Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
Independent thoughts, independent life. This is Chad Benson.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
This is JAD Show.
Speaker 3 (00:18):
My name is Craig Collins, filling in.
Speaker 4 (00:20):
Thrilled to be with you, a bunch of stuff as
always to talk about out there in the world. And
yet one of the first topics, one of the most
important topics that I could possibly think of to discuss
with you today, isn't on anyone's radar, and it's crazy
that it's not. I do love this. Oh, by the way,
this is the Chad Benson Show. I'm Craig Collins filling in.
I don't know if I even said that with how
(00:40):
distracted I am by this, But we don't have a
president basically, like I can say it that way, I
think I think that basically makes sense. Biden is on
permanent vacation at this point, a vacation that makes no
sense to a whole lot of us. It's a vacation
that probably shouldn't be happening because you know, he's not
really fit for the But here this is Fox News
(01:02):
saying that you can see the back of Biden's head
as he's sitting on a beach somewhere and also in
charge of the country.
Speaker 3 (01:08):
But you know, it's fine, Kamala has got it. It'll
be okay.
Speaker 5 (01:11):
In Rahobeth Beach, Delaware, you get kind of a backshot
of the President there enjoying the sun last couple of
days of summer. I want to hear both of you
get your response to what Senator Vance just laid out.
But let's start here. Mark. For years, Kamala Harris was
an advocate of very specific green energy mandates, whether it
(01:34):
was making the.
Speaker 4 (01:34):
Great Now, it's fine, they're talking about Harris now, they're
just moving on that. You got head sitting there, he's
looking at the beach, he's having himself a nice time,
and he's like, all right, let's talk about this other
stuff here. I'll play this too. Actually, this is what
amuses me so much about it. Ben Stiller, the actor,
lands at an airport. It looks like he's going to
some sort of Kamala Harris event, and somebody, because you know,
(01:57):
media does this, walks up to him and says, hey,
why you hear, why do you support Harris?
Speaker 3 (02:02):
What's going on with that?
Speaker 4 (02:04):
And his answer is hilarious, hilarious because it also makes
no sense. But unaware, he's unaware of that, and a
lot of other people. I think a lot of Americans
are behaving as though they think this makes sense. Here
we go play it for you.
Speaker 3 (02:19):
Team, What do you like about Harris perform me.
Speaker 6 (02:21):
We're just very excited about the moving forward and all
the energy and excitement that's around.
Speaker 3 (02:27):
It's very exciting movement right now.
Speaker 6 (02:29):
So that that's why I'm here, because it's time for change.
Speaker 3 (02:32):
It seems like you can sustainable.
Speaker 4 (02:35):
It's such an exciting time and it's time for change.
Harris is in the White House, she's the vice president.
I don't know, Like it's not even Look, there's a
lot of people out there that'll talk to you and
they'll be on one side of the aisle or the
other side of the aisle and screaming all this crazy stuff,
and I'll be honest, it's not I'm not motivated by
that at all.
Speaker 3 (02:55):
Today.
Speaker 4 (02:56):
I'm not trying to convince you that you got to
be on one side and not the other. It's it's
just insane to hear that. Like, it's just actual, full
on ridiculous to think that we're in a place where
mainstream media and politicians and celebrities and whoever want to
convince you that Harris is a brand new candidate that
(03:16):
she's not currently in a position of power. It's probably
the most amusing thing I've seen in a while. And yeah,
she does have a history of being very far left
on a whole lot of issues. I one issue that
she was very determined never to fund, and this goes
back to a tweet that I think she sent out
in like twenty seventeen, was the border wall. She said
(03:37):
that Trump's use of money for a border wall was horrible.
Speaker 3 (03:40):
It was terrible. I'm paraphrasing, but.
Speaker 4 (03:42):
It was a completely idiotic use of funds and she
would never support it. Oh, by the way, Harris in
twenty twenty four wants to build a wall.
Speaker 3 (03:50):
She's thinking about the border wall. She's on top of
that issue.
Speaker 4 (03:54):
She also wants to do some other things that have
been popular Trump plans for a while.
Speaker 3 (03:58):
You know, I do there's something else out there that
I do really like.
Speaker 4 (04:01):
And I'll be honest, a little bit of the shot
at CBS on this is silly to me. It's not
quite as strong as you'd want it to be, but
it is still amusing. It's still funny to see. So
Harris has been talking about, you know, no tips no
taxes on tipped work. And this is something that has
(04:22):
long been a discussion of Republicans and actually a discussion
of Trump for quite some time. And so you have
CBS the other day discussing this, and it's just it's amusing.
It's like a three minute long clip. I won't play
all of it for you, but you'll get the basic
sentiment if I play a little. So first you can
hear CBS talking when Trump rolls this out, about how
(04:45):
it's a terrible plan, it has no basis in reality,
it's going to cost us tons and tons of money,
essentially crapping all over the idea of it ever being a.
Speaker 3 (04:54):
Thing that could happen.
Speaker 4 (04:55):
Then Kamala Harris starts talking about it, and the tone
shifts dramatically for CBS, and it's sort of hilarious.
Speaker 3 (05:03):
And a lot of other places here we go.
Speaker 7 (05:05):
If you're a waiter, a bartender, a bellman, somebody in
the service industry who gets tips for the work you do,
your federal income and payroll tax would conceivably no longer exist.
Although looking at the two proposals that were put out
this week by House and centerate Republicans is actually a
little difference. That's the kind of money overall that funds
(05:27):
Social Security, Medicare, and other social safety net programs. So
they'd take a hit, believed if it were to be
enacted the way Trump is proposing, it'd be about a
two hundred fifty billion dollars hit the federal revenue over
the next decade. Culinary Workers' Union, for example, that organizes
a lot of them, says this Trump idea is unrealistic.
That they think that their members are smart enough to
know the difference between, as they said, real solutions and
(05:49):
wild campaign promises from me.
Speaker 3 (05:51):
I love it.
Speaker 4 (05:51):
So it goes on and on and on. It's like this,
this can't happen. It's crazy, It's ridiculous. Who wouldever say
this out loud? Why would anyone even entertain this? This
is obviously a promise that'll never come to fruition. Harris
talks about it, as I said, and then here's CBS against.
Speaker 7 (06:04):
Eve, especially working class people money. It's a Republican idea
that's been out there for several years. The idea that
if you are someone who makes a low minimum wage
of like two dollars in change an hour but live
otherwise on the tips you get from people which can
number far more than that per hour. You shouldn't have
to pay taxes on that cash tip, maybe even the
(06:26):
credit card tips. It's been floated for years by various Republicans.
In early June, when he was campaigning in Las Vegas
in Nevada stayed with the highest number of tip dourli
service workers, he said, we should stop taxing people's tips,
and a lot of people thought, well, that's crazy. How
would you exactly make that happen. Democrats criticize them for it.
The Culinary Workers' Union, massive popular labor union in that
(06:49):
state that can mobilize tens of thousands of voters, also
rejected the idea, saying it's not sensical and it would
have to be part of other solutions. Well, what did
Kamala Harris do Saturday night in Las Vegas? But I
support ending taxes on tips did as well as raising
the minimum wage. As we were out there, for example,
in late June, discussing this with waiters and bartenders who said, yeah,
(07:11):
love on paper, that's a great idea, which save me.
One woman told me that at the height of her
bartending career, she was making about one hundred thousand dollars
a year, and.
Speaker 3 (07:20):
I guess love right there.
Speaker 4 (07:21):
I just love it again though that it's more now
about the people. It's more about the way in which
this money could actually impact their lives, how much money
they actually make, all that stuff, the reporting it changes profoundly,
and it continues to change as discussion now becomes about
is this a realistic thing that we could do. Look,
I'll say it this way, and this is a silly
(07:41):
way to say this to start the show, but it's
not going to be shocking to anyone. Our government, our
politicians spend a crap ton of money they shouldn't spend.
They do it all the time. Both sides of the
aisle do this. Certainly the Democrats do this. They love it. Actually,
it seems they're like people that are drunk at a
bar at two A and don't know that their credit
card is already maxed out, so they just keep going
(08:04):
back in and trying again. That is essentially the way
that this works. And so what you have here, you
have a really bad financial idea that all of a sudden,
because Democrats are talking about it. Well, now at least
we understand where the human element is. We understand where
this is. By the way, there's one other thing that
I wanted to discuss today. Probably get to it more
(08:25):
later on throughout the show, But these reports about how
big of a lead Harris has taken over Trump in
any sort of national polling, and one thing about it,
it doesn't matter.
Speaker 3 (08:36):
I don't know how to say that different.
Speaker 4 (08:38):
And yes, a whole lot of conservatives have been touting
how good it looked for Trump to be leading in
national polls over button, and many times people talked about
how Republicans barely ever would lead in these polls over
the last fifteen to twenty However many years it's been
And the reason why is because, due to our electoral college,
(08:58):
the popular vote is not the way we who's the president.
So if a Republican is leading, that the odds of
them also winning the electoral college are through the roof
because of the way the system is built, essentially meaning
that those big giant cities don't carry the weight that
they might need to carry or should carry in the
world of just a popular opinion vote. And I actually
(09:19):
do think that's still a good thing. I mean, nonetheless,
that's why it's talked about one way and why if
Harris pulls a lead of any kind a few percentage points,
it actually doesn't mean that she's destined to win any
sort of election. It means that we still have to
look at the battleground states. We still have to look
at who's ahead here and who's ahead there, and that
race is very tight and very close. But it's just
(09:39):
interesting to see and hear all this discussion and wonder
to yourself, what has Harris done to deserve this? Genuinely
asking I don't even have to ask that in a
political way, just genuinely asking you in her career, what
has Kamala Harris done that deserves the nomination that she
was handed without winning a primary in twenty twenty, definitely
(10:02):
not doing well in her only attempt to win a primary.
What has she done as far as speeches she's given,
as far as you know, promises she's.
Speaker 3 (10:11):
Made, what has she done?
Speaker 4 (10:13):
And I don't have a good answer for that, And
I don't think many people have a good answer for that,
because she hasn't done anything. And yet the excitement for
is so crazy that Ben Stiller can't wait for change,
even though again she's actually currently in the White House,
all right, there's a lot to talk about. This's non politics,
a holiday coming up in just a few days. I
definitely a situation where you want to have as much
(10:35):
fun as he can.
Speaker 3 (10:36):
So I promise we'll do that today.
Speaker 4 (10:38):
As I said, this is Craig Collins filling in on
the Chad Benson Show. But hey, even when Chad is,
you know, off and not working, he does a bunch
of stuff.
Speaker 3 (10:48):
He's always doing things.
Speaker 4 (10:50):
And he has a message about rough greens coming up
for you in just a little bit here. Actually, hold on, Nope,
give me one more minute and then we'll get to
had Benson and rough Greens.
Speaker 3 (11:01):
My bad on that.
Speaker 4 (11:02):
I will say one last thing, and I'll say this
about the pulling data itself, and I do think this
is pretty interesting. Many of the stories that talk about
pulling data between Trump and Harris also mentioned a lot
of minority voters and what side of the political oil
they're on, who they're likely to vote for. I think
Hispanic voters is one area where they reference a lot
(11:23):
female voters, of course, one that's always talked about. It's
interesting to have to subset the audience to.
Speaker 3 (11:30):
Tell you how great of a job Harris is.
Speaker 4 (11:32):
Doing because even when you look at it on the
national scale, and even when she's leading, there's still there's
weaknesses within this system. There's weaknesses within the armor. There's
an achilles heel that seems to be screaming a lot
of people in the face, and it's that whole He
hasn't done anything problem that they think so many of
us notice. But all right, quick break, a lot coming up.
(11:52):
Craig Collin's filling out on the Chad Benson Show. Here
he is with a message about Roughgreens.
Speaker 8 (11:56):
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It's gonna help your dog at the nutrients they're missing
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(12:39):
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Or go to Roughgreens dot com. Slash Chad. It's the
Chad Benson.
Speaker 9 (12:53):
Joe Deep States, No Deep do, do't e the Chad
Benson Show.
Speaker 4 (13:09):
This is the Chad Benson Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in. Let's not talk about serious stuff, shall we.
It sounds more fun to talk about some silly things,
although this is still sort of politics, not really, I
guess BuzzFeed put up a question and a whole bunch
of people answered it. There are a lot of people
out there who just don't give a crap about politics anytime.
(13:29):
I think even presidential elections that get the amount of
popularity or the amount of attention that wants like this
do There's still people out there that are like, ah.
Speaker 3 (13:37):
My life's more fun with me not thinking about any
of this.
Speaker 4 (13:40):
So they ask those people, I imagine what it would
take for you to definitely vote and to vote for
a certain guide whoever it is, Like, what's the campaign
promise that wins your support?
