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June 4, 2025 109 mins
Elon Musk speaking out against Trump's Big Beautiful Bill. China and agroterrorism. Rubio Says He Has Revoked 300 or More Visas in Trump’s Deportation Push. Woke Wednesday. Hegseth orders Navy to rename ship honoring gay rights activist Harvey Milk. 
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:11):
The Chat Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
An abomination like the Snowman.

Speaker 3 (00:17):
Oh that was an abominable snowman. Sorry, still not good.
That's what Elon calls the big beautiful one, big beautiful abomination.
It's bloated. I don't know if it's big. Of course,
everybody's got the opportunity to come out.

Speaker 2 (00:37):
Oh he's missing the point. He just doesn't get it.

Speaker 3 (00:40):
He gets none of the stuff right, Like nothing here
he gets this is all this is. It's a mess.
I don't care what anybody says. It's a mess. It
is fat, it is nasty. And here's the thing. I'm
going through it as much as I possibly can. And

(01:00):
as I look and I'm like, okay, well we're going
to do all this great stuff. Really, what are you
gonna do? We're cutting like you've never even seen before.

Speaker 4 (01:08):
We're also achieving a top light on this is two
very important things. We're making permanent a massive tax cut,
and we are making a massive reduction in spending one
point six trillion dollars. Is the calculation?

Speaker 3 (01:22):
Is it? Well, when you go and you say you're
how do you define a cut? Because you're asking for
a giant, huge debt ceiling raise, of to the tune

(01:43):
of about five trillion. So, but it's the greatest. The
White House serves that the bill achieves over one point
six trillion and mandatory spending cuts in truth at best
six hundred over a decade. But that doesn't include the
fact that you're spending so much money on defense. We are, yes, yes, yes,

(02:12):
you are. The big beautiful bill is a big beautiful
and there's a bunch of other crap in there that
I want no part of. Now, what does it look
like when all is said and done. I'm not one
of these people that run around like the Democrats.

Speaker 2 (02:33):
They're stealing everything from everybody. Nobody's going to ever I
have anything ever again.

Speaker 3 (02:37):
It's all gone.

Speaker 2 (02:39):
Chat, it's all going. I took it away. Snap's gone forever.
Everything's gone.

Speaker 3 (02:44):
There's just nothing. They're going to force people to go
and work all day, right, and just that's it.

Speaker 2 (02:53):
I know, I don't if it's what.

Speaker 3 (02:55):
They say it is when it comes to the one
big beautiful Bill and the work requirements, and I'm wrong
with that.

Speaker 5 (03:02):
We needed to find out what that means by people
quote unquote losing their coverage from Medicaid. The primary piece
of this change is we're putting a requirement on able
bodied individual adults with no children to actually work.

Speaker 2 (03:16):
Who has the problem with that is junk can a chat.

Speaker 3 (03:22):
Snap. It's okay, but I don't know what it's gonna
look like when the set it's finally done. What I
do know is Elon's not happy about it. But I
wasn't happy about it long before this, and a lot
of people weren't happy because it does nothing to reduce

(03:45):
anything deficity, It does nothing to do anything other than
it's a giant mess. And it was funny. I was
watching I was flipping around and I saw this guy
talking about I think he was on Fox Business and
he says, you know this is you know, they've got
to get this pass or this will hurt the Republicans.

(04:05):
That's a dumb thing to say, Well, yeah, Chip, and
I want the Republicans to win.

Speaker 2 (04:10):
No, this is not about you. This is about America.

Speaker 3 (04:17):
This is not about what we better do this or
else this could hurt the Republicans. No, how about if
this is crap, this is going to hurt America. But
you've got to remember they're trying to do everything they
can to run out the clock, meaning they don't want
to be the last one holding the bag of turds
right when the bell strikes midnight. So get everything through

(04:40):
you possibly can, because when this stuff finally gets to
the point where you're holding that bag, they'll all be gone.
So it won't matter. They'll have moved on if you will,
and I'm not talking about death. They'll be retired, They'll
have moved on to something else. They won't be in
a position whell they'll pay the price for you know

(05:02):
who will all of us? Oh three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show,
is your extra inst to all the other things?

Speaker 6 (05:10):
Uh?

Speaker 3 (05:11):
Sir, what are you saying, Donald Trump? Don't trust China? China?
I agree one hundred percent. I've been saying that, don't
trust China, and I'm talking about the CCP, the the
Communist Party.

Speaker 2 (05:22):
If you haven't heard agro terrorism.

Speaker 7 (05:26):
The US attorney in Michigan is calling this the gravest
national security concern. You have a Chinese national, a woman
who's getting her post doctoral fellowship at the University of Michigan.
Her name is Young King Jeon. This is the indictment
that you see right here. Her boyfriend comes to visit
lands into Detroit NonStop flight from Shanghai. They think there's

(05:50):
something up with him. Customs and Border Patrol. They start
searching him. He says he doesn't have anything. They ask
him multiple times, and in his backpack they find a
killer fungus, something known as a agro terrorism terrorism weapon,
something capable of taking out billions of dollars in livestock

(06:10):
and crops and making people very very sick.

Speaker 3 (06:13):
What, yes, not really being talked about the way it
should be. This is why you don't trust China. They
own tons of farmland. We're gonna talk about that a
little bit. They own all kinds of crap. We're allowing
our enemy to come here and to essentially run hog

(06:34):
wild through our institutions to own property, et cetera, et cetera.
What are we doing, Well, it's our kindness. We don't
have to be seen as racist. This has nothing to
do with race. This has all to do with our way,
their way capitalism, freedom versus communism and oppression. And so

(06:58):
they readily admit, yeah, you know what, I did bring
this stuff over for her.

Speaker 7 (07:03):
He later admits that he was taking this fungus to
his girlfriend. To his Chinese girlfriend, who is doing her
post doctoral fellowship at the University of Michigan. The Feds
start digging through their cell phones all of the apps
that they have, the Chinese apps that they've been using
to communicate, where it's all crystal clear. They had planned

(07:24):
this out, that he was going to bring the fungus
from China into Detroit and then to the University of Michigan.
They figured it all out, the Feds, thankfully. They are
now charged with a number of things, conspiracies, smuggling, making
false statements, also visa fraud because the boyfriend was coming
in on a tourism visa.

Speaker 3 (07:44):
Yeah, indeed, don't trust China. I am not going to
This could have destroyed crops, potentially hurt tens of millions
of people. Oh but there's more there is. Well.

Speaker 7 (07:59):
I think it's interesting this happened in July of last
year and the charges just came.

Speaker 3 (08:04):
Now, why it took so long that it take.

Speaker 7 (08:06):
The Trump administration to come in and push these charges,
we don't know. But it took almost a year. And
you made a good point about her not just being
a post doctoral fellow. I was going through the indictment.
Leland she received money from the CCP. She received research
money from the CCP. She had to sign off on
a form saying that she adhered to the four basic

(08:28):
principles of the Communist Party of China, had to express
love for the motherland, not smear the motherland. This is
the woman who was now working at the University of Michigan.

Speaker 3 (08:40):
Don't trust China. I'm not going to. That's why when
I hear that Friday G and Trump are going to
get together and talk, right, everybody calls you, you taco.
Trump always chickens out, well, what are we doing the
farmland they owned?

Speaker 2 (08:58):
We not just see what took place.

Speaker 3 (09:02):
In Russia?

Speaker 2 (09:05):
Do we not just see that?

Speaker 3 (09:06):
Do we not see the fact that they are not
interested in being our friends. They want our stuff, They
want to be able to control the world. They want
to build an image. And while the media sits here
and there's a lot of things a bitch about Trump
and the way he acts the times, the reality is
they're not our friends. And as bad as you think

(09:27):
Trump is, the alternative is worse. The alternative is what
you see in China, and you champion them all over
the interwebs, and oh they're getting to win over us
when it comes to trade and this, that and the other. No, no, no.
And if you think, well, Trump's gonna go and he's

(09:48):
gonna do mean things and he's gonna take away our
right to say anything if we're in the media and whatnot.
You know, Scott Pelley, all these freaking clowns running around
and in.

Speaker 2 (09:58):
Reality, don't trust China. I know, sir, I won't.

Speaker 3 (10:02):
I won't.

Speaker 2 (10:03):
Indeed, Meanwhile, we moved from that chaos too.

Speaker 3 (10:07):
The family of the flame thrower, ass Hat McGhee, that's
what I call him, the guy in Colorado. Terrorists, they're here.
He waited till his daughter graduated high school. Well well, well,
Marco Rubio did what.

Speaker 8 (10:26):
He put out his statement a short time ago, saying,
in light of the horrific attack, all terrorists, they're family members,
terrorist sympathizers here on a visa. We will find you,
revoke your visa and deport you under the Trump administration
that he's saying there. So it would seem that the
family members may have been on a visa.

Speaker 3 (10:45):
We don't know.

Speaker 8 (10:46):
Mohammed Suliman his visa had expired, he was on a
work permit. He had been in Colorado Springs for a
couple of years. Born in Egypt, then lived in Kuwait
for seventeen years, then came to Colorado. Living in Colorado
right now now illegally.

Speaker 3 (11:02):
Get him out, Go get him out, or at least
well them about get him out. I mean, he's not
going anywhere. If kids dad got his dream, he gets
to stay in the United States of America. The bad news,
it's six hundred and thirty five years behind bars.

Speaker 2 (11:22):
Just crazy again.

Speaker 3 (11:24):
Our kindness and lack of having some colon as to
do the things we needed to do is biting us
in the ass.

Speaker 2 (11:32):
Do you see a pattern here?

Speaker 3 (11:33):
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Coming up a lot of stuff to get to today
on this Wednesday. Yes, some woke wackiness. It's Pride Month.
If you miss any the show, grab the podcast. It

(12:57):
is the Chad Benson Show. Chad Benson. Does anybody here
know who Harvey Milk is? He did not invent Milk. Yes, yes,

(13:19):
Sean Penn did pla him in a movie, first openly
gay non incumbent to win an election obviously San Francisco.
And he's a gay con gay icon. And he has
his name on a ship. Is it a gay cruise ship?

Speaker 2 (13:38):
It is not.

Speaker 3 (13:39):
It is a military vessel. I think you know what
kind of military vessel it is. But not so fast.

Speaker 9 (13:44):
According to a newly released memo, Secretary Hegseth is demanding
the Navy remove Milk's name from the ship to better
reflect the Trump administration's priorities. The timing during Gay Pride Month,
drawing criticism former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi calling it a shameful,
vindictive erasure of those who fought to break down barriers.
The move is part of a larger effort by the
Trump administration to re establish what it calls the warrior

(14:07):
culture of the military.

Speaker 3 (14:10):
It is a oil ship. Military Sealift Command operates the
John Lewis class of underway replenishment oilers. Really, this is
a priority, as a priority, you know our military.

