1801 - "Hate of Speech"
"Hate of Speech"
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Transcript
Uh I'm confused.
Adam Curry, John C.
Dvorak.
It's Sunday, September 21st, 2025.
This is your award-winning Get One Nation Media Assassination, episode 1801.
This is no agenda.
Uncancelable and broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country here in FEMA, region number six.
In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry.
Hey, from Northern Seuss.
Where are you?
Northern Seuss.
Northern Seuss.
I've been joining you in Seneca Valley, people.
I thought you had the whole week to get ready.
I did.
I screwed it up.
You did.
Hit it.
Adam Curry, John C.
DeVora.
It's Sunday, September 21st, 2025.
This is your award-winning Keep Monday Media Assassination episode 1801.
This is no agenda.
Uncancelable and broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Coal Country here in FEMA region number six.
In the morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where we missed it completely.
How did that happen?
I'm John C.
Dvorak.
It's Craig Bottom Buzzkill in the morning.
So I have a question.
Why are bagpipes often used at funerals?
It's some tradition in Scotland.
Was Charlie Kirk
of Scottish origin?
I don't know.
Maybe.
Well, because they have bagpipers.
I'm surprised you didn't pick up on my teaser.
That we completely forgot?
Yeah.
And forgot what?
You don't remember what we forgot?
Completely?
We completely forgot in the last show.
We forgot it now.
We completely forgot it.
It just didn't even come across our desk.
Did it come across the climate desk?
No, it wasn't climate.
No,
it could have come across.
I really don't know.
Blackout.
Oh, no.
Did we miss blackout?
Blackout.
It came and went on the 15th, I think.
And it was well organized.
There were going to be a million demonstrations.
The country was going to be on a general strike.
We're going to shut down because of Trump.
Hmm.
That's interesting.
Did we really, we didn't really think that was going to work, though, did we?
Well, we didn't, but at least we could have ridiculed it or something.
We didn't even do that.
It was just, it was such a dud.
And it wasn't even in the news.
Well, and that's why these things fail.
If it's not in the news, then it's not
clipped and
sent out on social media.
There was something else going on in the country, in the world at the time.
And so that's how these things work or don't work.
And you know, maybe.
It's very possible.
It was happening all over, but we didn't know about it.
If a tree falls in the forest, does anyone hear it?
If no one's there, does it make a sound?
Well, I was here in the Bay Area and I didn't see anybody protesting or walking out.
You know,
I suppose someone from the black community could say it's supposed to be the blacks that were supposed to stop working for some reason.
The blacks.
The blacks.
The blacks said, you know, we haven't got any jobs.
So what are we supposed to do?
So
a lot of, I got several emails saying, you know, you should start the show an hour later.
I'm like, this is going to be a multi-hour thing, this Charlie Kirk Memorial.
You know, we might as well not do a show.
We do a show on our own deathbeds.
This is true.
We do it on Christmas.
We're on vacation.
We're doing a show.
We're going to change the show for some outside influence.
I don't think so.
No.
And it's a podcast, people.
You can listen to it anytime.
I am recording it.
I will watch it later tonight.
I'm very interested.
It's a real moment for America's younger generation.
That place is packed.
Now, of course, they're showing me celebrities on the quad screen.
Very important.
We see who's there.
Were you there?
I have some big names.
Chris Tomlin, Brandon Lake, Phil Wickham.
These are all big names.
Are they?
Yeah.
Well, you won't see them on the MTV awards, but yeah,
they're big names.
I haven't heard of any.
All three of those names are unknown to me.
Well, because I didn't know who Halsey was until I was seeing all these posts because they won't let Halsey do another album.
So I went and I went to YouTube to listen to Halsey.
You're still stuck in your life.
You're Holly Mackerel.
It's just another one of these manufactured acts.
It's just like it sounds like Taylor Swift.
Probably has a little better voice.
But the songs are unmemorable, and there's lots of them.
And
yeah, that's what popular top 40 music has always been that.
Unmemorable.
I mean, name three songs, Taylor.
Hum, hum, the hook from Taylor Swift swift.
Three, from three Taylor Swift songs.
No, you can't.
Rihanna,
you're a big fan of Rihanna, but you can't hum one of her songs.
I can't.
Yeah.
Now, these are Christian contemporary artists.
They sell out Austin.
Oh,
that's what you would know.
I wouldn't know.
No, they sell out Austin two nights, 000 people each night they're pretty big that's a good business
it's a great it's it's the god business man it's a good business um so i have a a suggestion for people
uh get a proton mail or a fast mail account or get something other than gmail
Because I am convinced, based on the content of your newsletter, that Gmail slash Google slash alphabet destroyed it.
Well, I think this happens.
By the way,
our girl Catherine in Bangkok didn't get the mail either.
It says a bunch of people didn't get it.
And it's always Gmail.
And I think you might be right, but the problem is every time I send out the second note, I get about 10 to 20 to 30 to 50 to 100 people say, I've got Gmail.
I've always gotten the newsletter.
I don't know what these people's problems are.
So
there's something selective about it.
And I can't, and there's, I have yet to figure out what it might be.
It could also, believe it or not, it could just also be a massive technical fail.
Email, you know, there's a lot that can go wrong.
You know, years ago, this is back in the early 80s when I was writing for the DEC professional.
Wow.
A platform that I don't think is in use anymore.
No, because there's no DEC.
No.
Digital Equipment Corporation doesn't exist.
And I wrote this column.
Funny thing is, the columns I wrote for that magazine is the only columns I've won any awards for.
Wait, what award?
What award did you win?
I won the Computer Press Association Award for Best Column for one of those.
Did they have a gala every year?
The Computer Press Association Against the Excellent?
They did.
They did.
And it was gay.
No, no surprise there.
Well, it was a gala.
Oh, very, very gala, yes.
Oh, it took you forever.
Yeah.
So
I wrote this column once there.
I remember this distinctly because I never got so much hate mail in my life.
It was about during the early days of the internet when it was still, you know, just after ARPANET at first, you know, you get an email account.
And I did a rant about how that's unreliable.
And it's never going to, you know, it's always going to be that way.
It's just because of the system itself, the whole mechanism stinks.
And oh, man, all these nerds, you know, these engineers from all these big companies.
You can't say, it's bull crap.
This is the best thing ever.
It's going to work and it works well.
Well, you're
also
on video with evidence of how you troll Apple people.
That's one of my favorite pieces of video.
You were so glib about, oh, this is how I do it.
I slam Apple and then I'll go, yeah, Apple's great.
And then I'll slam him again.
And then people whipsaw back and forth, and my audience just keeps growing.
You are the ultimate troll.
It's very good.
Oh, well, I'm not as much as I used to be.
Well, I lost my touch, to be honest about it.
Can you turn your speakers just a little?
It's really, really coming back loud.
What is this?
What is it?
Yeah, it's coming back loud today for some reason.
It should be okay now.
Yeah, it's okay now.
So,
oh, I forgot to last night,
local Fredericksburg news report.
And by the way,
before you get your Fredericksburg news report, I want to say, so Mimi, who's running for office in Port Angeles.
Yeah, but where's the script?
She has
coming.
She has a
friend who's an ex-police, and
he is connected to the same military intelligence people we talked about before.
Oh.
And he great going down?
He feels feeds.
She says to me, she She tells me these stories.
Why does he think this?
And I always say, by the way, my response, which includes there's going to be an assassination attempt at the Charlie Kirk thing, and there's all this and that, and all the
anomalies about
the assassination and all the rest.
And I said, you know, and the one thing in common I think that all these people have is they refuse to listen to the No Agenda show.
Oh, no.
Why would they?
It's like Laura Logan doesn't listen to the No Agenda show.
She'll never listen to it because it's it's no, uh-uh.
I can barely get the keeper to listen to a full episode.
She listens.
You know who listens?
Everyone at church.
They love it.
They love the No Agenda Show.
Everybody's like, yeah.
Oh, and so I walk in.
This is the Boots and Barbecue.
This is the big Fredericksburg tea party gala, which I like a lot because
it doesn't cost anything and there's no auction.
Every gala in the world hasn't.
We have the silent auction is closed, everybody.
You know, they did have a silent auction.
You can
no, no, the silent auction, but it's, it wasn't, they had sponsors of the event, they didn't have fun, it wasn't a fundraising event per se,
although it is, but all these galas, like, and then, well, okay, we've got half a cow from uh Ted's ranch, and the bidding starts at $800.
And, you know, and then so people wind up buying a $4,000 half a cow.
You know,
it's all like kind of icky.
It's like, yeah, look at me.
I got the big swinger.
Just donate your money.
And there's always something that is very overpriced that you don't want.
Like
a week's stay in Steamboat, Colorado
in
August.
And what's the name of this thing again?
Boots and BBQ.
And it's organized so that
one of the big engines behind
Boots and Barbecue, also the Fredericksburg Tea Party, is Matt Long, who organizes our meetups here.
And Matt's the guy that dresses up as Benjamin Franklin and goes into
the schools, the public schools.
Actually, he looks like Benjamin Franklin.
He's one of those guys.
Oh, he's great.
He's good at it.
No, he's this is
real deal.
One of Benjamin Franklin's,
I don't know, relatives, a direct descendant.
A guy named Nick DeWolf was a very famous technologist.
And he,
I think he was the great-great-grandson or something.
And he actually looked like Ben Franklin.
Well, Matt Long looks like Ben Franklin.
And he also looks like.
But he's not related.
No, who cares about your stupid story?
It's like you just derailed everything.
I know a guy who was friends with the great-grandson.
If you had a good story, you just plow through it.
Yeah, but it wasn't a good story.
I'm trying to get to it.
Anyway, so it's a big deal, and
it's sponsored by,
let's see, this is a great list of people.
Gun owners of America.
Woohoo!
Ben Franklin?
No, no.
The Boots and Barbecue, the Tea Party, the big annual gala.
Oh, I thought you said it wasn't sponsored by anybody.
No, I said there was no auction where they have those stupid auctions.
Okay.
A golfing vacation.
Anyway.
I'm hearing something really strange.
Something's off with my system.
Are you still there?
Yeah.
Something's off with the system.
I don't know what's going on today.
So, underwritten, let's put it that way.
Gun owners of America, the Convention of States,
Moms for Liberty.
You can already tell this was a, this was a hoot nanny.
This was good.
And the, and the speaker was, um, it was that guy, um,
yeah, he has a, he has a lot of these podcasts.
Uh,
yeah, a podcast.
Story is getting worse for
Alex Newman.
Alex Newman, now he's pretty good.
Alex Newman did 45 minutes, and it was the no agenda show.
It was literally agenda 20, 2021, agenda 2030, Soros,
Common Core.
I mean, it was like a run through our history.
And the guys out there making money on this.
I'm sitting there going, we could do this.
We just get a PowerPoint.
He had so many slides, said, well, only have 45 minutes.
Went
just fast-forwarded through about 50 slides.
Okay, we're here now.
But it was good.
You know, they honored the volunteer fire department of Kerr County.
Of course, you know, we had the floods here.
So that was really nice.
Uh, but anyway, the point is, I bumped into uh Kyle Biederman.
And Kyle Biederman,
why are you laughing?
It's because this is the most rambling story you've ever told.
All right, never mind.
Okay, let's move on to the news.
Well, I don't know
who Kyle Biederman is.
I want to know now.
So I'm about to explain.
He's a state senator, guy who owns Ace.
Okay.
Is he from
Fredericksburg?
He's a Fredericksburg state senator for the Texas legislature, and he's a Republican.
Yes, and he he owns Ace Hardware.
And he comes out to me, he says, I...
He owns Ace Hardware, the chain?
No, he owns several franchises.
Oh, he owns a franchises.
And a pizza restaurant.
And he says, I love your show.
How long have you been doing that?
You guys,
you're really good.
Do you really like each other?
I said, no.
That's a good show.
And he says, I love the Florida Ounces.
Anyway.
And Chip Roy.
Chip Roy was there.
Did Chip Roy listen to the show?
Chip Roy doesn't listen to anything or anybody.
He's at every single one of these.
He's running for Texas Attorney General.
That's why he was there.
And
Don
Heffinus, he's running for Comptroller.
It was a political event.
But you know what was good?
The barbecue was good.
Somehow that story just didn't unpack.
I think it was all.
I was going to do a really short update.
I think it could have started with the ending.
But the barbecue was really good.
No, just the barbecue is good.
And guess who was there?
And he likes the No Agenda Show.
I think that would have some
really made it brought it home.
I'll do better.
I'll do better.
Instead of a bunch of
bands, I never heard of
the bands.
The bands were at Charlie Kirk's Memorial.
You are very, you're not listening.
You're very confused.
No, it's because the story was discombed.
Whatever.
Okay.
It was.
It was bad.
Oh, okay.
So let's.
Well, here we go.
Here we go.
Here we go.
Now, the topic of the week has been free speech.
And it's really irksed me how, well, not irks me.
I think people tune into the No Agenda Show or listen to it on the podcast to get some actual information, to really understand what the truth is about something.
And everybody is full of crap, including Ted Cruz.
What he said there is dangerous as hell.
And I got to say, that's right out of Goodfellows.
That's right out of a mafiosa coming into it.
That's all.
I wonder if I have that.
Wow.
That's got to be some kind of tell.
Let me see.
That's right out of a mafiosa.
Oh, I missed it.
Here we go.
And I got to say, that's right out of Goodfellows.
That's not it.
I thought I had a.
That's all they got.
I don't have it.
I don't have it.
I don't have it, Porky Pig.
All right, onward.
I got to say, that's right out of Goodfellows.
That's right out of a mafiosa coming into a bar going, nice bar you have here.
It'd be a shame if something happened to it.
If the government gets in the business of saying, well, hold on a second.
What is Cruz doing shtick now?
Well, this is his podcast.
It's on his podcast.
And he's doing voices?
That wasn't bad, actually.
I thought his voice...
No, it wasn't.
No, I'm not saying it was bad.
It was pretty good.
But he's Ted Cruz.
I know.
But this is the whole thing stems from a dumb remark or
a remark made on a podcast.
All right.
This is where this whole, people don't think about what they're saying.
on podcasts.
We've been the thesis of yours for
the entire 18 years we've been doing this show.
And it's been the basic thesis.
You love bringing these people, these clips from these naive people that think that I don't understand it either, to be honest about it.
Why do you think that you can say stuff on a podcast you wouldn't say on network TV?
Well, it's
they don't consider it to be real media.
To this day, it's getting a little closer, I think.
No.
Like
Palm Bandy.
You know, she said stuff on a podcast, which was just ridiculous.
And, you know, we determined that that was possibly a Stephen Miller hit, which I think is still a very good thesis.
But I mean,
let's get back to Ted Cruz with his shit.
You have here.
It'd be a shame if something happened to it.
If the government gets in the business of saying,
we don't can't say what?
Did you say something no that was in the clip oh you sound like cruise if the government gets in the business of saying what we know
what you the media have said we're going to ban you from the airwaves if you don't say what we like
that will end up bad for conservatives
okay
so
Let's just go through a couple things which are not really
exposed at all
or discussed.
And let's listen first to
what
Jimmy Kimmel actually said.
We had some new lows over the weekend with the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them and doing everything they can to score political points from it.
In between the finger-pointing, there was grieving on Friday, the white.
Okay, so the actual offense, as it's being determined, and we'll get into it, is this beginning part.
And the second part is what everybody's focused on.
We get some new lows over the weekend with the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them and doing everything they can to score political points from it.
So that was the true offense was...
saying that this was a MAGA guy.
He's saying it in reverse, but he's kind of saying that.
And then we go into the comedy portion.
Finger pointing.
there was grieving.
On Friday, the White House flew the flags at half-staff, which got some criticism.
But on a human level, you can see how hard the president is taking this.
My condulations on the Lothiger friend Charlie of Kirk.
May I ask, sir, personally, how are you holding up over the last day and a half, sir?
I think very good.
And by the way, right there, you see all the trucks?
They just started construction of the new ballroom for the White House, which is something they've been trying to get, as you know, for about 150 years.
And it's going to be a beauty.
Yes.
He's at the fourth stage of grief, construction.
Demolition,
construction.
This is not how an adult grieves the murder of someone he called a friend.
This is how a four-year-old mourns a goldfish.
Now, okay, it was offensive towards the president because really,
you know,
I don't know if the president even heard the first bit that
the reporter asked.
like, you know, the murder of Charlie, sorry about your murder of your friend Charlie Kirk, how are you holding up?
Or maybe he's an 80-year-old who's like, huh?
What?
Yeah, I'm doing great.
Look at the construction over there.
I don't know.
But that's fine.
But that's what it seems like.
Well, here's the full clip of that in context.
My condolences, directly.
My condolences on a logic of your friend Charlie Kirk.
May I ask, sir, personally, how are you holding up over the last day and a half, sir?
I think very.
See, it really, I mean, that's from the that's standing next to the president.
It's a different camera angle.
It's kind of hard to hear what he said, but regardless.
So then Brendan Carr, the FCC chairman, goes on the Benny Johnson podcast and shoots his mouth off.
Although technically, I believe he is correct.
There's a very concerted effort to try to lie to the American people about the nature, as you indicated, of one of the most significant
newsworthy public interest acts that we've seen in a long time.
And what what appears to be an action, appears to be an action by Jimmy Kimmel to play into
that narrative that this was somehow a MAGA or Republican-motivated person.
If that's what happened here with his conduct, that is really, really sick.
I've been very clear.
They have a license granted by us at the FCC, and that comes with it an obligation to operate in the public interest.
And we can get into some ways that we've been trying to reinvigorate the public interest and some changes that we've seen.
But frankly, when you see stuff like this, I mean, look, we can do this the easy way or the hard way.
These companies can find ways to change conduct and take action, frankly, on Kimmel, or, you know, there's going to be additional work for the FCC ahead.
So, kind of a dumb statement because it did sound threatening.
But what people don't understand
is
how the system works because everyone just watches stuff on X, or you watch it maybe on YouTube TV.
This is legacy, legacy of spectrum, and which is very valuable.
You know, you probably read about auctions.
Oh, a billion dollars here, $10 billion here, $17.
I think Starlink just bought some spectrum from somebody else for $17 billion.
So the broadcast spectrum is owned by all of us, the taxpayers, and the licensing requirements are very clear, although they really have not ever been enforced because most
presidents and administrations have been afraid of the media.
Like, well, you know,
if we start to mess with them, then, you know, they'll say bad things about me.
Well, I don't think President Trump has anything to lose in that manner.
And it really is not the networks.
It's each local individual station that has a transmitter, which if they just turned those off and went, you know, full digital, they would not have to deal with any of this.
Yes.
Well,
yes, that's true.
So there's a few requirements.
First of all, you have to be a citizen, can't be a foreign government.
This is why Rupert Murdoch became an American.
Character.
An applicant must act honestly.
Intentional misrepresentations greatly increase the risk of license denial or non-renewal.
Criminal
conduct may or may not disqualify an applicant.
When reviewing competing applications, An
applicant who has no character issues is more likely to receive the license than one with legal violations, et cetera, financial requirements, and there's technical requirements.
But there is
some very specific laws about what you can and can't broadcast.
So, first, let's continue with Benny.
These are all short, with Benny Johnson and Brendan Carr.
Obviously, look, there's calls for Kim to be fired.
I think, you know, you could certainly see a path forward for suspension over this.
And again, you know, the FCC is going to have remedies that we could look at.
And again, you know, we may ultimately be called to be a judge on that.
But this also strikes me as sort of conduct
that to some extent shows some sort of desperate irrelevance.
I mean, look, NPR has been defunded.
PBS has been defunded.
