All Episodes

July 11, 2025 • 34 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
An The Jesse Kelly Show, a final hour of the
world famous Jesse Kelly Show on what has been a
wonderful Ask doctor Jesse Friday. As we go cruising right
along into the weekend, we'll point, we'll put out something
dumb Kaitanji Brown Jackson said yet again. Here we'll get
back to the questions. All kinds of fun still to

(00:21):
be had in the final hour, Well, this lady sits
on the Supreme Court? What keeps you up at night?
I would say the state of our democracy about The
right selects its Supreme Court judges, and we want originalists

(00:43):
and people who will dispassionately interpret the law and things
like that, and all that's fine and right and good.
The communists select warriors, revolutionaries, reliable people. That's why one
day you wake up and Amy Cony Barrett voted the
right way, and then the next ten days you find
out she screwed you over, and then you can't figure

(01:03):
out what's coming Anyway, Jesse, if you had the power
to reset the government, what date would you reset it
to to make things better? And follow up question, you
can put any president and in that or you can anyway.
I don't know what he's saying with that last one.
But okay, so he's saying, when was the government the
way it should be? So here's the lamest answer in

(01:27):
the world. But it is true. The original form of
government we had was the best one and the most
limited one, and government grew every single day after that.
For the if you if you were looking at one
of those charts where you know it goes up and

(01:49):
it's down, and it's up and it's down. On a
macro level, since our country's formation, the government has only
gotten bigger and more evil. That's that really debatable. So
if I had to pick any date, it'd be the
first one. But here's the thing about that. That graph

(02:09):
you have in your mind of the government getting bigger,
more evil, bigger more evil, bigger more evil, until now
you have what we have now, that graph is reflective
of us. It's not just that the government got bigger
and more evil. Over time, we the American people, not

(02:33):
each and every one of us, but we the American people,
we cared less and less. We lost our way in
our personal lives. More and more. We started to rely
on the government for things that people in old times
would never have relied on. The government for I'll tell

(02:54):
you what. Here's a good example of it. You want
to have a good example of it, Let me ask
you something you know about those horrible Texas floods. I
don't even want to think about it, honestly, aub and
I can't even discuss it. Just the pain would be
unimaginable of losing your child, sending your baby girl off

(03:14):
to church camp and losing her. It's I can't It's awful.
And we've talked about the heroism in the wake of it.
But let me ask you. You don't have to answer,
what do you think about the federal government sending aid?
What do you think about the federal government sending aid

(03:38):
to Texas in the wake of those floods? Now? I
asked an incredibly uncomfortable question on purpose because if you
said or thought again, you don't need to say it.
But if you thought, well, yeah, I mean those poor people,
those poor families, poor Texas, those poor the government should

(04:02):
send aid. Did you know that if I could rewind
back to right when this country was formed the late
seventeen hundreds, let's call it the year seventeen ninety, and
I made you a politician, and you took that position,
you would not only be voted out of office, there's

(04:24):
a chance you would be arrested, tarred, and feathered for
that position you just took. On the Texas floods, did
you know that the federal government does not have a
rule in disaster relief? Did you know that and should not?
How did it get politicized? How did we end up?
Remember that Hurricane Helen aftermath where we had that evil
communist which with FEMA skipping over homes with Trump flags.

(04:49):
You let the government get involved, You let the federal
government take over it. And yes, story that, yes, Chris,
that is a story from way back then, a true
story where there were it was a terrible fire, I
believe it was in Georgetown, and the thought, the suggestion
was we should use some federal funds for a Virginia fire.

(05:09):
And there was outrage across the country. What federal funds?
That's not your money. That's up to the state to
handle that stuff. You don't get to take our money
and go put out fires with it. So maybe when
I said we the people have changed, and it is
directly correlated to the size and strength of the government,

(05:31):
maybe that applies to all of us, doesn't it. We
look at sad pictures on the news and sad stories
and we say to ourselves, man, we got to get involved.
We got to get Trump down there. Where's famou write
a check that's not the federal government's job and shouldn't
be the federal government's job. And to kind of piggyback

(05:51):
off that point, the incredible work that has been done
in the wake of Hurricane Helen, in the wake of
that terrible flood, almost all of it has been done
by private citizens and private charities. Did you know that
federal government doesn't new squad shows up, screws everything up,
disorganized bunch of morons work there. Private citizens just like you,