Speaker 2 (14:32):
We got a gay.

Speaker 3 (14:32):
Guy's name on it. Well, good, shouldn't that piss everybody off?
I mean honestly, shouldn't that piss people off? Look at them,
They're gonna kick her ass with a gay guy ship.
Oh my god. By the way, Harvey Milk was in

(14:55):
the Navy during the Kreen War. He was part of
the You would a Kiddiwake I think it was called.
It was a submarine rescue ship. He held the rank
of lieutenant junior grade. He was forced to resign and
accept at other than honorable discharge rather than face court
martial for being gay. This is performative. So you wait

(15:17):
till Pride to do this. And I don't care what
you call the ships. This is the performative stuff that
I just sit there and I shake my head. Is
it Pride Month? We got any ships named after gay people?

Speaker 2 (15:33):
We do.

Speaker 3 (15:36):
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty three
at Chad Benson's show. It's your ex, your Insta, YouTube, Facebook,
like and subscribe right here in the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (15:50):
And we know Pride Month could be absolutely ridiculous.

Speaker 3 (15:53):
We're gonna talk about that coming up in the Woke Wednesday,
in a more serious Woke Wednesday. But I'm just putting
this out there of the insanity of this is when
you decide to do it. It's just, can you guys
see the performativeness of it? Just put it out there.
Pretty funny if it was a gay cruise ship, but

(16:16):
it was a battle hardened destroyer. Here it comes. We're
gonna get you, guys. It is so like this.

Speaker 2 (16:28):
I think woke stuff is hilarious.

Speaker 3 (16:31):
I do because it's so Everything is performative in politics
now is performed nobody, nobody wants to get anything done.
Everybody gets mired in cultural battles all the while. Right
Rome is burning and we're debating the name of a
ship or equity is important, and inclusion is important, especially

(16:53):
if you go and you force it on people.

Speaker 2 (16:55):
It just it's so ridiculous.

Speaker 3 (17:00):
This is why we can't have nice things. Quite frankly,
at this point, I wonder if we even does serve
nice things. It's a good question, I know, right three two, three,
twenty four or twenty three eight Chat Benson Show. That
is your ex your Insta as well as your YouTube.
Like and subscribe there and share when you have a chance.

(17:21):
It really helps us out. We're gonna be live again tonight.
Last night we posted a video We're kind of doing
stuff to see which one gets the most bang for
the box, if that makes sense. So, if you have
a chance to go check out our latest video and
we're gonna have more up later on today as well
as well as a live tonight. This is the Chat Benson.

Speaker 10 (17:38):
Show, the Chat Benson Shoe.

Speaker 1 (18:01):
The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 3 (18:04):
It is Wednesday, so you know what that means, oh,
skilled of woke.

Speaker 11 (18:10):
This apot group is for people who are so woke
they're finding it impossible to have any fun at toll.

Speaker 3 (18:18):
It's that time of the week where we break it
down for you and get you woke. It's all right
that way too, It's all right cleat.

Speaker 12 (18:26):
It out, like, can we actually agree that women get
pregnant and not men?

Speaker 3 (18:31):
How dad?

Speaker 13 (18:31):
You white women raise the white boys who grew up
to be little misogynistic patriarchal tyrants.

Speaker 6 (18:40):
I am Kamela hair my pun understy of her, a
woman sitting at the table wearing the blue seat.

Speaker 3 (18:50):
It's time for woke Wednesday. Where do we start?

Speaker 2 (18:53):
Well, it is June, so that means it's pride month.

Speaker 3 (18:56):
Are you prideful? What?

Speaker 2 (19:00):
There's a lot of.

Speaker 3 (19:02):
Activism that has pushed companies and people into stuff where
you just sit back and go, yeah, no, this is
a bit too much.

Speaker 14 (19:13):
I am a lesbian and dyke, non binary or gender quaid.

Speaker 15 (19:17):
Why does a right share company produce videos with people
saying they are out and proud for the same reason
a defense contractor funds this float? They know doing these
things will help get your company a perfect score on
something called the Corporate Equality Index.

Speaker 16 (19:36):
This year, the CI rated forty two companies with an
incredible seven hundred and sixty seven scoring top marks.

Speaker 17 (19:44):
You celebrate Hyatt selection for the tenth consecutive year by
the Human Rights Campaign.

Speaker 15 (19:49):
The Human Rights Campaign is headed by Kelly Robinson, who's
been good at convincing companies that their customers want them
to support the HRC.

Speaker 16 (19:58):
Consumers are two times more likely to want buy from
brands that support the community.

Speaker 15 (20:02):
Supporting the community is a good thing. I certainly support
human rights.

Speaker 3 (20:08):
How does it matter? Well, yeah, Chad, you're not gonna
go like and well if I say I support the community,
what community? My community and surrounding areas? This here's the
issue with woke and I joke about this is Wednesday,
but this is a little bit more serious than normally
the crazy stuff we play because there's plenty of that.

(20:30):
Always the activists that push so much of this insanity.
This is a business. This is dollars and cents. That's
what this is. This is nothing more than that. It
is dollars and cents to say that I care about

(20:52):
equity or this, that and the other, like somehow gets
me on a magical list for people like you're a
really good person. All that should matter in life is actions.
Words are meaningless if you don't follow through. They may
make you feel good in the moment, but in reality,
if there's nothing there, what do you have? Empty empty

(21:12):
promises and sadness. We don't want to be sad, do we?

Speaker 18 (21:18):
They have nothing to do with actual human rights. They're
in LGBTQ plus efficacy organization that pushes topics about transgenderism
into the workplace, and they support sex changes for kids.

Speaker 15 (21:28):
Starbreck Uses is big social media following to criticize companies
that partner with the Human Rights Campaign.

Speaker 18 (21:35):
When you see a company gets one hundred percent from
the HRC, it does great harm.

Speaker 15 (21:39):
Harm, he says, because your health plan must cover transsurgery. Yes,
I know people who've had the surgery, and they seem happier.

Speaker 18 (21:48):
If you're an adult and you make a set of
decisions I disagree with. That's your prerogative, but I don't
want to give my money to a company that is
going to turn around and use it to fund any
sex changes of any child period.

Speaker 15 (22:00):
The HRC does require awarded companies to pay for puberty
blockers for teens. Now, we can debate the age at
which you're considered competent to medically change your gender. But
I had no idea that so many companies pay for it.

Speaker 3 (22:17):
So many do, and they feel like they're forced into
doing stuff. And look, these companies, much like with Black
Lives Matter, they don't want to get involved in this crap.
You know what they want to do. They want to
sell their chots, keys, they want to sell their shoes,
their shirts, their ride share program. That's what they want.
They want to feel good that then get back in
the community. What they don't want to be known for, though,

(22:38):
is all they care about is politics and screw the
business that. And they're being held hostage. They are, and
they're being forced into this crap and they fall for it,
and they're starting to get away from it because they
realize as much as they were forced into it. Guess
what happens. The pendulum swings, and then you know people like, well, no,

(23:00):
we don't want any part of this crap.

Speaker 2 (23:02):
It's not what we're looking for. No, no, no.

Speaker 15 (23:05):
Google even provides a concierge to help people transition.

Speaker 3 (23:10):
Rules, bringing on a dedicated PRANS liaison to help interpret
these benefits. Now you will watch a video about gender.

Speaker 15 (23:17):
To further raise their human rights campaign scores. Companies show
employees videos like this to educate them about gender identity.

Speaker 19 (23:26):
It's a girl.

Speaker 20 (23:28):
Actually, it's more complicated than that.

Speaker 15 (23:30):
Companies are also supposed to sponsor LGBT events, produce LGBT products,
and donate to LGBT groups like the Human Rights Campaign
that helps them collect they're millions of dollars.

Speaker 18 (23:45):
You got to make it very well known to the
world that you are all in on this.

Speaker 15 (23:49):
Even part of your Amtrak tax subsidy now goes to
pay for this stuff.

Speaker 21 (23:54):
Including education on personal pronouns.

Speaker 15 (23:56):
So all these companies suck up to the HRC. The
more I looked at the campaign, the less it seems
to be about human rights and more about left wing advocacy.

Speaker 3 (24:07):
Which is what it's all about.

Speaker 2 (24:11):
And it's money it's not even about the advocacy. It's money.

Speaker 3 (24:16):
It's about money. This is the latest money grab in
the woke wild world, and it's gone on for years
and it's starting to change. Thank god for that, because
it's insane. It is.

Speaker 2 (24:30):
What should matter is actions, not words.

Speaker 3 (24:35):
And these groups they don't care, by the way, groups
that are about diversity, equity, inclusion. You know what, The
last thing they want is everybody to be diversity first,
equity first, inclusion first, all of the companies to be
all the things they want them to be. You want
to know why, because then they're out of business. It's

(24:56):
not about the color of the skin or who you love.
It's about green. It's not just LGBT.

Speaker 15 (25:02):
On their homepage, you see protesters holding signs saying I
will aid in a bet abortion.

Speaker 3 (25:08):
So it's a question of what do.

Speaker 15 (25:10):
They mean by human rights?

Speaker 3 (25:12):
Yeah? Which humans? Which rights?

Speaker 18 (25:14):
Apparently if you're a small enough human you don't have rights,
and they'll actually support killing you.

Speaker 16 (25:19):
When I think about the work of the Corporate e
Quality Index, it is about trust and it's about partnership
with businesses to make workplaces as inclusive as possible for
LGBTQ plus people.

Speaker 15 (25:31):
Today, most businesses are inclusive. LGBT people are more accepted
than ever. Just twenty years ago, most Americans opposed gay
marriage and most said gay relationships were morally unacceptable. Today,
most Americans accept gay marriage and say gay relationships are moral.
Yet recently the HRC declared.

Speaker 18 (25:52):
A national state of emergency for LGBTQ plus people.

Speaker 3 (25:56):
This is a crisis right now. I think I know why.

Speaker 15 (25:58):
She says that if activists acknowledge that Americans now largely
accept LGBT people, the HRC might go out of business.

Speaker 3 (26:07):
They don't want to do that. It's about money. It's
about money, money, money, money, money, money, money, money, money, money, money.
So you have to sit through crazy hours of BS
with your DEI stuff that you've got to do any
computer for work, and you got to do all of
these things that you're pushed into, and it divides us.
It doesn't bring us together. They push us into because

(26:30):
they're all selling something. They've all got some sort of
hey take my course, here's my course. Let me show
you how to be more of this, more of that.
Because money, it it's a money grab.

Speaker 13 (26:44):
One of the aspects of the CEI is that we
are never going to reach a destination.

Speaker 15 (26:48):
Of course, now America's politics have changed.

Speaker 8 (26:51):
Major US companies Lows, Tractors supply now and others will
stop submitting data to LGBTQ lost Avagacy Group.

Speaker 3 (26:59):
The Human Rights can't now.

