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May 30, 2025 64 mins
Sam Sorbo joins The Anchormen
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:06):
Now it's time for the Anchormen Podcast with Matt Jays
and Dan Baull. Hey, everybody, Dan Ball here, thanks for
tuning into the anchor Men podcast. And I know what
you're saying. Wait a minute, it's in the name m

(00:26):
E N. But that doesn't look like a man sitting
over there. Where's Riley? Where's Matt? Where's Vish? Where's the
regular dudes I see here on the Anchorman Podcast. Well,
sometimes dudes get sick and right, it wasn't feeling that
hot today, So I ran into the One America News
newsroom and I was like, who could jump up here
and be a good co host with me with our
special guest tonight? Who will get to in just a second.

Speaker 2 (00:49):
And you don't have to lie, You can just say
you wanted me to come.

Speaker 1 (00:52):
Hey, you know what, that's it? Get out Dana, da
let's everybody, Dana. Let's uh if you tune in to
one of my news on evenings, yeah, right around what
time I'm usually home, not sleeping home, doing something at
the New Homestead, and so I don't get to watch.

Speaker 2 (01:10):
I get it nine o'clock eleven o'clock Pacific time.

Speaker 1 (01:14):
Everybody, Okay, gotcha?

Speaker 2 (01:16):
DVR.

Speaker 1 (01:17):
So you're in between our talk shows and stuff doing newscasts.

Speaker 2 (01:20):
Yeah yeah, right after the talk show.

Speaker 1 (01:22):
Gotcha?

Speaker 2 (01:22):
So this show lingering thinking about ooh, should I watch Bravo?
Should I watch Law and Order? Or you can watch
then evening news that would be your top choice.

Speaker 1 (01:31):
Oh man, I just expose that I'm not watching the
prime time lineup that I'm part of. I watch every night,
every single show on OAN. No, I have a life.
I'm busy. Sorry, I didn't know when you were on
just anyway, So yeah, I I bought a ranch. Sorry,
I'm busy. Yeah, yeah, there's no party, it's not yet.
You're pulling weeds, you're trimming trees, you're throwing mulch, you're

(01:54):
cleaning up dog poop, your you know, I do stuff
every night on the ranch when you have And this
doesn't sound like a lot to folks that are watching
this in the rural areas like where I grew up
in the midwestern South, where they've got hundreds or thousands
of acres to tend to. I've got three. That's not
a big whoop. But in California, that's cool. That's a
lot of land in California.

Speaker 2 (02:12):
In California. Yeah, right outside where we work. It's it's
like it's actually like a different like universe. It feels like, right, yeah,
I know.

Speaker 1 (02:19):
That's why I got out of the city, the.

Speaker 2 (02:20):
Urban parts of this place, southern California we live in.

Speaker 1 (02:23):
Well, San Diego used to be a more center i'll
call it giving center right well and accepting city, and
then Democrats took over a couple of years ago.

Speaker 2 (02:34):
Let's be real, Ain't that the truth?

Speaker 1 (02:36):
Yeah? How long you've been with the Way In.

Speaker 2 (02:37):
Now, it's been a little over five. I think you
came on right after me. I don't know if we
count my if we count my internship everybody, I wasn't
intern we can make that six years. I was still
in college. But wow, you're so young. But Dan, you
need us because you need the gen Z perspective. That's
why I came on today, because that's true. Clearly, this

(02:59):
is you know, the demographic of people that watch OIN
is the gen Z under under thirty crowd.

Speaker 1 (03:05):
Well, and the podcast thing that we're doing here, the
podcast is a lot different obviously than what I grew
up with watching. Yeah, because you got to remember, I'll
be fifty one this year, so my grandmother who raised me,
had me watching Walter Cronkite, which you probably don't even
know who that is. We know you do, Okay, Okay,
they did teach you that who Walter was. Okay, I
just say a second. That was before we started getting

(03:26):
guys like Scott Pelly and Rather and these guys that
actually threw their damn opinion in your favorite Yeah. I know,
I act like a journalist once in a while, at
least now that I'm doing a pinny talk show. I
remind and tell the viewers almost nightly, this is an
a pininty talk show. This is not a newscast. Okay.
I give you the facts of the story that I
throw in.

Speaker 2 (03:43):
Now you even have to say differentiate that because you know,
watching that you should kind of know. Like if I'm
turning on who is it? Lester Whole, I think I'm
getting the thirty straight think unbiased on you know, just
straight news these days has been coupled in with opinion
with left, which.

Speaker 1 (04:03):
Why I pointed out all the time, and I try
to remind folks. Now, go turn on MSNBC and CNN
and n Fox even and others, and you tell me
where do the newscast end and the talk shows begin
because they're all throwing their damn opinions.

Speaker 2 (04:15):
In Scott Pelley speaking. He was the one CBS at
Okay that went and spoke in front of the what
college was this?

Speaker 3 (04:23):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (04:24):
Yeah, yeah? The other was it Harvard or Princeton or Yale?
One of the ivy.

Speaker 2 (04:27):
One that I don't care me neither. And he came
up there and he was like, umping, oh, you know,
you guys are such young, bright minds, but also watch
out because you know we're getting crushed under this current administration.
But you have so much to live for and so
much to work for. But yet the big orange mean
man is coming in. It's like the same thing over
and over again. It's become so not unique and frankly boring.

Speaker 1 (04:49):
What the hell is a main anchor of CBS News
doing going and giving a commencement speech and then trashing
the sitting president.

Speaker 2 (04:57):
You see, it would make sense if he's speaking kind
of a cohort of people that journalists that really want
to come out and make good in the world, frontline people.
But he used his speech to weaponize what the state
of this government is right now and what he counts
it is what he thinks is opinion and how it's
crippling the everyday man.

Speaker 1 (05:17):
Yeah, you know, he's got an opinion about what's happening
when it comes to our education and speaking of kids
that are getting the education, what's happening with our kids,
what's in their food, what they're being taught, what they're watching,
whether it's film, television, whatever. Is our special guest tonight
And another reason I asked you first to fill in
for Riley because I felt this guest and you two
would get along. Plus, I think I bring enough testosterphone

(05:39):
to the show for three or four dudes. So without
further ado, we need more estrogen on this Anchorman podcast
tonight besides Dana and just I think two or three
weeks ago we had this is the better half to
a guest I had two or three weeks ago. Let
me set that up properly. Okay. So my friend Kevin Sorbo,
the actor. Everybody calls him hercules, right, I've known him
for twenty some year. We started playing in charity golf

(06:02):
tournaments years ago, and I did not meet his better half,
the amazing author, homeschooling mother actress. I mean, do it
all around mom, Sam Sorbo his wife until just a
few years ago when I started this show at a
way in and I'll tell you, I don't know who
I like Kevin on better. They got an amazing brilliant son, Braden,

(06:22):
obviously Kevin and Sam. So without further Ado, Jared, if
you would do the honors, please bring on Sam Sorbo
to the anchor Menpod.

Speaker 2 (06:29):
Thanks dam By, Sam.

Speaker 4 (06:31):
Well, hi there, it's great to be here with you.

Speaker 1 (06:34):
Nice seeing you. Is it okay that I brought my
friend Dana along to play tonight?

Speaker 4 (06:39):
I love it.

Speaker 2 (06:40):
She's so feisty, Like you said, Sam, Dan is now outnumbered,
so it's awesome.

Speaker 4 (06:45):
It's true.

Speaker 1 (06:46):
Yes, yes, before we started tonight they were making fun
of me. Riley, You're never allowed to call out sick again.
I need my dude backup power here. Sam, First and foremost,
thank you for doing this. Appreciate it. I mean, taking
almost an hour out of your schedule. As busy as
you and your family are these days, I understand that
is tough. So thank you. First. Tell people like, let's

(07:07):
back way up because I've never even asked you this,
and all the appearances on my and other talk shows
on oyn. You know you're coming on and you're talking
about a lot of serious issues that are affecting American families,
But nobody ever talks to Sam about who Sam is.
How'd Sam get her start? How'd you get into acting
and modeling and writing books and deciding to homeschool your

(07:27):
kid and becoming a mega mom and all the stuff
that we know Sam so was Now, I don't know
where you got your start? So can we back up
and you give us some bio cliff notes here? Where'd
you come from?

