Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to Media Exposed. Since we're going to take a
look at the New York City race again, Mayor Adams
was making his media rounds.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
We're also going to.
Speaker 1 (00:08):
Bring on a special guest, Congresswoman Nancy Mags who's been
a fighter in the culture wars, the trans wars. She's
announced her race. She announced her race for governor of
South Carolina, and bring her on too. We're going to
talk about Gaza a little bit. We're also going to
talk about the New York Post they they're launching in California.
(00:29):
That and more coming up on Media.
Speaker 2 (00:30):
Exposed to you.
Speaker 3 (00:40):
What they do say is fake.
Speaker 4 (00:44):
He inc.
Speaker 5 (00:46):
That's how devious the media has become their full force activists.
Now they folks, we're in on it, Sway's elections, Sways policy.
Speaker 2 (00:58):
We need to expose them.
Speaker 1 (00:59):
Republic trash, the contry.
Speaker 3 (01:02):
It stops.
Speaker 2 (01:09):
I've been doing this since i was eighteen. I've had
hit jobs done against me. I've been attacked by media.
Speaker 1 (01:14):
Reporters are afraid no truth will prevail.
Speaker 2 (01:21):
Fake news. Media. We're here to call you out. Heiden
to the.
Speaker 3 (01:31):
Media Exposed with Adam Wise starts.
Speaker 1 (01:34):
Now, Welcome to Media Exposed. The CBS Morning show with
Gail King is failing, flailing because the CBS prioritized, like
so many other corporations, identity politics over audience trust over
building a brand. When your best friend runs the show
and ratings still crash, it's not just bad TV, it's
(01:56):
bad management, it's bad leadership. Skydance is right to push
back on the bias because they bought Paramount. They bought
CBS viewers want news, not woke spin. I want to
next welcome my first guest, Justine Murray for the Media
Research Center NewsBusters. What would we do without NewsBusters? Justine
(02:17):
or Media Research Center calling out the media year after
year on their bias. It's incredible. But even the you know,
when you look at these morning shows, like CBS Morning Shows,
they made sure they ha's DEI picks, the executive producers,
a de.
Speaker 2 (02:32):
I pick the whole.
Speaker 1 (02:34):
All the hopes are African Americas for one. I mean,
it doesn't really show a clear catalyst of America or
a group think of America, right, but this is what
they wanted to push the agenda. I want to play
this clip about Gail King first, because that's who they
were saying.
Speaker 2 (02:51):
The New York pros broke the story on the work.
Speaker 1 (02:53):
Said she might be on the way out because you're
paying a fifteen million a year for terrible ratings. What business, right,
let's go cut one here.
Speaker 6 (03:01):
What do you think when people say, oh, it's frivolous
number when they call it a ride, which I find
very irritating because they never say men went for a ride.
What do you say to people who think that this
was frivolous or just a ride? You know, I think
the message that it sends is very very powerful. And
the people that say that, by the way, weren't there.
Speaker 1 (03:18):
Silly blaming something. Somebody called it a ride and you say,
and that's you know, that's anti feminist.
Speaker 2 (03:24):
Right, It's so silly.
Speaker 1 (03:26):
What are your thoughts on the CBS Morning Show about
the report that they might cut gelt King because their
ratings are.
Speaker 2 (03:32):
In the tank.
Speaker 1 (03:33):
Comreetis it's totally down twenty thirty percent over the last
few months.
Speaker 7 (03:37):
Christ Well, first, thank you again for having me.
Speaker 8 (03:40):
This is a house of cards. This is what happens when.
Speaker 7 (03:42):
Your company and when your show is built on THEI
when you hire people not for their skill or the
fact that they're entertaining, but just simply the fact that
they're so ideologically based, and their skin tone and their
gender is their entire personality.
Speaker 8 (03:59):
Eventually nobody will wants to watch it.
Speaker 7 (04:01):
The only people who think these ladies are interesting are
themselves and their girlfriends. They had a drag queen on
a while back who.
Speaker 8 (04:09):
Did this DEI version, wrote this.
Speaker 7 (04:11):
Dei book about Harriet Tubman. Nobody wants to hear that
in the morning. It's supposed to be about news. It's
supposed to be more light hearted, and it's not supposed
to be about their misery.
Speaker 1 (04:21):
You know, people wake up in the morning, they do meditation,
they do yogur, they try to get their mind uplifted
because you got to you know, I read this, got
a hard day ahead of you.
Speaker 2 (04:30):
You got to get achieved goals.
Speaker 1 (04:33):
They don't want to be lectured about such negative things
that the Democrats and the hosts and the media like
to electu it. Nobody wants to especially in the morning. Right,
You want to have a bright day, and that's not
what they think. The politics takes takes their religion over
even common sense.
Speaker 2 (04:50):
Let's just cut too.
Speaker 1 (04:51):
She tries to blame these cuts on this crash Gail
King does, saying when she's interviewing the Delta CEO.
Speaker 2 (04:57):
It's got to cut two.
Speaker 6 (04:58):
After looking at all these mishaps, so a lot of
people are very nervous. Do these cuts affect you?
Speaker 3 (05:05):
The cuts do not affect our scale.
Speaker 1 (05:08):
And she shakes ahead. You notice that was missing? She
was like she wanted the answer to be what see
the bias right there?
Speaker 2 (05:16):
Justine.
Speaker 8 (05:17):
They have their heads so far up their tushue.
Speaker 7 (05:19):
They're so egotistical that they can't just look.
Speaker 8 (05:22):
In a mirror and say.
Speaker 7 (05:23):
Hey, wait a minute, maybe we're not that interesting or
entertaining after all. Instead they have to point fingers at
everybody else. They're next, they're going to point the fingers
at the audience.
Speaker 8 (05:32):
Which is basically what they're doing.
Speaker 7 (05:34):
We're not wanting to watch them anymore.
Speaker 2 (05:36):
So I got Terry Moran.
Speaker 1 (05:38):
He was legendary, ANKA well known ACA ABC Nightline, and
then he was given this last interview with President Trump
and he had to be biased as ever, but he
never through his whole history of him ANTIVI we're fair,
We're not biased, right, gets fired from ABC? And now
(05:58):
what do you know on a substack where bias funny?
