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July 3, 2025 • 109 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is a podcast from woar from.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
Everywhere, USA. It's Fox Across America with Jimmy.

Speaker 3 (00:07):
Fayla, Folks, Jimmy Fayler in the house. And yeah, I'm
not here for today's show, but I just wanted to
remind everybody to stick around anyone because it doesn't get
any better than this guest host. And I'm not just
saying that because they paid me cash. They also sent
a Venmo go get them Champ.

Speaker 4 (00:23):
Thanks Jimmy.

Speaker 5 (00:25):
It's Rich Zioli from Talker to your twelve ten WPHD
in Philadelphia. Great to be with you on Fox Across
America today on a big day because the Diddy verdict
came back. Now you should care about this in a
big way because this trial estimates the investigation in a
twelve million bucks.

Speaker 4 (00:44):
Maybe maybe that. Yeah, it's a lot, it's a lot.

Speaker 5 (00:48):
So the Diddy verdict is int We got a big
show for you today. It's a hot one, as Jimmy
would say. And of course the rule stands. You can
be a Republican, you can be a democratics. Don't be
a bleep. Figure out the whole Jimmy Fayla's sound effects board.

Speaker 4 (01:04):
But we're happy. He's on vacation.

Speaker 5 (01:06):
He deserves it, and he needs it too, because I
think he was starting to get a little you know
what I mean.

Speaker 4 (01:09):
So hopefully he gets to relax a little bit.

Speaker 5 (01:12):
Count one of ditty racketeering conspiracy, not guilty, arson, bribery,
witness tampering, forced labor, sex trafficking, transportation for purposes of prostitution,
and drug distribution. That those were the counts of racketeering conspiracy.
Now I knew this was going to happen. The government
overcharged him. That's the thing. They overcharged this guy. You

(01:34):
can't overcharge because if you do that, then it's going
to be a win. If you don't, if you don't
hit with the big one. The big one's the rico.
It's how they got the mafia, and they tried to
allege here that Diddy was basically, you know, like John
Gotti and running this whole empire. If you don't get
him on a rico, all the other stuff really kind

(01:55):
of doesn't matter at that point. That's the big one.
That's the big one right there, the racketeering conspiracy. And
he's not guilty on that if and only if you
find a defendant guilty of count one, Did the pattern
of racketeering activity include sex trafficking of Cassandra Ventur, Well,
they did not find him guilty of count one. And
if and only if you find a defendant guilty of
count one, did the pattern of racketeering activity include sex

(02:16):
trafficking of Jane, Well, they did not find him guilty
of count one, Nor did they find him guilty of
count two. Sex trafficking of Cassandra Ventura not guilty. Count three,
the man act transportation of Cassandra Ventura guilty. Count four,
sex trafficking of Jane not guilty. Count five, the man

(02:38):
act transportation of Jane guilty. So essentially what they got
him on really was transporting a prostitute over state lines.

Speaker 4 (02:47):
That's basically what they got him on.

Speaker 5 (02:50):
After all that, after all that, after all that money,
after all that time, after all the publicity of that,
That's basically what they got Diddie on.

Speaker 4 (02:59):
We'll talk a little bit more about this. My buddy
David Gelman.

Speaker 5 (03:01):
He's as he was a prosecutor now he's a defense attorney.
So he's going to join us on the show and
a little bit. We also have Paul Scalen joining us today.
There was a big win yesterday University of Pennsylvania. So
I broadcast out of Philadelphia, but we of course take
Fox across America on our station, WPHT, great station, great show,

(03:21):
great great everything.

Speaker 4 (03:23):
The key of what happened at penn.

Speaker 5 (03:26):
Yesterday so real, so enormous, and a huge win for
President Trump, huge win for Education Secretary Linda McMahon, and
a huge win for the ladies, the ladies of the
swim team, the ladies who had to compete against.

Speaker 4 (03:41):
The dude named Will Gains.

Speaker 5 (03:45):
That's funny because even the media is still referring to
Will as Leah and saying that she will be stripped
of her titles, and she will be She is not
a she Will Gains. And now with what the with
what the what Thomas? I'm sorry, Will Will Thomas, thank you,
Josh Riley Gains.

Speaker 4 (04:05):
One of the swimmers.

Speaker 5 (04:06):
Of course, I just confused that you're right there, Will
Thomas stripped of his titles, as he should be, because
he stole the dreams of these young women and it
was outrageous and an absolute scandal. And what Penn has
come out and said now is they're also going to
wait for it, acknowledge that men or men and women

(04:26):
are women. I know, I know, I'm just as shocked
as you are by that. I'm just as shocked as
you are that they would actually come out and say
such a thing that men are men, women are women.
Men can't be women and women can't be men. And
they have to do this. They don't want to. They
don't want to. Let's understand something. They drew a big
line in the sand here. They refused, but they had

(04:49):
to because President Trump said, I'm coming after the money.
You're gonna lose all your money. So penn reluctantly did this.
But let's not confuse ourselves here. The University of Pennsylvania
and what they did to the swimmers, like my friend
Paul Scanlon, like Riley Gaines, like other people. What they
did to these people, to these women, stealing their dreams,
making them share a trophy with a biological man who

(05:12):
could not compete against other men.

Speaker 4 (05:14):
He was a loser, and.

Speaker 5 (05:16):
That's why he decided to identify as a female and
then compete against the women and beat them because he's
stronger and bigger and has a package, which while they're
shrinkage in the pool, the package does not shrink enough
to make you a woman. It's just how it works.
I mean, there is shrinkage. We all are aware of that,

(05:37):
We're acutely aware of that. But doesn't shrink so much
that it's not there. He's still there, the package is
still there. There wasn't even a chop off. He didn't
even get the chop off. I mean, and he'd walk
around the locker room and he'd have the you know,
right there. So this is a big win. Riley Gaines
was on with Laura Ingram last night. She and Paul Scanlon.

(05:58):
Paul Scanlon is a family friend of mine. I've known
her for a long time. She's been on my radio
show a lot. She's going to join us today a
little bit after one o'clock here in Fox across America.
But I'm just saying that Riley Gaines and Paul Scalen
and some of the others, they have been the leaders
in all of this.

Speaker 4 (06:11):
They've been the leaders in going out there.

Speaker 5 (06:14):
And getting these heroic women to stand up and say, no,
this is not okay, this is not okay. We cannot
have dudes playing in women's sports. And that's not easy
for college kids. I was a college kid once and
you know the pressure. But these women were brave and

(06:35):
they didn't back down. And good for them for not
backing down. I applaud them for it. It's not easy. You
face a lot of backlash. You get called a hater,
you get called horrible things. Paul Scanlon, when she joins us,
she'll tell us how she was called the racist. She's Asian,
but she was called the racist anyway, and they call
you all the words and you're big and a transphobe.

(06:55):
And let's think about the consequences of this election. Joe
Biden stayed in the race and somehow pulled out a
miracle win, or if Kamala Harris had won.

Speaker 4 (07:07):
Right now, we would be having an entirely.

Speaker 5 (07:09):
Different conversation because you remember what the previous administration was
going to do with Title nine, right They were rewriting
Title nine to say that transgender women i e. Dudes
with songs they can compete against women women. And Title nine,
which was passed by Congress in the seventies, was going

(07:31):
to be rewritten by the executive branch of government to
make all these accommodations for quote unquote transgender women. And
that would have meant the end of women's sports, and
it would have had been across the board, and they
would have done this without Congress by instituting a rule
through the Department of Education. That's what they were trying
to do with Title nine. Now it was stopped by

(07:52):
the court before the election, but had they won, they
would have moved forward with this.

Speaker 4 (07:58):
And had they won, we would not be having this.

Speaker 5 (08:00):
Conversation about the University of Pennsylvania and changing their guidelines
on this and erasing the records of the bio dude
and now acknowledging that men are men and women are
women and saying that men can't be on women's teams
and following actually the law of Title nine that was
passed by Congress. We would not be having that conversation.
Let's understand that no chance what would be having that conversation.

Speaker 4 (08:22):
Pen would dig their heels in.

Speaker 5 (08:23):
They would keep pushing this in the name of equity
and blah blah blah blah blah. And they have an
administration that would be pushing them and go along with it.
But this administration because President Trump one, thank god, came
out on day number one, on day one and said no, no,
this stops.

Speaker 4 (08:38):
Now, this has to end.

Speaker 5 (08:42):
Here's Linda McMahon, the Education Secretary, on with Laura Ingram
last night on The Ingram Angle.

Speaker 4 (08:48):
This is a big, big deal, A huge deal. Cut
number nine.

Speaker 6 (08:52):
This was an incredible day today, Lauren. Thank you so
much for having us on so we can talk about it.
The thanks to President Trump and the Trump administration. What
he campaigned on, what he actually signed an executive order on,
which was that men will not be able to compete
in women's sports, was acknowledged by the University of Pennsylvania.

(09:13):
We've signed an agreement with them, and we hope that
that agreement is going to be a template for other
universities who acknowledge that there is no room for men
and women's sports, not only during the competition, but also
in the locker room and other intimate spaces where these
women were required to be with males who changed in

(09:34):
front of them.

Speaker 1 (09:35):
So this is a big deal.

Speaker 6 (09:37):
The university is apologizing. It is taking away the titles
that were incorrectly given to men.

Speaker 5 (09:43):
Yeah, good, good. Apologize to each and every one of them. Apologize,
But they don't want to do this. Let's understand this.
This is a very reluctant apology. This is the kind
of apology you give when you know it's the only
way you're.

Speaker 4 (09:57):
Going to stop from sleeping on the couch.

Speaker 7 (09:59):
You know what I mean?

Speaker 5 (10:00):
I mean this is this is the I don't want
to sleep on the couch moment, even if you don't
think you've done anything wrong. Every guy knows what I'm
talking about here. There's an apology issued because you don't
want to sleep on the couch anymore for pen That's
what this apology is. They don't really mean it, they
don't believe it, they don't want to be saying it.
Let's not mince words here. They're only doing this because

(10:23):
of the money. They didn't find the light and turn
around and go, oh my god. You know, we just
discovered men are men and women are women. We just
here at the University of Pennsylvania and Ivy League school.
We just figured this out in twenty twenty five, I know, crazy.

Speaker 4 (10:42):
This whole time, we were wrong. We were wrong on
this point.

Speaker 5 (10:46):
We thought that men were women here at this prestigious
Ivy League edgect at school that costs like one hundred
thousand dollars a year to go to. But we just
found this out and we're so sorry that we did
not see this earlier. I had no idea stop. The
views are the same. These colleges would love nothing more

(11:06):
than to continue to allow this practice to continue to
destroy women's sports, but they can't because the President is
not going to let them, Thank God. Here's Riley Gaines
on with Laura last night Cut eight.

Speaker 8 (11:22):
Of course, I'm grateful for Secretary McMahon, for President Trump,
for even Attorney General Bondie. She's been fantastic at the
Department of Justice on this issue. Is an understatement. I
feel vindicated. I feel like pigs are flying. I feel
like hell has frozen over. So it is a fantastic day,
of course, for sanity, for common sense, but I think
more broadly for women, for humanity, for the little girl

(11:45):
that I'm growing inside of me right now that I
will welcome to the world in just a few weeks.
I think of her, I think of her future. That
is what Donald Trump, and of course Secretary McMahon and myself,
that is what we are fighting for. So very very
excited about today's news.

Speaker 5 (12:00):
She should be in congratulations, so Riley Gaines. And she's
fought the good fight on this She's fought it really
really hard. All right, A lot to come on Fox
across America. Let's talk about the whack job running from
mayor of New York City, zoron, ma'am Donnie. Why is
it now affecting the race for governor of New Jersey?

Speaker 4 (12:15):
I consider this to.

Speaker 5 (12:16):
Be an extinction level event for the Democrat Party. I'll
explain it's the only for Fala coming right back.

Speaker 1 (12:24):
The show that's got listeners on Lockdown.

Speaker 9 (12:27):
People that are from prisons, people that are from mental
institutions in Santas.

Speaker 1 (12:33):
He's Box Across America with Jimmy.

Speaker 10 (12:35):
Fala introducing the Cuomo Garden, the Italian restaurant that's hungry
for romance.

Speaker 4 (12:43):
Whether you like it or not. I am not married.
I am elegant.

Speaker 10 (12:49):
Other restaurants are big on social media, but the Cuomo
Garden realies on old school word of mouth marketing.

Speaker 4 (12:56):
You can go find hundreds of pictures of me.

Speaker 10 (13:00):
I see people, and we make sure every guest gets
the hands on treatment they deserve.

Speaker 4 (13:05):
I see that as my job and I'm going to
do it aggressively.

Speaker 10 (13:08):
So don't spend another night overpaying out one of those
fancy restaurants that charges a la car get down to
the Cuobo garden where we always share our breadsticks.

Speaker 11 (13:18):
It is my usual and customary way of greedy unlimited breadsticks.

Speaker 4 (13:25):
By the way, welcome back to Fox Across America with
Jimmy Fayla.

Speaker 5 (13:29):
Jimmy's on vacation or somewhere in prison possibly, I don't know,
but it's rich Zioli in for him today and great
to be with you, and thanks for joining us. And
you can feel free to weigh in at any time
and call the show. And Mikey, what's the number again?
Eight eight eight seven eight eight, go ahead, nine nine

(13:51):
to one zero. I'm not good with numbers, guys. I'm
a words guy, not a numbers guy. I have what
I think is called dyscalcula where I flip numbers around.
I think so like eight six seven five three oh nine, Jenny,
that song I had trouble with in school eight eight
eight seven eight eight ninety nine to ten. All right,
that's how you can get in here on Fox across America. So,
speaking of Cuomo, look, Michael Goodwin has a piece of

(14:14):
the New York Post today. I read this on the
train up to New York, and his whole point is
that Cuomo's their best shot.

Speaker 4 (14:20):
I agree.

Speaker 5 (14:21):
I think the love gov the nursing home serial killer.
As surprising as that is, Look, you got to realize
a couple of things here. First of all, the level
of death that Cuomo caused the nursing homes. To the left,
that's not even enough. They think there's a population problem.
They want more people to die. They would love to
see those numbers quadrupled and exponentially quadrupled. The groping and everything.

(14:46):
This is the same party that elected Bill Clinton. But
the problem is now he's not been nominee. So can
he become the standard bearer or is it going to
be Eric Adams. The Democrat Party cannot let this zoron
Mondami Guy win. His isn't a extinction level event for
the Democrat Party. Starting with the effects you're going to
be felt across the river in New Jersey because in

(15:07):
that race, the Democrat nominee Mikey Cheryl has already come
out and said she supports the goals of ma'am Donnie,
and even even even the great Dana Perino last night
on the Five brought that up and said that, yeah,
you know what, she's handled this terribly, which is similar
to what I said on America's Newsroom Monday morning, which

(15:27):
is that this race is absolutely going to give a
boost to the Republican candidate for governor. Jack should really
who you've heard on this show. Jack is already saying
that Mikey Cheryl is going to embrace the far left,
lunatic politics of Zoram.

