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January 13, 2025 • 34 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Michael, this is Guber seventeen one six and Louisville, Kentucky.
You know, I think that when history looks back, it's
going to realize how brilliant Trump's maneuvers have been, because
all he does is he just throws out these bombastic, laughable,
absurd demands, ideas and requests, and it's just to pacify

(00:21):
the children who are in Washington, and he's going to
get stuff done so they can go on deciding who's
allowed to want bathrooms.

Speaker 2 (00:30):
Yeah, although I do think the whole thing about Panama, Greenland,
and I thought there was a third one. There are
three things he threw out, one to Gulf of America,
Gulf of America. I do think there's substance behind those.
He's right about Greenland. He's also right about the Panama Canal.
You can't have China controlling one or both ends of

(00:53):
that canal. And well it seems trite when you if
I were to say, or or any just average Joe said,
wait a minute, we gave the Panama Canal to Panama.
Why have they turned over management and control to the

(01:15):
Chinese Communist Party. I think most Americans would be like, well, yeah,
we can't have not. Maybe they don't understand the geopolitical
ramifications of it, but they understand what's right and what's wrong,
and that's just inherently wrong. We gave it to you.
In fact, you know, we saved your country by the way.
You know we we have invaded Panama before too. Yes, No,

(01:38):
not in the nineteenth century, in the twentieth century, Yes,
I forget. Didn't George H. W. Bush. Wasn't he the
one that did it? Or maybe it was Reagan? But
one of the two actually invaded Panama, So let's not
forget that. Ninety two twenty four also disagrees with me.
Or maybe maybe you wouldn't ye, maybe a Lousville, Kentucky.

(02:02):
That is, maybe you weren't disagreeing with me. But ninety
two twenty four does, Mike, I disagree disagree with you
on how much time Trump has to enact his policies.
I believe the midterm election will actually give him a
larger amount of congressional Republicans. I believe his third year
will be his most powerful time of his presidential term.

(02:24):
I hope you're right. It's just that the odds if
you're betting on it. UH Historically parties in control in
the midterms have always lost their majorities. But I hope
you know. Trump's been swimming up streaming about a lot
of things, so I hope that is true. Here, dragon,

(02:47):
did you win a million dollars that Musk was giving away?
Not that I am aware of. Well, I've got bad
news for you. You did not, Ah, dang it, you
did not remember. During the election, Nuck was offering a
one million dollar prize for those who signed an online petition.
The winner appears to be a Michigan man who actually

(03:10):
worked on Trump's campaign. Uh oh, some hanky panky going on.
The prize was given to Tyler Van Aiken from reading Michigan. Well,
I don't know. Maybe a Michigan's reading in Pennsylvania's reading,
but I don't know about Michigan. Must funded the contests
through America Pack. That's a pro Trump superpack. It was

(03:34):
designed to distribute daily cash rewards of up to one
million dollars to voters in swing states. Participants he had
to sign an online petition in support of free speech
and gun rights. Well, that'd be hard to do, wouldn't it.
Initially thought to be random, the selection process came under
legal scrutiny when it was revealed that it was not

(03:55):
a lottery. So the district attorney in Philadelphia, Larry Krasner,
the George Sorol supported DA filed a lawsuit against Musk
and the America Pack, describing the initiative as an illegal lottery.
Judge Angelo FuG Lietta fogg Lietta, I don't know. Easy
for you to say easy, and obviously it just ran

(04:18):
off my tongue. Lieta allowed the contest to proceed in Pennsylvania,
ruling that the giveaway did not fulfill the legal criteria
of a lottery since winners were not chosen at random.
The testimony from the treasurer of the pack revealed that
the winners were chosen through a multi step selection process.

(04:39):
The attorneys from Musk explained that the winners were assessed
based on their suitability to serve as a spokesman for
the pack, as supposed to being lucky lottery winners. Now,
I don't really care about this, except did you pull
the wolves over my eyes? Elon? Because I thought it

(05:01):
was a random drawing. I thought it was a pure lottery,
and instead your lawyers are now using their legal ees
to explain that it was an assessment based on a
winner's suitability to serve as a spokesman for the pack. Huh.

