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October 29, 2025 • 107 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is a podcast from War.

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

Speaker 3 (00:08):
Oh you're damn right it is.

Speaker 1 (00:09):
And we got a stack deck episode a Fox Across
America with your radio buddy Jimmy Fayla, Bill Hemmer, co
host of America's Newsroom, a man who will be working
the board on election night one week from today. We've
got zoron Mom, Donnie Hansy, Andy Cuomo Andy, and of

(00:32):
course Curtis Sleewah, who continues to stay in the fight.
He's gonna be joining me Fox on Fox New Saturday
Night this weekend. I feel like he should be out campaigning,
trying to.

Speaker 3 (00:42):
Close the deal.

Speaker 1 (00:43):
That's not exactly a good sign for sleiwa.

Speaker 3 (00:46):
I got a bad feeling about this?

Speaker 1 (00:47):
What a good feeling about the next three hours of
the show? Edit eight seven, eight, eight, nine, nine one zero.
If you want to be a part of this thing,
Caroline Sunshine's going to be here. She is a former
Trump twenty twenty four campaign deputy communications director. That sounds
like senior ambassador to Starbucks to me. I don't know
that's a fancy one, but yet another marcher in Mikey's

(01:10):
Babe Parade and of course Philadelphia Radio Sensation Rich the
only in New York today because he's got a hit
on the Fox News channel, So we're making him do
double duty and stop by the studio to preview the
race in New Jersey where Jack Chitdarelli and Mikey Cheryl
to you know, they're saying it's gonna be a one
point one point race.

Speaker 3 (01:29):
One point is a big deal.

Speaker 1 (01:30):
If you look at Mikey Cheryl's stock portfolio, some of
those stocks went up one point. This check made about
seven million dollars.

Speaker 4 (01:37):
Money money, money, money, money, money money.

Speaker 1 (01:39):
True story if you haven't followed that race. Mikey Cheryl
was on with Charlemagne the God and he had asked
her about the scandal, the fact that people accused her
of insider trading in Congress and that she had made
allegedly seven million dollars. He asked on the radio show,
he goes, did you make seven million dollars? And she said,
I don't know. I mean, dude, some of these these

(02:03):
women are they are stupid. That is the worst answer,
because it's not acceptable. If I come home tonight at
four point thirty in the morning, and Jenny goes, where
were you? And I go, I don't know. This could
be a problem, a big problem. You gotta do a
better answer than that. But regardless of how you feel

(02:24):
about the politics of the day, this is just a
good old fashioned radio talk show. I don't care how
you vote. I don't care what you identify as. I
do not care who you want to sleep with. It's
the least interesting thing about you. The best thing about
you is you were an American and we will celebrate
that American privilege for the next three hours.

Speaker 3 (02:42):
Eighty eight seven, eight, eight, nine nine one zero is.

Speaker 1 (02:45):
The phone number, and you are all welcome to be
a Republican, be a Democrat, just don't be a bang happy.

Speaker 3 (02:51):
Tuesday, I was up, man. I was watching the.

Speaker 1 (02:55):
Dodgers play the Blue Jays into an eighteen inning standoff
ended with a Freddie Freeman walk off home run sometime
around three in the morning. I'm gonna be very honest,
that's the longest I have ever watched a sporting event
that I didn't have money on. You know, look back
in my gambling days. Yeah, I would have stuck with
a game like that, or you know, two guys, two

(03:17):
dogs on skateboards going down a hill. Okay, I probably
had fifty bucks on it in my twenties.

Speaker 3 (03:23):
I mean, why do you do things like that?

Speaker 1 (03:25):
They're like a crazy person.

Speaker 5 (03:27):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (03:27):
It was like, you know these It was an exciting
time in my life. But as a city here right
now watching that race last night, or at least watching
that game, and it was a classic, probably one of
the greatest World Series games ever played. I watched, you know,
the Dodger crowd stuck around. There were a lot of celebrities. Obviously.
Otani had this historic performance. He hit multiple home runs,
he was intentionally walked a bunch, made it onto, made

(03:50):
it to base eight times safely, which is an all
time record for the World Series. All wild stuff. And
it really did remind me though of why sports is
so much better than politics, because they're kind of the same. Okay,
you're rooting for a team really really hard. You want
your team to win. That's essentially what politics have become.

(04:11):
But your blind loyalty to the Dodgers or your blind
loyalty to the Blue Jays isn't going to usher in
an age of socialism. Depending on who wins the game,
it might not put a guy in the city hall
in your town that wants to defund the police and
thinks they're anti queer and racist, like we're dealing with
with Maamdani. But the closing message in politics this week

(04:32):
is we're, you know, getting close to an election. It's
exactly one week from today. Is nobody's really running on
their record so much as they're running in an effort
to distance themselves from their record. And the point is
a lot of these people are full of Okay, So
Mom Donnie goes out on the trail last night and

(04:53):
has to clarify the story he was.

Speaker 3 (04:56):
Mocked for last Friday.

Speaker 1 (04:59):
Is Mom, Donnie, try telling people that you know, as
a kid who grew up Muslim, he was the real
victim in nine to eleven is that he had an
ant who was scared to ride the subway with a
high jab on her head the headscarf because he was
concerned with the anti Muslim backlash, Okay, and he just
looked so tone deaf and stupid. I mean, he took

(05:21):
about a brazen lack of awareness, because anybody in New
York City who was scared to ride the subway in
the aftermath, not eleven was scared to ride the subway
because Islamic terrorists had just killed three thousand New Yorkers.

Speaker 3 (05:33):
So the idea that.

Speaker 1 (05:34):
Someone feeling uncomfortable in a headscarf is where we should
be placing our priorities, and that the closing message should
be about, well, you got to rid the scourge of Islamophobia,
you see. Okay, but lo and behold, we get out
of bed yesterday and find out what there was no.

Speaker 3 (05:50):
Ant Ah.

Speaker 1 (05:53):
Wow, And he's now clarifying because everybody did a deep
dive on the internet and said what ant what are
we talking about? And they found ant that was in
Tanzania at the time, that had never set foot in
the United States of America. There's no existing picture of
her wearing a headscarf. So Mom, Donnie pivoted yesterday to go, well,
it was actually my dad's cousin. My dad's cousin was
uncomfortable in the aftermath of nine to eleven. But if listen,

(06:15):
if it's his dad's cousin, she was probably uncomfortable because
the terrorists didn't kill enough people. I'm not trying to
be provocative. This isn't the shock jock show I played.
You with dad's comments yesterday. His dad literally said that
Hitler learned from Abraham Lincoln. I mean, that's the dumbest
thing I've heard of. Yeah, well, everybody always forgets about

(06:35):
that footage of Hitler wearing the top hat, Hitler going
to the theater, so they called they called him honest
eight off. A lot of people don't know that. I mean,
it's so embarrassing. But this is mom, Donnie's dad. And
then I'll give you the mon Donnie clarifications because it
was another day yesterday where he had to distance himself
from previous positions. He tried making the case in September

(06:58):
twenty three that every time the NYPD puts its boot
on your neck, it's laced.

Speaker 3 (07:04):
By the IDF. It's the Jews.

Speaker 1 (07:07):
The NYPD is roughing people up because of the Jews
and the fighting force over there in Palestine. And that's
the real problem. I mean, not even close statue of
this guy is. And I realized as I was watching
the Dodgers get into their twelfth hour of baseball last night,
I was like, oh, I know, I like this because
it's the same type of spirited competition, but it might
not end in a breadline. It might not end in socialism. Okay,

(07:31):
I played this yesterday. I don't want to devote a
lot of time to this. But his dad is a
real dirt bag.

Speaker 3 (07:40):
Here he is. This is Clip twelve.

Speaker 6 (07:43):
America is the genesis of what we call settler colonialism,
and the American model was exported all around the world.
Abraham Lincoln generalized the solution of reservation. They herded American
Indians into separate territories.

Speaker 1 (08:06):
So the guy will free the slaves is actually the
guy who turned the world on its head.

Speaker 3 (08:11):
You see, up until.

Speaker 1 (08:12):
Abe Lincoln came along, the world was just harmonious and glorious.
No one was trying to conquer anybody. Never No, there
were no Napoleons, there were no Aztecs, there were none
of the stuff that went on in all the Poloponnesian War.
None of that stuff happened. Nobody wanted anybody else's land.
Nobody was a lesser.

Speaker 3 (08:32):
Than he is.

Speaker 7 (08:33):
So foolish this guy.

Speaker 8 (08:34):
But here's the rest of it. Clip thirteen for the Nazis.
For the Nazis, this was the inspiration. Hitler realized two things. One,
the genocide was doable. It is possible to do genocide.
That's what Hitler realized.

Speaker 1 (08:57):
Second jumping going to jump in right there, I'm gonna
jump in. There are so many genocides that preceded Hitler sadly,
and there are genocides going on today in the Hubai
province of China that nobody likes to talk about. But
the idea that watching Abraham Lincoln taught Adolf Hitler that
genocide was doable. Abraham Lincoln freed the slaves. Okay, he

(09:20):
did not kill six million people. He did not attempt
to build a master race. He did nothing of the sort.
Like it's so intellectually disqualifying. But again, the closing message
from Mamdani is, oh, you guys are only pointing this
stuff out because I'm a Muslim. Now, we don't care
how many Muslim guys are in my taxi garage. There's

(09:42):
two million Muslims living peacefully in Israel right now. There's
a reason Israel isn't attacking them. They don't have a
problem with Muslims. They have a problem with terrorists. They
have a problem with Hamas sympathizers. They have a problem
electing people whose dad says America is the root of
all evil because here's a newsflash. The apple doesn't false
small from the tree. Okay, yes, I could say that,
if you gave me a minute, I could probably say

(10:03):
that in a language you understand. Do you speak of
an eglist? Jimmy's caffeinated, he's all worked out. But the
point is, yes, your dad has a profound influence on
your upbringing. My dad liked the Yankees. I like the Yankees. Okay,
every band my dad listened to I pretty much listened to.
My dad was chubby. He drank cheap beer. What do
you think I spent my teens doing drank cheap beer,
slightly better beer. Now I host a TV show, but

(10:25):
I'm still chubby. I'm still listening to the same music.
I'm still smoking the cigars. I still owned a bunch
of motorcycles. Your dad has a profound influence on your upbringing.
So if mom Donnie grew up in a house where
the dad said America is the root of all evil,
you know, son, Adolf Hitler studied that Abraham Lincoln guy.
That's why I'm Donnie's out there telling you America is evil.
That's why I'm Donnie's out there thinking that it's an

(10:47):
actual good political argument to say nine to eleven, you
should really think back to how his ann felt on
the subway, not the people crushed in subway cars on
nine to eleven. No, No, about his hand a few weeks
later when she put on a headscarf, except she didn't
because she wasn't in the country. And now it turns
out the whole thing was made up. Here he is
trying to backpedal on it.

Speaker 3 (11:07):
Clip two.

Speaker 9 (11:09):
Yes, that's I was speaking about my aunt. I was
speaking about Zata Fui, my father's cousin sadly passed away
a few years ago. And for the takeaway for my
more than ten minute address about Islamophobia in this race
and in this city, to be the question of my

(11:30):
aunt tells you everything about Andrew Cuomo and his inability
to reckon with a crisis of his.

Speaker 1 (11:36):
Own making so embarrassing man. Okay, the reason it was
called out was not because of his religion, but because
of how laughable it was to think anyone who was
in New York. You know, the never forget crowd, the
never forget crowd, the people who experienced nine to eleven,
the people that were here in the aftermath. Guy, you know, guys,
like me, my family. You know, probably a lot of

(11:57):
you listening in the Tri State area in war Okay,
realize the absurdity, the utter absurdity that in a town
where we literally didn't open a newspaper without seeing a
funeral on the front page for about four months, okay,
where we were living in a first time in our life,
color coded terror alert system, where going to the airport

(12:20):
changed forever that day because of how in the graphic
nature in which people were killed, We're going to a
large event changed forever that day, because of how in
the graphic nature in which people were killed, we're just
being a part of everyday life in America changed that
day because of how in the graphic nature in which
people lost their lives. He wants you to believe, Well,
his aunt got a dirty look on the subway once,

(12:40):
so she's the real victim. I mean, dude, Buddy, Pal, Mom, Donnie.
That is totally absurd, absurd Okay, But that's where we
are in the closing message as it pertains to this race. Okay,
on the left view politics as a team sport. There's

(13:03):
a lot of white guilt on the liberal side of
politics that can be emotionally blackmailed.

Speaker 3 (13:09):
Into supporting something.

Speaker 1 (13:12):
Well, Mom Donnie says people are only mad at him
for supporting Hamas because he's a Muslim. Well, Mom Donnie
says people are only mad at his dad, saying America
is the root of all evil and Abraham Lincoln inspired Hitler.
It's the religion they're mad at, and that's what they
want you to believe. And a lot of white people
on the left who are by nature empathetic, some of them,
and want to see a better world out there, go,

(13:32):
will Gee, I better help this guy win. Otherwise that
is Lamophobia is gonna, you know, run rampant in Manhattan,
and I'm going to be the guy who enables that
horrible culture. And this is how people got elected all
over Europe. And I you know, I don't know any
of these people personally in the rape gangs all over Europe,
but the people who enabled leaders like Mom Donnie all

(13:53):
over Europe created a society where they're being plagued by
a massive amount of rape gangs, a tremendous lack of
empathy for law and order, and the priority now becomes
the criminal who can be shielded by the religion. Although
no one is mad at the religion. They're mad at
the actions of people that are doing bad things. Whether
they happen to be part of a particular religion or

(14:15):
not is another story altogether, although a lot of people
would say it's the same. But the point is, Mom
Donnie wants you to believe that the people that are
upset about a support of terrorism and a lack of
you know, regard for America are the real villains here. Okay,
But the only problem with the argument is if iflamophobia
is running so rampant in New York City, he wouldn't

(14:38):
have to make up stories to sell the idea.

Speaker 10 (14:42):
And I'm mad here in the real world, and I
know what's right or wrong or bullsh.

Speaker 2 (14:46):
The show that sees through the bullet My response is right,
you know.

Speaker 11 (14:50):
And the tripper really like you.

Speaker 1 (14:54):
Tired of the white man keeping me down. Those are
the words of Mom Donnie pretty much as we've run
to election day on Tuesday. America is evil. It did
him dirty, It did his family dirty. I mean, don't
get me wrong. They managed to move here from Uganda,
make millions of dollars, live in a rent control department,
become a rapper. Did you know, Mom Donnie was a

(15:14):
rapper at one point. He was an aspiring rapper, put
out a song, was a you know, BS city councilman,
has never had a major job. But he appeals to
a lot of people on the woke left. They're crazy, okay,
And again there is a substantive point to Mom Donnie's appeal.
I do mean this. A lot of people on the

(15:35):
right reduce it the free stuff they got all they
want free stuff, and you know it's not free because
we got to pay for it your tax dollars raw
And we say that all the time. I agree with
that sentiment. There was nothing provided to you for free
from the government, because it means the taxpayer has to
foot the bill for all of it.

Speaker 12 (15:51):
Thanks did government witnesses.

Speaker 1 (15:53):
But the reason so many young people gravitate towards Mom
Donnie is because elite academia has saddled these kids with
two three and four hundred thousand dollars college debts and
they can't get a job to pay their way out
of that debt. And in a lot of ways, the
capitalistic system has failed them. But it hasn't failed because
of the market forces of capitalism so much as it's

(16:15):
failed because elite liberal institutions have sabotaged these kids. If
you sell a kid a gender studies degree for five
hundred thousand dollars and there's only two genders, that's just
the way it is. It's a biological fact. It was
only a matter of time before the rubber hit the road,
and there was no traction because there's only going to

(16:35):
be so many markets to study something that doesn't exist.

