All Episodes

October 15, 2025 • 32 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, Michael, welcome back. I think it was one of
your co hosts.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
I think it was Ryan actually gave me some really
good kudos.

Speaker 3 (00:07):
He said that he's never going to go up against you,
you know, when it comes to your knowledge of history.

Speaker 2 (00:12):
But it really shouldn't be surprising because you were there
when it was being written.

Speaker 1 (00:20):
Yes, and it was. It's very I was nervous about
going to the museum because if you if you have
the chance to visit, you should, obviously, because it's it's
I think for many of us. Obviously my granddaughter is
not true for her, but I think in the grand

(00:42):
scheme of you know, the timeline of history, that is
a seminal, defining moment. There's before nine to eleven and
there's post nine to eleven. I was surprised that when
we I was surprised how extensive it was. But again,

(01:03):
it's still it's still a target. New York's always going
to be a target. Right. When you go into the museum,
you go through literally the equivalent of airport security. Now,
some places you go through security, you like some of
the museums. You go to the Museum of Modern Art,
for example, So you go to MoMA it's a much less.

(01:27):
You know, they were looking in your bag and you
walk through too. I'm not sure that I wouldn't call
them magnetometers. There are two poles with blue lights that
I guess just signaled to a guy who's kind of
half asleep, looking just to see if there's enough metal
on you that it's going to beat and they might

(01:49):
patch you down or not. But I didn't take anything
out of my pockets whatsoever, and and walk right through
cell phone and everything. So it's a it's a very less.
It's less high and security at the museum, it is
the it is exactly the same. Uh, you don't take
your shoes off, but you have to take your belts off,
you have to complete the empty of your pockets, and

(02:13):
you I saw people getting wanded. It was TSA all
over again. Here's what I found interesting about security because
I you know, I'm trying to think of the last
time I flew. I flew to Chicago. I didn't notice
this when I flew to Chicago, but that was prior
to That's been what four or five months ago something

(02:37):
like that, so forty five months ago. So since then,
you know, they've changed the rules. So you no longer
take your shoes off, so there is less of an incentive.
For example, I have both TSA. Well, I've got Global
Entry which comes with TSA PreCheck, and I have Clear.
Now I get Clear. I don't pay for Clear because

(02:59):
I get Well. I don't pay for either one of
them because they come through my credit cards. They reimburse
you for it. But since DHS announced that you no
longer have to take your shoes off, I thought the
security was going to be a little less strict. Now
I always take obviously, I take my phone out, and
I've always taken. If I'm wearing the typical belt that

(03:21):
I normally wear, I take that belt off because it
has a metal buckle and it typically sets off the magnetometer.
I got padded down both coming and going. Now I've
got TSA pre check and I have Clear. Now you

(03:45):
combine those together, they'll take you to the front of
the line. You're in a TSA pre check line. You
don't take your shoes off. I put my phone, my belt,
and the YEA my backpack in the bucket, send it through.
I stepped through the magnetometer and it beeps. They make

(04:07):
me go back, walk back through. You they empty your
you know, are your pockets empty? I said, no, let's
see what's in your pocket. I have one of those
alcohol wipes that I use on my computer screen. I
had chapstick, and I had my AirPods. I mean, nothing

(04:31):
is metal and the metal end my Apple Watch doesn't
set anything off. Air pods don't set anything off. But
somehow they've got it so tightened down now that it's
actually worse than it was before. At least my my,
your mndy's made vary. Mine was horrible, horrible experience. So

(04:51):
then they put me around where it's not the old
body scanner where you have to put your hands over
your head, you know, because I used to lie about
that when when I saw those coming, I would tell them, oh,
I can't lift my left arm above my shoulder, because
then they'll just send you the MAGNETOOMEA. It was such
a joke. And they're not gonna question you about it

(05:12):
because well, now you're getting into you're questioning my handicap. Really,
I don't think you want to go there. So I
always just say I can't lift my arm above my
above my shoulder. But this is not those tss that
these are not the full body scanners. These are some
new scanner that I've got to go research and figure
out what they are. So you you, you, you face

(05:34):
the screen. You just hold your arms out to the side.
It's still detected my chapstick and it's now they took
the AirPods out, it's still detected the chapstick and the
little I mean it's it's it's like a little you
know what it is. It's it's a little packet that's

(05:55):
got an alcohol wipe in it, like your doctor uses
the be over to wipe your little spot up when
they give you an injection.