(05:25):
The last winner Van Aikin is linked to the Trump campaign.
Financial records indicate he received significant payments for his role
in preparing Trump's campaign events. He was paid over fourteen
thousand dollars for his work as a consultant, more than
sixteen thousand dollars for travel reimbursements. He also attended campaign events,

(05:47):
including the election that event in Palm Beach, America. Packs
year in filing list. Van akins one million dollar payment
on November twelve, twenty twenty four, as compensation for being
a spokesperson can sultant. Now, don't get me wrong. I
like Elon Musk and I wish him and the fake

(06:07):
Ramis Swami well in their DOGE efforts the Department of
Government efficiency, and I think he does kind of help Trump.
He's a good advisor to Trump. But I find this
thing just a little sketchy at best. Maybe he needs
a better publicist or something. Talk about the fires for

(06:29):
a moment, So now we have a memo. I always
love it when memos get released. The Los Angeles fire
Department has disclosed that it was really struggling to implement
a massive forty eight point eight million dollar budget cut
that was forced on it by Mayor Karen Bass just

(06:52):
days before the wildfires broke out last week. Elaked January
sixth department memo. In fact, day's the thirteenth, seventy six,
so just that's after the wildfire's book out, not just
days before, but just days maybe it was leaked just
days after. States that the LAA Fire Department believed a

(07:17):
worst case budget scenario, meaning there was not going to
be any relief from mayor, would result in the closure
of upward of sixteen fire stations on January eight. This
says several major wildfire's course brooklah blah, blah blah. The
leaked memo is pretty fascinating. Oh it is. It's updated

(07:41):
January sixth. Okay, so it's an update on January sixth
the Los Angeles Fire Department. This is the department update.
So this went out to the operations center or went
out from the operations center. The Los Angeles Fire Department
is still going through a forty eight point eight eight
million dollar budget reduction exercise with the budget office. The

(08:05):
Fire Chief. The Board of Fire Commissioners are steadfast in
their message of defending what resources we currently have in place.
The only way to provide a cost savings would be
to close as many as sixteen fire stations, not resources,
fire stations. This equates to at least one fire station
per city council district. Now that's pretty politically astute quo.

(08:27):
If the only way to save forty eight point eight
million is to physically close fire stations and then move
those men, those firefighters, and that equipment, all those resources
to other fire stations, then spread it out among all
sixteen city council districts. This is a worst case scenario

(08:49):
and is not happening yet. The fire chief will have
a chat with the Chief webinar next week to clarify
the situation and the budget. Let's see. Goes on to
say the Los Angeles Fire Department Superintendent four will be
added to all brush assignments to coordinate the hand crews.

(09:11):
They're just trying to figure out ways to move the
resources around. But indeed, it was forty eight point four
million dollars according to the Fire Department itself. Now, I
know timing sucks, and despite the leak memo and all
these media stories dealing detating that at least seventeen million
dollars was already cut from the budget. They're trying to

(09:35):
obfuscate the funding reductions. Victor Shi, one of the former
staffers who managed the social media account for Kamala Harris's
presidential campaign, is out there falsely claiming on x that
Bassett actually increased the budget by about fifty million dollars.
So of the seventeen million dollar budget cut in twenty

(09:56):
twenty four, seven million of it came in reductions from
time pay. Well, that's gone out the window because now
it's all hands on deck and every every firefighter in
the LA Fire Department has been required to call in
and to announce where they are because they've all been

(10:16):
called back to duty. Now. Of course, we didn't even
think about the diversion of moneys to the diversity, equity
and inclusion programs in recent years. And then did you
notice And I forget whether this occurred Friday or Saturday,
but the LA Emergency Alert system apparently had a glitch

(10:39):
of some sort and there were alerts that have been
sent out across the entire metropolitan area indicating that you
are under a mandatory evacuation. Then last Thursday, so this
apparently happened on Thursday. Then Thursday evening a notice went
out to the entire parity of La Kelly saying, Oops,

(11:04):
don't need to do that. In fact, it went off
as they were giving a.

Speaker 3 (11:10):
Press conference, Well, in coordination with our federal and state partners,
how we can stop the messages that are going out
right now that are not being initiated by a human
action to stop that and then understand how that occurred

(11:33):
so that the that the tool can still be used
for what was identified as like a critical fire weather
that we're still in experiencing and will continue to experience.

