Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly show. It is that Jesse
Kelly Show. Let's have some fun on a Wednesday, Happy
hook Day. You have finally made it, and we have
a bunch we have to get to tonight. Yes, they've
(00:34):
introduced articles of impeachment for Trump. We will discuss that
at some point in time. Two trillion dollars in corruption,
not waste corruption, we'll discuss it. Democrats are still being
pressed about lying about the Biden thing. Not good. Pete
haik Seth is doing amazing things, cutting generals. You're not
(00:57):
gonna believe. Who's winning currently the twenty two twenty eight primary.
Bad news. Germany's building another large army. And I defend
Democrats for falling asleep in Congress. All that emails and
so much more coming up on the world famous Jesse
Kelly Show. And we have Selena Zito, She's gonna give
(01:19):
us some How are people on the ground feeling so
far about the Trump presidency the GOP House. We have
Brandon Wikert because there's all kinds of foreign policy stuff.
What's Trump doing overseas Saudi Arabia, what's he doing and
what let's find out? Oh that and more coming up
tonight on the world famous Jesse Kelly Show. I want
(01:40):
to start out with something. I'm gonna warn you right
off the bat. This is really really heavy, but I
feel obligated as soon as I saw it, I feel
obligated to talk about it, to bring it up, because
here's what happens for those of us who are interested
(02:00):
in politics. Whether you love it, maybe you're love interested,
or maybe you hate interested, you pay attention to it,
and I'm glad you do. It's important. I told my
wife this morning, I kind of hate it. I do.
It's all so ugly and gross. I kind of hate it,
but I have to stay interested because my country matters
(02:20):
to me a lot, so we have I'm glad you're interested.
But those of us who pay attention every day is
what It's new headlines, it's new scandals, it's Republicans saying this,
it's Democrats saying that, And it can almost become if
you allow it. I know what's happened to me before.
It can almost become kind of a show you watch.
(02:41):
Does that make sense? You turn on the television and
there are the characters. There's the bad guys, and there's
the good guys, and he's saying this, and he's saying
that it just becomes a television show. Not necessarily personal,
not necessarily intimate, but a television show. And so we're
going to discuss this extremely heavy, heavy brutal story briefly
(03:04):
and then we're going to move on. But it snapped
me awake this morning, I'll tell you that much. I
was actually eating breakfast tacos when I read the story,
dug into the story more and it really really made
me sit up in my chair and once again realize
the stakes of what we argue about and what we're
(03:25):
fighting for every single day. There was a story. You
probably forget it, and it's understandable if you forgot it
because it was a while ago. But there was a
story out of Colorado, Aurora, Colorado, and well, i'll play
the local news report at least some of it, and
(03:47):
what happened to this teenage girl last July.
Speaker 2 (03:51):
Here it was Caitlyn Weaver was killed by a jeep
barreling through a residential neighborhood. This speed limit forty five.
The driver, investigators say, was doing more than ninety. The suspect,
who had kids in the car with him, was fifteen.
He was not only driving illegally, he was in the
country illegally. Under Daamy Padden, the teen, who faced up
(04:15):
to two years in youth corrections for vehicular homicide was
offered two years probation if he pled guilty. No financial
liability either, despite nearly a million in medical bills. The
jeep was uninsured, and the juvenile's mom says he took
it without permission, so she isn't responsible either. An Oregon donor,
(04:38):
Caitlyn Weaver continues to live on in others while the
person who killed her lives free.
Speaker 1 (04:47):
Caitlyn Weaver is her name, and I apologize. I don't
know even though if I should read it, because I
don't want to abuse her name. You know that's not
what I'm trying to do. But she was t twenty
four years old. Twenty four years old, and I wouldn't
recommend you go look it up, but you're welcome to
(05:08):
if you want. There's video of her getting absolutely blasted
t bone by this illegal driving ninety and a forty
five just destroyed her right And I'm going to play
something else for you, And this something else I'm playing
(05:31):
right now is Rear Admiral Pete Botaj Edge. He's going
to run for president, and I don't know whether or
not he'll be the nominee. Who knows, but he's definitely
going to run. But this is Pete Boudhajedge defending the
gang member Trump deported to El Salvador. Here's what he said.
Speaker 3 (05:49):
They're saying like, oh, well, this guy, you know, he's
a criminal. The whole point is that no one person,
least of all, no one politician, gets to decide that
you're a criminal.