Speaker 3 (13:50):
And some of these are awesome.
Speaker 4 (13:52):
Promising to make breakfast all day at every fast food restaurant,
that's something that someone said they'd really like to be
a campaign promise. Pledging to bring back original movie ideas,
not just sequels and remakes.
Speaker 3 (14:04):
I'm down with that.
Speaker 4 (14:05):
I don't know that i'd vote for someone for that,
but Hollywood needs to do that. Banning your item has
shipped when it's really just a label that's been created
and it's not.
Speaker 3 (14:13):
Shipped and it's not showing up anytime soon.
Speaker 4 (14:15):
Shoes staying on the TSA checkpoint all TSA checkpoints, Excuse
me is another one that people liked. Banning those super
bright led headlights that blind you at night. Yes, that
one is absolutely a yes. Where you have somebody approaching
you and you do like the bright light flash and
you're like, hey man, you got to turn your brights off,
and they're like, these aren't brights, baby, I'm just doing
(14:36):
this all the time. That would be great to get
rid of that situation. I'm way too passionate about that.
Speaker 3 (14:41):
One.
Speaker 4 (14:41):
One last one on here forging forcing excuse me, TV
shows to all have at least twenty two episodes a
season again instead of like six, which now is a
thing that a whole lot of them do because darn it,
they don't really care.
Speaker 3 (14:53):
Why do you care?
Speaker 4 (14:54):
You only have to release all the episodes at the
same time on a social media platform, so it needs
to make twenty two you anymore?
Speaker 3 (15:00):
That's not a thing I would support that. I like
those ideas.
Speaker 4 (15:04):
Not exactly political campaign promises, but promises for something would
be pretty awesome.
Speaker 8 (15:09):
All right.
Speaker 4 (15:09):
One other, very just quick thing out there that I
saw that I thought was interesting too. This is also
from BuzzFeed. I don't know why I'm generating so much
of my content from BuzzFeed today, but apparently both celebrities
and employees admit that dealing with famous people is horrible,
meaning a co star says that, oh, yeah, that person's
a jerk, or this person's an idiot, or a lot
of people who workplaces say the demanding environment or the
(15:33):
demanding you know, behavior of people is just obnoxious and ridiculous,
and I agree with that.
Speaker 3 (15:38):
But all right, we have a lot coming up on
the show.
Speaker 4 (15:41):
Rude celebrity is probably going to be a continued topic
of conversation because why not. The Internet says it's real,
so do I Craig Collins filling in on the Chad
Benson Show. But actually, there are a couple other stories
out here that I did love. Mike Myers apparently got
crapped on on BuzzFeed Jimmy Fallon and of course got
crapped down because of all the rumors that he's a big,
(16:03):
giant jerk in his own life. All Allen, I guess
also had that happen to her. Jennifer Lopez, who's now
going through a divorce with Ben Affleck, Apparently he is
also a person that's really really hard to deal with,
according to the Internet. I don't know that these stories
are true. None of them should come after me and
ssume me. I'm not backing it up. I'm just saying
that apparently it's a thing. Actually, even Julia Roberts got
(16:24):
some cramp from Steven Spielberg about the movie Hook, which
Julia Roberts plays the role of tinker Bell.
Speaker 3 (16:31):
That is an old movie.
Speaker 4 (16:33):
Wow, it's not actually an old movie. It's an old
movie to a lot of people in today's world. I
remember watching it as a kid. But it's a goodie.
You should check it out if you don't know all
what I'm talking about. And then finally, one other thing
that I saw out there that I'll probably discuss later.
A four year old kid accidentally broke a thirty five
hundred year old jug at a museum in Israel. Thirty
(16:53):
five hundred years this thing exists, it's put on display
all kinds of places. It's a history item, and then
one four year old took it down. I can't imagine
what that conversation is like if you're the parents of
the kid knocked it over.
Speaker 3 (17:07):
It shattered.
Speaker 4 (17:08):
People looked around the like, is that is that a problem,
And the answer is absolutely.
Speaker 3 (17:12):
It is, Yes, it is.
Speaker 4 (17:13):
This is very very bad for very very many people,
none of them probably that family. They're just gonna leave,
They're gonna say my bad. All right, quick break A
lot coming up. Greg Collins filling in on the Chad
Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (17:39):
The Chad Benson Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent Life.
Speaker 10 (18:03):
This is Chad.
Speaker 2 (18:04):
Benson, this is the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 4 (18:08):
My name is Craig Collins, filling in, thrilled to be
with you. A bunch of stuff to talk about. They
tell us that jd. Vance is way less popular than
anybody else in this campaign.
Speaker 3 (18:19):
I guess whether it's Kambala.
Speaker 4 (18:20):
Harris, who used to be deeply unpopular as a vice president,
not a candidate for the office of president, even though
she pretends as though she isn't the vice president A
lot of times.
Speaker 3 (18:31):
I've been talking about that somewhat. Today.
Speaker 4 (18:33):
You got Tim Walls out there who's actually made the
most mistakes. Like if we had to pick one person
out of the four people running for office together, Trump
and his VP candidate and then kammlin Hers, Tim Walls
is the most problems. The fact that he lied about
the rank he reached before retiring from the National Guard
(18:54):
is a problem. Bigger than that is the problem about
him talking about also carrying his weapon in places he
never was, like actually in places of combat. That's something
that should be a big deal that a lot of
people should care about.
Speaker 2 (19:08):
JD.
Speaker 4 (19:08):
Vance was talking about some of the brewing controversy as
the media will tell you it is, or as he says,
is kind of ridiculous, involving Trump and some of these
other discussions about a disagreement, in altercation, whatever word you
want to use, at the Arlington National Cemetery. Here's some
of what Vance said. And he did tell Kamala Harris
(19:29):
to go to hell. That was a part of the answer.
So I thought that wou be interesting too, and certainly
the headline of the entire thing.
Speaker 3 (19:36):
But here we go, look like for yourself and for
Trump at this time, well.
Speaker 11 (19:41):
I think, first of all, the altercation at Arlington Cemetery
is the media creating a story where I really don't
think that there is one. There is verifiable evidence. There
is verifiable evidence that the campaign was allowed to have
a photographer there. There's verifiable they were invited to have
a photographer there. There's verifiable evidence that the families of
(20:04):
these poor people who had their loved ones die three
years ago at Abbey wrote they had to be Abbygate.
Those thirteen Americans, a lot of them were there with
the President. They invited him to be there and to
support them. That's not an insult to the memories of
their loved ones. They wanted Donald Trump there, and thank
(20:24):
God that we have a president who stands with our
veterans instead of one who runs away from them.
Speaker 4 (20:29):
All right, So I want to stop it right there,
first and foremost, Yes, there is actual evidence that demonstrates
that the families of the people who gave their lives
in the horrible exit in Afghanistan in the first place,
and how angry those family members have been, those parents
have been of those soldiers at the Biden administration, feeling
(20:50):
as though it was needless the lives that were lost
that day, and how that all occurred. And they are
supporters of Trump, I guess, or they wanted Trump there,
they didn't mind the cameras. All those things are true.
Everything Vance just said so far is true. And the
reason I'm even choosing to play this is I think
that he does a really good job in these moments
of speaking clearly, of speaking with facts, of saying things
(21:13):
a certain way. He's certainly well educated. I mean, he's
he's skilled, and yet for some reason media is saying
he's the least popular of the four people they're at
the forefront of the presidential election and the vice presidential picks.
Speaker 3 (21:26):
So it's interesting to me.
Speaker 4 (21:28):
Because if you just watch the guy and listen to
the guy, yeah, sure his delivery isn't the nicest, but
he usually has the receipts when he talks about certain things.
It's hard to believe that he's this quote unpopular, and
he's also somebody who you think the left would love.
He crapped all over Trump at one point, which was weird,
and it's odd to even look back at those things
(21:50):
and think about how it's the vice presidential pick for Trump.
And I know that's been covered so much I don't
need to talk about it anymore. But just again, you'd
think that media would actually highlight that part of him,
prop him up as a person that they like, and
then also say, well, you remember what he used to
say about Trump as opposed to just crapping all over him.
But let's let him continue.
Speaker 11 (22:15):
Now. Yeah, I mean, it is amazing to me that
you have apparently somebody at Arlington Cemetery, some staff member,
had a little disagreement with somebody, and they have turned
the media has turned this into a national news store.
You know what, I think our veterans care a lot
more about that. Kamala Harris's VP nominee lied about his
military service. I think that our veterans care a lot
(22:37):
more about that.
Speaker 2 (22:37):
I think they do.
Speaker 11 (22:41):
And the other thing that our veterans care. The other
thing our veterans care a lot more about is that
three years ago, thirteen brave, innocent Americans died, and they
died because Kamala Harris refused to do her job. And
there hasn't been a single investigation or a single firing.
I don't I don't. Look. Sometimes mistakes happen. That's just
(23:03):
the nature of government, the nature of military service. But
to have those thirteen Americans lose their lives and not
fire a single person is disgraceful. Kamala Harris is disgraceful.
We're going to talk about a story out of those
thirteen brave, innocent Americans who lost their lives. It's that
Kamala Harris is so asleep at the wheel that she
won't even do an investigation into what happened. And she
(23:25):
wants to yell at Donald Trump because he showed up.
She can go to hell.
Speaker 4 (23:30):
Okay, look the way it even happens at the end
I know that that's a long piece audio and I
had to play all of it because he pauses before
he says she can go to hell.
Speaker 3 (23:39):
I think this is delivered well. I do.
Speaker 4 (23:41):
And I think that oftentimes when Jade Vance is put
in a situation where he's actually being interviewed by someone
who's going to challenge him or someone who's going to
push back on certain rhetoric and whatnot, that he succeeds
in those moments. And I do think at times, I'm
not trying to overly praise the guy. It's gonna sound
like I am, but I'm not trying to overly. But
I do think at times you need that. You need
(24:02):
that in politics. You need someone that's willing to sit
there and be like, these are the receipts. These are
receipts to say it calmly, but to say it forcefully
and then to push back on whatever the media narrative is.
And there's other versions of this. There's versions where he
sits down with reporters on obvious sides of the political
aisle and correct their statements as they're trying to get
(24:22):
to the question. And I love something else he does
sometimes where Vance actually literally says, can you just get
to the question part? Essentially, I'm paraphrasing the way he
does it, but he doesn't wait for or he wants
to interrupt during the essentially the reporter giving their opinion
of the story before they actually ask a question, which
is something we say we see way too often now
(24:43):
in media and used to not see very often at all.
There used to be a whole lot of news people
media people who never did that, who just asked questions
and just moved on without having to back it up
with a whole bunch of their own statements their own opinion.
But that's something that happens now, as I said, quite often,
and I just find it interesting because sometimes you know,
(25:05):
and this isn't a shocking thing to say.
Speaker 3 (25:07):
I think a lot of.
Speaker 4 (25:08):
People agree with this very easily too. Sometimes when you
watch the news and you hear the opinion that they're
saying that a lot of people have, you just sit
there and you're like, who actually has that opinion? How
many people actually think or believe that the way that
they're telling me that everybody thinks or believes that that
this happens to us very often. But I think that
what's happening there or the goal of it is very simple.
(25:32):
It's to just repeat something enough times for all the
people who don't pay attention to anything at all, that
don't hear any of this conversation to be like, all right,
that's probably true, and then they start to feel, you
know what, actually, let me make a comparison, let me
do something that's not in the world of politics, and
then I'll move on. I promise. I don't mean to,
you know, belabor this point as much as I am.
But have you ever known somebody, Maybe this is somebody
(25:54):
you work with, Maybe this is somebody that you know,
you only met a couple times and for some reason,
and a whole lot of other people have this strong
opinion of them. They might love them or they might
hate them, but they have this strong opinion and they
tell you about it all the time, every time the
name comes up, and eventually you start to agree with
whatever the people have told you about somebody and you
don't actually know them at all. And then eventually maybe
(26:15):
you actually get to know them a little bit and
you're like, oh, you're nothing like what people are saying
you are, or you're nothing like that.
Speaker 3 (26:21):
It happens to all of us.
Speaker 4 (26:22):
You know, people at work that maybe they challenge the
wrong person, and now there's this whole like crap world
behind the scenes against them, where everybody's saying how much
of a jerk they are, and people don't actually work
with them, don't know them, don't talk to them, They
just they just parrot it. And I think that happens
a lot, and especially in the society we have now
where everybody just reads the headline to something and doesn't
(26:44):
even read the article. The amount of parrots that are
out there in the world just repeating whatever the media
or anyone else says seem to be essentially the target
audience for a lot of this stuff now, certainly for
that kind of stuff. So I would encourage anyone that
thinks Vance is a bit giant jerk or whatever you
think he is, to actually watch him, to actually listen
(27:04):
to the way that he engages in these conversations, because
I don't think anybody else is doing it. I do
think Trump pushes back on the media, but I think
he does it very differently, and I do think at
times even Biden, well, he was someone that people paid
attention to at all. He's still our president.
