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May 1, 2024 39 mins
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(00:01):
Time to bury the tired narrative,tired narrative and uncover these stories not typically
heard, but stories that need tobe heard right or wrong, life or
death. This isn't your typical lawshow. This is Big Angry Law with

(00:23):
Charles Big Angry Adams on kPr Znine to now. Charles Adams, Well,
good evening, ladies and gentlemen.Thank you for joining me this fine
Tuesday night. For the regular listeners, of course you know who I am,
but this is Charles Big Angry Adams, a Texas trial lawyer right here

(00:46):
in Houston, Texas said Texas waytoo many times in that sentence, and
I'm continuing with that mistake. Youcan find me at Big Angry Law on
Instagram and Twitter. I want tostart the night with a legal story.
It is my favorite story that Icame across today, which shall be a

(01:07):
new running theingdom of the show,I believe just talking about it. Sometimes
I feel compelled to talk about thespectacle of the news of the day,
and it's just not as fun.This show is absolutely just Catharsis for me
after a long work day, andI think we're going to focus on the

(01:29):
stories I find interesting. I wantto take you to Florida. And now
most of you aren't living under arock. If you're listening to a talk
radio or a podcast, you probablyhave a Twitter or some other social media
where you are hip deep in newsthat can be triggering. I know that

(01:53):
I get frustrated a bit when Isee stuff that is just awful. In
a while back, I saw avideo of a very large African American man
beating a woman. It turns outhe was a seventeen year old young adult

(02:19):
in Texas. That would be anadult. You reach your age of criminal
majority, you can go to prisonfor crimes you commit without any sort of
adult being certified as an adult.You're just assumed to be an adult legally
you are at seventeen in the greatstate of Texas. I do not know
about Florida. I don't practice lawthere, but a seventeen year old there

(02:40):
was a video of him beating anolder lady in turned out to be in
her late fifties, brutally chased herdown, knocked her to the ground,
and then beat her to the point. This is not a small man.
This is a six foot six,two hundred seventy pound man beating a fifty

(03:02):
nine year old woman, and youask yourself why, Well, Brandon Depot
was angry because miss Natich had takenaway. Is Nintendo's switch. I have

(03:23):
kids that played Nintendo, So it'sa handheld Nintendo device that has a large
screen. It is their new largestplatform that you can play both on the
TV and on the machine itself.It's kind of a hybrid between a game
boy and you know, in sixtyfour or Super Nintendo or I don't know

(03:46):
what generation you all played video gamesor if you played them in all.
But he was mad. Now,that in and of itself not a particularly
fascinating story. What far the assaultwas Mister Deepa being charged with aggravated battery
as an adult, he is lookingat thirty years in prison, and his

(04:13):
lawyers instead of being singularly focused onlimiting the scope of the consequence for his
horrifying behavior, Well, what they'redoing is they're suing the school district.
It's the Flagler County School District.What are they suing the school district for

(04:36):
for failing to meet his needs?Apparently at Matanzas High School they were aware
that mister Deepa he had disabilities,triggers and problem behaviors, and that he

(04:56):
had this incredible history of misbehaviors,including striking another teacher's aide, scaring the
employees, screaming at his teachers,spitting on people. But they should have

(05:16):
known because he's a large black malestudent and he's subject to and this is
a quote, misperceptions and racism.Yes, the physical violence, the brutality,
the spitting, the meanness. Itwas only misperceived because of his race,
not the fact that he is amonster. And of course we're in
this time in America where everyone's disabledand in fact, if you just act

(05:42):
horribly, there'll be some doctor,some Marsali. Yeah, but he's on
the spectrum, Yeah, the spectrumof being an ass whole. Maybe.
I mean, it's absolutely say yeah, here's a great I mean it's sometimes
lawyers are so absolutely clueless that it'sagonizing. Let me quote the school.

