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July 31, 2025 • 107 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is a podcast from wor from Everywhere USA.

Speaker 2 (00:05):
It's Fox Across America with Jimmy Fayla.

Speaker 1 (00:08):
Oh hot, damn. The economy growing beyond expectations, three percent
GDP growth for America. Unfortunately, the hottest growth sector is
straight jackets for liberals flipping out over this Sydney sweety
ad campaign and American eagle crazy. It's Fox Across America

(00:29):
with Jimmy Fayler on a stack deck episode of the show.
Kennedy's going to be here. We're going to talk with
Katrina Campons as well, and we will get to some
of your calls, text tweets, and carrier pigeons as we
talk about all things America, including the new left wing
war on boobs. That's the dumbest thing I've heard of,
no other way to describe it, which is why I

(00:50):
said it the way I did on Laura Ingram last
night and got the look that I did. If you
didn't see it, it's on the Fox Across America website,
but either way a slice that you are all welcome
to check it out and agree or disagree. We don't care.
This is an old school radio show. I am a
talk show host, not doing a Republican show, not doing
a Democrat show or a libertarian show. I'm doing an

(01:12):
American show. Yeah, so you're all welcome. Be a Republican,
be a Democrat, just don't be a bang there. It
is Happy Wednesday, everybody, And I have to tell you
off the top. As the father of a teenage boy
who shops at American Eagle, you know, I want to
get you my son's take on this Sydney Sweeney situation. Unfortunately,
he has not come out of the bathroom since the

(01:33):
ad dropped. Just kidding. I'm sure Lakan has a take,
and if you have, when you welcome the way it is, well,
but I actually wanted to start there. Of all things. Okay,
I consider this to be a superficial story. I consider
it to be a culture war story. I consider it
to be an example of the old way of doing business,
which was the squeaky wheel got the most grease in

(01:56):
the outrage era, If three angry white chicks got into
super use, put in their nose rings, dyed their hair purple,
and called something racist, the media came a running. Oh
people are outraged. Oh there's a massive backlash. But is
there a real backlash of substance against American Eagle not
even close. Their stock price is up fifteen points fifteen points,

(02:22):
which means they're making money right now. But understand the
teachable moment and the reason I want to get into
this is we got to this place as a country
where we started to attach way too much emotional significance
to superficial things. Who's in the commercial, Who's in the
Victoria's Secret Runway show? Hopefully somebody hot with a nice

(02:46):
set of Hoodieshuba hubba. I'm just saying because the point is,
first and foremost, the reason advertising has been historically been
dominated by humor and hot chicks is because people liked
to laugh and look at pretty things. Okay, there's always
been a market for that. That was every beer commercial

(03:06):
since the beginning of time. Do you remember the cores
Light commercial, here's the football. Do you remember all the
bud Light commercials with the chicks you know, and a
Cindy Crawford Pepsi commercial and everything in between. People like
to laugh, look a good looking people, And that's what
this was actually born out of. It was a return
to normalcy for all intents and purposes, because this is
what ran advertising until woke people took over Madison Avenue.

(03:30):
Everything woke turns to and the reason people embraced cancel culture. Okay,
I wrote a New York Times bestselling book about that,
which is crazy. I am the only community college graduate
in the history of the New York Times bestseller list
to actually wind up on it. It is called Cancel
Culture Dictionary. It came out last January, and if you

(03:50):
like reading at a third grade level, oh, you are
going to love this book. But the point I was
making in the book is cancel culture created what we
call a war on fun. It was teaching people to
police sources of joy for sources of grievance. Meaning you
go to a comedy show for joy. You want to

(04:11):
unplug from the daily torments of everyday life. You want
to have a couple of drinks, maybe eat a chicken
finger or mozzarella stick, whatever you're into. Maybe you're on
a date with a girl. I don't have the answer,
but the point is you went there to have a
good time. When people started looking around the internet and
policing comedy shows as if these were actual, like political

(04:34):
stances the people were taking as opposed to just a
cartooning of society. We started to break the compass suddenly.
Whether or not the joke was punching up or punching down,
is that joke at a less fortunate, disenfranchised because who
cares what the joke is as long as it's funny.

Speaker 2 (04:55):
Bingo man, bingo.

Speaker 1 (04:57):
Okay, when you make fun of something, you are treating
it as an equal. You are saying it's mainstream. People
know what it is. You're just like the rest of us.
You're in the splash zone. Do you remember how they
were telling you, like, oh, you can't make fun of
trans people, or you can't make fun of minorities, so
you shouldn't be making fun of women. That's not a quality.
Putting somebody off at the kiddie table like an infantilized

(05:19):
lesser than is not actually treating someone as an equal.
But lo and behold, the cancel crowd won that argument.
They started policing comedians in the beginning because in the
infancy stages of social media, people didn't understand what this
rage mob was. They just knew that they needed to
get out of its way. Okay, our corporation doesn't need

(05:40):
the blowback. There's thousands of people saying we're racist, but
we're not racist. Who cares? We just wanted to shut up.
And the truth is everybody who bent the knee benefited
in no way, shape or form, because what they quickly
came to realize is the cancel crowd wasn't out there
for progress. They were just out there for their own prosperity,

(06:00):
Meaning they wanted the clicks, they wanted the relevance, they
wanted the power, but they weren't actually doing anything. Like
think of everybody that's ever been canceled for telling a joke.
Gilbert Godfrey got canceled in the aftermath of the Japanese tsunami.
Tsunamies are in the news right now, but at the time,
Gilbert Godfrey was the Athlac Duck and sixty five percent
of their actual business was taking place over in Japan.

(06:23):
So he told a series of jokes about the tsunami.
You know, that might have been poorly time. To be clear,
Corporate America might have had every right to distance themselves
from his comments, but the people on Twitter who called
for his cancelation, did any of them actually go over
there and help anyone affected by the actual tsunami, which

(06:46):
means it wasn't about the victims. It was about the
people who wanted the clicks. So far, so good. Okay,
understand nobody in Japan. If you think it's insensitive for
Gilbert Goffrey to be telling those jokes, great, but there's
nobody in Japan reading that, because if you happen to
be there at the time of that tsunami and you
had an iPhone in your hand, the only thing you
were using it for was an ore. Okay, Sadly, people

(07:08):
were dying in massive numbers, and you might not like
the timing of the joke, but nobody was sitting on
the roof of their house watching their neighbor's house float
out to see going you know? But more importantly, did
you see what the a flack duck said six thousand
miles away on the other side of the world. And again,
I'm not even telling you the timing of his jokes
were excellent. They were funny jokes. But once we broke

(07:30):
the compass on comedy, we started to do it everywhere else.
We started to police other sources of joy for sources
of grievance. Hey, the Victoria's Secrets catalog. They're having their
actual runway show. We're all the sexy girls they put
on the lingerie and shake their asses all over the
TV set.

Speaker 2 (07:46):
Oh yes, I've read about that in the Bible.

Speaker 1 (07:48):
Okay. And the point is we started to decide that
was a problem. Well, it's not inclusive enough. It's all
hot chicks. Where are the fat chicks. They're in my
search history if you want to be honest, But come on,
where are the fat chicks? We need some of these,
We need one of those. Non, No, we don't. Okay.
The whole point, and this comes right back to Sydney Sweeney,
is you have to understand certain people have been born

(08:11):
into endowments, gifts, genetics, things okay, that are better than
the rest of us. We might consider them to be aspirational.
You know, someone was arguing with me today, well, nobody
looks like Sidney Sweeney. She's so pretty. That's sending it
on fair message to girls. No, it's not girls. First
and foremost people are attracted to energy. We're not attracted

(08:33):
to looks. Everybody has left a nine at the bar
to go home with a six who had something about them.
They seem more fun. You might have clicked better, Okay,
And I know this is true because I was the six.
I was definitely not the nine. I was the six
that had a little bit of game. But the point
being is just because some of us have traits in
one area or another that are beyond the norm doesn't

(08:56):
mean they should be demonized. This idea that well, we
can't say, you know, Sidney Sweeney being this gorgeous, blond haired,
blue eyed girl with big boobs. That's not the norm,
and we shouldn't be celebrated. Why. You know, there are
people out there who can really really sing. Okay, do
we not let them sing because the rest of us
weren't born into that voice. There are guys that can
hit a baseball five hundred feet? Do we not let

(09:18):
them swing the bat? Because we can't all hit the
ball five hundred feet? Okay, that's the point. Certain people
have gifts and attributes that are worthy of celebration because
they are that much more distinctive from the rest of us.
So that's what the hot chicks and advertising thing was
born out of. People liked to look at these other
worldly creatures. They were literally called supermodels because the premise

(09:42):
was they were born into a level of esthetic prosperity
that was beyond the norm. We didn't look at them
as evil for being what they were born as. So
you understand, this whole argument resonates with a small faction
of America that has always been a tyranny of the minority. Okay,
the minority. The majority of people don't want to see

(10:05):
ugly Victoria's secrets models. You know, the majority of people
obviously don't draw any correlation whatsoever between Nazis and Sidney
Sweeney doing a play on words about jeans, knowing Brooks
Shields did the exact same commercial back in nineteen eighty four.
Was anybody in nineteen eighty four calling Brooks Shields a Nazi?

(10:26):
The verbiage in the commercial is identical. Jeans are hereditary,
they're passed down. They determine your looks and how much
this and that, and Brookshields was rolling around on the
ground trying to put on a type pair of genes.
So you understand, this was always born out of some
tyranny of the minority, and the country has moved beyond it.
The reason the woke mob died, the reason they lost
their power, is once people started standing up to them,

(10:49):
we realized the only thing they could ever do was yell.
They didn't have a plan to improve things, and they
didn't care about anybody. Okay, we whacked the Washington reds
Skins logo. Native Americans wanted it, but some woke white
people said it was racist. Okay. Native Americans suffer from
the shortest life expectancies, the highest rates of heart disease, diabetes,

(11:11):
and illiteracy. Did changing the halftime show do anything whatsoever
to improve the quality of life for the Washington Redskins
or the Native American community? To be clear, No, that's
the point. This is not activism, it's slacktivism. And five
years ago this type of blowback might have actually hurt

(11:32):
American Eagle because people, Ah, they're calling us names. We
don't want to be associated with the thing being called names.
I guess we'll just turn on a two. Okay. That's
actually how they got biological men competing against women. Eighty
percent of the country think men do not belong in
the same swimming pool as women. But at the height
of the outrage era, people didn't want the blowback, and
liberals created a gap between what people believed to be

(11:55):
true and what they were willing to say in public,
which is even how something like Dylan mulvaney happened. But
that was pretty much the last straw for this sort
of thing and advertising. Dylan mulvaney came out as the
antithesis of everything bud Light commercials traditionally stood for. It
was hot girls, it was silly jokes, okay, and they
went with Dylan mulvaney aka Sidney Weenie. And the next thing,

(12:19):
you know, nobody wanted to drink bud Light. They were
calling a tranny fluid. Why because they were no longer
catering to the customer preference. They were trying to change them.
You know, Mad Men was now mad Them, Don Draper
was now Dawn Draper, And the customer was like, wait,
why are they telling me I'm wrong for the way
I feel? I've been buying bud Light and laughing at

(12:39):
their real metagenious commercials my whole life. What's even happening here? Okay?
But this holdover from that era is what the backlashed
against American Eagle is all about. People making preposterous claims,
getting a lot of clicks on the media. The mainstream
comes sailing in and piggybacks off of what they tell
you is an outrage. The company's stock price is up

(13:01):
fifteen points. They're not actually in the middle of a controversy,
your right. So the teachable moment here, and it's a
good one, is that, yes, the outrage mob is at
this current incarnation dead. Okay, nobody cares. Are we gonna
cover this? Yes? Am I gonna do half my monologue

(13:23):
on Saturday night on Fox New Saturday Night about this? Yes,
because it's hilarious. Okay, they've declared war on boobs. That's stupid.

Speaker 2 (13:32):
Use your commonses.

Speaker 1 (13:34):
I mean, here's in the Atlantic. Here's a quick quote. Okay,
did an American Eagle know what it was doing when
it made the Sydney Sweeney advertisement. The company hasn't addressed
the controversy, but the ad not unlike the famous and
controversial Brookshields Calvin Klein campaign it appears to be playing
off of, seems like it was perhaps meant to walk
a line to just be controversial enough to garner some attention.

(13:56):
Even her figure has become a cultural stand in for
the idea pushed by conservative commentators that Americans should be
free to love boobs, to which America says does anyone
even hear themselves. Okay, oh, this conservative idea that Americans

(14:21):
should be free to love boobs. Guys, I'm gonna go
out on a limb and say there were a lot
of liberal men who liked boobs too. I'm Hillary Clinton
and I approved this message. Yeah, she caught them liking boobs.
But the point is when you look at this, and
you look at Wokism and the remaining remnants of it
in the elite media and in all of these lunatics

(14:42):
and subarus screaming into their iPhones. Okay, it's a reminder
that Wokism will never run out of ways to rack
up losses.

Speaker 2 (14:53):
You are listening to the most relatable men on the radio.

Speaker 3 (14:56):
Best way to describe he was to say he's a
typical boy.

Speaker 4 (15:00):
Now do black and brown women, because black and brown
women also have.

Speaker 5 (15:04):
Great jeans that they inherit from their parents.

