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October 15, 2025 • 16 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
All right, I'm sorry to do this, but we have
this SoundBite. Yesterday, Cheryl Hines, the wife of Bobby Kennedy Junior,
was on the View with Joy Bear and Alyssa Ferron.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
Brace yourself. I feel like Kenny's going to share audio from.

Speaker 1 (00:19):
The View, Cheryl Hines is explaining why she seems to
agree with her husband about vaccines and modern medicine. She's
made a lot of points that I think back in
twenty nineteen, liberal Democrats would have agreed with. Before the pandemic,
most Democrats would have said, yeah, what's in our drugs?
Because it used to be fashionable for liberal democrats to

(00:40):
be skeptical of big pharma. And then there was a shift,
a cultural shift. I don't know what they're about talk about.

Speaker 2 (00:46):
I'm assuming drugs, but you froze the screen from the
E clip from the View, and WHOOPI Goldberg looks like
she is about to climb over the little disk they
sit behind and start eating Cheryl Hines alive. Yeah, she
looks like I mean the face that she's making, in

(01:08):
the teeth that are jetting out of her mouth, she
just looks like she's just about to go cannibalize this woman.

Speaker 1 (01:14):
All right, So here's the conversation. I'm just going to
play a little of it. And right when you become
disgusted by this conversation, that's when it's going to end.
Don't worry, we'll get you out on time.

Speaker 3 (01:25):
I promise to say, hey, you know, consult your doctor
before you take this. Sure, I agree with that, And
I think that's okay for moms to here, Cheryl, Yeah,
go ahead.

Speaker 4 (01:36):
Out all right, I am this.

Speaker 1 (01:39):
This is not your fight really to be fighting.

Speaker 3 (01:42):
This is your husband's thank you for achnology.

Speaker 4 (01:45):
But I just I do want to say, you know,
he's not a doctor, and he's not a professional. Yes,
and oftentimes when he's talking, yeah, yeah, speaking, he is
speaking not with the best information that we can get

(02:05):
because you know, yeah, we could do a lot better
with health stuff, and there's a lot of stuff he
can do, and some of the things he's suggested take
it out of the hands of my doctor and me
and my ovgyatit.

Speaker 1 (02:22):
And I.

Speaker 2 (02:25):
Is anybody else about to throw up when Whoopee made
you think about her gynological visits?

Speaker 1 (02:34):
No, I will tell you, just like that, every man
listening to this radio show no longer has to think
about baseball. Well, he's with his wife, trying to delay
the inevitable.

Speaker 2 (02:44):
Does anybody else find it at all ridiculous that she
stops her and tells her her husband's not a doctor,
he doesn't know anything about medicine, and then she uses
the term all that medical stuff. It sounds like she

(03:06):
woopee might no less than Bobby Kennedy Jr.

Speaker 1 (03:12):
Boy, you gotta feel for Cheryl because going on the
View was probably a real easy task for her several
years ago.

Speaker 2 (03:18):
Sure, but now she still has to be nice because
she's still technically on their side, but not really.

Speaker 1 (03:24):
There's a real fascinating thing happening here, though, because you
see these women get together with Cheryl, and in some
way this is a microcosm of what's happening all over
the country right now, all over the country right now,
there are these unhappy, white liberal suburban women and yes,
I know who he's not white, but women like that.
And they're getting together with their vaguely conservative friend to

(03:46):
have coffee at Panera Bread on Saturday at the Bridge Tournament,
whatever it may be. And what you're watching here in
this video clip is how the same way that these
women on the viewer are talking to Cheryl is how
average Republican women are spoken to. Oh yeah, by their
smug liberal friends.

Speaker 2 (04:03):
They have to look down their nose at them for
other reasons besides the fact that you know, maybe they
don't dress well.

Speaker 1 (04:09):
You don't have to feel bad about the fact that
you love your country or that you care about America
more than you care about people in a foreign nation
who want you dead.

Speaker 3 (04:19):
Right.

Speaker 2 (04:20):
Yeah, that was kind of emphasized yesterday at the Charlie
Kirk ceremony. Did you guys.