Colbert is retiring.
Joy Reed is out at MSNBC.
Terry Moran has gone from ABC and sort of now admitting that they are biased.
CBS has now made some commitments to us that they're going to return to more fact-based journalism.
And so I think you see some lashing out from people like Kimmel, who are, frankly, talentless.
Yeah.
It's like, this is a podcast, and he thinks that no one watches Benny Johnson, or I'll do this.
I'll do this quick Benny Johnson.
He's a big podcast.
He's a big, of course he is.
Although, man, go look at his YouTube channel.
You know, he does with the YouTube channel.
If you want to just find the Brendan Carr interview, good luck because every image is AI generated of outraged-looking people.
You know, because that's what you have to do in order for the algorithms to pick it up and people to click on it.
Oh, there's an outrage clip.
Oh, I got to check that out.
Before you continue, I want to comment on that clip.
The way he cavalierly says that PBS and NPR have been defunded is ridiculous.
They're not defunded at all.
They're not even close to being defunded.
what he meant to say or should have said was that the government's not giving them any more subsidies subsidies and that amounts to one percent of their budget so how is that defunded it's not he he's an idiot in line with he's a
idiot he should be fired well he might get fired but and maybe this was intentional i don't know it doesn't seem like it seems like he's just shooting his mouth off and as a commissioner that's not your job we finally know his job you're absolutely correct.
This guy should not be on a podcast at all.
He should just, like all these lot of people during this, the Kirk, the
Kirk era, they should just shut up.
Well, here he is with the actual rules and regulations.
And then I have a few things to read.
We have a rule on the book that interprets a public interest standard that says news distortion
is something that is prohibited.
Likewise, we have a rule that addresses broadcast hoaxes.
And so, again, over the years, the FCC has stepped back from enforcing it.
And I don't think it's been to the benefit of anybody.
Just look at the credibility of these legacy media.
It's absolutely through the floor.
They used to be able to say at least they were more trustworthy than Congress, but now they're even less trustworthy than Congress.
And so I think as a business matter for them, something has to change.
And at the FCC, you know, we need to reinvigorate this.
So, again, there's actions that we can take on licensed broadcasters.
And frankly, I think that it's really sort of past time that a lot of these licensed broadcasters themselves push back on Comcast and Disney and say, listen, we are going to preempt.
We are not going to run Kimmel anymore until you straighten this out because we, we licensed broadcasters, are running the possibility of fines or license revocation from the FCC if we continue to run content that ends up being a pattern of news distortion.
So, I think, again, Disney needs to see some change here, but the individual licensed stations that are taking their content, it's time for them to step up and say, this garbage, garbage,
to the extent that that's what comes down the pipe in the future, isn't something that we think serves the needs of our local communities.
So, just so we understand,
the FCC can't pull anything away from ABC, NBC, CBS.
They can only pull away from individual stations.
And the renewal period is every eight years.
And it's a real thing.
It really happens.
And usually it's like, eh, whatever, just keep on going.
But the citizens who are in the market of
a transmitter, they are the ones who can file complaints.
And I'm sure they've filed plenty of complaints against the Vue and Kim.
There's a lot of people, particularly our age and older, who sit at home going, Ah, these guys, I'm going to file a complaint with the FCC.
You know that that happens.
And the
most, I'm at the point, if I wasn't doing this podcast, I'd be doing it.
Exactly.
You'd be writing letters to the president
on your typewriter.
No, so this is
it's very valid that a lot of these stations who are getting their complaints are saying, well, you know, this is kind of a problem because I think it's in 2028, is when a lot of them come up for renewal.
Like, well, you know,
if you look at the balance and if you really look at the laws, the laws,
then,
you know, I can see where they would be worried.
And Brendan Carr obviously threw some gasoline on the fire.
Now, there is another very specific,
it's in U.S.
law, 70, 47 CFR 73.1217.
Now, I certainly defer.
Oops, sorry, that's not the one.
He talks about here.
We have a rule on the book that interprets a public interest standard that says news distortion
is something that is prohibited.
Likewise, we have a rule that addresses broadcast hoaxes.
And so, again, over the years, the FCC has stepped back from enforcing it.
And I don't think it's been to the benefit of anybody.
Just look at the credibility of these legacy media.
It's absolutely through the floor.
They used to be able to say at least they were more trustworthy than Congress, but now they're even less trustworthy than Congress.
And so I think as a business matter for them, something has to change.
And at the FCC, you know, we need to reinvigorate this.
So, again, there's actions that we can take on licensed broadcasters.
And frankly, I think that it's really sort of past time that a lot of these licensed broadcasters themselves push back on Comcast and Disney and say, listen, we are going to preempt.
We are not going to run Kimmel anymore until you straighten this out.
Did I just play that?
I think I just played that.
Yeah, you played it twice in a row.
Yeah.
Okay.
So the law
is
no licensee or permittee of any broadcast station shall broadcast false information.
concerning a crime or catastrophe if the licensee this is number one if the licensee knows this information is false well that's kind of difficult to prove That is tough.
That's a tough one to prove.
If it is foreseeable that broadcasts of the information will cause substantial public harm,
maybe, maybe not.
Broadcast of the information does, in fact, directly cause substantial public harm.
This is kind of what they call the hoax, the hoax rule.
So, you know, obviously
no one should say anything because we don't know the exact origin.
They didn't at that time, certainly not know anything about this kid.
But, you know, when you're talking to someone who's saying, I'm sorry, my love, and is living with a trans person, it's probably not a MAGA.
You know, so probably not.
Probably not.
And his mom said he wasn't.
You can make a case that that was broadcasting false information, but it comes down to,
as we pointed out in the last show, we had clips that indicated that
that operation is so filled with liberals and siloed people not bubble i i decide i was thinking about these terms silo versus bubble bubbles pop silos don't
uh siloed people that all believe something and they and it and so i i think they were totally sincere on it it was definitely wasn't a hoax well news distortion is another part of a different rule on the books and this is the final question short do you believe that uh what jimmy kimmel said rises to the level of news distortion look again the festival could be called upon to be an ultimate judge in that but at this point, I think it's clear, it appears to be clear, that you could make a strong argument that this is sort of an intentional effort to mislead the American people about a very core fundamental fact to a very important matter.
At the end of the day, if we do get called upon to cast a vote on this, Disney will have a chance to put in their arguments and explain it.
But
this is a very, very serious issue right now for Disney.
Right.
So serious issue for Disney, Disney, but he has no power over Disney.
He only has rule, a decision-making over license renewal, which would come up in 2028, which he probably wouldn't even be there anymore if a Democrat president is in the administration, et cetera, et cetera.
So, it's all kind of hypothetical.
Here's Brendan Carr explaining himself on CNBC, where all truth comes out.
This is after this is after the podcast.
Yeah, this was in fact uh thursday now i certainly defer to the decision-making of the company itself in terms of saying this was beyond the bounds but i do wonder and i think many people do whether you really are just targeting comedians that you did you know who typically through the years have uh have made fun of political figures in a way that because the president simply is offended by it
no no no look again broadcast tv is different we're on a cable show right now you don't have an fcc license you don't have an obligation to serve the public interest Podcasts don't either.
Stand-up comedians, whether they're on lots of forms of communications, don't.
And Kimball is free to do that.
But if you have a broadcast TV license, that means that you have something that very few people have.
And you're excluding other people from having access to that valuable public resource.
And it comes with an obligation to serve the public interest.
And again, over the years, there's been a rule in place at the FCC that local TV stations get to preempt programming that they don't think meets the needs of their communities.
But recently, these national programmers, ABC, Disney, Comcast, NBC, they've been exercising out-sized control and power over those local TV stations, and there's been no pushback.
And this is a very significant moment because local broadcasters are now pushing back on national programmers for the first time that I can think of in modern history.
And that's one of the things we want at the FCC.
We want to empower local broadcasters that have the public interest obligation to push back on national programmers so that people have more choice.
Now, this was interesting to me because
I'm not, do you know anything about that relationship?
Are these local broadcast stations,
are they slaves of the networks?
Do they have their hands on their nuts, so to speak?
Are they slaves to the networks?
I think to some extent they are.
Because we had a situation in the Bay Area where one of our stations, K-R-O-N, which was the NBC affiliate,
was kicked off.
It was replaced by a
station that I think at the time was in Sacramento and they moved to San Jose, KNTV.
And it had to do with
all of a sudden the network wanted to charge more money.
Yeah.
Well, there it is.
It comes down to money.
There's a money issue due to the money.
And by the way,
this one thing that's not mentioned here, and it should be mentioned, is the Disney thing.
It's a little more complicated than what's being presented because there's also a deal that is going to have to be approved by the Trump administration at some point in time coming up.
What is the Disney deal?
The Disney deal, Disney's trying to buy via ESPN, they're trying to buy NFL networks.
Oh, well, what is the ⁇ oh, that would be
anti-competitive?
Yes, because it brings the NFL, you know, more NFL games over to ESPN.
And this is a big deal.
No one talks about that one.
But it's talked about in sports circles.
Okay.
As far as I'm concerned, no one talks about that one.
They do talk about it.
It's been talked about.
No, I know, but because it's sports.
Hello.
But let's follow the money.
I think these affiliates have been asking for probably since the writers, probably since the writer's strike, they've been saying, hey, ABC,
can you take this guy off?
We could do reruns of Hogan's Heroes and make a lot more profit.
Just to back you up on that, if you had looked at the newsletter.
I did.
I did when it came out.
When it came out.
Sorry.
If it came out, if you got one,
there is a chart in there showing the unbelievable fallout of the audiences for these late-night shows.
It is so bad.
How bad is it?
It's bad.
They've dropped, I'd say, 90% of their audience has been lost.
And Kimball was losing 40.
I mean, they say that
Colbert, which was overstaffed, was losing $100 million a year.
Kimball was losing $40 million.
$40 million a year just down the drain.
And the audience is not showing any signs of recovery.
And all three
words.
And there you have it.
The bottom line is that Disney didn't want the backlash.
They didn't want, you know, they just wanted to get rid of Kimball.
I'm sure NBC wants to get rid of Fallon because of this very issue.
It's not precisely what you're doing.
And you're writing about Horgan's Heroes, by the way.
Yeah.
Well, it's very interesting.
Horgan's Heroes reruns would get more audience.
It's cheap content.
It's cheap content.
You could put friends in it.
And it's cheap.
It's free.
Yeah.
So this is a money issue.
They've been probably saying this for a long time.
And oh, by the way, our audience gets mad, and that's why they're not watching anymore because your guy is just making fun of their guy.
This has been a money issue, and Brendan Carr empowered them, particularly Nexstar.
And what's the other outfit who used to be headquartered here in Austin?
Well, I know the other one that was upset was Sinclair, but I don't think they were in Austin.
Yeah, they're in Austin.
They weren't in Austin, were they?
Their headquarters in Austin.
Or it was.
Yeah, it was.
Ron Bloom and I went there.
No, Ron Bloom and I went there.
We pitched them on something.
along the way.
And it was
news to me.
Well, and we talked with a muckety muck.
A muckety muck.
Yes, a muckety muck, a true muckety muck.
So the only guy who, of course,
in a way, well, he waffles a bit at the end, but Rand Paul talked to Christian Welker from NBC, and he just called it straight up as it is.
Do you want to ask you, broadly speaking, about free speech?
Free speech?
Freedom of speech.
I want to play something that President Trump promised during his inaugural address, followed by comments that he made just this week.
By the way, I forgot to harp on the president for this comment during his inaugural speech.
Take a look.
I will also sign an executive order to immediately stop all government censorship and bring back free speech
to America.
When somebody is given 97% of the stories a bad about a a person, that's no longer free speech.
That's no longer, that's just cheating.
Senator, do you believe that President Trump is sending the message that he only supports free speech when it's speech that he agrees with?
Well, this is why it's kind of rich for Governor Shapiro also to come on and be outraged by censorship.
Was he asleep for the four years of the Biden administration when they did have censorship?
The FBI, Department of Homeland Security were sent to the offices of Twitter.
They were sent to the offices of Facebook.
Facebook was told to
take down information concerning the origins of the COVID virus, or they were being threatened with remove their liability protection or being threatened with being broken up by antitrust.
So we have had official censorship going on for many years now, and everybody on the left just looked the other way.
They actually had an office, an office of censorship.
So I applaud Trump for bringing that down.
Now, saying we're going after the FCC licenses is wrong and inconsistent with that.
I applaud Trump for getting rid of the censorship office in our government, but I think people should discontinue this idea of policing hate speech or sending the FCC after networks.
Yeah, both of those are in his crosshairs, and rightly so, because they're morons.
Brendan Carr is dumb, and Pombandi may be even dumber.
The thing that's amazing, though, is that
where ABC thought, wow, this is great, we we can dodge the bullet of getting rid of Kimmel because, oh, there's, you know, the only young people we have are the ones watching.
What is it?
The
0.7 rating, I think.
It's almost nothing.
More people listen in the demographic, 18 to 49, more people listen to the No Agenda Show.
It's really, it's really that bad.
It is.
It's that bad.
But what's happened is because of the hatred towards Trump from the, I guess, your typical ABC late-night viewer, viewer, they've gotten the ire of all of their fans and not just people who like Kimmel, but Disney fans.
And Disney fans, I mean, the, I know, I'm sure you know some Disney fans.
These are people who do pilgrimages,
you know, they or big buses.
They, they love Disney.
Anything that's Disney, they'll watch every movie.
Can I tell you something?
Yeah.
No.
Oh, I know a lot of people like that.
I do not know one like that.
Well,
that's interesting.
I know a lot of people like that.
Obviously, there's a lot of die-hard Disney fans, and they are revolting.
Not as in their
kind of revolting, too, but they are revolting.
They have to be revolting.
They're revolting against ABC.
Here's an example of some TikTok dude.
Okay, everybody.
So
as of today, I canceled my Hulu, my Disney Plus, my Paramount.
I never had ESPN.
I would have canceled it anyway.
I cut up my Disney credit card.
My Disney annual pass to the park has expired.
I was thinking of renewing it.
I will not be renewing it.
I refuse to sand on any Disney property.
I refuse to eat at any Disney establishment.
That is my little way of protesting my right to the First Amendment.
What they're doing on
now becoming state-run media is getting rid of everyone that disagrees with the current administration.
And that I have to draw the line.
I mean, there are other things, but this, my right to say whatever I want to say being taken away, no.
What I can watch, what I can't watch, no.
That doesn't flow with me.
So, only way to get back at them is got to get back at Disney.
Got to get back at ABC because they coward to a bully.
So they basically told them to get rid of these people.
Stephen Colbert was first.
Jimmy Killmee was second.
They will go after more.
Also, daytime.
State-run media.
This is the beginning.
It's happening now.
It's happened before.
North Korea, China, Russia, state-run media as of today.
1930s, 1940s, Nazi Germany.
Hitler became chancellor.
First thing he did, went after radio, went after the print, the newspapers, state-run media.
Told the people what they can watch, what they can't watch.
Sorry.
The only way to make them feel it, in the pocketbook.
I canceled it all.
What this brings to mind is something that you and Mo discussed some years ago about
the idea that
we're not going to hire people anything like this because the long-term effects are so negative.
This was some time ago when you talked about that.
Don't hire a black person because it's going to be trouble down the road.
This is the price you're going to have to pay if you're going to hire liberals at the level of Jimmy Kimmel.
Yeah.
Because
now they're paying the price.
And they're going to pay the price for when they get rid of the view.
That they should have not had the shows on in the first place is what's going to be the rationale for never hiring anybody like that again.
This is not the way to go about this.
And it's worse because now
big stars, big stars.
Actually, Cynthia Nixon,
you know, sex in the city, sure, but she's in Gilded Age.
A runaway hit series, and here's her little 30-second bit.
Hey, I just canceled my Disney Plus and Hulu subscriptions, and they asked me why I hit other, and I wrote, because I believe in the First Amendment, reinstate Jimmy Kimmel.
Now, my whole family is really going to miss Applet Elementary.
We are really going to miss Only Murders in the building.
But you know what?
We would miss the First Amendment a whole lot more.
Don't go to the theme parks.
Don't go on the cruises.
Cancel your subscriptions now.
Yeah, this is, they are definitely paying the price.
Yeah, they're paying their price.
If they hadn't had Kimmel in the first place, this wouldn't happen.
That's the irony.
Now, since we're talking about First Amendment stuff, I do have one.
I have one more in my sequence here.
The last one,
which relates to the woke guy talking about this is what Stalin did, this is what Hitler did.
This is
state-controlled media.
You want to hear about state-controlled media, woke boy?
This is my new friend, Katie Hopkins.
Remember, I met her.
Katie Hopkins was here in Fredericksburg.
She's your pal now.
She's my buddy now.
Yes.
And she was right down the right down the road doing an interview with Laura Logan, going rogue with Laura Logan.
And listen to this.
What my comedy shows do, they allow people to laugh at the things you're not allowed to say because I can just about get away with saying them now in the guise of comedy.
And
it's a fine line.
I was arrested and interviewed under caution.
I haven't spoken about this yet.
About three weeks ago, and I'm waiting to be charged for the crime of online communications, crime of speech, for my Katie's.
I do a pub night online called The Katie's Arms.
I love the Katie's Arms.
So I've been arrested for that i see
because of what i said on my katie's arms pub
so she that's her her live stream where she drinks wine you ever see you ever seen it no yeah she's just it's just her in her in her apartment she's drinking wine she's vague snyder remarks yeah and they arrested her for something she said that that's hitler that's the stuff yeah exactly and that's what's going on in the uk right now oh i mean when lynnham was arrested, he's not even a UK citizen.
I think he's Irish or Scott, or he might be Scott.
But whatever the case is, that he comes into Heathrow.
I think, and I said it on the show, a couple of shows, last show or the show before, that I think Americans that do a lot of tweeting
could possibly just be picked up when they show up at Heathrow.
Oh, well, it's funny you bring that up because I have a clip.
of an American.
Now, she's not at Heathrow.
She already is living in the the UK.
And this is, you know, the GB News is making a big deal of this.
She's a member of something called the Free Speech Union, which is probably strike one.
Here she is as a cop comes to her house.
I'm a member of the Free Speech Union, and I'm an American citizen.
Something that we believe you've written on Facebook has upset someone.
You're here because somebody got upset.
Is it against the law?
Am I being arrested?
You're not being arrested.
Then what are you doing here?
My plan was, if you were admitting that it was you who wrote the comment, you could just make an apology to the person.
I'm not apologising to anybody, I can tell you that.
The alternative would be that I have to call you up for an interview.
I'm here to talk to you about the allegation.
They've reported it to the police.
So what?
Obviously, we get a lot of reports like that.
Are there no houses that have been burgled recently?
No rapes, no murders?
Yeah, that's all going on as well.
That's being burnt.
Well, then why aren't you out there doing, you know, investigating those?
Because I've got to investigate everything that gets reported.
Well, you're not investigating houses being burgled.
No, that's not my job today.
Would you like to have a look at the comment that I...
I don't need to.
I know exactly the things I've said.
So the cop shows up at her house to talk to her about what she posted.
And if she just goes along with him and apologizes to the person she offended, then the problem goes away.
Otherwise, you have to come downtown.
We have to interview you.
By the way, didn't she sound a bit like Mimi?
No, not to me.
No.
To me.
She sounded very nervous and pissed.
Well, no.
Which does sound a little like Mimi, but
she's like, I know exactly what I said.
You know, I'm not apologizing to anybody.
I can see Mimi saying that.
Well, there's that.
Yeah, well, that would definitely be the wordage would be similar.
So,
you know, it's like, come on.