Speaker 2 (06:03):
Better yet, for the fat people like I used to
be the KFC wet nap.

Speaker 1 (06:06):
Yeah, yeah, exactly exactly. It's the KFC wet nap. Then
the guy passed me down. Oh I'm sorry. I had
a I had my TSA or my Global entry card
in my shirt pocket. It's plastic. It's plastic, there's nothing
to it. But when he's patting me down, he feels that.

(06:29):
He says, what's in your pocket? I show him the card.
He tells me, you should have taken that out. I said, why,
because we detected something in your pocket. I mean it
was a cirtuitous answer. I mean, he's circular answer. Then
when he passed me down, I get to the chapstick
and the KFC white. Do you know what he asked me,

(06:55):
show me what's in your chapstick. I was so pissed
off by that point. I pulled the cap off and
I stuck in his nose. I mean, I got it,
like right up, mixtures like you don't blame me, smell it,
you a hole, smell of this now. Shoes were never
an issue. I kind of thought my sneakers might be
an issue, but no, that was an issue. It was

(07:15):
that I had a plastic my Global entry card in
my shirt pocket and I had chepstick and a wipe
in my other pocket. It's gotten worse, not better, in
my opinion. Then I thought, oh, at LaGuardia, I thought, well,
I've learned my lesson. I took everything out. I thought,

(07:36):
surely the chapstick and stuff, you know, maybe that was
just a fluke. Nope, same thing. So despite having pre
checked and clear, I get the rectal examination, and oh,
show us what your chopstick is. Really you want to do?
You need some here? You can have it? You know,

(07:56):
I'll just go buy I'll go buy another, you know,
for ninety nine sense of the store. You can have
your own. It's absurd, absolutely absurd. So don't think that
Scott and Better has gotten worse my my experience. I
would be curious if if if you're a road warrior
and you do that, are you experiencing the same thing

(08:21):
I didn't experience one when Chicago the Forest. I want
to I want to hear whether you have. By the way,
Dragon's speaking of road warriors, you said we heard from
our favorite Jew.

Speaker 2 (08:31):
That is true. Yes, we were talking a little bit
about the No National No broad Day when Caldera was
filling in on Monday, and apparently that is tied to
breast cancer awareness. And John tied that to, you know,
breast cancer awareness is that pink color and wondering what
other because he's talking about other all the other cancers

(08:52):
have their own colors and whatnot. And he was curious
as to what color prostate cancer was, and I was like, well,
it's got to be brown, right uh. And of course
you moved on that from that, But the next commercial
comes up, and we take those commercials and then our
favorite Jew did leave a talk back and say the
prostate cancer. Color is blue, I believe.

Speaker 1 (09:15):
Okay, so any indication of how he's doing.

Speaker 2 (09:18):
He did not say if he was doing good or bad.
He just stated the fact that he does have prostate
cancer and the color is so.

Speaker 1 (09:23):
He's still alive. So that's that's we know that though.

Speaker 2 (09:26):
I'll take that as a win.

Speaker 1 (09:27):
Yeah, they absolutely take that as a win. There was
something else, No, I think that. I think that's it.
It was interesting because New York has such a you know,
strong or wide Jewish population. It was interesting to read

(09:51):
the local newspapers, which pretty much do anyway, and to
see some of the news about what happened in the Middle.
I'm not going to be well, I am being skeptical,
but what I want to do is I want to
give you some ideas about what's going to happen here.