(06:19):
private organizations, wonderful charities. There's a million that I could
name right now, just like you and the ones you
contribute to. They're the ones who step in and do good.
We don't want the federal government there, We don't need
the federal government there. FEMA shouldn't even exist. And you

(06:40):
know who would agree with me, every single man who
signed the Declaration of Independence, every single one of them.
Jesse love your show, Appreciate how you take the news
and convey it to us. Working folks, when did you
think when do you think working class people are going
to get a break from taxes? Is it coming at

(07:01):
the end of the year our paycheck? Man. I don't
want to be Debbie Downer. I was just Debbie Downer.
But let me give it to you because it's not
your mommy show, it's your daddy show. You're not going
to ever see a significant break in your taxes because
the federal government won't stop spending money. Then the federal
government won't stop spending money because the American people don't

(07:21):
care when the federal government spends a lot of money,
and they don't vote politicians out of office, politicians Democrat
and Republican. They are not voted out of office for
spending too much money. Therefore they continue to spend too
much money. We have now buried ourselves thirty seven trillion
dollars in debt as a country. Therefore, we don't have
to put a number on it. Working class people, rich people,

(07:43):
everyone in between, nobody, nobody is going to see a
significant tax cut. You may get a percentage here, no
taxes on tips, thing there. They'll shave a little here
and shave a little there. If you are ever looking
for substantial tax relief from the federal government. You and
I should have protested harder when they spent a trullion

(08:03):
dollars day after day after day after day after day.
Our federal government still spends at COVID levels. During COVID,
when we got a virus, we decided to start spending
as if we were fighting World War three, which alone
is and it's crazy, but either way, we haven't gone back.

(08:25):
COVID isn't even a thing anymore. And the federal government
looked around and said, wow, I kind of like this budget.
I think go keep it. And you know how many
politicians have been voted out of office for it? Not one,
not a single one. Tax relief went bye bye long ago,
both parties running up the deficit, running up the debt

(08:48):
while normal people suffer. Jesse, you're pretty worldly. Why do
some guys wear sleeveless T shirts like wife beaters? What
is the point? Your pits are dripping sweat left and right,
Yet I see guys wearing them alone as a top,
and I see guys wearing them under as a dress shirt.
Why not a crew type shirt or something like that? Okay,

(09:11):
why do guys wear wife beaters. Let's not stereotype all guys.
All right. Stereotypes are bad. You're talking about Italians, all right,
that's what you're talking about. And I mean, I don't know.
Maybe it's maybe there's some history there of wanting to
show off the gold chains. I don't Maybe maybe a

(09:35):
longer shirt gets caught in their arm hair. I have
no earthly idea. I just we don't need to stereotype
all men. Let's just stereotype Italians. Okay, all right, now,
let me talk to you about finding a good employee,
because as you've seen from this show, it's virtually impossible.

(09:56):
My people are so bad. They edit video, they edit
audio to make me look bad. I haven't moved one
inch on it. It is. This is amazing. Honestly, how
about this one, Jesse. Throughout my life, when I would
hear people talk about McCarthy, the McCarthy communist purge of
the fifties, they would speak about it in dark, sinister tones,

(10:20):
as if it were a black mark on American history.
Part of me wonders, is we should have another McCarthy
purge of our government in culture? Or would that be
an attack on free speech? Let's talk about that. Next
it is the Jesse Kelly Show on a fantastic of
wonderful Friday, and ask doctor Jesse Friday where you can

(10:42):
still email us your questions, your love, your hate, your
death threats Jesse at Jesse Kellyshow dot com. Guy emails
in and says, McCarthy the Communist Purge in the fifties,
he was always taught that it was this dark sinister thing,
and should we do another one of those or is
that an attack on free speech? Well, do you know

(11:06):
why you were always taught it's a dark sinister thing.
You were taught that McCarthy's Communist purge was a dark,
sinister thing for the exact same reason your school teacher
spent a month telling you how evil Hitler was. In

(11:27):
two minutes on MAO, remember this, our education system is
run by communists, and our education system will protect communists
at any cost. So when they're presenting history, look, it's

