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October 3, 2025 • 28 mins

We discuss the Netflix boycott and introduce a new writer with a short Red Pilled America audio-documentary called Bred to Struggle. We also give our MLB Playoff predictions. Join us for RPA Presents Famboogie!

Sponsored by Lear Capital (800-480-1100) and Ruff Greens (promo code: RedPilled)!

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
This is Red Pilled America. You're listening to Red Pilled
America's famboogie. If you want to join the fanbam, go
to Redpilled America dot com and click join in the
top menu. And don't forget to check out our new
video versions over at YouTube and Rumble. Just search Red

(00:23):
Pilled America Podcast on both host platforms and you will
find it. We want to get into this boycott Netflix
that's trending on social media because I think it's warranted.
I shouldn't say I think. I know it's warranted, but
there are some other things happening around it that I

(00:44):
think that we want to give our take on because
nobody else is talking about this. So this boycott Netflix
thing started with a couple accounts slips of TikTok is
usually the ones that to get this kind of trans
stuff going, and that's what this is about. It's basically
a lot of their youth content geared towards basically all ages.

(01:07):
So starting from you know, how old are kids when
they start watching cartoons? Three? Two, three years old? Bless you,
it's for all age groups.

Speaker 2 (01:19):
I mean, I'm going to say maybe younger than that.
I think I think people put their two year olds
in front of the television and they're one and a half, and.

Speaker 1 (01:25):
These cartoons are definitely in the range of a two
year old's you know, content. So I want to play
a couple of clips of this here. So this is
one of the shows, and this is a scene where
a girl is with her friend. I believe it's some
kind of a babysitting show, and the doctor, actually me

(01:47):
a nurse comes in talking to the two groups. The
kid that's laying in bed, the patient is a boy
transitioning to be a girl. And the doctor comes in
and starts talking to the group, and this is her
friend who's sitting next to her.

Speaker 2 (02:04):
Her response, yeah, I think it's the babysitter. But I
just want to note that the kid that's transitioning, that's
in the bed is maybe seven or eight years old.
This is a very small child.

Speaker 1 (02:18):
Exactly. Here is the exchange.

Speaker 3 (02:21):
Here, someone's not feeling well, just take a.

Speaker 4 (02:23):
Look at the little man.

Speaker 1 (02:25):
Can I please talk to you too outside.

Speaker 2 (02:27):
I know that you guys are busy, but as you
would see if.

Speaker 3 (02:32):
You looked at her and not her chart, Bailey is
not a boy.

Speaker 2 (02:37):
And by treating her like one you are completely ignoring
who she is.

Speaker 3 (02:41):
You're making her.

Speaker 2 (02:42):
Feel insignificant and humiliated, and that's not going to help
her feel good or safe or calm.

Speaker 3 (02:48):
So I'm here on now, Please recognize her or who.

Speaker 2 (02:52):
She is, and if at all possible, could you find
me a non blue hospital gown her followers.

Speaker 1 (03:00):
So there you have it. This is what's mind blowing
about it. Apparently a major shareholder of Netflix is Capital
Research Global Investors CRGI, and they're worth approximately three trillion
dollars and also have invested large sums of money into
puberty blockers. So you know, it's just it couldn't be clearer.

(03:23):
They're just pushing this agenda I want to I'm telling you,
the examples on Netflix are never ending.

Speaker 2 (03:30):
It goes on and on.

Speaker 1 (03:31):
Here is a cartoon it's called dead End Paranormal Park,
and it's a trans kid scene. Here you go. It's
not the park, it's it's me. I'm transnormal, and everyone
at school knows and everyone at home knows, and being
here it's.

Speaker 4 (03:48):
Like a whole new place.

Speaker 3 (03:51):
I can just be Barney, and I can.

Speaker 4 (03:53):
Choose if and when I tell people, I've never been happier,
and that's saying something.

Speaker 3 (03:57):
When I spent today chased by terrifying zombie mascots.

Speaker 2 (04:01):
Punsy reminded me how important it is to.

Speaker 1 (04:03):
Live your life without apology. So I think I gotta
give living here a shot. So you know, once, that
cartoon is probably geared towards maybe five or six year old.

