All Episodes

July 24, 2025 • 32 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Michael, I awakened this morning to the sand of your voice. Okay,
how before I was fully awake, I thought Beetlejuice was
playing on TV.

Speaker 2 (00:10):
Come on, who's the ghost of the most.

Speaker 1 (00:14):
Beetle Juice? Beatle Juice, beetle Juice, juice, miatle Juice. I
think I don't know whether I talked about this on
the weekday program with the weekend program, but I know
I've talked about Colbert got fired, right, Stephen Colbert the
Late Show is actually it's I don't even think it's
appropriate to say that Colbert got fired, the Late Show

(00:37):
got canceled, the show itself, that that whole franchise is
disappearing like in next May or August or something. But
Colbert got fired actually, or the franchise got killed more
than a month ago. Now his remaining fans, and there's

(01:01):
something else that's fascinating everywhere and it's still in the news.
It drove me nuts. Why I was you know, you know,
as I said, I did a lot of dead scrolling,
and I came across an account on Instagram called tv line.
If you want to put this up, I suppose you
could share it. Dragon. It's that the name of the

(01:22):
account is tv line l I n E. Tv Line,
and they've posted a short clip of the opening of
Colbert after the announcement was made that the Late Show
was going away, and it starts with a animated, an

(01:45):
animate animation of Donald Trump hugging a parament paramount seal
paramount emblem. Because you know, Larry, Larry Ellison's son, I
forget a first name, but that son is buying CBS
Paramount and he has committed to as part of the

(02:10):
agreement in the whatever the FCC has to do to
approve the sale, he has agreed that he's going to
do all these things to have an ombudsman for several years,
that he wants unbiased reporting. He's putting in all these
mechanisms to make certain that the reporting that they do
is as objective and unbiased as possible. And this Ellison,

(02:35):
as is his father Larry, they're actually friends with Trump.
So the whole meme going around the country is that
CBS canceled the Late Show franchise as part of the agreement.
There was some behind the scenes agreement made that you
get rid of Colbert because he criticizes, criticizes me all

(02:56):
the time, and I'll have the FCC and the DOJ
prove the purchase by the younger Ellison, which is all
bull crap, total bull crap. So here's a late night
show that has very low overhead costs because they they
bought the Ed Sullivan Theater and renovated it decades ago

(03:18):
for David Letterman when they brought Letterman on. So all
they have is just the up keeping, the maintenance on
the theater. And then you think about the production costs
of a talk show, very deminimous. Of course, you got
some cameramen and you have to have a green room
with some snacks in it for the guests. You need

(03:40):
an orchestras, you know, a band, so you got a band,
and then you need a desk, a couch, some lighting
and some excuse me, and some microphones. I mean that's it.
You don't have to have any you know, computer generated images,
any graphics, so much of anything. And on top of that,

(04:04):
they had a staff of more than two hundred. Now
I would imagine the majority of those were writers, because
I doubt that Stephen Colbert himself can come up with
that enough material to do a monologue. So he has,
you know, he has a plethora of writers to write everything. Anyway,
the show costs one hundred million dollars a year to produce.

Speaker 2 (04:27):
That's what.

Speaker 1 (04:27):
That's eight eight and a half million dollars. Uh, Now
what am I thinking that? Yeah? Eight and a half
million dollars a month to produce a show that loses
forty million dollars a year. So if you get if
you if this show, if this program right here, which

(04:48):
again has very little overhead costs, if it the biggest
costs in this because this studio. How old are these studios? Now? God,
they got to be thirty years old or something.

Speaker 2 (04:58):
More than twenty for sure, because yeah, I've been.

Speaker 1 (04:59):
Here try, so they got to That's why I just
guess thirty because we've been here twenty So they got
to be thirty years old since they moved from downtown.
And of course, looking at the Fremiica on the console
looks like it's from my parents' house in nineteen sixty eight.
So Laurden knows how old this stuff is. And I

(05:20):
know the software's got to be the original Windows still
not activating, so they're losing money. So as part of
the merger, they got to get rid of some of
the money losing things when they do the transfer of assets.
He's not going to buy that and CBS doesn't want
to keep it, so they're you know, nobody else wants

(05:43):
to buy it, so they kill it off. Well, they
keep blaming Trump, and I find that hilarious. Anyway, to
back up a little bit, Stephen, Colbert's fans got a
little bit of good news last Thursday night and some
bad news. The good news was last Thursday the Late

(06:03):
Show scored its best ratings all year long. So there
you go, Donald Trump. Yeah, yeah, they got their best
ratings all year long. But there was bad news too.
The extra viewers were there because they wanted to watch
Colbert announce the end of the show, which is aired
on CBS since nineteen ninety three.

