Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is a podcast from War from.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
Everywhere, USA. It's Fox Across America with Jimmy Fala.
Speaker 1 (00:08):
Oh buckle up, Buttercup, gonna be a chiffy one today
on Fox Across America with Jimmy Fala. A man who
does not oppose a troop surge in Chicago. Why because
I'm not an idiot. Some stats coming out today from
the at F showing that the whole myth of the
gun violence in Chicago being from neighboring Red States. Apparently
(00:32):
ninety percent of the guns used in Chicago crimes originated
in Chicago, which means when it comes to this latest
attempt to I don't know, shirk their responsibilities to protect
their own voters. Democrats are so full of crap.
Speaker 3 (00:48):
I'm mad about this.
Speaker 1 (00:49):
When Byron Donald's is coming by, he is going to
be the next governor in the great State of Florida,
we'll get into it with him and Giano Caldwell, a
Fox News contributor who wrote the book Taken for Granted,
Sadly has brother was killed in Chicago, and he has
talked at great length about how black votes matter a
lot more than black lives when it comes to the
Democrat Party.
Speaker 3 (01:08):
We're gonna prove it in this hour.
Speaker 1 (01:10):
And as serious as that sounds, this is gonna be
a pretty goofy show today. I know, I kind of
set up like a real high hurdle from hell. How
are you gonna do this, Jimbo. It's the only way
I know how to do the show. I told you
the whole hook of Fox Across America is We've got
to cover the heaviest news in the world, but we
do it in a way in which we put your
vitamins in your apple sauce. You know, back in the day,
(01:32):
you don't kids don't want to eat their vitamins. You're like,
come on, kids, come in here, you gotta eat your vitamins.
And they're like, so, You're like, I've got it. How
about we put them inside this sealed test ice cream
this Dolly Madison. We like, hey, kids, who wants a
bull ice cream? And they're like, yeah, there you go,
and you don't even feel the vitamins going down. That's
kind of what we do on this show. We feed
(01:54):
you hard news the way you feed a kid vitamins.
And I'm using that analogy because the one I use
in private is I say.
Speaker 3 (01:59):
My show is like I give.
Speaker 1 (02:01):
The public medication the way you give it to a dog.
You wrap it in a lot of peanut butter and
sweet treats so they can digest the heaviness of the
news cycle without actually feeling like hell at the end
of the three hours. So if you're ready, I'm ready.
Here's a little pat on the head, and away we go.
Eighty eight seven eight nine nine one zero. The phone
numbers the same every day, the rules of the same
(02:23):
as well. Be a Republican, be a Democrat. You're all
welcome here. Just don't be a bang happy Thursday. You guys,
if you watched me yesterday with Martha McCallum, we had
a funny chit chat about a fake Sidney Sweeney controversy,
and it was basically, you know, there were some people
on the left saying she shouldn't be modeling as a
ballerina for Jimmy Chow.
Speaker 3 (02:43):
They were like, oh, you can't have Jimmy Chew.
Speaker 1 (02:45):
You know, she can't be modeling as a ballerina because
she herself is not a ballerina. You can't just put
on the boots and claim to be a ballerina. Okay,
maybe maybe if that's how you feel. But then in
what world is it okay for a guy to put
on a wig and just decide he's a woman? You know,
how does he get all the real life rights of
(03:07):
a woman, including access to women's locker rooms and women's sports,
just for saying, Hey, I'm a woman, and I don't
want to get sidetracked on this. But the point is,
there's a lot of stupid, superficial arguments that are chewing
up so much of the news cycle. When the largest
and I told, the largest you know, segment of substance
(03:29):
we've probably ever dealt with in this country is in
real time rolling out as we speak.
Speaker 3 (03:35):
RFK is fighting with the.
Speaker 1 (03:38):
Senate Committe's Finance Committee over vaccine status and lies the
CDC told during COVID stuff of great consequence. Okay, You've
got Trump in the middle of this troop surge to Chicago,
and now it sounds like he might go into Louisiana. Okay,
and along the way, we're expecting some type of announcement
on a summit to end.
Speaker 3 (03:57):
A war in Ukraine.
Speaker 1 (03:59):
There's a lot of seriously consequential stuff happening. Okay, And
when I get on the air. The only thing you
ever try to do for me anyway, This is my
approach is like I'm always just trying to say, like,
how does this affect us?
Speaker 3 (04:11):
How does this affect you? How does it affect me?
Speaker 1 (04:13):
You know, if they're gonna pass this bill, is life
gonna be more expensive? Is it gonna be cheaper? You know,
if they're gonna do this troop surge, we're gonna be.
Speaker 3 (04:19):
Better off, We're gonna be worse. What does it mean?
Speaker 1 (04:20):
That's the only way I know how to approach this
because I don't have a background in anything else. I'm
not telling you I'm some particularly enlightened person who's discovered
the real way to do radio. Okay, not even remotely
close to that. I'm just telling you, you gotta play
the hand your dealt and this is all I got.
And when it comes to this troop surge, the only
thing I've ever tried to do, whether it was DC
(04:42):
now we're off to Chicago, possibly down New Orleans, is
explain why it is happening, why it is necessary, and
why ultimately there is so much pushback because when you
think about the twenty thousand foot view of this crime issue, Okay,
really kind of think about Like twenty twenty, we watched
(05:03):
cities burn, They looted stores, they torched police stations. They
started a pretend country in Seattle. If you're listening on
KTTH right now, you know the story. They started a
pretend country called Chaz or Chop, and it was an
autonomous zone and they were supposedly their own nation because
America was so racially intolerant that we had to have
(05:26):
Chaz instead.
Speaker 3 (05:28):
Okay, well, lo and behold.
Speaker 1 (05:29):
Within a few weeks, everyone in Chaz was robbing and
raping each other and they needed to disband their own
sovereign nation.
Speaker 3 (05:36):
Is how it went down.
Speaker 1 (05:39):
It was funny to cover in real time, but it
was absurd on its face. But behind that whole secession
movement or whatever the hell we want to call this
was an effort to say America was systemically racist because
we weren't doing enough to protect black lives. Black lives matter.
That was the gist of the summer of twenty twenty.
Now we're spending the fall of twenty twenty five being
told that black lives don't you know. Trump goes into
(06:02):
DC and is wildly successful. The Democrats fight him at
every turn. He can't do that. Hell no, what is
this a police state? This is some authoritarian Hitler stuff.
He just wants to get the troops into place so
he can do what, steal the midterm elections.
Speaker 3 (06:16):
That's what JB.
Speaker 1 (06:16):
Pritzker said with a straight face. You talk about a
shameless dirt bag. I played you this clip last week.
This is a real clip where JB. Pritzker goes. Now,
he's just trying to steal the midterms. Listen to this
clip seventeen. This is a part of his plan to
do something really nefarious, which is to interfere with elections
in twenty twenty six.
Speaker 3 (06:35):
He wants to have troops on the ground to.
Speaker 1 (06:37):
Stop people from voting, to intimidate people from going to
the voting booths. So take notes. That is what this
is all about. Oh God, that was embarrassing. I mean, really, JB. Pritzker,
he is so fullish this guy. He's trying to steal
the midterms. That's what this is about. It's not the
fact that if Washington, D C. Was a state, it
(06:59):
would have the high murder rate in the country. To say, now,
to be clear, Princek's talking about Chicago Chicago as a
city has more murders than any other city in America.
Think about that, and him coming in to address it
is supposedly a bad thing. Now it's a bad thing.
Can't have the troops in here, says, not his job.
He's the president. Go do some president stuff, tweet something
about me, climb around on the roof of the White House.
(07:21):
But you can't come in here and address crime. And
why can't they address crime?
Speaker 3 (07:24):
This is real.
Speaker 1 (07:25):
I own a politics to English dictionary. Nobody is saying this.
I've become the old man yelling at the TV. We've
been covering this stupid crime issue now for three weeks
on this show. And it's not stupid in the sense
that we want to lower the crime rate and protect communities.
Speaker 3 (07:39):
That is intelligent.
Speaker 1 (07:40):
But the opposition of this and the fact that it's
continued to make news is stupid. It's politically stupid because
the Democrats look insane to rational people. Okay, it's collectively
stupid as a country that we see things like crime
as political issues and not humanitarian issues. Because the truth is,
no one getting shot in Chicago knows who you voted for.
(08:03):
No one getting carjacked in DC knows who you voted for.
These are acts of violence and aggression perpetrated by people
who've been able to avoid accountability because there's been a
dereliction to the well being of their communities. In cities
that are run by Democrats, that's a challenge. These are
one party rule cities, and any party, if it was
(08:25):
a Republican party, it wouldn't be any better.
Speaker 3 (08:26):
I promise you this.
Speaker 1 (08:27):
If you left any party in charge for one hundred years,
things eventually go downhill. Why because they know they're going
to win the next election, whether they do a good
job or a bad job. When people start to vote
as a lifestyle, politicians get off a hell of a
whole lot easier because they no longer have to improve anything.
He's a lousy dad, but he's right.
Speaker 3 (08:46):
So that's how Chicago got so bad.
Speaker 1 (08:47):
That's how Baltimore got so bad, Philadelphia got so bad,
La Detroit. I don't want anybody to feel left out Chicago.
But what do all these cities have in common. They're
all run by Democrats for the last one hundred years.
And the reason they hate the idea of Trump going
in there, they fought them tooth and nail in DC,
they're gonna fight them, Mike. Hell in Chicago is because
(09:09):
if Trump goes in there as he did in DC
and lowers the crime rate by default, he becomes the
first president in history to do something about black on
black crime. Okay, that's the larger issue here. Democrats don't
care about black on black crime because there's no political
(09:30):
benefit to addressing it none. Okay, a cop shoots somebody,
you go, it's racist. All the cops are racist. The
whole country's racist. You gotta vote for us to fix
the racism. Okay, we got to defund the police. You
get a snappy slogan, People get passionate, they talk about it.
But ninety eight percent of the black men killed in
this country are killed by other black men. So the
larger problem is black on black crime. Straight up, ninety
(09:53):
percent of the murder victims in this country are black men.
So why are we not talking about that? If we
really care about black lives, if black lives truly matter.
And the answer is, I've been saying this forever, it's
because their lives don't matter half.
Speaker 3 (10:05):
As much as the votes. Okay.
Speaker 1 (10:06):
Giano Colwell wrote a New York Times best selling book
about it a black man himself.
Speaker 3 (10:10):
He will join us later to discuss it. But that's
where we find ourselves.
Speaker 1 (10:13):
If Trump goes into DC and he actually lowers the
crime rate, by default, the black community overwhelmingly benefits more
other than every other community, which strengthens his appeal to
the black community, which is the last thing on earth
the Democrats need. Okay, Donald Trump just got the highest
recorded share of black voters for any Republican since Gerald Ford. Okay,
(10:38):
think about that. After ten years of Democrats calling Trump
a racist, he won an election because black men voted
for him because they were tired of being talked to
about their skin color.
Speaker 3 (10:49):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (10:49):
Trump didn't come in and go, hey blacks, that's what
the Democrats do.
Speaker 3 (10:53):
Hey, LATINX people, That's what they do.
Speaker 1 (10:56):
Identity politics prioritizes your look over life.
Speaker 3 (11:01):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (11:01):
Trump came in and targeted their life. Hey, I'm going
to cut taxes. That's good for everybody, no matter what
race around. I'm going to close the border that's good
for everybody, no matter what race you're in. I'm going
to lower crime.
Speaker 3 (11:09):
That's good for everybody. Know where he's you're in.
Speaker 1 (11:11):
Okay, he prioritized our shared humanity and the Democrats are
in a really bad spot right now, really bad when
it comes to a place like Chicago. So you're starting
to get these dope quotes about nah, he the Feds.
It's you can't have the Feds in here. It's not
legal and it's not necessary. Hey, you know what else
(11:31):
is not legal and not necessary?
Speaker 3 (11:35):
Murder? Whow not legal? Not necessary?
Speaker 1 (11:40):
And Chicago has more murders than any city in America.
So are we just supposed to tolerate that for another forty
or fifty years.
Speaker 4 (11:49):
Like we have?
Speaker 1 (11:49):
Because you really think about that. Democrats ran in twenty
twenty on black Lives matter. Joe Biden won the election wrong,
but supposedly won the election.
Speaker 3 (11:58):
He became the president of the United States.
Speaker 5 (12:00):
I don't remember that ever happened, but it did.
Speaker 1 (12:02):
I swear it did. And the point is Biden's president. Okay,
does anything happen to lower the black crime rate during
those four years? Nan would be no?
Speaker 3 (12:12):
Okay?
Speaker 1 (12:12):
How about Obama before him? Anything to address the black
on black danswer would be no, weird, right, because they
don't care because the politics are so much more important
than the people that they're willing to get on TV
and say things like what Brandon Johnson said the other day.
Speaker 3 (12:26):
Hey, just deal with it. We're gonna have a gun.
Speaker 1 (12:28):
Violence problem because it's all the fault of the Red
states that are running in these guns.
Speaker 3 (12:35):
He said that with a straight face. Here to is
Clip thirteen.
Speaker 4 (12:37):
Chicago will continue to have a violence problem as long
as Red states continue to have a gun problem.
Speaker 1 (12:44):
Chicago will continue to have a violence problem. As long
as Red states continue to have a gun problem.
Speaker 3 (12:49):
You are so full of shit.
Speaker 1 (12:51):
And that's not the words of Jimmy Phyla or some
snappy cart sound cart that I just played for you.
Here is According to the Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearm Bureau
of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, gun recovery and trace data
going back to twenty twenty three for the state of
Illinois shows that Illinois is the state of origin for
which the vast majority of guns are recovered, slashed, traced.
(13:15):
This runs counter to the left frequent claim that Chicago
has a gun problem because other states do not have
gun controls as stringent as those in Illinois. According to
the ATF data, twenty two thousand, nine hundred and seventy
three firearms were recovered or traced in Illinois since twenty
twenty three. Of those nine thousand, one hundred and forty
seven were from Illinois, and in a distant second, just
(13:40):
two thousand, seven.
Speaker 3 (13:41):
Hundred and ninety six were from Indiana. Okay.
Speaker 1 (13:43):
So when they tell you we have a gun problem
because of these red states and their gun laws, okay,
understand that nine thousand from Chicago, two thousand from Indiana.