Speaker 4 (07:39):
So? So, it's actually a pretty good story in the
sense of a kind of a learning moment. I was
going to school to become a doctor because I was
raised to go to school and get a career, and
doctor sounded good, and I was good with science, and
I was in engineering school at Duke University, and I

(08:00):
was on my way, but I was working on an
ulcer because I was so stressed out about the idea
that if I don't make the grade, if I don't
somehow succeed, then I won't have any money. I'll be
a complete failure and life is over. Because everything was
tied to the dollar as it is in school today.
College prep and career readiness. It's all tied to the dollar.

(08:21):
And so I had to take a year off from
school because I was working on an ulcer, and I
decided to go to France and I modeled for a
year and I made a lot of money, and so
when I went back to college, college was really easy
for me. But then I realized I could make a
lot of money not going to college and not going
into debt and sort of doing everything else that I

(08:42):
wanted to do with my life, like learn languages and
travel and become an actress, which of course I'd been
dissuaded from doing because you can never succeed becoming an
actress and you won't make money. And so I quit
college and I became an actress.

Speaker 1 (08:58):
Wow, And as I'm out over your left shoulder, is
that a modeling pick of you from a magazine? Who
is that? I thought? So that looks like Sam beautiful.
See I knew you modeled and acted and you write books.
I didn't know in what order, So thank you. Now
you're catching me up on Sam's bio. So you did
the modeling gig, then you do the acting thing, and obviously,

(09:21):
over the decades, acting and Hollywood, and things have changed
a bit, especially the last few years with the woke,
ridiculous crap Hollywood is producing. And I know that you
and I might have a different opinion about what's been
coming out of Hollywood. So this is a great point
for the gen z or the millennial, which one of you?

Speaker 2 (09:40):
You're the gen Z, I'm of the cusp. It depends
on how I feel this day. If the gen zs
are doing really bad, I identify as a millennial and
vice versa. Today I'm a gen Z though happy to
be what.

Speaker 1 (09:49):
Let's see, I was born in seventy four, Sam, what
are we are? We exers? Are we gen x? Is
that what working?

Speaker 2 (09:54):
And you're a boomer I'm not.

Speaker 1 (09:55):
A freaking boot. Well, I'm not a boomer. I'm fifty
one this year. That's not Sam, Right, we're gen xers anyway,
So let's talk Hollywood. That's a good one to start,
because your whole family, I mean, or I said her
Braiden hubs everybody's actors too. So I want to know
when that transition happened, when you and how keV met

(10:17):
and how this whole acting thing from going from the
the norm mainstream of acting to do what you guys
do today, because now your family's all about patriotic, faith
based family, amazing film, not the crap Hollywood's been putting
out so philosoph well.

Speaker 4 (10:34):
I mean, basically, it's the Ronald Reagan line. I didn't
leave the Hollywood. Hollywood left us. And you know, Kevin
and I met down in New Zealand. On his show,
I played a princess.

Speaker 1 (10:45):
Oh of course, no, Hercules met his princess on location. Okay,
this is an awesome story, keep going.

Speaker 4 (10:52):
And then we moved to after he finished Hercules, we
moved to Vancouver. We lived in Vancouver for five years
and had our kids, and then we went back to
Hollywood and it had gotten weird. And Kevin is not
He's not some sort of reclining daisy. He speaks his
mind and it kind of got him into trouble. Yeah,

(11:14):
and you know, we talked about it and I said,
you know, you're gonna you're going to torpedo your career
because at that point people people knew you needed to
quiet down. You know, even I think it was Tom
Selleck who said to him, Hey, you know you really
should like quiet down a little bit, because you know,
they'll let you skate by if you if you're not vocal.

Speaker 1 (11:33):
Oh, I think you just gave us a little tidbit
information on who else is a conservative in Hollywood. But
keep going. And I knew it. I knew they'd be
a conservative behind that mustache. Come on, magnum p, I
keep going, Sam.

Speaker 4 (11:43):
So so anyway, you know, he started speaking his mind
and I started writing. I had a friend named Andrew
Breitbart who said to me, I'll publish anything you want
to write, and so I decided to write. But I
wanted to like remain under the radar. So I decided
to write about something completely non political. Education.

Speaker 1 (12:04):
Yes, that's not political at all, especially these days, school chife.
It is such a.

Speaker 4 (12:10):
I had no idea. But here's here's the point. Everything
is political, and if it serves the left, they will
politicize it. And so they've now politicized education. Like abortions
shouldn't be political because it's a moral issue. It's arguably
a health issue, but it's not a politic It shouldn't

(12:31):
be a political issue, but they've politicized it in order
to shut the right up about it.

Speaker 2 (12:35):
Sam, I've always been so curious. So you you weren't
quiet in a time where you I guess maybe it
was safer to be quiet in Hollywood and trying to
get these gigs and trying to you know, climb your
way through to get the best job you could. So
did you get the sense though there was other people
like you and your husband? Are there other kind of
I don't know, not people that we would think of.

Speaker 1 (12:58):
But how much trying to get out people?

Speaker 2 (13:00):
No, not people, but I want to kind of get
like a do it how I mean, how is there
secret conservatives in Hollywood that more than you would think?

Speaker 4 (13:09):
I guess, yeah, Well, because you're so young, you don't remember.

Speaker 1 (13:16):
H Yeah.

Speaker 4 (13:17):
Actually, in the in the early two thousands, there was
a group that formed called Friends of Abe. It was
it was named after if you remember there there was
a group that was called Friends of Dorothy that was
the gay movement. And so because we were the sort
of patriotic movement, we decided to call ourselves Friends of
Abe Lincoln kind of thing and friends of it. We met.

(13:39):
We met at Kelsey Grammer's house, we met at Patricia
Heaton's house. We had several meetings and then we were
kind of outed. We grew to well over fifteen hundred people.
I think actually more like twenty five hundred. I mean,
we had some very large events. There are a lot
of conservatives in Hollywood who are very quiet. Many of

(14:01):
them are on the other side of the camera, so
they wouldn't have a voice even if they spoke up.
Point the number of people that go to my husband
on set and say, hey, man, thanks for being a
voice for us. Yeah, and of course he says, be
a voice for yourself. And I feel bad for those
people because if you can't live in truth, if you
know that you're living a lie, that's a terrible burden.

Speaker 2 (14:26):
Because you want to you want to protect your job
and you want to protect your career and have a
future for yourself, but you're you're in this kind of
fear mode where if you say the wrong thing or speak,
you're too loud and you're too conservative, and a place
where it's not so forgiving to conservatives, I mean, you
might just risk it all. So I totally get that,
but look, you protects got.

Speaker 4 (14:44):
At what cost? Right, you're protecting you're protecting your livelihood
at what cost? And maybe there's something better out there.
And there are people now who have decided that they
can't work on the projects that Hollywood wants to work on,
and so they've left. And I mean that's what we
ended up doing, and there are there are a lot
of other people who have done that. Now Hollywood still

(15:05):
has all the financials, so but but maybe not for
much longer. I mean, was it snow White that just
came out? Lost three hundred million dollars or something like that.

Speaker 2 (15:14):
Many new movies I want to watch. I want to
watch it just so I can rage watch it and
then like just crapped up with my boyfriend.

Speaker 1 (15:21):
I don't I'm gonna waste my money, I waste all Nope,
not doing it.

Speaker 2 (15:26):
But no, actually no, I have seen a bit of
a shift because I think it's Angel Studios that came out.
I think they do some animations and they talk about
the Biblical times and the time commandments and it's all
about that. So there are new I think there are
a new thing.

Speaker 1 (15:42):
Yeah, Angel's been doing a lot because Any Studios did
the one on Tim Ballard's Life, that's right, right, They
actually trafficking and there's a bunch of other ones.

Speaker 4 (15:49):
Sam, Yeah, there's I'll get in a shameless plug here.
They just picked up a film that I worked on
a few years ago. It's called Just Let Go. It
stars Henry and Cusick and Brenda Vcarro and I play
the evil person in the movie. But it's a true story. Actually,
it's the true story about Chris Williams. It's a phenomenal film,

(16:12):
I have to say. Is the first film that I
was in that I saw that I liked. I can't
watch myself. So for me to go to this movie
and actually like the movie was quite a revelation for me.

