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October 16, 2024 109 mins
Early voting starting in some states. Most Americans not getting their information from mainstream media. Woke Wednesday. Kamala Harris gives an interview to Charlamange tha God. Chad's 13 scariest movie countdown #12. Texas Senate debate. Coastal Commission rejects SpaceX plans for more Southern California rocket launches. 
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
The Chad Benson Show, TikTok TikTok, TikTok, No, not the app.
That is the countdown to election day. Now, some states
are voting early, and hey, if you do it well,
you can vote often. And early voting is rocking and rolling.
Facts spoke to Uh, pretty sure Anthony earlier today. He

(00:31):
voted yesterday. He said, dude, it was crazy. It was
crazy in Jeojia voting early. I'm like, Anthony, if you
vote early, definitely vote often.

Speaker 2 (00:40):
More than five million Americans have actually already voted. That's
across well more than half of the states. That piece
is actually down from four years ago when COVID drove
record early voting. And while we don't know exactly who
voted for whom yet, we do know that more likely
Democrats are voting early than likely Republicans. Republicans have actually
picked up their pace from four years ago. There were

(01:02):
more Republicans voting early than last time around.

Speaker 1 (01:04):
Oh my god, who is going to be the winner.
What are the polls say, Chad, Well, they say a
lot of different things. It's really hard to get a
gauge in what the polls say. People ask me, what
do I look at I look at a few different things,
you know, I mean, I look at part We've got
some AI models, we look at things of that nage.

(01:25):
It's tough because again the polls people said, the polls lied.
The polls didn't lie. People lie, and that's what builds
the polls. So people didn't make the polls up. People
lied to the pollsters. That's the way that worked. So
what House always says, everybody lies. Phenomenal show, but everybody lies.

(01:45):
So if I call up and I'm a pollster and
I say, hey, John Doe, Jane Doe, any of the
Doe family, you guys are going to vote, how we're
going to vote? Who are you going to vote for?
Hillary Clinton? Donald Trump? Hillary? If you go vote for

(02:06):
Donald Trump, you've lied to the pollster. So the pollster, though,
is thinking, Okay, well you said Hillary, so boom they go,
and it happens over and over and over again because
we have this sphere of judgment. So we're like, oh
my god. So that's why I think you get a
better representative of polls if you were to do things online.

(02:26):
The problem with that is is when I see stuff
like people send me stuff, go eh, you see this here,
Donald Trump leads by nine hundred and fifty billion poets
or commonly leads by fifty five thousand gazillion points. And
I'm like, it's not really real because that's been asked
on breitbarton this has been asked on MSNBC. So those
aren't real either. So remember, the polls got it right

(02:51):
based on the information that they were given. Want to
mind everybody of that, Okay, continue, let's talk about the polls.

Speaker 3 (02:58):
The timing of our poll is really instructive here.

Speaker 1 (03:01):
As MSNBC poll just want you guys know that, and
as we all know, MSNBC loves Trump.

Speaker 3 (03:07):
The timing of our poll is really instructive here. And
when our September poll came out and had Harris with
a five point lead over Donald Trump, that of course
was after the debate. It was after a really rough
news environment for Donald Trump, with the discussion about Springfield, Ohio.
And now all of a sudden we do show a
tied race. And what has occurred is that those soft Republicans,

(03:31):
non MAGA Republicans, have come back home to Trump. In
our September poll, they were lagging obviously after the debate,
after the discussion of Springfield, Ohio. Our poll finds them
that they are back with Trump, and that explains him
going from forty four percent in our poll in September
now to forty eight percent. Harris has to work on

(03:52):
with showing up Latino voters, getting African Americans in the fold,
white women.

Speaker 1 (03:58):
Freaking white women, dear, it's ruined everything. So it's very interesting, right,
So they start breaking down the poll numbers. The chickens
are coming home the roost, whatever you want to say.
They the reality. And this is what democrats don't get.
And I talk about this a lot. People say, why Trump,
He's all the things that are evil and off. Well,
according to you, he's all the things that are evil
and awful, just like according to the right, the people

(04:21):
on the left are all the things that are evil
and awful. I hear it from both sides. It's still
your values. These are the things that I believe. You
don't believe these things. I believe these things, and I
may not like the messenger. I may like the messenger,
but this is the side, and these are the values,
and that's why I vote that way. Trump just happens

(04:43):
to be the messenger this time, which a lot of
people aren't big fans of even Republicans. And by the way,
the conservative side of stuff too. I tell everybody this
on the left, they're like, he's just I'm like, he's
not conservative. He's not. He is not conservative in the
way that you think. No, there are far more conservative
people out there who are built in a much different way.

(05:05):
On the conservative side of things. Mitt Romney was an
old school conservative, right. I mean Ted Cruzman to talk
about Ted later, you had that big debate. Lets very conservative.
Trump is a populist Republican. That's what he is. He's
a populist Republican. He's strong in some of the issues

(05:28):
that some of the people that are conservative like, but
he's also very flawed and he's with his populism. You know,
we're going to talk about like tariffs and stuff later.
The reality is some of the stuff he throws out there,
it's not what you would consider to be very conservative.
Wasn't great on the Second Amendment. We can go on

(05:49):
and on. He was very mild in the governing. It's
the personality that drives everybody crazy.

Speaker 3 (05:57):
Our pole ends up having a really big gender gap,
where Harris has a fourteen point lead among female voters.
While Donald Trump has a sixteen point lead among male voters,
that's overall a thirty point net gender gap. And what
is kind of fascinating is that Trump's lead with men

(06:18):
is slightly larger than Harris's lead with women. And if
you know, her ability to get back in a lead
national lead over Trump is being able to have a
bigger lead among women than Trump's lead among men, and
so a lot of those demographics. This is the last
three weeks the race. This is why you end up

(06:38):
having mobilization a campaign to be able to rejuice your turnout,
to shore up your weaknesses. And we're going to see
what both campaigns have up their sleeves of the next
three weeks.

Speaker 1 (06:49):
And I don't I mean, there's not a ton that
I think either side is really going to be able
to do. We'll see tonight if this moves the needle.
I mean, you know, we're gonna talk a little bit
about you know, Kamala was on with Charlemagne, the god.
The god by the way, I'm actually related to Charlemagne,

(07:14):
not that one, the real one, the ruler in France. Yeah,
DNA test Charlemagne. I'm French of Costia, ched you have castia.
That being said, does Brett Bears Tonight interview move the
needle a ton I don't know. Does she reach independence?

(07:36):
Maybe maybe not? Is she going to get some pushback
that she won't get elsewhere? When she was on with Charlottage,
she didn't get a ton of pushback. You know, it
was a bit of a love fest. That's the way
these things tend to go. Charlemagne a big fan of
Kamala comparatively to Trump, but Charlotte it's also very honest

(07:59):
about stuffel Mount and say, look, there was as what
it was, and I still think Trump may win. I
don't know what Charlot Mane thinks. And she went on there,
I think in a lot of ways, obviously because she's
struggling with male voters, in particular Black male voters, Hispanic
male voters, White male voters. You get whe're going. She's
struggling with male voters.

Speaker 4 (08:20):
Voting in this election. You have two choices or you
don't vote, but you have two choices if you do.
It's two very different visions for our nation. One mind,
that is about taking us forward and progress and investing
the American people, investing in their ambitions dealing with their
challenges and the other Donald Trump is about taking us backward.

Speaker 1 (08:40):
That is about fascism. Why can't we just say it?

Speaker 5 (08:43):
Yes, we can't say that.

Speaker 1 (08:47):
Fascism. It's about the fascism. Of course, it's about the fascism,
says or Donald Trump's In fact, let's go live to
Donald Trump's speech like loud.

Speaker 6 (08:57):
And it's tight for bended of it, and then I
probably just skim kind of steam up.

Speaker 1 (09:03):
Then y'all don't flee phil me for I said Tonald
Trump again if it's a vinnen. So it's about fascism,
Oh my god, let's just be honest. It's about fascism.
Is that what it really is? Is it about fascism?
Is it is?

Speaker 7 (09:23):
Is?

Speaker 1 (09:23):
I'm just explaining to me. Just tell me about the
fascist and tell me what he's doing. Well, Chad, you
don't understand. The first time he was president, it was
just a test see how he can do things. Now
he's totally gonna do it because is that all Hiddler?
So Donald Trumping wants Hitler? Yeah, oh god, what happens

(09:48):
when none of this stuff comes true? Are you gonna
go sorry about that? He is a little hyperbole it's
the same thing over there when everybody is on the
right gun. You know, I mom lands away. She's gonna
turn us into you know, some third world nation. No
or not, there're gonna be some third world nation. Again hyperbole. Enough,

(10:11):
talk to the people. We can talks to the people
if we must make them understand it via you to
rendez world and destroy their lives. Oh god, it is crazy,
it is. Listen to that. I mean, that's insane. But
what else do you get? You get to people like

(10:32):
joyr Ead. Right, here's a perfect example of let's just
talk about it's fascism. That's what it is. It's fascism.
It's Adolf Hitler with.

Speaker 8 (10:40):
These claims that Trump is surging with black and Latino
voters and leading in every single swing state according to
secret internal polls.

Speaker 1 (10:49):
Despite all the Hitler talk.

Speaker 8 (10:52):
Yes, this race will be far too close, because unfortunately,
we do have a fascist ground swell in parts of
this country, mainly among white men, let's be clear, but
in small pockets among black and brown men too. This
happens to be a global phenomenon. As women become more
economically independent and see positions of power.

Speaker 1 (11:14):
Oh, is that it? The women are more and more
in zivert force. Sylvie must do ever singing our part
to become frescioust and take away zellite to vertic thanks Joy.
Three two three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Headmnson Show, it is your Twitter tweeted at
is Textburg and have a lot of stuff to get
to today. We got our twelfth scariest movie of old Time.

(11:37):
This one has a comedy tenje to it, but terror. Indeed.
Trump gets into a very interesting conversation about tariffs with
the guy from Bloomberg, one of the editors there. It's
very very interesting. A lot of stuff to get to today.
Three two three, five three eight twenty four to twenty
three at Headminton Show, Which your Twitter, your Instagram, Rofgreens,
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Speaker 9 (13:09):
Chad Benson.

Speaker 10 (13:10):
A new poll reveals sharp divides and where Americans look
for information. According to Gallup, mass media is now the
least trusted civic or political institution, continuing a precipitous decline
since twenty eighteen, with just thirty one percent of Americans
trusting news zalads to report the news fully accurately and fairly.

(13:32):
The survey reflects a deeper divide and trust when it
comes to partisan beliefs. Republicans express especially low confidence in
the media, with only twelve percent reporting a fair amount
of trust, compared to fifty four percent of Democrats and
twenty seven percent of Independence.