Speaker 1 (15:06):
Did you know that talking about blue jeans.

Speaker 6 (15:08):
And white people boycott American evil a boycott out of them.

Speaker 7 (15:13):
A blonde haired, blue eyed white woman is talking about
her good gens like that is not the propaganda.

Speaker 1 (15:25):
Life is hard, but it's harder when you're stupid fox
across America with Jimmy failer. Did anybody listen to any
of that? It's all pretend Hey, American Eagle, do black
and brown women next?

Speaker 8 (15:36):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (15:36):
Really like Beyonce doesn't have a massive jeans campaign? Like,
what are we even talking about here? And that's the point.
The outrage mob is not dealing to people who are
interested in fact. They wield their emotions as facts and
for a long time we're able to use it as

(15:57):
a cudgel. Nobody actually believes this. Nobody these people want clecks.
I don't doubt there are some woke white liberal checks who, yes,
who've been taught there under attack. We've all seen the
women who walk around in the handmade costumes to protest
Republican deals and stuff like that. Guys, do you realize
white women in America? White women in America have more rights, prosperity, tolerance, acceptance,

(16:25):
corporate support, and governmental inclusion than any other group of
women anywhere on the actual planet of Earth. He knows
what he's talking about. Really think about that. Okay, half
the women in the Middle East can't even show their
face in public. Women in the Middle East get stoned
for reading. Women in the Middle East get stoned for

(16:48):
being raped. Well, you must have enticed the man. Really
with my covered up face and skin, I guess I
should have not shouldn't iron the sheets as well as
I did. It must be really tempting. Okay, and this
is all pretend. It's all people wanting to cash in
on the idea that victimhood is currency. That's what the

(17:09):
cancel culture era was. Somebody did me dirty. I want
them fired, And now you should all start to go
fund me because I was upset about a joke or
I didn't like an advertisement. Every one of these people
doing this to get attention, which, again, if you're concerned
about some type of Nazi coding in this commercial, I
can't imagine why you'd want to draw more attention to it.

(17:32):
But never mind how intellectually disqualifying it is to compare
six million people dying to a girl with a big
parrot wearing a tight pair of pants. Okay, but that's
what we're dealing with now on the woke left. Okay,
I'm not telling you it's the whole party, but I'm
telling you it's the entirety of the mainstream media, and
I'm going to prove it when we come back with

(17:53):
their own clips and we'll have a grown up talk
about hoodies. Who doesn't love that Fox across America with
radio buddy Jimmy Fallow. Kennedy's coming up. We're also gonna
be talking to Katrina Campins. Paula Scanlon will be here
as well. She's, of course a University of Pennsylvania swimmer
who was forced to compete against Leah Thomas, who was,

(18:15):
of course, to quote Austin Powers a man baby. That's
not right, not right, And of course for a long
time nobody at the University of Pennsylvania wanted to speak
up about it because they would be called a transphobe
and a hateful bigot, when in fact, speaking up about
it would have put you in the same intellectual class

(18:36):
as mister Rogers, who famously sang for fifty years about
the biological differences between men and women.

Speaker 9 (18:44):
Boys are boys from the beginning. If you were born
a boy, you stay a boy. Girls are girls right
from the start. If you were born a girl, you
stay a girl and grow up to be a lady.

Speaker 1 (19:00):
I mean, if he said that in the modern Democratic Party,
you know what the reaction would be.

Speaker 5 (19:05):
He should be behind bars.

Speaker 1 (19:07):
They would lock him up he might actually get the
death penalty. For the rest of the song.

Speaker 9 (19:11):
Only girls can be the mommies, Only boys can be
the daddies.

Speaker 1 (19:19):
Yes, wait, because I was told men can have babies.
That is a fact check false. Of course it is.
But that whole pretend narrative that they weaponized on the left.
They knew it wasn't biologically true, but they would draw
an extreme position in the culture war, and then if

(19:41):
you disagreed with it, they'd say, well, this is obviously
based on some type of transphobia or hatred or bigotry,
and you're like, no, actually, it's just based on real
life experiences. None of you have ever gotten a phone
call on a football Sunday that began with them saying, hey,
we're not going to make the game. Vinnie is going
into labor. Okay, it's never happened. It's never gonna happen.
You want to know why, Because boys can have babies. Okay, Seriously,

(20:06):
if men can have babies, where is it coming out
of in the male body? Okay? I mean because I
can't think of any pleasant options, you know, seriously, I
mean think about that. Okay, And are we having a
butt baby? I mean I'm just saying, and if this
is a real conversation, I'm not trying to be sophomoric

(20:26):
or stupid. I mean that would be the reality of
what we're talking about here. So the Democrats would draw
these absurd positions in the culture Wars because they knew
they would get pushed back, and they got all of
their work done politically in the last ten years of
identity politics. That telling you all forms of political disagreement
were born out of some form of hatred. That's how
it worked. Democrats just call everyone racist, so they go

(20:50):
along with their stupid ideas totally till people started to
realize the Democrats were harming the black community more than anybody.
The Democrats wanted to defund the police that drove up
the black murder rate by twenty five percent. Who opposed
a school choice where seventy percent of the kids in
this country are trapped in schools that can't read at
their grade level. The Democrats do? Okay, who actually got

(21:12):
Charles Barkley to speak out after all of these years
about why the Democrats were losing the black vote. The
Democrats did.

Speaker 10 (21:19):
The reason I think the Democratic Party missed a Biden
president Biden is losing black voss. They only care about
black people.

Speaker 2 (21:27):
Every four years.

Speaker 10 (21:29):
They come into our neighborhoods and say we're gonna make
stuff better. We're gonna do this, do this, do this,
and then finding us black people are like hell man.

Speaker 2 (21:37):
Other than nobility to.

Speaker 10 (21:38):
Dunk of basketball, All my neighborshoods are still the same,
Our schools are still the same.

Speaker 1 (21:45):
Think about that. Okay, Because the Democrats would rather run
on an issue than solve the actual problem. This is
politics as usual. That's the lesson they learned in electing Obama. Okay,
we elected Obama. We fulfilled our prom as a country
that anyone here could be anything, and then all men
were created equal. We had a black president. Okay. The

(22:06):
Democrats were like, wait, that's not good. So they had
to go back to characterizing every form of political disagreement
as some form of racism. Well, g what's so different
about this president that Republicans don't want to send fifty
billion dollars in cash to I ran the biggest state
sponsor of terrorism in the world. M What is it

(22:28):
when I look at him? What's different about how he
looks from the other presidents? This is what they did
g Obamacare drove up your healthcare premiums by three hundred percent?
What is it about this president that's got Republicans so mad?
It's like I'm looking at him.

Speaker 2 (22:45):
Race is not where the line is drawn.

Speaker 1 (22:48):
Is God's side and the other side on every issue.
But that's the fraud of identity politics. If you base
it and pretend racism and get people to buy into
the idea, there is no deliverable needed. You don't need
to fix anything. You're rallying against a pretend issue. That's
what calling American Eagle Nazis is. It's a pretend issue. Okay.

(23:10):
The CEO of American Eagle Jewish. He is Jewish. The
proceeds from this ad campaign are going to domestic abuse victims.
How many times did Hitler hire a Jewish guy to
raise money for domestic abuse victims? You could google it,
you can look it up. I don't mean to be
a spoiler here, but the correct answer is zero. Okay,

(23:31):
it's absurd on its face, But you run on pretend
things because with the Democrats are catering to are people
who want to believe they're morally superior to the rest
of us. Okay, you remember that vaccine that didn't block transmission.
Hundreds of thousands of vaccinated people have died of COVID.
That is a statement of fact. But what did they
cater to when they were pushing a vaccine mandate that

(23:53):
they said was never gonna happen in the first place.
It's time to start shaming the unvaccinated. These are bad
people you got not getting vaccines. It's time to start
shaming them.

Speaker 5 (24:03):
Because, frankly, we know that we can't trust to be unvaccinated.

Speaker 2 (24:06):
There the freedom. I want, my freedom to live.

Speaker 1 (24:09):
No, screw your freedom, your schmuck for not bearing a mess.
We have to stop coddling the morons who will not
get the shot. Shame on you, Shame on you. Okay,
but lo and behold. Everybody in that montage was wrong.
But the fact that they mounted a shame campaign, a
stampede of shame, allowed a lot of people on the

(24:32):
left who's emotions of their facts to feel like they
were morally and intellectually superior to you. That's what this
is about. Hey, Sidney Sweeney's a Nazi. Well I'm not
a Nazi, so anyone defending her is, And I'm glad
I'm on this side, because I wouldn't want to be
on the Nazi side. No, who would not? America? Our
grandparents fought and defeated the Nazis, and now we're sitting

(24:57):
here all these later being called Nazis because we like
a good set of I'm sorry, but that's where the
conversation takes us. Here is Robin Landa on ABC Clip three.

Speaker 11 (25:11):
The pun good genes activates a troubling historical associations for
this country. The American eugenics movement and it's prime between
like nineteen hundred and nineteen forty, weaponized the idea of
good genes just to justify white supremacist.

Speaker 1 (25:30):
Think about that, to justify white supremacists.

Speaker 9 (25:36):
What you just said is one of the most insanely
idiotic things I have ever heard.

Speaker 2 (25:41):
Everyone in this room is now dumber for having listened
to it.

Speaker 1 (25:45):
And do you understand Brookshields did the same commercial in
nineteen eighty four genes, and they crossed it out and
wrote genes and nobody was like, what do you mean,
master race eugenics? Do you know what was actually based
on eugenics? Not to get people work up Planned Parenthood.
The founder of Planned Parenthood, Margaret Sanger was the champion

(26:06):
of eugenics. They have conveniently wiped that off most of
the plaques, But if you go back and read her
writings and her teachings, she saw abortion as a means
to control the size of the black population. I'm not
talking out a turn here, go look it up. Just
want you to have an informed conversation. So this is
all a pretend hysteria. If you convince people that some

(26:29):
terrible injustice has been committed by some party that ran
a foul of polite society, a lot of them will
mobilize to your side because they want to feel like
good people. So I'm not telling you there aren't gullible
people who really now believe that they made some call
to arms about eugenics. But that's been the biggest problem
for the Democrats is there was a time when running
on pretend stuff was successful. It's not successful anymore because

(26:53):
we're having an honest conversation. The lanes of speech have
been restored. Elon Musk buying Twitter was the most consequential
thing to happen to this country in our lifetime, because
we were now able to dissent in the court of
public opinion and when other social media platforms saw that
there was a market for it, and they were gonna
make a lot more money, and they were going to

(27:13):
generate a lot more advertising revenue from letting people say
what they actually believed. The lanes of speech went wide open,
wide open. Do you know how many Democrats listening believe
that Trump never condemned Neo Nazis and white nationalists in
Charlottesville Because for about five years there you couldn't post

(27:33):
the clip of him condemning Neo Nazis and white nationalists
in Charlottesville. You could post it, but they would throttle
it so it wouldn't get any circulation to the algorithm,
And ninety nine percent of the people on Twitter under
Jack Dorsey really believed Trump said they were fine people
on both sides and never condemned the neo Nazis and

(27:54):
the white nationalists in Charlottesville.

Speaker 2 (27:56):
In no part of your mind or brain.

Speaker 1 (27:58):
I mean, that's the biggest problem, okay, is that he
did and.

Speaker 12 (28:02):
You had people and I'm not talking about the neo
Nazis and the white nationalists because they should be condemned totally.

Speaker 1 (28:08):
Wait what they should be condemned totally?

Speaker 5 (28:12):
I guess we have some issues.

Speaker 1 (28:14):
But we had no issues. Why because they had throttled
our ability to communicate freely. So the outrage mob used
to have a lot more sway because our inability to
dissent in the court of public opinion made it look
like their thought process was the prevailing sentiment. Well, everybody
in my feed says I should be mad about this.

(28:35):
Everybody's mad about this. Listen. I don't want to embarrass
the person because I think they were genuinely, genuinely sucked
into an emotional vacuum by the omnipotence of the news cycle.
But when I first started here and the left was
really running hard, hard on the he said, find people
on both sides. He didn't get theemn any the Nazis
and white supremacist. I knew somebody who's like a big

(28:56):
time TV person, okay at one of the network, who
I literally ran into that day, who was like, got,
he's probably got to resign. I mean, you can't be
president with the whole world knowing this about you. I mean,
it's not who we are as Americans. It's not the
oath you take when you put your hand on the
Bible to protect the clue klutx plant and that's exactly
what he just did. And I was like, dude, did

(29:18):
you even watch the clip? I watched, but no, because
we live in this world now where everybody is a
prisoner of the moment. Whatever we're consuming is coming at
us out of a fire hose, so nobody can think
beyond the blast. You're getting news out of your phone.
You're getting news when you get in the elevator, there's
a TV on. You get news at a gas pump.
Now you get news on your TV. You get news

(29:38):
on your iPad, you get a news update on your
watch if it's connected to your phone. You get it
on a boat, on a goat, on a train, with
a plane. Okay, it's everywhere you go. So if they
reinforce a mindset and people consume enough of it, they
start to believe things are true. This is how the
media was dominant in the first Trump term in a
way that they no longer are because they've been so

(29:59):
wildly discredited so many times, and they never went back
to acknowledge the wrongdoing. Okay, Russia, Russia, Remember, Russia did
not hack the twenty sixteen election to help Donald Trump.
It was made up by these sick people straight up. Okay,
that's reality. Donald Trump, who was impeached for threatening the

(30:19):
withhold aid from Ukraine, never threatened to withhold aid from Ukraine.
He looked into reports of Joe Biden doing it because
Joe Biden bragged about doing it.

