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October 17, 2025 • 32 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:02):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
The Michael Arry Show is on the air. It's Charlie
from BlackBerry Smoke. I can feel a good one coming on.

Speaker 3 (00:22):
It's the Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
Oh yes it is. Oh yes.

Speaker 1 (00:30):
Indeed, it was one year ago down today that Donald
Trump roasted all of DC and the media.

Speaker 2 (00:46):
But perhaps the finest line of the evening and the
year was this one.

Speaker 4 (00:51):
Here's the thing that Democrats were crazy for saying that
men have periods, But then I met Tim Wolves. Here's
the thing that Democrats were crazy for saying that men
have periods, But then I met Timwalls.

Speaker 2 (01:16):
You know, a good snort while you're laughing.

Speaker 1 (01:20):
I have seen people that I think do it on purpose,
and I don't know why, because it's horrible. Maybe they
don't do it on purpose. I just think they do.
But it's it's terrible, it's awful. But it's also a
sign that you have totally let yourself go in your

(01:40):
lab And that one is so funny. It's so funny
to me on so many levels. But part of it
is that there's the truth to you know, the insult.
But part of it is to the fact that Trump
loves the insult he is. He is what was that
triumph the insult comedy Dollar you remember that, Rember, that

(02:03):
whole thing that he understands human nature so much better
than the bushes or Romney's or McCain's or Biden's. He
gets that at the end of all of this, we
are human beings who can be reduced to the sum

(02:23):
of our fears and anxieties and insecurities. And he plays
upon that and it gives him an advantage over people
that is so hard for them to fathom understand.

Speaker 2 (02:37):
He makes them so mad.

Speaker 1 (02:39):
I mean, you know, Alec Baldwin is just pounding the
wall all day long over his hatred of Donald Trump
or or imagine John Bolton, imagine Jim Comey, imagine Hillary
Clinton doing her best Glenn Close in attraction.

Speaker 2 (03:00):
I will not be ignored.

Speaker 1 (03:03):
Hillary Clinton spent her whole life desperately scheming to be president.
And however, many of the conspiracies you believe she was
aware of, and you could go on up the chain

(03:25):
of culpability, you know, directed approved to get there. I mean,
they do have an odd number of people around them
who die. I mean, you can think it's all bunked
but you do have to admit a lot of people
around them die under extremely, extremely odd circumstances. And when

(03:47):
one of them is her alleged lover, Vince Foster, those
those things really they don't add up.

Speaker 2 (03:57):
And then she she hangs around, hangs around, and hangs around.

Speaker 1 (04:02):
She loses to Obama a and so then she does
her her Secretary of State thing, and they definitely made
a lot of money. They used that position to manage
to squirrel a bunch of money away illegally. And then
it's finally her term in twenty sixteen, and Obama clears
the deck with Joe. He says, look, you know your

(04:22):
boys just just pass you. You know, you don't want
to do this to your family, and and so he
clears the deck.

Speaker 2 (04:29):
So's she's got the run of the race.

Speaker 1 (04:32):
And then of course Bernie gets in, this dude with
a crooked finger who just rattles things off in the
most obnoxious socialist accent. I mean, he just he's a
parody of himself. But she hangs in there. They rig,
they rig the nomination for her, so she gets the
Democrat nomination.

Speaker 2 (04:51):
And now now it's time for her.

Speaker 1 (04:54):
And she's going to beat this guy, he'd never even
elected to office. He doesn't know what he's doing, says
things that upset people, and we can't upset people. You're
supposed to you're supposed to know all the phrases you
can and cannot use to stay out of the penalty box.

Speaker 2 (05:10):
And he uses all of them.

Speaker 1 (05:11):
But she knows, she knows all the right words to
say to the right community so that you never get
in trouble and canceled and criticized. And she does it all.
She plays the game, and she embraces the game. She
is committed to this thing, and she's at the finish
line and here comes Hillary.

Speaker 2 (05:35):
And Trump wins.

Speaker 1 (05:38):
You know, so many things happen that we forget because
we're constantly cramming new bits of information in, whether it's
a school shooting, an assassination, natural disaster, wars, elections, candidates, comments,
the Coldplay concert and the CEO and and so each

(06:01):
one of these things is uh. It was on this
day in nineteen eighty nine that Billy Joel released We
Didn't Start the Fire. But it's each one of these
things is something that we'll look back and kind of remember,
but the details will fade back and it's.