Speaker 15 (27:00):
Businesses can join whatever list they want, but they are
to do what's good for their business.

Speaker 18 (27:06):
At the end of the day, that's all people want
is for businesses to do their business, not to virtue
signal to us or to perpetuate a political ideology.

Speaker 15 (27:13):
We invited Human Rights Campaign's boss to rebut arguments Starbuck
makes in this video. She didn't respond. But miss Robinson,
my offer still stands. Please come here. I'll give you
time to argue your points.

Speaker 2 (27:28):
What do you bet she's not going to go on there?

Speaker 3 (27:31):
I bet one hundred percent she doesn't go on there
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ninety eight ninety eight for Birch Gold. That's the word Benson.
You text the number ninety eight ninety eight ninety eight.
Coming up a lot of stuff to get to, including
Bible influencers. What Chad Benson.

Speaker 20 (29:06):
Joe serving up talk radio medium, rare and dripping with irony.

Speaker 3 (29:21):
It's Chad Benson. The internet is an interesting place case
in points new AI Bible influencers. If you've not seen this,
I'll post the video. These are videos that are all
AI generated and what they are is if they had
cell phones back in the day. This is what it

(29:44):
would look like during the famous Bible stories like David
versus Goliath.

Speaker 22 (29:50):
Good fam your boy David here about to eat this
little stone at Goliath and see what happens.

Speaker 23 (29:56):
Okay, So I told y'all to trust the process, but
no ooo, y'all.

Speaker 3 (30:01):
Wanted to stay in Egypt stacking bricks.

Speaker 2 (30:03):
Yo, it's shadracked. This random dude just showed up.

Speaker 3 (30:06):
It's getting lit in here. I got the horses in
the back. Horse tack is attached.

Speaker 24 (30:11):
Hat is Matt Black, got the boots that's black to match.

Speaker 3 (30:14):
You know, I'm a daddy's boy.

Speaker 11 (30:16):
He's got me in this technicolor drip Brothers so jelly
right now, they're looking a little sus.

Speaker 2 (30:22):
These Philistines thought they could flex on me.

Speaker 3 (30:25):
Big mistake.

Speaker 2 (30:26):
I just took some pre workout and Finna bring the
house down.

Speaker 3 (30:30):
I'm fitting to bring the house down. So what do
you think apples? Then beat those apples? Wait what it is?
If it's hilarious, But the AI itself is awesome. I
mean it really is. It's incredible to look because you
realize none of this Israel actor wise, any of this stuff,

(30:53):
None of it is real, and it's also kind of hilarious.
That Yo, what's up? I'm about ready to go twist
off on this giliath. Meanwhile, remember the guys who escaped
from Louisiana. Two of them are still out there. Well,
one of them is taken to the interwebs.

Speaker 17 (31:14):
Yeah, this video, this story has all taken another twist
and another turn. First, there was that escape that everyone
sort of scratched their head at because they're still trying
to figure out how the men got through that hole
inside that jail. But at the same time, this video
does get some context clues in terms of maybe where
he is. Maybe they're trying to track the cell phone,
maybe they're trying to attract the account. These are all
things that they have been doing. And for the past

(31:36):
eighteen days, we've been calling our sources across four different
states to ask of what's going on with this search?
Antoine Massey looked directly into the camera. He basically said, hey,
I'm innocent, but look, let's just take a listen and
see what he says himself.

Speaker 10 (31:53):
Key's to coming over.

Speaker 3 (31:55):
The world, y'all.

Speaker 16 (31:57):
I'm not I'm.

Speaker 24 (32:02):
My nan was asked why I'm master, I'm gonna ask.

Speaker 25 (32:04):
This for help.

Speaker 13 (32:05):
I was one of the ones that.

Speaker 26 (32:06):
Was on these Paris chill.

Speaker 12 (32:09):
I'm on lead a sixteen a meter fifteen.

Speaker 3 (32:11):
Season twenty five, so please please hold me, Meek Mills,
Donald Trump, Lil Wayne, please help me.

Speaker 2 (32:25):
He's not a raper man.

Speaker 3 (32:28):
That's he took to the interwebs because you never know
what might happen. Probably has five hundred thousand followers now,
so away this goes. But that's what he thought he
should do, which is again it's fascinating that you think, okay,
well look Trump, I don't know, maybe think Trump's just
handing out pardons or something like that. It's the whole

(32:51):
thing is interesting because when finally got to the point
where he felt safe enough, he thought, okay, now I
can do a video and it was an ai it
was real.

Speaker 17 (33:06):
So you see how that has been put together at
this point, and he's begging for someone to help him
at One of the things he claims in this video
is that he's being held on a charge that should
have gone away right now. He actually is holding an
Afford David, and he's saying that, look, I've been cleared
of this crime. You can hold me on this one.
But it goes into that conversation there. Let's not forget
the reward has been raised at fifty thousand dollars in

(33:29):
connection with tips to find and capture this man. The
Orleans Parish posted on Facebook that they are aware of
the video and they hope that Massei turns himself in.
It doesn't seem like he's ready to do that yet.
As you look at the video screen next to me,
you can see all the people who have been captured
so far.

Speaker 3 (33:44):
Groves is still on the run.

Speaker 17 (33:45):
One of the things we talked to investigators about is
they believe that these two men Groves of Massy would
not get on the Internet and they would be smart
enough to sort of avoid a digital footprint. It seems
like Massi, who's escaped before, wanted to get his message
out there, and he's done that at this point. Let's
not forget the Marshall Earth Service is still out there
searching for these two men.

Speaker 3 (34:05):
He's done this before. Yes, he's escaped before. Did he
take the Internet before this? Now? I don't know what's
in the affidavit he's holding something up, but it's it's
a very interesting thing appeal to the publics even get
them on their side.

Speaker 2 (34:18):
I don't know what you know.

Speaker 3 (34:19):
He said, he's not a raper man, and I'm not
quite sure what he has or hasn't been convicted of.
I've looked at some stuff, and like anything, I don't
even know at times what you trust when it comes
to the interwebs anymore. So he thinks Meek Mills and
these guys are going to get him out. Maybe Trump
will look. I mean, Trump said he'd look at the
old Diddy thing, which has to be a troll, just

(34:42):
has to be. They just could never. Even the most
arden Trump supporters I have talked to said, I know
it's a troll, but if he did never again, and
I'm like, I get it, No way could I even
think about it if he did it. If he did it,

(35:05):
and again, it's a big if, and I do not
think for a second by the way, that these are
going to be the only charges against Diddi and that
there's not going to be more. Much like Weinstein and
everything else, there will probably be more cases coming, maybe
some on the West Coast on top of everything else.
Three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chat Benson Show is your ex your Insta, YouTube,

(35:28):
and Facebook. If you have a chance, we appreciate if
you like and subscribe, it really helps us out and
grab the podcast where available iTunes and whatnot. Right here
in the Chat Benson Show. Coming up, our number two
of the program, talk a little bit about Israel and
the conversation you can have because we don't have conversations anymore.

(35:51):
It is a situation where if you say something and
the tribe doesn't like you, you're out of the tribe,
which is ridiculous. And Israel is one of those things. Immigration, Israel.
There's a few things out there where even trying to
have a conversation about anything, just go sideways and talk

(36:11):
a little bit about that. We got some more wacky,
woke stuff. Tender has a new height filter. Ladies, this
is for you. We'll ask a question about.

Speaker 2 (36:20):
Maybe wait ooh hour.

Speaker 3 (36:22):
Of a two straight ahead Chad Benson charm.

Speaker 1 (36:24):
This is the Chad Benson Show, the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 3 (36:53):
It's the economy, stupid. Always remember that we talk about
it at nauseum because the economy matters, big beautiful bill
and abomination.

Speaker 2 (37:05):
But how is.

Speaker 3 (37:08):
The country feeling about the economy? How are they feeling
about the Republicans and the economy? Well, if you think
it's the worst, you'd be wrong.

Speaker 6 (37:18):
Yeah, you would think after all of the waves k faulp.
When after the last few months, the first five months
of the Donald Trump presidency, right of the first four
months of the Donald Trump presidency, that you expect that
Democrats are at this massive lead on the economy.

Speaker 3 (37:31):
It ain't so.

Speaker 6 (37:32):
It ain't so the party that is closest to your
economic views. And November of twenty twenty three, it was
the Republicans by eleven points. Now it's still within that range,
still within that margin of a plus eight point advantage
for the Republican Party. How is that possible, Democrats? How
is that possible after all the recession, Because after the
stock market's been doing all of this, after all the
tarifts that Americans are against, and Republicans still hold an

(37:55):
eight point lead on the economy. Are you kidding me?

Speaker 2 (37:58):
No, nobody's kidding you. The reality is simple.

Speaker 3 (38:01):
You look at what the Democrats did. They continued to
say that the inflation that was going on was transitory.
They continued to gaslight America and just tell everybody basically,

(38:23):
you know, deal with it.

Speaker 2 (38:24):
This is great, and I've always been very.

Speaker 3 (38:26):
Honest with it. Our economy compared to the rest of
the globe was damn smoking. But you don't care about
the rest of the Let you care about your world
that you live in, because the world that you live
in does revolve around you.

Speaker 2 (38:43):
The world itself doesn't.

Speaker 27 (38:45):
Oh yeah, this is a CNN. This is new CNN pulling.
How was that when we look for trends? How is
that trending with other data that you're pulling in?

Speaker 6 (38:53):
Yeah, if it was just this one CNN Paul, that
would be one thing. But take a look at Reuter's ipsos.
What do we see here? Party with a better economic plan? Well,
it may have. Twenty twenty four, just before Donald Trump
was re elected president, Republicans had a nine point advantage.
Look at where we are now and may have twenty
twenty five. The advantage actually went up by three points.

(39:13):
Now Republicans have a twelve point advantage when it comes
to the party with a better economic plan. And again,
this is after months of supposed economic uncertainty, in which
the stock market's been going bonkers, in which the tariffors
that Americans or against have been going on. And yet
despite all of that, the Democrats are down by twelve
points on the economy.

Speaker 3 (39:33):
This speaks the Democratic.

Speaker 6 (39:34):
Problems on the economy better than basically anything that you
could possibly look at. The Republicans still hold an advantage
on the all important key issue of the day. And
that is the reason why even if Donald Trump's approval
ratings are a little bit lower than they used to be,
Republicans are not out of the ballgame because they still
have a clear advantage on the economy. Whether you look
at CNN's polls or whether you look at the IPSOS

(39:57):
poll right here, in which they have a twelve point
advantage on the economy.

Speaker 3 (40:00):
Does that show that the Republicans are just amazing at
the economy. No, what it shows is how bad the
Democrats are, how absolutely horrible they were, like the Titanic
kind of horrible. The Huberris followed by the fall kind
of horrible, and they've abandoned the middle class the Republicans have.