It comes out now after the Czech stop, right after
he has to play along with the crowd, finally admitting
what we've known for years. Legacy is stacked, the legacy
meetia stack with anti Trump bias. And when you're on
the inside, you protect, but they protect the narrative. But
I like this clip and it's put and was put
(06:19):
together by one and only NewsBusters.
Speaker 2 (06:21):
So watch this. Let's go to let's go to cut
three here.
Speaker 9 (06:25):
I like to say that in some ways, Barack Obama
is the first president since George Washington to be taking
a step down into the oval office.
Speaker 10 (06:35):
I mean, from a visionary leader of.
Speaker 3 (06:37):
A giant movement.
Speaker 9 (06:39):
Now he's got an executive position.
Speaker 3 (06:41):
That he has to perform.
Speaker 9 (06:42):
In the question you can sense on everyone's mind. Is
they listen so intently to him?
Speaker 2 (06:47):
Is he the one?
Speaker 9 (06:49):
Is Barack Obama the man, the black man who could
lead the Democrats back to the White House.
Speaker 11 (06:55):
Around here, they're even naming babies after him.
Speaker 9 (06:58):
In twenty sixteen, Bernie Sanders changed the Democratic Party. He
made democratic socialism cool for millions of voters. Bottom line,
Row versus Waight is overruled. There is no constitutional right
to an abortion.
Speaker 2 (07:10):
Let's not mince words.
Speaker 3 (07:12):
Women will die because of this rule.
Speaker 9 (07:14):
And this is a court not of judges, but of
politicians in judges robes. Fight for Trump, not fight for America.
He has the Republican Party as a personalized power, like
we haven't seen it's a Cardio, it's a Caesar, it's
a fure.
Speaker 3 (07:30):
We don't see that in this country.
Speaker 12 (07:32):
We do now.
Speaker 9 (07:32):
It's much more like sometimes you see in other countries,
an authoritarian figure maybe who has crossed the line of legality,
still with an army of supporters, and in fact that
the White House at this point is a laughingstock's right
in the capitals of Europe. Looking to shore up shrinking
support with the white voters, he needs to recap to
(07:53):
the White House.
Speaker 3 (07:54):
The President boasted about.
Speaker 9 (07:55):
Rolling back an Obama era fair housing rule, stirring racist
This is why he was set here by people who
want to hear that message of America.
Speaker 1 (08:05):
Looking back, it's amazing that he get away with such
racist towards the president, such blaine disregard of truth towards
President Trump, racist, fura, all these words that are like
you know, shouldn't be allowed in ABC News.
Speaker 2 (08:20):
And you know, back in.
Speaker 1 (08:21):
Two thousand and eight, with that coverage of Obama, there
was no real America's Voice Jews, there was no Newsmax,
there was no podcasts that coverage that Obama got. There's
no way he was ever going to not be allowed
to be the first black president. They all want to
sit in adulation. We elected the first African American president,
even though that before that they loved John mccainn He
(08:42):
was this maverick streak independent republic the kind of Republican
they loved. But he didn't have a shot. And then
what they did to Sarah Palin was one of the
worst hit jobs, making it look like a buffoon. But
the coverage that they divided to Barack Obama was hundreds
of millions in free ad They didn't even need his
own advertise, and they had the mainstream media back then.
(09:02):
But with your thoughts on Terry Moran, now he finally
admits it, Justine.
Speaker 8 (09:06):
Right, he's a grictor.
Speaker 7 (09:08):
He was the biggest purveyor, one of the greatest bearers
of left wing orthodoxy at that network and in our
legacy media. Is now that his own team threw him
out after bashing President Trump too hard because now they're
afraid of their ratings. Suddenly he's pretending he's level headed.
It reminds me so much of Jake Tapper because it's
the same thing. But Jake Tapper did where he was biased.
(09:31):
He covered the Biden administration's failing. Yet suddenly, now that
he's basically got nothing to do, he's trying to cozy
up to the other side and pretend that he was
just levelheaded all along. Terry Moran was just a moderate
all along, even though just a couple of weeks ago
he was the one who went on this diatribe against
(09:53):
everybody in the Trump administration and he got sacked for it,
And now he's turning in his own milk. These people
have no values, they don't have a ground to stand on,
they don't have morals. They're so untrustworthy. They're snakes. These
the journalists class. They're run by a bunch of snakes.
Speaker 1 (10:12):
And you've been in the room with them recently in
the new Trump administration.
Speaker 2 (10:15):
Trump.
Speaker 1 (10:16):
Now recently you were in the White House Press Office
press when Carol Levitt does our press conferences. Do you
see any difference? So they're all smug there. How do
you what do you say in the in the room?
Speaker 8 (10:29):
Well, I have not been in the room yet. I
hope to be well.
Speaker 1 (10:33):
I know I saw you at the White House a
couple of times, so I wasn't sure if you're at
the press availability.
Speaker 7 (10:40):
I was at a couple of events at the White
House and they're really incredible people. But we do cover
the White House with the Media Research Center, so we
follow the live stream of the briefing room and we
hope to be in there. But we notice how you'll
have these legacy media types.
Speaker 8 (10:55):
All they do is complain and.
Speaker 7 (10:58):
Moan about the other people in the room. We're finally
having a voice, and they wanted to.
Speaker 8 (11:04):
Keep their orthodoxy. For so long, the.
Speaker 7 (11:06):
Legacy of media felt like there should be no voices,
no new voices whatsoever. And now that there are any
voices and they're actually being heard, the same legacy media
types that wanted to censor you and me, suddenly they're
the ones crying censorship because their ratings are going down.
Speaker 8 (11:19):
The dream.
Speaker 1 (11:21):
Justine, I want to thank you for joining us as always,
Thank you so much, and hopefully you'll be in that
press room any day now, well after the summer break.
Thanks for joining us. Stand they're coming up. The New
York Post is changing the game. They're heading out West. Next,
Kamala steps in the spotlight again and remind us why
she wasn't elected. Boy, was this a bad interview? That
(11:44):
mora coming up on media exposed? Welcome back to media exposed.
