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December 12, 2025 37 mins

What's the point of a justice system? And if it gets abused, could it be taken into individual hands. Colonization was not always a bad thing. The Communists exploiting white guilt. Gas prices higher in California and why.

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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is the Jesse Kelly Show. Is the Jesse Kelly Show.
Another hour of the Jesse Kelly Show on a fantastic,
fantastic Friday, and ask doctor Jesse Friday. We have all
kinds of stuff this hour, from Jasmine Crockett's run to
what's going on in Venezuela to the post World War

(00:32):
two decolonization of the world. Before I get to any
of that, I'm gonna talk about a story just for
a couple of minutes, one that probably passed you by
because it's not big. It's not big, but the headline
is this grieving Colorado uncle body slams the lawyer of

(00:56):
nephew's suspected killer outside the courtroom, fracturing his spine. Now,
the details of this story don't matter, doesn't matter, But
what does matter is this, And it's been on my
mind for a long time, and I just kind of
vent it out for you here. Every time we talk

(01:20):
about some horrible, heartbreaking story where some multi time felon
butchers some innocent person women, children, and some filthy communist
judge in da let the killer out let him off

(01:40):
scot free. Every single time I see one of these stories,
I have feelings that well up inside of me. And
I'm just gonna lay this out for you here, just
being honest with you. I have thought multiple times, if

(02:02):
that was my son, I'd kill that judge. I thought
about it multiple times. In fact, every time I see
one of these stories, if that was my wife who
got butchered on a train by some animal, I don't
even know if i'd kill the animal, I'd kill the judge. Now,

(02:23):
I'm not gonna do that, and I'm not encouraging you
to do that. I'm telling you about a feeling that
wells up inside of me every time I see one
of these stories. And then, of course I talk myself
out of it. That's against the law. Then you'd go
to prison. I talk myself out of it, right, But
that is my first reaction as a man. Every time

(02:45):
I see one of these stories, kill the criminal, kill
the judge. I think about it every single time. Now,
that's me. Have you ever had these thoughts? Have you
ever had these feelings? Of course you have, Chris is
Nodden orse. I think these are normal feelings that people have. Now,

(03:07):
let me ask you something. Why do human beings when
they create a society, why do they create a justice system.
Every society has one of some kind. You know, there's
always generally something you would recognize as a cop, some

(03:27):
sort of a trial system, you would recognize, some sort
of a prison system, you would recognize. Why do people
do that? Human beings demand justice. They demand it, and
that demand for justice it must be satisfied. It cannot

(03:52):
be denied without end. If it is denied for too long,
then human beings will take matters into their own hands.
And so because that feeling must be justicus must be satisfied.
Human beings, when they create societies, create justice systems for

(04:14):
those societies, so people have some semblance of justice. Somebody
did this bad, now our justice system will do something
to him because he did something bad. And it's always
imperfect and it's always ugly, and I get that. But
that's why human beings create justice systems in their societies,

(04:39):
which brings us to where we are now in our country.
And you're well aware of all the reasons why. I
want to get back to the questions so we don't
have to go in depth. But you know that communists
want violent criminals raping and murdering people. We've talked about
it without en that's why they open the prisons in
the Soviet Union. But violent crime destabilizes society, creates angst

(05:03):
in a society, which helps the communist in his revolution.
That's why the communist judge in your area let that
violent criminal out for the twenty fifth time, and then
he butchered your grandmother with a hunting knife. That's why
the judge wanted him to murder somebody, wanted him to
rape somebody. They're not soft on crime, they're not naive.

(05:25):
They want these things to happen, and that's why they
are so common now across the country. Where this career
criminal gets out and hurts someone, and this career criminal
gets it's not an accident, it's not a whoopsie, it's
not an unfortunate byproduct of restorative justice. It is the
communist's intention to put more rapist, thieves and murderers into

(05:46):
your society. Now I shouldn't say great thing, but I
guess in the end it is a great thing. The
great thing about the war against communists is eventually, oftentimes
very late, too late, but eventually the people will tire

(06:10):
of it and they will take measures to eliminate the problem.
I'm telling you right now. I've been feeling it for
a while. There's going to be a day when a
criminal gets murdered by a victim's family. There is going

(06:33):
to be a day in this country where a prosecutor
gets murdered by a victim's family. And there is going
to be a day in this country where a judge
gets murdered by a victim's family. And you ask how
far away that day is. Well, let's talk about me again.