Speaker 1 (16:23):
Isn't that interesting that, like Angel Studios, and I know
you've met Josh Macielo that runs Global Ascension Studios, who
did the Trump movie The Man. You don't know, there's
these studios and even some of the big old ones
Sam too. They are now doing looking for and producing
more patriotic, family, faith based film and television in series

(16:47):
just in the last six months to a year. Wonder Why, Yeah,
Wonder Why.

Speaker 2 (16:52):
By Nickelodeon, by Disney. There's a new player in town.

Speaker 1 (16:55):
I think that one the American people got tired of
having the woke bull crap ram down their throat Hollywood.
But then I also know, and Sam knows this very well,
that Hollywood doesn't see left, right, blue or red, they
see green. And so when we won in November, Hollywood went, oh,
the country still is center right conservative, Christian, patriotic, So

(17:18):
maybe we shouldn't produce any more of these inner city
black trans show likes. On Showtime there's only a show
with a bunch of black trans people. It's like, what
the hell is this I'm watching? And so all of
a sudden they started producing. And I'll just point this out.
I do it every time we have a film start
on one of the number one prime shows produced out
of Hollywood with a liberal actor. Alan Richson is Reacher

(17:39):
now Reacher if you haven't seen it is on its
third season, about to start its fourth. Huge ratings, brings
in tons of cash for Alan all the production people
who are liberal. Yet it's a ex military guy going
around the country like a vagabond, finding where evildoers are
hurting people and killing them and make things right. That's

(18:01):
what Hollywood's putting out right now, and I love it.

Speaker 2 (18:03):
Wait, there's a movie I just saw actually that perfectly
encapsulates this. It's uh, it's it just came out. I'm
gonna I have to look on my phone. I'm sorry
while I'm talking. I need to figure this out.

Speaker 1 (18:14):
Because I want to make fun of some of the
ones that just dropped this week. And I know Sam doesn't.
I will.

Speaker 4 (18:18):
I will weigh in a little bit here in the
idea that Hollywood only sees green, I don't know that
that's true. I mean snow White is a glaring example
of that. And so, yes, while there are some producers
who figure out how to tap into a good revenue stream,
there are plenty, plenty of people in Hollywood who are

(18:40):
so so sworn to their ideology right, which is anti America,
to put crap out right. So so I mean, we'll see,
we'll see for how far these studios will stand. The
good news is it's it's gotten so much less cumbersome
to make your own product and uh so much cheaper

(19:01):
to make your own product.

Speaker 1 (19:02):
That's a great point.

Speaker 2 (19:03):
Yeah, And so I.

Speaker 4 (19:04):
Mean Hollywood's days kind of I'm not sure, maybe numbered.

Speaker 1 (19:08):
It's kind of morematters.

Speaker 2 (19:10):
There's definitely working out. Okay, So I found the movie
I just saw this last month, Warfare, that just came out. Literally,
let me tell you something about this movie. This is
how you know, I guess Sam dan Over talking Hollywood
is kind of on the falling end with this military.
It's got ninety three percent on rotten, amazing and the
literally the entire movie, full combat, through and through, no

(19:31):
woke anything, no UH trials, and the only thing that
this is about is UH a soldier stuck in Ramadi,
Iraq and they're trying to get out without the.

Speaker 1 (19:44):
Was it based on a true story?

Speaker 2 (19:46):
Yes, this is based off a true story, because all
the guys in the end again and it did so
well and you don't need you know, your black trans
superhero person saved the neck. Yes, it's it's full military
combat style stuff and it's amazing and that's why it
got the rating it did. So people came, they knew
what the movie was about. They came and they saw

(20:07):
it and they got exactly what they wanted. Yeah, and
there was no surprise.

Speaker 1 (20:10):
I mean, what American, what red blooded American, Sam that
actually has to use the old military phrase God honor
country through family in their God honor family country. What
red bull American wouldn't want to see the good guy,
somebody in uniform, somebody whatever that's protecting and serving win
the day, win the battle. That's what most American, especially dudes,
most American men would want to see. It's what we

(20:32):
used to always get. That's why things like Rocky and
Rambo and these franchise flicks back in the seventies, eighties,
nineties where the good guy, tough American or gal won
the day made millions because why wouldn't an American like that? Now?
How the hell can you get millions of people to
identify like and cheer for the black trans person in

(20:54):
inner city Chicago like or whatever that show was about.

Speaker 2 (20:56):
I Can Fly.

Speaker 1 (20:57):
I don't know what it was about.

Speaker 4 (20:58):
Understand, there are elites who are just beholden to their ideology.
So if you look at the Democrat Party today, they
just launched a twenty million dollar campaign to quote win
back the younger, the younger generation of men because they
figured out that they're messaging the trans messaging or the

(21:18):
tamp on tim messaging is not effective for young men,
and so they're launching a propaganda campaign. But what they
don't realize is that propaganda is what got them into
the problem that they're in, and propaganda is not going
to get them out. So we'll see. I'm motixcited because
I think You're right. I think we're going to see

(21:39):
more good stuff coming out. And I also know that
Hollywood does what Hollywood does look true. When Noah came out,
Kevin and I went to a screening at Pepperdine, which
was like for the Christian crowd, and the one solitary
Christian producer on Noah came out sort of apologetically like
I'm the token Christian on the show on Noah, and

(22:03):
so I'm here to tell you, you know, it's it's
an interpretation of the Bible. It is not strictly adherent
to the Bible. And I don't know if you saw Noah,
but it was basically.

Speaker 1 (22:13):
What's that going to Russell Crowe?

Speaker 4 (22:16):
Yes, water World? Water World means transformers, uh, is what
I dubbed it. And so he kind of and after
the movie, people stood up and asked questions and a
guy stood up and this was on the heels of
God's Not Dead, which was a two million dollar movie
that made over one hundred and forty million dollars worldwide,
great movie, and the guy stood up and said, do

(22:36):
you think do you think that in the in the
aftermath of this, God's Not the It was just the
first movie at that point, in the aftermath of God's
Not Dead, which was Kevin's movie, obviously, do you think
that Hollywood's gonna try to do more, you know, real
faith based stuff instead of this Noah bull crap that
just that we just sat through. And the producer said, well,

(22:59):
I think that the dependant studios are going to continue
to do the independent stuff, and Hollywood will continue to
make the blockbusters because that's what they do, that's all
they know. And by the way, all of their movies today,
all the big movies are remakes.

Speaker 1 (23:13):
That's literally every conversation her and I had. So let's
talk about that real quick. And then I want to
dive into TV and books and education with you because
you're so involved as a mom and as a speaker,
as a conservative everything else. So you and I when
I called you today and actual to come on, we
were talking about there's a new is it leel And

(23:35):
and Skitch? Okay, a new one of those? Is that
the third installment? Fourth? I don't even know.

Speaker 2 (23:39):
Second, it's the remake.

Speaker 4 (23:42):
Oh, it's it's a remake of the original, but in
live action.

Speaker 2 (23:46):
Indeed, yeah, but it's live but it's a live action film.

Speaker 4 (23:49):
Is it woke and they and they apparently just eliminated
all the plots.

Speaker 2 (23:53):
Oh my god, didn't wait tell me because I didn't
hear about this.

Speaker 1 (23:55):
Well wait, hold on, hold on real quick, because there's
that one. And then there's another karate Kid that just dropped.
I don't know what this is. There was the three
when I was a.

Speaker 4 (24:05):
Kid's karate kid. They're making the Karate Kid trans.

Speaker 1 (24:09):
No, they're Jackie Chan did one and Ralph Macchio.

Speaker 2 (24:12):
That one's got You can't you can't.

Speaker 1 (24:15):
Are you joking with me?

Speaker 4 (24:16):
Or I'm joking? But I wouldn't put it past that.

Speaker 5 (24:19):
I know.

Speaker 4 (24:20):
It's the thing I heard about Lelo and Stitch.

Speaker 2 (24:22):
Wait, make this makes sense because there's so many creative
rights Hollywood, and why are we taking originals and trying
to flip it?