Speaker 1 (13:51):
What you need to pay attention to is independence, so
only twenty seven percent. So the Republicans, I understand why
they don't trust the media, and the Democrats understand why
you do. Cause newsrooms are ninety plus percent Democrat. They
don't trust the media. The Republicans because they have seen

(14:13):
the media lie. They have Well, think of it this way.
All of these companies now have made business decisions, and
those business decisions are to feed what we already have.
That's it. The media world is fractured. And I say
media because it's what it is. It's no longer the

(14:34):
news world. People look at the media now in a
way that is so much different than before because now
we have access to things we've never had access before,
which is everybody, all the time, twenty four to seven.
So what does that mean? You want affirmation? You're not
interested in information, so you're going to go to the
place it's going to feed the thing that you want fed,

(14:56):
which is your belief and your biases. And if you're
looking looking for things that are going to be straight
and just give me the who, what, when, how and
why kind of thing and I'll make up my own decision.
It's tough to find because that doesn't sell a big
portion of what's going on here is on us because

(15:17):
that's how we want to consume now. But we've also
been lied to a whole bunch and that ain't good.
I mean, we can go back two weeks, sixty minutes, right,
ten days, so still waiting for the transcripts. What exactly
was that all about? You change the answer from what
was the original three two, three, five, three eight, twenty

(15:41):
four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show, is your
Twitter tweet at a text the program right here? On
the Chad Benson Show over the weekend, Mike Johnson did
an interview and what ended up being on the television
wasn't the full thing that that's where people go. This
is the distrust we have. One thing though, that came

(16:04):
out of this report was who do we trust? Then?

Speaker 10 (16:08):
Contrasting this sixty seven percent of Americans say they have
a great deal of trust in their local government. This
is nearly double the trust Americans have in Congress, which
sits just a little bit higher than the media, and
thirty four percent. Trust in media had previously dropped to
thirty two percent in twenty sixteen before rebounding slightly. But

(16:30):
according to this survey, any goodwill built up over that
time has dissolved. Whether this trend will reshape national institutions
remains to be seen.

Speaker 11 (16:40):
The one thing is clear.

Speaker 10 (16:41):
The American people are seeking more transparency and accountability and.

Speaker 1 (16:46):
That is a great thing. And the thing is they
feel they can get it in other places. That's the
other side of this, the independent media, and I'm talking
about the YouTube world, TikTok. You know, whether you like
it or not, the reality as young people get their
information there twitter, Those things are out there now so
you can go juxtapost positions if you're curious about where

(17:07):
your position is in somebody else's and try to find
the truth in a way that we never had before.
But local that matters, and I'm talking also about the media.
Your local stations do an amazing job. And when it
comes to government locally, those things have a bigger impact
on your life than a lot of this chaos and

(17:28):
craziness is out there, although we tend to be a
little bit more entertaining. That's what I'm trying to tell you.
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson Show's your Twitter. If you missed
a check, have the podcast chet that'son.

Speaker 12 (17:37):
Cher Son, Chad Benson, Joe.

Speaker 9 (18:00):
The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (18:02):
Jamala Harris will be on with Brett Bear tonight on
Fox News Live local, not local, but nationwide, worldwide, local live, local,
non news Fox News. It'll be good, It'll be good.
I want to see he is. And I said it yesterday.
I'll say it again. She will get a much fairer
shake and treated with much more respect than Donald Trump

(18:26):
would be CNN, MSNBC. I'm gonna get him much fairer shake.
So yesterday Kamala struggling with black men and white men
and Latino men. Nobody cares about the Asian man. If

(18:46):
you notice that, they never saw it about who's getting
the Asian vote. Nobody cares. Why is that? That's not
very nice? It's the reality of So she and I
with Charlemagne, the god, who, by the way, is not
a god. And about Charlemagne, Charlemagne a ruler in France.
I'm related to. He's my great big got grandfather, so

(19:08):
it was interesting. He asked some questions. Remember, in the
question and answer portion of anything, it is the second
question and sometimes maybe even the probably the third question
that will get you to the answer that's real. You
want to point that out here we go immigration.

Speaker 13 (19:29):
Doesn't the Biden administration have to take some blame for
the border though a lot of the blame, because I mean,
the first three years, y'all did get a lot of things.

Speaker 1 (19:35):
Wrong with the border.

Speaker 4 (19:37):
Charlemagne within hours of being inaugurated, the first bill we passed,
before we did the Inflation Reduction Act, before we did
the Bipartisan Infrastructure Act, before we did the Safer Communities
Act to deal with gun violence, first thing we dropped
was a bill to fix the broken immigration system, which

(19:58):
by the way, Trump did not fix when he was pressed,
and you can look at every step along the way.
We then tightened up the asylum application process. We then
worked with what we needed to do to secure ports
of entry. We did a number of things, including what
we did to try and get that border security bill passed,

(20:19):
and then also an executive order that has actually reduced
significantly the number of illegal crossings and tightened up what
needs to happen in between.

Speaker 5 (20:29):
Ports of entry.

Speaker 4 (20:30):
But no, we've been working on it ever since.

Speaker 1 (20:33):
But no, you haven't ninety four executive orders to overdo
what Trump did and that first bill you passed. We
talked about it last week. Let's not forget that first
bill you tried to get out there and pass and
everything that would have granted citizenship to a whole bunch

(20:54):
of folks who came here illegally and abused our assylum system,
which you've not fixed, by the way. And when you
talk about well that other one, that's always the big thing, right, Well,
the other one, the other one. The Trump shot down
the other one. I don't know what the details are,
but Trump did it because that's the answer to everything.
The answer to all the bad things in life is

(21:18):
Donald Trump. He's the answer for everything. Who was the
second gunment on the grass?

Speaker 14 (21:22):
You know?

Speaker 11 (21:22):
Donald Trump?

Speaker 9 (21:23):
Who?

Speaker 1 (21:24):
Who? Who killed Superman?

Speaker 11 (21:26):
Donald Trump?

Speaker 1 (21:27):
Really? I mean that's the answer to everything. Doesn't matter good?
Who killed Lincoln? Donald Trump? The answer to everything? Who
started the COVID virus, Donald Trump. There you go more
from Kamala with Shallam and the guy.

Speaker 4 (21:39):
So what we're here's what has to happen. Congress has
to act to fix the immigration system, and it has
been broken for a long time. Congress has to act.

Speaker 9 (21:51):
But it does not help.

Speaker 4 (21:52):
When finally a bipartisan group got together to fix it
and Donald Trump told them, hold on, don't do that
because it won't It won't help me politically.

Speaker 13 (22:03):
Why are you allowing to call you the bordersar when
that's not even your.

Speaker 4 (22:07):
I'm not giving him permission for that. But if I
responded to every name he called me, I wouldn't be
focused on the things that actually helped the American people.

Speaker 1 (22:13):
And that's my focus, whatever those things are, because we're
not quite sure because you've never really nailed down exactly
what it is outside of giving away money, which Trump's
starting to do now too, because obviously Ockham's racer, sometimes
easiest passed is just the best path, which is giving
away money. Congress, She's right about that one hundred percent.
And by the way, long before Donald Trump decided to

(22:35):
descend down the escalator coming into our world, not as
the apprentice or the playboy billionaire, but as the evil
fascist that he has become. Long before that, both sides
have had numerous occasions to fix the broken immigration system,
which if I go back in time, chip on nails

(22:58):
over there in this ragon and they've decided to do amnesty,
but we're going to fix all of this so we
don't go through this again, and then flash forward to
where we are today. It was never fixed. So both
sides have had opportunities, ample opportunities to fix it, and
they have it and in many cases actually enforce something.
See that's the big deal. And you're, hey, we had

(23:19):
this great bipartisan bill, says you. And once again I
go back to this three years you did nothing. Then
it became an issue and you wanted to do something
because you felt you had to because the issue was
so big that even the blue cities were like, we
can't do this. So what happened? You tried to do

(23:40):
a bipartisan bill. It really wasn't going to fly because
the devil was in the details. And what were those
devil right there? As I look into those details, Oh,
you were going to give some money to enforcement. A
vast majority of that, though, was not for enforcement. What

(24:01):
was for processing more than enforcement? And five thousand a
day doesn't feel like you're slowing anything down. No, very interesting.
Now more on immigration. As a caller called into Charlemagne
the God, Hi.

Speaker 15 (24:19):
I'm Bobby from Georgia, and I have a question for
Kamala Harris. Could you please respond to Trump's claim that
he's going to use the Alien Enemies Act of seventeen
ninety eight to round up immigrants if he wins the election.
This law was last used to put Asian Americans in
internment camps during World War Two, and I have a

(24:40):
sneaking suspicion that if Trump wins, He's going to use
this law to put.

Speaker 9 (24:44):
Anyone that doesn't look weight in camps.

Speaker 4 (24:47):
And I'm scared he is achieving his intended effect to
make you scared. Not about hope, not about optimism, not
about the future, but about fear.

Speaker 1 (24:57):
Oh look at that, Jane. Do you think he's putting
all non white people? No? I don't, No, I don't. Sorry,
I know by it. Thank you very much for that,
Appreciate it. Now let's move on from there. And this
is very interesting to reparations, and these two calls actually
go together if you think about it.

Speaker 13 (25:17):
Black Americans are heavily asked to vote Democrat in every
election for over half a century, with very little in return.
What are your plans to address these very important issues
and change that narrative.

Speaker 4 (25:29):
Yes, I'm running to be a president for all Americans.
That being said, I do have clear eyes about the
disparities that exist and the context in which they exist,
meaning history. So my agenda, well, first of all, on
the plane of reparations, it has to be studied, There's
no question about that, and I've been very clear about
that position.

Speaker 1 (25:50):
Just be honest and say, no, it's not going to happen.
It isn't. We've got to do a better job at
making sure that men are in the household in the
black community. We got to do a better job of
having mentors in the business world to help young black
men and women who are entrepreneurs get going. We've got
to have a better way and a path forward. But
we're not giving out reparations. And why could you say that, Well,

(26:13):
the person before talked about what. Well, the last time
that act was used it was seventeen seventy nine, but
then it was again used to round up Japanese so
where does it end out of curiosity? So if we
go and say, hey, we're gonna give reparations to the
African American community, how do we even break that down? Secondly,

(26:36):
now who's next? What about the Latino community? What about
the Asian Committee? What about the Irish? What about the Irish?
We're always left out in this kind of thing. Just
be honest it look, we're not giving out reparations, we're
not handing out money. It isn't going to happen. A.
We just don't have it. And B it isn't going

(26:59):
to happen because not going to be a benefit. It's
gonna be even more divisive. So we aren't gonna do this.
What we're gonna end up doing, though, is figuring out
how to get inside the black community and actually help
lift people up and get them from Democrats to Republicans.

(27:19):
Oh Chad, But if think about it just for a second,
just take a deep breath and go yay, wait a minute.
If we did do reparations for African Americans and we
had to figure stuff out and always laugh, remember remember
with who's the only president was sleep? It was Trump?

Speaker 16 (27:39):
Right?