Speaker 2 (06:19):
It's just amazing to me.

Speaker 1 (06:21):
It is amazing to me that at that moment, the
American people did what I didn't think they would ever
do again, came to their senses, voted boldly and courageously
and changed the world. Because if there's no Trump one
point zero in sixteen, there would be no Trump two
point zero in twenty twenty four.

Speaker 2 (06:43):
It would be believed.

Speaker 1 (06:44):
That he was kind of a one trick pony, you know,
kind of a flash in the pan, but it's not
really a serious he has He has proven to be
a viable, practically a party.

Speaker 2 (06:58):
There's there's more MAGA today, and there.

Speaker 1 (07:00):
Is this sort of traditional Republican party that MAGA is
the heart and soul of the Republican Party. On the
air ninety all, He's got it all. John Bolton indictment
came down yesterday during the show. The problem is some

(07:21):
of you will realize this, and some people may not
have noticed the pattern. There is often news that is
reported erroneously. You'll find out shots broke out at the
Smith School in the state of Smith and so the

(07:41):
initial reports will be the shooter was a white man,
white nationalists. I'm not even convinced these people exist, but
apparently there's white nationalists everywhere.

Speaker 2 (07:52):
That's what the left ones us to believe.

Speaker 1 (07:54):
As a shooter is a white nationalist, he's angry, you're
wearing a Maga cat like just see Smollett's attackers. He's
wearing a Maga cap. And he's definitely right wing and
we're sure of it. And he's pro life and he's
Maga and he's a bad person, and this is what
it all. This is what those politics lead to. He's

(08:14):
a very bad person. And then you will find out
that no, actually he's an Antifa terrorist who is an
illegal alien, and he was joined by some other guy
who is black and another guy who's an illegal alien

(08:35):
from Guatemala, and none of them are white, and none
of them are conservative. And by the way, they wrote manifestos.
So there is a rush to be first in delivering news.
Everyone wants to be I got the exclusive, I got
it first breaking here. And the problem is you wouldn't

(08:57):
have trusted the primary source, which whoever first wrote that
story up, because you'd have a good sense to know
that person that's not trustworthy, that's not honest, that didn't
really happen. I don't believe it happened that way. I'm
going to wait. But you might trust the secondary source,
your favorite talk show host, and so when that person

(09:18):
passes on bad news, you don't always get a chance
to hear that person offer the correction. So why put
bad news out there? That news will still be news tomorrow,
the next day, and the next day. It doesn't have
to be first. It should be right. And so we
have taken great pains that we almost never break news,

(09:41):
and we don't intend to ever.

Speaker 2 (09:43):
It's not our thing.

Speaker 1 (09:45):
But we want you to know that when we report
on something that it is true as much as we
can possibly ferret out because at some point you're still
relying on primary posters of news, and so we do
add that into the judgement, into the judgment.

Speaker 2 (10:04):
So this was the.

Speaker 1 (10:04):
Story yesterday on CNN about John Bolton potentially being indicted,
and we know he was.

Speaker 2 (10:11):
I think it was five to eleven PM yesterday. I'm
not positive on that that's the number I saw.

Speaker 3 (10:16):
Multiple sources are telling CNN the Justice Department will ask
a federal grand jury today to indict President Trump's former
national security advisor.

Speaker 2 (10:25):
John Bolton.

Speaker 3 (10:26):
This would be the third indictment of the president's self
described political enemies in just three weeks. I'm joined here
at the table with a terrific group of reporters, including
Kaitlin Polantz, who is bringing us this reporting. Kaitlin, what
do we.

Speaker 2 (10:41):
Know, well, Dana.

Speaker 5 (10:43):
We know now from various sources that the grand jury
in Maryland in federal court is expected to be hearing
evidence about John Bolton this afternoon. The just Department is
expected to go in there and ask for an indictment
of the former national security advisor to Donald Trump and
somebody who is not just well known from the Trump era,
but a long time government official. This is a case

(11:06):
where it's been in the works for years. It's been
worked on because Bolton at one point was discovered having
an Aol email account according to the sertis I've talked to,
where he was writing notes to himself about his time
in the Trump White House, and that could include classified documents.
We also know from a recent search just two months ago,

(11:26):
that there were many documents, including ones labeled as about
weapons of mass destruction, about Allied strikes, things that had
markings on them that said classified secret. There were phones, computers, drives,
all of that seas from his house. His lawyer has
said this could all be very old material from the
George W. Bush administration and nothing inappropriate was being kept

(11:48):
by Bolton. But there is still an important possibility here
that this is a very serious national security case and
that the Justice Department does continue wanting to enforce.