(40:25):
And do I think the Republicans are going to do
anything with this now? I think they're going to flail.
I think they'll they'll they'll figure a way to snatch
defeat from the jaws of victory, and then the Democrats
will fumble it and then it's they've lost the people.

(40:47):
The Republicans haven't really gained. It's by default. And that's
what I see in the economy. Do they trust Trump more? Yes?
Do they look back and go, you know, pre I

(41:07):
mean because COVID, you don't count COVID. That's that you
can't quantify because that's not going to happen. That's once
every seventy five to one hundred years. So if you're
not counting, because it was such drastic measures that were taken.
But people remember the three years before Trump ran into COVID,

(41:31):
and they're like, oh, I like those three years under Trump. Okay,
the chaos was there. The other thing is, and the
media does it to themselves, which is you've talked about
the sky is falling all the time, and when it
doesn't fall, you're shocked that people are like eh. And

(41:51):
the other part of this too is Trump like he
says I'm going to do this, this and this, and
then he doesn't, or he does it for a little
or that he doesn't really or he you know, the
tariffs and.

Speaker 2 (42:06):
It's all negotiation.

Speaker 3 (42:07):
Well at this point in time, guess what, a lot
of countries are paying no attention to that. So it's
it's a lot of noise, but people still feel okay.

Speaker 27 (42:20):
And also in the CNN data, it does show that
Republicans are gaining ground in an area that is key
relating to all of this, which is when it comes
to the middle class.

Speaker 6 (42:30):
Yeah, you know, historically speaking, which is the party of
the middle class, has been a huge advantage for Democrats.
I have polling from NBC going all the way back
since nineteen eighty nine when Democrats had a twenty three
point advantage, twenty sixteen, seventeen point advantage. But by this
decade we already started seeing declines. Back in twenty twenty two,
we saw that Democrats led but only by four points,

(42:50):
well within the margin of error. And now in our
latest CNN poll among registered voters, which is the party
of the middle class, and it's tied. This I think
speaks to Democratic ellls more than anything else. They have
traditionally been the party of the middle class.

Speaker 3 (43:03):
No more.

Speaker 6 (43:03):
Donald Trump and the Republican Party have taken that mantle away,
and now a key advantage for Democrats historically has gone
audio smigos, and now there is no party that is
the party of the middle class. Republicans have completely closed
the gap.

Speaker 27 (43:15):
Cape all right, there's a lot of messages and a
lot to be learned from these numbers and the stated.

Speaker 3 (43:21):
And that's because the Democrats abandoned the middle class for intelligentsia.
They abandoned the middle class for degree holders and higher education.
They abandoned the middle class because they made it more
important about what goes on in college campuses rather than

(43:45):
the day to day workings of the average small business
owner and their family and how they're getting through because
he's a plumber and you know she's an office manager,
or what. You turned the people that you say you
support the most off by essentially saying we've already got you.

(44:09):
These people know these are the future, and yeah, in
some ways they're better than you. And Trump's all, we'll
take them because they're Americans, and it's worked three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three. Atch had been
to shows your ex your Insta as well as your

(44:30):
YouTube and your Facebook. If you're missing the show, shame
on you. Grab the podcast Now. The big beautiful bill.
We said it earlier.

Speaker 2 (44:37):
It is an abomination. Chuck Schumer was asked about it.

Speaker 8 (44:41):
Others Musk's composition change your approach to fighting business.

Speaker 24 (44:45):
Pe Well, Musk's opposition shows how bad. If even Elon Musk,
who's been part of the whole process and as Trump's buddy,
says the bill is bad, you can imagine how bad
this bill is.

Speaker 21 (44:58):
Well, I think that Musk is spending.

Speaker 24 (45:03):
Look, I just read you what Musk said. He said
people should be ashamed to vote for this bill.

Speaker 3 (45:09):
I agree with him part, but it's not the ashamed
that you differ in what you believe you want to
spend as much as the Republicans want to spend. You
just want to spend it elsewhere and cut elsewhere. We
need to cut everywhere, and this does very little of that.

(45:36):
There was. We're going to find out more and more
because the one thing I know about Trump is eventually
he'll tire of Elon taking to X and saying something,
and there's going to be that one moment where he
fires something off and they're trying to walk that fine

(45:59):
line right now where it's like we still support each other.
But Elon's gotta be pissed. I said, they weren't going
to do the things that they said they were going
to do, and now they're going to try to get
this bill through. That is, there's no cuts in this.
They don't really codify anything in this. It's just a

(46:20):
bunch of giant, huge spending bills for their buddies and
packages for the defense industry. That's what this is. There's
nothing here where you look and go oh. And then
you've got certain things in there that are being talked
about from AI regulation centralizing it for the next ten years,

(46:46):
which my uncle and I had a debate about this
last night. You can check it out on YouTube. I
understand what he's saying where it might not be the
worst thing ever, but what it does do is it
takes away states rights. But on top of it, with
all the stuff they want to put into it, you
start saying, Okay, who's pushing this because I bet you

(47:10):
it's big companies who already have all the infrastructure in place,
and that's going to take away the opportunity to see
I expand and you know, democratize it. And then there's
a few other things in there, including the what will
the Senate do when it comes to that little provision

(47:31):
in there where they would essentially defund any mechanism that
could have the courts hold the administration accountable if they
went against the court's rulings.

Speaker 2 (47:47):
So it's big. Is it beautiful?

Speaker 3 (47:51):
No? And if your argument is it's great for the
Republicans and it's better than the alternative, that's not a
great argument. Is it good for the American people both
short term and long term? Maybe maybe not. But we're
gonna find out when the Senate finally gets done with
it and if it can pass anything out of the Senate,

(48:16):
because I don't know if they can, because there's already
a lot of nope, nope, thank you to want any
part of this up there, And there's going to be
a lot of horse trading, as they would say, three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chadbenson shows
your ext your insta board capital, get your second opinion,
now with my friends over Board Capital. Why Bullard Capital
first and foremost. We just talked about the DOGE a

(48:37):
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our friends over at bull We're giving you a free
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(49:00):
they do, lower risk, lower cost, sover volatility give you
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(49:21):
seven nine Risk eight sixty six seven seven nine Risk
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check twenty five two one seven. It is the Chad
Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (49:50):
Chad Benson.

Speaker 3 (49:51):
Few things you can't have a conversation about anymore. Most
of it occurs in the world of politics, although sometimes
stuff could get a heated when it comes to sports.
What's going on in Gaza and what's going on with
Israel is one of those things. Immigration's another one where
you have a tough time. But the ever changing story

(50:12):
of what took place the other day between IDF, maybe Hamas,
maybe the IDF, maybe not. Maybe somebody shot somebody, maybe
somebody didn't, Maybe they shot their own people. It's the
ever changing thing. I don't trust Hamas at all, but
there's times I don't trust the IDF either in their

(50:35):
explanation of things. And you can't have a conversation without
people going, oh, you're anti Semitic. I'm like, no, no,
you're wrong, you're wrong. Israel has every right to defend themselves.
At what point does it stop being defense and it
becomes absolute punishment. Well, they're the ones doing the right things, Okay, Well,

(50:57):
the story keeps shifting.

Speaker 28 (51:00):
First of all, they said they fired near, not towards.
Then an Idea spokesman admitted that they had hit some people,
though he disputed how many people. That was accusing her
mass of numbers inflation. And then later in the day
they use the word targeted a number of individuals.

Speaker 3 (51:19):
You're you're story shifting and my uncle and I talked
about it last night. If you want to go check
out the YouTube and see us chatting about this, especially
at the end of it, because this is one of
those things where it is tough to have a real
conversation with a lot of people without getting blasted as
you're either a sympathizer or you're in the pocket for

(51:42):
the Jews, or you hate you. No, I want solutions.
See politics isn't about solutions. Politics is about prolonging an
issue for as long as you possibly can because it's
good business. And this I look over there and I say,
this is a nightmare that nobody seems to Hamas doesn't

(52:02):
want it to really go away because they got nothing right.
This is it.

Speaker 2 (52:05):
This is their last throws of trying to hang on
the power.

Speaker 3 (52:08):
I don't think BB is ready to give this up
right now because he's got a lot of other issues
and it is it is frustrating from a humanitarian point,
I look and I think this is awful. I can
see that. Let me know what you think. At Chad
Benson's show is your Twitter, you can text us as
well right here in the Chad Benson Show. From a

(52:32):
defense side of things, Hamas has to go and the
Palestinians need to be shown a new way again. These
things shouldn't be hard, but in a hyper polarized world,
they become tough. Or Chad, you're being mean to Israel

(52:52):
so you don't like Israel. No, it's not that I
love Israel and they have a right to defend themselves.
But I look over there and I see human beings.
I'm not talking about the those aren't humans. Those are
the worst of the worst, and they're getting what they get.
But what I see is elderly people, women, children who

(53:15):
are desperate and scared and angry, and they're caught between
a force that says they represent them and yet at
the same time treats them as cannon fodder, and another
force that wants to get at those people and will

(53:35):
do anything they can to get to them. Hamas is
the worst at this moment in time, and the way
they treat their own is. It's like Ditty and his assistance.
That's how bad it is. And then some it is

(53:57):
vile and disgusting. They're charging their own people for aid food.
There's got to be another way. And until we have
anybody in that region who has the balls to fix this,
and we'll stand up and say this is what we
need to do, We're going to continue to get this
over and over again. Listen to show the podcast. It's

(54:17):
a chat Benson.

Speaker 10 (54:18):
Shown Chad Benson, Joe.

Speaker 1 (54:41):
The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 3 (54:44):
It's Wednesday. We have fun on Wednesdays. Who's ready to
have a little fun? You know what this is called? Today?
What the woke want? The woke?

Speaker 13 (54:51):
Every time they refer to me, it's always lady girl,
it's non stuck.

Speaker 21 (55:00):
We are contributing to our fat phobic society.

Speaker 3 (55:04):
Someone fat like me, black like me, beautiful like me,
no offense, a shit about you? So that's my intentional
weight losses, fat.

Speaker 2 (55:15):
Homust your mouth?

Speaker 3 (55:16):
Who's fat? It's time for woke Wednesday. Let's have some fun,
shall we. We're to stop Asian hate?

Speaker 22 (55:25):
Whatever happened to stop Asian hate?

Speaker 3 (55:28):
What's that?

Speaker 27 (55:29):
You know?

Speaker 22 (55:29):
Asians and racism?

Speaker 21 (55:31):
I'm only racist.

Speaker 22 (55:32):
Sometimes no other groups being racist to you?

Speaker 21 (55:35):
You mean Chinese?

Speaker 3 (55:37):
No white people in.

Speaker 22 (55:39):
North America being racist to Asians.

Speaker 21 (55:42):
I don't notice it.

Speaker 22 (55:45):
Hey, maybe there should be a stop brown hay.