Speaker 1 (27:39):
Was that it Trump's family? Bamba would have to pay
reparations and all these they break it down, but Trump, Nope,
that's a lie. Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four,
twenty three at Chad Benson Show, is your Twitter coming up?
We've got number twelve when it comes to scary movies.
By the way, I saw a movie that is on

(28:01):
the list, So I finalized the list or a vast
majority of still taking some comments and you know you
want to shoot me some suggestions. But I watched a
movie yesterday that was terrifying, easily the best slasher movie
I've seen in twenty plus years and kind of gross.
Talk about that when it makes the list, which it has.

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(29:28):
hundred dollars saving right now on the my slippers men
and women sizes, tons of them, tons of colors, all
kinds of cool stuff. Mypellow dot Com slash Benson. Let's
get scared Chad Benson.

Speaker 17 (29:38):
Show, Deep States, No Deep doo doo eah, The Chat
Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (29:54):
That's that time of the show where we talk about
scary movies. We do it every single year. At this
time we count down, Well, it used to be the ten,
but we've expanded it to thirteen thirteen scary movies, which
is good because it allows us to bring in some
movies maybe that were scary but we missed, And Today
is one of those movies that well, it is funny

(30:16):
and terrifying at the same time. Are you guys ready?
You are fantastic. Let's do it.

Speaker 5 (30:25):
The time has come, so prepare yourself for a journey
of fear from the darkest corner of cinema, the most
bone chilling tales ever told. It's the countdown. You've been
waiting for, the thirteen Scariest movies of all time? Which

(30:48):
movie will take the top spot?

Speaker 18 (30:50):
How about a fish Tail so big because the Jaws
opened wide? Or the story of a young innocent girl
battling evil with some help.

Speaker 19 (31:14):
Well, then let's introduce ourselves. I'm Demion Karas and.

Speaker 20 (31:17):
I'm that Carol.

Speaker 19 (31:18):
Where's Reagan in here with us?

Speaker 5 (31:23):
Or The Fright of a Madman with a chainsaw?

Speaker 1 (31:26):
So I stop stop.

Speaker 5 (31:34):
You'll have to listen to find out. Are you ready?

Speaker 1 (31:40):
Now?

Speaker 5 (31:40):
It's time for the countdown to begin. The thirteen Scariest
Movies of All Time? Number twelve.

Speaker 21 (31:50):
The Jennings family has just moved to the small town
of Canaima in search of a simpler life. It's the
perfect place with my crime, with my crime, except for
one pesty little drama.

Speaker 11 (32:02):
Come with me and look at the web.

Speaker 1 (32:03):
The web.

Speaker 9 (32:04):
I have terrible fear of spiders.

Speaker 17 (32:07):
Come on country, now, it's time to work through this irrational,
paralyzed terror.

Speaker 11 (32:12):
It's not a.

Speaker 21 (32:13):
Rational Hollywood Pictures and Amblin Entertainment present Jeff Daniels.

Speaker 1 (32:20):
Honey, we're in a living room. We needed to.

Speaker 21 (32:22):
Kill a spider, and John Goodman over talk.

Speaker 1 (32:25):
Infestation must every so off from a little town somewhere
there's a health scout. Spiders make convenient cultures.

Speaker 15 (32:31):
I think one of your Venezuelan spiders hitch a ride here,
is spread.

Speaker 1 (32:34):
Out from a central nest in a weblike patent and
dominate the entire area. And that happens, this town is.

Speaker 7 (32:42):
Dead better in court by private doc.

Speaker 1 (32:45):
Rock.

Speaker 21 (32:52):
Hollywood Pictures and Ambline Entertainment presents a racknofolia, eight legs,
two fangs, and an attitude.

Speaker 5 (33:00):
Lloyd.

Speaker 1 (33:00):
If we find the spider that did this, you can
arrest him. A rachnophobia, a thrill on it. Absolutely the
terrifying movie, and the reason is simple, because a rachnophobia
is a phobia that is real. How many of us
have a fear of bug?

Speaker 11 (33:21):
Right?

Speaker 1 (33:22):
How many of us look at things right? The eight legs,
the six legs, four octopus, it doesn't matter, just legs.
My buddy, who is one of the biggest reptile people
on the planet, he used to tell me all the
time lizards bug him because they got arms. There is
something about it inherently. There is something terrifying about aracnets spiders,

(33:46):
and it is a very real thing. For those of
you not keeping score, and I think a lot of
you know this, let me tell you something about this movie.
It was funny. It was absolutely Funnyjef Daniels was funny
before he became a weirdo. And I'm kidding Jeff, your
pals right, you know? Old John Goodman, Big John Goodman
was hilarious in it. It was set up so perfectly.

(34:10):
There was humor in the right time, but there was
that primal, terrifying wackiness.

Speaker 14 (34:19):
And just.

Speaker 1 (34:22):
When it came to the fact that there were spiders
and so many of you reached out to me over
the last couple of weeks and said, arachnophobia, I know
It's not a traditional horror movie in the way that
you think, Oh, but it is, because much like you're
going to hear with a lot of these movies, one
of the things is that primal fear. And while there's

(34:45):
jokes aside, the fact is very few of us don't
freak out when a spider lands on her shoulder coming,
you know. I mean even the other day, I'm outside
taking the dogs for a walk and I come in
and I've got like I walked through a web just
I didn't even see it, and I'm still just swinging
at it, and I know there's no spider or stump.
There's something about it. And oh, by the way, not

(35:11):
only was it successful and it was, they're making a
new one. It's a reboot rather than a sequel, so
be prepared for that. A little bit more modern technology
might make it even creepier. Number twelve today a rach
nophobia three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four twenty
three at Chad Benson Show, is your Twitter tweet edis

(35:33):
text the program? I love hearing from each and every
one of you right here in the Chad Benton Show.
All right, coming up, second hour. A lot more to
get to when it comes to the election. We're twenty
days out. How are you feeling if you're Trump? How
do you feel if you are Kamala Harris? I feel

(35:54):
like one of them is doing what he does and
the other one is scrambling trying to find some sore
of footing again because the joy isn't working. We'll talk
a bit about that. A lot of other stuff to
get to as well. Again, you can reach out to
us across all of our social media. We love hearing
from each and every one of you. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show.

(36:16):
Is your Twitter. If you're missed it to the show,
make sure you grab the podcast. We love it when
you do that. Quite frankly, we really appreciate it. It
is the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 9 (36:24):
This is the Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 22 (36:53):
So while Kamalo was talking to Charlamade the God on
the radio, man by the name of Donald John Trump
sat down with some folks from Bloomberg.

Speaker 1 (37:06):
The man asking the question is one of the editors
at Bloomberg, and there's lots of questions here. This is,
you know, for all the chaos of Trump, and there's
plenty of it. And by the way, the media, you
guys play into it because you enjoy it.

Speaker 11 (37:18):
You need him.

Speaker 1 (37:19):
He's a drug, right. You guys have this weird relationship
that is have you guys ever known I'm sure you have.
Maybe you've been a part of it. You can't quit
each other like you're horrible for each other. It's like
the worst relationship you can think of. But the chemistry
sexually is that wow. And so you go back time

(37:42):
and time again. That's the relationship the media and Trump
have with each other. But yesterday there was a really
great conversation that quite frankly, Kamala she's not having this
now just because you don't have this conversation and defense
of Kamala Harris and several other politicians. By the way,

(38:08):
this is a much deeper conversation when it comes to
the economy than just like I'm going to lower inflation
and give you guys twenty five billion dollars for a
down payment for a house. There is a financial side
of things. It's much deeper. And this, you know, Bloomberg's
not having the same conversation they're gonna have Donald Trump
and they pressed Donald here, which, by the way, I

(38:29):
think is fitsiastic. I remember I saw this thing the
other day about what a great CEO and a great
leader is a great CEO with somebody who goes, Okay,
I'm running this company or whatever it is you running,
So what do I need to do? I need to
appoint better, smarter people around me to help me. I

(38:52):
need to then allow them to do their jobs, and
when they come to me with the problem, I will
know damn it. I got to fix this problem because
the smarter, better people in this situation can't do it.
So I've got to make the decision on how we
fix this problem. That's kind of what a CEO and
a leader is. So here we go Bloomberg yesterday, Question

(39:17):
an answer time one of the ansidents of Bloomberg with
Donald John Trump.

Speaker 23 (39:22):
He said, President Trump, at the moment, there was a
thing called the Trump trade in the markets.

Speaker 3 (39:26):
Do you know what that is?

Speaker 23 (39:27):
The Trump trade is very simple. People are betting that
your policies they're going to drive up inflation, drive up
interest rates. Are the investors wrong?

Speaker 14 (39:35):
Yeah?

Speaker 11 (39:35):
I had four years no inflation. I had four years
no inflation.

Speaker 1 (39:39):
But that was that was when you had much.

Speaker 24 (39:41):
I had four years. It's better than that. And Biden,
who has no idea where the hell he is. Okay,
Biden went two years with no inflation because he inherited
from me. And then they started spending money like drunken salers.

Speaker 1 (39:56):
And a portion of that was true and in fact
started even you know, and and I've said this, I can't.
You know, they blame Trump. You know, Trump lost cazillion jobs.
It's like, no, COVID lost the jobs, and the jobs
weren't lost. They were told everybody you got to go home.
Do you know Trump put on all this debt? Well, no,
it wasn't that Trump came up with some special thing.

(40:16):
Everybody wanted anybody to stay home because they're worried about COVID. Okay,
totally understandable at first, and then ended up happening. We
handed out money. We can't tell everybody you got to
go home and you can't work. It's against the law.
Right now, you're like, well, am I gonna pay my bills?
Not my problem. So that didn't work that way. So
doesn't mean that he didn't add to debt, because to
be honest with you, Republicans, you're not all that you

(40:37):
say you are when it comes to being I'm a
deficit hawk. Very few of them are. They're all about spending.
It's just where they spend. So that being said, I
can't at all look at him and go, well, you
know if Trump you added all this stuff, and then
you know, stuff started to happen under your watch, and

(40:57):
b COVID played a big parted and the second pile
of money you handed out, I was totally against. I
want to be on the record as if it's say,
because he is on the record, because he's the deavil.
I want to be on record saying that I was
totally against that second tranch of money that they handed out.
But then it got to the point where the supply

(41:20):
chains were broken. Everybody's sitting at home with a ton
of money. Then you hand out another thing of money
that should have been it. But then along comes Biden
and he's like, I want to give out a bunch
of money, and he does, and then he supercharges it.

Speaker 23 (41:35):
From the potential, and the markets are looking at the
fact you are making all these promises. Latest one was
car loans. You're flooding the thing with giving giveaways. But
I was actually quite kind to you. I used seven trillion.
The upper estimate is fifteen trillion. People like a Wall
Street Journal, who's hardly a communist organization. They have criticized

(41:57):
you on this as well. You are running out a normal.

Speaker 11 (42:00):
What is the Wall Street Journal?

Speaker 1 (42:01):
Now?

Speaker 11 (42:01):
I'm meeting with them tomorrow. What is the Wall Street Journal? That?
They've been wrong about everything? So of you, by the way,
you've been wrong. You're trying to turn this.