But anyway, you wanted to go to a club.
Yeah, I want to get this.
We're talking about free speech.
Freedom of speech.
I'm not going to allow it to say free speech.
I don't know why freedom of speech as opposed to free speech is so important to you.
Because one of these days they're going to write some legislation that's going to be free speech, and it'll be something different than the First Amendment.
This happens all the time.
No, it's different now.
Hate speech, like hate speech.
Hate of speech?
Hate
hate speech.
Hate speech kind of just crept in all of a sudden.
And then we have our attorney general talking about it.
So, no, it's freedom of speech.
To me, it's awkward structure to say freedom of speech when you mean free speech.
I don't mean that.
Free speech is this podcast.
This is free.
Free speech.
Okay, well, that's what I'm talking about.
Free speech.
Okay, free speech.
Podcast.
Yeah.
So
we had discussed Harvey Levin trying to get out of the fact that his audience cheered.
Yes.
No, not his audience, his staff.
Not his audience, his staff.
His entire staff cheered when Charlie Kirk was killed.
And he came on sheepishly saying, well, nobody liked that.
They weren't cheering about that.
Nobody would be working here if they were that way, blah, blah, blah.
And I've gotten plenty of evidence.
I've seen him go on and off on Trump all the time.
So listen to, so they bring up the Kimmel thing on the show and tell me that this guy didn't just hire people that hated.
I mean, they're just, you can tell that this whole operation is staffed by these types of people.
They're all a bunch of liberals.
to an extreme.
Just listen to Harvey in the background during this teaser.
This is the beginning of a segment on Kimmel.
And Harvey going,
as they're talking about free speech,
he keeps saying RIP, R.I.P.
Listen to this.
It is a new day in America,
a day where it feels like
more than ever, free speech and the First Amendment.
R.I.P.
Some people are saying R.I.P.
to the First Amendment after Jimmy Kimmel was officially suspended, but suspended indefinitely by ABC.
Well, that's interesting.
I thought that was a bit much.
And he was beside himself, RIP, RIP.
And they did a teaser with RIP, RIP.
So, like, he's going to be censored.
I mean, he could get fired.
Of course not.
Of course not.
He's a Jew.
The Jews run the media.
No way.
It's never going to happen.
He has nothing to worry about.
R.I.P.
R.I.P., R.I.P.
Brother.
Yes.
His problem is he's a douche.
And well, you don't actually watch TMZ, do you?
You just picked up that clip somewhere.
I'm sure you don't watch it.
I occasionally watch it
because I think it's, I like the structure of the show.
I find it fascinating that Harvey, who is very petite male, a lot of people, you don't realize it because he's not.
Oh, is he?
He's a petite male.
He is a petite male, really.
And compared, I mean, he usually is behind like a fence or behind a barrier, and he's kind of leaning over, drinking a soda.
But when he comes out and stands amongst the others, he is the petite, he's the petite male.
He works out a little bit.
But I would like to see him next to Greg Gutfeld, and I wonder which one of the two is shorter.
Well, you know, small people with big heads are very successful on television.
That's the rule.
Yep.
I'm going to lead you into your clips with a 40-second setup.
The Pentagon will now require credentialed journalists to sign a pledge to refrain from reporting on stories that have not been authorized for release, including unclassified information.
The newly named Department of War detailed in a 17-page memo that journalists who do not abide by the new policy will risk losing their access.
The new restrictions come as the Trump administration beefs up its attacks on the media landscape.
Defense Secretary Pete Hekseth stated that reporters will also no longer be allowed to freely roam the halls, adding that they must either follow the rules or go home.
U.S.
journalists have denounced the new measures as unconstitutional, calling them an attack on the First Amendment, which guarantees freedom of the press.
So, the press somehow believes that freedom of the press, which by the way, no one calls it free press.
You'll notice they do.
Okay.
Barry Weiss.
Yep.
Freedom of the press has nothing to do with where you walk or what you can grab.
It has to do with what you can say.
You can roam the halls of the Pentagon
barging into whatever office you want to.
Clearly, that's what they think.
According to Euronews, that's what, oh, they're all up in arms because we can't walk around the halls.
That's we have freedom of the press, man.
Free press.
Free press.
Free press is what my Chinese laundry does.
Pentagon clamped down.
This is from NPR.
There's only two clips, but they summarize it, I think.
Press Corps that covers it.
There are some new rules to follow.
That is, if they want to keep their official credentials that allow them to report from inside the building.
It is worth noting the move came at the end of a week where the Trump administration took aim at First Amendment rights on several fronts.
President Trump tried to sue the New York Times.
ABC took late-night host Jimmy Kimmel off the airwaves after the chairman of the FCC threatened the network's stations unless they acted against the longtime Trump critic.
Trump also warned that broadcasters who air the voices of critics like Kimmel should lose their licenses.
Joining us to explain what this latest.
What?
I know, but this is so slanted.
We just played the actual clip of what he said.
There was none of that.
Yeah, I know.
This is great.
Critic.
Trump also warned that broadcasters who air the voices of critics like Kimmel should lose their licenses.
Joining us to explain what this latest move at the Pentagon means for reporters and for the rest of us is NPR Media correspondent David Fulkenflick.
Hi, David.
Hey, Scott.
Tell us what exactly the new rule is.
Well, you know, Pete Hegseth came in as the Pentagon chief.
He's a former Fox and Friends weekend host, and he promised that it would be the most transparent Pentagon in history.
Instead, they've had very few press briefings, and now, and they threw out, by the way, a number of media organizations from their slots at the Pentagon, including NPR and the Watch Post, the New York Times.
And now they're saying that reporters who want to report from inside the building have to pledge never to divulge or even gather any information that the Pentagon hasn't authorized for release, and that's including unclassified information.
I mean, that just doesn't sound like reporting.
It doesn't sound like reporting.
It doesn't sound like the kind of reporters you and I know.
I mean, these are people who often have done this for many years.
Many of them have, you know, covered military conflict and wars in faraway zones and have gotten to know military personnel from the grunts to the multi-star generals and commanders and have gone through corridors and hallways and knocked on doors not only to get scoops, but just to get expertise and understanding
of the kinds of stories they're trying to bring to the American public and to the military personnel themselves.
How are the news organizations that cover the Pentagon responding to this?
Now, let me just say something to these hoity-toities here for a second.
I would be on board with what you're saying if, for the past
15 years, maybe even for the entire length of our free speech podcast,
we hadn't been inundated with complete non-journalistic reports of sources, say.
I went to college for three months
for communications.
And what I learned right off the bat from Vanita Zinn, who was my professor, you need to have two sources on the record to report something.
On the record.
We haven't heard an on the record in
over a decade.
So you're not.
Try two decades.
Try two decades.
Yeah, possibly right.
So, well, this was also 1985, I think.
No.
Try four decades.
Whatever.
So get out of here with your, well, you know, this is not how reporters operate.
Yeah, that's exactly how reporters operate.
You take leaks from all kinds of people with agendas from inside the building, which is the problem, of course.
And, you know, we don't want you doing that anymore.
Yeah.
Okay.
Fine.
I just look at the sales numbers.
How are we doing?
Do we sell any stuff to Ukraine?
Yeah, it's good to go.
I think that's about right.
But yes, I think all that is correct.
And they've kind of gotten lazy.
Well,
what they could have done,
because of the internet, yes, you're right.
Lazy is the word.
It used to be, according to the Uganda Times.
Now, those are the good old days when you had that.
Yeah, that's when the CIA could plan a story in the Uganda Times and they just pick it up.
They don't even do that anymore.
They're supposed to do it.
They don't even do that anymore.
Circular reporting.
They're too lazy.
You're right.
I haven't seen a report from the Uganda Times forever.
It's hopping.
I'm telling you, the Uganda Times.
Is there an actual Uganda Times?
I think there is a Uganda Times.
There probably is.
Okay, let's go to the finish this up.
Scott, I think it's very striking that none of the TV networks that I've reached out to, including Fox News itself,
CBS, NBC, CNN, have said anything publicly, issued any public statements.
Meanwhile, our new editor-in-chief, Tommy Evans, as well as Matt Murray, the executive editor of the Washington Post, and the New York Times corporately have released strong statements saying that this goes against First Amendment principles.
There's something called prior restraint, that is, that the government preventing the press or broadcasters from reporting the news before it's actually reported.
That was taken more than 50 years ago to the Supreme Court, which upheld the idea that the government cannot do that in the Pentagon papers case involving the Nixon administration.
I mean, this makes it harder for us reporters reporters for walking.
Hold on.
This is a conflation of prior restraint means you can't stop the paper from printing a story that's ready to go to the press.
It's got nothing to do with walking into offices, knocking on doors, and then
shooting the shit with some guy who's bored stiff at his desk.
I mean, come on.
By the way, there is most definitely a Uganda Times.
Yeah, this is the Times everywhere, yeah.
Yeah.
Bring the news before it's actually reported.
That was taken more than 50 years ago to the Supreme Court, which upheld the idea that the government cannot do that in the Pentagon papers case involving the Nixon administration.
I mean, this makes it harder for us, the reporters who cover Washington, to do our jobs.
David, why do you think people who read the news, who listen to the news, who watch the news, or just see it scroll by on their social media feeds should care about this development?
Well, reporters are trying to give the American people an accurate understanding of what our military is doing,
how our military are treated, and what's being done with their taxpayer dollars.
Take the attacks by the Trump administration and Defense Department against what they've characterized as Venezuelan drug boats.
There's been some question about that, and there have been some lawmakers in Capitol Hill, both parties, who've raised questions about the legality of that.
Clearly, HegSeth would like to control what kind of information gets out about
that now contentious things.
The idea of the strikes on nuclear sites in Iran, the military told us they were incredibly successful.
In subsequent days and weeks, we heard maybe not so much.
Again, the question is, what kinds of information is the American people getting?
I don't think the Pentagon gets to decide what we learn about the Pentagon.
Wait a minute.
So, in other words, the shooting of the drug boats, for example, to understand how that works, we have to have a guy roaming the halls in the Pentagon just going randomly from door to door.
Are you kidding me?
Yeah, I need freedom of the press.
The Uganda Times is owned by the government of Uganda.
Here, 26%.
I'm glad you took a deep dive into the Uganda Times for some unknown reason out of the blue in the middle of the show.
Well, it's interesting that 26% is owned by the Ministry of State for Finance.
26% owned by the Ministry of Finance, Planning and Economic Development, 19% the National Social Security Fund.
They have it split up.
Different
ministry interests.
Everyone gets to put their two bits.
Yes.
Yes.
That's exactly.
That's probably the way to go.
Yeah.
That's your state media
for a state run.
We don't have that here.
Not yet.
Not yet.
The New York Times is like owned by Saudis and a Mexican.
I mean, come on.
Yeah, exactly.
By the way, the Netherlands is on fire.
People have finally had it
with the.
Yeah, sure.
With the, well, it's interesting.
With the asylum seekers.
You got clips?
It's all in Dutch, so no.
There's a lot of fireworks and yelling and fighting and setting stuff on fire.
But what's interesting is the main protesters who went to The Hague where the government is,
there's this big open,
open field called Mali Veldt.
And that's where you do your demonstration.
You know, that's the place to go.
So you can get thousands and thousands of people.
The majority of them, who were all dressed in in black with skull masks,
football supporters of different teams, sometimes even rivals, they banded together
to say that they are sick of it.
They've had enough.
They fought the cops.
They set stuff on fire.
It's kicking off.
We'll see.
Well, yes.
I mean, take my bike.
Exactly.
Take my bike.
Where's my bike, man?
I forgot.
Yes.
That's my theme.
You picked it up.
You stole it.
I did not.
It's my theme.
Where's my bike?
It has always been my theme.
Oh,
people, go back and catch some clips of me bitching about the bikes.
Okay.
All right.
I'll give it to you.
Hey, just a little aside here.
Yep.
I think you'll be interested in this.
This is right up your alley.
Okay.
We're going to the moon.
As early as next spring, NASA hopes to send astronauts back to the moon.
Oh, we can't wait for this.
To orbit the moon, at least.
Okay, hold on a second.
Before we play these clips,
the more of these that come out, the more I'm starting to take your side on the original.
Only
I'm now wondering, you had this thing you used to do to soft peddle your argument.
Well, we never went to the moon, which is not an unusual commentary.
We had a famous pharmacist in the area that was a big advocate of this but you see i think you your original thesis was we never went to the moon but we went later
to the later because they went seven times or
someone look that up and get some clips
i think i think i could that could be documented and and i would
be i'm beginning to think that we maybe never went we didn't ever we didn't you not even for the later no the whole thing thing.
Even
if you risky, even Elon Musk says that he would have to refuel.
The whole thing is a big, massive hoax.
And now
even the scientists at NASA, who are so easy to get to the bottom of the middle bottom.
Okay, here's what bothers me, besides losing the tapes and all the rest of it, but here's what bothers me about these two clips that I have.
Okay.
Is why are we doing what they're going to describe?
What do we need any of this for, the way they're describing it?
Listen to this clip.
As early as next spring, NASA hopes to send astronauts back to the moon, to orbit the moon at least, the next step in a long plan to return to lunar landings and eventually to set foot on Mars.
Commander Reid Wiseman and the rest of the crew of Artemis II have been training for years.
When we leave planet Earth, we're zero miles an hour, and then when we come back in the atmosphere, we're doing 39 times the speed of sound.
We profiled the Artemis II astronauts on the show about a year ago, but on a mission like theirs, the people in space are just one part of a massive operation.
In fact, right now, NASA is recruiting volunteers here on Earth to help track the spacecraft as it makes its way to the moon and back.
Oh, wade, bring in some ham radio operators.
Volunteers like Scott Chapman helped NASA keep tabs on the automated uncrewed Artemis 1 mission in 2022.
After the spacecraft was no longer in sight, I assembled all those numbers into the format NASA asked for and uploaded it to their computer.
Chapman is an IT specialist specialist in Virginia and he mainly helps small businesses with computer issues.
But briefly in 2022, he got to Moonlight as a spacecraft tracker.
The spacecraft is transmitting at a fixed frequency.
However, when a transmitter and receiver are moving in relation to each other, either getting farther apart or coming closer together, the received frequency changes.
Coming towards you, the frequency seems to be getting higher, and then as it goes away from you, the frequency of what you hear gets lower as it goes past you.
And radio signals do the exact same thing.
Chapman is widely known in the amateur radio community.
And over the radio waves, he goes by his FCC-issued handle, K4KDR.
Much in the way...
Mah, he's not even an extra loser.
Widely known in the amateur radio community, and over the radio waves, he goes by his FCC-issued handle, K4KDR much in the way the local television might be does it
would you call that a handle no that's his call sign yeah it's not a handle it's like oh we have our local NBC station here and their handle is you know KNTV it's not a handle
I'm looking him up right now
yeah I look him up yeah I'm looking him up in QRZ is where I'm looking him up call sign of that local station is And then the amateur radio hobby that is essentially your name on the radio.
With his antenna up, he learned NASA was looking for operators to assist in navigating Artemis 1.
He wanted it.
Now,
this confused me a little bit.
He says the further away you get, the frequency changes.
No, no.
No.
It's like the train coming and going
past you.
As you're
accelerating away.
Sound, yes.
No, no, the frequency would, no, it's the same as sound, and you know, sounds a frequency.
So as you're going away, the frequency that the signal would be transmitting would be changing, it would be lengthening, and as it's coming towards you, it would be compressing.
And so you're going to have these different frequencies.
The frequency is going to
alter just enough that you need a ham in the middle of nowhere to do this because we couldn't do it in 1969.
So I don't know how they got the signals back and forth.
Well, yeah, but the shift is minute.
I mean, that's like sideways.
I would think it would be fairly small.
Yeah,
is that the biggest thing?
It's not worth doing a million miles an hour.
No, it's very minute, very, very minimal.
Because, you know, we bounce signals off the ionosphere.
And
yeah, you tune it a little bit.
We're talking.
minor kilohertz variation.
Let me listen to that last bit again from this nerd with his baseball cap on backwards.
The spacecraft is transmitting at a fixed frequency.
However, when a transmitter and receiver are moving in relation to each other, either getting farther apart or coming closer together, the received frequency changes.
Coming towards you, the frequency seems to be getting higher, and then as it goes away from you, the frequency of what you hear gets lower as it goes past you.
And radio signals do the exact same thing.
Chapman is widely known in the amateur radio community.
And over the radio waves, he goes by his FCC-issued handle, K4KDR.
Much in the way the local television might be designated as whatever the call sign of that local station is.
And in the amateur radio hobby, that is essentially your name on the radio.
With his antenna up, he learned NASA was looking for operators to assist in navigating Artemis 1.
He wanted it.
Brother.
Your point is well made.
It's like, what you have a $24.6 billion budget, but we got to get ham radio, guys.
Okay.
Sure.
I'm logging into my QRZ account to get this guy's full details.
Yeah, go.
I thought you'd have it by now.
So while you're doing that, let's play part two.
I forgot my credentials, but I have it in my password manager.
At first glance, it seems overwhelming.
Certainly, a person living in a
it was overwhelming, but it wasn't overwhelming in 1969,
but it's overwhelming today.
Why are you taking my gig, man?
It's like all of a sudden, you're on.
Well, I'm just annoyed by these sorts of reports, and how everybody's breathless about it as though, oh, okay, that makes sense.
It doesn't make sense at all.
At first glance, it seems overwhelming.
Certainly, a person living in a rural area of Virginia isn't going to be capable of monitoring the signals and reporting the data that they are looking for.
But I thought to myself, wouldn't it be nice if this project had one participant who had a very small system?
So I went ahead and replied, and much to my surprise, was selected for the program.
Chapman's job, tracking the signals beamed down from the automated spacecraft as it orbited the Earth.
As a hobbyist, he had the tools good enough for NASA.
I did have a one-meter dish, which you can hold in your hands, and that was mounted on a rotator on my roof.
So, in the eyes of the people managing that program, they determined that I was maybe capable of receiving the signal, and ultimately I did.
Applications to help track the next mission, one filled with astronauts traveling further from Earth than any human has in 50 years, are due in late October.
Yeah, this is a bunch of nonsense.
They do this to, I think, to show that they're relevant because,
you know, they've got citizens who are interested in this.
This guy's logbook isn't even on QRZ.
He's not a real ham.
Let me see.
Look at Sharice a real ham.
No, but I mean, if you got to be uploading your logbook, man.
Oh, you do.
You mean he's not like a nutball ham?
Yeah, exactly.
So, this program I'm looking at, volunteers worldwide to track lunar journey of NASA's Artemis 1 mission.
Look, I mean, this guy, oh,
I love communicating with the International Space Station.
Oh, I, I, wait, wait, I've got a thesis.
All right.
Fake.
You're going to have a bunch of these hams.
There's going to be so many of them that they won't have to worry about people saying that the whole thing was hoaxed.
No, how about this?
All you need is
some satellite that sends down a signal,
phase shifts, you know, do a little frequency shift, and then say, hello, I am Artemis 1.
Maybe it's just to prove that it's real.
It's kind of the same thing you're saying, I believe.
Yours is slightly better.
Yeah,
same thing, same basic thesis.
Let me see.
Just to get everyone involved.
So say, oh, look at all these people.
This confirms.
Hey, error.
Hey, error.
What frequency is Artemis 1 transmitting on?
So,
what?
What?
What frequency is Artemis 1 transmitting on?
Artemis 1 transmitted its main signals on the X-band, around 8 gigahertz for uplink and 7.2 for downlink, NASA's go-to for deep space chatter.
But if you're hunting amateurs, check the harmonics in your 2 gigahertz.