Speaker 4 (15:41):
Ma'am, Donnie.

Speaker 5 (15:43):
Here's here's a little montage on him on ICE, just
to give you an example of where he stands on
Immigration Customs Enforcement Cut thirteen.

Speaker 12 (15:51):
We have to stand up and fight back, not to
assist ICE agents in their mission to attack the very
fabric of the city.

Speaker 13 (15:57):
We have won because New Yorkers has such up for
a city they can afford, and it's where the mayor
will use their power to reject Donald Trump's fascism. Bussuck
mass ICE agents from to.

Speaker 4 (16:12):
Forty hour neighbors.

Speaker 12 (16:13):
The NYPD would actually serve New Yorkers and not assist
ICE in their operations. We need immigrant New Yorkers and
Americans across this country to be safe from Trump's ICE agents.

Speaker 5 (16:25):
And here he is saying this is very very key
right now. You should not have billionaires. I don't know
what that means. What do you do with the billionaires? Well,
first of all, if I'm a billionaire, I'm getting a
hell out.

Speaker 4 (16:37):
Of New York.

Speaker 5 (16:37):
That's what I'm doing. But I don't know what that means.
You should not have billionaires? Is that going to get
you to kill him? You're going to confiscate all their wealth? Listen,
don't put a past the guy like this to confiscate
all their wealth.

Speaker 4 (16:50):
Do not.

Speaker 5 (16:50):
They've had these crazy, nutty ideas on the left for
a long time. This is why I say this is
an extinction level event for the Democrat Party because these
kind of ideas are scared cut.

Speaker 4 (17:01):
Nineteen.

Speaker 6 (17:02):
You are a self described democratic socialist.

Speaker 14 (17:05):
Do you think that billionaires have a right to exist?

Speaker 12 (17:09):
I don't think that we should have billionaires because, frankly,
it is so much money in a moment of such inequality,
and ultimately, what we need more of is equality across
our city and across our state and across our country.
And I look forward to work with everyone, including billionaires,
to make a city that is fairer for all of.

Speaker 5 (17:27):
Them, including the billionaires. They're going to make it fairer
for all of them by taking away their money. So
that they want to leave. This is going to be
like Escape from New York. Remember that movie Kurt Russell
Stake Pliskin, great movie, fantastic movie, just saying all right,
we got more to come here and fox across America.
We're just getting started. Where does the one big beautiful
bill stand?

Speaker 4 (17:46):
Is it going to pass?

Speaker 5 (17:47):
They're going to go back to this Senate is going
to be more of a fight on this. We'll talk
about it. Plus question in everybody's mind today is Andrew
Cuomo the love God? Or is Eric Adams going to
be the guy? You don't go away America. Jimmy fails

(18:08):
off today. I know you miss him.

Speaker 1 (18:10):
I do two.

Speaker 4 (18:11):
Don't worry. You're in good hands with me.

Speaker 5 (18:13):
Rich Zioli from Talker to your twelve ten WPHD in Philadelphia,
So Diddy, was it a win or was it not
a win? We're gonna find out. We're gonna talk about it.
We got a guy, we got an expert. It's all
about getting a guy. Gotta have a guy so here
to talk about it with us. David Gelman, he's a
foreign prosecutor. Now he's a defense attorney. Best slogan in.

Speaker 4 (18:32):
All of law.

Speaker 5 (18:33):
Just because you did it doesn't mean you're guilty. Gelman,
Welcome to Fox across America.

Speaker 15 (18:37):
My man, Hey, Rich, you know, I know I'm your guy.

Speaker 1 (18:40):
So let's do this.

Speaker 5 (18:42):
Let's do this exactly. And you got a big day
ahead of you too. You're going on Fox News. You've
got a big day. You're all over the place, You're everywhere.
So you wrote a piece that was written in the
Daily Mail, and you basically predicted that this was the outcome.

Speaker 4 (18:55):
It was going to be.

Speaker 15 (18:57):
Yeah, I'm like, no, stre damis if you think, yes.

Speaker 4 (19:01):
I was just gonna say that. You're you're like nostras.

Speaker 1 (19:04):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (19:04):
Look, you know, and you and I talked about it
yesterday a little bit. I was thinking, like, uh, my
prediction may be wrong when the jury was bringing out
the notes and they were hung on that first count.
But coming back today they you know, it was just
like I called it, where it counts three and five.
The transportation of the prostitution for prostitution purposes. That's what

(19:28):
they got ditty on. And look that's rinky dick. I
mean these are normally that's what it's just called engaging
in prostitution. If this was a state charge, he would
have gotten probation, So I think there's a strong possibility
that the judge may let him out prior to sentencing
on a on a bond, and a very high bond

(19:50):
for that matter. And and you know, he may be
having a like I said, a freak off July fourth.

Speaker 5 (19:56):
Yeah, it would be a July fourth freakoff, as disgusting
as it is.

Speaker 4 (19:59):
But let's go through this for a second here.

Speaker 5 (20:01):
And I want to play a clip here our buddy
Paul Morrow, who right now is all.

Speaker 4 (20:08):
Over the place.

Speaker 5 (20:09):
He said that beating the most serious charge is a
victory for Diddy. I know, you know Paul, so he's
a former cop. Let's get his take on this. Cut
ten of.

Speaker 16 (20:18):
These counts, tarries ten years. This is the Notorious Man Act.

Speaker 4 (20:22):
As many people.

Speaker 8 (20:24):
May have heard.

Speaker 16 (20:24):
It's echoed down through history. It has been famous people.
Charlie Chaplin was charged with this, he beat it. They
got Chuck Berry on this arc. Kelly was charged with this.
So very clearly, what the jury seems to have decided
here is that the prostitution stuff happened, but the rest
of this stuff was not coercive, and in fact it
was transactional. And that seems to be the atmospheric from these,

(20:47):
you know, these verdicts, and you have to say, in
light of what he was looking at, you have to
say that this is pretty close to a victory and
a rare swing and a miss for the Southern District
of New York.

Speaker 5 (21:00):
David Gilman, as a former prosecutor, first of all, explain
to us what the Man Act is.

Speaker 4 (21:05):
And Charlie Chaplin, really, I was not aware about Charlie Chaplin. Yeah,
but the Man Act is.

Speaker 15 (21:11):
It's very simple. It's you're taking your you're getting prostitutes.
You're bringing them across state lines. Now again, it doesn't
matter how you get them. You can get them on
on the Internet and a lot of and that's how
they're getting them a lot of times now because a
lot of prostitution is done online. It's not good going
to the going to the corner in Atlantic City anymore.

(21:32):
So it's a it's a little different now, but that
for the most part, that is the Man Act. It's
a but it's a it's a low charge, it really is.
And Paul got this exactly right. This is a victory
for Diddy, and it's not a small victory. This is
a huge, huge, victory. It just shows that you better
have really good defense attorneys like me who uh, who

(21:55):
are gonna fight for you, because he would not have
gotten this if he had a low, low wroung you know,
defense attorney.

Speaker 1 (22:01):
But Diddy's never going to have that.

Speaker 5 (22:03):
I think it's also important to note that you probably
have very capable prostitutes in your own state. You should
not be importing them from across state lines, because that's
why you get into the federal allegedly. Right of course,
I mean there's there's plenty of wonderful, hardworking prostitutes right

(22:23):
here without having to cross the river. Now, David Gilman,
the Rico stuff, we've talked about this so so Rico
is what they used to go after the mafia and
the mob, and as disgusting as Diddy's behavior was and
the freak offs and everything else, look clearly they did
not prove any of this was not consensual. So they
got him on transportation over state lines, big big whoop,

(22:45):
But the southern District of New York. And that was
Moro's point, right, It's a rare miss swing and a
miss for them, coss taxpayers a lot of money, and
they overcharged him here in a big, big way, because
you've been saying for months now, and mister Ostra Domus,
David Gelman, you've been saying for months, there's no way
they're going to be able to prove the case that

(23:05):
this is Rico, that this is racketeering, that this is
this is the kind of conspiracy, that that is so
broad and so vast that we've used it to take
down people like John Gotti Bingo.

Speaker 15 (23:17):
I mean, look, nobody understands what Rico is.

Speaker 4 (23:21):
Attorney.

Speaker 5 (23:24):
Oh think we lost him. He froze up. He might
be a good attorney, but he's got a bad Wi
Fi connection.

Speaker 4 (23:32):
That happens. We'll try to get him back, but it's
the worst.

Speaker 5 (23:36):
By the way, the worst thing in the world is
when you're doing an interview and the audio goes out.
It's the worst. Or the camera freezes. And happened to
me two weeks ago on Laura Ingram show. She came
to me and she started talking and I didn't hear
her in my headphones at all. I didn't hear in
my earpiece. It is the worst feeling in the world

(23:59):
because you have no in that moment, and all you
can do is just pray to God, they come back
to you. They didn't come back to me, But I'm
coming back to David Gelman. All right, you're back, Yelman,
I'm back.

Speaker 1 (24:10):
I don't know what happened.

Speaker 4 (24:10):
I don't know what happened.

Speaker 1 (24:11):
Maybe it was Rico. I don't know.

Speaker 4 (24:13):
Pay your freaking Comcast bill? Will you all right?

Speaker 1 (24:16):
My bad?

Speaker 5 (24:16):
So you're in your law office there in South Jersey
because you got a bank vault door behind you. I've
been in your office before. That is the coolest office.
Do you want to share with everybody what's behind that
door or is that something I.

Speaker 15 (24:29):
Listen, I'm not going to do it for anybody, but
I'm going to do it for you because you're in
for Jimmy. All right, and let's start a secret. But
this is my little vault.

Speaker 4 (24:38):
Check this out.

Speaker 5 (24:40):
This is an actual old bank that David Gelman converted
into his law office in South Jersey.

Speaker 1 (24:47):
Yep.

Speaker 15 (24:48):
Now, behind there, we have a nice little cigar lounge.

Speaker 1 (24:52):
We have a bar. We got a lot of stuff there.

Speaker 15 (24:56):
And also, if at the end of the world happens,
you and I were going in there, we're gonna have
a lot of booze and we'll have some food and
we'll hopefully be all right.

Speaker 5 (25:04):
I think that is the coolest thing, and we're I'm
going to tell Abby Horn a second about that, because
she's gonna be on the show a little bit later,
because she does a whole thing on bunkers. She got
a whole Fox Nation special on that that literally literally
is a bunker.

Speaker 4 (25:15):
And even though it's not underground. I mean, that's how
many inches of thick steel is that you think? I
mean concrete? And you know, yeah, look at that. That's
a lot.

Speaker 5 (25:26):
Diddy would love to have a freak off in there.
I have no interest in doing freak offs or anything
like that.

Speaker 15 (25:32):
Maybe I'll rent it to him because he's you know,
and I could pay for my electric bill that way too,
so it could work out.

Speaker 1 (25:38):
Well.

Speaker 4 (25:39):
He's he's probably broken now.

Speaker 5 (25:40):
I mean, how much you think this defense cost him
if you had, if you had a ball off this in.

Speaker 15 (25:44):
All honesty, it's probably twenty twenty five million.

Speaker 1 (25:49):
Really, yeah, easily think about it.

Speaker 15 (25:53):
He's been locked up for ten months now, all right,
So he and he hired the attorneys before being charged
because he obviously knew he was going to be charged.
So the retainer fee for that is ridiculous. And then
when you have a trial and trials, look, you.

Speaker 1 (26:07):
You have all hands on deck.

Speaker 15 (26:10):
I can't imagine the time sheets that the attorneys had
to do. So and I'm being and I think twenty
million is probably very realistic. He had I think five
or six attorneys just in the main gallery, not all
the other individuals who were doing all the plea forms
and the briefs and all that kind of stuff. So yeah,

(26:30):
twenty million, I think it's easy.

Speaker 1 (26:32):
But look, did he has the money?

Speaker 5 (26:34):
Oh yeah, I mean he's got the money. Obviously. If
you had to estimate what this cost the tax payers
to get him on essentially now transporting hookers over state lines,
if you had to estimate that in your experience as
a former prosecutor, and again we don't know, so you
could ballpark it for us.

Speaker 4 (26:51):
But what do you think it is? Not we lost
his audio again? Yeah, I got you, go ahead, Okay.

Speaker 15 (26:59):
Oh, I think at least twenty if not more million.
Think about this is an investigation that happened for years,
years and years, So the amount of resources that the
SDNY put into this is beyond imaginable. I would be shocked.
I mean, I gotta tell you the government right now,

(27:20):
they're having a drink. The defense attorneys are having a
drink as well, but both for definitely different reasons.

Speaker 1 (27:26):
That's all I can say.

Speaker 4 (27:28):
Some drink to remember, some drink to forget.

Speaker 5 (27:30):
Right now, President Donald Trump was asked and this is
a flashback.

Speaker 4 (27:35):
I want to play for you, David.

Speaker 5 (27:36):
This is a cut number eleven and David Gelman's with
us here on Fox across America. Zioli for Fala and
the three of us. Sometimes me and Fala and Gelman
get on text chains. It's I hope to god never
get brought up in a Rico case at some point
in the future. But if we do, we got a guy,
and that is President Trump, will hopefully at least pardon
one of us. You are a member of Trump National

(27:57):
Golf Club. Here's the President talking about Diddy cut A.

Speaker 9 (28:00):
First of all, i'd look at what's happening, and I
haven't been watching it too closely, although it's certainly getting
a lot of coverage. I haven't seen him. I haven't
spoken to him in years.

Speaker 12 (28:12):
He used to really like.

Speaker 9 (28:13):
Me a lot, but I think when I ran for politics,
he'd sort of that relationship busted up from what I read.

Speaker 6 (28:19):
I don't know.

Speaker 9 (28:20):
He didn't tell me that, but I'd read some little
bit nasty statements in the paper all of a sudden.
You know, it's different. You've become a much different person
when you run for politics and you do what's right.
I could do other things, and I'm sure he'd like me,
and I'm sure other people would like me, but it
wouldn't be as good for our country.

Speaker 1 (28:37):
As we said.

Speaker 9 (28:37):
Our country's doing really well because of what we're doing,
so I can't It's not a popularity contest, So I
don't know. I would certainly look at the facts. If
I think somebody was mistreated, whether they like me or
don't like me, it wouldn't have any impact on it.

Speaker 5 (28:52):
Now politically, I wouldn't advise the president to part and
did he in this sense, but doesn't even really need
a part in because to your point earlier, this.

Speaker 4 (28:59):
Is kind of what he got here is like, no
big whoop.

Speaker 5 (29:02):
When is sentencing and what does the man act violation
which they got him guilty on two counts? What kind
of sentence could he potentially be looking at?