Speaker 3 (16:38):
It's like a no King's protest.

Speaker 1 (16:40):
The reason we're not talking about it anymore is we
didn't have a king before the protest, So how much
you know blowback is there going to be after the protest?
There's no like, well, is the king going to fall?
Are we going to vote against taving a king? No,
we already did that. We licked the stamps, stuck it
on the envelope, mailed it across the Atlantic Ocean and
said to the King of England, Hey, pal, here's a
big middle fire from the colonies.

Speaker 3 (17:01):
Bring it on.

Speaker 1 (17:01):
That was the no King's protest. So, Mom, Donnie is
someone who got you know, gloriously rich off America. He
is appealing to the sentiments of other white people who
got gloriously rich off the sentiments of America that have
roped in a lot of young people that have been
failed by the current job market because of the massive
level of debt that they're saddled with, and yes, because

(17:22):
of housing being very expensive, and yes, because of government
spending creating massive problems for the people who subsidize that
government spending. Think out how much of our tax dollars
when you talk about snap benefits right now, and the
Democrats keep telling you all the snap benefits are going
to expire, Well, the Republicans have voted to maintain the
snap benefits thirteen times in a row since the government

(17:43):
shut down. The Democrats have voted against reopening the government
and the Snap benefits all thirteen times. Okay, they're causing
the problem the solves and then lecturing the rest of
us for it.

Speaker 3 (17:54):
It doesn't fly.

Speaker 1 (17:55):
Democrats are so full of crap.

Speaker 3 (17:57):
Give me now.

Speaker 1 (17:58):
If you're over the age of sixty five, But I
said the Chairman of the board, you'd say, Frank Sinatra.
But if you're in the know with news and politics,
and you hear the Chamman of the board, your eyes
in your heart and your mind immediately dart to election
night any year and up comes our next guest, co
host of America's Newsroom, the chairman of the board on
election night, Bill Hemmer comes in to do it my way.

Speaker 5 (18:18):
Hey man, nicely done.

Speaker 13 (18:20):
I like that.

Speaker 1 (18:21):
I'm tying it together really good.

Speaker 5 (18:23):
I'm impressed. Thank you for giving it some thought.

Speaker 3 (18:25):
There's a lot.

Speaker 7 (18:27):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (18:29):
Thank you for pretending I did this. Stuff happens fast hammer.
It's all jazz. They call me brown shoes Johnson over
here on the radio. But let me give you this
brown shoes. Last night we get a Dodger game that
goes eighteen innings. Holy, I mean, which.

Speaker 4 (18:44):
Was you know, it's a shame I got to give
I know, I mean, I would have been really just
a blast.

Speaker 7 (18:50):
It was amazing how drunk those people want. They're drinking
for seven hours.

Speaker 3 (18:56):
This is what I was wondered about.

Speaker 1 (18:58):
You know, sometimes the baseball stadium cuts off beer sales
in the seventh they do. I wonder how that shook out.

Speaker 4 (19:03):
I'm the Dodgers have to be ticked off now, lost
a lot of.

Speaker 5 (19:06):
Revenue, a lot of money.

Speaker 1 (19:08):
Yeah, he kind of gave Otani an extension with a
twelve ins of beer saless and you want to deserve
one two home runs he got on base A Thomas.

Speaker 4 (19:17):
I really hope Toronto Wednesday night. And I'll tell you
why because I want to see you. I want to
see it. You know, they talk about a Fall Classic.

Speaker 1 (19:24):
Yeah, let's have a class. I love a Fall Classic,
barrel through seven game.

Speaker 7 (19:28):
It's good for the game, it's good for America.

Speaker 4 (19:31):
Let's, you know, share something together as opposed to the division.

Speaker 1 (19:34):
We need one of those. Although I do have my
concerns that if the Canadian team wins the World Series,
Trump is going to invade, and he'd be well within
his rights.

Speaker 3 (19:42):
I mean, do you not go?

Speaker 4 (19:43):
I mean, would he have the Blue Jays at the
White House?

Speaker 3 (19:47):
That's interesting.

Speaker 4 (19:49):
I mean I think he would think he does. And
I think he invites Carney to come with him too.

Speaker 1 (19:55):
I think that's what you got to do.

Speaker 5 (19:56):
Like that, that's the move.

Speaker 3 (19:57):
And then everybody hogs.

Speaker 1 (19:58):
They give him a jersey and he imposes the additional tariffs.

Speaker 5 (20:02):
Oh, by the way, guys, since I got you here to.

Speaker 4 (20:06):
Take that with your maple leaf I mean, is that
the way we're headed?

Speaker 3 (20:09):
That's going down.

Speaker 1 (20:10):
They're gonna start sinking maple syrup boats next. That's it's
gonna go down Bill Hammer's here.

Speaker 3 (20:16):
None of this is true. We're just being silly.

Speaker 1 (20:17):
But we're talking about marathons because a week from tonight
is the election. It's a nine pm poll close on
the East coast here in New York, which is a win.
But most of our biggest races are local this year,
you know, in terms of New York, New Jersey, Virginia,
a local geography that's I mean geographically local. So are
you optimistic that you won't be standing in front of

(20:38):
that board at seven am on Wednesday?

Speaker 7 (20:40):
Well, we might be at that board at seven.

Speaker 1 (20:43):
How much cardio of the Hammer is the Hammer election
team doing.

Speaker 5 (20:46):
I shall be prepped, my friend.

Speaker 4 (20:48):
So here, here's your layout, just in case you're scoring
at home.

Speaker 7 (20:51):
Here we go, ready, Virginia.

Speaker 4 (20:54):
The governor's race is the most interesting, but the attorney
general's race in Virginia got very interesting because it lead
text messages, all right, So they close at seven o'clock.
Virginia tends to count fast, so we'll see how that goes.
New Jersey closes at eight. I expect a very close race. Yeah,
I don't know if Chitarelli the Republican can beat her,

(21:15):
And I don't know if Mikey Cheryl, she may have
the ability to pull it out based on voter registration
in that state.

Speaker 1 (21:20):
Democratic Republican.

Speaker 4 (21:21):
I do, however, believe that that is a one point race. Yes,
either she wins it by a point or he ruins
it by a point. I reserve the right, by the way,
to change my mind tomorrow for a week from now.

Speaker 3 (21:31):
New data is going and then we.

Speaker 7 (21:32):
Got this bad boy in New York.

Speaker 4 (21:33):
Nine o'clock East coast closing time for an Eastern time
zone is frankly late. Yeah, my guess is that the
turnout is going to be big.

Speaker 5 (21:43):
It's going to be significant.

Speaker 4 (21:44):
Did you know in nineteen ninety three, By the way,
my head, they're filled with stack.

Speaker 5 (21:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (21:50):
Guys, if you are organized, if you're organizing a bar
trip this week, Bill Hammers.

Speaker 7 (21:55):
Your guy, I'm your guy to help you win.

Speaker 4 (22:00):
So it closes at nine o'clock, and my get ninety
three ninety three, Rudy Giuliani beat David Dinkins, and it's
for time Republican won in the city in a long time.
A lot of things like listeners at home, maybe they
know this, maybe they don't. It's seven to one Democrats
and Republicans in New York. Yeah, so for Republican to win,
how crappy was the dawn man?

Speaker 7 (22:24):
Right?

Speaker 4 (22:24):
You got New Joints and Times Square and today you
got the Lion King.

Speaker 5 (22:28):
Yep, that's what Juliani did.

Speaker 4 (22:31):
But the participation rate among the five boroughs it was
fifty seven percent.

Speaker 1 (22:38):
That's crazy.

Speaker 7 (22:39):
You know what it was four years ago.

Speaker 3 (22:41):
There's no way it crack fifty?

Speaker 7 (22:42):
Did it little more than twenty two?

Speaker 5 (22:44):
It was, right, Jimmy.

Speaker 7 (22:45):
The line graph from nineteen ninety three.

Speaker 4 (22:48):
Just it's like a black dime, man, it's just down, down,
down down. I think it's gonna pop. And I don't
know how the Board of Elections will handle.

Speaker 5 (22:57):
It, but we'll see. Well.

Speaker 1 (22:58):
You know what I think is interesting about that, and
maybe the lack of engagement thereof is the city got
better and kind of course corrected obviously the work of
Giuliani and the cops in Bloomberg. I was driving a
cab during Bloomberg. By and large, it felt like a
pretty safe city. It felt better than a lot of
I dare you well. I listen in the stop in
fris Garrow where they were police in quality of life,

(23:18):
of offenses cab drivers felt a little bit safer.

Speaker 3 (23:21):
They did.

Speaker 1 (23:22):
And but the one thing I would tell you is,
I think that's when a lot of people who traditionally
voted in city elections started spending election day eat a
little further out into the Hampton's or a little further
north in Greenwich, and didn't have the same investment in
the city. And that's my fear with the mom Donny
thing is, I don't know that the city needs the
drastic overhaul it needed under Giuliani, meaning he might be

(23:42):
the dinkins to the next Republican to win the mayor's race.
Does that make sense. I don't love what he's doing.
I just mean, and New York is not ideal right now,
Don't get me wrong. I tell people all the time
the walking tours have become running tours.

Speaker 5 (23:57):
Yeah that's pretty good.

Speaker 3 (23:59):
Give me the yes, mister data.

Speaker 9 (24:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (24:02):
Can I ask you one question about early voting.

Speaker 5 (24:05):
I mean, I'm just gonna go ahead and riff here.

Speaker 1 (24:06):
So, hey, you're supposed to him. You save it for
the game, hence the word talk go.

Speaker 2 (24:13):
So.

Speaker 1 (24:13):
I was informed this morning on an interview that early
voting seems to be up among seniors, have you seen
any data they are post.

Speaker 4 (24:19):
With something out about like older people sixty and over. Yeah,
and also jen X is showing up at the poll.
What age is that right now?

Speaker 10 (24:27):
Jen X?

Speaker 5 (24:28):
Forty plus is what it is?

Speaker 1 (24:30):
Somewhere somewhere between what thirty five and fifty?

Speaker 5 (24:33):
It came before Y and Z. That's all I know this.

Speaker 4 (24:37):
So the suggestion is that they would not necessarily be
Mom Donnie voters, But I don't.

Speaker 3 (24:41):
Know about ye.

Speaker 5 (24:42):
Now here's what I do know.

Speaker 7 (24:44):
Okay, what's the person five Burroughs.

Speaker 4 (24:50):
Population eight point eight million, give or take depending on
what's chechip t you're on, of which nearly five million.

Speaker 5 (24:57):
Are registered voters. I don't know how many of the
million will vote.

Speaker 4 (25:00):
Is it two point five which is where we were
nineteen ninety three, or is it one point five?

Speaker 5 (25:06):
I'm not sure.

Speaker 4 (25:08):
And I think you think about Queens, New York. What
percentage of Queens New York as a population of two
point three million people? Brooklyn, New York is a population
is two point seven. That is a higher population than
thirty eight US states.

Speaker 1 (25:29):
That's crazy.

Speaker 7 (25:30):
Sorry, eleven states have more people.

Speaker 1 (25:35):
Sorry, Jimmy, I gotta get my line.

Speaker 4 (25:38):
Thirty eight states have more people than Brooklyn and Queens.
Think about that, you're watching this thing in Wisconsin or Ohio.
Think about the like the dense humanity that we're describing
here in the.

Speaker 7 (25:50):
Borough of Queens. How many people were born in another country?

Speaker 1 (25:56):
Yeah, it's probably sixty right.

Speaker 4 (25:58):
Wow, Wow, Okay, forty eight percent, I think is extraordinary.

Speaker 5 (26:03):
That's really amazing.

Speaker 4 (26:05):
I just wonder if there's a there's a hidden story
there that, Like here in New York, we think about
thirty year old white girls, right.

Speaker 7 (26:11):
Yeah, who are all like Google for mom, Dannie. Yeah,
and maybe they are.

Speaker 4 (26:15):
But maybe the hidden story is that if he does
win and you have a lot of foreign people who
live here in the boroughs are accepting of his policies,
and that could very well be a hidden story.

Speaker 5 (26:26):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (26:26):
Or are these people as immigrants they come from different
parts of the world.

Speaker 7 (26:30):
And then it light the old system.

Speaker 4 (26:32):
And they wanted to come here and really exercise capitalism.

Speaker 7 (26:36):
So a lot of undercurrents and things like this for
next years.

Speaker 3 (26:39):
That's a great point.

Speaker 1 (26:40):
So the intangible isn't so much who's running, but who's voting,
you know, because there's a big who out there. But
we're about to find out about them. Now, how does
exit polling in a race like the mayor's race compared
to a presidential election?

Speaker 4 (26:52):
Do you get We have never had I've been doing
this in two thousand and eight. We've never had to
to study New York City.

Speaker 1 (27:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (27:01):
Ever, ever it was as a fatal complaint.

Speaker 4 (27:05):
And so what I want to tell you is that
over the past two months, diving into these five boroughs,
it's not like studying a county or even state. It's honestly,
it's like studying a country. In the five boroughs, there
are three hundred and fifty neighborhoods.

Speaker 5 (27:20):
They don't have towns or.

Speaker 4 (27:21):
Villages or townships. They have neighborhoods. There are three hundred
and fifty.

Speaker 3 (27:25):
I mean you may know.

Speaker 4 (27:26):
That from driving you most of them, but I mean
I'm studying night and day. So every time I get
out of a cab or an uber now, I say, hey, man,
where are you from?

Speaker 5 (27:34):
They always say Brooklyn or they.

Speaker 7 (27:35):
Say Queens and say yeah, but what neighborhood? Oh, Sunnyside,
East New York.

Speaker 5 (27:40):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (27:40):
Yeah, it's been great too.

Speaker 4 (27:44):
I've lived here for almost twenty five years and I've
never been forced to study it. And I'm delighted in
what I discovered because it's really been a great education.

Speaker 1 (27:52):
Bill Hammer's here and they're playing the game on old
Madden this year. You know, when you get the Madden
video game, you could play it on Madden and it's
just you're just playing in the computer. Just passes and
catch him, but all mad. And now you're looking out
of a helmet, and you've got to know the periphery.
You're playing all mad in this election, Pal, you're gonna
be out there.

Speaker 3 (28:08):
I don't know that.

Speaker 1 (28:09):
I don't know that you're gonna get the turn Duncin,
but we're certainly rooting for you. I appreciate, but it's
it's great. And then the last thing I'll leave you
with and then I'll let you go is you get
New Jersey, you get New York, you get Virginia. For
my money, those are the only real issues, are the
only real races we've been focused on. Is Prop fifty
out in California this election night?

Speaker 4 (28:28):
It is, it is, it is, and that'll have a
you know, California count slow. I don't know if you'll
have the results Tuesday night. They're going to decide yes
or no, whether or not they're going to jerry mander
their districts.

Speaker 5 (28:41):
Yeah, and we'll see if it passes.

Speaker 1 (28:43):
My favorite thing in the world about the jerrymandering protest
is when the Texas legislature flew to Illinois to demonstrate
that they were against jerrymandering. I'm like, what's next, You're
gonna go to Vegas to protest? Blackjack, Like, it just
seems like a location problem. But you're saying, if you
want an outcome on Prop fifty, Newsome might be on
his four of box and mac and cheese before we
get an answer.