Folks like Scott Tilley picked those up easy from their backyards.
Oh, well, something NASA couldn't do.
Oh, we need help.
You're right.
It's a hoax.
They're hoaxing by getting all these amateurs to say, yeah, I received the signal, man.
You know, I also...
This is a possibility that I have to accept.
I also once, you know, I tracked the International Space Station, stood out on the back back deck when we were still in Austin, like an idiot, pointing a Yagi antenna at the sky, and I got a message back from the International Space Station.
It could have been from Elon Musk's Starlink for all I know.
I couldn't see it.
You don't know if it's really Artemis One, could be anything in low orbit.
And he's, and so he has a one,
what did he have?
A one mega, what disc dish did he have?
One meter.
One meter disc.
Hmm.
Very small
yeah two gigahertz oh all right
sounds hoaxy to me this will continue this saga i like it i like it and by the way everyone's complaining like well i don't like the money we send to israel because you know we we can't eat at home well stop stop spending three times as much on this dumb stuff who cares it's dusty
we know that well we're talking about is you just mentioned Israel.
I do have a Gaza report.
Yeah.
And this is NPR.
You know, NPR has changed its voices, it's got new people.
And now they have, they actually, I'm pretty sure this is Dracula
reporting from Gaza.
Take a listen.
Israeli airstrikes across Gaza City continue as the Israeli military forces residents out of the area, home to about 1 million people.
Gaza health officials say at least 34 Palestinians were killed yesterday from airstrikes.
And Pierrez and Asbabis reports, the situation is deteriorating rapidly for civilians unable to get out of Gaza City, with many families running out of water.
In the heart of Gaza City, thirst is now spreading faster than the fear of bombs.
The municipality says 75% of central water wells have been destroyed or damaged by Israel, leaving hundreds of thousands with little or no access to clean water.
Families still trapped north of the city have been unable to evacuate or forced to walk as far as 15 miles to reach the south.
Evacuating is expensive, as much as $6,000 to secure a vehicle out and attend to stay.
Some have even returned home after failing to find a safe place in the southern Gaza.
That is what Al Jamala family did after failing to find safety.
They returned to their home early Saturday.
I want to suck your blood.
I was waiting for it.
Good one.
Well, I think NPR blew it because what an opportunity they've missed.
They've missed a massive opportunity to slam President Trump and his entire extended family.
Global news in Canada had it.
Bezele Smotrich had just been asked what he thought should happen in Gaza.
The controversial far-right minister answered that the first phase of urban renewal in the strip was done, the demolition, and that the time to build was coming.
Smotrich says to listen to him.
There's a plan on President Trump's desk that will turn what's happening into a real estate bonanza.
I'm not kidding, he says.
It pays off.
Now, the Washington Post earlier this month reported the Trump administration is considering a plan to run Gaza for a decade as a trusteeship.
Palestinians living in the enclave would be moved out, at least temporarily, while billions would be poured in to develop the territory as a tourism resort and high-tech manufacturing hub.
Residential areas would be built up inland away from the coast.
It was Trump's son-in-law who first floated the idea of developing Gaza, saying last year its waterfront property could be very valuable.
That idea seemed to stick in the mind of Donald Trump when he returned to the White House.
I don't want to be cute.
I don't want to be a wise guy, but the Riviera of the Middle East, this could be something that could be so bad.
This could be so magnificent.
Well, the only person who appears to be speaking publicly about the plan is Smotrich, the ultra-nationalist leader of Israel's religious Zionist party.
The reported reported Washington plan for Gaza is being criticized by observers and legal experts.
Many say any displacement of Palestinians out of the enclave would be coercive at best and violate international law.
Motrich, on the other hand, appears to be saying it doesn't go far enough that Israel deserves a part of the land in Gaza in return for the money it's spent on the war.
Man, what an opportunity NPR missed.
They got sound bites and everything.
By the way, you know who's who's going to pay for
this Riviera?
The Arabs.
They're all in on it.
Saudi Arabia, Qatar.
They're like, oh, yeah, this is good.
They are.
They're being very coy about it.
Of course.
As one of our boots on the ground said, even the attack in Qatar, the Qatar is like, well, it's not about sovereignty, but just don't hit any civilians.
That's not okay.
No one likes Hamas,
elected by the people of so-called Palestine in 1988 with their kill all Jews.
It's really amazing.
The lack of historical knowledge of people everywhere is just flabbergasting.
Who really occupied those territories?
Syria, Jordan, and Egypt.
Those guys get away scot-free.
It's amazing.
And I'm pretty sure the Palestinians will be sent to Syria.
That's why President Trump made nice with the terrorists over there.
Yeah, you take him.
Because Egypt doesn't want them.
Egypt doesn't want them.
Jordan doesn't want them.
They don't.
No, Jordan gave up.
I mean, the West Bank, which is actually East,
is actually the West Bank of Jordan.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They fought a war over that.
Anyway,
meanwhile, more importantly, back home
didn't get as much play as it should have, but the president, wow, he came out with a couple of executive orders regarding immigration.
Very interesting.
The first one is...
While he was on his way back from the UK,
he came up with an immediate
executive order to be implemented immediately regarding H-1B visas.
One of the most abused visa systems.
Oh, this is great.
It gets really good, huh?
One of the most abused visa systems in our current immigration system has been the H-1B Non-Immigrant Visa Program.
This is supposed to allow highly skilled laborers who work in fields that Americans don't work in to come into the United States of America.
What this proclamation will do is raise the fee that companies pay to sponsor H-1B applicants to $100,000.
This will ensure that the people they're bringing in are actually very highly skilled and that they're not replaceable by American workers.
So it'll protect American workers, but ensure that companies have a pathway to hire truly extraordinary people and bring them to the United States of America.
We need workers.
We need workers.
We need great workers.
And this pretty much ensures that that's what's going to happen.
I think, Sean, do you agree with it?
Well, they're $100,000 per year.
So the whole idea is: no more will these big tech companies or other big companies train foreign workers.
They have to pay the government $100,000, then they have to pay the employee.
So it's just not economic.
If you're going to train somebody, you're going to train one of the recent graduates from one of the great universities across our land.
Train Americans, stop bringing in people to take our jobs.
That's the policy here.
$100,000 a year for H-1B visas, and all of the big companies are on board.
We've spoken to them about the gold card.
They love this.
They love it.
They really love it.
They need it.
Now that's that part of the end.
Are you sure they love it?
Are you sure the big tech companies love it?
Because the Indians abroad in India, they sure don't love it.
It's the latest effort by the Trump administration to curb or raise more money from legal immigration.
Companies will now have to pay an annual $100,000 fee on H-1B visa applications.
Annual?
I don't know if it was.
They have to pay $100,000.
No, it's annual.
It has to be renewed.
A move that deals a major blow to the U.S.
tech industry, which relies heavily on workers from India and China.
It is a loss for America, not India.
Those who go abroad and can't pay that much money for the visa will open their offices here.
And when they work in India, which is already making economic progress, it will contribute to that.
So I think this hike is beneficial for us.
The Indian government says the plan is likely to have humanitarian consequences, particularly the disruption caused to families.
President Donald Trump's threat to crack down on H-1B visas has become a major flashpoint with the tech industry, which relies on H-1B visa holders more than any other sector of the U.S.
economy.
Supporters of the program, including Tesla CEO Elon Musk, say it brings in highly skilled workers essential to filling in talent gaps and keeping firms competitive.
The Trump administration, on the other hand, says hiking the fee will mean more opportunities for American workers.
The country would rather not have to pay $100,000, but
they'd rather, how do you do that?
You hire Americans.
So there's an incentive to hire an American.
But there may be instances where it's better off doing through expertise or whatever it may be.
The new fee is going into effect Sunday.
It will not be applied to existing holders of valid visas re-entering the country.
From what I hear, there's entire groups online who are
making
airline reservations
that they don't intend to take, but keeping them up until the last minute and then canceling
so they can't come back before the deadline and sneak into the country.
It's probably our own spooks doing it.
Well, talking about, it brings up a point which I want to read a letter.
A letter?
Not an email, but a letter.
I'm sorry.
I print mine out, so to me, it's like a letter.
All right.
Regarding Americans getting these jobs and something we discussed.
This is from producer Trevor.
ITM, I wanted to elaborate on the other producer who said zoomers can't use a tape measure.
As 26-year-old carpenter and tradesmen, I see this all the time with new hires as to what they don't understand.
For example, you ask them to cut cut a piece of lumber at, say, 120,
I'm sorry, 127 and 5 16ths.
First of all, they ask, how do I find out how long it is?
And then once you tell them to use this thing,
also known as a tape measure, they then have absolutely no clue what a sixteenth is or how to read the tape.
So you explain that there's 16 marks on the tape measure between each inch and
count each mark as 1 16th.
Then you go and say something like, cut that at 65 and 3 eighths.
And they have no idea what an eighth is.
Wow.
And it's easy an entire day, an entire day worth of explaining how to use a tape measure.
Well, that is.
Well, you're not going to get many
engineers at the highest level of H-1B dumb
if you can't even do that.
Well, maybe everyone will stop dumbing down our children and
consider
changing.
The whole Department of Education, all of this started during, was it Reagan?
Carter.
Carter.
I mean, all of this was a bad idea.
We started with Carter.
Reagan tried to get rid of it.
He failed.
And it just got worse and worse and worse.
So that was only half of the announcement.
The big announcement is the one we've been waiting for, the gold card.
So this executive order is entitled the gold card.
It will set up a new pathway, a new visa pathway for foreigners of extraordinary ability who are committed to supporting the United States for a payment of $1 million to the U.S.
Treasury, or if a corporation is sponsoring them, $2 million by that corporation.
And that will give them access to expedited visa treatment as part of this new gold card program.
Now, one of the biggest problems we have is that people go to the best schools and they do great and they get great marks and then they're thrown out of the country.
You're not allowed to stay.
And this way, a corporation will be able, sort of like a signing bonus for baseball or football
corporation will be able to get them to stay in the country.
And I think it's going to be tremendously successful.
Howard, you say to it?
Sure.
So, historically, the employment-based green card program let in 281,000 people a year, and those people on average earned $66,000 a year on average, and they were five times more likely to go on assistance programs of the government.
So, we were taking in the bottom quartile below the average American.
It was illogical.
The only country in the world that was taking in the bottom quartile.
So what we are doing now is we are going to stop doing that.
We're going to only take extraordinary people at the very top.
Instead of people trying to take the jobs from Americans, they're going to create businesses and create jobs for Americans.
And this program will raise more than $100 billion for the treasury of the United States of America.
which we'll use for cutting taxes and paying down debt.
Now, okay, hold one second.
Yeah.
So, about a year ago, or not, no, I'm sorry, early in the Trump administration, it had to be just what, five months ago,
he brought up this gold card idea.
And my understanding then was the gold card cost $5 million
and guarantees you citizenship.
No.
What happened to that?
Well, that's the platinum card.
See, they didn't talk about that.
Trumpcard.gov.
The Trump gold card is gold card is here.
Unlock life in America.
So you get this.
It's the website is just like a credit card company.
It's great.
Exclusive privileges.
Now, the Trump gold card.
Low interest.
Well, yes.
Listen to this.
The Trump gold card for a processing fee after DHS vetting, a $1 million contribution receive U.S.
residency in record time with the Trump gold card.
But then you have the Trump Platinum card.
Listen to this.
Sign up now and secure your place on the waiting list for the Trump Platinum Card.
So I guess it's coming.
It wasn't in the executive order.
For a processing fee and after DHS vetting, a $5 million contribution, you will have the ability to spend up to 270 days in the United States.
here comes, without being subject to U.S.
taxes on non-U.S.
tax income.
This is this.
Come on in, people.
All you rich British people, you lamis, come on in.
That's a very interesting twist.
That is an interesting twist to get rich people who are sick of what's going on in Europe, especially.
Yep.
And maybe even some Chinese.
And have all your money sent to America America and
no income tax.
That's dynamite.
That's a good idea.
Yeah.
You've got to see this website.
It's the president with an eagle.
Well, okay.
What is the trumpcard.gov?
You're going to laugh.
I'm sure.
This guy is amazing.
Trump card.
This is so good.
45th and 47th president of the United States.
Little American flag there.
Got a little presidential.
Yeah, he's on the card.
Of course he is.
With the eagle.
It's so good.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, my God.
And you know how many Brits and Dutch and French all email me.
They got a form you can fill out right there on the card.
Oh, yeah.
You signed up now.
No obligation.
Yeah.
I know.
It's perfect.
It's perfect.
This is so amazing.
Well, there's also a goat.
There's a gold card and a corporate gold card.
The corporate gold card is even funnier.
I mean,
I wonder if you can get miles.
You go further down, there's an animated eagle.
Oh, where's the animated eagle?
It's right at the bottom.
It says submit your application.
And the eagle turns its head.
Oh, he does.
Someone put some work into this one.
Yeah, this is not a slouch of a site.
Oh, designed in D.C.
by the National Design Studio.
Oh, well, good job, everybody.
This is too funny.
It's the most American thing I've ever seen.
Wow.
Unlocked life in America.
Yeah.
There are so many, you know, we should also have a green card, you know, like the green.
Well, no, I guess you can't call it the green card.
You know, we should, the,
what, uh, what we need a level for people with like only 100,000.
Diners.
Diners club card.
Trump diners card.
Yes, exactly.
I don't know.
I just get a kick out of it.
It's just funny to me.
It's just funny.
I'm sure somebody finds it offensive.
Well, probably offensive that we're talking about.
In that same sesh,
oval sesh.
The what?
The oval sesh.
Sessions, a short for session, sesh.
In that same oval sesh.
Sesh.
Sesh, yeah, sesh, sesh, session, sesh.
You call the session.
So you're going to be a stickler about freedom of speech, but you're going to use terms like sesh.
Yes, and sus.
I'm going to use all these terms.
Suss?
Suss.
Yeah.
You don't know sus.
Where have you been, man?
Sus used to be used to suss something out.
No, that's double S.
Sus, S-U-S is suspect, suspicious, sus.
Wow.
Here's what the president said about former President Biden.
Joe Biden didn't know what he was doing.
He had a man that didn't know what he was doing.
We had a man, by the way, that
didn't approve.
If you take a look at what's happening in Congress, we had a man that signed everything with almost everything with an auto pen.
And he didn't tell the people from the AutoPen, whoever was using.
The one man that used it predominantly said that Biden only spoke to him twice and it was only about the weather.
So those pardons that he gave are illegal.
He gave illegal pardons.
And that includes a congressman that destroyed and deleted all the information from J6.
They deleted everything because it turned out that they were wrong.
It turned out that I offered 10,000 National Guard or soldiers whatever they wanted, and you wouldn't have had a problem.
And they turned it down.
Nancy Pelosi turned it down.
And the mayor of Washington, D.C.
turned it down.
They deleted everything and they destroyed it, illegally destroyed it.
And Biden gave them a pardon.
And Biden gave a lot of other people pardons that, frankly, would be in jail if it wasn't for those pardons.
But those pardons now are illegal.
Illegal.
They're gonna go after that.
Yeah, they're gonna try.
I don't know how they're gonna, how far they're gonna get.
Well, the big thing, um, which I'm sure you heard, was um, let me see, it was uh the president's uh
uh truth, his truth
to Pam Bondi.
I thought I had a clip of that, um,
hmm,
where he basically uh went on truth social and posted a truth and said uh Pam Bondi, what are you doing, Pombandi?
You you gotta like arrest these people
Where is it?
I guess I didn't I thought I clipped that.
Well, nobody's arresting anybody.
We already know that.
Well,
I think the way I read it was
President Trump is on board with getting her out.
That's how I read it.
After
the Miller pod fiasco,
I think she's on the way out.
Because it was.
No, she hasn't done anything.
No.
And it does appear as though she's just a dud.
And you're right.
She sachets when she walks, which is a bit somewhat annoying, to be honest about.
Let me read this to you.
Let me see.
I have it here somewhere.
He didn't end it with thank you for your attention to this important matter, which meant he was really pissed.
Yeah,
that would be true.
Yeah.
Everyone has the headline, but why don't they just post a picture of it?
Oh, my goodness.
This is the problem we have.
It really is.
Oh, he deleted the post, apparently.
Okay.
Well, he did.
Well, let me see.
Just to make that's unusual for him.
Yes, to make it more sus.
By the way, we have some other suggestions from the troll room.
The coal card.
Amazon offers hourly employees.
Please.
The
coal card, the brown card, the algae card, the
jelly of the month card.
There you go.
Jelly of the month.
American Jelly of the Month.
Yeah.
Let's see.
This was, there was a president was at the, what was he at?
The Cornerstone Institute.
Have you ever heard of the Cornerstone Institute?
No, I've never heard of them.
Well, it was a big gala
with gays, yeah,
yeah.
The A gays,
of course.
Let me see, the Cornerstone Institute, American Cornerstone Institute.
Who are these people?
Oh, the Ben Carson is on
the cover here.
They got American Cornerstone Institute.
What do these guys do?
Well, so they had a gala, yes, probably with,
And the presence broke there in tuxedo.
No less.
Then he says something pretty interesting.
Marty McCary is fantastic.
He's done amazing.
He's done great.
Thank you.
He's done great.
He's really amazing.
And they're really working on it with Bobby.
They're working on it.
Bobby's so non-controversial.
I wish we could get somebody who's a little bit more exciting in there.
But they're doing something.
And I think we have, frankly, that's a big announcement.
I think we have a bigger announcement coming.
I hope on Monday, Marty, it's enough.
We have to announce.
We have to make the announcement.
It's so big.
We can't let people keep doing this.
I don't want to wait any longer.
We don't need anything more.
And if it's wrong, it's not going to be wrong.
But if it is wrong,
it's fine.
We have to do it.
Because we're going to have an announcement on autism
on Monday.
Got to be Monday.
I don't want to do it Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday.
And I think it's going to be a very important announcement.
I think it's going to be one of the most important things that we will do.
Because what's happened with autism,
do you know that if you go back 15 years, 15 years, maybe a little bit longer, it was one in 10,000 children at autism.
Bobby told me, it's hard to believe that this is correct, that as of recently, it was one in 10 boys.
Big announcement.
Not Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday.
Monday.
Monday.
Monday.
It's going to be Monday.
American Cornerstone Institute is Ben Carson's outfit.
Dr.
Ben Carson.
Yeah, he's very robust.
He's respected.
Yeah, he is.
I think he's getting publicity, but he's respected.
Yeah, I think he's getting the Presidential Medal of Freedom from the President.
Well,
you brought up the autism.
I do have a series of vax clips.
Oh, yay.
Vax Mania.
This was played out because they're all, everyone's, oh, they're going to do this, they're going to do that.
They don't do anything, of course.
This is typical.
It's like
a James Comer congressional committee.
They're going to, oh, they're going to put the piece, they got the dots together, they're going to get
Biden kid.
You know, they're going to get
the banks, they're going to find every this and that, and then nothing comes of it.
So let's listen to the.
So they're all bent out of shape about Kennedy's new vax panel.
I know they haven't changed anything, but here we go.
Secretary
The panel was hand-picked by Kennedy.
NPR Health correspondent Ping Wong was at their two-day meeting and joins us now.
Hi, Ping.
Hey, Scott.
Hey, Scott.
What kind of changes did the advisors make?
So they voted to narrow the recommendation on the COVID booster shot, and they also made a change in the childhood vaccine schedule, recommending against a measles and chickenpox combo shot for young children.
And while these changes weren't as drastic as some medical and public health experts had feared.
Stop the clip.
So that's it, by the way.