Speaker 21 (55:47):
Yeah, there's too many types of brown. It wouldn't work.

Speaker 22 (55:50):
Well, we can separated. They could be a stop Indian hate.

Speaker 21 (55:53):
I'm Pakistani, My parents would hate that.

Speaker 22 (55:55):
Okay, Well how about stop Middle Eastern hay.

Speaker 21 (55:57):
Now they're more of like a dark olive.

Speaker 22 (56:00):
My point is that there should be a stop all
hate campaign.

Speaker 21 (56:04):
Like all hang matters, hate everyone equally.

Speaker 22 (56:07):
No, no, like no racism, we end racism.

Speaker 21 (56:11):
That's not realistic. You want to hate somebody.

Speaker 22 (56:13):
Hating everybody is still racist.

Speaker 21 (56:15):
Not if it's equally distributed.

Speaker 2 (56:20):
Come on, that was funny, just for the sake of it.

Speaker 3 (56:23):
Here's some more crazy audio from the people that are
out of their mind.

Speaker 11 (56:27):
Learning that half half of the fucking population is functionally illiterate,
like has ruined me.

Speaker 3 (56:35):
It has made me like and like, I don't want
y'all to be dumb.

Speaker 11 (56:41):
I wish y'all were feing smarter because it's stressing me
the fuck out that I have to share a planet
with you people, Like there's a chance that my nurse
when I'm in the nursing home, isn't gonna believe that.

Speaker 29 (56:52):
That seems.

Speaker 3 (56:57):
How would you know you're in a nursing home. Man,
It's well, you know it's over for you because you're
in the nursing home. It's a little welk Wednesday where
I'm fine with wacky audio because there's plenty of it.

Speaker 19 (57:07):
No people other than white people cannot be racist, Okay,
tell me more. Is a term that refers to the
concentration of power among a certain group of people, who
then use that to exploit and oppress other groups of people. Yes,
people who aren't white can be prejudiced towards other groups
of people, but they can't be racist. Because of things
like colonization, imperialism, and white supremacy, power is concentrated primarily

(57:31):
into the hands of white people, both then and now,
which is why certain systems that exist now are inherently racists,
such as the prison industrial complex or police departments around
the country. That's why a lot of white people are
racist because their family members were racist, because their great
grandparents were racist, and so on. It's the concentration of

(57:51):
a lot of power into the hands of a few
based upon their skin color. However, intergroup prejudices exist, so
that's why you'll see people say, Hey, I am this race,
and I find that these people of this race are
route to me outside of white people because these individual
prejudices still exist, and yes, they are so harmful, they
just don't have a societal impact in the way that
racism from white people does.

Speaker 3 (58:12):
Thank you for that white woman lecture. You guys feel
better about that. You guys feel like you've been lectured enough. Oh,
you have it. How about this.

Speaker 30 (58:24):
Here's some acts of micro feminism you can use to
disrupt the patriarchy.

Speaker 11 (58:28):
All right.

Speaker 30 (58:28):
Tell me, when a man comes towards you on the street,
don't move, walk straight towards him, don't jump out of
the way. If someone's telling you a story about an executive,
a pilot, a politician, or a CEO, assume it's a sheet.
Whenever someone refers to you by a diminutive or a
pet name like sweetie or honey, just call them it

(58:49):
right back. If you're ever making a sports analogy, use
women's sports. Refer to Serena as the goat. When a
man asks you an inappropriate question, don't answer. When using
examples of people in power use women leaders.

Speaker 3 (59:05):
Okay, I will you guys feel better about that. She
just wants you guys to know that micro feminism it's
a real thing, and that the white women are gonna
set us free, free, set us free.

Speaker 21 (59:19):
Happy first day of Pride.

Speaker 22 (59:20):
But this year I made a new Pride flag. It's
for unemployment Pride.

Speaker 16 (59:25):
If you would like to be a sticker link in
the bio and then drop your letterbox top four in
the comments.

Speaker 22 (59:30):
Have a great, happy, safe pride.

Speaker 3 (59:31):
Everybody unemployed pride. There's no such thing, just some fun,
wacky stuff I like to play for you guys to
realize that there are many, many people that you think
that can't be real, and then you realize, oh my god,
it's totally real. These people take to the interwebs to

(59:53):
give you their thoughts on why you are a bad
person because you're a racist, or this is why you
lose Democrats, this is why you lose three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three At Chad Benson's show,
that is your ex your instant all of the other things.

Speaker 2 (01:00:13):
TikTok making changes changes.

Speaker 31 (01:00:16):
Now you can personalize your feed by adjusting how often
you see content from over ten popular categories like travel,
sports and creative arts or cinnamon tortilla rules. We'll see,
for example, if you want more nature less sports, no
problem with managed topics. You control how often popular topics
show up in your feed.

Speaker 3 (01:00:36):
That's great. Men, See that's called an algorithm. You know,
else is making changes. Tender. Oh yeah, and it's not Tender,
by the way, not for you short kings. What do
you mean it's it's it's not, it's not. It's it's
a sad situation if you're a if you're short, is
what I'm trying to tell you. No, Hello, I wish

(01:01:01):
I was a little bits all, or I wish I
was the ball, or I wish I had a girl.
I would call it. That's right. So Tender now has
a when you're on the gold I guess I don't know.
I've never been on Tender. So you can go on there,
and you can the ladies can choose height. So, based

(01:01:24):
on the fact that Short King summer seems to be
coming to an end, it never even got started. We're now,
you know, the season of the short King is over.
It's back to height. Height matters, and height matters too.
It's a trade off also with income. What yeah, So

(01:01:46):
this is what's crazy. If you're six foot today, what
you make, say sixty grand a year? It because your
six foot is totally cool to a lot of women.

Speaker 2 (01:02:00):
To get that same desirability.

Speaker 3 (01:02:03):
If you were five to five, you would have to
make one hundred and seventy five thousand dollars a year,
and then every inch that you're shorter.

Speaker 2 (01:02:16):
It increases.

Speaker 3 (01:02:17):
So if you are five foot on average, you'd have
to make three hundred and seventeen thousand dollars a year
to be attractive. Oh cheez, guys, you know, should we
ask for weight? Well, I mean, if you're gonna ask

(01:02:37):
for the height requirement and not everybody has to do it,
but if you would like that, it's a preference. I
got no problem with that. Should we say, all right, ladies,
what do you weigh? What are you going at? Just
I'm curious what sized you wear because I don't date

(01:03:05):
anybody out of the single digits. It's not very nice, Chad,
What about their personality? No, I don't care about their personality.
If you only care about my height or much money
I make, then I should be able to say to
you well, what about this Nobody wants to date Chinderella

(01:03:26):
three two, three, five three, twenty four, twenty three at
Ched Benson Show, is your ex your Insta and all
of the other great things, little wokeness AND's some fun
right there.

Speaker 2 (01:03:36):
Hey, guys, prize picks right now, speaking.

Speaker 3 (01:03:38):
Of fun, last series this basketball season, chance for you
still to win and win big with Prize Picks. Download
the app today, use my code Chad. Now when you do,
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(01:03:58):
instantly bonus right into your account. So a five dollars lineup,
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After you download the app, win or lose? How do
you win? Simple? You're not picking teams, you're picking players.
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You see where we're going with this assists things like

(01:04:18):
that you pick more or less based on your favorite player.
It is that simple. You can go cross sports too,
you can go hockey, and you can go basketball.

Speaker 2 (01:04:27):
It's just that easy to do. So download the app today.

Speaker 3 (01:04:30):
Make sure you use my code Chad, and when you do,
you get that fifty dollars bonus immediately in your account.

Speaker 2 (01:04:38):
Win or lose prize picks.

Speaker 3 (01:04:40):
Download the app today, use my code Chad to get
that fifty dollars bonus prize picks, run your game.

Speaker 2 (01:04:47):
This is the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:04:57):
If you like talk radio, like Chad Benson his meals,
You've come to the perfect place for takeout.

Speaker 14 (01:05:04):
We've got a piper dune. I said, we've got a
piper dune. What are you talking about? Imagine playing the
bagpipes already kind of annoying, but then Karen comes up
to you and you have a battle of annoyings.

Speaker 3 (01:05:21):
Scott Gibb has.

Speaker 32 (01:05:22):
Been practicing his bagpipes outdoors in a park for years.

Speaker 23 (01:05:26):
Everyone I meet in the park, you know, say nice.

Speaker 3 (01:05:30):
Things everyone, it seems.

Speaker 33 (01:05:32):
But this lady, who was now being dubbed bagpipe Karen
GiB who hails from Scotland, says, the woman got in
his face and demanded he stopped playing.

Speaker 23 (01:05:43):
She literally got her phone, put the flashlight on and
shoved it right in my face and blinding my eyes
while I was playing. She's started verbally abusing me again
and saying that her husband was coming down. He's a
federal judge.

Speaker 3 (01:06:00):
Oh, no, sure he's a federal judge. Sure he is, ma'am.

Speaker 2 (01:06:05):
It turns out that that claim is true.

Speaker 32 (01:06:07):
Oh, bagpipe, Karen's husband is in fact a federal bankruptcy
judge in Houston.

Speaker 3 (01:06:13):
So what's a problem with bagpipes?

Speaker 32 (01:06:15):
She says, it's too loud, But folks around this seemed
to be enjoying the beautiful sound of amazing grace on bagpipes.
Gibb says, the seventy six year old woman actually took
a swing at his white.

Speaker 23 (01:06:29):
She swung at her. My wife managed to get her
arm to defend herself. Then she started to grab my
wife's backpack and they basically fell onto the ground.

Speaker 32 (01:06:39):
Police charged Eunice Isger with misdemeanor assault. She apparently got
a black eye when she fell. Could you believe that
this was all happening all over you playing the bagpipes?

Speaker 21 (01:06:52):
I felt?

Speaker 23 (01:06:53):
How can someone be soone titled and feel above the law.

Speaker 32 (01:06:58):
GiB has already returned into his favorite spot in the
park and says the nasty incident will not deter him
from playing the bagpipes, echpipes.

Speaker 3 (01:07:12):
When I went to Scotland and I was up there
playing in Falkirk, my buddy Ray Ray Ray comes with me.
So we're young, right, we're in our late teens, early twenties,
and we're trying to find the stadium. So I'm supposed
to go to the stadium and then they're going to

(01:07:33):
tell me where the hotel that we're staying at is.
And I said, okay, cool. So we're lost. So we
get off the train and we start walking and we
have no idea where the hell we're going. We could
see like the floodlights, and so we start walking and

(01:07:54):
then we're like in this neighborhood. We're lost, and there's
this a group of young young kids us you know,
late teens, twenties, guys and girls. And they said, hey,
what are you doing? I said, send them here to play,
you know, go and trial and stuff with with Falkirk
and start our preseason. He's all, oh, you know it
did about you or something like that. It's oh cool,
he said, come on in and we're having a barbecue.