Speaker 4 (29:02):
Yeah, Jalinois has drawn up some kind of.

Speaker 1 (29:07):
Some kind of geometry, a lot of sketchy stuff in
the Italian neighborhoods in New York. They might call it
food gazing, Okay, fu gayzy maps being drawn out there.

Speaker 5 (29:19):
That's right.

Speaker 4 (29:19):
Maybe out in Bensonhurst, maybe that's what they're thinking.

Speaker 3 (29:22):
But that's why he's the chairman of the board.

Speaker 1 (29:23):
He's got the regular maps, he's got the fugazy maps,
and they'll all be on the Fox News channel next
Tuesday night, Bill Hammer, what's on there?

Speaker 5 (29:29):
Thank you? Jimmy back after this.

Speaker 3 (29:31):
You're listening to the best.

Speaker 1 (29:33):
Of the radio Campbell of Love by the Eagles. That's
a hot bump in as zoron Mom donnae he tries
to convince voters he is a victim of Islamophobia. This
guy's a serious ass. Mom Donnie goes on the Daily
Show last night. Sympathetic audience if ever there was one,
and uh, you know, tries to make the jokey case
for what he will and won't do. But what he

(29:55):
never acknowledges during this montage or not even a montage
but a forty second clip I'm about to play is
people are not attacking him because he's a Muslim and
they're projecting some type of ill will towards his community.
People are attacking his own words. It wasn't an islamophobe

(30:16):
that tweeted in June of twenty twenty. We don't need
an investigation to know the NYPD is anti queer and racist.
What we need to do is defund the police. That
was not an islamophobe who said that. That was zoron
Mom Donnie.

Speaker 3 (30:32):
Bingo, Man Bingo.

Speaker 1 (30:33):
Okay, so you understand when a guy says something like
that and then people have a negative reaction, outsourcing this
to islamophobia. Or hateful rhetoric by his opponents. Again, it'll
work on the Daily Show, where they're just there to,
you know, clap every time the applause sign comes on.
But if you're actually living in the real world, you

(30:55):
see through this for what it is, which is a scam.
Here is Mom Donnie talking to John Stewart, pretty plays
in back and forth Clip one.

Speaker 9 (31:01):
You know, I don't begrudge New Yorkers who are skeptical
because they've also lived through tens of millions of dollars
of commercials telling them to fear me.

Speaker 5 (31:11):
Right.

Speaker 9 (31:11):
You know, they have lived through waking up every morning
and seeing a photo of me and just feeling like,
oh my god, because the language that's written around me
is as if I am a threat to the city
that they love. And so when I meet with them,
just the mere fact that I don't strangle them within
thirty seconds, it's often, but and then I think it's
it's an opportunity where you know, I both can tell

(31:33):
them the things that I will do and the things that.

Speaker 5 (31:34):
I won't do.

Speaker 10 (31:34):
Right.

Speaker 9 (31:35):
I will freeze the rent, I won't defund the police.
I will make buses fast and free. I won't decriminalize misdemeanors.
I will deliver a universal childcare. I won't require everyone
to eat halal food.

Speaker 3 (31:46):
Hey, and he got a laugh for that.

Speaker 1 (31:47):
But when he says, you know the fact that people
are shocked, I don't strangle them in thirty seconds, nobody shocked,
because we've seen your bench press video. You're not strangling anybody.
You might choke out the economy, you might decimate the
tax base. The truth is for me, my takeaway. And
there's a lot of gloom and doom in talk radio
right now as everybody's talking about what mont Donney's policies

(32:10):
might do to the city. The truth is they would
destroy the city if he could implement them. I don't
truly believe he can implement most of them. Kathy Holch
is the governor. At a state level, she's going to
have to raise your taxes and do all the bad
things that would enact as agenda, But she's going to
be in a really tough re election battle with the
least staphonic. I don't know. I truly don't know that
she's going to have the balls to follow through on

(32:31):
this stuff at the state level because it's her own
butt on the line that being said, socialism is also
on the ballot in Minneapolis, and if this proves to
be electorally viable, it's not so much what gets done
in this election, but what gets done in the next
one and the one beyond that, because the minute people
start voting for it and it actually gets elected, you know,

(32:54):
the old success as a thousand fathers failure is an orphan. Well,
in this case, a lot of people who know better
than to preach socialism on the campaign trail might start
leaning into it a little bit more because they might
think it's their ticket to get into power again. Politics.
This is not about principle, it's not about virtue. These
are people who want to be powerful and whatever that means.

(33:19):
Do you got to dish dirt on somebody? Do you
got to backstab somebody? Do you got to vote for
something you know is wrong because the lobbyist wants you
to believe it's right. Do you have to abandon a
policy you held an hour ago? I mean, look at
somebody like Gavin Newsom and what a pure sociopath he is.
Like the factory settings on Gavin Newsom sociopath. Like if
you took your iPhone and reset it. You know, you'd

(33:39):
lose a lot of data and you'd just start with
what was originally on the phone. If you held Gavin
Newsom by the volume key, the control key until the
screen reset, you just have a sociopath. That's what you'd have.
When he was on with Charlie Kirk, if you remember,
he interviewed Charlie Kirk on his podcast and said all
the DEI woke stuff was garbage, was hurting economies, and

(34:01):
it was poisoning the political bloodstream and the Democrats needed
to get away from it. But what did he say
in a podcast over the weekend. Well, anybody who's anti
woke is just anti black. I mean, that's what's really
going on over here. I mean, and that is Gavin
Newsom a sociopath. The guy just wants power. And when
you have people that are so desperate for power that

(34:22):
are willing to do anything to get it, what ultimately
happens is these people wind up in charge of something
they don't know how to care for, like the dog
catches the car.

Speaker 10 (34:30):
What.

Speaker 1 (34:30):
Now, that's the modern Democrat Party. They've lectured you so
much about Donald Trump destroying faith in our institutions that
they've destroyed faith in most of those institutions in an
effort to get Donald Trump. It's like a little kider
doesn't want to share a toy. Hey, can I play
with the toy?

Speaker 3 (34:44):
Now? Come on, so let the play rod of it?

Speaker 1 (34:46):
Twos ah, and they tug on it and then parents
finally turn around in the car and go, hey, would
you just let him play with the fricking toy?

Speaker 3 (34:52):
Now he's not player.

Speaker 1 (34:53):
They pull on it so hard they wind up breaking
the toy that they wanted control of. Okay, that's a
lot of what's happening in California. We talked about this
with Steve Hilton yesterday. Hilton's going to be the next
governor of California with any luck, and it's going to
be because Gavin Newsom created an opening for a Republican
to swoop it and save the day.

Speaker 3 (35:09):
It's how Trump happened.

Speaker 1 (35:11):
Establishment Washington failed so many generations of Americans that that
fantasy people used to write screenplays about suddenly became doable
because folks were like, dude, we're so sick of these
folks in Washington telling us one thing and doing another.
What if we really let an outsiderer in there? Rodney
Dangerfield and Caddyshack. Get a regular guy into the country
club to tell the elites what jackasses they are. I

(35:34):
bet you get a free bowl of soup every time
you buy this hat ole. But it looks good on you.
The only difference between Rodney D and Trump is he
doesn't tell anybody they look good after reinsults the hat.
He just keeps bringing the fire. And we'll keep bringing
the show. Richie, only joining us in the next hour.
Don't go anywhere from everywhere USA. It's foxed across America
with Jimmy Bala. Oh baby boy, Yes it is, and

(35:56):
we are gonna drive it like we stole it in
honor of our guest for this full hour. Whether he
knows it or not, he came by to do a
radio hit. But this is very much the fight scene
in Bronxtail. Rich Zeoli, Now you can't leave. Good to
see you. W hey Man, w PHT Radio sensation, fastest
rising TV star here on the Fox News Channel.

Speaker 13 (36:18):
I wish that was true.

Speaker 1 (36:20):
Hey, all right, all right, all right, but you are,
of course in high demand. You'll be on America Reports today,
You're on America's news Room yesterday because you have a specialty,
which is.

Speaker 3 (36:29):
New Jersey, you know, Philadelphia politics.

Speaker 1 (36:31):
Yeah, and we got a big with well, to be clear,
the specialty is the bar across the street Langans.

Speaker 3 (36:38):
He now holds the state record multiple states.

Speaker 13 (36:41):
Am I allowed to go there? That's the only question.

Speaker 1 (36:43):
Amen. But me and Zeoli you're gonna do some good
old fashioned talk radio eight at eight seven eight eight
nine nine one zero. I don't actually have call screening
software up on my computer right now, but if we
wanted to put it out there. This is a kind
of high class show. I do see radio Z. The
only you wing it.

Speaker 5 (37:00):
About.

Speaker 3 (37:01):
It's called talk radio.

Speaker 13 (37:02):
We talk.

Speaker 1 (37:03):
You don't get on with the plane. So you came
by and you know, just talking to us.

Speaker 3 (37:06):
We knew you were coming on and a half hours
like whant to come on?

Speaker 9 (37:08):
Now?

Speaker 13 (37:09):
Come now?

Speaker 3 (37:09):
So now we're here.

Speaker 13 (37:10):
Now what Every time I'm out, they pulled me back in.

Speaker 1 (37:13):
Hey eight, I get seven eight nine nine one years
the phone.

Speaker 13 (37:16):
Go ahead, Guess who I was hanging out with last night?

Speaker 1 (37:17):
Oh man, let me talk about this. Guess who you
were hanging out I don't want to make it go.

Speaker 14 (37:23):
I got two hugs, two hugs from this person whoa
what big hugs.

Speaker 1 (37:27):
I was, well, it's obviously Katie Porter then, because when
you said big.

Speaker 13 (37:31):
Well, I love her mash potatoes.

Speaker 1 (37:33):
You ever have them right on the face, that'd be
a good cooking shit in the face in the face
with Katie Porter, little gravy on the head. Now the
reci he's healthy, but getting hit by it not so much.

Speaker 14 (37:45):
Tell me, young, I was, there are bro hugs from
Jack c rally last night?

Speaker 1 (37:48):
Oh give that you did an event?

Speaker 14 (37:50):
Yeah, man, he came, he did a rally, a bus rally,
and I introduced him. And to have the crowd going
wild with chance of Jack. Not hard to get a
crowd riled up with one word.

Speaker 13 (37:59):
That's how I could do that. I could pull that off.

Speaker 14 (38:01):
I just said, let's go Jack, Jack Jack, and they
did it and they played along.

Speaker 1 (38:05):
Isn't an amazing the simple of a chant. Like think
about my Ohio State family and how many milers they've
gotten one hundred and fifty years out of spelling the
word Ohio. It's also how you know who's not good
to drive after the game, because if somebody screws up
the chair, if.

Speaker 3 (38:18):
It's no way, it's like, ah, like all right, give
me the Keys.

Speaker 13 (38:21):
Although they screwed the Eagles chare they become the mayor.

Speaker 3 (38:24):
I remember them.

Speaker 7 (38:25):
That E LG.

Speaker 4 (38:27):
L E.

Speaker 3 (38:28):
Yes, I love yess.

Speaker 1 (38:31):
Madam mayor would have been a cabinet secretary of Kamalawe.
But as we're sitting here following politics, I feel like
your situation is less dire than mine. Is Mikey Cheryl corrupt, yes, yes,
but I feel like she's an extension of everything you
have in the governor's mansion right now, which is not ideal.
I mean, if you care about Jersey, you got a
root for Cheddarelly. But what we're dealing with in New York.

(38:52):
I think the reason the states are so much higher
is in truth, Mikey Cheryl's policies will be a lot
easier to implement at the state level. Of New Jersey
should be the governor number one, but number two there
is already that support. What I think Mom Donnie represents
is not so much that he can wreck the city
overnight because he needs help, but it's if it becomes electable.
It means it's going to get elected in other parts
of the country, and you'll eventually have socialist in place

(39:15):
to do the socialist stuff. And then we're on the
bread line. So I don't think it starts next Tuesday.
I mean public executions, yes, but I mean I listen,
New York's crowded. You know that no one talks about
the upside of the Sharia law. I mean, if the
women aren't driving, how much quicker am I getting to work?

Speaker 2 (39:29):
You know?

Speaker 1 (39:29):
And it's nothing against women drivers. That wasn't a sex joke.
That was a sharia law joke. That means best drivers
on the road. And well, the sexist humor is coming.
Rich the Oli's here with me. We're gonna get there, lady,
we're just getting started.

Speaker 3 (39:40):
Be patient.

Speaker 1 (39:40):
If you're watching on Fox daytion be patient, as they say.
But when you look at this right Hammer was here
a little while ago, chairman of the board. In terms
of electoral politics, he says, it's a one point race, Jersey.
Your race?

Speaker 3 (39:54):
Is that how you feel?

Speaker 13 (39:55):
They got new numbers in.

Speaker 14 (39:56):
I was just talking to him in the hallway because
my restraining order, I'm allowed to go with two hundred
feet of him.

Speaker 13 (40:01):
You can go near Hammer, not Perino, though.

Speaker 3 (40:04):
I testified in that case.

Speaker 14 (40:05):
Thank you, I appreciate that that was nice to you. Uh,
Gloucester County, New Jersey. They're up by two Republican votes,
which I noticed. It sounds like a lot. But it
matters that this early voting because Republicans hate early voting
because let's say he said the President sometimes comes out
and goes, don't do early voting, don't do mail in voting,
and then five minutes later we're all telling voters please
do mail in voting, do early voting. So Republicans get confused.

(40:28):
I go, I don't know what am I supposed to do.

Speaker 13 (40:29):
Do I vote early? Do I not vote early?

Speaker 14 (40:31):
Do I trust it? Do I not trust it? And
we're out there telling people do it? Bank the vote.

Speaker 1 (40:35):
Yeah.

Speaker 14 (40:35):
In fact, the Republicans are doing as well as they're
doing in the early voting is a very good sign.

Speaker 3 (40:39):
That's an encouraging sign.

Speaker 1 (40:40):
Plus, don't forget Trump left that voicemail endorsing. That's amazing,
Yael the tell rally, which is just him recording a
voice messes being like vote for Chittarelly.

Speaker 3 (40:52):
It wasn't like him on stage. It wasn't air Force.

Speaker 1 (40:55):
Now. I know Trump has trump stuff to do, but
the point is that's not going to move the needle.

Speaker 3 (40:59):
But what it allow?

Speaker 1 (41:00):
How was Trump? This is the beauty of Trump. Strategically,
we all know this to be true. If Chiarelly wins,
it could be like, why I endorse them, that's why
he won. And if he doesn't win, given like he's
a dog, that's why I didn't show up. There's a
very strategic method to what Trump endorses, you know. And
I think we're watching that play out in Jersey right now.
But I think you might make the point that in
parts of Jersey it might not help to have Trump's endorsement,

(41:21):
so maybe he's better off not having it.

Speaker 13 (41:23):
It's a fine line.

Speaker 14 (41:24):
And Hemmer asked him about that today when he was
on America's news room, and Jack was like, listen, ultimately,
the candidate has to win.

Speaker 13 (41:30):
Translation, I don't really know if we want Trump to come.

Speaker 5 (41:33):
It or not.

Speaker 13 (41:33):
I don't know if it helps her hurts they're torn.

Speaker 14 (41:35):
It's torn because if you get Trump's voters to turn
out and vote for Jack, then Jack can win. It's
four to one thousand Republicans sta at home. In the
last election, I only lost by eighty five thousand votes.

