they run a
2:08:06
pipeline from russia from right i'm sorry from
2:08:08
alaska through that another they obviously wouldn't put
2:08:12
in the same tunnel as the train no
2:08:14
but they'd run the pipeline uh probably in
2:08:17
the water across the straits up to uh
2:08:21
uh through vladivostok yeah and then into yeah
2:08:26
it's doable yeah i just hadn't heard about
2:08:30
it i thought that was rather interesting a
2:08:33
little little gem drop cheaper than the train
2:08:35
that's for sure yes i think the trains
2:08:37
would really be something uh so i'm looking
2:08:42
um so i did kind of like the
2:08:44
tunnel i thought that was okay um do
2:08:47
you like the the robot with the digital
2:08:50
id which which i use for the newsletter
2:08:52
i know jeffrey rhea he's using the same
2:08:54
model and it's just it's like it's boring
2:08:57
it's boring artwork i like it yeah i
2:08:59
know you do i didn't like it we
2:09:02
had the champagne socialist from dan obgyn okay
2:09:06
dan uh more pumpkins pumpkins pumpkins no it
2:09:10
was too much pumpkin art and do we
2:09:12
have anything even remotely usable for today yet
2:09:14
no not that i mean the lonely fans
2:09:18
thing is kind of funny but it's not
2:09:20
usable yeah well we'll see if anyone comes
2:09:23
up with something gotta you gotta hurry um
2:09:28
dude it's like i mean it's so easy
2:09:33
to prompt something but our people have no
2:09:35
imagination it seems no it's a ai has
2:09:39
no imagination there you go they prompt and
2:09:42
prompt you know that anything that's submitted here
2:09:44
you have to assume because i've used these
2:09:46
systems i use them to create art for
2:09:49
my substat column and you you prompt and
2:09:52
you prompt and you probably you can be
2:09:53
if you don't if you get on the
2:09:54
wrong track yeah you could be prompting for
2:09:57
days on end and you keep getting pieces
2:09:58
you get three or four pieces every time
2:10:00
and ah this is no good this is
2:10:01
no good you know every one of these
2:10:03
pieces that have submitted except for the crappy
2:10:05
ones like there's a one or two i
2:10:07
can think of that are on here right
2:10:08
now uh they're they're uh you you're picking
2:10:11
from maybe 25 pieces yeah this is like
2:10:14
as much work as doing the art if
2:10:15
you're fast yeah it's like when people are
2:10:18
sending me songs they send me like here's
2:10:20
another version here's another version here no no
2:10:22
pick one version and send that to me
2:10:25
i don't i don't need your producer people
2:10:28
i don't need your whole suno history okay
2:10:31
it's just not necessary okay okay hey let's
2:10:36
thank our producers who sent us some treasure
2:10:38
we always appreciate that and we thank everybody
2:10:41
fifty dollars and above and we have some
2:10:42
special uh thank yous to people who are
2:10:45
fortunate enough to be able to give us
2:10:47
two hundred dollars or more for this episode
2:10:49
which makes you an automatic associate executive producer
2:10:52
of the no agenda show for this episode
2:10:54
not only do you get that hollywood credit
2:10:57
which is usable anywhere right there up you
2:10:59
can be right up with daniel brunetti and
2:11:02
50 shades of gray grayer and smut and
2:11:05
uh on imdb.com and we will read
2:11:08
your note within reason robert from seven hills
2:11:13
and if you can send us three if
2:11:16
you can send us three hundred dollars or
2:11:17
more uh we will give you an executive
2:11:19
producer credit and we will uh also read
2:11:23
your note and of course the people who
2:11:24
come in big have the shortest notes and
2:11:26
so that's why i'm very happy to thank
2:11:28
daniela pompeo from los angeles california she sends
2:11:33
one thousand dollars and says happy 18th and
2:11:36
many more to come what well i cleared
2:11:41
this i had a bunch of these things
2:11:42
crop up on my screen what things and
2:11:45
i'm clearing bugs bugs creepy crawlies what things
2:11:48
no the little uh the little windows reminders
2:11:51
of this and that and i clicked on
2:11:53
one of them to get it off the
2:11:54
screen and instead it took over my screen
2:11:56
you're gonna reboot are you rebooting good yeah
2:11:58
i fixed it are you are you updating
2:12:00
i'm updating i've had the update pop up
2:12:04
three times during this episode alone it's like
2:12:06
you know that here's another boring story but
2:12:10
so i'm on a old version of windows
2:12:13
10 on this nook because it's it's like
2:12:16
a grandfathered out version that was specific to
2:12:19
the it's not supposed to update it's not
2:12:20
supposed to update and it doesn't update it
2:12:23
it says well you should be updating so
2:12:25
you say and it keeps pestering you so
2:12:27
you update and update and it doesn't then
2:12:29
it updates and says wait a minute i
2:12:30
can't do anything here because i'm locked out
2:12:32
i forget it and it goes back to
2:12:33
the original which is fine because it's bug
2:12:36
free and so uh so but now i'm
2:12:41
getting pestered you've got to move to windows
2:12:43
11 now this was after yeah i've been
2:12:47
told if you remember when windows 11 first
2:12:50
came out you had to run a check
2:12:52
to see if your computer was a windows
2:12:54
11 compatible yes member yeah of course member
2:12:58
member member and so uh this machine is
2:13:02
not but they've changed something because now they
2:13:05
say it is how does that work how
2:13:08
come it wasn't compatible but now it is
2:13:10
they lie they lie this is bullcrap dark
2:13:13
patterns and please i would love to run
2:13:17
the show on linux but please don't tell
2:13:19
me that my audio hardware will work on
2:13:22
linux because it will not you do not
2:13:25
need to email me if you do i'm
2:13:28
gonna have john block you on his system
2:13:30
okay uh many more to come says dame
2:13:33
pompeyo which is spelled p-o-m-p
2:13:36
-e-u and she says i'll be dame
2:13:39
pompeyo from now on isn't it pompeyo no
2:13:43
she says pompeyo is pronounced like mike pompeyo
2:13:47
so she will be dame pompeyo thousand dollars
2:13:51
thank you danielle we appreciate that and she's
2:13:54
also getting herself one of these uh yes
2:13:57
she's getting a peace prize peace prize duke
2:14:01
of san francisco's up he's in san francisco
2:14:03
that's right we see him at the meetups
2:14:05
we do you do six seven six seven
2:14:07
see we have a meetup coming up in
2:14:08
november 15th at the mallard club i want
2:14:10
people that haven't been showing up recently to
2:14:13
come oh boy uh commodore dude named ben
2:14:16
named ben duke of san francisco thanks adam
2:14:18
for sanity adam's response to my spiritual turmoil
2:14:22
was heartfelt oh you must have been communicating
2:14:24
with him he's in san francisco he's going
2:14:26
to be depressed and truly impactful adam has
2:14:30
truly enabled me to not go down the
2:14:33
self-hating cath jew path yes cath cath
2:14:39
jew he's a cath then he has a
2:14:41
hashtag escape pina colada i know what that
2:14:46
means six seven six six seven six seven
2:14:48
i know what that means here
2:15:03
we go watch
2:15:16
it there you go duke of san francisco
2:15:19
six seven six seven six that is a
2:15:22
very good donation number we're loving these six
2:15:25
sevens and we move on to nancy from
2:15:27
newberg new york oops oh go away uh
2:15:30
she's in newberg new york and she sent
2:15:32
in a uh a printed note uh big
2:15:37
hello to our i should mention this came
2:15:39
in before the uh before we closed secretary
2:15:42
general right five hundred dollars there's always going
2:15:45
to be a couple laggers yes a big
2:15:47
hello to my two favorite podcasters thanks for
2:15:49
all the laughs and fantastic media deconstruction i'm
2:15:52
writing this note in haste i'm hoping i'm
2:15:54
not too late to bestow the gift of
2:15:55
secretary general to my excellent son he knows
2:15:58
who he is i'm listening to your show
2:16:00
today and i'm realizing i am running out
2:16:02
of time we live in new york and
2:16:03
he lives in california next weekend he's flying
2:16:05
here for a quick visit it'll be great
2:16:07
if we can read this on november the
2:16:09
