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January 7, 2025 • 33 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time, time, time, luck and load. The
Michael Very Show is on the air. Want sure to
know it's over.

Speaker 2 (00:18):
Well, but.

Speaker 1 (00:24):
Audios mofo.

Speaker 3 (00:25):
The votes for President of the United States are as follows.
Donald J. Trump of the state of Florida has received
three hundred and twelve votes. We are going to the border.

Speaker 1 (00:43):
We've been to the border.

Speaker 3 (00:45):
So this whole, this whole, this whole thing about the border.

Speaker 1 (00:48):
We've been to the border. We've been to the border.
You haven't been to the border, and I haven't been
to Europe. You know, we have to say woke.

Speaker 4 (00:56):
Like everybody needs to be woke, and you can talk
about if you're the wokest or woker, just stay more
woke than less woke.

Speaker 5 (01:07):
Yeah, when it comes to the economy, do you believe
Americans are better off than they were four years ago?

Speaker 3 (01:13):
So I was raised as a middle class kid. An
undocumented immigrant is not a criminal, And we have to

(01:34):
correct course in this conversation. Buona personas not as criminals.

Speaker 1 (01:45):
I will snatch their cabin so that we will take over.
Yes we can do that, Yes, because we can do that.

Speaker 3 (01:55):
But more important, I'm vice president of the United States.
Anything that I handle is because it's a tougher shit.

Speaker 1 (02:09):
If anything which you have.

Speaker 2 (02:11):
Done something differently than President Biden during the past four years,
there is not a.

Speaker 1 (02:17):
Thing that comes to mind.

Speaker 2 (02:18):
Ukraine is a country in Europe.

Speaker 3 (02:22):
It exists next to another country called Russia. And as
a woman, there is a balance to be struck between
being tough and being a bit Tramla de Harris of
the state of California has received two hundred and twenty
six volt. I can imagine what can be and be
unburdened by what has been.

Speaker 1 (02:40):
I've become friends with school shooters.

Speaker 5 (02:55):
As a student of history, learned that nations. Civilizations are
known by their leader, whether that be Napoleon or Catherine
the Great, were Genghis Khan or Kublai Khan Hannibal. Nations

(03:19):
are known by the personality, which is always an oversized ego,
a larger than life persona, and people gravitate to that.
The American people have always been a proud people. You
will hear it said the loud American. In Europe, people

(03:43):
who are less proud of their place, their culture, their history.
And I don't just mean winning wars. Sure, we're the
defending champion of World Wars. I mean people who are
so proud of their culture, whose movies are shown around
the world, whose language is spoken around the world, whose

(04:06):
currency is used. The lingua franca meant the French tongue,
because the French believed that their language was superior and
the world would speak it, it would be the common language.
But the lingua franca today is not French. It is English,

(04:29):
American English. Just got back from two weeks in Japan.
The people of Japan, not just the educated, the teeming masses,
from from the rickshaw carrier to the trader on the Nike.
They speak English two varying degrees. They know American television.

(04:59):
There was a guy we were talking talking to who
was saying that. He asked if we were if we
were NFL fans. My boys are big boys. They're not
you know, they're not massive, but they're big boys, are
seventeen and nineteen years old, and they're black. So this guy,
of course kind of thing that would be considered offensive here,

(05:21):
but we laugh, my kids laugh.

Speaker 1 (05:23):
He'll play football, he says, and he's broken English.

Speaker 5 (05:27):
And my oldest said, yeah, but I'm graduating in college
and not anymore. He said y'all play foot Yeah, we
play football. And he said you like you like NFL says, yeah,
we like the NFL. And he says, you like Houston Texans.
He didn't know we were from Houston, and we see, yeah,
we liked the Houston Texans. He said, I like CJ.

(05:50):
Sploud because he can't say the R. It's an L.
Not making fun of people, it's a reality. And he
goes through Nico Coorin's for Nico Collins. We're Anderson Anderandalson.

Speaker 1 (06:05):
He goes through. This guy has.

Speaker 5 (06:08):
Never been trained in English, and he's watching NFL games.
He said he was the quarterback of his local team
and had been for twenty years, probably thirty eight. He's
probably late thirties, and he loved American football. America gave
football to the world. America gave basketball to the world.