(12:10):
Kamala's new book might be climbing Amazon charts already, but
let's be honest. It's not because American's areadients, because the
liberal publishing machine the media throws money at marketing ads
political allies, not because the merit or demand. She's doing
the media rounds with hosts who've been fired, were discredited,
preaching to the same insulated eco chamber that put her
(12:34):
approval ratings in the basement. It's not an outreach, it's
damage control. Kamala still can't answer basic question. She was
on Colbert and it was the same old Kamala, nothing new.
She leads like the Democratic Party leads these days.
Speaker 2 (12:47):
But sure, let's give her a.
Speaker 1 (12:48):
Book deal and a soft landing on Colbert. This isn't transparent.
It's a narrative laundering. If a conservative woman delivered the
level of incoherence and underperformance, she wouldn't get a book.
She wouldn't even get a comic book deal. She'd get
fought Berry the double stand and publishing media is the
real story here.
Speaker 2 (13:06):
The brutal reviews.
Speaker 1 (13:07):
Aren't coming from the right, They're coming from everywhere. This
rollout proves what we've already knew. Kamal Avers is great
at getting the spot a terrible using it. I want
to bolcome my next guy, Anthony Soccarti. He's the publisher
of Post Hill Press. Anthony, thanks for joining us. I
saw this book and I don't know what was Kamala
was going on Colbert and I said what And I
(13:30):
can't find the exact numbers. With some ridiculous ten or
fifty million dollars they're paying her for what There's no content.
It was a terrible campaign. Only in the publishing industry
does the left get rewarded for losing right. I mean,
you fight so hard for some of your authors, and
I've had some of the authors that we did. We
(13:50):
did some we did that past the Darrell Scott and
other authors.
Speaker 2 (13:55):
We did with your house.
Speaker 1 (13:56):
But you know the amount of fighting and hard work
have to do compared to what the left throws at
these people.
Speaker 2 (14:01):
It's ridiculous.
Speaker 1 (14:02):
And I want to go to a first club clip here.
It's a cut Flour and this is what we got
to witness on Colbert.
Speaker 2 (14:08):
It's soaping. But let's go to cut flour watches.
Speaker 13 (14:13):
I mean, there's it's there's a lot of personal stuff
in the book. I mean, poor Dougie. You know, for example,
my birthday is in October, the election is in November.
You see where I'm going, and Dougie kind of dropped
(14:36):
the ball on my big birthday.
Speaker 3 (14:38):
He didn't get you anything.
Speaker 13 (14:40):
Oh, you have to read the book, all right, show me,
show me.
Speaker 3 (14:48):
The pa.
Speaker 2 (14:50):
We're gonna take same old cackling kamala.
Speaker 1 (14:53):
I really want to go out and buy the book now, Anthony,
because to find out if Dougie bought O a birthday gift? Right,
give me this rollout and her book.
Speaker 4 (15:04):
Yeah, I mean, you know, it's it's typical of what
we continue to see in the publishing world my company,
and I appreciate you calling out some of the successes
we had. You know, look, when I published Miranda Divine's
Laptop from Hell, I mean every publishing house in the
country passed on it. They all thought it was a
conspiracy theory and these were.
Speaker 3 (15:23):
All Russia collusion.
Speaker 4 (15:25):
And here we are with someone that is you know,
ran the most failed campaign in modern day history, wasn't
even really nominated to run for office in that regard,
she kind.
Speaker 3 (15:37):
Of got there by default.
Speaker 4 (15:39):
And by the way, not only did she just get
a book deal, Joe Biden got a ten million dollar
deal from Hashit and the man can barely put two
sentences together. So all of this right now is really
what I think left wing media, left wing publishers, people
who covered for this administration for the past four years,
(16:00):
they're still trying to cover you there, you know what,
And I think this is just their way of sort of,
you know, tracing back and retelling history here that just
we all know is a bunch of garbage. So it'll
be interesting to see what ultimately happens. I was shocked,
to be honest with you that when she announced the
(16:21):
book and actually had a moment on Amazon where it
shot up the charts.
Speaker 3 (16:25):
But I don't think it's gonna last long. And a
lot of that could just.
Speaker 4 (16:28):
Be our own donor is buying up books, which is
what you know, you typically see from the left. So
it's a bit of I wouldn't say it's a surprise
that she's doing this, clearly, you know, it's a money grab.
Speaker 3 (16:43):
I don't ultimately know what they paid her, but I'm
sure it was a lot.
Speaker 4 (16:47):
But I think the one good thing we can get
out of all this, particularly from a conservative point of view,
is that she's going to have to speak for her
failures here. What is she going to do? Sidestep around it?
Blame Russian collusion? She doesn't have any ball right now,
so it is going to be interesting to see how
she spins it, and that alone will be fun to watch.
Speaker 1 (17:06):
Yeah, it's interesting what you said, Anthony, because I look down.
I said, this is going to be way up in
the charts, and somehow she was at like number two.
Maybe was a big blast from the all these left
wing groups. Buy one, get a signed copy free, because
there's nothing there to see, Like watch this cut five
here she can't even answer this basic question on Colbert,
(17:27):
it's got a cup five.
Speaker 10 (17:28):
Who's leading the Democratic Party?
Speaker 8 (17:30):
I'm just curious.
Speaker 13 (17:31):
There are lots of leaders, and it was generally.
Speaker 8 (17:33):
All leader of the Democratic Party, you know, like.
Speaker 11 (17:36):
Oh, that's the leader donorator party?
Speaker 6 (17:37):
Who comes to mind.
Speaker 13 (17:39):
I think there are a lot of I'm not going
to go through names because then I'm going to leave
somebody out and then I'm going to hear about it.
But let me just let me say this. I think
it is a mistake for us who want to figure
out how to get out and through this and get
out of it, to put it on the shoulders of
(18:00):
any one person. It's really on all of our shoulders.
Speaker 2 (18:04):
Think about this. She's supposed to be the leader.
Speaker 1 (18:06):
He asked her a simple question, who give me some names?
Speaker 2 (18:09):
Who are leaders?
Speaker 1 (18:10):
And she says, I can't answer that because I don't
want somebody snapping at me.
Speaker 2 (18:14):
But you're a leader.
Speaker 1 (18:15):
You're supposed to answer a basic question like that, Stephen.
Give us a little bit more heat, please, no wonder
you're getting canceled, right? You know it was recently, Anthony.
There was one hundred and ninety nine guests. I believe
in the last year it was a Colbert. Maybe it
was all Ody, but it was Colbert or something like that.