second show because we will actually be together
2:16:11
and we know the family that no agendas
2:16:14
together stays together it will also be a
2:16:17
surprise for him if that is not possible
2:16:19
that's okay too no done we did it
2:16:21
it's done he's coming he's coming he's coming
2:16:25
here to help us winterize our yard this
2:16:27
year because my husband and his dad have
2:16:29
been extremely sick this year with a very
2:16:30
serious disease prayers up prayer flare received we'd
2:16:34
all appreciate prayers for his recovery you got
2:16:36
it as many prayers as possible please god
2:16:38
willing he will get better my son and
2:16:41
i share the love of your show and
2:16:42
have been listening for years we are also
2:16:44
both sustaining donors if i were not in
2:16:46
a rush today i would compose a better
2:16:48
letter because you really mean a lot to
2:16:49
the both of us thank you so much
2:16:51
says nancy in newburgh new york and she
2:16:53
even writes there in handwriting love you guys
2:16:56
all right you got it and uh the
2:16:58
secretary generalship is taken care of robert in
2:17:03
seven hills ohio i didn't know there were
2:17:08
a total of seven hills in ohio ohio
2:17:10
let alone a town but 350 93 hi
2:17:13
tm adam and john did someone say hyper
2:17:16
local podcast network the crooked river cast is
2:17:21
ready where do we sign up for example
2:17:25
do you know what the ashland ohio county
2:17:27
democrat party has kicked out was kicked out
2:17:30
of the ashland county fair for offering buttons
2:17:33
with 86 47 ah what a classy operation
2:17:37
and buttons that say is he dead yet
2:17:41
wow ah those democrats what cards along with
2:17:45
others and the democrats are suing the county
2:17:48
fair of course for being removed and for
2:17:51
not being referred to and for being referred
2:17:53
for being referred to the secret service or
2:17:56
that as well they should be this is
2:17:58
good or that we have a petition in
2:18:00
ohio to get a constitutional amendment on november
2:18:02
26 ballot to abolish property taxes in the
2:18:05
state uh good luck and now the legislators
2:18:07
are scrambling to get bills passed in an
2:18:09
attempt to virtue signal that they are fixing
2:18:12
the problem yeah which is was fixed in
2:18:15
california with proposition 13 20 30 40 years
2:18:18
ago you can get more info at the
2:18:21
group's website lobbyistforcitizens.com all you ohioans uh
2:18:27
these are a few of the things you'll
2:18:28
learn listening to a local podcast like the
2:18:31
crooked river cast every monday morning check out
2:18:36
crookedrivercast.com for a new blog post which
2:18:38
publishes when the show it is a lot
2:18:40
long note very long this show does every
2:18:43
monday morning with the links and notes about
2:18:45
the topics we discussed on the show thank
2:18:47
you uh for our webmaster to our webmaster
2:18:49
and our wonderful sister-in-law just yeah
2:18:53
i think gisela gisela gisela yeah maybe i
2:18:58
said for all the work on the website
2:18:59
she is doing a great job this monday
2:19:01
11 3 will be the special show since
2:19:03
it will be our 33rd show and we
2:19:06
all know that if you only get 33
2:19:09
once we celebrate this show with a donation
2:19:11
of 333.33 to the greatest podcast in
2:19:14
the universe for help inspiring tom and i
2:19:16
to start the show after 32 shows i
2:19:19
have a new respect for what you guys
2:19:21
do especially when it comes to reading notes
2:19:23
and have done show for the last 18
2:19:26
years congratulations we knew it would not be
2:19:29
easy but wow i really had to i
2:19:32
had no idea how easy you guys make
2:19:35
it sound not reading notes though you're not
2:19:37
that good at thank you for everything you
2:19:39
do may you never fight an exit strategy
2:19:42
four more years because it'll take you that
2:19:44
long to read the next note please extend
2:19:46
your best goat karma for the show thank
2:19:48
you for your continued attention to this matter
2:19:51
robert from crooked river cast boy you've got
2:19:56
karma yes and then we have another note
2:20:01
uh from cassandra yeah this is the woman
2:20:05
i've talked about before she's she sends these
2:20:08
these beautifully designed cards yes that she does
2:20:11
by hand she sent a happy halloween card
2:20:14
and it says happy halloween john i'm looking
2:20:19
for my name on the card but no
2:20:23
no thank you for being the best podcast
2:20:26
host in the universe i guess it's just
2:20:29
you please accept my donation that includes check
2:20:32
cashing fees uh which added 20 or 40
2:20:36
cents or something she did she did uh
2:20:39
donation cal so what is her number here
2:20:42
her number 305 75 total 305 75 10
2:20:46
31 october 31st plus plus 2025 this year
2:20:50
is 3 056 divided by 10 305 60
2:20:54
plus 15 cents is 305 75 beautiful thank
2:20:58
you despite the fact that you didn't mention
2:21:00
me but i guess it was just for
2:21:02
john so that's okay you can have your
2:21:03
yeah it was it was meant for me
2:21:05
you're gonna have your fave yeah you get
2:21:07
plenty of fan mail suscovian charlotte north carolina
2:21:11
287 itm adam and john two sources inspired
2:21:15
this donation jcd's reference to the newsletters of
2:21:18
the government shutdown as a game of chicken
2:21:21
and senator john kennedy of louisiana's reference to
2:21:25
287 chickens and a goat i remember that
2:21:30
in lieu of all those chickens too many
2:21:34
eggs dot com please accept this donation of
2:21:37
287 dollars adam a goat scream if you
2:21:41
please thank you both for your courage and
2:21:44
for 18 years of superior media product sir
2:21:49
scovey thank you sir scovey sir dicksburg is
2:21:53
here from new brighton minnesota 233 82 dear
2:21:57
john and adam i hope this donation note
2:21:58
finds you well in an effort to list
2:22:00
all my producer credits and imdb i was
2:22:02
checking my accounting records i haven't donated in
2:22:04
a while he says he's a douchebag but
2:22:06
i won't douchebag you for that i can't
2:22:08
find proof of previous donations totaling enough for
2:22:11
the title of baronet doesn't mean i haven't
2:22:12
donated enough it just means i can only
2:22:14
find receipts for 1777.94 this is a
2:22:19
donation of 222 plus six cents plus fees
2:22:23
that will allow me to sleep at night
2:22:25
and use the title baronet without shame i
2:22:28
donated 222.05 in may of 23 likely
2:22:32
asking adam for a penny someday well i'm
2:22:35
going to give it back to you there
2:22:36
you go someday i may find the missing
2:22:38
transaction but i doubt it this is easier
2:22:41
no jingles no karma love is lit says
2:22:43
sir dicksburg and your title upgrade is planned
2:22:45
sir thank you brad grannier if it was
2:22:54
going to be pronounced that way i think
2:22:56
it'd be grannier no i think grannier hey
2:22:58
brad grannier is there a grannier here brad
2:23:01
grannier 223 36 god bless the both of
2:23:08
you i could use some jobs karma jobs
2:23:11
jobs jobs and jobs let's vote for jobs
2:23:17
man we got the blessings today the highland
2:23:20
craigs from colorado springs colorado come in with
2:23:22
200 dollars and say god bless y'all
2:23:25
love from the highland craigs thank you god
2:23:28
all uppercase eli the coffee guy in bensonville
2:23:32
illinois you missed sean you missed sean oh
2:23:35
i did oh i'm sorry sean homan uh
2:23:38
219 uh 11 uh itm brothers god be
2:23:44
with you there you go nice eli the
2:23:46
coffee guy there he is bensonville illinois 2102
2:23:49
200 plus the date 1102 it seems key
2:23:52
evidence from the january 6 pipe bomber case
2:23:54
has mysteriously disappeared funny how data corruption only
2:23:59
seems to happen when the files get interesting
2:24:01
epstein anybody you might not be able to
2:24:04
trust the narrative but you can trust that
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gigawatt makes amazing fresh roasted coffee so visit
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gigawattcoffeeroasters.com and use code itm 20 for
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20 off your order stay caffeinated says eli
2:24:17
the coffee guy michael chauvin in saginaw michigan
2:24:22
