All Episodes

August 15, 2025 32 mins

John talks about the recent polarization of the political climate and how it’s unlike anything he’s seen in his own life. And John talks about the Justice Department worker who assaulted a Customs and Border Patrol agent by throwing a sandwich at them. 

John talks about a CalMatters article about the terrible impact of people self-deporting, but John says by the time you get through the first paragraph, the only thought that comes to mind is “what’s wrong with this?”  

John talks about the recent feud between First Lady Melania Trump and Joe Biden’s son, Hunter. John plays audio of Hunter’s reply on podcast to Melania initiating the lawsuit and looking to recover $1 Billion in damages. John also revisits Newsom’s redistricting presser and plays audio from the ‘independent’ redistricting committee member Sara Sadhwani (who happens to be very bias) appearing at Newsom’s partisan presser and referring to ICE as “masked gunman,” who are threatening them.  

John talks about nudist night at German history museum which is apparently a sell-out.  

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
If I am six forty, you're listening to the John
Cobel podcast on the iHeartRadio app. After three, we've got
two rounds of the moist Line. At around three twenty
and three point fifty, we are also going to have
from Anchorage, Alaska. We're going to talk to Christianne Cordero,

(00:20):
ABC News correspondent to see if anything happens between Trump
and Putin, and Michael Monks at Cafe News has been
anxiously watching the skies ever since.

Speaker 2 (00:32):
I guess we have no fingernails left.

Speaker 1 (00:34):
We should look to the Northwest and see if if
they get angry enough and frustrated enough with each other
that they just press their respective buttons and then it's
all over for us. You just never know, right, I mean,
it wouldn't shock you. It wouldn't shock you if something
like that happened at It's not me. I almost kind
of expect this stuff with the way things are going.

(00:56):
Here's we're in an age. And I was reading a
much longer article and I wish I could get into
it now, but I only read a piece of it,
and I saw that I probably had seventy five percent
to go, And it is kind of it's by a
person who admitted that they started as some years ago

(01:16):
as a woke blogger, and they got caught up in
all the political hysteria going back to Trump and Hillary
Clinton and right on till recently, and suddenly one day
they realized that they had lost their minds, that they
had become a mental patient, and that many people around
them in the last ten years had also become mental patients.

(01:39):
And I think you've seen this. You may have seen
this among your friends and among your family members, where
people are having complete emotional breakdowns over one political issue
or another, primarily centered around anything Trump does, and friendships
dissolve and family relationships dissolve, and there's just a lot

(02:00):
of hysterical screaming and waving of the hands and people
running out naked into the streets. And it's unlike anything
I've ever seen in my life, and most people I
talked to have never seen it before. And it is
mass hysteria. If you wonder, I used to wonder, almost
not even believe things like the Salem witch hunt could

(02:20):
be a real thing. Now, how did you get that
many people all whipped up and screaming and insisting that
the following women are witches, and they all have to
they all have to be killed, and everybody in the
town by Isaka. Well, we've had about ten years of
a form of this going on, and there are some

(02:41):
examples that are just well, they're hysterically funny. There's a
guy you may have seen the clip, Sean Dunn.

Speaker 2 (02:49):
Now, there's a.

Speaker 1 (02:53):
Lot of whack jobs who show up at protests and
they don't work for a living, and they're usually on something,
and they're mentally unbalanced to begin with.

Speaker 2 (03:05):
They're incapable of holding a job.

Speaker 1 (03:08):
Maybe they can be recruited to be a fake protester,
but there is no there's no career for them. This guy,
his name Seawn Dunn, was different. He worked for the
Department of Justice, and he actually an interesting job. He
worked with foreign countries to help extradite those countries fugitives.

(03:30):
So I guess it's fugitives from the foreign countries who
may have ended up here, embedded themselves here, and these
countries wanted these gentlemen back to face charges back home,
and he somehow facilitated this. Now, he was more of
a paralegal. He didn't have a formal law degree, but
you know, there's a lot of paperwork and phone calls

(03:53):
and negotiating that takes place. And that's what Sean done.
Best I can figure out. Well, Sean went out for
a subway sandwich a couple of nights ago, Sunday night,
and he saw that Trump's immigration officers and Department of

(04:18):
Homeland Security personnel were in Washington and there was factually
a whole group of these agents. And Seawn Dunn, still
holding a sandwich, couldn't believe it, and he completely freaked out.