Speaker 2 (04:14):
No, I think that's more betweens. You think, so, yeah,
you know nine ish eleven A Okay.

Speaker 1 (04:20):
Well, this one is definitely geared towards three plus. It's
Strawberry Shortcake. And this is a quick clip of how
they are grooming kids into this ideology, like.

Speaker 4 (04:34):
Cotton candy clouds floating in a blue sky. Banafi will
slide that runway, Banabi, tell us why you chose this
delicious dress as a transberry. I love living out loud,
is my most authentic self, and I wanted to dress
as bold and unique as I am, which, let's face it,

(04:56):
as a tall order.

Speaker 1 (04:57):
So that is a transberry. It's it's a drag queen
slash trans person. And Strawberry Shortcake Strawberry Shortcake.

Speaker 2 (05:06):
And now all of you, you know ladies out there
that are a little older probably remember Strawberry Shortcake from
the eighties. Yeah, now they've made it trans. There's trans
There's a transberry. Now there's not just blueberry muffin. There's
a transberry.

Speaker 1 (05:22):
Here you go with, I bet it tastes terrible. Here's Transformers. Okay,
so they even worked it into the trans into Transformers.
Here's a scene where not only are humans trans, but
robots are trans.

Speaker 5 (05:38):
Life saints conouns.

Speaker 4 (05:39):
I again, he or she just doesn't fit who I am?

Speaker 3 (05:44):
My apologies, please switch there piece.

Speaker 1 (05:49):
Yeah, so the robot wants they them pronouns, and then
the transformer apologizes for using the wrong pronouns and goes
with the proper pronouns. So these examples go on and on.
There's a trans documentary about a guy who a boy
who goes through the court system to get his hormone blockers.

(06:12):
There's gay marriages, there's two husbands having a child that
turns out to be gay. There's lesbian kisses in Jurassic
World cartoons. So I mean, it is just non stop
on Netflix. So I understand this boycott movement. It is

(06:32):
very clear that in this particular, in this case, you
have a network pushing this trans ideology and this LGBTQ
ideology onto three year olds, and plus the problem is
is where is everybody going to go once they do
these boycotts. I mean, this has been really trending on Twitter.

(06:55):
You have Elon Musk promoting it as well. He's retweeting it,
and he obviously has this issue is close to his
heart because he has a trans kid that I think
it's a boy that's uh, that's you know, or transitioning
to be a girl.

Speaker 2 (07:10):
I think it's he or she has transitioned already exactly. Yeah,
he lost his child to this ideology.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
So but where do they go from here? Because people
the general public are going to go to these streaming services.
They have a long day at work and they want
to relax, they have the weekend, they want to watch things,
and it's everywhere it is.

Speaker 2 (07:31):
It's not just on Netflix, by the way.

Speaker 1 (07:34):
So Amazon Prime has a show called Bottoms, which is
two high school queers that set up a fight club
to lose their virginity. So they're basically getting other girls
to join this fight club so that they can have
sex with other girls. One of the girls that they're
trying to have sex with is Cindy Crawford's daughter. You

(07:55):
have Palmer feels.

Speaker 2 (07:56):
Like a better it would be a better name for
gay boys.

Speaker 1 (08:00):
You would think, you would think, you would think so
when you have Palmer that was starring justin Timberlake. It
had a transgender non conforming child and this kind of
washed up guy who serves some time in prison comes
home and he has to raise this child by chance
because the child's caregiver dies and so it lands with him,

(08:22):
and the mother is a drug addict, and so he's
raising this kid. And that's basically showing signs of being
gay as a young age at a young age non conforming.
You got White Lotus. Now here's a beautiful one. Actually
this was on HBO White Lotus a couple seasons ago.
You had a guy performing an act on another guy

(08:44):
that could give the person e coli, let's say, in
their mouth. Then you had this past season an incest
gay scene where a brother performs a sexual act on
his brother and these are adults. Then you had It's

(09:07):
Just Goes On and On. That's HBO. Another thing on
Amazon Prime the summer I Turned Pretty. You have a
basically brother brother girl love triangle and one of the
brothers is a bisexual who is sleeping with the other guys,
and then he ends up falling in love with his
kind of childhood friend and they a girl who's a girl,

(09:29):
and they almost get married. So it doesn't matter which
platform you go to, they're all there.