210 60 uh to my kathleen 36 years
2:24:27
ago i met a smoking hot brunette and
2:24:30
then and then life got in the way
2:24:34
two years ago you sent me a text
2:24:37
out of the blue and i got a
2:24:39
second chance at the love of my life
2:24:41
wow wow what a story this time i
2:24:44
am not letting go nice it's a message
2:24:48
to kathleen from that's 36 years ago yes
2:24:51
talk about carrying a message in a bottle
2:24:53
nice yeah hey there's matthew martel from martelhardware
2:24:58
.com brumal pennsylvania 210 60 only two things
2:25:02
scare me nuclear war and the threat of
2:25:06
being put on jcd's email block list it's
2:25:11
equal visit martelhardware.com use coupon code 67
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for an additional 10 off your order oh
2:25:19
he wants his hot pockets i'm sorry i
2:25:21
missed that one let's see jcd hot pockets
2:25:26
uh my system and that's not my system
2:25:30
it's my oh what this is interesting hot
2:25:35
pockets it's me it's not the system it's
2:25:38
me hot pockets there you go got it
2:25:43
linda lupak in liquid colorado there she is
2:25:46
200 bucks every show she should take get
2:25:50
herself a degree or something yes i agree
2:25:54
well she is this duchess i degree i
2:25:57
degree jobs karma for a competitive edge with
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a resume that gets results go to imagemakersinc
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job search needs by the way she uses
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a resume uh the first use it says
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resume and the second is actually resume with
2:26:17
the accent the goo on both though resume
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that's image makers inc with a k and
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work with linda loo duchess of jobs and
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writer of winning resumes jobs jobs jobs and
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jobs let's vote for jobs you thought and
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winding it up from calgary alberta canada marina
2:26:43
struen what are you a strew strew in
2:26:46
strew in strew in i'll do strew in
2:26:49
it's a calgary's a course to win today
2:26:52
november 2nd is my mom's birthday her name
2:26:55
is alina struen and she listens to your
2:26:57
podcasts every week she especially enjoys listening to
2:27:01
the live shows when they come out on
2:27:02
thursdays and sundays so i know she'll be
2:27:04
listening to this announcement live as well hello
2:27:07
alina my mom always tells our family how
2:27:10
the no agenda show is her favorite podcast
2:27:12
of all time if you guys could wish
2:27:15
her a happy birthday i know it would
2:27:17
make her day happy birthday alina happy birthday
2:27:21
and love from calgary alberta oh it's beautiful
2:27:25
live man i love it the people listen
2:27:27
live thank you very much to the executive
2:27:29
and associate executive producers we will be thanking
2:27:32
the rest of our 50 and above producers
2:27:34
in our second segment we appreciate you and
2:27:37
we appreciate that you're helping us in this
2:27:39
way it's value for value it's the only
2:27:40
way that the show continues for at least
2:27:42
four more years or until we're the 21st
2:27:45
that'd be three more years we're working on
2:27:46
it we're working on it keep us going
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go to no agenda donations.com any amount
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whenever you get value you determine what that
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is to you you only you know how
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send that to us of course you can
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always set up a recurring donation any amount
2:28:00
any frequency no agenda donation.com thank you
2:28:03
to these associate and executive producers our formula
2:28:06
is this we go out we hit people
2:28:10
in the mouth you i
2:28:24
have uh i have a rather disturbing report
2:28:27
from ktla ktla in los angeles this is
2:28:32
the guy who's the smug guy you know
2:28:35
he's always making little quips and little jokes
2:28:37
before he gets into his reports i cut
2:28:38
all that i watch ktla so i don't
2:28:40
know yeah i watch it all the time
2:28:42
yeah this is uh this is an unfortunate
2:28:45
dtcc which we all know stands for due
2:28:49
to climate change we've already talked about how
2:28:51
cocoa prices are rising worldwide because of climate
2:28:55
change and that doesn't seem to be changing
2:28:56
anytime soon but that in turn has the
2:28:59
candy industry rejiggering its recipes to try to
2:29:03
minimize the use of cocoa and cocoa butter
2:29:05
and use alternative ingredients without messing too much
2:29:09
with the taste and that's something that is
2:29:12
at now prompting them to quietly change the
2:29:15
labeling of their candies as well for example
2:29:18
you have may not have noticed but the
2:29:20
labels of almond joy mr good bar rollo
2:29:24
candies and others have been subtly changed in
2:29:27
recent years gone milk chocolate replaced with the
2:29:32
largely meaningless phrase chocolate candy okay what's up
2:29:36
with that the food and drug administration has
2:29:38
very clear criteria for what constitutes milk chocolate
2:29:42
and the chocolate industry ran afoul of that
2:29:45
when to grapple with their high cocoa costs
2:29:47
they started replacing expensive cocoa butter with other
2:29:51
fats now that reformulation as industry calls it
2:29:55
means that you can no longer claim that
2:29:58
a product has milk chocolate because if it
2:30:00
doesn't meet the criteria it's not milk chocolate
2:30:03
and hence we get the largely ambiguous phrase
2:30:05
chocolate candy replacing that some are already using
2:30:10
the phrase chocolatey which suggests that it is
2:30:13
in the vicinity of chocolate i suppose but
2:30:16
it's not the same thing now we can
2:30:18
see why this is happening and it's not
2:30:19
going to be changing anytime soon but make
2:30:22
no mistake this is not your father's almond
2:30:24
joy this is something else entirely and what
2:30:27
this means ultimately considering that climate change isn't
2:30:30
going to end anytime soon is that milk
2:30:33
chocolate for the masses might be a thing
2:30:35
of the past now amazingly the one question
2:30:40
i had about this report was actually asked
2:30:43
by one of the co-hosts on the
2:30:46
ktla morning show sadly the answer was not
2:30:49
satisfactory so what is it what what are
2:30:52
these other what is chocolate it's not milk
2:30:54
chocolate what is it well if you're using
2:30:56
other fats then i'm not sure where those
2:30:58
fats are but they are clearly not cocoa
2:31:00
butter fats and cocoa butter is what gives
2:31:03
milk chocolate it's very chocolatey taste fat is
2:31:06
something that delivers it's not true flavor hold
2:31:09
on chemist mouth appeal which is something that
2:31:12
the food industry focuses on if it doesn't
2:31:14
feel good in the mouth you're not going
2:31:16
to want to come back for more so
2:31:18
as they shift away from milk chocolate to
2:31:20
these other forms of more chocolatey ingredients you
2:31:23
have to change the labels and that's something
2:31:25
where we as consumers just keep an eye
2:31:27
out if you don't see milk chocolate it
2:31:29
ain't so thank goodness we have a podcast
2:31:33
with the two of us we both have
2:31:35
our strengths and weaknesses we do swat analyses
2:31:37
all the time and this is right up
2:31:40
your alley so first of all uh i
2:31:43
i agree it doesn't sound like cocoa butter
2:31:46
or cocoa fat is used in milk milk
2:31:50
milk chocolate uh so i'd like to first
2:31:53
milk i would like to know first what
2:31:55
is what is in milk chocolate and what
2:31:58
what other fats could they be using instead
2:32:01
well i'm okay i don't you don't know
2:32:04
what fats are using i mean cocoa butter
2:32:06
is a fat but milk chocolate specifically has
2:32:10
milk in it to make it that taste
2:32:12
the way it tastes it's actually they use