Beyond Indiana, they weren't even a thousand guns recovered or
traced with origins in another single state. So Missouri nine
(14:05):
hundred guns, six hundred from Wisconsin, three hundred and ninety
from Tennessee, et cetera. Okay, the vast, vast majority of
the guns confiscated in Chicago are actually just in Illinois
because of a crime problem. And they don't value human life,
which is why they can get on TV and go, hey, ho,
we don't have a gun problem. Trump's a white supremacist.
(14:26):
He's still in the midterms. This is Hitler stuff. But
lo and behold, what does that ultimately do. It creates
some type of political appetite to do nothing about a
city that leads the country in murders. Okay, And I'm
just telling you. Anybody that hell bent on power that
they're willing to let people die so they're more likely
(14:48):
to be in charge in the next election, has no
business running a five k let alone a country.
Speaker 2 (14:57):
He's the most talented man on the radio, but he
he's your help.
Speaker 1 (15:01):
We all know somewhere underneath all of that bright color
there's a man who's not right. It is Fox across
America with Jimmy Thala. Third day in a row, you're
gonna hear me praise a pundit on CNN. CNN is
the worst. David Axelrodd at Obama strategist. I mean, let's
(15:21):
be clear, he's not exactly throwing a perfect game. David
Axelrod said that Kamala Harris was gonna win the presidency
in a landslide.
Speaker 6 (15:29):
He said that Kamala is awful with her weird laugh haha.
Speaker 1 (15:34):
So let's not act like he's throwing a perfect game.
But it's rare when somebody gets on the air there,
aside from Scott Jennings, and actually reads Democrats their truth.
I don't know that he'll ever get booked again for
saying this, because he's on there as a Democrat to
just shit out Trump's Hitler, what are you doing to
your turn to talk? Just yell Hitler, what are you
white supremot? January sixth, Come on, man, what are you doing?
(15:57):
So this is a funnier clip to watch. We may
show it on Fox New Saturday Night this weekend because
he's telling truth about how this would be strategically beneficial
to Democrats. But they don't get it because this has
gotten emotional for them. When you operate from a place
of emotion, you guys, it denies you the self awareness
that would otherwise tell you sound nuts because you're emotional,
(16:18):
so you don't have that gear that goes, hey, is
this okay? Should I not be doing that?
Speaker 7 (16:22):
You know?
Speaker 1 (16:22):
And that's what the Democrats are in politics right now.
They have such an emotional reaction to Trump that they're
opposing things they absolutely have to stand for. How could
you oppose lowering the murder rate in the city with
the most murders in America. Here's David Axelrod trying to
make that point. Clip four.
Speaker 8 (16:40):
I would be careful about playing twenty eight politics on
this issue because the right answer is we'll take all
the help we can get, as long as it's appropriate help,
as long as it's stuff that will really help. I mean,
there's National guardsmen aren't even trained to do that work.
They're not authorized to do that work. So you know,
(17:01):
send us the resources that we need. We want to
work with you. If there are a criminal, if there
are people doing violent crimes here who are illegal immigrants,
we want them out of our city. We'll work with
you on that. I think that's the appropriate position to take.
Speaker 1 (17:16):
Okay, still a round of applause, but not too enthusiastic.
Speaker 3 (17:22):
You don't get the full blown crowd screen.
Speaker 1 (17:24):
Why because he's still trying to split the difference here
and say, well, the National Guard isn't actually trained to
do that.
Speaker 3 (17:31):
That's not even the point, guys.
Speaker 1 (17:33):
The point is having more uniformed personnel on the streets
lowers the chances of people acting out. That's what they're
doing there. A uniformed presence matters. But again, he shouldn't
be signing off on this because it's politically beneficial.
Speaker 3 (17:48):
He should be signing off on this.
Speaker 1 (17:49):
Because it will actually save lives. As Fox across America
Woul Jimy Fahla doing the damn thing in New York City.
If you want to come here and watch us tape
Fox News Saturday Night with Jimmy Fall on my weekend
TV show. It is free. It is free to the
general public. To be a part of our studio audience.
(18:12):
You just need to go to Foxacross America dot com
and you have scored yourself free tickets to hang out
with me and.
Speaker 3 (18:19):
The Fox crew.
Speaker 1 (18:20):
If you're on the road, you want to see me
once Lincolns football season is over. Lincoln's day two of
his senior year in high school. I'll be back on
the road in November. Tickets to all of those cities, Pittsburgh,
San Louis, Obispo, Las Vegas, Nevada. They're all there, okay
at foxacross America dot com. Foxcross America dot com got
(18:41):
a couple of Fox events coming up in Indianapolis and
Fargo too. So if you're listening on WZFG, you didn't
hear this from me. I don't know what I am
and aren't allowed to tell you. Sometimes these they are
like contracts and you can't let it out too soon.
So I don't know where I'm at on this, but
I am coming to Fargo that too. Hey should be
behind bar. Yeah, that's not good. All right, Well though,
(19:01):
all right, maybe I'm not coming up. Maybe you didn't
hear that from me, But let's move on, because there's
somebody you do need to hear from. It's an ESPN personality.
We're talking about Stephen A. Smith, who was making the
rounds on News Nation last night. He goes on Hannity
a lot, and I play a lot of those clips
because steven A makes some solid points about the Democrat Party.
The one thing about being a sports analyst that is
(19:22):
effective in politics is a lot of sports guys cite stats,
you know, like the problem here is they can't beat
anybody in their own division. You know, the team is
four and ten against the NFC East and the last
two seas.
Speaker 3 (19:38):
You know, stuff like that. They cite data.
Speaker 1 (19:40):
So steven A is talking last night about the crime
situation in Chicago, and he's specifically making the point that
a lot of Democrats have looked the other way on
the issue.
Speaker 3 (19:54):
I don't see you doing any better in the booty department.
Speaker 1 (19:56):
But it's worth pointing out because I want you guys
understand I'm gonna make this point. I've opened the show
on this issue pretty much every day this week because
people are dying. Okay, It's so much more important than
what else is going on with the cracker barrel logo
or Trump went on a spree of memes last night,
tweeting all over social media, good fun, entertaining stuff, but
(20:16):
none of it actually matters as much as the well
being of humans. Okay, And as someone who cares, this
is where I want the conversation to be.
Speaker 3 (20:25):
It's not the most fun way to do the radio.
Speaker 1 (20:27):
You're just talking about crime, rape, robbery's, murders, carjackings, crazy stuff.
But if we focus on this issue national and actually
improve it, then a lot of people I don't know
are going to live this weekend, and a lot of
their families that I don't know are going to have
much better weekends than they could potentially have if you
don't get this under control. And I want that for them.
(20:48):
But here's Stephen A. Smith speaking to the larger issue here,
and this is the larger issue. And it drives me
crazy because no one is saying this on cable news,
no one. It's driving me crazy. Okay, I've become the
old man yell at the TV. If I go home
and watch TV at night, I wind up yelling at
it because I'm watching everybody analyze the story, but they're
not saying the thing. What is the thing? The thing
is black on black crime. No one is saying those words.
(21:11):
But the murders in Chicago highest murder rate, excuse me,
highest amount of murders. Democrats hide behind the rate. They go, well,
the rate's high aer here, Well, great, but the total
number of deaths is highest there. Okay, but stick with me.
Ninety percent of those deaths are black men killed by
other black men.
Speaker 3 (21:30):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (21:31):
That is the issue in America. Like when we did
the whole defund the police thing in the summer of
twenty twenty, they're like, that's it. The cops are racist.
Gotta get rid of the cops now. Mind you, that
is weapons grade stupid. You should be disqualified from public
discourse if you ever actually legitimize the idea of defunding
the police, which are New York City mayoro candidates are
(21:53):
on mom Donnie very famously did by calling them racist
and anti queer. Mind you, the guy went to Uganda
for his wedding surrounded by cops, but Uganda criminalizes gay
behavior by death. You dig so if two guys take
a photo because they're having a gay wedding, like save
the date, and it's a picture of them at the
(22:13):
top of the bridge.
Speaker 3 (22:15):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (22:15):
By the time you get that photo in the mail,
they're at the bottom of the bridge. Not good, Not good, Okay.
They criminalize homosexuality with the penalty of death in Uganda.
Yet again, Mom Donnie goes over there and as a
guy protecting the queer community, has a wedding there.
Speaker 3 (22:32):
What a fraud over The fraud is.
Speaker 1 (22:34):
Everywhere on so many of these issues in the Democrat
Party because the politics are more important than the people.
Speaker 3 (22:38):
That's just true.
Speaker 1 (22:40):
Black lives do not matter to them, Black votes do.
So if a white cop kills a black guy, regardless
of whether or not this is legitimate, okay. And you
have no data, zero in any city, any major municipality
in America that says the police are killing unarmed black
(23:03):
men at a higher rate than other ethnicities. You don't
have that data. And believe me, if there's a questionable,
a questionable decision made by a cop anywhere in America,
it is all over every news channel in America. Because
that's the one bug light we can't stop flying into
why Because there are a lot of race pimps who
(23:24):
get rich by inflaming tensions, like if you go back
to Kenosha, Wisconsin, Jacob Blake, Jacob Blake, the larger issue
there was black on black crime. Why it was a
black man whose black wife had an order of protection
against him. He showed up brandishing a knife, sexually assaulted
her at knife point in front of their child, who
he then kidnapped. The cop showed up in the process
(23:46):
of this happening, got into a struggle, wound up shooting him.
Democrats including Kamala Harris and Joe Biden went to visit
Jacob Blake at the hospital. Did they go to visit
it Jacob Blake's abducted at knife point and sexually assaulted wife.
Speaker 3 (24:05):
No, I don't care about her. So this was not
about black lives.
Speaker 1 (24:08):
If it was, we'd be concerned about the black life
that was sexually assaulted, maybe the black kid that was kidnapped.
But there's no political value and saying, hey, we got
to get these situations under control because you don't get
the whole vote for me because those guys are a
racist thing. So they didn't go near it. They don't
talk about it. That is the real problem in politics
right now, specifically in the Democrat Party, is they don't
(24:30):
want to go and see Trump lower the rate of
black on black crime. The Democrats do a lot better
running on Hey, black folks, I know a lot of
you are living in poverty. We're the ones that can
get you out, you know, they said with a straight face.
Black people weren't capable of getting a driver's license in
order to vote. Joe Biden said that would be worse
than the Jim Crow era because they are so intellectually
(24:53):
deficient in the year twenty twenty. It was twenty twenty
one when he said it, that they'd be incapable of
going out and getting a license. Mind you, whether you
drive a car or not. A government ID is something
every single human being has, every single legitimate human being
live in this country as a voter, as a government ID.
Why because if you didn't you could open a bank account,
couldn't board a plane, couldn't go to the doctor, couldn't
(25:16):
buy a house, could rent a house, couldn't get a job,
couldn't get a vaccine, could rent a car, can do anything? Okay,
if you did not have ID, okay, Black America is
living at equal or higher standards than every other form
of America in the year twenty twenty five. But they
said it was worse than Jim Crow.
Speaker 5 (25:36):
This is Jim Crow on steroids what they're doing in
Georgia and forty other states.
Speaker 1 (25:42):
Because they've spent a lot more money. I've spent a
lot more political capital on telling black people that their
problem is Republicans, that their problem is.
Speaker 3 (25:53):
America systemically racist.
Speaker 1 (25:55):
Okay, when the truth is the biggest problem the Democrats have,
Are you ready for it? It's Democrats. Their biggest problem
are white liberals who've decided they know what's best for
the black community. Their biggest problem are just liberals, self
righteous people who think they have some moral high ground
(26:15):
that are willing to say things like, you guys don't
need a troop surch to lower the murder rate. You
guys don't need cops. Okay, that's not even a white
liberal thing, that's an all liberal thing.
Speaker 3 (26:24):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (26:25):
We all remember this montage because we've played it for
you a thousand times. This is democrats, and I want
you to understand. In the aftermath of the defund the
police movement, the Black murder rate went up by twenty
five percent nationally. Nationally because Democrats are like, no, you
just don't need cops. The cops are racists. Shut up,
we got to get rid of the cops.
Speaker 9 (26:44):
Yes, I support the defund movement because this is about
the investment in our communities which have historically been divested.
Speaker 10 (26:54):
Not only do we need to defund, but we need
to dismantle and start a new.
Speaker 1 (26:58):
Why use the word defunct?
Speaker 9 (27:00):
Why is the word defined?
Speaker 11 (27:01):
And it's like, this is the word that's coming from
the streets.
Speaker 1 (27:04):
Oh god, this is the word coming from the streets.
Speaker 12 (27:07):
Look, if you hate cops just because of the cops,
the next time you get in trouble, call a crackhead.
Speaker 3 (27:14):
Oh god, it's so gross.
Speaker 1 (27:15):
But you understand the Democrats have taken that approach to
black on black crime. Well, it's a problem because red states.
Red states have too many guns. And that's what I
just read you the stats from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
and Firearms. Ninety percent of the guns used in Chicago
violence come from Chicago. So you can't blame Indiana, can't
(27:37):
blame Missouri, can't do it. I mean, you can do it.
But if you have any self respect at all. You
can't do that, Okay, when you talk about things like
that montage I just played if them wanting to defund
the police. These are democrats who are indifferent to like,
they don't care about the crime. They care about the
political viability. So defund the police. Yeah, I get it,
(27:59):
that will increase the black murder rate. It did, but
they still ran on it. Nobody in their right mind
thinks the world is safer without comps. That's the movie
The Purge, and you're all an extra if that happens.
So y'all need to haji kids had a wife and
hadgehood because they rap an everybody out here, so nobody
believes it. That's not a real thing. But they get
(28:21):
out there and they chant something like defund the police.
Why because it gives them a boogeyman and it says, hey,
vote for us. We're going after this bad guy. That's
why you need to support us. Those crazy Republicans they
like the cops. And I understand, the cops in this
day and age are minority majority. So when you look
(28:41):
across the country at the biggest cities in America, they
are minority majority, meeting the majority of cops in uniform
are minorities. It's not some good old boy, white guy
clan club. It's every ethnicity known to man, Latinos, Blacks, Asians, Muslims,
anybody you can think of. Because these are people that
swore an oath to protect their community. They want to
raise kids there, they want to be a part of
(29:03):
the fabric of a decent, functioning society, and they risk
their lives to do it on behalf of a country
that doesn't even appreciate them. Like, it's really gross to
me the way cops get treated. And I say this
all the time, but the only thing more disgusting is
how Democrats treat black people.
