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April 21, 2025 • 31 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Karnak, Oh, Karnak, please rub the chrome dome and give
us the answer to what the heck's gonna happen next? Bye?
Mm hmmm, Karnak the Great has no idea. I was
just how do I say this?

Speaker 2 (00:25):
You know, the the Pope's dead, right, Pope Francis died.
Now I'm not a Catholic, so I'm not you know,
I I find it interesting. I only find it interesting
in the sense that I'm I appreciate the fact that
he stuck it out, unlike Pope Benedict, who decided to, Oh,

(00:49):
I'm getting old and feeble.

Speaker 1 (00:50):
I think I'll retire.

Speaker 2 (00:52):
I think if you are the vicar of Christ, if
you're if if you're the representative of Rist himself on earth.

Speaker 1 (01:02):
Then I think you ought to.

Speaker 2 (01:03):
You know, if Christ could die on the cross, if
if Christ could be uh, you know, crucified, the least
the Pope could do is stick around and kind of,
you know, go through the struggles of dying a slow,
ugly death. Look look at John Paul. John Paul didn't

(01:27):
I thought was it was inspiring the.

Speaker 1 (01:33):
Way John Paul did went about his life.

Speaker 2 (01:38):
Now I'm not Catholic, so you know, I feel free
to criticize. But Pope Francis I was not. He was,
I think truly was influenced, highly influenced by the Prones
in Argentina, and that was his political mindset. So he
really was, you know, kind of a Marxian. In fact,

(02:00):
you look over at Drudge and it was something, where
is it advocate for economic and social justice? Oh so
you were at Marxist all right? So God rest his soul,
and Dragon raised a good point earlier. I'm gonna drag
you into this dragon d.

Speaker 3 (02:18):
I just think it's kind of funny.

Speaker 2 (02:21):
What do you what do you find because I find
something else funny? What do you find funny?

Speaker 4 (02:24):
I find funny that people are praying for him. He's
the closest representative to God on the planet.

Speaker 3 (02:35):
I don't think he needs your prayers. We all know
where he's going, really.

Speaker 1 (02:42):
You do.

Speaker 2 (02:45):
Have you not seen like some of the you know,
the the anti pope movies there there's always good ones,
but I can't.

Speaker 1 (02:52):
So here's what I'm excited about.

Speaker 2 (02:54):
I'm excited about the conclave or concave conclave, whatever they
call it, where they elect.

Speaker 1 (03:01):
A new pope.

Speaker 3 (03:02):
Yeah, that voting is kind of neat.

Speaker 1 (03:03):
Yeah, that's gonna be interesting.

Speaker 2 (03:05):
And there's some movie that was out recently about that,
which was pretty good. I imagine Catholics didn't like it,
but us Heathens US Protestants really did like it. It
shows all the intrigue that goes on. So you're electing
the person who's the representative of Jesus Christ himself on Earth,

(03:25):
and yet it's all about politics.

Speaker 1 (03:27):
Yeah, so right, God rest his soul.

Speaker 2 (03:33):
But something else happened last week that I never got
to and then I didn't see her response to it
until Friday after work, and I thought it was fascinating.
You know, we're the only country, were the first and
the only country to put a human on the Moon,

(03:54):
and until this past week, that was America's finest achievement
in space.

Speaker 1 (04:03):
Now. I don't know whether to use the term.

Speaker 2 (04:04):
Space or the upper atmosphere. I know I can't use
the term outer space. But our finest achievement in space
generically speaking, now is that six of the bravest women
in the history of astronauts, Katie Perry, Jeff Besil's girlfriend,

(04:32):
and Gail King, and I don't know a few other
women with essentially the same hairstyle, the same look. They
had the same uniform on, went up in a penis
shaped rocket ship. Draw what conclusions you may went up into?

Speaker 1 (04:56):
Have that? I think they went fifty miles.

Speaker 4 (05:00):
I think the fifty miles I think is the barrier.
But sixty is when you really get space. I think
there's do they make it?

Speaker 1 (05:06):
Do they make it like the sixty two miles? For
some reason, I think that so what.

Speaker 3 (05:11):
You know, whatever, it's enough?

Speaker 2 (05:14):
Well, okay, but the thing is, Neil Armstrong, you've been replaced.

Speaker 1 (05:23):
The mean girls have gone to space.