Speaker 1 (42:09):
You're trying to term this you've been wrong about.

Speaker 23 (42:11):
You're trying to turn You're trying to turn this into
debate business.

Speaker 11 (42:16):
But you're wrong. You've been wrong. You've been wrong all
your life on this stuff.

Speaker 1 (42:20):
Okay, Well, I don't know if he's been wrong all
of his life. I don't think that's true. That's Trump,
That's what he is. He come back. That's how he
controls the conversation. I understand. It's not about demeaning or
it's a power play. How can I control the conversation?
All right? That's and that's one on one in negotiation.
That's one on one in a lot of things in life.
I'm trying to control the conversation. So that being said,

(42:42):
the Wall Street Journal has not been wrong about everything
neither as Bloomberg, and I do worry the handouts he's
thrown out there. The giveaways, quite frankly, are ridiculous. Now, yes,
politicians make promises. You got a kamal ague, I'm gonna
give you twenty five thousand gazillion dollars. You got so
and so, They all stuff because that's what you do, right,
You go out and you promise things. That's part of

(43:04):
being a politician. But then it got to the magical
world of tariffs, which aren't very exciting. But boy did
they have a little dust up here.

Speaker 11 (43:12):
We're going to bring the companies back.

Speaker 24 (43:14):
We're going to lower taxes so further for companies that
are going to make their product in the USA.

Speaker 11 (43:20):
We're going to protect those companies with strong tariffs. Because
I'm a believer in tariffs. I'm not sure that you are.
I don't think you are.

Speaker 1 (43:27):
But I congratulate you in your career.

Speaker 24 (43:30):
But to me, the most beautiful word in the dictionary
is tariff.

Speaker 1 (43:36):
I'm not a big fan of tariffs. And several of
you said, God he wants to tariff is tariff aft
But by the way, Trump is if we're going to
be let's be open and transparent here. Saying something and
doing something are two separate things. A lot of people
say a lot of stuff and they don't follow through.
Tariffs are all about negotiating, and there's probably a lot

(43:56):
of things you don't even know when it comes to tariffs.
You know, do you realize that we built Europe and
Japan back together on tariffs? We tariff them exactly the opposite.
This is Howard Lutnik, who is the CEO of Canter Fitzgerald,

(44:16):
pretty big financial firm, talking about how we helped build
Europe and Japan back based on tariffs.

Speaker 25 (44:24):
Nineteen forty eight. Right, we came up with something called
the Marshall Plan. Right, the world, Germany and Japan were
destroyed after World War Two, and we wanted to export
our economy to them. So we made a rule they
could tariff us and we won't tariff them, so they
can rebuild.

Speaker 1 (44:43):
This explanation i've heard of, so they.

Speaker 25 (44:44):
Can rebuild their economy. We rebuilt their economy using something called.

Speaker 11 (44:48):
The Marshall Plan.

Speaker 25 (44:50):
Our economy is so awesome that we'll use it to
help you rebuild.

Speaker 11 (44:54):
When should that have ended? What do you think?

Speaker 25 (44:56):
Nineteen eighty right, nineteen eighty five, I mean by forty
years are Japan and Germany and all of Europe still
tariffing the heck out of our auto industry tariffing the
heck out of our furniture industry.

Speaker 11 (45:11):
Do you realize all.

Speaker 25 (45:12):
Your furniture you're buying that's made foreign?

Speaker 11 (45:14):
It seems crazy?

Speaker 25 (45:16):
Why it's because they tariff us and we don't tariff them.

Speaker 11 (45:20):
It's so obvious.

Speaker 1 (45:22):
It's a negotiation. And that's a lot of what this is.
It's the start of something. You make promises, but are
you really going to do those things? Probably not? What
are the things we should tariff? Isf We make it
kind of thing? Should we be tariffing other people who
make it and bring it here?

Speaker 11 (45:43):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (45:43):
If we don't make it, No, we shouldn't. It's pretty simple.
So it's having an understanding of that. And here's the
other thing. And I go back to this when it
comes to the economy and tariffs and all this kind
of stuff, it's a little bit, you know, maybe a
little dry, but we try to make it funnier. Tariffs
and trying to do what Trump's trying to do, like
you know where he he threatened John Deere and John
Deere is not gonna now build things in Mexico this

(46:05):
day and the other one of these issues that we
have here in this country is American workers. They're more expensive.
And what do we like? It's anybody, anybody you over there.
We like cheap goods, correct, we like cheap goods. We

(46:26):
like you too, stock them deep and sell them cheap.
And that's why we are much more of a consumption
nation and an idea nation. We export as many ideas
as we do anything else. So there's a lot that
goes into it. It's not just a one size fits all.
But listening to that yesterday, that was a much more

(46:48):
coming at you, having a real conversation, being challenged. I
don't think Kamala would sit down and do well with that. Now.
That's not her forte at all. That's not businesses in
her jam. Everybody alway thinks that they've got to be all. No,
a great leader understands this is what I'm going to
I'm good at making decisions. I'm good at this, this

(47:09):
and this. I will find better people to handle these things,
and then I will allow them to do their jobs.
And if they can't, then I will be the tiebreaker
and will have to go and figure out what we
do from there, because the decision stops and starts with me.
That's simple. But that was a really good interview, and

(47:31):
it was a tough interview, and I like that. And no,
I don't think his planned is one hundred percent finite,
and I do not think it is perfect, but I
also think is a negotiation. I bet you didn't know
that they're still terrifying us one hundred percent. I bet

(47:52):
you didn't know that they're still doing all of those
things to us. We rebuilt their countries using our awesome
economy and saying hey, double quadruple tax us and will
help you build everything, and you can jump on our
back and we'll help you get there. Oh wow, that
was interesting. Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four
to twenty three Atch. You had Benson show, Cheur, Twitter,

(48:13):
your Instagram. We got some Wark stuff coming up in
a little bit. Ted Cruz and Colin all Red battling
it out for the Texas Senate seat they debated last night.
We'll talk a little bit about that as well. Raycon
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Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 9 (49:48):
Chad Benson.

Speaker 26 (49:49):
When the lights went out and they entered the capital
of the world. He went to Cancun on January sixth,
when a mob was storming the Capitol, he was hiding
in a supply closet. And when the toughest word of security,
build and generation came up to the United States Senate,
he took it down. Let me be very clear, I
believe in physical barriers as part of a comprehensive strategy
to secure the border. We had a bill for twenty
billion dollars for a thousand new borderbatrol agents, for more

(50:12):
immigration judges, more asylum officers to help us deal with
the backlog. I wanted to make sure we passed that.
When I'm the Senate, we will, and we'll also fix
our broken legal immigration system. Sandra Cruz has had forever
and he's done nothing to solve this problem.

Speaker 1 (50:25):
Why would we believe that he will with six more
that right, there was Colin Allred last night, the debate
between Ted Cruise and Colin Allred. Why does it matter. Well,
let's be real, it's very close. Texas dead red, not
as red as it used to be. And I continue
to say this. I think more Texans like Ted Kruse's politics.

(50:48):
I think a lot of Texans don't like Ted Cruz
and the abandoning the state as a lot of people
see it during the horrible ice storm is still kicking
him in the grundle. Now, Allred got in some hits

(51:08):
last night. There was no doubt about that. So did
Ted Cruz.

Speaker 27 (51:13):
When it comes to inflation, inflation is caused by the
policies of Kamala Harris and Congressman all Read. Kamala Harris
and Congressman all Read, they came in and they went
on a spending binge. They spent trillions of dollars we
didn't have, horrow trillions of dollars from China that we
didn't have, and they ran the printing presses. And I
and many others said, if you do this, you're going
to drive up inflation. And they didn't care. And I'll

(51:34):
tell you, texans at home are experiencing. And if you're
a senior on fixed income, you're finding it harder and
harder to pay your bills. The inflation caused by Kamala
Harris and Colin Allred spending binge is hurting Texans across
the border.

Speaker 1 (51:48):
And he's right, And that's one of the things that
all Red has to deal with the fact that he
is congressperson who is a Democrat that is being rightly
so put into a position where they have to defend
the fact that inflation is run wild. Both of them
got good opportunities to get good hits in Do I

(52:11):
think it changes anything.

Speaker 11 (52:12):
No.

Speaker 1 (52:12):
I think there were times. Look Ted Cruz lives for
this kind of stuff. There's no doubt about that. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show.
Is your Twitter tweet edis text the program right here
on the Chad Benson Show. I think at times all
Red looked a little stiff, But there's no doubt Allred

(52:33):
absolutely made some headways when it came to some of
the blows if you will, politically that he landed. Now
the question is going to be what happens in the
next twenty days, because there's not going to be a
lot else that happens. And when I say there's not
going to be a lot that happens, kind of like
what's going on with the likes of Kamala and Trump.

(52:57):
There's not going to be anything big that takes place.
Another debate, maybe a couple of town halls. I don't
even know tonight. Obviously Kama's gonna go on with Brett Bher.
I think that helps, maybe the Rogan Podcast for her.
For Trump, I don't know. Same thing with Ted Cruz. Now,
both Ted Cruz and Allread we've invited on the show.
I've had Cruise on the show. I've inted all Read

(53:18):
several occasions on the show. He has chosen not to
come because he thinks there's going to be a gotcha moment,
which I quite frankly think is a bunch of bs.
That's just me and why these things matter. Well, let
me tell you something. As close as everything is right now,
think about it. If you're Donald Trump winning the White
House and not having the Senate or the House, what
do you think is going to happen? Just out of curiosity?

(53:40):
Do you think maybe there's going to be another impeachment?
There's a possibility. You know, they'll have articles ready the
day he is inaugurated, so that's why these things are important.
Three two three, five three eight, twenty four to twenty three.
At Chad Bentson' show is your Twitter. You can tweet
at the show, and I love hearing from each and
every one. You get some wokes stuff coming up in

(54:01):
a little bit because we like to do some of
that kind of stuff. Because it is Wednesday, and even
though it's election year, we want to make sure we
still keep up with our woke stuff. Texta program three
two three, five three eight twenty four to twenty three
yd Chad Benson Show is your Twitter, tweet, text you
all those things. Love hearing from you. It's the Chad
Benson Show.

Speaker 12 (54:18):
Then Chad Benson.

Speaker 9 (54:19):
Show, the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (54:42):
It is Wednesday, so normally we do something where we
wake up or is it woke up? Every once in
a while, it's just getage a little woke.

Speaker 5 (54:51):
Okay, I have been made aware of the allegations.

Speaker 1 (54:54):
Is there anything you can say on your behalf?

Speaker 5 (54:57):
I'm trends you just won h.

Speaker 1 (55:00):
White people are also oppressed by racism.

Speaker 11 (55:03):
We're not.

Speaker 1 (55:03):
We are the oppressors.

Speaker 11 (55:05):
What did you say?

Speaker 1 (55:06):
Do not bring that European nonsense into this ethnic household.

Speaker 13 (55:10):
Do you understand me?

Speaker 9 (55:12):
I have hair in my armpit.