Speaker 2 (12:01):
Cases like these. It might not be all of a
political decision.

Speaker 1 (12:05):
Oh, when you've lost CNN, you're in really bad shape.
Now do you notice the pattern that CNN is so
protective of people who were perceived as being Republican. You know,
it's MSNBC and CNN. They've all rushed to protect John Bolton.

(12:29):
They did the same for Jim Comey. They did the
same for Liz Cheney and Adam Kinsinger, all of these
evil Republicans that they had been saying for years were
absolute demons, just monsters. When those people got crossways with Trump,
then the same people who once said they were monsters,

(12:52):
all of a sudden became very defensive of them, because
what they don't want, see, they want power and a
uni party system them and only them. And then there
were the Republicans over here who were not so different
than the Democrats but differed with them, and was a
different crowd and one of their team instead of instead
of the Democrat team. But but you know, we all

(13:15):
play again. We're all on the field, we all get along,
good sportsmanship. We don't we don't hurt any each other's
political careers.

Speaker 2 (13:22):
We go along, we get along.

Speaker 1 (13:23):
And then Trump comes in and he has scorched earth
and that that's going to end up costing them their jobs.

Speaker 2 (13:31):
They don't want that to happen.

Speaker 1 (13:33):
So now they realize, we've got to staye a coup.
We've got to help the Republicans put their old establishment
people back in.

Speaker 2 (13:43):
Trump won't be there forever.

Speaker 1 (13:45):
And they're trying to tear down the apparatus that is,
this stupid Republican party establishment that has sold out its
people for so long. And so now you see the
battle lines are draw on, you see the sides in
how they're stage and these you know, those people did

(14:06):
as much to bring down Trump as any Democrat ever did.

Speaker 2 (14:09):
Let's be clear on that.

Speaker 1 (14:10):
John Bolton was absolutely he was accusing President Trump of
mishandling classified information. He was absolutely claiming that Trump was
was stealing classified information and that he should be punished
for it.

Speaker 2 (14:26):
He should he should be sent to prison.

Speaker 1 (14:28):
As it turns out it was John Bolton who was
stealing classified information.

Speaker 2 (14:33):
And now it.

Speaker 1 (14:34):
Is my fervent prayer that justice be done and that
John Bolton will be on the wrong side of the handcuffs,
that he will be on the wrong side of this one.

Speaker 2 (14:51):
Sorry, this Michael Barry show A segment is older the moose.

Speaker 1 (15:01):
Evan Bolton has released his first statement since being indicted
on eighteen federal counts. Oh, it's a glorious thing. You
only need one to put him in the pan, put
him in a cage.

Speaker 5 (15:15):
I have become the latest target in weaponizing the Justice
Department to charge those he deems to be his enemies
with charges that were declined before or distort the facts.
My book was reviewed and approved by the appropriate experience
career clearance officials. When my email was hacked in twenty
twenty one, the FBI was made fully aware. John Bolton continues,

(15:37):
in four years of the prior administration, after these reviews,
no charges were ever filed. Then came Trump too, He says,
who embodies what Joseph Stalins, head of police had a
secret police once said, you show me the man, and
I'll show you the crime. John Bolton's statement ends these
charges are not just about his focus on me or

(15:58):
my diaries, but his tensive effort to intimidate his opponents
to ensure that he alone determines what is said about
his conduct. Dissent and disagreement are foundational to America's constitutional
system and vitally important to our freedom. I look forward
to the fight to defend my lawful conducts and to
expose his Trump's abuse of power.

Speaker 1 (16:21):
Now for the flashback of John Bolton on NBC News
where he accused. John Bolton is now has now been
indicted for mishandling classified information. Here was John Bolton accusing
President Trump of mishandling classified information.