(01:08:16):
So okay, cool. Swe we go in this. We have
no idea who these people are. Go into this and
my buddy Ray just gets hammered and about half an
hour I'm like, where is he in the guy's house?
Who were at He and Ray come out and raising

(01:08:37):
a kilt in his jeans, trying to play the bagpipes.
At the time he was a smoker, and about thirty
seconds in the bagpipes, between the booze and the fact
that he was a smoker, there was a piper dune.
They are a loud instruments, but at times they are beautiful,

(01:08:58):
no doubt about that.

Speaker 20 (01:09:00):
Ah.

Speaker 3 (01:09:01):
Going from the Scottish instrument to an instrument of death,
it is captivating down under. She's a killer, allegedly, she's
on trial. What did she do?

Speaker 2 (01:09:13):
She killed three people? Allegedly.

Speaker 13 (01:09:15):
How mushrooms well, mushroom cook Aaron Patterson has taken to
the witness stand in her own highly anticipated murder trial,
sharing new details about how she'd foraged for mushrooms, how
she's never actually had ovarian cancer, and the relationship she
shared with her in laws, who she's now accused of murdering.
The sole survivor of the fatal mushroom lunch in Wilkinson

(01:09:38):
looked on from the public gallery as miss Patterson was
Asked a broad range of questions by the defense, the
accused murderer told the court she began picking and eating
mushrooms during the pandemic, saying over several months she realized
they tasted good and they didn't make her sick.

Speaker 3 (01:09:55):
Well, they made somebody sick first of all. Another reason
not to eat mushrooms. Let you guys know that. He said.

Speaker 13 (01:10:01):
She chopped up the mushrooms very small so they couldn't
be picked out of food, and served them to her children,
also confirming to the court she'd shared photos of mushrooms
in her dehydrator and told online friends she'd been able
to reduce their mass by ninety percent.

Speaker 3 (01:10:17):
Yeah, this check is a whack a do. And on
top of all of this, she was going through a divorce,
so her this was her husbands who they were separated
at the time. This was basically her mother in law
and father in law, and I think they had remarried
and three of them died after eating beef Wellington.

Speaker 2 (01:10:38):
She's a nut.

Speaker 3 (01:10:40):
She lied about having cancer because she was gonna have
weight loss surgery. There's guilt written all over it. She
said it was bland food and that this stuff is it,
added some spice to it. You think she vomited up
the meal, but she said it is because she over ate.

Speaker 13 (01:10:57):
Later in the evening, when asked have you ever been
diagnosed with ovarian cancer, she replied I have not. And
to have you ever had a needle biopsy on a
lump in your elbow, she answered, I've never had a
needle biopsy anywhere. Miss Pattison described her in laws, who
she's accused of murdering, as being loving and still treating
her as a daughter in law after she separated from

(01:11:19):
their son, Simon. She also teared up when the jury
was shown Emolti Facebook messages in which she complained about them, explaining,
I was really hurt and I was really frustrated and
felt a little bit desperate. The court was also told
about the relationship breakdown between her and her estranged husband, Simon,
Miss Patterson saying the pair would both feel hurt and

(01:11:40):
misunderstood after arguments disagreements about child support payments escalating the
conflict between them.

Speaker 3 (01:11:48):
She also spoke about a distrust she had.

Speaker 13 (01:11:50):
Of the medical system and her tendency to use doctor Google,
but she said she eventually realized every headache isn't a
brain tumor.

Speaker 3 (01:12:01):
She sounds well, so she's going to be cross examined today,
and I have a feeling that's not going to go
well for her. Three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty
four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show is your
exer insta and all the other things right here in
the Chad Benson Show. Coming up, our number three of
the program, we got a little watch trending, talk a

(01:12:23):
bit about that wokeness, the Big Beautiful Bill. It's big,
it's fat, it's just big, not so beautiful at all.
I'm not thrilled by it, and none of us should be,
because it is ji frick enormous and it doesn't you know.
It goes back to the thing that we've talked about

(01:12:44):
forever on the show, which is everybody wants cuts, they
just don't want it in their area.

Speaker 2 (01:12:49):
We're gonna talk a bit about that as well. If
you missed any of.

Speaker 3 (01:12:52):
The show, make sure you get the podcast and also
check us out on YouTube. Nightly, right around seven o'clock
Eastern we go live our number three the show for
the head Chat Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:13:02):
This is the Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 3 (01:13:31):
It's big, but not beautiful. An abomination is what Elon
must cause. Earlier today, Ron Johnson, it's a Senator, was
on with CNBC. This is about a minute thirty. I'm
gonna play the whole thing because he's fired up about
not giving this thing a pass and getting it out

(01:13:56):
of the Senate, killing it because well, it's awful and
awfully expensive.

Speaker 34 (01:14:03):
Everything now says I have. There's greater upside risk to
that desert. Your instrates are moving up. If we go
in increase industrates one percent, that's another four trillion dollars
over ten years in terms of death sit If we
don't replace the four trillion dollars, that's four trillion dollars
of lost revenue. Again and growing the economy three percent.
It adds to it a little bit, but mostly in

(01:14:25):
the out years. So again, come to the table. Let's
look at the numbers. If I'm wrong, prove that I'm wrong.
But let's do it with respect, but mainly respect for
our children and grand children. This is immoral what us
old farts are doing to our young people. This is
grotesque what we're doing. We need to own up to that.
This is our moment. I can't accept this scenario, I

(01:14:47):
can't accept it, so I won't vote for it unless
we are serious about fixing it.

Speaker 21 (01:14:52):
And who do you think, Okay, when Paul you that
it would still pass, who else are you are you
talking likely? Who else are you talking about?

Speaker 3 (01:15:02):
Senator? Yeah?

Speaker 34 (01:15:04):
Again, I don't want to speak for others, but yeah,
I think there are a lot of people. There are
a lot of people that aren't as vocal as as
we are the support what we're doing. And again, they
can't dispute the numbers. Again, we didn't talk about numbers
in the in the in the House process. You know,
if the White House just comes and starts insulting us,

(01:15:24):
I'm sorry. I got the numbers to back back myself up. Again,
if my numbers are on, fine, prove me wrong. But
I think I have the numbers, which is I think
one of the reasons they probably won't insult me.

Speaker 3 (01:15:34):
And that's good. That's good. Indeed, by the way they
all come out and say, well, it's going to do this,
it's going to do that, it's going to do this,
The tax cuts are gonna I have looked, I do
have seen several different models, and models aren't perfect. We

(01:15:55):
know that it's always good as the data you get
and things will change. But the numbers I have seen
in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, the OBA is ugly.
So not just the CBO, the Committee for Responsible Federal Budget,
Tax Foundation, Center for American Progress, pen Wharton Budget Model,

(01:16:16):
Skatin ARP, Slate, Meager and Flom Great Band, all of
them say it's ugly. Best guestimates are a lot of
debt we're adding and very little cutting. So I'm with him.

(01:16:39):
Prove him wrong, prove him wrong. I bet you'll have
a tough time doing it. I'm just saying. Meanwhile, in
the great State of Texas, I think to myself, this
is what bizarre overreach looks like. So you've got the
THC thing right, and there you know, Dan Patrick's just

(01:17:01):
not the sports talk show host, but the lieutenant governor
is just like, oh God, anybody who takes this stuff's
gonna just die. And you know that insanity. But the
amount of money, by the way, can I just say
that potentially could be lost because of it, because of
this weird bizarre you know, it's the Kate White drag
and all that kind of crap. I okay, you know,

(01:17:23):
just the frustration level. But now colleges wait what yeah,
how about this tonight?

Speaker 35 (01:17:30):
New fears from professors at u T Austin. The school
may be best known for its dominance on Saturdays, also
a dominant force in academics, a top fifty school across
the board, and it's just one of more than one
hundred public universities in Texas with more than a million
students now being threatened with extra oversight that teachers say
is the most wide reaching threat to academic freedom from lawmakers.

Speaker 25 (01:17:53):
Yet this is a bill that micro manages higher education.

Speaker 35 (01:17:59):
The bill in his SB thirty seven would give a
ton of power to Governor Greg Abbott. He'd being able
to appoint a board that could eliminate some degree programs
and even change curriculum requirements. Texas lawmakers battling it out.

Speaker 15 (01:18:12):
So the objective of this legislation is to provide consistency
with respect to our curriculum and the degrees that we're
offering our students.

Speaker 3 (01:18:21):
That is not governance, that is control. Yeah. Look, there's
some issues with higher education cost, the fact that there
isn't a balanced viewpoint in many places on campuses. Okay,

(01:18:43):
but do I want the state going No? You can't
teach this, or no, you can't teach that. No, I
don't neither should you.

Speaker 35 (01:18:50):
The bill passing leading to a scathing joint statement by
the state's K twelve union and Professor's Association saying it
could cause a brain drain, leading to damage that will
taking years to undo.

Speaker 25 (01:19:01):
What we are finding already is that faculty are leaving Texas.
Faculty are not coming to Texas.

Speaker 3 (01:19:10):
The measure now headstack Governor Rabbit's desk.

Speaker 35 (01:19:12):
His office tells us he will thoughtfully review the legislation,
and he hasn't been shy on the topic, saying in February.

Speaker 34 (01:19:19):
Our public universities must also be more accountable. College professors
have increasingly pushed wellk agendas.

Speaker 3 (01:19:28):
Okay, but but we know they have I understand that
that again being said, No, you don't need no, no,
you don't need to do this. This is this is
what happens when you have no pushback and you have

(01:19:51):
no way to stop something. And what I always laugh
at is you don't think you're going to overreach, and
you do. And while I look at this and say,
do I understand some of the frustration at a certain level, yes,
but why are you involved at this. This isn't state

(01:20:12):
education as far as as the you know, public schools
or choice or any of that stuff. This isn't that.

Speaker 2 (01:20:19):
No, you're reaching in now to.

Speaker 3 (01:20:20):
Hire academia, and what do you think you're going to.

Speaker 2 (01:20:27):
Do with it.

Speaker 35 (01:20:28):
It's part of a growing trend as Republicans launch wider
attax on learning, with similar measures in other red states. For Florida,
Governor Ron descentis back in twenty twenty two becoming the
first to bend diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives in higher ed.

Speaker 8 (01:20:43):
Our universities and colleges should be about education.

Speaker 3 (01:20:45):
Not in doctrination.

Speaker 35 (01:20:47):
And in Ohio, a new law restricts how professors handle
controversial beliefs or policies at public colleges.

Speaker 3 (01:20:55):
One telling our affiliates.

Speaker 27 (01:20:57):
It has become very evident and clear to me that
not only the legislature, but Governor's wine is not interested
in listening to their constituents whatsoever.

Speaker 2 (01:21:06):
All of it raising a red flag to professors.