(04:40):
There's a guy named Cortes Dargon who lives in Washington,
d C. And he witnessed this, and he took video
of it, and he gave an interview to the New.

Speaker 2 (04:49):
York Post to describe what Seawn Dunn did.

Speaker 1 (04:52):
He said, in the beginning, there was a bunch of
ruckus set a legal term, a bunch of ruckus. I
seen this guy, Oh, this guy, this guy's an English major.
In the beginning, there was a bunch of ruckus. I
seen this guy walk across the street saying, these guys
are fascists.

Speaker 2 (05:13):
And I've seen the video.

Speaker 1 (05:16):
There's no point playing at The audio is a bit distant,
and there's a lot of f bombs. You can't play
any audio anymore. It's all f bombs. Even at Newsom's
rally yesterday, it was all these public officials f bombs,
very articulate. Sandyway Target said that Sean Dunner, he's wearing

(05:39):
a pink shirt and light blue shorts, screaming these guys
are fascists, and then Done suddenly turned and started coming
right towards where Cortes was standing and tried engaging Cortez

(05:59):
and Converse station.

Speaker 2 (06:02):
Was screaming the whole time, but he was looking for
an audience right.

Speaker 1 (06:05):
He was just bellowing and carrying on, waving his arms,
gesturing wildly with his sandwich. And he asked Cortes, what
car did the FEDCE pull up in? And I said,
I don't know. He goes to the car and I
thought he was going to do something to the car.
There were federal vehicles parked on the street. Done seemed
to be quite drunk. That could have played a role

(06:28):
in this. And Dargan started taking video because he just
wanted to show this guy, Look, you're really drunk. When
you see this video, when you sober up, you're going
to be like whoa And that's when done through his
foot long sub at the federal officer, hitting him squarely
in the chest, and that sent his sandwich meat flying

(06:51):
all over the place. Now he's as saulting, he's assaulting
here a federal law enforcement agent. Some of the officers
started laughing, but Dergan said, he goes. Look, they were
just learning the area. This is your first day of training,
and you had a sandwich thrown at you. And it
appeared to be because he got up close and inspected

(07:14):
the sandwich a subway BMT. Now what does that stand for?
Subway BMT. We're gonna have to look that up. I'm
I'm not familiar with all the offerings at subway.

Speaker 2 (07:29):
Let me see.

Speaker 1 (07:32):
Subway BMT. Oh, it's short for biggest, medius tastiest. It's
a signature sandwich. It layers pepperoni, salami, and ham. And
am looking at this guy. He didn't look like a
pepperoni salami guy. I would have picked a more vegan
selection for this guy, but you can customize it with

(07:55):
various veggies. He did have a lot of banana peppers
apparently in the sandwich because everything went flying. Now, I
don't I don't know what a banana pepper is uh
when he really doesn't realize what he did. He ran
from the scene, and uh he kept behind some buildings
that disappeared, but the police eventually caught up to him. Now,

(08:17):
what you don't want to do these days is get
on the radar of Pam Bondi, the Attorney General, assaulting
one of her one of her officers, because Bondy has
sworn that this guy's going to be charged with a
felony now and could go to federal prison.

Speaker 2 (08:32):
It could be for a year.

Speaker 1 (08:34):
Because you just can't do this, and they sound funny
to throw a subway sandwich a BMT at a federal official,
I advise you not to do it. I don't know
specifically what a federal prison is like, but I think
Seann Dunn's going to have a very uncomfortable time there.

Speaker 2 (08:53):
It's uh.

Speaker 1 (08:56):
When when you have to tell your cell mates that
you're in there for throwing us subway sandwich at a cop,
you're not going to get a good reception in the
shower room.

Speaker 2 (09:06):
I don't think we're gonna talk more.

Speaker 1 (09:09):
I've got I told you last hour about about this
absurd tear jerking way. The La Times covers immigration. For example,
cowmatters dot org. That's that's a pretty good website for
California news. But they've been affected by this as well,

(09:31):
because they wanted to write about the terrible effects of
all the people self deporting and what it's left behind
in some of these neighborhoods and towns. And the thing is,
by time you get through the first paragraph, the only
thought I had, well, what's wrong with this?

Speaker 2 (09:49):
I'll explain to you coming up.

Speaker 3 (09:51):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI AM
six forty this story.