(06:10):
This is from the petition, thelawsuit they filed against the school district on
his behalf. He wants money.He wants money because he beat a teacher
almost to death. Now they alleged, the lawyer's alleged the school and staff
working with him at the district newthat the electronics specifically the Nintendo and its

(06:30):
use on a school campus was atrigger for escalating behaviors. So that argument
right there is they should have knownif they took his toy away he was
gonna go insane, and he gottalet him have his toy even if he
breaks the rules, because if youdon't, he might beat you up.
And apparently Misnateich deserved the whoopon fornot respecting his triggers. They continue description

(07:00):
of him ticking time bomb, whoseneeds, despite concerns and warnings, were
completely disregarded by the district, afailure to address his needs or have staff
around him. This incident started witha para professional in the student exchanging words

(07:20):
and the student being reprimanded in frontof his peers. He was punished by
being denied his electronic device, eventhough other students were allowed theirs. The
pair profession, that is what punishmentis. You break a rule, something
happens. If you're screaming at yourteacher, there should be a consequence.
It's not a trigger. It's nota justification for beating someone almost to death.

(07:45):
Very refreshmon and the teacher began discussinghis ability to bring electronics to in
front of him. They talked aboutit in front of his classmates. Let's
file a hip of violation. Hey, it's described it as a self defense
mechanism. We'll be you're listening listeningto a big angry law on KPRC.

(08:13):
Start down, you crazy child.You're so ambitious for her, JUVENI.
But then, if you're so smart, tell me, why are you still
so afraid? Where's the fire?What's the hurry about? You better cool
it up before you burn it out. You got so much to do and

(08:37):
only so many hours in a day. But you know that when the truth
is told that you can get whatyou want, or you can just get
or you're gonna check off before youeven get halfway through. Ooh, and

(08:58):
will you lie? Vienna waits foryou. You're doing fine. You can't
be everything you want. We're gonnago with Billy Jolden name. It was
romantic on the borderline. I'll tryto go for some deeper cuts in Vienna.

(09:20):
But I like the sentiment of thissong. Charles Adams pigging of Radio
nine fifty am APRC, Real taxes, Real Talk, iHeart radio station.
That's why I get to play allthe good music, all right? Let's
get to it, and let's getto something that that I really would prefer

(09:45):
to just avoid. But frankly,I don't think I can't. Last week
we had an incident at the Universityof Texas where I thought that our governor
was a bit heavy handed. Studentshad just walked out and they were peacefully
testing. I talked to people thatwere there, and people were kettled and
arrested. Those charges were all almostuniformly immediately dismissed, and I think with

(10:11):
the incredibly progressive, far left,pro crime county attorney and disc attorney in
my hometown, that you won't seeany real consequences. A lot of chatter
about online chatter about the the Foxlocal cameraman that was arrested. I've watched
the video repeatedly. I think theclaims are one that he stumbled or too

(10:35):
that he was shoved by officers.All the videos I've seen from a couple
of different angles do not show anyoneshoving him. And I mean it does
look like he was aggressively smacking anofficer in the back with his camera.
He makes his surrogates are arguing,why would he do that with that super
expensive camera? I don't know.I don't think that he would, but

(11:01):
it looks like he did. Nowhe could have stumbled, and I've watched
there's three videos out there, twoor three that I've watched over and over
again. I think it's two andI slow moded and I can't tell.
So I'm not here to judge.And he's looking at a felony for assault

(11:22):
public servant, which I think wasreally going to come down to if there's
some evidence that he did it intentionallyor that he stumbled. I don't know,
frighting for him. If it happenedsomewhere where criminals actually faced consequences,

(11:43):
that is not Austin, Texas.And there are some stories about crime both
in Houston and Austin that I wantto talk about. But I think we've
got to talk about these protests becausemy initial result was, in my initial
reaction, this is horrible these kids, and just specific to the ut situation.

(12:03):
I mean, there's horrible behavior,aggression, blocking students from getting to
class, into libraries, Jewish students, and horrible behavior. And of course
we have this tidal wave of gullibilityabout the where the fault actually lies for

(12:24):
the devastating violent conflicts in the MiddleEast. But really, you just have
so many young adults cost playing infantata. Right, you had a sea of
non Muslim, non Arabic students atHarvard in Harvard Yard, all vowing to

(12:46):
pray to and the Muslim faiths theMohammed, and they're largely just costplaying extremism.
And you know, I so Iwant to play what was originally described
as a student but is a paidinstructor and a PhD candidate at Columbia.