Speaker 1 (06:03):
Who decides yeah, but playing more games, a bunch of
people have already decided he's a criminal. But Amy Padden
was elected. She was elected as the new DA in
this area in Colorado, a Rapahoe County. She was elected comfortably.
(06:29):
The voters went out to the polls and they said, well,
the people who cared enough to participate in the election,
they went out to the polls and they found the
crazy communist Democrat and they elected her. She was elected
by fifteen percentage points. Fifteen percentage points, so don't think
(06:52):
that it was a near run thing. The people in
this area overwhelmingly went to the poll and picked the
open borders, open jail democrat and now an illegal who
ended a life destroyed others. He will be home playing
(07:14):
Xbox a couple years on probation, and we'll go on
to live for god knows how long, totally free, while
a family is decimated beyond belief. The reason I bring
up this story to open up the show tonight is
not to bring you down. It's really genuinely not what
I want to do right now, and I swear on
(07:34):
my life I'm not carrying it into two segments. We
are going to move on. I bring up this story
because it jarred me awake this morning that we are
not watching a show, We're not playing a game. The
consequences of voting Democrat in the year twenty twenty five
(07:56):
is people die, Families are destroyed. Democrats kill people. Voting
for Democrats kills people. There are consequences for our actions,
all of us. We will all face consequences and have
(08:17):
faced consequences for our actions. The consequences of voting Democrat
is things will be destroyed and burned down around you.
People will die, twenty four year old girls will be massacred, raped, murdered.
That is the consequence of voting Democrat. And that is
(08:40):
what we're up against because there are places in this
country that overwhelmingly want that and will continue to do
that over and over and over again. And they're not sorry.
They're not going to back off. They're not going to
stop the peace. People who went out and voted for
(09:01):
that filthy communist to let this guy out Scott free,
they will go out and vote for the next communist,
and then the next Communist, and then the next communist
after that. And this is what we are up against.
We are in a power war that will determine lives,
whether people will live, or whether people will die. It's
(09:24):
not idiot Republicans in Congress or idiot Democrats in Congress.
It's not just a TV show. It's not making fun
of Chuck Schumer her screaming about the low TGP. It's
not just that people die and families are destroyed when
you vote Democrat, because Democrats bring death. Democrats today are evil,
(09:47):
demonic communists, and death will follow them wherever they go.
And we can never stop. We are not playing a game.
Twenty four year old girl. Imagine standing at the funeral
as your twenty four year old girl in a casket
(10:11):
is lowered into the ground because Democrats savages led an
illegal in the country, and knowing those same Democrat savages
made sure he wasn't punished for it. That is what
we're up against. Maybe you're tired and burn out. I
get it, Take a day off and get back in
(10:31):
the fight. This kind of thing wakes me up. We're
not playing a game. It's deadly serious, all right. Sorry
to make it heavy. We're moving off of it to
do other things, shall we. In fact, let's talk about
something wonderful, something happening in the military. Before we do that, though,
let's do something else for our children, something else wonderful.
(10:56):
What's better than a free education? I mean, don't we
all hold hopes and dreams. That doesn't every parent, I
should say, hold dreams of their kid, what getting a
scholarship one day? I'd love if I could get my
kid a free education. Well, I can't get your kid
a scholarship. I can't get mine one either, But I
(11:17):
can get you some free education from Hillsdale College, because
Hillsdale is offering more than forty free online courses for
people who listen to my show. Maybe your interest is
biblical Book of Genesis stuff like that. Maybe it's constitutional.
You want to learn about the Constitution. Maybe it's more
ancient Rome things like that. Hillsdale will teach you for
(11:41):
free about that. For free, there's not a cost. Hillsdale
dot edu slash Jesse is where you go to enroll
Hillsdale dot edu slash Jesse. We'll be back. He doesn't
care if you believe him, but he's right. It is
(12:03):
the Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful, wonderful Wednesday. We're
done with all the ugliness. Actually, I mean we're not
done with all the ugliness because Chris is still here,
but you understand what I mean. We're done with that
heavy story. To open the show, Let's talk about something wonderful.
Selena Zito is going to join us about ten minutes,
and now we'll find out what's the country think, what
(12:23):
is Middle America, I should say, think about Trump, Congress, Democrats,
so many other things. It's gonna be a huge show
for you tonight. Now let's discuss something absolutely wonderful, wonderful,
and it's something that should make you stand up in cheer. First,
before we get to what Pete Hegseth is doing with
(12:45):
the military, let me explain why I'm so passionate about that.
