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June 25, 2024 • 30 mins

Sean Davis, CEO & Co-Founder of The Federalist and Jeffrey Lord, author at The American Spectator and host of the Word of the Lord joins us with his perspective on the debate this Thursday, especially since he worked for CNN.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Round up information over on the hour eight hundred and
ninety four one Sean if you want to be a
part of the program. Just one hundred and thirty two
days from election day, eighty three days until early voting
starts in Pennsylvania, rolls out then around the country, and
the big debate is happening on Thursday. And of course,
you know, one of the things that people don't focus

(00:21):
enough on is Joe Biden. He got to pick the
He laid out all the ground rules that he'd accept,
and I will tell you I don't think they ever
expected that Donald Trump would agree to it. And I
think that was the strategy. Don't let Donald Trump say
no to the debate? Why because they dictate, Well, we'll
only do it on these four networks. That's it, really

(00:42):
is that how things work now, because that's never been
the case in the modern presidential error with TV or
televised presidential debates.

Speaker 2 (00:51):
It's never happened before.

Speaker 1 (00:52):
That way, we'll put it on fake news, CNN and
three other liberal networks that are options, and Donald Trump
will have no say with the moderator, pretty much no
say with the format. And you either take it it's
our way or the highway, or you're the one that's
afraid and you don't want a debate, You're you're you're
just afraid to debate. That's pretty much what they handed

(01:14):
Donald Trump, which is pretty outrageous and so fundamentally unfair.
But is it really any different than you'd really expect
when it comes to anything with Donald Trump and the
media mob and the Democrats. Oh, that's how they roll.
And that's why we have been pointing out that Jake Tapper,
fake Jake as we affectionately refer to him, and fake

(01:37):
Dana Bash. They are liberal Trump hating talk show hosts
that claim that they are journalists. They're not journalists. Fake
new CNN out there, you know, putting out statements supporting
fake Jake and fake Dana and how qualified they are
and how fair they're going to be. I don't believe
any of that for two seconds, and neither does anybody else.

(01:57):
They're not going to be fair, they're not going to
be balance, and they're going to be there and their
role is going to be to ask every trick question
and hard question of Donald Trump and try and avoid
the areas where he will have a hard time, meaning
Joe Biden, but anyway. You don't believe me, you ask
yourself this question. Listen to fake Jake Tapper and after

(02:22):
he said America's long nightmare is national nightmare is now over, listen.

Speaker 3 (02:29):
Well if it has also been a time of extreme divisions,
many of the divisions caused and exacerbated by President Trump himself.

Speaker 4 (02:38):
It's been a.

Speaker 3 (02:38):
Time of several significant and utterly avoidable failures, most tragically,
of course, the unwillingness to respect facts and science and
do everything that could be done to save lives during
a pandemic. It has been a time where truth in
fact we're treated with disdain.

Speaker 2 (02:55):
It is a time of cruelty.

Speaker 3 (02:57):
We're official in humanity, such as China separation became the
official shameful policy of the United States. But now the
Trump presidency is coming to an act to an end
with so many squandered opportunities and ruined potential, but also
an era of just plain meanness. It must be said,

(03:17):
to paraphrase President Ford, for tens of millions of our
fellow Americans, their long national nightmare is over.

Speaker 1 (03:26):
Now ask yourself, is that really coming from a journalist
or a liberal Democrat anti Trump talkshow hosts giving opinion,
but claiming to be a journalist.

Speaker 2 (03:43):
It's not that hard to figure out.

Speaker 1 (03:45):
That's the environment that Donald Trump has been forced into,
with little to no say about the rules of the debate,
the location of the debate, the moderators of the debate,
in the in the modern era of president will televised debate,
this has never gone down this way before. And here's
another example, Fake Jake, fake Dana Bash and they're anti

(04:09):
Trump rhetoric.

Speaker 3 (04:10):
We're not carrying his remarks live because, frankly, he says
a lot of things that are not true and sometimes
potentially dangerous.

Speaker 5 (04:17):
The most important question now is the culpability of the
president of the United States and the fact that he
went to that rally and called for an incited violence.

