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November 3, 2025 36 mins

Hour 3 of the Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show delivers a powerful blend of political analysis, cultural commentary, and audience engagement on the eve of pivotal elections in New York City, New Jersey, and Virginia. With record-breaking voter turnout expected, the hosts emphasize the urgency of civic participation and preview the potential impact of key races, particularly the New York City mayoral contest featuring Zohran Mamdani, Andrew Cuomo, and Curtis Sliwa.

The hour opens with reflections on voter motivation and turnout, drawing parallels to past elections where outsider candidates like Donald Trump and Barack Obama mobilized previously disengaged voters. Clay and Buck highlight polling data suggesting Mamdani may win due to vote-splitting between Cuomo and Sliwa, raising concerns about a far-left candidate potentially leading America’s largest city.

Cultural decay and low-trust societal behavior are central themes, illustrated by viral videos of Halloween “porch piracy,” where teens and even parents are caught on camera stealing entire bowls of candy. The hosts argue this behavior reflects a broader erosion of values, linking it to absent father figures and the inability to delay gratification—traits associated with long-term success. Clay connects this to his new book, Balls, which explores masculinity, responsibility, and the cultural challenges facing young men in America.

The show also addresses growing frustration with travel disruptions, including TSA delays and air traffic control issues, noting how these systemic failures are impacting everyday Americans. Clay shares a personal encounter with Trump aide Margo Martin at the Nashville airport, underscoring the real-world effects of government inefficiency.

In a fiery segment, the hosts tackle the controversy surrounding transgender access to women’s spaces and sports. They discuss a viral video of a woman banned from Gold’s Gym for objecting to a biological male in the women’s locker room, and a New York Post op-ed by a female soccer player advocating for sex-based sports divisions. The backlash from her teammates, who labeled her “racist” and “transphobic,” sparks a broader conversation about the Democratic Party’s stance on gender identity and its implications for women’s rights and safety.

Buck and Clay propose a provocative challenge: offering $100,000 to any biologically male soccer player who identifies as female and successfully joins a National Women’s Soccer League team. They argue this would expose the absurdity of current gender policies in sports and highlight the biological realities that are being ignored in favor of ideological conformity.

The hour closes with listener talkbacks, humorous banter about robe culture, Crocs fashion trends among teens, and a heartfelt farewell from Clay to his longtime neighborhood in Franklin, Tennessee. The hosts preview Election Day coverage, promising in-depth analysis of races in New York, New Jersey, Virginia, California, and Pennsylvania.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome in our number three Clay Travis buck Sexton Show.
It is election eve in New York City, in New
Jersey and Virginia. Vote Vote Vote. New Jersey potentially going
to come down to a razor's edge Virginia, particularly AG's race,
razor edge as we speak, record potentially high turnout. We're

(00:24):
gonna talk to Ryan Gerdusky tomorrow Buck on the program,
which will be election day. But he tweeted yesterday we
very well may be hitting more than two million votes
by Tuesday night in New York City, the biggest mayoral
election in New York City history. So it makes it

(00:49):
a little bit difficult to know exactly what is going
to happen because, as you just heard Mark Simone talking
with us, when you get into record high turnout, motivation
is high, there are a lot of people that haven't
been polled, a lot of people, frankly, that have not
voted before. We've seen this in nationwide elections. Trump brought

(01:09):
out a lot of people, frankly, that we didn't even
know we're going to vote. The same thing happened with
Barack Obama. When you go back to that election twenty twenty.

Speaker 2 (01:23):
Joe Biden brought out a lot of people that may
not even exist because I think more and more even
Democrats are looking at the eighty one million votes and they're.

