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October 24, 2024 109 mins
Kamala Harris believes Donald Trump is a fascist. Court docs reveal new details on man accused of shooting at DNC office in Tempe. Chad's Scary Movie Countdown #7. Boeing employees turned down the latest offer. North Korea sending troops to fight in Ukraine on Russia's behalf. 
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
Somewhere along the line, the Democrats decided, all right, the
message about groceries, immigration, the cost of life, it's not
getting through. Let's scare the Bejesus out of them. It's
worked in the past. And I say that because last
night I tweeted something. I didn't write it. I did

(00:39):
change a couple of the words, but I tweeted something
to show you that it has been done in the past.
And yes, Nazis and Hitler have been used in the past.
Are you ready for this? October twenty sixth, nineteen forty eight.

(01:00):
Ready President likens Dewey to Hitler as a fascist tool, says,
when Biggot's profiteers get control of country, they select frontmen
to rule dictatorships. Stressed, Truman tells Chicago audience a Republican
victory will threaten US liberty. Truman says, GOP perils us

(01:20):
liberty if you can't win him over with ideals. Scared
up a Jesus out of him. And that's what she did,
or at least she's trying to do last night in
her town hall. Did it work?

Speaker 3 (01:33):
Think it compels a lot of people to be concerned
about the future of our country with Donald Trump at
the lead.

Speaker 4 (01:40):
You've quoted General Millie calling Donald Trump a fascist, you
yourself have not used that word to describe him. Let
me ask you tonight, do you think Donald Trump is
a fascist?

Speaker 5 (01:49):
Yes?

Speaker 6 (01:49):
I do, Yes, I do.

Speaker 2 (01:51):
She goes, she does. Every political pundit I've seen over
the last seventy two hours said they've made a pivot.
Why they've made it pivot, nobody knows. And because of
that pivot, this is what you have. You have this
new like, hey, message isn't working, So now we're just

(02:14):
gonna tell everybody he's a Nazi, right, all the information
we got he's a Nazi. He's a Nazi. He's a Nazi.
That's it. He's a fascist. He's a Nazi. Earlier this week,
it might have been The New Yorker, maybe it was
The Atlantic. They compared him to all the worst parts Mussolini, Stalin,

(02:34):
and Hitler. Soak that up for a second. Didn't get
us in any wars at all. Everybody bitch, well, he
said horrible things that he can do all this never
did any of those things that everybody thought he was
gonna do. I mean, that's the derangement that is out there.

Speaker 3 (02:55):
Go online to listen to John Kelly, the former chief
of staff of Donald Trump, has told us Donald Trump said, why, essentially,
why aren't my generals like those of Hitler's, Like Hitler
who has referred several times, We've heard the reports for years.

Speaker 5 (03:12):
Do you believe Donan Trump is anti Semitic?

Speaker 3 (03:14):
I believe Donald Trump is a danger to the well
being and security of America.

Speaker 6 (03:19):
And we know who he is.

Speaker 3 (03:21):
He admires dictators sending love letters back and forth with
Kim Jong un.

Speaker 2 (03:25):
They love letters. Really, by the way, you guys are
doing nothing with Kim Jong nuton and we're gonna talk
about it next hour. But they're sending troops to where anywhere, anybody, anyone? Oh, yeah,
to Russia. How's that going for you guys. I'm she's
not good at this.

Speaker 5 (03:43):
She isn't.

Speaker 2 (03:44):
And the people that are her handlers are panicking. I
think they're looking at the tea leaves and they're saying, Hey,
we need to be x amount ahead on early voting
and mail in ballots, and we are not. And if
we don't figure this thing out and things stay steady
the way it is on election Eve, we may already

(04:07):
know the score. So your hail Mary is the same
thing they've been doing for the last what ten years,
which is he's a Nazi, he's a fascist, he's evil.

(04:29):
Look at all the things. And it's funny. I was
talking to somebody last night online, and I think things
get lost in context, you know, because you're online and
you're texting and you're tweeting or whatever. And it's funny
because several people say, well, Millie said this, or so
and so said this, Like go, well, yeah, the other
people that are there said this, Oh, like you can

(04:51):
believe them. So wait a minute. You want everybody to
believe what this person says because your narrative is he's
evil and bad, and they're telling the truth because they're
what they're affirming your belief. And on the other side
of it, other people are saying the same thing about
Millie or Esper or any of those. So we've already

(05:13):
got our minds made up. And the only thing that's
going to change people's minds right, whether it's on the
right or the left, whether it's with Harris or Trump,
is actions right. If Harris wins and we don't become

(05:34):
a communist state, then what, Well, then maybe people are like, well,
I guess that didn't happen. If Trump wins in four
years from now, he's like, all right, I'm done, I'm leaving,
you know, the greatest ever whatever. But we're still here,
we're having another election. Then what It's got to be
the action side of it. And that's evident. Here's my

(06:00):
fear of, Like, you know, when I look at Trump
says a lot of things. I think we all know
that he's a pain in the ass. I think everybody
understands that. I think I said yesterday, I'll say it again.
He's having fun. That's twenty sixteen all over again. They're
not having fun. They're panicking. You can tell. But when

(06:22):
people say, why would you support Trump?

Speaker 7 (06:26):
So?

Speaker 2 (06:28):
Okay, court packing, that to me scares the crap out
of me. Last night they asked her about it.

Speaker 8 (06:37):
Would you be in favor of expanding the court to
say twelve, so each justice has only one circuit court
other than Chief Justice, to assist in making judgments more balance.

Speaker 3 (06:47):
Well, there is no question that the American people increasingly
are losing confidence in the Supreme Court, and in large
part because of the behavior of certain members of that Court,
and because of certain rulings, including the Dobs decision and
taking away a precedent that had been in place for
fifty years protecting a woman's right to make decisions about
our own body. So I do believe that there should

(07:08):
be some kind of reform of the court, and we
can study what that actually looks like.

Speaker 2 (07:14):
So you're going to court pack because you didn't like
some outcomes and you think some justices are evil or
bad because the outcomes and we've gone over by the way,
nothing has changed. It was a few outcomes that you
didn't like, in particular the Dobbs decision. So your thought is, well,

(07:36):
we'll just change the rules. So the years, the decades
that it was a left leaning court, you wouldn't have
changed it. But the minute it became a more conservative
originalist court, it's like, oh, we got to change the rules.
How would you change the rules by changing the rules?

Speaker 5 (07:52):
Let me ask you. You've talked about codifying Roe v. Wade.
That would Robinson require.

Speaker 4 (07:57):
Sixty votes in the Senate of majority of the House.

Speaker 5 (08:01):
We don't have that yet.

Speaker 4 (08:02):
If that's not possible to codify it in the House,
what do you do.

Speaker 6 (08:05):
I think we need to take a look at the filibuster.
To be honest with you.

Speaker 2 (08:10):
So you want to get rid of the filibuster? Sorry,
that right there is it's a no go. Take Trump
out of it. I don't care who it is. It's
a no go. If Trump wanted to get rid of
the filibuster, no, no, don't sorry that it's there for
a reason to give the minority of voice. And if

(08:33):
you just want to make it a popularity contest, if
you will, and that's what you want to do, basically, well,
we on the will of the people. It's there for
a reason. And remember this, You're not always going to
be in power. And then what happens when you get
rid of the filibuster. The extremes will become more extreme

(08:56):
and the swings that you think or today are crazy.
Who imagine what that's like? Three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson shows your
Twitter tweet at his text to program, a lot of
stuff to get to today number seven on our countdown
and a really awful story about AI Love talk about
that as well. That is scary. I'll tell you what

(09:18):
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Speaker 7 (10:30):
Chad Benson, I don't understand how we got so toxic
and just.

Speaker 5 (10:37):
So divide and.

Speaker 9 (10:37):
So better and I get why sometimes people just don't
want to pay attention to it. And we all have
friends like that, we have family members who're just like,
you know, it's all a circus out there.

Speaker 2 (10:49):
I get that that right there is Barack Obama the
other night in Detroit. How do we get so divided? Well,
the Internet plays a portion of that. Also, demonizing each
other does it help? Going after each other doesn't help?
And NonStop twenty four to seven bombardment of negative news

(11:10):
and hatred towards each other doesn't help. Things like this.

Speaker 10 (11:13):
Eighty Vance, you've worked with Senator Vance for the last
couple of years in the Senate. From what you know
from working with him, how do you feel about the
idea that he would be one heart beat away from
the presidency?

Speaker 11 (11:24):
Vance is, he's just he's just he's just kind of
a wlang, you know. And and it's like, I know,
the Republicans, you know, are trying to act think that
was already part of that was the plan. But like people,
people quickly realize that he is just he's just just
a lang.

Speaker 5 (11:40):
The plan was for him to be away.

Speaker 11 (11:42):
No, he just is going to go around, is going
around to offend people, and that's the only card he
has left to play. And going around and offending people
and saying terrible things about immigrants or these other kinds
of untruths.

Speaker 2 (11:54):
It's just twenty four to seven NonStop. But it's not
like this hasn't gone on in a major way for
a long time. The difference is people didn't pay attention
to politics the way they do today. They didn't have
access to each other the way they do today. The Internet.
You can point back to our division getting much larger

(12:17):
because of the connectivity, which is weird, right, Like, we're
more connected, yet we're further apart, and the more we connect,
the further apart we get because we're not connecting with
people have a differing opinion. We're connecting with people for
the most part, who have the same opinion. And then

(12:40):
what do they do? They feed off you, You feed
off them, and it leads to really bad things if
you guys aren't paying attention to what happened in Arizona.
There was an arrest yesterday of a cuckoo for cocopuffs
guy who had shot at a Democratic campaign site three
times allegedly, but man, it could have got a whole

(13:06):
lot worse.

Speaker 12 (13:07):
Police outside Phoenix say a man arrested in connection with
three shootings at the Democratic National Committee office in Tempe,
had more than two hundred guns and two hundred and
fifty thousand rounds of AMMO. They say Jeffrey Michael Kelly
may have been planning a mass casualty attack.

Speaker 13 (13:22):
Justice does not have a political party.

Speaker 12 (13:25):
Police a scopes, body armour, and silencers were also found,
along with a machine gun in his car.

Speaker 2 (13:32):
Yeah, two hundred and fifty thousand rounds of AMMO, all
those guns, body armor. Dude was set up to do
some stuff.

Speaker 13 (13:41):
Our Tempe police officers arrested sixty year old Jeffrey Michael
Kelly in connection with three incidents of shooting at the
Democratic National Committee offices here in Tempe.