(11:49):
not hard to present Hitler as a bad guy. He's
a freaking evil demon. Mao killed way more people than
Hitler did. In fact, so did Stalin. Stalin was lottering
people in the Bloodlands before Hitler and the Nazis ever
even got there. Did you know that you didn't, did
you You know why you didn't because your teacher, who

(12:11):
was taught by communists herself, she understood that we really
can't dwell on the evils of communism of the past.
Let's just talk about Kitler. That'll bean. Chris said, I
don't even think they mentioned mauer Stalin. Of course they didn't, No,
they didn't. There's only one bad guy in history, Adolf Hitler.
No one else ever existed. Of course, why do why

(12:34):
did they all talk about McCarthy in these hush tones.
Oh no, that's McCarthyism. You never heard that term. This
is just McCarthyism. Why because they don't want to be exposed.
Because for them, aggressively purging communists from government life would

(12:56):
mean a threat to them and their life. That's why
McCarthy is always taught about like he's some evil, sinister villain.
Because McCarthy and by the way, McCarthy was far from
a perfect human being. I get that. But when McCarthy
said communists are infecting ollywood and academia and journalism, we

(13:23):
should really do something about this and government, he was
one hundred percent right about all that they were, and
the Soviet Union was very focused about infiltrating all these
things we know now from the histories. McCarthy was right
about every single freaking thing. The reason your teacher teaches
you that he was some evil guy is because your
teacher is a communist too, and a communist purge, a

(13:46):
purge of communists would mean your teacher would be in trouble.
That's why. And your teacher is a communist because your
teacher was taught by communists. That's another good point, Chris.
There's a chance there's a chance your teacher, In fact,
there's a very good chance your teacher doesn't know she's
a communist. Did you know that? I actually write about
this in the Anti Communist Manifesto, which is available at

(14:08):
Jesse kellybook dot com. That communists when they got here,
when they infected academia, they taught a generation in communism.
But then that generation wouldn't want to teach another generation,
and then another generation and then another generation. And you
know what, Yeah, Chris, play some uri play this. Listen

(14:29):
to your avensmana talk about the infiltration of the West.
Go ahead.

Speaker 2 (14:32):
Ideological subversion is the slow process which we call either
ideological subversion or active measures activelymirpriatia in the language of
the KGB, or psychological warfare. What it basically means is
to change the perception of reality of every American to

(14:53):
such an extent that, despite of the abundance of information,
no one is able to come to sensible conclusions in
the interests of defending themselves, their families, their community, and
their country. It's a great brainwashing process which goes very slow,
and it's divided in four basic stages, the first one

(15:18):
being demoralization. It takes from fifteen to twenty years to
demoralize the nation. Why that many years because this is
the minimum number of years which requires to educate one
generation of students in the country of your enemy exposed
to the ideology of the enemy. In otherwands, Marxism, Leninism

(15:40):
ideology is being pumped into the soft heads of at
least three generations of American students without being challenged or
counterbalanced by the basic values of Americanism American patriotism. The
demoralization process in the United States is basically completed already
the last twenty five years. Actually, it's over fulfilled because

(16:04):
demoralization now reaches such areas where previously not even common.
Dan Dropoff and all his experts would even dream of
such a tremendous success. Most of it is done by
Americans to Americans thanks to lack of moral standards.

Speaker 1 (16:21):
As I mentioned before, you can stop it. Most of
it is done by Americans to Americans. The democrat in
your life when they say they're not a communist, they
probably believe it. They were taught by a communist who
also didn't know that's what they were. And they were
taught by a communist who also didn't know what they were.

(16:42):
And they were taught by a communist who also didn't
know that was what they were. But they were taught
by a communist who did know that's what they were.
Now they think they're progressive. I'm a liberal, I'm a Democrat.
I'm not a communist. That's a dirty word. Now you
are in deep down they know it. That's why any

(17:04):
form of anti communism they immediately get suspicious of. Remember
that it is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Friday,
a wonderful Friday, and asked doctor Jesse Friday, this next
question that's going to be interesting revealing. I don't know,
it might even make you mad. I don't care, but
let's dig into it as we continue to roll into

(17:26):
the weekend. Jesse Trump has been abused by our government
agencies more than anyone. They tried to frame him as
a Russian agent. They hid crimes from his political opponent
in election fraud during his reelection. They even raided his
home and had him arrested. Why hasn't Trump made it
his personal mission to destroy the FBI in intel agencies