Speaker 3 (04:29):
That was the worst debate I have ever seen. In fact,
it wasn't even a debate. It was a disgrace, and
it's primarily because of President Trump, who spent the entire
time interrupting, not abiding by the rules that he agreed to, lying,
maliciously attacking the son of the vice president.

Speaker 5 (04:51):
He's high minded language.

Speaker 4 (04:53):
I'm just going to say it like it is.

Speaker 6 (04:55):
That was so and you know.

Speaker 5 (04:57):
We're on cable we can say that apologies for being
maybe a little.

Speaker 2 (05:01):
Bit crude unbelievable.

Speaker 1 (05:03):
Now does that sound like journalism to you or liberal
democratic hay Trump talk show hosts.

Speaker 2 (05:09):
It's not a difficult question to figure out, and they
know it. These are the same people here.

Speaker 7 (05:15):
Here.

Speaker 1 (05:15):
You get a valuation in the civil trial of Donald
Trump of mar A Lago, and it's eighteen million dollars
in a case that's supposed to be about valuations, even
though there's a disclaimer that says, don't take our valuations,
go by your own valuation. No lender, no insurance company

(05:35):
wouldever lend or ensure hundreds of millions of dollars of
property without doing their own valuations.

Speaker 2 (05:43):
It was an insane case.

Speaker 1 (05:45):
You know, you got twenty two plus acres of mar
A Lago, pristine, conditioned, historic property on the inter coastal
side of Palm Beach and on the ocean side of
Palm Beach, with not one but two clubs associated with it,
and on top of that, fifty some odd bedrooms other
units all around the property, amenities that you can only

(06:07):
dream of.

Speaker 2 (06:08):
Eighteen million. But you can go online and.

Speaker 1 (06:11):
Find an acre and a half lot in a horrible
place on the inner coastal with a street between the
lot of dirt and trees and the ocean. Of that
lot alone acre and a half lot of dirt and
trees is one hundred and fifty million, and the judge
stuck to that insane valuation, just like this ridiculous you know,

(06:34):
this ridiculous criminal case. What a legal non disclosure agreement
negotiated by a lawyer that was labeled a legal expense
from eight years ago, a misdemeanor in New York whose
statute of limitations had long since expired, and eight years
later they upcharged it to some federal election crime. Because
you have an abusively biased judge that allowed all of

(06:57):
this to happen and never even told Donald Trump what
the charges were. You can't make it up anyway, Joining
us now, Sean Davis, CEO, founder of The Federalist Jeffrey
Lord is with us, author at The American Spectator, host
of The Word of the Lord, which cracks me up
the name of his podcast. And anyway, Jeff, at one point,
how many years did you work for fake news CNN?

Speaker 8 (07:19):
About two fifteen through seventeen.

Speaker 2 (07:22):
Now true or false?

Speaker 1 (07:24):
While you were on some of these panels, whether it
was like eight or nine or ten liberals to you
and maybe you and Kaylee mcananey. How many times would
I write you and saying things like how do you
put up with this crap?

Speaker 8 (07:36):
I had to laugh, Sean, because I remember distinctly being
on air once and we were in the middle of
one of these tense debates and we get to a
commercial and I looked at my phote and a notice
from you, and You're saying I can't believe you sit
there through halpits, and I burst out laughing, and everybody is,
what are you laughing about? What are you laughing about?

(07:58):
I said, oh, trust me, text me shying to he
that he thinks this is amazing.

Speaker 2 (08:05):
Did they laugh when you said that.

Speaker 8 (08:07):
You were not one of their favorites? I know you'll
be shocked.

Speaker 1 (08:11):
Yeah, I don't think I'm their favorite now because I
dare to play fake Jake and fake data in their
own words, and you could see how defensive they are.
I mean, even fake news CNN management putting out a
letter defending their journalist's hosts. They're not journalist, Jeff. Why
can't they just be honest about who they are? Their

(08:31):
talk show host I'm a member of the press. I'm
a talk show host, but I'm just honest about who
I am, and they pretend to be something they're not.