Speaker 3 (41:45):
That's crazy.

Speaker 14 (41:45):
Trump voters will only vote for Trump. You know this
it'll go for everybody else.

Speaker 3 (41:49):
It's not portable.

Speaker 13 (41:49):
They're like those guys that.

Speaker 14 (41:50):
We know who like only watch one thing, Yeah that's
it and nothing else, and they won't watch anything else.

Speaker 1 (41:56):
It's like that, I only watch Fox. When so and
so was that tweet? You turn it off? I see
what's all it's say Tarlof, It's not.

Speaker 3 (42:04):
What's her name? They all know she comes on the
show and we talk about this.

Speaker 1 (42:08):
If Jessica Tarloff is on the show, I won't watch it.

Speaker 3 (42:11):
I'm like, I'll go, I'll go tell them.

Speaker 1 (42:13):
I'll let them know that the woman without the profile
picture and seventy three numbers in her handles that she's
not Not only is she not watching, but the cats
aren't watching, and there's at least a dozen of them. Well, yeah, no,
I get it, and I understand how that works. I'm
talking to the Great Riches, the Oleage w PhD radio
sensation regular on the Fox News Channel, just the same
We're talking about electoral politics, and then out in California,

(42:37):
Gavin Newsom's Prop fifty on the ballot. Jerry Mandering a
big concern. Democrats, as you know, staunchly against jerry mandering.

Speaker 3 (42:46):
It's just the damage two things.

Speaker 5 (42:47):
You know.

Speaker 1 (42:48):
The Democrats never like jerry mandering. The village people hated
the YMCI. They said, never go there, we don't like it.
We could ever endorse such a place. It's so comical
that this is what we've been reduced to. Now is
this whole and knew someth doing this too, with the
whole Navan Johnson, I was born a poor black child
from the jerk thing. I know, you said, Jam Pritzker,
say nobody called Trump hitler. I'm like, look, other than

(43:10):
these seventeen hours of montages of Democrats calling Trump hitler,
It's like in theory, he's right right, A week is
several hundred hours long. Okay, we only have seventeen hours
of them calling him hitler. It's not in the scheme
of things that much. Is it hot to Gavin?

Speaker 14 (43:25):
Do some survive eating all that wonderbread because it's not
real bread. I mean, if you ever checked the ingredient
label on there, he should be dead by now.

Speaker 13 (43:32):
That alone is amazing.

Speaker 15 (43:34):
Man.

Speaker 14 (43:34):
I ate wonderbread and mac and cheese, and somehow I
did it even though my father.

Speaker 13 (43:38):
Was a lawyer for a big oil company.

Speaker 1 (43:39):
But even though as we got by cover of the
San Francisco Chronicles, Children of the Rich I got, you know,
And it's this one poor kid after another in those things,
Am I right? It's like to do pond registry. Those
boats are only what one hundred and fifty million dollars.
They're probably the mac and cheese on the boat.

Speaker 9 (43:55):
You know.

Speaker 14 (43:55):
In his wineries in California he serves wonderbread. If you
order the fruit and cheese plate, it comes to some
wonderbread and Max.

Speaker 1 (44:02):
Now the cheese is the powdered craft backet.

Speaker 13 (44:04):
Not even the ooey gooey like squeezy kind. It's literally
the powder.

Speaker 1 (44:08):
The thing is when you grow up on a six
hundred million dollars vineyard, you know, he probably calls it
vineyard to sound relatable, like he doesn't know about the culture. No,
we know what you did. Let me give you some
of this. This is the Pritzker one. I love this
people walking back stuff. So Justin cut these montages. I
can only get away with this if Josh isn't here.
Josh doesn't let me play montages with audio on them, really,

(44:30):
because he's a perfectionist. He wants high level. Justin is
a long Island mook like we just put it on
right justin. I mean, you can confirm that correct, It's
very true. You're not going to embarrass me. And this
is gonna come on without the music, you know what.

Speaker 14 (44:41):
I guess host for you around Thanksgiving because I won't
have Josh through those montages then. So no, no, he'll
do one, but he's just you're gonna have to slum
it with me.

Speaker 13 (44:49):
Pal.

Speaker 1 (44:50):
No, you don't understand. I mean, I'm slumming with you
right now. It's fun, but no, I'm kidding. So the
point is I wanted to play this one montage because
it's the it begins with you know.

Speaker 14 (44:59):
Is it min tajr mon monted hod he say it montage?

Speaker 1 (45:03):
It's Dontel Williams, Montel Williams, Right, it's Montelli. Yeah you go,
so let me give you this one. Yeah, this is
just so everybody's listening, I'm about to take a minute
and fifty seconds off of your life.

Speaker 3 (45:16):
But in order to you'll.

Speaker 13 (45:17):
Never get that.

Speaker 1 (45:18):
They'll never get back. But I want you understand why
I'm doing this, guys, because me and Zioli just prioritize
an informed a discussion.

Speaker 3 (45:23):
Do we lean at the right.

Speaker 1 (45:24):
Yes, but when we get on the radio, we're not
cheating our angles to make Democrats look bad. We're using
their own words. It's like the Mom donnything. He's like,
they're mad at me because of Islamophobia. I'm like, no, no,
it was not islamophobia. To not like you saying the
cops hate gay people and they're racist if you need
to defund them. There was no Muslim belief in any
of that, okay, And I mean the Muslim belief is
actually the anti gay belief. Actually, if we were going

(45:46):
to be quoting that, you got his Ugandan background, he
would like the NYPD for being anti queer if he
really thought that. He's like, you guys should have been
at my wedding and youve gondam. But hold on a
minute and fifty folks. But there's a reason I'm playing
you this. It is a minute and fifty seconds of
your life. Good luck is the only and I will
see you on the other side. Light commentary along the way.
I haven't suggested that Donald Trump is hitler. I wouldn't.

Speaker 16 (46:11):
I don't think any Democrat has.

Speaker 1 (46:12):
I actinitely watch this.

Speaker 17 (46:14):
It is deeply troubling and incredibly dangerous that Donald Trump
would invoke Adolf Hitler, the man who's responsible for the
deaths of six million Jews.

Speaker 18 (46:27):
How can you possibly compare what happened in Germany and
World War Two to what's going on here in the
United States.

Speaker 19 (46:33):
We're talking about the death of a constitutional republic. That's
what happened in Germany in nineteen thirty three, nineteen thirty four,
and we're seeing today that you've got an administration in
Washington that's ignoring court orders.

Speaker 6 (46:46):
In this rogue Department of Justice going out to do
the bidding of this Timu Hitler.

Speaker 1 (46:55):
I don't even know what to call him.

Speaker 12 (46:56):
I've called him so many things, but this want to
be Hitler for sure.

Speaker 15 (47:00):
Trump actually re enacting the Madison Square Garden rally in
nineteen thirty nine that neo Nazis fascists in.

Speaker 20 (47:12):
America, Billie, Donald Trump's got this big rally going at
Madison Square Garden. There's a direct parallel to a big
rally that happened in the mid nineteen thirties at Madison
Square Garden. And don't think that he doesn't know for
one second exactly what.

Speaker 5 (47:26):
They're doing here.

Speaker 3 (47:27):
You stand by the comparison, though to a Nazi rally.

Speaker 1 (47:30):
Look the rally you saw for yourself. I'll let the
American public make a musication of what they saw. What
about you, though, So I know what I saw, and
I'll just leave.

Speaker 4 (47:36):
It at that.

Speaker 18 (47:36):
I compaired the rhetoric that the president has employed to
rhetoric that you might have heard during the Third Reiking.

Speaker 3 (47:43):
Calling human beings an infestation.

Speaker 1 (47:45):
Is something that we might have expected to hear in
Nazi journey?

Speaker 20 (47:48):
Is that not going too far to make a comparison
between the President of the United States and the Nazis?

Speaker 3 (47:55):
Find me a better analogy.

Speaker 1 (48:01):
But the best part of the montage, Nicole Wallace begins
with I don't think anyone's ever called him?

Speaker 13 (48:05):
Yeah, no, no one no.

Speaker 14 (48:07):
I mean now, the questions is too when they say
Germany in the nineteen thirties, but don't use Nazi.

Speaker 13 (48:12):
Does it still count?

Speaker 1 (48:13):
I say, yes, right, it's no count. The receiver got
one foot in bounds and college it counts sits up
in the air.

Speaker 3 (48:19):
In the NFL.

Speaker 1 (48:21):
But understand, she goes, I don't think any Democrat has
And then the montages the last two presidential nominees, both
of their vps. Everyone else on there is an elected official,
except Beta, who technically was an elected if he was
a congressman before he lost Senate and governor.

Speaker 3 (48:36):
No one has not time, no one has done more.

Speaker 1 (48:38):
To clothe the people of Caracas than Beto O'Rourke's political ambitions.
They're walking around in Senate t shirts, presidential t shirts.
But the point is, like it's all pretend stuff. We
have another minute here of Pritzker doing that, Josta Pritzker.
But you made a comment when Tim Waltz brought up
what Hillary brought up about the Nazi.

Speaker 3 (48:57):
Rally at Madison Square Garden.

Speaker 1 (48:59):
So I think you were saying, I guess van Halen
had Nasby rallies because they've.

Speaker 13 (49:03):
Probably joy I saw him a few hundred.

Speaker 3 (49:07):
Nazi rallies and the best part of that.

Speaker 1 (49:10):
And it's weird because, like in politics, what happens is
sometimes the story breaks and we all just kind of
dive bomb it and people almost forget other precedents, like
the Hillary one. I know you remember this, Bill Clinton
accepted the Democrat nomination in Madison Square Garden. Hillary goes, well,
any politician having a rally there, we know what they're

(49:32):
really thinking about. So did Clinton run on the third
right down. I mean, I don't remember that, you know,
but it's that's the point. And I always say, like,
we're living in the death of shame, but it's beyond
dead now.

Speaker 3 (49:43):
Like it's dead. It was bear, we dug it up,
we beat it again, that whole thing.

Speaker 14 (49:46):
Yeah, And don't you think, I mean, people see right
through it now at this point, because they've said it
so many times, you become inoculated to it. Because you
hear it over and over and over again. You're like, oh,
it's the two o'clock Nazi dropping again.

Speaker 1 (49:57):
You know, two years ago it was a scourge. Now
it's like they're calling people Nazis and you're like, oh,
do me, yeah, right's next. The Democrats have become the
Black Israelites. So there are these the Black Israelites. You're
not familiar with them. I don't actually know what their
religion is, but that's what they call themselves. They stood
around in Times Square for about thirty years in the seventies, eighties,
and nineties, and if you walked by the Port Authority
bus terminal, they would call you a white devil, you know, genocide,

(50:20):
all that stuff, and it was you'd go back to
get yelled at again because it was kind of funny
when you were a little kid, like you'd push your
friend in front of and be like, what's that white maggot.

Speaker 3 (50:27):
Wan a, my dad.

Speaker 1 (50:28):
We're like, that is amazing, you know. That's where the
Democrats have been reduced to at least open up a
violin case that we could throw a dollar in more ritzy.

Speaker 3 (50:35):
Only after this, it's crazy.

Speaker 1 (50:39):
Fox across America means the only just doing a State
of the Union about politics a lot.

Speaker 14 (50:45):
By the way, my hit on American reports is about
how the Democrats have to change because they're too freaking
crazy this new report that came out.

Speaker 13 (50:51):
So if you have any thoughts on that, let me know.

Speaker 1 (50:53):
Yeah, let's the only No, that's amazing. I mean, the
HiT's not going to happen.

Speaker 14 (51:00):
The best is when you go what time is your
non hit?

Speaker 1 (51:03):
The completion percentage on an America report hits in the
bottom half of the second hour, so low because Trump
likes to speak in the middle of the day, Israel likes.

Speaker 3 (51:11):
To bomb things.

Speaker 1 (51:12):
It's just that is the hour where if something's gonna
happen to bump a TV hit, that is the hour,
like the sweet Spot like I went.

Speaker 13 (51:19):
Down there and get makeup.

Speaker 14 (51:20):
They're like, why you don't, you don't need it. It's
not because I don't need it on my face.

Speaker 13 (51:25):
It's not gonna happen.

Speaker 3 (51:26):
It's funny.

Speaker 1 (51:26):
But if you like ever go on like a vacation
that involves any like degree of wilderness, they might tell
you at the front desk that, like, during these hours
of the day you might see a mountain lion. You know,
it's the same thing in cable that during these hours
of the day you might see a drone strike or
a spontaneous presidential gaggle. And that's the two that's that
would be that hour. But let me give you this,
somebody who should have been bumped from TV. Did you
catch any of the Obama things he was endorsing Abigail

(51:48):
Spamberger after yelling at black men to vote for the
sister Spamburger. I gotta be honest, I don't know she
can rap or something. She didn't really come off like
a sister. She's very pale.

Speaker 14 (52:00):
You know, you're saying that maybe, based on Obama's own lectures,
he should be supporting Winso worlds years.

Speaker 1 (52:06):
Thank you.

Speaker 14 (52:06):
I'm just I'm just it's an excellent point you're making
right now based on his own basis.

Speaker 13 (52:10):
So is Obama sexist?

Speaker 14 (52:12):
Is what I want to know, because he accused all
those black men, the brothers, of being sexist and now
voting for Kamma. So now is Barack Obama revealing his
own sexism?

Speaker 3 (52:20):
Wow, that's heavy talk.

Speaker 1 (52:22):
There are white folks and then they're ignorant, mother like you.

Speaker 13 (52:25):
Well, fair enough.

Speaker 3 (52:27):
I knew he'd respond. I didn't think he'd go there.
And that was aggressive, well said, we're talking that talking.

Speaker 1 (52:33):
Originally, that one made me laugh a lot, because again
it really was you have to vote for her because
she's black.

Speaker 3 (52:40):
And now he's like, yeah, Spamburger's got and.

Speaker 14 (52:42):
He literally said the brothers, some of these brothers, like,
that's what he said, and it was so bagasse. He
left Nantucket reducing the black population by one hundred percent
to go lecture the people of Chicago about how they're
own racist brothers.

Speaker 1 (52:54):
We heard what you said. He said, Obama left Nantucket
reducing the black population by one hundred percent, which we
know is true because Michelle ain't there with him. She's
doing a podcast with her brother that I think is her.
I think it's a nutty professor thing. You know, Eddie
Murphy plays all the characters in that one scene. That's
why that you know, everybody says like that podcast is
destroying their marriage, But that's why because once he sat

(53:16):
down in a room with both of them, you can
unsee the Michelle in the brother's face and you realize
you're just making love to a bold black man like
it's a prison date, which again is fine.

Speaker 3 (53:26):
That's what you're into.

Speaker 1 (53:27):
There's a lot of categories on those websites. We're gonna
discuss all of them when we come back. Richie Oli,
of course heard every day on w PHT twelve ten.
Hey girl, and may Or may not be on America.
What's today to think about? Ziel He's an international man
of mystery. He might be here when we come back,
he might not. You just don't know. But that's the
joy of this show. A Murdered Mystery with Richie Oli.

(53:48):
May Or may not continue Fox Across America with Jimmy
Falow Richie only in studio. He is scheduled to be
on America Reports today. But if you're keeping score at home,
the old only one who has actually done TV with
Sandra Smith this week is mes the Onlie could get on.
There's lines in Vegas right now. I think Polymarket has
an odd five.

Speaker 13 (54:08):
It's ninety ten.