Speaker 2 (11:45):
While they're in the middle of a press conference about it,
it actually goes off, so the glitch continues. I love
the word glitch. Tim Walls. Yeah, that guy has endorsed
a certain individual to be the next chair of the
or a vice chair of the next Democrat National Committee.

(12:06):
David Hogg. Yes, that David Hogg from Florida for the
anti gun activist David Hogg. Remember he was Marjorie Stoneman
High School shooting in Parkland, Florida. That was back in
twenty seventeen or eighteen. I think he's quoted as saying

(12:26):
I am obsessed with and I love Governor Tim Walls,
and Walls says David Hogg represents exactly the kind of bold, dynamic,
and courageous leadership our party needs right now. He has
a unique ability to connect with the American people and
to speak to the strengths of our party. He couldn't

(12:50):
be happier to support Hog for DNC vice chair. Let
me just throw my hat in the ring too, instead
of not my hat, but my endorsement, and say that
I too support David Hog. In fact, I think it'd
be great for David Hog to be the chair of
the Democrat National Committee. Now, why would Tim Walls do this?

(13:11):
I thought he was a hunter. I thought he was
a gun rights activist. Yet we know that he's lobbied
against American gun rights despite doing all of those things.
In twenty eighteen, he said that weapons of war that
I carried in war, which he did not, should not
be in public hands. Remember that whole claim about how
quickly we forget that whole claim that he had carried

(13:35):
weapons in war became a point of contention during the
campaign because he never served in a combat zone, and
then even members of his units accused him of having
deserted his unit shortly before it was due to be
deployed to Iraq. David Hog represents exactly the kind of
dynamic and courageous leadership our party needs right now, whatever, sir,

(14:00):
just go for it. Do you remember the Wagner Group?
Remember that group that was they were heavily involved in Syria.
They were a bunch of mercenaries then of Vladimir Putin,
and then Putin also sent them into Ukraine, and then
Wagner himself, the head of the paramilitary group, the head

(14:23):
of these mercenaries, started confronting Putin that he wasn't conducting
the war right. Well, turns out that he got blown
up in a plane. Well, I'm sorry the plane exploded.
He wasn't blown up. The plane just happened to explode,
and of course he was never seen again. Well, a

(14:43):
mercenary with the Wagner Paramilitary Group, according to court records,
was arrested while attempting to illegally cross our southern border
back on January fourth. He had two passports, four thousand
dollars in a drone. You cross what would you cross

(15:05):
the border? Illegally carrying a drune. I just don't get it.
He was trying to cross the Rio Grande River near Roma, Texas.
He had been honored previously for his combat service by
a Russian veterans organization that was established by Putin, and
then when he got arrested in the US by border patrol,
he informed that he was a citizen of Kazakhstan, and notably,

(15:27):
one of the two foreign identifying documents that he carry
was indeed at Kazakport passport. Now, the Wagner Group has
been designated as a criminal organization by the Department of Treasury,
has been the subject of a bunch of international sanctions,
and the organization's founder, of course, was you know, blown
up in that plane, Projikin p h pre Yot Preyot

(15:52):
Pregosion I think was his name. So here you have
the apprehension of a decorated Wagner mercenary attempting to enter
the United States illegally. Ought to be concerning, I mean, really,
why do you want to come here? You got two
passports at least, you got four thousand dollars in cash
and a drone. What are you gonna do with the drone.

(16:16):
It just continues to get weirder and weirder at the
border and then dragonheaded me. A story that says this
is from the post yesterday. Immigrants in Denver weighing options
from self deporting to fleeing to Canada ahead of Trump presidency.
Main bel Cavedo doesn't want to be stereotyped as a

(16:38):
lawbreaker just because he's Venezuelan. Well, if he's Venezuelan, he
may not be a lawbreaker unless he didn't use the
temporary protected status out the CVP one app which grants
Venezuelan's temporary protected status. But now he's not sure that
he wants to be here. He doesn't have a criminal record,

(17:00):
and he's now weighing his options about whether to stay
or to leave. Pump effect.

Speaker 4 (17:06):
Hey, Michael, would it be worth having stored water tanks
underground on the properties and fire extinguishers that could be
used by generator or electricity if a firefire showed up
or a homeowner was trying to put out their own fire.

Speaker 5 (17:26):
Do you mean similar to a fire hydrant that ran dry.