Speaker 1 (01:32):
Saying, really, really, eighty one million, But we want all
of you to get out and vote New York, New Jersey,
New York City, New Jersey, and Virginia, and we will
be breaking down all of that eight hundred and two
to two eight a two. You can react to that.
I want to say something off the top here, Buck,

(01:53):
as we are looking at these numbers you were talking about.
You were talking about New York's the Halloween, and there
are tons of videos that are going viral of these
so called you know, sort of Halloween porch pirates on Friday,
the number of people that left out treats. This happened

(02:14):
even in my own neighborhood. Some my wife was showing
me some of these videos and kids, a lot of
times teenagers frankly, who sometimes makes all of you well
remember moronic decisions, but also parents that are involved. Here
and right off the top, we had our last Halloween
in the Travis House. We have been in the same
house for a decade. I just posted a photo gave

(02:38):
out seventeen bottles of fireball shots to all the moms
and dads the neighborhood that we lived in in Franklin, Tennessee.
I can say it now, I think I don't know
that I ever said it before. West Haven, You've been there,
buck one of the greatest neighborhoods I think in the
entirety of the United States. After a decade, are moving,

(02:58):
not going to do Halloween there anymore, But Halloween has
been phenomenal thanks to everybody who has been so great
to my family for over a decade of living there.
Super sad yesterday when I left, because you know, you
raise your family in a house, at some point you're
going to be in this experience. You got a six
month old we moved into that house. My youngest was

(03:19):
in a crib. He now is in fifth grade. So
it's just been in a tremendous experience there. I would
describe where I lived as, generally speaking, a high trust
community where everybody looks after everybody else's kids, and it's
a fantastic place to live as a result, and everybody
comes around and mostly with the parents. You take one

(03:41):
little piece of candy at a time, but as you
see all of these different stories about these ring cameras
and everybody coming along and just dumping the entire thing
into their bag. I do think this is culture, buck
and when you lose culture, sure you lose the country.

(04:02):
And it might sound small, but I do think it's
a metaphor of a low trust society that unfortunately exists
in much of America.

Speaker 3 (04:10):
Now.

Speaker 1 (04:10):
But we're just.

Speaker 4 (04:11):
Talking about the circulation of videos all over the country.
Remember these are usually with parents present.

Speaker 1 (04:21):
That's the part. That's the part that I think is people.

Speaker 4 (04:24):
So there are parents who are watching their kids. Now,
now let's like work through this process for a second.
They're watching their children maybe you know, eleven, twelve, thirteen.
It's really not like young kids that are doing this.
It's not five year olds. It's you know, ten, eleven, twelve,
thirteen year olds, maybe fourteen year olds that are just

(04:45):
pillaging the take one piece of candy for yourself. Why
is that the rule or why is that the request
so that other people can get their candy?

Speaker 1 (04:54):
Right? It's very and also you see these kids, it's
not like they're.

Speaker 4 (04:57):
Taking a handful and we're saying, oh, they're only supposed
to take one okay, a handful spot. No one's got
a problem with that. There are videos with parents watching, okay,
the parents of these kids where they take like the
candy bowl and they dump the whole thing, yes, you know,
five pounds of candy. They dump it into their bag
and they're kind of laughing and gleeful about this and

(05:20):
then they, you know, hurriedly walk away and.

Speaker 1 (05:22):
It's just a disgrace.

Speaker 4 (05:24):
It's disgusting, and you know, this is one of these things.
You see what you see. You know, we're in this
era where there's video of that over the place and
everywhere of everything, and you know, people, we should bring
back shame a little bit in this country. Like if
you're doing this stuff and people know and your neighbors know,

(05:44):
like you should feel ashamed. I agree, you should be shamed.
You should apologize. You know, there's all these I remember
even near me where there was all the theft going
on Clay there was a grocery store near me that
had the photos of the of the repeat shoplifters and
there have been efforts to sue them.

Speaker 1 (06:01):
How dare you and you know you're not allowed to
show this.

Speaker 4 (06:03):
It's like, why are people okay with this, this is
this should be something that we all are clearly against,
and it's just a shame that it's something that should
be as joyful and innocent as you know, Halloween trick
or treating. There are people who are being really gross
about the whole thing, a lot of them. By if
this isn't like one person, there's a lot of this

(06:25):
going on. No, I think totally.