Speaker 13 (30:29):
I had gotten a commitment from Porshenko and from yachtsin
yuk that they would take action against the state prosecutor.
And they didn't. They said, you have no authority. You're
not the president. The president said, I said.

Speaker 1 (30:41):
Call him.

Speaker 13 (30:43):
I said, I'm telling you're not getting a billion dollars.
I said, you're not getting the billion, and I'm gonna be
leaving here. And I think it was what six hours.
I look at I said, leaving the six hours. If
the prosecutor's not fired, you're not getting the money.

Speaker 2 (30:55):
Oh, son of a bit.

Speaker 1 (30:57):
Got fired. Imagine that, and the media just pretended that
never existed. That's Joe Biden saying, as vice president, I
threatened to withhold their one billion dollars in four and
aid something that is the actual equivalent of treason. Okay,
And Trump was in peached for that. There is trees
in this behavior. And you didn't circulate that clip anywhere

(31:19):
on the Internet. Before Elon Musk bought Twitter, it really
mattered because loosening up the lanes of free speech allowed
for all intents and purposes. I guess you could call
it biology conversational biology to kind of reroot itself in
the vernacular. Yes, guys are attracted to hot Victoria's Secret models.
Doesn't mean they're not attracted to chubby ones and everything

(31:39):
in between. People are attracted to all shapes and sizes.
No matter what you look like, no matter what you weigh,
no matter what your hair color is, no matter how
many limbs you have, there is somebody who looks exactly
like you selling naked pictures of themselves on the Internet
right now. I mean that, I'm not trying to be funny.
The market for different types of looks is infinite. Everybody

(31:59):
is t acted to different things, different strokes for different folks,
different strokes. That was an actual TV show in the eighties.
By the way, for those of you youngsters out there,
a lot of people think different strokes and they're picturing
a conversation between Joe Biden and John Fetterman. But stick
with me. Understand that when we've opened up the lanes
of free speech. The people who were holding us hostage

(32:21):
with absurdist beliefs like jeans or Nazis and big boobs
are bad. They went from people who drove the zeitgeist
to actual, living, breathing punchlines. That's why we're spending so
much time on this is because we need to bring
back shame in society now. I always say we're living

(32:41):
in the death of shame. Okay, people, you don't know
shame if you can compare the death of six million
people to Sidney Sweeney showing a lot of cleavage and
talking about genes as a play on words. That's why
I always say we need to bring back sliming. Do
you remember the Nickelodeon show. You can't do that on television.
I don't like to mention Nickelodeon because my he's not
allowed around underage kids. But the point is, if you

(33:03):
remember that show, when people did something bad, they would
slime them on live TV, like you idiots, okay, And
that's what we need to bring back now because anybody
who's out there trying to make this connection and weaponize
the emotion of stupid people to think there's some type
of eugenics code to arm being made by a set
of hoodies. Deserve to be slimed because they're clowns.

Speaker 2 (33:27):
It's the show that leaves you hungry for more. Don't
sit around and cook some Soupy.

Speaker 14 (33:34):
Brand desserts and just get all fat.

Speaker 1 (33:37):
And say there it is Fox across America with Jimmy Fala.
This is the dumbest time there's ever been to be alive.
My uncle Chester defeated the Nazis just so I could
get called a Nazi for liking boobs. But since we're
talking about World War Two, I talk about this in
Punchlines and Patriots. I got a lot of gay friends.

(34:00):
I'm not saying we have to shorten Pride Month, but
we need a lengthened Veterans Day. We need a lengthened
Veterans Day. Pride Month could be a month, but that
means the veterans should get like two months like there is.
It is not insane to me to think that my
uncle Chester killed thirteen Nazs and he gets a day.
But if he would have gave one of them a
rubbin tug, he would have got a month. I mean,
think about it. If you would have just big spooned Nazi.

(34:23):
He would have played spin the bottle with the Nazis,
he'd get a month, but instead he threw hand grenades
and shot at them, so he only gets a day.
Shout out to my uncle Chester and everybody who put
on the uniform, especially the cops wearing it right now,
you guys really not getting the support you deserve out there,
especially down in Cincinnati. We're gonna get into it in
the next hour. If you're listening on WHIO, we have

(34:45):
a obviously viral brawl that you might have seen by
now that is being defended by a female sheriff who
wants us to believe were the bad guys for watching
this video out of context and we don't have the
full story. But the video ends with a man suck
her punching a white woman and knocking her unconscious. I
would like to know what context makes that. Okay, I'll

(35:09):
wait because I gotta be honest. For all these HR
seminars you go to in corporate America, and they make
me go to extra ones because of mikey search history.
But the point is, for all of these that you do,
there's never one where I've ever heard the case being
made for sucker punching somebody in the face, especially if
it's a man against a woman. I mean bananas. Okay.
It may fly in modern college athletics to let men

(35:32):
beat up women, but in the real world, where decent
people still rule the day, We're never gonna sign off
on that sort of thing. We'll get into it with Kennedy.
We're gonna talk to Katrina Campins, Okay. Paul Scanlon's gonna
be here as well. It is a stack deck the
rest of the way on Fox Across.

Speaker 2 (35:46):
America from Embry where USA. It's Fox Across America with
Jimmy Baylor.

Speaker 1 (36:12):
Oh, we're letting the guitars roll. Building to a broad
casting crescendo on Fox Across America with Jimmy Fallo. We
got Kennedy coming up, we got Katrina Campen's coming up,
and Paula Scanlon is gonna be here. And it is
Ladies Night, the good old fashioned ladies, the ones that
don't have wieners. You know what I'm saying. What the
hell did eight at eight seven to eight, nine, nine

(36:32):
one zero. If you want to be a part of
the show. We had a lot of fun in the
first hour talking about this preposterous claim that the American
Eagle Ads starring Sydney Sweeney is some type of Nazi
coding to eugenics. So crazy someplace else. We're all stocked
up here. They're gonna keep selling the crazy, but we're
gonna have some cold, sobering truth for you in this

(36:54):
hour eight at eight, seven to eight, nine to nine
one zero as we get underway. The show, which we
always tell you, is a place that operates free of
ideological barriers. We do not care who you vote for,
whether or you agree with us. It doesn't matter. I
don't care where you come from. I don't care what

(37:15):
tell y are. I don't care how's much y'all? I
don't care. I gum y'are No, ma'am say it all
the time. It could be a Republican, you could be
a Democrat, just don't be a That is all. So
as your roll on a couple of good things, let
me plan for you really quick, because the one thing
you need to know about my show is I'm always
processing issues through the lens of how does it affect us?

(37:35):
Not will it help the Republicans get elected other Democrats?
Cause I don't care. It's not my job. My job
is to look at what's happening in Washington, what's happening
in news, and translated into plain English for the rest
of us, so we understand how our lives will be impacted. Okay,
here's the good news about how our life has been impacted. Okay,
GDP grew quicker than expected. Take it away. The NBC

(38:00):
clibate a three percent of.

Speaker 8 (38:04):
Three percent, better than expected. That would be the highest
level since the third quarter of twenty four, when it
was up three point one percent. On the consumption side,
up one point four very close to estimates. Up one
point four would be the best since the last quarter
of twenty four.

Speaker 1 (38:22):
So that's them telling us the economy is up beyond expectations. Okay,
that's actually really good news. Here's Cheryl CASONI saying the
same thing. Clip seven again, GDP.

Speaker 15 (38:34):
This is the first read of the second quarter coming
in at three percent. That is better than expected two
point four percent.

Speaker 2 (38:41):
I want to bring it.

Speaker 5 (38:41):
Adam Johnson Marcus are certainly watching this right.

Speaker 12 (38:44):
Yeah, goldilots, because I would add to that Cheryl that
the GDP price index was only two percent and the
expectation was two point two in other words, we have
an economy growing at what you say, three percent, we
have inflation at two percent.

Speaker 1 (38:58):
That's the best of both worlds.

Speaker 12 (39:00):
So I'm very positive on that report, at least in
the moment.

Speaker 1 (39:08):
Did you hear that, by the way, the economy soaring
under Donald Trump? So much so that Axios which Axios,
which is not exactly mar Lago monthly, Axios actually giving
Trump credit and saying that the trade deal was a
win for the American people. Here it is, Axios. President

(39:32):
Trump is winning the global trade battle with a series
of deals that are resulting so far in big concessions
by major partners, new revenue for the federal government, and
minimal upset to the US economy or markets. It is,
let's continue. Tariff revenue is rolling in twenty seven billion

(39:56):
dollars last month alone, supporting the White Houses contention that
import taxes are on track to become a meaningful revenue
source that lowers the budget deficit. You know what that means, right,
It means the tariffs are working and all the critics
were wrong. I hope you like this song, folks. Okay,

(40:22):
you know who doesn't like this song? Are you ready
for it? A guy by the name of Chuck Schumer.
Chuck Schumer's a clown. I tweeted this earlier. Okay, Democrats
are so upset with this good economic news because it
means Trump is winning. In the Democratic Party, the politics

(40:43):
are more important than the people. Do you understand if
the GDP grows beyond expectations, if hiring beats expectations by
one hundred thousand jobs every month of Trump's presidency, if
American born workers have gotten ninety five percent of those
jobs created, this is a huge win for American tax

(41:06):
paying citizens. The Republican base, the Democratic base are people
in this country illegally. Okay, Democrats voted against the Big
Beautiful Bill, which got rid of a tax on tips.
Imagine if you're a single mom, or you're a poor
family and you're waiting tables to make ends meet after

(41:27):
you get done work in your full time job. Imagine
hearing that there'll be no more tax on tips and
someone trying to tell you that was a bad thing.
There's no world where you could but the Democrats fought
against something that was very, very popular. No tax on
tips is like the Sidney Sweeney story. Everybody likes hot
girls and funny commercials, the idea that you're gonna be like, no, no, no,

(41:49):
that's it. Boobs are bad insanity, actual clinical insanity. What
they've done, but you did. Chuck Schumer comes in today
after hearing the good news and says, oh, it's all
a mirage. You don't understand Trump and his people. That
is totally absurd. Here he is saying it. Are you
ready for it? This is clip nine.

Speaker 3 (42:11):
And while the Trump administration will try to wave rosy
headlines about the Q two number, today's GDP number is
in fact a mirage because some ominous numbers lurk under
the hood. Business investment plunged in the second quarter by
three point one percent. The fact that business investment plunged

(42:34):
so starkly is very troubling.

Speaker 1 (42:37):
Oh my god.

Speaker 3 (42:38):
It shows that already businesses are worried about growing their operations,
worried about hiring more workers, worried about trading with their
international partners, and worried in general about the future.

Speaker 1 (42:51):
I'm going to play it one more time just so
you get it, Okay, do you want to know why?
And this is real. GDP grew above expectations, HIRINGTX inflation
went down, real wages are ahead of inflation for the
first time in forty five years. Do you know why
he's quoting a stat that says business investment is down.
It's because in Trump's first quarter as president, we got

(43:13):
a bigger amount of foreign investments than we ever have
in the history of the country. Oh wow, Trump brought
in about four trillion dollars in capital investments. Okay, this
time around it's three percent less than that. But you understand,
in both instances, you're talking about trillions of dollars more

(43:37):
than we had at the beginning of the month. Straight clown. Okay,
and here's truck schruck Schumer. This is the greatest thing
in the world, truck Schumer said when Trump trucked the
straight trucky struck struck. The trade deal is. What do
you th think of it? Seriously, I sound like I

(43:57):
sound like Joe Biden.

Speaker 2 (43:58):
Up.

Speaker 13 (43:59):
Make sure the televis excuse me, make sure you have
the record player on at night.

Speaker 2 (44:04):
The punt.

Speaker 1 (44:07):
I gotta apologize to that man, Chuck Schumer said on
the Senate floor after Trump made the trade deal with
the EU a monumental trade deal. Okay, I'm gonna play
the reactions to that just the same. Okay, here he
is telling you the trade deal is a ninety billion
dollar tax on Americans. Clip twelve.

Speaker 3 (44:26):
Over the weekend, Donald Trump announced a new trade deal
with the European Union. It will result in a ninety
billion dollars per year tax hike on American families. When
you raise tariffs, the American families pay for it. Ninety
billion dollar tax on American families in this tariff deal

(44:48):
with the European Union.