He had one conservative, Stephen Colbert, and it was Liz Cheney.
(18:37):
I wouldn't call her a conservative, basically, I'd call her
rhino and drag. But this rollout is pathetic and I
don't know how she did it. But you know, give
me your thoughts on that last clip too.
Speaker 3 (18:50):
Yeah, you know, it's interesting.
Speaker 4 (18:51):
It's almost like she hasn't even written the book herself,
like somebody wrote the book for her. And how do
you not even prepare for that kind of question? That
is a basic, simple question, so you know, and you know,
it's funny she keeps making that reference to well, it's
in my book, you got to read my book. I
(19:12):
don't think she knows what's in her book, the same
way she can't answer who the leader is for her
own party. So I think she's completely checked out. I
think she's completely rethinking life.
Speaker 2 (19:26):
You know.
Speaker 4 (19:26):
I'm sure she's talking to celebrities about you know, and
celebrity pr people about what her next move is. Is
she going to go down the road of a Michelle
Obama podcast kind of route?
Speaker 3 (19:37):
But I mean it's it's really amateur hour.
Speaker 4 (19:40):
And to keep referring, you know, when she's asked a question, oh,
you'll have to read my book, that's the ultimate amateur
hour response. She was ill prepared for this. I don't
know why she's she's putting herself out there in this way.
I think it was just bad planning, bad strategy, the
same way her campaign was bad can't bad planning and
(20:00):
bad strategy.
Speaker 3 (20:02):
So just the trend is continuing here.
Speaker 4 (20:04):
And you know, again, you would think after the loss
that she took that she would go back, regroup and
you know, get some media training, get a new sort
of a team around her to plan her next move.
And this is the same old, same mold that we've
been seeing for the last several months.
Speaker 3 (20:23):
So it's quite frankly, it's embarrassing.
Speaker 1 (20:25):
Jim Costa got fired, Terry Moran got fired, the whole
host of other ones getting lu Don Lemon before the election,
whole host of these, Chuck Todd, they're all getting lost.
Speaker 2 (20:38):
Cultures moving. People want to have the other.
Speaker 1 (20:40):
In the CBS paramount deal, the executives want a more
fair and big store that Gil King earlier in the
week is they're looking. They don't want to renew her
contract because that whole CBS Morning Show is a bunch
of woke hosts sitting around playing I don't know who
they're playing, what audience they're playing to. But the book
industry is not moving along. I mean, who's battling to
get Kamala's book for what?
Speaker 3 (21:03):
I don't think it's side of the book.
Speaker 4 (21:06):
Yeah, you know, and it's interesting, you know, with Trump
back in office. Uh, you know, we're waiting to see,
you know, you know what how this Russiagate situation plays out.
I mean, obviously there's going to be more book opportunities there,
but no, you're absolutely right. The publishing industry, which you know,
I've been around it a long time and it used
(21:27):
to be about giving a home and a voice to
different types of messaging and different types of opinion. It's
that's no longer the case. It's almost become like a
college campus quite frankly, where you know, if you have
a dissenting view, you're you're an outcast.
Speaker 2 (21:43):
You know.
Speaker 1 (21:44):
Quick question, how did Miranda's book do?
Speaker 2 (21:46):
Seem you've took it?
Speaker 1 (21:47):
I mean, she's been a hit and now she's really
close with the ministration and the president.
Speaker 3 (21:53):
How did a book do excellent? It was one of
our top sellers.
Speaker 4 (21:56):
It was, you know, a major major success for us,
still sell today. Same thing for Cash, Betel Dan Bongino's book.
Both Cash and Bongino's last books were very very successful
for us. So you know, we we've been very fortunate,
you know, as you said, you know, the publishing industry.
Speaker 3 (22:16):
Has not moved with the.
Speaker 4 (22:17):
Culture, with the with the culture, and that, quite frankly,
has been good for my company because we're willing to
give a home and a voice to a lot of
these a lot of these authors that are being completely overlooked.
Speaker 1 (22:29):
Anthony, good luck, and we'll get you some more authors
and we'll do some more hopefully conservative books that will
reach a good sweat of America at the big houses
are missing out on.
Speaker 2 (22:39):
Anthony. Thanks for joining us. I'll see us than.
Speaker 3 (22:41):
Thanks so much, Aman, Thank you. This was great.
Speaker 1 (22:43):
Up next reppend Nancy Mays Congress from Nancy May is
now running for governor. We're going to have her coming
up exclusive interview here. That more coming up on Media Exposed.
Speaker 2 (23:06):
We've got your back as you start your day.
Speaker 1 (23:09):
America's small towns with big convictions.
Speaker 14 (23:13):
Real America isn't Wall Street greed and DC lies.
Speaker 5 (23:19):
America eight big cities in big tech.
Speaker 15 (23:24):
It's the construction worker focused on building a better tomorrow.
Speaker 8 (23:28):
And it's the farmer who works all year to provide
for nation.
Speaker 9 (23:33):
It's the teacher that leaves politics and policy out of
the classroom.
Speaker 4 (23:38):
It's the soldier ready to lay down his life to
defend our flag.
Speaker 10 (23:43):
We have not forgotten real America.
Speaker 9 (23:55):
This is real America where we put our faith in God,
in our families life.
Speaker 11 (24:10):
Welcome back to media Exposed.
Speaker 1 (24:12):
I want to bring on Congressman South Carolina Congressman Nancy Mace,
who just made headlines by launching a campaign for governor
of South con She's no stranger to political world, whether
it's facing off of the media, breaking with her own party,
or taking on cultural war flashpoints. And now she's aiming
for the top job in our home state. I want
to welcome my next guest, Congresswoman Nancy Mace. Congress Wan,
(24:35):
thanks for joining us, Yeah, and thank.
Speaker 16 (24:37):
You for having me today.
Speaker 1 (24:39):
It was early like two thousand, beginning of COVID, when
you know the flock of New York is like myself
that we went down to South Florida, Miami. I went
to a client and they said, Scott by and visit me.
And it was having this massive party and I.
Speaker 2 (24:52):
Was like walked in. It was off the chart.
Speaker 1 (24:54):
I said, I think I moved across the street right then.
But then I asked my friend what's the best places?