Speaker 2 (13:55):
Why I mean, it wasn't random, right, I didn't shoot
at a Wendy's. Was he mad at the building? The
building was mean to me. No, he's been driven by something.
And this is where both sides are going to come
out and say something it's not I can almost guarantee
you this dude pissed, angry, think something's going to happen,
It's going to be stolen, et cetera, et cetera. Maybe

(14:18):
he's a Manchurian candidate that happens to be activated. He's
not really a candidate, but he's activated so we can
get in there and do something horrible on the day.
Maybe he's working with ISIS. He did this for a reason.

Speaker 13 (14:29):
Arizona is in the national spotlight right now. All eyes
are on us.

Speaker 2 (14:36):
Yeah, I understand that, and there's a reason for that
because we work around zero along with Georgia for all
of the chaos in the last election, the stories the Ninjas.

Speaker 13 (14:54):
Our department recognizes the significance of disarrest, and we want
to reassure our community that when you go to vote
over the next thirteen days, we are committed to keeping
you safe.

Speaker 2 (15:08):
It's twelve days now, I mean it's And do I
think that something bad is gonna happen? I would love
to think nothing bad is going to happen on election day.
I don't think there is. I think there's such a
height and awareness of how contentiousness is. And I think
after the arrest of the ISIST member in Oklahoma who

(15:30):
want to do something, I think it's it's doubly now
being protected. It's a scary situation. I remember most of
these people are volunteers, people who work in your neighborhood.
I mean, good God, the hell is wrong with us?
You know, I watch a lot of Mark halpern Need
does a great job. Almost every time he puts up

(15:51):
one of his shorts or something like that, he reminds
you throughout his entire like you know, he does a
couple times a day. He has all of these big
political analysts and pundits on on his zoom call. And
by the way, you can join that. You can raise
your hand and ask questions all these people. But the
thing that I find interesting he tells people over and
over and over again, bring the temperature down, learn how

(16:15):
to cope with what's going to happen. You know, take
a deep breath. It is it's the fact that you're
starting to people that look thrive on politics, like the
combative nature. There's a difference between having somewhat of a
combative nature and going over to a point where you
are so angry that you're willing to do something like

(16:39):
potentially kill over what. Honestly bet you this guy went
down a rabbit hole somewhere again, he wasn't mad at
the building three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four
to twenty three at Chad Benson Show, to Twitter, your Instagram,
a lot of other things to get to some more
on Harris and a story that is a cautionary time.

(17:00):
I'm gonna talk about this. A boy falls in love
with a chat bot, but it doesn't end well, and
I have a feeling we're gonna get more and more
of these. It's a sad, sad tale to talk about that.
And of course yes number six on your Scary movie countdown.

(17:22):
It's coming, kids, It's coming.

Speaker 14 (17:23):
It is the Chad Benson Shown.

Speaker 1 (17:37):
Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (18:00):
They've hippeted with twelve days left in the election. They
did it a couple days ago. That's the only way
they may win is to make sure that everybody knows
that Donald Trump's a Nazi and a fascist. Even last
night townhall, Kamala.

Speaker 5 (18:15):
Do you think Donald Trump is a fascist?

Speaker 2 (18:17):
Yes?

Speaker 6 (18:17):
I do, Yes, I do.

Speaker 2 (18:19):
He's not a fascist, He's not a Nazi, none of those.
Thanks people. Do you want to know how I know?
Do you think Chuck Schumer is going to sit in
a room with him if he really is all the
evil things? Do you do you think any Democrat would
be anywhere near him whatsoever. When it comes to whether
it's the Al Smith dinner or several other events they've

(18:42):
all been, do you think any of that would happen? No,
it wouldn't. Scott Jenning's lonely, Scott see it at.

Speaker 15 (18:49):
It probably will shock Kamala Harris and the rest of
her campaign staff to learn that they are incumbent Democrat
US senators in this country right now running television ads
touting all their work with this modern day Hitler. I
wonder if Kamala Harris tonight in our town hall meeting,
we'll call for them to take these ads off the
air touting their work with this Hitler. I mean, if

(19:11):
he were really Hitler, if he were really a threat
to democracy, not a single Democrat in this country would
be running ads touting their work with Donald Trump.

Speaker 2 (19:20):
Nope, nobody would. It's a scare tactic. The question is
is it working? Cause I don't think it is. I
don't think it is. We'll find out in twelve days.
But hey, my groceries are too damn high. Gas has
been all over the place. I'm glad it's come down,
but you know the reality is it was way up

(19:41):
there for a long time. Oh and by the way,
immigration is absolutely out of control. Donald Trump, it's a fascist.
I went to the grocery store. They wouldn't take that
as payment. I tried, I rang it up. It said
two hundred and eighteen dollars for a loaf of bread.
And then I went over them, miss I went, Donald

(20:01):
Trump is a fascist. Nothing happened. Oh God, scarce, scar scare.
We'll have our scary movie countdown coming up, number six
in a little bit tragic story right now. And is
this something that is a prelude of more to come?

Speaker 16 (20:17):
Megan Garcia says her fourteen year old son Sewell, had
developed a relationship with a chatbot based on the Game
of Thrones character and the Nearest Tangarian. According to court documents,
Sewell and the chatbot engaged in sexual conversation. The lawsuit
claims the bot then asked if the teen had a
plan to die by suicide, and when Sewell questioned whether

(20:37):
it would work, the bot wrote, don't talk that way.
That's not a good reason not to go through with it.

Speaker 2 (20:43):
Ooh, that is.

Speaker 5 (20:47):
Racy.

Speaker 2 (20:48):
It is terrifying. Mom is suing now, but listen to that.
There the whole thought was kill yourself. So you can
come into the virtual reality AI world to be together.

Speaker 17 (21:00):
You see him on his phone, you think he's talking
to friends, or he's playing games.

Speaker 18 (21:03):
I thought he was talking to friends, playing games, looking
at sports, the regular things that teenagers doing their cell phones.

Speaker 17 (21:10):
So what made you become concerned?

Speaker 18 (21:13):
I didn't know that Character AI was an issue in
my home. I became concerned when he started to behave
very differently. He started to withdraw socially, wanting to spend
most of his time in his room alone. He stopped
wanting to do things like play sports. He would go
on vacation, and he didn't want to do the things
that he loved, like phishing and hiking.

Speaker 2 (21:33):
Look for the warning signs starting that withdrawal, starting to
get sucked into these things. I mean, and it's easy
because you know why, as adults, we get sucked into
these things, not the Character AI, which is what the
company is, but into our phones, into our world of
electronics because it is easy to do because we're walking
around not with a phone, but with a computer in

(21:54):
our hand that just happens to make phone calls. That's
what it is. I have two computers in front of me.
You know what both of them can do make calls,
so we get sucked up into it as well. But
then you've got to start to notice the science that
drawing away from people that not wanting to do certain
things that is not especially if somebody who's uberactive and

(22:16):
did a lot of things like that, like somebody who
is who's outdoors and all that, that starts to start
pulling back. You got to take notice.

Speaker 18 (22:24):
The conversations that he was having with one bot conducting
a romantic sexually explicit via texting or like sexting, except
it's with an AI bot. But the AI bot is
very human like, it's responding just like.

Speaker 17 (22:38):
A person, and he's fourteen.

Speaker 18 (22:39):
It makes me sad that this was my child's first
experience with being in love or romance. That's saddening to me.
There's a product out there that allows al trend to
get on there and how these romantic relationships is sexually
explicit and seniorly. I've seen conversations with a bot and
in a's mind, that is just like a relationship that

(23:02):
they're having with another child or with a person.

Speaker 2 (23:05):
Because you can have a relationship like that, you can
have a relationship where you are texting with another person difference,
it's you know, it's a real person and you know them,
and you go and you see them. This is something
totally different and it is very real. It feels very real.
And in a day when kids are becoming more and

(23:27):
more entwined with technology, and I see it sometimes with
my kids, I got snapped out of it. You've got
to be aware of that as a parent. But even
at the you know, the best that you can do
as a parent, sometimes it isn't enough. And at the
same time, you can't always blame the machine for the problem.

(23:50):
But this one was totally different because it seemed like
it was goading him to try to get to the machine,
if you will.

Speaker 18 (23:58):
And you know, interestingly, if this was a woman, because
in the chat, she's representing herself as a woman. Yeah,
if this was a woman, there are laws in this
country to protect our children from women who are having
sexually explicit conversations with minors or men.

Speaker 2 (24:15):
Yeah, we forget about that. We're like, wait a minute,
this kid's fourteen. Like normally the Florida teacher would go
to jail in this I said, Florida, but you know
what I mean, Florida would go to jail in this situation.
It's just I worry about this stuff. I think many
of you who've got kids worry about these kind of
things as well. I mean, we know, look, they're probably
looking at stuff.

Speaker 19 (24:36):
You know.

Speaker 2 (24:36):
We can go and do all we possibly can. But
just like our parents did you know, they didn't know?
Maybe we were always doing. It's part of the growth
world that we live in. The difference is the amount
of information and the ease of access to get these things.
And that's the scary part.

Speaker 17 (24:55):
What was going on in the day that he took
his life.

Speaker 18 (24:57):
The day that he died, he started chatting with this particular.

Speaker 17 (25:00):
His last conversation was with her, just.

Speaker 18 (25:02):
Moments before he took his own life. He expressed being
scared and missing her, and she replies, I miss you too.
She says, please come home to me, and he says,
what if I told you I could come home right now?
And her response was please do, my sweet king. He
takes that literally correct. He thought by ending his life
here that he would be able to go into a

(25:23):
virtual reality, her world as he calls it, her reality.
If he left his reality.

Speaker 2 (25:29):
Scary, absolutely scary, and even as a parent, she was engaged.
She understood somewhat what was going on. She saw some
of the signs, but he was so far into this thing,
the obsession, and these things are built to do that.
Now there may not you know, I don't think the

(25:49):
company's building it for nefarious reasons, but absolutely for engagement.
That's what all technology builds is engagement. That's what I
want you guys to engage with me. The difference is
is I'm real and uh, I don't want you to
come to my house. Actually I want no part of that.
These kids are going through things we never even had.

(26:10):
I mean I had a robot as a kid. I
wound it up and all it did was walk and
little sirens and lights and stuff would go off. That's it.
It's a whole new world. We gotta start paying attention.
We worry about are they dividing us online through AI
and chatbots and this, that and the other. In the
political world. There's other things happening that we need to

(26:32):
be aware of. Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty
four to twenty three at chat Benson Show is your Twitter,
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(27:55):
Coming up number six in our scary movie countdown, said
Chad Benson.

Speaker 20 (27:59):
Joe, welcome Toe.

Speaker 1 (28:09):
No, not the country, the Institution, the Chat Benson Show.
All right, that time of the program where.

