All Episodes

February 3, 2026 35 mins

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Oh, another hour of the Jesse Kelly Show on a
magnificent Tuesday. This hour, we are going to discuss tribalism,
some ugly stuff out there. I'll try to get to
some emails. We're about to touch on something with the
Supreme Court kind of shows the degradation of where we
are in society. All that and so much more coming

(00:20):
up in the second hour of The Jesse Kelly Show. Now,
I want to rewind a little bit. Remember when well,
it's known as the Dobbs decision, But that can get
a little wonky for people who don't follow this all
the time. Roe versus Wade, it was that Supreme Court
case back in the seventies where it said, well, every

(00:44):
woman can just have an abortion, super controversial. Fifty years
later Roe versus Wade, in what was known as the
Dobbs Decision got overturned. But a lot of people forget
about a couple scandals, significant scandals that took place because

(01:04):
of that during that the decision the Supreme Court. Here's
how it works at the Supreme Court. They will hear arguments,
you know, oral arguments. You'll see headlines all the time
the Supreme Court heard oral arguments today, but then nothing.
It's not like they hear oral arguments on a Monday

(01:26):
and then by Tuesday they come out with a ruling.
It's not as if they hear oral arguments on a
Monday and then by Friday they come out with a ruling.
A lot of reasons for it. Don't totally get all
of it myself. They'll hear oral arguments on a Monday,
January first, and then it's April before a ruling is

(01:48):
actually made. Traditionally, in the United States of America, the ruling,
what they actually decided on, is never ever, ever, ever
ever leaked. It is not leaked. It does not happen.
It simply does not happen. Whatever the ruling is, whatever

(02:09):
the makeup of the Supreme Court is, it does not happen.
Nobody leaks the decision. Yet, the Dobbs decision, the overturning
of versus Wade, was leaked. What what happened, Well, here's
what happened, and we don't know specifically who did it.

(02:32):
For reasons I'll get into in a moment. Someone in
the Supreme Court leaked the Dobb's decision, telling the world
that Roe versus Wade was about to be overturned. What
was the result of this. The result of it was

(02:53):
an assassin with weapons got on a plane and flew
from California. I believe he got on a plane. It
might have drove, but got on a plane, flew from
California and ended up in front of Brett Cavanaugh's house
ready to blow Brett Cavanaugh's brains out because someone leaked

(03:15):
the decision. It's a really, really, really big deal. Now
after that, John Roberts, he's the Chief Justice. He's the
big cheese on the Supreme Court. It's not like his
vote is worth more than anyone else's vote, but he's
very much the one who gets to decide on this

(03:35):
rule here and that rule there. There's a lot of
power chief Justice of the Supreme Court. You could almost
argue he's as powerful as a president of the United
States of America. It's a big deal to be chief Justice.
After the decision was leaked, everybody with some basic knowledge
of what holds our system together was freaking out. You

(04:00):
have to find this person, find who leaked it. That
person has to go to prison. You have to find
the leaker, and find the leaker, and find the leaker.
Now pause for a moment to clerk, to essentially work
for a Supreme Court justice is a huge, huge deal.
I am not a lawyer. I have many friends who

(04:22):
are lawyers, mostly Chris's people, and they will all tell
me I have some who have clerked for Supreme courts.
That's one of those things as a lawyer. It looks
really good on the resume. And you don't just clerk
for the Supreme Court itself. You clerk for a specific justice.
So you will clerk for sodom Ayor, or you will

(04:44):
clerk for Clarence Thomas, or you are a clerk for them.
Supreme Court judges have staffers. We have discussed this before.
Part of what drives the radical, monstrous, violent communist nature
of Democrat policies today. It's not even the Democrat politicians themselves,

(05:10):
it is the sub humans who work for Democrat politicians.
Who works for a Republican congressman, for example, a Republican senator,
Almost every time it's from some uber patriotic family from
that congressman's district. Some guy he wants to get into

(05:30):
West Point one day, he loves America. He's gonna go
be a cop. He ends up interning for the Republican
congressman vice versa. Who interns who who works for a
Democrat congressman or senator. The most America hating savages in
any state or district, they are the ones who work

(05:51):
for them. It works much the same way in the
Supreme Court in nineteen sixty five. If you had a
Democrat congressman or a Democrat senator, they would probably have, yes,
a Democrat interning for them, working for them. But it
would be a normal person, maybe for to the left

(06:13):
of you or me, but it wouldn't be some monster
you know who works for these people. Now. I played
a little bit of it earlier. This is a nurse
named Chad out of Chicago. Laugh all you want. Of course,
I mocked this fruity person earlier, Laugh all you want.
These people now sit in critical positions of power in

(06:34):
the country.