Speaker 1 (09:58):
I talked about this a little bit last hour, and
I found another great example how the emotional manipulation of
the way media. The media covers a lot of things,
but especially illegal immigration. Now, I told you that there
are a lot of people self deporting. There's a million
six across the nation that have self deported. And so

(10:22):
that's why when you see these these staged raids at
home depot, it's not just the everybody goes, well, you
know why why so many ice agents masked ice agents?
You know, just a round up sixteen guys. Isn't that overkilled?
It's like, well, it's not just about the sixteen guys.
It's about everybody watching on television, everybody watching on their

(10:44):
social media feeds when they see what's out there. Right,
when all the immigration officers were staged at MacArthur Park
a few weeks ago, right, and that's the thing that
gets Karen Bass screaming and yelling. I mean, she really
goes into emotional overload when she sees that, and she's

(11:04):
playing exactly into Trump's hands. And Tom Homan is that
they want that reaction because that'll give them more media coverage.
That means more legal aliens will see that this is
a real thing and it looks scary. Of course, they
don't need that many people. Of course, they don't need

(11:25):
to put on that big a stage demonstration in MacArthur Park.
But this is how you get a million six people
to self deport in a matter of months, because what
else is everybody talking about. Everybody's looking around saying, well,
did you see that? You know, it looks like it
looks like time to go calmatters dot org, which normally

(11:48):
has I mean, they're a left wing news site, but
they've got some decent coverage on some stories, so they
have a story here. Now, remember they're trying to emotionally
manipulate you and make you feel sorry for this particular neighborhood.
And the headline is what la immigration raids left behind?

(12:09):
Empty spaces and a city on edge? And they write,
there's a certain beauty in the notes not played an
entire symphony. If you're listening, it's very poetic. I don't
know what it means, but they're talking about the noise
you don't hear in some of these immigrant communities anymore
because so many people have beat it. They write, the

(12:35):
cars not back, the cars not backfiring, the sirens not wailing,
the fireworks not erupting in sonic booms that bounce off
hills and peel across the valleys. This is the consequence
of the largest planned deportation in American history. Let's stop there.

(13:00):
Who wants to hear cars backfiring all day and night
in your neighborhood? Who wants to hear sirens wailing? And
who wants to hear fireworks going off all the time
and the sound ricocheting off the hills and valleys. So
now it's not there anymore. And this cow Matters writer

(13:20):
is getting sad and wistful. It's like it's almost like
the birds aren't singing anymore. You don't hear the children
playing in the at the schoolyard. Maybe that's true too,
But these are the examples where you're supposed to feel sad.
The car's not backfiring, the sirens not wailing, the fireworks

(13:41):
not erupting. Maybe that's a sign that we had people
here that shouldn't be here. Because I don't know where
I grew up. This never went on. We had no sirens,
no backfiring, and no fireworks except maybe on the fourth
of July. The Trump administration goal is to make life unnavigable, unstable,

(14:02):
and uncomfortable for people in the country illegally. Well again,
what do you think would happen if you went to
a foreign country without your paperwork? The administration is hoping
they leave on their own or with their kids in tow.
Department Homeland Security actually has a pitch self deportation is
a dignified way to leave the US. So that's why

(14:25):
you see the show of force in the streets or
at MacArthur Park and you have one hundred guys rounding
up sixteen day laborers. It's not about the day laborers.
And people, you know bass, Oh, they're not a threat. Well,
of course they're not a threat. Yeah, the guy selling
strawberries yesterday is not a threat. The day labor is

(14:46):
not a threat. Yeah, yeah, we get it. That's not
the point of the raids. The point of the raids
is and is the audience at home. Everybody's watching. And
if you see it every day, you don't have to
see it every day. You can one of these stories
once a week. People get it comfortable and they pack
up the leaves. And I got to remind you, if
you're a California taxpayer, you are paying thirty five billion

(15:11):
dollars a year for illegal alien costs. Thirty five billion.
There's twelve billion we're paying just for illegal alien healthcare.
In fact, I saw a story today that the that
the insurance premiums are going up for Covered California customers.

(15:36):
So if you're in the Covered California plan, you're getting
a big hike. Well maybe if the government didn't have
to spend thirty five billion on illegal aliens, you as
an American citizen, might get a better deal for Covered California.
You can't have everything, everybody. Oh, the insurance companies are awful.

(15:56):
Yes they are awful, but so is the California government.
And it means as bad as the companies are in
overcharging you, Gavin Newsom slaps an even bigger tax on
you to cover other people who aren't supposed to be here.