Speaker 1 (24:30):
Sorry to Interjack, just sorry, I'm just going wax on,
cut off, wax off. Anyway, Sorry, I had to do it.
You said it the trans karate Kid. Whack it off,
whack it on. I don't know anyway.

Speaker 4 (24:42):
So what I heard about Lelo and Stitch and this
is this is on someone else's authority because I didn't
go see it. Is that the older sister in the
original is like doing everything she can to hold on
to her little sister. She's working three jobs, She's doing
every things she can to take care of her little
sister because she loves her. In the new version, in

(25:04):
the live action version, she wants to go to college.
She doesn't want anything to do with her little six.

Speaker 1 (25:09):
Of course, gotta go to college and get that education. Yeah,
what a great time to transition to education right about now,
because I got notes for you.

Speaker 4 (25:18):
Yes, why would anybody want to go to college.

Speaker 1 (25:21):
These days, especially like maybe fifty years ago. I mean
in my lifetime, watching what has happened with higher ed
is absolutely insane. And then when you look at the
ones that we used to deem and I say used
to because I hope we don't need more, the ones
that we used to look at and go, look at
these IVY leagues here, Yeah, the Princeton's, the.

Speaker 2 (25:41):
Harvard, the COLDI League, the Brown.

Speaker 1 (25:43):
Yeah, it's a bunch of crap.

Speaker 4 (25:45):
Anyway, it's it's the MOLDI League, It's the Mildew League.
And I don't like calling it higher education either. I
like calling it dumber education, because it turns out you
emerge from college dumber than when you went in.

Speaker 1 (25:57):
Typically, well, here's the deal, come out a mark, you
get brainwashed. Yeah right, And the only thing you might
know a little bit more than me or someone else
on the street is maybe some specifics about an individual
career field that you studied, Like obviously, I'm not going
to know mechanical engineering ease, right, And so if you
went and got that degree, you would know more about

(26:18):
engineering than me. Other than that, you wouldn't know Jack
squat because you were too busy of getting brainwashed by
those overpaid professors.

Speaker 2 (26:23):
What college is about now is credentialism, and it's a
test to see if you can come out done the paperwork.
Listen to your professor scored decently well because they they've
moved what the grading levels are? Oh, you don't have
you know, they won't fail if you don't do a paper.
I don't think they'll even fail you anymore. They'll probably
give you a fifty percent. How did you.

Speaker 1 (26:43):
Get through without becoming a socialist? You just graduated five
six years ago?

Speaker 2 (26:46):
Yeah no, I know, because I was raised well and
that's really what I to But it's not a test
of that. So what And I think people are catching
onto this and I think that's why people are moving
from curriculum driven job excuse me, to trade schools and
actually learning a skill set. Good point, because they found
out this particular formula, formula where you can do all this.

(27:06):
You could still make one hundred gram being a plumber
by the way, and or a.

Speaker 1 (27:10):
Lot more doing a lot more, and then you can
be comp Florida.

Speaker 2 (27:14):
No Maryland.

Speaker 1 (27:14):
Oh, I thought it was Florida. That's where the folks
are now, Yes, they got smart. That's where Sam and
Kevin went when they left HOLLOWEO, but.

Speaker 2 (27:21):
Shot out to Amelia Island by the way, because they
all love O and they'll all be watching the anchormen.
What Amelia Islands in the northern part of Florida and
they love you know, it's maggot world.

Speaker 1 (27:31):
Well, I gotta tell I gotta get Sam on here
about this one, because and bring that graphic up, guys
of the books. Sam has written so many books over
the years, And I noticed a trend in all these
jacket covers I was looking at earlier today of yours, Sam,
is that a lot of them are on parenting your
kids from home. They're your kids parents. Guide to Homeschooling
teach from love like Sam is the If you want
an expert about homeschooling and you can get to Sam soorbo,

(27:54):
you should get to her and pay her to teach
you how to teach your kids because and I am
saying this nowing your son Braden, and I'm going, Holy cow,
what a fine young man you and Kevin produced while
teaching him at home. So Sam, take it away on
why homeschooling should be bigger than it is today, especially

(28:14):
with the woke crap in K through twelve.

Speaker 4 (28:17):
Well, yeah, and before I do that, I just want
to point out that there are a lot of employers
who are looking to hire right out of high school
because they recognize that college tends to put a lid
on children and they stop thinking as opposed to out
of high school where they still are a little bit
bright eyed and bushy tailed, and they they can train
them themselves better than what the colleges are doing. But

(28:40):
for as far as K through twelve, I mean that
stuff's off the rails. I just read an article that
in San Francisco, a twenty six percent on a test
is a passing grade.

Speaker 1 (28:50):
Now, well, did you see what happened? Thanks starting a Bud,
that's rough. Did you all see what happened in the
last thirty six hours? Though, Gavin Newsom and the Democrats
in sec Cremento came out and proposed a pilot trial
program up in San Francisco where Okay, eighty percent is
going to be an a and she's right, twenty some
percent you could still get and not fail a class. Yes,

(29:13):
and they're doing it because of diversity and certain ei yep,
and certain students of certain skin color won't even have
to like have passing grades, turn and stuff everything. The
minute they put this out in today's Friday, this was
like Tuesday Wednesday. Put it out right. The minute they
put it out, the backlash was so harsh. Even there
it is even Rocana. Okay, a Democrat congressman from San

(29:36):
Jose came out and said, because I think he's Indian,
he's like my Indian dad didn't come across this ocean
and come here with my family to make a better
life for me to get, not to get a's matter
of fact, the quote was hold on. The quote was
when I would come home with a ninety percent. This
is a Democrat congressman. When I come with a ninety percent.
My dad would say, what happened to the other ten percent?

(29:56):
Now that's a good parent. But now Gavin and these
Democrats want to make it where you can get twenty
six percent and not fail. What in that? How are
we doing? Sam?

Speaker 4 (30:05):
I just want to point out that they hate black
people so much, maybe that they think that they are incapable.

Speaker 2 (30:12):
You the runt of my mouth, I'm raising that. I mean,
how ill do you have to think of minority groups
in this country that that you need to now change
what the I guess brackets are of meeting certain standards
and merits based off skin color. And here's the Democrats think,
you know, that's what they think.

Speaker 4 (30:30):
That's their party, that's their yes, evidently, and and you know,
I'm not going to argue with the evidence. I just
want to point out that, uh, they've been They've been
shifting the goal posts every year for decades. Education is
the only business that if they don't meet their goals,
they just change the goals. And so in the state

(30:51):
of Ohio, proficiency is measured at a above thirty six
percent test score. Now to you and I to you
and me, that test score is a face and grade.
But not in the State of Ohio. And so you
have to understand that they've changed all the definitions of words.
That's why I wrote Words for Warriors, because they change
the definition of words and we think we're still talking

(31:13):
about the same thing. And so I want to point
out to everybody education is not schooling. School is not education.
They are two completely separate things. Now, if you want
to get a good education, maybe a little bit of
school or things that they do in school, like the academics,

(31:34):
would be good. But the rest of the stuff that
they do in school is actually counter educational. It's actually
anti education. Making a child who is imminently curious sit
down and shut up and have to raise his hand
to ask a question. That's child abuse. That shuts down
the curiosity and the creativity of the child. So right

(31:56):
off the bat, you're killing the nugget of the engine
for learning in the child. You're killing it piece by piece.
And then we go on from there. That's what my
book Parents Guide to Homeschool is about, because home educating
your child is not nearly as difficult as people think.

Speaker 1 (32:13):
Yes, let me take it not more rewarding. Because Sam,
a lot of people and I know you, you preach it,
you loved it, and I can attest to this, folks.
Her kids turned out really dang well. So she did
a good job at it. Not everybody can do it.
Single mom out there, two jobs, she's gonna be like,
right here, hy, why do you look that well. I'm
just saying they're going to say that right now. The
minute they see this, they're going to go But Sam,

(32:33):
I'm a twenty nine year old mother with two kids,
and I have two jobs, and there's no way I
can stay home and homeschool my kids.

Speaker 4 (32:40):
So let me I know somebody who did.

Speaker 1 (32:42):
I know, but a lot of people know a woman
who did.

