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June 4, 2025 35 mins
In the first hour of today's edition of The Dan Caplis Show, Jon Caldera fills in to discuss the latest updates with the Ukraine-Russia war, including Ukraine's historic covert op, and what it means for America.
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is Dan Caples and welcome to today's online podcast
edition of The Dan Caplis Show. Please be sure to
give us a five star rating if you'd be so kind,
and to subscribe, download, and listen to the show every
single day on your favorite podcast platform.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
Capitalist, No asta a key. I'm John Caldera.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
And for Dan who got called away for I think
Jerry Duty or some sort of legal beagle.

Speaker 2 (00:25):
Thing that he does.

Speaker 3 (00:26):
You know, I think Capitalist has got to get his
priority straight.

Speaker 2 (00:32):
Sure, he does this great work as a.

Speaker 3 (00:35):
Lawyer, but come on, man, you got you got a
radio show. You should put that before your family, before
any other job. And allow me to say again, and
I learned this argument from from Biden. Come on, man, anyway,
give me a call. Three h three seven one three

(00:57):
eight two five.

Speaker 2 (00:58):
Five not what was that? I'm not joking around here.
I'm not joking around here, man, I'm not joking around here.
True story.

Speaker 3 (01:08):
Do you think do you think Biden is going to
go down as the worst American president?

Speaker 4 (01:14):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (01:15):
He's down there like James Buchanan, Jimmy Carter territory John,
isn't he right?

Speaker 3 (01:19):
And by the way, I think Jimmy Carter gets a
bad rap in some ways he was.

Speaker 2 (01:25):
He was a pushover president. He was terrible.

Speaker 3 (01:31):
But he did a few things. He deregulated transportation that
was huge. He negotiated a lasting piece between Israel and Egypt,
something that had never really been done.

Speaker 2 (01:44):
You know, there's some things there.

Speaker 3 (01:45):
I can't think of any achievements in the Biden years.
Maybe it's just because it's too close, but I just don't.
I just don't see it. And the Hoosels, you know
how everyone is excited. I am, at least by that
incredible attack that Ukraine provided to Russia, I mean deep

(02:09):
deep in their own territory, taking out as many as
forty bombers in a.

Speaker 2 (02:16):
Year long plan.

Speaker 3 (02:18):
It reminded me quite a bit about when the Israelis
used pagers just to blow up, to blow up terrorists.

Speaker 2 (02:29):
I mean, that was just frigging genius, and.

Speaker 3 (02:33):
The patients of building pagers that were in fact small
little bombs, getting him into the right hands, knowing which
ones and then at once blowing these people up. That
that's like next level thinking. Mind you, the terrorists didn't

(02:58):
use regular phones because they were worried that they were
too easy to track. It's harder to pin down a
pager because it doesn't transmit, it only receives. If I
understand it correctly, the Ukrainian surprise attack deep in Russia
was an embarrassment to Russia. It was It was just devastating,

(03:23):
and it shows that this country that looks so down
and out isn't so down and out. They had to
get one hundred or so drones across the border, snuck
in into Russia. They had to have communication to those drones.

(03:49):
Now think of what it would take to do that.
It's remarkable, and I have friends in Ukraine. I'm thrilled
by this attack. I think it's just a wonderful CounterPunch.

Speaker 2 (04:03):
And then in my.

Speaker 3 (04:07):
Admiration for it, it hits me, Wait a second. We've
just had four years of ten maybe fifteen million people pouring.

Speaker 2 (04:21):
Across an open border.

Speaker 3 (04:26):
Do you not think that during that wave of illegal
immigration that our enemies weren't using that for the exact
same purpose. Out of those ten to fifteen million people
who walked across and now living happily here in the

(04:47):
United States illegally, is there a percentage that were plants
that are there to do us harm, to bring in terror,
keep in mind.

Speaker 2 (05:04):
It doesn't take but a couple. So not only do
you have.

Speaker 4 (05:09):
To have.

Speaker 3 (05:12):
One percent, you can't let even one percent through. You
can't let zero zero zero zero one percent in.

Speaker 2 (05:22):
Which gets us to the guy who came in and Boulder.
Now he was not here. He didn't enter illegally, but
he did not leave. He was staying illegally.