(16:18):
And uh, they have all these lines in here about
LA's long nervous summer and the city is diminished. You
know what I wrecked. You know, here's the here's the
biggest one, and we.

Speaker 2 (16:33):
Got to do the news.

Speaker 1 (16:35):
Bus ridership is down a million and a half rides
in June, a million and a half rides. There's a
million and a half riders missing from the public buses
in a month. We're paying for that? Why are we
paying for this this huge bus fleet. I knew, as
you know it was mostly illegal, aliens and homeless people.

(16:56):
I see buses going up and down Wilster now in
the morning, Swear to god, I look at it every day.
Most I've seen in the last month two people on
the bus, both of them either as sleep or dead.
That's it, all right, when we come back. Hunter Biden

(17:18):
has resurfaced. He has shown up on on a YouTube
podcast carrying on about Milania, Trump and Jeffrey Epstein. You
think this is going to end well for Hunter? He
must be back on the crack. I mean, he barely
escaped prison only because his dad pardoned him, and now

(17:41):
he's going off on Trump's wife.

Speaker 2 (17:42):
We'll give you more.

Speaker 3 (17:45):
You're listening to John Cobelts on demand from KFI A.

Speaker 1 (17:49):
Six, so I guess they're still talking. Trump and Putin
has n't in a fist fight yet. I read today
that Putin actually speaks saying you're English pretty well, not perfectly,
but he's more fluent in German. But I don't think
I've ever heard him speak English. They always have interpreters.

Speaker 2 (18:09):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (18:10):
But you know, he and Trump may be speaking to
each other in the same language as they try to
get to well. Trump wants to get the war ended.
I don't think Putin has any interest, but we'll see.
Now Hunter Biden, he's he's a plague. He's just a parasite.

(18:31):
And after all those, all the drug charges, all the
corruption he was involved in during his dad's administration with
Ukraine and China, after all that, and he and he
emerges unscathed, the gun charges, the attacks charges, I mean,

(18:54):
how many different bad things has he been involved in
and you know, he's really unhinged. You would think, after
you escaped federal prison because your dad happened to be
president signed a pardon, that you just shut up and
go away. Instead, you went on this YouTube show called

(19:15):
Channel five with Andrew Callahan because he's been making connections
between Jeffrey Epstein and Milania Trump. Let's play this clip
Biden with Andrew Callahan.

Speaker 4 (19:29):
Presidential litigation has arrived. It's lawsuit time. In my hand
is a legal demand letter addressed to mister Hunter Biden
from the First Lady of the United States, demanding a
retraction of Channel five's video called Hunter Biden Returns, on
which mister Biden here makes some speculative comments about the
relationship between Jeffrey Epstein, Milania Trump, and Donald Trump.

Speaker 5 (19:53):
Okay, well they knew each other, well, they spent an
enormous time together. According to his biographer, is that Jeffrey
Epstein introduced Milania. That's how Malania and the First Lady
and the President met.

Speaker 4 (20:04):
Really Epstein made the intro.

Speaker 5 (20:06):
Yeah, according to Michael Wolfe. And so I only can
go by what people are saying, and I don't.

Speaker 4 (20:12):
Know he didn't make these claims out of nowhere. They
come from another journalist named Michael Wolfe, who is a
biographer that actually spoke to Jeffrey Epstein. But now here
we are, and I've got a billion dollar document in
my hands because missus Trump is seeking one billion dollars
in damages.

Speaker 2 (20:26):
If we don't take the video down and.

Speaker 4 (20:28):
If Hunter here doesn't issue a formal apology to Missus Trump.
So now we're here maybe to give you the platform
to apologize to the first lady for your statements that
you made about her possible connection to Jeffrey Epstein.

Speaker 2 (20:45):
That's not going to happen at that.

Speaker 1 (20:54):
I don't know exactly what the wording was, and the
exact wording matters in these kind of cases. But the
message was is that Millennia was a hired prostitute and
that's and and Epstein was passing her off to Trump.
That was the intent of the message. And I guess
a Hunter's going to stand by that. Well, I guess

(21:17):
he's got unlimited money. God do you remember when he
was doing paintings and selling those paintings I think for
tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars. You know, that
market dried up as soon as Joe was done with
his presidency. That's how they that's how they were doing
their money laundering. They were funneling the money to Hunter,
who knows where it went after that, and.

Speaker 2 (21:36):
It was for the paintings.