Speaker 2 (05:29):
The Journey of MS thirty one, as of course, uh
reported by themselves.

Speaker 1 (05:36):
I like that term nominal.

Speaker 3 (05:38):
Wait, they flew they controlled the capsule.

Speaker 2 (05:42):
Oh you didn't know? Oh yeah, Gail Key, I'm sure
was the captain s They ring the bell as they're
entering the capsule, as if they've had a really good
meal at Arby's.

Speaker 1 (05:56):
You know how you you go to Arby's and.

Speaker 2 (05:58):
If you've got really good service, Say they used to
have a bell where you could ring a bell if
you got really if you got a really good roast
beef sandwich. Now I find this interesting, you know, Dragon,
Whenever I watched like astronauts take off like they went
to rescue those astronauts that got stuck up there. They
always wear these suits and they have the big helmets on,
you know, the big rings around them, and they got

(06:20):
you know, they're being fat oxygen. They they didn't want
to mess up their hair. They didn't want to mess.

Speaker 1 (06:28):
Up their hair.

Speaker 3 (06:28):
Now, curiously, though, did Shatner do the same thing? Did
he have? No?

Speaker 1 (06:32):
No, That's that's my point.

Speaker 3 (06:34):
That's part of it. I don't think this is Bethos.

Speaker 1 (06:37):
I don't think this is space.

Speaker 4 (06:40):
Now.

Speaker 2 (06:40):
Admittedly I would I would love to go do that.
I'd like to experience zero g's, you know, float around
a little bit. So some of the things they said,
it is my pleasure to tell you you've passed. Does
that make you feel confident? Does that make you feel good?
Or it's not about going to space. It's about what

(07:03):
we bring back. Do they land somewhere? Do they do
they bring back some Did they stop with the gift shop?

Speaker 3 (07:09):
They landed on earth?

Speaker 2 (07:11):
But it's not about going to space. It's about what
we bring back. Is there a curio shop up there
somewhere they stopped at.

Speaker 3 (07:19):
I don't know themselves. They brought back.

Speaker 2 (07:21):
Oh okay, well, thank goodness. Finally somebody though, remembered the
real reason for all this. If you're a stupid man
who has not done the right thing and gone trans yet,
you probably still think that space exploration is about science
and adventure and expanding our knowledge of the universe. Well

(07:42):
in all the other rhetoric of the patriarchy, but it's
really just about self actualization. It's about soothing the feelings
of rich, entitled women who truthfully, Oh I don't mean
I can say this about guys too, so don't get
mad at me, who just aren't very useful to society

(08:04):
and didn't feel kind of defensive about it. Unfortunately, some
people wanted to diminish this stunning aeronautical.

Speaker 1 (08:11):
Achievement because they hate women. No, you didn't do that,
did you.

Speaker 3 (08:18):
I don't like that people are calling it a ride.

Speaker 1 (08:21):
A ride.

Speaker 5 (08:22):
You know, you never see a man, a male astronaut
who's going up in space, and they said, oh, we
took a ride. We actually duplicated the route that Alan
Shepherd did. That's why it's called this particular capsule is
called the New Shepherd. We duplicated that route, that route.
No one said he took that ride. It's always referred
to as a flight or a journey, So I feel

(08:44):
that that's a little disrespectful to what the mission was
and what the work that Blue Origin does does.

Speaker 2 (08:50):
Of course, gil King's exactly right, because it's sexist to
think that Alan Shepherd accomplished anything that she didn't accomplish.

Speaker 4 (08:58):
Arguably here jumping into how far away is space and whatnot.
According to the Internet for NASA, it says sixty two miles.
That's right, that's how how far you got to go
to get into space. And in an article from Forbes
found that these women went sixty six miles, so they
were in space.

Speaker 1 (09:18):
They were in space.

Speaker 2 (09:19):
Well, I saw the videos of them in weightlessness, so
I guess they just I guess there was enough oxygen
in the little capsule in the new Shepherd that they
didn't need it.

Speaker 1 (09:30):
But it's sexist to.

Speaker 2 (09:35):
Think Alan Shepherd accomplished anything that she that gel King
didn't accomplish. But we shouldn't forget that that that this
that slur is probably racist as well because out of
all the people we put on the moon, guess how
many were not white males?