Speaker 4 (32:45):
She had two little girls, she had no income, she
worked full time, She homeschooled her two girls all the
way through graduation. They're both set up for life, doing
very well with themselves. And then she went back and
adopted two little girl and did it all over again. Wow,
it's not that it can't be done. It's that we
have to rearrange our priorities. But we haven't been taught

(33:07):
to we haven't been taught to prioritize. We've only been
taught that money is the highest value, which goes back
to my starting story. Money is the highest value. That's
what we learn in school, and that's why we have
all the corruption in DC because everybody thinks that the
honor doesn't matter the way integrity doesn't matter. It's only
about the almighty dollar. And that's not true because at

(33:30):
the end of your life, the most important things in
your lives are your relationships family. So what we ought
to do is prioritize family and put school secondary to that,
because school destroys family. That's why we have such a
crisis in our families today. Well use kids come home
separated our families.

Speaker 1 (33:51):
Yeah, I've heard this multiple times. Say how many times
you hear the college kid comes home after four years
at Berkeley or somewhere and all woke walks in. You know,
mom and dad are like, how's it going, Jimmy, and
it's like, call me James, and let me tell you
something about capitalism in America. It was never great. It
sucks as they just spent one hundred and twenty grand

(34:12):
on your education and your most snibbling, liberal, little brainwashed
fashionable years.

Speaker 2 (34:16):
Your formulating years are to be sam Like you said,
in the family, the family's supposed to teach you right
from wrong. Basic math one plus one equals too. Instead
they throw their little gender spell on it. And then
you come home and you wonder why your kid has
blue hair, steptum piercing and.

Speaker 1 (34:32):
Thinks he can cut his penis off at thirteen?

Speaker 5 (34:34):
That too.

Speaker 1 (34:34):
But let me ask you this real quick, because I
got a great sound, but I want to play from
Nevada because you want to talk about one intelligent nine
year old. This has gone viral this week. And so
for folks that just say Sam, and again, I know
you're going to say, yes, you can, but let's just say,
they're like, no way. But I want to have a choice,
and I believe in school choice because I don't want
to just have to go to the local elementary in
my public school district if they can't homeschool. Are you

(34:58):
a proponent opponent? Like what do do you degree disagree
with school choice? I know Trump thinks there should be
school choice, and I want to play this clip and
then I'm going to get your reaction, Sam, because one,
this little kid's amazing. This is a protege. If we
had adults that were as smart as this nine year old,
we could solve a lot of problems in this world.
Watch this.

Speaker 3 (35:18):
My name is juliette Leon spelled j U l i
e t t e l e o ng, and I'm
here today to express my strong support for Bill AB
five e four to expand school choice. Thanks to Governor Lombardo,
Nevada is on its way to becoming a true school
choice state, giving the children the tools to thrive. Our

(35:41):
school system is too large and too slow to keep
up with the world cheap by rapidly changing job markets.
That's why families need options like smaller private schools, charter schools,
and homeschooling. I spell out a third grade level and
do high school level map, and no school could have
come date my needs. So I'm homeschooled. And because of that,

(36:03):
I've performed at Carnegie Hall Wants six national math competitions
and donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to nonprofit organizations
through the sales of my paintings. But what about the
child with the same potential, except whose family can't afford
to homeschool. It's not just about academics. It's about unlocking talents,

(36:28):
building confidence, and creating opportunities. It's about teaching kids to
solve problems and make a difference, since every kid is
different and every family has different circumstances. School choice is
how we prepare Nevada students for real world success and
that everyone who wants a job gets a job. The

(36:49):
world is moving forward and Nevada needs to move forward
with the world. Thank you, Governor Lombardo for fighting for
school Choicely.

Speaker 2 (37:00):
What the smartest nine year old ever?

Speaker 1 (37:01):
By the way, homeschooling was in there. She said, Sam,
your reaction to that from a nine year old?

Speaker 4 (37:08):
Yeah, so she's homeschooled and without school choice, right, because
apparently they don't have school choice, but they do because
we have school choice everywhere in the United States. You
can choose what school you send your child to, and
you can choose to homeschool. So the idea that because
the government is screwing up education so much, we would

(37:30):
then want to invite the government to give the money
to the parents so that the government can then enter
into all the private institutions and all the homeschooling homes
take to the parents how best to educate their children.

Speaker 1 (37:47):
Oh, is great point.

Speaker 4 (37:48):
Anathema to me. So I love that she's there representing homeschooling.
I can't fathom why whoever wrote her little speech would
put her in front of everybody. She is the perfect
example of not school choice bought that right to then say,
but but everybody else should get money from the government

(38:12):
so that the government can then go into their private
Christian schools and tell the private Christian schools you have
to teach the Quran and you have to do Hindu
workshops with the children. Okay, And in fact, I think
it's color I think it's Chicago has to pay millions
of dollars now to parents who sued because they had

(38:32):
worked Hindu rituals into the school day and the parents
got upset and they sued.

Speaker 1 (38:39):
And they gone, yeah, oh, and oh.

Speaker 4 (38:42):
Here's the problem with school choice. It's inviting the government
into all the private insts. And now why are we
Why is there so much money behind the school choice movement?
You have to ask yourself this why it's very well funded. Well,
it started with Pride in the state of flora. Oh,
there was a Pride group that first started the funding

(39:03):
in the state of Florida. And now in the state
of Florida, we have the pep Scholarship. We have you know,
money going to parents and it's no strings attached. So
if you get the money from the government, yes, you
can buy two flat screen TVs and a great big
bean bag chair, plus you know, year long passes to
Disney World if you want. In the state of Florida,

(39:23):
you're thinking the money's going to education, but that's not
the truth. Where the money's going is to the takeover
of the private institutions. Why because the government cannot take
the competition when you look at this little Juliet and
how great she's doing being homeschooled, which by the way,
is not merely as expensive as the money that they're

(39:45):
throwing at homeschooling parents. It's just it doesn't cost that
much to homeschool a child when you look at her,
and she is the example of no governmental infiltration whatsoever.
But she is now pushing.

Speaker 1 (40:00):
That, pushing it. Maybe the parents thought it was a
good thing, or who put the parents up to it.
I mean, she definitely had it down because I know
she was looking up not even reading script on a
few things and just average straight.

Speaker 2 (40:10):
Up like eighty Assembly bill five eighths.

Speaker 1 (40:12):
So let me ask this.

Speaker 4 (40:14):
But she's but she's a prodigy.

Speaker 2 (40:15):
She's obviously, that's the thing.

Speaker 1 (40:16):
She's a prodigy. Come on, I mean the artwork, the
performing at Carnegie Hall at nine, she's a prodigy. Let
me ask you this because I see that pick over
your shoulder of you and and uh keV and forty seven.
And I know, just like me, you've been to mar
Lago a bunch. You've had chats with the president. Have
you made that known to him? Have you said, Look,
I know everybody thinks school choice is great, mister President. However,

(40:37):
if you put government money in a private person's hands,
the government's going to want to influence what that mom
or dad is teaching you that kid in their private home.
Have you told him that they already do.

Speaker 4 (40:47):
Look in the state of Florida, homeschoolers who take the
money are no longer considered homeschoolers. What And I just
heard that the person who is in charge of the
program now is saying things like, I think we need
more regulation. Why because you're doing such a great job.

Speaker 1 (41:03):
Is santes allowing this crap? I thought him and Casey
are so big on parents having all the freedoms and
doing whatever parents want for the kids. That's what he
told me on the campaign trail. There is a lot of.

Speaker 4 (41:13):
Money behind the behind the quote school choice movement, there's
a lot of money.

Speaker 2 (41:17):
And what's crazy. I always thought school choice just meant
you have the right to go to private school if
you want to send your kid there, or to elementary school,
or to charter school.

Speaker 1 (41:25):
Or homeschool, which we have, which we are already have.
So yeah, so again she makes a good point, while
all of a sudden is there are millions billions being
thrown at it because you want to get the government.

Speaker 4 (41:35):
You know what, I'm going to say something that's a
little controversial.

Speaker 1 (41:38):
You see what the hell you want?

Speaker 4 (41:39):
But when the government gives you money for your child,
that's called trafficking.