Speaker 2 (06:34):
Remember how much power nurses half in this country. One
of our own was just murdered in the street. So
we might be able to stop this somehow. I would
really suggest to all the healthcare workers.

Speaker 1 (06:52):
I don't think this guy likes women.

Speaker 3 (06:53):
Organizations out there, that if you have knowingly maga employees,
that you terminate them. They're not safe people to take
care of other people.

Speaker 1 (07:07):
Yeah, you get the idea. Now, the clerks who work
for the Democrat justices, the Atlana Kagains, you know, the Katanji,
Brown Jackson, all of them. They're not just Democrats, they're animals.
One of those animals and we don't know who because

(07:27):
of John Roberts. Again, I'll explain that in the moment
one of those animals to whip up national outrage leaked
the Dobbs decision and the country ran wild. It almost
got Brett Kavanaugh killed. And then in the wake of that,
for whatever reason, John Roberts declined to let the FBI

(07:50):
hunt down whoever did it. He treated it as an
internal matter. The Supreme Court marshals were not clearly not
equipped to and to an investigation like this. The end
result was we don't know who did it. That brings
me to a story from today. The New York Times

(08:12):
flips out. This is a from Legal Insurrection. The New
York Times flips out over supposed new Supreme Court NDAs.
Those are non disclosure agreements. The Supreme Court now has
to have all the people who work for them sign
NDAs in an effort to stop the savages from leaking

(08:35):
these decisions out to the public, which gets Supreme Court
justices killed or potentially killed. I said all that to
say this, I'm happy there are NDAs. I'm glad we
got that. But you see what a dangerous place that

(08:56):
is for society that you have to have in NDA.
Isn't that so indicative of where we are as a country.
You shouldn't have to have a document trying to hold
the communists in check so they don't try to get
a Supreme Court justice's brains blown all over his front porch.

(09:18):
That's not a thing that should exist at all, Yet
it has to exist in this country because of what
has happened to the Democrat Party. We are in a
lot of ways trying to put up fences wherever we
can to try to keep the animals inside. But we

(09:40):
need to be a free range country. We need to
get back to being a country where you don't have
to have fences to keep the animals inside because the
animals don't want to go wild. That's not the country
in which we live. It's a sad state of affairs,
but it is our state of affairs. I'll do some
emails finally, next it is the Jesse Kelly Show on

(10:04):
a magnificent Tuesday, reminding you you can email the show
Jesse at Jesse Kellyshow dot com. Let's do some of
those right now. I've been negligent, Jesse. I was actually
really surprised at how many of these I got. I
heard you mentioned Ewojima war tactics on the Megan Kelly
Show today. By the way, I was on Megan Kelly's

(10:25):
show yesterday, in case you missed it. I was unbelievably
witty and brilliant. It was maybe the greatest radio ever.
I don't know, I can't say, but probably top five.
I'm seriously this guy said, my father in eighteen year
old marine was there from February nineteen forty five to

(10:51):
March nineteen four. It looks like he did a little
bit more than a month the February nineteenth to March
twenty fourth. He never talked about his experience. He passed
away in nineteen ninety and I regret never asking more questions.
Could you talk about the Eojima war tactics on your show?

Speaker 2 (11:08):
All?

Speaker 1 (11:08):
Right? So I got a lot of Ewojima questions after that,
and I realized a lot of people don't know a
lot of people are kind of new listeners on something,
so I know you know what Emojima is, but let
me just do a few minutes on this. In honor
of this man's father and everyone who fought there, I
want you to really understand what it was as we

(11:31):
marched through the Pacific in World War Two, taking island
after island, we were learning new tactics on how to
fight the Japanese, and the Japanese were learning new tactics
on how to fight us. And this part is really
really important. The Japanese were not under the impression that

(11:52):
they were going to stop us from taking any island
we attacked. They were not stupid at all. They knew
they eventually we would win. The idea for the Japanese
was kill so many Americans that the American public would
turn against the war, and then FDR would sue for peace,