Speaker 8 (08:39):
Well, you know, years ago, when I began to learn
about journalism, I was told that the journalist is never
in the story. This is a story about news. Well
that is just totally gone. Now they are the story,
and they are going to tell you what they think
you should you should know, and they're going to do

(08:59):
it their way all the time, which is quite heavily
seriously political political. And the thing that just astonishes me
is they're so obsessed with this they're losing ratings all
the time. I mean, think of the contrast between this
CNN and the one that many Americans remember from what
was it, the Iraq War. And there was Bernard what Bernard,

(09:24):
I forget his last name, who was underneath the bed
in an Iranian or Iraqi hotel room while all sorts
of literal gunfire and bombs were bursting outside the window.
That was amazing news. That was CNN at its finest.
We are a long long way from that.

Speaker 1 (09:45):
Quick break right back more with Jeff Lord and Sean
Davis on the other side. Your calls also coming up.
Eight hundred and ninety four to one, Shawn is a
number if you want to be a part of the program.
As we continue, all right the summers, all Sunshine Smiles,
road trips with the family. We continue now with Sean

(10:05):
Davis and Jeffrey Lorda with us.

Speaker 2 (10:08):
Let's get your take. Sean Davis, what are you expecting
on Thursday night?

Speaker 9 (10:12):
My expectations for CNN could not be any lower. And
I like the visual that Jeff brought up of Bernard
Shaw hiding under the bed from the bombs. Now the
CINA anchors go and hide under their desks to avoid
mean words from people they don't like. They cower there,

(10:32):
they're terrified of them. And I think it's fascinating that
Jake Tapper is going to be doing this, because this
is a guy who is patient hero of the Russia
Coaliian Hope. He started it January tenth, twenty seventeen. He's
the one who went and started publishing stuff from the
absurd seald Ossier Field Ossier, and when texts of his

(10:53):
were leaked several months or years later, we learned that
he had an absolute timber tantrum meltdown at Ben Smith
the BuzzFeed editor who published the dossier in full so
everyone could read it. Jake Tapper lost his mind and
he told Ben Smith that it was a terrible thing
he had done because it made his journalism at CNN
look bad. So that's the caliber of so called journalists

(11:14):
that we're dealing with. And I'll be honest, I think
you're actually being too generous calling them talk show hosts.
They're Democrat propagandas with bylines of the network, that's all
they are.

Speaker 2 (11:24):
It's state run media.

Speaker 1 (11:26):
Like at Fox, we have two very distinct divisions at Fox.
We have the news division, of which I am not
a part of, although I do. I can produce sean
thousands of hours of radio and television doing straight news.
If news is breaking, were just covering the facts, we
do it for hours on end. I can I could
produce thousands of hours of investigative reporting. I could produce

(11:50):
thousands of hours of me given my strong opinions. But
I'm honest about it. I'm upfront about who I am.
We talk about culture, we talk about sports. I kind
of use the analogy that I'm like a complete newspaper.
But I'm honest about who I am. They claim to
be journalists. That's the big that's that's the big rub here.
They're not journalists. They're offering their opinions and claim to

(12:14):
be journalists. Now, if they're journalists, they've got to stick
to facts. And after they got all those things wrong
about Jesse Smallett and Nicholas Sandman, and about Joe A.
Rogan taking a horse pill and about Russia collusion, do
you think they ever apologize for any of it.

Speaker 2 (12:31):
No, they don't.

Speaker 1 (12:33):
They just move on to the next, you know, set
of lies and conspiracy theories that they want to pedal
and give out their opinion, claiming to be fair and
balanced and journalists.

Speaker 2 (12:43):
They're just not. It's it's you know, it's just a
fact to me.

Speaker 9 (12:47):
You're right there. They're apparatricks, they're state media, they work
for the regime. And you know, just an interesting point
about their ratings. You know, they could actually have good
ratings if they just did news and were honest about
who they are. But I think it's important to understand
they don't care about ratings. That is an information operation
that is run by four and on behalf of the regime.

(13:08):
They don't care if five people watch as long as
they are given the power to set the agenda, to
run debates, to bully anyone who doesn't go against them.
Their entire agenda is helping, supporting, electing the regime. It's
not to get people to watch, not to entertain, and
it's not to be truthful. They want power for the regime.

Speaker 10 (13:26):
And that's it.