(13:09):
I mean, I think this stuffis important. Why wouldn't the university be
obligated to provide food to people who'vetaken over a building. Well, first
of all, we're saying that they'reobligated to provide food to students who pay
for a meal plan here. Butyou mentioned the thing is a requestive that
food and water be brought in unlessI missed to allow it to be brought

(13:30):
in. I mean, well,I guess it's ultimately a question of what
kind of community and obligation Columbia feelsit has to its students. Do you
want students to die of dehydration andstarvation or get severely ill, even if
they disagree with you. If theanswer is no, then you should allow
basic I mean, it's crazy tosay because we're on an ivy Leau campus,
but this is like basic humanitarian aidwe're asking for, like could people

(13:52):
please have a glass of water?They did put themselves in that very deliberately,
in that situation and in that position, so it seems like you're sort
of saying, we want to berevolutionaries, we want to take up this
building. Now, would you pleasebring us some food and water. Nobody's
asking them to bring anything. We'reasking them to not violently stop us from

(14:15):
bringing in basic humanitarian aid. They'restopping their delivery of the mood. We
are looking for a commitment from themthat they will not stop it by well,
I don't. I don't know towhat extent it has been attempted,
but we're looking for a commitment.Okay, So let's discuss what this was.
This was It has been identified asJoanna or Johanna King Slutsky. She

(14:43):
is studying the theories of the imaginationand poetry is interpreted through a Marxian lens
Communist poetry. Hey yeah who,and she was speaking to the reporters about
wanting a commitment. At first,it sounded as if she wanted Columbia to

(15:03):
feed and water the people that havebeen alleged to have taken over a building
violently called vandalism destruction. There wassome scuttle about three janitors being held hostage,
but I mean their janitors. They'rehardly human to these Ivy League students.
I don't know if that's accurate.There's been people contesting that narrative,

(15:26):
but I mean, I imagine WiFI will be the next request, and
it's insane. University of Texas campus, we've seen sobbing and crying and people
with pepper spray in their eyes.I got pepper sprayed once by a fellow
officer. I was down on theground fighting with a guy and instead of
joining us in the fray, hejust sprayed both of us. And that

(15:50):
happened twenty four years ago. I'mstill irritated about it. But you know
again, I was doing my job, going after a bad guy who had
gotten into a high speed chase Ithink initiated by Houston actually another department of
HP back when they did work.And you get pepper sprayed, Okay,

(16:14):
when you create a human chain andkick at the officers after you ignored multiple
orders to disperse and take out.That's that's not protest at that point,
it's crime. And the argument,oh, was someone on Twitter's like the
Boston Tea Party explaining that to me, Well, that was before our country
was a nation, and it wasthe precursor to a violent revolution. Okay,

(16:40):
so if you see this as aprecursor to a violent revolution, then
hey, I don't want a violentrevolution in this country, so I'm all
for it. Let's lock them up. I have done a complete one eighty
on the a peaceful assembly that's youknow, guaranteed in the First Amendment,

(17:02):
and I think the government intrudes onthat at times with requiring licensing and other
things, but taking over buildings,vandalizing buildings and doing all the horrible things.
That's a wash. All of thiscountry, well a lot of it's
sponsored by nefarious interests, right,people that want to tear down this country
and find the willingly gullible of academiaall ready to do it, because of

(17:26):
course they're too stupid to get thereal consequence if they got their damn way.
A Marxist poet doesn't really want tobe a Marxist poet because she might
actually have to do some work,unless she gets lucky enough to get into
the government, into the killing businessright of any communist regime. She might
actually have to pick up a shovelor stand in a breadline. And I

(17:49):
don't look like Johanna's got much experiencewith that, because damn it, she
wants her free food and water forher revolutionaries. It's all just absolutely idea,
big angry walls with Charles Adams onKPRCN for the longest time, who

(18:15):
for the longest you said good byeto me too? Nine would still be
music left to ride? What elsecould I do? I'm son spy by
you. That hasn't happened bother longesttime ones. I thought my lessonce was

(18:45):
gone. Now I know that havebeen. This goes on. That's where
you found me when you put jarsaround me. I haven't been longest,

(19:07):
longest time. Illow the falsetto onthe background. All right, Charles Adams,
Big Anger Radio, we've been atit. We've been talking about ridiculous
things. I played a clip ofan idiot woman bleeding Marxian poet excuse me,
bleeding about the need for food andwater to be unobstructed not violently blocked,

(19:32):
and later she admitted that well,it hadn't been violently blocked and no
one had tried yet to bring anythingin, so she was just bleeding to
bleed, which seems like that's whatso many people are doing. And that's
not that I don't have empathy forall the horrifying death that is happening in
the Middle East. It's of coursenot just limited to Israel. Death in

(19:53):
Syria. I mean, I couldjust go on and on, but it
doesn't get any press attention because thereit's just sectarian violence that's intra faith to
the Muslim faith, and it hasbeen going on forever. Of course,
they all seem to agree on onething, and that's hatred of the Jews.