Speaker 2 (09:36):
They're all there. I mean the idea that they are
pushing the idea to young girls and young women because
they basically end up being in college when they're having
this romance, the bisexual boy and this girl. The idea
that if your boyfriend is sleeping with other guys, that's
totally normal. Yeah, yeah, you know, you can sleep with anyone.

(09:59):
Anything goes. Yeah, that's not normal. Your boyfriend's gay if
he's doing that late well.

Speaker 1 (10:03):
And then on top of that, you mix that with
legislation like here in California, where you have that Wiener
who's a you know, I think he's a politician here
in California, pushed through legislation that no longer makes it
against the law to knowingly pass on HIV or AIDS
to your partner. And this is the problem that I

(10:24):
think that people aren't talking about. You boycott Netflix, and
then people have to go somewhere, and so they have
nowhere else to go because all of these platforms have
this same kind of thing happening, and conservatives and the
conservative movement isn't providing them a platform to go to.
You had the Daily Wire, you know, try to launch

(10:45):
some stuff with in the kids' space. I don't think
that ended up turning out well. I think the problem
is underfunding. You need a lot of money. We're talking
billions of dollars to pull off a platform like that,
because not only do you need to create original content,
you need to purchase licensed content to reach these kids.
You need to produce this stuff. That just is an

(11:07):
enormous amount of work. Just like our storytelling show. It
takes time to write scripts and to develop them and
to research them and to put them together. So, you know,
but the Daily Wire tried to do this. You know,
there's times where they frustrated me, but I was always
rooting for their success. They, you know, by all accounts,
have failed on the children's content. On the adult content,

(11:31):
they really kind of have not been doing much scripted.
I've been hearing rumors that they're kind of out of
that game.

Speaker 4 (11:37):
You know.

Speaker 1 (11:37):
A movie that they produced that Jeremy Boring produced has
not come to market yet. There's questions on whether it will.
So what we really need is we need these moneyed
conservatives to put money into this space because that's the
only thing that's going to make these kinds of short

(11:58):
term boycotts into a long term win, because everybody's going
to go end up going back to Netflix at some
point point.

Speaker 2 (12:03):
And we also need people to support the storytellers like us,
like you know, our new video endeavor on YouTube. It's
very very expensive to to create these videos, and we
need the support of the audience or it's just it's
if you don't support we love, it will go away.

Speaker 1 (12:21):
And you need to support you know, other storytellers, like
just get into the game, like see what other people
are doing and anybody that's in this space. Look, conservatives
aren't going to create the goodwill huntings of the genre immediately.
It takes time to develop talent and it takes ten
tries to make one hit. And I think at the

(12:43):
end of the day, the commitment is not there. We
don't have this critical mass happening on the right still
after all of this time, even after you know, putting
a president like Donald Trump, who is a cultural icon
in the White House, people don't get it. They think, oh, okay, yeah,
we get the culture. We look at look at our side.

(13:03):
Now we're winning. We won the election, and we have
a cultural icon on our side in the White House.
He's a once in a two hundred year anomaly. We
don't have a structure in place to develop people. We
don't have a farm league. We don't have you know,
film schools. We don't have the talent agencies. We don't

(13:25):
have the award shows, we don't have the film festivals.
The people that are purchasing all this content out there,
we don't have this deep bench. We don't have a bench.
There's no I would say, since you know Trump's election,
or you know, even going back maybe five six years,
I would say that it's gotten worse than gotten better.
You know. Yes, there's some social media. You know, people

(13:47):
that are good on social media, and that is a
new kind of a platform and a new kind of
a content creation space that conservatives have gotten good at.
But other than that, the long form stuff, the storytelling
stuff that create cultural moments and that stay with us

(14:08):
for generations, we don't have any of that. We've gotten
so complacent in this space, and you know, I think
at the end of the day, you have all these
these conservative influencers aren't pushing it because it's not their wheelhouse.
They want people focused on them and their kind of
one off content and their tweets and their posts, and