Speaker 3 (05:34):
That's just one guy out of our very broken immigration system,
Just one simple guy. How many more do you think
are out there? And this was a guy who came
in through the front door. We knew where he was.

(05:58):
He outstayed his visa I over two years, and the
Biden administration didn't do anything. So here's the simple question.
Does Biden have blood on his hand? Or should we
do it differently? Does Biden have gasoline and a Molotov

(06:22):
cocktail on his hands? I think yes? Three h three
seven to one, three eight two five five seven to
one three talk.

Speaker 2 (06:33):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (06:35):
So apparently this guy planned to die. I'm reading from
the Denver Gazette. Mohammed Solomon the man accused he love
that of attacking people holding a weekly walk.

Speaker 2 (06:46):
Do you know all the details he planned on dying?
He told authorities and Affidavid released by authorities show detailed
how Solomon allowed, allegedly.

Speaker 3 (06:58):
Prepared for and care reried out the attack that has
injured now fifteen people.

Speaker 2 (07:07):
Solomon left his house in the morning and he.

Speaker 3 (07:13):
Drove to a gas station, target and home depot in
Castle Rock, gathering the supplies to make Molotov cocktails.

Speaker 2 (07:23):
Set authorities, who.

Speaker 3 (07:25):
Also claimed he had been planning the attack for a year.

Speaker 2 (07:31):
Why come all the way up to Boulder?

Speaker 3 (07:33):
At one pm, Solomon arrived at the Pearl Street Mall
dressed as a gardener. He was born in Egypt in
December of nineteen seventy nine, lived in Kuwait for seventeen years,
moved to Colorado Springs area in twenty twenty two with

(07:53):
his wife and five kids. Over the last year, Solomon
planned the attack on an organization called Run for Their Lives.

Speaker 2 (08:05):
According to the affidavit, he was waiting for.

Speaker 3 (08:08):
His eldest daughter to graduate from high school to carry
out the plan.

Speaker 2 (08:13):
Well, isn't that nice.

Speaker 3 (08:14):
That we could we could provide her a free high
school education, and then he does this. The daughter graduated
on May twenty ninth. To find Run for Their Lives,
he searched for Zionist groups online, he told a detective

(08:35):
who interviewed him at the hospital after the attack, and
he found the group that met weekly on Sundays in Boulder.
The group advertises online and in weekly marches.

Speaker 2 (08:49):
And I've seen these folks. They're good folks.

Speaker 3 (08:53):
They're trying to keep the memory alive that there are
hostages in Gaza that have not been released.

Speaker 2 (09:00):
Reading more from.

Speaker 3 (09:01):
The gazette, Solomon knew where and when they would meet
that Sunday. That morning, he left an iPhone hidden in
a desk drawer at his house with messages to his family.
He told detectives. He also left a journal. You gotta
leave messages for your family on an iPhone. So here

(09:28):
here you have maybe your your last will and testament
to your your manifesto, your your last words to your
loving family as you go off to what you think
die in a jihad, and you put it on an
iPhone and your wife.

Speaker 2 (09:42):
Picks it up and goes, what, what's the pass code again?
I'm sorry, I'll just use my fingerprints. Oh wait, I'm
not registered. What hmm.

Speaker 3 (09:54):
He then drove to a target in Castle Rock where
he bought materials for Molotov cocktails, which he had learned
how to make on YouTube? Do you really need instructions?
The bottleful of gasoline with a rag stuck in it
not not what you call, you know, a neutron bomb.

(10:22):
Materials included eight glass wine Kraft bottles and ball jars
that he filled with gas and put into a black
storage bin. According to the affidavit, he had planned to
use a gun in the attack, even taking a concealed
carry class where he learned to shoot, but he was

(10:45):
denied the purchase because of his status in the US.
According to the Affidavid, so he decided to make Molotov cocktails.

Speaker 2 (10:55):
Can I make a quick detour here?

Speaker 3 (10:59):
He took the concealed carry classes and he learned to shoot.
By the way, now with the new ridiculous law that
Colorado has.

Speaker 2 (11:10):
That in order to buy a semi automatic.

Speaker 3 (11:13):
Pistol, which are ninety nine percent of the gun sold,
you will have to get first a permission slip from
your sheriff.