(17:50):
after what they've done to him? All Right, So at
first I'm going to say something that's going to sound
like I'm actually criticizing him when I'm not. I'm fine
with criticizing them, as you know, but that is not
what I'm about to say here. And then we'll get
to something that sounds like a compliment, and it kind
of is. First, when a system of government turns evil

(18:14):
and corrupt, the people who live under that system of
government will cry out for change. They will want it
to change, They will want something different. And because the
people want something different, men will begin to rise, rise
and assume the leadership position. I am your champion. I

(18:39):
am the one who will take on this evil system.
I am the one who will right all the wrongs
get behind me. Let's march together. Follow me. Sometimes those
men I should note are very well intentioned, brave, wonderful men.
Sometimes they're just evil opportunists who don't believe it. But
that doesn't matter for purpose of our conversation. What does

(19:01):
matter is the first one the people select. You see
this over and over and over again in history. But
the first one the people select, he is almost always
the weakest and the dumbest. And when I say dumbest,
I'm not talking about intelligence, really, meaning he is not

(19:25):
quite as nasty as he needs to be to take
on an evil, corrupt system. And because he's really the first,
and he deserves all the credit for that, he is
going to get tripped up in torpedoed by that evil
system in ways that nobody could possibly see coming. Therefore,

(19:49):
what happens is after he gets smashed, after he's finally gone,
the next one who comes after him will be meaner
and smarter because he will have learned from watching the
first guy. Oh wait a minute, they did that to
the first guy. Oh well, I'm gonna have to be
meaner than that. Oh I'm smarter. I figured out those

(20:09):
guys are the bad guys in fact, I would argue
that Donald Trump's second term is the second guy. Have
you noticed there aren't any more leaks out of the
White House? Have you noticed it was a story? I
forgot how many people? The State Department just fired thirteen
hundred people? Donald Trump told every government agency be prepared

(20:30):
for mass firings. Who is this guy? We didn't have
this guy the first term. Donald Trump did some great
things the first term, but he got torpedoed and kneecat
by every organization. But what happened. He got abused, arrested,
almost killed. Guess what. He came back meaner and smarter.
But still he's not the last guy. He's the first guy.

(20:56):
Or the way I just said it, he's the second guy.
Donald Trump still believes in an FBI comes from an order,
more traditional generation, and the order you are, probably the
more affinity you're going to have for institutions, even ones

(21:16):
that have turned evil because they weren't really evil for
most of your life. Why hasn't he made it his
mission to destroy the FBI? He's not that guy. The
next guy maybe maybe not. Maybe it'll be the one
after him. But Trump is the first and deserves all
the credit. In the world for that. That's one. Now,

(21:37):
that is the part I thought you might find insulting.
Remember if you're offended, I really don't care. The second part,
this is a compliment to him, But maybe it's not really.
The first guy, the first leader the people choose to
fight against an evil system, even though he won't succeed

(21:58):
in cleaning it up completely. No, there's always Guius Marius
before you get to a Julius Caesar. The first guy
may not succeed in cleaning up the system completely. He
probably won't, he really does, but he will weaken it
enough for the next guy to do more good than

(22:19):
he did. I use of boxing analogy people who've never
boxed at all. Sometimes it can be confusing. Why do
they ever hit each other in the body? I mean,
after all, you don't knock someone out by hitting him
in the ribs, right, You should hit people in the head.
That's where you can knock him out, punch him in

(22:41):
the face. Why are you even bothering all these body shots?
Body shots after body shots after body shots, why are
you doing this? Well? When you do that, you do
a couple of different things. One, it hurts to get
punched in the ribs, those defenses where you've got your

(23:02):
gloves up by your face. They can start to lower
the more shots you take in the ribs, and it
hurts and it hurts and it hurts, and your hands
start to lower, setting you up for that knockout blow,
and it takes away your wind. You don't have the
same stamina when you've had your mid section rock like
that over and over and over again. The first guy,

(23:25):
Donald Trump, whatever Donald Trump is able to accomplish with
his second four years and last four years, it won't
be the knockout blow. We've talked about that before. He's
not the final guy, but he will and is taking
steps to get those hands a little lower, weaken them,
break them down a little, so eventually in the final rounds,