2:32:14
dried milk solids normally and that's what makes
2:32:19
milk it's got to do with the fat
2:32:20
what do you think they're using though do
2:32:23
you see like like butt fat pig fat
2:32:26
other nut fat no i'm guessing it would
2:32:32
be palm oil or that's not good well
2:32:37
palm oil isn't bad if it's fresh oh
2:32:41
we know it's not gonna be fresh make
2:32:44
it on the spot it's not gonna be
2:32:46
fresh so um that would be my guess
2:32:48
it would say on the label well no
2:32:50
no they just say on the label if
2:32:52
they if they have added palm oil to
2:32:55
the mix it would say it it has
2:32:57
to say it well everybody get out your
2:33:01
almond joys whip out your almond joys i
2:33:03
don't i don't eat that crap i only
2:33:05
eat um lint chocolate if i eat chocolate
2:33:09
and i do eat a couple squares after
2:33:11
dinner of lint l-i-n-d-t
2:33:14
chocolate and mainly because i like the guy
2:33:16
on the back with the chef's hat making
2:33:18
the chocolate makes me feel good like that
2:33:21
guy made my chocolate well there's a lot
2:33:24
of good chocolates out there besides lint i
2:33:26
know well that's um i like the one
2:33:28
with orange orange yeah orange chocolate is good
2:33:32
it's like it's one of my favorite ice
2:33:34
creams historically has always been bittersweet chocolate orange
2:33:37
now i have another climate change update and
2:33:40
i'm very happy that a producer sent me
2:33:43
this clip it is a clip from uh
2:33:45
the tiktoks or something uh because i had
2:33:48
no idea about this the bovar scandal have
2:33:51
you heard of the bovar scandal in denmark
2:33:53
i have heard of it i don't have
2:33:54
the knowledge of it on the top of
2:33:56
the top of my head i have i
2:33:58
have the i'll be reminded once you tell
2:33:59
me i'll say yep i know i have
2:34:01
the knowledge but first we have the breakthrough
2:34:04
that this is now in the m5m hello
2:34:08
this is ken nelson from denmark this is
2:34:10
an update on the bovar scandal in denmark
2:34:13
three three days ago the first farmer went
2:34:17
out with his face and his name in
2:34:20
a video explaining how his cattle was sick
2:34:24
and some of them dead because of this
2:34:26
chemistry poison you might call it now three
2:34:31
days later our mainstream media is reporting what's
2:34:35
going on so we made it in some
2:34:38
way now the we broke the media wall
2:34:40
now people in denmark is talking about the
2:34:43
bovar scandal in some manner so it's only
2:34:47
this portion of the cows how they get
2:34:48
sick and some of them dies that's in
2:34:50
the mainstream media we still need some other
2:34:53
things there's nothing about poisoning our food supply
2:34:56
milk and beef there's nothing about how the
2:35:00
politicians knew about this scandal and what would
2:35:03
happen to our animals and our food supply
2:35:05
from december 24 december last year almost a
2:35:10
year ago the politicians and ala and the
2:35:13
media knew about this but in some way
2:35:17
we succeeded we broke the media wall and
2:35:19
now everybody who's watching the mainstream media and
2:35:22
everybody else who is informed now know about
2:35:25
how dangerous for where it is and we're
2:35:28
still working to get it totally banned here
2:35:30
in denmark but this is just some good
2:35:33
news from here i'm really excited this morning
2:35:35
so bovar b-o-v-a-e-r
2:35:38
is a feed additive which was developed by
2:35:41
the swiss dutch company dsm ferminich dsm of
2:35:45
course is the former chemical company which turned
2:35:48
into a food company they make food now
2:35:51
not real food but fake food with good
2:35:53
mouthfeel and this was developed to reduce climate
2:36:01
change from cow farts oh i remember this
2:36:06
yep it's supposed to work by suppressing a
2:36:09
specific enzyme in the cow's rumen yeah it
2:36:12
cuts down to methane which produces methane during
2:36:15
ingestion this reduces methane emissions from dairy cows
2:36:18
by 27 to 30 percent in beef cattle
2:36:21
by 45 and just as a technical point
2:36:25
yes most of the the cow farts and
2:36:29
methane gas actually come from the cow burping
2:36:31
right well um it is it was promoted
2:36:36
as a tool for climate mitigation i believe
2:36:40
this was forced on the danish farmers who
2:36:43
witnessed sudden collapses high fevers diarrhea mass mass
2:36:49
mastitis utter inflammation reduced milk production and refusal
2:36:54
to eat deaths with some unverified claims of
2:36:58
thousands of cows dying or being euthanized and
2:37:03
this seems to have finally broken through to
2:37:05
the mainstream and of course people have been
2:37:07
eating this beef and drinking this milk uh
2:37:11
which is probably not good for you and
2:37:14
so uh it appears now that the scandal
2:37:17
is out and i wonder if any bovar
2:37:21
was used in any other countries and i
2:37:23
of course am particularly interested was used in
2:37:25
the united states for this crazy climate mitigation
2:37:29
was promoting this was he switched around to
2:37:32
be not so much on the climate side
2:37:34
maybe he switched around right in time for
2:37:37
this scandal to break well good timing yeah
2:37:41
it's ridiculous can't believe that's what happens when
2:37:45
you fool around with nature exactly so be
2:37:50
on the lookout for this stuff uh that's
2:37:55
terrible it does sound terrible i have a
2:37:58
couple of i have the the camera the
2:38:00
camera kamala kamala kamala harris clip uh that
2:38:05
she did it which is i think a
2:38:07
classic as she did it on john stewart's
2:38:10
little podcast and this is where she's going
2:38:13
on about how great the democrats are and
2:38:14
what a fabulous uh party it is and
2:38:19
and all the stars and i think she
2:38:21
sounds drunk here we have so many stars
2:38:25
in our party there are so many stars
2:38:28
and and let's not be afraid of them
2:38:32
um you know you talk about mamdani i
2:38:35
mean he's exciting this group of people who
2:38:39
otherwise don't think of themselves as being aligned
2:38:42
or apart or even seen by the system
2:38:44
um you just look at the range of
2:38:47
what we have so many jasmine crockett who
2:38:51
i just talked to recently i mean we
2:38:53
have so many stars that is sad whether
2:38:58
she's drunk or not just the whole fact
2:39:00
that she's talking about how many stars they
2:39:03
have that's i don't know what she's getting
2:39:06
at here but i i re i i
2:39:08
changed the tempo of this a little bit
2:39:10
no kidding oh you changed it in your
2:39:13
own not in that one no here's what
2:39:14
i'm trying to say is that we have
2:39:16
so many stars and and let's not be
2:39:21
afraid of them um you know you talk
2:39:25
about mamdani i mean he's exciting this group
2:39:31
of people who otherwise don't think of themselves
2:39:35
as being aligned or apart or even seen
2:39:38
by the system um you just look at
2:39:42
the range of what we have so many
2:39:45
jasmine crockett who i just talked to recently
2:39:49
i mean we have so many stars i
2:39:54
don't think you needed to slow it down
2:39:55
to make the point no but i think
2:39:58
she sounds more like the drunk at the
2:39:59
bar with the old version yeah what was
2:40:02
that artifacts that i didn't like i know
2:40:04
i you know that was funny because those
2:40:06
artifacts normally don't show up when i do
2:40:08
what i did and i kept wondering if
2:40:11
you know it makes me wonder about the
2:40:13
original uh recording well because it has there's
2:40:17
something embedded it's a podcast what do you
2:40:20
expect really he has people that know what
2:40:22
they're doing so a couple of people sent
2:40:24
me this kind of fits in a little
2:40:26
bit with that i mean that was obviously
2:40:28
not an ai um and and and i
2:40:33
was surprised because the people who sent me
2:40:35
this i don't know if they understood that
2:40:37
this is actually an ad yeah i like
2:40:43
people who don't notice yeah they think something's
2:40:46
real and it's an ad like this is
2:40:49
a great supercut of college professors getting super
2:40:54
angry with their students about them using chat
2:40:58
gpt for their papers and other schoolwork see