(06:32):
America gives so much to the world. We should be proud.
The American left has taught Americans to shut your mouth,
to be ashamed, to feel guilty, and we have allowed
them to dictate our behavior, to dictate our behavior and

(06:56):
our mindset, or at least many people have, because I
certainly haven't. I'm proud of my country. I'm proud of
my people, I'm proud of our culture, and nobody can
take that away from me just because they're bitter and angry.

Speaker 1 (07:12):
Of course they don't leave.

Speaker 5 (07:14):
I start the show with this subject because President Trump
has declared with great bravado that we're not going to
call it the Gulf of Mexico any longer. It's the
Gulf of America. And of course that's driving the left crazy.

(07:38):
But we have to move beyond our greatest accomplishment being
trolling the left and instead accomplish the things that we
can do that make them crazy. This is a guy that,
in the last two weeks has talked about making Canada
the fifty first state, referred to the Canadian Prime Minister

(07:59):
as the go of the State of Canada, who, now
having been taunted tail between his legs, is resigning.

Speaker 1 (08:07):
Justin Trudeau. Donald Trump Junior is.

Speaker 5 (08:09):
In Greenland, where Trump has called in where he was.
I think the people there they don't want to be
under Danish rule. Taking back to Panama Canal and now
the Gulf of America.

Speaker 1 (08:21):
I love it.

Speaker 6 (08:22):
Girls all get pretty close in time when you're listening
to the Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 5 (08:27):
Interestingly, I live on the Gulf of America. When you
look at the Golf of America, it is.

Speaker 1 (08:38):
The water body.

Speaker 5 (08:40):
For those of you not in Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Florida.
First of all, I feel bad for you, because this
is God's chosen country. We are better for our suffering.

(09:00):
It is a war zone like existence because of the
hurricanes that come through here. But you know it is
through that suffering. I believe that people learn to rely
on each other. People learn you can't afford not to.

(09:23):
It builds an incredible sense of community. But living on
the Gulf of America as I do, the reality is
this should be named for our great nation.

Speaker 1 (09:38):
We should be willing to plant.

Speaker 5 (09:40):
Our flag wherever we go, to fly it high, to boast,
to brag, to be proud. That's what people do who
are confident in who and what they are. Don't let
anyone steal that confidence from you. Trump's saying it is

(10:04):
now the Gulf of America and not the Gulf of
a third world, broken, corrupt, cartel ridden country is yet
another sign of a man who is proud of this
country and wants to promote it. He's a promoter, and
there's nothing wrong with that. Americans are the best salesman
in the world. And I don't know why when I

(10:27):
say that, people are ashamed around the world they want
to hire Americans as salesman. We sell better than anyone.
What's wrong with selling, persuading, convincing, arguing, winning, Because in.

Speaker 1 (10:51):
Order to sell, you have to close.

Speaker 5 (10:54):
Don't make me go Glengarry Glenn Russell, and you don't
make me do it, You'll be stuck with the steak knives.

Speaker 1 (11:00):
Don't make me do it.

Speaker 5 (11:03):
But you know, this whole concept of the Gulf of
America and not the aforementioned, well you know what it
was called. It got me thinking because people keep telling
me that we should take in Mexico. You don't want Mexico.
You haven't been there obviously. First of all, if you're

(11:24):
going to take in Mexico, you're going to have an
actual war with the cartels. Now Trump has said he
would like to have that war, and I'm comfortable with that,
but you've got to it can't be like Iraq. You
can't go in there and violate the power doctrine because
you break it, you own it. Just like at the store.

(11:47):
When you go into Mexico and you take on the cartel.
If you go for the king, you better take him out.
I don't think Americans understand how power full the cartels are.
The firepower they have, the number of men and women,

(12:09):
they have, the equipment, they have, the sophistication of their drones,
of their communication systems.

Speaker 1 (12:18):
But they have something even more powerful. They own the government.

Speaker 5 (12:24):
They own the government, which means that if you go
in and you get the local town mayor, I'll call
they behind you, and you're going to reform that community.
The cartels just call up the governor and they that
the mayor is dead. By tomorrow, you get the governor

(12:48):
on your side, they call up the FEDS, and by
tomorrow the governor's dead. They don't just kill people the
way the mafia did. The mafia steered clear of famous people.
They made it a point not to. The cartels make
it a point to kill famous people, to kill powerful,

(13:11):
prominent people, and to put their fingerprints all over it.
There was a mayor in Mexico last year. He ran
on a on a reform platform. He got elected, and
within the week his head was placed on top of
his car.