Speaker 2 (11:24):
What will that cost? The law doesn't say how long
does a sheriff have to give you a yes or
no to this permission slip? We don't know. And with
that permission slip you get to.

Speaker 3 (11:34):
Go and take a multiple day class what happens in
that class.

Speaker 2 (11:38):
How much does it cost?

Speaker 3 (11:40):
We don't know. The law won't say or put a
limit on it. But now we know that this was
done to stop mass shooters. Imagine if this guy got
a gun, he would have been trained by by getting
his concealed carry permit. Well, now every shooter, every mass shooter,

(12:03):
will first have to go to a class to become
much more proficient with their guns.

Speaker 2 (12:11):
Colorado's newer.

Speaker 3 (12:15):
Mass shooters will be trained by law to be better
shots and more deadly. Man, do we know what we're
doing in this state? Three O three seven to one,
three eight, two five five in for Dan, I'm John Calderic.
Keep it right here, you're on six point thirty k how.

Speaker 5 (12:37):
And now back to the Dan Kaplas Show podcast three.

Speaker 3 (12:41):
O three seven to one, three eight two five five,
seven to one three talk. We went through the details
of what this scumbag did that day before he went
up and and injured fifteen people with molotov cocktails. Amazingly, amazingly,
he had more that he did not use. I find

(13:08):
that I find that just fascinating. This guy obviously, let
me just read this from the gazette.

Speaker 2 (13:17):
I think it says it all.

Speaker 3 (13:22):
He dressed as a gardener to get as close as
possible to the participants of the run for their lives.
All right, Actually, that's an interesting plan.

Speaker 2 (13:34):
He wore an.

Speaker 3 (13:35):
Orange vest and carried flowers and a backpack weed sprayer
from home depot. He filled the backpack sprayer with gas,
which he sprayed on himself because quote, he had planned
on dying.

Speaker 2 (13:53):
That is not the way you want to die.

Speaker 3 (13:55):
The clear liquid in the glass bottles and weed sprayer
was determined to be eighty evan octane gasoline. He arrives
in Boulder just before one waited for the group to
show up. Shortly after, he threw two molotov cocktails into
the crowd, yelling free Palestine. The cocktails ignited into the

(14:17):
crowd and a video posted on social media during the attack,
Solomon was seen shirtless pacing back and forth. He can
be heard saying how many children killed and Zionist. After
the attack, he told detectives several times he had wanted

(14:38):
to die. He told detectives he only threw two molotov
cocktails at the group because quote, he got scared and
had never hurt anyone before. What he said he had
to do it, he should do it, and he would
not forgive himself if he did not do it. The

(15:00):
affidavit said officers found sixteen unused incendiary devices at the scene.

Speaker 2 (15:11):
So this thing could have been so much worse if
he had a gun. It would have been so much worse,
eight times worse if he threw the other sixteen.

Speaker 3 (15:26):
Molotov cocktails. Now, there's nothing you can do about molotov cocktails.

Speaker 2 (15:31):
What are you gonna do? Outlaw jars, outlaw bottles. That's why.

Speaker 3 (15:38):
That's why citizens, when they're fighting someone have used Molotov
cocktails and thrown them at tanks. That's why when Ukraine
was invaded, they taught their citizens how to make Molotov
cocktails because they haven't a well armed citizen. If you

(16:02):
have a well armed citizenry, you're not going to get invaded.

Speaker 2 (16:10):
But he.

Speaker 3 (16:14):
He had these sixteen he did not use. We were lucky.
I'm waiting for a legislator or perhaps Boulder City Council
to now outlaw weed sprayers. Why because it's a flamethrower.

(16:35):
It could be used as a flame thrower, a really
lousy one, and therefore there's going to be reasonable common
sense flamethrower control coming our way. I could only I
could only imagine it, and what an idiot.

Speaker 2 (16:57):
Now, just think about this.

Speaker 3 (16:58):
I've used a little weight weed spray, you pump air
into it and has a little nozzle.

Speaker 2 (17:05):
That's really cool.

Speaker 3 (17:06):
But it's just a little plastic bottle, and that should
should the mist of gasoline get on it? And should
that mist of gasoline ignite, thus melting just a tiny
little bit of that plastic bottle, it would turn the

(17:26):
rest of the bottle into a fire bomb.