2:41:03
if you can spot the ad i
2:41:05
am
2:41:15
sick of grading essays that sound like they
2:41:18
were written by a polite robot with a
2:41:21
thesaurus stop using chat gpt it is lazy
2:41:25
it is dishonest and it is a guaranteed
2:41:28
way to fail this class i can tell
2:41:30
which of you use chat gpt i'm gonna
2:41:33
pass your resume to mcdonald's oh my god
2:41:36
i told you the only ai allowed on
2:41:37
this campus is study fetch i caught half
2:41:41
of you using chat gpt i told you
2:41:43
why use ai use study fetch only you're
2:41:48
all gonna work at mcdonald's or worse deloitte
2:41:51
i told you to use once break ai
2:41:54
not just chat gpt but nobody listens no
2:41:57
chat gpt no bots no tricks it's plagiarism
2:42:00
and it will ruin your career for everyone
2:42:03
who uses chat gpt you all automatically fail
2:42:05
the class it's unbelievable i caught half of
2:42:08
you using chat gpt as if i wouldn't
2:42:10
know guys i told you many times to
2:42:13
use lunch break ai if you're going to
2:42:14
use chat gpt all right that way that's
2:42:17
where everyone kind of should be figuring it
2:42:19
out lunch break ai i heard it the
2:42:22
first time yes i heard it the second
2:42:25
time and it it was so it's like
2:42:29
lunch break a i never heard of this
2:42:32
product it's you wouldn't this is bull it's
2:42:35
obviously bull crap because you wouldn't throw it
2:42:38
why would this guy say use anything exactly
2:42:41
so lunch break he's against chat gpt why
2:42:45
would he be all for lunch break or
2:42:47
why which is a product i never heard
2:42:49
of well here's the product lunch break.ai
2:42:51
right there on the on the home page
2:42:54
think chat gpt is safe think again paste
2:42:57
your ai text and get humanized undetectable versions
2:43:01
instantly oh so they want so that this
2:43:05
product wants you to take a chat gpt
2:43:07
ramble which is what i would call it
2:43:10
yep and drop it into lunch box or
2:43:13
whatever the hell it is lunch break oh
2:43:19
lunch break and drop it in there and
2:43:22
it outcomes something that's a little more uh
2:43:24
realistic yes and in fact they have uh
2:43:28
oh i'd like to try that out that's
2:43:30
not gonna work well you can scan your
2:43:32
text for ai for free right there on
2:43:34
the home page well i'll do that later
2:43:36
and by the way lunch box lunch box
2:43:38
lunch box is trusted by 300 000 world
2:43:44
-class teams professionals and writers to scam people
2:43:48
with a thousand i've never heard of it
2:43:50
yeah well there's a lot more oh you
2:43:53
gotta you gotta continue with google to sign
2:43:55
up yeah i don't think so oh please
2:43:57
what are the features what's let me see
2:43:59
what the pricing is does it give me
2:44:00
pricing it should no you gotta sign up
2:44:04
to get the pricing well just sign up
2:44:06
you got a google account you don't care
2:44:08
about okay okay i'm doing it here we
2:44:12
go oh we can read your name and
2:44:14
your profile okay lunch break here we go
2:44:19
uh detect and humanize what's the pricing come
2:44:23
on you're gonna show me pricing uh hey
2:44:27
stephanie says hey let us know if you
2:44:29
have any questions ask him the question what's
2:44:32
the price yeah what's the price okay stephanie
2:44:39
let's see stephanie has a picture let's see
2:44:41
can i click i can't click on stephanie's
2:44:42
picture chat with support stephanie well now she's
2:44:46
not she's not answering me oh no that's
2:44:49
unbelievable we can do an audio message uh
2:44:54
okay hey stephanie um it's john and adam
2:44:59
here we're really interested in your lunchbox product
2:45:01
could you please tell us how much it
2:45:04
costs okay i've sent it up it's being
2:45:06
uploaded let's listen to it it's already a
2:45:11
dog hey stephanie um it's john and adam
2:45:14
that's how our message starts it's already a
2:45:17
dog i'm here we're really interested in your
2:45:20
lunchbox product could you please tell us how
2:45:23
much it costs it's still no answer this
2:45:26
lunchbox thing is no good i want an
2:45:29
immediate answer she said hey let us know
2:45:31
if you have any questions oh well you
2:45:34
asked a question they should have asked and
2:45:35
she's not this is very bad it stinks
2:45:39
it stinks who comes up with these ideas
2:45:41
well chat gpt funded nonsense is what it
2:45:44
is chat gpt open ai they're they're oh
2:45:48
this is what i would do if i
2:45:50
was opening i'd create a bunch of bullcrap
2:45:53
products that suck this is a good idea
2:45:55
hold on it's a great idea hold on
2:45:57
let's see hold on a second uh who
2:46:01
are the investors in lunch break dot ai
2:46:09
how let's see that'd be funny be very
2:46:12
funny if it was open ai let's see
2:46:16
well grok is not familiar and is now
2:46:19
looking to find out so i guess i'm
2:46:22
not the only one who never heard of
2:46:24
the product no no grok amongst the 300
2:46:28
000 you know users yes yes well oh
2:46:31
here it comes um okay we're reviewing oh
2:46:36
it seems likely to be bootstrapped or self
2:46:39
-funded at this stage that seems in other
2:46:44
words we're not going to find out it's
2:46:46
good work of hiding it that seems kind
2:46:49
of unlikely all right there you go that's
2:46:54
all i got there oh yeah i talked
2:46:57
about this um on thursday and now it's
2:47:01
a news report youtube tv has removed channels
2:47:04
owned by disney from its lineup the removal
2:47:07
comes after the two media giants failed to
2:47:09
reach a new carriage agreement before yesterday's midnight
2:47:13
deadline the blackout leaves subscribers unable to watch
2:47:16
content from disney networks including espn abc disney
2:47:20
channel fx national geographic and freeform the two
2:47:25
companies remain in talks although neither indicated when
2:47:28
customers can expect programming to resume so where's
2:47:32
the outrage no outrage whatsoever nobody seems to
2:47:35
care i have uh i care and how
2:47:38
about how about jimmy kimmel is he did
2:47:40
he lose his audience now the networks are
2:47:46
still the local channels are still there right
2:47:49
but as far as i know abc is
2:47:51
still on the air it's the it's the
2:47:53
uh it's the cable stuff that's been taken
2:47:55
off because i was looking at the thing
2:47:57
the other day because it's football day i'm
2:47:59
thinking oh let's see what the games are
2:48:02
and then i say wait a minute actually
2:48:04
i noticed it on friday when i went
2:48:06
to watch uh pardon the interruption which is
2:48:08
one of the shows i've watched just to
2:48:10
keep up with sports news and so i
2:48:13
said what happened and i kind of figured
2:48:15
it out because i knew from some months
2:48:17
ago that they were bitching about this and
2:48:19
so what did i do to get my
2:48:20
my fix what'd you do i went to
2:48:24
youtube yeah disney posts almost everything on youtube
2:48:29
really now playing youtube and they take the
2:48:32
commercials out that's even better it's even better
2:48:36
what a way i found it on youtube
2:48:38
and the current show boom i watched it
2:48:41
it was like 16 minutes it was a
2:48:43
lot shorter and uh got that out of
2:48:46
the way and i don't care oh that's
2:48:49
excellent what that's a good life hack it's
2:48:52
a life hack ladies and gentlemen a life
2:48:54
hack nbc news has a new campaign uh
2:48:57
for their news products and uh the payoff
2:49:01
is facts clarity calm since they're on since
2:49:08
they're on screen only i shall read those
2:49:10
at the end of the spot they're bantering
2:49:13
back and forth i hate to say it
2:49:16
but i don't trust much of anything it's
2:49:19
all bulls**t i want to be able to
2:49:22
form my own opinions i've seen people cut
2:49:26
their families off oh just tell the truth
2:49:30
they make everything seem to be dream seem
2:49:33
scary i wish we didn't cite so much
2:49:40
i'm looking for some facts first tell me
2:49:44
the facts the truth report things from both
2:49:48
sides we got clear facts maybe we can
2:49:53
calm down a little just talk to each
2:49:55
other more that's that's what the news is
2:49:58
supposed to do facts clarity calm nbc
2:50:07
news that's terrible they're gonna lose their asses