(06:56):
I told you the feelings I have. What's the How
do I talk myself out of it? When I'm going
through that mental exercise and I say, if that was
if that was ob dead, I'd kill him. If that
was James dead, I'd kill him. If that was Luke dead,
I'd kill him. You know what really gets me out
of it? I think to myself, Well, if I did that,

(07:16):
then I'd go to prison, and then the boys would
be left behind and I'd be gone. Or the then
I'd go to prison and ab would be left behind
and I'd be gone. What talks me out of it?
Something to lose. How many men out there have some
sort of military law enforcement training of some kind. Men

(07:39):
who can kill, maybe have killed, are willing to kill
at some point in time in their lives. How many
of them are almost out of things to lose. What's
going to happen is there's going to be a story
and some innocent person is going to have been butchered

(08:01):
by an animal the communists turned loose, and there's going
to be a member of that family who's going to
be a guy willing to kill, knows how to kill,
and he's a guy who ain't stressed about going to prison.
And it's going to be a national story. And what's

(08:21):
worse is it's not going to be a one off.
It will probably spark a movement. I will venture to
guess if the communist judges cannot control themselves, and they
cannot control themselves, they will It's not humanly possible for them.
If the communist judges in this country who turn murderers
and rapists loose, if they do not change their ways,

(08:46):
there will probably not be enough private security for them
to save them when the reckoning comes. Ah. This is ugly,
by the way, and I don't celebrate this. It's a
terrible place for society to go to. You want a
justice system that is pardon the pun just you have

(09:07):
to have a justice system that is just. Otherwise society
descends into mob violence and vigilante justice and all these
other things. And they sound great. And look, I'm a dude.
We all love these movies, right. Everybody loves Man on Fire.
Everyone loves the dude who's got nothing to lose, and
now he's going to just go kill every bad guy.
I love him too. I'm a dude. I love him too,

(09:27):
just like you do. It's a terrible place for society
to be, and we're heading there. This is one little
story out of Colorado. The uncle probably just he was
completely in the wrong. I'm not defending him or anything.
I'm not saying that at all. It's just a story
out of Colorado. And I don't want you to ever
do anything illegal or anything violent. Remember, keep yourself out

(09:48):
of prison. But it's coming, man. How many more Irena
Zurutzka's do we have to see before someone snapped? What
if I'm talking about that little blonde girl who got
butchered by that savage on the train and we all
watched the video of it. What if that young lady
had a father divorced wipes out of the picture, no

(10:13):
other siblings, what if that father was fifty years old,
maybe maybe even lost his job, not that into his job.
He's angry, drinks a bit, and he logs onto the
internet and watches that animal kill his daughter. How hard

(10:33):
do you have to push that man before he does something?
Those days are coming in this country. I'm telling you.
They are the communists in the sitting in judges robes.
Maybe think they're going to be okay in those days.
They will not. They'll be the first ones on the menu.
It's coming. It's ugly and horrible, but it's coming. Better

(10:54):
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(11:41):
Go to c hoq dot com. Promo code Jesse Chuck
dot com promo code Jesse We'll be back truth attitude
Jesse Kelly. It is the Jesse Kelly Show, and Jewish
producer Chris brought up during the breaks. We actually touched

(12:03):
on it once before on the show. A wonderful story
out of Montana in the eighteen sixties. Corrupt law enforcement.
Justice wasn't done soon. People are swinging from trees. There's
a story out of I believe it was Athens, Tennessee.
Post World War Two, corrupt local law enforcement, criminality. Guess what,
Men started taking matters into their own hands, weapons, things

(12:26):
like that. I know the communist savages listening to the
sound of my voice right now, believe they'll be able
to open up the jails and let violent criminals run
free forever and there will never be consequences for it.
But I have terrible news for you, demons. There will
be There will be people will take a bit for
a while, an indeterminate amount of time, I should say,

(12:51):
and then when that time limit is up, you are
in trouble. Jesse, you mentioned in the Rhodesia History segment,
by the way, pause that starts again on Monday. If
you missed the previous three parts, get caught up on
the weekend. I Heeartspotify iTunes, you can download the podcast

(13:12):
hour two of Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Show Rhodesa History. We're
picking up again on Monday. If you're not caught up,
too bad, So sad, I can't recap it all. It's
been a long one, all right. iHeart Spotify iTunes. Jesse,
you mentioned in the Rhodesia History segment that the global
powers post World War Two collectively began decolonizing. What caused