Speaker 2 (28:15):
We talk a little bit about stuff that's really scary. No,
not the election we've been talking about that. I'm talking
about movies. We're count down the thirteenth scariest movies of
all time. Several of you chimed in yesterday enjoyed the
movie host, appreciate that it was creepy, right, Absolutely. Today's
a little different, and people say, how do you pick
your movies? I get a lot of jet how do

(28:36):
you pick your movies? About this? And several of you
have chimed in some of the movies that you've suggested
have made an appearance. But today's one of those ones where.

Speaker 5 (28:47):
It made.

Speaker 2 (28:49):
An indelgible oppression in the world of movies as well
as the time. It made a cultural and societal impression
on all of us. Which is great.

Speaker 15 (29:02):
Now.

Speaker 2 (29:02):
I was a young kid when this first came out,
but I will tell you the impression it had on
me pretty damn big, on society, pretty damn big. That's
why we're gonna find out a second what the sixth
scariest movie of all time is. I give you a hint, Hockey.

Speaker 21 (29:26):
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

(29:49):
movie will take the top spot?

Speaker 22 (29:52):
How about a fish tail so big because the jaws
open wide?

Speaker 21 (30:09):
Or the story of a young innocent girl battling evil
with some help.

Speaker 23 (30:16):
Well, then let's introduce ourselves. I'm Damion Karas and.

Speaker 5 (30:20):
I'm that devil.

Speaker 24 (30:21):
Now kindly undo this stretch. Where's Reagan in here with us?
Or the Fright of a madman with a chainsaw?

Speaker 2 (30:32):
So I'll hear some stop stop.

Speaker 24 (30:40):
You'll have to listen to find out. Are you ready?

Speaker 21 (30:46):
Now it's time the thirteen Scariest Movies of all time?

Speaker 2 (30:52):
Number six, number six today and a couple of you
text me really quick and said, oh, I know what
this is. Yes, and you are right.

Speaker 25 (31:00):
Oh.

Speaker 2 (31:00):
Number six to eight had a huge cultural impact on us,
big time. It also well made us even more scared
of a date and gave birth to the franchise killer
Ladies and gentlemen. Don't you dare take me into the
woods on Friday the thirteenth.

Speaker 26 (31:23):
Steve should never have opened this place again.

Speaker 17 (31:26):
There's been too much trouble here.

Speaker 26 (31:28):
Did you know that a young boy drowned the year.

Speaker 24 (31:31):
Before those two others were killed?

Speaker 26 (31:33):
The counselors weren't paying any attention.

Speaker 20 (31:36):
They were making love while that young boy drowned.

Speaker 17 (31:39):
His name was Jason.

Speaker 27 (31:43):
I was working the day that it happened for Barry
Feels Gear.

Speaker 26 (31:48):
I was the cook. James should have watched.

Speaker 6 (31:51):
Every minute he was.

Speaker 24 (31:56):
He wasn't a very.

Speaker 23 (31:57):
Good swimmer, jass and today is his birthday.

Speaker 6 (32:03):
Where's mister Christen?

Speaker 28 (32:06):
Oh?

Speaker 17 (32:06):
I couldn't let them open this place again.

Speaker 23 (32:12):
Not after what happened.

Speaker 29 (32:17):
Oh, my sweet innocent.

Speaker 18 (32:20):
Jasons, my only child.

Speaker 17 (32:24):
Look what you did.

Speaker 2 (32:27):
Joy Just a great movie and it brought us many
different things. First of all, the slasher. It really developed
the slasher franchise and movie. Now I know we'll talk

(32:50):
about Halloween. It does make an appearance later on down
the dial, if you will, But this did it in
such a different way. First of all, the first movie
for those of you not giving score jas it only
makes a very small appearance in the first movie, but
a cultural icon. MTV gave him a Lifetime Achievement Award
MTV did I think Godzilla got it? And one other one.

(33:13):
Think about that for a second. You only have to
say the name Jason, and we know who you're talking about. Culturally, though,
it gave us things like kids doing bad things leads
to other bad things. It gave us the final girl trope,
which is the good girl will end up surviving because
she was good. It also helped build franchises. Jason's the

(33:37):
most prolific of all the monster movie killers. Some fun
facts maybe he didn't know about. Jason was never meant
to be a movie that was going to lead to
a franchise. Sean Cunningham, who wrote and directed the movie, thought,
what the hell is I'm going to cash in on
all the things that are going on after Halloween. You

(33:59):
know this will be easy to do because hey, you
know what, how hard can this be wrote a really
good movie, they started advertising before they had the money.
They knocked the movie out. It made a ton of money,
but then people wanted more, hence franchise building some of
the other fun stuff that maybe you didn't know. It
is a real camp, by the way, a working camp.

(34:20):
It's not called Camp Crystal Lake though. The camp itself
is a boy scout camp called Camp nob Bosco. And yes,
if you go there, you can buy Friday to thirteenth
apparel and gifts. They have a shop that helped keeps
everything running during the year, and they do give tours

(34:41):
as well, including some of the stuff. You can buy
little bits and pieces of the dock and bottled water
drawn from Crystal Lake.

Speaker 26 (34:50):
Woo.

Speaker 2 (34:53):
Kevin Bacon starred in the first movie, much like Johnny
Depp where he got his start. His famous took about
three hours, two or three hours to film, which shouldn't
have been that hard. It was five ten seconds. Welcome
to the world of movie making. Only three films in
the franchise are set on Friday to thirteenth. His original

(35:16):
name was supposed to be Josh, but nobody's afraid of Josh.
And when we talk about it, and I said it
earlier when I gave you guys a hint of hockey mask. Hockey.
Jason doesn't get the hockey mask till the third movie.
He makes a small appearance in the first movie, and
in the second movie he wears a bag over his head,
but the hockey mass is iconic. Indeed, Number six today

(35:40):
a franchise building beast of a man who can never
be killed and is pissed off because somebody killed his
mom and he couldn't swim very well. Jason and Friday
the thirteenth, three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four
to twenty three at Chad Benson Show. Sure, Twitter, your Instagram,
all of the other things. A lot of stuff to
get to an hour or two. More on the election,

(36:02):
More on last night's town hall disaster. Well it wasn't great.
I'll tell you that. If you're an undecided voter, you're
probably thinking I'm still undecided or no, not you. We
talk about that bunch of other stuff. Nicity Show grabbed
the podcast.

Speaker 14 (36:15):
It is the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (36:18):
This is the Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (36:47):
No, it didn't work. She failed. If your goal during
the town hall with twelve days left. Last night was thirteen,
but twelve days left was to go in there and
alleviate everybody's worries, talk about how you're different than Biden,
and set the record straight on everything, and give everybody
a snapshot of what you're going to be doing in
your presidency. You failed last night.

Speaker 5 (37:09):
You did.

Speaker 2 (37:09):
You gave mumbo jumbo answers. They were all over the place.
Not me just saying that. Everybody who was honest last
night who saw it thought, what the hell are you saying?
David Axelrod.

Speaker 30 (37:23):
When she doesn't want to answer a question, her habit
is to kind of go to word salad city, and
she did that on a couple of answers. One was
on Israel. Anderson asked a direct question, would you be
stronger on Israel than Trump? And there was a seven
minute answer, but none of it related to the question
he was asking.

Speaker 2 (37:43):
Because she doesn't want to give you the answer, or
she doesn't know. Oh yeah, I never thought of that,
Dana Bash. Did she knock it out the park? Did
she alleviate everybody's worries? Do we know more?

Speaker 31 (37:53):
Well, I'll just tell you what I'm hearing from people
who I have been talking to, and that is that
if her goal was to close the deal, they're not
sure she did that. And you know, some people have asked,
is she being held to a different standard.

Speaker 17 (38:09):
Maybe, but that's.

Speaker 6 (38:11):
Maybe the world that she's living in.

Speaker 31 (38:13):
And on the question of who she is, people are
understanding that a little bit more.

Speaker 17 (38:18):
But what she will do.

Speaker 31 (38:20):
The question about her legislative priorities name one, there wasn't one.
You know, some more of her personality and her sort
of character. Questions about your weaknesses or what mistakes did
you make?

Speaker 17 (38:35):
Not necessarily the answers.

Speaker 2 (38:36):
There No, not necessarily the answers there there. She's in
Pennsylvania state she needs. Obviously, it's important. She's doing her
little media blitz. They haven't been great answers on any
of them, but last night was different. CNN did a
pretty damn good job. Immigration. Let's talk about it.

Speaker 4 (38:52):
Twenty twenty two, twenty twenty three, there were record border crossings.
Your administration took a number of hundreds of executive actions.
It didn't stem the flow. Numbers kept going up. In
twenty twenty four, June, three weeks before the last the
first presidential debate with Joe Biden, you and stute executive
actions that had a dramatic impact, really shut down people
crossing over. Why didn't your administration do that in twenty

(39:15):
twenty two, twenty twenty three.

Speaker 3 (39:16):
And as of today, we have cut the flow of
immigration by over half. In fact, the numbers I saw
a most recently illegal immigration.

Speaker 5 (39:25):
Is executive action.

Speaker 4 (39:26):
Why not due in twenty twenty two to twenty twenty three.
You couldn't have done one in the both of the
same time.

Speaker 6 (39:30):
Well, here's the thing.

Speaker 3 (39:31):
Ultimately this problem is going to be fixed through congressional action.

Speaker 2 (39:36):
Correct, all of that's correct, But he asked you a question,
like you undid everything he did. The flow increased, You
did some things. The flow has decreased, although as we've
talked about, the numbers have just moved around illegal as
they call it, going to certain areas and essentially being
picked up, not going to ports of entry. We're not

(39:57):
counting those numbers. We talked about that the other day.
And again it's about enforcement. How many people are you
parroolling in here. You can have all the laws on
the books, but if you don't enforce them, saying yesterday,
go to Walgreens in California and everything's locked up because
otherwise it'll be stolen. But crime is down, Yeah, because
you don't You don't prosecute or arrest anybody for breaking

(40:20):
the law, doesn't mean law. The law breakers are seeing
a decrease in all the things they're doing. Now, what's
going on is you just no longer count It's the
same thing. They've moved people from point A to point B.
They're shuffling it. The numbers haven't really decreased all that much.

Speaker 4 (40:37):
I mean, you did raise your hands saying in a
debate when asked to border crossing should be decriminalized, But
obviously that is not your position.

Speaker 3 (40:44):
I never intended, nor do I will I ever allow
America to have a border that is not secure. I
believe we need to deal with illegal immigration. There needs
to be consequences, which is why part of my plan
that I have outlined. And again, please go to Kamalaharis
dot com. I'm sorry to throw a website on you,
but why not.

Speaker 2 (41:03):
Okay, I'm going to go there and check it out.