Speaker 1 (13:31):
It's uncanny. You see the picture. It looks like it's photoshopped.
It was real.

Speaker 5 (13:36):
They hang the heads of journalists who are writing stories
about him, investigating him, and judges. They hang them from
the from the overpass. You're driving along and they're dangling
down is the head of a prominent person. It's a
powerful message. You think about that, it's a very powerful message. Hey,

(14:01):
you want to mess with them, you want to mess
with them, this is what will happen to you. It's
a scarecrow effect. I don't want Mexico. You might go
down to Cancun and have a nice time at a
wet hang, or you might go down to one of

(14:22):
your favorite beaches and have a hell of a good time,
but you want to come back home.

Speaker 1 (14:28):
You might go down to Cabo for a period.

Speaker 5 (14:30):
You don't want the burden of the corruption because you
don't want the Mexicans running their own government. There's too
much corruption within it. Of course, Ron White had a
Ron White had an interesting idea on what to do
with Mexico. Since we're since we're moving our chest pieces here.

Speaker 6 (14:47):
And we take the money we make from selling the
rest of Florida to Israel, we buy Mexico, fix it
up and flip it Now we'll have to send down
some painters and landscapers, because they're all up here, and
when they're gone, you're a wonder where they went. Because
you ain't gonna want to do this shit yourself, not
if you're anything like me. We sell Mexico to a
country they can put a ton of cash down, but

(15:10):
you know they can't make the payments.

Speaker 1 (15:12):
Like Peru.

Speaker 6 (15:13):
Peru has trillions of US dollars in cash and banks
all over Peru. That's your cocaine money they tricked you
out of. We get all that money back. We financed
the balance of Mexico to Peru. We let them get
behind on the payments. We repossess Mexico. Now we have
Mexico free and clear, new paint, new shrubs.

Speaker 1 (15:30):
Now with all that cocaine.

Speaker 6 (15:32):
Money, we start buying countries south of Mexico.

Speaker 1 (15:34):
We buy them all. We buy believe, Honduras.

Speaker 6 (15:37):
Nigga, Rockwell, salvad or Costa Rica. And every time you
buy one of those countries, that long ass wall this
country needs to build gets a little thing shorter, doesn't it,
until eventually we buy back the Panama Canal, which we built. Anyway,
stand there and go swim this bit, and you know what,
we'll call it North America.

Speaker 1 (15:57):
If you can't say something nice, you can all ways
say it.

Speaker 7 (16:00):
On the Michael Verie Show in the early eighties, under
Republican gubernatorial direction, the state of California, with its gorgeous beaches,
it's an incredible climate.

Speaker 8 (16:15):
The beauty of the people, attracted by Hollywood and Rodeo drive,
the mountains, Pacific Coast Highway.

Speaker 5 (16:26):
California was America's dreamland. People would vacation in California and
come home and say, why can't where I live be
like this?

Speaker 1 (16:38):
Somehow?

Speaker 5 (16:40):
And there was a there was a bumper sticker at
the time. It was very popular. It said there were
there were billboards it said welcome to California and now
go home. And they didn't want Texans coming out there.
They want us to go home, not don't relocate there.

Speaker 1 (16:54):
The state. The U haul.

Speaker 5 (16:57):
Just came out with for the fifth year in a row,
the number one place for people to take to rent
a U haul and move to was Texas, followed by
South Carolina.

Speaker 1 (17:07):
California. Nobody wants to go to California.

Speaker 5 (17:10):
Well, the weather didn't change, the beautiful beaches didn't change,
the water didn't change the mountains, didn't change the coastline.
None of that changed the beautiful homes to look at. No,
what changed was bad policies that drove people out of
the state, and many of them ended up in Texas,
some of them ended up in Tennessee, many of them

(17:31):
minted up in Florida. I have maintained for some time
since before Kamala Harris was the Democrat nominee, that Gavin
Newsom would be their nominee in twenty twenty four. I
was sure of it, and I still maintained that Gavin
Newsom would have been a much stronger candidate than Kamala Harris.