Speaker 4 (55:14):
I have it there for a few reasons.

Speaker 28 (55:15):
One lazy, two the patriarchy, and three.

Speaker 16 (55:20):
Were law saying, oh my god.

Speaker 1 (55:26):
It's time for woke Wednesday. Yes, even with the craziness
and the chaos of the world and the election dime,
and we're twenty days away, we can say relax and
let's enjoy some wokeness if you don't mind, and I
don't mind. Let's start here with kindergartners. This is why
you're homeschool your kids.

Speaker 28 (55:45):
How can I give explained trans people to my kids? Well,
I am a TA in kindergarten class, and I explained
it to them today. So people were wondering if I
was a boy or a girl, and so they asked
me what of the kids said, are you a boy
or a girl? And I said that's a great question.
I'm kind of in between. And he was like, what, No,

(56:06):
are you a boy or a girl? And I was like, well,
are you a boy or a girl? And He's like,
I'm a boy and what do you think, Lisette is?
I think Liste's a girl.

Speaker 14 (56:12):
Cool.

Speaker 28 (56:13):
So some people are boys, some people are girls, and
some people can be in between, or they can be neither.

Speaker 1 (56:19):
No, they can't. By the way, for all the people
out there that are trans and I'm sure there are
some that listen, because I've had a couple of you
reach out to me, by the way, and I wish
you nothing best but the best for your life. I
want you to excel and to be happy all that stuff.
But pick an effing lane, right, Like, don't you agree?

(56:39):
I mean, don't you kind of go non buying her?
I don't want to declare I'm not picking all right, No,
pick a freaking lane, Pick a damn lane. Continue. Kindergarten teacher,
why homeschool my kid?

Speaker 28 (56:54):
Most people are boys or girls, and sometimes people switch
from one to the other.

Speaker 5 (56:58):
What you mean I could be a girl?

Speaker 28 (57:01):
Yeah, you could be a girl if you wanted to
right now. Yeah, if you wanted to, you could say
I'm a girl. And if you wanted, I could call
you by a different name and call you she.

Speaker 9 (57:11):
And he was like, but I don't want to be
a girl.

Speaker 28 (57:13):
And I said, that's great. That means you're a boy
and I'll call you by your name and use heat
And he said.

Speaker 1 (57:19):
Okay, pick a lane and stop talking to the kids
about whatever you think you are or aren't based on
which way the freaking wind blows. It's not that hard.
My kid's here to learn the ABC's and the one
two threes, not whether you got one of those and
two of these. Oh that was a great rhyme. I know, right,

(57:42):
I've decided not to declare no. Now, well, then the
world will declare for you. Pick a freaking lane.

Speaker 9 (57:48):
So what do we use for you?

Speaker 28 (57:49):
And I was like, you can use whatever you like.
You can call me mister Bernie, miss Bernie, or just Bernie.
And he said, okay, So that's how you explain trans
people to your kids. It's impuls heck, all right, kindergarteners.

Speaker 1 (58:02):
Can do it, and so can you. The non binary
thing is like climate change, right, You used to want
to go one way or the other. Now, depending on
the day, it could either be hot or cold. Man
or woman. Oh chat. Speaking of that. Last night in
the woke world, there was a battle in the woke

(58:22):
world when it came to the debate between Ted Cruz
and Colin Alright, now this is for the Texas senen
See and he got to trans issues, oh jeez issues,
and they went at it by the way, I thought
they were gonna throw down. I said it earlier. If
they were going to throw down, my money's on Colin Alright,

(58:42):
he's a badass former NFL cat right, it's big dude,
Big dude.

Speaker 27 (58:48):
Four times he has come out for men playing in
women's sports, for boys playing in girls sports. He is
a co sponsor, and he voted for a law called
the Equality Act. The Equality Act Man dated that boys
be able to go and go gls' bathrooms and their
locker rooms and their changing rooms.

Speaker 1 (59:02):
He voted for it.

Speaker 27 (59:03):
That is his record. Number two. There was a bill.
It was a very simple bill. It was narrowly defined.
It was protecting women in girls' sports. He voted no.
The only issue on that bill was whether biological boys
should compete against our daughters.

Speaker 1 (59:17):
That's not fair. That's not fair. By the way, I'm
just going to point that out and tell you this
right now. It is not not even close to being fair.
It should never happen. Now we need to have and
here's the thing, and this is where the right gets
it wrong. See the way I did that. This is
where the right gets the wrong. You can try to

(59:38):
have understanding and compassion as you should with any human being,
regardless of who they are, who they worship, who they love,
what they identify is you shouldn't play into some of
the wacky delusions that are out there. But you know what,
kids are confused, their stress, they're going through all kinds
of things in life, and they shouldn't be experimented on.
I will say that over and over again, and I

(59:59):
will continue you to say that, because that's what it is,
and it's going to come back and bite everybody in
the ass in a few years and then everybody that
was all for this is going to turn the other way.

Speaker 8 (01:00:06):
Go.

Speaker 1 (01:00:07):
I wasn't involved in that. Oh yes, the f you were. Ooh,
we've got receipts. No, boys shouldn't play with girls in
a competitive nature. Just shouldn't happen. Now if you're playing
co ed kickball or soccer. I've done that, but it's

(01:00:30):
not the competitive nature, because if it's competitive, I'm gonna
crush you. I am. And I've told the story before.
I played soccer at a very high level back in
my day. You know, I'm back in the way back day,
back in a long century ago. And you know I
was fortunate enough to go to Europe and to play
over there and to do all kinds of stuff and

(01:00:51):
it was awesome and I would never change any of that.
And yeah, I was pretty damn good for my time.
Let's tell my wife. I see some of these kids nowadays,
I'm like, my god, these kids are freaks. You know,
those kids ten and he could do things that would
never even tream it because we weren't taught that way.
But when I came home, I'm thirty two, not in

(01:01:13):
the shape I was when I was twenty three and playing,
but still not the worst. We would play indoor soccer
with several women with and against on the US women's
national team. We spoke and I'm like, I told I,

(01:01:37):
remember this is I'm going to be an ass here,
so just bear with me because I was, I was young, stupid.
I remember I got a ball, it went around two ladies.
And this is the time too. We're also playing where
they get the best team with who's ever got the
best women because they get two goals and we only
get one. But I went around two or three of them,

(01:01:58):
put one through the legs and bang one the goal.
And I looked at my buddy and go, you know
what'd been better if I'd had a donut in my mouth.
I mean, that's the way it was, and it sounds horrible.
That's the reality of it. It's not about whether or
not these kids should or shouldn't play. It's just understanding that,
you know what, young girls have a say in this too,
and we have taken their voice completely away because we're
trying to cater to very few, and we have taken

(01:02:22):
their voyage away. Could you imagine if let's say the
fastest high school male athlete decides no, I don't even
want to be a woman, I just want to compete
against the girls. There would be an uproar because of
the physical advantage that he would have. So how do

(01:02:42):
we do it. Well, we're gonna have to find the
best finest line we possibly can when it comes to
protecting our daughters, protecting young women, and not just about
the injuries, but also about the fact that they need
their opportunity here and they're opportunity in some cases is
being absolutely wiped out. So it's not a lot, but

(01:03:05):
it's enough to make noise and those girls they should
have a say in this too. And the young boys
who become you know, think that I identify as a
woman and I want to play girls sport and stuff.
We're going to have to figure that out because it
isn't fair. It isn't And you don't see a young
girl go I'm going to be a boy and go
play face. It doesn't happen. That's how you know this

(01:03:27):
is This is BS and they know it. So where's
the fine line? We can have compassion and at the
same time we need to be honest, and many people
don't want to do that because it's all or nothing.
And as we've talked about on the show, and we
talk about it all the time, it's not all or nothing.
Most of the world is grayer and heading to a

(01:03:47):
little black, or it's gray and heading more towards the white.
But very rarely is it black and white. But when
it comes to our young men better, faster, stronger than
young girls, and is the advantage noticeable. Absolutely. You can

(01:04:08):
take a mid level kid athlete who's a boy, put
him on a girls team and he's going to dominate.
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson Show is your Twitter twy tat
us text the program. I love hearing from all of you.

Speaker 11 (01:04:23):
I do.

Speaker 1 (01:04:24):
I don't know if you guys are aware of this.
There is an election coming and it's coming fast, so fast,
I say, now, how fast? Well, let's just put it
this way. It's here in some states, it'll be here
in twenty days for everybody. And I don't know what
the polls say. It's hard to tell exactly what the

(01:04:47):
polls say. And we have talked about this, and I
talked about it, you know, to start the show, which is,
you know, everybody's like, the polls get it wrong. The
polls get it wrong. The polls get it wrong. The
polls get it right based on the data and information
that we give them. And as the Great Gregory House

(01:05:11):
Doctor House to you, and I said, people lie. And
we've seen a lot of that twenty sixteen, so a
lot of that in twenty twenty. And is it built
in the lie already if you will, or are more
people willing to say, look at this, look at that,
look at this. It's hard, it's hard to tell. So

(01:05:31):
this is going to be very interesting because I feel
like because and here's the thing about the polls, I
think this is the last opportunity for the polls as
we know it to survive. Again, I think with the
data they're given, they do a fine job. The problem
is if the data is faulty because everybody's lying, well
that that doesn't I mean you can do that with anything.

(01:05:52):
Like if everybody goes into a controlled environment to do
a study with a drug and then everybody lies about
how it makes them feel. They're only going on you
know a certain amount of data, and you know what
do they do? This is the data I was given.
So that data, you can fudge it all day. And

(01:06:14):
that's what people did. And I still think people are
doing that cause people don't want to be judged. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Hed Benson
Show to Twitter, your Instagram coming up, something that happened
in California. When people talk about the deep state and
all of these things, I'm going to point out we

(01:06:35):
do our thirteen days of folloween, the countdown to the
scariest movies. This is terrifying. This is what government overreach
and ridiculousness looks like. We're going to talk about that
straight ahead. Roughgreens areuff greens dot Com, slash Chat, vitamins
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out what the hell he was allergic to. Still don't know.

(01:07:19):
But what I do know is Angus, it's a lot better,
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(01:07:40):
called eight eight eight ninety my dog for rough Greens.
You cover the cost of shipping, they get you a
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Chadmnson Show.

Speaker 9 (01:08:00):
If you like talk radio like Chad Benson likes his meals,
you've come to the perfect place for takeout.

Speaker 1 (01:08:07):
The most terrifying thing in the world of politics isn't
the people you vote in? Donald Trump is a Nazi?

Speaker 11 (01:08:14):
Right?

Speaker 1 (01:08:14):
Then you hear that all the time. It is unelected bureaucrats.
People are appointed to position little people too much power.
Case in Point California. Yet, guy about the name of
Elon Musk, Right, he's got a thing called SpaceX, He's
got starlink, he's all the stuff. Well, he asked if

(01:08:37):
he could fire some more stuff in the air. Right, So, hey,
we're gonna fire some stuff in the air with SpaceX.
Gonna be awesome. You're gonna love it. It's gonna be
great because it's not just for me. It's for Space Force.
It's for the Air Force. But you know, we've come
here to ask this. Fifty rockets per year from VanderBurg
Space Force Base located in northern Santa Barbara County. Oh

(01:09:00):
what happens? They tell him no. They vote him down
six to four. Is it because of the loud noise
which the Air Force has said, Look, we're partners with them,
We're going to come up with a way to mitigate this.
Is it because of that?