Speaker 1 (06:27):
And people can say, well, what's the significance you know
of this? I do think it is representative of low
trust in culture. And I talked about in Chicago, dad
and daughter going out trick or treating. Dad pulls up
in a car and instantly the car gets stolen. Somebody
runs up with a gun puts it in his face,

(06:48):
just trying to take the little girl out trick or treating.
And I do think that what you will see likely
occur is the parents that are allowing this to happen,
and even encouraging it to happen, have raised kids that
are gonna have a lot of issues in the years
ahead because they have lost the ability to interact in

(07:08):
an honest culture. And to your point, teenagers do stupid things,
and so to me, the parents watching it and even encouraging.
It is a substantial part of this, but I think
it speaks also to and I know there are strict moms,
but we had a big conversation about this. I think
it speaks also to a lot of times dads are

(07:32):
enforcers in households, you know, particularly young men boys. They
respond to dad as a household influencer more than they
do to mom. That doesn't mean that moms out there
aren't often forced to do incredible job both raising, trying
to play the role of both parents because a lot

(07:52):
of men are absent. But this reminds me Buck of
do you remember the big study they did. This is
why I think it would be true if you could
run out for years. One of the best signs of
your ability to succeed in life is can you defer rewards?
And they have that great is the like either it's
a donut or a cookie. Marshmallows was the initial one

(08:16):
they tell you for those of you haven't seen this study,
And they actually have funny videos of this of little
kids trying to avoid a treat, right and they basically
come in and they say, hey, if you can wait
a certain amount of time, will give you two and
so there's a treat on the table, and it's sometimes
a cookie donut. I think it started with marshmallows, and

(08:38):
they'll be like, hey, little kid, if you can wait,
then we'll give you double. And what they have been
able to find is the kids that are able to
defer the reward have overwhelmingly higher levels of success than
the kids who take the immediate gratification in front of them.
And to me, this is a sign of that, right, hey,

(09:01):
you're still going to get a lot of candy. I mean,
my son came home with a whole a pillowcase full
of candy. But you have to put in the time
to go from one house to another, or you can
run up and dump the whole thing in at once.
I think you're going to see that the life results
are actually negative for the kids that are doing this.

Speaker 4 (09:21):
There's also very clear, very clear data on delaying gratification
and IQ level, So now you start to get it
to this part of the conversation as well. Higher IQ
corresponds directly with a greater likelihood to be willing to
delay gratification for better reward. So this is true. Any

(09:44):
of you can you can check this out. Dumber people
want it right now? Yeah, just true, No, I mean
look and look.

Speaker 1 (09:52):
For being a parent, I would argue one of the
most important things you do as a parent is teach
your kids to play the long game get good grades
in school. Do you get immediate gratification because you make
good grades in school in eighth grade? Not necessarily. Do
you get immediate gratification for doing your homework every single night,

(10:13):
for showing up at class, for taking tough courses. Not immediately,
but you play the long game, and overtime, good decisions
lead to better outcomes. And this is a big part,
you know, candidly, of what I wrote about. And I'm
asking you to go buy the book, to buy the
book Balls. It's all about how do we raise better, younger,

(10:36):
more successful men. And this is something that I spend
a lot of time thinking about. And when I saw
these videos of these porch pirates stealing all the candy,
I couldn't help but think there's a lot of absent dads,
I bet and moms, but particularly dads when it comes
to bad behavior by kids. So you got to be shameless.

(10:59):
The book out tomorrow, I asked you. In the first hour,
I'm gonna talk about it tomorrow. Can you drive this
to the top ten best sellers on Amazon. That would
mean a tremendous amount to me, all of the proceeds
going to charity. Just got to sell the book is Balls.
I'm holding it up on the video feed from our
New York City studio. You're gonna see me all over

(11:19):
Fox News selling this book. But it would mean a
lot to me if you guys would go buy a
copy and give it to someone else. Buy a copy
for somebody that you think needs some balls in their life,
either metaphorically speaking. Again, it's everywhere. It's gonna be in
every bookstore. My name Clay Travis. The book is Balls.