As I was driving down from New York, he said,
stop in Beaufort. It's beautiful. I stopped in there, I said,
my god, these houses are stunning, historic, but look like.
Speaker 2 (25:08):
A liberal area.
Speaker 1 (25:10):
Your area, right, and I said, wow, this has got
to be a Democratic stronghold. But you've run up the
numbers recently. Congratulations on that. But more historically, here we
do Media Exposed and it was a major turning point
in March of twenty twenty five when Big George Stephanoppos,
who probably shouldn't be working anymore.
Speaker 2 (25:30):
After what he did to you and I have to lose.
Speaker 1 (25:32):
Anybody loses that kind of money for a corporation should
be fired, but only in the media business they get
to keep their job. So before we start, I'd love
to play this cut seven because this is where the
president won his lawsuit and you were really treated terribly.
Speaker 2 (25:47):
Let's go to cut seven.
Speaker 17 (25:48):
How do you score your endorsement of Donald Trump with
a testimony we just saw.
Speaker 16 (25:52):
Well, I will.
Speaker 14 (25:53):
Tell you I was raped at the age of sixteen,
and any rate pickam will tell you I've lived for
thirty years with an incredible amount of shame over being raped.
I didn't come forward because of that judgment and shame
that I felt, and it's a shame that you will
never feel.
Speaker 16 (26:10):
George.
Speaker 14 (26:11):
And I'm not going to sit here on your show
and be asked a question meant to shame me about
another potential rape victim.
Speaker 16 (26:18):
I'm not going to I'm not going to do that.
Speaker 17 (26:20):
It's actually not about shaming you.
Speaker 3 (26:21):
It's a question.
Speaker 16 (26:21):
By no, no, you are shaming.
Speaker 17 (26:22):
You've endorsed Donald Trump for president. Donald Trump has been
found liable for rape by a jury. Donald Trump has
been found liable for defaming the victim of that rape
by a jury. It's been affirmed by a judge.
Speaker 16 (26:34):
It a criminal court case. It's number one, number two.
I live with shame, and you're.
Speaker 14 (26:41):
Asking me a question about my political choices, trying to
shame me as a rape victim, and I find it
disgusting and quite frankly, Egene Carroll's comments when she did
get the judgment, joking about what she was going to buy,
it doesn't It makes it harder for women to come
forward when they make a mockery out of rape, when
they joke about it.
Speaker 17 (27:00):
It's wanting to come forward women.
Speaker 14 (27:02):
It makes it harder when other women joke about it.
And she's joked about it. I find it offensive, and
I also find it offensive that you're trying to shame
me with this question.
Speaker 17 (27:10):
I'm not trying to shame you.
Speaker 6 (27:11):
In fact, I had dealt with this for thirty years.
Speaker 14 (27:13):
You know how hard it was to tell my story
five years ago when they were doing a fetal heartbeat
bill and there were no exceptions for rape incestor or
rape or incest in there.
Speaker 16 (27:22):
I had to tell my story.
Speaker 14 (27:23):
Because no other woman was coming forward this, no rape
victims were represented.
Speaker 18 (27:27):
And you're trying to shame me this morning.
Speaker 16 (27:29):
And I find it offensive. And this is why women
won't come forward.
Speaker 17 (27:32):
Women won't come forward because they're defamed by those who
perpetrate rape.
Speaker 14 (27:36):
Donald they are judged and their shamed, and you're trying
to shame me this morning.
Speaker 16 (27:39):
I think it's I told my story. It took me
twenty five years.
Speaker 1 (27:44):
If any should be taught a university about what not
to do in the media business, that was George Stephanopolis
the one of the largest morning shows on Sunday, and
he berated you, and then it's glad that they lost it,
but he starts a job. Nancy, and give your thoughts
on that moment in time, because that's kind of should
be in the history books the way you would treat it,
in the way the president was able to win the lawsuit.
Speaker 2 (28:06):
In December of the same year.
Speaker 18 (28:08):
Well right, number one, Georgefaniloppus learned a fifteen million dollar
lesson in defamation. He's the one that actually defamed the
President of the United States of America over this. And
the second thing I want to say is this is
what the radical left and even the mainstream Democratic.
Speaker 16 (28:24):
Party is about now. They don't like women.
Speaker 18 (28:28):
They shame us when you are a conservative woman or
just any woman. Really, they don't like any women, whether
they're a Democrat or not. But the Democrat Party hates women.
They want men and women's spaces, men and women's bathrooms,
locker rooms, dressing rooms, women that come forward like me
as survivors. They try to shame us. I mean the
kind of memes after that interview too, people from the
(28:48):
Democrat Party saying I deserve to be raped, like those
kinds of things. It's just disgusting and it's why I
fight so hard for our daughters. And I want to
say a thing too, is that a lot of men
came forward to speak out to defend me, A lot
of Republican men and the thing that I appreciate about
our party is that we have real men and the
Republican Party, and real men protect women.
Speaker 1 (29:09):
Right, you said you have pushed into the media fight.
Was there a specific moment? Was that the moment when
you said enough was enough? Was that now infamamous interview
that we just watched, or what was the moments that
that's it?
Speaker 18 (29:23):
Yeah, it definitely was a moment, I would say in
the last two years especially, I mean I came into
Congress giving everyone a fair shake, like this is going
to be a normal process, It's going to be balanced, and.
Speaker 16 (29:34):
It just wasn't.
Speaker 18 (29:35):
And what I've discovered over the last four and a
half years in Congress the way the mainstream media, it's
not just Donald Trump, it's conservatives who support Donald Trump.
The lies that they say, the smears that they make,
the stories they just make up, the hoaxes.
Speaker 16 (29:47):
I mean, Donald Trump was right.
Speaker 18 (29:49):
About everything, and it's worse than I could have ever imagined.
Speaker 16 (29:52):
And so I've gotten tired of it. I've gotten tired
of the lies.
Speaker 18 (29:55):
By the mainstream media, and I've continued to call them
out because quite frankly, I just don't care.
Speaker 16 (30:00):
I know what the.
Speaker 18 (30:01):
American people want Trump supporters want, and they want the truth,
and they want others in the media to tell the truth.
And that's why alternative media is so much more successful.
Speaker 16 (30:10):
Right now than the lamestream fake news. I mean, they
were a dying breed.