Speaker 1 (13:27):
The one good thing is it is being simulcast by
places like Fox News. I will be in Atlanta. I'm
sure the fake news CNN people will love seeing me, Jeff.
I'm sure they're going to give me a warm heroes
welcome when I arrive. But I will be there and
I'll be broadcasting from the Spin room there, and I'm

(13:47):
not expecting anything other than a pretty good night for
Donald Trump.

Speaker 8 (13:51):
Yeah. I think that's right, you know, having been to
these and my fair share of these debates and Ben
in the Spin room, and for those in your audience
who may not be familiar with it, it's a large
room where there's chunks set aside for CNN, for Fox,
the New York Times, whatever, whatever, whatever. So so the
chances that you can cross path with these people is there.

(14:13):
And Sean, I'd love to be following you around with
my iPhone. When when the moment comes that you're passing
the CNN.

Speaker 1 (14:21):
Booth, I'm just going to be polite and say, hi, guys,
how are you.

Speaker 11 (14:28):
Well.

Speaker 8 (14:28):
I'm got to the real problem here, Sean. I just
think that they they've done so much damage to themselves
that at this point is this is no longer some
sort of secret. As this incident with Caroline Levitt showed
just in the last couple of days. The American people
are onto it. They get the deal that these people

(14:49):
are partisan activists masquerading as journalists. They get it. So
everything that is said and done before, after, and during
this debate, they're going to understand what they're really seeing.

Speaker 2 (15:03):
I appreciate both of you, Sean Davis and Jeffrey Lord.

Speaker 1 (15:06):
Guys. Good to hear your voices. Thank you both for
being with us. When we come back, we'll hit the phones.
It's say eight hundred and nine to four one, Shawn.
As we continue along, remember Charlemagne the God and the
twenty twenty election. If you don't, you know, vote for me,
you ain't black. Let me let me take you back
down memory lane.

Speaker 7 (15:23):
It's a long way until November. We got more questions
you got more questions.

Speaker 5 (15:28):
But I tell you, if you have a problem figuring
out whether you're.

Speaker 4 (15:30):
Frem Me or Trump, and you ain't.

Speaker 1 (15:33):
Black Well Charlemagne. Actually he's really gained in popularity, and
certainly his public exposure has been very high lately. He's
very interesting guy to me. I don't know him. I
met him, I think once in the hall. His studios
were above mine whenever I'd be stuck in New York City,

(15:53):
although I did like to be around my team, but
short of that, I didn't like anything. And my team's
glad because they don't have to get this special corn
beef that they can never get, and whatever I wanted
for lunch at the time, which was nearly impossible, like
a simple grilled cheese with bacon on sour dough is
the hardest and heaviest lift in all of New York City.
But putting all of that fund aside. So I met him,

(16:15):
and I don't think he had a clue who I was.
This is what he said recently as it relates to
Joe Biden, that if he really cares about democracy, he
should drop out if he flops at the debate.

Speaker 3 (16:30):
But if he does flop so hard that it's even
the media can't deny it.

Speaker 4 (16:36):
Should they pull him, I would, I would say yes.

Speaker 7 (16:40):
The reason I would say yes is because you know
the base is gonna show up. But it's about like
those independents, in those hypothetical swing voters, those people who
you know, maybe undecided, you know, it's about them, Like
those are the ones that I think are really gonna,
you know, change the time I have the election.

Speaker 6 (17:01):
You know, come.

Speaker 7 (17:01):
November, I don't know what rhetoric or what narrative you
you push the people that's going to have people say, well,
you know what, we did this then, but come November,
you know we're going to be gun hole, you know,
to show up for you. So I think that you
would probably have no choice, you know, but but to
pull them if you really truly care about you know, democracy.

Speaker 1 (17:22):
And then he actually went on to say something out
loud that I think a lot of people probably have
no problem with.

Speaker 2 (17:27):
I do have a problem with it.

Speaker 1 (17:29):
If he wants to take performance enhancing drugs, okay, that
gives him an unfair advantage. I think the American people
need a president that doesn't need performance enhancing drugs just
to get through a ninety minute debate. But anyway, he
made the point that Biden should take them for the debate. Well, okay,
maybe that gets them through the debate. How does that

(17:51):
help him govern as President of the United States and
the leader of the free world.