(14:30):
they haven't created this ecosystem where we are building a
farm league and we are promoting people that are creators
out there. And I think it's going to end up
being a big, big issue in the long term. You know,
we're going to be a broken record on this topic
until somebody very high up starts to push this and

(14:50):
we start seeing some money flow into this space. We
are going to be transing our kids like these cartoons
have been doing. That's how committed these people are is
they've said, Okay, you know what we need we can reproduce,
because you know, two men can't reproduce, you know, in
the normal, you know, creation way. So what we're going

(15:13):
to do is is we're going to pass on this
ideology through our content onto the kids and bring as
many people over or at least loosen the resistance as
much as possible.

Speaker 2 (15:24):
Yeah, onto our kids exactly.

Speaker 1 (15:27):
So I want to take a quick break. But after
the break, we're going to introduce you guys to a
new writer and show you that we are living what
we preach. We'll get to that right after the break.
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(16:53):
listening to Red Pilled America's Famboogie. Join the fambam. Go
to Redpilled America dot com click join in the top menu.
We need you guys, support support storytelling that'll with your
values and check out our YouTube videos over at YouTube
and rumble. So before we get into introducing this a
new storyteller, I want to get to Adriana's predictions on

(17:17):
the Major League Baseball World Series. We have the playoffs
are set now there's eight teams left. As you guys know,
we are huge Dodger fans over here, and the Dodgers
have made it into the National League Division Series. You
have the Dodgers going up against the Phillies. You have

(17:38):
the Chicago Cubs going up against the Milwaukee Brewers. You
have Detroit going up against Seattle on the American League
side side, and you have the New York Yankees going
up against Toronto.

Speaker 2 (17:49):
All right, so why don't you give me your predictions?

Speaker 1 (17:52):
Interesting? Okay, I think that the Detroit Tigers are going
to beat the Seattle Mariners. I think that the New
York Yankees are gonna beat Toronto. So the Stankies are
gonna go up against the Detroit Tigers for the American
League pennant.

Speaker 2 (18:10):
The Stankies also known as the.

Speaker 1 (18:12):
Yankees, exactly. I think Milwaukee Brewers are going to beat
Chicago on the National League side, and they're gonna end
up going up against the Dodgers. And that is data
backed up. I know I'm a Dodger fan, but the Dodgers. One,
they have the odd the betting odds are for the
Dodgers right now. They've shifted towards the Dodgers. And two,

(18:37):
their batting is incredible. In the wild Card series, they blow.

Speaker 2 (18:42):
We're having a problem with our bullpen. Our bullpen is
crap in the bed.

Speaker 1 (18:47):
Well, yes, but we have some Dodger pitchers, starter pitchers
that we're gonna be throwing into the bullpen glass now
is going to be going in there. So my prediction
is is the Dodgers are going to beat the Phillies.
It's going to be a close match. They're gonna go
up against the Brewers. Prediction is it's going to be
in the World Series, a repeat of the Dodgers against
the Yankees, and of course the Stankies are going to

(19:11):
fall because the Dodgers have their number. The baseball is
about mental fitness, and it's all mental at this level,
mental fortitude because at the end of the day, everybody
has the skill. I think that's why I like the
baseball so much. Is it's really about like how life is.
You have some losses, you have some wins. Really, in baseball,

(19:34):
it's kind of a fifty to fifty game. The people
that end up winning the whole thing are just a
little bit above fifty.

Speaker 2 (19:41):
And sometimes you have to bunt.

Speaker 1 (19:46):
Exactly exactly. Sometimes you have to throw a ball at
the pitcher.

Speaker 2 (19:50):
Kay, no, no, I don't condone any violence unless I
don't like the person.

Speaker 1 (19:54):
Are you kidding me? You're the first one that love
to watch a dugout clearing fight. That is my prediction,
Dodgers against the Yankees, and Dodgers are going to end
up winning the World Series again.

Speaker 2 (20:05):
Well, guess what we are on the same exact page.

Speaker 1 (20:08):
That's why I married you.

Speaker 2 (20:10):
No, that's why I married you that we have.

Speaker 1 (20:11):
Been baseball fans for as long as we've been dating.
Some of our earliest pictures and some of our earliest
dating has been at Dodger games.