Speaker 15 (29:10):
Yeah, I don't think the president, well, I don't. Number one,
I don't think he would pardon Ditty, especially because Diddy
went out against him in the last election, in the
election before that. But also, you know when Diddy is
going to be sentence right, which will be probably two
three months away, you know, he might be getting a
time serve sentence, or in the alternative, he may get

(29:32):
a couple more months. And when he is sentenced, and
if he has to do more time, he's not going
to be at that terrible prison that he's at right now.
He's going to be at a minimum security prison or
maybe in like a halfway house something like that. So
I don't think that you know, Diddy's going to be
doing much more time.

Speaker 1 (29:49):
I know that the.

Speaker 15 (29:52):
That the max is ten years on each count.

Speaker 5 (29:55):
We let me not to interrupt you, but just to
jump in. Can I play Devil's Advocate with you for
a second? But what if the judge thinks this guy
is such a scumbag?

Speaker 17 (30:03):
Uh?

Speaker 5 (30:04):
They could improve these charges, but I want to throw
the book at him because I know he's a bad
guy and I know that he's he's a creep.

Speaker 4 (30:11):
Can can the judge do that?

Speaker 1 (30:14):
Technically?

Speaker 15 (30:14):
Yeah, the judge can do anything he wants, but you
have sentencing guidelines okay for this, all right, and the
guidelines are going to be pretty low. He has no
criminal record, believe it or not, he doesn't have. These
are not violent offenses, even though there was a lot
of evidence showing that their violence did occur, and as
first time offenders and all the time served. I think

(30:35):
he's going to have a very difficult time getting Diddy
to get hit get the max. And if he does,
it's going to be appealed.

Speaker 4 (30:43):
Oh, you can appeal the sentence.

Speaker 15 (30:45):
He's going to Oh, definitely anything. You can appeal anything
in this country, so it doesn't matter.

Speaker 4 (30:50):
I love that you can appeal anything, Just appeal it,
appeal anything. Eh, find you?

Speaker 1 (30:56):
They do it?

Speaker 15 (30:57):
And obviously did he showed us again?

Speaker 1 (30:59):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (30:59):
Well obviously where can people find you if they get
involved in a freak off and need an attorney to
help them get off? God, it did not sound good
in any way, shape or form. That nothing about what
I just said sounded good. You should just dump that
whole phrase. Where can people find you?

Speaker 4 (31:14):
Gelvin?

Speaker 15 (31:15):
You can go to Gelman Law Firm dot com and
I'm on the X now it's a David Gelman ESQ.

Speaker 5 (31:21):
All Right, buddy, I have fun in America reports, give
them my best, and we'll talk to you again soon.
This is Fox across America is the only for Falua.

Speaker 4 (31:28):
We're coming right back.

Speaker 2 (31:30):
The critics have spoken, well, that was probably you're listening
to Fox Across America with Jimmy Dale.

Speaker 4 (31:38):
Oh yeah, Fox across America. Great to be with you today.

Speaker 5 (31:44):
You can follow me on x at Rich Zioli if
you want to make any comments. You can also call
the show eighty eight seven eight eight ninety nine ten.
That's how you reach us. But it's great to be
in for my radio buddy and yours Jimmy Fayaler. And
I'll be back tomorrow. Maybe, I mean I'm supposed to be.

Speaker 4 (32:00):
It's very possibly after today's show they say absolutely not
get out and don't come back. It's highly likely.

Speaker 5 (32:06):
But in the as of right now anyway, I'm scheduled
to be with you again tomorrow. So good for you,
lucky for all of us together, and hopefully we'll have
some more chaos because normally in I remember a time
in radio when this was the week you would talk condiments.
You would talk condiments. Is it fourth of July? So
you'd have conversations with callers about this. Do you like relish?

Speaker 4 (32:28):
Do you put ketchup on a hot dog?

Speaker 5 (32:31):
Or to quote Clint Eastwood, dirty Harry, no man, no one,
and I mean no one puts ketchup on a hot dog.
Those are the kind of conversations you used to have.
That's not what you have in the Trump era.

Speaker 4 (32:41):
No, no, no.

Speaker 5 (32:41):
In the Trump era, every day is a torpedo of
news coming at you. So you could talk about the
fact that I, for example, think mayonnaise is a highly
underrated condiment.

Speaker 1 (32:53):
I do.

Speaker 4 (32:54):
Look, ever since I saw pulp fiction, I've long believed
that mayonnaise does belong on a burger and that you
should drown your French frise in him. They blank and
drown him in those things.

Speaker 5 (33:03):
I'm just saying that was the kind of stuff of
summer talk radio in a bygone error. But this president
doesn't slow down. He didn't stop. He literally does not stop.
He's a machine. So he keeps going and going and
going and then affecting the news cycle accordingly. And while
we were thinking that maybe they'd have the one big
beautiful bill passed, sent it to his desk on the

(33:25):
fourth of July, he signs it.

Speaker 4 (33:26):
Everybody goes to their parades, all have their fun. No,
not even close.

Speaker 5 (33:32):
It's a battle right now in the House of Representatives
over the One Big Beautiful Bill.

Speaker 4 (33:36):
It's a big battle because we're.

Speaker 5 (33:38):
Talking about five trillion dollars potentially of new debt. But
there's some people that dispute that and say that that's
not accurate, that's a fugazy number. This is where we
are right now, going into the fourth of July weekend,
having an intra party battle over the One Big Beautiful Bill.

(33:59):
And I'm not shorts going to pass the House in
the Forum of the Senate sent it in because I
heard several conservative members in the House of Representatives say
this bill's dead and arrival, Chip Roy, Andy Harris, and
Maryland a couple others dead. And one thing that I
do know, as an Italian who loves to cook, is
that if you ever spill salt, you better pick that

(34:22):
up and throw some over your shoulder or it's bad luck.
I'm a superstitious man, That's what I do. But the
kind of salt we're talking about this July fourth weekend
is not do you salt your ground beef patties before
or after they go on the grill before. No, No, we're
talking about state and local tax deduction. That's what I mean.

(34:44):
We're talking about salt state and local tax deduction of
forty thousand dollars and whether or not that's gonna survive,
because if you don't keep that in there, you're gonna
lose all these Republicans in red blue states, in red districts,
guys like Mike wa New York and others who said
that comes out it's a deal breaker. So this is

(35:05):
what they're battling right now in the House of Representatives
on pre fourth of July weekend. Whether or not they'll
be able to fix this in time. I mean, it's
something's gonna happen. That's the good news. Here's what I
promise you. I guarantee you they will absolutely come up
with something. I'm almost I'm also going to guarantee you're
not gonna like it.

Speaker 4 (35:26):
We're all gonna get stuck with it.

Speaker 5 (35:28):
But they have to make the Trump tax cuts permanent period.
They have to, so they will pick something will pass.
It's just a matter of when, and it's a matter
of how ugly this thing is ultimately gonna wind up being.
But they have to make the Trump tax cuts permanent,
or we are royally royally screwed.

Speaker 4 (35:49):
It's Fox across America.

Speaker 5 (35:51):
It's Rich Zioli for Jimmy Fayla talk about Pennsylvania and
the fact that men or men and.

Speaker 4 (35:57):
Women are women. Paula Scalon joins me straight ahead.

Speaker 2 (36:11):
From Embry Where USA. It's Fox Across America with Jimmy Fayla.

Speaker 4 (36:17):
Oh Hot, damn, Hot, damn.

Speaker 5 (36:19):
I feel like I gotta say that every time I
feel in for Jimmy. It's Rich Zioli from WPHD and
Philadelphia in for your buddy and mine, Jimmy Fayla, the
King of Saturday Night, who is taking a long, well
deserved prison sentence.

Speaker 4 (36:33):
I don't have noidy where he is, but I don't
even really care.

Speaker 5 (36:35):
What I do care about, though, is the fact that
there was a huge, huge victory yesterday for common sense
and for women and here to join us talk about
it with us, My friend and yours.

Speaker 4 (36:48):
Paula Scanlon.

Speaker 5 (36:49):
She's a swimmer, was a swimmer at the University of Pennsylvania,
and she's here with us here on Fox across America. Paula,
thanks for making time today, my friend.

Speaker 4 (36:57):
How are you I'm good.

Speaker 18 (36:59):
Thank you so much for having me on today.

Speaker 5 (37:01):
Yeah, you're everywhere. You were on America's newsroom this morning.

Speaker 4 (37:04):
How'd that go?

Speaker 18 (37:05):
I thought it was pretty fun. It was, you know,
always exciting to be on set.

Speaker 4 (37:09):
You gotta be on Setna, Yeah.

Speaker 18 (37:11):
I gotta be on set live here in New York.

Speaker 19 (37:13):
Had to rush back from DC because obviously I was
there for the big announcement yesterday. I gave a few remarks,
which was obviously, you know, a surreal experience.

Speaker 18 (37:21):
There really is no other way to describe that.

Speaker 19 (37:23):
But again, the Trump administration is just continuing to do
exactly what I voted for.

Speaker 4 (37:28):
All right, So what did you say yesterday? I'd be
a big event when the Education Secretary Lenn McMahon made
the announcement.

Speaker 19 (37:35):
Yeah, so I just went over and summarized really what
the University of Pennsylvania did to us female athletes and
why they needed to apologize. Honestly, I think an apology
with them is really just to start. I'm very curious
to see with how they phrase it. Are they going
to give the apology that just says I'm sorry you
were offended, or are they going to actually say we

(37:56):
were in the wrong, and we are genuinely sorry for
the harm that we put you into.

Speaker 18 (38:02):
I'm good. I'm curious which which route they're going to
go here.

Speaker 19 (38:04):
But the biggest thing is just showing how strong the
Trump administration is on their leadership here by doing exactly
what they've done with the University of Pennsylvania.

Speaker 18 (38:12):
It shows that they are doers. They do get things done,
they do deliver.

Speaker 19 (38:16):
On promises, and that is a I think the really
the biggest takeaway I took from the entire announcement yesterday.

Speaker 5 (38:21):
I agree with you. I just don't think penn is sincere.
I think they're doing this because they don't want to
lose money. They don't believe this, they don't mean it.
So even if they apologize to you, Paula Scanlon, and
they should, I don't believe their apology. It's it's a
fake apology. It's it's an apology. It's a forced apology,
is what it is. It's like when I make my
five year old apologize to her sister for hitting her.
She doesn't mean it, she doesn't want to apologize, but

(38:44):
she has to otherwise she's going to time out.

Speaker 18 (38:47):
Yeah, you know, I think it's gonna it's going to
be one of those things.

Speaker 19 (38:50):
But what I will say, though, is it shows some
level of accountability. So whether or not the University of
Pennsylvania agrees with it or truly believes that they're saying it,
shows that there's this starting accountability here, and other schools
will say, well, wait a minute, if the University of
Pennsylvania made the decision to bend the knee, come to
the negotiation table at the Trump administration, what are we
missing here?

Speaker 18 (39:10):
Are they onto something? Should we do the same thing?

Speaker 19 (39:12):
And it'll really start that process of getting some of
these other institutions and start thinking about these things again.

Speaker 18 (39:17):
I think the most fascinating part about all.

Speaker 19 (39:19):
Of this is the difference between Harvard and penn We're
really seeing the tale of two Ivy League schools going on.

Speaker 18 (39:25):
One that's saying, yes, Trump.

Speaker 19 (39:27):
Administration, you got it, will do exactly what you say,
and Harvard, who's saying, you know, doubling down on their
stances on a lot of the things they've gotten in
trouble for and just continuing to just say, no, we're
always right, We've always been right.

Speaker 4 (39:39):
Screw you, screw you.

Speaker 5 (39:41):
Paula Scalon's with us here, on Fox across America. She
swam at penn Your story and I know it well,
especially broadcasting out of Philadelphia.

Speaker 4 (39:50):
But for those that don't.

Speaker 5 (39:51):
Know, what was it like being on that team, dealing
with a dude who was pretending to be a woman,
and a university and an NCAA that said you were
the problem if you had an issue with this.

Speaker 18 (40:04):
Yeah, I quickly summarized it.

Speaker 19 (40:06):
I mean, I'm sure many people are familiar with this story,
but Leah Thomas formerly William Thomas, was a member of
the men's team for three years quite literally woke up
one day and.

Speaker 18 (40:15):
Decided he wanted to be a woman, joined the women's swim.

Speaker 19 (40:17):
Team, quickly broke records in every event that he swam,
was undressing in our locker room eighteen times.

Speaker 18 (40:23):
Yeah, week that we were on that team.

Speaker 19 (40:26):
You know, as soon as he started smashing all these
records and the media started getting involved, the University of
Pennsylvania sent a bunch of administrators to speak to us,
and in this meeting, they told us we were big
at it and hateful if we objected to him being
on the team.

Speaker 18 (40:38):
They told us we would never be able to find
a job if we.

Speaker 19 (40:41):
Objected to him competing and undressing in our locker room.

Speaker 18 (40:44):
They even tried to tell us that if we didn't want.

Speaker 19 (40:46):
To undress with a six foot four tall, fully grown man,
that it was equivalent to not wanting to undress with
someone based on their race in the nineteen sixties. And
then the last thing that he told us in this
little meeting was, well, everything we've said, that's not enough
for you. You are the problem. Here is the number
for an on campus counselor. Please go make an appointment

(41:06):
because you need therapy.

Speaker 5 (41:09):
I mean, that's insane, that's insane, Paula. But that's where
we were heading. And I said this earlier in the
show that if the if Biden had won or Harrison
had won, they would continue they would have continued down
that road of title nine, of rewriting it and saying
that biological men should be able to walk around schlangs
out and everything in the locker room and take away

(41:30):
the trophies from you. I know, you guys had to
share the trophy with him. I mean, it was ridiculous,
but that's where we were headed. So yes, the credit
goes to President Trump. The credit goes to Linda McMahon.
For finally dealing with this. But I gotta say the
credit goes to you, my friend, and Riley Gaines and
others who have been brave enough to speak out, because
it's not easy, especially when you're you're young and you're

(41:52):
in college or you're right after college, and you get
called all kinds of names, like, for example, I know
this because you've told me this before, you were called
the racist in addition to being called a sexist at
a transphobe.

Speaker 18 (42:05):
Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 19 (42:06):
I mean, there's really no name I haven't been called
at this point, and now it's kind of funny. And
so I was, you know, I was looking back. Yesterday
was a very full circle moment. It was very reflective
for me.

Speaker 18 (42:16):
I mean, obviously it was something I'd worked so hard of.

Speaker 19 (42:18):
It's something I never really thought would happen, that there
would be an opportunity for me to be invited into
the White House to speak about my experience at the
University of Pennsylvania. I was looking for the memories of
when I was really in the depths of going through this,
and that was December of twenty twenty one when this
really started to explode, and I actually posted a screenshot
of a text message I received from a teammate of

(42:40):
mine calling me a transphobe, saying.