Speaker 3 (29:17):
Here is Steven A.
Speaker 1 (29:18):
Smith talking about this in a way that he doesn't
really even have the balls to say it. Like he says, yeah,
like Obama could have did more, Democrats could have did more,
but he doesn't say the thing. And this is why
I've become an old man yelling at TV. Okay, they
don't put me on TV to make serious points. I
am cable news sorbet what does that mean? That means
at the end of the show they bring me on
for five minutes to tell you jokes and make you
(29:40):
feel better about the world, because every one of these
shows opens with this is who's dead, this is who's
going to jail, And after forty five to fifty minutes
of watching people die and go to jail, you go, jeez,
I don't know if I can watch any more TV.
And then Jimmy shows up, makes a couple of balloon animals,
tells a joke about his sport code, and you're like,
maybe I'll stick around for the top of the next show.
Then everybody dies and goes to jail again. Okay, so
(30:00):
watch what I am. I'm like a rodeo clown. I
get it. My Saturday night show is one hour of that.
It's us giving the world a reset. There's so much
death and horror and insanity happening in our lives every
day that they roll out a fat guy at ten
o'clock on a Saturday night. Hey, tell a couple of
jokes over there, you know, yuck it up, Bring your
dirt bag kid on or your wife, one of your
drinking buddies, have some fun talk about the news. Everybody
(30:23):
can go to bed and wake up tomorrow to the
serious stuff again. That's what I represent. So I don't
really watch TV for the points, meaning I'm not watching
people analyze stuff on Fox on nights. I'm not on
like tonight. If you see me on Jesse Water's great,
I'll be on to do something goofy.
Speaker 3 (30:38):
But when you.
Speaker 1 (30:38):
Watch the other people make points, you still get frustrated
because there's a specific thing here. This is the specific thing. Okay,
it is a lack of interest in black on black crime.
That's who's dying in Chicago. Here's Steven A. Smith trying
to say as much, coming as close as you possibly can,
(30:59):
so I have to give him credit Clip seven.
Speaker 12 (31:01):
In terms of what has been transpiring through the streets
of Chicago. It has been going on for years. It
was going on before Obama was in office, it was
going on when he was in office. It has been
going on since he's been in office. I recall seeing
a black couple on national television asking for military assistance.
Speaker 3 (31:24):
That's how bad it has.
Speaker 12 (31:25):
Been in Chicago, and one administration after another has either
been incapable or unwilling to do anything about it. It
is shameful, and black folks in that city have been
getting killed for years, and I'm disgusted at the level
of ineffectiveness or unwillingness that they've aret that they've executed
(31:46):
and getting better things done and making it better for
the law abiding citizens in Chicago.
Speaker 1 (31:51):
I mean, he knows what he's talking about, and he
should be frustrated and disgusted at the level of ineffective NA.
So it's the unwillingness that's the word he uses, because
there is no will to get it done. Like they're
flat out telling you, this is a manufactured crisis. Lori
Lightfoot remember her, she was the last mayor of Chicago.
She says, this isn't real. Clip six.
Speaker 13 (32:11):
If he comes to Chicago, he's going to be in
court and he's going to be sued by the state.
He's going to be sued by the city, and I
believe that there with private interests that also sue him.
This is not about violent crime, and I don't think
we should pretend that this manufactured crisis and his attempt
to provoke people in Chicago is legitimate exercise of power.
Speaker 7 (32:33):
It is not.
Speaker 1 (32:34):
Oh Lori Lightfoot, you are a sad, strange little man
kills me. Okay, but understand this is you talk about
an unwillingness. Fifty eight people got shot in Chicago last week,
eight people got killed. That's the tops in America. And
they're telling you this is a Manua factured crisis, like
that's apparently an acceptable number of shootings and deaths in
(32:57):
a given weekend in an American city. And Trump shouldn't
be concerned with that. This is about some exercise and power.
That's what we're really watching here. And it's crazy because
that's where you find yourself, you know, when you're looking
at a timeline of events summer of twenty twenty Black
lives matter summer of twenty twenty five. No, they don't.
(33:18):
That's the Democrat Party. If you're listening to the most
relatable man on the radio.
Speaker 2 (33:24):
Best way to describe here was to say, he's a
typical boy next door.
Speaker 1 (33:28):
Fox across America with a Jimmy Phaler. It is Fox
across America with Jimmy Falo, broadcasting across the country, around
the world. Of course, we have some killer affiliates out
in Pittsburgh, WJAS, and of course Beaver County Radio. Their
Steelers are getting ready to roll into the Meadowlands MetLife
Stadium this Sunday and hopefully beat up the Jets pretty good.
(33:50):
Joining us now a man who is not in New
Jersey with a Jets play. He's out in Pittsburgh where
the Steelers do. Abraham's on the line. Yo, Abraham, Hello,
Demi fala, how about it? What's going on out there
in the Burgh?
Speaker 14 (34:03):
I'm excited.
Speaker 15 (34:04):
I just I was driving around the Burgh listening. You
mentioned you're coming to Pittsburgh, so I got on the website.
Speaker 1 (34:12):
Uh huh.
Speaker 15 (34:12):
I bought a front road ticket to your show on
November twenty second.
Speaker 1 (34:17):
Hot damn.
Speaker 15 (34:17):
And I'm really excited.
Speaker 1 (34:19):
Yeah, that's right. It's gonna be rowdy, man, like you're
gonna that's that's my first attempt to sneak out of
the Fox headquarters because I'm in town for my son's
varsity football season. Uh, you know, because I bet a
lot of money on these games, I might as well
watch them. But once they're over, the first stop is
the Burgh, So you're I mean, that's live, Ammo Abraham,
you better get the zone man. That's it.
Speaker 3 (34:40):
It's gonna be rowdy.
Speaker 14 (34:41):
I want to say, Pittsburgh.
Speaker 15 (34:43):
Pittsburgh is a Pittsburgh is a secret.
Speaker 1 (34:45):
Kind of place.
Speaker 15 (34:46):
It's a you know, whenever my New York friends tell
me Oh Pittsburgh. Oh the ormput Yeah, I say, you
know what, you can say that about Pittsburgh and tell
all your friends.
Speaker 14 (34:54):
Yep, we're We're very happy over here.
Speaker 15 (34:56):
Pittsburgh is a special place. Unfortunately, Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh made the
map in recent years for.
Speaker 1 (35:03):
Not good reasons.
Speaker 15 (35:04):
You know, we had that horrible shooting in my community,
and you know we had the situation and hold on, but.
Speaker 1 (35:12):
We're bringing it back. That's the point. I know all
of this.
Speaker 3 (35:15):
You know my family.
Speaker 1 (35:16):
I have a lot of family and Ambridge, So you're
gonna meet some of my drunk Polish relatives if you're
at the Carnegie that night.
Speaker 3 (35:23):
So that's where we keep the pocus.
Speaker 1 (35:25):
Yeah for real, Like I'm twenty seconds from a commercial.
Speaker 3 (35:27):
Break, but you just made the hour. Abraham, you and.
Speaker 1 (35:30):
Me hanging out at the Carnegie on November twenty second,
anybody who wants to come hang out with Abraham and
my drunk Polish relatives. The Polish Falcons will be representing
from Ambridge. Get your tickets at Fox across America dot com.
Byron Donald's joining us at the top of the hour.
Speaker 2 (35:44):
Next from Everywhere USA, It's Fox Across America with Jimmy Baylor.
Speaker 1 (35:51):
Oh hot, damn, here we go, Here we go. Big
hour coming up on Fox Across America. You're home for
top shelf radio in a bottom feeding political world. Just
an absolute race to the bottom in the Democrat Party
right now. Hard to say who is in the lead.
It is very clear though, the one person not winning
is the American citizen in that party. We're gonna get
(36:14):
into it in this hour Byron donald's'll stop and buy
Superstar Congressman could be the very next governor in the
great state of Florida. Johneral colebell is gonna be here
as well, and we will get into some of your calls,
text tweets, Carrier pigeons. You can send a smoke signal
if Elizabeth Warren happens to be listening. We don't care
how you communicate with the show. We're just happy to
have you on board because, as I say every day,
(36:34):
Fox Across America is an audio safe space for cool people.
Cool people can come in any shape, in size or
political ideology. Okay, you don't have to agree with me
to be a part of the show. You just have
to behave. That's the motto of the show. We say
every day, be a Republican, be a Democrat, just don't
be a that's it.
Speaker 3 (36:54):
You can do that. You're gonna fit in just fine. Okay.
Speaker 1 (36:58):
I don't know that you're riding as high as my
next guests, though, because his Florida Seminoles might have pulled
off the biggest upset of the young college season last Saturday,
let's hope he sobered up from that tail Gay Party
Congressman Byron Donalds on the line, bat and leadoff, Yo, BD.
Speaker 14 (37:14):
It's not an upset if you're good, man, you know.
Speaker 1 (37:17):
It's actually you can go the other way too. It's
not enough set if they're bad, because they've no no,
but they've had obviously a hell of a run under
Nick Saban. They were a ranked team coming into the game,
so people certainly held Alabama in higher regard than the
Knowles did.
Speaker 3 (37:33):
Like that was hot stuff.
Speaker 14 (37:36):
Right now.
Speaker 4 (37:36):
Look, I think the game I saw, I think Bama
is okay, and they're pretty good. But people very much
underrated Florida State. And I think the reason why we
weren't even ranked in the top twenty five was based
upon last year's performance when we were two and thirteen.
Very forgettable season. We don't want to rehash old stuff, Jimmy,
We don't rehash old news.
Speaker 14 (37:57):
Yeah, but that being said, we.
Speaker 4 (38:00):
Have a new quarterback, we were able to retool. Our
defense looked very good. And the thing that impressed me
most from the game was that our offensive and defensive
lines were controlling the line of scrimmage. And that's key.
That's key if you're going to be successful in football,
not just in like a one game deal where you
know they weren't they didn't know our speed or something
(38:21):
like that. That's the stuff that lasts you through October
through November. So excited to see it. A lot of
football in front of us. But look, I got look,
I'm running for governor now, so I can't just talk
about my nos. Although I could do that all day, Jenny,
I just can't talk about my nos. Listen, man, Hurricanes
they look good. You got to give them credit. They
look good. Florida looks good. So we'll see.
Speaker 14 (38:42):
It's going to be an interesting year enough in football
in the state of Florida.
Speaker 3 (38:45):
Yeah, we'll take it.
Speaker 1 (38:45):
But that's you know, one of the one of the
most underrated aspects of your candidacy is that if you
weren't governing the state. You could be an ESPN pundit.
Speaker 3 (38:53):
You know you could do.
Speaker 14 (38:54):
That's what I told stephen A. Jimmy, hold on, man,
I told stephen A this. I said, stephen A, man,
you gotta get me on a first take. I can
do it.
Speaker 1 (39:04):
He laughed at me.
Speaker 14 (39:05):
Come on, stephen A, I came and did your show. Yeah,
come on now, let me on no hope of chance.
Speaker 1 (39:11):
Yo, I see him when he's here doing Hannity. If
I see him in the building, I'm gonna get behind this.
I'm gonna lobby fetus because guy just jump in real quick.
He's trying to do your gig just the same like
he's he does. He makes the rounds, he's doing a
lot of commentary. So see, couldn't you guys do like
a like an exchange student thing. Will you do a
first take? And he comes in cincinniire what.
Speaker 14 (39:30):
I'm saying, my new agent. That's all I know.
Speaker 1 (39:37):
You definitely want me to be your agent and not
my agents. That's all I could say. Let me stay well,
let's stay focused.
Speaker 2 (39:41):
Though.
Speaker 1 (39:42):
We got the great Byron Donald's on the line. So
I bring up stephen A because he made a point
last night. I saw him on News Nation rival network,
but I don't care if it's a good point. It's
a good point, and he was basically talking about how
there's been such a griliction to protect the community in
Chicago under multiple administrations, majority of which you're Democrat. But
is that kind of why they opposed Trump in this
(40:03):
crime crackdown? Is because it draws the attention to the
fact that they've just been indifferent to it.
Speaker 14 (40:09):
No, I think that's part of it.
Speaker 4 (40:11):
The other piece is they opposed Trump just because they
got to oppose Trump everywhere, because they're looking for something
to be able to run on next year in a
midterm cycle. That's really what's going on. So, whether it's
the National Guard, that's why the Democrats all of a
sudden are clamoring for the Epstein files to be released,
(40:31):
because when Joe Biden was president, they didn't want to
release them, but now they want to because they think
that hurts Donald Trump. And so it's not even about
their own people. It's how do we oppose Trump so
that we can find a way to.
Speaker 14 (40:45):
Run against him.
Speaker 4 (40:46):
But the point that stephen A is making is correct,
is that this is local leadership that has been derelict
in their duty for decades. This didn't just happen last year.
This has been a decade long thing, and so I
think it's new tried to thought he was cute and
was saying, and you know, some of the cities with
the worst crimer in red States, and I'm thinking, like,
Newsom is a fool because those cities are run by
(41:09):
Democrats top to bottom.
Speaker 14 (41:11):
And that's the issue that you got.
Speaker 3 (41:13):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (41:14):
You know the old adage in sports when the Giant,
when Bill Parcells was coaching the Giants, he would say,
you are what your record says you are. So he's like,
I don't want to hear it if you're two and five,
I don't want to hear that you look good in
practice because you're a two and five team, you know.
And that's the bigger problem for the Democrats right now.
The record says something completely different than the argument that
(41:34):
they're making. And I think a lot of times the
Newsom's of the world, the Pritzkers of the world, they
basically try to fail upwards by nationalizing their conflict, meaning
nobody wants to clean up their own state.
Speaker 3 (41:44):
They're like, I've got it.
Speaker 1 (41:45):
If I get in a fight with Trump, I'll be
the face of the Democrat resistance. And as you said,
maybe there's some momentum for the mid terms or twenty
twenty eight. That seems like the plan to make.
Speaker 14 (41:55):
Yeah, that's the only thing they got, man. I mean, look,
if they get blown out in the midterms, what is
the state of the Democrat Party. I believe that what
they need.