(20:14):
But the yeah, I mean,it's awful. It's it's equally awful
the tidal wave of violence and crimethat has swept over Europe, much of
its stemming from migrants from Africa andthe Middle East. There is a horrifying
rhetoric coming out of the United Kingdomvilifying white people. That is just crazy

(20:42):
to me, right that a country, I mean, race based hatred is
idiocy, no matter how who it'sdirected. It if a large influx of

(21:03):
migrants who have entered unlawfully, haven'tbeen fedted, haven't gone through their appropriate
process, and an outsized portion ofthem are committing violent crime and disrupting social
systems in the country where they're overflowing. It's not xenophobia to say, hey,

(21:23):
it should stop. It's not islamophobicto point to the tidal wave of
radical Islamist violence that is called radical, but it's not particularly radical because it's
such a large portion of those whosubscribe to that faith that either engage or

(21:47):
tacitly support it. And that's notwhat radicalism is. Radicalism is, you
know, a tiny offshoot that isdoing horrible, horrible things. We you
know, and we have all thesewe shouldn't be talking about that, you

(22:18):
know. I want to talk aboutthis situation in West Virginia, but I'm
constantly looking stuff up while I'm speakinginto this microphone, and I want to
read the biography of Remember if youhad missed the last segment, go hit
the podcast. But Johanna King Slutsky, the woman demanding demanding that Columbia stop,

(22:44):
although admitting it never started, blockadingfood and water from being delivered to
the revolutionaries who have taken over abuilding in a much more violent fashion than
I don't on January sixth, andyet I'm suspecting and we'll see very little
to no consequence even for those others. A video of a I believe on

(23:07):
UCLA's campus of a trans woman taseringa Jewish student. We've seen Jewish students
being blocked in night entry. We'veseen I mean, it's just it's insane.
But Johanna King Slutsky, here's ourbiography. My dissertation is on fantasies

(23:32):
of limitless energy in the Transatlantic RomanticImagination from seventeen sixty to eighteen sixty.
My goal is to write a prehistoryof metabolic rift, Marxist term for the
disruption of energy circuits caused by industrializationunder capitalism. I am particularly interested in

(23:52):
theories of the imagination and poetry isinterpreted through a Marxian lands, in order
to update and propose an alternative tohistoricist ideological critiques of the Romantic imagination.
Romantic is capitalized, referring to aperiod, not the concept of Romance that
was a little aside. Let's continue. Prior to joining Columbia, I worked

(24:15):
as a political strategist for a leftist, leftist and progressive causes, and remained
active in the higher education labor movementbecause yes, that's what you need of
the ivy League. You need unionsbecause they are so put upon. I
mean, it's it's it's insane.You think she was hitting a joint in

(24:41):
cackling as she wrote that diatribe ofnonsense. Maybe, I mean, it's
it's brilliant emptiness. It's incredible nonsense. It's very well written nonsense, but

(25:03):
it is. This is how itall falls apart. And when the idiot,
I mean, he will indulge me. As I go to my Twitter
at be angry Law, which youknow, I killed it once and then
I came back to it because Iheart was pushing me to and I get

(25:23):
hot and cold. But I hadwritten protesting peacefully is one thing, a
very American thing. Forcefully fighting adispersal order, taking over spaces, committing
vandalism and assaulting those who do notagree with you may also be American things
in twenty twenty four, but thereare things that should land you in handcuffs.

(25:45):
And a person identifying itself is JamesLangford, but it's at our Lames
Jankford, who then is at LamesLangford. It's parody from Oklahoma, he
writes. So the Boston Tea Partywas which and again a precursor to a

(26:07):
violent revolution where a lot of peopledied and a new nation was forged as
a result of the violence. Hey, hey, guess what. I don't
want that? And all those tryingto encourage a violent revolution. Well,
I'm no statist, but man inmy hey, that's the thing, right

(26:33):
I am. I'll say it here. You have talked to my staff and
my associate who works for me,who I hopefully can spin off of business
on his own, my business partners. In my civil practice, I am
near done a couple of cases wereI'm probably just going to have to pay