Speaker 25 (01:21:09):
It has chilled faculty's freedom of expression in the classroom.
It has chilled students' freedom of expression in the classroom.
I am very, very concerned about the future of higher
education in the United.

Speaker 35 (01:21:22):
States fearing what's happening in the state is just the beginning.

Speaker 3 (01:21:26):
Well, first and foremost, I don't know too many liberal
college professors that really are terrified to say anything in
their classroom, unless, of course they're overreacting. And secondly, well
because look what Trump will do. Okay, maybe, but how
many conservatives or libertarian kids were afraid to say anything

(01:21:47):
inside of classrooms from fear of getting obliterated because they
weren't part of the echo chamber. This is the part
where you want to get rid of di and stuff
like that. Okay, I have no problem with that. I
think that's all about just hogwash. I was gonna say
something else, but we're on radio, so I won't this though.
You know, like anything, you have to see what it

(01:22:10):
looks like when it's out the other side.

Speaker 35 (01:22:12):
But so we've been talking to the Association of professors
there that share a real fear that a certain percentage
of these teachers just see this as a bridge too
far and will decide to quit. Others, as you mentioned,
say they are adapting. In fact, we heard from the
interim president at UT Austin releasing a statement saying, in part,
we will adopt the requirements of SB thirty seven. Honestly, decisively,

(01:22:34):
and positively. Our implementation will maximize student success, promote a
diversity of viewpoints and academic freedom, uphold our core mission
of education and research, and align our public university with
the public's expectations. It went on to call this a
pivotal moment for the university, and I can't help but
think the ramifications will be dramatic.

Speaker 3 (01:22:55):
We'll find out, We'll find out what happens, because it does.
He sign it, and he's gonna go like everything, I'm
gonna go over it. The same thing with the thhccret
governor happens, I'm gonna go over it.

Speaker 1 (01:23:05):
Think about it.

Speaker 3 (01:23:07):
I think they were surprised by the pushback by a
lot of people. And like a lot of these states,
Red states, you know, when given the opportunity to put
it to the people, what happens a lot of time
the red states that think they know what's best think, well,

(01:23:30):
we can't let the people do it because the people
might choose wrong, but we know it's best. Just like
the Blue states say everything's okay, right living outside is
that's just a lifestyle choice.

Speaker 2 (01:23:40):
I mean, these are where's the common sense.

Speaker 3 (01:23:44):
It's not there because, as we all know, people, common
sense is anything but coming. Oh yeah, it isn't common
is it. No, it's what's so damn frustrating. I mean,
it's just both sides. I just sit there and I
shake my head. My old uh, honter partner, Katos, super

(01:24:06):
best friend, Mission, big guy Uh still kicking ass doing
his thing with Bruce. Love them both. But he used
to say, I'm not a right or left, I'm a skeptic,
and I'm like, so true. We need more skepticism in
politics than ever before because our leaders, the ones who

(01:24:29):
do stand up, get blasted for saying stuff like, hey,
don't tell me this is the greatest bill in the
history of bills because you get a massive tax cut.
Don't tell me how great this is for everybody. But
when the numbers come out from eighty different places, you're like,
they're all wrong. Okay, It's just it's so frustrating. Be

(01:24:52):
more skeptical and hold your side accountable people three two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three at you had Benson shows
your ex your insta Raycon, best earbuds around, love my
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Speaker 2 (01:26:14):
Straight ahead? It is the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:26:28):
Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (01:26:29):
No, It's time to find out what's trending.

Speaker 3 (01:26:32):
What's trending?

Speaker 12 (01:26:34):
Signed James Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Serena.

Speaker 3 (01:26:50):
Cheesecake jump boom, what trending? Let's find out what was
trending on this Wednesday, Lady in the Chad Benson Show
and the Internet, because that's where things trend start over Twitter,

(01:27:11):
Love Island, numb one trending thing TIBs. Tom Thibodeau was
the coach of the New York Knickerbockers. They still called
the Knickerbockers. I don't think so call the Knicks. He
was let go yesterday after the best run they've had
in twenty five years. Hey, great job. We haven't gotten
this far in a quarter of a century. You're fired,
I know, right, And it's like what Ukraine Harvey Milk,

(01:27:36):
the gay icon who was killed thinking that what seventies
He had a ship named after the navy vessel and
heg Seth renamed it just in time for Pride monthly.

(01:28:00):
I gotta be honest with you, guys. This's this whole
the performative world of politics is everybody's so busy trying
to to score points in the culture wars that everything
else falls by the wayside. Head over to Google. Tom Thibodeau,
Harvey Milk, Kate Spade for serium, Graham seram. If you

(01:28:28):
don't know what that is, we talked about it. That's
the biological pathogen that was twelve. It was close to
being smuggled in here to America toxic fung guy ooh yeah,
it's one of the big trending things there. And finally
over to Yahoo. You're Russia, Ukraine War, the French Open

(01:28:49):
three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty three
at Chad Benson Show, is your ex? You Instay, YouTube,
you Facebook? And all of the other things right here
on the Chad Benson Show, Big Beautiful Bill, Elon musk

(01:29:12):
Nix senate disgusting. I like that. Uh, disgusting is my
That's what Elon called the Bill's disgusting.

Speaker 2 (01:29:25):
It's gross, it's awful. It's the worst, Big Beautiful Bill.

Speaker 3 (01:29:31):
If it was on Tender, it would definitely there would
be a height requirement because we were talking about that
last hour. Tenders got the new height requirement filter thing
Ema Bomber that you can go to the ladies can
and say, I don't want to date a guy under
six foot. The same thing. If we could have a

(01:29:53):
tender version of the big Beautiful Bill or all the
bills out there, this would be one of those ones
where I don't care how many filters you have. I
don't care a matter how whatever height I'm able to
choose or wait or whatever. This isn't big and or
beautiful at all. Gee, but but but and when I

(01:30:15):
say stuff like this and this is what I get
pushed back from people on the right and the left,
which means I'm doing something right. If I criticize Trump
in the administration, of course I'm not American and whatever.
If I criticize Trump, the left says, h look what
you got? Huh? Are you happy now? Well, of the

(01:30:36):
two options, I'm happier with this. But that being said,
I think if we all look back, we'd like different options,
wouldn't you. But the last here we are. So this
is what we've got, and I want Trump to succeed.
Missing the show grab the podcast It's Chad Benson.

Speaker 10 (01:30:55):
Joe, Chad Benson, Joe.

Speaker 3 (01:31:19):
The Chad Benson Show. Monday was the longest day in golf.
Several courses around the country hosted the final qualifying for
the United States Open. You play thirty six holes. Some
of these guys playing, they've won big things. Some of

(01:31:42):
them have won. I believe there's a couple of major winners.
Max Homer's got six wins on the PGA Tour. You
see him all over the place every weekend week out.
Currently he's ranked ninetieth in the world. You're better than that, Max,
Come on now, he was out there carrying his own
damn bag. Did he qualify? He did not, but several did,

(01:32:02):
including a youngster and a dentist.

Speaker 36 (01:32:06):
Next weekend, the best men's golfers in the world will
all gather at Oakmont Country Club in Pennsylvania to battle
it out for the US Open title. Scotti Scheffler, Rory McElroy, Bryson, De'shambeau,
and oh Yeah, a dentist. Doctor Matthew Vote is a
dentist in Indianapolis. He lives with his wife and their
two rescue dogs, and when he's not filling cavities he's

(01:32:29):
playing amateur golf. He grew up near Pittsburgh and caddy
that you guessed it, Oakmont Country Club. Well, now he
has qualified for the US Open being played there.

Speaker 5 (01:32:38):
The feeling of going back home where I grew up
in Pittsburgh and where I caddied at Oakland is ah.

Speaker 10 (01:32:44):
It's a dream come true.

Speaker 2 (01:32:45):
It's easy to forget.

Speaker 36 (01:32:46):
But when we talk about these tournaments with these names,
the British Open, the French Open, the US Open in
golf and tennis, Open means something. It means anyone can
theoretically qualify. You don't have to be a pro, you
don't need an invitation. If you show up and win
local qualifiers and then sectionals, you're in.

Speaker 3 (01:33:03):
That is so cool. Open is awesome. Soccer in Europe
they have like England has the FA Cup, So anybody
associated with the Football Association. You could be in the
lowest wronged park League team, but you're registered with the
Football Association, you have a chance to go all the way.
Same thing with this, By the way, the guys that

(01:33:26):
usually get in, like this guy's a dentist, but like
he's a plus three or four when it comes to golf.
So golf scratches, whatever the course is. If the courses
is seventy two, right for eighteen, you're gonna play right
around seventy two. When it's a plus, that means you

(01:33:47):
are going to essentially shoot a sixty eight. I mean, obviously,
good day, bad day's a whole nine yards. This guy's
like a plus three or four. The week before this,
he was playing in the corn Ferry Tour, which is
the ladder before the PGA Tour. So while he's a dentist,
he is not your average dentist when it comes to golf.

(01:34:08):
Although there's a lot of guys out there who they
didn't want to do the pro thing and they're a
plus five, and you know they could they go and
they play and opens, they've played at the Masters, they
win the US Amateur, but they got other jobs. They
just didn't want to do that. This guy, I think,
if given the opportunity, I think he would go forward

(01:34:29):
if he made the PGA Tour. But the fact that
he's going there and he was in tears afterwards, he
was so excited is awesome.

Speaker 36 (01:34:37):
That was the premise of the nineteen ninety six film
Ten Cup, starring Kevin Costner as a brash local golf
pro who drinks too much and can't keep a job
as a caddy, and yet somehow qualifies for the Open fifty.

Speaker 3 (01:34:48):
Bucks says, I knock it on from here with a
seven nine on the green, right on the green.

Speaker 26 (01:34:53):
You got it.

Speaker 36 (01:34:54):
It's actually not so far from the story of Orville Moody,
a war veteran who in nineteen sixty nine went through
a series of local and sectional tournaments put on by
the US Golf Association.

Speaker 3 (01:35:06):
And won the whole thing. How cool is that overnight sensation?
Imagine that like that's going from nothing I'm great at
my local.

Speaker 2 (01:35:19):
To wo man that is otherworldly.

Speaker 15 (01:35:24):
Obscurity, to the very top of his world in less
than two years.

Speaker 36 (01:35:31):
These rules are the reason that this year, seventeen year
old Mason Howell from Georgia will be in the field.
It's the reason Johnny Goodman, an insurance salesman, won the
Open in nineteen thirty three, and it's why Fred Hurd,
a Scottish immigrant, won the event in eighteen ninety eight,
shortly after moving to Chicago. He was such an unknown
and such a visible alcoholic that organizers refuse to let

(01:35:52):
him walk away with the trophy unless he put down
a deposit on it with the cash he had just won.
This qualifying process is the reason that pros often resurrect
their careers by playing the Sectional tournaments. The final day
from this weekend, thirty six holes are known as the
longest dagg in golf. In fact, last weekend, Max Homer,
who had just parted ways with his caddy, had to
lug his clubs for eight hours by himself. He fell

(01:36:15):
just short. Instead, Mark Vogue Dds will be teeing it
up next Thursday, hoping to drill his opening drive and
become part of history himself.