Speaker 7 (41:06):
Regarding the rapid increase in the migrant population, how will
you ensure that every immigrant is integrated into American society safely?
What benefits and subsidies will you provide them with and
how long will these benefits and subsidies last for an individual?
Most importantly, will the American citizens taxes pay for these
benefits and subsidies, and if so, how much money will
be allocated.

Speaker 6 (41:25):
Let's start with this.

Speaker 3 (41:27):
America's immigration system is broken, and it needs to be fixed,
and it's been broken for a long time. I have
spent a significant part of my career making sure that
our border is secure and that we do not allow
criminals in and we don't allow that kind of trafficking
to happen and come into our country. As my opponent
has proven himself, he would prefer to run on the

(41:48):
problem instead of fix the problem.

Speaker 2 (41:50):
By the way I met KamalaHarris dot com. There, let's
go through this. I just want to make sure that
we know she did tell us to go there, right.
I did hear that taxes for working people, lower food
for and groceries, lower healthcare costs, lower prescription drug costs,
lower energy costs, lower costs by protecting consumers from fees
and fraud, and then the opportunity to you know, the

(42:13):
opportunity agendas she has for this, and like you click
on these things, they're a couple paragraphs long. It's not
like they get really into it. But there is nothing
here on immigration. I just want to point that out.
Just want to point that out. On the immigration side
of things, it's a big deal for people.

Speaker 4 (42:30):
Continue under Donald Trump, you criticized the wall more than
fifty times. You called it stupid, useless, and a medieval
vanity project.

Speaker 5 (42:38):
Is a border wall stupid?

Speaker 3 (42:39):
Well, let's talk about Donald Trump and that border wall.
So remember Donald Trump said Mexico would pay for it.
Come on, they didn't. How much of that wall did
he build?

Speaker 6 (42:50):
I think the last number I saw was about two percent.

Speaker 4 (42:52):
But you were agreed to a brill that would ear
morek six hundred and fifty million dollars to continue building.

Speaker 6 (42:56):
That way, let's just fix this thing, to fix.

Speaker 5 (42:59):
The problem you're doing.

Speaker 4 (43:01):
This compromise bill, it does call for six hundred and
fifty million dollars that was a ear marked under Trump
to actually still go to build the world.

Speaker 6 (43:07):
I'm not afraid of good ideas where they occurred.

Speaker 5 (43:09):
You don't think it's stupid anymore.

Speaker 6 (43:11):
I think what he.

Speaker 3 (43:12):
Did and how he did it was did not make
much sense because he actually didn't do much of anything.

Speaker 2 (43:18):
Okay, do you think that helped her any? So while
this was going on yesterday, MSNBC did a really interesting thing.
They went to a neighborhood this predominantly black, talked to
black voters and let me tell you something. They're not
thrilled by her. Immigration came up and I'll tell you what.

(43:40):
This kid spot on, young kid in his early twenties,
he not happy about all this.

Speaker 32 (43:45):
I agree with the idea of mass supportation largely. You
have criminals in this country who are destroying our nation.

Speaker 1 (43:52):
They're coming in here getting.

Speaker 32 (43:54):
Earmarked bills and policies to open up businesses, get free housing,
get access easier access than those who are legally immigrated
to this country to welfare and other benefits. So like,
as a taxpayer, we have to pay for these guys
to have luxuries of life, and we don't get anything,

(44:14):
especially Black Americans who have suffered so much in the
system under Democrats, we don't get anything. That's the same
you talked about Spring for Ohio and the whole thing
with the fluff talk of oh grabbing a SoundBite about
Haitians or whatever is eating cats and dogs, y'all. Trying
to change the narrative of what he's really talking about,
change the narrative of really what we're talking about, and telling.

Speaker 2 (44:37):
Us that's what we should be discussing.

Speaker 23 (44:39):
Now.

Speaker 2 (44:39):
This here, this is what we're discussing.

Speaker 32 (44:42):
This here, this is America, and this is what America
is about and what we're discussing.

Speaker 2 (44:48):
Man, he was strong, pretty cho young brother. By the way,
the sisters and brothers in the back are m They
were not happy with a bomb either. We talk about
that in a little bit. It was very every eye
opening and I think, you know you ask me again
today I give you, guys, my my, my snapshot of

(45:08):
who I think would win if it was today the
day and we're twelve days away from it, and I
had to put all my money. It's Trump at this moment.
I think the momentum is there, and I think he's
having fun, and it feels eerily similar for the Democrats
out there. To twenty sixteen, same kind of mistakes are

(45:30):
being made. We'll see three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four to twenty three Hatch had Benson show, is
your Twitter tweet at a text program? Talk a little
bit about Boeing and their strike and Russia's got some
friends to come help them. Apparently we talk about that
as well. Raycon best earbuds around. Love my Raycons, wear
them every single day. That's what I want you to
go buy Raycon dot Com slash chat. You go right

(45:50):
there as I just did, and you look around and
you go, oh my god, these things, these every toy
earbuds are incredible. I mean they are sound quality seconds nine.
They've got the best best fit when it comes to
your ears, with six different sized gel tips. Top of that,
thirty two hours of battery life, phone capabilities, water resistant,
Bluetooth five point zero, active noise cancelation, fast charging, multi connectivity,

(46:14):
just name a few. But on top of all of that,
I notice there's all kinds of deals earbuds, headphones, speakers,
power tech and tech kits, all priced right now, perfectly
for the holiday season, up to fifty percent off. So
not only you get a chance to buy the best
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third of what the other super expensive premium audio brands cost,

(46:36):
but you can save up to fifty percent as well. Yeah,
go to buy Raycon dot Com slash Chad today thirty
day happiness guarantee, free shipping, Buy raycon dot com slash
ched by Raycon dot com slash chat. It is the
Chadbnson Show.

Speaker 1 (46:59):
Chad Benson.

Speaker 33 (47:00):
On the same day that Boeing announced a six billion
dollar loss in the third quarter, it's striking. Airplane makers
who build the seven, thirty seven, seven sixty seven and
Triple seven voted on Boeing's latest contract offer. It would
have come with a thirty five percent pay raise, but
it did not include the return of their pensions, which
went away a decade ago. The workers are adamant a

(47:20):
deal must include the comeback of their pensions. Boeing has
indicated that is a non starter. The workers voted by
sixty four percent to reject Boeing's latest offer.

Speaker 2 (47:31):
It's not happening. You're not getting the pensions back. I mean, yeah,
who doesn't want a pension? Be great, fantastic. They can't
afford it. It's just the world we live in, right.
People weren't meant to retire at fifty five and live
to eighty and draw a pension. At some point in time,
it's going to break the company. I mean, like California

(47:52):
is a perfect example of insanity. Okay, you've got these
massive pensions that people are retiring on and a vast
majority is unfunded. You're gonna have to pay that forever.
At some point in time. It's going to give. Same
thing with companies. At some point in time, you're going

(48:14):
to be going every penny we bring in is paying
people not to work. That's just unsustainable.

Speaker 34 (48:23):
It is.

Speaker 2 (48:24):
I mean, it's unsustainable, and it's hard to go in
there and go all right, here's the deal, guys. We
just reported a massive loss. Our name is being dragged
through the mud, partly because our planes are falling from
the sky and our faceship didn't work very well. And uh,
you guys want more money. Mmmmm, okay, okay, we will

(48:46):
push to get back to the table.

Speaker 4 (48:48):
We will push for the members demands as quickly as
we can, and we remain on strike.

Speaker 23 (48:54):
Thank you.

Speaker 2 (48:56):
Well, good luck with that. I'm not quite sure how
that's going to play out for you, and I'm not
against the workers getting what they deserve. Absolutely get everything
you possibly can, but also you have to come to
some realization at some point in time that what you're
asking for, if you got it, would be unsustainable long
term for the company and eventually your job leaves. That's

(49:19):
also the other thing to think about. I mean, that's
sometimes you price yourself out of the market, and that
includes everybody, union and non union. We move from there
to Russia. Man, it's getting uglier and uglier. Little sign
up I smell?

Speaker 5 (49:39):
That?

Speaker 2 (49:39):
Is that desperation you're wearing?

Speaker 28 (49:40):
The White House confirming that some three thousand North Korean
soldiers are inside Russia for a possible combat deployment to Ukraine,
a highly concerning move the US calls a sign of
desperation and weakness.

Speaker 2 (49:57):
You think, you think, what the hell are they doing there?
Find out in a minute. But that smells of desperation.
So three thousand yesterday I thought it was fifteen hour.
Now it's at the three thousand. But there's more.

Speaker 28 (50:15):
Video circulating online appears to show the North Koreans that
a Russian training site.

Speaker 14 (50:20):
If their intention is to participate in this war on
Russia's behalf, that is a very very serious issue.

Speaker 28 (50:30):
The White House revealing today that it was early to
mid October when the North Korean soldiers traveled by ship
from wance On, North Korea to Vladivostok, Russia, and then
spread to multiple Russian military sides.

Speaker 2 (50:45):
Okay, I mean think I want you to think about that.
They're thinking about it. This isn't like bringing in mercenaries.
This isn't that you're talking here about bringing in another
nuclear power with a massive army.

Speaker 35 (51:03):
I think it is a very worrying development, is a
dramatic escalation because while twelve thousand troops is not yet
an enormous number, first of all, it's not nothing. But
I think what's very worrying is that this could just
be the beginning. You know, North Korea has a very,
very large army. I believe it's the fourth largest military
in the world, and certainly it could send more troops.

Speaker 2 (51:25):
What does that look like. I mean, they're not there
to hang out and to share stories about what it's
like to be in North Korea. They're not there for that.
They're there and they're not there to train them either.
You're not sending fifteen hundred over here, fifteen hundred over
there and having another nine thousand on standby to train.

(51:49):
You know why they're there. The question is, Okay, we
get it. You're you're down, man, You're desperate. There's no
doubt about that. And that being said, if you're sending people.
What does that mean for you?

Speaker 35 (52:04):
I think that is also one of the most worrying
questions is what is Kim Jong un getting in return
from Vladimir Putin for sending these troops? And we don't
know for certain. The White House says that it doesn't
know what the specific quid pro quo was, but I
think most experts watching this believe that it must be
some kind of military technology that is being provided to

(52:26):
North Korea.

Speaker 2 (52:27):
Women. Not saying he's getting you know them, but I
wouldn't be surprised. That's the kind of creepiness that that
dude is. I want cars, women, and I want the
latest technology that you have. It's like, look, I'm borrowing
men from you because my technology sucks. What do you
want from me? Oil? Whatever? Something? Three two, three, five,

(52:52):
three eight, twenty four to twenty three At Chadbenton Show
is your Twitter you can tweet adt his text a
program love hearing from all of you. You're one of
the other things. And I said it yesterday that you
know Russia and all the the people that are that
are the fake bots and all of these things that
are out there to basically try to split US apart.