(11:40):
Please go buy it. Buck's gonna have a book out
in January. I'm told the publisher is very happy I
bought a copy of Balls. I got Balls on the Way.
You got Balls on the Way? Is a roommate who
loves Polish sausages. Told them, Hey, you might as well
add some balls to it too. You know, I'm gonna
throw this out there because I didn't want to. I
didn't want to start this once again, because he actually

(12:00):
is a real roommate from the Chicago area.

Speaker 3 (12:03):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (12:03):
He also was a robe guy, which maybe is not
surprising Polish sausage guy being a robe guy. I mean
I think that, you know, I would just say it.

Speaker 4 (12:11):
He also would walk around our dorm room in in
a row or you know, our dorm housing in a
robe all the time. So Polish sausage and robe they
can go hand in hand.

Speaker 1 (12:20):
You never know. By the way, we need to talk
about this too. I bet a lot of our listeners
are caught up in air traffic control. I'm just seeing
Houston has told people you may have a three hour
wait to get through TSA uh buck. I traveled. I
was trying to come back from Chicago on Friday. This

(12:42):
is if you're out there and you're not a federal employee.
I think some of the situations right now with delays
has turned into a crazy city. You know who I
saw actually Sunday as I was traveling to New York City,
our friend Margo, president Trump's topest. I come right through security.
She is awesome, does incredible behind the scenes work for

(13:05):
President Trump. She just got back from Asia and she
was at the Ohio State football game over the weekend.
And I come through security. It's TSA as kind of
a mess everywhere. Boom, Marco who does Marco Martin who
does incredible work for President Trump right there in the
Nashville airport. But this is the lead story right now

(13:26):
on CNN Travel Misery. As people are having issues with
TSA air traffic Control. They shut down Nashville's airport on
Friday for several hours over this. This is where I
think a lot of people are starting to get very,
very frustrated about the shut down because it starts to
impact their individual lives.

Speaker 4 (13:47):
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Speaker 1 (14:50):
Safe news you can count on and some laughs too.
Clay Travis at Buck Sex.

Speaker 5 (14:57):
Find them on the free iHeartRadio app or wherever you
get your podcasts.

Speaker 1 (15:02):
Welcome back in here to Clay and Buck. Let's take
some talkbacks here from.

Speaker 4 (15:06):
All of you as this great planned of ours. We've
got Ken who listens in Lincoln, Nebraska, d D on
the talkback edit.

Speaker 3 (15:16):
Don't be hating on people who sports the robe. Yes,
it is a lifestyle. I'm retiring. Well, I'm not a
retiring pastor. I'm still a pastor, but I'm about to retire.
I'm an avid fly fishermen have built several poles, so
don't be hating. Good show. I have a blessed one.

Speaker 1 (15:37):
Thank you.

Speaker 4 (15:38):
You have a blessed one too. I don't usually think
of robe guys as also fly fishermen, but that.

Speaker 1 (15:43):
Is a bit of a that is a bit of
an upset, like if he had been like and I'm
also into smoking pot and uh and uh, you know
Birkenstock's orgies. Smoking pot and orgies. That's kind of what
I think about for robe guys.

Speaker 4 (15:58):
So I've also I've noticed something, probably because of all
the lot of all the young people walking around trick
or treating, there is this is very unk of me,
which is you wearing an unk T shirt.

Speaker 1 (16:07):
I am Ali got me an unk T shirt.

Speaker 4 (16:10):
Bunk and owning it. So that's a word that the
youth uses. But I've noticed something that the kids, like
thirteen to sixteen, they're wearing Crocs onun ironically.

Speaker 1 (16:22):
Oh yeah, the shoe was popular, Crocs.

Speaker 4 (16:25):
And their hairstyle is this like poofy in the front
thing like it's like unkempt, kind of like like wavy curly.

Speaker 1 (16:35):
You know what I'm talking about. This is the hairy boy.
I think my boys have this. I mean exactly what
you're saying. If you had them come over to the camera,
I can tell you. But I can tell you they're
all these kids walking around with the same hair. It's
a very unique hairstyle. Yes, and that their rocket crocs
are and have been for several years now, insanely popular
with young kids, like teenage teenage kids. I thought you

(16:59):
were gonna say, well, hold on, let's play. Renee in
Kentucky who wanted to react to the idea of all
this candy being stolen.