You're going to hear a bunch of clips here where they're moaning and groaning and moaning and groaning about
these massive changes.
One, the COVID shot.
They kind of changed the way they're looking at it.
Two, they're going to split off the chickenpox shot, but you still got to get all these shots.
That's it, by the way.
I'm just going to tell you in advance, that's the big horrible news.
Well, to be fair to NPR, we also are able to fill about 45 minutes talking about Florida ounces.
So,
you know.
The recommendation on the COVID booster shot, and they also made a change in the childhood vaccine schedule, recommending against a measles and chickenpox combo shot for young children.
And while these changes weren't as drastic as some medical and public health experts had feared, this meeting did show that these members, who Kennedy chose after firing the entire panel back in June, is starting to figure out how this works.
And they're starting off on an ambitious agenda, backed by Kennedy, who has a history of being very critical of vaccines.
Let's just make this news you can use for a moment.
I'm sure a lot of people listening are wondering.
Can I let's make this news you can use.
I think we should use that.
That's a great slogan, John.
No agenda news you can use.
This works, and they're starting off on an ambitious agenda, backed by Kennedy, who has a history of being very critical of vaccines.
By the way, stop it.
Let's just make this a huge.
This ambitious agenda is what I just said.
Yeah, separating news.
Changing the way we look at COVID vaccines, and we're going to split off one of the vaccines.
Very ambitious.
Very ambitious.
It's very ambitious.
Very ambitious.
At how this works, and they're starting off on an ambitious agenda, backed by Kennedy, who has a history of being very critical of vaccines.
Let's just make this news you can use for a moment.
I'm sure a lot of people listening are wondering, can I go into a pharmacy, a CBS, whatever, and get a vaccine shot like I have the last few years?
Can I go into a pharmacy, a CBS, whatever, and get a vaccine shot like I have the last few years?
The answer is mixed.
So in some states, yes, and in other states, it's not clear.
And that's because the group has recommended the vaccine to everybody under something called shared clinical decision-making, which means that patients are supposed to talk to a medical provider about risks and benefits before they get one.
But at this point, billions of COVID shots have been given out.
So this kind of counseling would add a new hurdle.
So wait a minute.
So they're going to tell you that the shot is maybe dangerous or it can do this and that and the other thing, and that's bad.
But what they've already given, look, Adam, Adam, Adam, Adam.
Yes, John.
You never call me Adam.
This must be serious.
They've given out a billion shots.
Yeah.
So what's the big deal?
Just keep giving shots out.
What could possibly be wrong with that idea?
Just you giving a billion out.
I'm sure that Scott asked that very question in clip number two.
Wrong.
Also, the panel wanted input on what goes into that counseling.
They voted to add more discussion about theoretical, theoretical, theoretical, theoretical risks to the vaccine information sheet.
And Ratzaf Levy, the panel member who led that discussion, focused on things he said were unknown.
Do we know all the answers?
No.
Did we hear satisfactory explanations from the companies and the FDA?
Absolutely no.
Okay, one thing about that clip, which I emphasized there.
Yes, I heard it.
Theoretically.
They're going to give you the theoretical risks.
No.
These aren't theoretical risks.
That's a lie.
These are actual risks.
It's not a total lie.
These are documented contraindications
and side effects that have been...
They don't make them up.
I mean, if it was anal leakage, you wouldn't make that up.
You wouldn't put it on the mic.
No,
it's not a theoretical risk.
She says she uses a propagandistic term, theoretical risk.
It's not theoretical.
Take away their license.
Oh,
you know, now I think about it,
you could do that with NPR stations.
I'm going to start to complain.
Yes, write a letter.
So that information sheet for consumers could go from one that summarizes the most important documented side effects of the COVID vaccine, things like fevers, body aches,
a rare risks, a rare risk of heart problems for young men, to one that includes a lot of speculation, speculation, speculation, which could confuse people and dissuade them from getting vaccinated.
Okay, so that's clearly the headline here, but I'm wondering what else was on the table.
Hold on a second.
What is her name again?
I need to look her up now.
What is her name?
Oh, they said it at the very beginning.
Secretary Robert F.
Kennedy Jr.
has promised to change the country's vaccine policies.
And during contentious meetings in Atlanta this week, vaccine advisors for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention began began to do picked by Kennedy.
NPR Health correspondent Ping Wong was
penguin.
Goodness, how do I spell that?
Peng Wing.
Ping Wong.
Ping Wong.
Ping Wong.
Ping White.
Ping Wong.
Now we're racist.
I can't believe this.
No, you are.
You are not me.
Okay, it's
Pen Hong, P-I-E-N-H-U-A-N-G.
Ping Hong.
Ping Hong.
Okay, I'll look her up while we play clip number three.
So that information sheet for consumers could go from one that summarizes the most important documented side effects of the COVID vaccine, things like fevers, body aches,
a rare risk of heart problems for young men, to one that includes a lot of speculation, speculation, speculation, which could confuse people and dissuade them from getting vaccinated.
Okay, so that's clearly the headline here, but I'm wondering what else was on the table.
So do you think Pen Wong is a doctor or has some
expertise in the medical field?
When that she is the correspondent correspondent here for?
Would you not think?
I'm guessing she's a drug salesman.
Let's see.
She joined NPR in 2019 as the newsroom's first Reflect America fellow, working with shows, desks, and podcasts to bring more diverse voices to air and online.
She's a diversity hired.
She's a DEI hire.
Her reporting with NPR's visuals team on tracking
COVID-19 data won her an Edward R.
Murrow Award.
Yeah, we haven't won that.
Not yet.
Wong's experiences span categories and continents.
Here we go.
She was the executive producer of Data Made to Matter,
a podcast.
Whoa, there's an Edward R.
Murrow award
topic right there.
Data Mata.
That's a podcast from the MIT Sloan School of Management.
Oh,
and she has taught.
What do you think she has taught
at the at Northeastern University?
Communications, podcasting.
What?
Yes, she's taught there's a class in podcasting at Northeastern.
Apparently, she has taught podcasting at Northeastern University.
How come I never get these gigs?
How come you weren't contacted by her for some syllabus information?
Podcasting course, Northwest.
I gotta find it.
Northeastern.
Northeastern?
Oh, well, what's North Northeast?
It's different.
Eastern University.
Well, I can't wait to see this.
Do they have a.
It's a minor.
It's a minor.
Yes.
So you can get a minor in podcasting.
You can actually get a degree.
Yes.
Wow.
I should get an honorary degree.
I'll do the commencement speech.
In an era of profound disruption for legacy media, podcasting has emerged as one of the most durable and successful features of the new media and information ecosystem.
Listenership continues to rise with devoted audiences for long-form audio storytelling, like she's doing storytelling right here.
Narrative news, true crime, personality-driven interview
shows, etc.
This minor is for students from a variety of disciplines interested in learning interviewing, performance, research, and production skills required to create high-quality non-fiction audio programs in a variety of formats.
I'm betting
10 bucks on the line with anybody
that she credits Adam Carolla with inventing podcasting.
Yes.
You only need a 2.0 grade average to get in.
This typical.
Yeah.
Well, that would be normal for podcast troops.
Podcasters.
Yeah.
Podcast.
You get.
Okay.
All right.
Clip force.
So there was a proposal to recommend that states require prescriptions for COVID vaccines, which would make them much harder for patients to get.
And after a charged discussion on it, it was defeated.
And the panel also tabled a proposal to change the hepatitis B vaccine schedule for babies.
Now, some members said that the current policy, which recommends a shot right after birth, is working fine and they saw no reason to change it.
Now, there was some confusion, and it did seem at times that members didn't seem to fully understand how their votes would affect policies and coverage.
To that point, what is the impact of these votes?
What do they affect?
This group's recommendations form the basis for which vaccines are covered by health insurance or subsidized through federal programs.
And an example of how that works is to look at the other vote that they did take on the MMRV vaccine.
That's a combination shot for measles, mumps, rubella, and chickenpox.
And this vaccine comes with a slightly higher risk of causing fevers that can lead to seizures in children under four.
Kids generally recover from them pretty quickly.
What?
Wait a minute.
So a kid under four gets a stupid shot and they have seizures.
Yeah.
But they recover.
They tend to recover rather quickly.
I don't want my kid having seizures.
Theoretical.
Theoretical seizures, not actual seizures, just theoretical.
That's unbelievable.
It's completely short.
So we finish off.
I think we finish off here.
They can also get the same protection from getting the MMR and the chickenpox shot separately.
So that's how most kids get it.
But up to 15% of parents ask for the combo shot.
And here's why, according to pediatrician Cody Meissner, who's the only member who served on this panel before.
Some parents don't want to administer.
Wait a minute.
I thought they kicked everybody off.
This guy has served on it before.
That's what they said.
They kicked everybody off, put a new group in, but this guy was there before.
How does that work?
Some parents don't want to administer two doses of a vaccine if they can receive one and get the same degree of coverage.
why are we taking away that option?
This is
coverage, access, coverage, access.
We already know the insurance company said they're going to cover the COVID vaccine.
We had that on the last show.
Yeah.
So this is just more of the same.
CBS had a report about this, which I have queued up for us.
There was pushback during today's meeting of the CDC's vaccine advisory committee as the panel debated a new recommendation for the combined MMRV shot.
But if a parent wants to get a single dose,
why are we taking away that option?
Same guy, same clip.
Isn't that amazing?
Yeah.
A single dose.
Why are we taking away that option?
The proposal, children under four should get one shot for measles, mumps, and rubella, and then a separate one for Varicella, better known as chickenpox.
This recommendation is going to create more confusion among the public.
Earlier this year,
I'm confused.
It's not that hard.
Separate one for Varicella, better known as chickenpox.
This recommendation is going to create more confusion among the choplack.
Earlier this year, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F.
Kennedy Jr.
fired all the panel members and picked their replacements, some who share his vaccine skepticism.
Thursday, the committee chairman defended the new group.
You have falsely been called anti-vaxxers, but your stance is not only pro-children,
but also pro-science, pro-public health, and pro-vaccines.
Here on Capitol Hill, the fired CDC director told lawmakers she was pressured by Secretary Kennedy to rubber stamp the committee's recommendations without first considering the scientific evidence.
He just wanted blanket approval.
The panel is also debating changes to the hepatitis B vaccine recommendation.
Much of the data is is considered pretty subtle.
Dr.
Jody Guest is the senior vice chair of the Department of Epidemiology.
She said most of the data is pretty subtle.
Listen to that again.
He just wanted blanket approval.
The panel is also debating.
Oh, she want to hear it again.
Pro-public health and pro-vaccines.
Here on Capitol Hill, the fired CDC director told lawmakers she was pressured by Secretary Kennedy to rubber stamp the committee's recommendations without first considering the scientific evidence.
He just wanted blanket approval.
The panel is also debating changes to the hepatitis B vaccine recommendation.
Much of the data is considered pretty settled.
Dr.
Jodie.
What does that mean?
The data is settled?
Most of the data.
Is considered pretty settled?
Yeah, that's a vague thing.
You know, by the way,
they're defending this woman.
They should be playing.
I don't have the clips, but I could go back and get them.
Rand Paul grilled her in front of Congress, and she's an idiot.
He just wanted blanket approval.
The panel is also debating changes to the hepatitis B vaccine recommendation.
Much of the data is considered pretty subtle.
Dr.
Jodi Guest is the senior vice chair of the Department of Epidemiology at Emory University.
She says these vaccines are safe and effective.
And there's not new evidence out there that we have been following
there's not new evidence out there that we have been following is this woman a lawyer
so there may be evidence out there but we're not following it we don't follow them on twitter that would show that you would want to change the guidance dr guest also warns that is that is wow i can't believe that so there is evidence out there but we're not following it so we don't make any changes says these vaccines are safe and effective and there's not new evidence out there that we have been following that would show that you would want to change the guidance.
Dr.
Guest also warns any changes could lead to health insurance companies limiting coverage.
No.
No, they want your kids sick.
They want seizures.
Come on.
They're not going to change that.
It's a small investment.
Cover the vax, customer for life.
You know, you want to take some wagers on what the big announcement is on Autism Monday?
What do you think?
Well,
here's what I.
So it can't be.
Okay, so far Kennedy has been thwarted at every turn, and they're still going after him.
And this new panel is useless.
And they're still going to give the kids the 80 shots or whatever it amounts to,
including the Hep B shot four minutes after they're born, which is
ludicrous.
That was in the clip as well.
It's on the
table.
I'm guessing they're going to come up with nothing.
The big announcement's going to be
something that's inconsequential.
We'll give every child a gold card?
Well, obviously, from what we've been looking at since the discredited
report, what's the
research?
Discredited research from Andrew.
What was his name again?
The
I don't know.
Wisen Huh.
Vaccine.
Okay,
let me ask the bot.
Hold on a second.
Who was the scientist who did research that proved autism was caused by vaccines but was
discredited?
Well, that sucks.
Shall we try it again?
Who was the scientist who did a research survey that showed that vaccines cause autism and was discredited, disbarred, and thrown out of society?
That'd be Andrew Wakefield.
Yes.
Okay.
Thank you.
Long way to go.
Wakefield.
Wakefield.
Okay.
That's what I would be hoping because at least millions of parents would have an answer, and we could have a lot of lawsuits.
That's the problem right there.
Well, maybe it's not, maybe it's a benefit if we can sue a lot of these companies.
Well, I would be, yeah.
Also, if they just take these advertisers off the air, that would help.
Well, they're going to have to do it.
So they don't own the media.
They're going to have to do four-minute ads.
Or four-minute ads, which would be funny.
Yeah.
Because everyone would be like, oh, these ads suck.
This medication sucks.
I don't want all that.
Because they're going to have to have all of the side effects in the ad.
That would be good.
Okay, so I got the clips.
How much time do we have before we go to a break?
Well, it depends.
What's your topic?
Well, this is a lot of clips here.
This is the clips you wanted from Matt Gates' show, where the guy who's embedded with the Russian army
goes on and on about how Ukraine is not what we think it is.
And this may be a piece of pure propaganda.
I think we should do it.
I think we should do it now.
It could be a piece of propaganda.
It turns out I mentioned in the last show, and I got a couple of notes mentioning other people, I guess, that have been embedded in the Russian army that are Western reporters.
And
I don't know who they are, never heard of them.
This guy here is somewhat obscure as far as I can tell.
I don't know if these reports are accurate.
The disclaimer is clear.
It's hypothetical embedded.
I have no idea, but I think it's definitely worth listening to.
And Matt Gates, a former congressman, is not a dumb
idiot.
No.
And so he, the fact that he's got this guy on, his name is Pearson Sharp.
Spook name.
It's a spook name.
Is he in Britain?
No, but as you mentioned the spook name, he has certain characteristics as possible, and he has a kind of a spook joke at the beginning of his presentation.
You'll hear it.
OAN investigative reporter Pearson Sharp, host of the Sharp Report here on What American News, has traveled to the front lines.
He's spent time with the troops fighting this war, and he joins us now from Russia.
Pearson, first of all, it's good to see you safe and sound.
It looked from some of the snippets of your reporting, I was able to see that you were pretty close to the front lines and the fighting.
Tell us where you are and what you have learned about this war from your reporting and your journalism.
First, I'd like to read this pre-prepared speech from my KGB handler.
I'm kidding.
Listen to this.
About Pearson Sharp from his own website.
As a privacy junkie, I'm slowly getting rid rid of my social media accounts.
Yeah, as a spook, that's what you do.
All right, good joke about the KGB.
All right.
Of course, if it was updated joke, it would be FSB, but he uses KGB because that's a reference we all know.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
FSB would be no good.
I agree.
I agree.
Yeah, no one would get it.
But that's what it should be if he's going to be reading a prepared statement.
Okay.
So that was funny.
Okay, so now I've got, okay, the guy has a sense of humor, so here we go.
We're here in Nizhny Mizhny Novgorod, and it's about a four-hour train ride east of Moscow.
And this is where some of the drone attacks have been happening.
And actually, they have installed some jammers in the area to block signal because, you know, they're trying to keep the drones from attacking the military targets.
But in any case, this past week, we were down in Donbas, which is a large region
down near Ukraine.
And we were in Donetsk.
We went to Mariupol.
We went to the Azovs, the Azovstal steel plant.
We went to a couple of other small towns that have just been absolutely decimated by the fighting.
And being down here has been incredibly eye-opening as far as the kinds of people that you meet, the kinds of things you see that just destroy the Western narrative about what's happening here and what life is actually like in Russia, really.
How are people dealing with all of the death?
I mean,
that's a very difficult question to answer.
How does anyone deal with the death?
The people here are living their lives as best they can.
Donbass has been the center of a lot of the fighting, and we went to Donetsk, which was
the front line of the war for quite a while.
It's now moved quite a bit west from there.
But the people have tried to integrate the war into their lives the best that they can.
John, I got to tell you, this guy is definitely a spook.
He has no bio, no wiki page.
OAN has.
Pearson Sharp grew up in a small farming town in central Ohio.
He moved to Colorado for school, where he attended the University of Colorado in Boulder studying English and creative writing.
You know, I'll say.
There's nothing on this guy.
So there's no profile at all, which is like one of the earmarks.
Yes.
Well, on his own page, I'm a show host and foreign correspondent.
I cover international conflicts from the migration crisis.
So you spotted it immediately with his name.
That's a spook name.
It's a total spook name.
All right.
Well, good.
Okay, so it's a spook.
Okay, let's assume he's a spook, which is good to know.
Yep.
We don't know who he's working for
and what's the point of this.
Because the point of this is there's got to be something going on here.
Tell me it's in this clip three.
I think it's in clip four.
Okay.
We went to a park in Donetsk, and it was a memorial park.
They had a little shrine there for the children that have been killed by the Ukrainian shelling.
And so far, the running count just in Donetsk, not at all of Donbass, but just in Donetsk, is 257 children
that have been killed from Ukrainian shelling.
And it was called the Alley of Angels.
And it was very powerful.
Oh, that sounds
horrendous.
And it certainly animates President Trump's efforts to try to end this war and end the killing.
Little children should not be dying because of this type of geopolitics.
It's a tragedy.
You know, Pearson, we've seen photos of you interacting with the people who are fighting this war.
What can you tell us about those people?
So we actually got to visit some of the troops who are fighting for the Russians against the Ukrainians.
And the incredible part was that these aren't Russian soldiers.
These are Ukrainians.
And they've decided to join with Russia and fight against the Ukrainian regime, as they call it.
And when I asked them how they felt about fighting against fellow Ukrainians, and, you know, are they fighting for Russia now?
Do they want to see Russia win?
And they say, we're not fighting for Russia.
We're fighting to free Ukraine.
And I think that says a lot about the mindset of the people here.
They don't think that Ukraine is free right now.
The Ukrainians living there don't think that it's free.
And these people, the soldiers that I spoke with, none of them joined the army willingly.
They were grabbed off of the streets, thrown into vans and forced to fight.
One of them was a university student, and he was trying to get his doctorate because apparently there's some kind of loophole that once you get your doctorate, you don't have to fight.
And so he was literally at his desk at school and the henchmen came in and dragged him out, kicking and screaming, and threw him into a van.
Suddenly, you're in the army now.
So he was in the Ukrainian army, but then switched sides and joined the Russian side of the fight?
And joined the Russians, yes.
Wow.
To fight against Zelensky.
Now, that interesting little factor there was the fact that Gates
heard the interview going in a wrong direction.
He adjusted it because it was not clear what was going on.
And so the guy was, so he's been conscripted out of school, right out of his classroom before he got his PhD and ended up.
This is one of those, this didn't happen stories.
But there's a message here about this whole thing that is
through gates that's being done for some purpose or other.