(10:14):
You may have seen that the speech that Trump gave
to the Kanesse, the Israeli equivalent of Congress Parliament, was
one of his you know, let's follow the teleprompter, but
then let's go off teleprompter too, So it was pretty
much one of those you know, free wheeling, you know,

(10:36):
just stream of consciousness kind of speeches. He did turn
to the Israeli president at one point and say pointed
to Benjamin net Yahoo, the Prime minister, who is sitting
in in the audience, and says to the President, you
should pardon that guy. I really like him. He's one

(10:56):
of the great war presidents. And he's done, you know,
a fantastic job. And you know because Net and Yong
was facing some some lawfair himself. So so Trump then
leaves and goes to Egypt. He came, he solid conquered.
I mean he was. It was a true heroes welcome
by everybody. He agreeed that hostage hostage families and the

(11:23):
hostages themselves. Then when he went to Egypt, that's where
they actually signed the and I'm just going to say
peace deal for now. It's really just a cease fire
for now, but it's got the framework for a piece deal.
And it was it was a I thought it was
a moving speech. You think about the fact that he
had twenty seven countries that were there, and they were

(11:46):
all there because they want to push the next phase
of this twenty point plan. And of course he wanted
to take a victory lap, which he always wants to do.
Even Time magazine, he's pissed off about the Time magazine
cover because it's a shot for below and you and
you can't see his hair, and he's all mad about
the photograph. But Time, even magis magazine, had some some

(12:08):
comment about some some of you the effect this is
his moment. I mean Time gave Hi kudos for it.
I mean that that's a shocker. But think about this.
So the guns are silent, They're they're still silent leased
as of this morning, the relief's supplies, which have always
been pouring into Gaza, are now pouring into Gaza, but

(12:30):
actually getting into the to the people that need them.
The the IDF troops Israeli defense forces have pulled back
to the areas that have been agreed upon. The twenty
survivors were released at lee. At last count four of
the twenty eight bodies of the dead, one turns out
not to be one of those, which are we surprised
by that, And the others say they will be returned

(12:54):
when they find them, which means they may never find them.
That spikes the release of the hostages. That is the
spiking of the football for the most powerful weapon the
Hamas had.

Speaker 2 (13:10):
Now what.

Speaker 1 (13:13):
In return for that? The Israelis released some two thousand
so called Palestinians, a lot from a mosque, some even
serving life sentences for murder. They've been released and turned back.
I think Trump's personal promise that Israel would retreat to

(13:34):
these agreed areas. You may have seen some of the
photographs of them coming across and just flooding back into
this completely. I shouldn't think there's some areas have survived,
but truly a demolished dystopian world where homes and businesses

(13:54):
are just rubble, like the rubble of Ground zero. It's
just true rubble.

Speaker 2 (14:00):
Did you see those zombie apocalypse movies. Yeah, that's what
it was. That's exactly what it looks like. Let's think
about how this came about. So one of the key
ingredients was the culture of New York business. Jared Kushner,
the President's son in law, served in Trump one point zero,

(14:24):
is serving here, but not in an official capacity. He's
got very deep relations in the Arab world. Steve Whitcoff,
a businessman friend of the president, somebody that Trump says,
you know, he's really smart, really good. But the thing
that the reason he chose Steve is because everybody ends
up liking Steve Whitcoff. Whitcoff, He's just a guy that

(14:46):
everybody likes. His goal was to deliver what Trump wanted.
The president himself, you know all.

Speaker 1 (15:00):
Everything that he learned in the boardrooms, in the c
suites of the bankers that he did loans with which,
by the way, never got fraud. So Letitia James bite
my ass. He knew how to get to Yes, he
knew how to get to what he wanted. Kushner describes
himself as a deal guy, just like his father in law,

(15:20):
and says that deal making is a sport, but it's
a different sport from diplomacy, which is also a form
of a sport. You take what you can get from
the key players with whom you form close relationships, as
Trump's demonstrated when he acknowledged all of you know, almost
everybody he knows personally, and then't worry about the details. Later. Well,

(15:41):
now come the details, and with the details comes where
my skepticism moves in. I'm not convinced this is a
bright future. You see the televised you know they were
showing on with some of the build boards in Times Square.
Fox News is running on their cairn outside they're building

(16:04):
on sixth Avenue. You see the image of all these
twenty seven nations all gathering to applaud Trump. Now, Hamas
did not attend. The attendance of BB Netanyahu at the
signing in Egypt got mixed by the Egyptian president. Nah,