Speaker 6 (16:45):
President had a habit of asking to retain sensitive documents,
and from time to time he did that, and we
didn't know what happened to them. And it was always
a concern that because he didn't really fully understand and
the risks to sources and methods and other dangers of
revealing classified information, that it might get out to the

(17:08):
wrong people.

Speaker 1 (17:09):
What are the chances that these people accuse Donald Trump
of the.

Speaker 2 (17:14):
Very thing that they are doing.

Speaker 1 (17:18):
I mean, can you imagine can you imagine Ted Bundy
standing out in the middle of the street and screaming
at people. You're all beating women to death and raping them.
You're all doing it. No, Ted, just you, you weirdo.
Flashed back to twenty twenty three John Bolton on MSNBC

(17:41):
after the mar Lago raid.

Speaker 2 (17:44):
This is what he said.

Speaker 6 (17:45):
But I don't think he cared about the classification system.
I don't think he appreciated the sensitivity of this information,
and he didn't appreciate the sensitivity of how it was
often acquired, the so called sources and methods. So this
had been brief to him before I arrived, it was
repeated frequently. I think it simply had no impact on him.

Speaker 2 (18:08):
Whatever.

Speaker 7 (18:09):
There's a couple of different ways that people think about this,
and people who are not friendly to the president who
think about what's happened here, and one of them is,
you know Donald Trump, master thief, you know, criminal running
the kind of elaborate conspiracy to bring things out of
the White House and keep them secret for potentially for
political or financial gain. There are other people who add
its attitude is Trump is chaotic, he's careless, he's not

(18:31):
that smart. He just he wants he took these things
almost by mistake, and now he's basically stamping his feet
and saying, their mind, I don't want to give them up.
Give me a sense of where you think the truth
lies with respect to Trump's intelligence, carelessness and the degree
which he might have brought motive to bear on taking
these documents out of the way and keeping them for

(18:52):
this long.

Speaker 6 (18:52):
And mar Laga, well, it's very hard to speculate on
motive other than that he liked cool things. He saw
things that he so he wanted to take them that
he was pretty much able to take them, and not
just on classified information matters, on all kinds of things
that crossed his desk. Some days he liked to eat
a lot of French fries. Some days he took classified documents.

Speaker 2 (19:15):
He wanted them. Why did he want them? Because he
could get them flashback.

Speaker 1 (19:19):
Oh it's so good to go back, you know, when
you got the receipts of Hey, here's this, here's this.
Thanks to Jim Mudd, our creative director, for going back
and finding all this good stuff. Here was John Bolton
with Piers Morgan talking about Julian Assange and he says

(19:39):
he hopes he gets he hopes juliasonge gets one hundred
and seventy six years in jail for exposing how the
Deep State was a bad actor. See, these people don't
like the truth to come out because the truth, like
for people who Bill Gates rints people who were on

(20:01):
Epstein Island, the truth for those people is a very,
very damning thing.

Speaker 6 (20:06):
He's committed clear criminal activity. He's no more a journalist
than the chair I'm sitting on. The information that he
divulged did, in fact put many people in jeopardy. It
undercut the ability of the United States to have confidential
diplomatic communications, not just with other foreign governments, but in

(20:27):
many countries with dissidence, people who even speaking to American
diplomats could find themselves in trouble. And so you know,
he's been complaining about his treatment over the past.

Speaker 2 (20:39):
Period of time.

Speaker 6 (20:40):
He's the one who sought asylum in the Ecuadorian embassy.
Now he faces extradition to the United States. I presume
he will get due process in the United Kingdom to
determine whether extradition should go forward, and when he gets
to the United States, he'll get due process here. And
I hope he gets at least one hundred and seventy
six years in jail for what.

Speaker 1 (20:59):
He did, and the truth in the end will not
set them free because this is what they all know.

Speaker 2 (21:07):
By the way, they all know that their goose is cooked.

Speaker 1 (21:11):
They are very well aware that their goose is cooked,
and that the time is up. The time is absolutely up.

Speaker 2 (21:22):
There were a few.

Speaker 1 (21:25):
A few audio clips from this week that I wanted
to get to before we get back on pace. One
of them is six oh seven, Jim. It's Bill Maher
and he's talking about uh. You know, the left started
with with good intentions, you know, teach kids not to
not to beat up other kids for who they are,
and it turned into being abused and causing more problems,

(21:51):
as most lefty policies do.