Speaker 4 (42:02):
To do, which they should have been a long time
ago already, is they have to purge the radical left
out of that party. And I'm not one of these
people who believes in suppression. Suppression. I think that's wrong.
People are allowed to have their opinions, they're allowed to
express themselves. But as a party, they got some decisions
to make. Are they going to continue to go down
it's Bernie Sanders, AOC, Elizabeth Warren woke ideology, foolishness, or
(42:27):
are they gonna, you know, in some respects go back
to the Clinton era where they're trying to triangulate moderates
and kind of be a more moderated party. And you know,
since the Clinton era, they've gone hard left.
Speaker 14 (42:40):
That's the truth.
Speaker 4 (42:40):
And they got away with it based upon just general
goodwill from the American voter. And then this guy named
Donald Trump came along and just you know, he just
wrecked all that and so and so. Now they're a
party that doesn't know where they're going. And it's really
they have to get rid of that leftism.
Speaker 16 (42:57):
Man.
Speaker 4 (42:57):
That stuff is a cancer, not just in their party,
it's a cancer in American politicians.
Speaker 1 (43:01):
Yeah, like and everything it touches. We're talking to Congressman
Barron Donald's what it reminds me of, especially when I
see a lot of the battles they're picking. You know,
they're fighting against the crime crackdown. They were mad about
ice deportations. I was watching a guy yell last night
because trunk sang a car sank a cartel boat full
of cocaine, and they were worked up about that. And
what I feel like is when you watch, you know,
(43:23):
the squeaky wheels and the Democrat Party, the ones that
are getting all the grease, which are the ones you
talked about, the radical left ones.
Speaker 3 (43:29):
I really do look at it like a party.
Speaker 1 (43:31):
Have you ever walked into a party when you were younger,
and the minute you walked in the door, you realized
everyone there had already had twelve drinks and there's no
there's no way you were ever going to be able
to connect with these people.
Speaker 3 (43:41):
Have you had that.
Speaker 1 (43:42):
Experience, It's like you leave. Yeah, you walk in and
you're like, I did people have their shirts off?
Speaker 3 (43:48):
Like I just got it.
Speaker 1 (43:51):
Parties been, there was a there was a pool involved.
Speaker 3 (43:57):
I was going to clean it up. Don't worry. But
is sometimes you show up.
Speaker 1 (44:01):
To a party you realize everyone is in such a
state of disrepair that it's just not gonna work. And
you're like, I gotta leave, and I think that's their
challenge right now. And when you're in that state, there's
no self awareness. Sometimes we didn't bring.
Speaker 3 (44:13):
Up the last time you were on that.
Speaker 1 (44:14):
I just wanted to as a guy I know who's
into sports, fitness and everything else, did you buy chance
come across the mom Donnie bench press video that was
like two weeks ago.
Speaker 14 (44:21):
It was so sad. That was sad, man, Jimmy about
thirty five that's warm up. Wait listen, man, I'm not
one of these guys like, I mean, look, what the
problem is is that you got RFKJ and hegsas are
out there doing freaking military challenges and you're like, you
know and they're putting out fifty push ups, which you know,
(44:44):
you know, the fifty pull ups and a hundred push ups.
I mean I got them with the push ups. Put
them pull ups. Jimmy, I'm too eighty baby lot. But
I'm just saying, but I'm Donnie. Come on, bro warm
thirty five. This with the full spot. Come on dude, Yeah, kid,
that's crazy.
Speaker 1 (45:04):
You know what thet to me of Uh, it's like
because if the spider was obviously doing the work. You know,
sometimes in high school there's a group project. One guy
does nothing, the other guy does all the work and
get but you know they've got to share the ah.
But in this instance, they couldn't even get the A
because he had again one. It was embarrassing. And what
I wonder is there has to be somebody, either him
(45:26):
or on his campaign that has to know whether or
not he can lift that weight. Isn't somebody supposed to
step in if they know that's the case.
Speaker 14 (45:34):
This is where being self aware is critical. Yep, he
should have known, forget somebody on the campaign. He should
have known this is not my forte. I should not
be doing this.
Speaker 4 (45:46):
You know.
Speaker 3 (45:46):
The kid talking to Congress with Byron Donalds.
Speaker 1 (45:49):
I'm dying, a kid said on my show last Saturday night,
because Mom Donnie is the reason that some liberals believe
men can compete against women and it'll still be fair.
Speaker 3 (46:00):
You know what I'm saying, and it's probably true.
Speaker 1 (46:02):
Okay, you ain't mentioned at Buck thirty five, but give
me one more hold on because you have too much
range for me to leave it at Mom Donnie.
Speaker 3 (46:09):
Okay, you are running for governor of Florida.
Speaker 1 (46:11):
It sounds like you might be getting an additional opponent
entering the race. Is that something that Donald's campaign is
mindful of?
Speaker 14 (46:19):
Wait, say it again. You broke up? You broke up
one more time.
Speaker 1 (46:21):
All right, So you're running for governor of Florida. We
were told you might be getting an additional opponent. Does
that affect anything you do in any way possible? No,
just throw the fancom man.
Speaker 14 (46:33):
You say you stay ready, You ain't gotta get ready.
I'm being honest with you, Jimmy. That doesn't impact me whatsoever.
We're gonna keep doing what we do. You know, other
campaigns they gotta the way. Our view is. Honestly, we're
set in the pace. They got to come catch me.
Speaker 3 (46:51):
Look at you that's a check.
Speaker 14 (46:53):
Pretty good on the strike. Jimmy, just letting you know,
don't let the sie.
Speaker 1 (46:59):
He's a fleet, a fleet to eighty Byron Donald's. I
love that. It's amazing big man with speed. That's why,
that's why the president in doorshere Trump likes. He likes
the athletics, he likes the sports. He saw you as
a as a as a speed rusher off the edge.
Is that is that what you're represented this administration?
Speaker 14 (47:15):
No, no, no, I mean I'm very confident in myself.
Speed rusher off the edge is not the deal. Definitely.
Speaker 4 (47:23):
You know, a d tackle like my son that played
college football. You know, we're just gonna, you know, we're gonna,
you know, we're gonna most some people down.
Speaker 1 (47:30):
All right, I'll take it, man, and good luck with
all that I got. My my Lincoln just started his
varsity season. Starts this week. Uh, they're fired up, he said.
I had him on TV last week. He knows his
coaches are watching. So we predicted an eight no season.
But I don't know that the locker room is brought
into eight no. Like I hate to be the dad
who's betting on the other football team. But you know,
(47:51):
the rent don't pay itself. B.
Speaker 3 (47:52):
D Oh my god, we'll see.
Speaker 14 (47:55):
He's not a high school boar.
Speaker 17 (47:56):
Man.
Speaker 14 (47:56):
You can't do that. You can't set lies high school football.
Speaker 3 (48:00):
Come on, man, I forget it.
Speaker 1 (48:03):
Man, listen, I am a public figure. They play on Saturdays.
I host a Saturday night TV show, So I can't
do what all these other moms are doing in the
stands and getting drunk. Half of these parents. I didn't
know this until I got into youth sports.
Speaker 3 (48:16):
If your kid is.
Speaker 1 (48:17):
On a travel league, ninety percent of the people you're
surrounded by are drinking at nine in the morning.
Speaker 3 (48:22):
I didn't know that.
Speaker 1 (48:23):
You know, if I would have known, I probabould have
hung out there in college. But you know, I got
to keep it above board now, BD. So if I
want to, if I want to bet the under on
a halftimeline in a middle school football game, you know,
spare me.
Speaker 3 (48:34):
You know.
Speaker 1 (48:35):
That's all good stuff, man, Keep playing good ball out there, BD.
See Jimmy, my man, the great Byron Donald's going to
be the next governor of Florida. They were talking about
the fact that the former House Speaker Paul Renner entered
the race today. Byron Donalds is backed by Donald Trump
(48:56):
and in the state of Florida, that is there's no
way to understate how significant that is. Like it's bananas, Okay,
They are very pro Trump down there. They used to
tell us that, you know, Florida was a swing state. Wrong.
Do you remember going even into twenty twenty when there
were polls that showed Florida being a one point race
(49:18):
or him losing by two points and he winning it
by twenty Like Trump has cemented Florida into the red column.
And if you were watching the convention this summer when
Trump got shot in Butler, Pennsylvania, really insane gripping stuff.
He spent the week of the convention either bouncing his
grandkids on his knee or sitting with Byron Donalds. BD
(49:40):
was right next to him every night at the convention.
Because he's held in that high a regard, because he
has a real relationship with these people, Like I think
I've told you this.
Speaker 3 (49:50):
I've met him on the air, I've met him off
the air, i.
Speaker 1 (49:52):
Met his kids. They're the same people off the air
that they are on. And for me, that's the litmus test.
You know, it's very easy for anybody to get on
a national talk show and be like, I care, I'm
trying to help. And then they get off the air
and they're like, anyway, where's the Hooters at? You know
that whole thing. He ain't that guy, and Trump knows that.
And in terms of the sports analogy, like you are
(50:13):
what your record says you are. The reason they're winning
is they're focused on winning. They're not spending all week
calling the other side names. They're not looking for some
fictitious lane so they can run in the midterms by
saying these guys are racist or authoritarians or whatever the
hell it is. They're not doing that. They're just focusing
on deliverables for the American people. And that's what gives
(50:35):
him a major advantage over anybody he's gonna run against,
is that if you actually just have a good record
of governance, we'll vote for anybody in this country. Okay,
we could legitimately bring back the Whig Party and they
could dominate, you know, whin three out of the next
four presidential elections if the country was running well. Because
at our core, the majority of people still know that
(50:58):
that is the priority here.
Speaker 3 (51:00):
It's not I just got to beat the Democrats. I
just got to.
Speaker 1 (51:03):
Beat the Republicans. It's really you know, we're all American.
As the country goes, we go. So we just need
people in power who have their s together.
Speaker 18 (51:12):
And I'm out here in the real world and I
know what's right or wrong or bullshit.
Speaker 1 (51:16):
Change the show that leaves you hungry for.
Speaker 19 (51:18):
More'll only sit around and cook some soup, eat brand
desserts and.
Speaker 1 (51:25):
Just get all fat and sassy.
Speaker 2 (51:27):
He's fucks across America with Jimmy Fala.
Speaker 1 (51:30):
Oh hot, damn it, This box across America with Jimmy
Fala doing the damn thing. At eight eight eight seven
eight eight nine to nine one zero. A new ice
detention facility opened up in Louisiana today, it's called the
Louisiana Lockup. They all have nicknames now. It's so bizarre.
I never thought i'd see the day where the federal
(51:51):
penitentiary system had gift shops, but we're we're now living
in the age of merch. Of merch in the cell block.
It is kind of It's kind of funny to me.
It's because do you remember when Trump started this debate,
he was in office like a month. He's like, I
think I'm gonna reopen Alcatraz, and I remember saying on
Fox New Saturday night, I go, wow, that'd be funny.
(52:11):
If he reopened Alcatraz would be the only federal prison
with a gift shop, seeing as it already has one.
And at the time that seemed like, you know, a
little off. But every single one of these Alligator Alcatraz,
it's got merch. You know, that's the Speedway slammer. It's
got merch. It's like you got you go to jail.
But it's like an Oasis concert you buy you know,
they have like Oasis twenty twenty five. That's you could
(52:33):
buy the T shirt with your release date on it,
Alligator Alcatraz spring of twenty twenty six, you know, something
like that.
Speaker 3 (52:39):
It's a wild time to be alive. And one of the.
Speaker 1 (52:42):
Challenges is if you're hosting, you know, three hours of
syndicated radio every day and you host a TV show
on the weekend, is you're always trying to figure out
what rises to the level you know that that it
qualifies for like national discussion, And sometimes it's what do
I think is fun? But most of the time on
this show, it's what do I think matters? And then
(53:03):
how can we kind of make that slightly entertaining. That's
our gig is. We're trying to be like a spiritual
caffeine in your work, daddy, or your commuter, wherever you
find yourself listening to this show. If you're cooking a
pot of meth like some of my family members, we
just want to pick up the vibe while you do it.
Make sure nobody burns themselves on the stove. But the
point is coming by in the next break, three of
the women who run my TV career, who helped program
(53:24):
the show, are going to tell me what is actually
trending with the American people, not myself drinking in the backyard,
smoking a cigar, fact drunk and stupid. There's no way
to go through lifestyle.
Speaker 2 (53:38):
You're listening to Fox Across America with Jimmy Fayla on
sevent ten.
Speaker 1 (53:43):
WR Miami Vice theme. Last time I heard this song,
this is a real story. I was driving down the
peninsul in Clearwater Beach in a rented Mustang convertible, my
son Lincoln, Jenny and like we're rocking out. We've just
finished up Punchlines and Patriots and clear Water. The phone
rings and I have to shut I have to shut
off the music because it's like Sean Hannity in.
Speaker 3 (54:04):
A helicopter and wants to tell me about the show.
Speaker 1 (54:07):
And what I like about my next three guests is
they never interrupt my favorite songs from their helicopter. They
always wait till they land. Returning to the program from
the halls of Fox New Saturday Night, the three women
who run my TV career, Leo, Jen and Annie back
in the studio. The crowd goes, Wow, this one of
the crowd is crazy. Great to see that. How about it?
Speaker 3 (54:30):
How about it?
Speaker 1 (54:30):
So normally you guys come here on a Thursday and
I'm like, what are we going to talk about on
the show? But today it's who are we going to
have on the show? I think that's where we are
right now. We're still working this out. Let me roam
one by you. This has bananas. So Trump just said
five minutes ago he's gimmicked. I don't even know what
this means. They have ten days to clear the New
York City Mayor's field, meaning Adams and Slee would have
(54:51):
to get a step aside or I don't know what
that means. He's going to start tweeting bad stuff. It's
like when they wanted Biden to drop out. Remember, so
I don't know what that means, you dig, but is
it worth getting one of these people on? And we've
had Sleewan? You think Adams would come on?
Speaker 4 (55:06):
Yeah?
Speaker 7 (55:06):
Absolutely, I think.
Speaker 1 (55:08):
I would have Quomo on, But I don't want the
three is getting groped. That's rough for me.
