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May 30, 2025 • 32 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time time time, time, luck and load.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
Them.

Speaker 1 (00:11):
Michael Arry Show is on the air.

Speaker 3 (00:21):
It's Charlie from BlackBerry Smoke. I can feel a good
one coming on. It's the Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 2 (00:26):
This is the story Rambles that has been waiting for
his entire life. The King of ding loves anything to
do with Djibouti. It's not the story itself that I
think you've been waiting on. It's just the geographic location

(00:47):
and that Jibouti actually gets mentioned in a real story.
White House Deputy chief of Staff and one of our favorites,
Stephen Miller, was on Newsmax a short time ago and
he disclosed how a local judge trapped ICE agents in
you guessed it, Djibouti at a.

Speaker 4 (01:10):
Local judge of Boston ordered the flight grounded and has
now trapped ICE officers in Djibouti. With these savage monsters
having to guard to protect them twenty four to seven
in a location with no appropriate facilities, no detention space,
no detention beds, nothing putting their lives in line. They
have to wash them twenty four to seven. There aren't

(01:31):
enough resources in the location to ensure the safety of
these Ice officers. Is this judge mad? Is this a lunatic?
What kind of world are we even living in where
we're even having this conversation in legal aliens who invaded
our country and murdered our people and now we're setting
them out and a judge says, no, that is a
judicial coup by any definition.

Speaker 2 (01:52):
I told you that Ramone has waited for this moment
for a long time. He wrote this song about being
trapped injo Booty.

Speaker 5 (02:22):
About the flat to Boston, had my beads playing in hand,
was chasing out some criminals, but uncle sayn's whole but
justice wheels were spending it and I sending my.

Speaker 1 (02:34):
Head for Smoothie.

Speaker 5 (02:36):
I judged it up and yell, this play stays injine Booty.
Now I'm trapped injibooty.

Speaker 3 (02:42):
O canick it out?

Speaker 5 (02:45):
Feel tired?

Speaker 6 (02:46):
Loop me.

Speaker 5 (02:48):
Because I said, sir, that's international booty.

Speaker 3 (02:53):
Ll me in my dignity.

Speaker 5 (02:55):
Stuck the inji Booty, lost my keys and Jabooty you
came by, you got yourceived some regrets.

Speaker 3 (03:14):
I should never have known my back up bad.

Speaker 6 (03:19):
Dick. I've reached a baba mad, it's parist.

Speaker 5 (03:25):
I got done stop agibutin fam sick bree agibuty heard
it said help me stomy given gold.

Speaker 6 (03:39):
Sway you, but.

Speaker 1 (03:52):
I'm stopping Agibutty.

Speaker 6 (03:56):
Left a sandwich to a long noid have food in
dsa noun the best that duty now exit it. Trapped
in jibooty. There's a loss of found in jabooty. Shoot
a dream and maybe a hooking. I tried to smug

(04:21):
a hope, but it's caught me now halting quanty in
jibbooty trapt InChI booty cramped, InChI booty. I'm great for freedom,

(04:42):
but got your booty.

Speaker 1 (05:00):
Africa, you know, speaking of Djibouti and Africa generally.

Speaker 2 (05:11):
Going down quite far from Northeast Africa to South Africa,
literally the country known as South Africa. It's two interesting
things about South Africa is that South Africa had not
been in the news. And Elon musk a proud South African,

(05:36):
managed to bring South Africa into the news and managed
to bring the American public up to speed on what's
happening there with the black slaughter of white farmers who
were in the distinct minority. He's managed to bring it
to President Trump's attention and President Trump brought a lot
of attention to the issue in the world, in the

(05:59):
world's mind by hosting the South African Leader and then
playing video of White's being slaughtered. It's really really interesting
when you study messaging and media and these sorts of things,
how the issue of South Africa went from being something
that no one was talking about to being something that

(06:23):
on the streets of Tupelo or the streets of Tampa
people are talking about at bars and restaurants and waiting
in line. It became a major story without you know,
the Olympics does that, the super Bowl does that.

Speaker 1 (06:40):
You know, George Floyd Case does that.

Speaker 2 (06:42):
But Elon willed this story to being relevant to people
who have never gone and will never go to South Africa.
And it's it's quite amazing. I mean, his commitment to
the issue and making this issue something that the war
is going to have to confront is quite impressive.