Speaker 6 (17:07):
If my son had ever dumped a bowl of candy
and his bag, I would have busted his ass on
the spot. He would have had to apologize as well
as do community service work for that neighbor. That's how
that goes. Anyone else that would do something different is

(17:29):
low class.

Speaker 1 (17:31):
Renee.

Speaker 4 (17:32):
You are someone who is holding a line on civilization
and I appreciate you.

Speaker 1 (17:38):
Renee is very civilized. Buck. I love that. And yeah,
if you happened to see your kid on one of
those viral videos, I think you should make a video
of the kid apologizing and make them go knock on
the door and buy candy, maybe do some yard work
to make up for the candy that he took. Total.
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(18:46):
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welcome back in Clay Travis buck Sexton Show Monday edition
of the program. I just took a picture of it.
I have it on my phone. Buck final New York
City mayoral poll from Atlas Intel. They have an A

(19:08):
plus rating in terms of they have been one of
the more reliable polls out there. Their final poll, Mom
Donni forty four percent, Andrew Cuomo thirty nine percent, Curtis
Sliwa fifteen and a half percent. According to them, without

(19:29):
Sliwa in the race, Cuomo would be winning by five
points over Mam Donni. So we may well wake up
on Wednesday as we talked last week with Curtis Sliwa,
and the results may be that if Sliwa had chosen
not to run or dropped out at some point and

(19:49):
endorsed Cuomo, Mam Donni would have lost. But by dividing
potentially the vote totals now we will see because there
are record amounts of turnout underway. It may be that
having double opponents has allowed Mom Donnie, a socialist at best,

(20:10):
communist at worst, to take over our nation's largest city. Okay,
some of you may be saying culturally the impact I
wanted to play this this is did you see this yet?
Buck a Well? First, let me play was the woman
in Los Angeles area gold Gym to confirm this is

(20:32):
a video that has gone very viral. A woman in
La is a Gold Gym workout person. I guess a
customer would be one way of saying it of the
Gold gym. And she was kicked out of Gold Gym
and they ended her membership because she complained about a

(20:55):
man using the women's locker room in the golds Gym.
We've had edited a bit, but this has gone megaviral.
Listen and doze.

Speaker 7 (21:05):
Man road man with big and the women's locker role,
and that's why I'm getting kicked out and I want
to make sat across. Now everybody saw that man.

Speaker 1 (21:19):
In the locker role.

Speaker 7 (21:21):
No one says and he's done with this.

Speaker 1 (21:28):
He's still this.

Speaker 7 (21:30):
And Sanja.

Speaker 1 (21:32):
Me making in front of a man.

Speaker 7 (21:34):
But I might have now why I'm talking that for
not running.

Speaker 1 (21:40):
Men in the locker room. Okay, now you could hear
she's a little fired up, a little bit of salty
language there. This has gone megaviral. Someone recorded her complaining
because she has been banned from Gold Gym. Not the
man with as you heard, male genitals in the women's
locker room, but this woman, black woman, to the extent

(22:03):
that you care about race, that is out there. She
has now gone viral for speaking out about this buck.
I see it connected here because this was the LA
women's soccer team. So one of the women at on
the La angel City women's soccer team did an article

(22:23):
for The New York Post saying we need to have
men out of women's sports. It's a professional soccer player.
New York Post ran it. The angel FC. Also in
Los Angeles, players said that the women's soccer player who
said women's soccer should only be made up of women
said that she was racist and transphobic their teammate. They

(22:47):
had a press conference to respond to it. This is
cut twenty eight. We pulled some of the cut listen.