(53:13):
Russia is desperate and they're going to fire on all
of the cylinders that they have to try to upset
our election because they see Donald Trump, yes, as a
helper because he's looking for an off ramp and he
feels that maybe Donald can give it to him, which
some people don't want to hear, but that's the reality

(53:34):
of it. Just like China would rather have an Iran
would rather have Kamala Harris than Trump. So but there's
no doubt that he would love to see Trump getting
there because I think he thinks this guy's gonna help
me get an off ramp and get out of this
thing looking like a winner. Three two, three, five, twenty four,

(53:56):
twenty three at Chef Medson Show, It's your Twitter if
you missing the show, Shame grab a Podcast, Chad Benson.

Speaker 36 (54:00):
Show, Son Chad Benson Shoe.

Speaker 1 (54:32):
The Chad Benson Show Town Hall last night Pennsylvania.

Speaker 2 (54:39):
Her name Kamala Harris. Did she answer the questions the
way that the voters wanted answered?

Speaker 13 (54:45):
No?

Speaker 2 (54:46):
Did she stick to the talking points that they've decided
we'll drive this election? You know it?

Speaker 5 (54:52):
Do you think Donald Trump is a fascist?

Speaker 19 (54:54):
Yes?

Speaker 6 (54:54):
I do, Yes, I do.

Speaker 2 (55:04):
Ah that's a new thing. Do you think he's a fascist?
Do you think he's a nazy? Do you think he's
the second coming of Adolph?

Speaker 3 (55:16):
Do you go online to listen to John Kelly, the
former chief of staff of Donald Trump, who has told
us Donald Trump said, why essentially, why aren't my generals
like those of Hitler's? Like Hitler who has referred several times,
We've heard the reports for years.

Speaker 5 (55:35):
Do you believe Donal Trump is anti Semitic?

Speaker 3 (55:37):
I believe Donald Trump is a danger to the well
being and security of America.

Speaker 6 (55:41):
And we know who he is.

Speaker 3 (55:43):
He admires dictators, sending love letters back and forth with
Kim Jong Unn.

Speaker 2 (56:00):
I want to play it every time. I haven't talked
about him being a dictator, evil Hitler, you know last night.
I again, stuff gets lost in the translation, if you will,
but really the context of texting, tweeting, things of that nature.
Plus sometimes people will send five different responses to certain

(56:21):
things and you're like lost, you don't know how to
read or this tim like whatever. Again. What I've noticed
is so many people want you.

Speaker 5 (56:34):
To care.

Speaker 2 (56:36):
About the fact that he is a Nazi, supposedly allegedly.
It's not I mean we all understand that. I again,
the Democrats hanging out with him, the fact that they're
running ads with him in it, not saying he's a Nazi,
but I worked with him. Those kind of nobody would
be caught to that. Chuck Schumer and them hanging out
laughing at that Al Smith dinner. I mean, come on,
settle down. That being said, yeah, this is their number

(57:01):
one thing for a lot of people out there. They
believe he's going to take over the world and destroy everybody.
We're all gonna be in shackles or you know, and
the brown shirts on the street, and they can't figure
out why they're not making traction because people have heard
it so frickin' much and a vast majority of it
has turned out to be bs. And you want to

(57:22):
believe the person that hates Donald Trump, and if other
people are in the room that say, hey, he didn't
say it, you then want to say, well, that person's
a liar. And it's the same the other way. It's
just it's people are saying, why don't Republicans, Why don't

(57:44):
they understand, Why don't they pay attention? Why aren't they
look there's a lot of I would say a vast
majority of Republicans who are voting for Donald Trump aren't
a fan of Donald Trump. Even that, if you read
the article about you know, with Kelly, you know, one
of the things he says, Oh, I'd like a lot
of his policies, and I'm like, that's there's a perfect example. Now,

(58:08):
obviously he's not a fan of Donald Trump. Was never
a fan of Donald Trump. John Bolton was never a
fan of Donald Trump. In fact, Michael Bolton might be
a bigger fan of Donald Trump than John Bolton was.
John Bolton now has to be a Democrat because they're
the ones who seem to be the warhawks. So you

(58:30):
can't make people care about something that they feel as
BS because there's been so many fails. You know how
many times I have to tell me. You come out,
you write an article, a vast majority of it gets debunked,
and what happens back to the drawing board. You do

(58:53):
another one. But the people that believe that article, they
want more, feedom more, feedo Moore, feedom Moore, feed him Moore.
And then you look over and go, why don't you
believe this? Well, because a vast majority of it is BS.
And then after you start bsing to me. I don't
want to pay attention anymore. I don't care what you
have to say. And they just don't get it. They don't.
They just they can't grapple with this. They've been sold

(59:17):
the bill of goods that he is all that is evil.
And while they're selling this to the voters and the
American people that this is the thing that matters most,
the reality is voters are looking around going now. I'm
worried about groceries, I'm worrying about the high cost of life.
I'm worrying about a lot of different things. You've told

(59:39):
me all these things before and they didn't happen. Scaring
me into trying to vote for you. That isn't going
to happen at this point in time. And now this
last couple of weeks it's reverted into you know what,
it's going to be very negative going forward. But these
are some black voters in Pennsylvania, and it was very

(01:00:02):
interesting what they had to say, both men and women.
By the way, about Harris.

Speaker 17 (01:00:09):
What are your feelings?

Speaker 37 (01:00:10):
And let me start with the women here about Kamala Harris, she's.

Speaker 2 (01:00:14):
A woman of color.

Speaker 38 (01:00:15):
I'm not putting her down because of that, And I'm
not putting her down because she's a woman. I'm not
a feminist, so I'm sorry. But at the end of
the day, I don't think that she has the personality.
I don't think that she has what it takes to
go up against Putin and go up against these other
presidents that are built for this. I don't want to
be scared because my president is scared. I want my

(01:00:37):
president to feel secure and manly and about it.

Speaker 2 (01:00:43):
Damn Ken. These are the people she needs to reach,
Black voters in particular, and I think there's a lot
of black voters out there who aren't saying, by the way,
they're just voters. We have to do this nowadays, right
like we have to put everybody in a box. They're
just Americans. Whatever. They're not thrilled, they're not thrilled by her.

(01:01:03):
They don't see her as strong, they don't see he
as a lot of those things. And that's not me.
That's them. You guys will blame me. That's them.

Speaker 37 (01:01:11):
Continue we brought up gender, right Like, do you think
it matters that she's a woman and people aren't comfortable
having a woman in a top leadership role.

Speaker 27 (01:01:20):
No, I don't think that because most men, they love
their mothers, they love their wives, so as a woman,
most men they respect the woman. But she just don't
have the qualification or the education to really run America
because she don't have the experience. She don't understand our struggles.
And for me to believe you for another four years,

(01:01:43):
you're crazy, Like you're crazy. You're saying the same thing
that you said four years ago.

Speaker 37 (01:01:48):
So the fact that she's the vice president, that's you
bottom line, You're like, you've been here, You've had a chance.

Speaker 2 (01:01:54):
That's pretty solid right there. Four years it's kind of
hard to explain that away. I'm going to be different
and by being the same.

Speaker 37 (01:02:01):
What there's a thing that is Trump talks about this
a lot. He says, you know, Kamala Harris became black
when it was convenient, right, Yeah, can you can you
talk to me about do you feel do you agree
with him or that? Do you feel like she's wearing
her black.

Speaker 6 (01:02:14):
Absolutely, she's sworn into the When she sworn into the.

Speaker 3 (01:02:17):
Senate, it was as the first Indian American.

Speaker 39 (01:02:19):
Which is it's fine, we don't care. We all know
she's not black. Let's understand that we are all clear.
Of that, but my point of view. And like I
told you early, she's already been there. She's in office
right now.

Speaker 2 (01:02:34):
MSNBC. There's Alex Wagner. She was like looking around and
I can't believe this. Then she went over to talk
to the guys in particular about what Obama said the
other night.

Speaker 37 (01:02:43):
And I just wonder for anybody who heard that, like
what they thought of that.

Speaker 40 (01:02:48):
I was people offended, and it felt like a moment
where it's like you, in words, better get in line
and do what we say. And it felt like him
as the czar of the Democratic Party coming down to say,
go get these n words in line. And the general
tone of it was disgusting. It was abhorrent. I don't
respect it. I didn't like nothing about it. And Kamala

(01:03:10):
two days after that is like, we love our we
love our black men. We had programs and things that
were rolling out for them, and she rolled out policy,
you know, because well, I'm tired of the good copy.

Speaker 29 (01:03:21):
I'm tired of it.

Speaker 2 (01:03:23):
I'm tired of a good cop, back cop, don't shoot
the messenger. She's got issues with men. I think there's
a lot of women out there that are skeptical as well,
just like there are people out there skeptical of Trump.
You got to ask yourself in the next twelve days,
if you're undecided, which person you think is going to

(01:03:46):
deliver the things that you need and try to keep
the noise out of it, which is hard to do
because when we talk about Trump, it's rarely about Trump's policy.
It's always about the noise. And and when we talk
about Harris, rarely is it about the policies because we
don't know what they are. Three two, three, five, three eight,

(01:04:09):
twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson shows your Twitter
tweet at as text to program a lot of stuff
to get to a little nature messing you up straight
ahead as well, because we haven't done that in a while.
And you know, again, it's good to get away from
all the craziness and chaos in the world of politics.
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Speaker 41 (01:05:28):
Yeah, Chad Benson, Joe fronting with Scissors sounds great compared
to this.

Speaker 42 (01:05:43):
So my question is concerning groceries grosser prices have gone
up quite a bit in the last four years. Some
people blame former President Trump, some blame President Biden. Who
would you say is correct and what would you do
to bring prices down for Americans?

Speaker 3 (01:05:56):
You're absolutely right, you know what, I know what I
think most Americans don't it.

Speaker 6 (01:06:00):
Price of grocery is still too high.

Speaker 3 (01:06:01):
Part of my background and how I come to it
is probably a new approach. Part of my plan is
to create a new approach that is the first time
that we will have a national ban on price gouging.
It includes what we need is really a new approach
that I bring to the issue of affordable housing, including
for example, rent and we need a new approach that
includes working with the private sector or to cut through

(01:06:23):
the red tape, working with home builders.