(17:54):
Is everything the Democrats like, which is a good looking
white guy who talks constantly about race, so you pick
up all their coalition groups. But at the end of
the day, Democrats still want a white candidate and a
young white male like a Bato O'Rourke. Oh it hearkens

(18:14):
back to John Kennedy. Totally different politics, but that's what
the Democrats think they want. Well, Gavin Newsom wasn't the nominee,
as you know, it was Kamala Harrison. She wasn't a
good candidate, although she was from California, and it sure
seems to be the case. Sitting in Texas as I
am that California politics are polluting America's politics. And that's

(18:37):
not limited to Kamala Harris. This goes back to Crazy Moonbeam,
Jerry Brown, this goes back to Nancy Pelosi. California values
are corrupting the Democrat Party, which is corrupting the country.
Gavin Newsom would like to be president, and there are
plenty of people who are willing to help him make

(18:58):
that happen. The Democrats don't have an air apparent. But
Gavin Newsom has a lot of problems, and our guest,
Susan Crabtree is going to tell us all about him.
She's written a book called Fool's Gold. The radicals, con artists,
and traders who killed the California Dream and now threaten
us All Ramon, When I said traders, could you tell

(19:20):
that I was referring to people who've committed treason and
not people who trade things? Okay, all right, I'll say
it again so you can hear it. Probably Fool's Gold.
The radicals, con artists, and tradeurs who killed the California
Dream and now threaten us All But the reason she's
our guest today and came to our attention as the
political correspondent for Real Clear Politics is a story that

(19:42):
she has broken on Gavin Newsom and corruption and PG
and Eve Susan, welcome to the program and take us
right into this story of Gavin Newsom's most recent corruption.

Speaker 2 (19:58):
Well, it's on go as we speak, because we have
new rate hikes. We've had several rate hikes from PG
and E over the past year, several years, and that
is to pay for.

Speaker 1 (20:11):
What they their role.

Speaker 2 (20:14):
And they have been found guilty of manslaughter in some
of California's worst wildfires in history. In fact, they were
found guilty of manslaughter in twenty twenty twenty for eighty
four instances for eighty four deaths in the Campfire, the
most destructive wildfire in California history. And he is literally,

(20:40):
well not literally, but he has been so close to
PGNE over the years that PGNE has funded his wife's
gender justice films that promote transgender They have a trend
what they call the genderbred Man diagram that she I'm

(21:01):
not kidding you to school. They have even to public
schools all over this country, not just in California. So
when you start, when you talk about exporting the values,
there is one big instance right there, where a very
fine example where PG and E is so close to
Gavin Newsom and other members of the Democratic Party that

(21:22):
they are funding both his campaign and his wife's campaign.
I found that they gave more than seven hundred thousand
dollars to both entities, and that Gavin Newsom's wife screened
her gender justice films at PG and headquarters in San Francisco.
The problem with all of this, of course, is that

(21:43):
they talk about climate change being the main culprit for
all of these wildfires that we see year after year.
It's almost like it's inevitable in California, and they claim
to be so concerned about pollution, but even Stanford University
has said that the those wildfires from twenty seventeen to

(22:04):
twenty nineteen twenty twenty put more particulates contaminants into the
air than all of the efforts to try to move
to ev carbon free environment, to EV vehicles that the
state has done over the last decade. So it's just
unbelievable the close nature that PGN has with Democratic politicians.

(22:27):
Willie Brown sort of captured it the best when he
openly told the New York Times that he was he
was lobbing Gavin Newsom's office to help them get out
of their bankruptcy issues and create a fund that would
prevent them guarantee that they would not have liability for
future wildfires. And he wouldn't talk about the details of

(22:51):
what he was lobbing about, but he told New York
Times that he loves getting a call from PG and
E because it always generates an invoice.

Speaker 5 (23:01):
Willie Brown, the former San Francisco mayor and lover married
at the time to Kamala Harris, who has managed to
get rich and powerful off of the people, and it's
a truly truly disgusting thing to behold. PG and E
is a name that is well known to my neighbors

(23:23):
back home in Houston, Texas, because we have a company
called Centerpoint Energy that absolutely fell down on the job
this last year. And the guy who leads this company,
who made seven million dollars last year, there is a
call by the Lieutenant governor for him to step down.
They want his head. This guy's bad and where did
he come from? But PG and E a company that

(23:46):
just keeps coming up and worth noting you said this
at the beginning of your statement. I want to make
sure people, if they're driving, heard this clearly. PG and
E pled guilty to eighty five felonies for recklessly sparking
the fire which destroyed Paradise, California, in the largest mass

(24:07):
homicide committed by a corporation in the United States of America.
That is worth noting. This is the sort of thing
that people's heads should be gone over.