Speaker 4 (55:13):
Man.
Speaker 11 (55:13):
Whatever happened to all those chumo sexuals? Really they really
have been quiet?
Speaker 3 (55:18):
Bran did that get quiet?
Speaker 1 (55:19):
If you had a pair of headphones over there, I
could play you that montage. Leo just dropped a great reference.
So back when Cuomo it was during the pandemic and
they were trying to make him happen, they talked about how, yes,
they were quomo sexuals. Even Stephen Colbert said this, this
is crazy. Hold up those headphones. This is real. Some
people are calling themselves chromo sexuals. You are obsessed with
(55:39):
you and want to date you or want to marry you.
Speaker 9 (55:42):
Trevor, you call yourself a cuomo sexual, and I agree
with you.
Speaker 11 (55:47):
I feel like I'm a cuomo sexual too.
Speaker 5 (55:49):
Do you think that you are an attractive person now
because you are single and ready to Mingle. Is it
true that this was this swab that the nerve.
Speaker 1 (56:00):
Chris, you disappeared.
Speaker 5 (56:03):
So the scale this was the actual swab that.
Speaker 1 (56:08):
Was being used. It's okay, these feelings are perfectly natural.
Many Americans experienced moments of being at least Andrew curious,
if not fully cuomo sexual. Oh god, he heard that.
Speaker 11 (56:23):
He got the really wrong ideas like, oh, what do
you want me to do?
Speaker 7 (56:27):
All right?
Speaker 19 (56:28):
I remember comedian Chelsea Handler was like posting things on
her Instagram with basically her top off being like I
love Cuomo.
Speaker 1 (56:35):
Do you remember that? Yeah, she's saying that about Robert
Muller too.
Speaker 4 (56:38):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (56:39):
Remember that, She's like, I want to bang Robert Mueller
from my country.
Speaker 7 (56:42):
Yeah, first and last time that's ever been said.
Speaker 3 (56:45):
You don't hear that a lot, but I would.
Speaker 11 (56:47):
Love this is our open invite to Mayor Adams. I mean,
he comes on, the only thing was we just have
to have that bleep button ready because he says some
stuff are like wow, I didn't even know that could
be on some one's mine. But thank you for really
sharing the most wild things.
Speaker 1 (57:03):
One of the nice things about having a mayor who
gets paid in bottle service. Yes, Yeah, it makes for
some eventful interviews. You know, Sliva comes by with the
hat Sleeva was on recently. Yes, do you think he
was mad at Danny Poula shop for wearing the hat?
What was your read on that?
Speaker 19 (57:19):
I thought he wasn't that into it. Yeah, I mean
he looked a little like, oh.
Speaker 1 (57:24):
Yeah, am am I being mocked here.
Speaker 4 (57:27):
Yeah.
Speaker 11 (57:27):
Well I was surprised because I kind of thought like
there was like a little pizza rat under his hat,
like ratituey that was just controlling him all the time
and making him make all the decisions for the city.
So when he took it off, I was like, oh
my god.
Speaker 1 (57:38):
Wow, we could do like a mean tweets type segment.
Then I'm gonna bring these guys in and be like,
these are things my staff has said about you on
the radio. Oh yeah, do you.
Speaker 7 (57:49):
Still this is what we say on microphone? You don't
want to hear.
Speaker 1 (57:52):
Yeah, you don't want to know. Leo Jennannanni are here.
We're talking about TV, talking about the state of the country.
It's Thursday. We do this every Thursday, Uh is jen
you know? But lot about Taylor Swift? Is she going
to play the Super Bowl halftime show.
Speaker 19 (58:04):
There are so many rumors as she is, but I
don't think so because I don't think Travis Kelsey's making
the super Bowl, So I don't think she would want
to do that.
Speaker 1 (58:16):
She wants you saying she wants to perform if he's there.
The problem is they decide who's performing in October. They
don't decide obviously he's the season, But do you think
she'd want to have the event?
Speaker 3 (58:25):
Maybe to herself.
Speaker 1 (58:26):
Though, meaning if he doesn't make it, she's kind of
excited because she's maybe.
Speaker 19 (58:29):
It should be like he's gonna retire this year and
then like she does it next year and it's like
a and then he can like and.
Speaker 1 (58:35):
He can be like a backup dancer like Left Shark
or whatever that that did.
Speaker 20 (58:40):
A great job in his performance with.
Speaker 7 (58:42):
On the Eras Tour. Is that true?
Speaker 4 (58:45):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (58:46):
He likes Todd Pat Travis.
Speaker 1 (58:48):
Yeah, because Annie's twelve, she doesn't go out a lot.
Speaker 3 (58:51):
Don't get too excited about this.
Speaker 1 (58:54):
No, I get it. Lincoln didn't. It didn't connect with Lincoln.
Lincoln was on TV last week given Travis Kelsey a
hard time.
Speaker 11 (58:59):
Well, I mean, if there's other there's another quarterback who.
Speaker 7 (59:03):
Has a pop star wife.
Speaker 11 (59:05):
Heyo Josh Allen, go Bill's Haley Stein Mills.
Speaker 1 (59:08):
If you're listening on wb E n up in Buffalo,
Leo's gotcha.
Speaker 19 (59:12):
He likes the Bills, like just plan for USA, for
the US open tonight Bill's Mafia.
Speaker 1 (59:18):
Yeah, let's go Buffalo represent hard. They like this on WBN,
that's our newest affiliate up in Buffalo. We're gonna be
in north Tonawanda April twenty six. That's all. Yeah, that's
because you cannot offend a Buffalo crowd.
Speaker 7 (59:31):
No, they're strong, strong sturdies you think up there.
Speaker 1 (59:34):
Yeah, you can club a baby seal on stage. Hit
them again, they don't. They're the best people. I love
the their rowdy. I mean, wait, this is a true story.
If you're listening around the country, you might not know this,
but the first time Johnny Damon was on Fox New
Saturday Night, he came with his friends that were members
of actual Bill's Mafia. Oh yeah, and they were so
drunk we couldn't let them in the studio in that show.
(59:55):
Like they think of the things that go on on
that show, Well.
Speaker 11 (59:58):
In Buffalo that would be considered legal allowed to drive.
Speaker 7 (01:00:01):
Say, that's why They're like, what's the big deal?
Speaker 1 (01:00:05):
That's funny? So that happened and the NFL starts tonight.
Yea Eagles, Cowboys? I hate them both, but yeah, you're
not a fan. Does that listen? We're on w PhD
in Philly. I took a lot of smack about these folks.
I mean, we're on KLF and we're all over the
place in Dallas just the same. Well, they're listening on
KTBB and Tyler. These are very passionate people. I give
(01:00:27):
people respect for the fact that some of these cities
are still throwing twenty five dollars beers. We're not like
New York is so expensive you do not see beer
thrown anymore. Yeah, and I think that's an indicator of
how the quality of life is going in a city. Andy,
did the Seahawks fans throw beer in Seattle?
Speaker 3 (01:00:42):
Where you're from.
Speaker 7 (01:00:43):
I've actually never been to a shocks Is that true?
I've never been to.
Speaker 1 (01:00:46):
All the ballplayers you stalk.
Speaker 3 (01:00:47):
You've never been to an NFL game.
Speaker 7 (01:00:49):
So she's trying to get in.
Speaker 11 (01:00:51):
Okay, she's outside the stadium with her hinge.
Speaker 7 (01:00:53):
Open, like, hello, match with me? God, No, I never did.
Speaker 20 (01:00:58):
Actually, because we're not. I have hearing loss, and when
I was younger, my dad was like scared that I
was going to go even more death if I go
to a game, it is there, you know. Now I
live in New York. I think I can do it
now because of all the sirens and yeah stuff I
hear anyways, so.
Speaker 1 (01:01:12):
You're hearing everything anyway.
Speaker 11 (01:01:13):
Yeah, we could just get you like one of those
baby headphones, like yeah, I need.
Speaker 7 (01:01:17):
A little or like anything.
Speaker 1 (01:01:18):
Any well, the people who throw beer at twenty five Dove,
that's a commitment to fandom. You're rich.
Speaker 3 (01:01:24):
Yeah, either that or you're just drunk.
Speaker 1 (01:01:27):
I don't know, because like old school Yankee Stadium, Like
the funniest thing about these the show fights on the JumboTron.
Speaker 3 (01:01:32):
At Yankee Stadium.
Speaker 1 (01:01:34):
Do you know this story like some of the radio
audience does about me getting hold out of Yankee Stadium?
Speaker 3 (01:01:38):
Do you know? Do you guys know a story?
Speaker 7 (01:01:39):
Hold out?
Speaker 1 (01:01:40):
You guys, the wor audience in New York will like this,
this is a real story. Stay in school kids. But
I'll say a real story. Since we're talking, we're trying
to figure out what we're going to do on the
TV show. That's the point of this conversation. Maybe this
ends with us just having an intervention, but that's not
what I'm going for here. I want to tell you
a real story and they'll appreciate it. So pre social
media and iPhone which talking like oh two, when you
(01:02:03):
didn't have information at your disposal every second of the day,
it was possible to not know about like events having
different times and stuff like that. So far, so good.
So we had gone the Yankee Stadium for what we
thought was a one PM day game on a Saturday,
and got there and started drinking in the garage next
to the jail at nine in the morning, like you
(01:02:24):
would do for a one PM day game. You want
four hours, I think, is that's what the Surgeon General recommend.
Watched drink at four hours before we ended at the stadium.
So if you get nar at one thirty, you get
there at nine thirty, you start drinking. So anyway, at
a one PM day game, we started drinking at nine am.
We found out around eleven that it had become like
the Fox Game of the week and they had moved
it to eight pm. Oh that we're already there. Okay,
(01:02:50):
the old switched horses in the middle of the race. Okay,
so we drank our way to like a six thirty
seven pm ballpark entrance in really bad shape, just absolutely
smashed in bad shape. It gets so much better. We
finally get to our seats. My buddy Pat, my buddy Shawn,
(01:03:11):
my brother Mike, who's a New York City cop. He's
just graduated the police academy at the time, and I
knows cops in the stadium and all that, and maybe
we'll even see some of them, you don't know. But
as we're getting to our seats, we're in the upper deck,
we're on the moon again. To our credit, we're nine
hours drunk, which is you know, the fact we're even standing,
you know. So as we're getting to our seats, my
(01:03:32):
buddy Shone accidentally dumps beer, not like dumps beer, but
like his beer falls a little bit on the die
in front of us, right, guy has a Yankee jersey on.
We're like, hey, we're sorry about that, but I am
nine hours drunk, so I'm like twenty at the time,
twenty one. I'm like, I go, hey, you can't dump
beer on the Yankee guy, but not the Red Sox.
Speaker 3 (01:03:55):
Guy, you know, So I dump a beer on the
Red Soide.
Speaker 11 (01:03:57):
Right, and he's deliberate, dumpy.
Speaker 1 (01:04:01):
He is not a sport about it. He turns up,
you know, hey, I get hit with another sud. I'm
gonna take it to your f and face, he says,
I don't know what this means. I'm taking it to
your f and face, and they show it on the
jumbo tron. Because Yankee Stadium was like Heathens back then.
It was like you know, ancient Rome, cocaine and cam quarters.
Speaker 3 (01:04:18):
It was crazy. It was not they were nuts.
Speaker 7 (01:04:20):
So anyway, especially if you're in a Red Sox ert.
Speaker 1 (01:04:21):
Every cop in the upper deck comes running over Section
twenty seven and breaks it up.
Speaker 3 (01:04:26):
What's going on? It's not a big you gotta stop
break it up.
Speaker 1 (01:04:28):
I'm like, you know, separating us, and he's cursing and screaming,
and so we sit back down. And on the next pitch,
this guy Mike Stanley who used to be a Yankee
but was a Red Sox and then came back. The
next pitch, Mike Stanley hit a grand slam for the
Red Sox. So this guy jumps up and gives me
a doub or barreled middle finger, like care, what are
you gonna do now, at which point it take my
(01:04:48):
beer and I go. It just doubs this man. Okay,
you wanted to know. Now, the whole section just starts
throwing punches at the same time. And as my poor
brother Mike comes walking up the ram with his pretzels
and his four beers in the styrophoone, he sees me
walking down the ramp in handcuffs and I got temporarily
put into Yankee jail.
Speaker 7 (01:05:09):
That's amazing.
Speaker 1 (01:05:10):
By and by the old uh in the old Yankee Stadium,
by the third base line, they have a little holding
cell where they've got to like sober you up, or
write you an appearance ticket, or whatever the case may be.
My buddy Chris Cruz, who still works at Yankee Stadium,
was a clubhouse attendant for the Yankees. So as I'm
in jail screaming like it's because I'm white, you know,
like I'm hammered. It's all the bananas, he walks by
(01:05:31):
with the retecks of the shortstop called no mare Garcia
para and no more Garcia Para. Hears him yelling like hey, Jimmy,
and so no mare Garcia Para is yelling like Jimmy
like that, and I'm in jail, but my brother Mike
came and knew some people and we had to apologize
to the people we got in a fight with, and
they let us out of Yankee jail and kick us
out of the stadium.
Speaker 13 (01:05:50):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (01:05:50):
Well, I held on to every single word of that story.
I was following so closely. I heard of a more
Looney Tunes style story. But that's kind of how al
Jimmy story.
Speaker 14 (01:06:01):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (01:06:02):
But the point is, if you thought you were drinking
and for a one o'clock game, and they attacked on
six hours, how do you budget for that?
Speaker 11 (01:06:07):
Listen, if we were playing a game of like Jimmy's
Court right now, I'd be like, innocent innocence. You had
no choice but to keep drinking it. If they didn't
move the game, it was honestly their fall.
Speaker 1 (01:06:18):
Your honor. My client was perfectly responsible up until the
stated star time on the ticket, right.
Speaker 11 (01:06:23):
You would have if the game was supposed to start
at one o'clock, you would have been out of there
by then.
Speaker 1 (01:06:26):
You've been healthy by the time Church. The time I
threw that beer, I would have been volunteering at the orphanage.
If this could start as I always does when I
have the free time a Yankee jail.
Speaker 3 (01:06:39):
We're talking to Leo Genial and Annie.
Speaker 1 (01:06:42):
Yeah. I don't know that that makes the show, but
there could be something sports. Because the NFL does start Sunday.