Speaker 1 (41:44):
I don't think that's controversial. Yeah, hey, what are the
scariest words? What Reagan always tell us, I'm with the government.
I'm here to help. The scariest nine words ever, it's
what Reagan said forty years ago. He was right. Oh,
oh my gosh, it's with you keep going.

Speaker 4 (42:01):
Yeah, no, I'm just saying it's not a popular position.
But because we've all been trained to love money, when
the government holds out a check for seven thousand dollars,
you say, yes, please, yes, please, government. What do I
need to do?

Speaker 1 (42:14):
But why money? You can get everything online these days,
you know what the.

Speaker 2 (42:17):
Teacher kids, you can evade higher like you said, Ivy
League school, everything's free online and in the rare cases,
obviously if you're a lawyer a doctor, you need to
do these things. But sure, this is the always say.

Speaker 4 (42:29):
Let me speak to that for just a minute, because
I really want to open people's minds up. To go
to law school and to go to medical school, you
need not have a graduate a degree from college.

Speaker 2 (42:40):
It helps.

Speaker 4 (42:41):
But if you pass the MCATs or the LSATs without
having gone to college and you do well, I mean
pretty much any any upper level school will want you.

Speaker 2 (42:52):
It is harder, though, and I know most if you're
going to try to run like a private firm or something,
I think it's just a lot harder to do. And
obviously to get the clientele rolling people are probably like, okay,
well I want to see your background, what you've accomplished.
You know, when you go into an office at doctor's office,
you see the certificate on the board, you have.

Speaker 4 (43:10):
To ask yourself, yeah, we do see certificates, and I've
seen certificates and then I go, wait, why am I
in this office? Because he went to the school in Bermuda,
but he was highly recommended to me, so I guess
I'll still see him, right, Yeah, So you know, how
how often do people ask, Well, you're still young, so
people might still be asking you where you went to college.
But rest assured a lot of people.

Speaker 1 (43:30):
Yeah, Sam, I don't care. I joke all the time.
I go. I don't care about your piece of parchment paper.
I want to hear it from people. Tell me that's
the mechanic I should hire because he knows what he's doing.
That because he got a certification. But this is the
doctor I should use because he saved his family member's life. Like,
I don't give a crap.

Speaker 2 (43:45):
Dan, what's a Grand Canyon University.

Speaker 1 (43:46):
I didn't go anywhere, you know. I went the United
States Air Force. That's really how I went. Good for you,
and I gave my gi bill that I had a
GI bill I went to college. I didn't.

Speaker 4 (43:54):
This was pretty fascinating. I just met a guy who
has a company and they're doing a I no sorry
ar artificial reality training for mechanics, and they've worked it
out so that a two year.

Speaker 1 (44:09):
Like.

Speaker 4 (44:11):
You know, degree for auto mechanics is now twenty five
days of training Holy col with the AR. And then
they have also these these glasses that are assisted, so
they're AI assisted, so you basically in your glasses you
have an assistant, a computer assistant that can give you
the size of the thing that you're looking at to

(44:33):
replace it, or take a photo and send it up
the line to the to the guy in charge or whatever.
And I mean, we have to understand that our schools
are geared to educate children for jobs that existed last century.

Speaker 1 (44:47):
Okay, it's good.

Speaker 4 (44:50):
Is it works that way anymore?

Speaker 2 (44:51):
Three billion that was going to go to that Harvard
grant and reinvesting it into the trade schools and for
people to actually have an opportunity to make a crept money.

Speaker 5 (45:00):
Yeah, no, kid, But what I'm saying is even the
trade schools may be on their way out because when
you can train with AR instead of going to the
point having to go to a school every day.

Speaker 4 (45:12):
In less than a month, I know, stuff is crazy.

Speaker 1 (45:14):
I was a seventeen year old, she'll be eighteen in October,
and she was just telling me last weekend about all
the AI stuff and everything else that they can do
to train and learn careers. Having to go to that
six month, one year, two year academy, institution whatever to
get the cert in injectables. If you're gonna do whatever.

Speaker 4 (45:31):
You're gonna do, I have to say I do not.
I don't think this applies for grade school or even
even middle school. And I think we need to get
our kids off of screens, and we need to bolster families,
and we need children to be with their parents.

Speaker 2 (45:50):
So that's up to wish. I wish the parents like
the ones, especially when I see them take their kid
at a playground or something. You know, they'll push their
kid on the swing. Then you see the one hands
pushing in the other ones on the phone texting. It
drives me teaching them, it drives yeah right because he Jimmy.
It drives me nuts. And I wish just for this
one hour throughout the playground, can you put the phone down,

(46:11):
actually spend time with your kid, pay attention. I mean
you guys, I don't strike up conversation. Teach your kid
a thing or two.

Speaker 1 (46:18):
Well, we've all gotten. That's one thing I can say.
I'll and I'll preach. This family thing is one thing
that's been good for my family is getting the hell
out of a city. Buying some land and going out
and living on this ranch that we got and having
my daughter, Uh, spend time on the ranch on weekends
when my wife and I are not working and we're

(46:40):
all just doing stuff around the ranch together. And the devices,
I forget where the heck my phone is.

Speaker 2 (46:45):
Half the time it phone in the car.

Speaker 1 (46:47):
Sometimes Saturday and Sunday, I forget, and I got to
go look for it.

Speaker 2 (46:50):
That phone is staying in the car, just even as
an adult. It's so liberated. But yes, I wish parents
enforce this rule.

Speaker 1 (46:57):
We're getting close to out of time, forty six minutes
in and I haven't even brought up something big I
want to do with Sam, because I know this is
another big issue for the amazing mom Sam is to
her kids, and that is the health of our children.
So besides education, forget education, you got to make sure
they're healthy first and then educate them obviously. And thank
God for President Trump putting Bobby Kennedy, a guy who

(47:19):
for twenty five years has been fighting to try and
make stuff healthier for our children, and liberals called him nuts.
Kennedy one of the only heirs left a camelot, and
Democrats hate this guy. Because he wants to make stuff
healthy again. So I wanted Sam's opinion on what went
down over the last week or two, because Bobby has
come out and done a whole bunch of stuff. Let

(47:41):
me rattle a few off and then you take over, Sam,
removing all the red dye that causes cancer from all
of our food. They're working on getting the fluoride out
of the water, cleaning up the trans fat, the oils,
and all the crap in our food and how it's
cooked at fast food restaurants. And then just this week
the getting rid of the COVID jazz before children, right,

(48:01):
I loved that one. And pregnant women the vaccination protocols,
see that.

Speaker 2 (48:05):
Was even a thing for pregnant women, I mean.

Speaker 1 (48:07):
And them putting out the full report with doctor Peter
McCullough's testimony in the Senate this week saying point blank
in that report, now it's official. Now it's government information.
Nobody can call us conspiracy theorists on oan. We can say,
by golly, the jab caused myocarditis in young people your
age and younger, and it's affecting women's reproductive health. And as
far as I'm concerned, and I'll say it, Yep, Sam,

(48:30):
this might cause controversy and it's a huge conspiracy theory,
but it's not. This is how you do population control
globally because you just jabbed millions and millions of people
and now millions of women won't be able to give birth.

Speaker 4 (48:42):
Well, I mean, it's definitely something that you should say
consider strongly.

Speaker 1 (48:46):
So anyway, I will just.

Speaker 4 (48:48):
Park on this idea. I was on Facebook this morning
and I noticed somebody like talking back about because the
post was about how this person hadn't taken the job
and actually was happy about it, but never judged anybody
for taking it, and he lost a friendship because his
friend couldn't be friends anymore because he refused the jab.
And somebody wrote, I took it and I'm so happy,

(49:12):
And because you know, they don't believe that there was
ever any trials, but there were, And so I wrote
back and I said, you know, you think that there
were trials, but if a trial isn't concluded, it is
not a trial. So they started with an experiment. When
they first rolled it out, it was experimental, and I
just feel like I have to set the record straight.