Speaker 1 (21:38):
So he'd slop up these bad paintings and people were
paying tons of money. And I really am curious how
many different bank accounts in how many different countries that
family could have.

Speaker 2 (21:54):
That's of course.

Speaker 1 (21:55):
That's not something anything is going to go and anybody's
going to go and find out.

Speaker 2 (22:01):
Now.

Speaker 1 (22:02):
I got another clip to play here, and this is
connected to Gavin Newsom's PEP rally yesterday to redraw the
congressional districts in California. And we have an independent group
that draws the districts. Now, an independent means it's not

(22:22):
drawn by politicians. And we had Carl Demayo on earlier,
who's the Republican Assemblyment, and he's going to be fighting
Newsom's new idea. And you know what he said is right.
He goes, we want an a dependent district. He goes,
it's not partisan. This is not just to benefit republic
it's it's not to benefit anybody. It's supposed to have
a nicer process, you know, a fairer, more equitable process,

(22:45):
and he's right should be that way. There shouldn't be
any tricks pulled by Republicans or Democrats to redraw districts.
Having said that, though, this woman, I'm going to play
for you here, Sarah sut Wani was appointed a member
of the independent citizen redistrict the Redistricting Commission. Now, even

(23:08):
with this independent commission, Democrats have about eighty percent of
the congressional seats. It's forty two to nine, forty three
to nine, and Newsom wants to make it forty nine
to three, even though Republicans get about forty percent of

(23:28):
the vote in these state races. But somehow Republican voters
only get twenty percent of the districts. So it is
independent and it is a preferable method. But if you
wonder how it ends up being forty three to nine. Anyway,

(23:48):
listen to this speaker at Newsom's press conference yesterday. I
remember this is his campaign round. This is launching his
presidential campaign and pushing for a near total domination of
the Democrats from in California's congressional group. Her name is
Sarah Saidwani, and she was appointed to the commission.

Speaker 6 (24:11):
My name is Sarah Saidwani. I'm a political science professor,
and I served as a commissioner on the California Citizens
Redistricting Commission in twenty twenty. I had the distinct honor
of being selected through a lattery draw. I'm not an
elected official. I believe in good governance, and to serve

(24:32):
on the California Citizens Redistricting Commission was one of the
proudest moments of my life. But these are extraordinary times,
and extraordinary times call for extraordinary measures. We have witnessed
masked gunmen kidnapping our neighbors off the streets, and my
understanding is they're outside waiting to do it again. We

(24:55):
have seen not just the toleration of political violence, but
the encouragement of it on January sixth against nonpartisan election officials,
and the deployment of the National Guard in our cities,
turning our cities into police states. And if that wasn't enough,

(25:16):
we are watching executive overreach that no doubt is making
our founding fathers turn in their graves.

Speaker 2 (25:23):
All right, you can stop right there. So that's why.

Speaker 1 (25:29):
Republicans who supply forty percent of the votes for Congress
can only have six percent representation because hysterical rantings from
this lady. I looked her up. Assistant professor of politics
at Pomona, and she was a commissioner. She says she

(25:49):
won it in a lottery, and she studies voting behavior, elections,
voting rights, public opinion, and on and on and on.
She's got a doctorate in political science, but she's horribly
biased against your right to vote in anyone else for
Congress who isn't one hundred percent opposed to Trump and

(26:13):
anything he does. So she's highly educated, highly over educated,
and at the same time hysterical. There's no police state
out there. People are not being kidnapped. I love the
catchy little phrases they use. Not being kidnapped. They're being
detained for being here illegally, which is against the law.

(26:35):
And that is the penalty from the US government. If
they catch you and you're here illegally, you get detained,
you get deported.

Speaker 2 (26:44):
That's the way the law works.

Speaker 1 (26:45):
So many people, even if you have advanced college degrees,
have never seen law enforcement enforced the law before, apparently publicly,
and it's freaking them out to the point of a
nervous breakdown.

Speaker 3 (26:59):
You're listening, dude, John Cobelts on demand from KFI A
M six forty.

Speaker 1 (27:04):
And Uh, Putin and Trump are are still meeting.

Speaker 2 (27:10):
The UH.

Speaker 1 (27:12):
I don't think Putin's serious about this because while they're
having the meeting, Russian forces are still pummeling Ukraine with
UH with a lot of high powered weaponry.

Speaker 2 (27:23):
UH.