Speaker 3 (27:20):
I'll move on. I don't care.
Speaker 4 (27:21):
But even Biden would just yell at the media and
be like, you guys are jerks. But the way in
which Vance does it is different. All Right, I want
to move on. One other thing. I want to play.
I thought this was interesting. You have Joy Reid interviewing
Amy Klobachar talking about how Trump is a domestic enemy. Now,
Trump also survived an assassination attempt, and actually some information
(27:45):
came out yesterday that I still am confused people are saying,
and essentially, I'll tell you what it is. Essentially, the
FBI is saying they still don't have a motive in
the attempted killing of Donald Trump by the twenty year
old person. Twenty one year old person that got way
too close. Shouldn't have gotten within four hundred yards of
a former president and the leading candidate on the Republican
(28:07):
side of the aisle. Well actually at that point already
the nominee and honestly, for a lot of that time,
the most likely candidate to be elected president by any
of the polling data. No one ever should have been
able to get that close to try to take that
shot to kill him. That should never be something that
you know, secret Service or anyone else is incapable of defending.
Speaker 3 (28:27):
But nonetheless, that actually happened.
Speaker 4 (28:29):
And one of the reasons that probably happened, according to
a lot of people, is this stuff the domestic enemy,
the trying to radicalize people to think that Trump is
some horrible, terrible, you know thing that if he gets
back in the White House will be the end of
society and our country as we know it. And that's
just not going to happen. The guy's already been in
the White House once, so it's insane. But nonetheless, I
(28:51):
love that the FBI still says we don't know the motive,
we can't figure it out, because trying to kill somebody
feels like a significant enough action for you to be like, oh, man,
he probably didn't like that person because he tried to
take his life.
Speaker 3 (29:04):
I don't know how to say that different, soll just
say it like that.
Speaker 4 (29:06):
But here here's a little bit of joy read back
and forth with Amy Klopachar talking about how Trump is,
you know, the worst person in the history of the world.
Speaker 2 (29:15):
Let's play Nancy.
Speaker 12 (29:16):
This is a new clip from Oh Yeah from this
is from January seventh.
Speaker 2 (29:20):
This is speaker Pelosi all.
Speaker 4 (29:21):
January seven with her daughter Alice.
Speaker 11 (29:23):
Our daughter had a documentary that she created.
Speaker 3 (29:25):
This is one clip from.
Speaker 10 (29:26):
It that's come out and recently take a look.
Speaker 13 (29:30):
There's a dynastic enemy in the Mighty Mash.
Speaker 4 (29:39):
Now, by the way, I do love that they played
that clip and not other clips, because there are a
bunch of clips out there now of Nancy Pelosi on
January sixth, blaming herself for not doing more to protect
the Capitol, excepting that she is the person, as the
Speaker of the House, in charge of doing things and
organizing things a certain way and including the National Guard
or whatever it is he could have chosen to do,
(30:01):
and she did none of that stuff. So she is
taking blame for saying that the Capitol building was not
ready for what happened on January sixth. Now, don it
that's not blade enjoy read show, but this is. But
here's how Klobuchar responded, Yes seventh.
Speaker 13 (30:15):
Very good Nancy telling her staff, let's not mince words. Words.
Mince words are not the words I ever associate with
Nancy Pelosi. She is direct and one of the things
she understood deeply that day, as we've seen in that
tape and others is that Donald Trump instigated the insurrection
and he didn't stop it.
Speaker 11 (30:36):
I was there.
Speaker 13 (30:38):
In fact, it was Roy Blunt and myself and Mike
Pence that made that walk at three point thirty in
the morning, just us. Everyone else in the Senate was
sent home over the broken glass by the spray painted
pillars with racist vocarities, with the three pairs of young
pages carrying those boxes.
Speaker 3 (30:56):
The boy's right there.
Speaker 4 (30:57):
I wonder why she chose to make that trip at
that moment in that way and then talk about it forever.
I wonder if it had any sort of political stunt
tied to it whatsoever. But nonetheless, I just think it's ridiculous,
and I think it's amazing you say these things and
you talk about it this way, and then the FBI
can actually roll out information and be like, we're not
sure why someone tried to kill Trump. We have no
idea what would have caused someone to feel that way
(31:20):
or do any of those things. And come on, I mean, honestly,
the way I would research it is, first, did he'd
try to kill him? Yes, well, that probably means he
didn't like him very much. I would go that road first,
and i'd feel confident about it.
Speaker 3 (31:33):
It's ridiculous.
Speaker 4 (31:34):
I don't even mean to laugh about an assassination attempt,
and I'm not laughing about an assassination attempt on the president.
I want to make sure people understand that I don't
even like to laugh within the topic itself, although I
laugh at a lot of stuff. But I can't help
myself in thinking how ridiculous it is that they're claiming
they still don't have a motive. How do you possibly
say that? Anyway, we'll take a break. A lot coming up.
(31:54):
This is Creig Collins filling in on the Chad Benson Show,
but when Chad's not here, he's still doing stuff.
Speaker 3 (32:00):
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Buy Raycon dot Com slast chat Chad Benson Jim.
Speaker 10 (33:01):
Fronting with scissors sounds great compared.
Speaker 8 (33:03):
To this same.
Speaker 4 (33:08):
This is the Chad Benson Show. Thrilled to have you
with us. Lots of stuff to talk about. My name
is Craig Collins. Filling in. There's a fancy restaurant in
New York City that apparently is bragging about having an
optical illusion set of seating that makes you feel like
you go on a tour of the world. You're on
a bus trip in Bangkok at one point. That is
real thing. Don't get me in any trouble for saying
(33:29):
that that's what's written here and obviously of course a
real place anyway. Nonetheless, they have all this stuff happened
while you're eating food, and I wonder why isn't the
food good enough? That's literally my first thought is that
if the food's delicious, you don't need to trick me
into all kinds of optical illusions and stuff. You just
have to serve me delicious, amazing food, and then I'll
(33:51):
be happy about that part. When you have to do
the gimmicks in the restaurant, it turns into like adult
versions of Chuck E Cheese. To me, that might be
a harsh take, but I can't again't help it. So
I would never want to go here, is what I'm saying.
And anyone that does go there, well you've made your
own life decisions, so that's fine for you. It's not
a place I want to be, all right. Other things
out there I saw. I thought this was interesting. An
(34:13):
uber driver damaged somebody's house over a one star rating.
The seventeen year old who was in the car and
the mom complained about the person who vandalized their house.
Nobody was hurt during the encounter, but the seventeen year
old gave somebody a one star review and they did
not take it.
Speaker 3 (34:30):
Well, let's say it that way, here we go.
Speaker 1 (34:32):
I was just trying to make it to the mall.
Speaker 13 (34:33):
I was trying to get there within a certain timeframe,
and he had decided to take the longer way to
the mall.
Speaker 3 (34:40):
At the end of the day, somebody should have a
right to a review.
Speaker 12 (34:43):
You know, it's opinion based, Like if you have a
one star, you have a one star.
Speaker 3 (34:48):
Look, I'll be honest.
Speaker 4 (34:49):
Even though I don't think it's at all okay to
pick up a brick and lob it at somebody's home
and break some stuff, that kid sounds annoying. I wanted
to get to the mall. I wanted to get there quickly.
He took the long road to the mall, and I'm upset.
So I give one star review. That seems real stupid,
And honestly, those reviews actually very much hurt the people
who drive for Uber because it can be a huge
(35:10):
impact on anything you're doing as far as getting more
rides or all that stuff at your actual livelihood. So
I'm annoyed by that kid, just like the driver was.
You can't lob a brick at a house. Though that
feels like that's a tad too far, that's a bit extreme,
But I do love that that audio is out there everywhere,
because I think it's probably not benefiting the kid as
much as people think. All right, I'm going to take
(35:32):
a break in just a bit. This is Craig Collins
though filling in on the Chad Benson Show. And before
I do take that break, one other thing that was
adorable that people are talking about a lot. Yesterday show,
Hey Otani had his dog throw out the first pitch
at a Dodger game at Dodger Stadium. His dog's name
(35:53):
is Decoy. I Decoy just picked the ball up and
ran it to show Hey, that was awesome. Look, I'm
a sucker for these sorts of things. I'm a dog person,
I guess you could say. But nonetheless, like we need
more of this stuff. This is so much better than
celebrity misses by a mile, dog runs a balt man.
Do that more Major League Baseball? Quick break A lot
(36:13):
coming up. Creig Collins filling in on the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (36:21):
This is the Chad Benson Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent Life.
Speaker 10 (36:51):
This is Chad Benson.
Speaker 4 (36:54):
This is the Chad Benson Show. My name is Creig Collins,
filling in. Thrilled to be with you. A bunch of
stuff to talk about somebody you.
Speaker 3 (37:02):
Have to follow on social media.
Speaker 4 (37:03):
Somebody should be all over is Tom Elliott just because
he does such a great job of putting together these
superclips or these supercuts I think is what he calls them,
and what a lot of people call them, that demonstrate
the hypocrisy of media, or a bunch of other narratives
that are out there in the world.
Speaker 3 (37:20):
He just crushes it.
Speaker 4 (37:21):
So the other day, Trump faces a brand new indictment,
essentially a rewriting of a past indictment from Jack Smith
on the twenty twenty election and how he tried to
do horrible, terrible things election interference case, whatever you want
to call it. What I thought was really interesting about
Tom elliott supercut that went viral and he put up
last night was a reminder of just how many people
(37:43):
in media essentially impacted the twenty twenty election by lying
about the Hunter Biden laptop story. This matters, This should
matter a whole lot to a lot of people. I'll
just play a reminder of the things they said and
how they all now know these were absolutely not true,
because oh yeah, the government used the laptop in its
trial against Hunter Biden, where he was found guilty of
(38:06):
a felony gun charge. That laptop was actually used as
evidence by the government, who said, this is Russian disinformation.
Let's go ahead and talk about it. Let's make sure
all the media talks about it. This is how dumb
or evil, you can pick either one you want. Media
actually is here we go with the New York.
Speaker 14 (38:24):
Folk story right now on Hunter Biden.
Speaker 15 (38:27):
This is really one of the stupidest October surprises.
Speaker 2 (38:31):
I've ever seen.
Speaker 16 (38:31):
STI.
Speaker 15 (38:32):
It helps to really view this as storytelling, not so
much as news coverage, but as political entertainment.
Speaker 2 (38:37):
Ah and Pierre explained.
Speaker 7 (38:39):
We don't want to waste our time on stories that
are not really stories.
Speaker 11 (38:42):
Who even thought to make that story up?
Speaker 5 (38:44):
A story that many intelligence experts say has all the
hallmarks of a foreign interference campaign. It looks like it's
tied to Vladimir Putin in Moscow.
Speaker 17 (38:53):
This is a Russian intelligence disinformation campaigne.
Speaker 4 (38:56):
It's amazing, though, to watch this and remember this in
twenty now today. As I told you, the government itself
uses laptop that specific lap And by the way, when
you have the Scarborough quote of who even thought to
make that up?
Speaker 3 (39:09):
Nobody? It's so ridiculous.
Speaker 4 (39:11):
It had to be true that Hunter Biden would have
left the laptop that had a bunch of horrible information
damaging information on it at some repair shop and then
forgot about it. That's only a thing that happens in
the real world. It's not something you make up and
then have people believe. But anyway, it is interesting to
contrast that to Trump facing a brand new set of well,
(39:34):
or just a refinement of charges, a new set of
you know, things within an indictment, because Jack Smith doesn't
want to go away, and he doesn't want to go
away right now, at least until after November. Like, honestly,
if you actually wanted to seem as though you weren't
trying to influence the outcome of the twenty twenty four election,
you'd probably just wait, since none of this is going
to be tried until after November anyway, for someone to
(39:57):
decide whether or not, well, the country decided whether or
not they I wanted to be president, and then maybe
not do this stuff.
Speaker 3 (40:03):
I don't know, That's just my opinion.
Speaker 4 (40:05):
Another thing out there that I thought was interesting found
a few different places is the CBS Morning News story
from the other day.
Speaker 3 (40:13):
This is incredible.
Speaker 4 (40:15):
They had on the CDC director talking about climate change,
doctor Mandy Cohen, and this clip, this one sentence is
one you're going to love. I don't care what you
think about the reality or if you don't think there's
a reality climate change.
Speaker 3 (40:30):
I don't want to have that conversation.