And I thought it was definitely worth it.
I mean, I didn't play it on the last show, but
I think it's probably worth listening to.
to and this is the last clip we went to a park in Donetsk and it was a memorial park they had a little shrine there for the
that have been oh I'm sorry I queued up the same one twice my apologies
Wow conscription may may not be all it's cracked up to be if that type of no these soldiers they they said they don't want to fight for Zelensky they don't they called it the regime they don't want to fight for him and I I asked them, Well, you know, how this is a opinion, of course, you know, the troops here, but what about the rest of the Ukrainians?
How do they feel about this?
And they said, No one wants to fight for Zelensky, no one sees him as legitimate.
They all think that he's an illegitimate ruler who's been propped up in place and is basically a dictator at this point.
And no Ukrainians want this war to continue, they all want it to end.
Hmm.
Well, he was born in London, I've found,
attended University College London, the Dragon School of Oxford.
What's the Dragon School?
I don't know.
I've been to Oxford and I haven't seen that school.
It's like some kind of Hogwarts.
Winchester College, Trinity College, Cambridge.
No, that can't be right.
This is.
It's got to be a different guy.
That's error.
That's error.
Making errors.
I can't be right to the guy.
Hmm.
Well, yeah, the conscription.
There's videos on Telegram of people being dragged off the street, thrown into vans all the time.
That's been going on for the entire
three years of the war.
So, yeah.
We're not getting good information one way or the other.
No.
No, we're not.
Well, then, we'll go into our break here with the latest news from Europe.
Brussels airport is the worst affected by this outage, and there's real scenes of chaos at the airport.
Lots of flights cancelled, lots of flights delayed.
The airport is telling people don't come unless you have it confirmed that your flight is actually taking off because the agents are having to do things manually because that system software that processes ticket check-in and luggage check-in is offline.
So this is different than when you would have, let's say, an outage for air traffic control because that means the planes literally can't take off.
This can be solved by surging staff over to the airport to be able to process all the check-ins manually.
So I'm told they are trying to do that.
There's a number of other airports affected as well, London Heathrow and Berlin Airport, Berlin-Brandenburg Airport, for instance.
They are also seeing these scenes of check-in agents having to manually check people in, which is obviously slowing things down.
But this is very worrying if this is indeed a cyber attack, which the evidence is pointing to right now, because Collins Aerospace is a very, very big company.
It It manages air traffic,
airport check-in across the world.
And especially worryingly, it's also a defense company.
So, the fact that it could have been subject to this kind of cyber attack is very worrying.
But a transport sector analysts that I've talked to over the past months have said they've been worried about something like this because these types of services that can shut down multiple airports with just one attack are a very tempting target.
Now, I think this is a hit job from a competing company because every single news report had the same payoff.
Oh, it's Collins, you know, Collins, a major defense contractor.
Very, very worrying Collins.
And where does it hit?
Brussels.
Brussels, Brussels, where all of the European muckety mucks live and work.
I'm not going to argue that at all.
I think it could even be Microsoft.
Microsoft doing it because they're not using Windows on these systems in Europe that they're talking about.
They're talking about somebody else's software.
And this very, I mean, it's not beyond the pale because back in the day during the OS2 era.
Oh, what a great OS that was.
During the OS2 era,
when they had, they came out with a version called,
then they made the claim IBM did that.
Didn't you write a book about it?
I did.
Wow.
One of my 27 books that I've done.
Instant bestseller.
What was the scripting language called again?
Oh, I forgot.
That's what was so appealing.
First of all, it has a nice scripting language.
There's no doubt about it.
But I didn't even finish the story.
So during the, when they came out, crash proof, it was called the warp version of OS2.
OS2 warp
crash proof, crash proof.
So Steve Ballmer would go into the IBM booth with a disc and just stick it in any random computer and crash it.
And he did this it was a big joke amongst everybody there that ballmer would pull the stunt that that's a uh classic i don't put it past microsoft to do stuff like that to this day classic rex
rex yeah rex restructure
restructured extended executor
wow man i love that yeah it was supposed to be crash-proof that was right before we we found out that if you sent a flood ping to a
um
a Windows NT computer, that it would give it blue screen of death.
You remember that?
No, I don't remember that.
It was so fun.
Yeah,
you see someone across the way working on a Windows NT, and if you had his IP address, we even worked over the internet.
You could send a flood ping, and it would get blue screen of death.
It was amazing.
It was good times.
Can't do that anymore.
Yes, it was super fun.
But with that, I want to thank you for your courage and say in the morning to you, the man who put the C's in the coal card.
Say hello to my friend on the other end, the one, the only, Mr.
John C.
DeMorth.
Yeah, well, the morning you go, Shadam Curry, in the morning, shift, see, boost of the ground, feet in the air, subsider, and all the dames and nights out there.
In the morning, to the trolls, control room.
Stop moving around.
Let me count you.
There we go.
We're counting.
Oh, 1,982.
That's low, but I think a lot of people are watching this Charlie Kirk memorial.
You know, I'm going to say something, and this is, I said, I say these things, and you may be always, you wishful thinking.
Wishful thinking, I'll say it in advance.
Yes.
Such as when I said, I think President Trump can go all the way.
I think
this Charlie Kirk murder might spark a long overdue revival in America.
Four more years, baby.
We'll see.
Four more years.
I love my truck, and I love what I do.
The trolls are in the troll room.
You can join them at noagendastream.com or my preference, trollroom.io.
And they are there listening live because they either know it or they have a modern podcast app.
You know, probably not discussed at Northeastern University.
And we have all of the brand new
functionality in the modern podcast apps, not that legacy Apple thing, or certainly not Spotify.
We are not even on Spotify.
We refuse to be on Spotify.
It hasn't hurt us.
Instead, we're on all those modern podcast apps.
We have chapters, we got transcripts, we had all kinds of cool thing-amabobs, including when we go live, which we do on Thursdays and Sundays, we send out the bat signal.
Your podcast app will tell you that you can listen live.
You can listen live to us in the podcast app.
It's like on-demand and live.
And when we publish it, your modern podcast app will let you you know within 90 seconds.
Why deal with any other podcast app?
Podcastapps.com.
18 years in October.
We just celebrate 1,800 episodes.
18 years, a long time.
And we've been doing it value for value, which means we are the true essence of free speech because it's there, free.
Free?
Because we're not selling anything.
All we want is for you to consider, if you got any value out of the work that we do as a public public service under the guise of free speech, just send us something back and keep us going for more years.
One of the ways you can help is by sending us artwork.
There are a lot of things you can do.
NoagendaartGenerator.com is where we are always hunting for a piece of art to use for every single episode.
Every single one is different and often interesting.
But,
you know, we had the big 1800 episode
on Thursday.
And,
you know, you know, when you get Darren O'Neal twice in a row, you know that the art was bad.
Wow.
What is this?
What is this thing with you and Darren?
What do you got a feud going?
No, I got no feud with Darren.
He knows exactly what I'm talking about.
Darren agrees.
Like, yeah, that's crazy.
I can't believe that I typed in, give me a road sign with no agenda way, 1800, no agenda way, and Curry Dvorak at an intersection.
Okay, AI, go.
That's all he did.
Anyway.
I think he's doing more.
I think he's doing something to brighten up his images because his images have no none of it.
He pays attention.
That's one guy in the group that pays attention.
And you bitch and moan and bitch and moan and complain and complain and complain about the orange nature of a lot of these images.
And all it takes is just a quick shot and put it in Photoshop and take the orange out and boom.
This is true.
This is true.
Is that he the only guy that pays attention to that?
I noticed it.
Well, Darren's wife wife works and he just stays at home podcasts.
Always a home dad.
As far as I understand, hey, I'm happy.
He's our pre-show guy.
Darren's rock and roll pre-show is important.
It riles everybody up, gets them all ready.
You know, there's always a Ted Nugent song played.
He used to play Taylor Swift all the time.
He stopped doing that.
Yeah, that's a good thing.
Too many complaints.
So we were looking for, we always like to go pretty traditional, something with 1800 on it.
And
pretty much everybody failed.
Yeah, we had a lot of 1800 Cuervos.
We had a bunch of
rando women.
We liked the 1800 Cuervos, but it was all too small.
You couldn't read it.
And the one that we liked,
like Curry Devor, like, okay, Servent.
Let me see.
Where are all these?
Oh, they scrolled down to the next page.
Next page.
Next page.
Hold on.
There's a lot of art, of course, but it's
we should just integrate an LLM in this thing already.
So we liked.
I like Matthew Dropko, but it was too small.
You like the, I really like Nico Symes.
But again, it was too small.
And yeah, you like the Darren with the two glasses, but you see Adam Curry, John C.
Dvorak on the glass.
You couldn't read it from the evening.
I didn't really
at all.
People, you know, this is the problem with AI.
Like, oh, it's so easy to make art, but people don't pay attention to anything anymore.
So we have to call you out on the things you're doing wrong.
But maybe once it's created, you know, it's very hard to
tell the model, change this, change that.
It screws everything up.
Honorary mention, though, for Matthew Dropko.
The Corey Booker clutching his pearls was dynamite.
Oh, yes, that was hilarious.
Of course, he has eight fingers on one hand.
That's a minor problem.
Gee, that's not AI.
You're using one of the older models, Matthew.
Lily has one, two, three, four, five.
Yeah, six fingers.
Very nice.
Very interesting.
And they're all bent.
Bent and warped, which is okay.
But that's probably what the AI thought clutching looked like.
Yeah, yeah.
But
we were going to pick something that
definitely had 1800 on it.
So it didn't matter.
Of course, of course.
Maybe, but that was a
funny idea.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That was poorly timed.
Too many fingers.
Poorly timed too many fingers.
Exactly.
But we appreciate the effort.
You prompt jockeys, you.
You've pretty much chased away every single actual artist.
It's too bad.
I'm going to do the same with end of show mixes.
It's all happening.
It's all here.
Yeah, you're going to see it coming down Broadway.
Yeah, you can fight against all you want.
But like that, that mix that we have coming up is a good mix.
About the No Agenda Knights.
Agenda Dames is a good mix.
You can't fight it.
It's a good mix.
Well, you can fight it.
I tried.
I'm giving up.
Because I have nothing else.
Everyone's like, oh, man, it's like too much work.
You just throw it in the air.
It's too much work.
This is the laziness thing we brought up earlier in the show.
Well, it's like a theme in the country.
Well, let me ask you this.
If we could do this show with AI and not have to show up and just make it happen, press a button, do some prompts like, okay, talk about the gold card, talk about
free speech versus freedom of speech.
If we did like, you know, like 50 lines of prompting and the show did itself, would we just stay in bed?
If it was as good as it could be, if it was as good as the real show, I would.
But that's never going to be.
That's the problem.
I mean, AI is creeping into everything, but it's not creeping into
certain things it can't do.
It doesn't, for one thing, the personality of AI sucks.
It stinks.
It's got no voice, no personality.
It's flat.
Bemrose.
Bemrose says these lazy AI images is just value for value.
Very rude, Sir Bemrose.
Very rude.
Yeah.
Anyway, it doesn't matter.
We still have a piece of art, but take some pride in your work, people.
Get rid of the orange, lighten it up, make your blacks blacks, your whites whites, and check the fingers.
Check your fingers.
Of course, we always thank people who support us with monetary value, $50 and above.
We always want to
mention them and thank them profusely for supporting the show.
It's the only income we generate.
No tote bags, no hats.
Oh man, I heard NPR.
NPR, like, you know, if you only give us $25, we'll send you a hat.
It's like they don't understand value for value.
Do you think that Democrat listeners, that they just are stingy?
Or do you think they had a matching donation, a $15,000 matching donation the other day on the media?
Stingy.
Which reminds me, I got a note here.
Hold on,
where's my note?
I got a note here from one of our producers.
And this is, hold on, this is producer
Nate.
Nate says, ITM Adam, I've been listening since your first Rogan appearance and haven't missed a show since.
I love the work you two do.
I could go on, but I'll try to get to the brass tacks.
I am regrettably a douchebag, as I haven't donated once.
Well, it's free speech.
What do you expect?
But I have hit several people in the mouth.
During show 1800, you mentioned having some challenge coins made for the Rubilizer donation.
Finally, an opportunity to add value back to the show enters my mind.
I have very close friends who operate a third-generation family-owned casting company
that does small and large-batch castings.
Locally, the business provides medals and trophies for schools as well as custom commissions for anything from belt buckles to shirt pins.
Made in America, baby.
They also have made tons of merch.
for basically any band you can think of that has been big since your MTV days.
I would gladly pay for the commission and materials required for the first 33 challenge coins and mail them to you, either you or John, once they're done.
I'm not an artist, however, so I would need someone to render an image for the coins.
If you're interested, feel free to respond anytime.
Much love and keep up the good work.
Well,
that's a beautiful offer.
That's great value for value.
All we need now is a beautiful design.
What do we need for that?
You like
a high.
No, I think we should just give it to get talk talk paul into doing it he did the original challenge coin still one of the best you don't want to use made in america by nate for free
no no i'm talking about the the
design the the design of the coin not the manufacturing of the coin oh okay well paul doesn't even listen anymore well i he would probably perk up if i told him we need a new design for a new challenge coin he'd come up with something tell him Tell him.
I will.
Yeah, please.
I will do that.
And then we can pass the information on to Jay, and she can coordinate the whole thing.
Okay, excellent.
hey we have a we have we have staff i love it we have a we have a yes we have a workflow i figured out work it's called workflow we have we have workflow we have workflow
everybody we got workflow thank you very much brandon mango from midland pennsylvania and we always have uh special uh titles for our top donors for each show although any amount anytime we love it all and we appreciate it it is value for value so the value is only something you can determine and brandon
thinks it's very valuable what we do.
$1,052.60, which I'm thinking is $1,000 plus fees.
And he says, any chance, y'all can let me know how much I've donated.
Love you, love the show.
I'm sure Jay responded to him.
And for that, he becomes an executive producer.
$300 above always gets you an executive producer credit.
$200 above gets you an associate executive producer.
And in both instances, we will always read your note.
And I guess you're going to become a, wow, he'll become a secretary General today and tonight.
It's beautiful.
And thank you very much, Brandon.
We appreciate it.
Well, let me stop everything and say no.
What do you mean, no?
We can't tell you how much.
The idea is the way we do this.
No, but I think
you have to keep your own.
No, those days, years ago, Eric had some mechanism where he could look at some of the past donations and come up with a number.
Well, it's always been on the honor system, regardless.
I just thought.
It's always been on the honor system.
We want you to keep your own books.
Yes, keep your own books, people.
Okay.
Thank you for saying that.
And I think people should be reminded of that.
And that's what I'm, why stopped.
I stopped the presses right there.
Yes.
Thank you.
Because most people can figure it out.
You can look at your checkbook or you can look at your bank.
It's always knowing how much money you, I mean, you better
know
how much money
you're spending on anything.
You should, yes.
Joshua,
what is this?
What do you think?
Coffett?
Coffett?
Coffelt?
Coffett?
Coffelt, Coffelt, Coffelt, Coffelt, Coffeel.
He's in Grove City, Ohio.
Yes.
And he came in with 51538.
Hi, Tammy John and Adam.
Thank you for your courage.
The assassination of Charlie Kirk has made me realize that the country is still in dire need of the service you provide.
Ah, there we go.
I think so, too.
I want to do my part to ensure that you're able to continue doing what you do for four more years.
This is my first donation.
ADNISA dedouching.
You've been dedouched.
If it has not already been claimed, I would like to be named the Secretary General of the Unknown Unknowns.
Sounds good to me.
Can I please get some baby-making karma?
And can you play the following clips slash jingles?
Trump, they're eating the dogs.
John's mac and cheese.
Alex Jones.
Durka Durka, Durka Durka.
Yes, you know what that is?
I don't know.
Shut up already in science.
And the baby-making karma.
They're eating the dogs.
You slaves can get used to mac and cheese, mac and cheese,
macaroni, and cheap cheddar melted together.
Mac and cheese, mac and cheese, mac and cheese.
They're just Durka Durka Muhammad Jihad.
Durkada Durka Durka Durka.
Shut up already.
Science.
You've got.
karma.
And night, John checks in from Tucson, Arizona, 343.33.
He says he added 10 bucks for fees.
Not sure how that works.
Next time, I'll write a note and send the check.
Yeah, that saves everybody money, John.
ITM Adam and John, this donation of 333 plus 33 plus fees is for a birthday wish for Archduchess Kim, keeper of the nutty fluffers.
She is definitely on the mend, and we are very happy about that.
Happy birthday, Kim!
All uppercase.
Kim shares her birthday with Bilbo the Frodo.
Please excuse the Lord of the Rings reference.
And the Equinox.
That's right.
Today is the Equinox.
She will also, yes, it's the equal daylight
and nighttime.
Today is the Equinox.
She will also be 42, so we'll soon have the answer to life, the universe, and everything.
That's right.
I enjoyed your discussion of drive-through liquor stores a few episodes back.
I remember driving through one for a six-pack while test driving a car with the dealer.
Times have certainly changed.
Yes, Kim was a little kid in the back seat with her sister.
She went ahead and survived my upbringing anyway.
Jingles, F-35 Karma, and screw your freedom.
Screw your freedom.
You've got
karma.
So Sir Lawrence of Dystopia, who's over here in Oakland and was at the meetup, came in with 333.48, the Oakland meetup.
meetup, and he had a complaint,
which I found somewhat distressing.
ITM, gentlemen, while listening on the Sunday show, I was horrified to find that my cash donation was not all there.
Oh, no.
If you will recall, John, I had the envelope pressed, passed down the table to you.
It was sealed in wax with my No Agenda Night Ring signet.
ring and I don't think any of the people there would have taken it.
I think I got it and probably opened it.
I'm not sure what was in it because you don't tell me here.
Taking it, they just said,
things get, you know,
the cash donations get piled up and then obviously this one was somehow forgotten.
Yes.
Unless it was less than 50,
which there were none, so it had to be at least $100.
So give you, take $100, $100, $100.
Taking as if they were all non-douchebag no agenda Americans.
It is possible you may have stopped off at Club Mallard on the way back from the Pizzeria Violetta, had a drink, and tipped the excellent bartender a nice fat tip.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's gonna.
If I go straight home, or considering my rather poor performance at my IDFA match the following day, it's possible I counted twice only to short the best podcast in the universe.
That ends now.
Congratulations on 18 glorious years, Sir Lawrence of Dystopia, Baronet of Maxwell Park, Kilo, Oscar 6, Echo Juliet, Echo73s.
73s, Kilo 5, Alpha Charlie Charlie.
We'll see you on
the 2GHz back channel from Artemis 1.
Joe Grillo, soon to be Sir Joseph Lord of the Central Jersey Swamps, 333.34.
Thank you.
He adds a penny to the jar.
Hey, John and Adam, if someone told me I would someday donate $1,000 to a podcast, I would have told them that they needed their head examined.
Well, I guess I need my head examined because this third donation of 333.34 puts me into the knighthood category.
I couldn't possibly ask you to kick in the penny considering how much bitching John does about the lackluster donations of late.
There you go.
Please, knight me, Sir Joseph, Lord of the Central Jersey Swamps, and if you'll be so kind, provide some gumbo parmesan and albeda beer for the roundtable.
We already did this donation.
I think so we did too, didn't we?
Yeah.
Did we?
Yeah.
Because Dala beat a beer.
We got into a big discussion about it.
But I don't remember.
No, I think this is.
And I do remember him saying what he said about I didn't think I'd ever donate $1,000 to a show.
I don't know how it got on here twice, but here it is again.