Speaker 2 (17:30):
It would blow up. And who would it hurt the most?
The idiot that's holding it.

Speaker 3 (17:39):
So, by the way, I doubt there are any fourteen
year old boys listening, But if there are, don't try this.
I mean, I know it would be fun to play
with a flamethrower, but if you do this, you you.

Speaker 2 (17:54):
Could blow yourself up.

Speaker 3 (17:57):
Do you expect Do you expect some type of regulatory action?

Speaker 2 (18:05):
I wouldn't be surprised.

Speaker 3 (18:07):
Why because the left needs to do something after these
type of events. Everything must result in a new law
banning something. What do you think it'll be?

Speaker 2 (18:21):
Three or three? Seven?

Speaker 3 (18:22):
One, three eight two five five in for capitalism, John Caldera,
keep it here six.

Speaker 2 (18:26):
Point thirty K how.

Speaker 5 (18:37):
You're listening to the Dan Kaplis Show podcast.

Speaker 2 (18:40):
Give me call three or three seven one three eight
two five five seven to one three talk. Here's something
from the Washington Examiner.

Speaker 3 (18:50):
What happened in my backyard I live in Boulder is
now making changes around the country.

Speaker 2 (18:55):
Federal immigration authorities plan to crack down.

Speaker 3 (18:57):
On illegal immigrants who legally entered the United States but
failed to leave when their documents expired. This This is
key todd Lyons, acting director for US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, said,

(19:18):
there's been a big push at ICE to identify all
those that have overstayed their visas. We have millions that
have come in, you know, all across the last administration
that have overstayed their visas and overstayed They're welcome. One

(19:40):
of the main missions of ICE is to go ahead
and arrest anyone we can take and an enforcement action
against that has violated immigration laws. Here's what the Examiner says.
The breaks with the type of immigrant population that Trump

(20:04):
administration has focused efforts on during the first four months,
arresting and deporting those who crossed illegally. So these should
be the easiest people to get out of our country.
They are here with an expired visa. Now, first, bless

(20:25):
them forgetting a visa, bless them for coming in legally.

Speaker 2 (20:31):
We want them to come in legally. A B two.

Speaker 3 (20:34):
Visa is a visa not to work, but to come
and visit, and it usually lasts about six months, but
a lot of people use it to.

Speaker 2 (20:50):
Come in and then you don't leave. Do you think
just put on the imagination cap.

Speaker 3 (21:05):
If Biden enforced the immigration laws, this guy would not
be in the United States. It's just that simple. The
President's job is to enforce the laws.

Speaker 2 (21:25):
He didn't.

Speaker 3 (21:28):
The blood I think is on his hands. If you
think differently, please by all means three or three seven one,
three eight, two five five. The guy from ISAs. We
want to go ahead and make sure we take these
bad actors out of the country before anything like this

(21:48):
could happen. We don't know the intent of what a
lot of these people came for. A lot came here
to commit crime, terrorist acts, or just be the person
we want in our neighborhood, not.

Speaker 2 (22:05):
Want in our neighborhood.

Speaker 3 (22:06):
Excuse me, I'm trying to get a ven diagram to
meet here between the immigration that came in the act
of terror we saw in my backyard and Boulder, and
the attack deep in Russia by Ukraine.

Speaker 2 (22:27):
And the reason I add that little one in.

Speaker 3 (22:31):
Is that with a wee bit of ingenuity and teamwork,
the Ukrainians took out forty planes.

Speaker 2 (22:43):
Do you think our airplanes are more secure?

Speaker 3 (22:48):
Do you think the planes we have at air bases
are somehow covered differently? Do you think they're in garages
and they can't be seen. No, they're out on air field.
So let's take all three of these open borders, people
overstaying their visas, including bad actors. We have the Loan shooter,

(23:14):
we have crazy individuals like this Egyptian who went after
the Jews and Boulder. Thank god he was just one
guy and not an organized group of terrorists. But do
you really think that after four years of open borders,
after years and years of visas never being enforced, so

(23:39):
people staying as soon as they get here, of ten
to fifteen million people pouring in, do you believe that
there hasn't been coordinated groups of people coming in to
do us harm? Well, certainly there have been. In terms
of Venezuelan gangs. They use those wonderful open borders, to