2:50:12
on this that's not what people want from
2:50:14
news they want yelling break eggs important things
2:50:17
you're gonna miss this gets spun up this
2:50:19
is really good you just see this on
2:50:21
the watch at 11 that's very bad pretty
2:50:25
much yeah very bad idea oh by the
2:50:28
way lunchbox right there on their website it
2:50:32
says backed by balaji s x coinbase cto
2:50:38
slow ventures m13 road capital and more i
2:50:44
mean how could how could ai not find
2:50:46
that it's right there on their website yeah
2:50:51
this is a problem it's kind of wrong
2:50:54
like the basmati rice recipe i'd say that's
2:50:57
i mean come on yeah how hard can
2:50:59
that be no wait did she get back
2:51:00
to me no she still hasn't gotten back
2:51:02
to me no she sucks she's no good
2:51:04
what'd you say i said she's no good
2:51:09
okay i uploaded that to her okay she's
2:51:14
no good talking about sucky and no good
2:51:20
so i have a clip from jennifer which
2:51:23
that woman of putty face i'm sorry jennifer
2:51:27
welch that putty faced woman who's on i've
2:51:32
had it podcast oh oh oh the taco
2:51:35
tits lady yeah i guess that's what it
2:51:39
is yeah her and her and her doctor
2:51:40
buddy that come to from oh from oklahoma
2:51:43
and they're big experts this is the more
2:51:45
i got two clips from her she's just
2:51:47
going on some hateful rant oh good it's
2:51:50
a well of course you know me yes
2:51:54
okay so it's a hateful rant and it's
2:51:57
like delusional and it and it just confirms
2:52:00
my sub stack column about mom donnie and
2:52:04
how he's he's going to fool the democrats
2:52:07
into thinking that being you know going full
2:52:09
tilt radical socialist and this is really funny
2:52:13
consider she's in from oklahoma uh going full
2:52:17
tilt i guess she's from oklahoma she spent
2:52:19
some time in hollywood i guess for a
2:52:21
while just enough time to ruin her so
2:52:23
she's and she also looks like she's according
2:52:26
to i was talking to marty our joke
2:52:28
writer your joke writer he says uh she
2:52:34
may have had those there's like these fat
2:52:36
pockets called buckle buckle fat or something underneath
2:52:40
the chin near the chin bone is that
2:52:42
everyone has them on their face and it's
2:52:44
become a trendy thing to take them out
2:52:46
from surgically remove them and give you more
2:52:49
of a gaunt look and then it just
2:52:52
makes your face collapse and you see these
2:52:54
people people should look this up it's the
2:52:56
sound when somebody gets older after these and
2:52:59
that taylor joy taylor whatever that actress's name
2:53:02
that did the queen's gambit whatever her name
2:53:04
is she had it done to her and
2:53:06
she looks like hell she's so pretty but
2:53:10
anyway here we go is happening just in
2:53:15
new york and you think people are waking
2:53:18
up only in new york city you're mistaken
2:53:20
look at this clip of a wine mom
2:53:23
at the no king's march play the clip
2:53:25
his name was charlie kirk man yeah him
2:53:28
is horrible horrible charlie kirk is horrible yes
2:53:31
i'm glad he's not here you're glad he's
2:53:34
dead yes why would you say something like
2:53:37
that ma'am he was horrible on the
2:53:39
campuses the college campuses horrible person you know
2:53:43
what i do the exact same thing would
2:53:45
you be glad if i would die maybe
2:53:47
i'd have to think about it you should
2:53:49
be ashamed of yourself your friend just said
2:53:52
she'd be happy if i died so listen
2:53:59
up democratic establishment you can either jump on
2:54:02
board with this shit or we're coming after
2:54:04
you in the same way that we come
2:54:06
after maggie period stop taking apac money go
2:54:11
on and i'm sorry i took apac money
2:54:14
atonement tour if you want to stay in
2:54:16
power stop missing out on these big rallies
2:54:22
hakim and chuck should have been front and
2:54:25
center introducing the next mayor of new york
2:54:28
city but no they wouldn't show up because
2:54:30
they're pussies they're pussies that are beholden to
2:54:33
the same corporations that donald trump that helped
2:54:37
donald trump get elected and this is just
2:54:40
an embarrassment kudos to bernie to aoc to
2:54:45
zoran and that woman out in somewhere middle
2:54:48
america saying fuck charlie kirk he was a
2:54:52
racist he was a piece of shit there
2:54:54
are so many more of us than there
2:54:56
are of them and these democrats that continue
2:54:59
to play patty cake with corporations and lobbyists
2:55:03
nobody wants that nobody wants you well this
2:55:07
kind of proves my theory doesn't it that
2:55:11
the apac is the great unifier you've got
2:55:14
these nut jobs over here and you've got
2:55:17
nut jobs over here and like everyone's controlled
2:55:19
by apac and israel and mossad well there
2:55:23
you go you can go have your big
2:55:25
aoc party with bernie and uh tucker and
2:55:31
uh and fuentes is great yeah you've got
2:55:35
to you've got to think if i'm thinking
2:55:37
the same as this lady what is wrong
2:55:40
with this picture yeah well there's definitely something
2:55:46
wrong and here's the second half of this
2:55:48
clip she is she is unhinged this is
2:55:52
terrible and there's sorry about the not safe
2:55:54
for work stuff but that's what these democrats
2:55:56
have fallen you know this by the way
2:55:57
before you play it i've noticed this and
2:56:00
somebody pointed it out in one of the
2:56:01
shows i think it was on gutfeld they
2:56:04
point out that you never had to do
2:56:05
this before when a democrat comes out and
2:56:07
they've given a speech or something you never
2:56:09
had democrats and republicans for that matter yeah
2:56:13
you never had to bleep it so much
2:56:15
bleep bleep bleep bleep it's unbelievable how much
2:56:18
these people are just cussing gratuitously nobody wants
2:56:23
that nobody wants you we want politicians to
2:56:27
speak freely and look at what the benefit
2:56:30
is look at what is happening in new
2:56:32
york and you dipshits are sitting on the
2:56:34
sidelines um doing running your social media like
2:56:38
complete dorks it's embarrassing get your shit together
2:56:42
hakim and chuck seriously get your shit together
2:56:44
because the democratic party is moving on we
2:56:47
are moving on no so is the republican
2:56:51
party it's amazing and neither will go anywhere
2:56:54
it's not going to happen it's a pipe
2:56:57
dream that's not how it works mandami is
2:57:01
an op uh these women don't see that
2:57:05
from the letter we played which is the
2:57:07
guy the woman who's dad mom the mom
2:57:11
of the restaurant yes yes we know we
2:57:13
know that he's an op so we know
2:57:16
he's an op for probably there's got to
2:57:19
be some it's the same it's a bernie
2:57:21
sanders part of the party is a it
2:57:24
has to be bernie sanders behind this all
2:57:26
well because he's the one who in this
2:57:29
day maybe the guy which took his i
2:57:31
was gonna assassinate somebody or other at the
2:57:34
convention some years ago as a bernie sanders
2:57:37
guy bernie sanders is i think is a
2:57:39
little more uh he instigates more than i
2:57:42
think we know so bernie sanders is the
2:57:45
evil man behind the curtain is he does
2:57:47
he's stroking his white pussycat you know sometimes
2:57:51
you have to wonder wow that is kind
2:57:56
of blowing my mind now that i think
2:57:57
about that no there's got to be more
2:58:05
it's got to be someone no bernie sanders
2:58:07
is out front with mom donnie this guy
2:58:10
up in maine is bernie sanders country that's
2:58:13
where bernie would have some influence and have
2:58:15
maybe an operative come in there and offering
2:58:17
or get him to this job bernie may
2:58:19
be the guy that was responsible for getting
2:58:21
chunk and these other people out of the
2:58:23
liberal democrat the democrat socialist group oh they
2:58:27
were called justice democrats to be fair to
2:58:30
be fair he had he had the young
2:58:32
kids going for a while there before the
2:58:34
democrat party screwed him remember that so maybe
2:58:37
because they because the insiders of the democrat
2:58:40
party know what's going on they know about
2:58:43