Speaker 1 (44:49):
He is so fullish this guy straight up, because you
want to know what we haven't done since Trump imposed tariffs.
We haven't paid more for goods. Okay, So this whole
idea that it was a tax on Americans, we were
all going to feel it. We've brought in a record
record of over fifty billion dollars in tariff revenue since

(45:11):
Trump implemented them. So when Chuck Schumer gets out there,
this is the point I want you to understand. Okay,
as a guy who cares about people, I drove a taxi.
It was really poor. It was really, really really poor
when my kid was born. Okay, we were banking out
of a shoe box. I know some of you have
heard the story A million times. Okay, you talk about
not having money in the bank, We didn't have a bank. Okay.
We were banking at the Bank of Nike, and we

(45:33):
were keeping cash in a Nike box, hoping to catch
a hot streak and save up to the bank of rebook.
If you've ever lived that way, and you're responsible for
lives beyond your own, and you're in such a primal
fight for your own financial survival day in and day out, yeah,
builds a lot of character. It's a lot of fun.
Looking back on it now, it's very whimsical and amazing
and incredible, and your wife and your kid and you're
moving around and all the fun stuff that we got

(45:55):
to do. But the point is it's really really hard,
like really hard, and if you've ever lived through it,
you can never abandon your connection to it, and you
can never take your eye off of the poor people
struggling the way you did. So when I hear these
massive GDP numbers and job growth and no tax on
tips and stuff like that, I'm thinking of somebody like

(46:15):
myself who would have really benefited from this, Okay, And
I know there are people out there right now that
are hearing good economic news for the country and going
not me. I'm not doing much better, and you might
not be yet, but the bureaucratic boot of regulation is
being lifted off the neck of the business community, which
means it is only a matter of time till your

(46:36):
own pace and quality of life accelerates if you keep
on working. Okay, things are absolutely positively trending in the
right direction. I know that because all the networks that
hate Trump have been forced to admit it. Here's CNN
clip fifteen.

Speaker 16 (46:50):
The bottom line is, this is the biggest trade deal
in President Trump's effort to effectively reshape the global trading
order that has been one of his central priorities since
taking office in January. He's been issuing many threats of tariffs,
but they clearly have been working in terms of bringing
other countries' allies and adversaries alike in some cases, to

(47:13):
the negotiating table.

Speaker 1 (47:15):
I mean, think about that. That's CNN. CNN's saying it's working.

Speaker 5 (47:19):
CNN is the worst.

Speaker 1 (47:21):
But even they can't lie about it because it's irrefutable.
Here's MSNBC clip sixteen. The US take.

Speaker 12 (47:28):
Any hits with this deal, and what does it say
this outcome say about the President's ability to negotiate.

Speaker 1 (47:35):
It's incredibly favorable for the United States. When you look
at this, it's been very one sided.

Speaker 12 (47:40):
I mean, the US is been making the demands and
these other countries have had to kind of contort and
comport themselves to them.

Speaker 1 (47:45):
I mean, think about that. Okay, incredibly favorable deal to
the United States of America. Do you know how many
hits we take zero? Okay, Trump understood we have all
the leverage with the biggest economy in the world. People
need us to sell their products. They need us a
lot more than we need them. So what he's trying
to do is twofold. One is he's trying to leverage

(48:07):
that access by getting them to pay us more for
the privilege of doing business here. Two, he's incentivizing investment
in our country. He's saying, hey, I know you don't
like tariffs, so move some of the factories back. Okay.
When you really think about what NAFTA did under Bill Clinton, Okay,
it killed over five million factory jobs. I'm not saying
we're gonna get every one of them back, but you

(48:28):
show a hands. If you're listening in a car right now,
how many of you just drove through a town that
used to have a factory in a booming downtown and
now has a Walmart and a cracker barrel next to
a highway. Shout out to Walmart and cracker Barrel. I
love them both. I mean, I fit in just fine there.
Those are my people. But I'm telling you, you might
have had a thriving downtown. You might have had a
different quality of life before they took all of that

(48:48):
American manufacturing and exported it overseas. And when everybody says, oh,
you know it's gone, you can't wave a wand and
bring it back. Do you remember when Obama was saying
all that stuff, it's because he didn't have the balls
to use the leverage we have as the world's biggest economy.
That's the one, and I really mean this. The biggest
attribute of having people from the private sector running the
government right now is they're running it like a business

(49:10):
instead of running it like a government. A government traditionally
uses taxpayers as a piggybank for whatever special interest they'd
like to pursue with their own agenda. That's just how
white folks will do you, and that's always been it.
Run on one thing. Do another outsource stuff to this
slush fund or that slush fund. Hey, everybody's starving in Africa.
We gotta send the money. And the rest of us

(49:31):
are like, yeah, we got to send the money. We're
going to starting in Africa. But you know what the
clearance rate is on usaid when it comes to foreign aid,
ninety cents on every dollar we send to Africa for food,
ninety cents of every dollar never makes it outside of Washington,
So they get about ten percent of what we're actually
committing to things like that, which is actually a high

(49:52):
clearance rate. If you ask the people who donated to
California's fire relief fund under Gavin Newsom, like people should
be in jail for that. They raised one hundred million
dollars at the charity event, and no homeowner has gotten
any relief because the money was filtered through Democrat Get
out the Vote organizations in California, a state that's like
nine hundred and sixty two percent liberal, give or take

(50:12):
a few counties where they're listening to us on KSRO
right now. But the point is it's all a scam,
and Trump has the balls to call it out for
what it is. And the reason the economy is thriving.
Is for the first time in our life, we have
a president that is putting America first and the American
laborer is benefiting. And yes, Chuck Schumer can go on

(50:33):
TV and ah, this is bad. It's a mirage. You
don't understand because his job is not to make your
life better. His job is to hope it gets worse.
So you'll give Democrats another shot at running the country. Okay,
But does anybody looking around right now at all the
destruction they did, driving grocery prices up thirty percent, inflation
to a forty year high, letting twenty one million people

(50:56):
into the country, which resulted in a three hundred percent
spot of spike, three hundred percent fentanyl poisoning deaths, bumbling
is in the brink at two world wars and telling
us men can have babies. Is anybody sitting around right
now going gae? If only those people could be in
charge again? And you know the answer.

Speaker 2 (51:15):
These foks across America with Jimmy Saylor.

Speaker 1 (51:17):
Here's one of those, like, oh girl, it is Fox
across America. But the main man Jimmy Phala Kennedy's coming up,
Paula Scanlon's gonna be here, and we're also going to
talk to Katrina Campin's about the Sydney sweeneyad. Because people
are all in a huff about cleavage. That's the whole
friggin thing. I know, right, people, I'm not. Yeah, That's

(51:38):
why I guess Lincoln's reaction. But the point is, as
we have this conversation, the one thing that I keep
coming back to over and over and over again is
the two political parties. If you look at them as
just parties, I forget pilits and not a Democrat party,
not a republic party, just a party. It reminds me
of an old episode of the Office. Have you ever

(52:00):
seen The Office when they have competing Christmas parties. They've
got like a Michael Scott party, no one's going to,
nobody cares. Then the other guys are having like the
cool fun party and everything like that. That is the
Democrats and the Republicans right now. The Republican Office party
is a lot more fun. They've got jokes, they've got
big boobs. Women feel good about themselves. Women feel safe

(52:22):
in this environment because they're not being told that men
are allowed to get naked in their women's room. They're
not losing out on scholarships and awards and medals and
trophies because they're being forced to compete against biological males
on behalf of an ideology that purports to care and
protect women. Okay, the Democratic Party, if you looked at

(52:43):
it as a party, is erasing women. They're saying their ability,
which is unique to them to give birth, is not
their own. It's not something women have a monopoly on
because men supposedly can also give of birth. I mean,
you know that, and I know that. But that's politics

(53:05):
in a nutshell right now. One side is setting all
kinds of historic trade deals. They've shut down the border,
They've cut your taxes, and yes, they've cut taxes on tips.
So at the Republican Party, not only are you having
more fun, but the strippers are happier too. Meanwhile, over

(53:27):
in the Democratic Office Party, there's plenty of women, but
for some reason, they all have a bigger Adams Apple
than you. Politics twenty twenty five, Kennedy's coming by to
extol on the virtues of this expert analysis. After this,

(53:50):
we are rocking hard on Fox across America with Jimmy Falo.
We've been a little high Brown today, we've been talking
about boobies for the past hour and a half. Happen
to know that two fellas in the control room right
now have thrown a lot of money at them over
the years, paying in cash to quote el Rushbell joining
us now an expert on all things Booby's cash, all

(54:10):
of it. The k Train, host of the Kennedy Saved
the World podcast. Kennedy is up on the main stage.

Speaker 5 (54:15):
Thank you, Jim.

Speaker 1 (54:17):
I love a strip club voice. Do you a strip
club djads?

Speaker 5 (54:22):
Together?

Speaker 1 (54:24):
We had a scenery rockets take her in the back.
Who knows what will happen?

Speaker 2 (54:30):
That was the room.

Speaker 5 (54:32):
People listen, there's snow bouncers or cameras.

Speaker 1 (54:35):
People listening up in Utica WYBX, we've been there. We
did We did a stand up comedy there. They used
have a strip club called Peepers. And when I was
a senior in high school, we were there for a
baseball tournament and Peepers let us write in like with
a library card.

Speaker 15 (54:49):
Well you know, I'm sure uh huh, based on your
high school Several of those seniors were probably twenty five.

Speaker 1 (54:58):
And they were to be fair visiting their classmates on stage.
But the shrimp club. DJ Peeper is a legend, and
I had never been a shrip club before, so you
would imagine this carries a lot of sway with a
young boy. Go take her in the back for a
leap dance. Who knows what might happen? And we're like,
whoa all ride, you know what happens?

Speaker 5 (55:16):
You'd probably my girlfriend.

Speaker 1 (55:19):
What do you remember the old Chris Rock bit there's
no sex in the champagne room. No matter what a
stripper might tell you, there is no sex in the
champagne room.

Speaker 15 (55:28):
But I don't doubt when John Stark's ratted out his
former teammates. Yeah, and I was like, I was at
a strip club with Patrick Ewing and I saw some
very untoward things happening with a young lady's mouth.

Speaker 1 (55:40):
And that's why the Knicks never won a title, because
John Starks didn't understand the value of going after loose balls.
Got everybody gotta go wrap it up.

Speaker 15 (55:51):
If only they could have employed some of those women
from Flashdance.

Speaker 1 (55:57):
Bang. So we're talking about women in the highest intellectual
sense of the term. Indeed, uh, I always say back
in the cancel culture era, I used to call it
a war on fund, meaning they were they were basically
policing sources of joy for sources of grievance. You know,
they'd go to a comedy show like, is this joke
punching up or punching down? Who cares? Am I laughing? Yeah,

(56:18):
it doesn't matter, No punch down, go ahead. And I
think the whole throw your back out, amen. And I
think the hold ups, the holdouts on the Sydney Sweeney argument,
the crazy white women in Sube Rus or whoever they are,
are operating under an old business model that you could
police a source of joy for a source of grievance
and for a while, maybe hold sway on social media

(56:39):
because people would get behind your social pressure campaign, regardless
of whether it was more to any fact. I mean,
because I think wherever you take your analysis, I think
we would agree.

Speaker 5 (56:47):
Oh it is Wednesday, it is time for my your analysis.

Speaker 1 (56:50):
But I think we would agree that drawing a correlation
between killing six million people and a chick in jeans
with hoodies is intellectually disqualifying.

Speaker 15 (57:00):
Yeah, okay, you start there, as if I love that
Sydney Sweeney somehow now is a Nazi propagandists.

Speaker 5 (57:07):
For me, it's like never mind.

Speaker 15 (57:10):
The hordes of people who've taken over Columbia and Harvard
and UPenn and UCLA and these killed the Jews rallies.
Now all of a sudden, they've sprouted some anti Nazi sensibilities,
even though there's spray paint all over these campuses. Hitler
was right, yeah, but now it's like they're jealous of

(57:30):
Sidney Sweeney.

Speaker 5 (57:31):
So they're like, oh my god, Like this is so freaky.

Speaker 15 (57:35):
This is obviously a propaganda campaign, and it's really freaking
me out. It's like, that is such a historical stretch,
and for the professors to go on can and be like, well, actually,
this is all the EU Jennux program started in the
United States from nineteen hundred to nineteen forty.

Speaker 5 (57:53):
But I see a lot of parallels.

Speaker 15 (57:55):
It's like, what between cleavage and a classic car and
the termination of six six million was just a starting.

Speaker 1 (58:05):
Point for she was, to be clear, and a Shelby GT.
Five hundred, which is not a Volkswagon if you wanted
to make the parallel. Since we're having this conversation.

Speaker 5 (58:14):
Those cups were not filled by crupps.

Speaker 1 (58:17):
Kennedy is in studio. We're having a grown up talk
about Sidney Sween. Somebody had to. It's like no one
in the media had the.

Speaker 5 (58:23):
Gus telling to young gen zers.

Speaker 15 (58:26):
They're not selling to constipated, frigid millennials who already sound
in this debate, they already sound incredibly old. Yes, you know,
it's like gen xers and young gen zers have so
much in common because like everything that we liked is
now retro. I don't care if they feel like they
discovered it. The important thing is they want to have fun.
They don't want to be lectured to. They don't want

(58:48):
to be told that. You know, there's not enough body
positivity here, and it's like a lot of dudes pitching
pup tents going on.

Speaker 5 (58:55):
I'm pretty positive about it.

Speaker 1 (58:58):
I tuned it earlier. I've been trying to get my
son's take, but he hasn't come out of the bathroom
since the ad dropped. And there over there.

Speaker 15 (59:04):
There was this There was this pudgy face TikToker, who
was like, I really, I'm so disturbed by this. It's like, okay, listen,
they you have the ugliest septum ring ever. You are
disturbed because no one is ever going to run anything
up the flagpole thinking.