Speaker 3 (17:30):
No.

Speaker 2 (17:31):
I think he's talking about having your own having your
own oh for.

Speaker 5 (17:34):
Your own property, your own property gotcha.

Speaker 2 (17:36):
Okay, well it would as long as you have a
reliable source of energy to pump the water out of
the storage tank. Yeah, but then you'd have to talk
to a professional and find out how much how much

(18:00):
water do you really need to put in storage based
on the size, composition, the landscaping, everything about your home,
and then you have to make a decision about if
you need Let's say the house has caught fire, but
it's not fully engulfed yet because you may not be

(18:23):
home or before you can get out. You know, some
of these fires move so quickly that by the time
you get out, the house has already started. And if
you've evacuated your sol If you haven't evacuated, you probably
don't have power, which means you've got to start the generator,
get the generator going, get the pressure built up, and
then you've got to be able to start, you know,

(18:46):
dousing the fire, and then do you know how to
do that?

Speaker 5 (18:50):
Also, you may need more water because depending on which
way the winds are blowing your neighbor's house on fire
blowing to your house, So now you need to put
your neighbor's house on fire to save your own.

Speaker 2 (18:59):
Right, I've seen many videos of people with garden hoses
out hosing their property down, trying to keep it damp,
but which which may minimize, it may mitigate, but it's
certainly not gonna prevent because the heat in those wildfires

(19:19):
dries out everything so rapidly that a garden hose is
probably not gonna save it. It's probably not. I'm not
saying I'm not saying you want a storage tank with
Let's just say that it's twenty thousand gallons, ten thousand gallons.
You're not gonna pump that onto your house with a
water hose. You're gonna need something else, And so then

(19:40):
you know. So then the other issue becomes can you
can you physically handle Have you ever had a held
have you ever held a fire hose? I've only been allowed.
I was only allowed to hold a fire hose that
was already pressurized and the water was already flowing, just
so I could feel how difficult it is, how much

(20:04):
strength it takes to hold and direct that hose as
that water is coming flowing out. So I'd say you
it's possible, But I think to really understand all of
the logistics and the mechanics, all of the different probabilities

(20:27):
that you need to take into account. To do so
would make it extremely costly, which is why we pay
taxes to have fire departments to keep fire hydrants that
have water under pressure in them, which I know is
stupid on my part to say, because they don't seem
to have any of that in California. So go back

(20:49):
for a moment to the self deportation that's occurring. So
the liberal policies, the Marxist policies of the Democrats of
leaving the border open and then facilitating homelessness too, have
subjected California, obviously to hordes of illegal aliens and derelicts.
I think this guy fits both descriptions. One Manuel Sierra Leva.

(21:16):
This comes to us from the Liberty Daily. A man
was detained by residents near the Ken Fire in West Hills, California,
after being caught with a blowtorch. The individual, identified as
one Manuel Sierra Leva, has been confirmed by ICE sources
to be an illegal immigrant from Mexico. Now, of course

(21:39):
we know that Los Angeles is a liberal woke jurisdiction,
and if he is an illegal alien, and if he
is on probation, he shouldn't have been running around the blowtorch.
He should have been in prison prior to the deportation.
Let me think correct that he should never have entered

(21:59):
the country in the first place, because it should be
the first priority of you know, maybe perhaps the military
and ICE and CBP to defend the border from Ford invasion.
But once these Marxists in charge let them loose, he's
gonna go back starting start fires again. US Immigrations and
Customs Enforcement officials are planning to place a detainer request

(22:22):
on Sierra Levey, but they do not expect it to
be honored due to the California sanctuary state law. According
to Fox News and Bill Malusian, who's doing the best
reporting on all the illegal immigration going on so as
Los Angeles demonstrates, I don't think it's feasible to live
under this Marxist rule. And then, you know, Los Angeles,

(22:44):
do you think that parts of it will ever really
be rebuilt? You know, we often joke about California just well,
you know, if the big one comes in San Andreas
just drops everything that's kind of you know, west of
the mountains, just kind of drops it into the ocean.
Is anybody going to notice if a tree falls into
force and nobody's there. Does anybody really hear it? Are