Speaker 18 (42:42):
That I disgusted her.

Speaker 19 (42:44):
And it's so funny because they all use the exact
same language. I mean, I can't even get an original insult.
And the rare time someone insults me and it's original, honestly,
I'll give it a like because I'll say, you know what,
it might be hurtful and offensive, and you might be
bullying me or whatever, but at least you have an
original thought for other time they're saying the exact same thing,
same words.

Speaker 4 (43:04):
Props for your originality, That's all I can give you
for that, Paula, What what What's next? I mean, what's next?
On the journey? This battle is not over.

Speaker 5 (43:13):
I mean, this was a win, and it's a big
win because getting the University of Pennsylvania to acknowledge at
menner men women are women, to take away the titles
of will gains, to erase it, to apologize to you,
to apologize to your fellow female athletes. It's a big deal.
And I don't want to understate that it's a huge,
huge deal. But the war continues, does it not?

Speaker 15 (43:35):
Yeah?

Speaker 18 (43:35):
You know, really, this is truly just a first step.

Speaker 19 (43:38):
I mean, New York City of Pennsylvania has agreed to
fix the record boards, meaning Leah Thomas is not a
women's team record holder. Okay, but what about the three
pool records that Thomas has at Harvard? What about the
NCAA championship. I mean a lot of these things are
not mentioned in the negotiation with Penn and the Trump administration,
and those things need to be fixed.

Speaker 18 (43:57):
I mean, the problem is that you don't you can
undo the past.

Speaker 19 (44:01):
Who's to say if the girl who would have competed
in that final wasn't going to win the event outright
or place last. I mean, you can't know what would
have happened or what could have happened in these situations,
and so there's so much that needs to be fixed.
But I think ultimately we're just continuing to fight this
and continuing to say no, men.

Speaker 18 (44:17):
Don't belong in women's sports.

Speaker 19 (44:19):
This big major university is now realizing and admitting their
fault in that. I'd love to see other universities have
the same stance, because Penn is not the only offender
of allowing a man on a team. It might be
the most notable one, but it's certainly not the only
one that's that's done this and subjected girls to this,
and even stories we probably haven't even heard of it,
even smaller schools or places in more rural areas. I mean,

(44:40):
this is really widespread and we have to continue pushing back.
But this is the last thing I will say about
this is this is a good first step, and I
am excited and I'm grateful to the chop of administration
for getting this done.

Speaker 5 (44:51):
You know, Paul, I was telling our mutual friend Dana
Perino yesterday that you're working really hard now to flip
New Jersey red in your other capacity working with early
vote Action, And I said, one of the ramifications of
all of this has been that it's for a lot
of young people watching this, going through this, did you
feel a change, Like were you political before this? Or

(45:14):
did this light of fire in you this experience that
maybe would not have been lit otherwise.

Speaker 19 (45:22):
I probably the exception. I actually was political. I was
in college Republicans before any of this ever happened. I
was always you know, actually I was in a high
school when Trump got elected. I saw all the crazy
things the teachers tried to say. I mean, I actually
got kicked out of class for simply saying our checks
and balances in the government, because after Trump got elected.

Speaker 18 (45:40):
My teacher refused to teach class because she was sobbing.

Speaker 19 (45:42):
And I was like, Oh, I understand you don't like
the president, but what about the other branches of government,
the other elected officials that you rely on.

Speaker 18 (45:49):
Apparently unacceptable to say.

Speaker 19 (45:51):
That in a high school in Connecticut, and I was
kicked out of class, and so that really opened my
personal journey on the political you know, my political belief
So I was always on this side of the aisle.
But I know many female athletes that have been pushed
over by this, and I know a lot of people
that even are Democrats, lifelong Democrats, that have left their
party over this issue.

Speaker 18 (46:10):
And so that's really what we're seeing.

Speaker 19 (46:12):
And I'm very curious to see not just at the
local level, the federal level, or wherever, but I'm curious
to see how the Democrat.

Speaker 18 (46:18):
Party will regroup. Now.

Speaker 19 (46:20):
Are they going to double down on this or are
they going to adjust to match even their own voter base,
because even the New York Times says that sixty seven
percent of Democrats don't even agree with men and women's sports,
and sixty seven percent of Democrats are probably actually even
celebrating the announcement that was made yesterday.

Speaker 4 (46:35):
Yeah, you know, I remember the moment.

Speaker 5 (46:37):
It was I think three or four years ago when
these two women I know who are involved in a
drowning prevention organization and they're not Trump fans in any way,
shape or form, but one is a big Democrat and
the others kind of a Republican who just doesn't like Trump.
But they both said, this is outrageous what these swimmers

(46:59):
have gone through, meaning you and Riley and others, and
they were furious at this. And that's when that was
that AHA moment for me when I said, you know,
I bet you suburban moms are feeling the exact same way.
And I just anecdotally started asking, and it was everyone
I talked to you said the same thing. It's ridiculous that,
you know, my little girl will spend all this time

(47:21):
and the sacrifices to get there to then lose.

Speaker 4 (47:24):
To a dude.

Speaker 5 (47:26):
Because Paula, to get to where you were as a
collegiate level NCAA Division one swimmer, it wasn't like you
just jumped in a pool. A couple times you had
to sacrifice so many years of your life when other
people were out partying and doing other things.

Speaker 4 (47:41):
Right, definitely.

Speaker 19 (47:43):
I mean I can't tell you how many times I
had to say no to a social plan on a
Friday night because we had early Saturday morning practice.

Speaker 18 (47:49):
Waking up three times.

Speaker 19 (47:50):
A week in high school to go to a five
am practice, showing up at the crack of dawn it's
dark out. My dad had to drive me before I
got my license. I go there, I you know, get
soaking wet in the pool. It's winter. I have to
go to school immediately after that and sit in a
classroom for eight hours and then go right back to practice.
I mean, I can't tell you how many times they

(48:10):
did that. But it was worth it to get into college,
to have this opportunity to continue my athletic career, to
work at something, to be part of a team. And
I got to college and it really left a bad
taste in my mouth, and people ask me all the time,
you know, as a former college athletes often struggle once
they graduate because they you know, it was really easy
for me to move on because I said, oh my gosh,
I you know, real world to take me.

Speaker 18 (48:32):
On I don't want to have a man in my
locker room anymore. This is a blessing.

Speaker 19 (48:35):
And so it did, in a way feel like it
was a really sad ending almost to my athletic career.
But at this point in time, and after all the
work I've done, I know I was on the right
side of history.

Speaker 18 (48:45):
I was not on the wrong one, like my university
tried to tell me.

Speaker 19 (48:47):
But also that I was put on this team for
a reason, and really the situation had to happen the
way that it did for people to really open their
eyes and for Trump to get elected in for all
of these other wins that we've been able to get
on the books.

Speaker 4 (48:59):
Well, keep it a good fight, my friend. You're doing great.
You're a rock star.

Speaker 5 (49:02):
Follow Paula on social media at Paula Why Scanlon.

Speaker 4 (49:06):
We'll talk again soon. Congratulations, Thank you. It's Fox Across
America's the only for Fala coming right back. Do not
go away.

Speaker 1 (49:15):
As you're listening to the host who won't back down.

Speaker 2 (49:19):
He is white, but he can fight Box across America
with Jimmy Fayla.

Speaker 4 (49:25):
This is exciting stuff.

Speaker 5 (49:29):
We it's exciting stuff, big stuff on Fox Across America
with Jimmy Fayla. Jimmy is off today, but it's me,
rich Z, the only with you. Great to be with you,
great to hang with you, and great to be here.
And we have our guests coming in. Out of curiosity,
just thinking about that, Mikey, Mikey, do we have our
guests coming in?

Speaker 4 (49:49):
Is he's still with us?

Speaker 14 (49:52):
He's coming in? Next segment?

Speaker 4 (49:53):
Okay, next segment, guys, one thirty five. I can't read
thirty five after the hour, not twenty five after the hour.
You think I would pay attention more.

Speaker 5 (50:04):
All right, So, as we're talking about a bunch of
things here, and this is very exciting, I just want
to mention the bo and big beautiful bill and where
it stands right now in the house, and it's ugly in.

Speaker 4 (50:13):
So many ways.

Speaker 5 (50:14):
Look, there's an old saying. You've heard this saying before.
Nobody wants to see the sausage made. I disagree with that.
I actually, as an Italian, love seeing sausage made. I
make sausage I do. It's not that hard to make
your own sausage homemade. It really is not. I highly
recommend it if you get the chance to do it.
You just need a little sage, little garlic, you know, salt, pepper.

(50:34):
But when it comes to a bill that sausage, making
that sausage is ugly and horrific, and you do not
want to go anywhere near making that sausage. And this
is where we are right now. Can there are two
sides of the Republican Party come together. And by the
two sides, I mean you've got the Conservative Freedom Caucus
and you have the people that want to see the
salt deduction. And now the other fight, which is over

(50:56):
the Medicaid tax reimbursement, with some calling a scale and
others saying it's going to destroy royal hospitals. Nothing is
more boring than getting into the details of this bill.

Speaker 4 (51:08):
Nothing.

Speaker 5 (51:09):
But at the same time, if we don't get this done,
then our taxes are going up. That's the bottom line.
Your taxes and mine are going up, and it's going
to be the biggest tax increase in American history.

Speaker 4 (51:22):
Bottom line. Now here's the good news.

Speaker 5 (51:26):
As much as this bill sinks, it has to get
done because of the tax increases. Tom Emmer of Minnesota
said that, well, listen, it's going to get done in
some way. He's the House majority whip cut number four.

Speaker 11 (51:39):
President wants the bill as is, wants it on his
desk by Independence Day. He wants to sign this thing
and deliver on the promises that he made to the
American people. And if you look at the bill, it
basically is eighty five percent of what the House sent over.
So there are some changes, but I think there are
changes that the President has adopted. He likes the bill.

(52:01):
He wants the bill passed. We're going to get it
done tomorrow.

Speaker 5 (52:04):
Okay, today, that's today, because he said that, So that
means that today tomorrow they're gonna get it done.

Speaker 4 (52:11):
That's a big deal. If they can do that.

Speaker 5 (52:12):
If they can do that, that's a huge, huge deal.
I just don't know if they can get it done
today or tomorrow. I really I don't know. Harry Enton,
pollster from CNN. Apparently Americans hate this bill. That's the
problem with doing big bills is that there's a lot
to hate in them. But understand this, The reason why
they have to do it this way is because they're
trying to avoid the sixty vote.

Speaker 4 (52:34):
Threshold in the Senate.

Speaker 5 (52:35):
So they're trying to cram everything into this one bill
that can pass with a simple majority and not require
the sixty votes, because there's no way they can get
sixty votes. They can barely get fifty one votes. They
had to use the vice president to break a tie cut.

Speaker 4 (52:48):
Seven.

Speaker 20 (52:49):
What are we talking about here? Well, why don't we
take a look at the big beautiful bill. I got
four or five five, not just four five different polls
across the screen for you. This is the net favorite rating.
The highest rating comes from the Washington Post at minus
nineteen points. How about Pugh minus twenty points, how about
Fox minus twenty one, Pinnipiac minus twenty six and k
f F takes the cake at minus twenty nine points.

(53:11):
When you have a bill who's net favorable rating ranges
from minus nineteen points, which is already terrible, all the
way to minus twenty nine points. The bottom line is
the American people don't see this as a big beautiful bill.
They see it as a big bad bill.

Speaker 4 (53:25):
They hate it, hate it, hate it, hate it, hate it,
hate it. I get it, I do, I understand.

Speaker 5 (53:33):
And let me tell you why it's so awful Because
you have Republicans in blue states who need to keep
their seats, and the majority is so slim that you
can't lose more than one or two of them in
the House.

Speaker 4 (53:48):
And this is the problem. So what you have now
is you have a real ideological battle, but also a
political reality of talenties Republicans lose their seats. More to
come on this as we continue.

Speaker 5 (54:00):
But Johnny Joey Jones, the man himself, New York Times
best selling author, my guest straight ahead here in Fox
Across America.

Speaker 21 (54:21):
Jimmy Fayla and Fox Across America on sevent tenor.

Speaker 4 (54:28):
Yeah, Fox across America. Great to be with you today.

Speaker 5 (54:33):
It's rich Ze only from twelve ten WPHD in Philadelphia.
So the socialist whack job man Domi extinction level event
for the Democrats. And I'll tell you the first casualty. Ready,
the first casualty is going to be the New Jersey
governor's race because mikey Ryl, who's a Democrat nominee, has
said she supports the goals of Man Dommy. What the

(54:56):
hell does that mean? His goals are the eradication of billionaires.
His goals are to take over grocery stores, to take
over the means of production. His goals are to not
condemn globalize, the Antifada, I mean, like, are you kidding me?
And so Jack Chitdarelli, who's a Republican nominee for governor,

(55:16):
has a really really strong chance now because you see,
prior to ma'am Domi man Dommi becoming the nominee, Mikey,
Cheryl the Democrat was going to try to make this
entire race a referendum on Donald Trump. That was her
entire goal. She was going to make this governor's race
a referendum on Trump. Now Chitdarelli gets to make the

(55:37):
race a referendum on ideas because the Democrat Party, this
is not your dad's Democrat Party, this is not your
mom's Democrat Party. This is a Democrat party that is
now nominated a socialist kook to be the mayor of
the biggest city in America. And look, I'm not saying
this from the perspective of sounding like some kind of

(55:59):
a East co snob, but New York gets the most
attention of any city in America, good or bad the mayor.
It's a huge, huge office. This is not some podunk town.
This is this is New York City. It's the biggest
city in the country in terms of population. And also
attention that you've just nominated a guy who is a

(56:20):
avowed socialist.

Speaker 4 (56:21):
He says, he's not a communist. I don't know what
the difference is. I'm treated a.

Speaker 5 (56:24):
Democrat, socialist and a communist. Because they asked him to go,
Are you're a communist? He goes, no, I'm not a communist. Well,
because you don't live in a commune.

Speaker 4 (56:31):
Is that it?

Speaker 5 (56:32):
If you move it into a commune and you started
baking your own bread, would that make you a communist?

Speaker 4 (56:37):
Because your ideas are the same.

Speaker 5 (56:40):
Are you going to not live in Gracie mansion if
you're elected mayor, you're going to live in a tent
in a communal tent in Central Park. That's not men's
words here, Democrats, socialist, communist, Marxist, it's all the same.
Jack Chitarelli running for governor of New Jersey and Republicans
written large now get to say this is who the
Democrat Party has become.

Speaker 4 (56:59):
You know this, this is the party now we're an
avowed socialist, a guy who refuses to condemn the phrase
globalize the indifi who has said anti Semitic things, that's
now the standard bearer in the biggest city in America.
That is going to make people think.