Speaker 1 (59:21):
About you hard truth, hard truth. Maybe not hard, but truth.
And Kennedy's here. So I was I was gonna play
one of those clips for you, because what I find
funny is there's this other argument being made just the same.
This happened to me today. I was getting ready to
do newsroom and someone.

Speaker 5 (59:37):
Made a point to me dropped not at all, friend.

Speaker 1 (59:42):
Is nobody talks to me in this jacket, even my son,
I got no respect to my Lincoln Lincoln kle on
stage and just went in on my jacket straight up.
He goes. Apparently nobody told my dad Pride Month was over,
and he goes. But I can't make fun of him
because he pays my grocery bills. But that's like the
worst because he's also saying, like you're beneath beneath contempts. Yes, anyway,

(01:00:07):
I was just trying to tell you that. Ahead of
newsroom today, someone made a point. I don't want to
out the staff or she's delightful, but she said, but
what do you say to this argument? I'm hearing a
lot that Sydney Sweeney, being as gorgeous as she is
is unfair to women because they're saying, you've got to
look like that to be in a commercial. I'm like,
first of all, they're not saying that they're just using
this specific person in this specific commercial. There are people

(01:00:30):
of all shapes inside. Aleena Dunham has a show coming out,
you know, right and awful. It's the worst thing you've
ever seen. But the point is that commercials were not
doing this as a means of saying to everyone consuming them,
this is the only way to live your life. And
people who were born into, you know, certain attributes that
were beyond the norm, we used to just celebrate them

(01:00:52):
for that ability. Meaning if you take hot checks out
of commercials because we're not all that hot, then how
do we justify letting people sing knowing that most karaoke
performances yeah aren't on that level. Yeah you know, hey, hey,
that's enough out of you Whitney Houston. Yeah, maybe that's
what why Bobby gave her crack. He was telling you
wanted to be more inclusive. He's actually sings too good.
We gotta start killing off the.

Speaker 5 (01:01:13):
Good singers too much.

Speaker 1 (01:01:14):
Yeah, I mean, think.

Speaker 5 (01:01:15):
About the level the playing field.

Speaker 15 (01:01:16):
But it's that mentality that you have to level the
playing field that's like, you know, asking someone who just
broke a hip to join the Rockett dance line at
Radio City Music Hall. It's no, you want to see
ideals because.

Speaker 5 (01:01:29):
Ideals are aspirational.

Speaker 1 (01:01:31):
Thank you. That's what it was. Aspirational, that's the point.
And it's like when Victoria's Secret used to have super
model like they're literally called supermodels. We acknowledged as a
people that some people were born into a level of
aesthetic prosperity that was unique to them, and we were
just like, isn't that something, you know, no different than
a guy who's a baseball five hundred.

Speaker 15 (01:01:50):
Feet or a person that an artist who paints an
incredible painting.

Speaker 5 (01:01:54):
Yeah, Hunter biden.

Speaker 1 (01:01:58):
Ah. The idea though, it's so funny. We took about
the corruption and stuff like that because so much of
it happens in plain sight. Goad's getting a half a
million of painting, yes, and now obviously nothing and we
don't draw a parallel between this being some type of
backdoor pay for play situation.

Speaker 15 (01:02:12):
Yeah, well, why if there was a market for it,
why isn't there still a market for it?

Speaker 1 (01:02:16):
Thank you.

Speaker 5 (01:02:16):
It's like inflation's coming down.

Speaker 1 (01:02:18):
It's like it's basically the Clinton Foundation with a paintbrush. Yeah,
because it was the same thing. Gazillions of dollars. They're like, oh,
she's out of politics. The number you have reached is
not in service. All of a sudden, the donation line
went right down. Yeah, Kennedy's in the studio and the
other thing, and this is bonkers, and I've heard this
side of it just the same is we're in a

(01:02:38):
current news cycle where a biological man is the face
of Alta Cosmetics, and that's a modeling opportunity that would
traditionally go to a woman. And if you were a
female model, being the face of Alta would be a
really big gig.

Speaker 5 (01:02:49):
To get too aggrieved.

Speaker 1 (01:02:51):
Yeah, but think about that. So like, the modern feminist
movement is actually not protecting women in any way.

Speaker 5 (01:02:58):
No, it just it wants to tear in down.

Speaker 2 (01:03:00):
Yep.

Speaker 15 (01:03:00):
Absolutely, And that's so much of these feminists. And I
was reading the Washington Post there was a column between
their two fashion columnists, and you know, one of them
was like, well, I just worry that this campaign is
very regressive. And it's like, yes, because progressive loses like
that is not an attractive philosophy for younger people and

(01:03:22):
regressive for them.

Speaker 5 (01:03:23):
Means oh, we can have fun again.

Speaker 15 (01:03:25):
Yeah for us, I know, we saved fun as a generation.

Speaker 1 (01:03:29):
Straight up.

Speaker 15 (01:03:29):
You guys tried to wreck it forever and we're not
going to let you straight up.

Speaker 1 (01:03:33):
And that's the point is when you start to become
like the grievance minded whole monitors of society, you're introducing
a lot of conflict in inconsequential areas. Meaning this ad
would come and go.

Speaker 15 (01:03:47):
I mean, you know, oh, they've given it life, they've
given it so much oxygen and American Eagle. They're not
going to reap the benefits of it right now. They're
not going to read the benefits until these actual genes
are in stores because people will hordes of people will
rush to find.

Speaker 1 (01:04:04):
Them show their support for the ideological cause. So it's
like their stock prices up.

Speaker 5 (01:04:08):
And they also want to look that good.

Speaker 1 (01:04:10):
Yeah, and that again was aspirational. That was the point
of the Victoria Secrets Lingerie show before they turned it
into a series of before models and there's nothing wrong.

Speaker 5 (01:04:19):
My go so much.

Speaker 15 (01:04:20):
Allie London had a hysterical contrast. There was a Calvin
Klein print ad from a few years ago.

Speaker 5 (01:04:27):
Yeah, the man in.

Speaker 15 (01:04:28):
The in the beige sports broad just these corpulent, dowey,
unattractive people. And the woman, you know, she's all like chubby,
but not in the good way, not like the Cardi
b you know, it's like hips don't lie kind of way.

Speaker 5 (01:04:44):
It was like, no, it's like painfully truthful that these.

Speaker 15 (01:04:47):
Are unattractive people who have given up on their fitness.
And it's like that wasn't selling. Like you used to
have Kate Mawson Marky Mark in their calvins and that
was really hot that you know, it's like people are
trying to get back to fun.

Speaker 1 (01:05:03):
Yeah, we went from heroin chic to women who looked
like the Iron chic. It was not supposed to be.

Speaker 5 (01:05:09):
The pretty Yes, I have a beard. If you don't
want to sleep on money positivity, if you don't.

Speaker 1 (01:05:15):
Want to sleep with a bearded man in a dress,
you're a transphobe.

Speaker 5 (01:05:20):
Take me to prom.

Speaker 1 (01:05:23):
But they did that, and it was always a tyranny
of the minority. But what was really of great consequence
is the fact this is where Elon buying Twitter, though,
has really helped society in a weird way. It loosened
up the lanes of free speech because other big tech companies,
so that that's where the market was going and stopped
responding to the heavy handed government censorship efforts that were

(01:05:43):
being made. Like Fate, you could tweet about you could
post about politics again on Facebook. You weren't really able
to do that and be in the algorithm a year ago.

Speaker 15 (01:05:50):
But actually we find these things to be offensive. Yeah,
therefore we have to deep platform people and make their
post down.

Speaker 1 (01:05:58):
I mean, really think about it. When the media was
able to actually bury the Hunter Biden laptop story, Okay,
you might have had a different electoral outcome if everybody
was able to speak freely about it for the last
three weeks running up to the election. They killed it
on October twentieth, Yeah, and it was able to keep
the Yeah they yeah, the post did what they did,
and they were like hell no, you know. So that's
where you know, like the Jack Dorsey owned Twitter was

(01:06:21):
kind of they were throttling posts that didn't agree with
the prevailing or preferred narrative. So you could make these statements.
It wasn't like you were going to be deplatform but
no one was going to see them. And when they
were amplifying things that were like we referred to earlier,
the Calvin Klein underwear campaign and they had seven hundred millions. Yes,
this is beauty, and be like, I guess this is

(01:06:41):
beauty now, and we're like, actually, the funny thing about that,
So I feel like the fact that you know they're
calling this, oh, it's a backlash, but it's not actually
a backlash, Like society is firmly on the side of
the boobs here.

Speaker 5 (01:06:56):
Yeah, it's it's a reset.

Speaker 1 (01:06:57):
Yes, and that's what we're watching.

Speaker 15 (01:06:59):
And they were like, well, maybe if we put real
women with real curves in our advertisements, people buy the
And I remember looking at like Lululemon and their sports
bras and it's just like corpulent. And women see that
enough when they go into fitting rooms.

Speaker 5 (01:07:15):
It's like, no, I want to see something that I
want to look like eventually.

Speaker 1 (01:07:19):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (01:07:20):
Not when I gained six hundred pounds when I take
three months of straight Pilate's fos.

Speaker 1 (01:07:26):
Think about that. How many people listen? I know I
have you probably have to. Sometimes you actually buy an
outfit and go, I'm gonna use this as my motivation
to get into shape. I'm gonna wear I'm gonna make
it so this I can wear this, Yes, okay, imagine
how much you're defeating people's sense of purpose and determination
but being actually like, it's the letting yourself.

Speaker 5 (01:07:46):
I'm gonna buy a size eighteen.

Speaker 1 (01:07:49):
I'm gonna buy this once I gained the thirty five exactly.
That's what they were doing.

Speaker 15 (01:07:54):
I'm swimming in it now. But man, I swear to
God when i'm pretty again, strapping a feedback to my
face till after Christmas.

Speaker 1 (01:08:03):
Whoo, they broke the compass, that's the point, and no
one was buying, like, meaning, they broke the compass, but
no one was following them through the woods. They're like, no,
not fine, like, guys, guys, let us not okay, and
think about it. You know this before bud Light did
what they did, okay, And this is essentially the opposite
of that. This is what bud Light used to be.
Bud Light was always hot chicks and jokes. Remember the
court Light, here's the football and twins, that whole commercial.

(01:08:25):
Do you remember the Cindy Crawford commercial.

Speaker 17 (01:08:27):
Yes, it's the.

Speaker 1 (01:08:27):
Greatest pepsi commercial of all greatest super bow commercial bal
Time nineteen ninety two. Yes, she pulls up at a
ferrari for those of you who haven't seen it, I'll
talk slower. Cindy Crawford pulls up at a Ferrari and
like one hundred degree day, gets out in one of
those dirt parking lot gas stations where the bell rings
ding ding. She goes over to the pepsi machine. It's
a new can, pulls it out and wipes it off
her forehead, wipes off her chest, and they cut to

(01:08:48):
little boys who go, man, that's a great looking pepsi
can and it's so great a Peyton switch. You're like, oh,
the hottest girl in the world. Hot chicks in humor, Okay,
we run on. That is a country, yes, and this
campaign is the antithesis of everything that makes us who
we are. And is it not insane to think that

(01:09:09):
maybe our grandparents are great grandparents literally are the ones
who defeated the Nazis so their descendants could be called
Nazis because we like cleavage. This is the dumbest time
there has ever been to be alive.

Speaker 5 (01:09:21):
Yeah, it's offensive.

Speaker 1 (01:09:22):
Thank you. Kennedy's stinking around for one more segment because
the bars aren't open yet. Back after this, this thing
is gonna becoming God gainst you and when the Son
of Man comes.

Speaker 2 (01:09:33):
You're listening to Bucks Across the.

Speaker 1 (01:09:35):
Little Girl and his Fox Across America with Jimmy Fla.
We're getting some Bonus Kennedy on Wednesdays. I love that, though,
you know what I'm saying, I do too little bonus Kennedy.
And we were chatting about Sydney Sweeney and got a
New York City mayor's race mom Donnie back in the
country today.

Speaker 15 (01:09:53):
Yeah, after being in a very very poor country in
his family's lavish compound, which is a great metaphor for
what's going to happen in New York City, Like he'll
be living in Gracie mansion, surrounded by armed security twenty
four hours a day, and the rest of the city
will crumble into an absolute hell.

Speaker 1 (01:10:11):
Whole, absolute hell whole. And the guy who wanted to
defund the police, as you know, had plenty of armed protection.
And as a guy who famously he quughte a lot
of heat, we had this horrible shooting this week. He's
obviously on record is saying we don't need an investigation
to know the NYPD is racist, anti queer and a
threat to society.

Speaker 15 (01:10:29):
Yes, if there's no queer liberation. There should not be
an NYPD.

Speaker 1 (01:10:33):
Yeah, I made Imagine that Does that mean? What is
queer liberation?

Speaker 2 (01:10:36):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:10:36):
What does it actually mean? Has anyone been to the
Pride parade? Yes, Like I've made this.

Speaker 5 (01:10:40):
They don't let cops gate, Cops march in the price.

Speaker 1 (01:10:43):
Now imagine that. If you can tell the cops whether
they're allowed to come to your shindig, you're as liberated
as liberation's gonna get you. Yeah. Okay, folks listening around
the world, if you throw a Pride parade in Iran,
the cops are coming. They're coming right away. They're coming, and.

Speaker 5 (01:10:59):
They're not coming to to wave flag for the first.