Speaker 7 (01:06:47):
It feels like, you know, it's it's we're all back.
Speaker 1 (01:06:50):
It's baseball, We've got football.
Speaker 11 (01:06:51):
Everything was like, yeah, there's moment college is back.
Speaker 1 (01:06:55):
It's it's sports, Timber, thank hey girl. Lincoln left today
for his second day of senior year. Wow, that was
pretty wild. He he walks to school because he doesn't
have his I mean, he lives close enough, but he
doesn't get his license till November. He's sixteen. He's young.
He's young for his age. When did you guys start
driving in high six sixteen? But I'm saying, what you
reach do that make you a junior?
Speaker 7 (01:07:16):
Junior?
Speaker 1 (01:07:17):
Really?
Speaker 11 (01:07:18):
I learner's permit, but I got mine the summer before
senior year or the.
Speaker 7 (01:07:23):
Day of my birthday. I was like, please don't fail me.
Speaker 11 (01:07:25):
Today is my birthday, so I probably had just yeah,
turned eighteen in July, first day of school, driving the school.
Speaker 19 (01:07:31):
I was a may baby in Vermont. You get your
perman at fifteen, licensed at sixteen, so it was my
junior year May. So then it was like all summer
I had my car driving my friends around.
Speaker 3 (01:07:41):
That is fine. I forgot about that.
Speaker 1 (01:07:43):
Your Vermont origin story Rol Station WVMT.
Speaker 3 (01:07:46):
They're great. They're in Burlington.
Speaker 1 (01:07:48):
They're the rowdiest people I've ever hung out with. Oh yeah,
we did an event in a place called and he
was called the Spanked Puppy.
Speaker 20 (01:07:55):
And it sounds like a bikini Bury to stand.
Speaker 1 (01:07:57):
In Annie's bikini baristas keep getting a robbed. Maybe that'll
be the story in the criminal segment.
Speaker 7 (01:08:03):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:08:04):
I don't know that we made any progress planning the show.
Speaker 21 (01:08:06):
Yeah, we just take.
Speaker 11 (01:08:09):
Everything we talked about, We shake it all up, and
a show pops out.
Speaker 1 (01:08:12):
That's it. That's actually how Fox New Saturday, and it happens.
If anybody wants to know, you just you just saw it.
Just you got you were backstage, you stood behind the magician,
and you saw how where we pulled the rabbit out
of and all that jazz.
Speaker 7 (01:08:23):
And you're where as surprised as you are.
Speaker 1 (01:08:27):
But it's a lot of fun.
Speaker 3 (01:08:28):
It's a stuffed it's a stuffed rabbit.
Speaker 1 (01:08:30):
Ten o'clock Fox New Saturday Night, myself, the Girls, Johannal
Coldwell's coming up. He's not on the show this weekend.
I don't know where he is, but he's on this show.
So everyone is well represented. Girls, you did great.
Speaker 3 (01:08:42):
Take a bout. We're back after this.
Speaker 2 (01:08:45):
These Funks Across to America with Jimmy faylo.
Speaker 1 (01:08:48):
Hear it is Fox across America with Jimmy failout. I
got a lightning around a couple of calls here because
there's some good points that need to be made.
Speaker 3 (01:08:54):
Rich Batton lead off in Grand Junction, Michigan.
Speaker 18 (01:08:56):
Yo, Rich, Hey, Jimmy, uh heads exploding this this whole
thing about Trump's grabbing the mid terms and that's why
he's going to Chicago to reduce crime.
Speaker 16 (01:09:11):
He's already reduced crime in DC. How is grabbing the
midterms a disqualifying factor for less murders?
Speaker 14 (01:09:18):
Yeah, I don't.
Speaker 16 (01:09:19):
I don't care if he wants a mother, if, I
don't care if he's a Democrat. If the president comes
in is like I'm gonna grab you know, two terms,
and all I'm going to do is secure.
Speaker 14 (01:09:30):
The border, healthy economy, and lower.
Speaker 16 (01:09:32):
Crime city to city. That's a trade offs. You take that.
Speaker 3 (01:09:38):
Yep, and that's that's what's going on.
Speaker 1 (01:09:40):
They they the problem here for them, okay is obviously
you know there's this it's like a childish thing. This
is not adult leadership here to just oppose anything a
guy does. Okay, that is you know, there's no reasoning
with that. Hey, Trump wants to lower the murder rate. No,
and you're like, what do you mean? Ah, Like there's
there's not a reasonable debate when you're saying things like
(01:10:01):
the mid terms or that jackass. Brandon Johnson said, well,
the real problem is the guns in the Red States. Okay,
we have the data. The guns are from Chicago. So
they just oppose him to oppose him. It's been the
dumbest week of my radio career because I've had to
talk about this every day and the debate we're having
is so stupid. Like my face hurts. Do you feel
it getting to you?
Speaker 21 (01:10:19):
Yes, it's right at the bottom out though right it
will Okay, they'll they'll back off of this because the
polling has him at his highest approval rating of his
presidency right now, because people approve of the crime crackdown.
Speaker 3 (01:10:30):
So they'll eventually walk away for.
Speaker 1 (01:10:32):
Political reasons, which means they never had any stake in
this anyway. But I'm going to change the subject in
the next hour and probably tomorrow because, like you, Rich,
honestly my face hurts. Go eat lunch or something and
feel better. We'll do it again, brother the Great Rich,
real quick. I got to get to Sandy and Utica
listening on WIBX. Sandy, yes or no? Should Trump? Should
Trump enter the mayor's race or no?
Speaker 17 (01:10:55):
No?
Speaker 14 (01:10:55):
Right?
Speaker 3 (01:10:56):
I agree.
Speaker 17 (01:10:57):
I think that the republic need to be grateful that
Mam Dammy is running and they had to do everything
that they can to promote him.
Speaker 16 (01:11:05):
Because if he does win, Yeah, eight months.
Speaker 17 (01:11:08):
Later when they have the midterms, everybody's gonna hate the
Democrats so much. They're gonna say, we gotta get out
of this Democrat country.
Speaker 1 (01:11:20):
No, you might, You're probably not wrong, okay, but uh
you know, if Mom Donnie wins, I might be living
with you up there in Utica. So make some room
in that extra bunk. Sandy, great call. As always, I'm
glad we snuck it in. We got Giano Caldwell coming
up in the next hour. More of your calls. We
got some grown up talking to do on Fox across America.
Speaker 2 (01:11:41):
From Everywhere USA. It's Fox Across America with Jimmy Phyla. Jimmy,
there's our guy back in action.
Speaker 1 (01:11:48):
Big hour, Fox Across America with your main man, Jimmy.
Fayla Giano called Well a Fox News contributor who is
not happy with the Democrat Party. He wrote a New
York Times best sell book called Taken for Granted about
how the Democrats have failed the black community and he
is pretty worked up about. It's bizarre, but it's like
(01:12:10):
a pro crime message out of the Democratic Party right now.
That's the dumbest thing I've heard of. We're going to
sort of talk about it, but it is so dumb
that we literally had an intervention with some callers in
the last hour to discuss how this news cycle is
becoming collectively hard on anybody with like an eighth of
(01:12:30):
a brain, because this really is the dumbest time there
has ever been to be alive. So we're going to
try to make sense of it for you in this hour.
But wish us luckman, you got.
Speaker 12 (01:12:42):
Some big testicles to pull this off.
Speaker 14 (01:12:44):
Broke.
Speaker 1 (01:12:44):
I don't know that we're gonna pull it off, but
yes to the big testicles. Anyway, eight at eight seven
and eight nine nine one zero. If you want to
be a part of the conversation, also the phone number.
If you would not like to be a part of
the conversation, you're just another bag. Fine, Okay, I get
that a lot, but either way, you're welcome. Agreed, disagree
to be a Republican, be a Democrat, just don't be
a bang. Here it is we get underwigh, the third
(01:13:08):
and final hour of a three hour audio masterpiece sponsored
by the fine folks at Previgen Previagen for your Brain.
Something I want to get into in this hour as
a comic who hosts a TV show and it's going
on tour again. This fall has to do with I
guess what we would call the outrage mob, cancel culture.
(01:13:30):
I wrote a New York Times bestseller myself called the
Cancel Culture Dictionary, an A to Z guide to winning
the War on fund. That's a real thing I did.
I might be the only Nassau Community College graduate to
hit the New York Times bestseller list, but damn it,
that's a thing.
Speaker 3 (01:13:45):
We did that.
Speaker 1 (01:13:47):
And what I talked about a pretty great length in
that book is that the Democrats back for five years
ago had created a gap between what people believed to
be true and what they were willing to say in public.
Meaning five six years ago, no one believed that biological
(01:14:09):
men should be competing against biological women. No one believed that,
but they went along with it because they didn't want
to be called a transphobe or a bigot. They didn't
want to get shouted down. That's why female swimmers like
Leah Thomas, who were actually men, were able to gain
access to the female sites just by claiming they were
(01:14:30):
a woman.
Speaker 3 (01:14:30):
Most people agreed it wasn't right.
Speaker 1 (01:14:32):
You know who else agreed that biological men had a
massive advantage over biological women when it came to athletics.
The most decorated female athlete of all time Serena Williams,
who was once asked about the idea of playing Andy Murray.
Who Andy Murray was in one to one hundredth the
player Serena Williams was at her peak. He wasn't remotely
(01:14:53):
as dominant in the men's division as she is in
the female division. Okay, it's proby of the greatest female
tennis player of all time, but here she has talked
about the idea of playing against Andy Murray.
Speaker 6 (01:15:02):
For me, tennis and men's simmys 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 completely difference worth.
The men are a lot faster and me and they
(01:15:23):
they get, they serve harder, they hit hard. It's just
a different game.
Speaker 4 (01:15:26):
And I love to.
Speaker 6 (01:15:27):
Play women's tests 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 Jane any justice.
So Andy's stop it. We're not gonna I'm not gonna
let you kill me.
Speaker 1 (01:15:39):
Wow. So that's Serena Williams, your honesty. But she said
that to David Letterman. That was back in twenty thirteen. Okay,
fast forward five or six years. You can't say that anymore.
She would have lost her Nike sponsorships. Nike was not
only putting transgender men into women's sports bras like they
did with Dylan mulvaney. That was embarrassing, okay, but they
(01:15:59):
were actually funding research that was exploring the biological advantages
boys might have in youth girl sports. I mean, Nike's
done a lot of nefarious things along the gender thing.
But the point is this was able to happen because
there was so much social pressure to play along with
the mob, the outrage mob. People didn't want to get canceled,
(01:16:21):
they didn't want to get docked and have their employer harassed.
They didn't want to be chased out of leadership positions
because they weren't conforming with what the outrage mob demanded,
which is that we all pretend men and women are
the same. Even though mister Rogers got famous for singing
about their differences.
Speaker 22 (01:16:40):
Boys are boys from the beginning. If you were born
a boy, you stay a boy.
Speaker 14 (01:16:47):
Girls are girls right.
Speaker 22 (01:16:49):
From the start. If you were born a girl, you
stay a girl and grow up to be a lady.
Speaker 1 (01:16:55):
But the Democrats came along fifty years after he started
singing that song, and they were like, that is a
fact check false. No, ma'am, boys and girls are the same.
It's just a construct. You are whatever you identify as.
And that outrage mob was so pervasive that intelligent people
who knew better played along with it, Malcolm Gladwell wrote
(01:17:17):
tipping point. I mean, he's written a lot of good books,
as as successful as an author can be. Malcolm Gladwell.
Here he is admitting on a podcast this week that
he was basically pressured into supporting trans athletes, something he's
embarrassed to say he did. But it was back in
twenty twenty two, and he didn't want to be on
(01:17:38):
the wrong side of that mob. He wanted their approval,
he didn't want to get screamed at. He didn't want
his book sales to be crushed. Here he is talking
about a club twenty nine. There's many interesting things to
say with the conversation.
Speaker 10 (01:17:47):
One was that it was a particular moment which has passed.
If we did a replay on that exact panel at
the Sloan Conference this coming March, it runs in exactly
the opposite direction, and it would be I suspect near
unanimity in the room that trans athletes have no place
(01:18:10):
in the female category. I don't think this is any question.
I just think it was a strange I mean, I felt,
I mean I was the reason I'm ashamed of my
performance of that panel because I share your position one
hundred percent, and I was cowned.
Speaker 1 (01:18:29):
So that's Malcolm Gladwell, best selling author who has made
tens of millions of dollars selling books, and he's flat
out admitting that in twenty twenty two he was cowed
into agreeing with something he didn't believe to be true.
Because that, for the better part of the last ten years,
(01:18:49):
is how democrats have gotten their way in politics. They
scream until you're so uncomfortable by the prospect of them
screaming that you give them their way. It's all a
lemon drop. I'm a former cab driver. There's a street
hustle I've talked about it on the show before, called
the lemon Drop. Guy walks around Times Square with a
broken set of glasses. He spots a family of tourists
(01:19:11):
that are looking up at all the big buildings, crashes
into one of them, drops the broken glasses on the ground,
and goes, you.
Speaker 3 (01:19:17):
Gotta watch where you go. And you just broke my glasses.
Speaker 1 (01:19:20):
Man, I can't believe this.
Speaker 3 (01:19:21):
I can't see you broke my glass.
Speaker 1 (01:19:22):
You better give me some money, get my glasses fixed,
give me some damn money. You broke my glasses. And
the guy's like, I'm not giving you money. I didn't
and the guy starts yelling officer, officer still broke my glasses,
won't give me any money. And the guy's like, oh god,
all right, jeez. The cops are all right, honey, give me twenty.
Let's get out of here. And they give him the
twenty and he walks down the block and you know
what he does. He bumps into the sax family of tourists,
(01:19:43):
drops the glasses on the ground.
Speaker 3 (01:19:44):
And starts screaming.
Speaker 1 (01:19:45):
Again. That's how it works. That is how the lemon
drop works. That's what the Democrats do. Okay. They walk
down the street and go, hey, men should be competing
against women. You're like, but wait, that's not true. They
have advantage officer, this dude over here, just go away.
I'll give you what I want, okay. And that's how
they've gotten your way forever. And I say that because
(01:20:06):
they did it with defund the police. Remember that, if
you didn't want to defund the police, they let your
business on fire through rocks, through the windows.