(23:05):
he really going to care? Well? I'm not really sure
that joke's appropriate right now, But in all seriousness, I
think there may be areas that may never rebuild, but
not always because of something that the city or the
state may do. I want you to think about. Take
a typical family of four. You see all these commercials

(23:29):
on TV all the time about John, do we have
insurance somebody just had a stroke, Or John, do we
have insurance because somebody just is involved in a car
wreck and they're in intensive care? And John always says, well,
I haven't gotten to it yet, because you know, getting
insurance is complex and it's just too expensive and I
can't fit in our budget. And then you know, the

(23:49):
sales pitch comes on, well, come to this company because
you know we've got term life insurance policies at such
and such, or you know, somebody's always trying to tell you,
you know, whether it's Progressing or or it's Geico or
whomever it might be. They always got the cute little
characters always trying to sell you insurance. So your homeowners
comes due and it's more than you can afford so

(24:16):
you don't buy insurance, or you put it off for
a while, like Okay, well I'm gonna I'm gonna run
the risk and I'm not going to buy insurance for
three months while I try to save up enough money to,
you know, like start paying the premiums fire hits. You
don't have insurance, Well, if you're saving money just to

(24:36):
pay for the premiums, that means you probably don't have
enough savings to rebuild the home, or you don't buy
a complete replacement policy that's going to cover whatever it
costs to rebuild your home as it originally was. If

(24:59):
you don't have that kind of policy, see, you probably
don't have savings that's going to allow you to rebuild
back a three thousand square foot home or whatever size
it might be. You can only afford to rebuild of
fifteen hundred square foot home. But then nobody's thinking about this.
Those fires were so intense in some areas that the

(25:21):
foundations are ruined. So everything in terms of the infrastructure
is going to have to be replaced. Your sewer line
may have collapsed, your water lines may have collapsed, or
they may have been completely melted in the in the
fires as the heat of the burning house just spreads
down through the ground. So now you don't have any infrastructure,

(25:44):
so you have to completely rebuild waterline, sewer lines, You
got to rebuild a foundation. If you have a basement,
you got to rebuild the basement. You got to redo
all of that. And some people may look at all
of that and unless mayor or Governor Newsom raised some
of the regulations the cost of rebuilding. Now they've been

(26:05):
talking about, oh, we're going to streamline the process. We're
going to make it so to getting in a building permit.
It's going to be so easy to do that. You
won't have to wait forever to get a building permit. Well,
you get the building permit and then you look at
the requirements and you've got all these new things you
have to do. It's got to be to the new
codes for fire resistance. It's got to be you know,
not fireproof, but fire resistance. Fireproof will be the next

(26:27):
thing I'll try to do. Fire resistance. You've got to
have a certain class of roof, a certain class of
shingles on it. You're going to have to meet. It's
going to be all electric or if you wanted to
have gas, you can't have gas, or maybe you can
have gas for soap, but it's got to have a
certain ventilation on it because otherwise you're going to die
of carbon monoxide poisoning. It's because, I mean, all these

(26:49):
stupid greeny weening regulations, and so now you start looking
at the cost of rebuilding your house and you're like,
oh my gosh, well, the insurance is going to reimburse
me for the replacement costs, but then did you have
the prevent that they will also pay to meet the
current building codes and the current regulations. I discovered all
this when the tornado hit our house because I had

(27:09):
gotten a policy that that said that they will pay
you know, the replacement costs, plus they will meet any
codes that have changed since the house was built to
build it to the current code. So I wasn't no
anything to well, of course I didn't have to rebuild
the whole house, but it was still extensive. It was
still you know, almost one hundred and seventy five thousand

(27:31):
dollars worth of damage. So a lot of people are
going to look at that and they're going to just say, no,
the where's the U haul? Well, oh well, I guess
we don't need a U haul, we don't have anything.
And then you don't rebuild, and now you have a

(27:53):
vacant piece of property. What's going to happen with that
vacant piece of property? Well, just in Colorado, pretty soon
you're going to get a property tax bill. So you
can't rebuild. You got property taxes own ode, you can't
meet the new codes. What are you gonna do? That's
why I say they truly may never rebuild. Here's some

(28:22):
assumptions that Scott Adams, the found the creator of Dilbert,
put out about rebuilding after the fire, and I think
these are worth thinking about. It can take years to
get anything approved in normal times in California. The backlog
from the fire can push it out to a decade,
perhaps two. The cost of building a custom home in