(12:15):
so that Japanese would end up with peace. They'd end
up bitter off than they were before, you know, a
little bit more territory than they had before, so on
and so forth. Right, that was the idea of it. Now,
by the time we got to Ewojima, the Japanese realized
they could not stop us at the beach. They had

(12:36):
previously tried, you know, machine gun nests, everything, try to
stop Americans from even landing. They knew our tactics had increased,
our naval gunfire was so good, our air power. They
couldn't stop us at the beach. They came up with
something new. Ewo Jima is one big black rock. It's
a big volcanic rock. What's not rock is black sand,

(13:00):
all right, Whatever is not rock is black sand. That
Japanese knew a long time before we got there that
we were coming to Ewojima. So the Japanese made preparations.
You've seen, undoubtedly, I know you have if you're an American. Honestly,
if you're anybody, you've seen the picture of those guys

(13:23):
raising up the flag on Ewojima. It's Marines, it's a cormant.
You've seen those guys raising up the flag. They are
raising up that flag at the top of what is
known as Mount Sirabachi. Sorry to ruin your historical perspective,
but I need to stress that that was in no
way the end of the fighting in Ewojima. That was

(13:45):
just the beginning of it. But what was Mount Sirabachi.
You can go see it to this day. On Ewojima,
which is fairly flat, there is on one end of
it a mountain. Like I said, the whole island is
volcanic rock. The Japanese, in anticipation of us coming, they

(14:07):
brought in all kinds of workers, all kinds of concrete,
all kinds of everything, and they turned that mountain into
a honeycomb fortress. All throughout that mountain are tunnels and
holes in railways where the Japanese stored ammunition, they hid
their artillery guns they prepared. Part of that preparation was

(14:32):
they sighted in their large guns on the beaches that
were there, and instead of firing before we got to
the beach, the Japanese decided to wait until we piled
up on the beach, and then they started firing down
on us where there were huge clusters of Americans. More

(14:56):
Americans died on ewo Jima than died in the twenty
year Global War on Terror. Did you know that the
fighting just to get up to the top of Mount
Surabachi was unreal because it's all caves, it's all bunkers,
it's all rock. It was savagery at the highest levels,

(15:22):
and really ewo Jima it was such a critical airfield
for US when it came to access to bombing of
Japan that they put extra men on that island and
they fought for every single inch of it. Ewo Jima

(15:42):
was awful to the level where remember how I said
the Japanese were trying to bleed us dry to get
the American people to turn against the war. You know
that ewo Jima almost turned the American people against the war.
That's how bad it was. The administration they were extremely

(16:06):
concerned that Ewojima it was going to make them sue
for peace because the American public was aghast at how
many of our guys died on that island, an entire
fortress of black Rock, where the Japanese had planned for
a long time and as they were planning, they were

(16:29):
learning our tactics, what we did, what we didn't do.
It was just unspeakably bad. If you know a veteran
of Ewogima, you should know they have seen horrors beyond comprehension.
They really truly have. They have seen horrors beyond comprehension.

(16:50):
The fighting on that place, it was just awful in
every possible way. If your father fought there for a month.
Your father is an American hero. If you have anybody
in your family who fought there, they are American heroes.
You understand that, heroes beyond believe. It is the Jesse

(17:14):
Kelly Show on a Magnificent Tuesday. Remember, if you miss
any part of the show, you'll die. You have to
download the podcast on iHeart, Spotify and iTunes. And if
you want the Little Red Book, my Little Red Book,
it is free. Don't email Jewish producer Chris and ask

(17:39):
for the book. I already told you I'm dealing with
the Jewish revolt. You have to go to Jessekelly dot
com and just put in your email address. They'll send
it to you automatically Jessekelly dot com. All right, all right, Jesse,
I'd like to ask a stupid question regarding the Epstein Files.

(18:03):
Why does anyone care about any heavily redacted so called
Epstein files when all the victims who were exploited and
who high profile figures had relationships with when they were
underage are still alive to tell their story. Well, one,
they're not all still alive, by the way, they can

(18:24):
tell us firsthand which celebrities did what when? How many times?
How old? What am I missing here? Well, you're missing
a couple things here, not that you actually said anything
dumb at all, But here's what you may be missing.
First of all, victims. Have you ever known or maybe

(18:45):
sadly you are a woman who has been a victim
of something like this, a crime where a man did
something terrible to you. I have known women like this
in my life. I have never won time, not once
known one who wants to talk about it. They don't