(13:36):
this shift? Was it in response to the aggressive actions
of Germany or Japan or something else? Okay, so there's
a bit to this, but one of the things that
doesn't get talked about because it did happen post World
War two, in years and years and years. It wasn't
like immediately after World War Two. But post World War two,

(13:57):
these empires, certainly European empires, but honestly even American and whatnot,
started to give up or frankly lose their territories they
held in far off lands and part of the There
are a couple different reasons we can discuss. It can
get deeper, but we'll discuss two different things. First. Remember

(14:17):
this about colonization, and your dark history teacher probably never
taught you this because they were only ever taught that
America's evil and white men are bad. So let's discuss
what colonization is. In so many places, it's an agreement, right.
We'll make it about what the Europeans were doing in
Rhodesia with the African tribes. It was an agreement. The

(14:42):
agreement was, we are going to bring civilization here. No
more dying at thirty five from dysentery, no more relying
on one cow to feed your entire family. We are
going to bring the ability to read, right, modern roads,
running water, healthcare, We're going to bring up air conditioning.

(15:05):
We are going to bring civilization to your society. Right.
But there's an agreement, and the agreement is we will
also in some way look out for you as we
colonize you. Remember, yes, we are conquering, that's what colonization is.

(15:28):
We are conquering, but we are also going to protect you.
We're going to look out for you. Yes, it may
be Rhodesia. Now, we may have taken your tribal lands.
But guess what, Zambia doesn't get to form an army
and come in here and start attacking you, because we'll
go up there and beat the living crap out of them.
That's part of the deal with colonization. There is a
certain layer of protection. Now if you go to what

(15:50):
we'll make it about Britain. If you look at countries
like Britain, they lost India almost immediately afterwards. Why where
were you when the Japanese were rampaging through this freaking place?
Where were you when they were raping all the women
and butchering everybody? Where were you? Same thing the French

(16:10):
and Vietnam. Hey, France, you moved in here and you
colonized it. Yeah, thanks for the paved roads. But when
my daughter got sold off into sex slavery in the
Japanese Empire, where were you? And if you the empire
that did the conquering, did the colonizing, if you were

(16:31):
not strong enough to then protect what you colonized, you
are inevitably going to be cast off. You are going
to be cast off. There is a protection agreement there,
and there's another aspect to it which we don't have
to get deep into simple finances because money, national debt,

(16:53):
things like that. The numbers are always so big they're
beyond our comprehension. I can't I don't understand what thirty
seven trillion dollars is do you? Nobody does. The numbers
are so big they're beyond our comprehension. We don't really
take in what the financial impact of World War two
was for the entire planet, certainly the established powers on

(17:16):
the planet. I want you to think about this New
York City. Think about New York City. I know you
can at least picture it in your head. Maybe you're
sitting there right now watching or listening in New York City.
Think about all those buildings, all those bridges, all that stuff.
How much money do you think is all that worth?
The buildings, the bridge is everything. But I know you

(17:39):
don't know, neither do I. But it's a lot. Right now.
I just bombed it to rubble. There aren't two bricks
still stacked on top of each other. I have to
rebuild it. What does that cost? That's one city? Now,

(17:59):
think about all the destruction from Russia throughout Europe, Asia, Africa,
think about Japan, think about all the cities rubble. The
financial cost was so great for the established powers of
the world. They didn't have the money to worry about

(18:23):
colonies anymore, and they were done with it. And there's
one more aspect to it we can touch on. I
don't want to give the game away too much, but
one more aspect we'll touch on in a moment. Hang on,
Jesse Kelly Bacsion. It is the Jesse Kelly Show on
a Fantastic Friday, and ask doctor Jesse Friday. Remember you

(18:47):
can email the show Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com.
So as far as the world's decolonization goes, one final
point on this after World War Two, when the established
powers decided they were going to hand their lands back
to the natives. As I mentioned already during our history
segment of the Rhodesian Bush War, and I've mentioned it

(19:10):
on a million different history segments. Communists find the cracks
that form in every single society and they wormed their
way into those cracks and use the crack to break
the society apart. They are masterful at this, masterful at this.