Speaker 1 (54:09):
And this is not in any way a commentary on
Zioli of the show. If you watch Fox News every day,
you know a lot of times we're breaking news, and
in certain hours of the day you're more likely to
get it the president giving a speech, a press conference,
going along, and stuff like that. And it's really changed
the TV game because this wasn't happening the last four years.
There was no chance of Joe Biden doing a spontaneous

(54:30):
press conference in the last four.

Speaker 13 (54:32):
Years, or spontaneous anything.

Speaker 3 (54:36):
Bow movement, stick, stop it, stop it, stop it. But yes,
you said the auto pen, and that that checks.

Speaker 1 (54:42):
Just the same.

Speaker 14 (54:42):
That may just start signing things. That that's possible spontaneous signing.

Speaker 3 (54:46):
That's amazing.

Speaker 1 (54:47):
And now I heard James Comer saying like, well, we're
gonna you know, these auto pens might not be legitimate.

Speaker 3 (54:52):
Thrill guy. I don't think any of them were either.

Speaker 1 (54:54):
Yeah, I guess this is a dangerous road, but exactly,
and there's this there's this Chinatown aspect of Poul. It's
like with the Hunter Biden stuff. They definitely did it,
and they definitely got away with it. And there's for
some reason within the hierarchy of Chinatown. In the movie Chinatown,
when Jack Nicholson solves the crime and they go forget it, Jake,
it's Chinatown.

Speaker 3 (55:14):
He's just not going to work. It's we've had this discussion.

Speaker 1 (55:17):
The autopen thing is Chinatown because I'm sure there is
money involved in pardons that flows both ways. Isn't that
what the stock tip thing is?

Speaker 14 (55:26):
It's one hundred percent. I mean, you don't get a
pardon unless you are connected. Yeah, you might be the
most deserving person for a pardon. You're staying in prison,
but if you've got a lot of money, you may
have done.

Speaker 13 (55:36):
The worst thing.

Speaker 3 (55:38):
You're getting out.

Speaker 13 (55:39):
All right, Let's be honest.

Speaker 14 (55:40):
You're writing the Republican National Committee a big check through
a guy, through another guy, through a pack and then
subtenly now clemency.

Speaker 3 (55:47):
Would you know that?

Speaker 13 (55:48):
Imagine that?

Speaker 1 (55:49):
You know it's not the guy in prison reading all
the books and rehabilitating his life. It's the guy donating
to the presidential library. You have to read a single book,
You just have to donate to the library. That's going
to have those other books when this guy gets out
of office. Is that what you're telling me?

Speaker 3 (56:04):
I heard?

Speaker 14 (56:05):
I mean, I might have heard a guy in Jersey
who might have got a clemency thing being, might have
voted a lot of money in the irs, but he
was a big, powerful Republican connected.

Speaker 1 (56:13):
But this is this is the thing, okay. And when
you make that point, that's how we also know though
with the Biden auto pens and when they's internal emails
came out being like, well, it doesn't seem like the
president knows about any of this. Once you get that
sort of operating system in place, it means the people
in the position to sell the pardon to just open season.
Can you imagine the discussions that were out there. You

(56:35):
know the scene in Vacation when Chevy Chase Rex's Carni
goes how much I owe you? And the guy goes,
how much you got?

Speaker 13 (56:40):
I'm calling the sheriff.

Speaker 1 (56:42):
What's it going to take for this convicted Chinese pedophile
spy to get out of prison? How much you got?

Speaker 14 (56:47):
And don't forget Trump pardoned Rob Right Blogo, who was
literally selling pardons.

Speaker 1 (56:53):
That's a funny.

Speaker 13 (56:54):
I mean, that's what he was doing.

Speaker 14 (56:55):
He got a pardon for selling part and also selling
the Senate seed, which made up lot of sense.

Speaker 13 (57:00):
Right's the same thing.

Speaker 1 (57:03):
That's pretty funny. I will tell you this. Rizzioli is
in studio. I have a good Blgoyevitch story. Then I'm
gonna tell you off ther folks. It's not the kind
of thing I can't share. It's not one of those stories.
It's just a long story about me interacting with him
here on a TV show and us exchanging a couple
of dirty jokes, one of which, all right, if you
want to hear it, I told the dirty joke on
the Kennedy Saves the World podcast yesterday, So if you

(57:24):
want to give Kennedy some downloads and watch me pedal
the smut. But it's it's the type of street joke
that I need to tell without a guest. It would
complicate things to have you here. I'm trying to protect
your career. You appreciate that.

Speaker 14 (57:34):
No, You're always looking out for me here for sure,
very much.

Speaker 1 (57:37):
So let me give you a little more because I
love this. There's so much of this out there with
a lot of sound they're gonna do.

Speaker 13 (57:42):
Fatty Pritzer can you say fatty, is that fat streaming?

Speaker 1 (57:45):
Can you used? But no, it's actually people. If you
said fatty, you could go to hr you're supposed to
say land whale land. Yeah, because I'm kidding stick I have.

Speaker 14 (57:55):
But he went all that money in Vegas? How how
much did the Fay people get? Because that's what Vegas
right when he walked in, they must have freaked out.

Speaker 1 (58:03):
Man, that's funny. We're gonna break even a night best
case scenario. So the new thing right now, I love
this so much, poor Pritzker. The new thing is that
they're saying Trump's gonna run third term.

Speaker 5 (58:17):
He's not.

Speaker 1 (58:17):
Okay. Every time Trump has tried to like deport a criminal,
some appellate court judge at some town in New Hampshire,
you've never heard of issues an injunction.

Speaker 3 (58:25):
And he's got to fight to the Supreme Court.

Speaker 1 (58:27):
Just do that. The idea that they're just gonna let
him rip up the constitution, write an amendment and go
third term without any legal pushback. And of course the
Supreme Court isn't gonna let him run for a third
term just the same. So there's no version of this
that ends with him running for a third term. But
you know how like the attack, the concern, like the collective,
like we went from no Kingston now it's back to
third term is the new thing. So we have a

(58:49):
lot of sound, as you do on your radio show
about third term. Here is the view was talking about
third term, that's the thing. And I have this other one.
Oh well, this is a Pritzker Nicole Wallace mont forget that.
Let me do you that.

Speaker 3 (59:02):
I can't.

Speaker 14 (59:02):
I can't do another one montage an hour.

Speaker 1 (59:05):
All right, So here is Trump first and foremost, and
I want The reason I'm playing this first is because
this happens before the view discusses it. So Steve Bannon
had floated an idea that Trump could technically run a
third time as vpay So someone's going to be at
the top of the ticket. We're going to vote for
that guy to kick him out and make Trump the president,
which sounds already a little far fetched, which means it'll
probably happens against the twelfth Amendment. Just stick with me, okay,

(59:29):
But Trump says, no, I wouldn't do that. It's too cute.
I don't think they would like it. Let me just
have you hear that as an audience clip, thirty one.

Speaker 3 (59:35):
Theory on how you you might try to serve third
term because that you could bruy this.

Speaker 5 (59:39):
The vice president.

Speaker 7 (59:40):
Yeah, i'd be allowed to do that.

Speaker 3 (59:42):
The council because position, you'd be allowed.

Speaker 4 (59:47):
To do that.

Speaker 5 (59:47):
But I wouldn't. I wouldn't.

Speaker 4 (59:49):
I think it's it's too cute.

Speaker 7 (59:51):
Yeah, I wouldn't do that up because it's too cute.

Speaker 5 (59:53):
I think that people wouldn't like that. It's too cute.

Speaker 3 (59:56):
It's not it wouldn't be right.

Speaker 1 (59:57):
That's Trump saying he wouldn't run as vice president and
he thinks it's too cute, that people wouldn't like it
wouldn't be right. And as you can hear, it's obviously
some challenging audio because they were interviewing him in a
tanning bed and you know, the bulbs and the heat,
it's kind of loud. He's got the goggles on. He
doesn't even knows are getting zat. It doesn't necessarily see
the mic. He's talking into one of angry guys like.

Speaker 17 (01:00:18):
That's not true.

Speaker 3 (01:00:19):
It was on Air Force one. How dare this Rhino?

Speaker 1 (01:00:22):
Mock? Tr Sojia Anger and talk radio CDs. So there's
Trump saying he wouldn't do it, I wouldn't do it. Ready,
set here comes the view clip twenty five.

Speaker 18 (01:00:33):
You know who told us he was going to be
a dictator on day one, and damn if he isn't
a dictator.

Speaker 3 (01:00:40):
He got back into.

Speaker 10 (01:00:42):
Office and his former chief strategist Steve ben and just
added more fuel to the file.

Speaker 12 (01:00:48):
And I feel crazy because I coul like a conspiracy
theorist talking about this. I asked Justice Sodamoor when she
was here, and people were like, Oh, that's so wild.

Speaker 3 (01:00:56):
But here's the thing.

Speaker 12 (01:00:57):
This is a person who's been right before saying it.
The President and self isn't ruling it out.

Speaker 10 (01:01:01):
Now.

Speaker 12 (01:01:01):
What I would say is this, there's two ways to
do it, But I think he's going to go for
the third way, which isn't technically the way you would
do it. You would either need a super majority in
Congress to pass a change to the Constitution, or you
would need two thirds of states calling for a constitutional
convention to consider making a mistake it. I sort of
think that he's going to try to challenge it through

(01:01:22):
the courts on the grounds that it wouldn't be consecutive
terms and so to kind of parse the language within
the Constitution to say that he actually could do this.

Speaker 3 (01:01:31):
Life is hard, but it's harder when you're stoopid. And
the point is this isn't happening.

Speaker 14 (01:01:38):
You know some and I have an observation on this, Jimmy.
For years, they've been saying he's a dictator. He's a dictator,
and now they're worried about him running for a third term.

Speaker 13 (01:01:48):
Do you notice that?

Speaker 14 (01:01:50):
And they're worried about they're away screaming about democracy is
under threat and they're worried about a democracy electing him.

Speaker 5 (01:01:57):
For a third term.

Speaker 1 (01:01:57):
Do you know you didn't see a lot of Just
to get it out there, folks, you know, when you're
watching all that harrowing, really heartbreaking footage from the Holocaust,
the one thing you don't see in the background are
Hitler forty nine bumper stickers. They're not running for office
if they are addicted. First of all, he's a dictator,
you're not on TV talking about him right now. You know,
if he's a king, you don't rally four hundred thousand

(01:02:19):
people and they're laid hundreds to the quad in DC
to march against it. You know what I'm saying, And
you know that, and I know that but that's the
pretend element to what they're doing. And I think what
it's going to take to fix the Democrat Party, if
we're going to be substantive, is they just need like
one dude to show up and be like, Hey, what
if what if we actually like talked about issues, not
pretend issues like a king or a third term, but

(01:02:41):
if we actually you know, I know they like to
talk about groceries and it's like, oh, well, mom, donnid
they talk about affordability, but he's not talking about an actual,
real solution. He's saying, well, I want to give everything away,
and if you don't like it, it's because you're an islamophobe,
which is not a real conversation. So couldn't the Technically
they've created such a huge opening for like a real guy,
not like an but like a real like I Newsom
took the real approach, But I don't know that he's

(01:03:04):
capable of that.

Speaker 14 (01:03:05):
We you think, well, I think your point about Mandomi
talking about affordability is why Mandami is winning because he
actually was talking about affordability, which is an actual thing
that people care about. Uh, there's no one I know
and you and I talk to people in our lives
all the time, because part of being a good talk
show host is to listen. Right, does anyone really honestly
come up to you with the grocer and be like,
I don't know, man, I can't take this king. Are

(01:03:28):
they worried about bat or a? They worried about the
price of beef? Like that's I mean, this is this
is again where your point about what they used to
call him kitchen table issues?

Speaker 1 (01:03:35):
Right?

Speaker 14 (01:03:36):
Who's sitting around the kitchen table worried that Trump's gonna
run for a third term And if he does run
for a third term, he may lose, which also then
doesn't make him addictive if he was allowed, And I
don't think you would be. I think it's against constution.
I don't think he's going to I think he's trolling.
He loves to troll them. It's like cating it for him.
I think when he gets bored, like when we're bored,
we do all kinds of crazy things we should never
say on the air when we're just you know, dulling downtime.

Speaker 13 (01:03:56):
When he's bored, he goes, let me just troll.

Speaker 14 (01:03:58):
And get on so and true social and just I'm
gonna run for a third term, and then immediately they.

Speaker 3 (01:04:02):
All react like it's not president dunehell.

Speaker 1 (01:04:05):
I'm like, I don't know, was it presidential to wheel
of the last guy around on a handtruck like he
was at an elect so didn't want him sniff.

Speaker 3 (01:04:11):
At Anybody.

Speaker 13 (01:04:13):
Sent it a nice suit.

Speaker 1 (01:04:16):
So we're talking to Ritzy only he may or may
not have television later today. Honestly, there was a Fox
News alerts because Israel is apparently fed up with a moss.
I think they'll still drive me home if you don't
appear on the channel. Does the car service still hold?

Speaker 3 (01:04:33):
I don't know. That's just so much funnier to me.

Speaker 1 (01:04:37):
That would be funny if I didn't realize at the time,
but half of my midday taxi fares were people who
got bumped from.

Speaker 14 (01:04:44):
Hey, as a guy who drove a cab, can I
ask you. I get in the car yesterday morning to
do the America newstation what was it newsroom with you?
And I threw my newspaper and my binder and my
cup of coffee, so it got all over his his seats.
Oh god, coffee all over all over my suit. I
had a run and grab a new suit, a whole thing.

Speaker 3 (01:05:02):
She didn't do this on purpose, No, I just I
just was.

Speaker 14 (01:05:04):
I was in a way here and I just threw it,
you know, like that accidentally. And the driver's a good guy, Ruben,
He's driven me a bunch of times. You got a
tip after that?

Speaker 1 (01:05:12):
Right? The idea that you're even asking this on a
public broadcast, He's like, so he was, he had his
kid with him. I put a cigarette out on the kid.
I threw up on him, and then I went potty
in the backseat. I mean, do you tip and that
situe it now? Actually you don't? In that's is you
run for your life. This man is fed up. He's
been in traffic all day. That's that's a Can I

(01:05:33):
take a funny story about a relationship I had with
another TV network? This is crazy. So in the infancy
of my comedy career, before I had ever my first
Fox appearance, I was on Kennedy's Fox Business Shows. First
time I was on TV here, but I was on
a couple of the other local networks as a comedian.
When I say, maybe five times in my life where
they brought you in is like, let's get a comics

(01:05:54):
take on something or other and there was a guy
who had driven me like four times in a row,
whose attitude had gotten you know, progressively worse about society,
like literally saying things to me in traffic, like when
there's a lot of people in this town. Could you
imagine a bomb went on? And I was like whoa.
And I started writing in my stand up journal. You

(01:06:15):
know about this one dude who seems a little off
and everybody has a friend that if he killed everybody,
you wouldn't be surprised. So I'm writing all these jokes.
I'm mentioning him by name. One night, after a TV hit,
I left my book.

Speaker 3 (01:06:26):
In his car.