(19:06):
want to have discussions about it. I am not a woman.
I have never been victimized in that way. I'm not
going to attempt to put myself in her shoes. But
I know that that is very, very consistent. So you're
assuming already the victims want to come out and talk
about it. That would probably be a bad assumption. But

(19:26):
I know what you may be saying. But Jesse, I've
seen press conferences where these women, the victims of Epstein,
have stood up and they've kind of told their tale,
but don't really tell their tale. Well, now the waters
get even murkier. Why if you have a press conference

(19:48):
full of Epstein victims, why don't we ever get names
and dates and things like that. Why is it never Hey,
you pick your guy. Bill Clinton assaulted me on this
date in nineteen ninety five. Why don't we ever get that. Well,
there's a variety of reasons for that too. One of

(20:11):
those reasons is these men from what we know. Remember
there's so much we don't know and we'll never know.
But from what we know, these men are high society types.
Money buys you what it buys you access. That's what
money truly buys, access to better cars, better homes, more

(20:35):
beautiful women, better food, better healthcare, better lawyers. But the
money also buys you access to people who, if you
want them to do so, they'll do violence for you.
They will do You think the most powerful men in
the world, we're talking British royalty, celebrities or presidents. You

(21:02):
think they don't have anybody and their rolodex who walks
on the dark side of life and does things in
the dark, in the dark side of the planet. There
are people like that all over the world who will
do whatever you want them to do for money. You
think none of these women have been contacted and well threatened.

(21:27):
Let's just put it out there. Oh no, no, no, no,
tell your tale. No, that's fine. I better not hear
my name, or you might get hit by a bus
crossing the road one day. Would be a shame if
anything happened to you. That's not just something that takes
place in the movies. The movies got that idea from

(21:48):
real life. That's how real life works. That's one reason.
Another reason could be this the real life victims. Maybe
some of those real life victims have already been paid off.
Maybe it wasn't threatened, Maybe it was flat out bribery. Oh, Tina,

(22:10):
I'm making up a name here. Please don't think I'm
referring to any Tina. Hey, Tina, I'm a prince whatever.
I understand that you're saying I victimized you. Well, how
much is it going to cost to shut you up?
Did you know this little things that I've found out

(22:31):
in my life that I wished I hadn't found out.
Did you know that professional athletes? Actually I heard this
about the NBA, the National Basketball Association, so I assume
it's for all professional sports, but I heard it about
the NBA specifically. Do you know that NBA players having
children with women who they don't want to hang out with,

(22:52):
and they don't want to raise the kid. Is so
common that there is a fairly standard legal agreement already
hyped up that everyone has at this point in time.
Did you know that it's not like it's one time thing.
It happens so often. The legal agreement is already typed up,
and it goes something like this, fairly plain language. I

(23:12):
never want to hear from you again. I don't want
to ever hear about this kid again. I don't want
anything to do with him. I don't want anything to
do with you. Here is one million dollars for you
to disappear forever. Here's your million dollars. Give me my
signed document back, goodbye. Do you think that only exists
in the NBA again? This is an ugly dark world

(23:38):
that I want no part of. I hope you don't
want any part of. But we do have to acknowledge
it exists. Another thing. Some of them are lying, that's
just the bottom line. Some of them are lying. That's
obviously a thing. Some of them are lying. They were

(24:00):
paid to do what they do. Some of them they
did it willingly for money. Now they're acting like victims.
There's no one story. There's not one set of stories.
For all the people involved in a decade's long spree
of millionaires in billionaires and royalty and presidents hanging out

(24:24):
with this guy who apparently through parties you wouldn't want
to take your mother to. There are all kinds of
different circumstances here and something else. How many people, how
many powerful people, even people maybe you don't like or
I don't like, have been falsely accused by someone else

(24:47):
who has an axe to grind. It's very, very hard
to wade through this and find what is actually the truth.
And that frustrates me, and I know it frustrates you
because we're tired of watching powerful people get away with everything.
It seems like powerful people get away with it every
single time. They never go to prison. Of course, if

(25:10):
you cheat on your taxes by five hundred dollars, you
know the IRS will be kicking down your door and
sending you to prison. And you also know these people
cheat on every freaking thing, no one sends them to prison.
And the feeling that something is unfair, that there is injustice.