Speaker 4 (40:32):
I do want to say, and I say it every
time I talk about this, that the government is the
worst possible place to trust and to give a whole
bunch of money to to fix anything.
Speaker 3 (40:41):
You know that.
Speaker 4 (40:41):
I know that a lot of us know that they're
asking for a whole lot of money to fix climate change.
That's not going to end well if we give them
all the money they want.
Speaker 3 (40:49):
But here we go.
Speaker 16 (40:49):
You know, the impact of heat on our health and
climate change is not only impacting us as humans, but
it's changing where mosquitoes and ticks live and thus what
disease is are moving around in different regions. We're just
seeing more bugs, and.
Speaker 3 (41:06):
I love that. I can't get over that we're just
seeing more bugs. Guys, this is bad now. Things are
getting really really serious.
Speaker 4 (41:12):
We need to make sure to stop this as soon
as we can, because there's just there's too many there's
too many bugs now and how.
Speaker 3 (41:19):
Do you make that go away?
Speaker 4 (41:20):
That's the real thing that the director of the CDC said,
I did enjoy one thing during the coronavirus pandemic. It's
a weird sentence, a weird transition, but I did love
how much the CDC wound up getting made fun of
by people in social media because it was a lot
and it was the ridiculous versions of we're going to
advise you to do this, so we're going to tell
you to do that, and then we're going to take
(41:40):
it back, We're going to change it.
Speaker 3 (41:42):
That happened, guys.
Speaker 4 (41:43):
Let's not forget about that, all right, To get back
in some more of a serious fashion out of some
of the things out there in the news, like the
a new indictment of Trump and the way in which
the Special prosecutor Jack Smith is trying to remove some
but not all that many of the charges that he
thinks the Supreme Court has said you can't go after Trump.
(42:04):
For what I thought was really interesting about this story
being back in headlines in the news, and this might
seem like it doesn't connect, but to me it does,
is the other story about Mark Zuckerberg, of all people,
and Mark Zuckerberg admitting that, yeah, Facebook was pressured into
removing a whole lot of COVID misinformation, a disinformation whatever
(42:25):
they called it at the time, they wound up actually
being accurate. Mark Zuckerberg said that not only was he
pressured about the Hunter Byden laptop story, which essentially is
I guess, election interference as many people are saying, but
also forced to do some things that he now wouldn't do.
I think Trump even threatened to jail Mark Zuckerberg for
life over elections, according to The Rolling Stone. I don't
(42:47):
know if that's actually true. I imagine that's an out
of context statement that's being made.
Speaker 3 (42:52):
But if you just look up Mark Zuckerberg.
Speaker 4 (42:53):
Right now all over the place as far as you know,
being covered in the news, and the only question that
I have, and I think that you should have, is
why did it take this long for him to admit this?
Do you know how much more powerful this would have
been to the American people with our attention span being
as crappy as it is. And of course maybe it's
(43:14):
because of fear or something else. When Elon Musk has
taken over Twitter and everybody's saying how horrible it is,
how dare he and then Elon musk is putting the
Twitter files out there that'd say that the government tried
very very much to influence everything that was on Twitter,
and that the old owners of Twitter allowed them to
do it, essentially tampering with COVID, misinformation, disinformation, whatever you
(43:36):
want to call it again, stuff that we now don't
think is wrong. And that's kind of crazy in and
of itself. But how much more powerful would have been
if another leader of a social media platform had come
out and said, you know what, this is happening to
us too, We're not sure if it's right or not.
They could say that the thing is there was so
much confidence, I guess, or just so much lack of caring,
(44:00):
if that's the better term, as far as the amount
of people who who silence this information removed it and
would have known that science doesn't move as quickly as
they were claiming it did. We didn't have consensus opinions,
we had differing opinions. We had a world that makes
a lot of sense to a lot of scientists, and
yet they didn't care, and they shoved one narrative, they
(44:20):
forced one narrative. They told people to be quiet and
now they look like idiots. And most I think people
like even a Zuckerberg, who I'd considered to be an
intelligent person, should have known that part that the debate
version of a discussion in this world, in the world
of a brand new disease, is kind of normal, and
it's something that happens a lot. And so it's just
(44:42):
it's fascinating again that it's coming out now, and you
ask yourself, why why now for the indictments on Trump?
Why now for the Zuckerberg admission, Why any of this
stuff comes out? And you do wonder who's telling people
to stay or talk about this stuff, because do you
think that there's somebody that's pulling the strings, there's somebody
(45:02):
that's encouraging something to go a certain way, however crazy
or salacious.
Speaker 3 (45:07):
That is or it sounds. And I don't know.
Speaker 4 (45:09):
A part of me just thinks personally that Zuckerberg woke
up one day he realizes that he feels differently about
Trump because of the assassination attempt and his own statement
about how he thought it made Trump look like a
badass for what he did, for how he responded to
almost getting killed. That's a real thing that he said,
and so now he just puts this out there. But
(45:30):
I'm sure other people would say, well, it's you know, August,
it's getting closer and closer to the election. A Kamala
Harris is pretending as though she's a brand new candidate,
which still makes no sense to me. And so Zuckerberg
is going to admit something that he hasn't admitted it before.
Or maybe it's just the people like Joe Rogan get
that out of you and other people don't. I'm not sure,
but Joe Rogan is It seems in some way God
(45:53):
send to some of the discussions that happen in our
society because he's the guy that a famous and maybe
informed person might actually admit some stuff too, for whatever reason,
whatever it is.
Speaker 3 (46:05):
But again, I think that's really interesting.
Speaker 4 (46:08):
And again, as much as I could, I guess you
can ask yourself why the timing is what it is.
It doesn't make Zuckerberg a hero or a good person.
It makes him a coward for not saying this sooner,
for not giving this information out at a point when
it would have been much more helpful to sew so
many people dealing with those discussions. But all right, that's
just one thing out there in the world. There is
(46:29):
a lot of other stuff to talk about. I promise
we'll get back to some sillier things too, including a
story that I really loved about a utility worker and
how they decided to help out in a time of
need for well, a cat stuck on a pull. This
real story. I have audio. I'm gonna play it all
in just a little bit. But that's just one thing
(46:49):
coming up. Also, a woman and let's just say snakes
is a story. I'm going to discuss them a little
bit with that coming up and more. Craig Collins filling
in on the Chad Benson Show.
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Speaker 8 (49:13):
Oh my gosh, I kind of like it.
Speaker 11 (49:17):
I'm not gonna lie.
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This is the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 4 (49:21):
This is the Chad Benson Show. My name is Creig Collins,
filling in, Thrilled to be with you. A bunch of
stuff to talk about the level of anger that these
five words have created apparently significant. The TSA went viral
after it tweeted that peanut.
Speaker 3 (49:36):
Butter is liquid. It has been viewed more than twenty
million times in the last few days.
Speaker 4 (49:41):
The post said, quote, peanut butter is a liquid. We
said what we said. They obviously meant to irk people
by putting that out there. But I love that this
dominates the internet, you know what I mean, because like
all this stuff we could be talking about, and there's
a whole lot of people reacting to whether or not
peanut butter is a liquid and how dare the TSA
claim that it is? And now you can bring peanut
butter with your places that you want it to go.
(50:02):
Is you're not going to bring just a little, tiny,
any bitty of it, so that's a problem. But this
is awesome. One person even said there should be a
congressional action taken here. There should be people involved, and
fight should occur. Peanut butter is technically not a liquid
according to X and other places, because there's even a
community note now added, which is hilarious to me. One
(50:25):
other thing that I saw this is People magazine Orpeople
dot Com. Now, I don't know that anybody still gets
the magazine answering a question that you might have been asking,
although I doubt very many people were actually asking this,
why is Alec Baldwin, and then actually, why also is
Geena Davis. Why are they not in the new Beetlejuice
movie Because there's a new Beetlejuice movie coming out. It's
(50:47):
ridiculous to me that you'd ask why Alec Baldwin's not
in this thing. Alec Baldwin was facing a charge of
killing somebody and it feels like that should probably take
precedence over showing up in the Beetlejuice movie. And the
eventual dismissing of that case is something that people are
still really confused about and many people still ask questions
about because anybody who knows anything about gun safety knows
(51:11):
you never point a gun, even if you think it's unloaded,
at a human being. That's something that Alec Baldwin did
on the set of Rust, and of course, you know
the rest of that story, took the life of an
individual and then wound up defending himself in court. That's
why he's not in the movie. Geena Davis was an
asked to return. I guess according to some they say
that there might be something in the storytelling that might
(51:32):
tell you that, but anyway, I just thought it was
interesting that you have an interview with Tim Burton or
anyone else out there. Beetlejuice is coming out next Friday,
by the way, if anyone's actually waiting for that to
be a thing that comes out in the world and
telling us the answer to something that we probably should
have already known the answer to.
Speaker 3 (51:50):
All Right, one other quick thing. I just like this.
I want to play this real quick.
Speaker 4 (51:54):
This is a beauty influencer saying that rubbing garlic all
over your face will cure acne.
Speaker 3 (51:59):
It will not, it'll do the exact opposite of that.
Speaker 4 (52:01):
But here she is telling us the thing anyway, because
that's what the internet, that's what the world actually is today.
Speaker 9 (52:06):
Stay two, I just rubbed some so it's fit flat
off this morning.
Speaker 12 (52:11):
It wasn't as.
Speaker 3 (52:12):
Read, but the lumpsy there. I love that she said.
It's a little flared up.
Speaker 4 (52:17):
She is bright red after rubbing garlic all over her
face and there are still acne lumps. Because that's not
going to fix anything, right. This is Craig Collins filling
in on the Jad Benson Show. And if you ever
take any of your advice from anyone on social media
like this, lady. Her name is Claire, by the way,
on TikTok, that's rubbing the garlic on her face. I
(52:38):
just feel bad for you, like I wouldn't even make
fun of all the people out there. Well I probably would, Okay,
I shouldn't say that. But I also feel bad because
there's a bunch of ways to figure out how to
fix anything in your life, acting or anything else. The
worst possible way is just see what people are saying
on TikTok, at least in my opinion. But that's a
real story that's out there the news, at least my
version of the news.
Speaker 3 (52:59):
And I love it, you know. So there's one other one,
and I might play this audio later. I don't know.
Speaker 4 (53:03):
It's a dude that's saying people are making ice cubes wrong,
and E've been making ice cubes wrong your whole life
because you need to point it at a specific spot
on the ice cube tray and all the water goes
there and it then fills up all the other cubes.
You know, it's like a waterfall kind of situation. I've
always done this. I didn't know anybody did it the
other way, where you moved the tray. Okay, I did
I knew people did it, but what I love about
(53:25):
it is that this guy goes viral and his his
you know, TikTok video is one of the dumber things
I've heard, mostly because of the way it ends. All right,
I'll just play it now, screw it, I won't play
it later.
Speaker 3 (53:37):
We'll do this right away.
Speaker 4 (53:38):
This is the guy who went viral on TikTok for
correcting how you do your ice cube tray.
Speaker 3 (53:42):
You've been killing you an ice tray all wrong this
whole time.
Speaker 14 (53:45):
All you have to do is ang the little square
in the middle and it will just run down, no spills.
Speaker 3 (53:51):
I slayed. I hated so much. I hated so much.
Speaker 4 (53:56):
He said ice sleigh at the end there. I think
I just hate slang, the newest version of slang. It's
so dumb. That's real dumb.
Speaker 3 (54:03):
But make your ice cubes ice cubes correctly. People.
Speaker 4 (54:06):
Greg Collins filling in on the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (54:17):
Such Chad Benson.
Speaker 1 (54:18):
Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent Life.
Speaker 10 (54:41):
This is Chad Benson.
Speaker 4 (54:44):
This is the Chad Benson Show. My name is Greg Collins,
filling in. Thrilled to be with you. A bunch of
stuff to talk about out there in the world, and
yet microphones and whether they're going to be muted for
a debate is something that's bouncing all over the political world.
You might not be paying attention to this at all,
and God bless you if you're not, because your life
is probably better for it. But there's this ongoing discussion
(55:05):
as to whether or not the Kamala Harris campaign is
going to accept the rules of the ABC debate that's
coming up next week because it'll have muted microphones, something
that Joe Biden asked for because his brain is broken
and doesn't work and he didn't want to have to
deal with Trump interrupting him. But now the Harris campaign
seems to think that, hey, you interrupt her, that'll look
(55:26):
worse for some reason, that'll be bad, and so unmute
the microphones and let Trump do the interrupting. And Trump
doesn't seem to care. Actually, I think he said earlier
this week. They can be unmuted, they can be muted.
He doesn't really seem to think either one matters. He'd
prefer unmuted, but well, you know whatever, But this is
a real discussion, and you know what's important about this.