Speaker 5 (57:19):
You know, there was a time when the Democrat Party,
at least let's go to the nineties for a second,
Bill Clinton, they tried to say, we're a new kind
of Democrat party. We're the Democrat Party that is, we
are there for the working people. Bill Clinton himself was
the one out there talking about workfair. Remember welfare, workfair.
We're gonna have workfare. You have to be able bodied.

(57:42):
If you're able body, you work, Otherwise there's no Bennies.
At one point was a mainstream Democrat idea in the
nineteen nineties.

Speaker 4 (57:50):
So was a secure border.

Speaker 5 (57:52):
Now you've got a guy who's a standard bearer for
the party in New York who has said, you got
to defund the police because that's queer justice what and
it's and it's and defund the police is a feminist issue,
particularly for trans women. I don't even know what that means.
Literally had to ask a translate app. I woke translate

(58:14):
app on my phone. It couldn't figure out what it meant.
I say, this is an extinction level event for the
Democrats because there are sensible voters out there. They may
not like Trump, but now you're comparing the ideas of
a guy like this, and they go, wait a second.
So he wants to have price controls, and he wants

(58:36):
to take over the means of production, and he's going
to target neighborhoods, white neighborhoods, and he's going to go
after people's money. They go, this is insane, and this
is what the Democrat Party has become.

Speaker 4 (58:50):
But how do we?

Speaker 12 (58:51):
How do we?

Speaker 4 (58:51):
How'd they get there?

Speaker 5 (58:52):
How they You see, I was a county chairman in
New Jersey Republican politics for close to a so I've
always been involved in local politics.

Speaker 4 (59:02):
And I can tell you this.

Speaker 5 (59:03):
And I say this and my friends who are Libertarians
get angry at me, but I'll say it anyway. There
will always be a two party system. Okay, you're never
going to change that fact, because it's entrench at the
local level.

Speaker 4 (59:14):
At the local level, you've.

Speaker 5 (59:16):
Got your wards and your precincts and your municipal leaders
and everybody. And yeah, they do the get up of vote.
But that's not why I say the two party systems entrench.
It's entrenched because whoever's in power gets to decide and
dole out the contracts for all the various authorities and entities,
the government entities and authorities that exist. So the Democrats

(59:39):
who control the county give out the contracts, lawyers, the
insurance companies, and that money gets cycled back. The whole
thing is a gigantic money laundering scheme. But that's why
there's a two party system. You can't have a third party.
You will never have a successful third party. Elon Musk
can try. You might win a couple of races, but

(01:00:02):
you're never going to dominate because of the reason I
just said. Because the ward leaders in New York City,
in Philadelphia and Chicago and the other places, they want
to make sure their party is in power so that
they can hand out the benny's and the contracts, and
they can make sure it all gets looped back to them.

Speaker 4 (01:00:17):
That's the bottom line. But what you can do is
you can infiltrate a party.

Speaker 5 (01:00:27):
You take over a party, not from the top down,
but from the bottom up.

Speaker 4 (01:00:31):
Where have we seen this.

Speaker 5 (01:00:32):
We've seen this with prosecutors across the country, funded by
billionaires like George Soros, who helped elect Alvin Bragg in
New York City, Larry Krasner and Philadelphia that nut out
in La the gascon, the guy in San Francisco that
they recalled, the guy in Chicago, and on and on
it goes.

Speaker 4 (01:00:52):
See Soros had it right.

Speaker 5 (01:00:54):
He said, I'll put money behind these people, these woke
social justice warrior prosecutors.

Speaker 4 (01:01:00):
We'll take over the courthouses.

Speaker 5 (01:01:02):
And then you see what happened, right, criminals room free.
Alvin Bragg, instead of focusing on going after actual criminals
in New York City, goes after Donald Trump. Meanwhile, these
cities resemble some sort of a dystopian hellscape where you're
waiting for snake plisken to try to escape. And that's
what you get. But that's how you take over a

(01:01:25):
political party. You start at the local level and then
you get your cronies in those municipal seats. What is
the mayor of New York At the end of the day,
It's a municipal job. It's a municipal position. It's not president,
it's not governor, not US Senate, it's not Congress.

Speaker 4 (01:01:42):
It's a municipal job. In the mayor of New York City.
The only difference between the mayor.

Speaker 5 (01:01:46):
Of New York City and the mayor of a small
town in New Jersey like Teeterborough, which somebody even lives in.
Is that there's just more people, but still just a
municipal job. Pick up the trash, got to make sure
that the city streets are safe. And the same thing.
That's how you take over a party. You elect people

(01:02:11):
at the municipal level. This just happens to be the
biggest municipal position in the country. And then you spread
out and you get other socialist whack jobs elected across
the country and next thing you know, the Democrat Party
is fully entrenched in this. And it started because they
allowed Bernie Sanders in, and it started because you had

(01:02:32):
all these progressive prosecutors get elected. And now you're gonna
probably have a mayor who's a socialist get elected. And
then the Democrat Party that you once knew is gone forever.
It's gone the way of the Whigs. It's still called
the Democrat Party. The name won't change, but the party

(01:02:52):
that at one point had moderate blue dog Democrats that's gone.

Speaker 4 (01:02:55):
That's over. That's done. But can it win, No, it can't.

Speaker 5 (01:03:02):
So when I say the Democrat Party goes the way
of the Whigs and this becomes an extinction level event.

Speaker 4 (01:03:07):
It can't.

Speaker 5 (01:03:08):
It can't sustain itself outside of cities.

Speaker 4 (01:03:11):
It can't sustain itself.

Speaker 5 (01:03:14):
For whatever reason, you have enough crazy people in cities
to keep electing these people despite the outcomes.

Speaker 4 (01:03:19):
But across the state, across the country, people turn around
and go, I don't want this.

Speaker 5 (01:03:26):
This is insane. So back to New Jersey. Now, Jack
Hidarelli is a Republican. We've got two races for governor
this cycle around. Trump's backing. The Democrat wants to make
this whole election about Trump. Well, now Jack gets to
turn around and say, hey, if you want to elect
a Democrat as governor, then you need to open your
eyes to what the Democrat Party has become. It's become

(01:03:48):
a party of socialism. It's become a party of defund
the police. It's become a party of allowing men to
compete against women in sports. This is who the Democrat
Party is today. This is not the Bill Clinton nineteen
ninety's work fair party anymore.

Speaker 4 (01:04:07):
And Jack will use that message.

Speaker 5 (01:04:08):
And it's gonna help them, and it's gonna help Republicans
across the country. I don't know if man Domi will
make it or if the love gov slash Nursing Home
serial killer, Andrew Cuomo will make it or Eric Adams will.

Speaker 4 (01:04:21):
But I do know this. The Democrat Party controls the
levers every step of the way. Well, think about it.

Speaker 5 (01:04:29):
In twenty sixteen, an avowed socialist named Bernie Sanders probably
would have won the nomination had they not controlled the
levers to ensure that Hillary Clinton would become their nominee.

Speaker 4 (01:04:41):
But Bernie had the momentum.

Speaker 5 (01:04:42):
Yeah, the grassroots the Democrat Party knew that if Bernie
Sanders became their standard bearer, he might win.

Speaker 4 (01:04:49):
But they'd rather lose with.

Speaker 5 (01:04:51):
Somebody they can control than win with somebody they can't.

Speaker 4 (01:04:55):
The elites who.

Speaker 5 (01:04:56):
Run the party, the power brokers, the super de the
former presidents and the former governors, and the billionaires. Because
as much as Bernie screams about the oligarchy and the billionaires,
guys like that Tubby JB. Pritzker in Illinois, that fatty
that guy. I'm sorry to fat Jane, but he is
He's a beast of a man. That guy is a billionaire.

(01:05:18):
He is the richest politician in America and he wants
to run for president. Those people control the levers, and
they did the same thing in twenty twenty remember the
day everybody just dropped out of the race to make
sure Joe Biden will become the nominee.

Speaker 4 (01:05:30):
And what are they doing.

Speaker 5 (01:05:31):
Twenty twenty four told you were crazy if you thought
Joe Biden had dementia. And then when that debate happened
a year ago this month, they all said, oh, now
he's got to go, and then they put in Kamala Harrison,
nobody voted for, and the Democrats at the convention weren't
allowed to have a say and they just controlled the process.

Speaker 4 (01:05:45):
They may have to do the same thing here in
New York.

Speaker 5 (01:05:47):
They may have to just come in and just control
the process and take over and ensure that Eric Adams
or Cuomo wins because they can't have this guy be
their standard bearer in the biggest city in America.

Speaker 4 (01:05:58):
It's that bad for them.

Speaker 5 (01:06:00):
It's an extinction level event for the Democrat Party as
we know the Democrat Party to be. And then they'll
be the socialist party. Because there is a time when
a guy like Mandami, he just would have run as
a socialist and he would have lost. He would have
run in some third party ticket, the People's Liberation Party
or whatever other fugaz name they'd come up with, and

(01:06:22):
he would have lost. Now he's the Democrat nominee because
the Democrat Party took the socialist crazies in. It's like,
you know the signs they have it said hate has
no home here. Well, they said socialists are welcome.

Speaker 1 (01:06:36):
Come on in.

Speaker 5 (01:06:38):
We kicked out hates, so now we're letting the socialists in,
and now they've infiltrated the party. Here's Eric Adams talking
about in New York City he wants to run.

Speaker 4 (01:06:46):
Actually, let's skip that. Let's go to Stephen A. Smith,
because I think Stephen A.

Speaker 5 (01:06:50):
Smith speaks for a lot of people here and what
he's saying is correct, that this is a wake up call.

Speaker 4 (01:06:56):
It has to be for Democrats. Cut fifteen ladies, gentlemen,
let me be very very clear.

Speaker 22 (01:07:02):
If the Democratic Party becomes the likes of Zoranmomdani, who,
by the way, I like not trying to throw any
shade on him or anything like that, but if the
Democratic Party.

Speaker 4 (01:07:12):
Becomes him, you have no chance.

Speaker 22 (01:07:15):
You have no chance on a national basis, in terms
of the presidency, in Senate seats, seats in the House.

Speaker 1 (01:07:22):
You have no chance. You have no chance.

Speaker 4 (01:07:25):
I want to be.

Speaker 1 (01:07:26):
Very very clear about that.

Speaker 22 (01:07:27):
You might have a democratic socialist sprinkled hand there, but
that ain't what America is.

Speaker 4 (01:07:32):
America is about capitalism. America is about dollars and cents.

Speaker 22 (01:07:36):
America is about an economy, a florising economy. Okay, and
you know what, it's not about.

Speaker 1 (01:07:45):
Free stuff.

Speaker 5 (01:07:48):
Yeah, it's a bad look. It's a bad look, but
that's what they got. And mark my words, their first
casualty will be in New Jersey in the governor's race.
It's Fox Across America is the only for failure.

Speaker 2 (01:07:59):
Coming right back, you're listening to Fox Across America with
Jimmy Fayla, a.

Speaker 4 (01:08:04):
Very inventive, troubled comedian. I like Alligator Alcatraz.

Speaker 12 (01:08:12):
I do.

Speaker 5 (01:08:12):
I'm a fan of Alligator Alcatraz, and I'll tell you
the reason why. Because the goal of putting somebody behind
bars is to keep them there.

Speaker 4 (01:08:20):
That's the goal.

Speaker 5 (01:08:21):
The goal of putting somebody in detention is to keep
them in detention. So whatever deterrence, you have to do
that fair game. But remember something before you encounter the
alligators at Alligator Alcatraz, you have to do what try
to escape? See if you don't try to escape, you
won't encounter the alligators. The alligators are not going to
be in the in the in the room with the detainees.

(01:08:43):
I think it's a very important to note that. But
you know something else too about this whole situation that's
not being talked about.

Speaker 4 (01:08:49):
The freaking mosquitos.

Speaker 5 (01:08:51):
I mean, I'm just saying, you know, there's gonna be
a lot of mosquitos down there. So that's really what
the left should be freaking out about, is the level
of mosquito bites that the detainees are going to be
subject to, because I am telling you right now, those Everglades, Baby,
they breed mosquitos, So they better hand out adet or that,

(01:09:12):
or we should go full DDT. But I know they're
not going to do that. But mosquitoes are no joke.
No joke, folks. And I don't know that you've light
a bunch of citronella candles. I don't think those things work.
I really don't. I don't believe they really work. But
here's the media freaking out about alligator Alcatraz with their
faux outrage over this. Let's start with cut twenty one.

Speaker 17 (01:09:33):
I mean, I don't think you can just turn a
blind eye to it. I think it's anti American. I
think the fact that you're going to have individuals and
populations in there that are stacked on top of each other,
many of whom without due process, the.

Speaker 7 (01:09:45):
Location, the manner in which was done, and the language
right that the humanizing language employed by the authorities here.
There's nothing about this facility, about this detention camp that
is not cool and inhuman.

Speaker 23 (01:09:58):
The whole thing is extremely dehumanized, saying Trump and DHS
have and drawn DeSantis frankly have treated immigrants and migrants
in a dehumanizing way. And I think that they definitely
want to scare people.

Speaker 5 (01:10:14):
So what if they had sharks like they had of
the original Alcatraz which were in the water, I don't know.
And is it dehumanizing to have people with guns standing
guard on prison walls? Because not everybody who goes to
prison is Andy Dufrayne from Showshank Redemption. But for the
most part, the goal of prison, jail, detention, whatever you

(01:10:38):
want to call it, is to keep people in side
because when you get on the outside, you don't just
gain your freedom. You have to also encounter a series
of things in your way. You know what I mean,
like the police, for example, with loaded guns trying to
find you. Is that in humane too. I'm just curious.

(01:10:58):
I'd rather take my chances of an alligator personally. I'm
not saying I could beat an alligator. I'm just saying
that we're sort of missing the plot on this a
little bit. If you escape prison prison, you're gonna have
lots of police officers with loaded guns coming after you,

(01:11:18):
in addition to you having to do the things that
you have to do to try to escape prison, and
there'll be a massive manhunt ensuing for you. It's not
like we just go, oh got out, Oh all right,
well then he beat the system.

Speaker 4 (01:11:32):
High five. It's not how it works.

Speaker 5 (01:11:36):
But Joy Reid believes this isn't Alcatraz Concentration Camp cut
twenty two.

Speaker 24 (01:11:41):
He took the Comfy Couch hosts on a tour of
the concentration camp that he's building in Florida in order
to round up people, round people and throw them in
a camp in a camp.

Speaker 5 (01:11:56):
At some point, I have to play you, Christy, No,
I'm talking about this cannibal start to eat himself. It
reminds me of Pizza the Hut from Spaceballs. You remember
that he ate himself to death. It kind of reminds
me of that. We'll talk about that as we continue
here in Fox Across America.