Speaker 2 (17:55):
It doesn't listen.

Speaker 4 (17:56):
And I'll give them a tip for Thursday too.

Speaker 7 (17:58):
You know, it's all of this talk going around about
you know, Biden needing to be drug tested, and you
know they want to check him for peds.

Speaker 4 (18:08):
If they got peds to give them, give it to him.
I'm all for the drugs.

Speaker 7 (18:13):
Drug him up, Like, give him the same super serum
they gave Steve Rogers to make them captain America. Expose
him to the same gamma radiation Bruce Bannon got exposed
to to becoming an incredible hulk. I want him to
join a long list of incredible athletes who were better
when they were on peds.

Speaker 4 (18:30):
The Mark McGuire is the barrier bond to the world.

Speaker 7 (18:32):
If they got something that can make him look more
energetic on Thursday, that can make him look like he's
not incognitive decline, they need.

Speaker 4 (18:41):
To give it to him.

Speaker 1 (18:41):
I mean, interesting comments for sure, But Joe Biden will
never agree to a drug test. Why because they don't
want a drug test.

Speaker 2 (18:50):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (18:51):
Maybe maybe all that caffeine from Red Bull and when
we get jacked up Joe, hyper caffeinated Joe. Maybe it
just it would just be off the charts, I don't know,
or whatever else it is. Adam Kroll, who I think
is a pretty funny guy too, is in the news.
Let me play for you his explanation as to why

(19:12):
he is moving out of California.

Speaker 6 (19:16):
Now it's time to move, is it like, are you
to that point? Yeah?

Speaker 11 (19:20):
Well, I have twins and they're in their senior year
of high school, and I couldn't. I didn't want to
pick up and write, you know, tear up their roots.

Speaker 6 (19:31):
You know. So people will always go when are leaving,
and I.

Speaker 11 (19:35):
Go, I will be attending their high school graduation in
a U hall.

Speaker 6 (19:42):
I may not get out of it. I may just park.

Speaker 11 (19:45):
I probably won't be able to hear him from where
I am, but I'll see him come across the day
as our Hell. The boy might not even graduate either way.
Tuning on the horn some high beams and then right
and the guys.

Speaker 12 (19:57):
Be backing out, and you'll be backing out, driving to.

Speaker 11 (20:01):
Well you know, that's a sad testimonial about California. And
it's a sort of recent downturn in LA as well,
because growing up out here, nobody left.

Speaker 6 (20:18):
Yeah, you'd be a fool to leave, you know.

Speaker 11 (20:21):
And the notion of moving out of LA and going
to like one of the Carolinas or Nashville.

Speaker 6 (20:30):
Or Texas, Houston. I mean, that's like everyone said.

Speaker 11 (20:35):
You watch the beginning of the Beverly Hillbilly, So that's
how it worked. They lived over here and then they
came to where we are, and I was already there,
right And now when people go, well where are you going,
it's like anywhere Texas, Florida, one of the Carolinas, Tennessee.

Speaker 6 (20:52):
Like there's like fifteen places.

Speaker 11 (20:54):
You know, And that's sad because I didn't even have
a place that I need to go. I just need
There's a difference between going I want to live out
my retirement years in Maui or I got to move
to Arizona because I have bronchitis or something. This ain't that,
This is just I have to leave. I know where

(21:17):
I'm going. This isn't me cheating on you for another woman.
This is I hate you so much I'm moving into
a motel room and not dating for six years.

Speaker 1 (21:27):
I mean, pretty pretty profound when you have high profile
people moving out of states like New York, New Jersey, Illinois.
I mean in California, they're giving you the reasons why
they're leaving, and nobody seems to care. The only people
that seem to care have talked to people that have left,

(21:48):
like states like New York in particular. Only people that
seem to care in the end are the tax collectors
in New York. You know, I've been told that there
are more tax collectors from New York that are working
in Florida and other states than there are actually working
in New York state, because while they don't care that

(22:08):
people left, they just want their money, whether they live there,
whether they're residents of that state or not residents of
that state. I mean the stories I've heard people are like, oh,
you better be ready. Oh well, I mean, we did everything.
I hired more accountants, more lawyers than I can ever
tell you, just to make the move to Florida, knowing

(22:28):
that that would be the likely scenario.