(55:47):
Before I move on to something else, that's Kamala Harris related.
You can't possibly think that you're the best candidate for
a job if the way in which you want to
try to win is to try to get the other
guy to embarrass himself by interrupting you.
Speaker 3 (56:01):
On a debate stage. Whether or not he actually does it,
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (56:04):
Trump probably would do it, and who knows, maybe the
interruption will actually go well with the American people and
not as poorly as Kamala Harris thinks it will. I
have no idea, but that's such a petty win, like
that's such a dumb thing to be, like, well.
Speaker 3 (56:16):
He interrupted or a lot.
Speaker 4 (56:18):
So we don't know if we want him to be
president and they're counting on that, that's the thing they're
actually hoping for.
Speaker 3 (56:23):
And why this is a discussion at all.
Speaker 4 (56:25):
Here's Corey Lewandowski popping up on television to talk about
how great of a debate Trump is I think he
was on News Nation, but then also to highlight toward
the end of this clip that Trump has agreed to
all the same things that were so important to Democrats
when it was Biden that was on a stage. And
now you want to flip the script because you think
it has a benefit to you. It's so like planning
(56:48):
these things in the world of politics is one of
the things that I think makes people hate politicians so
much is that they debate whether or not, well, should
the mics be muted?
Speaker 3 (56:56):
Should they not be muted.
Speaker 4 (56:58):
It's sort of like if you sit in a meeting
for an hour and people talk about what, you know,
coaster you should have at the upcoming event you're going
to have, and people like, we don't really care about that,
that doesn't really matter to us.
Speaker 3 (57:08):
We just will rather do other things.
Speaker 4 (57:10):
It's the little stupid details that wind up being the
hyper focus of people that I probably don't believe that
any of the actual things that matter are things that
you'll actually be able to, you know, side with her
on or care about.
Speaker 3 (57:23):
But here's a little bit from Lewandowski.
Speaker 14 (57:27):
This guy rises to the occasion every single time. I
remember in the twenty sixteen campaign, the first time he
ever stepped on the debate stage with all of those
Republicans on there, He'd never debated, and he won the
debate in overwhelming fashion. And then when he had to
debate Hillary Clinton again, had never done a one on
one debate against someone who the media told us was
the most qualified candidate to ever run for presidency, and
(57:49):
so he beat her.
Speaker 4 (57:49):
By the way, the media is telling us that again,
they say that Kamala Harris, at least some places in
media are saying she's the most qualified person ever.
Speaker 3 (57:56):
To seek the office of president.
Speaker 4 (57:58):
I feel like maybe the founding fathers were fairly credible
when they went after that role.
Speaker 3 (58:02):
But anyway, let's continued to hurt.
Speaker 18 (58:03):
In those debates.
Speaker 14 (58:04):
And then what do we see from a man who
had to debate someone who's been in an elective office
for half a decade, half a century, fifty plus years.
Speaker 11 (58:12):
He destroyed Joe Biden.
Speaker 14 (58:13):
And only because of Donald Trump's successful debate performance did
the American people finally see the cognitive decline that most
of the White House Press corps has been lying to
us about for the last four years.
Speaker 4 (58:25):
Kamala Harris is clearly yea actually want to stop it again.
I thought that was a really interesting point that Lewandowski made.
Not that that's entirely true. I think there were a
lot of Americans that already saw the mental decline in
a Biden, but there were a lot of people that
couldn't help but admit it after that debate for whatever reason,
whether it's the fact that all right, yeah, Trump's gonna
win this election because Biden is just not there anymore,
(58:47):
I'm not sure, but it is a valuable way to
say it that Trump so won and Biden so lost
the debate, that that caused the end of the Biden campaign,
something that he adamantly tried to fight and said in
interview after interview that he's not going anywhere, that he
is the candidate, that this all is to stop, and
now he stepped aside and he's not running for office anymore.
So that debate really did destroy the political livelihood of
(59:12):
one of the two people, the person who's currently in
the White House. And so I do think it's interesting
that the Harris campaign now wants to change some of
these rules because maybe they think she'd lose as well.
Speaker 3 (59:21):
I'm not sure here, let's continue.
Speaker 14 (59:22):
We've been lying about it. So I am so confident
of his success going into this debate in early September
that you know, as you know, the Kamala Harris campaign
wanted to be able to sit down so she'd be
on equal footing.
Speaker 2 (59:34):
She didn't want to have to stand that's.
Speaker 11 (59:37):
She said, I want to bring notes.
Speaker 14 (59:38):
She said, I want to bring notes, she said, we
want to have live microphones all the time. The truth is,
when we negotiated on behalf of the Trump campaign, we
negotiated with the Biden Harris campaign. And these are the
same criteria that she had agreed to for the vice
presidential debate. She wants to change that because she got
confidence in it.
Speaker 4 (59:56):
It is true, Actually she did agree to it for
the vice presidential campaign. And I love the fact that
you say we negotiate with the Biden Harris campaign because
that's also accurate and an easy way to describe why
it's so odd now that some of these things are
being pushed back on the way they're being pushed back on.
But anyway, Lewandowski makes that point pretty apparent. All right,
let's move on to this. Kamala Harris will do her
first big Well, okay, when it was Biden, you called
(01:00:18):
it a big boy interview.
Speaker 3 (01:00:20):
I don't know if I'm allowed to call it a.
Speaker 4 (01:00:21):
Big girl interview or if you're going to get in
all kinds of trouble for that. But big boy press conference,
I think was actually what Corrine John Pierre described a
press conference or a thing that Biden did, which is amazing.
It's ridiculous, but this is supposed to be the first
real test to the credibility of the candidate. That's a
headline in the Guardian, but there's a lot of places
(01:00:44):
that are saying this, How ridiculous is that. Let me
just state that again if you agree with it to
be true that a CNN interview, a friendly interview with
Dana Bash Tim Walls, her running mate, will be sitting
beside her, is the first real time are going to
get a long form discussion from Kamala Harris after she
became the nominee for the Democratic Party to be the
(01:01:07):
presidential candidate.
Speaker 3 (01:01:09):
And this is something that was in the works for
several weeks.
Speaker 4 (01:01:11):
Obviously, she's had a few sit down interviews as a
vice president, but not many.
Speaker 3 (01:01:15):
They did not go well.
Speaker 4 (01:01:17):
But this is surreal to think that we're in August,
almost September, and this is the first time that anyone's
going to sit down for long form discussion with her,
and they're telling us that her poll numbers are through
the roof and excitement for her and popularity or all
these things, and she hasn't even done anything like this
yet with anybody, much less the CNN.
Speaker 3 (01:01:35):
That's insane.
Speaker 4 (01:01:37):
By the way, this went viral in response to that
that Kamala Harris, I think tonight I'll be sitting down
and having a discussion.
Speaker 3 (01:01:44):
She's not so good at these, as you know, and.
Speaker 4 (01:01:46):
As I know, a one amazing moment happened when she
was a vice presidential candidate talking about the debate with
Mike Pence and some other things going on, and this
was CBS fact checking her to her face and then violence.
Just seems amazing from Kamala Harris in this moment.
Speaker 3 (01:02:04):
So here we go.
Speaker 4 (01:02:04):
Let's play this as a refresher of what you could expect,
even though CNN is not going to challenge Harris like
this at all.
Speaker 19 (01:02:11):
You're very different in the policies that you've supported in
the past. You're considered the most liberal United States senator.
Speaker 13 (01:02:20):
Somebody said that, and it actually was Mike Pence on
the debate stage.
Speaker 19 (01:02:24):
But yeah, well, actually the Nonpartisan Gov Track has rated
you as the most liberal senator. You supported the Green
New Deal, you supported Medicare for all.
Speaker 4 (01:02:35):
Just silent at that moment, She's like, yeah, no, it
wasn't it wasn't Mike Pence. He might have said it,
but it was actually a website that you can no
longer find gov track, which is weird, although the wayback
machine can help you out with that.
Speaker 3 (01:02:46):
You can see it.
Speaker 4 (01:02:47):
But yes, she was the most liberal senator by independent sources.
Speaker 3 (01:02:52):
She is far left.
Speaker 4 (01:02:54):
The thing that made I guess to some Biden a
logical candidate for the Democratic Party is that he's not
far left, but a whole lot of the party truly
is now a lot of the party embraces and endorses
many of the things that Harris would be four, even
discussions about things like Israel and Hamas, the terrorist organization
(01:03:14):
that Israel is fighting. She has a viewpoint that might
be more attractive to say the younger far left voter,
which is horrible, but it's amazing. I want to play
this one more time though, because it's so good. It's
in twenty four seconds. Every aspect of what makes Kamala
Harris a bad candidate for her side of the aisle.
It's the laughing, it's the making up something that's easily
(01:03:36):
dismissed as not being true. And then my brain can't
think of another reaction, so I'm just going to sit
here and own this. It's very similar to when she
was getting upset that people were asking her to go
to the border because she was the Borderzar and she
didn't want to go to the border. She didn't want
the optics of a photo of her there politically, so
she wasn't doing it. And she asked why it mattered
(01:03:57):
to people, and they were like, because you're in charge
the border, you should go there. And she said, well,
I've been there before. Who cares. That was another of
her terrible moments that made so many Americans dislike her.
Here again, though, is one that was just amazing when
she was part of the ticket in twenty twenty. Hold on,
if we can actually get it to play this time,
(01:04:18):
it's oh man, I just had a second ago. Hold On,
We're going to get it because I do. I really
do love it.
Speaker 11 (01:04:23):
Here.
Speaker 19 (01:04:23):
We be very different in the policies that you've supported
in the past. You're considered the most liberal United States senator.
Speaker 12 (01:04:32):
Somebody said that, and it actually was Mike Pence on
the debate stage, but.
Speaker 19 (01:04:36):
Yeah, well, actually the nonpartisan gov Track has rated you
as the most liberal senator. You supported the Green New Deal,
you supported Medicare for all.
Speaker 4 (01:04:47):
You supported a whole lot of stuff that is very,
very far to a side. Now you want to build
a wall, which is also hilarious. By the way, if
we talk about that just quickly, US taxpayers spent one
hundred and fifty billion dollars on illegal immigrants last year
thanks to the Kamala Harris Joe Biden open border policy.
There was a debate even recently, or a discussion I
(01:05:10):
think jd Vance didn't interview where he was told that
those numbers are now at an all time low, are
at a low that we haven't seen in four or
five years at least. And that's true that illegal crossings
at the border have dipped, but that's only because they've
allowed for essentially legal versions of illegal crossings, or people
who don't wind up with legal status in our country.
(01:05:30):
I can come into our country through a different ports
of entry and then stay for a while while they're
trying to get their asylum claim heard. So this is
sort of a moving around of information as opposed to
a reality. And jd Vance really pushed hard at a
reporter who asked him a question about that, because those
numbers are still terrible. But it is amazing that Harris
(01:05:53):
would talk at all about wanting to build a wall
or any of those things, and also say what she
says about the no tips, no taxes on tip work.
She's adopting some of Trump's positions because in twenty twenty
four it's harder to argue the opposite than it was,
say in twenty sixteen or twenty twenty on this stuff,
which is which also just amazing. It demonstrates to you
(01:06:16):
the inauthenticity of someone. It demonstrates to you the willingness
to play whatever political game they need to play. The
whole demand about having the microphones open as opposed to
having them muted, which no one should really even care
what direction that goes all those things. I just show you,
show you how unseerious. It's a accusation she had of Trump,
(01:06:37):
but it's an accusation that's true of her. She is
as a candidate because she doesn't want to talk about
her policies and her decisions and the things that she'd
do if she was given power, because they're far left
and they won't be as popular as she wants them
to be. She's more popular now not talking about her policy.
What does that tell you about her. All right, quick
break a lot more Craig Collins filling in on the
(01:06:59):
Chad Benson Show. But even when you know Chad's not here,
not doing stuff, he's still doing stuff.
Speaker 3 (01:07:05):
Here he is with the message about Rough Greens.
Speaker 8 (01:07:07):
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make a three six nine. All this incredible stuff power
packed into a supplement that you gave your dog every
single day, and your dog is going to love it.
It is a powdered supplement. You're sprinkling on top of
your dog's food. With Rough Greens. You don't have to
do anything crazy. There is no putting food in the refrigerator,
(01:07:27):
taking it out, cooking it and then you mix this.
Speaker 3 (01:07:31):
No, it's just sprinkled us on.
Speaker 2 (01:07:32):
Top of your dog's food.
Speaker 8 (01:07:33):
And watch what happens with all of these amazing vitamins
and minerals and everything's and fruits and all this incredible stuff.
It's gonna help your dog at the nutrients they're missing
right now. Because your dog food is dead food, shelf stable.