Speaker 4 (01:12:09):
Got a big hour coming up.

Speaker 5 (01:12:10):
Let's talk about the One Big Beautiful Bill, the effects
of man Dommy on New York City, the socialists, the
rise of this and as even a Democrat who works
for Obama who's now saying this will forever change his party,
very very worried about it.

Speaker 4 (01:12:25):
Zioli for Feala. So glad you're here, coming.

Speaker 1 (01:12:28):
Right back.

Speaker 2 (01:12:36):
From Everywhere USA. It's Foxed Across America with Jimmy Fayla.

Speaker 5 (01:12:41):
Damn right, it is, and great to have you with
us today. It's Rich Zioli from Talker Too, twelve ten
WPHD in Philadelphia, in for Jimmy Fayla and very excited
in studio is my buddy Caroline Downey, National Review staff
writer and sitting fellow with the Independent Women's Forum and
frequent I mean, you're.

Speaker 4 (01:12:59):
All over this at work and Fox Business too.

Speaker 25 (01:13:02):
It's always so fun to be on with you, specifically Rich, Well,
thank you, Caroline.

Speaker 4 (01:13:05):
Yes, it's nicey to say.

Speaker 5 (01:13:07):
I don't know if you mean it or not, since
you I'm right here, but I appreciate you saying it
either way.

Speaker 25 (01:13:11):
Oh no, I learned so much from you. I feel
like it's a dynamic duo we got going on. I'm
very grateful.

Speaker 5 (01:13:17):
It's a dynamic due until the two of us look
at each other because we know it's at that moment
that we're not going to make the hit because some
sort of breaking news just happened.

Speaker 4 (01:13:25):
But no, it's fun.

Speaker 5 (01:13:26):
When you were a newsroom together on Monday, that was a
lot of fun. We're talking about the socialist whack job
man DOMMI.

Speaker 4 (01:13:32):
What are a tough time saying this guy's.

Speaker 25 (01:13:34):
Name, Mom Donnie, and I'm Mom don I know it's
a bit of a tongue twister, but it's zor on
Mom Donnie. And but you could just call him the
Kami to make things simpler.

Speaker 5 (01:13:43):
Yeah, he said he's not a comedy, he's a democrat socialist.
What the hell is the difference?

Speaker 14 (01:13:47):
I mean, that's insane.

Speaker 25 (01:13:47):
I just think it's so funny that we're still litigating
that as if it's like a real, a real distinction
democratic socialists versus communists. Let's just say that democratic socialism
is communism on training Wheels and that demo critic. Socialism
is the model that is enacted by a lot of
these Nordic states like Sweden and Norway. What it is
is a generous welfare state. So they have so many

(01:14:10):
benefits and entitlements. They're packed to the gills with entitlements
way more than we are. I mean, Europe is a
whole other level. We talk about our welfare state and
how it's ballooning and our debt crisis, but their.

Speaker 26 (01:14:21):
Whole other level.

Speaker 25 (01:14:22):
But I would argue when it comes to those countries,
they're very small, first of all, very homogeneous population. This
is the example that a lot of these dem socialists
like Bernie Sanders and zoon Mom Donnie look to. But
the key difference, besides the fact that they have no
ethnic diversity and we have a very interesting makeup as
a population. We subsidize their defense. So these Nordic states

(01:14:44):
can do democratic socialism because they don't really have to
pay for their defense.

Speaker 26 (01:14:49):
NATO kind of takes care of that.

Speaker 25 (01:14:50):
They don't contribute all that much, So that kind of
nullifies that argument right there. But for our purposes, domestically
democratic socialism, even if there is a slight difference, and
it's like a little bit more palatable to swallow. The
way that mom Donnie is talking about it is straight
up communism.

Speaker 26 (01:15:07):
It's textbook communism.

Speaker 25 (01:15:08):
And he's taken quotes right out of the communist manifesto,
whether it sees the means of production being his utopian
ideal for society, or I mean even taxing the rich
to the degree that he's advocating for. The slippery slope
from there is confiscating property, which is it happens in
every communist regime throughout the world throughout history.

Speaker 26 (01:15:28):
You know, you can.

Speaker 25 (01:15:28):
Totally draw the logical line from what he's saying to
the worst historical episodes of this ideology being implemented, and
it almost always ends in more class strife. It ends
in other things, very very bad other things. If you
want to like take it to the extreme, and it
has no place in New York City.

Speaker 5 (01:15:49):
Ay, and we should take you to the extreme, Caroline Downey.
And that's the thing, because when he says he wants
to eliminate billionaires, how do you do that?

Speaker 4 (01:15:56):
Exactly?

Speaker 5 (01:15:57):
Also, by the way, the difference between democrats, socialism and communism,
I see it is in communism you live in a
commune and you make butter, and that's basically the only
difference because it's the same stuff. It's the same ideology,
it's the same ideas.

Speaker 25 (01:16:10):
And he does want to nationalize or I guess not nationalized,
because this would be a localized effort.

Speaker 26 (01:16:14):
In New York City.

Speaker 25 (01:16:15):
He wants the state to own key industry, right, which
that's what sees the means of production means he wants
government run groceries.

Speaker 5 (01:16:22):
You seize property, you sees wealth, you sees all those things.

Speaker 25 (01:16:25):
And in government run grocery stores. Again, it's like it
wasn't that long ago that the USSR existed, and under
that regime and all of its satellite states, you had.

Speaker 26 (01:16:35):
Government run everything. Yeah, and what do we know about that.

Speaker 25 (01:16:38):
There were breadlines, there were shortages, the quality of the
food is heavily diminished.

Speaker 26 (01:16:44):
They're very inefficient. It's just it doesn't work.

Speaker 5 (01:16:47):
Did you imagine the gluten free breadlines in New York City?

Speaker 25 (01:16:52):
I mean, what about the vegan state run grocery store.

Speaker 26 (01:16:55):
I mean, that's the thing.

Speaker 25 (01:16:56):
And that's what's so ironic about it is the people
who voted for Mom Donnie.

Speaker 26 (01:16:59):
Are these middle to upper class.

Speaker 25 (01:17:01):
Elites, college graduates, and they're the types of folks who
go to these really niche, bougie grocery stores and they
get the vegan stuff, and they get the gluten free stuff,
they get all these organic options. Did it ever occur
to them to that innovation and those types of alternative
foods that are very elaborate to make. I mean, they're
kind of complicated, all of these different foods that wouldn't

(01:17:23):
be possible in a socialist system because there is no
incentive to innovate. So apparently they don't make that connection.
But I'm afraid that New York City might have to
live through this episode to make these gen Z transplants
realize the error of their ways.

Speaker 5 (01:17:40):
By the way, Caroline Downy's with us, since you just
used the word bougie, which is a word I use
all the time.

Speaker 4 (01:17:46):
I love that word. It's an underused word.

Speaker 25 (01:17:48):
Bougie, absolutely absolutely very bougie of you, Thank you so much.

Speaker 5 (01:17:52):
Like they're bougie cocktails annoying me because they're so expensive.

Speaker 25 (01:17:56):
Like a cosmopolitan, And that's the thing I partake in
a bougie cocktail. I'm a Politan, but I don't go
around and say I want socialism because I'm not dumb,
and I know that the fact that I have all
these great cocktail clubs to go to the fact that
New York has a vibrant nightlife and has all these things,
that's in spite of government control.

Speaker 5 (01:18:18):
Now the Conservator right, So Paula Scanlon was on the
show earlier. I know she's your buddy, right, she is
all right this whole idea.

Speaker 2 (01:18:27):
Now.

Speaker 4 (01:18:27):
First of all, big win yesterday at the University Pennsylvania.

Speaker 26 (01:18:30):
Yep.

Speaker 4 (01:18:30):
Huge, And you are a part of the Independent Women's Forum.

Speaker 5 (01:18:34):
So talk to me, Caroline Downey about the impact of
this and where the battle goes next. Because I personally
believe the reason why President Trump did so well with
suburban women, and we've talked about this together on America's
Newsroom actually is largely in many ways of this issue
because parents just don't want their little girl, who's worked
so hard to get where she is, they have to

(01:18:54):
see a dude with a schlang in a locker room.

Speaker 4 (01:18:57):
Period.

Speaker 5 (01:18:57):
Bottom line, they don't want this and they don't want
her to lose the trophy to them. And they may
not post that on Facebook, they may not post it
on social media, but that's how they feel.

Speaker 26 (01:19:06):
You nailed it.

Speaker 25 (01:19:06):
And maybe it's a distasteful way to put it, but
President Trump is just collecting scalps. I mean, this man
is rounding them up. He's getting wins, and he always
bribes about how quickly he's able to turn around deals.
But he really does make people bend the knee at
an alarming rate. And for that, I say, thank God,
thank God. Can you imagine we have Kamala Harrison right now.
Not only would we have a lot of slongs in

(01:19:29):
locker rooms on women's sports teams, we would be subsidizing,
we would be at the taxpayers. We'd be subsidizing gender
transition surgeries for felons, gender confused male criminals who would
then turn around and pray on female inmates.

Speaker 5 (01:19:44):
So I mean, just and by the way, if I
ever get sentenced to prison, which could happen, the minute
that gavel comes down and I'm guilty, I'm standing up
and I'm a woman, I'm just gonna say I'm not
going to a man's prison if I go to a
women's prison, right absolutely, Oh my gosh.

Speaker 25 (01:20:00):
Intive structure is all there to game the system? You really,
in most of these blue states you don't really have
to demonstrate that you have undergone any surgery. You can
just simply declare that you feel like a woman that
day and they.

Speaker 26 (01:20:11):
Have to honor it.

Speaker 25 (01:20:13):
And then you're going to be terrorizing most likely other
female inmates.

Speaker 26 (01:20:17):
How do we know this? I covered it.

Speaker 25 (01:20:18):
There's so many stories of sexual abuse of rape in
these female facilities when these quote women come in. But
to your point about the sports issue, the sports issue
in Independent Women's Forum, they have put their flag in
the sand on this issue and they did it years
before it really reached a fever pitch. And thank goodness
for that, because the win yesterday is the product of

(01:20:41):
years of building momentum, keeping their eye on the ball,
like they just never they never dropped this. And paul
A Scanlin, like Riley Gains, dealt with this first hand.
It was so important to have her testimony. She has
always had this platform of Look to your point, young women,
young girls, they I don't even know what they're getting

(01:21:02):
into now. If they want to be in competitive sports,
it's going to be it's going to be a terrifying
territory because they could lose their scholarships, they could lose
their safety in many cases they could lose their opportunities
because of some political paranoia that these leftis have to
include men.

Speaker 21 (01:21:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:21:22):
No, Look, Caroline Downey, I think you're so right about that.
And what's the impact because you're gen Z. Yes, all right,
And I'm sorry to have.

Speaker 4 (01:21:30):
To ask that question, but I know it's all the
rage right now gen Z, the raise, and the fact
that gen Z is now trending more to the right.
I guess you could say.

Speaker 26 (01:21:40):
Yes and no.

Speaker 25 (01:21:42):
Overall in twenty twenty four election, they did trend toward
the right. But what I've done in some of my
reporting and a commentary is actually dissect that question a
bit further. You can break this down into two groups,
young women who are still very much in the Democratic
camp and young men who lurched right in twenty twenty four.
Young men weren't always Republican. Young men were actually pretty

(01:22:04):
Democratic a couple decades ago, but with Trump's arrival on
the political scene in twenty sixteen, they really started ditching
the Democrats. And then in November it was like an evacuation,
really really big, big departure from the Democrats.

Speaker 26 (01:22:20):
Young women seven percent more gen Z.

Speaker 25 (01:22:22):
Girls went for Trump than in twenty twenty, but it's
still overwhelmingly a very progressive group. Actually, young women are
the most progressive group in America, which is why as
on the side, I do the Conservator because part of
our project there is to try to win the hearts
and minds of young women with counter.

Speaker 26 (01:22:41):
Messaging because that's esthetically pleasing.

Speaker 25 (01:22:44):
I want to make a point of that because most
of the pop culture content out there, from call Her
Daddy to Cosmopolitan magazine to Vogue, it's very heavily laced
with heradical feminism, with sexual ideology. It's it's not Intersectionality
is woven throughout all of it, and young girls that's

(01:23:04):
all they really have on the market to consume. And
next thing you know, they're going to academia where all
this is hammered into them.

Speaker 26 (01:23:11):
Even more.

Speaker 25 (01:23:12):
Gender studies as a degree has exploded, has exploded, and
we wonder why young men are leaving college. It's because
it's the whole environment on a college campus is by
default to kind of demonize them.

Speaker 5 (01:23:28):
Where can people find the Conservator because I think it's
a really important project you're working on.

Speaker 25 (01:23:33):
So we have a website, the Conservatory dot Com. We
also have an Instagram. That's where we have a really
large following there. I believe it's almost one hundred and
thirty thousand followers.

Speaker 26 (01:23:42):
Great, and we.

Speaker 25 (01:23:43):
Have some other projects coming soon, but merchandise store, we're
just trying to deliver the same caliber of aesthetics and
vibes that Vanity, fair l Glamour would offer, but with
better value, without the kookiness, without the condoning of adultery,
without the polyamory, you know, stories, all of that. So

(01:24:05):
we think we're pretty much on the right side of history.

Speaker 5 (01:24:07):
There waits, that's a thing. Polyamory is really a thing
in these magazines nowadays.

Speaker 25 (01:24:12):
Just just take one look at any issue produce.

Speaker 5 (01:24:17):
Ten years I predicted that after the Overfell decision, that
was gonna be the next big movement in America to legalize.

Speaker 26 (01:24:24):
Uh oh, it goes right on that.

Speaker 1 (01:24:26):
Yeah.

Speaker 25 (01:24:26):
You know what else is actually really trending among young women,
and I blame these magazines for glamorizing it is astrology, witchcraft,
all that other soft religion that has replaced the real thing.
And you know, I mean, there was an influencer in
New York City recently. She just had a really big
wedding and the influencer seene here is super big, especially

(01:24:48):
among young women in the fashion space. And she literally
had a witch he's her wedding and this was like
on social media like yeah, I had a way to
it was so cool she you know, she she hexted,
so there wasn't bad web And I'm just thinking to myself.

Speaker 26 (01:25:01):
Like how did we get here?

Speaker 4 (01:25:03):
Yeah, it's like you guys are so close.

Speaker 25 (01:25:05):
You're almost at the real thing, which I mean, like, okay,
just just choose a religion, like just be Christian, you
know what I mean. Because they're clearly appealing to a
divine power. They do want a source of meaning and
purpose in their lives, but they're settling for the awcult.

Speaker 26 (01:25:21):
I don't understand why.

Speaker 5 (01:25:23):
I mean, Bridget and I are celebrating seventeen years in August,
and I had problems with the DJ at the wedding,
but nothing like a hex Oh.