Speaker 1 (09:55):
Almost none?

Speaker 2 (09:57):
You know, who is that how we're going to view
the world. I don't want to sit here and listen
to Gail King being disrespected by a bunch of racists
who cannot afford to pay one hundred and fifty thousand
dollars each to go up in space for a few
minutes in a self driving rocket. It's like, it's like, hey,

(10:17):
I went for riding at Tesla. All hail the Queen
of Space, Gail King. All this stuff kind of reminds
me of that time that Ryan Gosling portrayed Neil Armstrong
in the movie and people got mad about that for
some reason. Donald Trump August twenty eighteen, five seven am tweeted,

(10:43):
Canadian loser Ryan Gosling hasn't made a good movie since Drive.
Now he's insulting our great American moon guy, Neil Armstrong.
Very bad, very very bad. So the Democrats have found
their new mascot. The new mascot we've talked about previously.
That's the wife beating MS thirteen gangster and the human
trafficker who doesn't speaking at least at least when the

(11:04):
cameras are on. And like the old saying goes, never
interrupt your opponent when your opponent's making a mistake. You know,
when your opponent's digging a whole, step back and let
your opponent dig a hole. So if this were Friday,
when I was going to talk about this, I'd say
tgif tersely should have even ailed fetus or something. I

(11:28):
don't know, And and well, you know, thanks for going
along with the ride, and thanks for sharing your ride
with us. I'm not quite sure what it accomplished, but
Gail King was upset that people were making fun of
her for going into space the Teddy Perry saying what

(11:55):
a wonderful world. She says she wanted to pay homage
to Louis arm Strong, the first man on the moon.
You thought it was Neil Armstrong, was really Louis Armstrong.
And then when she got back to Earth.

Speaker 4 (12:07):
Did she seriously say that? Please tell me she did
not seriously say that. No.

Speaker 2 (12:11):
I said that, okay, wouldn't have been glorious, would have
been wonderful.

Speaker 4 (12:17):
Jessica Simpson moment, Chicken of the Sea is chicken chicken.

Speaker 2 (12:21):
And then when they got back to Earth, Katy Perry
knelt down and kissed the ground. So I don't know,
does the Earth now have herpie? Simplex.

Speaker 1 (12:34):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (12:35):
And then there's a new online conspiracy, a theory that
claims that blue origins all female space flight was a hoax. Yeah,
skeptics don't believe that six of these entitled women could
spend ten minutes alone together without bickering about something. So

(12:55):
I want to see the entire I want to see
all of it, all of them speaking to women. Rosy O'donnald.
As long as I'm digging a hole here, mu as
well keep digging, right, rosy O'donnald's become friends with convicted
murderer Kyle Menendez, saying the quote, for the first time
in my life, I felt safe enough to trust and
be vulnerable and love a straight man now, whereas Menendez

(13:21):
says that for the first time in his life he
actually regrets murdering his parents. Dragon, if you ever heard
of Taco the Human Colleague, do what now, Taco the
Human College. I can't believe you haven't found this.

Speaker 4 (13:37):
Oh, is this the guy that's choosing to believe to
live as a dog?

Speaker 3 (13:40):
And then with Jesanese man who was.

Speaker 2 (13:42):
A fourteen thousand dollars suit to make him, Yes, a
fourteen thousand dollars suit to make him look like a
four legged dog has shut down his tokyo zoo so
that other would be human pooches can move in and
share the glory that he's been glorying. Now, apparently visitors
were turned off by the three hundred dollars price tag.

(14:05):
Now I've heard that there was mandatory spading and newtering,
but that may be.

Speaker 1 (14:09):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (14:09):
That might be true or not, I don't know. And
then I didn't realize. Did you know about the boot
tan Fest in Colorado? Did you hear about that?

Speaker 1 (14:17):
One dragon?

Speaker 2 (14:19):
There's an annual event called the boot tan Fest that
drew hundreds of women who skied naked as a form
of female empowerment. I could say about something about skiing
without a pole, but that might be inappropriate, so I
won't say that. And the legendary rock band The Who

(14:41):
have fired their longtime drummer, Zach Starkey, son of Ringo Starr.
It just wasn't working anymore. According to Roger Daltrey's new girlfriend,
You'll go ono.

Speaker 1 (14:54):
No, I'm just kidding.