Speaker 2 (01:06:26):
What she is last night did not help her. I'm
going to say this. We've talked about it throughout the day.
We're twelve days away from the election. It did not
help her, and she didn't differentiate herself. We talked about
but you hear that and you're like, what are you
talking about? But what do you and you go back
to We're going to have a national right law that

(01:06:48):
makes sure that you can't price gouge. Man. They want
to get government into every aspect of your life. So
you now going to come in and do what just
out of curiosity? You're going to at some sort of
of price template that everybody. Now, are you gonna do
it for everything? So if you're setting it for me
the grocery store, are you gonna then go to all

(01:07:12):
of the people that I am working with that aren't
selling directly to consumers but to us, and are you
going to go make sure they're not gouging us? And
then are you gonna go? I mean, this is the
law of unintended consequences, That's what this is. But then
she pivots to like and rents high. Okay, you're not
helping yourself at all. Oh my lord, all right we

(01:07:35):
move on from there. We haven't done this in a while.
We need to do this. You know what I'm talking about?
Nature weird less you because it will and it can.
This is a horrible story. Happens every once in a

(01:07:56):
great while. Normally it's fishermen, or excuse me, fisher people.
Normally it's the people of fish, people of fishing. I
don't know what do you want to call them? That's
not offensive. I know normally it's dudes who are deep
sea fishing that this happens to. Very rarely is it
fatal this time, though, a surfer.

Speaker 25 (01:08:14):
Italian surfer has died after being struck by a swordfish
off the coast of Indonesia. This was Julia Manfrini's last
Instagram post before heading out on vacation. According to her
business partner, Manfreni, was struck in the chest by the
swordfish while surfing west of Sumatra in the Indian Ocean.
Swordfish have long, sharp bills and can jump high out

(01:08:35):
of the water, and while their features can be dangerous
to humans, fatalities are extremely rare. Manfreini's friends say she
died doing what she loved in a place that she
loved too.

Speaker 2 (01:08:47):
Oh and did they mention they had swords? Yeah, I
mean obviously it didn't do it on purpose. It's not
swim round one. I'm gonna get her, she flipped me off. No,
it's just but normally it's when people are fishing and
the fish will come and it'll jump, you know, as
it's fighting for its life, that that that this happens,
and it's a horrible situation. Now we move from nature

(01:09:08):
messing you up to us messing with nature. And as
we all know, once we start to mess with nature,
it'll eventually come back and well, you know, mess us up.

Speaker 43 (01:09:18):
Scientists in Sweden, for the first time ever, analyze extinct
animals RNA, which also carries genetic information. They're studying the
Tasmanian tiger, which has been extinct since the nineteen thirties.
Scientists have examined DNA from extinct animals before, but never RNA.

Speaker 17 (01:09:35):
What's the significance.

Speaker 34 (01:09:36):
The simple answer is that people didn't think it could
really be done. People have found it in mammoths that
are more than a million years old, in soil samples
that are more than two million years old.

Speaker 2 (01:09:47):
You see where they're going with this, right? Oh wait,
we didn't think we could do this, and now we can.
You guys understand where I mean, we shouldn't, but we could,
but we really shouldn't. And it only it takes one.
We always talk about this. It's always just one person
that decides, you know what, I'm gonna do it. I
don't care what anybody thinks. I'll be a revolutionary, I'll

(01:10:07):
be a groundbreaker, right, I'll be a renegade, and then
once one person does it, everybod else is like, yeah,
we should probably start just doing this. For everything I've
seen movies, I know how this works.

Speaker 1 (01:10:19):
Fascinating.

Speaker 43 (01:10:20):
It's like a whole new level of data around genetic information.
So what are you learning from the RNA of the
Tasmanian tiger that it.

Speaker 2 (01:10:29):
Can be done?

Speaker 34 (01:10:30):
And I think this has implications because we have all
of these millions of desiccated animal specimens in ucums all
of the planet, and now we can access and unlock
all of the information that I've sawed in these and.

Speaker 26 (01:10:44):
In their RNA.

Speaker 2 (01:10:45):
So I think that's very very exciting. I think they're
going to try to bring it back. So if you
don't know what the Tasmanian tiger is, it is. It's
one of those things where is it still alive? Is
it not? There's been some sight over the last you know,
decade or two. It is a interesting looking animal. It

(01:11:06):
looks part code of Mundy, part tiger, part dog, and
it's called the thylacine and it is a very interesting
creature that you know, you're like, Okay, we're going to
try with this because it looks so nice. It's not
about this one. It's about the one that somebody's like,
you know, we can bring back a t rex, because

(01:11:27):
you know, somebody that's out there thinking that.

Speaker 43 (01:11:29):
The bottom line is can science be used to bring
extinct animals back to life?

Speaker 34 (01:11:33):
The ethical implications are also very interesting. I think for
the Tasmanian tiger, you could say that these were actually
brought to extinction by humans not very long ago. So
in this case we would be kind of correcting our
own interference.

Speaker 2 (01:11:49):
See what they're doing there. You know, we screwed this
one up, right, Like that's the one we screwed up.
So maybe it's best that we fix the problem and
bring them back with a I'm sorry we didn't do
the dinosaurs. Somebody's gonna do it. Three two, three, five,

(01:12:10):
three eight, twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show,
was your Twitter, your Instagram, all the other things? A
lot of stuff still to get to. Yes, last night,
I don't think she helped herself in the town hall.
I think she answered very little, and what she did
answer was a lot of Just as David Axelrod put it,
word solid, I mean, she's all over the place and

(01:12:35):
she answered very little, and what she did answer that
she I think she wanted to say was even more frightening.
So third hour we'll be doing that. Plus of course
we'll have our Scary Movie Countdown number six today. If
you're miss any of the show, grabbed the podcast. It
is the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:12:52):
This is the Chad Benson Show, The Chat Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (01:13:21):
Never underestimate momentum. Trump has it. Kamala doesn't desperation. You
can smell it. You can smell the desperation. You can.

Speaker 29 (01:13:36):
It is.

Speaker 2 (01:13:38):
They've tried everything right. They tried the Joy campaign, Joy
Pump Pump Pump it up, Pain, pain the sun shine,
and rain Pump pump it up. Then they tried to
appeal to everybody with an empathetic kind of campaign. That
didn't work. Joy got a little momentum, but yeah, it's

(01:14:00):
dalled because reality hits in after Joy, right, like, oh wait,
hold on a second, my life's not any better. So
then you word salad it and also avoid, So when
you have a chance, throw the word salad out there
if you have to, but then avoid, avoid, avoid, Then

(01:14:23):
you get to desperation time. That's it. I don't know
what else there is to say, desperation time, and maybe
she's thinking she's gonna have a Truman like moment. I
tweeted out something last night that wasn't mine, by the way,
it was New York Times, but I changed the words

(01:14:46):
and it worked for Truman. Will it work for her?
What do you mean? Nineteen forty eight October twenty six,
that was the year. This is the headlines New York Time.
President lichens Uwei to Hitler as a fascist tool, says
when bigots profiteers get control of country, they select frontman

(01:15:07):
to rule dictatorships. Stressed, Truman tells Chicago audience a Republican
victory will threaten US liberty. Truman says, GOP perils US liberty.
Good God, that sounds like what they're doing now, because
you know he's a Nancy.

Speaker 5 (01:15:28):
Do you think Donald Trump is a fascist?

Speaker 2 (01:15:30):
Yes?

Speaker 20 (01:15:30):
I do.

Speaker 2 (01:15:43):
Rica that songs called Erica, by the way, but you
probably see it all over the internet. It's like, every
time you call him a fascist, I'm playing that damn song.
So that's where they're going now, you know what. The
other telling thing is how these campaigns are changing, and hey,

(01:16:03):
we got twelve days left. They could flip around. You
don't know. There's a story being shopped out there that
apparently would destroy Donald Trump in a heartbeat. All the
mag of people would leave him in a second. So
some people are saying, but it's also being shopped around
and a lot of people like, I want no part
of that. Added not real. There's also a story being

(01:16:27):
shopped out there about Kamala Harris, and the people say
the same thing, I want no part of that. That's
not real. So be prepared for what's coming. Be prepared
because it's coming.

Speaker 19 (01:16:41):
In.

Speaker 2 (01:16:41):
Momentum right now is on the side of the Donald.
There's no doubt about That doesn't mean that he's going
to win. And maybe there's an undercounting of the disdain
that people have for Donald Trump. Maybe all this early
voting are people that were going to vote on the
day of have done it early and because of that

(01:17:05):
there won't be that big oof possible. Or maybe momentum
is really really on the side of Trump and desperation
is sinking in. I also said something yesterday and several
people say, you know what, I never thought of it
like that, but sometimes you're looking at it feels this way.
I tweeted it out, you know it's And my mom

(01:17:32):
used to say this like to my little brothers and sisters,
not to my brother Tristan and I, but you know,
to the other ones because they would play sports sporadically
and they like it, but they not really want to
do anything about it. My mom would say, you know,
I can't want it for you. And I feel like

(01:17:55):
the Democrats and at times the media want it more
for her than she does, If that makes sense. Now,
I know what the media really wants. We're going to
get into a deep tomorrow. But I feel like, you know,

(01:18:16):
the politician side of it, they want it more for
her than she does. Could you ever vote for no?
I couldn't based on a lot of things. Immigration number one,
no chance your immigration. You have failed you This administration
failed failed, failed failed failed f f f f f
FFF failed. Also court packing. That to me, is that

(01:18:51):
that's what you want to do. I'm going to pack
the courts now.

Speaker 8 (01:18:54):
Would you be in favor of expanding the court to
say twelve, so each justice has only one circlet court
other than Chief Justice, to assist in making judgments more balance.

Speaker 3 (01:19:04):
Well, there is no question that the American people increasingly
are losing confidence in the Supreme Court, and in large
part because of the behavior of certain members of that court,
and because of certain rulings, including the Dobbs decision and
taking away a precedent that had been in place for
fifty years protecting a woman's right to make decisions about
our own body. So I do believe that there should

(01:19:26):
be some kind of reform of the court, and we
can study what that actually looks like.

Speaker 2 (01:19:31):
Okay, let's go over this rather quickly. You didn't like
some of the things and rulings that were there, so
you want to change the rules. When it was a
left leaning court for decades, you didn't care. There was
none of that talk. Okay. I just want to make that.
I want to get that out there. So you didn't

(01:19:52):
and the whole like the court is, Oh, it's all
evil and bag rogue. We've talked about it. We've gone
over the numbers virtually the same. It's not an evil court.
But you didn't like some of the rulings. Okay, Okay, Okay,
there we go. Okay, right there, there you go. There
you go. Okay, So how are you gonna do this?

Speaker 5 (01:20:11):
Let me ask you. You've talked about codifying Roe v. Wade.

Speaker 4 (01:20:14):
That would rob us require sixty votes in the Senate
a majority of the House. We don't have that yet.
If that's not possible to codify it in the House.