People think I'm passionate about what's happening in our military,
about the communist rot inside of our military. They think
I'm passionate about it because I serve four years in
the Marine Corps. I'm a marine. That is not why
it is actually not why. I guess that probably contributes
(13:08):
to it, but it is not why I am passionate
about our military. It's not even my patriotism. If I'm
being honest, it's because I love history, and I'm a
dude when I study history, when I read about it,
watch things about it, talk about it with you. Oftentimes
it falls to war and destruction and invasion and things
(13:32):
like that, and they are they're the worst stories you'll
ever read in your life. When your country loses a
major war. The things normal people go through are un imaginable, unimaginable.
(13:52):
Just imagine your entire town gone, rubble, your family gone,
they were under a bomb, burned, this horrible stuff. You
live out your days with wheelbarrows full of bricks that
used to be your house, Like, this is what it's
(14:15):
like when you're military cannot stop people from coming to
kill you. That's what happens. And so what's happened in
the United States Military, as we've talked about many times,
is well. Communists believe in control, and they believe in
using all the power they have at their disposal for
(14:37):
political reasons. For their own power. They don't ever, because
nothing is viewed through the lens of patriotism, and they
look at the United States Military as Hey, there's three
million people, and I can make them do whatever I want.
In fact, I can do whatever I want with it.
If I want to make them get solar powered tanks,
(14:59):
I could. If I can make him gay the whole
thing up, I can do it. If I can put
in firm white people suck policies, I'll do that too.
I'll do whatever I want. And look, it's been happening
for a while. Clinton started it and stuff like that.
But Barack Obama, because he was just better sharper, he
was a more worthy enemy than all the others, he
(15:22):
took that and he ramped it up into overdrive. And
what Barack Obama did was he took the leadership and
he cleaned him out. If he even sniffed conservatism on
you, you were retired and gone. He just replaced north of
one hundred flag officers. And since that time. Remember he
(15:42):
had eight years and then Trump didn't dump them, and
what didn't dump even close to all of them, and
they'be have four years of Biden. So what is that?
Do the math? That's sixteen years of all those dirty
communists spreading their communism down. It's that poison's gone down,
and it's now a matter of policy in places like
(16:02):
our military academies and otherwise. It's been devastating, devastating. And
I said before, before Trump even was sworn in, I
screamed that the cuts must be deep, deep in the military.
I told you when it came to the academies, I'd
fire everyone. I'd fire the parking lot attendant. It has
to be that deep. Now I'm not naive. I know
(16:26):
they're not going to fire the parking lot attendant. And
I know they're not going to fire everyone, nor are
they really able to do so. But this came out today,
Pete Hegg said has a new policy less generals and
more gis, and they are planning to cut more more
(16:47):
than one hundred and twenty high ranking military officer positions
across active duty and National guard forces. Maybe on its surface,
that doesn't mean anything to you gonna fire, a bunch
of generals and abirls. It's everything, not only for the
dirty commis who are about to be removed, but it
(17:10):
sends a message to everyone else in the military, both
the guys on the ground and the officer corps, that
there's no more comy gook, no more nothing. We are
here to kill people and blow things up and anything
else will not be tolerated. You will be gone. Is
this all we need? Of course not. But this is
(17:32):
a big, bold, drastic step because they know what's coming
after this. Chris, you go ahead and write this one down,
even though it's the most easily predictable thing in the world.
Every one of these dork generals and abirls, they're all
gonna run to CNN and they're gonna drap drape themselves
in the flag and try to appeal to your patriotism
and try to tell you how devastating it is that
(17:54):
I'm a general. I'm fun in Iraq, even though I
never left the air conditioning. I thought that they're gonna
try They're going to run a propaganda campaign. But this
is a good thing and it's something you should celebrate,
all right. You should also celebrate that Selena Zito is
going to come on in about ten minutes, tell us
about what's going on on the rost belt. And you
(18:15):
should celebrate protecting your retirement. If you've already called gold Co,
that's a reason to celebrate. I rest easier at night
knowing that I have fortified my retirement with things that last.
They last through tariffs, they last through recessions, they last
through nations. Precious medals will outlive you, me countries forever.
(18:41):
That's how long it lasts. Gold Co is the one
people trust the most because they've been doing this for
a long time, numerous awards won People trust them. They
will get gold or silver as part of your retirement,
so no matter what happens with the market, you don't
lose every You've busted your butt for your whole life.