Speaker 1 (04:25):
Watch Charlie Kirk and Erica Kirk were a beautiful couple.
I think it's an It's an amazing love story. It's
very sad how it ended. And people that are trying
to dunk on Erica Kirk are some of the worst people. Horrible,
terrible people. And if you're writing an email right now, Kenny,
this is why you're divorced. Like, just dude, just stop.

(04:45):
You have no idea.

Speaker 3 (04:46):
Yea.

Speaker 2 (04:46):
The same guy from yesterday that sent that email about
how she never loved her husband didn't care anything about
him said that's why Kenny's divorce goes. Kenny just doesn't
know how to read women. I guess none of us do.
Then you know it both could be true, sir, Yeah,
separate but true.

Speaker 1 (05:05):
It doesn't matter anyway. Rested peace, Charlie Kirk. It's very sad,
but yesterday was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom of
I would say it's well deserved. Oh absolutely yeah. And
it was his birthday. He would have turned thirty two.
He started turning point USA when he was eighteen years old.

Speaker 2 (05:25):
And look at the impact he had had in just
that short few years, just over a decade. Very impressive
work that she will continue on. And like she said,
the shooter, the murderer, the assassin, didn't stop his movement,
didn't shut him down. He actually amplified it, tried many

(05:46):
many times over.

Speaker 1 (05:47):
Charlie Kirk changed the world, whether you like it or not.
I've noticed there's more than one clip circulating on social
media of young pop starlet's Charlie Kirk's age or younger
denigrating him that have gone social or Donald Trump or Ice.
Really generally, ice is what they're talking about, and none

(06:07):
of them are really gonna matter. Nobody remembers Tiffany, nobody
cares about Jessica Simpson anymore. Charlie Kirk's legacy is going
to live on for a long time. There's a story
today about Britney Spears and Kevin Fetterline. I was wondering
what became of him. Apparently, Kevin Fetterline claimed that his
ex wife Britney's erratic behavior is worse than what people
see on the surface. He's very worried about their children. Mmmm, well,

(06:30):
rightfully so. I think as a father, he's terrified that
one day he might wake up and his sons are
going to have to deal with the unimaginable. He says
he has a new book out where it's going to
be released later this month. I'm sure I won't read
it where he talks about how most of the people
that are close to Britney Spears think getting rid of
the conservatorship was a bad idea. As a libertarian, I

(06:51):
don't like the idea of a conservatorship right. But the
other thing I don't like is this umbrella idea that
everybody should live by this rules. Now, there are probably
some people crazy enough who need some help.

Speaker 2 (07:03):
Yeah, I mean, if people are mentally unstable or physically
unable to take care of themselves, somebody does need to
step in do the right thing. And it might not
be popular in this case because she's she's famous, and
she seems young and able to deal with these things
on her own. But if you ever watched her dance

(07:25):
in any of those videos and stared into those eyes,
you know something ain't right inside that head.

Speaker 1 (07:30):
No, and it probably has a little bit to do.
I mean, she's probably a little crazy, but she's on drugs.

Speaker 2 (07:36):
Well she got Yeah, the crazy kind of comes and
goes hills and valleys and apparently the valleys or when
she videos herself.

Speaker 1 (07:43):
I've got a video of a recent one on the
screen right now, and it just how it is there?
How is there no one close to her that loves
her enough to tell her to stop doing this. It's
just really really.

Speaker 2 (07:56):
Every she's she'll be she'll turn four party four in
early December. You know, it seems like you know, you're
forty three, she's forty three. You are pretty much the
same agent she always have been. Yeah, six months older
than you give her take prime of her life, I

(08:18):
guess physically speaking, but mentally not so much.

Speaker 1 (08:22):
Every one of these videos is the craziest thing you've
seen today, And it's so sad.

Speaker 2 (08:27):
As if you remember her from well twenty years ago
when she was young and she was actually held up
as a good choice for young girls to emulate back
in her early days of her career.

Speaker 1 (08:43):
She looks exhausted and unhealthy and like, you know, how
did it get this way? Well, that's what kind of
what Hollywood does to people, especially when left alone to
their own devices. And maybe we just don't need to
medicate everyone's problems away. Maybe fame and riches aren't always
the solution to your happiness. Maybe what Britney Spears needed

(09:03):
was God. Maybe is it two ages? Somebody needs to
come take the knives away from her. Her ex fetter
Line claims that she watched her son's sleep with a
knife in her hand. Why because she's crazy? What was
the point? What was she going to do?