Speaker 8 (22:52):
That article does not speak for this team in this
locker room. I've had a lot of combos with my
teammates in the past few days, and they are hurt
and they are harmed by the article. And also they
are disgusted by some of the things that were said
in the article. And it's really important for me to
say that. And we don't agree with the things written

(23:13):
for a plethora of reasons, but mostly the undertones come
across as transphobic and racist as well. The article calls
for genetic testing on certain players, and it has a
photo of an African player as a headline, and that's
very harmful and to me, it's inherently racist because to
single out this community based on them looking or being

(23:34):
different is absolutely a problem. And as a mixed woman
with a black family, I'm devastated by the undertones of
this article.

Speaker 1 (23:44):
I saw this last night book and I couldn't I
watched the whole press conference. The racist part of this
article is they took a photo of Castor Semina, who
is a man that has been winning women's biologically male
has been winning women's races, happens to be from Africa,

(24:05):
but is a sign of a man competing in women
winning women's championships. The New York Post pick the picture
the author, the women's soccer player who wrote this piece,
which I think is actually brave. I can't believe we
need to do it, but I mean to speak out
and call her racist and transphobic for saying, hey, we

(24:28):
need to have rules in place to ensure that men
can't compete in women's professional soccer. This is the same
city where this woman is going viral for saying, hey,
how am I getting canceled in Gold's gym. This is
a real thing the Democrats are in favor of, including
Abigail Spanberger, who is running for governor in Virginia.

Speaker 4 (24:48):
You know, why do they test for steroids in men's sports?
You know why you're not necessarily better just because you're
hitting the juice real hard?

Speaker 1 (24:58):
You know?

Speaker 4 (24:59):
I mean you can make the a lot of these
same arguments for that, like, well, is it really unfair?
Don't you still have to do the things you're doing.
It's not proven that every person who takes steroids is
going to be so much stronger than other people who don't.
I'm sure there are some people on steroids. It just
all sounds like nonsense, doesn't And by the way, somebody
should write a book called Balls where they discuss many
at these controversies, a lot a lot about this, Clay,

(25:23):
I think that this is one of the surprises that
many of us have after this last election. The Democrats
are not backing off this at all. They are continuing
to push for this, and I start to think that
the only way that maybe we start to get beyond
this is we're going to have to start recruiting guys

(25:45):
in all these different sports. I agree, who will do
the bare minimum, the bare minimum required to say that
they are trans and then they will have to defeat
women's professional sports teams by like one hundred to zero,
which is what I actually happen. If you got, you know,
you actually got, if you actually got male athletes in

(26:06):
these sports, they don't have to be pro level, but
they just have to be good. Yep, you know, if
you've got, if you had a team, if you had
teams of D one level men for these different team
sports trying to play against these women's pro teams, they
would absolutely annihilate them and it wouldn't even be close.
And if they do that enough, if there's a team

(26:27):
of quote trends women that goes undefeated and wins every
soccer game ten nothing, would then they start to or
would they I don't know.

Speaker 1 (26:36):
By the way, maybe that wouldn't be enough play. I
don't know.

Speaker 4 (26:39):
I start to think that this is such a it's
a little bit like the climate change thing.

Speaker 1 (26:43):
It's become such a.

Speaker 4 (26:44):
Religious belief for people that they will not move their
thinking on the subject whatsoever. It does not matter what
reality is presented to them, or how much reality is
presented to them.

Speaker 1 (26:55):
They just don't care. I look, I don't. I don't
don't understand how it has become the party, the position
of the Democrat Party that men should be able to
walk around in women's locker room with you know, full
male genitalia and still be claiming that they are women.

(27:19):
And to your point, Buck, I have offered to pay
a man to identify as a woman and go play
in the WNBA. Maybe I need to expand it to
the National Women's Soccer League. So if you are out
there listening right now and you are a talented male
soccer player, to bucks point, let's say you play D
one men's soccer and you want to identify as a

(27:41):
woman and try to make a women's pro soccer team.
I think we have to just call out the absurdity
of these arguments. It's not racist, it's not transphobic, it's
not sexist. There's just a real biological difference here. So,
if you are a male soccer player and you are
listening to us right now, D one, I would encourage