Speaker 3 (01:20:12):
Do you remember when CNN was telling us.
Speaker 1 (01:20:14):
It was a fiery but mostly peaceful protest. Fiery but
mostly peaceful, straight up, okay? And if you remember on
the night that happened during the George Floyd riots, people
breached the CNN studios in Atlanta and were lighting things
on fire. The same network that was like, no, it's
under control, don't worry about it. People aren't buying at CNN,
(01:20:34):
you dumb best suits. And the reason they were pretending
it was under control is they wanted the Democrats to
win the twenty twenty election, so they were trying to
tell us all that violence was justified and it was
a good thing because America was systemically racist. It was
all Trump's fault. You had to let these people go.
You know, rioting is the language of the unheard. They
would quote Martin Luther King, never mind that they've disavowed
(01:20:56):
Martin Luther King's signature phrase of I want to live
in a world where we judge people by the content
of their character and not the color of their skin.
The Democrats now reduce everything to identity and skin color.
But the point is they've gotten their way historically by
screaming and yelling until people feared their outrage wrath enough
to just play ball. That's how the men started competing
against women. Nobody in their right mind thinks that's fair,
(01:21:20):
but there's so much pressure to play ball that guys
like Malcolm Gladwell got in line because they didn't want
the headache. Well, that moment has changed now. Okay, some
people are still sus subsceptible to it, yes, because it
was a viable business model for them politically for a
long time. But that's what we're watching play out in Chicago.
(01:21:40):
And the reason I bring this up is we're gonna
have Giano Coldwell on today, Gianno Caldwell, like myself, like
a lot of people you hear at Fox, we're calling
a lot of this garbage out with no regard for
how the outrage mob was going to react. Okay, we
didn't do it like Malcolm Gladwell. Yeah, it's good that
he comes clean and he realizes this. But for society
(01:22:03):
to hold up people in his position need to do
it jk Rowling and recognize that if I can't speak
the truth, what chance do little people have like jk Rowling.
If history is won by the right people will be
regarded as like an icon for women's rights because she
(01:22:24):
stood up with them at every turn when they've tried
to erase biology. And it doesn't make her a transphobe.
It doesn't mean she hates trans people. It just means
she's well aware that being a woman is not something
that should be usurped by anybody who just wants to
decide that they can okay. And she's not saying kill
the trans people. She's not saying don't be friends with them.
(01:22:46):
She's saying that we have to acknowledge that this is
its own thing and give it every right to be
its own thing. But it can't happen at the exception
of other people. Now, there's so much pressure to not
do that that most people would just be like, no,
I'd rather.
Speaker 3 (01:23:01):
Have their way.
Speaker 1 (01:23:02):
But you understand, when they can erase the truth, the
actual truth that there are biological differences between men and women.
That's the slippery slope to them erasing any truth, any
truth they want, And if we're scared to point it
out for fear of a backlash, then you're really truly
living in a tyranny of the minority. When they control
the language, they control the people. That's why the First
(01:23:24):
Amendment is so vital, and what you're seeing over in
Europe is so terrifying. The arrest of the comedian saying
for talking about men and women being different and decided
those are hateful tweets and now this guy's got to
go on trial today. This is insane for just you know,
having an opinion is bananas. But that's why if you
are someone in this country who recognize the importance of
(01:23:47):
free speech, you've got to not only continue to indulge
in it, but you've got to salute and cultivated environment
where other people are willing to do so just the same.
And that's where we are on Chicago crime. Giano could
Wall was a black man and wrote a book about
the Democrats abandoning the black communities in inner cities. And
he wrote this book. The first one came out maybe
five years ago, and believe me, there wasn't a lot
(01:24:10):
of upward mobility for a black man in the media
defying Democrat party orthodoxy because they trash guys like that.
Think of Byron Donalds, a black man running for governor
of Florida. Do you have any things Democrats have said
about Byron Donald's or somebody like Tim Scott who wants
to win some seers the things they I mean, good God,
did you see the winsome Sears debate last week with
(01:24:32):
Abigail Spambury, that lunatic who basically said, you know, there
was a sign held up outside their debate that if
trans men can't use the women you know, can't use
the women's room, then win some sears. You're not allowed
to use my water fountain.
Speaker 3 (01:24:46):
What the hell did you say?
Speaker 1 (01:24:47):
That was on a sign that was straight up on
a sign like, hey, we'll go back to black segregation,
as if one is the other. And the problem is
when you create these massive social pressure campaigns, a lot
of people of prominence are susceptible to them. They just
want to be on the right side of the mob,
(01:25:07):
so they'll abandon principle for convenience. And that's how women
found themselves in the situation that the Riley Gaineses of
the world did. Okay, they're suddenly getting changed in a
locker room with a biological man, as Riley said on
the show, a fully intact, biological man is now naked
in the women's room. You know, ten years ago you
(01:25:28):
would have considered that a sex offender. Now you're supposed
to call that a teammate. But nobody thinks that's okay.
And the reason we're back in a position to stand
our ground. Is free speech one Elon Musk bought Twitter.
Trump won the election. We've kind of legalized speech again. Now,
to be clear, it was always legal, and freedom of
(01:25:48):
speech truly does mean that the government can't arrest you
for what you say. We've had that, but we've seen
a lot of behind the scenes manipulation where people will
in fact lose jobs. People will in fact corporations to
get somebody to represent them who conforms with what the
mob's agenda happens to be. Now, the good news is
those people are losing power, Okay. The bad news is
(01:26:09):
they can always get it back if people lose their
balls and stop telling the truth. And that's what this
segment is about. We're gonna bring on Gianna to have
our own conversation. But I play you that Malcolm Gladwell
clip because Malcolm Gladwell very late. He has found Jesus
very late in the service, but he recognizes that if
a guy like him, who's worth tens of millions of
dollars can't tell the truth, a guy like you or
(01:26:30):
me has no chance. So I appreciate him doing that,
and every one of you out there listening is also
a Malcolm Gladwell to somebody else, no matter how broke
or beat up you think you are, I promise you
that's somebody in the world right now who has it
ten times worse. You know, in your obligation to pull
them up and to help out and create that greater
good of society is to keep speaking the truth. Not
(01:26:51):
like your truth, not like their truth, just good old fashioned.
Speaker 3 (01:26:56):
The truth.
Speaker 12 (01:27:00):
Is going to becoming God Gatuan when the Son of
Man comes.
Speaker 1 (01:27:04):
You're listening to this earlier in the show with the
player one more time before Giano Caldwell gets here. It
is Stephen A. Smith on News Nation summing up the
situation in Chicago that's been going on not just for
this summer, not just for this year, but for decades.
Speaker 3 (01:27:20):
Here it is Stephen A.
Speaker 12 (01:27:21):
Clip seven in terms of what has been transpiring through
the streets of Chicago. It has been going on for years.
It was going on before Obama was in office, it
was going on when he was in office. It has
been going on since he's been in office. I recall
seeing a black couple on national television asking for military assistance.
Speaker 1 (01:27:45):
That's how bad it has been in Chicago.
Speaker 12 (01:27:47):
And one administration after another has either been incapable or
unwilling to do anything about it.
Speaker 1 (01:27:54):
It is shameful.
Speaker 12 (01:27:56):
And black folks in that city have been getting killed
for years, and I'm disgusted at the level of ineffectiveness
or on willingness that they've ought that they've executed and
getting better things done and making it better for the
law abiotic citizens is Chicago.
Speaker 3 (01:28:12):
That's Stephen A. Smith saying, mad as hell. And I'm
not trying to take this anymore.
Speaker 1 (01:28:18):
We give them credit.
Speaker 4 (01:28:18):
Man.
Speaker 1 (01:28:20):
Back to the conversation we're having earlier about people not
wanting to take those positions because there's a lot of
social pressure to be like shut up, play along, but
like the literal shut up play A long aspect of
this is allowing and furthering the idea that all these
people just get hilled and you're just supposed to be
indifferent to it.
Speaker 3 (01:28:37):
As JB.
Speaker 1 (01:28:37):
Pritzker said, he's like, Wow, you know what big cities
have crimes, That's what he's talking about. It's so like
like you're just supposed to be like, Okay, listen to
this one clip twelve.
Speaker 13 (01:28:46):
You're going to hear people, especially Patton this past weekend
fifty four shot, seven dead.
Speaker 7 (01:28:51):
They're going to say the city's not safe.
Speaker 13 (01:28:54):
Would you ask your friends to ride the l after
midnight or after, you know, nine o'clock at night, even
to get down to the city from O'Hare.
Speaker 1 (01:29:02):
Look, big cities have crime, there's no doubt about it.
But let's just pay attention to what President Trump is
doing targeting show.
Speaker 8 (01:29:11):
He's overlooking god red states that have much higher crime rates.
Speaker 1 (01:29:15):
Jay B.
Speaker 3 (01:29:17):
Pritzker, there's a slob.
Speaker 1 (01:29:18):
There's a real slop.
Speaker 3 (01:29:20):
It's coming from me.
Speaker 1 (01:29:22):
We're gonna get into it with Giannod Caldwell, a guy
with a lot of family out there, grew up up
there and is not happy what's happened, throwing some challenge flags.
The NFL season kicks off tonight. It wouldn't be a
football game without a challenge flag. So Gianno Caldwell comes
by to watch the instant replay after this on Fox
Across America. There it is Fox Across America with Jimmy
(01:29:45):
Falo Byron Donald's on the show earlier. He's going to
be the next governor of Florida. This next guest is
I believe the senior correspondent to Bottle Service in Florida,
which is not nothing. Joining us now from the champagne room,
Gianno Caldwell on the show. Hey man, that's right.
Speaker 14 (01:30:04):
It's good to eat your voice.
Speaker 4 (01:30:05):
Brother.
Speaker 3 (01:30:05):
I know you got to come up to New York
do some TV.
Speaker 1 (01:30:07):
Man.
Speaker 4 (01:30:08):
Yeah, I'm ready I get to You know.
Speaker 1 (01:30:10):
You invite me, no stopping her friend.
Speaker 4 (01:30:12):
She only invites you when she's broken up with her
next boyfriend.
Speaker 1 (01:30:16):
That's not true. You were here, you had your woman.
I think you got hit on by my aunt a
lot one on the last time you were here.
Speaker 4 (01:30:25):
Yeah, you don't even know this because I didn't even
want to tell you, but there actually was a fight
between your aunt and my girlfriend because your aunt was
telling her, no, I'm taking them on.
Speaker 1 (01:30:34):
Whoa and fran You gotta be careful with that one.
Those listen women in their seventies have strong hands. Like
I get groped at these meet and greets. I was
talking about this yesterday. Man, I'm not kidding like I
got my I was in like Potstown like two weeks ago.
My left butt cheek is so sore. Can I joke
(01:30:56):
about it on stage? But I think that makes it
worse because then they do it to be funny, you know,
but these are strong women because they've been like kneading
dough and cooking their whole lives.
Speaker 3 (01:31:07):
You don want to mess with that.
Speaker 4 (01:31:08):
Yeah, you do not want to. They pinch your butt?
Speaker 1 (01:31:11):
Yeah, you know why this started. It started because of
a story. I was doing a gig in Butte, Montana,
and is that correct? I think that's where we were,
and second to last person at the meet and greet,
I felt a big right hand on my butt cheek
and in my ear I hear, I just got to
know what a TV ass feels like.
Speaker 18 (01:31:29):
I'm not kidding, And I go, I.
Speaker 22 (01:31:32):
Was, you know.
Speaker 1 (01:31:33):
I go, I'm sorry if it wasn't the one you've
been fantasizing about, and he goes, no, it was. I
was like, wait a minute, what's happening here? But anyway,
so you know, I've been there. As Bill Clinton would say,
I feel your pain. I've been there. I thought, no,
imagine that. No, I'd like to think my show will
be on past this Monday.
Speaker 3 (01:31:57):
Oh that's funny.
Speaker 1 (01:31:59):
Well, givey Giano, you've written some pretty successful stories in
your own right. You wrote Take It for Granted about
how the Democrats have kind of turned their back on
the black vote. And me and you have been talking
about this for five years. We always say that black votes.
Speaker 14 (01:32:12):
Matter to me.
Speaker 4 (01:32:12):
Actually that's not true. They didn't turn it black on
the black vote. The only thing they care about is
I know that's true.
Speaker 1 (01:32:19):
Fair. Fair, Yeah, they didn't abandon that.
Speaker 16 (01:32:23):
They you want to vote, We're just not gonna do
anything for you.
Speaker 3 (01:32:27):
Nothing, you get nothing.
Speaker 1 (01:32:29):
And I'm watching this like the Chicago thing play out, man. Yeah,
but they're really trying. Even Stephen A. Smith kind of
called him out on it last night. He's a politicians
and the Democratic Party have been indifferent for decades. This
is not like it this summer thing, and that's what
they're trying to make it sound like. I mean, you know,
this firsthand just predates even Obama's time in Chicago politics.
Speaker 3 (01:32:52):
But it didn't get any better when he came to town, right.
Speaker 1 (01:32:55):
And that's the thing.
Speaker 4 (01:32:57):
And you know I'm actually on Mark Levin and it's
Saturday on this show, Yeah Life, Liberty and Levin. So
I'm excited to do that and join you guys on Saturday.
Speaker 14 (01:33:09):
What is it, Saturday at APM?
Speaker 1 (01:33:10):
That's that's the time of the show, right, yeah, Liberty.
Speaker 4 (01:33:12):
In Yeah, life, liberty, and Levin. That's a big deal.
I'm very honored. And the conversations that we're going to
discuss are around Chicago and the violence there and the
fact that there has not been a president to my knowledge,
that actually cared about Chicago, especially to the extent of
President Donald Trump. Obama didn't. He didn't do anything for Chicago,
(01:33:35):
and violence was high back then. Things have gotten worse now,
but still still and all this guy didn't give a
care there were people dying in the streets back then.
Speaker 14 (01:33:44):
He never even mentioned a.
Speaker 4 (01:33:45):
Word of it, awareness or anything. So this becomes a
very unique set of circumstances. I don't think there's any
president or politician that has made these kind of strives
as Donald Trump has. I believe that this is a
very unique moment in our history, and I believe Donald
Trump is a once in a century or a lifetime
(01:34:06):
kind of figure, somebody who says, forget the establishment. I'm
just gonna go do what's right, regardless of the political pushback.