Speaker 11 (01:09:12):
No?

Speaker 1 (01:09:12):
No, no, no. Is it because you would harm the
wee willie winkie worm if you fired from here? It
would make it environmentally bad? No? No, no, no no.
The California Coastal Commission said, now, your politics are wrong.

Speaker 20 (01:09:25):
We are talking about SpaceX in this and I will
say it.

Speaker 1 (01:09:30):
I just want to put it out.

Speaker 20 (01:09:31):
There, you know, as a as a person in this process.
In as was mentioned earlier today, we're an appointed body.
There's the politics in policy and science. They mix in
these in these spaces.

Speaker 1 (01:09:47):
It's real.

Speaker 20 (01:09:49):
This company is owned by the richest person in the world,
with direct control over what could be the most extensive
global communication system on the planet. And just last week
that person was speaking about political retribution on a national
stage and how and it was very glib, but yet

(01:10:12):
he was standing next to a person, a candidate that
openly promotes and is work, you know, working to normalize
that language. And we have to push back against that.

Speaker 1 (01:10:23):
That is the biggest bunch of hog horse. I'm sorry.
Science and politics they mix. No, and you guys are appointed.
You're appointed, like if it was a bad environmental thing,
totally understand. And by the way, they came to you
out of the kindness. And I remind everybody that why

(01:10:46):
because as the Air Force said, you know, we don't
need you guys, right, we'll just declare this federal and
do it ourselves. We came here to be kind. They
partner with us, and we partner with them. We just
thought this would now political. That right there is terrifying.

(01:11:07):
So because of his politics, you decided you're not going
to allow this to happen, even if it's a good thing. Wow,
think about that. The uppity sobs that you are a
little power corrupts, and boy does it corrupt big time.
They even started talking about Starlink, which had nothing to

(01:11:28):
do with SpaceX and oh he was on stage with Trump.
It is the biggest bunch of my god, that right
there is terrifying. That's the thing you should really be
scared about when stuff like that happens. They are an

(01:11:52):
hoa on steroids. Oh man, he's vowed to sue. Don't
sue let it go. You know what you do. Just
go to your buddies at the Air Force and Space Force,
by the way, and say let's do it. Anyways. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show.
Is your Twitter tweet at US TEXTA program. I love

(01:12:13):
hearing from every single one of you right here on
the Chad Benson Show. Coming up third hour. A lot
of stuff still to get to. We got a little
what's trending for you, maybe some more woke stuff as well.
Got some comments some of you. So we're talking a
little woke stuff about trans in sports, kids, young women.

(01:12:33):
I think it's an important conversation have because it's coming
to the forefront, and I think we need to have
an adult conversation, not one where we scream back and
forth to each other, which for the most part.

Speaker 11 (01:12:42):
Is all we do.

Speaker 1 (01:12:43):
Anyways. Top of that, we got more on the election.
Twenty days away to the big election. What do the
polls say? Same thing the Fox says, doom doom doo
do doom dich doom doom doom do do doch doom
doom doom do do You're missing to the show grabbed
the pod, Yes, do do do Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 9 (01:13:02):
This is the Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:13:31):
Twenty days and counting till the election. But some of
you have already voted. As I told producer Anthony today,
he voted yesterday. Remember, vote early and vote often because
he was in Georgia, which is now voting twenty days

(01:13:52):
to the big election. Is that a big election in
your pants? Are you just happy to see me? It's
a big election. Pretty excited about it because it'll be
over and then we could talk about stuff that matters,
like UFOs. If Trump wins, I know we're going to
find out who killed Kennedy Cia and where the UFOs
are they're hidden, That's what I heard. If Kamala wins,

(01:14:17):
this business as usual.

Speaker 2 (01:14:19):
More than five million Americans have actually already voted. That's
across well more than half of the states. That pace
is actually down from four years ago when COVID drove
record early voting. And while we don't know exactly who
voted for whom yet, we do know that more likely
Democrats are voting early than likely Republicans. Republicans have actually
picked up their pace from four years ago. There were

(01:14:41):
more Republicans voting early than last time around.

Speaker 1 (01:14:44):
So there you go. We got more Republicans voting earlier
that I do know. They're about the mail in ballots,
get it out there, get it done. It's look, it's
on now. We can no longer say it's approaching. It
is here voting season. It's kind of like Halloween's voting season.

(01:15:07):
So what did the polls say? That's a big thing.
What's the polls say? What do the polls say? Today?
MSNBC from yesterday, I think it was talking about the polls.
Has Trump made up ground? Is he now tied with
is he ahead in some areas?

Speaker 3 (01:15:21):
Oh, the timing of our poll is really instructive here.
And when our September poll came out and had Harris
with a five point lead over Donald Trump, that of
course was after the debate. It was after a really
rough news environment for Donald Trump, with the discussion about Springfield, Ohio.
And now all of a sudden we do show a

(01:15:41):
tied race. And what has occurred is that those soft Republicans,
non Maga Republicans, have come back home to Trump. In
our September poll, they were lagging obviously after the debate,
after the discussion of Springfield, Ohio. Our poll finds them
that they are back with Trump. That explains him going
from forty four percent in our poll in September now

(01:16:04):
to forty eight percent. But Joe, you ended up mentioning
the things that Harris has to work on with showing
up Latino voters, getting African Americans in the fold, white women,
white women.

Speaker 1 (01:16:17):
To name my band. We're going to turn with white zombie.
It'll be awesome, just be a whole white party.

Speaker 3 (01:16:23):
Our poll ends up having a really big gender gap
where Harris has a fourteen point lead among female voters
while Donald Trump has a sixteen point lead among male voters.
That's overall a thirty point net gender gap. And what
is kind of fascinating is that Trump's lead with men

(01:16:43):
is slightly larger than Harris's lead with women. And if
you you know, her ability to get back and a
lead national lead over Trump is being able to have
a bigger lead among women among than Trump's lead among men,
and so a lot of those demographics. This is the
last three weeks the race. This is why you end

(01:17:04):
up having mobilization and campaign to be able to rejuice
your turnout to shore up your weaknesses, and we're going
to see what both campaigns have up their sleeves of
the next three weeks.

Speaker 1 (01:17:15):
It's a bunny, what's up your sleeve, It's a pigeon,
it's a dove. Look. We've talked about it throughout the
show because I get this asked me all the time.
What did the poles say?

Speaker 11 (01:17:26):
Chat?

Speaker 1 (01:17:26):
What do you think of this poll? I think polls
are only as good as two things. Who's asking the question? So,
if you've hired me from the left, I'm going to
phrase the question in the way that you probably want it.
If you hired me from the right, I'm going to
phrase the questions you probably want to answered in a
certain way. If you are allowing me to my own devices,
I'm going to go out there and ask the question.
Simple question, Keep it simple, stupid, I'm not here a

(01:17:48):
fool you. So that's number one. Number two, and maybe
the most important of all. Buyers are liars. I learned
that when I was in the financial world. I got
a hot one. Buyers are liars, meaning my dad is
only as good as the information you provide. If you

(01:18:11):
tell me you're voting for Kamala and then you vote
for Trump, my poll is going to be wrong. If
you tell me you're going to vote for Trump and
you vote for Jill Stein, my polls are going to
be wrong. That's what's happened. Everybody's like the polsters really
screwed up. Some of them did, but for the most

(01:18:33):
part they got it right based on the information that
they had. So I go ask a bunch of questions
to one thousand people at three hundred and thirty three Democrats,
three hundred and thirty four Independents, three hundred and thirty

(01:18:56):
three Republicans, and seventy per of them give me the
real answer and thirty percent give me a crappy wrong answer.
My data is not going to be good. Not because
I tried to fool you or I'm I'm playing with
the data. No, I want this answer to be this

(01:19:16):
it's because the answer you gave me doesn't match with
the action. So could the poles be skewed. It's possible.
Could the polls be right. All of these things are possible.
They are the last four or five polls that been released.
And you go to five thirty eight. That's Nate Silver

(01:19:37):
and he's got some new fandangle way, probably AI. That's
what we do. We have a methodology that my uncle
and I have been screwing around with. I don't know
if it's right or wrong, but I know one thing.
Buyers are liars. We're talking all day right house. Everybody lies,
of course they do.

Speaker 14 (01:19:55):
You know.

Speaker 1 (01:19:56):
One of the reasons that federal witnesses are never really
good witnesses is because a lot of times the defense
is able to pick apart their stuff. And part of
it is because they like to sing. They like to
perform for their handlers, so they'll put extra mustard on
a story. They'll put themselves in places they really weren't

(01:20:18):
when crimes were committed because they think it's going to
make people happy. A lot of times people feel judged.
So that's why twenty sixteen was a hot mess. Twenty
twenty got it wrong for Biden. So buyers are liars.

(01:20:40):
Doesn't matter anyways, because joy Reid she's figured it all out. Crazy.

Speaker 8 (01:20:45):
Have you noticed how sharply the polls have shifted in
Trump's favor over the last couple of weeks with these
claims that Trump is surging with black and Latino voters
and leading in every single swing state. According to secret
internal polls. Despite all the Hitler talk, yes, this race
will be far too close, because unfortunately, we do have

(01:21:05):
a fascist ground swell in parts of this country, mainly
among white men, let's be clear, but in small pockets
among black and brown men too. This happens to be
a global phenomenon as women become more economically independent and
seek positions of power.

Speaker 11 (01:21:21):
But Friend of the Show Simon Rosenberg.

Speaker 8 (01:21:23):
Points out that just like in twenty twenty and twenty
twenty two, dozens of right wing poles have been dumped
into the marketplace in the last few weeks, twelve in
Pennsylvania alone. Those poles then swing the polling averages to
the right, making Trump look strong and Kamala Harris looks stalled.

Speaker 1 (01:21:43):
I just told you about four of the poles that
were dumped that are on the right that you give
Trump a little help. But MSNBC is not one of
those poles, and their poles are saying, yeah, she's got
some issues. Is it true. I don't know. I don't
know what the data is that they collected. I have
no idea, I have no I did what those people
were saying, and I don't even know if they were

(01:22:03):
saying something that was honest. I also didn't know there
were black Nazis. I was unaware of that. Are you
unaware of that? You've unavera of the black Nazis? Fair?
Could you not be unavera of the Black Nazis and
the Latino Nazis? Is vail if you never ever ever

(01:22:25):
thought about South America and Argentina. Oh, she's nuts, she
would listen to more, she's off for Rocker. She is
Smidge Smidge. And I always knew there were black Nazis
because you remember the time. I'm not saying Michael Jordan was,
but do you remember when he did those Hanes commercials
and he had a little mustache, like you know, do

(01:22:46):
you remember that? It was weird?