Speaker 7 (07:02):
I must say, I'll bet you we've got ten thousands
sweet little ladies of seventy or more that would make
a pound cake that you could eat cold and enjoy.

Speaker 3 (07:14):
Michael Very Show.

Speaker 2 (07:21):
Just say reminder that we do a Saturday podcast, the
Occasion Team, about because or should I say occasioned by
the fact that for years people would tell me that
they loved our show Monday through Friday, and most of
those came from people in the evening who didn't know
that we also do a morning show, which is a

(07:43):
different show, and so okay, great, they went and found
our podcast and started listening to the morning show and
then listening to the evening show on their radio. But
then they would say, we really enjoy hanging out with
you guys, We would I wish you'd do a weekend show,
and that's our time to recharge our battery. So we
started a weekend podcast and that is now what we do.

(08:08):
We do Aday Saturday podcast, which is usually a long
form piece because our clock or radio is about nine
minute segments and then news and traffic and weather and
on and it we don't have time, you know, if
it's a if it's a fifteen minute speech that builds

(08:30):
to a crescendo, we struggle with that because it would
be interrupted by a by a separation. So anyway, if
you've not tuned into our podcast, you can get it
wherever you get your podcasts, iHeart iTunes, Spotify, and we
also you can at our website, Michael Berryshow dot com.
You can send me an email, you can sign up

(08:52):
for our daily blast, you could buy our merch and
I do.

Speaker 1 (08:55):
Love to hear from you. That's all at Michael Berryshow
dot com.

Speaker 2 (08:58):
FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino tweeted that the FBI will
either reopen or push additional resources to the following cases.
You're gonna like this, the DC pipe bomb, the cocaine
found in the White House. Uh oh, Hunter, and the

(09:21):
Dobbs decision. Remember the Dobbs decision leak, the abortion case,
the Supreme Court leak.

Speaker 1 (09:31):
We've never had a leak like that. Leaks like that
are dangerous. People could get hurt.

Speaker 2 (09:37):
Somebody could get killed if they were going to vote
the wrong way on an issue. They could be killed
by an activist to keep them from casting. They're vote
in a case for making the ruling. Well, we're going
to find out who it was. Was it Katanji Brown Jackson?

(09:57):
Was it Sonya Sotomayor? Who was was it Elise Kagan?
We're gonna find out. We're gonna find out. Former FBI
Assistant Director for counter Intelligence Frank Figliuzzi is very upset.

Speaker 1 (10:16):
He does not want answers to these questions. Can you
guess why.

Speaker 2 (10:22):
He told MSNBC that finding answers to the DC pipe bomb.
You kind of think that that would be important, wouldn't you.
Cocaine was found in the way, that's kind of important,
isn't it. There was a leak in the Supreme Court
that must never happen again. It's never happened before, it
can never happen again. So why wouldn't the FBI be

(10:43):
investigator should have investigated before? Now? Well, former FBI Assistant
Director for counter Intelligence, Frank Figliuzzi, he's very unhappy here.
He was on MSNBC saying it's just not good.

Speaker 8 (10:55):
So at face value, of course, people catching this quickly
in the evening news, with their lives going on around them,
they may say, what's wrong with that?

Speaker 1 (11:03):
We all want to solve.

Speaker 3 (11:05):
Let's get to it.

Speaker 8 (11:05):
Let's figure out who's cocaine it was at the White House.
Let's solve the pipe bombs placed on the night of
January fifth, Let's figure out who leaked the Dobs draft
from the Supreme Court. Sure, but you've got to understand,
as you said, first, what's not getting done in the
FBI's national security priorities, public corruption, organized crime, violent gangs
number one?

Speaker 3 (11:26):
Number two?

Speaker 8 (11:27):
What's really behind all of this posturing by the Deputy
Director of the FBI. He's got to make good on
the promises that Cash Pattel, the Director, and himself made
in their podcasts, their books, their public appearances where they said,
I believe in the following conspiracies.

Speaker 3 (11:46):
I believe the.

Speaker 8 (11:46):
FBI is hiding who the pipe bomber is. I believe
that some liberal Democrat leaked the Dobs draft out.

Speaker 3 (11:53):
Of the Supreme Court, etc. Etc.