Speaker 2 (30:14):
Yeah, I know.
Speaker 1 (30:14):
I had so many corporations and the communicator over the
years that got attacked and they didn't know what to
do because they were so weak and there was Immedia
can destroy people's lives, as we know over the years,
but at least one thing Donald Trump and you too
have taught people fight back, don't cower. Lead by example,
because they just they're roofless and no other business in
(30:35):
America get away with what they do. George def fanopplos
should not be working. Who can lose a if you're
in the military.
Speaker 2 (30:42):
You were in the military.
Speaker 16 (30:43):
I was not in the military. I was not in
the military.
Speaker 3 (30:45):
Oh so I did go to the citadel, so dope.
Speaker 1 (30:47):
But people in the military get fired thrown out for
such small things. And this guy lost his company fifteen
million dollars and he's still on the akadesk. Right, You've
been one of those.
Speaker 16 (30:57):
Millions of dollars a year.
Speaker 1 (30:58):
It was spreading lies h You've been one of the
fewer Republicans to call out both the far left and
your own party. How does this the independent street play
in the Republican primary for governor.
Speaker 2 (31:08):
How do you think it will play well?
Speaker 18 (31:10):
I think it's going to play very well. I mean,
you all know better than anybody. But it's been both
Republicans and Democrats alike who have put all this debt,
trillions of dollars of debt. And we have to acknowledge
the problem that we have that we have Republicans in
our own party that are big spenders. And look what
Trump just did with the Big Beautiful Bill. He gave
the working class, hard working Americans, a permanent tax cut.
(31:31):
He understands how hard it is for them. He has
a huge economy that's growing and discrew at two point
nine percent the GDP in quarter two and the Trump's
first six months in office. And so it's important that
we call out when we have Republicans that are spending
too big or in my case, I'm in a red state.
I'm running for governor in the red state of South Carolina.
Speaker 16 (31:51):
But you might not know it.
Speaker 18 (31:52):
In some cases we're we were supposed to have banned
sanctuary policies. But what you know, over the last four years,
my statewide leaders allowed to sanctuary sheriff to go rogue
in South Carolina, let out illegals into the streets of
South Carolina.
Speaker 16 (32:05):
That were rapists, that were murderers, that were.
Speaker 18 (32:08):
Pedophiles, and not a single statewide leader stood up and
said anything.
Speaker 16 (32:12):
I got her fired. With the voters of South Carolina.
Speaker 18 (32:15):
We ejected her, rejected her at the ballot box last November,
and we got a sheriffan that worked with ice on
day one, But that was in a district or in
a county that Kamala Harris won. I got Republicans and
Democrats to ouse the Democrat.
Speaker 16 (32:27):
Sheriff, but nobody else.
Speaker 18 (32:29):
I mean, you know, that's the kind of thing that
we're up against sometimes even with members of her own party.
We have a Republican Attorney General in South Carolina, Alan Wilson.
There's a he doesn't like to prosecute pedophiles. There's a
case right now that I'm bringing attention to where a
guy had nineteen hundred images and our Attorney general pled it.
Speaker 16 (32:47):
Down to one day in jail.
Speaker 18 (32:48):
Like I don't know how you walk around with almost
two thousand images. You're a convicted pedophile, and your Republican
Attorney General, Alan Wilson, I'm talking about you, allows the
guy to serve one day in jail only.
Speaker 16 (33:00):
So I'm going to call it out when I see it,
and I'm going to protect kids.
Speaker 18 (33:03):
I'm gonna protect women, I'm gonna protect men, I'm gonna
protect everybody.
Speaker 2 (33:06):
I know you went to.
Speaker 1 (33:06):
Back ray for the women and in sports, women and athletes,
women in sports. But a lot of backlash. People were
chasing at the Capitol News paper. Reporters were making up
lie mears against you. But did that make you more
attractive when you went back home to the base and
people that saw through it, because thank god we have
alternative media, like you said earlier, because it was up
(33:27):
to that mainstream media junk that they put out. It
would smear you, right, But did it make it more
attractive to the voters?
Speaker 18 (33:35):
Well, I think that people see me fighting, whether it's
for myself or for other people's rights, they say, you
know what, at least she's fighting for something, And that
does seem to make people feel like they are a
part of my life.
Speaker 16 (33:44):
They're a part of the process, They're.
Speaker 18 (33:46):
A part of our team to know that we're fighting
for them, and I'm fighting for victims everywhere. I'm fighting
for lower taxes, for you know, for us to clean
up the illegal immigrants that are here in South Carolina.
I'm fighting for everyday hardworking Americans and South Carolinians just
like myself. And so I think they see a bit
of themselves when they've been against the machine, or when
(34:07):
the machine has been against them, they see me fighting
for them.
Speaker 1 (34:11):
I'm so glad you've been a fighter for against all
these woke and other illegal alien issues. But tell us
a little bit about the race. Where people can go
to the website? Is that do you have a website?
Know you just launched it early in the week, but
let people know where they can come and support you.
Speaker 18 (34:28):
I would really love for folks to go to Nancymace
dot org and just chip in one dollar, put your
name on the list and say you are a day
one Nancy May supporter. Go to Nancy Maas dot org.
You can click the donate button at the top right
of the page and just kick in a dollar. I
would love your help to shut down the illegal immigrants
in South Carolina, and we want to help President Trump.
(34:49):
We have a huge opportunity to have MAGA governors America,
first governors in the state of South Carolina and everywhere
across the country.
Speaker 16 (34:56):
And I would love your viewers support.
Speaker 2 (34:58):
Wow, this is amazing.
Speaker 1 (34:59):
We got to com worst person woman that only asks
for one dollar.
Speaker 16 (35:03):
One dollar, that's it.
Speaker 1 (35:05):
We should give you an award for that. Thank you
Congressman for joining us. Hopefully we'll see you soon. Good
luck on your race.
Speaker 16 (35:11):
Thank you so much, and God bless.
Speaker 2 (35:13):
God bless you.
Speaker 1 (35:14):
And coming up next, we're going to talk about Mayor Adams.
He's hanging out at the clubs again, late night clubs,
and he was on a podcast telling us why that.