Speaker 14 (01:22:47):
Right?

Speaker 1 (01:22:47):
Like it was like what wait? What what was that
all about? If you don't remember that, look it up.
It was weird.

Speaker 11 (01:22:54):
It's weird.

Speaker 1 (01:22:55):
Continue joy.

Speaker 8 (01:22:56):
Now, there are lots of explanations for why you'd want
to gain the polls. Entrepreneurial Republican polsters can certainly gain
favor with Trump, who's apparently fuming about Vice President Harris's
billion dollar fundraising and positive press. And then there's the
more sinister explanation that if Trump, Republican polsters, and even
jittery Democrats convince enough people that his victory is inevitable,

(01:23:21):
how much easier would it be to claim that the
election was stolen he loses, And how much easier would
it be to get his base to rise up and
maybe even get violent the way they did when he
lost the last time?

Speaker 1 (01:23:35):
Is what's going to happen. It's totally gonna happen. Chat Well,
it'll be mostly peaceful, though. Are you guys scared yet?
I'm not scared yet? How about one more for joy?
We're having fun here because of you, a hangout as
the Black Nazis and the Latino Nazis and of course
Donald Trump, Anita.

Speaker 8 (01:23:54):
Trump and Republicans backed by far right wing billionaires like
Elon Musk and right media and anti woman manosphere podcasts
are creating social media are gaming social media apps like
ex Twitter in Trump's favor and pumping disinformation into the
brains of Trump's supporters. Not quite foreign interference, but not

(01:24:16):
exactly different from what Vladimir Putin would do. Donald is
not running a normal election. He's talking America into damn
near a civil war to terrify voters into supporting him,
and if that doesn't work, he's laying the groundwork for
insurrection two point zero.

Speaker 1 (01:24:33):
I would have went with Part two electric Boogloo, you
do what you do boo there as the Black nazis
vingdam Kia basketball on keeth.

Speaker 11 (01:24:42):
Of me so good.

Speaker 1 (01:24:44):
Swear God, she's lost her f in mind. Nobody takes
her seriously right, there's not a soul out there, Goes.
I gotta get home because Joey reads on and she
is crazy as three two, three, five, twenty four to
twenty three acts. You have been to Charles or Twitter,
feel free to tweet that to me. I love hearing
from each and every one of you. Raycon best and

(01:25:06):
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(01:25:29):
sound quality. All those other things are freaking amazing, but
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got awareness mode, you can switch in between them rather easily.
You can wear them all day. They're incredible. Now you're
saying to yourself, Chad, these things probably cost a ton,
about a third of whether at premium audio brands cost.

(01:25:49):
But it gets better than that. Thirty day happiness guarantee,
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(01:26:11):
Now buye raycon dot com slash Chad. Bye, Raycon dot
Com slash Chad. What's trending? Chad Benson, Joe.

Speaker 9 (01:26:27):
Chad Benson, No, It's time to find out what's trending?

Speaker 1 (01:26:32):
What's trending?

Speaker 6 (01:26:33):
Signed James Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Serenom what trapping?

Speaker 11 (01:26:57):
All right?

Speaker 1 (01:26:57):
All right, all right, that's find out's treading out? User
fall Wednesday. Shall we where do we start today? How
abow we start with Google? Biggest trending things over the
last twenty four hours are Mari Cooper traded, Baudi and
Tina Bolivia, Tyra Banks, Mexico, Estadio Anitos, but a seal Peru.

(01:27:19):
These are all soccer things. Just pointing these things out
to you, NFL trade deadline killing and Bape Warriors Lakers share.
Colin Allred talked a bit about that today. Do you
guys know took on Ted Cruz in an untimed cage match.

(01:27:39):
Really no, it's not that it was a debate. Oh
that would have been funny though, Just letting you guys
know that. Head over to the magical world of Eyahoo
number one trending thing, Victoria Secrets Fashion Show. After a

(01:28:00):
five year hiatus, they brought it back, and last time
I checked, I think most people prefer the old fashion
Victoria fashion with her secret. I'm just pointing that out.
What are you saying, Jann Well? I mean, you know
a lot of wokeness, you know, you know how you

(01:28:22):
do it nowadays you're like, hey, I normally like, uh what,
I prefer mine Victoria's Secrets fashion model without balls. But
whatever you do, you right, Aaron Judd, that's a baseball
player Davante Adams traded Georgia election ruling. Tom Brady. By
the way, it's not only an announcer now, he's also
an owner of a team, well part owner ten percent

(01:28:45):
of the Raiders. Ooh, and finally over to Twitter, where
people argue about anything all the time. They do they
do three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to
twenty three Chad Benson Show. Is your Twitter, your Instagram
and everything else? On The Chad Benson Show where old

(01:29:10):
him it is soccer player, the Oilers, Hockey Kesha, Jimmy Carter,
DJ Trump, DJ Trump makes me laugh, Potch. You guys
are gonna learn that if you like soccer. Pochettino, the
new head coach of the US men's national team, Tyra Banks,
and Victoria's Secrets all trending right now in the medical world,

(01:29:30):
the little Twitter man, I tell you what. DJ Trump
that thing the other night, so if you didn't see it,
we didn't play it. Yesterday there was two medical emergencies
and at a Trump rally, so he just just did
what he does. He riffs. He's like, let's play some music,
and I don't want to take any more questions, and

(01:29:52):
who wants to hear that. Let's rite, you know, just
being Trump. People like he's losing his mind, He's losing
He's just he's losing his mind. I thought, no, oh,
he's DJing, that's what he's doing. So it's it's interesting,
you know, the way that people approach Trump. Do I
think as sharp as he used to be? No, who
is at that age? I mean, some people I think

(01:30:14):
can pull it off, you know, at a much older age.
Do I think that Trump is lost that much on
his fastball? I don't. I don't think so. But every
little thing that happens from here on out will be
made to be bigger and bigger. Just know that as
we move into this thing. Three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four twenty three at Chad Benson Show is your Twitter.

(01:30:37):
You can tweet out the program. If you miss into
the show, make sure you grab the podcast. We are
just twenty days away from the election of our lifetime,
which is what they all say. Just want to point
that out. Nobody ever says, well, it's not really that
big an election. Voter, don't vote, we don't care. It's
the chat Betsy Show.

Speaker 12 (01:30:57):
Son, Chad Benson, Joe.

Speaker 9 (01:31:18):
The Chad Benson show.

Speaker 1 (01:31:20):
Do you trust the media? Not everybody does, and it's
totally understandable. Part of that is on us, though, because
I've talked about it affirmation on information. We're more interested
in being affirmed, So we're going to go to the
places that we know we're gonna get fed the things
that's going to help our identity and ego. On top
of that, the media hasn't been really spot on. And

(01:31:42):
if you're on the Republican side, if you're on the
conservative side, you've seen that in the past. I'm not
saying the right doesn't do it, but I'm talking about
establishment media. And for those of you out there go
you're just making stuff up. I will tell you most
newsrooms across this country are not just kind of left.
We're talking ninety five plus percent left. Now, that doesn't

(01:32:06):
mean everybody there is a super left. It only wants
to destroy, it is only gonna lie. I'm talking about
The New York Times, the Washington Post, I'm talking about
the and I say this MSNBC, NBC kind of stuff
because the reality is they're cable news. They're there as
entertainment as much as anything else. Infotainment is really what

(01:32:29):
they are. They have their base. They play to their base.
Think of it as over here Fox Fox is rock, right,
heavy metal? Over here is MSNBC, NBC. Their base is
I don't know, soft rock whatever, some of you polka

(01:32:50):
whatever it is. But they're playing a polka because it's small.
So that's what they're doing. You've got CNN, right, and
their base may be, you know, just soft rock, all
the stuff that you hated here it is nobody who's
the soft rock. That's like, that's the dumbest thing. But
it is what it is, so don't think of it
like that. So part of it is our consumption and
the way that we consume it, and the other part

(01:33:13):
of it is the way it's presented to us. So
we distrust because when we did trust the media, guess what,
Eventually it turned out that their biases got in and
then we got upset, and then we started to splinter
and then more options game, more options here, more options there.
You're listening to me, you can listen to me on
a podcast. You can listen to this, you can listen

(01:33:34):
to that. You go to YouTube, you go to Twitter,
you can do all these things. And now that's what's
going on. So we don't have trust anymore in the media,
and there is a reason for that.

Speaker 10 (01:33:47):
A new poll reveals sharp divides and where Americans look
for information. According to Gallup, mass media is now the
least trust in civic or political institution, continuing a precipitous
declined since twenty eighteen, with just thirty one percent of
Americans trusting news zalads to report the news fully, accurately

(01:34:08):
and fairly. The survey reflects a deeper divide and trust
when it comes to partisan beliefs. Republicans express especially low
confidence in the media, with only twelve percent reporting a
fair amount of trust, compared to fifty four percent of
Democrats and twenty seven percent of Independence.

Speaker 1 (01:34:28):
Independence are the things you need to pay attention to
because they're not right, they're not left, they're independent. Right,
that's in theory. I mean they were disgruntled right or
left at one point in time, but now they've moved
to a position where they feel like they're not represented anywhere.
So twenty seven percent, that's it. That's it, that's not
that's not ty huge, it's not big. You need more

(01:34:50):
than that, right, like, if you want that trust, And
it's hard, and I understand why the right doesn't actually
trust the media because the media hasn't been great to it.
And I want to point out the media different between
journalism and media. I think there are two separate things here.
Journalism is a totally different thing. Who, what, when, how?
That kind of stuff they're there. I'm going to give
you all the information. I'm gonna allow you to then

(01:35:12):
formulate your belief and your way that you think this
story went right, like that's what journalism used to be,
not that anymore. It's now other things, and people are
frustrated with that. Taking point this guy goll It listening
to me every day and I appreciate that. And yes, sir,

(01:35:33):
you did get the number.

Speaker 14 (01:35:34):
Right, hey, Chad. At least it's just the right number
for Chad'm longtime listener, Rold glad that they brought you in.
You're still a little conservative for my taste, but better
than most of the talk show hosts. Just wanted to comment.
You were talking earlier about Fox News. You really shouldn't
call it that. It's Falk's opinion and that actually should

(01:35:54):
be extended to you. In s NBC, CNN and the
rest that they're ill. None of them are uns anymore
and giving this real adulterated news just so thought, thanks
for being there, have a great day.

Speaker 1 (01:36:06):
I appreciate that. And he's absolutely right. They shouldn't. And
it's even tough because you know, back in the day,
it's like, Okay, I expect Fox News, Fox News to
go sortway. I expect see Ann to go a certain way.
I expect, you know, I expect these things. But you'd
be able to watch Face the Nation, meet the Press, right,
you should be able to watch these things and feel
like you're getting something real. This weekend, Face Nation Mike

(01:36:29):
Johnson still feels like a made up name was on
Face Nation talking about FEMA.

Speaker 8 (01:36:33):
So that's a different accounting than this two percent you
say was distributed.