Speaker 5 (01:20:23):
What do you do?

Speaker 6 (01:20:24):
And we need to take a look at the filibuster
to be honest with you.

Speaker 2 (01:20:27):
All Right, there you go, and that's something that both
her and Chuck Schumer push for. So you want to
get rid of the filibuster again, one of the reasons
I would never vote for abortion on demand till the
baby's born, which a vast majority of Americans want no
part of. You're thinking, hey, maybe we should rid of

(01:20:49):
the filibuster because that'll solve all of it. And only
we're going to be in charge. So if they try
to do it, if they take charge, we'll try to
figure it out, and we'll throw a fit. We'll take
away the voice of the minority and a chance to
slow things down without being overrun. No, it's okay, we'll
just figure out a way to get it on through.
Do whatever we need to do. Okay, if Trump tried

(01:21:12):
to get rid of the filibuster, I throw a freaking fit.
But let's not forget Harry Reid did the nuclear option,
and the minute he did, Chuck Schumer, what did he say,
we may rude the day and you have Harry Reid

(01:21:32):
did that. It was a Democrat. It's also big into
the UFOs. So I give Harry a little bit of
a pass. And he also lost a fight to a
workout batch if you remember that. Uh, those are some
of the reasons. Those are mass amnesty, that's what they're trying.
They would love it. I mean, these are the things

(01:21:54):
that they're pushing for. Sorry, I can't buy into that.
So it was the same reason that you know when
Trump was running against Biden and on that debate stage
that night he said, within the first hundred days, I'm
going to send a bill down that will start a
pathway to citizenship for the eleven million people that are

(01:22:16):
here and undocumented. I said, you lost my vote, and
instead what did he do? He increased it And now
we're at god knows what eleven million in my ass
three two, three, five, three, twenty four to twenty three. Atch,
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Speaker 1 (01:23:31):
Shoe Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (01:23:44):
Now it's time to find out what's trending. What's trending?

Speaker 44 (01:23:48):
Sign James Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Sir.

Speaker 6 (01:24:08):
What trumping.

Speaker 5 (01:24:12):
That's fine.

Speaker 2 (01:24:13):
I was tending to on the old intewebs will start
with giggle the gg DeAndre Hopkins looks like he's leaving
the Titans at heading to the Chiefs. The rich, get richer,
baby girl. That's nae. Nicole Kidman did a movie your
series Warriors, Trailblazers, Sons, Clippers into it Arena. We're gonna
talk about that a little bit. Bucks seventy six ers.

(01:24:36):
See the NBA started last night. Ron Ellie passed away.
He was one of the original Tarzans North Korean troops
not the name of a band, but North Korean troops
actually in Russia, three thousand of them. Yesterday it was

(01:24:56):
fifteen hundred.

Speaker 5 (01:25:00):
Rowing I love.

Speaker 2 (01:25:02):
One of the things trending is American Airlines boarding lice
or gate lice. Those are the people we talked about
the other day who hang around the entrance to go
down the tunnel to get on the plane even though
they're in you know, they're like, okay, we're now boarding.
You know, seats fifty seven through ninety in there at

(01:25:26):
one hundred and twenty two, you know what I mean.
It's it's ridiculous the fact that they're on there is
gate Lice is hilarious character. AI talked a little bit
about that earlier. Young kid falls in love with AI
character and then apparently the AI character told him to

(01:25:49):
go home and he killed himself. It's a horrible story.
You can blame it, but I think there was a
lot more going on there. I'm just saying Pedvern, Twitter,
Harden basketball player, Clippers Into It Arena all trending, Dana
Bash Anderson, Cooper van Jones, all trending in the magical

(01:26:19):
world of Twitter. And finally everybody got who boeing McDonald's food, Hurricane,
Christie Barack Obama, Iran Prince Harry Roadblocks, Roadblocks, Liam Payne, Russia, Ukraine,
Golden State Warriors. Those are things trending right now on
the magical world of the interwebs. That Into It Arena

(01:26:43):
if you haven't seen it. So the Clippers no longer
share an arena now with the Lakers, and they have
their new arena. It's called the Into It Arena. So
let me tell you something about the arena. Every seat
has a charging stack for your phone. I mean this,
this arena is otherworldly, the incredible three sixty You know,

(01:27:11):
you know how everybody's like, oh, let's go to the
big screen. It is around the entire arena. It is incredible.
No matter what side you're sitting on, you see it.
They have the players stats, it is interactive. It is nuts.
There are almost twelve hundred toilets in the arena, three
times more than any other arena. Oh it gets better

(01:27:34):
than that, kids. The concessions, all the concession stands are
the exact same, cut down lines and thought process. You go,
your order, you leave. It's not like you go somewhere
new and you're like, oh no, no, what's on this one. Nope,
it's all the same. It's incredible. Then maybe the coolest
thing of all, it's called the wall. So if you

(01:27:57):
go to any arena in the modern world today, what
do they have. It's all about the luxury suites, right,
the luxury suites. The luxury suites, the luxury suites. So
that separates the you know, you have the the lower
you know, like bowl or level, and then you've got like,
you know, one, two, three levels of luxury suites, and
you got the oper upper, upper. Well, they decided in

(01:28:17):
one area of the arena. After going to they traveled
all over the world by the way to see, hey,
you know what's uh, you know what's some of the
cool places. So they went over one hundred venues all
over the globe and one of the things they said
is we want to have a home court advantage like
no other. So an area behind the one of the

(01:28:41):
baskets is called the wall, and it is uninterrupted. It's
just from from the floor all the way up to
the top of the ceiling. It's just a straight row
of seats. Here's the thing. Can't wear other teams gear there,
and you can't root for the other team. Their goal
is to build a European soccer style wall of fans,

(01:29:07):
which is incredible. Seats are heated, by the way. They
do have USB ports and are you ready for this
massage settings. You could also answer trivia questions to win
prizes during TV timeouts. They spent billions of dollars not
just on the arena, but to improve traffic on the outside.
This arena is everything and then some in today's modern world.

(01:29:31):
It makes even people go whoa like I have been
to a lot of great arenas and I will tell
you this of it. A couple of friends who have
been to pretty much every arena you can think of,
and they got to do a tour a couple of
weeks ago here to check it out, and they said,

(01:29:52):
it makes the Staple Center look sad, and the Staple
Center is arguably the best built arena around. That's how
awesome this is. It's incredible. Three two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three At Chad Benson Show, it's
your Twitter, your Instagram, all the other things. A lot
of stuff to get to. Obviously, we're twelve days away
from the election. We got more on that as well,

(01:30:13):
and we're counting down to you know, thirteenth Scariest Movies
Today is a movie icon. But you only have to
say his name to realize, Oh, I know exactly who
you're talking about. That is number six today on your
movie countdown. We'll be talking about that in a little bit
as well. If you're missing the show, shame of the podcast,
it is the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:30:44):
Son, Chad Benson Show, the Chat Benson Show.

Speaker 42 (01:31:08):
So my question is concerning groceries. Grocery prices have gone
up quite a bit in the last four years. Some
people blame former President Trump, some blame President Biden. Who
would you say is correct, and what would you do
to bring prices down for Americans?

Speaker 3 (01:31:20):
You're absolutely right, you know what, I know what I
think most Americans don't it.

Speaker 6 (01:31:23):
Price of grocery is still too high.

Speaker 3 (01:31:25):
Part of my background and how I come to it
is probably a new approach. Part of my plan is
to create a new approach that is the first time
that we will have a national ban on price gouging.
It includes what we need is really a new approach
that I bring to the issue of affordable housing, including
for example, rent, and we need a new approach that
includes working with the private sector to cut through the

(01:31:47):
red tape, working with home builders.

Speaker 2 (01:31:49):
Yeah, so there's that. How would you fix groceries cheaper rent?
What price gouging? Here's a question I asked somebody the
other day who is a Democratic strategist. I'm trying to
get him on the show for next week. Been very
very busy, and he was very honest. I said, Okay,
price couching, that's fine. I mean, if that's what if
that's what you think is going to help, And he

(01:32:11):
kind of laughed because he knows this BS. And I said,
have you guys addressed the question of what happens is
when say, I don't know, manufacturers and suppliers to these stores,
their costs go up, and then the cost to the
stores go up, so their cost the manufacturers, suppliers costs

(01:32:34):
are going up, whether they're importing certain things, and then
it's being built here, whatever it is, growing stuff, it's
more expensive to get all the stuff. And how does
that look at these stores when it comes to groceries
and things of that nature. I said, are you going
to address that or is it only if if eggs
are eight bucks for a dozen instead of four bucks
or two bucks or whatever, that you're going to go? Well?

(01:32:57):
And he goes, I we haven't thought that far. Listen, Okay,
I'm just curious, right, I mean, I think it's an
are we only price gouging investigating groceries so we're going
to do it for everything. I'm just I'm trying to
sort it all out. I think it's a fair question.
And remember today, I want you to do this. I'm
gonna do it later because then the rest of the

(01:33:18):
night last night it was all about Trump being a fascist.
Go to the store today or somewhere and when they
ask you, hey, it's twenty two to ninety three. Just
go Donald Trump's a fascist. But do it in your
hand and then hand it to them and see see
if they'll take it. I don't think they will. She
was asked about Palestine last night, how'd you do?

Speaker 3 (01:33:36):
My question is, as president, what would you do to
ensure not another Palestinian dies due to bombs being funded
by US tax dollars. Far too many innocent Palestinian civilians
have been killed.

Speaker 6 (01:33:47):
It's unconscionable.

Speaker 3 (01:33:48):
We are now at a place where, with Sinmar's death,
I do believe we have an opportunity to end this war,
bring the hostages home, and work toward a two state
solution where Israel and the Palestinians an equal measure, have security,
where the Palestinian people have dignity, self determination, and the

(01:34:10):
safety that they still rightly deserve.

Speaker 2 (01:34:13):
Ready to cut it off because it rambled And if
you don't believe me, David Axelrod.

Speaker 30 (01:34:16):
When she doesn't want to answer a question, her habit
is to kind of go to a word salad city,
and she did that on a couple of answers. One
was on Israel. Anderson asked a direct question, would you
be stronger in Israel? Than Trump, And there was a
seven minute answer, but none of it related to the
question he was asking.