(28:01):
you to go to open tryouts if you make a
women's soccer team, or they ban you just say you
identify as a woman. If you make a women's soccer team.
I'll pay you one hundred grand challenge out there for
every men's every man listening to us right now, I

(28:22):
want one of you out there to try to make
a women's pro soccer team. Just tell them if they
question you, hey, I identify as a woman and I
want you to make the team because if they don't
have this rule in place, it would be transphobic for
them to stop you from being able to become a
male identifying as a woman professional athlete. And I think

(28:46):
you might be able to score fifty goals in a year.
And maybe this is what needs to happen in the
National Women's Soccer League. Because again, this is angel FC,
I think they're called. This is Bob Eiger. The CEO
of Disney owns this team. Did you know that the
CEO of Disney, Bob Iger, that owns ESPN, he and

(29:06):
his wife own this LA soccer team. That just said
it's transphobic and racist for one of their players to
say men shouldn't be able to play women's sports. I'm
putting one hundred grand on the table for all male
soccer players out there. Figure out how to make a team.
If you make it, if you make a team and
play in a game. I'll give you one hundred grand,

(29:28):
which is probably more than a lot of the females,
more than they make, more than the women's average soccer
player makes. I will give you one hundred grand my
own money if you are a man listening to us
right now, and you can make a national women's soccer
league team. I really do wonder what is the basis
in some of these leagues currently. If you say you're

(29:50):
what I'm saying, yeah, you know, and you and I
have some facial hair going. If I just showed up,
if I didn't do the thing where I get like
super fake long nails and grow my hair out long,
or get a wig and put a bunch of rouge
on my cheeks or whatever. Like, if I just show
up and say I'm actually a chick, do they have
to let me try out? It'd be transphoted. I mean,

(30:14):
who gets I mean, who gets to make the determination
of I mean, if the guy's walking around in the
Golds gym in LA and he's got what's the phrase
that we can u he's got a penis, I'm trying
to think of the word. All right, male equipment, male
equipment he's got the he's got the carrot and the broccoli,
and he's just walking around like it's pretty clear that

(30:37):
he's a dude. I'm just I think the penis and
the balls are undefeated in terms of male genitalia. Uh,
it's defining the gender. Although you know, they like to
argue now that sometimes doctors at birth get it wrong.

Speaker 3 (30:50):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (30:51):
I was there for three berths. When they held the
baby up, I was like, hey, I got a pretty
good sense of what gender I've got.

Speaker 4 (30:58):
I've always thought it's interesting too that they exp they
explicitly deny that this is about intersex formally called hermaphrodite individuals,
which is a very rare genetic unfortunately.

Speaker 1 (31:12):
Very rare. Yes, very rare.

Speaker 4 (31:14):
But it's not that it's never about that, because then
you could you can deal with that biologically. By the way,
they're generally much more male or much more female. It
just has to do with the sex organs. But actually
the res you know.

Speaker 1 (31:30):
They're historically they would have defined as one way or
the other before we had gender testing, they would have
just decided, hey, and it's unfortunate, but it's highly irregular
that you basically have almost, you know, like Klein syndrome
of Kleinfelter or something like that. I think, if I'm
not mistaken.

Speaker 4 (31:47):
But that is not this is this is this is
truly I say, therefore I am is the basis of this.
And also they don't want to get into hormone stuff either, Clay,
because well, hold on a second. Why if you have
to take hormones to make you the thing that, how
are you affirming that you're transforming? You're not affirming, right,

(32:08):
So that's what has to be a psychological thing. It
can't be that your biochemistry is changed and therefore you
are because you're altering your biochemistry. So there's clearly a
physical basis for this. Like why do you have to
do that to be a woman? If you only have
to say you're a woman and then you're a woman,
it's it is the height of crazy. But here we are,

(32:31):
all right, let's talk about something that actual women have
to deal with, and that is unplanned pregnancies and the
pressures that can come with them in our society, and
planned parenthood is out there saying come to us, and
unfortunately there's a lot of abortion that's happening across the country.

Speaker 1 (32:47):
Right now.