(25:32):
It creates such a visceral emotion in humans when they
feel like they are held to a standard others aren't
held to. If you have siblings, You went through this
multiple times in your life, whether it was real or imagined. Hey,
you're being harder on me than you were on Billy.
That's not fair. Major Mad didn't it? Course, injustice is

(25:59):
something that makes us all angry. I'm not confident we're
ever going to know more than we know now. The
White House messaging around it's been terrible because I don't
think they truly understand how palpable people feel, the anger
like this, this and no.

Speaker 4 (26:17):
He made a statement about me and Jeffrey Epstein's I
have nothing to do with that. I have nothing to
do with Jeffrey Epsin. And in fact, if you look
at the DOJ they announced, you know, they released three
median pages. It's like this is all they're supposed to
be doing. And frankly, the DOJ I think should just
say we have other things to do, because that whole
thing has turned out, I mean other than Bill Clinton

(26:38):
and you know, Bill Gates and lots of people that
have there are a lot of questions about it, but
nothing on me.

Speaker 1 (26:45):
They have other things to do. He's not wrong. Sounds bad,
all right. We'll touch on paternity leave, the Grammys, rent payments,
next it is It's the Jesse Kelly's Show, And I
may push back against the Eagles for that song. There
ain't no way to hide your lion eyes. I would

(27:08):
like to introduce the Eagles to Jasmine Crockett. When you
glue eyelashes like that on your eyes that are that long,
you can in fact hide the lion eyes.

Speaker 5 (27:19):
It turns there was more so to understand who causes migration.
So the example that I usually use specifically in Texas
is when the Haitians showed up at our border. There
were these images of officers on horseback that were beating
Haitians back into the water, and yeah, it never happened.

Speaker 1 (27:37):
Communists lie about everything all the time. Also another thing
they do. It has to be so exhausting to be
a communist. Every single thing that happens, it's not only
the worst thing that has ever happened, but it's the
first thing that has ever happened. For instance, the worst
thing that ever happened. Everything has to be the Nazis

(27:58):
and the Gestapo stopo like behavior. Donald Trump's modern.

Speaker 4 (28:03):
Dagas scappo gescapo is stooping folks up off the streets.
When you compare the old films of the Gestapo grabbing
grabbing people off the streets of polist It does look
like a Gestapo operation.

Speaker 5 (28:16):
You posted on social media that quote ICE is acting
like a terrorist force ICE agent.

Speaker 1 (28:22):
They are coming and kidnapping and disappearing people on the
streets of the United States. But this terror campaign of
having masked people rolling up in vam everything's the worst
thing ever. But like I said, everything's also the first
thing ever. This has never happened before. I about died

(28:47):
when I read this little tidbit from the Washington Post today.
Of course, the Grammys just just happened. I didn't watch them.
I don't care about pop culture. I certainly don't care
enough to watch any of this crap. And I don't
get care about the opinions of musicians on anything at all,
because musicians are mostly insane. People just make music. I
don't care. Dance for me, That's all I care about, right,

(29:10):
But this has gotta be man, what an all timer
imagine writing this. This is from the Washington Post. Quote
politics are often treated like radioactive material on Grammy's Night,
writes Post pop music critic Chris Richard. Chris Richards, but
on Sunday, something changed. The world outside had finally become

(29:33):
too loud to ignore.

Speaker 6 (29:35):
Ah every single awards show ever, all these stupid dirty
comedies get up and spew out their stupid, dirty comedy
opinions about everything from COVID do ukrained if these people
never shut up about politics, that everything has to be
the first thing ever and the worst thing ever. This

(29:59):
year it was so bad they finally had to speak out.

Speaker 1 (30:03):
God, geez, that has to be exhausting. You know what
else is exhausting? Paternity leave totally overrated. Now listen. I
only bring this up because there's a headline the NFL
world is in disbelief after hearing from former Vikings GM
took paternity leave. Dude just took some paternity leave, and

(30:25):
they were shocked by the whole thing. First, take your
paternity leave, please. Producer Corey getting ready to have a baby,
told him take your paternity leave, get out, go enjoy
your kid. Also, just know that it's gonna suck, all right.

