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September 9, 2025 11 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
We welcome back to the show, BREYP. Bart. News editor
in Chief Alex Marlowe. I appreciate you coming back on.
How have you been.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
It's great to be with you. You've boys been such
an amazing supporter about it, bry Bart, So it's nice
to come on and me I want thank.

Speaker 1 (00:13):
You absolutely, and congratulations on the new book, the third
Breaking the Law. Now, I remember Breaking Biden. I didn't
read the one prior to that. I really enjoyed Breaking Biden,
and I'm looking forward to reading Breaking the Law. Before
we get into talking about that, though, I do have
to say, and you know, I don't mean any disrespect,

(00:34):
but looking at the article E. Gene Carroll hopes are
explosive new documentary will finish off Trump. And here's why
that's absurd, like and you know it's explosive, tell your ride,
you know, documentary. And I didn't need to really go
past that point. I didn't need to be told what.

(00:57):
I don't think anything's going to finish off Trump. Don't
take anything can finish Trump up. He's been impeached, I mean,
he's been attacked. I don't think and certainly not this.
I don't think. I don't even think there's going to
be viewership for this documentary, no matter how it might
have performed at a film festival. So I kind of

(01:18):
didn't need to dig deeper into the article. I want
you to tell us why. But my belief is that
nothing can finish this guy. All he's going to finish
his term, be done, say it was the greatest presidency
e there ever was, and move on.

Speaker 2 (01:34):
Yeah, and hopefully another four years or eight years after that.
I mean, who knows. I don't care how I'm into it.
Let him say. No, I think you're right about this.
I mean, I think after Butler Pennsylvania, we saw that
clearly there is divine intervention to keep Trump in the
presidency and to make sure he won this election. I
don't think anyone who could see the circumstances of that
event and draw a different conclusion. So yeah, I do

(01:56):
think I could have written the article in one sentence
and then nothing can finish off Trump because God's got
his back. I could have written it that way, but
that'd be very boring, and I do need to create
content for my audience.

Speaker 1 (02:06):
Well, absolutely, but even beyond that, you know, just looking
at the presidency in general and I'm know his story
and Nixon notwithstanding, I mean, look at Bill Clinton another
one just a complete, complete scandal impeachment. It's an odd
structure that's in place because the presidency didn't end, you know,

(02:32):
not technically.

Speaker 2 (02:34):
Yeah, yeah, So I don't know why. One thing that
I do want to clarify here is that really the
point of these articles that I've been writing on law
Heir and why I wrote the book Breaking the Laws,
because the Lawfaer apparatus right now is working over time
to undermine this presidency and they're doing so effectively. And
when your audience is familiar with these injunctions and temporary

(02:55):
restraining orders, and I walked through how those are taking
place and how the law Fier super structure as the
way I describe it, deeply well funded, very organized, and
they're working right now effectively to undermine parts of Trump's agenda.
But Trump's taking the Chaguna approach, so he's able to,
you know, set a record level executive actions, and so
even if they stop a third or forty percent, you know,

(03:16):
he's still wildly successful. But they shouldn't be stopping as
much as they are, and it's the reason why they
are is because they're organized and because they're fighting. And
when Trump gets sued, and he will continue to get sued,
and people who follow in the footsteps will get sued.
Not everyone will be able to weather the storm the
way Trump has. And Trump has also endured cruel unusual punishments.

(03:37):
This Carroll case in particular, she only asked for fifteen
million dollars over two cases and she was awarded ninety
million dollars. That's a cruel, unusual punishment. We've never seen
anything like that in our country, aside from one time,
and that's the Kiss James case, where which was another
case where it was a victimless crime. Trump owe no
one a penny and was assessed a half a billion

(03:58):
dollars in penalties. That's why that was thrown out for
the same reason. So it really is a horrifying thing.
Even though yes, we could feel very confident Trump's going
to beat all this stuff and he's going to continue
to be a super effective president. But it's summat right,
is not just, and it reflect from a system that
is deeply broken.

Speaker 1 (04:16):
And for those who need the refresher course, this is
the Burgdorf Goodman Department store dressing room story, you know,
for those who need to catch up the advice calumnists,
and I was misleading for dramatic. I opened our exchange
this time around dramatically, huh, because I of course did

(04:36):
read the article. And one thing I didn't know until
I read your article, Alex, is that she was a
former Saturday Night Live writer. I found that maybe I
just missed that first time around, maybe it wasn't widely publicized.
I find that really interesting considering his relationship with Saturday
Night Live. I don't know what year she was there.

(04:57):
I was. I'm going to imagine it was a while ago,
but there were times when he was on, he hosted
and brought down the house. Then he became this you
know character on it. Now he's constantly taking it down.
So I feel like his Trump's relationship with Saturday Night
Live is far more complicated than any of us ever knew.