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(01:07:54):
the cost of shipping. Call eight eight eight ninety my Dog.
That's eight eight eight ninety my Dog. Or go to
Roughgreens dot com. Slash Chad, It's a Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 10 (01:08:17):
Welcome to the chat Autonomous Zone. Who bipolar?
Speaker 8 (01:08:20):
There's a lot of things that I love about Hitler.
Speaker 20 (01:08:26):
No bipartisan, don't abandon, don't censor, engage.
Speaker 1 (01:08:31):
Yes, the Chad Benson Show where free speech and uncensored
dot run wild.
Speaker 2 (01:08:37):
That's crazy.
Speaker 4 (01:08:40):
This is the Chad Benson Show. My name is Greig Collins,
filling in, thrilled to be with you. A bunch of
stuff out there in the world to talk about. Even
the hawk Tua girl apparently has a new thing. I'm
gonna wait on that. Let's do this first. Although this
will feel connected even though it's not. I thought this
was interesting. So a museum in France apparently has an
(01:09:00):
new expo, new show that's going to be all about
nudity in art. So there's gonna be a lot of
art pieces that have, you know, depictions of male and
female bodies. It's always weird when you go to any
sort of art show and you see some of those
paintings and you don't really know what to expect, and
then all of a sudden they pop up there.
Speaker 3 (01:09:20):
My wife really loves to go to art shows as
I can.
Speaker 4 (01:09:23):
As you can probably tell by how I'm talking about this,
I'm not a fan anyway. The thing about the French
one that's going to be unique is you're allowed to
go to it naked. So whoever you are, whatever you're
up to that day, you can just show up and
be naked. And I kind of love it's weird to
say this, and I probably shouldn't tell you about this. This
is a New York post, by the way, so you
(01:09:45):
can find the story for yourself. I kind of love
that there's a photo of a bunch of people from
the back that seem to be naked at this event,
and it kind of looks like the collection of people
you'd expect to show up at this thing. There's some
people there that probably are not the most desirable forms
of the human body, and then there's one person that
(01:10:06):
seems like a model just straight in the middle of everybody,
which I don't know what that's all about, but nonetheless
I can't.
Speaker 3 (01:10:12):
What I couldn't help.
Speaker 4 (01:10:13):
Get over when I thought about this was if you
didn't know that that was going to be a part
of it, and you showed up at the show and
everything's naked, and then everybody around you is also not
wearing any clothing, and how that would go, Or if
there's any guys out there that would actually be very
excited to go to this art show that aren't excited
to go to a lot of the other ones until
you got there and you'd be like, oh, yeah, this
is why this is a whole less lot fun than
(01:10:34):
we think it is. But nonetheless, that's out there, that's
in the world, and I thought it was weird, but
darn it, the French are weird at times.
Speaker 3 (01:10:42):
All right, let's do this. This is very strange.
Speaker 4 (01:10:45):
So YETI and the drink company Liquid Death that make
different like water products have partnered together to make something
that the world definitely doesn't need.
Speaker 3 (01:10:56):
It is a working cask.
Speaker 4 (01:11:00):
It cooler, meaning that if you throw ice in this
thing the size of a casket, it'll stay freezing cold.
As long as a Yeti cooler does several days all
that stuff. What's even odd about it? And actually, I'll
do this in pieces. Is the actual ad that Yeti
and Liquid Death created to promote this thing. By the
way they're auctioning it off, this is a real ad
(01:11:22):
and not a you know, real person crying, an actress crying.
Speaker 3 (01:11:26):
But strange.
Speaker 9 (01:11:27):
It's not just a casket.
Speaker 11 (01:11:29):
It's a revolutionary beverage cooler.
Speaker 3 (01:11:32):
It has triple foam cold cell insulation.
Speaker 11 (01:11:37):
What is this?
Speaker 3 (01:11:38):
Is this to your satisfaction?
Speaker 2 (01:11:40):
No, it's perfect. The casket cooler, a liquid Death and yetti.
Speaker 14 (01:11:47):
It'll keep your dream of ice cold for an eternity
hung hers.
Speaker 4 (01:11:51):
So again, that's a real thing. It's being auctioned off.
And here's the other part. The current bid thirty eight
three and twenty one dollars thirty eight thousand bucks for
a casket cooler and it's only you know, gonna keep
going up because there's still a day left.
Speaker 3 (01:12:07):
In this thing.
Speaker 4 (01:12:07):
This is insane. I'm so disappointed at times in our society.
This is Craig Collins filling in on the Chad Benson Show.
Is it is just insane? Though they say that there's
a featured triple foam cold cell technology used for this thing.
Like I wouldn't Here's the other part about this, some
(01:12:28):
of these social media things that go viral. Four hundred
and fifty eight people have bit on this. I wouldn't
know anything about this if I didn't do this job
for a living and look for these kind of crazy stories.
So think about the inevitable person who wins this thing
and it gets delivered to the house, and if the
significant other doesn't know what's coming and you're like, what
did you buy?
Speaker 3 (01:12:45):
You bought a casket cooler.
Speaker 4 (01:12:47):
That would be the most insane fight, the most valuable
fight I've ever seen in my life, So much better
than debate.
Speaker 3 (01:12:52):
Craig Collins filling in on the Chad Benson shell.
Speaker 1 (01:13:00):
Is the Chad Benson Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent Life. This
(01:13:29):
is Chad Benson.
Speaker 4 (01:13:32):
This is the Chad Benson Show. My name is Craig
Collins filling in. I love the fact that we're still
talking about Kamala Harris like she's a brand new candidate
for stuff.
Speaker 3 (01:13:41):
She's going to do a big.
Speaker 4 (01:13:42):
Girl interview and that will probably get me in trouble
for saying it that way. In twenty twenty four. But
remember that the Biden administration called one of his press
conferences a big boy press conference before he gave it.
And this is the first time that Kamala Harris is
going to do an interview since being anointed the candidate
for the Democratic Party.
Speaker 3 (01:14:01):
I just want to play this though.
Speaker 4 (01:14:02):
This is a Ben Stiller showing up at an airport
and talking about the actor, Yes, talking about how he's
excited to vote for Harris or excited to support her because.
Speaker 3 (01:14:10):
It's a time for change.
Speaker 13 (01:14:11):
Man.
Speaker 4 (01:14:12):
We got to change things in this world we live
in by putting someone who's in charge in charge more.
Speaker 3 (01:14:18):
I guess that's what changes to him. A team, and
what do you like about Harris pactor?
Speaker 6 (01:14:23):
I was just very excited about moving forward and all
the energy and excitement that's around this movement right now.
Speaker 21 (01:14:31):
So that's why I'm here.
Speaker 2 (01:14:32):
It's exciting, time for change.
Speaker 3 (01:14:35):
Oh yeah, it's time for change and we're happening.
Speaker 11 (01:14:37):
You know what.
Speaker 3 (01:14:38):
Actually, I'll take a step back for a second.
Speaker 4 (01:14:40):
So I saw something in the Associated Press, and I
think this was like Friday of last week, and it
said that a lot of Americans believe we should have
a female president.
Speaker 3 (01:14:50):
And I don't have a problem with that.
Speaker 4 (01:14:52):
I don't and I'm not trying to be like, well, look,
this is how nice I am.
Speaker 3 (01:14:56):
I'm being honest.
Speaker 4 (01:14:57):
I think the sentiment that there should been a female
president at some point throughout the history of our country
actually makes sense. I don't even think it's like a
woke thing to say, like, yeah, okay, women are as
good as men at stuff, so why isn't a woman
in charge at some point in our society? And if
I want to win points as a husband, I say,
you know, women are smarter than men and whatever else
(01:15:17):
the stand up comedians used to say. But nonetheless, like,
I don't, in theory think that that's wrong. And if
that's what Ben Stiller or any of these famous people
are saying, is that we need change, as in, we
need to see someone be the president who hasn't been
the president before, whether that's a female leader or you know,
a female And she touts herself as black and Indian,
(01:15:43):
depending on what like political moment she's in, she highlights
one of those parts of our heritage more than the other.
But nonetheless, like, I get that all that stuff makes sense.
The baking, breaking the glass ceiling thing. All that's fine.
I'm not trying to sound woke in saying this. However,
I will be honest with you. You don't just pick anybody
to do that. You don't go, wow, we need to
(01:16:03):
make sure we get somebody in who doesn't look like
the rest of us.
Speaker 3 (01:16:06):
The DEI thing.
Speaker 4 (01:16:07):
But they're essentially making that same call or making that
same request right now because she hasn't even done an
interview yet, she hasn't talked about her policies and the
things she'd do in office if she actually makes the
decisions herself, because they're going to be far left because
she was the furthest left politician in the Senate when
(01:16:28):
she was a senator, and that's something that she was
told by independent agencies, not necessarily just politicians on the
other side of the aisle. So we know all these
things about her and about this discussion. And so again,
I'm not anti the idea, and I think it's sort
of ridiculous and very lazy versions of arguing for people
(01:16:49):
to try to pretend that you are anti the idea
of a woman as president because you don't support Kamala Harris.
In fact, I think it's the exact opposite that you're
willing to say that I care about your positions more
than I do. What you look like, who you are,
what sex you are, what race you are, None of
that matters to me. What matters to me is your
positions and how insane they are, or just the fact
(01:17:11):
that you lie as much as you do. This is
audio that's resurfaced and been all over the internet recently.
This is Kamala Harrison years ago when she was making
her first run for office, talking about her career as
a prosecutor and the live that apparently were being told
about how many cases she even had tried, which is
sort of amazing. And she did a really bad job
(01:17:32):
in this back and forth interaction of defusing the shots
against her. If you're going to be a successful politician,
you need to take shots, whoever they're from, from the
opponent or from media, and you need to find a
way to defuse them.
Speaker 3 (01:17:45):
You need to find a way to defeat them.
Speaker 4 (01:17:47):
One of the best examples of this is a debate
stage joke that Trump made about Rosie O'Donnell that I
might play for you in a minute, when he was
being asked a tough question by Megan Kelly, and the
answer he gave made the audience laugh, and she's even
praised him for it in retrospect. This is not that,
this is Harris struggling on a phone call.
Speaker 12 (01:18:07):
Here we go see embarrassed as a prosecutor that you've
had six cases overturned, four which have been for Prosecutoroma's conduct.
Speaker 18 (01:18:17):
How many cases have you tried? Can you tell us
how many serious feelings you have tried? Can you tell
us one?
Speaker 12 (01:18:21):
I've tried about fifty cases, mister Fossio, and it's about leaderships.
Speaker 18 (01:18:26):
Why does your information, which is still published, say that
you tried hundreds of serious feelings. I think that's misleading.
I think that's disingenuous. I think that shows that you
are in case right.
Speaker 3 (01:18:37):
It's something that you just said isn't true. I asked
you how many cases you tried?
Speaker 4 (01:18:41):
Your own team at that time, when she's trying to
get elected to a state level position, is claiming something
that you're now telling me is totally untrue. You're a liar,
just like your vice presidential candidate has lied about stuff too. Now,
this seems like you just don't care about that. And
how do you respond to being caught in a lie
again of.
Speaker 18 (01:19:00):
Leadership, and you're not to be trusted. You continue to
put out information which says you have tried hundreds of
serious felonies.
Speaker 12 (01:19:07):
Mister Fazia leadership and you've got my quest working with
different communities as a career prosecutors done that, which is
why not you have re law enforcement organizations.
Speaker 4 (01:19:17):
By the way, I hate leaders who never ever get
their handster. I hate that you probably hate bosses like
that too, And granted, in some positions, it just does
make sense for the boss to be doing the same
work that you're doing. But I hate if they've never
even tried in their career to do any of the
things that they wind up being in charge of.
Speaker 8 (01:19:37):
That.
Speaker 4 (01:19:37):
You've got to be some you got to use some
connection to some part of something in an organization before
you swoop in and run the whole thing. And that
is essentially what Harris is trying to say there is like,
you know what, I didn't need to try a lot
of cases for me to be a leader. I'm here
now and this is my role and this is what
I want to do. But I know it looks good
to claim that I've tried a bunch of cases. So
I'm going to do that part too, because both those
(01:19:59):
parts equally important to me. All Right, I'm going to
go back to something that I debated talking about more today,
but I will so. Earlier this week, Trump was invited
to go and spend a short amount of time with
the families of the soldiers who died in the failed
withdrawal from Afghanistan, thirteen servicemen who lost their lives, servicemen
(01:20:24):
and women, and the parents have been very vocally against
the Biden administration because of the way in which the
exit from Afghanistan left their children in harm's way when
that shouldn't happened. Our military was more than capable of
handling things differently, and the Biden administration didn't care. They
said to our military, do this as quickly as possible,
(01:20:47):
as risky as possible, and let's hope nothing bad happens.