(49:34):
It was experimental. They quit the experiment because they didn't
want the results. And then everybody who was the test
guinea pig who hadn't gotten the shot, everybody in the
placebo group, they got the shots because it would it
would have been and the justification was, it's not fair
for them not to have the shots because the shots

(49:55):
work so well, even though we have no evidence to
prove that they do. And so now finally they're taking
it off the childhood vaccine. This is very dangerous for
the for the vaccine manufacturers. It is still considered experimental
because it is not FDA approved. It's FDA approved as
an experimental drug. Right if the FDA ever approves it,

(50:17):
they are open to a lot of lawsuits.

Speaker 1 (50:20):
And isn't this is the definition of a vaccine. It's
not even a true vaccine. And the m RNA that's
in it, that spike protein that's giving people the cancer. Okay,
a good old documentary.

Speaker 4 (50:30):
Change the definition of vaccine. That's partly why I wrote
my book Words for Warriors, because they changed that definition too.

Speaker 1 (50:36):
Like they changed twenty thirty years ago. We all used
to say criminal illegal aliens, and then it went to
undocumented workers, undocumented immigrants.

Speaker 2 (50:46):
They do it all everything, all the time.

Speaker 1 (50:48):
So anyway, let's talk a little bit more about that,
just real briefly. Because the vaccine is so controversial, people
are still taking it. And I'll just point out one
very high, high prolific person. Turbo cancer Joe. They had
that poor old guy, Joe Biden, who is obviously cognitive
declining over the last five years. Roll his sleeve up

(51:10):
six times, folks, six times. So whether they lied about
the prostate cancer and he did have it five years ago,
two years ago, one year ago, whatever, Every doctor that
I've spoken to, from doctor Peter McCullough, Robert Malone, Eric Neputi,
all the guys that were outspoken about the JAB for
the last four or five years have said, yeah, actually
he could have got it maybe last year. They kept
it quiet for a few months, but having six shots

(51:32):
with that spike protein would give him turbo cancer and
that's why it would expand into the bones. So they
killed me.

Speaker 4 (51:39):
So they're kind of dailed if they do and damned
if they don't, because either he's had it for five years,
in which case they've been lying.

Speaker 1 (51:45):
To thank you for five years, that's right, Sam, or.

Speaker 4 (51:48):
He got it because of the jobs and he just
has turbo cancer.

Speaker 1 (51:51):
And they don't want to say that either. So you're
right crazy that.

Speaker 2 (51:54):
I didn't even know that could happen. A spike protein
and then oh yes, a catalyst of cancer inside your.

Speaker 1 (52:00):
Yep and the milecarddit is so the MR and A
the spike protein is creating like your heart and the
surrounding tissue of the heart to inflame, especially if you're
a young athlete and you work out all the time.
So that's why people were dropping, and we were saying
that on this network. Remember we're like, all these athletes,
why are nineteen to twenty five year olds falling over?
They're healthy as hell because you gave them two three

(52:21):
jabs of this crap.

Speaker 4 (52:22):
That's why the athlete I mean, yeah, the of the
kids who fall over, you wouldn't think it was the healthiest.

Speaker 1 (52:29):
Among us, right, it was the job right.

Speaker 2 (52:31):
Three four years out of COVID almost right? How are
we still that's in the scheduling pro I mean, I
know why the dollar signs, right, but it's like there's
no I mean, is there any other logic to it?
I mean, it's just it's done. There's variations that you just.

Speaker 1 (52:43):
Said, Damn Dampton, Joe. That's I think the whole thing,
Sam is you can't back out of this now because
then you'd admit we were wrong hurting people. So they
got a double.

Speaker 3 (52:51):
Now, got it.

Speaker 4 (52:52):
You know, we've got a big problem because there's serious
health ramifications and now we're all responsible for everybody else's
healthcare because of Obamacare, and you know, we've there are
some very serious things that are coming down down the
stretch towards us, and we need to be looking with
a very strong eye at all of.

Speaker 2 (53:12):
This because COVID was such a flop in their vaccination process.
Obviously of what we found out now it's going to
create the entire greater society to become skeptical.

Speaker 4 (53:22):
Yes, and a lot of uncertainty.

Speaker 2 (53:24):
Vaccine that comes out.

Speaker 1 (53:26):
Take any of the crowds. Yeah, do you say, I
don't take anything. I don't even like taking an aspirin
for a friggin headache. I don't like taking I take arnica.

Speaker 4 (53:35):
I take arnica for aches and pains. And yes, I'm
researching all of the all of and you know what,
it's it's brought me to realize how much generational knowledge
we have sacrificed because we've sent our kids to school.
So it used to be that you grew up around
mom and grandma, maybe even great grandma, and so you
got you got great grandma's recipes for the poultice that

(53:57):
you know, helped with the flu or whatever. And now
it's just you know, take a pill, go to school.

Speaker 1 (54:03):
I know.

Speaker 4 (54:03):
And so I think we're I think I think there's
going to be a resurgence of traditional families and traditional homes.
There's certainly a surge in home education and homesteading, which
tend to go a little bit hand in hand. They
don't have to, but they they sometimes do. And so
I think we're gonna we're gonna sort of recapture some
of that, but I know that we've lost a lot

(54:25):
of it.

Speaker 1 (54:25):
And I think it's you're right, then, But there is
a big push, I think, and thanks to the America
First Movement, families like yours having the guts to talk
about it all the time. I think you're right. The
more families come together around education, around the dinner table
with healthy food, talking about how to get healthier using
stuff that's organic and natural, you are going to have

(54:45):
this resurgent, let's call it. Since Trump's saying the golden
age of America that he's trying to return when it
comes to our economy and everything else. How about let's
get the golden era of the American family back.

Speaker 4 (54:55):
And with that, and you know what, young men, young
men are flocking back to church. They're looking for orthodoxy,
They're looking for truth. They know that they've been lied to,
they know that there is this nefarious kind of force
that's trying to Men want to be men from zam
inheriting just the left.

Speaker 1 (55:17):
Men want to be men. Trust me as a fifty
year old man, I'll tell you. But when you have
the media and political leaders on the left and their
favorite celebs or whatever it may be, telling them they
shouldn't be so manly or managed.

Speaker 2 (55:30):
David Hog did.

Speaker 4 (55:33):
Jes see Tim Waltz saying that he could code talk
to men who drive pickup or something.

Speaker 2 (55:38):
I can barely watch this man.

Speaker 1 (55:40):
When you did this with your hands or whatever you did, Timmy,
you lost me, Tampa and Tim. Anyway, they're giving me
the wrap up or almost at an hour. And I
want you to be able to get in a plug
for everything. Sorbo, because like I said, Sam, Sorbo Kevin Sorbo,
their son Braid, and the whole family. This is a
family to be reckoned with. Let me tell you what author's,
actor and actresses, speakers, they do all of it. I

(56:02):
know you guys have your own studios, the Sorbo Studios,
So give them a pitch, will you, Sam Books Films,
everything the whole family's doing.

Speaker 4 (56:08):
Go ahead, Yes, of course. So we have a new
film coming out next week that Kevin's in. It's premiering
at the Kennedy Center, which is so cool because I
don't know if you saw Bill Maher was joking about
how the Kennedy Center is now being taken over by
the Trump administration, and he joked, what does this mean
that Kevin Sorbo's going to get at Kennedy Center award? Well,

(56:30):
we're going to NY Center next week. If you go
to sorbostudios dot com, sign up for our newsletter that
keeps you informed on everything that we're up to. We
have a trip to Norway if you go to the
events page. We also are taking a trip to Greece.
We're leading a small group in the footsteps of Paul
in Greece. That's very exciting.

Speaker 1 (56:51):
My wife and talk to you about that one. Sorry,
my wife and I want to talk to you about
that one seriously. When Kevin was on a few weeks ago,
he said come to Greece of me and Sam. My
wife heard it and said, oh my god, we're going
to take a biblical trip of where Paul went with
the Sorbos and a small group. I got to talk
to you offline. Keep going. Sorry, that's a.

Speaker 4 (57:07):
Great end of September, and there are still some spots open.
But and then there's my book, The Parents Guide to Homeschool,
which is doing very well. I'm very pleased, and I
can't tell you how gratifying it is to have parents
come up to me and say I followed your advice
three years ago. It's been the very best thing for
our family. It's been so amazing. And this is what

(57:28):
happens is it's transforming lives and you start to understand
that school is grift. School is a new religion.

Speaker 1 (57:37):
Yep.