Speaker 1 (24:18):
Heads should roll. At a minimum, head should be gone.

Speaker 5 (24:21):
This is as disgusting and despicable as I can imagine.
We'll continue our conversation with Susan Crabtree, the political correspondent
for Real Clear Politics, on Gavin Newsom, California corruption Moore
coming up. Yet, people to understand giving information is not snickning.

Speaker 1 (24:43):
Susan Crabtree is our guest.

Speaker 5 (24:44):
She's political correspondent for Real Clear Politics. She came to
our attention. She's the author of Fool's Gold, The Radicals,
con artists and traders who killed the California Dream and
now threaten us all. But she came to our attention
with a story she had written on on Gavin Newsom
and another round of corruption Susan, I want to bring
into our discussion the law firm of o'melviny and Myers.

(25:08):
When I was in law school at the University of
Texas School of Law, most folks would have been very
proud to get an offer from this prestigious firm over
o'melviny and Myers, LA based firm, I believe, powerful firm.
And you write about the fact that they seem to
be writing the laws that keep PG and E executives
out of prison. And there is this sort of revolving

(25:30):
door between O'melviniye and Myers and Gavin Newsom the Governor's
office and PG and E the utility. They keep coming
up again and again. Can you explain this to folks
outside of California.

Speaker 2 (25:42):
Yeah, Well, PG and E had been using that particular
law firm for decades and just it's just as a coincidence,
right that when Gavin Newsom was using backroom maneuver and
deals to come up with a pathway to save EG
and E, that that is the same firm that he chose,

(26:05):
and he spent millions of dollars in taxpayer money to
provide their services their counsel. They basically wrote the bill
that was later passed. In the back room of the
Governor's office, they wrote the bill that was later passed
that would give the PG and E, would prevent them
from having any more liability, and create a fund to

(26:25):
pay the victims. But the biggest part of it is
it denurres them from any liability for the future fire
wildfire devastation. And I talked to a whistleblower who was
the executive director of the California Public Utilities Commission, which
is a long way of saying, it's the government agency
that's supposed to regulate the utilities that keeps that serves
as the revolving door between PG and the executives and

(26:49):
the in itself and the government and Gavin Newsom's government. Basically,
what that woman said to me, your name is Alice Devans.
She said that they were forced her to sign off
on a certificate of security, basically that PG and E
was now a safe company, had safe practices, and she

(27:11):
regrets that entirely. And she told me exclusively that Gavin
Newsom that everyone thought that that the previous governor, Jerry Brown,
as you mentioned, he was corrupt with PG because one
of his best friends. Michael Peevey was a president of
the Public Utility Commission, and he was thrown out after
scandal after scandal, But Brown's sister served on Sempra Energy

(27:35):
and other companies board, making a million dollars over a
course of a few weeks, just a few years. But
really he said that PG and E and legislature and
the Public Utility Commission were acting far more independently than
when Gavin Newson came on. And as he can see
even he finally Newson, after so much bad publicity for

(27:57):
PG and his their contributions to him and his life,
he finally said a few years ago, when at the
height of the wildfire problems, that he was not going
to take any money from Vicini. Well, guess what his
big proposition to save to try to stop homelessness that
he barely passed because Californias are sick of spending billions

(28:20):
with no results on homelessness. Last year they funded that
proposition to the two of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars.
So that the nations are still coming, They're just not
coming directly into Gavin Newsom's campaign, coffers.

Speaker 5 (28:33):
It's sickening. It's third world standards. It's not only beneath
the standards we expect of the United States of America.
This is a state that was once a pinnacle. You know,
the state of California had a bigger economy than almost
any country in the world.

Speaker 1 (28:51):
It was a high point. It was a beacon.

Speaker 5 (28:53):
We all held up California, not just as a beautiful
place to visit, but powerful companies head orders and not
just Hollywood, and to think that they have so corrupted
this and it's brazen. I mean, is there nobody to
prosecute this nonsense? Is there nobody to step in and say,
we've got to take back our state.