this because why wouldn't they they got smart
2:58:45
operatives there is it who is it who
2:58:49
is this group is this the dsa well
2:58:53
this is dsa is definitely part of it
2:58:55
but i think bernie's calling the shots i
2:58:57
think bernie may be a bigger player than
2:58:58
we think i'm gonna show my support by
2:59:01
donating to no agenda imagine all the people
2:59:04
who could do that oh yeah that'd be
2:59:06
fab yeah i did not expect to hear
2:59:15
that i didn't either i just came to
2:59:17
me but now's the time we're gonna play
2:59:19
thank the people that came in with over
2:59:22
50 bucks and adam is going to read
2:59:25
the names and thank everyone baron ladekin in
2:59:28
houston 100 right away clevin mclaughlin with his
2:59:32
boob donation from concord and north carolina 8008
2:59:36
and he says boob donation the archduke of
2:59:39
luna lover of america and boobs mark plaguer
2:59:41
in beaver creek ohio 76 76 i have
2:59:47
to read this he says adam was unfairly
2:59:49
mocked when he claimed that the japanese won
2:59:51
the world series what he remembered was the
2:59:53
world baseball classic in 2023 a multinational event
2:59:57
that japan did win by beating the united
2:59:59
states ah lay off dvorak he says dame
3:00:05
dana laughlin nevada 72 27 that's a very
3:00:09
nice palindrome scott clark clouder sport pennsylvania 70
3:00:13
96 tech guy ty in somerville tennessee he
3:00:18
sent 69 50 that is a 73s he
3:00:22
says from nj 8x tech guy ty safely
3:00:26
outside of memphis uh chris forestell in missouri
3:00:29
69 50 uh these are 67 donations by
3:00:33
the way yeah all of them yes he
3:00:36
says i hope that you can explain 67
3:00:39
um no there's you can google it you
3:00:43
can chat gpt it it's uh it's there
3:00:45
it's available for you sir fat dad 67
3:00:48
sir fat dad says 67 uh dude sir
3:00:52
dr sharky st peters missouri 67 uh that
3:00:57
was all the 67 67 yeah less tarkov
3:01:00
another fabulous promotion less tarkovsky in kingman arizona
3:01:05
small boob 6006 michael saliba in clinton township
3:01:10
michigan 55 33 says promo code itm for
3:01:14
25 off tariff free watches at magatimewatch.com
3:01:18
what is that magatime watch i think they're
3:01:22
i think they're sending us a couple of
3:01:23
watches oh okay well then it's great uh
3:01:28
sir by his grace david wicker in jacksonville
3:01:31
florida 55 10 double nickels on the dime
3:01:33
he says 55 is the new 67 no
3:01:36
that's for sure about that paige holland san
3:01:38
antonio 55 blake neely in hendersonville tennessee 54
3:01:42
30 john basano in madison alabama 52 72
3:01:47
milton mize in covington louisiana 50 these are
3:01:51
the 50s luke rainer 50 forester birch from
3:01:54
new york 50 matt frazzi in saint john's
3:01:57
florida 50 daniel leboy in bath michigan 50
3:02:01
we have leslie walker from rosenberg oregon says
3:02:05
thank you for your courage to speak truth
3:02:07
love the show with $50 donation and michael
3:02:10
kemmerer in snohomish washington $50 these are our
3:02:14
supporters $50 and above again thanks to our
3:02:16
executive and associate executive producers who came in
3:02:20
nicely for this episode we really appreciate that
3:02:23
you can support the show it's all value
3:02:25
for value no levels no gimmicks no gitmo
3:02:27
gizmos um of course it's all um on
3:02:31
the honor system so when you reach knighthood
3:02:33
then we do have something nice for you
3:02:35
which is a ring we actually have a
3:02:36
dame coming up and a title change and
3:02:38
we we do have lots of cool gimmicks
3:02:40
actually but it's not obligatory you just do
3:02:43
whatever you want to do no agenda donations
3:02:45
.com set up a recurring donation today any
3:02:47
amount any frequency no additions.com lucy christine
3:02:57
garing was born on october 28th so we
3:03:00
say happy birthday to her and we also
3:03:02
say happy birthday to theodore james ah yes
3:03:05
this is the twins who were born on
3:03:08
october 28th they got a beautiful picture a
3:03:11
little disappointing that their names are lucy and
3:03:13
theodore and not adam and john but there
3:03:15
you go congratulations good job mama marina struen
3:03:19
wishes her mom alina a very happy birthday
3:03:22
dame dream girl rose wishes her sexy and
3:03:25
conversant husband sir recalcitrant crazy steve a happy
3:03:28
birthday he celebrates in two days from now
3:03:31
on the fourth and we say happy birthday
3:03:33
in advance to mimi smith dvorak she'll be
3:03:38
celebrating on november 4th and my note says
3:03:41
she'll be turning 86 years old well there
3:03:44
you go that's what it says happy birthday
3:03:46
everybody from the best podcast in the universe
3:03:59
i have a feeling there's some kind of
3:04:01
gag going on that i'm not privy to
3:04:03
within the dvorak family i've met mimi and
3:04:06
she doesn't seem to be that old to
3:04:08
me but and otherwise i'd like to know
3:04:11
her skin regimen uh congratulations sir dixbert you
3:04:14
become a baronet today as you uh you
3:04:17
upped your auntie there with your 222.6
3:04:19
i believe it was well we appreciate that
3:04:21
very much and congratulations with your addition then
3:04:25
we have oh that's that's right we have
3:04:28
a a late secretary general which means they
3:04:30
get to play the jingle again all hail
3:04:33
to the secretaries and
3:04:34
we
3:04:46
get to congratulate nancy's son name withheld he
3:04:52
becomes a secretary general today just let us
3:04:56
know what name you want to put it
3:04:57
uh put on the secretary general certificate and
3:05:00
we'll keep it anonymous but we'll send that
3:05:02
off to you with the appropriate name and
3:05:04
we do have a peace prize for daniella
3:05:08
pompeo thank you very much for your very
3:05:11
wonderful donation daniella one thousand dollars gets you
3:05:15
that handsome no agenda peace international peace prize
3:05:19
i might say we have one dame and
3:05:22
that would be the same one that would
3:05:23
be uh daniella pom pompeo so if you
3:05:26
can get your blade out you got the
3:05:28
dame blade the dame blade yes indeed beautiful
3:05:32
okay daniella pompeo step right up oh man
3:05:37
what a beautiful day for you you hereby
3:05:39
are officially pronunciated as dame pompeo dame of
3:05:45
the no agenda round table which means we
3:05:46
do have the uh red boys and chardonnay
3:05:49
on deck for you if you prefer we
3:05:51
also have uh beers and blunts we got
3:05:53
um geishas and sake i don't know if
3:05:55
you want that vodka and vanilla bong hits
3:05:56
and bourbon sparkling cider and escorts ginger ale
3:05:59
and gerbils fresh milk and pavlon for you
3:06:01
maybe i don't know for sure we always
3:06:03
have the mutton and mead on deck for
3:06:05
anybody who is a knight or a dame
3:06:07
here at the round table congratulations welcome dame
3:06:11
pompeo you can head over to no agenda
3:06:15
rings.com and take a look at your
3:06:17
handsome signet ring please let us know what
3:06:19
ring size to send off to you and
3:06:22
we'll get that into the mail as soon
3:06:23
as possible along with some wax to seal
3:06:25
your important correspondence with along with of course
3:06:28
a certificate of authenticity the same goes for
3:06:30
our secretary generals secretaries general and our international
3:06:34
peace prize winner go to no agenda rings
3:06:37
.com i don't have
3:06:46
any meetup reports but i do have a
3:06:49
couple of meetups that are taking place one
3:06:51
is underway now in durango colorado at the
3:06:53
ska brewery that's the anyone out there meetup
3:06:57
um also starting oh underway as well dame
3:07:01
hoochie of the high desert mountains oh i'm
3:07:03
sorry that she's doing the durango colorado durango
3:07:06
i said durango you wanted me to say
3:07:10
something dumb like durango i would never say
3:07:12
that the indy na tri-state short and
3:07:16
long barrel safety meetup i think they're shooting
3:07:18
guns today this is a top right hand
3:07:21
corner of indiana that's a day maria and
3:07:23
sir mark of the greenwood i'm looking forward
3:07:25
to daymanette's report on that one it'll be
3:07:28
forthcoming next show day november eight the northern
3:07:30