Speaker 8 (21:52):
And when I say a five year old tipping tipping
at a bar under a sign that says it's not
gonna lick itself, do I have to pretend that's cool
in order to keep my liberal ID card.

Speaker 2 (22:07):
Sorry, I can't do that.

Speaker 8 (22:09):
If you want kids to be more tolerant, why not
have handicapped.

Speaker 2 (22:11):
People read them stories.

Speaker 8 (22:13):
Kids are more likely to encounter disabled people than drag
queens in life. Jeez, can't we just go back to
the good old days when kids were read simple stories
with simple morals like if you're a lonely single man,
just make a boy out of wood.

Speaker 2 (22:33):
I've said it before.

Speaker 8 (22:34):
Wokeness is not an extension of liberalism anymore. It's more
often taking something so far that it becomes the opposite.

Speaker 2 (22:43):
Teaching kids not.

Speaker 8 (22:44):
To hate or judge those who are different. Great, proud,
we got there all for that. But at a certain point,
inclusion becomes promotion. And contrary to current progressive dogma, children
aren't many at your adults wise beyond their years.

Speaker 2 (23:00):
They're morons. They're gullible, morons.

Speaker 8 (23:08):
Will believe anything and just want to please grown ups,
and they don't have any frame of reference, so they
normalize whatever is happening. That's why endlessly talking about gender
to six year olds isn't just inappropriate, it's what the
law would call entrapment.

Speaker 2 (23:26):
Man Michael Barry in the system modern.

Speaker 1 (23:37):
As I said these messages, I'm not going to try
to pivot and tie them together necessarily. They're just things
that happen this week that I wanted to bring to
our attention that if I didn't get to I wanted
to make sure the week doesn't end without them. This
next clip is from RFK Junior, the Director of Health
and Human Services, and in it he says that thirty

(23:58):
six thousand dollars had their Medicare reimbursements altered based on
childhood vaccination rates. Now I know that everyone has been
or most people have been convinced that.

Speaker 2 (24:17):
You know, you want to be a good person. You
want to drive on the right.

Speaker 1 (24:19):
Side, you want to be safe, you want to be clean,
you want to be polite. There are things you do
right and if you don't do those things, then you
fall outside of polite society, and that's where you get ridiculed.
You're a bad person. CPS comes to take your kids,
you're dirty. There are all sorts of ways, and societies

(24:41):
have always done this. They've always done Anyone who doesn't
conform to the conventional is frightening to people because they're
safety in numbers. If everybody does exactly the same thing,
exactly the same way, then even if we're on their
own course, we're all in this together. We don't have
to We're not confronted with the dilemma of is what

(25:06):
I'm doing the right thing. That's why the unvaccinated were
so dangerous to the vaccinated. Is because if there were
people who were choosing not to get the vaccine and
they survived, then that meant you didn't have to get
the vaccine, and they needed to believe that you did.
They desperately needed to believe that you needed the vaccine

(25:30):
in order to survive. And that's why you heard them
say things like they hope we die. That's why they
tried to shame us into your killing granny. But it
eventually developed into them hoping we died, and.

Speaker 2 (25:45):
That was the reason.

Speaker 1 (25:46):
That was the other thing is if they if they
couldn't kill us, then the goal was to kick us
out of society, make sure that we couldn't get a job.
There were lots of HR directors only too keen to
fire people who didn't get the shot. Within the military,
within the law enforcement ranks, within corporate ranks, there was

(26:09):
the constant push to take things away. Remember Biden said
that you're gonna make him mad and he's going to
spank you. I mean like we're children here, and that
was this sort of you cannot be allowed to not conform,
and it excites a fear in people. It triggers a

(26:33):
fear in people that makes them angry and violent and
mean and teddy, because at heart, it's not about you.
It's about how it makes them feel. And it makes
them feel it makes them have to question their own actions.
So we're supposed to believe that children are getting what

(26:56):
did I read? Over seventy vaccines per child? Now when
you had a handful when I was a kid, and
somehow you need all these vaccines. Listen, here's the deal.
If we're going to kill our people with these damn
vaccines so that big farmer can make money, I'd be

(27:18):
better off saying, hey, look, stop with all the stuff
of killing us. Just have an appropriation in the bill
and give them that amount of money. Because what they're
doing is, in order to make for every dollar they make,
they got to sell us nine dollars of poison. And
the government has to require it, and the schools have

(27:40):
to require it. And now the doctors, the government tells
doctors you can't get your government reimbursement for Medicare services
unless you're sticking a needle in all these kids, lots
and lots and lots of needles. If you don't, well,
it will hurt your financial bottom line.