Speaker 1 (29:12):
This is horrible.

Speaker 2 (29:13):
Kama Harris, interestingly enough, was supposed to be prosecuting BG
and E, and there was a lot of push for
her to do so by consumer watchtok organizations and across
the ide biological spectrum. But she let the statute of
limitations run out on some of these prosecutions that she
could have gone after. And a source of from her

(29:35):
office it says I reported this when she was running
for president. But oh, you know, it's very difficult to
prosecute some of these complicated cases. Did not give me
any specific reason why did they let the statue of
limitations run out, But there was a lot of outrage
over that. But also her successor did the same thing.
And now Rob Bonta, as you know, is spending his

(29:57):
time along with Gavin Newsom, launching off there against the
gas companies a well in gas companies, but yeah, he's
basically in bed with the electric utility companies because there's
such a monolith in monopoly in serving five million residents,
and they have so much money rolling around that they're
supposed to be spending on trimming trees and taking care

(30:20):
of their equipment. But instead, right when all of this
backroom deals were going on, they paid their incoming CEO
fifty million dollars, so it fifty forty of that was
in shares in stock, but still it's fifty million dollars,
and they're saying that they can't pay the victim, that
they're having trouble paying the victims, and they would go

(30:41):
into bank ruptcy. This is the second bankruptcy for them
in a matter of fifteen years. So it's just unbelievable that.
The really sad part I think is that the California
you think about California's weather some of the best weather
in the country. But Californians are paying the highest utility rates,
the highest electrotricity rates, more than eighty percent more eighty

(31:05):
percent more than the national average. So what's driving all
of this? And they're using the funds now. They keep
saying we need more rate hikes and more rate hikes.
And twenty percent of California consumers are in debt. They
can't pay their utility bills and the average bill that
they have in debt is eight hundred dollars. This is

(31:26):
a cost of living issue. Gavenue semester day just had
a big press conference where he laid out all his
budget priorities, and he has a three hundred and twenty
two billion budget and suddenly his forty to fifty billion
dollar deficit just suddenly with a raised in his new
budget proposals through budget gimmicks and increasing taxes. But he

(31:47):
had as asking using five million dollars of the taxpayer money.
Even though a lot more congressional districts turned red because
of Donald Trump that you're about ten congressional to districts
became majority of Republican districts after the election, he's using
twenty five million dollars of taxpayers money to wage lawfare

(32:10):
against President Trump. And last time around, the California governor
of the state of California launched one hundred and twenty
two lawsuits against Trump to the tune of forty million.
So we know that twenty five million is just the
starting point. And Gavin Newsen basically said that yesterday that
he could definitely go up from there. It was pretty

(32:31):
slick press conference. You have to really know what you're
talking about to read between the lines when he is
That's the problem with Kamala Harris was that she's not
very articulate. The opposite is true for Gavin Newsom. He
comes off so slick because he has manipulating language. He's
talking about accountability for homelessness, that he has a new

(32:54):
accountability website, and all it does is it provides a
way for him to cite to put pressure on the
county to do more on a homeless and you know
what's crazy, were just launching it twenty twenty eight campaign.

Speaker 5 (33:08):
Yes, we have seen this across the country. Whenever you
throw money at a problem like homelessness, you actually institutionalize it.
Because now the organizations that survive off of the money
over homelessness are never going away that becomes their mother's milk.
Susan Crabtree, political correspondent for Real Clear Politics.

Speaker 1 (33:29):
The book is fool's gold.

Speaker 5 (33:31):
The radicals, con artists, and traitors who've killed a California
dream and now threatened us all.

Speaker 1 (33:38):
Thank you, dear, thank you so much for having me.

Speaker 2 (33:40):
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Bookmarked by Reese's Book Club

Bookmarked by Reese's Book Club

Welcome to Bookmarked by Reese’s Book Club — the podcast where great stories, bold women, and irresistible conversations collide! Hosted by award-winning journalist Danielle Robay, each week new episodes balance thoughtful literary insight with the fervor of buzzy book trends, pop culture and more. Bookmarked brings together celebrities, tastemakers, influencers and authors from Reese's Book Club and beyond to share stories that transcend the page. Pull up a chair. You’re not just listening — you’re part of the conversation.

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

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

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