Well, should I just read it just in case we're going to go?
Yeah, finish it off.
We might as well.
It's there.
Here's the part I don't remember.
If you'd be so kind, provide some gumbo.
That is, I do remember that.
Please mention my band, the Gumbo Goombas.
Yeah, it came in.
This was a letter he had that had Gumbo Goombas on top.
I read this letter.
All right.
Well, I don't know how it got, unless he did it again, which is possible, because the original one was a handwritten note.
It wasn't on the spreadsheet.
Hmm.
Well,
but a lot of people do this, by the way.
Well, not a lot, a few.
A number of people have done this.
Not enough.
Not enough.
They send in a note that is handwritten with the check, and then they send in the same thing somehow through the PayPal.
So I believe he's just getting double publicity, which is somehow he pulled it off.
Good job.
More power to him, to the gumbos.
The Goomba Gumbos.
Good job, everybody.
Okay.
Onward.
Okay, now we go to Linda Lupatkin in Lakewood, Colorado.
Oh, that's it.
We're done.
No, we're not done.
Kelly and Monica are both in Canada, and their donations amount to $240 each at least.
Okay.
Yeah, in Canadian.
Yes.
Okay.
All right.
Go for Linda.
Linda says jobs karma for a competitive edge with a resume that gets results.
Go to imagemakersinc.com.
For all your executive resume and job search needs, that's ImageMakers Inc.
with a K.
And work with Linda Liu, Duchess of Jobs, and writer of winning resumes.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's vote for jobs.
You saw Karma.
Yes, Kelly Spongberg, no stranger to the show from Rocky Mountain House in Alberta, Canada, came in with $189.55 Candinavian Dollarette.
So associate executive producers.
No, no, no,
that's American after the $250 worth of Canadian Dollarette.
Thank you.
I got you.
So they will be associate executive producers.
Sir Kelly and Dame Andrea are pleased to announce the completion of our business expansion.
at Metal Dog Machines in Rocky Mountain House, Alberta.
This donation is to both celebrate the show's 1800th milestone and all Dame Andrea's work as a general contractor.
All right.
Huh.
Beautiful.
Interesting.
And last on our list is Monica Lansing.
She's in Drayton Valley, Alberta, Canada.
You guys should meet up.
That would be $240.48, I think, is what it comes to.
Happy belated 18th anniversary.
Thank you.
All right.
Belated.
Well, you can do it again in October.
It's not quite belated until October 20th, something.
1,800 episodes.
We appreciate that.
That's what she meant.
And we appreciate all of our executive and associate executive producers.
As always, thank you so much for your courage.
And of course, these credits are entirely real and accepted by the Hollywood bigwigs.
Go to imdb.com.
You'll see over a thousand No Agenda executive and associate executive producers.
It also works in your LinkedIn profile or on your X or if you're on it, on your Blue Cry.
And we'll be thanking the rest of our value for value supporters in our second segment, $50 and above.
And again, congratulations to this associate executive and executive producers.
Our formula is this:
we go out, we hit people in the mouth.
Silence is golden.
So, so somebody sent me a clip, this clip, which is this is Newsome.
Yeah.
And this is a short clip that I pulled it off Twitter.
And Newsom has been getting nothing but grief because he's trying to act like Trump and he's a tough guy and he's cussing a lot.
So somebody pointed out this is Newsome.
Now he's decided to change course and act like Biden.
And if you listen to this clip, he sounds like Biden, except he's missing the no joke.
What was the other thing Biden used to say?
No joke, man.
No joke.
No, it's not a joke.
It's not a joke.
It's not a joke.
I'm not kidding.
And this sort of thing.
And
I'm not lying.
This response to this particular bogus story is
every known meme of things that didn't happen
were posted.
And in fact, I collected a few of them for the future use in the newsletter.
It's like nobody believes a word of this story which makes it again more like Biden one of his you know cockamamie screwball stories and this is just nonsense.
This is a chill.
This is chilling.
This is serious.
I walked into a restaurant the other day.
Entire staff came out and started hugging me and crying.
The hell is that?
The United States of America.
What he's doing to our diverse communities, what he's doing to the fabric of our society.
He does.
Yeah.
He does it a little bit like corn pop.
He was a bad dude.
There's a bite in cadence
and stupid.
That's funny.
Yeah.
No one cares about it, by the way.
No one cares about Biden, except for President Trump, who wants to undo all the pardons.
Yeah, well, that's definitely what's happening.
And so since we're on California, you do have one more clip on this is not from Newsom, but it's about Newsom.
And this is the
Cali banned.
It says banned, but it's about the ban on ICE masks, legal ban on
California will be the first state to ban most law enforcement, including federal immigration agents, from covering their faces while on official duty.
Governor Gavin Newsom signed the bill into law today, saying the masked law enforcement, pulling people off the streets, is a step toward authoritarianism in, quote, Trump's America.
A few other states are considering similar measures.
The law does allow exceptions for things like riot gear, medical masks, and undercover work.
In the past, ICE said its officers wear masks to prevent being identified in videos and photos online and facing threats.
This is an amazing world we live in.
You know, the very state
that
forced everyone everyone to wear a mask still does from time to time.
Well, if you listen to that report carefully, there is an out,
which is instead of wearing the normal masks that the ICE guys are wearing, they just put on a medical mask.
Yeah.
It said right there, except for medical masks.
So you can go out to like the COVID.
Yeah, that's an out.
That's an outside.
So you wear that.
You wear a little blue mask and
screw you.
Oh, that's good.
That's good.
It looks like we have a deal.
The deal has been approved on the phone.
I don't think we've papered it yet, but we got a deal.
We have a deal.
We got a deal.
It's like, I got a deal.
I spoke to the guy.
We got a deal.
Here we go.
The deal is for TikTok.
Video sharing app TikTok's future in the U.S.
has long hung in the balance.
But Donald Trump says his Chinese counterpart approved a deal over the phone as they plan to meet at the APEC Regional Summit next month.
As you know, we approved the TikTok deal, and we're in the process.
We have some great investors,
some of the biggest
in the world, because we have to get to get it signed, I guess.
Due to security and surveillance concerns over American users' data, Washington passed a law last year mandating that TikTok, run by Chinese parent company ByteDance, must sell its U.S.
operations or risk going offline.
ByteDance has expressed its willingness to negotiate and keep its estimated 170 million users in the U.S.
We thank President Xi Jinping and President Donald J.
Trump for their efforts to preserve TikTok in the United States.
ByteDance will work in accordance with applicable laws to ensure TikTok remains available to American users through TikTok U.S.
According to the Wall Street Journal.
The deal could involve the U.S.
government receiving a multi-billion dollar fee from TikTok in exchange for facilitating negotiations with China.
Trump's stance on TikTok has changed since returning to office, and he credits the app with helping him win a second term via Young Voters.
He's delayed implementing the sale deadline multiple times the latest now until december 16th the app's fate has been caught up in a sweeping tariff spiral between washington and beijing that has strained relations between the world's top two economies
so let's talk about this for a second a who do you think the buy it's got to be multiple buyers at this point i i pretty much yeah oracle's one of them yeah oracle has the data already as part of project dallas or whatever they call that yeah whatever yeah for for harvest harvesting the data, the U.S.
data in Oracle, which is where a lot of your data is harvested.
Who else?
Who else would be in on this?
Andreessen Horowitz is one of them, and there's a third partner, and I'm trying to think who it is.
You know, your bot there would know.
I'm not going to ask the bot.
The bot doesn't know anything.
But so there's, it's just, you know, it's a.
What are the chances that it'll just suck?
Well, the problem is that they're still negotiating about the algorithm.
It's so silly.
I could write this algorithm.
You think so?
Yeah, I know so.
William, why don't you give them a call?
I like red.
You get red stuff.
That's what that's what they're
saying.
It's what it looks like to me, too.
Yes.
You know,
I like
black.
preachers that do the falling thing.
Boom, you get them all.
Yeah.
You know, I like blue hair complaining and crying about Trump.
Boom, you get it all.
It's very, it's a very simple algorithm.
And then the monetization is the shop.
That's the problem.
You know,
because of the well, de minimis is probably still high enough at $200 that you can still get most of that junk
in without without import duty.
That's by impression.
But I mean, is it still making the, what was it making?
$8 billion a year?
I think is what it was.
I don't know.
I think your robot would know.
I don't care.
Get your own robot.
Get your own robot, man.
Like getting a robot in the house.
It's just like an intrusion.
You know, I was thinking about, you know, Optimus Prime and all these robots and that ridiculous robot expo where all the
boxing, the boxing robots, they're boxing
crap.
They're boxing and they're playing soccer and it all sucks.
It totally blows.
It's really funny.
The thing is,
people always want a humanoid robot.
That makes no sense to me.
I have one robot in my house, and I love this robot.
It's my second one, actually.
And that's the vacuum cleaner.
Oh, it's not from
Roomba, is it?
No, it's from Shark.
Because she has a fine.
Oh, Shark.
That's fine.
No, Shark has one.
Oh,
I have no doubt that China has an entire layout of my house.
I mean, I really despise that part, but it's so because of Phoebe.
Phoebe's shit.
Oh, my goodness.
I forgot to let her in.
Oh, boy.
Stop the tape.
Yeah, let me stop the tape.
Hold on a second.
The poor dog is burning up.
You know,
I think I liked it better when you played the slide slide whistle.
Slide whistle was better.
Yeah, well, so the ASPCA, they're going to come and take her away, I'm sure.
Poor dog.
Well, it's like it's 85, it's almost 90 degrees.
Well, she's a big white hairy dog.
She's in the corner of the yard with a little bit of shade.
She's all curled up like, I'm frying, daddy.
Oh, no.
Why don't you have a doggy door?
Oh,
this dog needs a human door.
We should teach the dog how to open the door.
Yeah, okay.
Anyway, thank you.
I also took the opportunity to urinate and get some water for myself.
Anyway, we were talking about dog.
I don't, what were we talking about?
Oh,
that's a good question.
The shark vacuum cleaner.
Oh, yeah.
It's monitoring and mapping your house.
Yes, but they have a special version that is specifically specifically for pet fur.
And it's really good.
And I love that thing.
We call it Steve McLean.
And every night at 11, Steve McLean goes around.
And that's an actual robot that is functional.
It doesn't look like Rosie from the Jetsons vacuuming.
This is what I don't get.
How stupid.
You're spending all this battery and energy and gyroscopic power on keeping this humanoid thing.
Who cares?
Oh, look, it walks just like a human.
It can jump.
Make it functional.
Don't make it look like a human.
I've never understood that.
Am I just
obsessing too much about this?
No, I've always felt the same way.
I always, and I point out to people that they all have robots already.
The word processor is a typist.
And you hit the button and it types out a bunch of documents for you.
That's a robot.
It's a robot.
There's other examples.
Yes.
Oh, something's happening in the UK.
They're pushing, they're pushing, they're pushing.
It's coming here.
I had a long talk with Kyle Biederman about this.
I said, man,
Lindsey Graham's in bed with
Cash Patel, which he took.
I thought you were going to say he was in bed with the Queen.
Well,
believe me, Kyle Biederman got the joke already.
He thought it was funny.
I said, digital ID, man, it's coming.
And here's the UK Labour Minister.
We know the government is looking at digital ID cards at the moment.
How would that help prevent the situation that we're in now?
Well, Keir Stahmer, our Prime Minister, has said we are looking at what other countries have done to bring in a sort of digital accreditation.
I think there's real actually benefits right across here from obviously dealing with illegal working, but also actually, imagine if your viewers imagine that they had one credential that would allow them to access all the different government services and our public services do.
I'm sure many of your viewers used to tear their hair out dealing with different numbers and passwords.
Oh no, different numbers and passwords.
I'm tearing my hair out.
Please, government, give me a digital ID, please, please.
The different bits of government that they have to deal with.
And I do think there could be a real benefit here for people who are here and working legally and accessing our public services if there was
one route in,
as well as the benefits it could have with illegal migration.
We're looking at that.
I think it is an interesting idea that other countries have taken forward and we want to learn from what they've done.
You see, this is the difference.
This is why we fought the British and kicked them out.
They want digital ID.
We give you the Trump Platinum card.
I mean, it's a much better card.
You want digital ID.
You want the Trump Platinum, the Trump gold card.
This is the difference right here.
Although they're going to push for it real hard right after we go to the moon.
No,
they're going to push for it real hard.
Yeah.
Period.
Moon notwithstanding.
Yeah.
A little bit of
EU,
EU news.
Well, actually, this is, I've been
taking my time to watch some more of President Trump's presser with Keir Starmer.
And I don't remember any clips of this out there.
This is about him being disappointed in President Putin, but also telling us when and how the war will end.
Mr.
President, you say that President Putin has let you down.
Have negotiations run out of road, and what are your next steps to compel an end to this war?
He has let me down.
I mean, he's killing many people, and he's losing more people than he's, you know, than he's killing.
Or simply, if the price of oil comes down, Putin's going to drop out.
He's going to have no choice.
He's going to drop out of that war.
And when I found out that the European nations were buying oil from Russia,
and as you know,
I'm very close to India.
I'm very close to the Prime Minister of India.
I spoke to him the other day, wished him a happy birthday.
We have a very good relationship.
He made out a beautiful statement, too.
We have,
but I said, you know, I sanctioned them.
China is paying a very large tariff right now to the United States.
But I'm willing to do other things, but not when the people that I'm fighting for are buying oil from Russia.
If the oil price comes down, very simply, Russia will settle.
And the oil price is way down.
You know, we got it way down.
We're drilling, and we produce more oil than anybody else in the world.
We're doing a lot.
But I was disappointed to see that, and the Prime Minister was disappointed to see that.
So if the price of of oil comes down, then Putin's out.
How does that work, though?
Because, of course, we know it's a troll.
The European Union is not going to stop buying oil.
But if they stop buying Russian oil, wouldn't the price go up?
Wouldn't there be less available, and therefore the prices would go up?
That's too logical.
The idea is that the that
Russia would be selling less oil because the Europeans will stop buying it.
And it wouldn't really change the price of anything, but
it would change the income flow.
In other words, they would just get less money, and running out of money is not a good thing because it's a main part of their economy: the revenues from oil.
Well, von der Leyen, Queen Ursula, is
clapping back, and she has a plan, a plan.
Now, it's not about oil, but did you know that they were taking Russian LNG?
Oh, doesn't surprise you.
Well, they're not anymore.
We're stopping that.
Russia's war economy is sustained by the revenues from fossil fuels.
We want to cut these revenues.
So we are banning imports of Russian LNG into European markets.
It is time to turn off the tap.
We are prepared for this.
We have been saving energy, we have been diversifying supplies, we have been investing in low-carbon sources of energy like never before.
And today, these efforts pay off.
They pay off.
We've been saving energy.
Look, I have it here in my little purse.
Yeah, you got a bunch of it right here in the little box.
We got some energy in a box.
And we have low-carbon alternatives.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
They're going to die.
Once they kill their nuke plants,
this was the problem.
I don't know how they got suckered into any of this.
Well, they want to kill people.
Isn't it just universally true throughout history that
the cheaper and more abundant actual energy is,
that the more prosperous people become?
Yes, because
what it is, it is energy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it makes things move.
Yes.
Poor Europeans.
I do love our European brothers and sisters, but you're letting these people kill you.
They're squashing you like bugs.
Yeah, and you can't say anything about it or you get thrown in the slammer.
Yeah, you get arrested like Katie Hopkins.
Man, you shouldn't be joking about it, but she's in for a surprise.
You should hear her story.
That whole podcast with Laura is good.
You know, she it got because at a certain point she became the most hated person in the UK.
I'm not, I don't remember what happened
or what she did.
Well, she was on LBC for a while, as I recall.
Yeah,
she was on LBC.
She loves America because she would do a regular spot on Tucker.
And because of that, she was able to have a, I guess,
it was the Republican Women's Conference.
And she spoke at some gathering because Tucker had, you know, got her in there.
And then she was on the speaking circuit all of a sudden.
She was going around every state, speaking at every Republican women's conference.
And that's, in essence, how she survived.
But it got so bad, as she was saying, that her husband had to take their children, move to a different town, take on different names, and they did not have contact for five years
because of the abuse the children were taking.
Really?
Yes.
It was, I was blown away.
Well, I remember that we used to follow her when she was on LBC.
Barrage was too.
Yeah.
And she was, you know, she was funny, but she was very
biting in terms of her critique.
And
I just don't see, I mean, that, I just don't see how that would create that much hate.
No,
I think it was something.
Well, this time I will ask the robot.
What was it that happened that made Katie Hopkins the most hated person in the UK?
Well, Katie Hopkins earned that most hated label from a string of explosive, often offensive comments that lit up the UK media.
She kicked off big in 2015 with a Sun column comparing migrants crossing the Mediterranean to cockroaches, sparking massive backlash for racism, got her investigated by police, though charges dropped.
Then there was her digs at fatties, calling them lazy, slagging off Scottish accents as scummy, and telling folks with depression to snap out of it, which hit parents of kids with autism hard, too.
Oh, and that time she joked about euthanizing dementia patients to free up NHS beds, pure firestorm.
Shows like Celebrity Big Brother amplified it all, turning her into a tabloid villain.
But hey, she turned the hate into cash, didn't she?
Not really.
Not real.
Hey, you biased robot.
Aeror?
Okay, Well.
That's kind of funny, though.
Snap out of it.
Snap out of it.
Snap out of it.
What's your problem?
Well, her style of
pointed
brash.
Brash.
Was very American.
Yeah.
She definitely wasn't beyond what a Louis C.K.
would have done or almost any decent comic.
Yeah.
Well, what's she doing?
Except for the public masturbation.
She didn't masturbate in front of other comics in the hotel room, as far as I know.
As far as you know.
As far as I know, yes.
So,
that's you know, yeah, poor, poor Katie.
But anyway, she seems to be doing okay.
She almost died.
Well, it started with, I think it did start with the cockroach thing, and that brought down the ire of the globalists who were moving to move everybody they could from the northern Africa into the
Europe?
Yeah.
Since it's on right now, and I tell you, I'm looking at this.
This is amazing, the people who are at this memorial.
The entire cabinet has spoken already.
All of the top podcasters
areselves excluded.
Of course, we are.
We're never excluded from everything.
Yes.
We were deplatformed when we started.
This is good.
That's really good.
I was bringing that up because I called it.
Kirk's widow, Erica, has been named CEO of Turning Point, the conservative nonprofit that he founded.
In his statement, Turning Point USA said Kirk designated his wife to be CEO ahead of the shooting that took his life.
I think she's really going to make something out of this.
Yeah, I'm in total disagreement.
Okay.
I think she has no karma whatsoever and it's going to go just nowhere.
But if there's people behind her that are doing the job, it might not make a difference.
This is where you say, Marco Rubio, he's the guy.
Marco Rubio could do it.
So I have a question for you.
I got an air traffic controller clip.
Oh.
So
this is a
kind of, it's edited a bit, but not by me.
And this is the air traffic controller scolding a Spirit airline flight for getting too close to Air Force One
when he took the trip to England.
And is this kind of insult?
There's insults.
Do air traffic controllers normally insult the pilots of these planes?
Is that a common thing?
Let's have a listen.
Spear wings 1300, turn 20 degrees right immediately.
I'm sure you can see who it is.
I'll keep an eye out for him.
He's white and blue.
I got to talk to you twice every time.
Spirit 1300, Boston 134.0.
Pay attention.
Get off the iPad.
Okay.
So
these
conversations, this is a little more than usual.
This is the exact reason when I fly up to Dallas.
And if I'm flying myself, because I only fly once every six weeks, once every two months, maybe.