wake post halloween recovery hugathon at six o
3:07:33
'clock at hoppy endings in raleigh north carolina
3:07:35
you guys need to send me a report
3:07:37
you have a lot of meetups that i
3:07:39
don't think i ever get a report from
3:07:41
you please send did i miss a report
3:07:43
by the way i have a feeling i
3:07:44
missed some reports today hold on one second
3:07:46
that would be quite horrible maybe there's no
3:07:49
meetup at all no no there's definitely meetups
3:07:51
i think i money laundering operation yeah here's
3:07:54
the tmi yeah see i knew i knew
3:07:57
i missed one hold on a second i'm
3:08:00
gonna i'm gonna play this uh blind okay
3:08:03
i have no idea how it's going to
3:08:04
turn out let's see what happens morning this
3:08:06
is chris with a tmi evac zone meetup
3:08:08
question for the audience would you rather talk
3:08:11
like al sharpton or rfk jr i'm 13
3:08:14
and i agree to 8 o'clock hi
3:08:16
this is our conference and i have nothing
3:08:18
witty to say live from racita wait wait
3:08:20
no harrisburg yeah in the morning it's sir
3:08:25
7 37 and we're just here to tell
3:08:27
you this is what democracy looks like in
3:08:29
the morning this is serpent stop getting activated
3:08:33
on discard and start getting on the offensive
3:08:35
in the morning jason with the great retease
3:08:40
thank you for your courage and we did
3:08:42
not have a server in that report but
3:08:44
there we go hey we got a on
3:08:49
the 11th fort wayne indiana on the 15th
3:08:52
albany california get john out of the house
3:08:54
on the 15th also zurich switzerland on the
3:08:57
15th well definitely looking forward to that meetup
3:08:59
report with your server wilmington california the 22nd
3:09:03
and burlington kentucky also on the 22nd go
3:09:05
to no agenda meetups.com this is where
3:09:07
you get connection that gives you protection these
3:09:10
will be your first responders in any emergency
3:09:12
at the no agenda meetups go to no
3:09:14
agenda meetups.com if you can't find near
3:09:16
one near you start one yourself it's easy
3:09:19
sometimes you wanna go hang out with all
3:09:22
the nights and days so
3:09:39
i'm looking now um man i'm i'm over
3:09:43
iso'd here right now you only have one
3:09:46
which of course is always going to be
3:09:47
some great ai thing you've put together so
3:09:50
i will give you some choices i have
3:09:52
one two three five isos let's see if
3:09:56
i can compete smooth not too bad i
3:10:01
did a punch line have been good okay
3:10:03
how much did we pay for this bad
3:10:05
boy no what do you want me to
3:10:08
say it's great i couldn't understand it what
3:10:11
do you want me to say it's great
3:10:12
it's great i can't understand this mumbling tremendous
3:10:16
okay that's not too bad that's tremendous and
3:10:19
the last one that's good that's good that's
3:10:22
nice of course of course and with the
3:10:26
aj of course of course that's good that's
3:10:29
good that's nice all right and you have
3:10:32
one i have one that the aj one
3:10:36
could beat but you said this will be
3:10:38
up to you holy smoke how many years
3:10:40
can this go on that's good that's good
3:10:46
that's nice holy smoke how many years can
3:10:49
this go on i don't know it's hard
3:10:52
for me it's a toss i think you
3:10:54
can go in this is one of this
3:10:56
is similar to the one that the show
3:10:57
is too long yeah in fact you should
3:10:59
save it for that purpose to throw it
3:11:01
in out of the blue yes okay at
3:11:03
the break because how many years can this
3:11:06
go on it's it's a downer compared to
3:11:08
alex i have to say so you win
3:11:10
this one all right everybody and now it
3:11:12
is time just in the nick of time
3:11:14
for john's tip of the day now
3:11:25
she's gonna start asking for a commission okay
3:11:29
this is a booze uh booze recommendation for
3:11:32
people who haven't had it and i was
3:11:33
talking to about recommending tank 10 as a
3:11:38
gin people should buy if they're going to
3:11:39
buy gin relating to like i i was
3:11:42
actually on the tasting panel professional tasting panel
3:11:46
pick tank 10 as the gin of the
3:11:49
year um when it came out the year
3:11:52
it came out this was in the 90s
3:11:53
so it's a while ago but and it
3:11:57
may have been talked about before in the
3:11:59
show but the one thing we haven't discussed
3:12:00
in the one i'm to recommend the tip
3:12:02
of the day people should just get this
3:12:04
use it in cocktails or just drink it
3:12:07
it's terrific okay it is tank array rang
3:12:12
poor lime it's a flavored it's a flavored
3:12:18
gin it would be dynamite because it's lime
3:12:21
flavored in a uh in a martini but
3:12:25
it's tank array rang poor lime you have
3:12:29
one taste of this stuff and you'll fall
3:12:31
in love with it it is tremendous so
3:12:33
is it is tank array is gin no
3:12:35
tank array is gin yeah tanker is gin
3:12:38
yeah i'm not really a gin fan oh
3:12:41
you'd like this really yep so and do
3:12:45
you when when do you drink this uh
3:12:47
this all the time for breakfast everybody there
3:12:50
it is find all these great tips at
3:12:52
tip of the day dot net all the
3:12:56
time and sometimes at all created by daniel
3:13:04
brunetti well there you go i'm not sure
3:13:06
what's coming up next on the uh we've
3:13:10
had some issues communicating with the the back
3:13:12
office on what comes up next on the
3:13:15
no agenda stream be nice to know it'll
3:13:19
be the dns hour dns hour it's always
3:13:25
dns don't you know that by now uh
3:13:28
that does conclude our broadcast day we're always
3:13:30
excited to be here with you uh thank
3:13:33
you for joining us thank you for your
3:13:34
boots on the ground your contributions your value
3:13:37
for value as always end of show mixes
3:13:40
inq tell mvp and bonald crab tree and
3:13:44
remember uh the link for the no agenda
3:13:48
ai slop song stream slop stream is in
3:13:52
the show notes make your own website let
3:13:54
me know we'll promote it uh and that's
3:13:57
it that's it coming to you from the
3:13:59
heart of the texas hill country right here
3:14:02
in fredericksburg texas in the morning everybody i'm
3:14:04
adam curry now from northern silicon valley where
3:14:07
i remain i'm john c we've got abs
3:14:10
and a six-pack next there you go
3:14:11
with sir seat center uh we'll talk to
3:14:14
you again on thursday until then adios mofos
3:14:16
hui hui and such good
3:14:29
lord crashing
3:14:42
computers escaping review the back door in the
3:14:46
house watching over you pounding the losers starting
3:14:50
cold at 10 cracking at 13 you mess
3:14:54
with the best and die like the rest
3:14:56
if you step to this your family will
3:14:59
miss repping cia don't call me a fed
3:15:03
targets let's play ladies get us laid oh
3:15:07
since they said privacy is dead we entered
3:15:11
doors wet it up some pores stop drop
3:15:15
a bit blow your shit in i feel
3:15:18
the wind we don't forgive sin these colors
3:15:21
don't bleed and neither do you crispy pikachu
3:15:26
yankee doodle doo scarface hellfire drone war hummus
3:15:31
and a face mask eating well make it
3:15:34
hello get up and flip the table speaking
3:15:37
now in cold face fuck this oh fourth
3:15:56
amendment snowed in extractors locked in hear me
3:16:03
now in q-tel do you hear me
3:16:07
now so
3:16:17
is
3:16:31
that a prompter misread yes it's a total
3:16:39
prompter misread exactly
3:17:06
grounding ground truth groundbreaking groundbreaking
3:17:17
is that a prompter misread that's crazy oh
3:17:27
haters gonna play they tricks here's this position
3:17:32
matrix haters gonna play they tricks here's this
3:17:37
position matrix oh i hit you with my
3:17:44
double tap ain't
3:17:57
freaks heritage foundation obama kept a cheap project
3:18:00
2025 all the vitals ain't freaks look trump
3:18:04
too lax on deportation policy remnant romney he's
3:18:08
stricter than donnie b 08 2012 crucified the
3:18:11
poles born outside america somehow religion gonna creep
3:18:18
up on you secretly married to a man
3:18:20
oh mama bomba gonna creep up on you
3:18:24
secretly married to a man oh oh
3:18:58
no room for white in the white house
3:19:03
so that's
3:19:26
good that's good that's nice
0:00 0:00