Speaker 3 (20:20):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (20:20):
Yeah, Actually for my birthday, guess what we're doing. We're
going to a Dodger playoff game. Yes, I'm so excited.
I can't wait.

Speaker 1 (20:27):
And we the other day you cleared out an old bag,
an old handbag that you had, and she goes into there,
into the bag and what does she have in the bag?
Dodger tickets. Yeah, we are huge Dodger fans. I want
to hear your guys' predictions. Who do you guys think
is going to end up winning the World Series? Shootes
an email or leave us something in the comments. But
with that, we want to introduce you guys to a

(20:51):
new storyteller that's going to be entering the scene.

Speaker 2 (20:53):
Yeah, and you know, I just want to show you
guys that we really do practice what we preach here
at Red Pilled America. And the new storyteller that we
are introducing is actually our daughter, poet, poet Corelchi, that
is her name. She is an incredible writer, truly, she's
a natural born writer. And she wrote about something that

(21:16):
is near and dear to our heart, about a condition
that one of our dogs, our English bulldog has called
Boaz where it really affects their breathing. And she took
it upon herself to write this story and create this
short podcast to bring awareness about this issue. And we
really hope that you guys enjoy the debut of poets

(21:39):
new podcasts.

Speaker 1 (21:40):
Yes, and for all of you listeners out there that
love your dogs, be sure to introduce them to Rough Greens.
They're a new sponsor of ours. You can get a
free trial bag. All you have to do is pay
for shipping by using our promo code red Pilled.

Speaker 2 (21:55):
And I promise you guys, you will love this product.
Our bull mast of Willow. She has hip problems because
she's such a large dog, and a lot of large
break dogs have hip problems. Willa was at the point
where she could barely get up. We were so worried.
We thought, what are we going to do? Is she
gonna need surgery? And we started to give her the

(22:15):
Rough Greens and they have a supplement that you put
into the Rough Greens called that that's for joints and
it has made a world of difference. I cannot recommend
this enough.

Speaker 1 (22:25):
Yes, And all you got to do is is you
take this mixture and you sprinkle it on your dog food.
We make our dog's food, but you can also sprinkle
it on kibble. But if you make your dog's food,
you sprinkle it on there as well too, because you
might be thinking that you're giving them all the nutrients.
But they're not humans. They're dogs. They have different needs
than we do.

Speaker 2 (22:42):
And if you want to know what I feed my dogs,
and you want my recipe for the homemade food that
I make my dogs, I make it in big batches.
Just shoot us a DM at info at Redpilled America
dot com and I will respond to you and I
will tell you exactly.

Speaker 1 (22:56):
So be sure to check out rough Greens once again
use promo code red Pilled. And here is a poet
Corell Cheese short story on Boaz and it's called Bread
to Struggle.

Speaker 2 (23:08):
Enjoy everyone.

Speaker 5 (23:11):
This may sound like a normal excited English bulldog, but
in actuality, he's on the brink of suffocation and humans
are largely to blame. Hi, I'm Pote Curlchi and this
is bread to Struggle. For centuries, dogs have been considered

(23:32):
man's best friend. And that's for many reasons. They protect us,
alert us to danger, and then there's the cuteness factor.
What makes breeds like English bulldogs, French bulldogs, and pugs
so cute are their flat face and short muzzle. The
technical term for these types of canine skulls is breaky cephalic,
a Greek term meaning short head. But with this trait

(23:57):
comes a condition breaky cephalic obstructive airway syndrome or BOAZ,
and extreme cases can be deadly.

Speaker 3 (24:05):
Rakocephallic obstructive airway syndrome is created by anatomical abnormalities.

Speaker 5 (24:12):
That's doctor boaz Man, a medical director at the Boca
Midtown Animal Hospital in Boca Raton, Florida. He also creates
YouTube videos to educate people on BOAZ.

Speaker 3 (24:22):
Essentially, there was too much stuff in too little space.

Speaker 5 (24:25):
BOAZ is a common condition today in pugs and bulldogs,
but it hasn't always been.

Speaker 3 (24:30):
If we look at dogs from many years ago, they
did have longer noses and they had less problems.