Speaker 26 (01:25:31):
No, they hexed did Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:25:32):
Yeah, so maybe somebody hexed my wedding. I don't know,
but we did. By the way, pies instead of cake.

Speaker 17 (01:25:39):
I like that.

Speaker 4 (01:25:39):
Yeah, that's very cool. Yeah, and I'm a huge fan
of that trend. I want to trend that.

Speaker 25 (01:25:47):
You can do cool things at your wedding that aren't traditional,
But I mean, yeah, do we have to have like
the Wicked Witch a beast wig?

Speaker 15 (01:25:55):
There?

Speaker 4 (01:25:55):
I don't know Caroline Downey.

Speaker 5 (01:25:57):
You can follow her at Caroline Downey's over social media
and follow the Conservator and just watch Fox News at
any given moment she'll be on and hopefully we'll be
on together at some point very soon on the show,
my friend.

Speaker 4 (01:26:10):
So keep up the great work. Nashal Review staff writer.
It's Fox Chuss America is the only for Fala coming
right back.

Speaker 1 (01:26:16):
The show that always comes prepared. I got food, I
got my fried she again, Millivia.

Speaker 21 (01:26:25):
Always.

Speaker 1 (01:26:26):
If you're listening to Fox Across America with Jimmy Fayla.

Speaker 21 (01:26:32):
Jimmy Fayla and Fox Across America on seven ten, woor
is the only.

Speaker 5 (01:26:40):
Four Jimmy Fayla, Abby horn a second is on the line. Abby,
Why are you not in studio though it's my only complaint?

Speaker 27 (01:26:48):
Well, Rich, I am actually at least since you asked
getting over food poisoning. No, I don't think anybody wants
me in the studio.

Speaker 4 (01:26:57):
Yeah, all right, good call, of course.

Speaker 5 (01:26:59):
Fox Nation Superstar Abby hornessec Parked Season eight is out
June twenty fifth, so it's out now Fox News, Fox
Nation and Bunkers too.

Speaker 4 (01:27:09):
So we got the Bunkers going on What's What's What's
going on? Fourth of July for you?

Speaker 27 (01:27:14):
So sorry if I threw you off by my answer,
I wish it was. I am leaving tomorrow though, for
something exciting. Yeah, fourth of July, we are going to
South Carolina Myrtle Beach. They're doing this incredible flyover called
the Salute from the Shore. So thousands of people line
up on the shoreline of Myrtle Beach and they look

(01:27:37):
up in the sky and it's led by two pilots
that are flying S six teams. They're leaving from Shaw
Air Force Base, and then they're followed by a few
war birds. So if you like old school planes that
are from like World War Two, that's that's your that's
your gig. But yeah, we're just going to find out

(01:27:57):
how patriarch people are in South Caro. I've heard it's
pretty awesome.

Speaker 5 (01:28:01):
My parents live in Myrtle Beach. They will be on
the beach. Yeah, they're they're going to be there for that.
It's it's pretty special. That is awesome that you're gonna
be there covering that abbey.

Speaker 4 (01:28:11):
You'll see a.

Speaker 27 (01:28:11):
Lot of your parents.

Speaker 4 (01:28:12):
What's that?

Speaker 27 (01:28:14):
Can I meet your parents?

Speaker 4 (01:28:15):
You don't want to meet my parents?

Speaker 19 (01:28:16):
I do mister and.

Speaker 4 (01:28:17):
Missus Zoli, Well, they love you, they'd love to meet you.
I'll tell them to try to find you. They would
love to meet you.

Speaker 26 (01:28:26):
Abby.

Speaker 5 (01:28:27):
You're you're crushing an uphoxination with the national parks. I
said to my the other day, I said to my
wife and said, we got to go to a national park.
We got to take our kids to one. What we
so we're started to think about what we want to
what we want to do. What's the recommendation you can
give me? I got ten eight and five.

Speaker 27 (01:28:45):
Ten eight and five, Okay. I love that you asked
this question, Slash, that you're even thinking about going to
a national park, all right? Ten eight and five. I
feel like a good part for that is Zion National Park.
Utah is a little further from New York though, so
it's a bit of a a bit of a flight,
but there are just so many things you can do
there with kids. You can hike, you can have picnics.

(01:29:10):
The walks everywhere you go, even the nice easy walks,
are spectacular. So it's not like you have to go
rock climbing to see the views. I actually grew up
going to Zion and some of the Utah parks. So
when I when I was those that age, so like,
you can mountain bike, really do anything you want there.
So I would say good at Utah.

Speaker 12 (01:29:29):
I like it, you know.

Speaker 5 (01:29:29):
And my daughter was born there. So two of our
three kids are adopted and came to us for adoption.
Uh so that would be fun actually to do go
back to her roots.

Speaker 27 (01:29:39):
Really, yeah, she was born in Utah.

Speaker 4 (01:29:41):
She was Claire. Yeah, so that's cool. I love that.
And then tell me about if if a bunker, you
got a good bunker for me?

Speaker 27 (01:29:49):
Okay, So this Bunker show, the idea is we highlight
different types of bunkers. So we get a congressional one
in West Virginia and that one was built at the
Green Brier during the Cold War and they'd never ended
up using it, thank goodness. But then we talked to
a gentleman who builds bunkers that you can install into

(01:30:11):
your house or you can just go into if something happens.
We're going to one in Las Vegas in a few weeks.
So I would say but let's build you a bunker.

Speaker 4 (01:30:20):
Let's do it. Let's let's do that.

Speaker 27 (01:30:22):
Colorado, Colorado. We did a survival ranch and that one
is very fun because you learn how to survive.

Speaker 12 (01:30:28):
I love it, you kid, You got to learn how
to protect them.

Speaker 5 (01:30:30):
Well, well, Mikey's gonna kill me if I don't break.
But Abby horna Sack, have a wonderful Fourth of July.
Follow Abby at Abby Hortiseck.

Speaker 4 (01:30:37):
You're the best. We love you, Thank you, Abby, I
love you too.

Speaker 5 (01:30:41):
Thanks rich Parents, Fox Truss America, go back, Fox across America.
Your buddy of mine, Jimmy fail is off today all week.

Speaker 4 (01:30:58):
And some sort of I think he's in Alligator Alcatrazma.

Speaker 5 (01:31:01):
But it's me rich Ze only from talk reader twelf
ten WPHG in Philadelphia, in studio with me, my friend
and fellow Fox News Saturday Night panelist Lydia moynihan, New
York Post, New York Next.

Speaker 4 (01:31:14):
How are you, my friend?

Speaker 28 (01:31:15):
I'm great, I'm great, excited, fellow, I didn't actually know
how you're going to finish that off.

Speaker 4 (01:31:20):
The panelist is the right word, I guess panelists, right, That's.

Speaker 5 (01:31:22):
What we would say, pololist, powerless I mean we were
on together and people said it was probably the greatest
night in television history.

Speaker 14 (01:31:31):
But yeah, that was with what everyone on Twitter was
talking about.

Speaker 4 (01:31:34):
That's what they said. Yeah, and so now they're trying
to keep us away apart, you know, but it.

Speaker 14 (01:31:38):
Just wouldn't be fair to the competition.

Speaker 4 (01:31:40):
No, it's not right. It's not right for anybody.

Speaker 5 (01:31:42):
You are crushing it at the New York Post and
you can follow Lydia at LJ.

Speaker 4 (01:31:47):
Moynihan. You're first of all the New York Next stuff
that you do.

Speaker 14 (01:31:51):
Oh, thank you you.

Speaker 4 (01:31:52):
You sat down recently with the Spotify CEO.

Speaker 1 (01:31:54):
That was very cool.

Speaker 28 (01:31:56):
We're we're I know, we're getting some good guests. I
think it's interesting because I feel like for long time
the Post has had amazing coverage, but people are a
little terrified of it, and they read it, but they're
afraid to go on the record.

Speaker 4 (01:32:09):
Oh I see.

Speaker 14 (01:32:10):
So everyone gets back to your calls, but they're just
they're wary.

Speaker 4 (01:32:15):
Yeah, you know.

Speaker 14 (01:32:16):
And what's always happened is, you know, it's like some
page six item comes out that they're not happy with.

Speaker 28 (01:32:20):
No one's ever happy with any coverage about themselves, even
if it's like the most glowing piece.

Speaker 14 (01:32:25):
They'll find one thing and be like, wait, I'm not
describe me as like older.

Speaker 28 (01:32:29):
This is offensive. It's like, no, it's a statement of fact. Anyway,
I digress. But so it's been it's been fun because
we're getting We did Bill Gates' daughter, we did the Ford,
the CEO of Ford, Spotify CEO.

Speaker 4 (01:32:39):
That was a lot of fun to the Spotify CEO.

Speaker 5 (01:32:41):
And you had that conversation because I mean, obviously I'm
in radio and Spotify is now kind.

Speaker 4 (01:32:48):
Of yeah, killing radio in many ways. Do you not you,
not me, not me, not.

Speaker 5 (01:32:54):
Jimmy, But do you think that Spotify is embracing conservative talk?

Speaker 28 (01:33:01):
So, I mean the fact that they did an interview
with in your post, I think speaks volumes about the
people they want to be reaching.

Speaker 14 (01:33:08):
They what I'll say for them is they were very
supportive of Rogan.

Speaker 28 (01:33:12):
If you remember he was censored on YouTube and all
of these big tech platforms, they were really the only
ones to.

Speaker 14 (01:33:17):
Not censor him.

Speaker 28 (01:33:19):
And so yeah, Daniel Eck was very candid about this
is like a huge value for him, and you know,
even talked about sort of during I feel like we
always end up talking about COVID.

Speaker 14 (01:33:30):
Everything goes back to COVID, but it was the formative
of time.

Speaker 28 (01:33:32):
But he says, you know, even at that time in
his life, he was looking at how Sweden was responding
it and seeing what the US was doing, and it
kind of was a watershed moment for him about like
why is why is the US censoring content when there's
so many different discussions.

Speaker 14 (01:33:44):
So he is very clear that he wants us to
be in open place.

Speaker 28 (01:33:47):
I also just did an interview with Steve Bannon, actually
because Bannon is now back on Spotify posting regularly and
they were happy to have him. So I think they're
really being very mindful about allowing all voices.

Speaker 14 (01:34:02):
So that was definitely something do you do?

Speaker 28 (01:34:04):
That's something they're They're not just allowing, but like they're
actively promoting and celebrating.

Speaker 4 (01:34:08):
And that's good. Yeah, we need more free speech.

Speaker 19 (01:34:11):
You need it.

Speaker 5 (01:34:12):
So do you do the covers for the New York Post?
Because I heard you did that. You come up with
all the witty Oh.

Speaker 28 (01:34:17):
Yes, I write all of the headlines, all of the
front pages.

Speaker 18 (01:34:23):
That's me.

Speaker 28 (01:34:24):
You know, at such a young age should be in
such an elevated position. I right now, I'm trying to
think about what the headline tomorrow should be.

Speaker 14 (01:34:33):
Maybe Diddy did he get away with it?

Speaker 12 (01:34:38):
Didy?

Speaker 4 (01:34:38):
Oh, I like that Diddy.

Speaker 26 (01:34:41):
Did he got off?

Speaker 4 (01:34:43):
That's kind of freaky.

Speaker 14 (01:34:45):
Yeah, that's that would that would be a good one.
That would be a good one.

Speaker 4 (01:34:48):
So since you're younger, baby.

Speaker 28 (01:34:50):
Baby oil, No one can I remember I used to
use baby oil to take off my makeup.

Speaker 14 (01:34:53):
No one can ever talk seriously about maybe.

Speaker 4 (01:34:56):
Never again, yeah again.

Speaker 5 (01:34:58):
And the whole problem is there there's plenty of hardworking
prostitutes right in your own state. You don't need to
bring them across state lines. I know, I know, it's
it's so true, like by local.

Speaker 14 (01:35:09):
Right, fresh, local organic.

Speaker 4 (01:35:14):
Sport, a local community, don't you know?

Speaker 18 (01:35:16):
Go uh?

Speaker 5 (01:35:17):
As a young person, are you watching as your generation
just handed a socialist whack.

Speaker 4 (01:35:23):
Job potentially now the Mayor's office in New York?

Speaker 14 (01:35:26):
Okay, So I have I have so many thoughts about this.

Speaker 28 (01:35:30):
The first is that the only people I know who
supported him are the ones whose parents paid for them
to go to an Ivy League college and now who
continue to subsidize their rent. So it's been kind of
shocking seeing that. And you just can't you can't reason
with them because they're so insulated from reality. But actually,
the concept that I've thought is very interesting is the

(01:35:53):
idea of Instagram and equality and socialism is now something
shocking that is being embraced by the rich. So the
in general, the working class people, the immigrants who came here,
they're just happy to not be in like Cuba, or
in a place where they don't have any rights. They're

(01:36:14):
just happy to be here to have a job, to
work hard. That's their American dream. But for a whole
generation of kids who grew up who had a pretty
nice life, there's parents kind of handed them everything, and
then they went to college.

Speaker 14 (01:36:28):
They studied you know, queer ideology or.

Speaker 5 (01:36:33):
Whatever, intersectionality. I don't even know what that means, but something.

Speaker 28 (01:36:37):
They studied something, and then they graduated and still have
a pretty nice life.

Speaker 14 (01:36:42):
Their parents are still help them out.

Speaker 28 (01:36:44):
But they're looking at like the bezos wedding and they're like, wait,
I'm never going to have a fifty five million dollar
wedding in Venice.

Speaker 14 (01:36:51):
This is unfair. Yeah, this isn't right.

Speaker 4 (01:36:53):
I agree.

Speaker 28 (01:36:53):
And so it's this weird phenomenon where people are seeing
these crazy rich wealth poorn lifestyle on Instagram at the
same time that they feel like they've been sort of
betrayed because the American dream was always to have a better.

Speaker 14 (01:37:07):
Life than your parents.

Speaker 28 (01:37:09):
Well, honestly, everyone has a pretty nice life right now,
even poor people have a very nice life. Like everyone
has air conditioning and clean water. Like it's we're doing okay,
you know.

Speaker 5 (01:37:18):
Yeah, no, lyddy in morn to hand, we are doing okay.
But there always has to be a victim class out
there for the particularly for the left as a campaign,
there has to be this whole idea that there's inequality.
And what is amazing is what you just said though
about the people that went to the Ivy League schools
at back this guy because they never had to worry
about money. Yeah, so if you don't worry about money,

(01:37:39):
you have to really work for a living. But I mean,
theoretically speaking, isn't like, don't they have to worry that
he may seize their money if people like him get
in power. I mean, isn't that kind of the thing.

Speaker 14 (01:37:49):
I know, it's funny.

Speaker 28 (01:37:50):
The thinking was always, oh, you know, when somebody gets
the first job and they start paying taxes, they're going
to be fiscally conservative.