Speaker 1 (01:06:28):
In his car I got home, I realized that I
was like, my god, and I had the guy's number,
so I didn't call him to say I had left it.
This is a crazy story till I got to his
garage just to minimize the window through which he could
have that book to go through it if he didn't
see me leave it there. And I showed up to
the garage, I called him. I went in. I found

(01:06:50):
my book. Thankfully, it was under his seat, which means
I probably left it on the floor and he didn't
see it. And I did tip him a lot of
like don't kill me money and I've never done a
hit on that network. Again, that's a true story. That's
a crazy story, right. It was like a fledgling cable
news network that had really nice graphics. It's not one
of the ones we've heard of. I'm not non naming names,
like I'll think about it during the next break and
out and out. The experience could had nothing to do

(01:07:11):
with the channel, but it was jokes about you know,
everybody has that one friend. You know, if you turned
on the news you saw that guy pantless on the
top of a highway overpass, you'd be like, yeah, probably Vinnie.

Speaker 5 (01:07:21):
You know what I mean?

Speaker 1 (01:07:22):
Well, I basically wrote probably the probably Vinnie joke and
left it in Vinnie's car. And do you have to
tip in that situation?

Speaker 13 (01:07:28):
The answer is yes, good to know, Yeah, Richli is good.

Speaker 1 (01:07:31):
We're gonna go through more tipping etiquette stories, which is
funny because most of the women in his life work
on tips. I mean, come on, I'm kidding. Stop at
bridget We're back after this. Jimmy Phila, He's been America's
most favorite comedian. There it is Fox Across America with
Tim Yukala rich Zioli in the house for the full hour,
Larry King style. We're both wearing suspenders. Mikey just gave

(01:07:53):
us viagra.

Speaker 3 (01:07:53):
Who knows where this is gonna go?

Speaker 13 (01:07:55):
For having another kid?

Speaker 1 (01:07:56):
Who knows where this is gonna go? Now, wh're Chattwood
ritzily about his little state of the Union. Uh? He
of course our lead in on w PHT. So the
guy just did you know a big bundle of radio
And we're like, he's not done yet. Do you know
when he eats the old ninety six er in the
great outdoors, the only thought he was done. He's like, no,
you got to come by for the ten ounce as
a grizzle and fat that we call fox across America.

Speaker 3 (01:08:18):
You gotta eat the grizzly. He's not done yet.

Speaker 1 (01:08:22):
Yeah, good job, justin If he finishes it, can you
throwing some T shirts and Frisbees for the kids. So
it's he only makes it through the hour, all the
kids get some T shirts and some Frisbees.

Speaker 6 (01:08:34):
There you go.

Speaker 1 (01:08:34):
Well, yeah, but as we're having this conversation, I don't
know why I'm playing kid noise.

Speaker 13 (01:08:39):
Were you gonna play another You're not gonna play another
montage right now.

Speaker 3 (01:08:42):
But I brought up food. God, why do you have no?

Speaker 14 (01:08:44):
I was just I was just wondering if we because
I feel like we've been teasing Britzker.

Speaker 13 (01:08:48):
But I don't know if there's anything to say about
the guy. No, who do you think wins? If it's
him versus.

Speaker 3 (01:08:52):
Nuisan Ooh, him versus Newsome?

Speaker 1 (01:08:55):
For me too, rich white? I know, right is true,
You're right about that. I mean, honestly, I think Newsom
is better at being a sociopath than Pritzker is, totally,
and that's why I like Newsom. If if the Democrats
did in twenty twenty eight what they did in twenty twenty,
rememberhen they're like, well only a woman could be a

(01:09:16):
black woman could be vice president, Newsom would transition. Like
if the Democrat Party in twenty twenty six was like,
we need a female president. There's the only way we're
nominating anyone is if it's a female, Newsom would transition
straight up.

Speaker 3 (01:09:28):
He is that big of a social fiena. Yeah, he.

Speaker 1 (01:09:31):
Jef Eden Newsom. No, here's some Christopher Koons all of
these clips make in the rounds about the Democrats. Is
a nine second clip that tells you everything you need
to know about the shutdown in politics and the faux
concern for the working man. Here it is Republicans control
the House, the Senate, and the White House. Frankly, this
is our only moment of leverage. Wo a very unpleasant

(01:09:53):
tool to use.

Speaker 3 (01:09:54):
Did you hear that?

Speaker 5 (01:09:55):
Frank guy?

Speaker 3 (01:09:56):
I know it's not okay, you know, but it's all
we got.

Speaker 13 (01:09:58):
It's all we got is maybe see planes falling out
of the sky.

Speaker 1 (01:10:01):
I mean, holy cow. Now the Republicans don't care about
the little guy. We do that being said little guy,
No air traffic controllers'd.

Speaker 13 (01:10:09):
Be you say, little guy, a plane may fall on
your head.

Speaker 3 (01:10:11):
Just duck. Let me give you another one.

Speaker 1 (01:10:15):
I know you've heard the Kathy Clark one. Did you
play on your show the Chris Murphy one from Connecticut?

Speaker 6 (01:10:19):
No?

Speaker 3 (01:10:20):
Okay?

Speaker 1 (01:10:20):
He was asked on State of the Union of letting
Americans go hungry? Is a good trade off? Basically says yes,
this is clip seven.

Speaker 18 (01:10:27):
Deed, this is happening because Democrats have not agreed to
vote to fund the government without the Republicans making concessions
to seriously change healthcare policy.

Speaker 3 (01:10:38):
So is this a trade off?

Speaker 18 (01:10:39):
You're willing to make and continue to make, letting some
Americans go hungry until these Obamacare subsidies get extended.

Speaker 11 (01:10:47):
Well, let's be clear, we're shut down right now because
Republicans are refusing to even talk to Democrats about a
bipartisan budget bill. As you know, the reason that we
didn't shut down for four year when Joe Biden was president,
it was because Democrats negotiated with Republicans in every single
one of those short term or long term funding bills
included both Democratic and Republican priorities.

Speaker 3 (01:11:10):
Oh, don't change the subject, Just on so the.

Speaker 7 (01:11:15):
How he did it now, because he knows.

Speaker 1 (01:11:19):
And that's why, like I haven't even covered it to
great lengths on the show because like they're not even
taking it seriously.

Speaker 13 (01:11:25):
That's gonna go on, go on and go on.

Speaker 1 (01:11:27):
They're hanging out at a swim up bar this weekend
being like the American people. You know, the American people
would like another Pina colada for the congresswoman. So if
you could send that our way. It's all a scam Rizioli.
He's all over your TV.

Speaker 3 (01:11:40):
Wish him walk.

Speaker 2 (01:11:44):
From Embry where USA. It's spots across America with Jimmy
Baylor boom.

Speaker 1 (01:11:50):
Back in Action, third and final hour of Fox Across
America spontsored by the fine folks at Previgen.

Speaker 3 (01:11:55):
Previgen of course for your brain.

Speaker 1 (01:11:58):
And if you're covering politics day and day out like
I am, sometimes you feel like you might be the
only one left with a brain. I mean, it is
a mess out there on these streets. But we're gonna
get out the radio mop clean it up. Eight at
eight seven and eight nine to nine one zero. Caroline Sunshine.
She is a former Trump twenty twenty four campaign worker.

(01:12:19):
She is a regular here on the Fox Channel. If
you see her on Fox News, Fox Business. Her and
I were on Larry Kudlow together last week. We had
a great time talking about the NBA betting scandal, which,
by the way, has kind of disappeared from the news.

Speaker 4 (01:12:31):
What the wide wide worldless sports isn't going on here?

Speaker 1 (01:12:34):
And I will tell you what's going on in this hour.
I said this last week. I even said this on
Jesse water Show. I said, Yo, this NBA scandal is
the biggest story in the world, but it's gonna be
like the Coldplay kiss cam. It was like the only
thing anyone on earth talked about for forty eight hours
and then we forgot it. Ever happened. The difference to
the Coldplay kiss cam is you eventually run out of

(01:12:54):
memes to post and Coldplay jokes to tell. In this instance,
there's another reason for that story to leave the news.

Speaker 2 (01:13:01):
Money money, money, money, money, money, money.

Speaker 1 (01:13:03):
There is a lot of money involved, and the American
people believing that our sports have been corrupted, that our
propossessions have been proposition bets have been fixed, becomes a
major liability for every major network that carries these sports
and banks on not only the integrity of the games,

(01:13:25):
but the integrity of the bets.

Speaker 5 (01:13:28):
Ah, you have a good man.

Speaker 1 (01:13:30):
They don't want a story on ESPN all day about
how some of the bets were fixed while they're advertising
their online gambling site at the bottom of the screen. Okay,
we covered this on Fox New Saturday night. This weekend,
ESPN is reporting on a breaking scandal with a bet
ESPN add at the bottom of the screen. Imagine you
went to an intervention and the guy leading it smelled

(01:13:52):
like Scotch and had the hiccups. You might be like,
they really invested in this intervention, and the answer is no,
ESPN is not none. Of the major sports leagues are
They got in bed with gambling, knowing full well that
they were going to have to accept a lot of
indignities to the sport. But as long as the bottom line,
you know, the envelopes were full, they could make it

(01:14:15):
all work paying in cash. And that story is a
wall and it involves NBA Hall of Famers, coaches, players
for crime, families for NBA teams. Has anyone heard anything
about it anywhere on TV today? Answer would be no,
And it's not even like the news is that juicy?

(01:14:37):
So you realize there is a way, you know, for
money to get its its way. That's basically what it
comes down to. Big money really does drive a lot
of things. You know, the old saying if it don't
make dollars, it don't make sense. Well, it don't make
dollars to sit here and go well they were fixing bets, okay,
which means it don't make sense to spend all day
reporting on it. Is it going to come back up

(01:14:59):
in the news. Yeah, they are probably more players and
celebrities involved. Yeah, but is everybody going to talk about
it in the meantime? No, we might on this show.
The government's gonna jump all over your head, Jimbo.

Speaker 3 (01:15:10):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:15:11):
I think the government's the one breaking up the racket.
So I think we're just gonna keep on chatting as
new information makes it this way.

Speaker 3 (01:15:17):
You got some big testicles to pull this off.

Speaker 1 (01:15:20):
Broke. A lot of people feel that way. But as
we get underway in this hour, not even talking so
much about the NBA, Okay, we're just talking about the
other form of corrupt gambling politics.

Speaker 3 (01:15:32):
The stock market.

Speaker 1 (01:15:33):
Mikey Cheryl, who's running to be the governor of New Jersey,
was asked on Charlemagne's podcast if she made seven million
dollars trading stocks, and she said, I don't know, she's
not real smart. Now, she has since amended that answer
to say, well, my husband trades the stocks, and you know,
I wouldn't be paying attention on a day in a
day on batious, But it turns out we did make

(01:15:54):
some money, and blah blah blah blah blah. This is
the biggest schmuck I've ever met ever. Okay, but understand,
I mean that's a big part of our politics. The
reason I get on the show and I take a
lot of shot at Republicans is. I want everybody listening
to understand that politics is not you against your Democrat buddy.
Politics is voters against governments. That's what real politics are

(01:16:15):
supposed to be in this country. It's supposed to be
about us, the citizens who pay for the people to
go to Washington and do us dirty to not get
that get away with not enacting legislation that's beneficial to us.
But line times out of ten seems like it represents
the interest of their lobbyists more than it does the
people who actually send them to power.

Speaker 3 (01:16:35):
This is politics as usual.

Speaker 1 (01:16:36):
That's why Mom Donnie has a good shot at even winning.
Do you know much money financed and subsidized zor on
Mom Donnie's campaign, And it ain't grassroots. It ain't little
poor New Yorkers sending them five dollars checks and twenty
dollars checks and holding lemonade sales.

Speaker 5 (01:16:51):
They're not doing that.

Speaker 1 (01:16:53):
Ninety percent of the money comes from political action groups
outside the state of New York. So Mom Donnie, which
has risen took and all kinds of social media prominence
with the help of outsiders, will now become the face
of a city where the people left with the bill
are the insiders, meaning the folks who actually live here.
A lot of the Liberals voting for Mom Donnie. You

(01:17:14):
don't even live here. They're registered to vote here, but
they own houses in the Hampton's and Martha's Vineyard and
everything else. And they'll show up next week just to
stick it to Republicans and vote for Mom Donnie. But
at the end of the day, they're actually sticking into
the city that they purportedly care about. That headless the
world Com'm doing. I'm gonna give you some Mom Donnie audio. Okay,

(01:17:35):
this is not good audio. This is him In September
of twenty twenty three, more of the anti semitic rhetoric.
Mom Donnie flat out saying, Okay, the NYPD is out there,
you know, trampling people. And you understand, if the NYPD
is trampling you, it's not just the NYPD, it's the IDF,
it's the Jews.

Speaker 16 (01:17:55):
It's people with the dirty mind that think like that.

Speaker 1 (01:17:58):
Here he is Clip three.

Speaker 4 (01:18:00):
For anyone to care about these issues, we have to
make the.

Speaker 10 (01:18:07):
We have to make clear that when the food of
the mips is on your neck, it's been laced by
the ideas you're in a country where those connections abound, especially.

Speaker 5 (01:18:20):
In New York City.

Speaker 10 (01:18:21):
You have so many opportunities to make clear the ways
in which that's struggle over there is tied to capital's
interests over here.

Speaker 3 (01:18:30):
Wow, you're looney.

Speaker 1 (01:18:32):
I mean, seriously, so many ways to make clear that
the struggle over there in Israel is tied to capital's
interest over here. I mean, the NYPD behaves a certain
way because financial interest in Israel want them to do
that here in New York.

Speaker 3 (01:18:50):
I mean, dude, I'm second thought.

Speaker 1 (01:18:52):
Oh, but here is the reality. Okay. A lot of
Democrats don't agree with his socialist principles. A lot of Democrats,
to be clear, don't hate Jews. They don't. Does a
significant percentage of the Democrat Party hate Jews? Yes, there's
a reason Josh Shapiro wasn't the VP under Kamala. She
flat out admits it in her book. Okay, they were
worried about losing the swing state of Dearborn of Michigan

(01:19:15):
because of the raging anti Semitic population in Dearborn, Michigan.
They didn't want to lose Michigan over the people in
Dearborn who hate the Jews. You'd want to put a
Jew on the ticket. But lo and behold, Josh Shapiro
was a pretty popular governor of Pennsylvania at the time.
Would have been a much better alternative to Tim Waltz,
who just you know, he is the arm movement of
an inflatable guy outside a car wash, weird Richard Simmons impersonator.

(01:19:39):
And you know, you understand. Tim Waltz was the guy
who burst onto the scene and said JD. Vance made
love to his couch. What the hell did you? You say,
I don't know, But that would only make JD. Vance
more historic. He'd be our first presidential candidate who was bisectional.
Stole that one from my TV show. But as we say,
you're having this conversation, you dig that in politics oron

(01:20:00):
mom Donnie is about to become the face of the
Democratic Party if he wins at a national level, which
means they will start to mimic mimic this practice of
getting out there and saying America is a racist hellhole
and it's full of Islamophobes. This is the problem they have. Okay,
this is real, and I'm telling you this. I understand
politics on a level no one covering it does. And

(01:20:23):
the reason being is I'm not as smart as them.
I'm not saying that to be self deprecating. The people
who cover this for a living day in and day
out can tell you which county voted what way in
twenty twenty four, in twenty twenty and how that'll change
based on the shifting demographics and the key issues affecting
the local races.

Speaker 3 (01:20:38):
That stuff really really matters.