Speaker 3 (06:27):
Oh hey, everybody, we got a great show for you tonight.
Senator Adam Schiff was my guest. We harmonized on seven
Bridges Road.

Speaker 4 (06:35):
What a voice, I cried.

Speaker 3 (06:36):
But before we start the show, I want to let
you know something that I yeah.

Speaker 1 (06:42):
If they were paying the writers to write that crap,
no wonder they're losing money.

Speaker 3 (06:48):
Found out just last night. Next year will be.

Speaker 1 (06:51):
I remember this is what he announced Thursday, or wouldn't see,
but he's announcing it on the show Thursday. Ohn, remember
that our last season.

Speaker 3 (07:02):
The network will be ending the Late Show in May.

Speaker 4 (07:06):
And yeah, I share your feelings.

Speaker 2 (07:17):
Not just the end of what all five people in
the audience are booing.

Speaker 3 (07:21):
Our show, but it's the end of the Late Show
on CBS.

Speaker 4 (07:24):
I'm not being replaced. This is all just going away.
And I do want to say.

Speaker 3 (07:30):
I do want to say that the folks at CBS
have been great partners. I'm so grateful to the Tiffany
Network for giving me this chair and this beautiful theater
to call home. And of course I'm grateful to you
the audience who have joined us every night in here,

(07:53):
out there, all around the world, and Missus America and
all the ships at sea. I'm grateful to share the
stage with this band, these artists over here, and I
am extraordinarily deep.

Speaker 5 (08:07):
What more cheers for the band than the show being canceled?
Just everybody got their ears on this.

Speaker 3 (08:17):
Oh yeah, Grateful to the two hundred people who work here.

Speaker 1 (08:22):
Two hundred people we get to do this show.

Speaker 3 (08:28):
We get to do this show for each other every day,
all day. And I've had the pleasure and the responsibility
of sharing what we do every day with you in
front of this camera for the last ten years. And
let me tell you, it is a fantastic job. I
wish somebody else was getting it, and it's a job
that I'm looking forward to doing with this usual gang
of idiots for another ten months.

Speaker 4 (08:50):
It's gonna be fun.

Speaker 3 (08:51):
Yeah, already, we're gonna lock in. Not already, let's go already. Okay,
that's all I wanted to say, Dante.

Speaker 1 (09:05):
Yeah, enough of it. Apparently even the crew didn't know
that Colbert was making that announcement. So even with the
funeral boost in the ratings, Colbert still lost to the
show that you know, these people have been writing for
every day, which is amazing because here we are. Did

(09:28):
you get that for the next ten months now? I
can't imagine, particularly considering the personality of both myself and
mister Redbeard, that if let's say that last week sometime,
or in this case, like with Colbert, two months ago,
so let's say back in May sometime, that corporate made

(09:54):
the decision to eliminate the situation with Michael Brett. They're
going to eliminate the station, They're going to eliminate talk
they're going to convert this to I don't know, a
Spanish station or something, and they told me this Thursday.
Do you think I'd be here today? Do you think
they'd take that risk considering how close did I walk

(10:17):
to the edge sometimes in criticizing corporate Do you think
they would keep me on for another ten months? Which
really begs the question, because it really blows my mind
that he's going to be there for ten more years
or ten more months, because now he's made enough money
that he doesn't really have to work anymore for the
rest of his life. He doesn't want to. He may

(10:37):
love it so much that he's going to try to,
you know, reinvigorate that franchise or at least something that
he does on another network, Or he may try to
go on streaming or get you know, Netflix or somebody
to pick him up. I'm sure he's got enough Democrat
buddies in the streaming world that he can find somebody
would pick him up. But when did Colbert get the

(10:59):
best news? When did his bosses make the decision? And
how's that square with the whole media conspiracy theory that
Donald Trump himself got Colbert fired for supposedly always speaking
truth to power. A reporter at Late Nighter writes Stephen