Speaker 3 (01:20:50):
And then when a.
Speaker 4 (01:20:51):
Terrorist uses a bomb on their body to take out
members of our military. The Biden administration also does nothing
to punish any of the people that they should have
punished any the failures that existed there, people should have
been fired. This is something jd. Vance has said a
lot about and others have said a lot about now. Granted,
(01:21:13):
what's crazy about this, though, is some of the new
reporting I think the Daily Caller and others have it
that'd say that essentially the biggest reason this occurred at
all is because people didn't want political People didn't want
Trump to be seen there with family members because it
would be a politically beneficial thing. Not that Trump was
(01:21:34):
invited for that reason, not that the family members I
think even care about that part all that much. They
probably are no fans, as I just said, a second
ago of Biden or Harris or any sort of election
campaign on that side of the aisle. But more importantly,
they actually I think, just wanted Trump to be there,
and so he showed up, and throughout this there were
obstacles thrown in the way to prevent him from trying
(01:21:56):
to get to the point he was in, and even
the family are there some reporting that the family leis
themselves struggled to coordinate a time when they could all
wind up in the same place to mourn the loss
of their loved ones because people were fighting that too.
And so it's just insane to think that this is
something that became once again a political conversation as opposed
(01:22:19):
to a conversation that should have been about other things,
but nonetheless to get to the point, the Trump campaign
staff said, the altercation happens at the Arlington National Cemetery.
It happens because of people trying to prevent him, as
I said, from going there, and eventually mainstream news media
talks about how discovery, how disgusting it is or horrible
it is that Trump was in that place at all,
(01:22:41):
a place he was invited to be, and acting as
though he's trying to gain political points by showing up
there to honor the people who died protecting our country,
putting themselves in harm's way, and the administration that failed
them not being invited to that event. It's just so
crazy that it becomes this big, giant other thing when
(01:23:03):
it shouldn't be and it doesn't have to be, and
granted it, we continue to lose the main point, and
the main point is that family members lost their loved ones,
people who willingly served their country in our military, and
wanted to, you know, for a third year in a row,
celebrate those individuals and the sacrifice they made, and invited
(01:23:24):
the former president to do it. And then people got
involved to screw this whole thing up, and then they
want to criticize Trump after the fact for it because
there's an obsession to do that. It just it makes
no sense to me again, and you completely lose sight
of the objective itself for the conversation itself being about
the families and the sacrifice that any military makes. And honestly,
you know, it's even more powerful than anything else to
(01:23:45):
me about that. And I'll just say this quickly, and
I've interacted more with military over the last couple of
years because of some things. I've been lucky enough to
be put in certain situations than I had and I
have military family members, but I've interacted more with VET
in the last two years and I have at any
other time in my life. And I'll tell you that
the willingness to make that sacrifice, the willingness to put
(01:24:07):
yourself in harms way, and then the family to be
just devastated by that loss, especially when the leadership failed,
and that's the big reason that they lost their lives.
There's something that's so important about acknowledging and thanking, and
you know, discussing that and thanking the families who lose
loved ones that are willing to defend our country. Those
(01:24:28):
should be at the forefront of this discussion, the power
and the you know, sacrifice and the acknowledgment of the
importance of this, and not all the other crap that
winds up jumping to the beginning or the front of
the discussion that just doesn't matter. I just feel so
horrible for the families that, yet again, this discussion takes
a turn in a place that they're not asking us
(01:24:49):
for it to go, and it shouldn't be going. But
all right, that's enough on that topic. It's something that's
been discussed all week for whatever reason. As I said,
probably a lot of dumb reasons. The stuff about Trump
and all the criticis I'll take a break a lot
coming up. Greg Collins filling in on the Chad Benson Show.
Here he is with a message about Raycon Raycon.
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Speaker 3 (01:25:54):
Chad Benson chair.
Speaker 11 (01:26:07):
Helen Keller is a Nazi terrorist that is a male.
Is that what you're telling me right now?
Speaker 21 (01:26:11):
Are you thinking of Hitler?
Speaker 10 (01:26:14):
Vaccines work? But only The Chad Benson Show is one
hundred percent effective against stupidity?
Speaker 11 (01:26:21):
Do you know what day is?
Speaker 13 (01:26:23):
D Day?
Speaker 22 (01:26:25):
God, Karen, you are so stupid to check us out
on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and wherever you find your favorite
woke free podcasts.
Speaker 10 (01:26:36):
This is the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (01:26:39):
This is the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 4 (01:26:41):
My name is Craig Collins, filling in thrilled to be
with you, a bunch of stuff to talk about.
Speaker 3 (01:26:46):
I thought this was interesting.
Speaker 4 (01:26:47):
A psychologist is out there talking about some data that
shows that most men are invisible on dating apps, meaning
that a large quantity of the dudes who are trying
to date people online aren't even seen. They're not even found,
because darn it, there's so much demand for guys and
so little demand for ladies that some of the most
(01:27:08):
popular accounts are just getting fed to all the women
as far as the guys go, and then any account
that the lady gets fed to the amount of dudes
who are on those places. There's something really sad about this,
in all honesty, but it also is causing this mental
health issue according to this psychologist, which doesn't make sense
to me. By the way, that if you're on a
(01:27:29):
dating app and you're not getting any attention at all,
you feel a weird form of rejection, not the same
form as if you say, walk up to somebody in
public and try to flirt with them or ask them
for their number or something, and that doesn't go well.
The old version of trying to date somebody before the
Internet and everything else made it so different and so
you're not even really sure if people are seeing your
(01:27:50):
account and you just feel like no one likes you,
and so there's something bad about that, and that makes
sense to me.
Speaker 3 (01:27:56):
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (01:27:56):
I wonder how you get back to the world of
people not dating each other online, which sounds insane, and
as a married man, I probably don't understand anything about it.
But to be honest with you, I think that that
would be better for us, because then you get to
know somebody you wouldn't you know, decide based on just
photographs if you like him or not, or their profile
if you like them or not. You might actually get
(01:28:18):
to know them as a human and then that might
turn out to be something different than what we're seeing here.
But nonetheless, this is real, This is out there, and
I think it does make sense, and I feel bad again,
as I said, for people all right. Another thing that
I thought was kind of interesting as just a discussion
point that's out there is a new form of attraction
according to young people, called simbo sexual attraction, which is
(01:28:41):
an attraction to the energy within a relationship. I don't
think there's a smarter way to say this, so I'm
just saying it the only way that it exists to
be said, the exchange of you know, energy that exists.
And I don't know how you say that cleanly, but
I just did on the radio. But that's so stupid.
I can't even tell you any more about it than that.
This is Craig Collins filling in on the Chad Benson Show.
(01:29:07):
And I have never been simbo sexually attracted to anyone
in my life. I don't even know how to say that.
I'm so confused by every part of it. It's so
it's so dumb. You know what, You're actually attracted to,
the human, the person out their energy. By the way,
there was one other story that I thought about talking
about that I haven't thrown out there. It's this woman
who at some point in her life married a ghost,
(01:29:29):
which means, of course already she's one of a special
group of people. Her name is bro Cardi. I think
she's a singer. But anyway, she went to a penitentiary,
a state penitentiary, and did a seance and said she
was almost taken over by a mass murderer. A real
story that's out there in the world. The New York
Post is a headline a woman who married ghosts says
(01:29:51):
she was attacked by spirit of mass murderer on a
haunted prison visit. That is an amazing sentence. That's an
amazing headline, an amazing topic. And this woman is dead
serious about it. She's probably been symbosexually attracted to all
kinds of people, and I feel bad for both them
and for her.
Speaker 3 (01:30:10):
But it's crazy.
Speaker 4 (01:30:11):
This is nuts, and I wonder if any part of it,
any part of it at all, is something that even
the writer when they were writing about it, was like,
I don't know if I should put this one in here.
It's fine, somebody will read this, somebody will talk about
it on the radio somewhere. And again, just feel bad
for all involved is that's my genuine reaction. But I
actually feel especially bad for the ghost that she divorced.
(01:30:33):
Is that that ghost is still wandered around there man,
probably still aware of everything going on. That's got to
be tough, all right, Quick break a lot more. Greg
Collins filling in on the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (01:30:53):
Such Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (01:31:14):
Independent Thoughts, Independent Life.
Speaker 2 (01:31:17):
This is Chad Benson, This is the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 4 (01:31:23):
My name is Craig Collins filling in Just a few
quick things out there in the world. First, the Supreme
Court has declined to unblock Joe Biden's President Biden's student
loan plan forgiveness plan, which Kamala Harris would probably take
credit for if it actually does ever work, and if
it doesn't work, she'll blame it all on Joe and
say she has no idea what's going on there. But
(01:31:43):
essentially his SAVE plan, the Saving on a Valuable Education initiative,
which would lower income, which would lower student loan payments
based on income to maybe zero dollars, and then also
potentially give you access to forgiveness much sooner. The Supreme
Court still says you can't. You can't get that gone
because we think that some of those things that are illegal.
(01:32:03):
You're just essentially trying to buy votes, is what it is,
and you can't do that. You also can't have massive
student loan debt forgiveness without working through the other branches
of government.
Speaker 3 (01:32:12):
That's another thing you can't do.
Speaker 4 (01:32:14):
I would have thought it was interesting that that was
out there in the world and being talked about a lot.
There's also another story about how California is now the
quote new center of political corruption in our country because
there have been a lot of downfalls going on in California.
The city hall downfall was stunning, as one of many
(01:32:34):
have been. But honestly, there's some references in here that
I thought were really interesting in this article about how
some of it might be because of the sensibilities of
some of the people who are crossing over into Los
Angeles into California from say Mexico. My wife is Mexican,
she's from there, born and raised there. I've been there many,
(01:32:57):
many times, and I can't tell you the amount of
discusesions I've had with people in Mexico about how the
political system there is horrible. They kill politicians, that's something
they do way differently than here. The cartels kill multiple
different candidates for offices every single election cycle, which is insane.
(01:33:17):
But then also the amount of corruption that exists within
the political system there, the police system, or pretty much
anything there. Family members of mine will say that in Mexico,
with the enough money, anything's possible. And so when you
think about California becoming an epicenter, not that probably hasn't
to some point been already, but with embezzlement, perjury, all
(01:33:38):
kinds of charges being lotted a bunch of local politicians there.
You wonder if the influence of that is due to
the open border policy as well, and some of the
people that bring in money that want to influence power
structures in those places too. This is not a new thought.
It's just a thought that's being bounced around more now
that we're talking about the impact just leaving the border
(01:34:01):
wide opened for anyone to come across it.
Speaker 11 (01:34:03):
All.
Speaker 4 (01:34:03):
Right, Another thing I saw out there, I thought this
was kind of funny. Jade Vance is getting crapped down
a lot in a lot of just mainstream media places.
Other are things I don't like about him. There are
things I do like about him, But I do think
he's quite articulate and does a good job in conversation.
And this was one of the funnier moments during a
rally he gave recently. Someone seemed to notice that he
(01:34:24):
didn't have a teleprompter so that he held something out
and his response was actually quite good.
Speaker 11 (01:34:29):
Here we go, ma'am, I don't need a teleprompter. I've
actually got thoughts in my head, unlike Kamala Harris.
Speaker 4 (01:34:36):
So Kamala is gonna do her first interview tonight. The
first big girl interview is what I'm calling it. And
I know everyone's going to get mad at that, and
I don't care, well, not everyone. A whole lot of
people are not gonna get mad. Some people are gonna
get mad about that. And remember that they called Biden's
press conference a big boy press conference. That's what his
own press secretary did, so this should be called the
(01:34:57):
same thing if we're just being fair, if we're just
being honest. But anyway, one of the biggest things that's
being criticized about it is bringing along Tim Walls, her
vice presidential candidate, so it's a two person interview instead
of just her, and why that needed to happen, and
what the intention of that was or why you needed
a security blanket. Actually, I think one of the funnier
tweets out there is that you needed a you know,
(01:35:19):
emotional support animal or emotional support human in this case,
to help you do the interview. It's not live, so
of course it's taped and it probably is going to
be edited. Whether or not it'll make Harris look good
or not all that great to voters is yet to
be seen, but it will be interesting the discussion and
the reaction to it, because there are several other stories
(01:35:39):
out right now saying that the honeymoon period for Harris,
at least as polls are concerned, is starting to evaporate.
She may have peaked as far as the popularity goes,
before she actually has to say things of substance, things
that matter, things that can actually be challenged, as far
as what her plans are for the next four years
(01:36:00):
if she were actually elected to be our next president.