Speaker 2 (14:56):
Disney's research division has developed an autonomous this humanoid robot
that can mimic human behavior in real time. It's all
part of the effort of Disney to keep the Disneyland
mascots from getting drunk. And of course we remember that
Gretchen Whitmer hit her face last week while with the

(15:17):
folder while visiting the Oval office. She was worried that
Trump would ask her what it would was like to
take home the gold medal of the nineteenth Summer seventy
sixth Summer Olympics. That would probably when every where everybody's said,
I had a friend that went to Coachella, watching them
on Facebook, the attendees that are complaining about food prices,

(15:38):
one influencer claiming their meal of Mexican food cost over
one hundred bucks. Bernie Sanders was condemned to condemn, was
quick to condemn the oligarchs that Big Taco Inc. And
they battled with heat temperatures in Indio, California near the
record set in.

Speaker 1 (15:58):
Nineteen o four.

Speaker 6 (16:02):
Some good morning from South Dakota. If Katie Perry's an astronaut,
then Bill Clinton's a gynecologist.

Speaker 1 (16:10):
Everyone have a great day.

Speaker 3 (16:13):
Well dragging, You're absolutely right the seward winner for the day.

Speaker 1 (16:16):
That's the award winner for the day. You're checking the
mail so that we've cleansed our palette of all the
immigration stuff and everything else going on in the world,
let's get back to some serious stuff. So I just glanced.
Let's see what the journal says. Well, I gotta get through.

Speaker 2 (16:38):
See doll the Dow industrial averages follow nine hundred points
dollar drops. This Trump renews federal reserve attacks. Well that's
fine in the new federal reserve ternament anyway. But say
what you will. I don't care about trade deficits, national debt, sovereignty,
the financial markets, the dollar of authority, all those things.

(17:03):
There are a variety of good faith options about how
to structure the trade practices that would put this country
back in a better position to succeed, both short term
and long term. But the future of our relationship with
China has got to be based on reality and not ideology.

Speaker 1 (17:26):
China is in fact ripping us off all the time.

Speaker 2 (17:31):
For decades, the Chinese Communist Party the CCP, despite how
one may feel about its core political ideology, has never
operated in good faith in its relationship with us. It
is always chosen to commit blatant fraud, outright cheating, and
routine deception. Now I've been one of those individuals insisting that, yes,

(17:57):
when it comes to the stock market, the stock market
is indeed a significant component of the US economy, of
the US economy, many Americans, whether they realize it or not,
are indeed invested in the stock market. They've got a
four oh one K, or they got a public pension
they somehow, or they've got a mutual fund somewhere somehow,

(18:17):
they're involved in the stock market. So I do believe
it is a significant component of our economy. But there
are claims of these, I guess over reminiscent protectionists, MAXIMALUS
in government and obviously.

Speaker 1 (18:32):
In the media too.

Speaker 2 (18:35):
And I've actually defended free market advocates who I do
believe correctly point out that shocking the market's too ferociously,
too wildly will result in some negative consequences for Americans.
That's just the reality. Those are facts. But when it

(18:55):
comes to China, when it comes to a country that
is a threat to us economically and is an existential
threat to our very survival, Wall Street cannot be allowed
to dictate the terms of our relationship with the CCP.
Wall Street is way too fixated on quarterly reports, short

(19:17):
term interests. I don't know that Wall Street is in
a place where they can support a long term pivot
away from China and toward our allies abroad. I even
consider Vietnam to be an ally. I know that China
uses it as a waypoint. So let's you know.

Speaker 1 (19:39):
One of the rabbit holes I went down over the weekend.

Speaker 2 (19:43):
Was the manufacturing of some luxury goods that we pay
thousands of you may pay thousands of dollars for that
are actually made in China, but then our shipped back
to France or Italy where they'll have some small shop
somewhere where they'll you know, sew on the label and
your Louis Vuitton bag or whatever, and then ship it

(20:05):
back to the United States. Think about the carbon footprint
of that bag. So all the materials that go to China,
I haven't thought about this. So just now all the
material that goes to China, and then the sweatshops in
China put together the bag SAand say the handle or
the label, and then they get shipped to France or
to Italy Louis Vauton, and then they sow on they

(20:29):
attached the handles. Depending on the kind of bag or
purse you're buying, and then they'll have some handcraft people
hand craft the label and sew it on by hand,
and then they'll ship it, you know, back to the
United States. It's it's traveled all over the world. It's
got one hell of a carbon footprint. Nobody ever talks
about that. But the same thing's going on in Vietnam.