Speaker 14 (01:34:14):
That I may get. And he's getting it.
Speaker 4 (01:34:17):
But at the same.
Speaker 14 (01:34:17):
Time, there are some folks that are.
Speaker 4 (01:34:19):
Coming around, like Marion Bowser, DC's mayor, and you know,
I'm seeing some viral things and Governor What's Moore is
looking to work with President Trump on the crime issue.
I don't know if that's true or not, but that's
what I'm seeing on a lot of social media today.
(01:34:39):
But if that be true, that's great. They're seeing that
his policies are effective. It's lowering crime. People are happy
and they're satisfied, and they know they have high crime
areas for example Baltimore, which Kimberly Klasik who ran for Congress,
that made extraordinarily a popular topic where President Trump was
tweeting about it along and often. So this is interesting
(01:35:00):
set of circumstances that I'm very thankful for the president
willingness to tackle this very important issue.
Speaker 1 (01:35:06):
To my heart, Amen, we're talking to the great Giano
Coldwell Coldwell Institute dot org. If you want to help
out make a difference. You've been fighting this fight for
a long time. You're getting some air cover from Trump
and I feel like you know, as people who get
on the air, it's goofy as me and you are okay.
One of the things that makes this work for us. Yeah,
(01:35:27):
I don't know, man, I've hung out with you. I've
hung out with you fair, okay, but as people who
have like a legitimate interest in the well being of
other people, which is rare in politics. Nobody actually cares,
you know, especially not most of these politicians. Trump has
a human element to him that it's more apparent in
(01:35:49):
this second term because he's been around now and you
can't cartoon him the way they did in the first term.
And what's so funny about even the first term when
they were saying like he was like some fringe lunatic
that came out of nowhere, the dude that just hosted
a show on NBC for sixteen years, Like do you
remember when they yelled at Jimmy Fallon because they were like,
he normalized Donald Trump by having him on the Tonight Show.
(01:36:10):
I'm like, dude, Trump was hosting a show that had
higher ratings than the Tonight Show, So like, how did
he normalize them? But that was the scam. And I
feel like at the very least when you hear things
like Wes Moore might want to play ball, what Muriel Blauser,
you know, was kind of rolling with us. Now, I
think we're starting to, ever so slightly get back to
a human place in our politics. Where it's okay to
(01:36:32):
agree on certain things because the truth is they affect
all of us. Nobody carjacking someone in DC knows who
the person voted for unless they're driving like a Prius,
then you probably know.
Speaker 4 (01:36:44):
Oh my gosh, And you're so right about that.
Speaker 14 (01:36:46):
And you're right.
Speaker 4 (01:36:47):
I can't be goofy when I hang out with you,
but it's usually because I called contacting your office. All
the weed you spoke.
Speaker 1 (01:36:55):
I love that. Whenever you call the TV show, you're like, yeah, Jimmy,
Jimmy was smoking weed in his office again.
Speaker 3 (01:37:00):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (01:37:01):
I want to be very clear about this because I
run a class operation. I am doing nothing in that
office during the day besides drinking bourbon. Nothing, and I
will not stand for these allegations.
Speaker 3 (01:37:13):
Yeah you cannot.
Speaker 1 (01:37:14):
That's We'll listen to a lot of rap music in
my office. You can't smoke in a building in corporate America,
or I would be smoking cigars for real.
Speaker 4 (01:37:22):
There you go, wanting to ruin a good, big thing.
Speaker 1 (01:37:24):
No, no, no, you can say it. I'm just this
is for you and me. I don't think anybody believes me.
I think they think I'm smoking.
Speaker 14 (01:37:29):
A bro is all a joke.
Speaker 4 (01:37:33):
But what isn't a joke is the lives that are
being saved in Washington, d C. Due to thanks in
part to Donald Trump's policies and his actions.
Speaker 14 (01:37:41):
What isn't a joke is.
Speaker 4 (01:37:43):
The lives that need to be saved in Chicago because
the politicians there in Illinois, in Chicago itself, the city
have made matters quite dangerous YEP and employing policies like
the Safety Act, which became law which eliminates cat bail
in Illinois, employing policies like the no chase policy with
(01:38:04):
Chicago police need to call their supervisor to chase someone
either on foot or in car. They're aby the suspect
that's gotten away by.
Speaker 14 (01:38:11):
The point they get their approval.
Speaker 4 (01:38:13):
There's much danger when it comes to progressive policies and
it's implementation in cities and especially to those who are
the demographic of African Americans. We see that we see
oftentimes those who are involved in violent crime, the perpetrators
are black and the victims are as well most times,
especially in the city of Chicago. So with those considerations
(01:38:36):
in mind, you know there needs to be a real
and true focus here, and I think Donald Trump is
doing just that.
Speaker 1 (01:38:41):
Amen, we're talking to Giano Caldwell and this is all
of this stuff matters.
Speaker 3 (01:38:46):
And I think that's another issue.
Speaker 14 (01:38:47):
Though.
Speaker 3 (01:38:48):
They don't like Trump.
Speaker 1 (01:38:49):
Going into these neighborhoods where it might predominantly be black
on black crime, because if he's actually making big improvements,
that highlights the fact that they didn't you know, they
have There's there's no way to know misconstrue this. The
Democrats have had no interest in anything remotely resembling black
on black prime because they don't think it's politically viable.
(01:39:11):
You know, they'll focus on anything else, but they don't
see that as a lane for them. How else could
you justify it going on for as long as it
has without them doing something about it.
Speaker 14 (01:39:20):
And that's the thing.
Speaker 4 (01:39:21):
This isn't. This isn't about demonizing black people, and.
Speaker 3 (01:39:24):
I think that needs to be extraordinarily even closer.
Speaker 4 (01:39:27):
Yeah, if my brother was black he was murdered by
another black person, should I should Should I say that,
Oh it's okay for that person to murder my brother
because he's black.
Speaker 14 (01:39:37):
That's ridiculous.
Speaker 4 (01:39:39):
Yep, It's never okay no matter what the color of
the person is, no matter that background, gender, religion, whatever
the case may be. Violence is wrong in every sense
of it. So how could they it all decide not
to even talk about an issue that impacts the community.
Speaker 14 (01:39:55):
That supports them in droves. That's a problem.
Speaker 4 (01:39:58):
We got to get back to talking about the family structure,
parents in a home, and I know there's you know,
in this era, especially when it comes to black men,
there's more black men taking care of their children.
Speaker 14 (01:40:08):
So like that.
Speaker 4 (01:40:09):
That's really good, But we got to do so much
more in the black community to develop and push our
community for this so we don't have these issues which
sometimes stem from poverty.
Speaker 3 (01:40:18):
Amen.
Speaker 1 (01:40:19):
And you know what, there shouldn't be any concern whatsoever
because when it comes to this stuff, these are not
race issues, as you said, these are human issues, and
that's what we're trying to bring back. We're trying to
bring back humanity to politics. As crazy as it sounds,
Trump's probably leading the way on that. And it sounds
crazy to say because at ten o'clock at night he's
tweeting memes about Adam Schiff's pencil neck and JB. Pritzker
(01:40:41):
being a sumo. But that's also real and relatable, so
he gets it. Listen, you're doing great work. Good luck
on life, liberty and live in this weekend. That's exciting
stuff and I'm sure our booker will reach out soon
once we make the peace between an fran and your girlfriend.
Speaker 14 (01:40:58):
No friend is good.
Speaker 4 (01:41:00):
Thank you so much for the for your time, and also,
if there's anybody in the Chicago Land area, I'm having
an event on September twenty fourth in Chicago.
Speaker 1 (01:41:10):
You can get your tickets.
Speaker 4 (01:41:11):
They're free at Caldwell Institute dot org. Again Caldwell Institute
dot org. Please go there and support our efforts. And
of course, my most recent book out the day my
brother was murdered, My Journey through America's Violent Crime Crisis,
available now wherever you.
Speaker 14 (01:41:25):
Get your books. Oh should I get.
Speaker 4 (01:41:27):
My Instagram to my social media?
Speaker 1 (01:41:28):
It wouldn't be you if you didn't.
Speaker 4 (01:41:30):
Okay, and please follow me on Instagram, Twitter, also x
Facebook at Giano Caldwell g I A n NL Caldwell
c A L D W E L L.
Speaker 1 (01:41:43):
Excellent stuff. I'd love to stay in chat, but I'm
going to smoke weed in my office.
Speaker 3 (01:41:46):
I'll see it. You're the best.
Speaker 2 (01:41:52):
You're listening to the man with a fashion sense. That's
all his own looks like a gay bag lady Across
America with Jimmy Phyla. You're listening.
Speaker 1 (01:42:06):
American Eagle stock up twenty five percent since Sydney Sweeney's
boobs went viral. Hubba hubba. That is a report that
we caught on Fox Business earlier today. The era of
outrage is dead. Couldn't come back? Yes, it absolutely positively can.
(01:42:29):
But there's one place where we have defunded the joke police.
That is certainly this radio show Fox Across America and
of course my TV show Fox News Saturday Night with
Jimmy Fayala. One update I can give you on the
show is a mayorial candidate who is being pressured by
Donald Trump to drop out of the race has agreed
to complete his case on my show this Saturday night.
Speaker 3 (01:42:52):
We will have that exclusive Saturday Night at ten pm.
Speaker 1 (01:42:55):
Right now over in West New York, New Jersey, we
have Sandra who has her own hot take on the election. Yo, Sandra, Oh.
Speaker 17 (01:43:03):
Wow, I didn't expect to be called on, but I'm
I'm so happy you did. I just wanted to say
Jimmy that his name is Edward garn To and he's
the mayor of New Jersey and Garfields and guess what,
he's not going to be a Democrat anymore. He's going
to become a Republican and he's going to endorse Jack Chattarelli.
(01:43:24):
I was so happy when I learned this, you know,
it's it's great. They're waking up and we need all
the help we can get, and he's going to help
him fundraise and help him win.
Speaker 1 (01:43:33):
All right, Listen, if Jersey could go red that there's
hope for the whole the whole country. Okay, Chicago, you know,
places like well, California is going to be a mess
for a few more, you know, go rounds. But the
point is a lot of people are just waking up
and focusing on issues like crime and stuff that have
nothing to do with Republicans or Democrats. It's just good
(01:43:56):
guys and bad guys. You got to stop the criminals
so the good guys can go live their lives. So
that's where this thing is headed. Sandra, and I wanted
to take your call because I just know there's a
lot of common sense out there where you are, and
I needed some to get me through this last break.
You were kind of like a little like a like
a five hour energy for a five minute radio segment.
So don't ask me what I'm going to do for
the next four hours now that we're getting off the air.
(01:44:18):
But great stuff as always, and let's do it again soon.
Speaker 17 (01:44:21):
All right, girlfriend, thank you so much, Jim, I love you, I.
Speaker 1 (01:44:25):
Love you more. Sandra. There she goes the great Sandra.
So Sandra is fired up because she believes the Democrats
could lose the state of New Jersey, something they've had
a monopoly on for quite some time, and if they do,
it's kind of a bell weather to where things are
trending nationally. The Democrats. You only have to do one
(01:44:45):
thing if you want to make it in politics, like straight,
like literally one thing. You have to pretend to care
about the people voting.
Speaker 3 (01:44:52):
That's all you got to do. That's all. You don't
have to follow through on anything.
Speaker 1 (01:44:55):
Has any been has anyone been following politics for like
the last fifth the years? Okay, everybody runs on everything
and the minute they get into office, they don't do anything.
That's just how white folks will do it because you
can fundraise off these issues. If the problems go away,
the fundraising goes away.
Speaker 3 (01:45:14):
But they aren't. Nobody care.
Speaker 1 (01:45:15):
I mean, come on, if politics had a motto, it's
we went money.
Speaker 3 (01:45:21):
They just want more money, you know.
Speaker 1 (01:45:22):
So if you solve the problem, are you gonna get
more money for it?
Speaker 4 (01:45:26):
You know?
Speaker 1 (01:45:28):
So what's happening now is a lot of these people
who've gotten away with just not caring. You know, people
we talk about who make one hundred and seventy thousand
dollars a year in Congress and are somehow worth thirty
million dollars. You're like, what's going on here? It's shenanikins.
I don't know what's happening. But the point is that
was a lifestyle that worked. It worked for decades. But
(01:45:50):
the game is changing now. And it's changing just because
there are very basic obligations that governments have to their
constituents that are not being fulfilled. Like, you know, you're
in charge of a federal government. You gotta protect your citizens.
Did they protect the citizens by letting twenty one million
(01:46:10):
people into the country illegally? No, According to their own DHS,
five hundred thousand kids went missing, three hundred thousand people
were poisoned and killed by fentyl.
Speaker 3 (01:46:20):
That's not protecting the country.
Speaker 1 (01:46:21):
It's not a government fulfilling its obligation, and people were like, hey,
well that's kind of bs pay a lot of taxes
live in America, that you mean something. So people started
to revolt against that faction of the government. Then came
this other faction of the government, which was running on identity,
which was like, hey, you got to vote for us
because the Republicans don't care about those people. But then
(01:46:42):
you take a closer look at who cares and who's
done what in terms of providing there's really only one
group of people telling you we don't need to crack
down on violent crime. It's just part of doing business.
Shut up and move on. What is this, hitler? What
are you trying to cancel the midterms? And a lot
of people who aren't Republican are just hearing that and
they're being like, wait, really, do they really just say
we shouldn't bring in the troops to lower the murder
(01:47:03):
rate in DC and Chicago, because again, the troops aren't
out there stopping carjackers. They're not out there writing people tickets,
tackling them, throwing them into purp vans. They're just out
there having a presence on the street. Because their very
presence is a deterrent, and a lot of people are
mobilizing towards that train of thoughts because they'd just like
(01:47:23):
to go to the grocery store without getting mugged or.
Speaker 3 (01:47:26):
Jumped to carjacks.
Speaker 4 (01:47:27):
Not me.
Speaker 1 (01:47:28):
I pay money to get beat up on Craigslist, but
I'm a different demographic when it comes to voters. I'm
also the guy telling you the show's over. Pay up,
get out. We'll see you here tomorrow for the win.
This has been a podcast from wor