Speaker 3 (01:36:25):
I love stories like that, all right. We could sit
here and talk about all the negative stuff, but that
just that makes my heart sing. Right there, kids, that
makes my heart sing. Maybe I should go and bust
my butt for a year, year and a half. Depending
on how I'm playing. Everybody's like, what do you shoot?
Because you play a lot of golf. I haven't played
a lot of golf. I've only played twice since I've
been out here. But with Jack coming out this week,

(01:36:47):
We're going to be playing a whole bunch of golf.
Like I'm talking a crazy amount of golf for the
next six weeks. But when I'm on and I'm playing
a lot, I can you know, I can shoot at
her around par or one or two, but it's you know,
it's like anything. You can shoot a seventy two one
day or seventy four, and you can shoot an eighty
five at this level. Because I don't have time to

(01:37:08):
practice pickleball, I got really good, really fast, and I
thought I'm gonna go play some Senior Pro Tours. And
then everything changed and move the whole nine yards. Opportunities
came and it's just like, ah, you just don't have
the time. And I try to play as muchs I can,
but it goes back to again time and then I got,
you know, I wan't to spend time with my kids,

(01:37:29):
so but who knows, Maybe I'll throw my hat in
the ring next year for the Senior Senior Open because
I'm not doing the I'm not just like with pickleball,
I'm not chasing around a twenty one year old. I
can't hit the bowl three hundred and fifty yards. These
kids are freaking crazy. My son has he out driven me.
Somebody asked me the other day and I said, you
know what, on a whole or two. He's gotten close.

(01:37:55):
Now I can still rope it, but on a whole
or too. He has smoked a few and I was like, damn,
tell I am, where'd that come from?

Speaker 2 (01:38:06):
And here's the crazy thing? Does it with a three wood?

Speaker 3 (01:38:09):
Holy moly, Hey, let's have some pomus, some crazy aaudio
because why not. So you're telling me that if the
Big Beautiful Bill passes Big Beautiful, I will lose everything
I hope. So I will lose the bottom surgery that
I have been on a wait list for for two years,
god willing, I will lose my testostero.

Speaker 2 (01:38:29):
Oh no, all gender affirming care.

Speaker 3 (01:38:33):
Gone bye, gone out the window. One positive for the
Big Beautiful Bill. It's not very nice if you're asking yourself,
why are men and women struggling when it comes to dating?
Because all these liberal women they want this.

Speaker 26 (01:38:49):
Apparently, one of my favorite forms of hetero is a
very powerful street woman that absolutely hates men, that dates
a little stubby man that's afraid of her.

Speaker 3 (01:38:58):
Sister. You did that. I'm so proud of you.

Speaker 26 (01:39:01):
I'm just like watching a movie crying eating my popcorn, like, yes,
this is the world we need to live in, and
my take is that I think that for straight women,
they're like when am I gonna find my person?

Speaker 11 (01:39:11):
Like?

Speaker 3 (01:39:11):
When am I going to find a nice guy? Step one?

Speaker 21 (01:39:13):
Do you hate men?

Speaker 3 (01:39:15):
Step two? Did you stop dating them? Step three?

Speaker 26 (01:39:18):
It'll all work out, I promise you in the long run.
It'll be a beautiful thing. And if I know you've
acquired steps one and two, if I see you with
the man, it's a good one. I know he treats
you well.

Speaker 2 (01:39:30):
Oh yeah, good god.

Speaker 3 (01:39:33):
Really you know what? You don't want that in real
life because you want to that's not a man you're dating.
That is a beta of epic proportion. Just might as
well date chicks at that point in time if you'ar that,
if you hate man, if your goal is, could you
imagine going, uh, you know what I really like doing?

Speaker 2 (01:39:51):
Hate in women?

Speaker 3 (01:39:52):
I think it's a good place to start. It's so stupid,
Oh my lord, And you could sit there at twenty
three and twenty five and go, oh my god, that's
really what I like and I hate man and blah
blah blah. You're gonna look back on that and go, oh,
I'm sick of these bitchy little men. They're the worst.
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty three

(01:40:15):
at Chad Benson Show. Is your ex your insta and
all of the other good things. And there's plenty of them. Roughgreens,
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(01:40:36):
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(01:41:22):
Is your ex your Instat, YouTube and Facebook like and subscribe.
We'll go wrap it up on this Wednesday straight at.
It is the Chad Benson.

Speaker 29 (01:41:28):
Show, Deep States, No Deep doo doo eah, the Chatfstan Show.

Speaker 37 (01:41:43):
This is going to be a hot take, but I
am sick and tired of being patient with Trump voters.
You say, we don't need to help people overseas, We
don't need to feed hungry people overseas. We have to
help the people right here, the ones that are in
the US, our neighbors who are hungry. Did you you
really believe yourself because to say something like that, and
you really want to help the people in America, But

(01:42:04):
then you continue to be okay with what happened in
the House when they passed the budget, taking thousands and
millions of kids, taking away their food, taking health care
away from people that need it. Oral health care already sucks,
and it is going to continue to crumble. And that's
going to affect you too, because when you have a UTI,
you're not going to be able to get into the

(01:42:25):
doctor because there's not going to be one. When you
or your family member has a stroke, you're not going
to able to get to the closest hospital to you
to get the clockbusting protocol because it's not going to
be there, or there's not going to be enough providers.
You were going to suffer. What is wrong with you people?

Speaker 3 (01:42:41):
What is wrong with you people? Well, there's plenty wrong.
I think we know that with all of us. She's angry,
she's done with us. Maga folk, I'm not maga, though
I tell about I'm not maga. I'm an American. And
when everybody goes make America great again, I said America
was already great. Can we make it better? Of course,
is some of what you say maybe true. Yes, the

(01:43:04):
rural is already struggling, But it was struggling long before
this bill came around. I mean that's you know, the
battle like Texas and Tennessee, perfect example of the hold
up in school choice was because the rural areas we're

(01:43:26):
gonna suffer the most.

Speaker 2 (01:43:30):
The rural has suffered for quite a while.

Speaker 3 (01:43:33):
So this is, you know, the big beautiful bill, which
I think is is very big, and as Elon calls
it a disgusting abomination, it has bloated and I don't
think it does well really any of the things they
said they were gonna do. But the overreactions. Everybody's gonna die,

(01:43:56):
every child's gonna lose everything. People are now going to
work again everything. Now that's the overreaction. Settle down, Okay,
calm down. A lot of you chiming in about the
height issue when it comes to Tender because it's become

(01:44:19):
an issue, so you guys don't know. Tender is now
going to allow it. I think it's the Gold Package.
I don't know. I've never been on Tender, but the
Gold package is a we'll allow you to filter in

(01:44:41):
such a way that you can put the height that
you want on your profile. So if you want to
date somebody who's over six foot, you're able to do that. Fantastic,
I guess. And this is just for women. And the question,

(01:45:04):
of course, last hour, I kept saying, well what about
the men, right, Like, do they get an opportunity to
maybe say, all right, well this is what you're gonna do.

Speaker 2 (01:45:13):
What about a weight requirement?

Speaker 3 (01:45:16):
Oh? Man? That set some people off. Some of you
passed and some of you laugh too, because I said, well,
you don't want to date a short king, because that's mean,
you know what, A lot of guys don't want to
date Cinderella.

Speaker 2 (01:45:32):
Hit that's not very nice. I just put that out there.

Speaker 3 (01:45:37):
Cinderella wasn't a glass slipper? Was that Cinderella? That's Cinderella, right,
the glass slipper? So confused? What was it? It's a
big gulp. Short kings, don't worry. Live your life in

(01:46:02):
such a way where you got confidence. Just rock it. Okay,
rock it. When it comes to your height. It's like
bald too, man, I get that a lot. How do
you stand being bald? I'm like, well, first of all,

(01:46:24):
I shaved my head because it's easier for me. Secondly,
I'm not a woos I mean every it's I get
some people that is a big deal to them, and look,
and I will readily admit I got a nice dome
for it. Not everybody's got a great dome. There are

(01:46:44):
some people out there that it's like, oh, you need
something because you kind of look like you have like
the alien's head right in the back. You got eight
head and then you got like twelve head in the back.
But I've just it's never been a big deal and
I'm not gonna die everything. Would you ever die your mind,
stash or anything, you know? Because they got a big beard.
I'm like, no again, I'm growing into me. That's all

(01:47:06):
I'm saying. But the short kings. Sorry, And yes, I
think it is fair to say. What about the weight thing?
If you're asking for height as a requirement, then shouldn't
men be able to filter in another way?

Speaker 2 (01:47:25):
What? Here's something else, short kings.

Speaker 3 (01:47:30):
So if you're five foot six, to be as desirable
as a six footer, you have to earn one hundred
and seventy five thousand dollars a year. Whoa yeah, one
hundred and seventy five thousand a year. Study shows that,

(01:47:52):
on average, men who are five foot six need to
make about that or more to be desirable to somebody
who's six foot and just makes an average weight.

Speaker 2 (01:48:00):
The number increases with shorter heights.

Speaker 3 (01:48:03):
A man who is five foot tall must earn three
hundred and seventeen thousand dollars a year to be quote
unquote desirable. Oh man, that's crazy, that's crazy. Man. Three
two three five, three eight, twenty four to twenty three

(01:48:23):
at Chad Benson Show. Is your ex your Insta as
well as your Facebook, and yes, my good friends and
yours your YouTube where you can like and subscribe and
nightly we're doing something over there right around seven o'clock Eastern,
and so tonight we're gonna talk about all kinds stuff.

Speaker 2 (01:48:44):
That we didn't get throughout the day.

Speaker 3 (01:48:46):
So I'd love you if you join us over there,
it really helps us out and like and subscribe for
us and check out the podcast as well right here
on the Chad Benson Show, Solid good show today. You know,
when I do my local show, a lot of times
people are like, why do you have so much fun

(01:49:07):
and you don't talk about politics all day? Because it
just don't. I just don't. That's not what I do.
That's not what humans do. Humans talk about everything. That's
what we do here. We like to be well rounded
and entertaining. That is that should be the mark of
any man or woman, short or not. If you miss
any of the show, what do we always tell you?

(01:49:29):
Shame on you. And again tonight right around seve o'clock Eastern,
Join us on YouTube, Instagram, and x We love seeing
it there, like and subscribe you to have a chance.
Please share the content as we'll have a blessed rest
of your day. We got you over the hop night,
night Jack.

Speaker 1 (01:49:42):
This is the Chad Benson Show.
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