Speaker 2 (09:21):
Well, if you can explain it, it might not be crazy.
But I don't think you can explain away crazy.

Speaker 1 (09:26):
I would say, when you're watching your children's sleep, if
you're holding a knife, there should probably be a good
reason why. I don't know. I hope he's wrong about that.
But her kids are old now. I don't know if
she was watching them recently. They're nineteen and twenty. According
to this reporter.

Speaker 2 (09:43):
Yeah, maybe they need to distance themselves from mom and
not fall asleep where she could watch them.

Speaker 1 (09:51):
Yeah, with a knife in her hand. And maybe everybody
doesn't need to grow up in Hollywood. That's a Knight
probably would wouldn't hurt now. RFK Junior approved Walton Johnson Show.
What are you doing over there? Mister h Why are
you mumbling like that? Mumbling?

Speaker 2 (10:06):
I was tributing and singing alone.

Speaker 1 (10:09):
You know, it was best A could anyway, you know,
I know, let me start the song over. I never
noticed that before.

Speaker 2 (10:14):
What happened?

Speaker 1 (10:14):
Why are attributing people? This is the song brown Sugar
by D'Angelo. He was a big R and B singer
back in the two thousands, the late di'angelo. Did you
ever notice that if you listen real closely, in the background,
there's like people mumbling.

Speaker 2 (10:28):
Kid, let's pulling my my singing alone?

Speaker 1 (10:30):
I was back up? Why do they have that? Why
was that included in the recording? We want people at ACKs?
Why you just don't get it? Do you do they
pay a guy to do that?

Speaker 3 (10:38):
What?

Speaker 2 (10:39):
Like they bring in a guy like backup singers on
a you know, on a showy.

Speaker 1 (10:44):
Imagine meeting the producer and explaining to someone, all right,
I want you to order pasta and wine, but do
it kind of breathy and so that like, what pasta
and wine? What do you mean? Yeah, we want to
make it sound like you're just mumbling in the background
having a conversation.

Speaker 2 (10:58):
My man DiAngelo Grammy win a fifty year roll died
yesterday battle of pancreatic cancer. That's a bad one. Man
could have pancrealism. That will turn you out. He helped
define the neo soul movement of the nineties. Jamie Foxx
wasn't of the first to tribute the musician, although tribute

(11:18):
support him, Missy Elliot, Jill Scott, Doja Cat, many many
more paying tribute. I'm trying to find out if he
was gonna be part of the funk Fist because it
he ain't now obviously, but I'm guessing they knew he
had pancreadd cancer, so they probably had to leave him
off the menu.

Speaker 1 (11:33):
Yeah. Back in the late nineties in the early two thousands,
there was this brief period in hip hop where all
of a sudden, mainstream rappers took a break from being
gangsters and they were reel into jazz and like poetry
and that sort of thing, and Erica Bado the roots.
That's not her, that's where the roots came from. Nas

(11:54):
those kinds of guys. Common was one of them, and
a lot of you know it is like upright bass
with the drum cat And then they got away from
that immediately and it went back to wel John going.

Speaker 2 (12:04):
Yeah, Well, since I brought it up, I will alert
those of you who didn't already know. The Gnallings Funk
Fest is this weekend, starting on Friday at the Spanish
Blouse the mass of Pa featuring the Soul Rebels. We
got Galactic with Irma Jelly Erica, we got dumpster funk.

(12:26):
You know that dumpster funk is funky, Cyril.

Speaker 1 (12:29):
Neville, dumpster funk sounds like something you would like, a
term you would use to describe a fat check you
met at a bar that did not end to the night. Well,
what does she smell like like dumpster funk?

Speaker 2 (12:39):
My boy, Cyril celebrating fifty years with a wild chumpatulas
funky meters two point oh headhunters.

Speaker 1 (12:47):
I mean, you just go on and on.

Speaker 2 (12:49):
George Porter Junior and the Running partners Big Sam's Funk Nation,
Mississippi River Revival. All of the usual suspects are gonna
be at the Funk Fist stawed in variety.