Speaker 4 (57:38):
We are trained to believe in school and that's wrong.
And there are a lot of different ways to get
it done. The founders were homeschooled. I think they did
a good job. I think we could take a page
from their book, and then Brayden's book is Embrace Masculinity. Yes,
I think he's sending a copy to Tim Waltz.

Speaker 1 (57:59):
And you tell him to send me a copy. And
the next time I run into some little tampon Tim
acting man out here in San Diiago, I'll give him
the book and say, read up, start acting like you
got a pair. Great. It is Sam Sorbo. It is
sorbostudio dot com. To check out everything they're doing, from
the trips to the books, to the films to the
TV shows. This is an American family that, yes, folks,

(58:21):
more of us need to model after. So Sam, thank
you for being that better half behind the scenes but
also in front of the scenes. You know, most times
I'll say behind every good man, there's a great woman.
Well she's not behind keV. She's right there with him,
because I mean she's been acting, she's been writing, she's
been modeling, she's been teaching, she's been speaking, and all

(58:43):
he does is show off is pecks as hercules. Whatever,
give me a break.

Speaker 2 (58:46):
Samo was great meeting you.

Speaker 4 (58:49):
Nice to meet you to thanks you too for having
the ony best.

Speaker 1 (58:52):
Of the whole family. God bless you, and I'll get
with you and keV offline. Okay, great, God bless all right,
God bless you. What a great interview. Art isn't awesome?

Speaker 2 (59:00):
I'm the best.

Speaker 1 (59:01):
I told you. See you're one time jumping on.

Speaker 2 (59:04):
Yeah. Sure, you didn't have to get to me. I
could tell just from looking at the person. I'm like,
she's a good one. That's checks out.

Speaker 1 (59:09):
That's why, Like I said, I met Kevin years ago
because he's huge on doing charity golf tournaments for all
kinds of events and charities, and majority of them help
kids that he's involved with. I think's amazing and veterans.
And so we met on the on the celebrity golf circuit,
if you will, probably like two thousand and one or
two twenty some years ago. God, I've known keV ever since.

(59:29):
And then when we old you and I and everybody
started here with the way in several years ago, and
the whole MAGA movement right obviously, Kevin and Sam and
now their son Braden have been big voices in the movement.
And so my wife Peyton is the one that that
had Hey, you should be booking Sam too. I always
booking Kevin.

Speaker 2 (59:46):
Yeah, I got to book the wife yeah, the whole family.

Speaker 1 (59:48):
Yeah, well who is Sam And that's what I'm like,
Holy cow, she's pretty cool and has done a lot.
I don't want to say more stuff than Kevin's done,
but I mean he's an action she's multi you look
at it.

Speaker 2 (59:58):
Yeah, we can do a bring a bunch of different
things to the table and it's great. How many books
for days?

Speaker 1 (01:00:02):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:00:03):
How many nine?

Speaker 1 (01:00:03):
We're all it was nine, that's all they could fit
on the screen. I think there was a whole page
of Yeah, there's just a handful of eight nine books. Wow.
And then the homeschooling of their kids. You got to
have time every day and the hours and the day
to do that while you're trying to have a career,
while she's out given speaking engagements, while they do the

(01:00:24):
I mean, amazing woman. So if you're not doing a
fraction of that, you should feel bad about yourself. I'm
just kidding. I'm just kidding, all right. So I don't
know if you watch how we usually do this. At
the end, we'd like to wrap up.

Speaker 2 (01:00:35):
Okay, so I wrap it round.

Speaker 1 (01:00:36):
It's not even a wrap it round because we're right
at one hour, we're just to shut up, like thirty
seconds ago. So this is just a reminder of everything
we offer here at OA in and how you can
find everything at OAN. So pitch yourself, what's happening with
your shows? When can they see you? And then I'll
talk about the talk shows.

Speaker 2 (01:00:51):
Okay, so right after the talk shows nine o'clock eleven o'clock,
and then I appear on the social media every now
and then quick plug at Dana alexin News and you
can follow my work there, all.

Speaker 1 (01:01:02):
Right, Dana Alexa one of our and we said talk
show host, you can just say.

Speaker 2 (01:01:06):
Top talent that works.

Speaker 1 (01:01:07):
Oh by the way, I got to throw this into
before I do my plug for all of our talk
shows at late night in the primetime next week. Uh,
special guest, I don't know that you'll want to do
this one because I don't know if you have a
lot of background in Navy seals. But you being a
lady and most ladies like Navy seals, you might want
to stand in the corner and watch this one because

(01:01:29):
look at this right here, this you want to talk
about a warrior. Here's my boy, this is my buddy.
This is Mike Sirelli. He is a retired commanding officer.
He was a lieutenant commander of Navy Seal one Team one,
so not Seal Team six that killed Osama bin Laden.
But I mean, I don't care what team you're on.
If you're a serial, you're a.

Speaker 2 (01:01:49):
Badass, decorated you can tell yes, yes, extremely that.

Speaker 1 (01:01:53):
So Mike Cirelli will be on next week's podcast. We
will talk about how he got his start as a seal,
what he's doing out today with charities and stuff to
help our service members. But also for me, it'll be
a big discussion about the military, being a vet, how
we've been so woke the last few years, and how
now Pete hagg Seth and Trump are trying to turn
that around.

Speaker 2 (01:02:12):
See that movie Warfare, Okay, I'll watch to comment.

Speaker 1 (01:02:15):
I almost picked that night before lust I did see it.
It's on Prime writer Netflix, which.

Speaker 2 (01:02:18):
Is I don't know Prime on the movies.

Speaker 1 (01:02:20):
I think it's on Prime anyway. Check out Real America
with Dan Ball. That is eight pm Eastern five Pacific
Monday through Friday. Matt Gates Show is on after that,
and then Chanel Rion after your newscast. So that's our
primetime lineup. You can always find all things O an
on the homepage. That's the best way to do it.
O A n N dot com. I think we got

(01:02:41):
a sale right now for three forty nine or a month.
What is it to sign up for the app?

Speaker 2 (01:02:45):
I gotta sign up.

Speaker 1 (01:02:46):
It's a couple bucks.

Speaker 2 (01:02:47):
Wait, you need to sign up.

Speaker 1 (01:02:48):
I have the app. I have. I pay for the app.
I pay for the o an app and the Roku
app or not wrote to you? Pardon me? Cloud? Yes,
you can always find us on cloud TV. That's KLOWD
and then app those cost you four bucks a month.

Speaker 2 (01:03:02):
Thanks, yep.

Speaker 1 (01:03:04):
But Dana, if you have Spectrum now right, because we're
on Charter Spectrum, we just you have right a couple
of weeks ago. If you have Dish, if you have
Sling TV, we are now on all of those. And
there's one more big carrier that's coming but I can't
say yet, but I got some inside scoop. But another
big so O N is making a huge comeback. Not
Direct TV yet, Come on Direct TV. Put us back
on too. It's okay, you can do it.

Speaker 2 (01:03:25):
You know you wants on.

Speaker 1 (01:03:26):
Yeah, Americans want their oan and you'll make money. Put
us back on. So anyway, check out OA in all
the platforms, social media, Dana on the news, Matt Chanel, Me,
and Riley Lewis, who's on at six. I gotta get
that one. Iways forget Riley. Riley's on right before me,
six Eastern. And thank you so much for turning into
the Anchorman podcast.

Speaker 2 (01:03:45):
Thanks for having me on.

Speaker 1 (01:03:45):
I was always taught to give the lady the first
and last word.

Speaker 2 (01:03:48):
So Dana, it's been amazing. We should probably cheers.

Speaker 1 (01:03:52):
Did you get any You didn't even get any whisky
for on one? Okay, all right, all right, and.

Speaker 2 (01:03:55):
Then we'll do it. Cheers to this. You gotta go
ear number one on the podcast.

Speaker 1 (01:03:59):
This is like is for my homies. Okay, there we go. Okay,
hello us, thanks for coming on. Appreciate it, guys. We'll
see next Friday at about seven when we drop these
for the next Anchorman podcast. In the meantime, thank you
so much for tuning in.

Speaker 2 (01:04:13):
Thank you, Thanks great bye
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