Speaker 29 (01:36:37):
Yeah, so they've obligated some funds, but they've only distributed
two percent. The rescue and recovery efforts still going on,
and then we address the rest of it.

Speaker 1 (01:36:45):
You're like, okay, that seems okay. Was that the answer?
Was it the answer? See, here's what some people are
doing now, and it's understandable. What do they do. They're
bringing their own cameras because they want everybody to know.
At may not be what I said.

Speaker 29 (01:37:01):
Yeah, so they've obligated some funds, but they've only distributed
two percent. And when I was there on the ground,
and you should go, I mean, bring the cameras and
talk to the people there. They'll tell you don't take
politicians' words for this, or the administrations were talk to
the people there on the ground. They had not been
provided the resources almost two weeks out from the storm
that they desperately need it. And when I was there

(01:37:21):
thirteen days post, you know, post the storm hitting that state,
people are still being rescued. They're stuck in the higher
elevations in the mountains because the roads are down and
all the rest. So they need every available resource in
all hands on deck. The rescue and recovery efforts still
going on. And then we address the rest of it.

Speaker 1 (01:37:39):
Well, it was edited for time, maybe, but could you
imagine going to say, let's say you watched Star Wars, right,
remember television back in the day. This movie's been edited
for time, and they leave out spoiler alert, Luke, I'm
your father. Well that's that line right there, right like
that's it. It's a late story. You're buried, you buried

(01:38:00):
the lead. That's the issue and the problem with everything
nowadays is it's presented in such a way. You can
edit stuff, you can do stuff, and you can present
it to your people. And there's the frustration, and that's
why people don't trust the media. And I'm talking about
the establishment media. And now with all of us craving

(01:38:24):
affirmation and not really interested in any information that would
potentially challenge my beliefs, I have everywhere I need to
go to find all of the things I need to
again affirm my beliefs. So do we trust anybody or anything?

Speaker 10 (01:38:43):
Contrasting this, sixty seven percent of Americans say they have
a great deal of trust in their local government. This
is nearly double the trust Americans have in Congress, which
sins just a little bit higher than the media, and
thirty four percent. Trust in media had previously dropped to
thirty two percent in twenty sixteen before rebounding slightly, but

(01:39:05):
according to this survey, any goodwill built up over that
time has dissolved. Whether this trend will reshape national institutions
remains to be seen, but one thing is clear. The
American people are seeking more transparency and accountability.

Speaker 1 (01:39:22):
I think that's all anybody wants for the most part.
I think the average person wants that, some accountability, some transparency.
But for hardcore people in today's world and the consumption
that we like to do, which is about how we
feel in our beliefs as tough to find, right like,
you may not be interested in that. You may not

(01:39:43):
be interested in whether or not this will help or
hurt your candidate because you've wrapped up your world and
your identity in many cases in politics and certain issues,
and you don't want any of those things challenged. I
think for the rest of us, which I believe is
the exhausted majority, well, we want some transparency. Just give
us the straight you know, skinny about everything. Why is

(01:40:06):
it always gonna be about Wait, that wasn't under me.
That's like an old saying whatever at local government? How
many times I say this, local, local, local will have
a bigger impact on you than all these chaotic stuff
that happens at the federal stuff that is Hollywood for
very average people three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty

(01:40:27):
four to twenty three. At Chad Menson shows your Twitter,
your Instagram all up the other things, talk about my
friends over mapillow. Why is that, you say, because right
now they got a SAand going on baby mass slippers.
Things are awesome. Four different layers. You say, oh yeah,
let's first and foremost. Start as a look men's and

(01:40:47):
women's styles, the moccasin style slipping. Get the faux furt,
No foe is hurt in this. They've got the incredible
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money back guarantee ten you warranty again Men's women. So
then you get into the four layers, first and foremost
patented phil from my pillow, followed by memory foam, and

(01:41:07):
then this incredible impact jail that is awesome, graffrey joints
your ankle, stuff like that. And then they've got the
soul indoor outdoor. Wear them all day long, I do.
You will love them. How about this one hundred dollars
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save yourself one hundred dollars just forty nine ninety eight.

(01:41:29):
They make great Christmas gifts and you can wear them
all day I That's what I loved about. Get these
amazing moccasin myslippers from my pillow, myipellow dot com slash Benson,
MyPillow dot com slash Benson. We're gonna wrap it up
straight ahead because it is number twelve of the thirteen
Scariest movies of all time? And kids, can I tell

(01:41:51):
you this one? It is scary, but it's also funny.
Oh yeah, oh creepy good. So chat Benson.

Speaker 16 (01:41:57):
Joe serving up talk radio medium, rare and dripping with irony.

Speaker 9 (01:42:11):
It's Chad Benson.

Speaker 1 (01:42:13):
Ladies and gentlemen. It is that time of the show
where we sit back, relax and we talk horror movies.
I love doing this. People ask me, Chad is a
big election. Why do you like doing stuff like this?
Simple because I'm a human being and I don't walk
around talking about politics all day. In fact, while I

(01:42:35):
do talk politics a lot of times, I also talk
about everything else like a normal person. Some people live
and die by politics. I enjoy all kinds of things,
from sports to scary movies to everything you can think of.
And yes, I enjoy my politics as well. I'm not

(01:42:55):
going to lie to you, but it is the scary
time of year, and every year we do this. Of
this year is I expanded it to thirteen because I
heard a lot of you say, hey, you know what,
why not go to thirteen? Kind of a creepy number. Thirteen,
So we decided to do that, and now we're at thirteen.
So yesterday we had the universal Monsters. Today we're moving
down from thirteen to what's the other number?

Speaker 5 (01:43:18):
The time has come, so prepare yourself for a journey
of fear from the darkest corner of cinema, the most
bone chilling tales ever told. It's the countdown you've been
waiting for, the thirteen Scariest movies of all time? Which

(01:43:41):
movie will take the top spot? How about a fish
tail so big.

Speaker 18 (01:43:48):
Because the jaws open wide?

Speaker 5 (01:44:01):
Or the story of a young innocent girl battling evil
with some help.

Speaker 19 (01:44:08):
Well, then let's introduce ourselves. I'm Damion Karras and I'm
a devil. Where's Reagan in here with us?

Speaker 5 (01:44:17):
Or the Fright of a madman with a chainsaw? So
I hear some stop stop, You'll have to listen to
find out. Are you ready? Now it's time for the
countdown to begin. The thirteen Scariest Movies of All Time?

(01:44:42):
Number twelve.

Speaker 1 (01:44:44):
Ooh, number twelve. Now today's movie is a little bit
different because we've expanded. It's not just terrifying movies with
monsters and things of that nature and what goes bumping
the night or this one's different because there was a
lot of comedy involved and a lot of times when
it comes to horror movies, there is great comedic timing

(01:45:04):
because much like comedy, horror has to have the right timing.
And this movie came out through Amblem Entertainment. That's Spielberg's
little old production company there, and it was about these
little monster thingies that actually exist, and they've got eight

(01:45:30):
little leggs.

Speaker 21 (01:45:31):
The Jennings family has just moved to the small town
of Canaima in search of a simpler life. It's the
perfect place with my crime, with my crime, except for
one pesty little problem.

Speaker 11 (01:45:43):
Come with me and look at the web.

Speaker 1 (01:45:44):
The web.

Speaker 5 (01:45:45):
I have terrible fear of spiders.

Speaker 9 (01:45:47):
Come on the country.

Speaker 2 (01:45:49):
Now it's time to work through this irrational, paralyzed terror.

Speaker 1 (01:45:53):
It's not irrational.

Speaker 21 (01:45:57):
Hollywood Pictures and Amblin Entertainment.

Speaker 1 (01:46:00):
Jeff Dangels, Honey, we're in a living room. We need
you to kill a spider.

Speaker 21 (01:46:04):
And John Goodwill over thin talk infestation management.

Speaker 1 (01:46:07):
Every so off from a little town somewhere there's a
health scout. Spiders make convenient cultures.

Speaker 29 (01:46:12):
I think one of your Venezuelan spiders hitch a ride here.

Speaker 1 (01:46:15):
They spread out from a central nest in a weblike
pattern and dominate the entire area. When that happens, this
town is dead.

Speaker 7 (01:46:23):
We are in court by Private Stock, Hollywood Pictures and
Amblin Entertainment present a Racknofolia, eight legs, two fans and
an attitude.

Speaker 1 (01:46:41):
Kirkut Lloyd. If we find the spider that did this,
you can arrest him. A Racknophobia A thrill on it.
Absolutely love that movie and part of the fun of
that movie is the fact that so many people are
terrified of spiders, and now phobia is a very real thing.

(01:47:02):
How many of you are going, oh god, spiders creep
me out. They do, they should. They are creepy, but
they're not. They're very necessary part of the world. Now,
the movie had these special evil like you know, Venezuelan spiders.
That's not real. There are some spiders out there that
can kill, but very rarely does it even happen. The

(01:47:23):
funnel web comes to mind. That is an Australian spider.
But for the most part, they're not going to hurt
you and they're not going to kill you, but it
doesn't mean that there isn't this fear, this primal fear
when it comes to spiders. By the way, the giant
spider in that movie was a bird eating tarantula. Had
one of those when I was younger. The lake span

(01:47:44):
over eight inches. The director, Frank Marshall, he wanted the
movie to be similar to Alfred Hitchcock The Birds, which
was to scare the audience but at the same time
also make them laugh. And one of the other things
I found very fascinating about this because they you know, look,
animal safety is big. They brought all these you know,
professionals in when they're dealing with animals, and that includes insects.

(01:48:06):
But originally it was supposed to be John Candy and
not John Goodman to play that part. It was awesome.
The original script was more horror than comedy, which is
kind of interesting when you think about it, that they decided, hey,
you know what, let's throw some comedy in here. Let's

(01:48:28):
have some sort of foil for this insanity, and that
would be John Goodman. A movie that did quite well
at the box office, and if you're wondering, wonder if
why they did well?

Speaker 11 (01:48:37):
What the heck?

Speaker 1 (01:48:39):
There is a reboot coming, not a remake, but a
reboot of the movie itself, which will be coming out
sometime late next year, So be prepared for that. Number
twelve today in your scary movie countdown, A little bit
funny here on the Chad Benson Show. Got you over

(01:48:59):
the hump. On this Wednesday, we are twenty days away
from the election. I mean, right now, some people are voting,
but you guys, get it. It's November fifth, that's what
we're twenty days away. Are you nervous? I'm not, by
the way, because I live in America and everything is
going to be fine. It may be a little bit
bumpier if it goes one way compared to another way,
but the reality is it'll be I I just want

(01:49:21):
to point that out to you. So for some of
you freaking out, it's not the horror movie you think
it could be. If you miss any of the show, shame,
go out there and grab the podcast. You can reach
out to us across all of our social media three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chadvnson Show
is your Twitter, We'll do it again. Tomorrow is always
night night Jack.

Speaker 9 (01:49:42):
This is the Chad Benson Show.
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