(19:36):
After World War Two, when the world was trying to
pull itself back together. Remember, the communists were on the move.
They weren't sitting around heartbroken about World War two and
loss of life. They're communists, they don't care about dead people.
And they recognized that exploiting the white guilt of the

(19:58):
West would be an incredible way to take over all
kinds of places they wanted to take over, just like
they were doing in Rhodesia. Hey, it's white versus black.
The blacks are oppressed. We need to get in there,
aren't you oppressed? Your a prep race. Communism is such

(20:21):
an easy sell and Western civilization by this point, and
I don't know we could do a whole deep dive
on this. Was too weak to stand up for it,
to stand up to it, just simply too weak, didn't
understand what was happening, didn't stand up to it. Hey, Jesse,
I just saw the footage of Venezuelan thug Maduro dancing

(20:42):
wearing some dopey hat, threatening to smash the teeth of
North America. Wouldn't it be nice to see a footage
of a drone whiz by that commie. Don't take him out,
Just some chin music, as they say, in baseball. I
don't know how he's still alive at this point in time. Yeah,

(21:03):
it really is a miracle that he's still alive, because
we have a fifty million dollars bounty on his head,
and Donald Trump has all but said to the camera, Yeah,
I want someone to kill him, and I'll pay you
fifty million dollars. I want someone to kill him. I
think the Trump administration, if I had to guess, and

(21:24):
that's all we can do is guest, because they have
to keep these things kind of close to the vest.
I think it's pretty obvious that's what he's going for.
He doesn't want to actually drop bombs on Venezuela, certainly
doesn't want to invade Venezuela. He's aware the American people
are not going to have any appetite for that at all.
So you just drop a fifty million dollar bounty up there,

(21:44):
and you say, man, it'd be a shame if something
happened to him. And now you get to the place
where loyalty can be hard to come by. You have friends,
you have family, probably one of the two, Lord Brillin,
you have both, but you never know you have any friends,
you have any family, good, good, good, let me ask you,

(22:08):
how many people in your life are you one hundred
percent positive would not sell you out for fifty million dollars?
Remember what fifty million dollars means. That's not just you know,
flying first class now and then you probably have a

(22:31):
couple mansions for that kind of money, probably a couple
times a year at least, you fly on private jets.
You have a maid, maybe two or three. You live
like a king for the rest of your life with

(22:51):
fifty million, tax free dollars. If you're Maduro, you know
he's asking him this exact question every single night. Now
that's you. You're a normal, peaceful person. I gotta be honest.
I got a few friends, got some family members. How
many am I sure wouldn't do me in for fifty million?

(23:17):
Count that number on one hand. Chris, Oh, Chris probably
has even less. Think about that. Fifty million dollars is
a lot of money. I think they want someone to
take the guy out. We already sent our military in
in case you don't know. And we grab this woman
who Trump wants to be the new leader of Venezuela,

(23:37):
and we sent her to I think it's Norway or
something like that. I'm sure she has a security detail
that rivals Donald Trump's at this point, because if Maduro
has half a brain, he understands that taking that woman
out would benefit him. We'll see where it goes. Don't
don't convince yourself by the way that everything's a walk

(23:58):
in the park. Also, don't convince yourself that regime change
solves problems all the time. The history has shown you
can kill a bad guy. It's easy to kill you
know that. Easy to kill a bad guy. It's not hard,
especially today, with the technology we have. We can fire

(24:19):
missiles from two hundred meters from two hundred miles away
and drop them in a coffee can. Today, it's not
hard to kill somebody with the rifles we have now,
It's not hard to kill somebody. You can kill somebody easily.
Replacing them with somebody who will stabilize things and do
the things you want becomes a much, much, much more

(24:40):
difficult affair. Jesse, if you're using a senate race to
build your brand, always talking about Jasmine Crockett, you're aiming
higher than the Senate. Jasmine Crockett might already be running
for president and we'll be in the primary if she
keeps it up. Nobody else is popular right now. But
I'll tell you something you want to hear something. Do

(25:01):
you know who the number one fundraiser in Congress is
number one? More than Mike Johnson, more than you know who?
Number one is AOC. Part of the reason we are
in such a dangerous place as a country is these
insane communists that we kind of I don't know. I

(25:23):
don't want to say we dismissed them, but when they
were the squad, when it was just four or five
young women, I don't know that we took them as
seriously as we should have. I don't think we understand
the amount of money that is behind communism. Now they
have moved off of the street corner and there are

(25:44):
now billionaires who will write huge checks to committed communists. Now,
it's a really scary place to be as a society.
But that's where we are. Look, we're all thinking Gavin
Newsom is going to be the Democrat nominee. Do you
understand how premature that is. It's still the year twenty
twenty five. That primary isn't until the year twenty twenty eight.