(19:03):
They'll give you a free copy of their twenty twenty
five Golden Silver Kid if you want call them eight
five five eight one seven Gold or you can go
to Jesse likes gold dot com, which I find hilarious
because I actually do really like gold, but Jesse likes
Gold dot com. I probably don't like it as much
(19:24):
as Chris, but you understand what I mean. Jesse likes
gold dot com. Selena Zito joins us. Next, he doesn't
care if you believe him, but he's right, Jesse Kelly.
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful, wonderful Wednesday.
(19:44):
And of course a Wednesday made all that more wonderful
because my friend, one of the great writers in America,
Selena Zito, joins me. Now you know Selena Zito. She's
the one who spends her time in the rust belt
talking to normal people. In fact, she has a book out. Hey, Selena,
what's this book called.
Speaker 4 (20:05):
It's called Butler, The Untold Story of the near assassination
of Donald Trump and winning the America's heartland and how
he was America's heartland.
Speaker 1 (20:18):
Now, where were you on that fateful day? Because that's
part of the reason I wanted you to come on, Selena,
because I actually thought about that. I was thinking about
Butler again today and how much we don't know, and
just how incredible that moment was, that we were inches
away from losing the president, and out of respect, we
did lose someone else got shot in the head. Where
(20:38):
were you?
Speaker 2 (20:39):
So?
Speaker 4 (20:40):
I was in an area by the stage. It's called
the buffer. The buffer is basically the place where usually
photojournalists are in security. So Sebha Terravis I just had.
They just happened to put me in there along with
my daughter because I was the post to fly with
(21:01):
President Trump right after the right after the rally and
interview him on our way to Bedminster. And I happened
to see him just minutes before he went out on
the stage that day because he just wanted to say
(21:22):
hi and see how I was doing and tell me
he was looking forward to our interview. He also commented
on my hair. He always tells me I have the
best hair in America, and asked about my grandchildren, gave
me a little hug and said, okay, I'll see out.
(21:43):
There's zdo. And I've interviewed if people have heard me
on your show before, I've interviewed President Trump almost two
dozen times. And there's a running joke between the two
of us since the first time I interviewed him, and
he always says, Hey, you want to go out with me,
and I'm like, no, I don't. So he said it
(22:05):
that day as well. Uh, And so that's how I
ended up being just four feet away from him.
Speaker 1 (22:11):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (22:12):
When he wouldn't when the shots went off. They went
right over my head.
Speaker 1 (22:16):
Selena. Obviously I don't have to ask you to do
this well, because you do do it well. But can
you describe what that moment was like? Was it was
it instantly that you knew what was happening? Was it
that were you totally shocked? Where was it?
Speaker 4 (22:33):
It's you never know how you're going to react in
situations like that. What can be situations of terror and panic?
You I always wonder, am I gonna be am? I
gonna freak out? Am I gonna be calm? I was
remarkably calm, so much so that I still haven't really
reacted to what happened yet, even in the process of
(22:55):
writing the book. But in that moment, I'm a goner
come from a g owning family. I knew exactly what
those four shots were. And I don't know if it's
because I'm a reporter or not, but I didn't immediately
duck down. I was looking around to see what was happening,
and how do I cover this. I'm understanding that this
(23:17):
is history and is my job to record it, you know,
and report it accurately. I saw on the president the
blood streak a constant face immediately. But I also saw
him kneel down, so I knew he didn't fall down.
I knew he wasn't taken down. And when the next
(23:37):
four shots went off, he was already surrounded by a
sea of navy blue, right the Secret Service and so
and that's when the campaign advanced. Guy's name was Michelle Picard.
He's like, get down, and he tackled me into the
ground because I still didn't get it. But you know,
(24:03):
because I was recording the rally, I have the entire thing,
and because I was so close, I got most of
the conversation between him and his Secret Service. It's all
in the book, and I will tell you this part
what was really. You know, sometimes things end up being funny,
(24:24):
not because you're it's funny, but because it's like absurd.
President's Trump's insistence that he gets his shoes on. And
that's because they got gotten knocked off when they surrounded him,
when they put the protective stamps around him. But he
kept insisting they wanted to go, and he kept insisting,
(24:44):
I need to put my shoes on. And he could
hear this one Secret Service agent, I believe it was
a female, say fine, like she was like so exasperated
with him when because he wanted.