Speaker 14 (01:37:57):
That of course assumes that somebody.

Speaker 28 (01:37:59):
Is going to be working and paying taxes, and I
think these people aren't.

Speaker 4 (01:38:03):
They don't have to.

Speaker 14 (01:38:04):
Yeah, because they don't have to or there.

Speaker 28 (01:38:07):
Yeah, I think I think that's honest, like a lot
of the people who voted for him. But again, I
do think it is this envious mentality of like, there
are rich people have so much more, and rather than
being self reliant and saying what can I do? What
business can I start? How can I pull myself up
from my bootstraps, It's like, no, I just want to
I want to tax that person, screw them.

Speaker 4 (01:38:26):
Sure there should be no billionaires.

Speaker 14 (01:38:28):
Yeah, exactly, Like, look, I'm not a billionaire, like I don't.
I don't have a vested in you.

Speaker 5 (01:38:33):
We're a Billionaire's why I got you on the show today.

Speaker 4 (01:38:35):
Lyddy want this is become up.

Speaker 14 (01:38:36):
My private jet lighter.

Speaker 23 (01:38:38):
No.

Speaker 28 (01:38:39):
But it's like, and this is a great line I
heard from another radio host years ago, Republicans are at
the party of the rich.

Speaker 14 (01:38:44):
They're the party of the people who want to get rich.

Speaker 4 (01:38:47):
I said that that was me.

Speaker 5 (01:38:48):
Okay, yeah, because you can't name the radio host, so
I'll just take credit for it.

Speaker 28 (01:38:52):
Why you are the an anonymous, good looking, clever, hyper
intelligent radio host.

Speaker 4 (01:38:58):
You're you're way too kind.

Speaker 5 (01:39:00):
You're basically now in this point of your life where
you're in a newspaper at a time when the Superman
movie is coming out next week.

Speaker 4 (01:39:10):
No, I'm serious, this is a big deal.

Speaker 14 (01:39:12):
I thought you were gonna say newspaper at a time
when no one's reading it.

Speaker 5 (01:39:15):
No, I think this is a huge moment for you
because the daily plant in my mind is that is
in your post. You're kind of like Lois Lane, where
the newspaper industry is about to have a major major
boost because of the Superman movie coming out next week.

Speaker 4 (01:39:29):
I'm serious about race.

Speaker 14 (01:39:30):
No, this sounds I follow your logic.

Speaker 4 (01:39:32):
I'm and that movie is going to make a billion dollars. Wow,
at least, don't you think wow.

Speaker 14 (01:39:39):
I mean that's really an economic impact. As the Bezos
wedding hat on Venice.

Speaker 5 (01:39:44):
Now, we make movies in America that make a lot
of money. That's kind of what we export to the
world in many respects.

Speaker 14 (01:39:49):
We also make a lot of movies that don't make
a lot of money.

Speaker 4 (01:39:51):
That's true, and there's a lot of actors that I
can't stand. I mean a lot.

Speaker 5 (01:39:55):
Yeah, but being in this moment though, of covering culture
and celebrity and everything else, and now getting all those
young people to pay attention to actual news, I think
there's a shift now away from tell me if you
think I'm crazy, shorter attention spans. People want more, They
want more in depth content and conversations.

Speaker 14 (01:40:18):
I think I think you're right.

Speaker 28 (01:40:19):
I mean, I think it's it's both, and so I
think people still look at the three second TikTok videos,
but they also do want smart analysis and they'll listen
to a four hour YouTube video. So I think I
think there's we have range. It's not it's not just
the three second videos. It's it's also both. I'm actually okay.
I'm actually curious though, because I spoke a lot about
mom Donnie.

Speaker 14 (01:40:39):
I'm curious to get your take.

Speaker 23 (01:40:40):
Oh.

Speaker 28 (01:40:41):
I think it's the because you don't live in New
York City, right, you don't have in Jersey, so you
you kind of have the best of both worlds where
you can just watch Rome.

Speaker 14 (01:40:49):
Burn from Afar.

Speaker 4 (01:40:50):
Yeah, it's the smell is lovely. So I live in Jersey.

Speaker 5 (01:40:54):
But I think this is an extinction level event for
the Democrat Party Liddy more hand, and I think it's
going to help my guy, Jack SHOUDRELLI win the governor's
race in New Jersey. Really yes, because Mikey Cheryl, who's
a Democrat candidate, has already said that she supports Mondami's
ideas and she'll back him as the nominee. So she

(01:41:14):
wanted to make the race for governor of New Jersey
a referendum on Trump. Now Jack gets to make it
a referendum on the Democrat Party in Mark because if
this becomes their standard bearer, a socialist Marxist kouk as
their as their standard bearer the biggest city in America,
then that has to be a wake up call the
people that this is coming to a town near you,

(01:41:36):
and is this what you want? This is not your
parents' Democrat party anymore?

Speaker 28 (01:41:39):
Kind of fitting the Superman movie is coming out, because
we might need him and Batman.

Speaker 4 (01:41:45):
What do you like better?

Speaker 28 (01:41:46):
I mean Batman's Gotham. I feel like it's a little
bit more aligned. It's true with the whole that's really interesting. Actually,
that would be kind of a crazy occurrence of New
Jersey did once again elect a Republican.

Speaker 4 (01:41:58):
I think it will.

Speaker 23 (01:41:59):
I do.

Speaker 4 (01:42:00):
I think it will because I think it's a lot.

Speaker 14 (01:42:01):
Of people that trauma can benefiture.

Speaker 4 (01:42:04):
So you live in New York, you're gonna pay the price.

Speaker 26 (01:42:07):
I mean, I don't know.

Speaker 14 (01:42:08):
Maybe I'm going to Why did you.

Speaker 4 (01:42:09):
Just move the jersey?

Speaker 14 (01:42:11):
Honestly, like, honestly, if that happened, that would probably make
a lot of sense.

Speaker 4 (01:42:14):
You won't stay in New York if he wins.

Speaker 14 (01:42:17):
Famous last words.

Speaker 5 (01:42:18):
But what was that giant water thing they had the
other day that you guys covered. It was like a
pink thing that shoots out water. People can with their
foot pedals.

Speaker 14 (01:42:27):
Oh, it's kind of hazy coming back.

Speaker 5 (01:42:31):
Okay, I'll show you the picture. It's not show graphic,
and it's in New York City. The city's freaking nuts.
I'm just saying the city's nuts. It kind of makes
sense they nominated this guy because he's crazy.

Speaker 14 (01:42:41):
He's great.

Speaker 28 (01:42:41):
But what doesn't make sense to me at all is
just so both he and AOC are both New Yorkers. Yeah,
and sort of now it seems like the standard bearer
for the party because everyone's afraid to piss off this
young demographic and supports these people.

Speaker 14 (01:42:57):
Your people, my people, my people. No, I'm but it's crazy.

Speaker 28 (01:43:01):
They both act like they're so aggrieved, and these are
like the epitome of people who really.

Speaker 14 (01:43:10):
Have kind of like lived the American dream like AOC. Yeah,
she had to work as a bartender, Sandy, she's a
member of Congress. Like it worked out okay for her.
She went to a grade school, she worked her way up,
and then she got to like, how is that? How
is that an illustration of how problematic the system is.

Speaker 5 (01:43:28):
Yeah, I'm same from them, Donnie Well. I wrote in
the New York Post yesterday Lydia that she's not really
from the Bronx. She's really from what is it, Yorktown? Yorktown, Yeah,
Yorktown Heights. And she went by Sandy, Sandy from Yorktown.
Not it doesn't have the same ring to it as
Sandy from the Bronx. I'm just saying, no, Sandy from
the streets. No, your town is another posh area. But

(01:43:49):
now we're we're connecting what you said earlier, which is
that it's all these people that come from means that
embrace all the socialist cookery, right, And so I think
what what we can conclude is that they go to
college yeah, and they're fed this stuff at these elite
universities where I mean you talk about inequity. If you've

(01:44:11):
got a degree from an Ivy League school, you have
a leg up in life that most people. I went
to a p I went to University of Maryland, right,
So some people with a Harvard degree beats me at.

Speaker 14 (01:44:20):
A job about the Harvard of Maryland.

Speaker 5 (01:44:24):
That's because our fraternity house was like basically like animal House,
which is based on Dartmouth, I think. But but you
know what I'm saying that, and they're they're indoctrinated, and
then they have I guess they're they're told that their
privilege and their guilt and they're all their other stuff
and then they have to atone.

Speaker 14 (01:44:39):
They have to atone.

Speaker 28 (01:44:40):
Yeah, and then also think about it, if you're at Harvard,
you're also surrounded by like truly the most privileged people
in the world in the world, so it's like point
zero zero zero one percent. So you're looking at that
and you're like, this isn't fair. Whould you go to
college It's called the King's College. It has gone bankrupt, so.

Speaker 4 (01:44:56):
Well, at least you have to worry about giving them money. Actually,
you don't have to worry you.

Speaker 5 (01:45:00):
I've never getting how you are because you don't get
hounded with the alumni guilt letters.

Speaker 14 (01:45:06):
I think they're gonna I have a feeling they might
try and make a comeback.

Speaker 4 (01:45:10):
Yeah, but it was, Yeah, it was.

Speaker 14 (01:45:13):
I can't say I'm surprised, to be honest.

Speaker 4 (01:45:16):
Does your degree still count?

Speaker 15 (01:45:18):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (01:45:18):
I mean, that's a good question.

Speaker 15 (01:45:20):
You know what that's gonna be.

Speaker 28 (01:45:20):
My new narrative is I I don't have a college degree.
I'm a working class kid without a college degree.

Speaker 5 (01:45:28):
The bootstrafts right, without a college degree, and somehow making
it all the way to the number one.

Speaker 4 (01:45:33):
Paper in New York City, the New York Post, the
lowest lane of.

Speaker 14 (01:45:37):
Our of our generation, doesn't have a college degree.

Speaker 4 (01:45:40):
Without a college degree.

Speaker 1 (01:45:41):
Amazing.

Speaker 4 (01:45:41):
I just we rewrote the narrative here. As you're sitting
down with all these.

Speaker 5 (01:45:46):
Big CEOs and celebrities and everybody else New York and acts.
Tomorrow a big interview coming out.

Speaker 4 (01:45:51):
Who is it with?

Speaker 14 (01:45:52):
It's with gil Slater, who a lot of people have
not heard of.

Speaker 28 (01:45:56):
But she is the most important person if you are
in the business world right now, because she well, one
of the most important people because she heads the Anti
Trust Division of the Department of Justice.

Speaker 14 (01:46:04):
So it's her first interview that she's done since.

Speaker 28 (01:46:06):
Assuming this role, and she talks a lot about her philosophy,
her agenda.

Speaker 14 (01:46:10):
WI She's gonna allow deals, the whole thing.

Speaker 28 (01:46:13):
So there's a lot of people I think in d
straight we're going to pay.

Speaker 14 (01:46:16):
Attention very good.

Speaker 4 (01:46:18):
Where can they go to find that?

Speaker 14 (01:46:20):
On the New York Post website or my social.

Speaker 4 (01:46:23):
Media, Lydia Jay moynihan, Yeah, look at us, Lydia. Yeah,
I mean, because that's it can't keep them, no.

Speaker 14 (01:46:33):
It it's hard. It's like I was a late adopter,
so you kind of just take what I.

Speaker 1 (01:46:36):
Bring with me.

Speaker 4 (01:46:36):
You can get I got, I got rich Zoli or
Zioli show. It's annoying, but.

Speaker 28 (01:46:41):
You know the point is that we are these other
rich Sciolis out there, like you're the only one.

Speaker 4 (01:46:45):
I don't know what another one?

Speaker 25 (01:46:46):
Right?

Speaker 4 (01:46:47):
Yeah?

Speaker 28 (01:46:47):
Crazy, They don't like they're irrelevant seed.

Speaker 4 (01:46:51):
Maybe if you had a college degree you would understand.
But since you don't. All right, Lydia morn Ahan, rock star,
my friend, keep up the great work. It's so good
to see you in person.

Speaker 14 (01:46:58):
Such a pleasure.

Speaker 4 (01:46:59):
Thank you for joining us here on Fox across America.
We'll be right back.

Speaker 1 (01:47:03):
Critics are calling it the funniest show in the radio.

Speaker 4 (01:47:06):
How funny?

Speaker 1 (01:47:07):
How I mean funny? Like I'm a clowny Fox across
America with Jimmy Taylor.

Speaker 4 (01:47:15):
I can't get her out of here.

Speaker 5 (01:47:16):
Guys, lydiam moeand your post. She's still still here. I mean,
it's great to see you. I'm happy you're still here.

Speaker 1 (01:47:24):
Wow.

Speaker 28 (01:47:24):
Okay, No, I mean, now, okay, I didn't didn't mean
to overstay my welcome.

Speaker 5 (01:47:30):
I just literally just said to you stay after what
are you?

Speaker 7 (01:47:35):
Are you free?

Speaker 14 (01:47:36):
Do you want to?

Speaker 23 (01:47:36):
Well?

Speaker 4 (01:47:36):
I gonna host the radio show in Philly.

Speaker 14 (01:47:40):
Invitation.

Speaker 4 (01:47:41):
You want to come on that show too? Come on
every show? Why not? What the heck?

Speaker 7 (01:47:44):
I love it?

Speaker 14 (01:47:45):
This is this is how the stalker relationship it started.

Speaker 4 (01:47:49):
But am I the stalker in this scenario? Okay, all right,
I'm joking.

Speaker 5 (01:47:54):
By the way, how much uh, since you follow finance,
how much are all these weight loss drugs making?

Speaker 28 (01:47:59):
Avosk Nordisk kind of screwed up their socks, actually going
down the lot of market share because there's so many
new entrants into this.

Speaker 14 (01:48:08):
When they started it was just them, and now you have.

Speaker 28 (01:48:13):
Set bound Manjaro, like Eli Lilly, all of these other
pharma companies are getting in.

Speaker 5 (01:48:17):
And they're all over the internet now, the compounded pharmast
I don't even know how they're legally allowed to do that,
but they have all those.

Speaker 14 (01:48:23):
Yeah, I would, I would be cautious.

Speaker 4 (01:48:27):
I get mine from a guy in the subway. Figure
what could go wrong?

Speaker 14 (01:48:30):
Totally?

Speaker 4 (01:48:31):
He includes the fentanyl for free.

Speaker 5 (01:48:33):
It's like an upgrade, you know, lydia one and you
are the lowest lane to my superman. I thank you
Rich always great to see you, and thank you for
listening to Fox across America and tune in of course
every day. I'll be back with you tomorrow filling in
for Jimmy Fayla. Follow me on x at Rich Zeoli
have a great rest of your time listening.

Speaker 1 (01:49:00):
H This has been a podcast from w o R.
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