Speaker 1 (01:20:41):
But what I talk to you about is large messaging campaigns,
is the prevailing sentiments that shape a particular election. The
Democrats have chosen to make Zoron Mam Donnie's closing argument
about Islamophobia a new form of racism to accuse the
entire country of why are they doing that, Jimbo, It's

(01:21:01):
because saying where the clan isn't working anymore. Okay, That's
why this is the new frontier of civil rights. They
tried the everybody hates black people thing, only to watch
Black Americans vote for Trump in record numbers. They tried
to do the well trans people are under attack, only

(01:21:23):
to hear people laugh at them and go, no, they're not.
Nobody cares if your trends. We're not trying to erase you.
You want to play sports. We just want you to
play in your own division. Okay, you want to go
to the bathroom, use the one assigned to your biologue
to you at birth. We don't want sex offenders in
women's rooms like they're running on in New Hampshire. So
what they've realized is that one isn't moving the needle.
The trans issue is an eighty twenty issue for Republicans.

(01:21:44):
Eighty percent of Americans believe that biological men should not
be competing in women's sports. Eighty percent of Republicans excuse me,
of the country of the electorate, eighty percent of the
electorate believes biological men shouldn't be in the women's room. Okay,
so the Democrats can't run on. We'll protect the trans
agenda because everybody's like, why just let the trans people

(01:22:04):
be trans? Okay, if you're eighteen, do anything you want
to your body. It's a free country, okay, and go
enjoy your life. You plur a bassoon amount of many one.
No one bought the idea that this was a civil
rights frontier. No one bought the idea that Black America's
freedom is on the ballot. Okay, because a lot of
prominent Black Americans mock the Democrat Party for failing to

(01:22:26):
meet the moment when it comes to looking out for
black Americans.

Speaker 3 (01:22:29):
How many times have you heard this Charles Barkley clip
on my show.

Speaker 21 (01:22:32):
The reason I think the Democratic Party missed a Biden
president Biden is losing black voss.

Speaker 5 (01:22:38):
They only care about black people every four years.

Speaker 1 (01:22:41):
Wow, that's Charles Barkley saying Democrats only care about black
people every four years.

Speaker 5 (01:22:48):
I agree with that.

Speaker 1 (01:22:49):
So the problem is black people know that. You know,
the schools in this country are failing. Seventy percent of
our high school kids that go to inner city schools
cannot read at the level of their grade. Okay, so
they've failed black kids and minority kids, Latino kids, all
kinds of minorities that go to inner city schools. And yeah,
a lot of white kids just the same. But the
point is those schools are failing, and the common denominator

(01:23:11):
amongst a lot of minorities is they don't have the
money to go to private school. So when the Democrats
get in the way of something like school choice, they're
ostensibly trapping minority families and failing schools. They don't care. Okay,
just vote for us because the other guys are racist
against minorities. That worked for a really long time. But
in this last election, when people looked at what we

(01:23:32):
were told was a battle for the soul of our nation,
you gotta vote Democrat. Do you have a problem figuring
out whether you're pre may or Trump and you ain't black?
But when Black America saw Biden get elected, only to
watch their unemployment rate go up, their inflation rate go up,
their murder rate go up, their screw proficiency rate go down,
they said, Wow, what do we have to vote?

Speaker 3 (01:23:52):
What do we have to show for voting Democrat?

Speaker 1 (01:23:54):
And it started a conversation that made it possible for
Trump to run on his record. Trump did not get
a wrect level of Black voters by going, Hey, black people,
that's what the Democrats do. Trump just catered to humanity
instead of identity. Okay it No one's identity is immune
from humanity, okay, And no one's identity has a monopoly
on humanity. What I mean by humanity is economy. The economy, Hey,

(01:24:18):
we're going to make more money, We're going to cut
your taxes, We're gonna shrink the size of the government.
We're not going to subsidize all these dopey things on
the other side of the world that cost you more
money and drive up inflation, because government spending is the
root cause of inflation. We're not going to do that.
It's just a rising tide that lifts all boats. If
you're a human being, hey, no more criminals on our streets.
We're going to deport the murderers and rapists.

Speaker 3 (01:24:38):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (01:24:38):
There is not a single solitary race that holds the
monopoly on benefiting from that issue. We're all safer as
a result of it. Okay, So when Trump goes out
there and caters to humanity and a rising tide that
lifts all boats, it becomes appealing to people because what
democrats in the era of identity politics, for god is,
we're all the same. Like we might look different, but

(01:24:59):
we're all the same. You want to make money, you
want to eat food, you want to have a place
to live, you want to get a little something something
in the sack at the end of the night.

Speaker 3 (01:25:07):
Oh yes, I've read about that in the Bible.

Speaker 1 (01:25:10):
But none of that is exclusive to any individual race.
That's the point. And once the conversation began about substantive
issues like delivering for these minority communities. It made it
really easy for Trump to start to win record levels
of votes. Okay, So, knowing that they've lost their grip
on the minority vote and the whole America is really

(01:25:30):
systemically racist and we're just the giant klu Klux clan rally,
the Democrats embracing Mam Donnie are pivoting to the new
form of racism. Well, it's actually just aslamophobia what you
didn't realize about America. Don't forget that ant that he
imagined and made up after September eleventh. Wasn't comfortable on
the subway because she was Muslim. Well, everybody else wasn't
comfortable on the subway because a bunch of Muslims killed

(01:25:52):
three thousand New Yorkers. And again we're not making it
about the religion. It's about the terrorist acts. But Mam
Donnie's the kind of God who's trying to use pretend
institutionalized racism as a justification for putting a Jew hating
racist in charge of New York City. Okay, and is
it gonna work? Yeah, I actually think it's gonna which

(01:26:14):
isn't good. There are checks on his power okay, and
that's the good news.

Speaker 3 (01:26:18):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (01:26:19):
The bad news is if it works, other people are
gonna try to mimic it going forward. But the hard
lesson they're gonna learn in the long run is the
same lesson America learned in the twenty twenty four election.
You can only call us racist so long before we
kind of tune you out and focus on the real issues.
Race is not where the line is drawn. Is God's

(01:26:39):
side and the other side.

Speaker 5 (01:26:42):
He's the host.

Speaker 3 (01:26:43):
You shouldn't get too close.

Speaker 1 (01:26:45):
To a lot of things about me.

Speaker 3 (01:26:46):
You don't know anything about that.

Speaker 1 (01:26:48):
Things you wouldn't understand, things he couldn't understand. There it
is Fox Across America with Jimmy Thaler. We're gonna be
talking to Caroline Sunshine in the next segment. Right now,
we were having some you and me talk about Mom Donnie.
The one report is that the polymarket gambling site odds
are plunging, with the hot rumor being that outside interests
might have driven them up by placing a lot of

(01:27:10):
wagers on Mom Donnie and creating a sentiment that it
was inevitable that he would win the next election.

Speaker 3 (01:27:18):
Now I don't know what to believe.

Speaker 1 (01:27:19):
Traditionally the betting markets have been very accurate, but it
would make sense to me that you could use them
to manipulate sentiment, because that's what they do with the
polls a lot of times when a poll comes out,
like say last week, we had this poll that was like, well,
Curtis Sleeve when he needs to drop out of the
race because if he does, Andrew Como has a shot
at winning.

Speaker 3 (01:27:37):
And you go, oh, everybody gets Sleeve out of here.

Speaker 1 (01:27:39):
But then you come to find out what that the
poll was paid for by the people supporting hansy Andy
Cuomo Andy Andy, and it turns out that poll might
not be reliable. Then there's a poll that comes out
over the weekend. I think Rudy Giuliani posted it. He
was like, you know, if Como gets out of the race,
Slava could win this thing. But then you find out

(01:28:00):
that Mayor Giuliani might have an interest in sla Wa
winning this thing. So it's hard to take it at
face value. But if there's a third effort at manipulation, yes,
then that might be Mom Donnie and people betting the
gambling markets. That being said, a lot of the polling
and a broad swath of the polling shows Mam Donnie
winning this thing pretty easily. So my guess is I
believe he's going to win. I think most people I

(01:28:21):
know do at this point. What the resolute hope is
between now an election day, the surgeon early voting of
senior citizens, specifically senior citizens, the most relying, voting, reliable
voting block we have in this country. They are apparently
turning out in big numbers in New York City's early voting.
Now the problem remains, and Bill Hemmer talked about this
earlier on the show. If you missed it, you can
get the podcast at Foxcross America dot com. We don't

(01:28:45):
know who these seniors are. We know there's an early
voting turnout for seniors, but are they these seniors that
moved here from other countries and don't like the idea
that New York might closely resemble the type of thing
it fled. Or are they the self hating white seniors
who showed up to the No King's protest and wasted
a Saturday pretending we had a king in Washington, DC

(01:29:06):
when we don't have anything of the sort. And the
truth is we're not gonna know that till we start
to get some exit polling on election night, so it's
really fascinating stuff. But this whole idea that Mom Donnie's
closing message is about racism and it's lamophobia and how
he's gonna make New York a place where listen, New

(01:29:29):
York has every race known to ma'am, it's the most
diverse place in the world. So this seems like a
bit of a reach by a guy like Zora mom dunk.

Speaker 3 (01:29:38):
Last night. Well, you're in luck.

Speaker 1 (01:29:40):
Mikey has booked a major California baseball fan. Unfortunately she
roots for the Angels always. This is like the movie
twenty seven. Dresses kind of a bridesmaid in this world series,
but you're America's bride. When it comes to the media,
they all love you. Caroline Sunshine in the house and
the crowd goes wild. Hay girl, how you doing. You
want to have a funny laugh about Larry Lower our buddy.

(01:30:00):
This is the last time I saw you. We have
big NBA scandal breaks last Thursday. Caroline and I go
on Cudlow to talk about it. Friday, he pulls me
into his office and he goes, hey, I want to
thank you guys for coming by talking about that yesterday.
He's like, you know, I've dealt with a lot of
addiction in my life, drugs, everything like that. He says,
I've never heard an addict talk about their vice the

(01:30:21):
way you did. And I go, well, I don't go
to Gamble's anonymous, and he goes, well, maybe you should.

Speaker 3 (01:30:26):
It's like, okay, Larry, let me get out of here.

Speaker 1 (01:30:28):
I'm gonna go to a meeting. But I feel like
we gambled in one. We did good TV together. Give
us credit for that. Amen, thank you, all right, thank you?
Because I know the hater I'm kidding. There's no haters.
They're very supportive on the Cudlow Show. They are the best.

Speaker 16 (01:30:39):
But it's great to say you gambling is the only
addiction I've never had.

Speaker 1 (01:30:43):
I said, he said, He said that on the Area.
He says, Cambling's the only addiction I've never had. I
love that about Cudlow.

Speaker 3 (01:30:48):
He's the best.

Speaker 1 (01:30:48):
He does real TV because he just asked you a
question gets out of the way, Yeah, and you can
actually just talk. You know. Well, that's my favorite thing
about radio too, is we have room right now. Most
TV hits are like, what do you have? Why do
you have it. Here's a picture of that guy coming
up next, here's a story underneath.

Speaker 3 (01:31:02):
Get out of here.

Speaker 13 (01:31:02):
Yes, that's what I was saying.

Speaker 21 (01:31:04):
I feel like so many viewers don't see the backside
of like in your set, it's cool, it's more of
the hang like you're saying, it's more, it's more real.
People don't see the backside of of TV, and like
it sometimes feels very yeah to your point, Yes.

Speaker 1 (01:31:20):
Robbing an old cosmic. Get in there with the garbage bag,
fill it up with some lipstick, and get out of.

Speaker 16 (01:31:24):
There, which, by the way, is crazy.

Speaker 21 (01:31:26):
Like I mean I was telling you, I'm you know,
in l A, and it came out to New York
and like just going into a CVS here, like I
thought LA was bad, but you go into a CVS.

Speaker 16 (01:31:34):
You cannot buy toothpaste.

Speaker 21 (01:31:35):
In this city without having to have some You feel
like a kindergartener, right, you have to have somebody come unlock.

Speaker 16 (01:31:41):
The gate and say there's your toothpaste, Like it's that
is not normal.

Speaker 1 (01:31:45):
Yeah, And so the guy you have to flag down
a guy you're like, I want.

Speaker 16 (01:31:48):
To buy toothpaste, and he's miserable and.

Speaker 1 (01:31:51):
He's got to grab a key and unlock the toothpaste,
and then he's got to unlock toothpaste. He's gonna hand
you the toothpaste and then you steal it.

Speaker 21 (01:31:59):
Like high, You're just made to feel awful for being
there wanting to purchase anything. He's upset, like you have
to hit the little button first to pay guys aisle
seventeen assistants need it. You know.

Speaker 1 (01:32:11):
My favorite part about that is then some local politician
gets on TV goes, you know crime is down.

Speaker 14 (01:32:15):
Yeah, I know.

Speaker 1 (01:32:16):
Yeah, you can tell by the way we're barricading the cosmetics.

Speaker 21 (01:32:20):
Or it's the opposite where it's a guy like Mom
Donnie where he's like yeah, like what's what's wrong with it?

Speaker 16 (01:32:25):
Like he's not gonna do that's.

Speaker 21 (01:32:26):
The thing, right, it is like on his crime policies,
I'm thinking, like, does everybody just want to live in
a new normal where we're not being able to buy
a razor without having somebody unlock a glass case?

Speaker 16 (01:32:37):
Is like we just accept that. It's like, oh, yeah,
this is civilized society, now, this is how it is.

Speaker 1 (01:32:42):
Yeah, you never shop there with no impulse buying, right,
You just like see something on a shelf and get it.
You go there with a plan, you find the key operator.
It's so bananas, it's crazy. We're talking to Caroline Sunshine.
Here's mom Donnie on the Daily Show. I wanted to
play this. This is him kind of trying to make
sense of what he will and won't do. And he's saying,
you know, I've been accused of wanting to do like

(01:33:03):
things like defund the police. I mean, yeah, they didn't
like make that up. You know, Like he's tried to
claim that all of the attacks against him are rooted
in some form of Islamophobia. I mean, no, it's not
so much your religion so much as you've taken the
side of Islamic terrorists. That's a problem, you know what
I mean. Or you know, the defund the police thing
is his tweet. It's not our idea, but I just
want you to hear this. It's clip one.

Speaker 9 (01:33:24):
You know, I don't begrudge New Yorkers who are skeptical
because they've also lived through tens of millions of dollars
of commercials telling them to fear me.

Speaker 10 (01:33:34):
Right.

Speaker 9 (01:33:34):
You know, they have lived through waking up every morning
and seeing a photo of me and just feeling like,
oh my god, because the language that's written around me
is as if I am a threat to the city
that they love. And so when I meet with them,
just the mere fact that I don't strangle them within
thirty seconds often But and then I think it's it's
an opportunity where, you know, I both can tell them

(01:33:56):
the things that I will do and the things that
I won't do. Right, I will freeze the rent, I
won't defund the police. I will make buses fast free,
I won't decriminalize misdemeanors. I will deliver universal childcare. I
won't require everyone to eat halal food.

Speaker 1 (01:34:08):
And I think he might've gonna laugh at the end
of that. But the point is all of these things,
he's defending himself against our own positions, you know what
I mean, Like, I'm not going to defund the police,
all right, Well you tweeted that we should. So the
fact that we're like, hey, don't defund the police is
not us being Islamophobic or anything.

Speaker 3 (01:34:25):
You know, it's just anti the policy.

Speaker 21 (01:34:26):
Wouldn't you say, Oh yeah, same thing where he had
he apologized to the NYPD. ID get one of these
because while I'm here in New York, Because if mom
Donnie wins, like, you're.

Speaker 16 (01:34:37):
Not gonna be able to get these anymore.

Speaker 21 (01:34:39):
It's just gonna be f the police hoodies and wife
Peter Tank.

Speaker 1 (01:34:42):
It's you're not going to.