We're also want to talk about the New York Post,
the legendary New York Post is going to California, and
we're going to look at this redistricting battle happening all
over Texas that's big in the news. That more coming
(35:35):
up on Media Exposed.
Speaker 11 (36:09):
Welcome back to Media Exposed.
Speaker 1 (36:11):
Eric Adams, the Cities New York City mayor thinks rubbin
elbows at a place called Costa Chipriana at midnight makes
him relatable to the people because he says he visits
the disharshes. But New Yorkers want a mayor who's managing crime,
managing homelessness, getting the economy back up, not the club scene.
King talking to dishwasher aft the bottles isn't leadership, it's deflection.
(36:35):
While the city's spirals on public he's justifying VIP access
because these you know, clubs, these private members are difficult
to get in. But if your mayor, you got the
car blanche, come on in, sir, right. While the city
of spies on he's justified byeing this access to but
it's public service he's supposed to be performing. This is
the problem with brand over substance. Politicians Adams campaigns on
(36:59):
riff great then governors with self a selfie stick and
a night pass.
Speaker 2 (37:06):
So I want to welcome my.
Speaker 1 (37:07):
Next guest, David Zier, host of Breaking, joining us on
the set.
Speaker 2 (37:11):
Thanks for joining us, David, Hey, what's going on out?
Speaker 1 (37:14):
Also, the New York Post just said they're going to
launch the California Post. We're going to talk about that
and a cut, but I want to go to this cut.
Speaker 2 (37:22):
It was.
Speaker 1 (37:24):
Kind of like, was uh, it was so confused by this,
but let's go to cutaid. It's Mayor Adams on Azima
Tsari's podcast.
Speaker 2 (37:33):
What's just brought up?
Speaker 19 (37:34):
You know, being out all the time. You and I
were both at Kasa Chipriani last Friday night. I didn't
want to interrupt you.
Speaker 1 (37:41):
I shut up.
Speaker 19 (37:42):
So talk about being nightlife Mary. You seem to take
pride in this title. I think people people level it
as some kind of you know, you need a daytime mayor,
what's the night life?
Speaker 3 (37:52):
And that's what people miss.
Speaker 20 (37:54):
What I learned from police and I did overnights as
a police officer. I did eleven at night into like
eighty in the morning, right right for several years. And
what I learned is that New York is not a
nine to five city. There's a whole body of people
who they do day hours. They do these afternoons until
(38:16):
twelve o'clock, and then this new group of people come.
They sleep during the day, they're nocturnal, and they're out overnight.
Speaker 2 (38:22):
And what has happened.
Speaker 20 (38:24):
Mayors have never witnessed them, you know, And so as
this nightlife mayor. When I came into office, our nightlife
industry was decimated.
Speaker 11 (38:32):
COVID COVID, Yeah, and.
Speaker 20 (38:34):
People don't realize when you see that fancy cosser Cipriani.
You're missing the fact that the cooks, the dishwashers, the waiters,
the people clean up after hours.
Speaker 11 (38:43):
And I knew I had to say you were in
the kitchen.
Speaker 2 (38:47):
No, No, I actually.
Speaker 3 (38:48):
Go in the kitchen.
Speaker 20 (38:48):
When you go to these major establishments and you ask
them of you know, has the mayor been in here?
Speaker 2 (38:54):
And what happened when he comes in he stops in
the kitchen.
Speaker 4 (38:56):
No.
Speaker 19 (38:56):
Actually, the staff did tell me that you chat to
them them, And.
Speaker 20 (39:01):
I knew I had to revitalize our night life, thirty
billion dollar industry. If I didn't get that industry back
up and operated roating class, people would have suffered. And
so you know, I took hits for it because people
thought it was okay. He just wanted to hang out
and you know do X, Y and Z.
Speaker 2 (39:17):
No, I was.
Speaker 20 (39:18):
It was part of my overall plan off. I got
to revitalize my nightlife. I have to revitalize my business industry.
I had to revitalize my four to twelves as we
call them. Okay, the whole city.
Speaker 19 (39:30):
And now the city is Ishaman, but you're still gone
because it's also fun.
Speaker 4 (39:36):
Me.
Speaker 20 (39:36):
People want to see you they want to see you out.
Speaker 19 (39:38):
Are you a member of any of these clubs?
Speaker 20 (39:40):
No, no, no, I have so many people that are
members of different clubs. You come in as their guests.
This is too expensive for me on my salary.
Speaker 1 (39:48):
So that's a Naima Nima Raza, formerly of The New
York Times New York Magazine. She says, a smart girl,
Dumb Questions podcast, Actually some smart questions to get the
that of him, because if people don't know, Costache is
probably the hottest private members club, the chicest people, but
nothing productive happens. They people having dinner, socializing, and he's
(40:11):
justifying day's bringing nightlife back when crime's happening all over
the city, homelessness. I don't mind David and Mayor having
a decent time, but when the city's not doing well,
you shouldn't be hanging like at midnight one o'clock at
private elite members club.
Speaker 2 (40:26):
Give me your thoughts on that podcast.
Speaker 12 (40:27):
And yeas listen Mayor Adams riding the gravy train for
years as mayor New York City. You're right, he's the mayor.
He can afford to join all these posh clubs, But
how many free lobsters has he gone in the last
three and a half four years. You know, he's everywhere.
He's in all the clubs. You and I were with
(40:47):
Curtis Slee were listening to him speak at the Union League,
and we're talking to Curtis about the homelessness problem in
New York City. And I went down the street by
Trump Trump Tower and Avra, the high end Greek restaurant.
There's a big club in it. And I go back
there and Mayor Adams is there. Curtestley was still on
the street looking for homeless people. This is like the
difference in what's going on here. But homeless people are
(41:10):
sleeping on every other bench in Fifth Avenue. I just
think it's crazy. And you know he says he can't
afford these clubs. Well, who's paying for the two and
three thousand dollars suits that he has and his private tailor?
That's what I want to know. So you know, maybe
he should be filing, you know, receipts for all those
free dinners he's been getting.
Speaker 1 (41:29):
Right, you justifying this plot posh place going to by saying,
I I go in and.
Speaker 2 (41:35):
Meet with the meet with the But.
Speaker 1 (41:38):
Who's paying for these post for the drinks, right, you
know what I mean, what's.
Speaker 2 (41:43):
Going on here? I don't get it.