(23:50):
whoever the final guy is that comes can land that
knockout blow. He's taking on a system that is more
powerful than he is. Remember that. Remember that the system
was built by evil men over decades, specifically to be

(24:10):
more powerful than the president, more powerful than the Senate,
more powerful than the House. The system was built to
withstand political change. Frankly, the system was built to withstand
you and what you want. The system knew that eventually
people would get tired of all this evil and get

(24:32):
tired of all this corruption. And so what do you
do if you're an evil person. You don't decide you're
going to stop doing evil. That's not in your nature.
You make preparations. You prepare for the day that comes
where the people have had enough. You can call it
the swamp or the deep state, or the blob, or

(24:52):
whatever word you want to put on the gigantic federal
government system. But it's beyond just the federal government, the universe.
The city system works with them, social media works with them,
Hollywood works with them. The system, the big evil system,
is more powerful than the Office of the Presidency. Remember
I'm not going to ask you to play it. Don't
pull it up, Chris, But remember that clip we've played

(25:15):
for you so many times where Christopher Ray, Remember Chuck Grassley,
he's the big cheese on the Senate Judiciary Committee that
might be the most powerful committee in the House or Senate.
In fact, it probably is. Christopher Ray. The director of
the FBI is underneath the Judiciary Committee. And Christopher Ray

(25:40):
sat in front of Chuck Grassley, and Chuck Grassley said, hey, uh,
we have a lot more questions. We need you to
stay and answer them, and Christopher Ray said, ah, yeah, sorry,
I'm in a hurry. I gotta go catch a flight
and he was going on vacation. He looked at someone

(26:00):
who's supposedly his boss and said, hey, can you wrap
it up? I got a MyD tie waiting with my
name on it right now, Who's really in charge? Jesse
Kelly Show Final segment at a Jesse Kelly Show. Remember,
I'm not going to be here on Monday, And as
much as I would love to blame the suits or Chris,

(26:23):
this is all on me. I'm sorry. I'll be back Tuesday.
If you miss me while I'm gone, go download the podcast.
iHeart Spotify iTunes. If you want to email me and
yell at me, that's fine too, Jesse at Jesse kellyshow
dot com. Jesse, did you or any of your fellow
Marines have any superstitious beliefs, especially related to your tour

(26:46):
of duty in combat experience abroad? For instance, just to
name one of several during my tour of duty in Vietnam,
more than a few of my fellow grunts believe that
there's a bullet with my name on it when we
went out in the field beating the bush on search
and destroy missions. For one, I just love you Vietnam guys, man,

(27:12):
I am so honored that veterans listen to the show.
Guys who are still in listening to the show. Veterans
listen to the show. I'm honored. One. Two, there's a
bullet with my name on it. This is a concept
that was widely spread in Vietnam, but the general concept

(27:34):
behind it. I've read World War two books with that
same concept behind it. There's a bullet with my name
on it, or none of the bullets had my name
on it. What is it and do we have something similar? Yeah,
here's what it was and what it is and what
it always will be. In combat, sometimes things don't make sense.

(28:03):
Why did I live and he didn't? Why did the
grenade land over there and not over here? Why why
did my best friends Humby blow up in front of
me and not mine? If they'd waited another another two seconds,
it would have been mine instead of his. We both
stood up at the same time. He got shot. I

(28:26):
didn't it all feels I was gonna say, unfair, but
unjust and wrong and confusing, and also we don't like
the feeling that we lack control, that no matter how
hard we train or how tough we are, or how

(28:47):
tough our friends are, if you get hit with an
AK forty seven round, you're gonna die sucks. So the
idea that, well, if it's my time, it's my time.
That's what it means. It's not just true in the
biblical sense, meaning you're not gonna leave this earth a

(29:09):
minute before God's ready for you to. But that aside
in combat, it helps you cope. It does me no
good to sit in stress. It does me no good
to sit and twist myself into knots over it, because
either there's a bullet with my name on it next
time we go out, or there's not a bullet with
my name on it the next time we go out.