Speaker 1 (01:11:01):
God gets spanked on the first float. The cops are coming.
It's going to be a very short parade. It's gonna
end in a fire pit, my god. Okay, but by
the way.

Speaker 15 (01:11:11):
Yeah, where they'll throw you off a building to land
in the fire pit.

Speaker 1 (01:11:14):
It is literally going to become the scene in Pee
Wee's Big Adventure. I say, we drown them, and then
we hang them, and then we kill him.

Speaker 5 (01:11:21):
It's gonna be cle I say, we let.

Speaker 1 (01:11:24):
No shout out to the k train back in the
next hour. Kennedy will be saving the world every day
until then. Check out our pod podcast, the podcast Ladies
and Gentlemen, I stand correct.

Speaker 2 (01:11:45):
From Everywhere USA. It's Fox Across America with Jimmy Fayla.

Speaker 1 (01:11:50):
Oh Girl, here we go, Here we go. Back in action,
it is Fox Across America with Jimmy Fayla, your home
for top shelf radio. In a bottom feeding political world,
we have people.

Speaker 3 (01:12:03):
In Washington that don't know what they're doing.

Speaker 1 (01:12:06):
Thankfully, the man who uttered that quote is turning things
around right now inheriting power or winning back an election.
He'll tell you it was his third election. Technically speaking,
he's only won two. Wrong okay, but one way the other.
Trump now in charge. Washington doing better by all accounts.
We've got a tremendous trade deal with the EU, Trump
on the precipice of other deals. Border crossings are at

(01:12:27):
a record low GDP, exceeding expectations according to the earnings
report out today. We have a lot to be happy about.
But as it pertains to the people knowing what they're
doing and not knowing what they're doing. Most of the
talk on the show so far today has revolved around
the Sydney Sweeney ad and the fact that Democrats have
declared a war on boobies.

Speaker 5 (01:12:49):
This is total crap.

Speaker 1 (01:12:51):
A lot of people feel that way, regardless of their ah,
your background, but it's happening against another backdrop that has
to do with Alta cosmetics. We're going to talk about
it in this hour with Katrina Campins. She is the
star of Mansion Global on the Fox Business Network. She
of course appears on Fox Notissius as well. She is

(01:13:12):
a luxury realtor down in Manhattan. She was on the
Apprentice with Donald Trump. And you know, some people might
tell you she's easy on the eyes herself. I don't know.
I work in corporate America. I'm not supposed to actually
notice women and their looks and everything like that. So
I don't you are so full of Paula Scanlon's going
to be here as well. She is a former University

(01:13:34):
of Pennsylvania swimmer who was forced to compete alongside a
biological man. Despite the fact that her and her teammates
did not feel protected and think it was okay, the
university forced them to go along with it, and it
was a scam. But in a roundabout way, these two
stories kind of meet in the middle of a junction

(01:13:56):
called wokeism and insanity, and as to where we are
at the top of this hour, Alta Cosmetics, Alta Cosmetics.
Alta Cosmetics has made a biological man with a beard
the face of their actual marketing campaign. Okay, a biological man,

(01:14:23):
not a woman. Okay, not a plus sized woman, not
a you know, minority woman, not a supermodel, not a
before model like me. Okay, an actual man like you know,
Austin Powers. She's a man baby. That whole thing. Well,
somebody stood up at Alto Cosmetics and was like, I

(01:14:44):
think this guy with a beard should be the face
of our female modeling campaign, and unfortunately there was no
Austin Powers in the room to go. You shut your mouth,
you Boston. So some people online are calling for the
boycott of Alta Cosmetics. Now, I am not looking to
boycott Ulto Cosmetics. I don't really have a dog in
this fight, but I'm trying to send a message to

(01:15:09):
corporate America. Most of them have gotten it. They've disbanded
their DEI departments, and they're no longer worried about ESG environmental,
social and governance scores, and they're getting away from that
stuff because they realize it interferes what makes these countries succeed,
which is their ability to create products that there is
a tremendous market for. But understand some people are still

(01:15:33):
holding on to the old woke model. Jaguar did this.
If you remember at the beginning of the year in
January posting the ad with the fifteen transgender models and
the literal car commercial did not feature a car. You're
watching a car commercial with no car in it. The

(01:15:55):
headless of world come and do what is the world coming?

Speaker 2 (01:15:58):
To?

Speaker 1 (01:15:58):
Chapter eleven. In the case of Jaguar, their sales fell
off a cliff. Okay, but they kind of, as people
like to say, bud lighted themselves Alto Cosmetics, did not
bud light themselves because, to be clear, they're not doing
something that's so diametrically opposed to what they were known for. Yes,

(01:16:19):
bud Light had a problem because their whole entire marketing
ethos was hot chicks and beer. Guys like me who
are kind of gofully perverted with their humor, who like
hot chicks, who like beer, who like leaning into being men. Hey,
let's go out get some beers and hit on some chicks.

(01:16:41):
Let's go get some hot chicks down at the bar. Well,
the hot chicks aren't talking to us, okay, Let's get
some middle of the road chicks down at the bar.
All right. Well the middle of the road chicks left
with other people. All right, Well, let's get whatever's left
at the bar. That's what beat the man is, Okay.
Sometimes you go out hunting for a point buck in,
so you settle for Bambi, And by Bambi, I mean

(01:17:04):
shripper who works at flash Dancers around the block. But
the point is, the backlash for bud Light was a
lot more severe because they alienated a core customer. There
are a lot of woke liberal women shopping at Altacosmetics
who think it's somehow empowering to take a modeling gig
that would traditionally go to a female model and give
it to a man. Okay, do I think it's okay?

Speaker 9 (01:17:24):
No?

Speaker 1 (01:17:24):
Does most of America think it's okay?

Speaker 9 (01:17:26):
No?

Speaker 1 (01:17:26):
Most of America? If you ask them, I'm sick. Okay.
Which is why Sidney Sweeney is such a compelling story
to so many people, because it's Madison Avenue. It's the
ad agencies realizing, oh yeah, we could actually do that
thing where we cater to the customer's preferences instead of
trying to change them. Okay, that is the biggest problem

(01:17:47):
that faced Madison Avenue in woke ism. They stopped saying
the customer was always right and started saying, Wow, the
customer is not in line with our climate agenda and
our dei agenda. Eric, We've got to change the customer's thinking.
Except the ushuber didn't come to a beer commercial to
get a lecture on environmental politics. As Brian Brenberg so
famously said, beer is not for activists. Beer is for inactivists.

Speaker 2 (01:18:11):
I think he's a part.

Speaker 1 (01:18:12):
So the fact that they keep forcing this stuff on us,
it's just so exhausting. So Alta Beauty, this is what
it is. Okay. They basically partnered with gender queer Netflix
star Jonathan van Ness. So it's a guy with a
thick white guy with a beard, okay, walks around in dresses,

(01:18:34):
he's on the Netflix show. He's got a bit of
a following online and basically Twitter users are bud lighting
they saw. Don't ever use them again. It's not going
to happen. Alta is not going to get bud lighted
because bud Light, ninety nine point nine nine percent of
their consumer was on the other side of the identity
politics issue. I don't know what the democratics democracy demographics

(01:18:56):
are with Alta. The only thing I can tell you, okay,
is this sort of fad of erasing women is why
no one will ever take the feminist ideology seriously. Again,
Like feminism is just it's not there to empower women.
If you're looking to empower women, you go, you go,

(01:19:16):
Sidney Sweeney. You're beautiful, people like you. You're proud of
the fact that you're beautiful, and people like you. You're
not apologizing for your God given attributes. The point is,
people like Sidney Sweeney used to be considered aspirational, something
you hoped to be. Someday you bought a shirt size
smaller than the one you currently wear, going, I'm going

(01:19:37):
to get into shape so I could wear this shirt.
And the Democrats took marketing to this other place where
it was like, no, no, I'm gonna start putting models in
there that I'd have to gain weight to look like.
And yeah, that's convenient if you want to go eat
your feelings every night, but it's not actually good for
your health. It's not actually empowering women to champion people
with diabetes. You know that's not good. I'm not disparaging you.

(01:20:02):
I'm fat. I'm not if listened, if I wasn't on TV,
i'd be a before model in a nozembic ad. But
I'm telling you just the same body positivity was teaching
women to pursue bad habits that were worse off of
their long term health. So you've got the left side
of the aisle telling women to gain more weight and
feel good about it. Okay, you could gain weight, feel good.

(01:20:24):
I do it all the time every summer on vacation.
But I'm telling you that being the standard operating procedure
is not the case, especially if you're concerned about the
well being of the women long term. But when it
comes to the actual idea that the left was telling
you that biological men should be in women's spaces, that's
the feminist position here. The feminist position is that it

(01:20:45):
is wrong to look at Sydney Sweeney through the lens
of positivity. She's blonde haired and blue eyed. That's Hitler stuff.
She's got big boobs. Okay, I read you this quote
from the Atlantic earlier today. I promise you this is
physically the dumbest sentence ever written. Okay, this is so
physically stupid, but I want to read it to you again.

(01:21:06):
It's from a piece by the Atlantic, and it's bananas
talking about Sidney Sweeney. Even her figure has become a
cultural stand in for the idea pushed by conservative commentators
that Americans should be free to love boobs. Wrap your
face around that and try not to hurt it. Okay,

(01:21:29):
the idea that before conservatives started championing Sidney Sweeney, people
didn't think it was okay to like boobs. You can't
handle the truth, guys. We have fought wars over boobs
literally around the world. Okay, people have lost careers over boobs.

(01:21:55):
I mean the things that have gone. People have gotten jobs,
people have lost jobs. To think of the entire are
of the me too movement. The me too movement doesn't
happen if people didn't like boobs. Some of them liked
them too much, didn't know how to go about getting them,
so they wielded their influence in untoward ways that are
frowned upon in modern society and should be. But this sentence,

(01:22:15):
even our figure, has become a cultural stand in for
the idea pushed by conservative commentators that Americans should feel
free to love boobs. Guys, in what country? Should you
not feel free to love boobs? I mean, isn't that
what queer liberation it's supposed to be about. You should
be able to like whatever you want? Okay, the boob

(01:22:35):
liberation is that where we are now. But this is
something an actual journalist wrote a piece about. But when
and I'm telling you this when you are when you
were nothing more than a grievance movement, meaning whatever happens
in society, if the right likes it, I hate it. Okay,
I'm promise you. I promise you. If Donald Trump started

(01:22:56):
a policy tomorrow going puppies are awesome and every kid
in America is going to get a free puppy. Okay, yep,
stop it. The Democrats would be telling you it's time
to kill puppies within like five seconds of him saying that,
I'm not even kidding, Yeah exactly, I know. I wish
I was kidding. But that is the reality. Okay, Like,

(01:23:17):
come on, Jimmy, that's different. That's puppies. Puppies are a
lot more popular than boobies. That is a fact check
false Guys Boobies twenty twenty eight. I'm not trying to
be sophomoric would win the day if boobies are on
the ticket against puppies, Okay, it's probably gonna be a
close race. Probably gonna be a close race, Okay, But

(01:23:38):
I think at the end of the day, it's bad
news for the puppies because the boobies are gonna get
a bigger bounce.

Speaker 2 (01:23:46):
You're listening to the man with a fashion sense that's.

Speaker 1 (01:23:48):
All his own, looks like a gay bag Lady's America
with Jimmy Phyla. And if the home house band sounds
fired up, it's because they are joining us now, a
multimedia super star who's back in the hood. You talk
about a boost from morale. Okay, I don't even know
what I'm trying to get emotional. I can't even get
the words out right now. Katrina Campins back in the

(01:24:09):
studio and the crowd goes absolutely listen a madness.

Speaker 14 (01:24:14):
Good to see you, pal, It's so awesome to be
here because I feel like it's the realist of the
real right. So, and I saw you in hair and makeup,
and I'm like Jimmy I was supposed to do your
show yesterday but I got sick.

Speaker 5 (01:24:25):
But I'm here today.

Speaker 1 (01:24:26):
Amen. And then a big win for the American people.
So this is how it goes down. Me and Campins.
I'm on the in the makeup room, get ready to
do America's newsroom. She's doing everything. I mean she she
does it all like she signs my paycheck. At this point,
she kind of runs the whole building. But anyway, I
know the jokes on me. They're like, you don't get paid.
They give you beer. No one bought that one. They're like,
I'm paying you for the Come on, now we've heard

(01:24:47):
the show. But anyway, stick with me. Me and you
got caught up in a conversation about this whole Sydney
Sweeney thing because a young stafford had asked for my
opinion on it and what was interesting to me, and
I want to start here with you. Okay, we only
have like five minutes. We're going to make this filt.

Speaker 5 (01:25:02):
Let's do it.

Speaker 1 (01:25:03):
Yeah, come on, hold on. So a young staffer had
said to me that, you know, she didn't like the
idea that they were putting a gorgeous woman in a campaign,
because that was sending like a negative message to everybody's
don't think we're supposed to get our self worth from
advertising number one, But number two, the idea that we
should be demonizing hot chicks is so antithetical to our
entire genetic makeup.