(11:20):
Colbert reportedly did not know the Late Show had been
canceled until more than two weeks after CBS made the call,
because his manager kept the news from him while Colbert
was on vacation. In a new report for The Ankler
Never Heard of that One, veteran trade journalist Leslie Goldberg

(11:40):
writes that CBS executives informed Colbert's longtime manager, James baby
Doll Dixon. You know, if I ever get a manager,
I want them to have the nickname baby Doll, particularly
if it's a male James baby Doll, Dragon, baby Doll,
red Beard. Yeah, I don't think so. Anyway, they informed

(12:01):
his manager on June twenty seventh if they were pulling
the plug on the show. But again, this is according
to Late Nighter, but Colbert would not learn the news
of his show's demise until he returned from vacation. It
was after Colbert taped the Wednesday, July sixteenth episode that
Dixon informed him of CBS's decision. So, go on vacation,

(12:24):
come back, do a show, and then we're gonna tell you.
So let's kind of deconstruct that for a moment. First,
let's go back to the manager. It's called baby doll.
Is that like a nineteen seventies street pimp, which maybe
appropriate in this case, I don't know. Maybe he was
waiting to break the news to Colbert until he could

(12:45):
find a way to blame Donald Trump, because that's clearly
what they're doing. So let's unpack the news. Colbert's bosses
at CBS made the decision on June twenty seven, three
weeks before Colbert made the announcement, and it was will
before Colbert publicly blasted CBS for settling the Trump lawsuit,

(13:06):
So his valorous act of truth telling dissent clearly was
not what prompted the cancelation. Despite all the conspiracy theories
that are being spread by CNN and MSNBC and all
their fellow travelers, their fellow Democrats, now scribble all that
backwards on a post it note and stick it on

(13:26):
your big fat forehead so you can see it in
the mirror. Brian Stetler, because Brian Stelller continues to maintain
over on CNN that Colbert was criticized was fired for
criticizing Trump. Really, because Colbert has been bashing Trump since
the very first episode. That's his whole brand. That in fact,

(13:47):
that is his brand which he has managed to drive
away half of his potential viewers. It was, oh, I
know it was the weekend show that I played this
last Saturday, because I played a short SoundBite from Johnny
Carson being asking an interview about why you don't make
fun of you know, why don't you delve into the

(14:09):
world of politics, And Johnny Carson very astutely announces, because
once you go down that rabbit hole, I'm paraphrasing, but
once you go down that rabbit hole, it's very dangerous,
and you're going to offend audience members. And I'm here
to entertain and people that go down that rabbit hole,
which is something that I think these are all entertainers
should learn, is that you're going to piss off half

(14:32):
the potential audience. So why do that? If Cobert was
going to be punished for criticizing Trump, why did it
take CBS ten years to do that, and why are
they giving him almost another year ten months to do
it again. My favorite coping mechanism that I'm now reading

(14:55):
online from all of the liberal and tell gentsia is,
if Trump had nothing to do with Colbert's firing, then
why is he bragging about it? Answer that one you
maga hats, Well, let me answer it for them. Donald
Trump has a lifelong habit of taking credit for things

(15:16):
he didn't actually do.

Speaker 5 (15:17):
During his first term, there was one full year if
no FAA accidents, no airline crashes, and you know what,
Trump took credit for it, even though He's got nothing
to do with any of it.

Speaker 1 (15:29):
Did you really find that factoy?

Speaker 5 (15:31):
No, that's real. That's a real thing. Is that really
it's very much a real thing.

Speaker 1 (15:35):
Well, that shows I didn't go quite far enough from
my research for this little bit he took credit for
no air crashes during his first term. Correct.

Speaker 5 (15:45):
I don't have the story in front of me. It's
something that I'm going off of memory here, so I
but I highly doubt I'm wrong.

Speaker 1 (15:50):
Well, no, but it proves my point. If Trump had
nothing to do with Colbert's firing, why is Trump bragging
about it? Answer that when maga hats, And that's because
he does have a habit of taking credit for things
that he never actually had anything to do with.

Speaker 5 (16:08):
Headline from Politico, Trump takes credit for airline safety record
in twenty eighteen.