(20:53):
So the CCP, the company's controlled by the CCP, which
are virtually all of them in China, they will ship
the goods to Vietnam. They'll do some basic final assembly,
just like cars, you know, we'll do some basic assembly
of cars in Mexico, ship the rest of them to
the United States, put a few things on made in America.

(21:13):
Well they do this. The CCP does the same thing
in Vietnam. But yet I still consider Vietnam to be
one of our allies. And you know, Apple Computer, for example,
is one example of where they're trying to move more
of their manufacturing, their total manufacturing to Vietnam to get
it out of China. But too many Wall Street firms,

(21:33):
and too many Wall Street banks, and too many corporations
have been corrupted by Beijing's influence, and I don't think
they have the independence to act in our best interests
in a way that the White House can in this
situation beyond its promotion an advancement of domestic and global tyranny,

(21:57):
the CCP steals, cheats, and it will never reform. You
don't let me back that up. It may reform. I
do believe that Sheijing Ping is in a precarious position.
The People's Liberation Army, the PLA is really out to
get him, I think, and he's disappearing in generals as
fast as he can. And I think the more people

(22:21):
that are lined up outside factories, the more people that
can't pay the mortgages on the way overbuilt apartment, the
way inflated real estate marketing in China are beginning to
get frustrated too. Hijing Ping may not last. So when
I say that they may not change their ways, and
they might change their ways if Chijing Ping doesn't try

(22:45):
to invade Taiwan before they have a chance to do that.
But have you ever thought about the things that the
CCP has stolen from American companies and our own government
in recent years? Ready for a list? I made a
list of thirteen things, some very specific, some general. The

(23:05):
F thirty five fighter jet data that got stolen by
cyber attacks, and they used all of that data to manufacture,
to create, design, create, and manufacture China's J twenty stealth fighter.
It's a BFD Lockheed Martin's F twenty two data. They

(23:25):
use all of that data to design and build China's
J thirty one fighter. Just in general missile guidance systems,
A lot of I shouldn't say all. A lot of
our technology was stolen to enhance Chinese missile systems. We
talked about going out space. NASA spacetech hack data on

(23:46):
our propulsion capabilities and our materials research chips, think about chips.
Designs worth billions of dollars have been taken for China's
memory chip industry, NOCUAR missile sensors, infrared detection tech stolen
to use for military applications in China. In fact, I

(24:11):
saw one of these take off recently. Boeing C seventeen
data our military transport plane specs were hacked linked now
to China's Y twenty plane. Apple's now kind of gone away,
but Apple's self driving car technology. In that case, an
ex employee took secrets to a Chinese startup and gave

(24:32):
it to him chip technology theft via partnerships so they
can advance Chinese semiconductors, noclear reactor designs AP one thousand
tech taken during en joint venture. Be careful who you
get in bed with. American radio systems proprietary technology stolen

(24:54):
by Hi Terra, which is a Chinese enterprise, American semiconductor processes,
targeted cyber attacks to close China's tech gap software code.
That's just that's almost run of the mill.

Speaker 1 (25:10):
You can go do a.

Speaker 2 (25:11):
Quick search yourself. That's just what a quick Google search
will pull up for you. China has stolen the intellectual
property of a massive chunk of cutting edge American technology
and military platforms. Yes, there are also instances of American
firms that wanting to you know, find you know, a

(25:31):
cheaper manufacturing location or just trying to you know, get
Chinese cooperation. Actually gave away some of our tech secrets
Chinese companies. But that's not what that list was. That's
list of things that they've actually stolen. And that list
alone counts for hundreds of billions, if not maybe trillions
of dollars in stolen value. And this is where the

(25:54):
real deficit between our countries becomes the most transparent. The
bottom line is is that the Chinese Communist Party is
not an honest trade partner, and it will never be
an honest trade partner outside of its dishonorable trade practices.

Speaker 1 (26:13):
The CCP is.