Speaker 1 (13:03):
I hate to be the guy to point this out,
but I don't know a lot of these bands. Well
you ain't funky, No, why you ain't. Never gonna be
accused of being funky? Come on, I'm funky. No, not
even a little bit. People think I'm funky. I've been
told I'm funky. Maybe you just smell that. There's another
way to look at that. You know, there's a band
called Uncut. Uh oh, what what do you mean?

Speaker 3 (13:24):
Uh? Oh?

Speaker 1 (13:25):
Will uh? Are they talking about?

Speaker 3 (13:30):
You know that?

Speaker 1 (13:30):
That's what I wonder? Well, yeah, I know. And do
they get along with those who do the cut? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (13:35):
What's the rule? They don't start trouble. There's been trouble.
So master P featuring the Soul Rebels, that's right, that's right.
You know master P and I are friends. There's a
photo of us on Instagram together. Oh well, that's that's
all it takes. That's evidence.

Speaker 1 (13:48):
And you could tell when we briefly ran into him
at the New Orleans Airport that he really didn't mind
taking a photo very quickly as he walked past me.

Speaker 2 (13:54):
He didn't seem to be disturbed by it at all.
He was like, sure, get your phone out, hurry up.
By the way, if you're going to the airport today,
a rethink that or at least check call ahead, see
what's up. Because the one thing that this government shutdown
does seem to be affecting that It is evicting people.

Speaker 1 (14:11):
I know, is the airport?

Speaker 2 (14:14):
Is it?

Speaker 1 (14:15):
Because you see that in the news, And then when
I go on social media and I type long lines
at the airport or TSA, I'm searching for things on
Twitter that would allude to that. I see a lot
of local TSA offices saying no lines today.

Speaker 2 (14:30):
In Waco, we're here there, but some of the bigger
cities obviously in them probably Democrat run cities.

Speaker 1 (14:36):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (14:36):
I have friends that have been traveling in the last
couple of weeks since the shutdown. We are in what
the beginning of week three now, and they said they
have had flights either delayed and sometimes just canceled out right.
I can I hate it here our government employees fly
on each plane. Why are the councel in a flight?
Is nobody in the government should be you'll fly in

(15:00):
for United air Traffic Control and the TSA. But that's
the real issues, the air traffic control. I don't want
to get on a plane and realize that there's nobody
up there directing traffic.

Speaker 1 (15:11):
Okay, But to your point, why is it on the
taxpayers to pay for this? Why can't the airlines do it?
You know, we've always asked this question. There was a
time when it wasn't up to the federal government to
subsidize security at the airport. I mean, if you're concerned
the government shutdown will affect your way time, now, it's
as good a time as ever to start asking the
airlines to provide their own security. Sure.

Speaker 2 (15:33):
But if I remember, and it's been a long time
since I was in high school, they said back then
that there were certain types of government, you know, around
the rest of the world that likes to control everything. Sure,
what kind of government is that again, that wants to
get involved in every single aspect of your life and
tell you what, when, where.

Speaker 3 (15:52):
And how? Well?

Speaker 1 (15:53):
Communism or oh that was it? Yeah, communism, Yeah, authoritarianism,
watch out for that. I'm with you. Yeah. Anyway, it's
a shame that it's come to this, But yeah, you
could drive, you know what I mean, just a thought.
I don't know, I don't I hate flying. Who likes flying?

Speaker 2 (16:10):
But some of my friends weren't going to fly to Spain.
I mean, you weren't going to drive to Spain. They
needed to fly and they couldn't.

Speaker 1 (16:21):
A massive explosion at a New Jersey auto body shop
sparked a raging, five alarm fire that destroyed several of
the neighboring businesses.

Speaker 2 (16:30):
Have you all noticed stuff seems to be blowing up
almost every day?

Speaker 1 (16:33):
Now? Is it that it's happening more often or just
that we're noticing it? Well, there was a munition's plant.

Speaker 2 (16:40):
They made explosives and it blew up, sure and in
Middle Tennessee and killed everybody at the plant. And now
this happened at a body shop and.

Speaker 1 (16:49):
Billy, yeah, didn't you say you blew up the bathroom earlier?
That's kind of different. Walton and Johnson Radio Network
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