(26:08):
That is three centuries. That's not three years. That's three
centuries in politics. It's gonna be a wild world out there.
It's gonna be a very, very wild world. And when
I stop being afraid of it and start thinking about it, honestly,
I'm fascinated by it. I'm kind of excited to live
through the whole thing. I think it's gonna be quite

(26:29):
a ride. Hey, Jesse, isn't Blackrock and Larry Fink affecting
private home ownership negatively by buying up single family homes. Yes,
they are driving up the cost of housing and limiting
availability for the average American. My son, who is twenty
six and more informed than many his age, did love Trump,

(26:49):
but is disillusioned, as he says Trump is letting his
billionaire buddies benefit from his policies, but not your average Joe. Well,
the reality of that we can discuss. But image in
politics is everything. Remember, people who are informed, like you,

(27:11):
you know the reality of things. But most people are
not informed. Most people know five second video clips they
got on Twitter. They know headlines they see briefly and
then move on. Most people are not super informed. And yes,
right now, I would argue Trump has an image problem

(27:34):
that he has overcome in the past and he probably
will not. Probably he has to overcome it now before
the midterms, and that image is, Hey, you ran as
the McDonald's guy. A lot of billionaires are getting pardons.
Where's my stuff? He's aware of it, all right, he's
aware of it. He's got what ten months to undisillusion

(27:59):
I'm sure that's not a word to undisillusioned people like
your son. It's got to figure it out, all right.
Let's talk about some other things before we do that.
Let me talk to you about gold. I already said
the debt crisis is it's inevitable. The devaluation of your
money is inevitable. There's nothing that can stop it. I

(28:20):
can't stop it, You can't stop it. All we can
do is prepare gold co is how we prepare A
plus rated from the Better Business Bureau. They still have
free twenty twenty five gold and silver kits. Gold just
hit yet another record. Gold keeps hitting records because the

(28:41):
currency keeps going down. Don't wait until it's completely unobtainable.
Call eight five five eight one seven gold to learn more,
or go to Jesse Likes goold dot com. We'll be
back the Jesse Kelly Show. I Like it next it

(29:01):
is The Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful Friday. You
can still email us Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. Jesse.
The national average gas price is two ninety five. California
is four forty seven. Their tax is seventy point nine
two cents per gallon. California gas without taxes is three

(29:23):
seventy six, Oklahoma's one ninety nine. So on, so forth.
Why is there nearly a two dollars per gallon difference?
Love the show? Feel free to use my name. Okay,
So I'm not going to break down all the fees
that go into things like California. But remember there are
things things you'd probably call hidden fees, hidden costs to

(29:45):
life that make life so much more expensive. For example,
I'm just gonna use this as an example. I'm not
this is not accurate. It's just an example, all right.
So California gas. By the way, I just drove by
a gas station last night. It's two dollars in nineteen
cents a gallon to nineteen If you're in California right now,
don't drive your car off for bridge. I'm sorry, we
pay half of what you pay. Why if it's more

(30:09):
than just taxes. Why whoa remember how many layers there are,
how many different working parts there are to every single
part of an economy. It's what we actually talked about
a lot during COVID that we have a twenty trillion
dollar economy. You have any idea how complicated that is,

(30:31):
how many different parts and shapes. It's unbelievably complicated, and
the different parts have to work with each other anyway,
So let's make it about gas. What do I have
to do? I have to pull oil. This is a
very overly simplified explanation, but I have to pull oil
out of the ground. Well, let's say I'm in the ocean,
because California has that, I have to pull oil out

(30:54):
of that. I then have to transport that unrefined oil
to someplace that can refine the oil. Once the oil
has been refined, then I have to turn it in together,
and then I have to get it to the gas state.
And that you understand. Now we're talking about layers. Now
there are layers involved. Yes, the price you pay at

(31:15):
the pump may just have a seventy cent per gallon
tax on it, but that oil platform any extra fees
they have to pay in California that they wouldn't have
to pay in say Texas. The boat, let's call it
a boat, the big boat that's going to go out
to that oil platform and grab all that oil. Any

(31:39):
extra fees, any extra licenses, classifications that have to be
done to that boat before that boat can actually ship
out bring things back pipelines themselves. You know, I told
you I worked construction most of my life. That's what
my dad did. That's what his dad did. Just the