(29:29):
And you know what I can do about that. Nothing.
It's a way of letting it go. It's not in
my control, so I'm letting it go and I'm not
stressing over it. That's what it is. And yes, we
had it, and everyone has it. By the way, I'll
give you one little tradition we had. I don't know

(29:52):
if it's a superstition, but it was a tradition. You
ever seen the movie Last to the Mohicans. Great movie.
I'm totally it's a great book, but I don't read. No,
I'm kidding. It's a great book, but it is a
great movie. It's got a great soundtrack. Chris, you wouldn't
like it. There are any words on the songs. It's
a great soundtrack and one of the songs in Last

(30:12):
of the Mohicans. We loved that movie. It was one
of the few movies we had before the DVDs got
scratched up in Kuwait, so we watched it a bonds.
We didn't have options, okay, but we loved that movie.
And you know it's about warriors and fighting and things
like that. There's a song and I think the song
is called Promenatarie. I may not be pronouncing that right,
but I know it's something along those lines. Shut up, Chris,

(30:34):
that's the name of the song. I didn't name the
song Promenaderie. Promenaderie, I don't know. I went to community college.
Before we would go out on patrol, we would gather around.
We would can load our magazines, put on what you
had to put on, pray if you had to pray,
and we would play that song. So there little tradition.

(30:56):
Now let's talk about something better than all this heavy,
ugly combat stuff. Let me talk to you about your dog,
about having your dog longer. What if? What if you
could sign up right now, just sign on a piece
of paper for an extra year with your dog? Would you?

(31:16):
We all would? I'll tell you that's how I look
at Rough Greens. Fred is five, just about five or five,
he's right around five, and he's a golden doodle. Not
a designer dog, but he's a golden doodle. And so
we've got him for about half his life. You get
about ten out of those and then they leave. We're

(31:39):
trying for eleven. That's why we sprinkle rough greens on
his food, actual nutrition, live vitamins and minerals and omega
oils and antioxidants. And we see such a difference in Fred. Definitely,
his coat and his breath hasn't done anything for his intelligence.
But there's nothing you can do about that. Do you
want your dog to live longer? Call them for a

(32:03):
free jumpstart trial bag and start sprinkling rough Greens on
your dog's food. Eight three three three three my dog,
or go to Roughgreens dot com slash Jesse and now
here's a headline. Why go you know, you know the
things emails we didn't get to men, you whisper. We

(32:28):
have a chain here in Tuscaloosa, Alabama called Freddie's. I'm
not sure where they're headquartered, but they have shoestring fries
you so crave. We have Freddie's all over Texas. I
think it's called Freddie's Frozen Custard and Steakburger. The steakburgers
are cheeseburgers are delicious. The fries are even better. And
here's a little tidbit. You know, I tell you can

(32:50):
use any general seasoning in my world famous cheeseburgers, and
you can. You know what? The best one I found
is Freddie's. They sell it. I can buy it on Amazon.
You can buy Freddy's seasoning. Delicious, absolutely delicious. Jesse. Looking
forward to your Kama Kazi history lesson. I wonder if
they were the first suicide bombers in history? Are the strategies? Okay? No? Now,

(33:16):
having guys commit suicide on purpose is historically not common,
and it's not because other armies were moral or something
like that. It's because when you have your guy kill
himself on purpose. You're reducing the size of your force

(33:36):
on purpose. It's better if you find a different way. So, no,
it's not the first at all. But also no, it's
not that common. And when they were discussing the Kamakazi
program in Japan, and it was highly debated, which will
go over during our history episode when I get to it.

(33:56):
It was debated. One of the main debates against it.
Wait a minute, we're going to take we don't have
that many pilots. We're gonna take the pilots we're training
and just throw them away. That's not a very good
use of the pilots we have. That was part of
the debate. Now, I'm going to leave you until tuesday.

(34:18):
It's my fault. I'll explain when I get back that
I'm going to leave you until tuesday. Keep your chin up.
We'll keep our eyes on this FBI Pam bondy thing.
But put your phone down and enjoy your weekend now,
all right, that's all.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

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

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Ding dong! Join your culture consultants, Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang, on an unforgettable journey into the beating heart of CULTURE. Alongside sizzling special guests, they GET INTO the hottest pop-culture moments of the day and the formative cultural experiences that turned them into Culturistas. Produced by the Big Money Players Network and iHeartRadio.

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

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.