(28:45):
California is roughly double the market value of the home
when finished. Listen to that again, the cost of building
a custom home in California. The cost is about double
the market value once the home is constructed. Three, the
new home will get a property tax step up to
become unaffordable for anyone who owned the original home for

(29:08):
a decade or more so. It's been. You know, it's
been assessed to a certain value, and now you rebuild,
and that assessment's going to increase, and so the step
up in property taxes may be such that you can't
afford that house anymore. Four, the fire risk will return
once everything regrows, and insurance companies may or may not

(29:30):
come back. So you assume continued incompetence, and you assume
that they continue to pull out or they just their
premiums just skyrocket. And then think about this twelve thousand structures.
Now not obviously not all of those are homes, but
are there enough qualified builders to rebuild? And then I

(29:54):
think about the number of scam artists they're going to
move in. People will be desperate to rebuild their home
and suddenly, oh, here, I can rebuild your home for
thirty percent less than that guy, but I need twenty
percent down, never to be seen again. And then last,
but not least, owners would be rebuilding in the midst

(30:16):
of what could turn out to be unchecked and growing crime.
If maybe not unchecked crime, at least growing crime, because
crime's been increasing in California and it will continue to increase,
and are they gonna do anything about that? So will
Los Angeles rebuild. I think it's a great question to.

Speaker 5 (30:38):
Your point about insurance.

Speaker 2 (30:40):
On top of that, you have to remember.

Speaker 5 (30:42):
That if they had a mortgage, they still owe that mortgage.
Just because their fire burned down their current house doesn't
mean that mortgage doesn't mean to be replaced.

Speaker 2 (30:51):
You're right. Those mortgage payments will continue until you to
either pay off the mortgage or you somehow were able
to sell the land and get enough money to at
least reduce the principle by enough that you can. Yeah,
I mean, it's just a great point. I tend to
focus on property taxes because it irks me that I

(31:15):
pay property taxes on property that I have purchased and
paid for and there's no end to it. So you
take my mom, who's ninety four years old planning. You'll
see her next weekend if the weather's okay. Is still
paying property taxes at ninety four years old on a

(31:36):
house that my father built in nineteen sixty eight or
sixty nine. And I don't know what the value of
the house is today. I should try to find that.
And she's not really done any improvements to it at all,
and she did this day, still at ninety four years
old is still paying property. It's absurd, utterly absurd. There's

(31:59):
one great spot in this in these fires of somebody
telling the truth. The chief the LA Fire Department, at
least as of yesterday, had not been fired for saying
this on Friday period.

Speaker 6 (32:18):
Did the City of Los Angeles fail you and your
department and our city. It's my job to stand up
as a chief and exactly say, justifiably what the fire
department needs to operate to meet the demands of the community.

Speaker 2 (32:32):
Did they fail you?

Speaker 6 (32:33):
That is our job, and I tell you that's why
I'm here. So let's get us what we need so firefighters.

Speaker 2 (32:37):
Can do their jobs. Did they fail you? Yes, Chief
Kristin Crowley.

Speaker 7 (32:44):
I believe the anchors that wanted to ask a question. Yes,
in some comments we do. If you could please ask
her regarding the Times article that came out that the
Santaanez reservoir was closed to repairs and it was empty.
One hundred and seventeen million gallons of water could have
been used in this fight.

Speaker 2 (33:02):
The question is about the Santa email. Now that's okay.
The point I wanted to make is when she's asked,
did the city fail you. She finally just said yes.
Then the rumor started sw swirling around that the mayor
had fired her. So the mayor brought the mayor said no,
I've not fired her. I would add the parenthetical yet,

(33:24):
and brought her up and had her stand with her
next to her at a press conference and which they
were giving an update on the fires. But this is
I think what Americans want. Americans want is I maintained
this from the very beginning. We can handle the truth.
We just want to be told the truth, even if
it's bad, or it's ugly, or it's painful. We want

(33:47):
to know the truth. And generally the truth has a
way of finding its way out into the open anyway.
So I applaud this woman for at least having the
cajones to stand up and say, yeah, I was failed.
The mayor and the city council, the governor, they've all failed.
The Los Angeles Fire Department. Good for her, absolutely good

(34:09):
for her.
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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

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

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