Speaker 1 (16:16):
So why would you if you think that Trump does
all of that, then why do you believe him now?
Because you want to That's why you believe it, because
you want to believe it. Friday Night's Late Show was
a rerun when Colbert came back on Monday. The show
opened with that bit of comedy that I told you
about from TV line with the Donald Trump, Oh and

(16:38):
John Stewart and what's the other British guy that had
John Oliver? They had some late night comedians in the audience.
Oh look, we're here, We're here, We're here as if well,
we're supposed to get it what we're supposed to get
with the other late night hosts in the audience. Doesn't

(16:59):
that kind of remind the viewers that there are probably
too many of those guys still on TV and we
haven't been watching them in years. The only time that
I ever see anything about John Stewart is when he
pops up in my clipping service. The thing goes for
John Oliver, anybody else that doesn't Late Night show. Pear

(17:20):
Bear's going to be fine. He's insanely rich, So yeah,
now he's a bonifide liberal martyr. And of course that
fits perfectly because it's always about victimhood, right, It's always
about their victim hoods.

Speaker 5 (17:47):
Michael, I'm so relieved you're back because I couldn't handle
another minute of the dinosaur guy from Missus doubtfire.

Speaker 1 (17:55):
Most of the dinosaurs were hers, but this torontosaurus quacks.
It's our carnivore. The reason we use Caldera is because
we have to put in our public information file, the
public service that we do, you know, to show how

(18:19):
we reach out to the afflicted, to the downtrodden and
the poor, and how we help those that are less
fortunate than say me and Dragon Redbeard. Plus, he works
for Booze, and he works for Booze, and while that
may be a little incongruous and may seem contradictory, nonetheless
it keeps him off the streets. So that's why we

(18:41):
do it occasionally. We just bring him in here. It
kind of boosts his ego. And besides that, Kathleen and
Dave and everybody that works at the Independence Institute, it
gives them some time away from him. So it's our
public service work that we do by bringing Caldera in.

(19:02):
And I don't want anybody to come in here and
fill in for me that's better than me. Why would
I do it? Of course that would be hard to find.
That would be very difficult to find. Trained monkey could
do better than I do. Dragon, hand me a story
from the Denver Post. Federal immigration authorities arrested at least

(19:25):
two hundred and forty three. Now, let me just read
it straight from the Denver Posts. If you can pick
up any biases here, Federal immigration authorities arrested at least
two hundred and forty three undocumented immigrants with varying criminal
backgrounds in the Denver area in mid July. US Immigrations
and Customs Enforcements said Wednesday the agency provided limited information

(19:50):
about most of those detained in the eight day operation,
which ended Sunday. The people arrested either had been sought
in connection with or charged with crimes, or had been
convicted of offenses, the agency said in a statement. ICE
did not provide a breakdown at convictions or charges for
most of those detained. It's also unclear from the statement

(20:13):
if the two hundred and forty three announced arrest represented
all of the immigrants detained in the operation or just
those who had some level of criminal background. Steve Kentucky,
a spokesman for the Denver Ice office, did not immediately
return an email seeking comment Wednesday afternoon. I used to
get those sometimes, Hey we're doing it. You know it's Thursday,

(20:34):
July twenty four, nine thirty five mountain time, and you
get an email at nine thirty five mountain time that says, hey,
we're running with this story. Would you comment? We need
your response by nine thirty six mountain time. No, I
can't do that. But the House Oversight Committee responded, they

(20:56):
wrote this on x. ICE just arrested two hundred forty
three illegal aliens in Denver, Colorado, among them murderers, child rapists,
human traffickers, drug dealers, thieves, and Trenda Ragua members. In
our hearing in March, Denver Mayor Johnston defended them multiple times.

(21:18):
Remember that hearing. We paid a retainer of what five
million dollars two million, five million dollars, Hey, who cares
when it's a taxpayer money somewhere between two million and
five million dollars as a retainer for lawyers to represent
the mayor, because well, you never know when the mayor
might need a lawyer because he perjures himself in front
of Congress. Here are the top five times that the

(21:40):
mayor defended them. The first one starts with Chairman Comer
asked Mike Johnston if Denver was a sanctuary city. He
refused to answer the question. The question went like to this, Oh,
it's Mayor Jjohnson. Is Denver a sanctuary city? A lot

(22:03):
of folks use that term, yes, sir.

Speaker 6 (22:05):
De diary, mister Chairman, folks use that term different.

Speaker 2 (22:08):
I can tell you what Denver does we do?