Speaker 1 (24:56):
To put his shoes on she is Selena Zito. If
you want to hear the rest of that conversation, I
would highly recommend you go by the book. The book
is called Butler Selina. I think about that day and
I think about what we don't know still not from
your angle, obviously, but I have a lot of questions still,
(25:18):
and I'm sorry when I look at the things that
happened in the wake of all that, my questions. Well,
I'll just put it to you this way. I'm suspicious
and I believe people in the government were involved. I
don't know how you spray off that roof. I don't
know how you cremate the body right away. These things
are not done at any crime scene, let alone the
attempted assassination of the Republican nominee for president. I'm very suspicious,
(25:41):
and you know I'm not the conspiracy theory wing nut type.
I look at the things around that day and I
think there are ugly elements at work here in this country.
Speaker 4 (25:51):
I think there's a lot we don't know, and I
think there's a lot we will end up knowing. But
as as the current administration peels back the layers of
what happened, because I don't think everything can be hidden.
And I will tell you this, having worked and talked
(26:12):
with local law enforcement that were there that day, I
am pretty certain they're talking right now and and and
and outlying what went wrong and everything that that that
was that was treated wrong and and I think we
will find out more and I would say in the
(26:34):
next several months. But you know, this was this was
a striking moment in American history, and it's all the
more striking by the amount of of of things that happened.
To your point that we're not done towards during protocol
that were not done in in the after effects, and
(26:57):
there's too much hidden for it not to be pull
peeled back and the full story being told.
Speaker 1 (27:04):
Good. I look forward to that full story being told.
Let me ask you before I actually I want to
get to the electorate and what they're thinking about everything. Sorry,
I guess I went on too long with this, but
I just find the subject so fascinating. A man did
lose his life that day. Yeah, and obviously we've seen
his family and we know that they've gone through hell.
(27:26):
Have you spoken with them, were they.
Speaker 4 (27:28):
Yes, Yes, I just saw his wife, Helen Competore, and
his daughter in Butler and and I they're they're okay.
But but you have to understand. I mean, I could
see from the angle how bad he was shot. It
(27:50):
was clear that he was not going to survive, and
this family saw it right in front of themselves. Most
people didn't. Someone immediately put a towel over his head.
But it was a gruesome death, and this family will
never be able to wipe those images from their face.
(28:12):
The way the community has come around to them, you'll
find out in the book what President Trump has done
for them has really been remarkable, and this family has
really been embraced by the community of Butler, but also
western Pennsylvania and the entire country. Helen is doing okay
(28:36):
about as much as you can expect. You add what
happened to her in the public, plus all the attention
that really hasn't gone away, that's a lot to ask
for a regular person.
Speaker 1 (28:50):
Yeah, yeah, sure is Selena, do you think you can
stay on for one more so we can actually talk
about how people are feeling about things. We will be
right back with Selena Zita, author of the book Butler
highly recommend you go pick it up. Hang on, Jesse Keilly.
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful, wonderful Wednesday. Remember,
(29:14):
if you would like to email your love, hate, death threats,
or anything else, you can email those into Jesse at
Jesse kellyshow dot com. And we are back with my
friend Selena Zito. You already know where you listen to
this show, author of the book Butler. Okay, Selena, let's
move off of that ugly topic and let's talk about
(29:35):
how the public is feeling. Now. I know how my
Republican friends are feeling. You travel the Ross Belt, you
talk to normal people. I know there's been stock market up,
stock market down, tear eff in, tariff out, deportations. What
are people feeling one hundred days plus in about Trump?
Speaker 4 (29:54):
They feel very good. I mean, I will you know,
I'm not trying to make a Polly on a statement.
People had a level of expectation of.
Speaker 1 (30:06):
A lot of.
Speaker 4 (30:07):
Chaos, and not the way you think of this in
the negative way, but in a way of reshuffling the
way things have been prosecuted for the past four years.
Speaker 3 (30:18):
Right, So that is.
Speaker 4 (30:18):
Going to cause uncertainty, But They have this belief that
once the desk was settled, there might be a little pain,
there might little hurt, that things would go would go
in the direction of what they voted for, which has
a lot to do in first and foremost, it had
to do with securing the border. It was very, very
(30:41):
important to voters, and that's something that President Trump can
can crow about because he has done it. In terms
of the tariffs, people also had a genuine understanding that
this was going to be an open air negotiations and
it wasn't going to look pretty at times. It was
(31:02):
going to look great at times. But they believe at
the end of the day, it is better for the
country to have a level playing field as opposed to
how lopsided it has been for almost forty years.