It's just sort of surreal that it's this far into
all this to get to this point, Like I can't
tell you how odd it is to be almost in
September of the election year itself, and to be able
to stay on radio anywhere and honestly not say it
with any sort of political agenda, that the actual platform
(01:36:24):
of the Democratic candidate for president is somewhat of a mystery.
The actual policy decision things that she would hang her
hat on are somewhat confusing, and we're a few months
away from choosing who gets put into office. It'd be
like if you were choosing the next leader of your
company and there was a person who'd been there before,
who'd done it before, and he kind of liked some
(01:36:44):
of the stuff that had happened the last time that
that person was the boss. And you're like, all right,
I get what they're going to do. I have a
pretty good idea. And then you look across and you're like,
this person's brand new to the company, been here a
couple of weeks, they have no plan yet, and they're
not sure what plan is going to do. But by
the way, they've also been working for someone who has
been in charge for a while and it's been terrible.
So they're not exactly as brand new was going to
(01:37:06):
tell you they are, but they haven't been in charge
yet and they have no policy, no plan whatsoever. And
deciding who you want to run the company, the person
that seems like they have no idea what's about to happen,
the person that at least has done it before. That's
really where we are in this society. And then also,
I guess I'll mention this as far as other news
stories out there, Jack Smith has tried to change a
(01:37:28):
little bit the indictment against Trump as far as the
twenty twenty election interference case goes. Remove some of the
things that the Supreme Court said that Trump as president
would be immune to being prosecuted for, but leave other
things intact. Some would ask you why this is happening
now in August as opposed to happening, say, after the election,
because the Justice Department typically doesn't want to interfere in elections,
(01:37:52):
and having to recreate an indictment in basically September of
twenty twenty four feels a tad like it's going to
influence or potentially try to influence the election. So you
think for that reason they might pump the brakes for
just a couple months on this, but no. And this
led to Tom Elliott, who does great things on social media.
You should check him out on x on Twitter, but
(01:38:14):
he does a lot of great stuff, creating a supercut
of all the times that the Democratic Party, or in
this case, a whole lot of media, essentially rigged the
twenty twenty election by lying about the Hunter Biden laptop.
And it's funny because you've heard that said before. People
say that and you're like, oh, this is political. This
is the right side of the aisle far right to
(01:38:35):
say that the election was essentially stolen in this way.
Speaker 3 (01:38:39):
But it was.
Speaker 4 (01:38:40):
And the reason that you can say that so candidly
is that the government actually used the Hunter Biden laptop
as proof against him in his felony gun charge and
his felony gun conviction that finally they found him guilty
of that they submitted the laptop as evidence the people
who said the laptop was Russian disinformation, but just as
a reminder as Trump faces yet another charge or another
(01:39:02):
attempt to find him guilty of election interference, that somebody else,
a whole group of people did it, and they're not
going to be charged by Jack Smith anytime soon.
Speaker 14 (01:39:11):
We're not going with the New York Folk story right
now on Hunter Biden.
Speaker 17 (01:39:16):
This is really one of the stupidest October surprises I've
ever seen.
Speaker 15 (01:39:21):
STI it helps to really view this as storytelling, not
so much as news coverage, but as political entertainment.
Speaker 18 (01:39:27):
And Pierre explained, we don't want to waste our time
on stories that are not really stories.
Speaker 2 (01:39:31):
Who even thought to make that story up.
Speaker 5 (01:39:33):
It's a story that many intelligence experts day has all
the hallmarks of a foreign interference campaign. It looks like
it's tied to Vladimir Putin in Moscow.
Speaker 3 (01:39:42):
This is a rutting intelligence disinformation.
Speaker 4 (01:39:45):
Campaigns, foreign intelligence operation, foreign intelligence operation.
Speaker 3 (01:39:49):
Yeah, it wasn't at all.
Speaker 4 (01:39:51):
Hunter Biden really did just leave his laptop that he
wanted to get fixed at a repair shop and a
whole bunch of damaging information on it, and then he
forgot about it and never came back. For it's a
real thing. We all know about that now. No one
is really debating the truth in that story anymore. It's
just it's kind of amazing, you know. And I'll say
this about it actually, and then I'll play one other
piece of audio that I find hilarious for the wrong reasons.
Speaker 3 (01:40:13):
Today.
Speaker 4 (01:40:14):
The thing that's most amazing to me about the Hunter
Byden laptop story is if you bring it up with
someone on the other side of the aisle. Now they're annoyed,
like ah talking about this still, But it's one of
the best examples in the last I don't even know
how many years where you can show just how ridiculously
one sided, how ridiculously biased, how ridiculously stupid at least
(01:40:34):
if not actually operating to benefit a political party, that
our news team is, our news system is because they
all said this thing that's blatantly untrue. They distrusted it
because of where it came from or who they thought
provided it to them, and they didn't do their job
to just figure out if it was real on their own,
something that eventually they all did do one at a time.
(01:40:57):
I think CBS might have been first at that a
year later, when you could have validated it right away.
And I hate continuing to talk about that, but it's
such a great example and such a great demonstration as
to why it's ridiculous that you have Trump still dealing
with his indictment charges after the Supreme Court decision and
you don't have anyone being tried for that.
Speaker 3 (01:41:16):
All right.
Speaker 4 (01:41:17):
One other thing, and this is just funny. It's out
there one of the unknown aspects of climate change. The
CDC director Mandy Cohen, Doctor Mandy Cohen recently said that
there's a lot of mosquitoes that have been caused by
climate change, and that's a problem.
Speaker 11 (01:41:32):
Here.
Speaker 3 (01:41:32):
I'll let her explain.
Speaker 16 (01:41:33):
You know, the impact of heat on our health and
climate change is not only impacting us as humans, but
it's changing where mosquitoes and ticks live and thus what
diseases are moving around in different regions. We're just seeing more.
Speaker 3 (01:41:47):
Bugs, and we're seeing more bugs people.
Speaker 4 (01:41:50):
We're seeing a whole lot more bugs and that means
that horrible things are upon us, that the end is near,
that the end is nigh. That's a unique approach man,
to try to get you to give a whole lot
of money to the government to fail at fixing a problem,
which is what they do with any other problem. I
don't care about the discussion as to whether or not
climate changes is real or not. I get annoyed by
that actually whenever I hear from people on it, because
(01:42:13):
it's easier to discuss whether or not it's right to
give that money to the government. And the answer is
it's not. It's wrong, it's terrible, don't do it. That's
my position on it. But I just love this. This
was just the other day on CBS Mornings, ramping up
another political talking point topic and doing it by talking
about how many more bugs there are out there and
how you're probably in horrible danger. All right, well, that's great,
(01:42:34):
that fear mongering is done. I'll take a break and
we'll end on something lighter, something more fun than this stuff.
Speaker 3 (01:42:40):
In just a bit.
Speaker 4 (01:42:41):
This is Craig Collins filling in on the Chad Benson Show.
And even though Chad is not here, hardest working guy
in radio, still doing stuff. Here he is with a
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Speaker 1 (01:44:00):
Into Chest No, not the Country, the Institution, the Chad
Benson Show.
Speaker 4 (01:44:06):
This is the Chad Benson Show. My name is Craig
Collins filling in. You know, it's amusing sometimes watching local
news media, you know, whatever the affiliate is for your
own community, trying to talk about a story that they
probably don't know how to cover. That is the case
for Fox twenty nine in Philadelphia when they had to
deal with a parked car that rolled into a river.
(01:44:29):
I now, granted everybody survived, there were a man and
woman inside. The man and woman may have been doing
some things that some may do in the backseat of
a car when someone kicked. I think the woman actually
kicked the car into gear and it rolled into the river.
This is how again, Fox twenty nine News covered this
breaking news story as they were talking about it the
other day on television.
Speaker 20 (01:44:50):
Art down by the Schouogl River.
Speaker 3 (01:44:52):
Yes, in a parking lot.
Speaker 17 (01:44:54):
Yes, I don't know if we have any video of that,
but yeah, according to police, a vehicle was parked a
Long to Kelly Drive in a parking lot right near
the grand stand curve. What we're looking at right there
are the headlights and brake lights of that vehicle fully
submerged underwater.
Speaker 20 (01:45:11):
So this is this was at four forty five this morning.
So police say a man and a woman were well.
Speaker 17 (01:45:20):
They said they were parked in the parking lot.
Speaker 20 (01:45:22):
Like we used to say, they that they were parking
when I was growing up, if you were making out
in a car, we were parking right.
Speaker 17 (01:45:32):
Well, the police said that the car was parked and
that somehow they hit the gear shift and the car
went into the water.
Speaker 20 (01:45:40):
So what you're telling me is that these two people
were in the back seat of this vehicle.
Speaker 2 (01:45:44):
I didn't say that.
Speaker 17 (01:45:45):
Probably don't have the location of where they were actually sitting.
Speaker 11 (01:45:48):
In that way, they were in.
Speaker 4 (01:45:48):
The backseat of the vehicle. The police confirmed that. By
the way, this is hilarious how long this goes on.
And they're talking to the weather guy by the way,
as he's going back and forth with them, and some
of the detail I do.
Speaker 13 (01:46:00):
In the front, I mean they're messing with the gear
and then in the front I heard the police.
Speaker 20 (01:46:05):
I believe this is in the police right, they were
in the backseat of the car when the woman accidentally
kicked up I don't know what appendage engaged the gear.
It must have been a right stick well, and the
car rolled into the water. Thank god they both got out.
Speaker 3 (01:46:22):
Thank yeah, thank god they're boled out and they're both okay.
That's real.
Speaker 4 (01:46:26):
Morning News try to talk about a story that they
probably should have just skipped.
Speaker 3 (01:46:29):
But I'm very happy that they didn't skip.
Speaker 4 (01:46:31):
But the couple did have to be rescue, and I
wonder what you say to the police when that happens.
All right, I have another piece of audio too that
I want to play. This is also odd, but I
can't help These are, you know, the last pieces of
audio we play at the end of the show. This
is a guy in his twenties who is a stay
at home boyfriend who plays a video game all day long.
I don't know if he actually even makes any money.
(01:46:52):
I'm playing this game in line, but he recounted a
day in his life, and the internet had feelings about this.
You might have feelings about this. Here's a little bit
of his viral video.
Speaker 21 (01:47:01):
So I usually stay up till around three am playing
the game, and then I go to bed. My girlfriend
wakes up around five am, and then she leaves for
work around six am. She comes back to work around
ten am for her lunch, and she usually makes me
breakfast on her lunch, but today she brought me McDonald's,
so I wasn't complaining.
Speaker 3 (01:47:22):
Oh that's good.
Speaker 21 (01:47:24):
And then after this she had to go back to work.
Speaker 4 (01:47:28):
They say, I love you, I love you, go to
work and buy he's speeding all that up.
Speaker 21 (01:47:33):
Now, I just ate my breakfast and then I decided
to play the game for a little bit. I forgot
My girlfriend asked me to sweep the patio before she
got home, so I had to make sure to get
that done real quick.
Speaker 3 (01:47:47):
It is horrible.
Speaker 21 (01:47:47):
Then I took our dog on a walk around the block.
Speaker 4 (01:47:50):
Rope Qui real quick, and then she came home real quick,
and then she brought me a red Bull real quick,
and I was real happy about that. And then I
played the game until three am when I went to
bed again. That's his life, and he did the whole day.
Apparently they have cameras all over the house too, because
he showed every moment of it, which is crazy, but
this is how he lives all the time. He just
takes care of the dog sweeps whatever area of the
(01:48:12):
house she wants him to sweep, and then also plays
his video game and goes to bed himself, and that's life. Yes,
a whole lot of people thought this was ridiculous and
thought you need to do better things there, sir. You
need to find out or at least the woman needs
to find somebody else to be in a relationship with,
because that's insane. One other quick thing I just thought
this was interesting. I'll throw it out there. Post Malone
(01:48:33):
is now the first person in history to have a
number one album on the country rap and rock charts.
He's the first person ever to do that. The f
one trillion album apparently is doing well on the country charts,
So congratulations of post Malone. Not sure if you would
have had that in the office pool. All right, this
is Craig Collins filling in on the Chad Benson Show.
(01:48:56):
And I also do love one other thing being debated
out there. I'll just throw this out as as a
last little teaser. Cat Turd, the actual Twitter account cat
turd too. Actually, if I'm being accurate about it, is
now apparently so famous that people are wondering who the
person is, and we haven't known who they are, and
they have two million followers on x on Twitter, and
(01:49:16):
so there's a recent article about who is cat turd
and why are they such a right leading individual that
we don't know the name of but everybody follows online.
That's hilarious and that's my question of the day. Who's
cat Turd? Figure it out if you can. Greg Collins
filling in on the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 10 (01:49:35):
This is the Chad Benson Show.