Speaker 8 (11:56):
And now last week Kendelanian of NBC News wrote it
on the pressure coming from MAGA on the FBI. Hey,
you said you'd deliver on this show us the goods
show us expose all of these conspiracy theories. You was faust, Well,
they can't do it, and so now we're seeing all
these resources are going to go into doing something. By

(12:17):
the way, the Supreme Court leak was never truly investigated.
So look, I'm for a real honest investigation. You recall
the Chief Justice decided to do that in house with
the Marshal of the Supreme Court. That's not an investigation.

Speaker 3 (12:31):
They didn't.

Speaker 8 (12:31):
I've wrote about this I've spoken about it. They never
went outside the court to interview former clerks spouses, never
did a real live grand jury to get to the
bottom of this.

Speaker 3 (12:42):
So yeah, let's do it. But are they prepared be
careful what's asked for?

Speaker 8 (12:46):
Because if the FBI finds that Giett it wasn't some
left wing liberal who leads to the DOVS decision.

Speaker 3 (12:52):
Are we going to get that truth? That's what's important.

Speaker 2 (12:56):
This will take away from investigating old crime. Someone planting
pipe bombs next to the RNC and the DNC as
political an assassination attempt as you can get, and you
don't think that's real crime. Well, you're not worried that

(13:20):
maybe we'll find out who did it, are you? You're
not telling me that those pipe bombs weren't actually placed there,
are you, Frank, You're not saying that maybe if they
were placed there, they were placed there by an asset
under the FBI's direction.

Speaker 1 (13:41):
That wouldn't have happened, would it.

Speaker 2 (13:44):
Well let's see who stands to gain if very grainy footage,
the worst footage ever we were in twenty twenty in
January of twenty twenty one, and the footage was that bad.
Green cameras are better than that, And footage emerged of

(14:04):
a person looks like the same person putting a pipe
bomb next to the RNC and the DNC. Well, what
narrative might someone be trying.

Speaker 1 (14:18):
To create?

Speaker 2 (14:21):
Maybe that the January sixth people were very dangerous, So
the fact that not one of them was armed when
they tried to take over the government by walking through
and reading the constitution out loud. Ah, but look at
those bombs. Yeah, see you've got those bombs. Yeah, your

(14:41):
best Norm McDonald voice, Okay. Someone planting bombs for political
assassination is a pretty big crime. Someone leaving cocaine in
the White House, that's the real crime. If cocaine were
found in your house, you'd better believe they would investigate

(15:03):
until they found out whose it was. Why wouldn't you
want to find out who did this in the White House?
Leaking a Supreme Court case that's never been done. This
was the most scandalous thing in the Supreme Court in
fifty years? How's that not apron But I'm reminded of
someone proverb now quoted by Sheila Jackson Lean mus I

(15:26):
Die Michael Show, MSNBC legal analyst Joyce Vance claims these
investigations politicize the FBI.

Speaker 1 (15:38):
Now, folks, I know some of you out there.

Speaker 2 (15:43):
Laugh out loud when I said that line, not because
it's actually funny, but because if you didn't laugh, there
would be an insurrection. It's amazing there hasn't been a
revolution in this country. The way they've treated us, the
way they've stolen money, the way they've imprisoned protesters on

(16:07):
January sixth, while letting Black Lives Matter and Antifa thugs
literally kill people and Walt free, it's amazing there hadn't
been a revolution.

Speaker 1 (16:19):
It speaks to the meekness, the.

Speaker 2 (16:23):
Timidity, the frankly we've gotten fat of this nation because
the people who founded this country, who took it from
colony to superpower, those people said these indignities are too much.

(16:47):
They told King George the third, the most powerful man
in the world.

Speaker 1 (16:53):
We have had enough. Brother, We are no longer your subjects.

Speaker 2 (17:00):
We choose that you shall no longer reign over us,
take from us, govern us, humiliate us, tax us.

Speaker 1 (17:15):
That's what they did. They wrote a letter, But it
wasn't the writing of the letter that was courageous. You
ever looked at there's YouTube videos out there.

Speaker 2 (17:27):
Just look up. Whatever happened to the men who signed
the Declaration of Independence? They pledged it all, they said so,
and most gave it all. It is amazing that today
these people have gotten away with as much as they have,
all things considered, I mean, when you really stop and

(17:50):
think about it, it is amazing, all things considered.

Speaker 1 (17:53):
Anyway, here's that audio.