(26:56):
people back. I've got a meetingwith the district attorney in Brasort County to
try to resolve those remaining cases,and if they can't be resolved, all
just refund money. Despite having workedon the cases for years, I'm just
done. I can't. When Igot involved in criminal defense, it was

(27:17):
because the War on drugs bothered meas an American, as a police officer
bothered me, and want to participateit. I didn't right, and I
threw a lot of drugs away.And that's not saying I don't think drugs
destroy lives, because they do,but I think the consequence and the disparate
enforcement on people of color and poorpeople that created a horrifying reality where so

(27:41):
many intelligent Americans were denied opportunity andforced into lives with limited utility for merely
being the one caught with a littlebit of drugs on them. And I
think it's horrible. But now criminaldefense is largely just I mean, I've
got and it's a client, buta lot of it is just, you

(28:03):
know, they're not law enforcement isn'tdoing anything, so you find yourself dealing
with the worst of the worst oftentimes, and it's just it's not something that
I want to do it. AndI am fortunate that I have other business
interests, both legal and non legal, that are allowing me to make this
decision. But I just and that'snot to discount the need for those that

(28:25):
push back against the state in thecriminal arena, but because it's it's incredibly
important. I mean, I wouldsuggest go read a biography of John Adams
if you don't think that it is. But having said that, I just
don't really want any part of itanymore, because it's in watching my city

(28:48):
be just a tidal wave of criminalitythat is going largely unchecked from you know,
we'll talk policing when we get backin a month. You're listening listening
to Big Angry Law on KPRC ninefifty Saturday night, and you're still hanging

(29:22):
around. You're tired of living inyall one hostown. Like to find a
little hole in the ground for awhile, So you go to the village

(29:45):
and y'all tied die jeans and youstare at the junkies in the closet.
Queen, it's like some honographic magand you smile. I should just listen

(30:22):
to Captain Jack. But let's getback to it the Charles Adams Big Anger
Radio. We did Billy Joel,I may we'll do it again tomorrow.
I mean, we hardly made adent. I want to take you now
to the Houston subreddit. Why whyAngry? Why are we going to reddit
twice in one week? Maybe I'lldo that more often. You do have

(30:48):
to dig through all of the AIcontent that people are posting nowadays, but
you find real stories and this oneis from and you. I mean if
you look at the account, theunderlying account, it's often pretty easy to
determine. But this is a prettyinteresting description of an event. It's on

(31:11):
the Houston celereator again. Petty theftat an eye Houp. My little sister
works at an eye hop. Twoyoung black adult males reached over the counter
to grab my sister's phone, whichis also her wallet, and left the
restaurant. We provided officers the addresswhere a phone GPS pinged, but they
stated they couldn't search the premises despitethe phone turning off as soon as they

(31:33):
arrived at the town home building.And the restaurant has surveillance of the purpse
faces, which if they put themin a lineup, my sister could id
them. This is how cops inHouston handle things, question Mark. I'm
so upset for her. She's gonethrough a lot, and this is not
what she needs right now. Iwish I could afford to get her a
new phone, but I'm already assistingfinancially for some of her bills and other

(31:56):
relatives. I despise the scum thatsteal from those less fortunate than themselves,
taking what little they have in thisworld, and this is the reality of
Houston crime. It is endemic,It is everywhere, and is every day,
and it often targets those already struggling, those that are getting up every
day and day. And the governmentkeeps finding new ways to tax every single

(32:21):
scent that they make as white staffwith the gleeful assistance of employers. She
have. A woman works all typesof shifts, clearly struggling, paying her
own way through it. Though Iworked those kind of jobs, I never

(32:42):
worked at an eyehop, but Iworked before as a police officer. Let's
see, I always forget places,right. I started by grass getting business.
I worked at a kiowsk at themall. I worked at Sonic before
that. My mom made me quitbecause she was a little hippie, and
I made the mistake of telling herabout the cool gun that my manager brought
in this rough part of Austin,and I was glad he had a gun,

(33:06):
A big pacifist my mom. Andthen I got a job at a
kiosk at Highland Mall back before itbecame acc Then let's see the US Censuspirero
radio shack, selling furniture, bartending, bar back bartender service, bartender at