Speaker 2 (22:30):
I don't know, Linda, why do I think.

Speaker 1 (22:32):
That maybe they might have a little bit of a
target on my back.

Speaker 2 (22:35):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (22:36):
Maybe they don't like me in New York because we
had not one but the last two governors actually say
that if you're a conservative, like you know, and you
believe in the assault weapons, meaning the Second Amendment, if
you're pro law eth if you're anti gay, I'm not
anti gay, Okay, then you're not in New Yorker and

(22:58):
there's no place for you in New York. Or Kathy
Holkle saying, get out of town, get on a bus,
get down to Florida.

Speaker 2 (23:05):
Get out of town. If you know, you're not a
New Yorker.

Speaker 1 (23:09):
If you're a conservative like Lee Zelden, O'donald Trump, get
out of town, go to Florida.

Speaker 12 (23:13):
All right here to say that the era of Trump
and Zelden and mon Arrow, just jump on a bus
and head down to Florida.

Speaker 2 (23:23):
Where you belong.

Speaker 12 (23:24):
Okay, get out of town, get out of town, because
you don't read, you don't represent our values.

Speaker 5 (23:31):
You are not New Yorkers.

Speaker 10 (23:33):
Their problem is not me and the Democrats. Their problem
is themselves. Who are they are?

Speaker 5 (23:41):
They?

Speaker 10 (23:41):
These extreme conservatives who are.

Speaker 8 (23:44):
Right to life, a.

Speaker 10 (23:47):
Pro assault weapon, anti gay? Is that who they are?
Because if that's who they are. And if they are
the extreme conservatives, they have no place in the state.

Speaker 6 (23:59):
Of New York. So this was that's not who New
Yorkers are, all right.

Speaker 1 (24:04):
So I've had not one but two governors in a
row telling me that I'm not wanted in New York.

Speaker 2 (24:11):
I grew up there.

Speaker 1 (24:12):
Now I've left for sixteen years and then went back
when I got hired by Fox. And then I'm like, well,
I'm obviously not liked by the people in New York,
as evidence by you know when I walk down the street.
Not everybody exactly loves me in New York. Linda, you
have seen it with your own eyes.

Speaker 12 (24:29):
Yeah, but I have to say I think that you are.
We'd be remiss not to discuss the fact that the
Jersey Boys and Nathan Lane literally orchestrated and crafted an
entire I mean, it was just a beautiful piece of
music dedicated to you.

Speaker 13 (24:47):
Say, mister Hannay, stay, who would we text to his
money was gone?

Speaker 1 (24:58):
Who would we empe socialism upon sat talking?

Speaker 4 (25:08):
Stay in your first and second homes. Don't disappear forever
by hen Cod.

Speaker 6 (25:14):
Please, mister Hanna, he's mister Hannah.

Speaker 13 (25:21):
Sure you need brand and in Saturday say so your
wait till the rest of humanities.

Speaker 4 (25:29):
Say what I say, remain in the States. It fills
you with. Kate's has the same what you're saying.

Speaker 2 (25:49):
On second thought, who gives a fuck what you do?
That last comment by Nathan Liony.

Speaker 12 (25:55):
I mean, you know, he brings it home like a
true New Yorker. He's f bomb and he's angry. At
the end of the day. They can sing a little song,
but in their inner soul they're angry and bitter because
they live here in this dump we call New York
City run by socialist liberals.

Speaker 14 (26:08):
So that's why I currently did not because they love it,
Oh they are. They're just pro choice in the sense
that Okay, if you like that smell, and you like
that city, and you don't care about the crime, and
you don't care about paying a fortune for all of
Joe's unvettered illegal.

Speaker 1 (26:24):
Immigrants, and stay. I made the decision to leave, and
I don't regret it. And things have been so much
better for me down here in Florida.

Speaker 2 (26:33):
And will I go up and.

Speaker 1 (26:36):
Visit maybe not very often. Everyone probably by now knows
I sold my house in New York.

Speaker 2 (26:42):
I don't think. By the way, why does anybody care?