(24:03):
come in here and open up shop, to terrorize people,
to sell drugs, to kidnap people into into human trafficking.
And those were the people who were just funded with

(24:23):
gang money. These were the criminals. What about the funded terrorists?
Do you really believe that after fifteen million people come
across the border, that there aren't twenty of them, fifty
of them, a thousand of them who are part of

(24:45):
a coordinated effort. And seeing what happened in Ukraine, what
a coordinated effort can do, can can create immense amounts
of havoc. While I'm so excited about that attack in

(25:06):
deep in Russia, I look at it and go, I
bet there are whole bunches of security experts in the
United States and the Western world who are looking at
that and pooping their pants, going, we don't have a
defense for that. What is the defense for this? I

(25:32):
don't think they do. All right, let's get to the phone.
Three or three seven to one, three eight, two five five,
Let's go to Pueblo.

Speaker 2 (25:43):
Talk to Dan. Good to the afternoon. Dan, you're with
John Caldera.

Speaker 6 (25:47):
Hey, Jan, just a quick comments about the guy with
the makeshift slang thrower. Uh, you're talking about regulating gardens,
prayers and such. I think this just gives the left
the fuel unintended to byan eighty seven octane gasoline.

Speaker 3 (26:08):
I think what we need is common sense gasoline controls.
Now that we can see what gasoline is being used for,
we need a three day waiting period to buy gasoline
and some sort of background check before some person could

(26:28):
just buy gasoline. Now, fortunately this guy was not here,
couldn't buy a gun because he was a foreigner.

Speaker 2 (26:36):
If we had the same restrictions that foreigners could.

Speaker 3 (26:39):
Not buy gasoline, this wouldn't have happened. Obviously, common sense
gas control is what we need to prevent this.

Speaker 6 (26:49):
Yeah, well maybe he should have used electricity and tried
to pasee everyone.

Speaker 3 (26:55):
It is true that the left stands ready with a
pocket full of ideas to control us. They're they're already
written up in bill form, and they wait until tragedy strikes,
and then they have they have something ready to roll.
This is why the Brady folks and the Bloomberg folks

(27:17):
you know, have a have a suitcase full of tiny
steps to take away our guns. And after each mass
shooting we they they let it loose. Everything except of
course arming, good guys, good point. Hey, appreciate the call.
Three or three seven one three eight two five five.

Speaker 2 (27:39):
Let's go down to the SnO oh, we got to
do a break. Everybody's got to make money.

Speaker 3 (27:45):
Three or three seven one three eight two five five
Roy and Kolora Springs hang on. I'll get you right
when we get back. I'm John Caldera. Keep it right
here six point thirty k.

Speaker 5 (27:53):
How and now back to the Dan Kaplas Show podcast.

Speaker 2 (28:04):
They're just wipe out and uh, it's a green onion
or something like that.

Speaker 5 (28:09):
There it is green onion.

Speaker 6 (28:10):
Jim.

Speaker 3 (28:11):
Yeah, so there's there's a there's a few. Herb Albert
had a few too. All that was great stuff. Yes, yeah,
I still have a I have the Whipped Cream album
cover framed it on my wall. That was the album
cover by the way that all boys would sneak into
their parents' record.

Speaker 2 (28:28):
Collection to look at the cover. Did you know which
one this is? Oh? Yeah, yeah. For those who don't
know what I'm talking about, there's a beautiful woman on
the cover covered in whipped cream. When when you're twelve
years old, it certainly gets you thinking.

Speaker 3 (28:46):
All right, I'm John kelderic give me a call. Three
oh three seven one three eight two five five. Let's
chat with Roy.

Speaker 6 (28:51):
Roy.

Speaker 2 (28:52):
Welcome, so glad to have you on khow.

Speaker 4 (28:55):
Thank you, John, appreciate your call, I mean taking my call.
Can you hear me? Okay, okay, I've got a traffic
situation out here. You know, the the question of how
many are in the country. We've known since after nine

(29:16):
to eleven, there was training camps for jihattes, at least
five at that time.

Speaker 6 (29:24):
And I saw the movies.

Speaker 4 (29:27):
I mean I saw the films. Hannity presented it.

Speaker 6 (29:30):
On his program.