(30:49):
It's not like you get to relax or sleep. People
think it's like some kind of a vacation for a dude.
This is the worst time because the kid doesn't do
anything yet All he does is cry and poop, and
mom isn't sleeping, and so she's miserable. It's not like
you're living it up with the old lady swinging from

(31:09):
the chandeliers drinking champagne. She's miserable. You're miserable. The kid
isn't any fun at all. I mean, don't get me wrong.
I want you to take your paternity leave, but people
act like it's some sacred time. Oh. I couldn't wait
to get back to work. I could, Chris. You don't
think the wife is listening right She can't hear us

(31:29):
right now, Bob is here in the studio. I just
wanted to make sure she couldn't actually hear any of this.
What Chris, But don't turn the speaker on in the
rumor she is, Chris. That's mean, don't do Is this
about the emails again? I told you, I told them
to stop emailing you. What do you want me to do?
I want you to switch to Pure Talk. That's what

(31:50):
I want you to do. In the name of Chris.
Save some money, please. The average family saves one thousand
dollars a year year when they switch to Pure Talk.
You don't need Verizon and you don't need AT and
T and you don't need T Mobile. You can switch
to pure talk and be you're on the same cell
phone towers. You realize that you understand that those other

(32:14):
companies hate you. Puretalk loves you. And for twenty five
dollars a month you get talk text, plenty of data,
twenty five bucks a month, no contract, no cancelation fee.
How do you do it?

Speaker 4 (32:30):
Well?

Speaker 1 (32:31):
You pick up your phone, which you can keep by
the way. You dial pound two five zero, say Jesse Kelly,
pound two five zero, say Jesse Kelly. Switch to pure Talk.
All right, all right again everything is the best thing
or the first thing ever, or the worst thing ever.

(32:52):
It's gotta be so insanely exhausted. Let's do an email, Jesse,
thanks so much for the red book. I'm sending it
to friends and highlighting some of your sentences. I've been
looking for your sults and it's end quote for some time,
so thanks. I hope you don't mind if I use
some of your thoughts and a few blogs I follow.
I don't care if you use my thoughts. What have

(33:15):
I taught you? I've taught you this time and time
and time again. There is no limit to what you
can accomplish if you're willing to take credit for someone
else's work. I don't look, I don't care if you
print this thing out and put your name down as
the author and distribute it to people. None of this

(33:35):
means anything to me whatsoever. I in all serious this.
I just wanted you to have it. That's why I
gave it free. And I told you I knew no
one would believe me that it wasn't a gimmick or
anything like that, because no one just gives something out now.
And I'm a capitalist as much as anybody. I actually
had a buddy someone you would know I had a buddy.
He reached out. He texted me this morning and he said, hey,

(33:59):
where do I pay pay for this thing? And I
explained to ing that it was free, and he didn't
believe me. He thought I was messing with him. He said, no, no, no, no, Susie,
where do people pay for the thing? It's just a
free booklet, that's all. That's it. It's a free booklet.
Jesse Kelly dot com. You put in your email address,
it's a free booklet. I've had people ask me, do

(34:19):
you care if I print a bunch of them.

Speaker 6 (34:21):
I don't care.

Speaker 1 (34:22):
Do you care if I send it to a friend?
I don't care. Do you care if I quote it?
I don't care what you do with it. You can
roll it up in a little water and wipe your
rear end with it for all I care. I wanted
you to have something nice, something that that's easily consumable.
That's my thing, easily consumable. I want to be able
to eat it easily, like a cheese it. Have you

(34:44):
heard they have a cheese at pizza Chris? I had
a buddy tell me, was it you told me that? Yesterday?
I had a friend, yes, an emailer that told us
that's right. Thank you to you, whoever you are, for
emailing and letting us know. I will give you a
TI taste test on that shortly. Let's talk about tribalism
next
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

Betrayal Season 5

Betrayal Season 5

Saskia Inwood woke up one morning, knowing her life would never be the same. The night before, she learned the unimaginable – that the husband she knew in the light of day was a different person after dark. This season unpacks Saskia’s discovery of her husband’s secret life and her fight to bring him to justice. Along the way, we expose a crime that is just coming to light. This is also a story about the myth of the “perfect victim:” who gets believed, who gets doubted, and why. We follow Saskia as she works to reclaim her body, her voice, and her life. If you would like to reach out to the Betrayal Team, email us at betrayalpod@gmail.com. Follow us on Instagram @betrayalpod and @glasspodcasts. Please join our Substack for additional exclusive content, curated book recommendations, and community discussions. Sign up FREE by clicking this link Beyond Betrayal Substack. Join our community dedicated to truth, resilience, and healing. Your voice matters! Be a part of our Betrayal journey on Substack.

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

Connect

© 2026 iHeartMedia, Inc.