(16:30):
take that back, I think it was the Turkish president
Ertawan did it, and Ertawan threatened to not show up
if Netanyahu showed up. So some of these underlying hatreds
still exist. Now, crucially, the Iranians announced support for ending
the genocidal wars they called it. But they're going to

(16:51):
continue to back Hamas, and they're going to back Hamas
according to the Iranians if Israel, if Israel continues their
expansionist and racist plans. So those deep sea that hatreds
all still exist. But Molas promised to rearm their proxies
throughout the region, so they're going to be equipped to

(17:11):
continue their battle to destroy Israel. Never mind that Trump's
warned them that he's ordered twenty eight you know, as
he calls them beautiful new B two bombers, and that,
you know, in kind of a kind of an Arnold
Schwarzenegger tone, you know, I'll be back. If you do
anything to interfere with this, I'll be back. So all

(17:35):
the deep seated hatred still exists, then you've got the
problem with the positions that have been taken by Hamas
and Net and Yahi Harmases, one of their leaders, says
that the proposed weapons turnover is out of the question
and not negotiable.

Speaker 3 (17:56):
Good morning, Michael and Dragon. Michael, glad you're back. Welcome back.
You may have answered it already, but inquiring minds would
like to know, did you end up doing the backpack
with the leash on it?

Speaker 2 (18:08):
Have a good day?

Speaker 1 (18:10):
No, No, I'll tell you what. You know, grandfathers and
granddaughters are obviously a very special relationship, and you know,
just look with your daughters too. You're just very very protected.
But once I saw her and her adaptation to New
York City life, I was not I shouldn't say I

(18:34):
wasn't worried at all, but my anxiety level just dissipated
because nobody was going to mess with her, and so yeah,
I didn't worry about it at all, not at all.
There were even when like like there was one obnoxious
guy that kind of kept accosting her and we were

(18:55):
just walking along and she she just kept ignoring him,
but he just kept bugging. She finds she didn't say anything.
At least I didn't hear anything, but she's turned around.
She must have given him the stink eye because he
immediately backed off them. So she must have that look
like missus Redbeard and Tamra have that, you know. Oops,
don't f with me. That's right, monster, move away, move away.

(19:19):
So back to this peace deal. And I'm not trying
to be Debbie down. I'm just trying to be again.
I'm just trying to live in the real world about this.
So Hamas's political bureau has announced that the turnover the weapons,
in other words, disarming of Hamas is out of the
question and not negotiable. In fact, that's a quote out
of the question and not negotiable. Net and Yahoo's promised

(19:43):
that if a Moss does not disarm, they're no further compromises.
Now I don't know what that means, but no further compromises.

Speaker 2 (19:52):
Now.

Speaker 1 (19:52):
There are rumors floating around. I haven't checked again this morning,
but at least yesterday there were some rumors floating around
that Israel might offer amnesty to the Hamas fighters if
they do surrender their weapons decommission their weapons. The head
of Masade has made it clear let every Arab mother

(20:12):
know that if her son took part in the massacre,
he has signed his own death warrant. Now, Israel obviously
in tims to treat these Hamas fighters as it did
the terrorists that assassinated the Israeli athletes at the Olympics
back in nineteen seventy two in Munich. They're going to
hunt them down and assassinate them, no matter where they

(20:35):
are or how long it takes them to do that.
So if anybody was hoping that a cease fire, not
a peace deal, but a cease fire would eventually reduce
the hatred between the Gosins and israel I, just think
that's totally unrealistic. And then all those thousands of Gosins
that you see trekking across Godzis of their former homes

(20:58):
are just going to find that debris and then they're
you know, think about that, you I saw it in disasters.
People would people would be you know, they would evacuate,
They come back and they you know, they have hopes
of hopes that their house, even though they've seen the
weather reports, they seen the news coverage, they've seen everything.
They still had hope, which is the human condition, that

(21:22):
their house survived, that maybe all their neighbors or how
houses are gone, but theirs would survive. Goslins are human
beings too, so they're coming back hoping that they'll see something,
but they're not. You know, most of them are going
to find that everything's been completely obliterated. That's going to
turn to anger at some point, and then they're gonna