Speaker 14 (01:25:23):
I'm flabbergasted. I heard you talking about this in hair
and makeup. I'm like, oh my god, there's, Jimmy, this
topic we need to discuss, because, first of all, when
did it become threatening to be a hot conservative woman
in jeans? Like I grew up in the era where
you had Cindy Crawford and Christy Brinkley and all of
these women and you were you looked up to them
because they were feminine and they were women. Yes, And
now it's like, oh my god, this is such a

(01:25:45):
threat and it's such a simple ad. Think about it,
because I'm like, Okay, the marketing team was really clever.

Speaker 1 (01:25:49):
But really it was really simple. Yeah, it was basic.

Speaker 14 (01:25:51):
She's just hot, she was wearing jeans, and she's a woman.

Speaker 1 (01:25:54):
Thank you.

Speaker 5 (01:25:55):
Let's bring femininity back.

Speaker 1 (01:25:56):
Again, Jimmy, come on. I saw the ad and I.

Speaker 14 (01:25:59):
Saw everybody talking about and I'm like, I'm glad she's
getting this much publicity. I'm glad that American Eagles getting
this publicity because we need femininity back the same way
we need masculinity.

Speaker 1 (01:26:08):
Amen. And what it is really is just a reset
because this is what advertising ran on forever, hot chicks
in humor, people like, if you don't have a hot chick,
make it funny. If you have a hot chick and
it's funny, Wow, you are off to the races. And
that's what this was.

Speaker 14 (01:26:21):
It's crazy how simple, yeah it is, and how effective
it's been, which shows you just how powerful femininity and
women embracing their femininity is. But that's why the left
has tried to destroy women, motherhood, anything that has to
do with a woman, because they know that it's very powerful.

Speaker 1 (01:26:40):
Amen. We're talking to Katrina Campons. She is fired up.

Speaker 14 (01:26:43):
I am sweating every time I get.

Speaker 1 (01:26:45):
In here to sweat.

Speaker 2 (01:26:46):
No.

Speaker 1 (01:26:46):
No, she likes the Sydney Sweeney stories like she does.
She gets she's she's passionate, passionate woman, Katrina Campons. So
the other argument, which it's so intellectually disqualifying to try
to link this to Nazism in any way, shape or form.
It's like our great grandparents, our grandparents literally defeated the Nazis.

Speaker 14 (01:27:02):
I don't even understand how that could possibly be an argument, Like,
I don't even and then I see like these girls
crying on of course it's I mean, and I don't
want to say.

Speaker 5 (01:27:11):
I don't want to say.

Speaker 1 (01:27:12):
It's white chicks and super roots.

Speaker 5 (01:27:14):
But it's young, the youngest generation. They don't get it.

Speaker 14 (01:27:16):
They didn't grow up in the eighties and the nineties,
like we did you know where they watched Cydy Crawford,
like in.

Speaker 1 (01:27:20):
Jeans shields did this exact commercial?

Speaker 14 (01:27:22):
Yes, yes, and so. But any of these arguments I
think are just it's sad.

Speaker 1 (01:27:27):
I think a lot of people two things. People now
get attention for saying they have been victimized in some way.
And then there's this perpetual like race baiting, gas lighting,
Nazi thing that also used to be a viable model.
And again it's still a viable model because we're talking
about these people and giving them all kinds of holy
hell and making fun of them, but no one's taking

(01:27:48):
them seriously. And I think that's the progress of this story,
is the fact that American Eagle is benefiting tremendous saying
me is as popular as she's ever been, because these
people don't hold sway anymore. You know, years ago this
might have mattered because a brand would hear that people
were upset on social media and be like, I got
to get out of here, you know. But again, the
Democrats have now aligned themselves, maybe not the entire party,

(01:28:10):
but the people taking this position as the anti boob party.
Like literal wars have been started over people's love of booth,
Like it's not you know, this ain't new.

Speaker 14 (01:28:21):
Well if you think about it, I mean also like
American Eagle, like American, So now being American is also threatening.
So American being pro women, being pro family, having conservative values, Like,
all of a sudden, this is like the devil imagine,
imagine It's like what world are we living in? I'm
like shaking my head every time I see my feed.
But you know what, kudos to them, like, look look

(01:28:43):
at all of the advertising that they're getting for free.

Speaker 1 (01:28:46):
Amen, that's are we need to.

Speaker 14 (01:28:48):
Do an ad with American Eagle.

Speaker 5 (01:28:49):
Like, I'm super pumped up.

Speaker 1 (01:28:50):
We met my closing question to you in the last
forty five seconds. Can we con you into sticking around
till Saturday night to do the show?

Speaker 14 (01:28:57):
Yes, I'm so excited about talking. I'm so excited aout
the something that I'm supposed to leave on Friday. I'm
doing Fox with Yes, Jimmy and the Big and I'm like,
you know what, I'm going to stay.

Speaker 5 (01:29:07):
To discuss this topic.

Speaker 1 (01:29:09):
You have to. That's how passionate are you think you're passionate?
Mikey's going to flash dancers to do research after the show.
He's just got a lot of singles out of the ATM.
This is the hot topic, folks.

Speaker 5 (01:29:19):
I hope we have a good audience too.

Speaker 1 (01:29:21):
W ready, you don't worry about nothing.

Speaker 5 (01:29:22):
A lot of hot women.

Speaker 1 (01:29:25):
Let's go big tapic. Katina Camp and you're a hero
for this. I will see you. I'm in I will
see you in hair and makeup again. There she goes
the great Katrina Camps.

Speaker 2 (01:29:40):
Jimmy Fayla.

Speaker 1 (01:29:41):
Oh girl, it is Fox across America with Jimmy Phala.
People are worked up about this Sydney swinging modeling campaign.
My next guest just happy it went to a biological woman.

Speaker 11 (01:29:52):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:29:52):
Former University of Pennsylvania swimmer, current superstar Paula Scalon and
studio Hey girl, hey, so are you kind of laughing
at this? As I am.

Speaker 5 (01:30:01):
Oh, yes, it's just like it's.

Speaker 1 (01:30:03):
So delicious and obviously there's it involves crazy people, it
involves fake grievance and you know, like faux outrage and
the people doing the Nazi thing. Okay, just so you understand,
you went to the University of Penn, I went to
community college. I majored in Nintendo.

Speaker 4 (01:30:17):
You're probably a million times smarter than the most.

Speaker 1 (01:30:19):
Maybe out there like the regular world.

Speaker 2 (01:30:20):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:30:20):
I used to make fun of community college graduates. I'm like,
but we're actually like all right, like we didn't like support. Yeah,
that's what I mean. I've never kidnapped a single janitor.
I've never overthrown the school to chant death to you know,
the Israel and everything like that. But the point is
there are people out there that are obviously waging an
absurdist argument that there's some correlation between this and Nazism.

(01:30:43):
Like I think that is intellectually disqualifying. When you say,
at a base level.

Speaker 4 (01:30:46):
I would say so, I mean, I think they're their
basis of their argument is that there's something with genetics,
and I'm sorry, jeans and jeans is the easiest.

Speaker 5 (01:30:52):
Play on words.

Speaker 4 (01:30:53):
If a company hasn't come up and used that in
a slogan already, then you're failing at advertising. I mean,
it's the best slogan to use.

Speaker 1 (01:31:00):
Literally, do you how many beer commercials have used cans
and cans like to take it there, But the point
is they were just selling good looks and humor, hot
chicks and humor. It's been a business model for as
long as we've had business models, supermodels who've been a
part of this for as long as we've had supermodels,
and so so much of this story is just stupid,
Like it's not an actual backlash. It's three crazy white

(01:31:22):
chicks and Subaru's posting take time. Maybe it's more than three.
What do you think the number is?

Speaker 5 (01:31:27):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (01:31:27):
But every single clip that I've seen, and by the way,
against my will, ever single time someone's showing me this,
it's like, look at this or what do you think
it shows up on my feet? I'm like, I don't
want to see it. And every single person who's posted
something has face piercings, they look they have blue hair.
I mean, I have never I have not seen a
single average looking person criticizing this ad. I'm serious, and
I'm not trying to dig on anyone's But like, I'm serious.

(01:31:50):
If you have multiple face piercings and I can't even
see what your face looks like, you're not average looking.

Speaker 1 (01:31:55):
It's not good. It's the best thing about being on TV.
People will criticize your appearance and they don't even have
a profile pick. I'm like, you couldn't even get the
fake cartoon of yourself. You're over here, you know, fire
and shots. I want to play you one of those
montages because some of them are so funny, Josh, can
you play me clip too?

Speaker 16 (01:32:10):
Hey?

Speaker 4 (01:32:11):
American Eagle, Now do black and brown women? Because black
and brown women also have great geans that they inherit
from their parents.

Speaker 6 (01:32:17):
Did you know that talking about blue jeans and white people? Oh,
boycott American Eagle, boycott out of them.

Speaker 7 (01:32:25):
A blonde haired, blue eyed white woman is talking about
her good genes, Like that is not the propaganda.

Speaker 1 (01:32:38):
First of all, the first woman, I'll start with her,
she's like, now, do black and brown people? Beyonce was
the face of a national jeens campaign and.

Speaker 4 (01:32:45):
She looks you know, she dyed her hair blonde. Is
that not considered you know, whitewashing?

Speaker 2 (01:32:50):
Cultural hold on?

Speaker 1 (01:32:52):
Now, Beyonce is canceled. She did a country she did
a country album. Nobody can give.

Speaker 4 (01:32:57):
She does it, and she dyes her hair blonde. It's
her choice. She looks stunning and beautiful. But if somebody
else has naturally blonde hair, which actually Sidney City isn't
even a natural.

Speaker 1 (01:33:05):
Blonde, thank you, she's just beyond saying this. Okay, but
you've had so. I mean, Tyra Banks, a pretty famous
black model, just the same, landed all kinds of endorsements,
Naomi Campbell, you know, and the list would go on.
But the point is, Okay, this is all pretend. And
I think this is the biggest problem for liberalism right
now is they're aligning themselves with pretend things. Okay, something

(01:33:25):
you dealt with at the University of Pennsylvania was the
pretend to belief that there is no biological difference between
a man and a woman. And you guys were essentially
for a long time forced to kind of play along
with this against your will.

Speaker 4 (01:33:36):
No exactly that, I mean, it's just everything is fake.
There's nothing that they stand for. And again, the whole
calling this Nazi propaganda, the word loses its meaning and
it's incredibly harmful to people who actually went through disgusting,
terrible things during World War Two. Yeah, you can't rebrand
everything or it means nothing.

Speaker 1 (01:33:55):
Thank you. That's a great point. Poll a scale on
this here, makeing all kinds of sense. She downplayed. I
don't know that you unplated your intelligence. I think you
build up mine which these people listen for three hours
a day. You can't sell them that. You could sell
them a lot of things. You're not going to sell
them that I don't know.

Speaker 4 (01:34:08):
I mean some of the things and some of the
things you see from these graduates from Ivy League schools,
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:34:13):
I mean, it's crazy. So give me this. I know
you've talked about this, I've seen a lot of your interviews.
But you were at a time and this is why
I'm bringing up your experience specifically because it parallels with
something going on that I'll get to in a second.
You were at the University of Pennsylvania. You were swimming
with Lea the person we would know to be Leah Thomas, correct,
William Lee will yeah, will yeah, exactly, and being forced
to change with a fully intact mail YEP.

Speaker 4 (01:34:35):
Eighteen times per week. There's nine practices, you change in,
change out. That's eighteen times you're undressing in front of
this fully grown.

Speaker 1 (01:34:41):
Dude, which is disgusting. It's non consensual for all intents
and purposes. And the school at the time didn't have
any interest in your side of the argument.

Speaker 4 (01:34:49):
Correct, yeah, no, And they actually told us back to
this conversation, why does everything lead back to race? They
said that you would be known as the bigots from
the nineteen sixties if you objected to undressing in the
locker room of this man.

Speaker 5 (01:34:59):
So they said, this is the new civil rights movement.

Speaker 4 (01:35:01):
This is equivalent to not wanting to address with black
people in a locker room.

Speaker 5 (01:35:06):
That is what we were told.

Speaker 1 (01:35:07):
It is so absurd on its face because here's the
thing about black people. They were born black, Okay, trans people.
It is literally a cosmetic if you wanted to call
it a manufactured movement.

Speaker 4 (01:35:20):
Well, but when they said that announcement to me, I said,
I'm mixed race, Okay, I split down the middle, fifty
to fifty. My mom mimigrated here from Taiwan. I have
tawny citizenship, I'm American citizenship. I'm fifty to fifty. Do
you want me to cut myself in half and change
into locker rooms, because that's the argument that you're trying
to make there, and you can't do that.

Speaker 2 (01:35:37):
Men are men and women.

Speaker 1 (01:35:38):
Are women, which is insane, and the vast, vast, vast
majority of society supports you on this. It's more than
an eighty twenty issue at this point. But what they
had succeeded in doing at the time was creating a
gap between what people believe to be true and what
they were willing to say in public. Obviously, now that
the lanes of free speech are being restored, you know
they're getting a little bit of a comeuppance. But did
you see Alta Cosmetics has a man as the phase

(01:36:01):
of a cosmetics brand, and it's like, modern feminism is
actually erasing women. It's not an empowerment movement for women,
wouldn't you say?

Speaker 5 (01:36:09):
Exactly?