Speaker 3 (01:34:45):
You're gonna sell that on the black market.

Speaker 1 (01:34:46):
I love this.

Speaker 16 (01:34:47):
It's a relic, absolutely.

Speaker 21 (01:34:48):
But he like he looks into the camera and he
apologizes to the NYPD. But it's like, you literally said
that the NYPD.

Speaker 1 (01:34:58):
Is racist, anti queer.

Speaker 14 (01:35:00):
Yeah, it would be.

Speaker 16 (01:35:01):
Queer liberation to defund, to defund them, and they're racist.

Speaker 21 (01:35:04):
And it's like that's not really something that you can
kind of like easily apologize your one your way out of.

Speaker 16 (01:35:11):
But you know, he's he's an actor.

Speaker 21 (01:35:13):
I keep telling everybody yes and maybe finally Jimmy, you listen,
being a comedian, Like, the guy is an actor.

Speaker 16 (01:35:21):
He's a really good shtick.

Speaker 21 (01:35:23):
You can tell he practices it very well in the mirror.
He's been super well prepared by whoever it is on
his team, and he just knows how to you know,
I don't say this as somebody who's like, oh, mom,
Donnie's great.

Speaker 16 (01:35:36):
I'm just telling you from a technical.

Speaker 21 (01:35:38):
Aspect, how the guy is playing baseball and winning, why
he's going up to that and like not striking out.
No matter what everybody's saying about him, He's just he's
an actor.

Speaker 16 (01:35:48):
He's got a really good shtick.

Speaker 3 (01:35:50):
Caroline Sunshine is here.

Speaker 1 (01:35:52):
She says, if politics were America's got talent, Mom Donnie
can get to the next round phrasing the rent, though
might not get our talent in the next round.

Speaker 3 (01:36:01):
Price controls on grocery stores maybe.

Speaker 5 (01:36:04):
Not the ideal, you know what.

Speaker 21 (01:36:06):
It's crazy though, So I was out. I went to
Queen's yesterday because there's there's this voter group that I'm
interested in. It's people that voted for Trump in the
presidential but then they voted for Mom Donnie in the primary,
and yeah, really interesting. And I was asking them about this.
I was like, you know, hey, like what about his

(01:36:27):
policies on freezing the rent, or like his policies on crime,
or like you really want to you know, like decriminalized prostitution,
Like are you good with all these things? And everyone's
attitude their vibes were very much. I mean, yeah, I'm
kind of willing to risk it. It was like, I'm
just so fed up with the state of things in
New York City. This guy's kind of talking about affordability.

Speaker 16 (01:36:46):
That's my main thing. I'll risk it on everything else.

Speaker 21 (01:36:50):
And I just thought that was interesting because that's not
what you're hearing on television or not. But when you
go talk to people, people are like, I'm just so
done with nobody caring about me. Y'all risk it, I'll
try it, Which is so sad that we put voters
in the state.

Speaker 1 (01:37:02):
The political equivalent of the pregnant women taking tailand all,
like Trump said, don't.

Speaker 10 (01:37:08):
Do it all.

Speaker 2 (01:37:08):
You know, what did you see?

Speaker 16 (01:37:10):
He made time to tweet that again. Yeah, that's the
best thing about Trump. He's on this like foreign visit,
he's meeting with world leaders, he's doing deals.

Speaker 21 (01:37:17):
And then you go check truth social and he's like
thailant all pregnant women.

Speaker 1 (01:37:21):
No, he was literally on the plane lift of an
aircraft carrier dropping truth social tweets as he parachuted into
a meeting with the troops at three am this morning.

Speaker 3 (01:37:33):
He's live tweeting.

Speaker 7 (01:37:34):
You know, so it's real.

Speaker 1 (01:37:36):
We're talking to Caroline Sunshine. I mean, you worked on
this campaign, You've been around this sort of thing. I
think that what Trump is doing on the other side
of the world, right now is obviously historic. I think
back here at home, we're just watching the new form
of grievance take shape. You know how we went into
like no Kings, and obviously that didn't really stick.

Speaker 9 (01:37:52):
Mom.

Speaker 1 (01:37:53):
Donnie's closing message really is Islamophobia, and that's what he's
talking about. Did you hear that made up story about
the ant? Now turns out I want to play this
for the listeners. He now clarifies it was his dad's cousin,
not his aunt he was speaking about. But the reason
it's so laughable is regardless of who it is. Okay,
I'm sorry you're uncomfortable on the subway. The rest of

(01:38:13):
us were really uncomfortable because they blew up three thousand people,
you know.

Speaker 3 (01:38:17):
But here he is clarifying.

Speaker 1 (01:38:19):
And again, if the closing messages is lamophobia, and that's
a real message. You don't have to make up stories.
But he's making them up. And this speaks to your
analysis of him being an actor. So listen to this act.
Listen to the rewrite here it is clip too.

Speaker 9 (01:38:32):
Yes, that's I was speaking about my aunt. I was
speaking about Zantafui, my father's cousin sadly passed away a
few years ago, and for the takeaway for my more
than ten minute address about Islamophobia in this race and
in the city to be the question of my aunt

(01:38:53):
tells you everything about Andrew Cuomo and his inability to
reckon with the crisis of his own making.

Speaker 1 (01:39:00):
It's and I get the Cuomo shot just the same,
but it's a made up story.

Speaker 21 (01:39:04):
The best part is he's clearly caught in a lie. Yeah,
and he doubles down because it's I mean again, I'm
just I'm laughing at this because it's funny, Like he
doubles down, he doesn't apologize, he's clearly caught in a lie,
and instead he just pivots to and you know what
it was actually not in It was a cousin and
she's dead now, so.

Speaker 4 (01:39:24):
We can't even go ask You can't even get him there.

Speaker 16 (01:39:27):
You can't even go ask her because she's dead.

Speaker 21 (01:39:31):
And it's offensive, frankly that you're now talking about my dad, like,
shame on you for catching me in a lie about
my aunt.

Speaker 3 (01:39:38):
It was actually that cousin.

Speaker 1 (01:39:41):
Dud If I come if I guys, if I come
home tonight covered in glitter, smelling like a pirate hooker
and Jenny goes, where.

Speaker 3 (01:39:48):
The hell are you? And I go, why because I'm white?
That's what he's doing.

Speaker 21 (01:39:54):
It's such a it's a stake, like everyone kinda is
trying to mo needs such a phenomenon in a way
that everyone's trying to analyze him, and you know, label
and we're always as socialized obviously it's like and nothing's
really sticky, but it's like, guys, it's because he's a
theater kid. He's a theater kid who figured out how
to take his act on the road to get political power.

(01:40:15):
Like he reminds me of like kids that I did
model you n with in college, where like they really
think they're smarter than everybody else in the room. They've
they've rehearshed the stick they think they're smarter than you,
and they're just gonna like keep writing it until you
catch on. Was like, he's he's a fraud, really, I
mean he's a what his parents are both like they

(01:40:37):
have money.

Speaker 16 (01:40:41):
And his dad's like a.

Speaker 3 (01:40:42):
Who says Abraham Lincoln inspired Hitler right like his death
it's extreme.

Speaker 16 (01:40:46):
That's extreme.

Speaker 3 (01:40:47):
Parents really do shape your world view.

Speaker 1 (01:40:49):
You grow up the house where the guy at the
head of the dinner table said, Hitler was inspired by
Abe Lincoln.

Speaker 3 (01:40:54):
You probably developed some anti American sentiments.

Speaker 21 (01:40:57):
Maybe, I think. I think and same thing with the
whole like what is he he eats his food with
the his hands, right, But it's like that's an act.

Speaker 16 (01:41:08):
Too, Like that's not real, but the whole thing's fake. Yeah,
that's what you're saying.

Speaker 1 (01:41:12):
Hot he is like this decade's Obama and that he's
a hot topic candidate. It's cool to say you're voting
for him. It's like a it's like flair you put
on a jacket. It's like a button you put on
that you bought it hot topic or Spencer gifts and
you're like, I'm one of these.

Speaker 21 (01:41:27):
It's I'm glad that you brought that up because that also,
to me, is accurate. Like him and Obama have a
very similar shtick.

Speaker 16 (01:41:34):
They grew up very similar.

Speaker 21 (01:41:36):
They're the child of like very progressive academics, and then
they figured out how to have a good act.

Speaker 16 (01:41:42):
Yeah, and it's an act.

Speaker 21 (01:41:43):
That is like likable, it's personable, it's kind of fun,
it's smart, it's quick, Like that's exactly what Obama's act was.

Speaker 1 (01:41:50):
Yes, and you could emotionally blackmail a lot of guilty
white people like, yeah, we've got to save that. It's
so crazy, so conywhere our Caroline Sunshine is sticking around
the host who always has gifts for his Listeners's.

Speaker 16 (01:42:04):
Some grass, a few effs, Nosey.

Speaker 3 (01:42:06):
And Box of the Night, The Box across America. Caroline
Sunshine ride from Shotgun.

Speaker 1 (01:42:11):
Hey girl. She is from California, where Gavin Newsom grew
up a poor black child. If you've been watching the
podcast this week, it's so funny. Well you talk about
acting like, nope, we're living in the death of shame.
There are people among us who actually don't feel shame,
like they don't go that's bad.

Speaker 21 (01:42:29):
Yeah, And then by the way, they're like chronic cases
like there's no the hopeless you know.

Speaker 1 (01:42:34):
Yeah, no, it's just the thing. They've made peace with
that because it's the factory setting in the machine.

Speaker 21 (01:42:38):
You have to be a certain level of shameless to
do what they do, like to get up and be
Gavin Newsome every day. There's a certain level of shamelessness.

Speaker 16 (01:42:47):
It is required.

Speaker 1 (01:42:49):
I love it so much though, because he's on this
NBA podcast he's like, yeah, man, Mac and Cheese, Wonder Brett, Yo.
It was a struggle man. Dad's hanging out with the Gettyes.
He's actually in like his childhood Christmas photo. He's sitting
on a person. They use this furniture. It's like they've
not kidding. She goes, I haven't seen that. Well, there's

(01:43:09):
a reason, Caroline. Here is Kamala Harris. Though we're talking
about California politicians. I wanted to get into this too.
It's clipped thirty seven.

Speaker 17 (01:43:16):
When are they going to see a woman in charge
in the White House in their lifetime?

Speaker 21 (01:43:20):
For sure?

Speaker 1 (01:43:21):
Boy? Could it be you? Possibly? Have you made a
decision yet?

Speaker 9 (01:43:26):
No, I have not.

Speaker 1 (01:43:27):
But you say in your book, I'm not done. That
is correct. I am not done.

Speaker 17 (01:43:32):
I have lived my entire career a life of service,
and it's in my bones, and there are many ways
to serve. I have not decided yet what I will
do in the future, beyond what I am doing.

Speaker 1 (01:43:46):
Right now, which is also still a little meandery.

Speaker 16 (01:43:50):
She's not done, Jimmy.

Speaker 1 (01:43:53):
What you don't realize is if you saw that on camera,
she was talking to the woman coming to take her
wine glass.

Speaker 3 (01:44:02):
I'm not finished.

Speaker 16 (01:44:04):
I'm not finished.

Speaker 3 (01:44:06):
It's in my bones.

Speaker 1 (01:44:07):
There are many ways to serve. She's actually lecturing her
about how she presented the glass. You can come in
on a flat tray, you can.

Speaker 5 (01:44:15):
Hand it to me.

Speaker 21 (01:44:16):
Ironically, I actually think if she leaned into her, just
like Wino persona, she'd probably get more votes.

Speaker 1 (01:44:21):
That's what a lot of people is wrong, Carolyn Sunshine
and studio, even the new something he grew up rich,
that's actually not a bad thing if you lean into it. Yeah,
Trump's pretending, yeah, pretending you didn't. I think Mitt Romney
gave Trump the blueprint because when Mitt Romney ran, he
tried to pretend he was poor.

Speaker 16 (01:44:35):
Yeah, and they had a personality.

Speaker 1 (01:44:37):
There was that, and he wore the mom jeans. Do
you remember that? And what's funny is you know he
ran away from his success. Trump, as you know, runs
like a rapper. He parks a private jet in front
of the podium and as a supermodel bring him on stage.

Speaker 21 (01:44:49):
I mean Trump is like, yeah, I'm a little bit
richer than what they say it is, but he does
like he's a showman like Peo.

Speaker 1 (01:44:58):
People love it, they love it. Yeah, that's what Kamala
is getting wrong. If she said I'm a day drunk mess,
but I love this country. I vote for that.

Speaker 16 (01:45:05):
I think a lot of people would be like I
feel seen heard.

Speaker 8 (01:45:09):
And like me too.

Speaker 1 (01:45:10):
I am seriously like, think about this. If Prince Harry
and Megan Markle showed up and instead of being like, wa,
we're victims, will never get the crown and they were
and they were like, actually we inherit like half a
billion dollars and we don't do I'd be like, I
want to follow them on Instagram. This is amazing, you
guys just hang out my other favorite. Yeah, it would
be amazing. But what happened is in that era where

(01:45:32):
they tried to fancy victimhood is currency, it duped a
lot of successful people into running away from the things
that were going right in their lives.

Speaker 21 (01:45:40):
Yeah, and they don't even know. It gets to a
point too where like you just don't know who you
are anymore. But I see that in so many people
that run for office. They just they've been told that
they need to be. If they're to this, then they're
this voting group isn't gonna like them. If they're to that,
these people aren't gonna like them. Like you just see
people become they lose who they actually are.

Speaker 1 (01:45:58):
And if you lean into the thing. It's funny. I'll
get Dave Chappelle credit for this. Dave Chappelle talked about
if Trump one in twenty sixteen. He did a great
bit where he goes, you know, they said to Trump,
you didn't pay taxes, and he goes, well, I have
good accountants. There were loopholes. They saved me money. He goes,
this man came out of that big house all the
powerful people are in and told us exactly what's going

(01:46:18):
on in there. Totally, but you respect them, Like if
Newsom said, Hey, I grew up really rich and I'm
friends with the Getty's and I've just done well for myself,
and let me tell you how the rich people really
look at society and how we manipulate you and do
things and benefit ourselves. And you'd go, wow, that's like
so authentic. But because they were duped into thinking victim
hunt his currency, he wants you to believe he was

(01:46:39):
eating wonderbread.

Speaker 16 (01:46:40):
Yeah, And it's like they'll do anything to be liked.

Speaker 21 (01:46:42):
It's like you see that in actors sometimes, you know,
like I grew up in Disney Channel and La and
all that. Like you see there's like a complex and
actor sometimes like they just want to be liked. Yeah,
and you see that in like the politics that plays
out in Hollywood. Like I don't really think half the
people in Hollywood have the actual politics they claim to,
but they want to be liked and they feel like
if they say, I just hate Donald Trump more than you,

(01:47:02):
maybe you'll like your cart enough. That's also in the
people that run this country. It's fine for actors to
have that complex, not great for people who want to
run your country.

Speaker 1 (01:47:13):
Amen, folks, we're talking to the great Caroline Sunshine. Get
her out, Get her out of here.

Speaker 3 (01:47:18):
You don't want to.

Speaker 1 (01:47:19):
But the show's over. That was not a personal data.
That was the radio clock speaking. We're back here to
do it again. Tomorrow, Caroline Sunshine, do it again as well.
We'll always have this see tomorrow. Be a Republican, be
a Democrat, don't be a

Speaker 3 (01:47:33):
This has been a podcast from w o R.
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