Speaker 1 (26:45):
I was kind of surprised by two things when I
made the announcement in January that I left because I
had left my house, it became public that I put
it on the market, and then it's sold. Why does
everyone seem to care so much about all that stuff?

Speaker 2 (27:00):
Don't get it? Am I missing something?

Speaker 12 (27:02):
I mean, we have entire websites dedicated to other people's
lives People Magazine, TMZ. These are organizations that literally make
their living following other people around and asking them about
their lives. And I guess, at the end of the day,
when you have a lazy, entitled, disenfranchised, disillusioned you know

(27:23):
group of people we now call Americans who don't do
anything except sit on the couch and get paid for
doing nothing and soaking off the teed of welfare. I
guess it's fun to look at other people who might
or might not be doing something. If you want my
honest opinion.

Speaker 1 (27:35):
Yeah, I you know it was John Stewart. I think
John Stewart could be very funny. Even when he does
attack me, and he does, he seems to do it
fairly regularly.

Speaker 2 (27:46):
From what I don't get to watch a show.

Speaker 1 (27:49):
I guess he's back on Comedy Central now, right he is?

Speaker 12 (27:52):
Thank god, Trevor Noau was the worst.

Speaker 2 (27:54):
Oh, he was the worst. It's not awful.

Speaker 1 (27:57):
I don't care if you hate me, but be fun
Like that bit about me was funny as hell.

Speaker 12 (28:03):
I mean the amount of funny he trained right to
your house. I'm like, do you clearly have no idea
where this man lives? The train cannot go there?

Speaker 6 (28:11):
Come on?

Speaker 2 (28:11):
Yeah, Well they were going to figure out a way
just from me.

Speaker 6 (28:15):
It's pretty funny. Uh.

Speaker 1 (28:17):
And I guess he did his his Apple TV show
and maybe he just got sick and tired of doing it.

Speaker 2 (28:22):
I don't know, but maybe he was too serious. I
don't know.

Speaker 12 (28:24):
I think they probably begged him to come back because
Noah sucked.

Speaker 1 (28:28):
Yeah, Noah sucked, There's no doubt about it. But there's
none of these late night guys are funny anymore. I mean,
if you put Kimmel and Fallon and Colbert together, they
don't get combined.

Speaker 2 (28:41):
What either Leno and Letterman.

Speaker 12 (28:44):
Gott or Johnny Carson, I mean Johnny Carson.

Speaker 2 (28:47):
Johnnie forget it.

Speaker 1 (28:48):
Well, there's a little bit of a different error there
weren't as many choices around, and Johnny spent with thirty
three or four years. I I heard stories about Johnny Connie.
Donnie was right in real life.

Speaker 12 (29:01):
Yeah, man, it's it takes a tight, you know, sharp,
tough leader to run a ship. You know, you can't
be out there making friends. That's a problem with liberals.
They want everybody to be sweet and nice, and nobody
can hurt anybody's feelings, you know, unless it's them hurting up.

Speaker 2 (29:12):
And who's the tough one on this show? Is it
me or you?

Speaker 1 (29:16):
It's me exactly. You're supposed to be the opposite way.
I'm like thee I'm like the nice guy. I'm like, okay, everyone.

Speaker 2 (29:25):
Want to I'm not proud. I admit it.

Speaker 1 (29:28):
We got to get you happy pills. The happiest pill
we can get you is Trump winning in a mirror.

Speaker 6 (29:35):
Days.

Speaker 2 (29:36):
Hey who.

Speaker 11 (29:38):
Right?

Speaker 1 (29:38):
That's gonna wrap things up with today Hannity. Tonight nine
Eastern on Fox News, Senator Ted Cruz and Joscelyn Nungare's
family will join us the tragedy of what happened to
this little girl? It's so heartbreaking. Also check in with
Jim Jordan and Congress with Mike Turner. They have news.
Elena Habba, Trump's legal spokesperson, has news. Also check in

(30:00):
with Speaker Johnson, Tutor Dixon, Joe Concha on CNN's abusively
biased coverage for this debate that we expect. All coming
up nine Eastern sey DVR tonight for Hannity on Fox.
We'll see you then back here tomorrow. Thank you for
making this show possible.

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