Speaker 5 (24:35):
English and French bulldogs and pugs were each bred by
humans for different purposes, and a look at how bulldogs
were bred shows how humans helped cause this BOAZ condition.
The term bulldog first emerged in the seventeenth century, often
associated with the grueling sport known as bull baiting, where
the dog was tethered to a bull and expected to

(24:55):
attack it until the bull could no longer fight back.
Over the years, bulldogs developed the traits needed for this
brutal task, a strong, stocky build in a massive head
and jaw. After bull baiting was outlawed, breeders began breeding
bulldogs for gentler traits and marketing them as pets rather
than fighters, and in eighteen sixty five a breeding standard

(25:15):
was published showing off these dogs with large heads, stocky builds,
and the characteristic short muzzle. Over the years, breeders follow
this standard. Their results were English bulldogs in their miniature siblings,
the French bulldogs Hugs developed from a completely different part
of the world, but all of these breeds started off
with short muzzles. Throughout the years, humans began selecting these

(25:38):
dogs for even shorter muzzles, and there was a reason
for that.

Speaker 3 (25:42):
There has been research proven to show that human beings
are attracted to these dogs because of their facial features
that remind us of newborn babies. They have big eyes
in a roundhead, so there's an instant bond and connection.

Speaker 5 (25:56):
This natural peel for baby faces made these features more popular,
causing the snout of the dogs becomes shorter and flatter.
This caused a problem.

Speaker 3 (26:06):
So the nose is the first most obvious thing, and
you can see that from the outside.

Speaker 5 (26:10):
Imagine pinching your nose. This causes these dogs to have
narrow oxygen paths, making it increasingly harder for them to breathe.
But that is not the only thing going on.

Speaker 3 (26:26):
There's a fold attached inside the nose called alar fold,
and then it's attached to a bulb behind it, so
it's actually quite a large obstruction with inside the nose.

Speaker 5 (26:35):
These dogs also have an elongated soft palette which sits
at the front of their windpipe near the entrance of
their lungs. When they get excited, it can get sucked
into their airway, filling up a space, essentially disrupting their breathing.
The combination of these traits creates a kind of quicksand effect.
The more they struggle, the harder it is for them
to take in air. When they play, sleep, or even

(26:57):
simply live, they are constantly fighting with their own bodies
just to breathe. But doctor boas Man says there are solutions.
A surgical laser can open the nose.

Speaker 3 (27:09):
There are also other procedures that can be done, like
a wet surgery that's just like a little incision there
that removes a little bit less tissue, but this.

Speaker 5 (27:17):
Entire issue can be reduced. In breeding, humans need to
begin putting the health of their dogs over their cuteness.
We all love our furry babies. With more awareness of
this suffocating boaz condition, maybe us humans will begin to
desire dogs with longer snouts. Dogs are man's best friend.
It's time for us to return the love.

Speaker 1 (27:53):
That was bred to struggle by poet Corelchi. Thank you
for giving it a listen. Please, if you want to
become a member of the FAMBAM, go to Redpilled America
dot com click join the top menu, and be sure
to check out our new YouTube versions of the show
on YouTube and on Rumble. Thank you so much for
supporting the show. Support which you love or it fades away. Guys,

(28:17):
Thank you and enjoy your weekend, and until next time,
keep an eye out for our next story coming up soon.

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The heart was always off-limits to surgeons. Cutting into it spelled instant death for the patient. That is, until a ragtag group of doctors scattered across the Midwest and Texas decided to throw out the rule book. Working in makeshift laboratories and home garages, using medical devices made from scavenged machine parts and beer tubes, these men and women invented the field of open heart surgery. Odds are, someone you know is alive because of them. So why has history left them behind? Presented by Chris Pine, CARDIAC COWBOYS tells the gripping true story behind the birth of heart surgery, and the young, Greatest Generation doctors who made it happen. For years, they competed and feuded, racing to be the first, the best, and the most prolific. Some appeared on the cover of Time Magazine, operated on kings and advised presidents. Others ended up disgraced, penniless, and convicted of felonies. Together, they ignited a revolution in medicine, and changed the world.

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