Speaker 1 (27:25):
It's he didn't even take a break to meet Trump
side on it, and he should never get caught up
in this hype. There's a story in the New York
Times that just came over as how both sides are
manipulating websites making wild claims about one another. There's like

(27:46):
all kinds of propaganda and misinformation and and then and
then people start believing it or they want to uh,
they want to spread the garbage news to other sites,
another populations. And this is what people do all day.
They create fake fake news. Even the governments create fake
news and they just send it out there as waste product.

(28:09):
And people say, oh, look at this, and I don't
really I don't really, I don't really understand anything nothing
at all.

Speaker 2 (28:22):
Story today.

Speaker 1 (28:26):
I guess this is in maybe the London Times there
there is. I'm I'm I've become a museum guy. I
can't say I went to a lot of museums before
I got married, but my wife civilized me to some extent,
and I enjoy going to museums, especially historical ones. I
like learning stuff to some extent art museums. It depends,

(28:48):
but I mean, I'll go through it.

Speaker 2 (28:50):
Now.

Speaker 1 (28:53):
This is one in Stuttgart, Germany that I'm not going to.
It's the bottom work Wertenberg House of History. I'm just
I'm just gonna warn you. They have a They have
an exhibit right now about the history of bathing. I'm

(29:19):
not making it up. And I guess bathing outdoors at
a lake or a beach. I don't know if it's indoors.
The thing is at the Baden Wurtenberg House of History.
If you go on a on a certain night of
the week, you you could go there naked.

Speaker 2 (29:41):
You could go there entirely nude.

Speaker 1 (29:44):
And there's a photo of mostly middle aged men, some
older men in a group of about twenty of them,
all standing naked, wear nothing but there their socks and shoes.
And this is a back view. The photo is actually

(30:05):
from an exhibit in Vienna some years ago. But that's
the idea of what's going on at the Baden Wurtenberg
House of History. That's going to be the dress code
for the evening tours. The show is called frey Schwimmin'
geminosaid Free Swimming Together. It's about fluctuating notions of public morality,

(30:32):
and the invitation says, we ask for your understanding that
at the time of this exhibition it may only be
visited with no clothes on, so showing up as a
nude customer is mandatory at the museum.

Speaker 2 (30:46):
There's no option.

Speaker 1 (30:49):
You are asked, and I'm not making this up, you
are asked to bring along a small towel.

Speaker 2 (30:54):
To sit on.

Speaker 1 (31:00):
Apparently this is very popular in Germany. Uh The German
people are into this stuff and the chance to walk
around a museum naked is so alluring that all the
naked viewing times are sold out more than two weeks
in advance of the dates, says. Public nudity is much
less of a taboo in Germany than other places. Naked

(31:24):
public bathing stretches back to the Middle Ages. In Germany,
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (31:34):
This, says.

Speaker 1 (31:34):
There's something called the there's like some kind of philosophy
called Fraco percultar FKK, and that it says that the
simple fact of nudity or stripping off close in company
actually encourages a healthy relationship, a healthier relationship with the body.
And I'm i'm, I'm looking at these guys, and you know,

(31:56):
many many of these guys should not be, uh, should
not be standing there without clothes. And you've got to
have some sense of what you got hanging out there.
When we come back, we are going to talk to
We've got a reporter coming on from Anchorage, Alaska from
ABC News, Christianne Cordero, and this is the Trump Putin meeting. Hey,

(32:22):
you've been listening to the John Cobalt Show podcast. You
can always hear the show live on KFI AM six
forty from one to four pm every Monday through Friday,
and of course anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.

The John Kobylt Show News

Advertise With Us

Host

John Kobylt

John Kobylt

Popular Podcasts

New Heights with Jason & Travis Kelce

New Heights with Jason & Travis Kelce

Football’s funniest family duo — Jason Kelce of the Philadelphia Eagles and Travis Kelce of the Kansas City Chiefs — team up to provide next-level access to life in the league as it unfolds. The two brothers and Super Bowl champions drop weekly insights about the weekly slate of games and share their INSIDE perspectives on trending NFL news and sports headlines. They also endlessly rag on each other as brothers do, chat the latest in pop culture and welcome some very popular and well-known friends to chat with them. Check out new episodes every Wednesday. Follow New Heights on the Wondery App, YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen to new episodes early and ad-free, and get exclusive content on Wondery+. Join Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts or Spotify. And join our new membership for a unique fan experience by going to the New Heights YouTube channel now!

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.