Speaker 9 (17:55):
There's two of the investigations on that list of the
pipe bomb and the cocaine found it. The White House
have long been a subject of right wing conspiracy theories,
claimed that Bongino himself has promoted. So what does it
tell us about how the FBI is operating right now?

Speaker 10 (18:12):
So I think you've gone right to the heart of
the issue. Is this the FBI following the most important
cases in its portfolio? Bongino said he's getting weekly briefings
on progress in these cases. It's tough to imagine that
they are the most important cases in the FBI's portfolio
right now. And so it suggests, although it's the Justice

(18:35):
Department that's currently investigating politicization of the Biden Justice Department,
that there's a lot of politics going on at the
FBI these days.

Speaker 1 (18:45):
Ramon just reminded me. We're on a little bit of
a tangent, but we do that.

Speaker 2 (18:52):
That Paul Harvey had a wonderful piece on this subject,
and he wants to play it because we just love
to hear Paul Harvey's voice. And Paul Harvey could read
the phone book we listened to him. But this is,
as usual exemplary of his not only his great delivery,

(19:14):
but his great writing. Oh hermy was a great writer.

Speaker 3 (19:19):
Americans.

Speaker 11 (19:19):
The how and the why of our beloved republic are
so much better known and understood than the who. The
United States of America was born in seventeen seventy six,
but it was conceived.

Speaker 3 (19:32):
One hundred and sixty nine years before that.

Speaker 11 (19:35):
The earliest settlers had watered the new world with much sweat,
They had built substantial holdings for themselves, for their families,
and when the time came to separate themselves from a
tyranny in ocean away, at best, it meant starting all
over again after the ravages of war.

Speaker 3 (19:54):
Researching what you're about to.

Speaker 11 (19:56):
Hear gave a whole new dimension to my reverence for
our nation's first citizens. All others of the world's revolutions
before and since were initiated by men who had nothing
to lose, nothing to lose. Our founders had everything to

(20:16):
lose and nothing to gain except one thing. Hello Americans,
I'm Paul Harvey. You remember the cherry tree fiction a

(20:39):
long time after you had forgotten the more earth shaking
history making episodes in the life of George Washington. You
have misplaced in your memory the details of Ben Franklin's statesmanship,
but you remember his flying a kite. Joyce Kilmer was
a great military hero, but the only thing you personally recall.

Speaker 3 (20:58):
About him is his poetic tribute to trees.

Speaker 11 (21:02):
Maybe of this current decade, that which will be remembered
best will not be its wars and its moon rockets,
or it's crumbling frontiers, or the giants who lived and died.
Maybe all that'll survive to linger in the day by
day vocabulary of generations yet unborn.

Speaker 3 (21:17):
Maybe the.

Speaker 11 (21:19):
Songs of a Memphis minstrel, or the reincarnation of electric automobiles.
But for any eve of the fourth of July, I,
Paul Harvey, do herewith bequeath unto you something to remember.
You may not be able to quote one line from

(21:40):
the Declaration of Independence at this moment henceforth, you'll always
be able to quote at least one line. It's in
the last paragraph where you will recall when I remind you,
it says we mutually pledge to each other our lives,
our fortunes, and our sacred honor. In the Pennsylvania State

(22:00):
House that's now called Independence Hall in Philadelphia, the best
men from each of the colonies sat down together. This
was a very fortunate hour in our nation's history, one
of those rare occasions in the lives of men when
we had greatness to spare. These were men of means,
well educated. Twenty four were lawyers and jurists. Nine were farmers,

(22:22):
owners of large plantations. On June eleven, the committee sat
down to draw up a declaration of independence. We were
going to tell the British fatherland no more rule my
red coats below the dam, a ruthless foreign rule. Stream
of freedom was running shallow and muddy, and we were
going to like a fuse to dynamite that dam. This

(22:43):
pact at, as Burke later put it, was a partnership
between the living and the dead and the yet unborn.
There was no bigotry, there was no demagoguery in this group.
All had shared hardships. Jefferson finished a draft of the
Dock in seventeen days. Congress adopted it in July, and

(23:03):
so much as familiar history. But now King George third
had denounced all rebels in America as traitors.

Speaker 3 (23:10):
Punishment for treason was hanging.

Speaker 11 (23:14):
The names now so familiar to you, from the several
signatures on that Declaration of Independence. The names were kept
secret for six months, for each knew the full meaning
of that magnificent last paragraph, in which his signature pledged
his life, his fortune, and his sacred honor. Fifty six

(23:41):
men placed their names beneath that fledge. Fifty six men
knew when they signed that they were risking everything.