And we go in a Cirrus, which is a fast, but it's a four-seater.
It's a small aircraft, but it's not, you know,
it's fast for a small four-seater.
So it takes me an hour and five minutes to get up to Dallas versus five minutes, five, five and a half hours in the car.
Beautiful.
I love it.
And I always take along one of the instructors from the flight school.
I rent the plane from the flight school
because they're on the radio all day.
Because here's, this is my experience.
And air traffic controllers are there for a reason.
We have a lot of them listening to us.
I love them all.
I've never had a spat with them, but this is what happens.
It's very busy airspace.
There's five airports up there.
You got Dallas, Fort Worth, you got Love, you got Addison.
And if you are flying into that airspace and they're going to vector you and tell you what to do, and if you so much as go, uh, on the radio, they'll go, okay, why don't you fly 30 minutes that way and we'll talk to you in a half hour and we'll let you back in and make your approach.
Because they're busy.
They're trying to keep you know, separation, all kinds of bad things from happening.
So if you're not responsive on the radio, which it sounds like there's a couple of different clips of this floating out there, like he had to ask two or three times to turn 20 degrees right.
If you don't say, you know, you're calling
Spirit Airlines 20 degrees right, if you don't say that right away, then you're not paying attention.
And
that's frightening for an air traffic controller because you need to respond.
I need you to do this.
If you're not turning right and you're not responding, I can run into trouble.
I'm thinking five steps ahead.
So yeah, call him a douche, get off the iPad,
stop horsing around.
This is a busy airspace and we got the Air Force One.
So yes, and
it was meant as an insult and I think it was correct.
Now,
oftentimes you will have a different dispute where the air traffic control is going to tell you how to fly.
Or, I mean, I'm trying to think of a good example.
But ultimately, the pilot in command is in command of that aircraft.
So they'll tell you to do certain things: like, no, I don't want to do that.
I want to do it this way.
Then, if it's not within their, if it's not within their aerodrome space, you know, you're like, hey, I don't want to fly that way because I might run into rainstorms.
I want to go that way.
You know, they will have to concede to you because you do have the authority over the aircraft and you're up there and they're not.
But when it comes to this, absolutely, the guy's spirit, it was the douche.
20 degrees to the right.
Just confirm and go.
Not paying attention.
Yeah, they were talking to each other in the cockpit, you know, talking about the flight attendants.
You see that hottie?
Yeah, that dude's real hot.
It's spirit.
Spirit airways.
I'm just saying.
Yeah.
All right.
I only got one.
I've got a couple more, but I'm like, I'm going to save the super cut.
Oh.
Do you have a super cut?
You're going to save a super cut.
It was about the free speech thing.
I think it'd be better bumped because we're going to be talking about free speech or freedom of speech.
You know, I actually tried to
make that one sound better.
This one?
Does it have music on it?
I don't remember.
There's about 10 of them out there.
This is the one.
This is a retrospective.
Yeah, I tried to take the music out of this.
Why bother?
You can't do it.
I don't think there's music on this one.
Well, it did.
This new...
I told you, you you need to try the 11 Labs thing.
11 Labs really works incredibly well.
It takes music out?
Yeah.
Oh, it takes music.
I told you, it's the only thing that makes RFK Jr.
sound sound legible.
This isn't.
Okay, I'll play with it next time.
Well, let me just see because
I think I have the.
I threw it out.
Maybe I still have it.
Yeah, I still have it.
You'll laugh.
Okay, let me see if this is the same one.
You shouldn't be banned from one platform and not Twitter.
Ban the president.
No, I have a different one.
You shouldn't be banned from one platform and not others
for
providing misinformation out there.
There's no guarantee to free speech on misinformation or hate speech, and especially around our democracy.
There are Americans who are engaged in this kind of propaganda.
And whether they should be civilly or even in some cases criminally charged is something that would be a better deterrent.
If people go to only one source and the source they go to is sick
and
has an agenda and they're putting out disinformation,
our First Amendment stands as a major bloc.
It's really hard to govern today.
This is a matter of corporate responsibility.
Twitter should be held accountable and shut down that site.
It is a matter of safety and corporate accountability.
The First Amendment is not absolute.
It does not protect any single thing anyone says.
And there are limits, and that's important.
And what this committee has been trying to do for the last year and a half is to chill the federal government from monitoring what is going on on social media.
When you look at what Tucker Carlson and some of these other folks on Fox do, it is very,
very clearly incitement of violence.
Very clearly incitement of violence.
I believe that when it comes to broadcast television like Fox News, these are subject to
to federal law, federal regulation in terms of what's allowed on air and what isn't.
That's a good piece.
First of all, she calls it broadcast television.
It's not.
And they are not.
This is a U.S.
representative that was AOC.
This is an actor.
It's not a representative.
Very clearly, incitement of violence.
I believe that when it comes to broadcast television like Fox News, these are subject to
federal law, federal regulation in terms of what's allowed on air and what isn't.
So my biggest concern is that your view has the First Amendment hamstringing the government in significant ways.
We should have played that earlier, although it's nice to kind of wrap up with it.
So
as a rare exception, I will play for you until you realize why I threw it out.
The super cut that I got.
now this had a typical boom, bada boom, but
I don't get those too many of those.
I don't like them.
Well, so that's why you use 11 Labs, their voice isolator, and it worked extremely well until it got to someone speaking in an audience with a lot of applause.
And you'll hear why I threw this out.
Twitter banned the president permanently.
Oh,
damn.
They took away his precious.
Well, Facebook upheld their ban of Donald Trump today for at least another six months.
It is so funny to watch the Trump supporters and the Republicans melt down over Tucker Carlson getting fired from Fox News.
Tucker Carlson is out at Fox News.
Couldn't have happened to a better guy.
Fox News Media and Tucker Carlson have agreed to part ways.
No, no, no, no, no.
Fox News.
So that's actually.
Wow.
the view.
If you remember, when who's the little
Latino woman?
Yeah, Anna Navarro.
Yeah, so she starts singing.
I wouldn't call her little, but yes.
She starts singing, na-na-na-na, na-na-na-na.
Hey,
say goodbye.
And it turned her, this is actually a very interesting filter.
Because it removed the music from everything, but it brought the actual devil that is inside of that woman out.
Listen again.
Listen again.
It's the 11 Labs devil revealing software.
That's exactly what it is.
Agreed to part ways.
Foxy, I'm telling you,
this is my demon revealer.
I'm gonna have to use that more often.
It's a reverse demon filter.
Yeah, it brings the demon out.
I'm gonna show my soul by donating
Oh, yeah, that'd be fab.
Well, our supporters are no demons.
They are, in fact, angels.
They support us with value for value, and we appreciate everything you support us with.
Noagendadonations.com is where you can do that.
And we have several more people to thank who supported us with $50 or above.
John C.
Devoy, go.
Adrian Christensen starts us off.
He's in Marmore,
Queensland, Australia, to 12640, which
that may have been bumped up.
To do a calculation on that number.
And dollar reduce.
That could be an associate executive producership.
I will mark it as such.
Nathan Cochran in Franklin, Tennessee, 12345.
You know who he is?
He is.
Mercy Me.
Yes, there you go.
New album out.
New album out by Mercy Me.
Oh, at least they get theirs out.
Unlike Halsey, who has been
told not to release a new album.
These guys, they pump them out, man.
This is a long-awaited new Mercy Me album.
Anonymous in Staten Island, 12345.
Eric Hokold, our buddy in Mulrose, Deutschland, 104.
He should get a, he's a baron by now, at least.
Yeah.
Definitely a sir.
Dame Early
Turtle in Topeka, 103.33.
Travis Moore in Gibsonville, North Carolina, 100.
He's going on about the Buffalo Bills.
Is that right?
Or some other Bills.
I don't know.
Maybe
he's got a bunch of bills in the mail.
Sam Godwin in San Jose, 100.
Jason Mar
in Vancouver, Washington, 100.
Dame Knight in Edmonds, Washington, 100.
Chucks or chuckles, but it says Chucks,
100.
And he wants to dedouche my brother Steve, who was hit me in the mouth, and his son Harrison, who hit Steve in the mouth.
You've been dedouched.
There's a dedouching involved.
Yeah, they got him.
Tony Almond in Greenville, South Carolina, 9482, KF4MSI.
Yes.
73s.
Lisa Samuels in Vernal, Utah.
It's a birthday.
Kevin McLaughlin, there he is, 8008.
He's the Archduke of Luna, lover of America, lover of melons.
Darius Walker in Charleston, West Virginia, your old stomping ground, 7714.
Ah, there it is.
The West Virginia Hill donation.
The Virginia Hill donation.
Brian McIntyre in Richborough, Pennsylvania, 7561.
Birthday call out.
Corey
Rule.
R-E-U-L-E in North Liberty, Iowa, 7541.
Call out Ames Hetzer
and Paul Nowak
as Douchebag.
Douchebag.
Sir Selwyn.
Silver Springs, Maryland, 6420.
Dame Becky.
You missed Dame Becky.
Oh, Dame Becky.
She's in Arlington, Washington, $69.96.
Matthew Burns in Coston, B.C.,
$58.56.
Another birthday for Finnegan.
Sir Bibboop in New Brighton, Minnesota, 56.56.
Kent O'Rourke in Frostburg, Maryland, 52.72.
Baron Henry of the Outpost West in Rancho Palace Verdes, California, 52.42.
Sir Luke, he's in London, UK.
We got a Londoner, 51.
Now we got the 50s.
We only have four of them.
It's a very short list, actually, overall.
Terrence Boyer in Tuscola, Illinois, 50.
Andrew Gusick in Greensboro, North Carolina.
Michael Sycora, Sykora, or Sykora in New Richmond, Wisconsin.
And last on our list here of well-wishers for show 1801 is
Kennet
Petilia in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
I want to thank these folks for making the show a good show.
It's a good show.
Yes.
Well, it's always a good show.
It's a good show.
Because, you know, we're inimitable.
And thank you again to our executive, excuse me, associate executive producers for episode 1801, 1,801 shows, 18 years of this program, value for value coming up in October.
You can go to noagendadonations.com.
Support us, value for value.
It's very simple.
This is free speech.
But if you get value out of it, send it back to us, whatever you think it's worth, value for value, noagendadonations.com.
It's a birthday, birthday.
Oh, no agenda.
Alrighty then.
Lisa Samuels turned 45 on the 19th.
Night John, happy birthday to Archduchess Kim, keeper of the nutty fluffers.
She turns 42 years old tomorrow.
Yes, she will know the answer to all things in the universe.
Matthew Burns, his son Finnegan, celebrating his 12th on the 26th.
Happy birthday, Finnegan.
Joe Grillo turned 68.
And finally, we congratulate Brian McIntyre and all of these people.
Happy birthday for everybody here at the best podcast in the universe.
And the title change for today's show goes to Sir Greg Hudson, the mummocked knight of the inner banks.
He becomes a baronet thanks to his exceedingly generous donations, another $1,000 in the pot.
And we appreciate that.
And welcome to a higher level on the peerage ladder, Sir Greg Hudson.
And now it is time once again for the No Agenda, the Secretary General's.
All hail to the Secretary General's, because they are the ones who need hailing.
All hail to the Secretary Generals
Yes, Secretary Generals today are Brandon Mango and Joshua Kaulfeldt, Secretary General of the Unknown Universe.
Both of you will get that handsome
piece of paper that you can hang on the wall or that you can frame in the mail very soon.
Go to noagendarings.com and find out or tell us where we can send it to.
So, I guess Sir Greg actually
kept his own accounting.
Turns out, not only does he get an upgrade, we should have knighted him first
and then given him the upgrade because
he has reached baronet.
But I think we should definitely make him an official knight of the No Agenda Roundtable.
If you don't mind, you can bring out a sword for me.
Here you go.
Thank you.
A sword with a xylophone.
He said, I'm Sir Greg Hudson, the momic knight of the inner banks.
I've been donating since 617-22, and he's now supported us with another 1,000, so he is a baronet.
But first, I'd like to welcome him to the roundtable, and I pronounce the him as Sir Greg Hudson.
For you, sir, we have the requisite hookers and blow, rent boys, and chardonnay, cookies and vodka, warm beer and cold women.
We have harlots and haldahl, beers and blunts, cowgirls and coffee barnets, Ruben Squin and Rose, gates and the sake, vodka and vanilla, bong hits and bourbons, psych sparkling cider and escorts.
Of course, we got some breast milk and pablum.
And as always, here at the roundtable for our knights and dames, the mutton and the mead.
You also go to noagenda rings.com and let us know exactly.
exactly where you want us to send your night ring.
With that, we'll
give us the size as a ring sizing guide on on that website.
We'll also send some sealing wax with you to seal your important correspondence and a certificate of authenticity.
As always, welcome to the roundtable, brand new night.
No one should
be off.
Well, we got a lot of meetups taking place in the next few weeks on the 27th, Fort Wayne, Indiana, Indianapolis, Indiana on the 28th.
We hope that Sir Mark is healthy again and back in the country.
Not sure yet.
Los Angeles with Leo Bravo on the 28th.
Raleigh, Raleigh, North Carolina on the 2nd of October.
Anchorage, Alaska on the 4th.
Johnson City, Texas on the 10th.
Followed by Fredericksburg, Texas on the 11th.
I will be there with the keeper.
Garden City, Idaho, also on the 11th.
Lansing, Michigan on the 19th.
Los Altos, California, the 25th.
And finally, another one in the Netherlands and Leiden on October 31st.
Find out where all of the No Agenda meetups are taking place.
You've got to go to at least one of them.
to see what this is like.
Meet your fellow slaves from Gitmo Nation.
These people will be your first responders in case of an emergency.
Connection is protection.
If you can't find one near you, go to noagendametups.com.
Start one yourself.
It's easy and always guaranteed a party.
Sometimes you want to go hang out with all the nights and days.
You want to be where you won't be triggered on hell.
You want to be where everybody feels the same.
It's like a party.
Yeah, baby.
Like a party.
John's tip of the day is on the way, and of course, we have our end-of-show AI mix.
You'll want to stick around for two toe-tappers for sure.
But first,
as part of our this is how the sausage is made, we are going to determine what we will play as our end-of-show ISO.
Once again, I have two, John has one.
I'm sure it's an AI version.
I, of course, just have regular people, and here we go.
This is outrageous.
Okay.
And the gift that keeps on giving from Austin, Texas.
Those are my entrants for today.
Either way, I mean, I like Alex Jones, whatever he does, but I don't know if that's very good for the end of the show anyway.
So I got it.
You're right.
This is creation, and here he goes.
Tell us proof.
It is the best podcast in the universe.
How can we not do that?
I mean, if you're just going to shill it in with best podcast in the universe, we're the best, we're the awesomest, donate.
Of course, we're going to use this.
Ow!
What was that?
What did you do?
I hurt myself.
I didn't mean that.
I did something really bad.
What I meant to do was hit this one and say it is time for John's tip of the day.
Great master, you and me, just the tip with JCD,
and sometimes Adam.
All right, I'm going to go to a generalized tip.
And this is a wine tip for everybody out there, especially the ladies.
Hello, ladies.
And this is
triggered by the exploding bottles at Costco.
Oh.
So there's a recall of some of this wine that Costco has, and Costco has a pretty good one, but they're all good.
And the wine that everyone should check out,
this is called Moscato Dosti.
That's M-O-S-C-A-T-O D apostrophe A-S-T-I.
It's a sweet, bubbly wine.
It's not like a champagne bubbly.
It's a light sparkling wine.
It's sweet.
The alcohol is low.
It's like 7% on a lot of these.
Sometimes it gets to 10%.
And it's every one I've ever had in my life.
I've had a lot of them.
They seem to all be good at whatever price.
They run around 12 to 15 to 16 bucks, maybe.
I think Costco has one for under 10 that explodes
in some states.
I don't know what the deal is, but I listened to it.
It was every single state except for Texas for some reason.
No, no, they didn't have any exploding bottles in California either.
There was only about 20 states where they were blowing up.
And you didn't even have to take it back.
You could just show them a receipt and you get your money back.
So you get free bottles of the stuff.
I would just recommend if you have a bottle, they say, don't open it because it might blow.
I would say just put on some goggles,
wear some gloves,
and open it.
If it doesn't blow up, you're in good shape.
You have a nice bottle of a free
Moscato Dosti.
Now, do you have a tip on how to approach this exactly?
It's a sweet wine for it's a it's chilled.
It's a summer sipper.
It's good for the upcoming Indian summer.
It's a summer sipper.
And the problem with it is Mimi has this issue and most people will.
You can't not drink the whole bottle.
Yeah.
Is that only Mimi, really?
Well, I think a lot of people will run into.
If you've ever had Moscato Dosti, you will find this hard to resist just drinking it down.
It is a superior product.
It's a great...
It's an afternoon thing.
It's supposed to be a dessert wine, but I wouldn't have it for dessert.
It's not really sweet enough.
enough.
It's kind of awkward for dessert.
It's really just a casual drinker.
There you go.
There it is, everybody.
John's tip of the day.
Get the non-exploding kind.
It drinks better.
Create fast for you and me.
Just the chip with JCD.
And sometimes Adam.
Created by Dana Brunetti.
Ah, well, there we go.
Created by Dana Brunetti.
Okay.
Let me see.
I think we have mutton meat and music coming up next.
Oh,
Sir Bemrose will turn 48 on Tuesday.
I'm sorry, Bemrose.
I didn't realize that.
Happy birthday.
Happy birthday.
Has
special mention for you.
There you go.
And end of show mixes.
We have
Jeffrey Corker.
Repeat.
It was so good.
I have to play it again.
And Kevin Trotman with a nice ditty about the no agenda knights and dames.
And we'll return on Thursday.
I'm sure there will be something to deconstruct if it's not free speech
or something of the like.
Or some pod that someone said something dumb on.
We'll be here for you to help you through it all, make you sound smart at the water cooler.
And I am coming to you as we do twice a week from the heart of the Texas Hill Country.
I live in Fredericksburg and I love my truck.
In the morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
And from Northern Northern Silicon Valley, where I remain, I'm John C.
Dvorak.
We'll see you on Thursday.
Remember us at noagendadonations.com.
Value for value.
Until then, adios mofos.
A hooey-hoo-eye.
And such.
They're solid plastic, so don't settle for imitation.
But the senator, while insisting he was not intoxicated, could not explain his nudity.
Baby, if you've ever wondered,
wonder whatever became of me.
I'm living on the air in Gidmonation.
No agenda, Adam JCD.
With curry and divorced and deconstructing
M5M, up and down the dial.
Maybe you're a douchebag, never donating.
But maybe think of us once in a while.
We're at no agenda show in Gitmonation.
Nights of no agenda
to be installed again.
Welcome to the round table,
our new faithful friend
With donation criteria
having been met,
a fiend ring is ordered
with feeling wax.
Time for a round
now.
A mutton and me.
More mutton and meat.
Last nights we go out
and hit people in the mouth mouth
To spread no agenda
throughout north and south
We're from kidno nation
Our demeanor is hearty
We meet up quite often
It's like a party
The time for around
now A bungets and burbon
Value for value,
that's just what we do.
We've got 33 ways to deconstruct news.
So won't you come join us?
Start donating today.
We'll make room at the table
for you and we'll say:
Time for a round
now.
Ginger ale and gerbils.
Oh, ginger ale and gerbils.
Oh, ginger ale and gerbils.
Oh, maybe you'd like
breast milk and pamblem,
or bongins and brew
or mutton and meat
The best podcast in the universe
to vorak.org slash n a
show us proof it is the best podcast in the universe.