Speaker 9 (28:01):
Hi, I'm Robert F. Kennedy, Junior, your HHS secretary. Let
me ask you something. Should doctors make decisions based upon
what's best for their patients or based upon what makes
them the most money? Is not a tough question, But
we've inherited a healthcare system that constantly pushes doctors toward
the latter. It rewards certain treatments not because they're better

(28:25):
for the patient, but because someone profits. Take what happened
during COVID hospitals were paid to report staff vaccination rates.
Those numbers were fed into the National Healthcare Safety Network,
then published on the CDC website to shame any hospital
that refused to become an enforcer of federal vagacine mandates. Today,

(28:47):
I'm proud to announce we've eliminated that policy by repealing
a dangerous Biden era provision in the cm AS Inpatient
Payment Rule. And we're not stopping there. We're scanning every
corner that healthcare system for hidden incentives that corrupt medical judgment.
Over finding is alarming. Doctors are being paid to vaccinate,

(29:10):
not to evaluate their pressure to follow the money, not
the science. We've recently uncovered. Then, more than thirty six
thousand doctors had their Medicare reimbursements altered based upon childhood
vaccination rates. That's not medicine. That's coercion. It's immoral. It
has no place in a constitutional democracy or in a

(29:32):
system that claims to protect children. Medical decisions should be
made based upon one thing, and one thing only, the
wellbeing of the patient, never on a financial bonus or
a government mandate. Patients deserve honest, uncorrupted advice from their doctors.
Doctors deserve the freedom to use their training and to

(29:54):
follow the science and speak the truth without fear of punishment.
Doctors should be guid by medical judgment and their hipocratic oath,
not by financial incentives or government mandates. That's what this
policy change is about. And it's just the beginning. Thank
you very much.

Speaker 1 (30:12):
So, how do you feel knowing that you're a doctor?
May have I don't know. Maybe some of these doctors
really passionately believe in vaccines, and maybe some of them
had their Medicare reimbursement reduced because they didn't do enough

(30:33):
when the government told them to jump, They didn't ask
how high.

Speaker 2 (30:36):
Maybe just maybe I don't know, maybe.

Speaker 1 (30:43):
Maybe maybe some doctors suffered financial consequences for that and continued.

Speaker 2 (30:49):
To because they believed in it.

Speaker 1 (30:51):
But I think it's worth a moment to think back
how hard you were encouraged to get your child vaccines.

Speaker 2 (30:59):
Why was it that important?

Speaker 1 (31:03):
Is it that doctors felt, in their professional opinion, you
were exposing your child to a massive threat if you
don't get every single one of these vaccines?

Speaker 2 (31:16):
Okay?

Speaker 1 (31:18):
Do you have on hand the studies that show how
many children developed conditions directly linked? How about the fact
that that information was suppressed. They suppressed the information that
would have told you, here is the risk of autism,
here is a And then I guess the part that

(31:41):
maybe bothers me most is that here's a trust the science. Okay,
but why is nobody listening to the parents of children.

Speaker 2 (31:51):
Who were perfectly normal children.

Speaker 1 (31:54):
Who develop autism immediately after getting the vaccines. There are
too many of these for it to be an outlier.
Why don't if you're gonna you're gonna trust something, Why
doesn't anybody trust them?

Speaker 2 (32:11):
Why doesn't that ever come up?

Speaker 6 (32:15):
M h m hm
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It’s 1996 in rural North Carolina, and an oddball crew makes history when they pull off America’s third largest cash heist. But it’s all downhill from there. Join host Johnny Knoxville as he unspools a wild and woolly tale about a group of regular ‘ol folks who risked it all for a chance at a better life. CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist answers the question: what would you do with 17.3 million dollars? The answer includes diamond rings, mansions, velvet Elvis paintings, plus a run for the border, murder-for-hire-plots, and FBI busts.

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

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

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

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.

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