Speaker 1 (22:09):
Hey, I take that as he is. He can't answer. Now,
you would think that if you're the mayor and you
are a sanctuary city and you're proud of being a
sanctuary city, that you would do it. But then two
out of five he flip flopped. After Congressman Jim Jordan
told him that Denver is a sanctuary city, Johnson says, well,

(22:33):
we have a city ordinance. No, sorry, I disagree with you.
An ice officer was assaulted because his city released an
illegal alien into a parking lot.

Speaker 7 (22:44):
We have a city you know why you don't do
it that way. We have a city ordinance for a
sanctuary city. This is the whole point.

Speaker 6 (22:50):
No, sir, I disagree with you because I'll tell you why.
If you talk about sanctuary as a definition of shielding
people from law enforcement, we do not do that. What
we do do is provide services. In this kind text,
what we did is because we coordinated.

Speaker 7 (23:01):
Their officer got assaulted because of your policy, which says
we're going to release him to in your words, not mine,
to the streets. They have to arrest him in the
parking lot. They bring six officers when they could have
had one or two. Just come in your facility into
jail and take the guy there.

Speaker 2 (23:16):
But you won't do it then because.

Speaker 1 (23:18):
That is a sanctuary city. But let's back up, when
you provide all of those services, that too, is the
definition of a sanctuary city. You can't have it both ways,
mayor can I just divert from divert from this for
just a moment you heard about I'm sorry, I forget

(23:38):
it wasn't New York or Houston. For some reason, I
think it was. I thought it was New York. I
know it was New York where there was an off
duty ice officer who got attacked by an illegal alien
who was wanted for some crimes. He was mugging people
near or in Central Park or someplace. I forget the details,

(23:58):
because here's what I focused on when I heard the story.
So you got a criminal, illegal alien roaming around New
York City, a sanctuary city. He just happens to bump
in and tries to rob the wrong person. It's an
off duty ICE agent. Oh so the off duty Ice

(24:19):
agent pulls his service weapon and shoots the guy. Nobody,
Nobody that I could find, focused on the fact that, Oh,
aren't we lucky that somebody in New York City had
a concealed carry permit and was able to shoot the
guy that was attacking the family. Nobody mentions that at all.

(24:44):
They're just all, oh the And I'm not saying he
wasn't a hero. He was a hero. He probably saved
you know, other people from being harmed. But what if
it had been you? What if it had been me?
There have been numerous times that I really he's thought
about taking a weapon to New York City because I've
been in some really kind of dicey situations in New

(25:05):
York City and it would have been nice to have
a weapon. But no, I'd have been charged. But because
he's an ICE agent, he won't get charged. Because he's
authorized to carry a weapon. It just shows you how
desperate they are to keep you from ever, ever, ever
defending yourself three out of five. Congressman Bobert asked him

(25:30):
Mike Johnson to call for the repeal of Colorado's sanctuary policies.

Speaker 8 (25:35):
Johnston declined, mister mayor, would you join me today and
calling and demanding that these sanctuary policies, these Colorado state
laws be repealed?

Speaker 1 (25:50):
Thank you?

Speaker 2 (25:50):
Congresswoman. Yes or no? Mister mayor, yes or no? Will
you joined me? I do not believe that detail on
needs to be changed.

Speaker 1 (25:57):
I can tell you what.

Speaker 8 (25:58):
Okay, So you don't want them to coordinate with Ice,
but yet you're blaming the state of Colorado for those policies.

Speaker 2 (26:05):
It's a state wide.

Speaker 8 (26:06):
Law, it's not a Denver law, and you're blaming the
state of Colorado for the law. Yet you will not
call for that law to be repealed.

Speaker 1 (26:14):
No, he won't and he's never going to, because they
honestly care more about getting them imported into this country,
into this city and in this state and then providing
them all of your tax dollars to you know, supplicate
them and take care of them, and house them and
feed them and everything else, because well, they don't care

(26:37):
about you. You're You're just the piggy bank. That's all
you are, is the piggy bank. Congressman Mayor Johnston ask him,
do you love the illegal aliens more than you love
your fellow countrymen? Well, to my point that I just
made worry about that.

Speaker 6 (26:53):
Mayor Johnston, you don't violate federal law either.

Speaker 2 (26:56):
You don't violate federal law. Would you not violate Is
it violating.

Speaker 9 (26:59):
Federal law if you don't honor detainer requests from Ice?

Speaker 2 (27:03):
Absolutely not.