Speaker 4 (01:36:10):
I saw that ad, and actually the person who's featured
in that ad he had a meltdown about the whole
transgender and sports thing, saying it was like we're killing
trans people, and he had some meltdown. I remember seeing
that he But the point is, Okay, are there some
men that use makeup? Probably, but that is not your
target audience, and so what are you doing or straying
away from your target audience. It's bad marketing. It's who's

(01:36:31):
running these businesses. It's just bad business to be doing that.
And that's what we're seeing. And it's like they're just
abandoning their entire base.

Speaker 1 (01:36:37):
But what they do is they're preying upon this empathetic
quality that women have because you want to be nice,
you want to be considerate, you want to be mindful
of other people's feelings, especially if you deal with guys
all day, because we're ogres and we're not always mindful
of yours. Okay, and I know that's what I'm playing against.
Guys are like, men don't listen whatever you want to know,
the truth there's about men listening. By the way, sidebar,
It's not that we don't find you interesting or compelling.

(01:36:58):
It's that the male mind is like a computer with
no virus protection, and when people talk to us, we
get pump ups that fly on to our screen and
just take us in a million different directions. That's a
real thing. Okay, someone's got to work on that. You know,
the firewall for the male brain, it hasn't been it
hasn't happened yet. But the point is, women who are
empathetic by nature, a lot of you are trying to
be considerate, are basically told, hey, these people need your help,

(01:37:21):
but the help comes at the expense of your own
well being. And that's the scam here. If you are
a model, okay, a supermodel like you are, you don't
you talk about a starving artist like they are literally starving,
Like that's the business model for the model. Okay, I
knew a supermodel who got pregnant. You had to learn
to start eating for one, you know what I mean.
It's not good. But the point is if you are

(01:37:41):
a supermodel being the face of Alti Cosmetics, pretty big gig.
So the idea that women just lost that Isn't that
a middle finger to women?

Speaker 5 (01:37:50):
It absolutely is.

Speaker 4 (01:37:51):
But that's the whole point is they don't even know
what that is. So they're saying that aren't taking the opportunityway.
This is just a stunning and beautiful woman that's taking
your place. And they pull up a photo of Dylan
mulvany and they say, this is the most beautiful person
I've ever seen, and I'm looking at it and I go,
I just I don't see what you're getting at. I
don't see how this person is better looking, better for branding,
is helping reach a target audience.

Speaker 5 (01:38:11):
I mean, I don't understand.

Speaker 4 (01:38:12):
It's just that there's this victimhood and they buy into it.
And it's what the leftists have been doing. They just
pick a person who's more important than everyone else, and
that's you know, men pertunity to be women.

Speaker 1 (01:38:21):
Oh, it's so terrible. Paul Scanalon's here, we're having a
grown up talk about the modern left. I laugh at
this stuff because it's kind of my job to laugh
at this stuff. But we were at a really dangerous
precipice like five years ago because the way they were
censoring conversation. Basically they had the big tech platforms just

(01:38:42):
throttling posts that descended. So it's not like you were
going to go to jail for saying it. You just
didn't have any reach. And they were amplifying views that
were minority views and trying to sell them as majority views.
You know, my hope is, and maybe this is yours
now that we're kind of conversing honestly, because the free
market is sorting out American eagle. They're making money they're
not losing because of this. So is this the kind

(01:39:04):
of grievance movement we could kill for good? Or are
we always going to have to stand guard because these
people don't walk away from their ideology, you.

Speaker 4 (01:39:11):
Know, I hope so, But I feel like we're still
going to have to stand guard. I mean even after
the election. Right, So, I'm looking at my own personal
experience with this whole transgender issue. I thought that Democrats
were going to walk away from it, and some kind
of started trying to do that post election in November.
If you remember, there was a few interviews from people
and they were saying, oh, maybe not such a good idea,
and now they're still pushing it. We have people like
Avin Newsom who are just letting this run rampant in California,

(01:39:34):
and a lot of other politicians that are freaking out
and crying over these kids that are never going to
get to play sports, which is not the reality. By
the way, you've spot in the men's category, go play that.

Speaker 1 (01:39:42):
That's the other scams they always say. Look, no one
is saying they can't compete, but that's how they frame
the issue. Well, if they're to not access, they're not
do not access, just compete the right division. And it's
so crazy because they got away with so much pretend
for so long. So I feel like we're watching a
societal course correction. But I think I agree with you,
like there hasn't been a post mortem, like they're convinced

(01:40:04):
they didn't lose because of their policies. It was like,
we're just we just needed to do more social media.

Speaker 4 (01:40:08):
Yeah, And they said the problem is that the average
American voter is a racist.

Speaker 5 (01:40:12):
That's what they are saying. That's what they said.

Speaker 4 (01:40:14):
After they're like, it's not our problem, it's the American
people are problem. And I think the reality is the
majority of Americans are just normal, common sense thinkers and
that they don't buy into men being women and they
don't buy into all this crazy everything's racist and everyone
calling everyone a Nazi.

Speaker 1 (01:40:27):
Sorry, it's so exhausting, and it's like the country as
a whole, like racism is obviously a byproduct of ignorance,
and people hated and feared things they didn't understand. But
we've been so fully integrated for so long now that
like we are like so far past race, we now
invent racism, like this has invented racism. Okay, calling this Nazism,
and it's like tearing down statues. It's like we're actually

(01:40:49):
tearing down old statues so we can have new arguments.
But there's no deliverable on any of this stuff. Like
if Sidney Sweeney isn't in that AD, I don't know
who benefits, you know, I mean just I don't know
who loses by her being in that ad.

Speaker 4 (01:41:03):
Just the same well they claim everyone, they claim black people,
what brown people?

Speaker 1 (01:41:07):
It's so many people I don't like, and so many
of the biggest celebrities in the world are not white,
you know, especially in the Daian age. And that's the
I think the scam is that the Left took symbols
of achievement and turn them into symbols of oppression. It's like,
how many times a week do I have to hear
Michelle Obama tell me black women can't get ahead. She's

(01:41:28):
recording a podcast in one of three mansions as a
former first lady, Like, you're due. I'd love to be
as behind as you are as a black wo, wouldn't you?

Speaker 5 (01:41:36):
I definitely would.

Speaker 4 (01:41:37):
I Mean, it's the funniest thing. While I get all
these comments calling me nazy, whatever. And again I'm I'm
literally Asian. I'm quite literally an Asian woman, and people
are like, no, no, but.

Speaker 1 (01:41:45):
You don't count.

Speaker 5 (01:41:46):
You don't count because you have wrong reviews. And that's
something I do with day to day.

Speaker 4 (01:41:49):
And I'm reading through my comments sections or I'll get
comments like if you were full white, you'd be more successful.
It's like, I don't think that has anything to do
with my.

Speaker 5 (01:41:56):
Success or lack thereof, you know, not in this day
and age.

Speaker 1 (01:42:00):
And if you actually break down like income per capita
amongst ethnicities as the highest number one.

Speaker 4 (01:42:08):
If anything, I would be better off being fully Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:42:10):
Like you should commit. But that's all. The other point
is like in the Democratic Party, people now fake minority
status to get ahead. They lie about having it to
get things. I mean, Elizabeth Warren did just the same.
And that's so like Mom, Donnie, you're you know, said
he was you know, said he was black because like, well,
he's technically from a you know, continent that has you know,

(01:42:32):
but so is Elon Musk. Is that make him black?
Is Charlie's they're on black, you know, just because she's
from a nation landlocked to AFP of course not. But
that's the point, it's all pretend stuff. So I think
like the teachable moment for Democrats is that at some point,
like you actually have to compete in the real world.
And I don't think they've had to do that for
a while. And if the party is going to have
a resurgence, it's going to come from a person we

(01:42:53):
don't know right now, because none of the people we
know right now are actually trying to distance themselves from
any of this stuff.

Speaker 2 (01:42:59):
Yeah, that's a good point.

Speaker 4 (01:43:00):
I mean, I would love to see who they try
to put up in the next couple of years. I mean,
there's a couple people who are already trying to campaign
out there, and it's involving saying men can be women,
which is probably the least popular stance you could possibly
ever get anyone to get behind. Because truly, even Democrats
I have I know, I grew.

Speaker 5 (01:43:16):
Up in this area New York City, Greater Area.

Speaker 4 (01:43:19):
And I know so many Democrats, and they tell me
that every single viewpoint I hold is disgusting and terrible.
But they're like under their breath, they're like, okay, but
but but the men and women's sports, Maybe I agree
with you.

Speaker 1 (01:43:30):
Because they know think about this and then I'll let
you go. You've probably heard this clip a thousand times,
but not the audience hasn't always heard it. So Serena
Williams probably the most successful female athlete of all time. You
know where this is going. David Letterman asked her to
scrimmage Andy Murray. She says the following.

Speaker 17 (01:43:43):
For me, Tennis and men's SAMs and women's stays are
completely almost two separate sports. So I'm like, if I
were to play Andy Murray, I would lose six oh
six to Soho in five to six minutes, maybe ten minutes,
because no, it's true, it's completely it's a come, completely
different sports. The men are a lot faster and me,
and they get, they serve horder, they hit hard.

Speaker 1 (01:44:06):
It's just a different game. And I love to play.

Speaker 17 (01:44:08):
Women's and I only want to play girls because I
don't want to be embarrassed. I would not do the tour.
I wouldn't do Billy Jean any justice. So Andy's stop it.
We're not gonna I'm not gonna let you kill me now.

Speaker 1 (01:44:20):
I'm gonna go out on a limb and say Serena
Williams knows more about women's sports than Dawn in the subaru,
who's listening in Vermont right now with a nosering ranting
into an iPhone. Wouldn't you say, I mean I feel
like she's she's got standing on this. Oh yeah, definitely.
But that was twenty thirteen, letterman is she said that
in like twenty twenty three she might have lost every

(01:44:41):
endorsement she has exactly that.

Speaker 4 (01:44:43):
And back when I was first dealing with us several
years ago, now, I went and did research on the
difference between men and women's sports. Not that I needed
to even do that, It's pretty obvious, okay. And I
found a New York Times article from two thousand and
eight or two thousand and nine about the Beijing Olympics
comparing the Olympic champions in events like track and field, swimming,
you name it, saying yes, men are stronger.

Speaker 5 (01:45:01):
And this is why.

Speaker 4 (01:45:02):
Okay, I'm sure they tried to bury that article because
if you surfaced it fifteen years later when I was
actually dealing with it.

Speaker 1 (01:45:08):
Like the New York Times would cancel itself for try
finding that clip online. That Serena Williams clip is a
deep dive. They buried it. They also buried this is
a joke, but Joan Rivers famously called Michelle Obama transgender.
It's the fastest I've ever seen a TV network cut
to commercial. So the late Great Joan Rivers is walking
into an apartment. There was a bunch of paparazzi and

(01:45:29):
they said, now that we have a black president, when
do you think we're gonna have the first gay president?
And she goes, we already have it with Obama to go.
Everybody knows Michelle Obama's a tranny or like back after
these messages. It's really it's on the internet. We've played
it on Fox New Saturday Night, but we had to
work hard to find that clip.

Speaker 4 (01:45:46):
One more quick, Michelle Obama, before I take up too
much of your time. There's two people at Princeton whose
thesis papers have been hidden from the public that you
cannot access. Oh wow, one of them is Michelle Obama.

Speaker 1 (01:45:57):
Wait a minute now, I swear.

Speaker 5 (01:45:59):
My friend who went to Inton told me that.

Speaker 4 (01:46:00):
And another one is something that's really dangerous. It's like
how to build a nuclear bombers.

Speaker 1 (01:46:05):
Fair well, they'll probably release that before Michelle. This is
a cliffhanger for your next appearance. The Great Paula Scanlon.
We got to go to commercial while we still have advertisers.
I'm back after this.

Speaker 2 (01:46:14):
Jimmy Phali, he's got great charisma.

Speaker 10 (01:46:17):
Yeah, he's always dressed fantastic.

Speaker 1 (01:46:19):
He had Bottom of the Nine on Fox Across America
with Jimmy Fala a man on waters World Tonight, America's
newsroom this morning. It's a lot going on over here.
If you missed any of it, it's on foxacross America
dot com. If you want to get takes to see
me live, Okay, August ninth, we're in Potstown. If you're

(01:46:39):
listening on WEEU, if you're listening on WPHT, no excuse.
Those tickets are on sale right now at foxacross America
dot com. And if you were in the Tri State
area and you want to come to a live taping
of Fox News Saturday night, those tickets also free to
you at foxacross America dot com. And I will say
this weekend's episode Nuts, Kurt Slee was going to be

(01:47:00):
on Man could be the next Mayor of New York City.
Katrina Campens is going to be on defending cleavage. This
is the world we now live in. Democrats want to
ban cleavage.

Speaker 2 (01:47:11):
It's people with the dirty mind that think like that, and.

Speaker 1 (01:47:14):
That's Michael Jackson, who's probably not even a fan of cleavage.
I gotta be honest with you, I don't know. We're
just piling on now. The point is the show's over.
Shout out to everybody who was a big part of
it today. Kennedy did a great job outstanding, Katrina Campins
off the charts, Paula Scanlon, who was just done, was
all kinds of funny, and you the listener, did a
phenomenal job of not changing the station. So take a

(01:47:36):
bow of the show's over. See tomorrow. Be a Republican,
be a Democrat, don't be a This has been a
podcast from wor
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