Speaker 1 (31:17):
Well, these are the people who who've watched the rust
Belt become the rustbelt. It was used to be the
manufacturing belt in it ain't anymore.
Speaker 4 (31:24):
That's exactly right, you know, And it's interesting because you know,
this is the next generation. However, that legacy and culture
and sense of place is still very very rooted with
young people from the Rust Belt. They know that their
parents and their grandparents were done wrong They know their
(31:45):
towns and cities look the way that they do because
they were done wrong and they are because they are
so rooted to place. They are willing to wait it
out because they believe that, you know, and they believe
at the end of the day, it'll be better for
the country. And what is really interesting to so many
(32:05):
people is when they watch people whine and complain about
some of the pinching and the hurting from the elites
about the tariffs, they often say to me, to a person, well,
where were they when our cities were crumbling? They didn't
show up with cameras and ask us how our pain was,
(32:26):
you know, And we're here and we're willing to wait
because it's better for our country. It's better that we
make our own things. It's better that we reshure manufacturing.
Speaker 1 (32:41):
About that, do they really curious? Does Congress, whether it
be Republicans or Democrats at House Senate? I don't care.
Does it ever cross their lips or cross their minds?
And if it does, are their praises are their criticisms?
You know, because there's obviously a lot more than Donald
Trump running the.
Speaker 4 (33:01):
Well. I think members of Congress their biggest challenge in
both parties is have a better understanding of the people
that they represent. There is this misnomer that happens among
elected officials and Jesse, you and I have talked about
this numerous times, that they go to Washington and they
always say it'll never happen to them, and it happens
(33:23):
to them where they believe that they are representing their
party and all the interests that support their party, which
often aren't the interest or in conflict with the interests
of the people they represent. And I think there I
am finding among Republicans, there is an especially newly elected Republicans,
(33:45):
there is an awakening of understanding that that's not what
people aren't going to tolerate that any longer. They've seen
how it could be, even small glimpses, and they don't
want any part of of what has been the status
quo Selina.
Speaker 1 (34:03):
What do they think? Just real quick final question here,
what do they think of Democrats that the party as
a whole? Obviously it's not what I think. Everyone knows
what I think. I'm pretty honest about that. But are
they are they forgotten? Are they hated? Where are they now?
Speaker 4 (34:18):
Well? You know, I went to out to Bucks County, Pennsylvania.
It's on the other side of the state. You are
pretty reliable Democrat county when it came to presidential elections,
a mixed bag when it was local elections. Ruben Gayezid
went out there, the Arizona Senator, and I interviewed him,
and I will tell you Democratic voters who went to
(34:41):
listen still struggle with their party and the party's message.
And while you turn on the cable news and you
think that they want the party's message to be what's
the Technas Texas congresswoman's name, I can't think.
Speaker 1 (34:59):
Of it, Jasmine Crawking.
Speaker 4 (35:01):
Yes, so cable news thinks that's what Democratic voters want.
Speaker 3 (35:07):
Trust me, it's not.
Speaker 4 (35:09):
It's not even close. They want they want more bipartisanship,
They want their party to move to the middle, and
they want their party to have a crisp message. There
was an ap Report poll that just came out five
minutes before I came on the show today, and it
is devastating from Democrats in terms of polling of Democrats
(35:33):
in the middle of the country who are very unhappy
with whatever they've been putting. The show they've been putting
on since January.
Speaker 1 (35:41):
MM Mmm, well, I guess that's the way the kookie crumbles.
Selena Zito, she wrote that new book, Butler. Go pick
up Butler up, Selena, I'm sure they can get it wherever.
What do you want people to buy this book?
Speaker 4 (35:53):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (35:54):
Right now.
Speaker 4 (35:55):
It's on sale and on Amazon. And I will tell
you when you are off. That is not from DC
and New York and writing about things we already figured
out it is. It is very difficult to get booksellers
to stalk your book unless you have a good pre sale.
So I encourage people to get it now. And I
(36:16):
trust me, this is an extraordinary book. I don't usually
brag about my stuff, but this is an extraordinary book
that captures a moment in history but also captures the
campaign in a way that nobody was reporting on.
Speaker 1 (36:32):
See that's the difference between you and I, Selena. I
love to brag about all my stuff. Selena Zito. The
book is Butler. It's on sale, Go pre order it Amazon.
I appreciate you very much. All Right, we have our
two coming. Let's talk about corruption, shall we next?