Speaker 3 (23:51):
They knew.

Speaker 11 (23:51):
If they won this fight, the best they could expect
would be years of hardship and a struggling nation.

Speaker 3 (23:57):
And if they lost, they'd face a hangman's The.

Speaker 5 (24:01):
First I've been destroying the black community is to dismantle
the black family.

Speaker 3 (24:05):
Michael Berry show, why don't.

Speaker 6 (24:06):
We ask missus Willie Brown if Kamala Harris cares about
black families?

Speaker 2 (24:11):
Look, we'll use any excuse to play Paul Hart because
we get to listen to him.

Speaker 1 (24:17):
With you, we love. Paul Hart.

Speaker 2 (24:19):
Paul Harvey and Russell Mbaw are our two greatest influences
in doing what we do. We were talking about the
signers of the Declaration of Independence and the statement they
made and the level of the commitment they made, and
Ramon reminded me, well, remember the Paul Harvey bit. You
don't have to tell me twice. So here is the
second half of Paul Harvey's beautiful, beautiful discussion of that issue.

Speaker 11 (24:45):
Fifty six men placed their names beneath that fledge. Fifty
six men knew when they signed that they were risking everything.

Speaker 3 (24:56):
They knew if they won this fight, the best they
could expect would me years of hardsh.

Speaker 11 (25:00):
I been a struggling nation, and if they lost, they'd
face a hangman's rope. But they signed the pledge. And
here is the documented fate of that gallant.

Speaker 3 (25:11):
Fifty six.

Speaker 11 (25:15):
Carter Braxton of Virginia, wealthy planter, trader, saw his ships
swept from the seas to pay his debts.

Speaker 3 (25:22):
He lost his home and all of his properties and
died in rags.

Speaker 11 (25:27):
Thomas Lynch Junior, who signed that pledge, was a third
generation rice grower, aristocrat, large plantation owner, after he signed,
his health failed. His wife and he set out for
France to regain his failing health. Their ship never got
to France was never heard from again. Thomas McKean of
Delaware was so harassed by the enemy that he was

(25:50):
forced to move his family five times in five months.
He served in Congress without pay, his family in poverty
and in hiding. Vandals looted the properties of Ellery and
Climber and Hall and Gwinnette and Walton and Hayward, Rutledge
and Middleton. Thomas Nelson Junior of Virginia raised two million

(26:10):
dollars on his own signature to provision our allies the
French fleet. After the war, he personally paid back. The
loans wiped out his entire estate, and he was never reimbursed.

Speaker 3 (26:22):
By his government.

Speaker 11 (26:24):
In the final battle for Yorktown, he Nelson urged General
Washington to fire on Nelson's own home, which.

Speaker 3 (26:31):
Was occupied by Cornwallis. It was destroyed.

Speaker 11 (26:35):
Thomas Nelson Junior had pledged his life, his fortune, and
his sacred honor. The Hessians seized the home of Francis
Hopkinson of New Jersey. Francis Lewis had his home and
everything destroyed. His wife imprisoned. She died within a few months.

(26:55):
Richard Stockton, who signed that declaration, was captured, mistreated, his
health broken to the extent that he died at fifty one.

Speaker 3 (27:04):
His estate was pillaged.

Speaker 11 (27:06):
Thomas Hayward Junior was captured when Charleston fell. John Hart
was driven from his wife's bedside while she was dying.
Their thirteen children fled in all directions for their lives.
His fields and gristmill were laid waste for more than
a year. He lived in forests and caves, and returned
home after the war to find his wife dead, his

(27:28):
children gone, his property's gone, and he.

Speaker 3 (27:31):
Died a few weeks later of exhaustion and a broken heart.

Speaker 11 (27:35):
Lewis Morris saw his land destroyed, his family scattered. Philip
Livingstone died within a few months from the hardships of
the war. John Hancock history remembers best due to a
quirk of fate rather than anything. He stood for that
great sweeping signature attesting to his vanity.

Speaker 3 (27:54):
Towers over the others. One of the wealthiest men in
New England.

Speaker 11 (28:00):
He stood outside Boston one terrible night of the war,
and he said, burn Boston.

Speaker 3 (28:08):
Though it makes John Hancock.