Speaker 1 (41:45):
I've never seen people a mayor into such nightlife to
bring him back the nightlife. It's not you know, you're
not elected to bring back the nightlife. I'm glad if
you don't got this, Adam. It's kind of silly, but
one of the great institutions of it that New York
was founded in the early eighteen hundreds by Alexander Amerton.
It's one of the few papers in New York. It's
(42:06):
pretty moderate to conservative. The New York Post, legendary New
York Post, has great content, has great articles, has very
catch your headlines all the time. They announced earlier in
the week they're going to California and they're calling the
California Post. So maybe they got one radical state on
the east coast, one on the left coast, and let's
see if they can bring their humor and somewhat moderate
(42:30):
writings and columns to California, because what does California needa?
Speaker 15 (42:34):
Right?
Speaker 2 (42:35):
Yeah, they do.
Speaker 12 (42:36):
And listen, there's like forty newspapers in Los Angeles and
billionaire Patrick soon Chiang owns the La Times. He's going
public this year so maybe the New York Post is
making a play to get a presence over there in
Los Angeles. But between the Los Angeles Daily News, the
La Tribune, the Los Angeles Times, you know, it's a
steady stream of homogenized, you know, left leaning, you know,
(43:00):
information stream. So you know, I think they could use it,
and I think it'll do very well. Right, just like
the New York Post is the counter to the New
York Daily News. Right, there's a lot of liberals in
New York the New York Times, but the Post is
always safe refuge if you want a little bit of
common sense and some fun.
Speaker 1 (43:16):
Well, the people use the New York Posts a lot
of the TV producers segment produces bookers. Yeah, they really
have interesting stories to post, and they do it in
an easy manner.
Speaker 2 (43:26):
I mean the New York Times you have to fold out.
It's like it gets lost on the side. Yeah, it's
a tabloid.
Speaker 1 (43:31):
It's called an easy read in the business.
Speaker 2 (43:34):
Easy to read.
Speaker 1 (43:35):
You get the story right away, and then they go
to TV with it. So the Post has done a
great job over the years producing great sensational stories that
turn into sometimes they turn it the best selling books.
Sometimes they turn it the miniseries the Post does, but
they got the eye and hopefully they bring that talent
to Los Angeles because they need it. Los Angeles has
losing too many people. Recently, the CEO of in and
(43:59):
Altberger decided to say. She says, I can't do this
anymore with these regulations. He's suffocating taxes, suffocating mid and wage.
So she's leaving California going to Tennessee.
Speaker 2 (44:10):
Did you see that story.
Speaker 12 (44:12):
No, but that's the story. A lot of people going
to North Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Idaho, all from California.
Speaker 2 (44:19):
There's this big story this week.
Speaker 1 (44:20):
Early in the week, the Texas legislature Democrats decided to
leave the state. I think it was the lieutenant governor,
the governor. And although they decided to say we're going
to arrest you, and what happened was to the left
wing media decided to rush down there take the side
of the Democrats as they always do.
Speaker 2 (44:40):
I Meanwhile, other.
Speaker 1 (44:41):
States have these jerremanda where they take one side of
the state, throw it to the loops to the other
side of the state they're not even near each other,
just to make it racially diverse. And that's really not
what it's supposed to be. You're supposed to have a
congressional dishes in the neighborhood, fair to the constituents that
are in there, fair to the public. Not do this
map because you get a certain percent, all because a
(45:03):
state is ten point two percent Africaner, all because of
that area. You don't have to make those percents so high.
But this one jokes to was this show on the
Alex Steyne on the Blaze. Let's see he did the
little photo bomby. Let's go to cut nine.
Speaker 15 (45:19):
We just watched the speaker gabble out with a whole
lot of anger.
Speaker 3 (45:22):
Kelly, here's the state of play.
Speaker 11 (45:24):
Here's the CBC are you MSNBC sid talk?
Speaker 15 (45:30):
So okay, sometimes this happens, and we understand that that
can happen. And while we love free speech, we're going
to keep control here. So Ryan, thank you, Shack, thank you.
A volatile story. We'll be following it. And apparently, uh
not only.
Speaker 11 (45:48):
Shaq cleaned up.
Speaker 15 (45:50):
Okay, stay with us here because Ryan has cleared the set.
As we would like to say, the gentleman moved on.
So Ryan, let me turn back to you. Nicely handled there,
can you give us an update on as you were
walking us through this. We'll all take a breath there.
(46:11):
Maybe not Okay, go ahead, Ryan, see hold on, hold
on one.
Speaker 1 (46:16):
I think we do it in a little better manner, David.
But you know it's this little comedy sneak.
Speaker 2 (46:23):
Sneak attack there. But you know this.
Speaker 1 (46:26):
MSNBC had a flood gate down there. And take the
sides of the Democrats.
Speaker 12 (46:30):
What do you think, Well, it's common for jerry mandering
to a car all over the country. And nobody was
saying boo on the Democratic side when they failed to
redistrict recently in Wisconsin. They're heading to Illinois. This is
common practice. And Texas. These five districts that they want
to create here they increase the Hispanic vote for the
(46:54):
Republican Party and for Donald Trump by big numbers like
ten or fifteen percent.
Speaker 2 (46:57):
I think.
Speaker 12 (46:58):
So this is a amble still for the Republicans to
do this. They could lose a few of them.
Speaker 1 (47:03):
It doesn't mean they're going to keep the Hispanic vote
they did well this time. A different candidate could lose
Hispanic vote well because they you know Jerrymann it that way.
It doesn't mean anything. It doesn't mean a guaranteed victory. Right, David,
thanks for joining us on the set.
Speaker 2 (47:16):
Thanks you soon.
Speaker 1 (47:17):
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Speaker 1 (47:29):
Is aar parts over one point four million global propert
is available cross all travel categories, and they've been in
the business for more than twenty years. If you call
their reservations line, you'll speak to a real life human,
not about Hotel Plan of high tech, high touch. I
want to thank David Zier for joining us on the set,
Congress Congresswoman Nancy Mace, Anthony Soccarti from Post Till Press publisher,
(47:51):
and also Justine brook Murray from Media Research Center see
friend and.
Speaker 2 (47:56):
Eron in the Control of the Job.
Speaker 1 (47:58):
See us soon on media