Speaker 6 (27:03):
In fact, the statute Congressman shared, we explicitly follow. The
statute says you cannot prohibit city employees from sharing information
about someone's status with the government.

Speaker 2 (27:12):
We do not prohibit that.

Speaker 8 (27:13):
Do you love illegal aliens more than you love your
fellow countrymen?

Speaker 2 (27:17):
I love all the residents of the city, county marriage.

Speaker 1 (27:20):
Are they residents or are they interlopers? Are they just occupiers?
I'm not really sure they're residents. How do you establish residency?
Like if I want to establish which if I want
to establish residency in Nebraska? Do I own property there? No?

(27:44):
Do I work there? No? Do I pay taxes there? No,
do I earn any income in Nebraska? No? Do I
get any benefits from Nebraska. Let's say I'm an the
illegal alien and I'm living in Nebraska. Yeah, is that
enough to establish residency? No, it is not. Then we

(28:06):
get to Congressman Gabe Evans. He claims that Congressman Evans
had bad facts after being asked how many homicides were
committed by illegal aliens?

Speaker 9 (28:19):
For those homicides, do you know how many of those
were committed by people illegally present in the country?

Speaker 6 (28:26):
Thank you, Congressman, and happy to answer that because I
think you may have some bad facts and happy to.

Speaker 1 (28:30):
Clarify them for you.

Speaker 6 (28:31):
In terms of what's happening in Denver right now, is
we know crime is down in Denver from last year.

Speaker 9 (28:36):
This reclaiming my time laire? Do you know do you
want to answer the reclaiming my time? Do you know
how many of those sixty five to seventy one homicides
were committed by people illegally present in the country? And
I'm happy to show all of the sources for my facts.

Speaker 6 (28:49):
We don't ask anyone's status at the point of arrest.

Speaker 1 (28:52):
We do not know someone's status and when they charged.
Thank you, thank you for we don't ask. By the way,
the claim that crime is down, and I'm not ready
to talk about it yet, but the Common Sense Institute
has done an analysis of crime figures in Denver. Yeah,
when you take color I as a whole, you can

(29:14):
generally say that a lot of crimes are trending downward.
The crime in Denver, Well, guess what it's trending upward?

Speaker 10 (29:23):
Hey, Dragon, doesn't matter if Michael Danger Brown is having
a man cold or strep throat or whatever he's having.
If he's back today and sounds like he does, I
think you better invest in some microphone condoms, maybe some

(29:45):
lysol spray, a couple of gloves masks, just like.

Speaker 1 (29:51):
The old COVID days. Ah, the good old days, the
good old days of COVID.

Speaker 5 (29:56):
Where you were sent home because you knew somebody who
knew somebody who knew somebody who didn't even get tested
for COVID, or the good old days when people you
didn't like you didn't care because they had to stay
at least six feet away.

Speaker 1 (30:07):
Anyway. Yeah, that was fine, that was fine. Yeah, that
was fine. This whole thing about illegal aliens really touched
a nerve with me while I was out. Because of
a story that broke on Monday, Jose Armando Carcamo Perdomo

(30:28):
was arrested. He got caught on camera kidnapping a woman, caring,
I know you see you've got If you haven't seen this,
you really aren't paying attention to the news. He was
carrying her bear hug style to a trailer house in Houston.
The victim was a forty four year old Chinese national

(30:49):
and a legal immigrant to this country. She was in
Texas because she was lured there for work. She had
been working as a masseuse in New York City, but
was told by I'm sure some gang, some criminal elements somewhere, Hey,
we got a better paying job for you in Texas,

(31:11):
and now everybody wants to move to Texas, right, So
somebody drove her to Houston, where they took away her
Chinese passport and then locked her in a trailerhouse. She
was exploited as a sex slave. She was beaten, she
wasn't giving food or water. The torture lasted for five

(31:33):
days before she was rescued. At one point during her captivity,
she was able to do that brief escape She called
nine to one one for help, but before they could
get there, she was recaptured by this dirt bag, bound
and locked in a closet. Only because neighbors had seen
it on their reen camera were they able to figure

(31:54):
out where she was. This is what the cartels and
all these ill legal alien thugs are doing to even
legal immigrants in this country, preying on them and engaging
in human and sex traffic. Stop it
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
24/7 News: The Latest

24/7 News: The Latest

The latest news in 4 minutes updated every hour, every day.

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

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.