(21:44):
get anger when they start thinking about family members that
they can't find, friends that no longer exist, They're gonna
get pissed off. Now there's euphoria right now in Israel.
You saw the cheering, you saw the crowd, you saw
the reception that Trump got. Well, when you start hearing

(22:06):
the horror stories about what the Gosins I'm sorry Hamas
did to the hostages, when they start relating their stories
to family members in the press, in the media, think
about the anger that's going to grow about that. Today,

(22:28):
this very moment, Hamas remains in charge of governing Gaza
the Israeli press, so take that for what it's worth.
The Israeli press is estimating it somewhere between sixteen to
twenty thousand Hamas fighters survived, and that they're now actually
killing internal opponents. So what does that indicate to me?

(22:51):
That indicates to me that they're trying to just like
Sodom Hussein when Sodom Hussein took over the Bath Party.
There's this, I'm sure you can find it online. There
is this video where he's called all these party members
together and they're in this giant auditorium and he's up there,

(23:12):
he's got somebody next to him, He's got people spread
out around the along the sides of the auditorium, and
he starts calling out names of individuals that he believes
was involved conspiring with Syria to prevent him from taking office.
He calls them out, they are taken out one by

(23:36):
one and they're executed. That's what Hamas is doing. Why
would why does Sadam Hussein do that one to intimidate
everybody and to solidify his power, to solidify that he
was in control. So why is Hamas killing some of
their their what they believe to be are internal people

(23:58):
that may have secretly one the cease fire or that
we're just cooperating because they wanted to live who they're dying.
And then what about this international peacekeeping force. I don't
know that peacekeeping forces always keep the peace, and I
don't think it's realistic to believe that, you know, Trump's

(24:21):
dream of turning Goz into this beautiful seaside resort on
the Mediterranean, I just don't think that that's that's certainly
not going to going to emerge in my lifetime. No,
if it does, fantastic, but I don't think it's going to.
So this birth in Gaza of some sort of thriving
modern city, you know, it's not going to turn into Riyad,

(24:41):
it's not going to turn into Abu Dabi or Dubai.
I just don't think that's going to happen in my lifetime.
And even if it were, the Israelis are going to
object because what does it take to build a city.
It takes concrete, it takes steel, it takes construction workers,
it takes For example, if you're going to build a

(25:01):
high rise, what do you have to do? You have
to dig into the ground. One of the most stirring
things for me, having been in the pit at ground zero,
was where the museum is. They preserve some of the
retaining wall that kept the water from the Hudson from
coming into when it was a parking garage and the
shops and everything were down below in the plaza. That

(25:23):
some of that wall still remains, well, that wall. If
you're going to build high rises in the Gozza strip somewhere,
based on where it's located, you're gonna have to dig
down deep and put up retaining walls and that requires
concrete and steel, rebar everything you can possibly imagine to

(25:45):
keep the Mediterranean out, but also to support the building.
And then hmm, there was the ability to go from
ground zero. I'll never forget this. There were There were
obviously the path train that came into where ground zero was,

(26:06):
and then you had the subway stations there, and then
you had tunnels. Most people don't realize it, but there
were tunnels so you could to a certain perimeter, you
could live and work in that area and never go
outside because of the network of trains, tunnels and subways.

(26:29):
What and how did Hamas survive tunnels? If you start
to rebuild, how are you going to how are you
going to prevent tunnels from getting rebuilt or at least
you know if they can steal food and aid. Uh,
they can steal concrete and rebar too, and then they
can start rebuilding their tunnels and make sure re manufacturing

(26:52):
some of the some of their weaponry. The United Nations,
for what it's worth, estimates that cost it least fifty
billion dollars to rebuild Gaza. Now, Trump's looking to other
countries in the Middle East to open their wallets and
do that, but they haven't yet. Saudi Arabian, the United

(27:13):
Arab Emirates, they haven't even agreed on the structuring, the
governing structure yet. And you're going to have to have
a governing structure in place before the rebuilding age's going
to flow in because someone's going to have to oversee it. Again,
going back to nine eleven, simply because it's on my mind,
is you know, we put up an entire process and