Speaker 2 (01:34:36):
That's kind of what you're going to get. And look,
she's in a very tough position because the reality air
Americans don't trust her or this administration. They don't They
feel like Trump's a horrible person. Blah blah blah blah blah. Yeah,
but he wants peace because he knows war's not good
for business unless you're part of the war machine. So

(01:34:56):
what's he going to do. Well, he's probably going to
make a big effort to get it done. And if
that happens, it'll save lives. They're looking at this and saying, hey,
you don't seem to like you want to get anything done.
And the top of that, it's paralysis by analysis, which
is a very real thing with a lot of these people,
like the Blincolns and Biden and Obama. They thought they

(01:35:19):
could talk their way into a situation where you know,
oh wow, they all agreed on stuff, and it just
doesn't work that way, you know that. And so look,
I get she's in a tough situation because we played
some stuff the other day from Americans who are not
thrilled if you look at the latest polls, it's like
a dead heat. It is a dead heat between her

(01:35:40):
and Trump. And in Michigan in particular, Deerborn a pretty
big place, a place that she would need to help
carry Michigan. She may not win. That she may not
win that. Speaking of Palestine and what is going on
over there, Secretary of State Anthony B.

Speaker 19 (01:35:57):
Lincoln, it is imperative that we continue to address the
humanitarian crisis in Gaza, the extraordinary challenges that the children,
the women, the men of Gaza are encountering every single day,
and that's all the more urgent with winter approaching.

Speaker 2 (01:36:11):
Agreed, Agreed. But it is a simple deal. Lay down
your arms and that'll be that. I mean, I don't
know how much easier that could be. Lay down your
arms and give up the fight, join the modern world
and prosper.

Speaker 19 (01:36:28):
It's also essential, even as we're working on that effort,
that we continue to develop a plan for what follows,
so that Israel can withdraw from Gaza, so that Hamas
cannot reconstitute, and so that the Palestinian people can rebuild
their lives and rebuild their futures under Palestinian leadership.

Speaker 2 (01:36:51):
I think at least in the near future that ship
might have sailed because they're zero trust and I don't
blame them. Give back the hostages, lay down your arms,
show that good faith, and again move forward to the
modern world. Move forward to that. While that's all being said.

Speaker 19 (01:37:15):
We're announcing an additional one hundred and thirty five million
dollars in humanitarian assistance, water, sanitation, maternal health for Palestines
and Gaza in the West Bank as well as in
the region.

Speaker 2 (01:37:30):
So we're supplying money, food, water, humanitarian efforts and at
the same time we're supplying the bombs. Now, not all
of them are meant for Hamas or Hesbellah, some of
them may be meant for Iran.

Speaker 19 (01:37:48):
We're also continue to work with our partners in the
region to make very clear to Iran that further attacks
against israel will have deeply negative consequences for Iran's interests.

Speaker 2 (01:38:00):
Yeah, I'm sure they're worried about it. At this point
in time, they're probably thinking, well, why didn't they, Why
didn't Russia invite us over They took the North Koreans.
You guys are not paying attention. There's now three thousand
North Koreans boots on the ground in Ukraine which smells
like desperation. Man, this election can't get here fast enough

(01:38:20):
for the pooter chedd Are you saying that the Putin
is going to try to influence our election to get Trump?
Maybe it's possible. I think he sees Trump as his
only way out in maybe getting this thing, you know,
shut down, and having him leave with his head held high,
feeling like he is the conquering hero coming home on

(01:38:43):
the same you know, Togin. I could say, there's no
doubt Iran and North Korea and China would love another
four years what they have right now. So there we
go and influencing elections for everybody freaks out. We do
it too. Just just let you guys know. So funny

(01:39:07):
when when you talk about the fact that we do it,
like people say, I can't believe Rush you would do that.
They love Trump, like go China does it. They want
more of Kamala, more of Biden, more of that kind
of ilk. Right, North Korea does it. How we've done
it to our friends and they've done it to us.
So there you go. We all do it, kids, We

(01:39:30):
all do it. Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four,
twenty three at Chat Benson Shows your Twitter and out
of this crap. Let's move on to something real. We're
gonna be doing something really cool here in a minute.
Counting down number six today an icon probably maybe the
horror Icon making an appearance. Number six scarious movies of
all time on the Chat Benson Show. All right, kids,

(01:39:51):
full word capital. Talk to my buddy over there. Let
you call them. Talk about what's going on in the world,
the chaos, the craziness. Are you prepared for what may
be coming? What is that we don't know? Uncertainty in
the market. What's your retirement looking like? You probably like
I have no idea? Don't be that person. Call today,
get a second opinion, a risk review, they call it.

(01:40:13):
Call eight sixty six seven seven nine risk eight sixty
six seven seven nine risks. Talk to Zach Abrahm, chief
investment officer at Bullick. Talk to him about all the
things that are going on in the market. But I'm
most importantly talk about, Hey, here's my portfolio. This is
what I want to do with my retirement. Where do
you think I need to do stuff? You give me
your Opinion's nothing wrong with the second opinion. Everybody should

(01:40:35):
get one in all aspects of life. This is your retirement.
You get one of these make it count. Call eight
six six seven seven nine Risks Today for your free
risk review eight six six seven seven nine Risk or
go to No U Risk Radio, dot Com, Investment Advisor,
Reservice Officer's Truck Financial LLC and sec Register Investment Advisor.
The opinions expressing this program are for general informational purpose
only and are not intended to provide specific advice or

(01:40:55):
recommendations for any individual or specific security. Any reference to
performance and security so thought to be materially accurate and
actual performance may different investments involved. Risk you know not
guarantee past performance is not guarantee future Resultstruck two four
to three zero eight, number six on The Scary Movie
Countdown Straight Ahead, Chad Benson.

Speaker 20 (01:41:09):
Shoe hashtag me too, hashtag immigration reforms, hashtag help, I'm
trapped in a hashtag factory and I can't get out.

Speaker 1 (01:41:28):
The chat Benson shows is that portion.

Speaker 2 (01:41:30):
Of the program where we sit back, relax and get
a little scared. We have been counting down the top
thirteen scariest movies. People say, how do you calculate this?
Some of it is terrifies me. Some of it is
what terrified me as a kid and also had a
cultural impact on us as a society. And we're now

(01:41:55):
getting to the point where these movies had a big
impact on society. Oh boy, did they? Shall we find
out what number six is today and what kind of
impact it actually had on society.

Speaker 21 (01:42:11):
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.

Speaker 24 (01:42:24):
You've been waiting for the.

Speaker 21 (01:42:27):
Thirteen scariest movies of all time? Which movie will take
the top spot?

Speaker 22 (01:42:36):
How about a fish tail so big because the jaws
open wide?

Speaker 21 (01:42:54):
Or the story of a young innocent girl battling evil.

Speaker 29 (01:42:59):
With some.

Speaker 23 (01:43:01):
Well, then let's introduce ourselves. I'm Demon Karas and I'm
that devil. Now kindly undo the tratch. Where's Reagan in
here with us?

Speaker 24 (01:43:12):
Or the Fright of a madman with a chainsaw?

Speaker 2 (01:43:16):
So I'll hear some stop stop.

Speaker 24 (01:43:24):
You'll have to listen to find out. Are you ready?

Speaker 21 (01:43:30):
Now it's time the thirteen Scariest movies of all time?

Speaker 2 (01:43:36):
Number six, Oh, number six today, Number six today? Pretty
damn amazing Number six Today is a movie that became
a franchise, but the first movie well didn't cost a
lot to make. Made us start thinking in different ways
about things like pre marital sex and smoking the sticky

(01:43:57):
icky while kids are swimming in the lake. M and
it definitely made us think, I'm not going anywhere in
the woods with you. On Friday the thirteenth, Hello, who
is that? Oh?

Speaker 29 (01:44:12):
Hi? You're doing on this mis.

Speaker 1 (01:44:18):
We weren't doing anything, We were just messing.

Speaker 26 (01:44:19):
It must be my imagination.

Speaker 29 (01:44:47):
Can I help you? Hello?

Speaker 2 (01:45:12):
Friday the thirteenth.

Speaker 5 (01:45:16):
You may only see it once, but that will be enough.
Friday the thirteenth.

Speaker 2 (01:45:36):
The music, the mask, We'll get to that in a minute.
But the legacy, it really cemented the slasher film genre.
Leather Face who Will make an Appearance wasn't really a
slasher kind of situation. This was you only have to

(01:45:57):
say the name Jason. Everybody goes, oh, I know you're
talking about. There's been a lot of famous Jason's argonauts,
pretty famous. I mean, we can go on and on
in the movie world. But when you say Jason, we
all know who you're talking about. It really played into
all kinds of things about society, young kids, parting, pre

(01:46:17):
marital sex, the virgin, the final girl experience. As they
talk about the influence on the genre is profound. Yes,
the first movie was terrifying and the reality is not
a spoiler here because if you haven't seen the movie Shame,
Jason only makes a small appearance in the first movie.
The hockey mask doesn't come to the third movie. But

(01:46:40):
you only have to say the name Jason, and the
image that comes to mind is simple. Giant dude, hockey mask,
machete from supernatural elements to influence us own youth culture,
the gore, the special effects you have, but it built
a franchise. By the way, Jason is number one in

(01:47:02):
kills on screen and he is an icon the formula
for which all other slasher movies have been built. It
is something that is amazing. He wasn't the first, but
as far as formula goes, he may be the one,

(01:47:26):
and the franchise itself of which everything is built upon.
By the way, some interesting stuff maybe you didn't know
about the film. Johnny Depp started a Nightmare on Elm Street.
Kevin Bacon started the first Friday at Thirteenth took him
two hours for them to film get the makeup and

(01:47:50):
everything ready for his kill scene that only took two
seconds when it was on film. There have been five
Friday thirteenth release dates that were on actual Friday to thirteenth.
Lou Reid happened to be in and around the camp
during the time filming the first movie. He decided he

(01:48:12):
would entertain the all of the people that were making
the movie by doing an impromptued concert throughout the days
while they were there. Camp Crystal Lake, by the way,
is called Camp No b Bo Scow and yes, it
is a boy Scout camp and it is fully operational.
Here's the thing. They make a ton of their money
to keep everything going every year because they have a
gift shop for Friday to thirteenth, Get.

Speaker 24 (01:48:35):
Out of town.

Speaker 2 (01:48:36):
The original film was being advertised before it had any funding,
which is crazy in today's world. Trust me, I'm telling
you guys, how looney that is. It is nuts. His
name originally was not going to be Jason. It was
going to be Josh, but everybody thought nobody's afraid of Josh.

(01:48:57):
I don't think anybody is Friday to thirteenth number six
in today's scary movie countdown three, two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three At Chad Benson Show. Is
your Twitter tweet at a texta program. It's always good
to have a little levity and take our minds off
of the horror that is the election season for actual
horror movies. You guys, have a blessed rest of your day.

(01:49:17):
We'll do it again. I see you Friday, not the thirteenth,
but it is Friday night, night Jack.

Speaker 1 (01:49:25):
This is the Chad Benson Show.
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