Speaker 2 (26:14):
The world's most malevolent force, and it threatens our founding principles,
and it threatens our global sovereignty, and it threatens our
global dominance. Sure, the United States can find itself trading
with some unsavory partners. Yeah, we've bought oil lots of
times from Saudi, but China combines tyranny with bad faith

(26:38):
and that's just too much. And I know Wall Street
may not like this, but America is complete decoupling from
Chinese trade. I think it's both morally and economically sound
in the long term, and I think it will greatly
ben a fifty United States to completely detach from China

(27:01):
so that we can have reliable, good faith, and morally
sound trade partners. And that is exactly what Donald Trump
is trying to accomplish. He is boxing China in and
for all the bull crap you hear from the cabal
about how, oh my gosh, China's going to retaliate. Never
forget they need us. If you don't think they need us,

(27:22):
go back to that. Go make your own Google list
of things they have stolen from us that produced items,
oftentimes defense items that they would not have but for
the fact they stole it from us. So Wall Street,
buckle up, start being honest with the American public about

(27:44):
our decoupling from China. I think it's much more necessary.
And I think Trump finally, just like he's trying to
turn around immigration, how he's trying to turn around so
many things, he's trying to turn that around too, And
we're now over We're now up one hundred and fifty countries.
Now I whant to negotiate with us, keep on keeping.

Speaker 3 (28:05):
On Trump, Michael.

Speaker 6 (28:07):
If the United States were to completely one hundred percent
decouple from China, then how and why would China need
the United States at all? We would effectively completely destroy
their entire economy by doing so. I agree with you.
I'm just saying, who's to say that another virus doesn't

(28:28):
just slip out of one of their labs, or maybe
we get a cyber attack.

Speaker 1 (28:35):
Oh I.

Speaker 2 (28:37):
I don't want to say I fully expected, but if
we suddenly were to suffer from a massy cyber attack attack,
or let's say a even a targeted electromagnetic pulse explosion
over oh, I don't know, Manhattan or DC or Los

(29:00):
Angeles or even Denver. Just showing us the capability of
what an EMP could do would shock us back to
the stone age.

Speaker 1 (29:10):
I think it would.

Speaker 2 (29:12):
It would truly frighten the feces out of people. So
this is why I think that the invasion of Taiwan,
while they're so called target data according to the Intel community,
is twenty twenty seven, I think it could actually be
earlier than that because of two things, two things happening simultaneously.

(29:38):
One is Shi Jinping is beginning to lose his control,
his grip. The People's Liberation Army is beginning to rebel,
and frankly, they're rebelling over the invasion of Taiwan. That's
one of their objections. They don't want to do it,
they don't think they can win that. And the second
is his crackdown is even worse than mal I don't

(30:02):
think we understand just the extent to which human human
rights abuses are occurring in China today. And then you
have their economy, which is in the doldrums. So exigen
King's been pushed into a corner. He's a cornered, rabid animal,
and he could strike out at any moment in including us,

(30:24):
and he could do that in an effort to show
us that yeah, I still got it, or do a
massive cyber attack, do an EMP.

Speaker 1 (30:35):
Can you imagine how.

Speaker 2 (30:39):
Many people are driving say a pre nineteen what would
it be, probably pre nineteen seventy nineteen, maybe not quite
that old a vehicle that if an EMP were to
explode over Denver today, every ninety nine point nine percent
of cars driving right now would be inoperable. Yes, this building,

(31:01):
we're not I don't think I'm giving anyway state secrets here.
This building is not protected from from an EMP. Just
instantaneously dead air television, all the local station boom gone.
Delivery vehicles no longer, you know, delivering goods to grocery
stores or to pharmacies or anything else. We live in

(31:24):
a very precarious world, and we don't realize just how
precarious it is. But this is what Trump's trying to do.
And I read an article I guess it was last
night about some manufacturing coming back, but a lot of
it will be automated, but well, someone still has to
manage the automation, and someone Seles to maintain the automation,

(31:47):
and someone Slash to design, construct and build the automation.
It's just a changing world, and one of the things
we need to change our reliance on the CCP.
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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.

The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show

The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show

The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show. Clay Travis and Buck Sexton tackle the biggest stories in news, politics and current events with intelligence and humor. From the border crisis, to the madness of cancel culture and far-left missteps, Clay and Buck guide listeners through the latest headlines and hot topics with fun and entertaining conversations and opinions.

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