Speaker 11 (28:10):
A beggar if the public good requires it, so he too,
lived up to the pledge. Of the fifty six, few
were long to survive. Five were captured by the British
and tortured before they died. Twelve had their homes from
Rhode Island to Charleston sacked, looted, occupied by the enemy,

(28:34):
or burned. Two lost their sons in the army, one
had two sons captured.

Speaker 3 (28:39):
Nine of the.

Speaker 11 (28:40):
Fifty six died in the war, from its hardships or
from its more merciful bullets.

Speaker 3 (28:47):
I don't know.

Speaker 11 (28:49):
What impression you had had of the men who met
that summer in Philadelphia, but I think it's important that
we remember this about them.

Speaker 3 (29:00):
They were not poor men. They were not wild eyed pirates.
These were men of means.

Speaker 11 (29:06):
They were rich men, most of them, and had enjoyed
much ease and luxury in their personal living. Not hungry men, certainly,
Not terrorists, not the irresponsible malcontents, not fanatical incendiaries. These
men were prosperous men, wealthy landowners. They were substantially secure

(29:31):
in their prosperity. They had everything to lose, but they
considered liberty.

Speaker 3 (29:38):
And this is as much as I shall say about them.
They had learned at liberty. It was so much more
important than security, that they pledged their lives, their fortunes,
and their sacred honor. And they fulfilled their pledge. They
paid the pride, and freedom was born.

Speaker 2 (30:05):
Anyway, back to it, Ramon, you want to take a
guess who Joyce says is concerned about the investigations. The
rank and file. Oh, the rank and file are concerned.
That's not true. I know some of the rank and files.
Some of you can do as well. The rank and
file live in our neighborhoods. They do their jobs. They

(30:27):
are not political. The people who are political are comy
who should end up in prison. Andrew McCabe who was
fired for lying and creating hoaxes, and then he sued
the government and Department of Justice, handing him seven hundred
thousand under Biden As a way, his point was, Hey,

(30:48):
I know what y'all did. Yeah, you caught me committing
a crime, but you know I committed some other crimes
on your direction. If you don't, I'm going to sue y'all.
If you don't settle with me, give me all this
money that I'm going to blow the whistle on it,
And that's exactly what happened.

Speaker 1 (31:03):
That wasn't a rank and file doing all that. Peter
Strasik with.

Speaker 2 (31:08):
His little mistress Lisa Page, he was in the rank
and file. These were got These were highly political people
in the top office. And that is why our new
FBI director, Cash Mattel is moving those folks out of there.

Speaker 9 (31:24):
And we've talked before, Joyce about morale. What does it say,
What is this decision say when you reinvestigate, what does
it say to the people who worked on these cases before.

Speaker 10 (31:35):
So, look, investigations can be reopened. That's not entirely uncommon,
but typically it happens when there's new evidence that means
that a case that previously couldn't be prosecuted should be reinvestigated.

Speaker 1 (31:50):
Maybe there's new evidence here, but there's no indication in that.

Speaker 10 (31:54):
From what we're seeing them say, this looks like they've
simply been reopened because in at least in one case,
the cocaine found in the White House, President Trump has
suggested maybe it's Hunter Biden's.

Speaker 1 (32:05):
And he wants to know who it belonged to.

Speaker 10 (32:08):
And so this does nothing good for the morale of
individual agents. They've got cases to work on. They're already
under attack by this administration. Those of them who worked
on January sixth related cases that were assigned to them
have legitimate fears.

Speaker 3 (32:23):
About their future.

Speaker 10 (32:25):
And so now to see cases being reopened that have
already been disposed of, that I.

Speaker 3 (32:30):
Think is concerning to the rank and five.

Speaker 1 (32:34):
Thank you, good night,
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Boysober

Have you ever wondered what life might be like if you stopped worrying about being wanted, and focused on understanding what you actually want? That was the question Hope Woodard asked herself after a string of situationships inspired her to take a break from sex and dating. She went "boysober," a personal concept that sparked a global movement among women looking to prioritize themselves over men. Now, Hope is looking to expand the ways we explore our relationship to relationships. Taking a bold, unfiltered look into modern love, romance, and self-discovery, Boysober will dive into messy stories about dating, sex, love, friendship, and breaking generational patterns—all with humor, vulnerability, and a fresh perspective.

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!

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

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