(32:00):
white trash construction family from Ohio, that's what we are.
I I would work, well, it all over the place, Montana, Arizona, Texas,
New Mexico, all over the place. I would work. Usually
in the ditch. We wouldn't make. This is when I
was young. I wouldn't make. I was usually the one

(32:21):
of the lowest laborers on there because I got the
crappy jobs. That's this way it is. That's the way
my dad wanted it. But I wanted to make twelve
bucks an hour. Thirteen bucks an hour, I mean, that's
when your buddies are working at fast food place. That's
good money. Right then. I remember that it was the
first job I did in California. We had to go
put in. I believe it was a sewer line in Oxnard, California.

(32:45):
It's southern California, by the way, Oxnard, California. We did
a pipeline project out there. And don't quote me on
this exactly because I don't remember. It was years ago,
but I believe I was making twenty three twenty dollars
an hour an hour. Why well, California had all these

(33:09):
rules that said I had to be paid all this. Well,
that pipeline project. I don't remember how much it was.
Let's say it was a five million dollar pipeline project.
Who pays for it? You know, the government doesn't have
any money. Right if you're sitting in Oxnard, California, and

(33:30):
you pay taxes, you paid for it. All those extra requirements.
We got to raise the wage cheer an extra license there.
I've told you this story. We did a project in
a San Diego area. I think it was La Joya
if I remember right, but San Diego area. We had
to I think he was forty five dollars an hour.
We were digging a line, and we had to have

(33:52):
some kind of archaeologist expert type guy there for the
entire project, every minute of every day, and his only
job was he stood on the side of the ditch
and looked down into the ditch all day, every day
in case you came across in an old Indian arrowhead

(34:16):
or something like that, at which point he would stop
the entire project. And by the way, if he did
stop the entire project, the state of California or city
of Sandy, I don't know who put it on, would
then have to compensate us for the fact the project
would stop. Well, we dug the air arrowhead out of
the ground, and who paid for that the taxpayer. I've

(34:39):
told you that inflation's not going to go back to
where it was, right, you know that. I've told you
about the value of the dollar going down. You know that.
And I've told you this too. You better remember it.
If you want the honestly the most effective way to
at least mitigate some of this inflation brutality you're going through,

(35:02):
you got to get out of your communist state. You
want your dollar to go a lot further. Get out
of your communist state. Go look, go look at La Jolla, California,
San Diego. Take two hundred thousand dollars. That's about I
would say average size of a home. Take two hundred
thousand dollars and look at what you can get in

(35:24):
San Diego, California. Then come to Texas. Look in Dallas, Houston.
I don't get rural Texas. Take your two hundred thousand
dollars and see what kind of home you can get
if you are in a blue state. Because the communism
is so rampant, the tax is, the fees that it's
never ending. Your standard of living is shockingly lower than

(35:50):
it would be if you lived in a red state
without all those taxes and regulations and fees and this
and that. It's just a fact. What do you think
so many people will They'll make a bunch of money
in New York City, for instance, build up a good retirement,
and then when they retire right down to Texas, Why well,

(36:12):
they want to live in a nice big house with
a pool. Can't afford that in New York, Texas. Take
all that money down here, live like a king. Move
if you can't. We still have an entire hour. It's
going to be a good time before we do that.
Let's do this. Let's talk about memories. Right now. Legacy

(36:33):
Box has a special for nine dollars. They will convert
your home movie nine dollars a tape, whether it's a
VHS tape, a film reel. When I say convert it,
they will hand digitize it. They're not feeding some crap
into some machine that's going to tear your stuff up.

(36:53):
This stuff is digitized by hand. Keep that whole movie forever.
Did you know that today it's more faded than it
was yesterday? Heat, humidity, cool. It's just the way it works.
These things don't last. Those pictures don't last. Twenty thirty
years from now, that picture, that polaroid, it's gonna be
all white. It's gone. You can't see it anymore. If
you digitize it with Legacy Box today, you keep it forever.

(37:17):
Your kids get to see it, and their kids and
their kids after them. There's nothing more precious than memories, man, memories.
To have my dad on my phone means everything to me.
Legacybox dot Com slash Jesse, Legacybox dot com slash Jesse.

(37:38):
We'll be back.
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Host

Jesse Kelly

Jesse Kelly

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