Speaker 2 (05:19):
Really, Yeah, this is something that we've forgotten about, that
he was a fixture in Hollywood. He's the number one
show in the world with The Apprentice for a while, sure,
and that he is, you know, was We've all seen
the viral clips of him doing a World Wrestling Federation
stuff where he's fighting people in the in the ring,

(05:40):
they are at WrestleMania and things like that. And it's
an interesting thing because I think a lot of Hollywood
felt betrayed by him because he turned into this this
Republican figure, because they hate all Republicans, not just Maga Republicans.
They hate them all unless they're going to attack Trump,
and those are the only Republicans they like at all.
So it is something that I do you think that

(06:00):
there's a lot of there's a lot of excess baggage
that through through decades of him being someone that was
part of the club. Now he said I'm leaving the club,
and in fact, I'm going to destroy the club because
it's better for the country. I do think that everyone
is not over that fact yet.

Speaker 1 (06:18):
Yeah, it's such another great refresher course. Really, you know
who I find to make really interesting comments these days
is actually George Clooney in the sense that he goes
there and says, you know, I have memories I have
there were nights out with Donald in New York. Donald

(06:38):
was New York. Clooney owns it. He says like Hollywood
loved him. He calls him a celebrity and says how
he had dinners with him, and I've said here on
the show that I don't know if I've used the
word gutsy, and certainly my audience doesn't feel that way.
But at least colony, you know, it's like you said,

(07:00):
to a degree, Hollywood, Scott doesn't seem to have a memory,
but Clooney does. He remembers. This is a guy we
put in Home Alone too and Sex in the City,
and you know, we gave him roles. He was one
of us.

Speaker 2 (07:13):
Yeah, very important point. And it's interesting because I agree
with you on Clooney. I don't know how he got
this outsized influence in Hollywood because I don't know. I've
never thought of him to be some sort of a genius,
and he's certainly not in a lot of great movies.
He's been in very few great movies. But he is

(07:34):
best friends with Barack Obama, and recalled that Obama sent
Clooney out there to try to take out Biden, and
by Obama to do himself. He sent Clooney out there
at that essay York Times, and people really responded to it.
I don't know how an actor who has been in
only a couple of good movies. Yeah, I decided that
he was going to be in charge the Democrat Party.
But I guess he is because Clotoney wrote that up
at and then.

Speaker 1 (07:53):
Filed it out, you know, back in the day when
I used to do Top forty reck radio and I
did that with Glenn Beck. I don't know if you
know that, Alex we a regular guest on our show
would be Clooney's dad, who was a journalist, you know, So,
so I think that's it. Yeah, a little something for
you to.

Speaker 2 (08:12):
You know, yeah, trivia. I would not have guessed that.

Speaker 1 (08:15):
And he was a great guest, like a really smart guy,
a for real journalists. So I think Clooney came up
in a house where he saw dad was this coveted
kind of TV figure and a legit journalist, which obviously
journalism really doesn't exist anymore. So I think that's how
he was able to pull it off too. And that's

(08:36):
why your books are New York Times bestsellers. To tell
me about the new one, breaking the Law.

Speaker 2 (08:41):
I go through. The centerpiece is the six major cases
against President Trump, including the Carroll case, and people really
enjoy the arc I have of a Brybird dot Com
which is a write up of all of the various
details of that case, because it's completely absurd. But it's
also horrifying because when you see howard ridiculously bad this
case was, you see how not credible she was, probably

(09:04):
even crazy. I give details about her life, about how
she lives in a house in the woods called the
mouse House, and she decorates her house with trash, with
actual garbage. She drives a polka dot Toyota Prias. She's
a seven year old woman. She says, she wakes up
at noon. There's all these things in her life. She oh,
she's a cat named Vagina and a dog named Kits.

(09:24):
She's a very very odd person. And there were no
other witnesses in this case. And yet the case brought
two trials, years of a headache for Donald Trump, and
eventually a ninety million dollar judgment against Trump with a
rigged jury and judge. The judge I actually called for
an investigation into him for the way he conducted the case.

(09:45):
And that's just one example out of six. And Trump
had to either win or survive these six major cases,
the other notable ones being the Jack Smith case, the
Fannie Willis case in Georgia. Actually, Jack Smith is two cases,
Fannie Willis case in Georgia, the Letitia James case, the
Stormy Daniel's case, which was brought by Alvin Braggs, and
all these cases. He to survive them, win them if
he could, and then when he was and then he

(10:08):
had to go out and campaign from the courthouse essentially
and win an election while he's going through these trials.
It's a superhuman, herculean effort. But it should stop all
of you dead in your tracks, because they really did
try to rig the election with law fier. And if
we fall asleep at the switch and get overly confident
because the Democrats are so pathetic now and Trump is

(10:29):
so amazing, oh, I agree, it will work next time.

Speaker 1 (10:32):
Oh. I agree that being apathetic or being resting on
any laurels how you just said it right there, is
so key right now any level of comfort is wildly misguided.
But Alex Marlowe, I appreciate you taking the time to
come back on again. Breitbart News editor in chief. Third

(10:56):
New York Times bestseller Breaking the Law available right now.
We'll be giving some copies away too, coming up a
little bit later on this week,
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