Speaker 4 (29:32):
Had to look at it on the internet. But there
were and I remember the map. There was one in
New York, and there was one in Texas, and they
and the other three were scattered around the country where
jihatties were training with their weapons in full dress jihatti
you know, Muslim outfits.

Speaker 2 (29:56):
And they were here in the United States doing that.

Speaker 4 (29:59):
Yeah, And where are they now? Why weren't they taken out? Why?

Speaker 2 (30:06):
Why?

Speaker 4 (30:06):
Why? Why?

Speaker 2 (30:07):
What?

Speaker 4 (30:07):
What?

Speaker 2 (30:07):
What?

Speaker 4 (30:08):
All these questions come up as to why they were
allowed to even set up for any amount of time,
why they were allowed to continue to grow five camps,
five locations, so that jihadis could practice, you know, like
wiping out.

Speaker 6 (30:31):
Right bars.

Speaker 2 (30:32):
Let me put it in this way.

Speaker 3 (30:34):
I don't think even even if we had a spectacular
immigration system with great controls that kept everyone we didn't
want in out and everyone with an expired visa was
kicked out and it was all working perfectly, we would
still have the lone nut, the loan shooter, the lone

(30:57):
crazy person going nuts and doing something like this.

Speaker 2 (31:02):
That's going to happen.

Speaker 3 (31:03):
The real damage, here's the point I want to make.
The real damage is going to come when it is
an organized, coordinated attack from many crazy people like nine
to eleven that are now.

Speaker 2 (31:17):
Hidden in the United States and they've been welcomed in
over the last four years.

Speaker 3 (31:22):
Don't for a minute think that those people aren't here
and finding it empowered. When they see drones from the
Ukraine destroying.

Speaker 2 (31:31):
Their enemy, they go, wait a minute, we can do that.

Speaker 4 (31:37):
Yeah, yeah, taking it a step further there, but you know,
making an example of some of these people early on
which I can't remember who was in an office of
it was Obama or Bush when I saw those movies,

(31:57):
you know, they were film clips on Hannity, But making
an example of them may have made an impression, but
we didn't have We didn't have the leadership to do
that right, agreed.

Speaker 2 (32:12):
I just we need to Hey, by the way, thanks
with the call. Appreciate it, Roy, have yourself agreed, see
you later.

Speaker 3 (32:21):
There are two big events that will shape the next
twenty forty fifty years. The first one were the lockdowns
from COVID, and it will have a repeating effect on
us as the children who were wrong, the children who
didn't have their education, the disrupted marketplaces, the inflated money

(32:46):
supply and the inflation that's following, and the incredible debt
that we're having.

Speaker 2 (32:51):
All these wild.

Speaker 3 (32:53):
Outcomes from the governmental lockdowns have are going.

Speaker 2 (33:00):
To have impacts for decades.

Speaker 3 (33:05):
The other big one is four years of open borders,
where ten to fifteen million people just walked in and
we don't know who they are, we don't know what
they're up to.

Speaker 2 (33:20):
We don't know what good or evil they.

Speaker 3 (33:23):
Wish to perpetrate in the United States, and that too
will have decades of impact. We don't know, but be
very certain. Both of these our government caused terrible, heroic, heroic,

(33:44):
horrifying mistakes. What they did to our economy, our children,
our souls. By putting the whole country under house arrest
is going to have so many bad ramifications. Kids who

(34:07):
are mentally unbalanced, who turn into mass.

Speaker 2 (34:10):
Shooters, the incredible lack of education that puts our kids
and are soon to be adults even farther and farther
behind other powers across the globe because we can't even
do math. And then you add in the terrorists that

(34:31):
have walked over.

Speaker 3 (34:34):
All these all these things come from the government not
doing its job, not protecting our life at liberty, taking
away our freedoms. In the next couple of decades, they're
not going to be how the echoes of those bad
decisions will continue to ring, and I don't think it

(34:56):
will be pleasant back after this.

Speaker 2 (34:58):
I'm John Kelderic. Keep it right here. You're on six
thirty k how m
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I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

Ridiculous History

Ridiculous History

History is beautiful, brutal and, often, ridiculous. Join Ben Bowlin and Noel Brown as they dive into some of the weirdest stories from across the span of human civilization in Ridiculous History, a podcast by iHeartRadio.

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