(27:36):
hired I can't remember the guy's name now, but he
was very famous for having being able to distribute funds
for all of the health issues at ground zero. Well,
you're going to have to have someone that's going to
oversee all of the fifty billion dollars. Is that Tony Blair?
I don't know. Tony Blair might be too busy building

(27:59):
and he's going to need somebody alongside him to oversee
all of the cases can have come in. But so far,
the Arab countries haven't said, oh yeah, we'll you know,
we'll pony up for you know, if it's going to
cost fifty billion dollars. The Saudis haven't promised you know,
half of it. They haven't promised ten percent of it.
They haven't promised anything yet. Now I've seen some estimates

(28:22):
again from the United Nations, that there are fifty million
tons of debris and then it might take twenty years
to get all the debris out. Now, I think that's
I think that's tooid. I don't think it'll take that
long if Now, for example, again you think about Ground Zero.
They estimated a couple of years or more. We got

(28:45):
it done in several months, We got it within we
got it earlier than scheduled, and we got it done
under budget. Now, whether that was a good thing to
do or not do it was an interesting conversation I
had yesterday while I was with James and most people
at the museum. So there are all of these other

(29:07):
things that nobody is really thinking forward about. I shouldn't
say none of us out here in the public I
think of thinking about it. I'm sure internally that the
Secretary of State in his team, that whit coffin his team,
and I'm sure that the Israelis and the Arabs, whoever

(29:27):
part of these groups, they're all thinking about these things.
But so far, no answers, just lots of questions. And
I know it's early, but we had to recognize that
while it's early, these are things that have to be
answered if the cease fire is going to stay in
place and he could fall apart at any second. You

(29:50):
must have fluent to Tita Borow, didn't you. Yeah, my
Gulf Stream flew into Tita Borough and the limo and
the driver picked us up up and drove us in,
you know, and we stayed at the plaza. You know,
I get I I was gonna get one a two
bedroom suite, but you know that was like five grand

(30:12):
a night. Instead, I decided to just get two separate
rooms for you know, three thousand dollars a night, you know,
so we can have our own rooms the plaza. I
can remember staying at the plaza, like I don't know,
thirty years ago. It was probably I don't know, maybe
two hundred dollars a night. We thought that was expensive. Yeah,

(30:34):
to the borough. I'll tell you what I did not do.
I did not fly into Newark, no way. But I
wasn't gonna fly into Newark. So so back to this
piece deal. I don't want anybody to think that I'm
opposed to it. I'm just trying to be really. Everybody's ecstatic,
which which is fine because they got the hostages back,
they're still looking for the bodies. But it's it's it's

(30:57):
kind of like we never stop and think about all
the other stuff going around because the news media's got
their lens focused on just you know, the celebratory things
going on, and I'm thinking, I guess it's just perverted me.
I'm thinking about the rubble. I'm thinking about when those
families come back in and they can't find anything. I'm
thinking about the hamas Terrace. Just like Sanam Hussein, They're

(31:20):
they're out killing their own now. Uh. They they say
they're not going to disarm Israel says that's a deal breaker.
So all of that's still going on in the background,
and then who's going to manage this place. It's it's
not going to just recreate itself. And I think those
other Arab nations Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Indo, you know,

(31:42):
Indonesia is a part of this, the you know, the
largest Muslim country in the entire world. They all need
to be a part of this if they're really going
to create a new Gaza city, a new Gasan territory.
And nobody talks about it. Nobody says, hey, what about
this or that? You think the media and of course

(32:06):
even if the media you did ask the question, now
they get some bs answer. You know, speaking of cease
fires North Korea, you know that war is still active.
It's just a ceasefire that's still still held for more
than seventy years
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist

CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist

It’s 1996 in rural North Carolina, and an oddball crew makes history when they pull off America’s third largest cash heist. But it’s all downhill from there. Join host Johnny Knoxville as he unspools a wild and woolly tale about a group of regular ‘ol folks who risked it all for a chance at a better life. CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist answers the question: what would you do with 17.3 million dollars? The answer includes diamond rings, mansions, velvet Elvis paintings, plus a run for the border, murder-for-hire-plots, and FBI busts.

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.

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

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

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.