(33:28):
a fancy restaurant, bouncer, dorman, police officer, worked all kind of
crazy jobs because of course I waspaying for things and struggling, and you
know, I've been a victim ofcrime, had my windows smashed a couple
of times, and stuff stole onmy car, but typically, like this
is the nineties, a big folderof my seat. I lost my CD

(33:51):
collection once I was down in Brownsville. It's just disgusting, right because the
music. Now everything's on your Spotify. But then it was a very personal
thing. But nowadays your phone hasso much on it, and it sounds
like her phone case was also awallet, and it's probably just debilitating to
her. But I mean, youknow, backing mad day, but back

(34:14):
in my day, and of coursewe didn't have the sophistication like all these
cameras that show clear images. Youknow, if we had any footage,
which is almost never, it wasincredibly grainy and you couldn't tell anything.
But now these cameras are amazing.So you have clear images of these two
thieves faces, right, officer couldwatch that and then know what they look

(34:36):
like to recognize them. You havea location of the home where they took
the stolen phone. We would justhave information I think they went there.
We'd go bang on the door,Hey did so and so meeting this description,
come in here with something he juststolen. Hey. A lot of
times we'd get to the bottom ofit. We didn't need all the help.

(35:01):
We just did work, and wewere expected by our supervisors to do
work. Now, I am notcriticizing the rank and file law enforcement that
there are plenty of lazy, donothing, windows up, ignore everything officers,
right, but most of them havebeen created by the missives coming from

(35:25):
on high, which is engaged farless. Let's make the let's let's show
up late, and let's lower thestats inauthentically instead of doing the work to
you know, actually fight crime.And that's one thing, But here we
have all the information you need tosolve, albeit a petty victim crime,

(35:50):
and have consequence. Instead you're saying, you know, hey, kids,
y'all just keep criming, y'all,keep stealing, y'all, keep ruining lives
because nothing is gonna happen to you. And then when someone gets fed up
and does something violent to these monsters, well they're the victims. Or what
we had here in Houston. Right, guys, they go in, they

(36:15):
steal some stuff. The guy followsthem, allegedly with a firearm. They
pull out a gun. These arejuveniles, They pull out a gun,
shoot and kill them. They getcharged with murder. It gets no build
by this very progressive DA's office thatit didn't you show. Well, it's
a grandeary grandturies do whatever they're told. And see you've just told these kids

(36:37):
don't only steal stuff. If someonetries to stop, you kill them.
And it's okay, that's insane.But the fact, I mean, how
do you believe in policing when youare victimized? You, hey, give
the officers all the information they needto quickly solve the crime, and you

(37:00):
have some sort of consequence for theawful and you just get told a tough
nonsense oh well we can't do it. Why. Yeah, I mean,
you can't go kick the door in, but you can certainly go knock on
the door. And hey, there'sprobably not a good parent there because they're

(37:20):
doing that. They were probably thetrash fell close to the trash tree.
But you don't know, maybe maybeyou don't knock on the door and say,
hey, these two young men I'vegot a screenshot. I can show
you the picture. I took itfrom the eyehob. They stole the waitress's
phone and her wallet. It's goingto ruin her life. Do you know

(37:42):
these kids? And the dad's likethe dad yeah. The dad's like,
uh yeah, those are my sons. It goes and gets them and drags
them and smacks them in the backof the head and makes them give the
phone back. And even then,if else there's too lazy to press charges
to go through the hassle that atleast you have the phone back. But

(38:04):
ultimately, why not take them downto West Dallas processing for that? They're
just gonna get a light wrist slap. But maybe the ride and the bracelets
teach them a damn lesson. Butnow the only lesson to be learned is
while I should have just stayed homeand been on government assistance, because they
wouldn't have been able to steal myphone, and I would have to work

(38:25):
months and months to make the moneyneeded to replace that phone on top of
my other bills. That's what thatyoung woman is looking at. And it's
absolutely disgusting. It's absolutely repugnant,And you know, I don't think there's
any chance that this user, AndyAsouth, is listening to my show,

(38:46):
but if she is, let meknow and I will gladly. Hell,
I mean, the whole thing's justabsolutely disgusting. Thank you so much for
joining me tonight. Hopefully I'll beback tomorrow now if at the AMKP Mercy
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If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

The Nikki Glaser Podcast

The Nikki Glaser Podcast

Every week comedian and infamous roaster Nikki Glaser provides a fun, fast-paced, and brutally honest look into current pop-culture and her own personal life.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

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