Speaker 4 (32:48):
This is where preborn clinics come in. Preborn clinics introduce
women to their babies when they come in via a
free ultrasound. Because when mom sees that tiny baby insider,
here's that heart, she realized that there are so many
hope filled choices for her when she chooses life, and
Preborn continues walking with her for up to two years,

(33:08):
providing maternity clothes, diapers, counseling, and so much more. Preborn
cares for the whole woman, mind, body and soul and
the precious baby growing inside her. So as you think
about your year end giving, consider the greatest investment you
could ever make, the gift of life. There are hundreds
of thousands of mothers to be in this situation today.
As the year comes to a close, your tax deductible

(33:29):
donation can be the difference between life and death. Would
you consider a leadership gift to save babies in a
big way.

Speaker 1 (33:35):
Your gift of.

Speaker 4 (33:36):
Five, ten, or fifteen thousand dollars will be used to
save countless babies for years to come. To donate, dial
pound two five zero and say the keyword baby. That's
pound two five zero, say baby, Or go online and
donate securely at Preborn dot com, slash Buck, Preborn dot com, slash.

Speaker 1 (33:53):
B u c K sponsored by Preborn.

Speaker 5 (33:57):
Making America great Again isn't just one man, it's many.
The team forty seven podcast Sunday's at noon Eastern in
the Clay and Buck podcast feed. Find it on the
iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts.

Speaker 4 (34:11):
We are closing up shop on Clay in Buck. Great
time to remind you to get some Crockett Coffee going,
my friends Crocketcoffee dot Com. Subscribe this holiday season. You'll
get all kinds of great deals coming your way. Furthy
the Crockett's team. Ten percent of the profits annually goes
tend to go to the Tunel, the Towers Foundation. So yes,
you definitely want to be drinking some Crocket. It's good

(34:33):
time to have the coffee going. And we also want
to remind you to subscribe to the Clay and Buck
YouTube channel.

Speaker 1 (34:39):
That's free. Subscribe, it's free, it's great. I think you
really like it, so highly recommend you do so.

Speaker 4 (34:44):
And occasionally, well not only will you see our hopefully
various stute commentary, but also you get Ginger Spice makes appearances.
Baby Speed Clay's funny t shirts. There's a lot of
good things. Hold up copies of Balls, so that's what's
great there.

Speaker 1 (35:04):
Please go. I'll do it tomorrow too, on election Day
because the book is actually coming out, and then I
will stop, but please go buy a copy. My personal
request to all of you. It would mean a lot
to me. Proceeds to charity when we get this thing
sold that officially is going to be in bookstores tomorrow.

(35:25):
Clay Travis. Obviously the book is Balls. It's everywhere. I'll
do it tomorrow and then you will not have to
hear you will see me all over television talking about it,
but we will be done after tomorrow. So Balls, Clay Travis.
It would mean a ton to me if you would
all go buy a copy. Buy it for someone that

(35:45):
you think would enjoy it too, or someone that is
angry that Trump won and you want to just gag
gift them. Hey, I thought you could use a pair
of balls since you don't have one, because you're a
white dude who voted for Commalin or black dude or
Hispanic Dudinasian, So that would mean a lot. Please go
buy the book. Clay Travis, Balls Out everywhere. Tomorrow, Buck, Tomorrow,

(36:06):
we will be getting ready Virginia, New Jersey, New York
City voting going on all over the place, California proposition
out there, as well as Pennsylvania Supreme Court. We're gonna
be breaking all of it down for all of you tomorrow.

Speaker 4 (36:21):
I'm hoping that New Jersey comes through that. I will say,
I think New Jersey has a shot. I think New
York City. Go out, have a good meal, think about
the good times, think about think about the Giuliani era,
the Bloomberg era.

Speaker 1 (36:39):
Just remember it while you can. No, I'm just kidding.

Speaker 4 (36:42):
It's gonna be fine. It's gonna be fine. Communists, what's
the worst thing they can do? It can be pretty bad.

Speaker 1 (36:49):
Actually, it's not good.

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