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November 9, 2025 36 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Loathsome political duo in the country is gearing up and
that the events of this week could bring them to Washington,
d C. Sooner rather than later. And I'm talking about
California State Senator Scott Wiener and Gavin Newsom. Welcome to

(00:21):
the Trevor Carey Show. I am not Trevor Carey. I
am John Girardi. I am filling in today for Trevor.
I am the usual host Monday through Friday of The
John Girardi Show six to seven pm. So, yes, that's right.
If I'm filling in for Trevor and doing my show,
you got four straight hours coming up of old Johnny
Girardi on the radio. I'm also the executive director at

(00:43):
Right to Life of Central California RTLCC dot org. Hey,
if you like Right to Life of Central California, if
you like pro life stuff, you like saving babies, if
you like supporting our various initiatives to help moms and
babies and educate people and fund our Rights Life radio
show on the weekends, why don't you go to RTLCC

(01:05):
dot org slash Christmas and you can make a donation
for our big Christmas dinner and auction fundraiser on Friday,
December fifth at the Valdez Hall of the Fresment Convention Center.
It will be a great time. Also the development director.
I am for the Obria Medical Clinics of Central California
ob RI I a three six five dot org. If
you want to support the work of our pro life

(01:25):
nonprofit Obgyn Clinic. All right, got all my commercials out
of the way, here we go. I want to talk
about Gavin Newsom and Scott Wiener, and you got to
talk about him together, because Scott Wiener is nothing without
Gavin Newsom. Some of you may have heard of Scott Wiener,

(01:45):
some of you may have not. Let me give you
the introduction to him. Scott Wiener is a California State Senator.
He represents basically the very heart of San Francisco. Okay,
I left my heart, not that kind of heart in
San Francisco. We'll talk about what kind of heart issues

(02:07):
in San Francisco he likes. Scott Wiener is an openly
gay man who was famously photographed marching in a gay
pride parade while he was a sitting California State senator,
wearing a leather vest, no shirt, leather pants, and a
leather tie, some weird kind of leather stuff. Let's just

(02:32):
say this man was a California state senator and that
is how he was marching around during a gay pride parade.
He did it, not me. I think I'm allowed to
make at least a little bit of fun of him.
And Scott Wiener has introduced, not just voted on, but

(02:52):
authored some of the worst, most extreme bits of legislation
that have passed the California state legislature over the past
decade that he's been in office. Allow me, if I
may to give you a sampling. In twenty seventeen, he
passed a law that lessons penalties for persons who knowingly

(03:14):
exposed someone else to HIV through sexual contact. Used to
be a major felony. He massively reduced the sentencing SB
one thirty two from the year twenty twenty. This bill
allows men allows men to be housed in women's prisons
on the basis of their alleged transgender identity. So we

(03:39):
have biological well, is there any other kind? We have
males living in women's prisons here in California, raping people.
There's a whole indictment that Sally Moreno, the District Attorney
of Madera County is prosecuting against a male inmate I
believe his name is Tremaine Role, who identified as a woman,

(04:03):
got housed at the Women's Correctional Facility, the women's prison
in Chowchilla. This is a California State prison in chow Chilla,
and he's being accused of raping three female inmates, three
sellies of his, one of whom he impregnated. And the

(04:25):
judge in the case was throwing a hissy fit because
the prosecutors and the victims kept referring to mister Carroll
as he or him. The judge thought this was horrible,
even though one of the whole theories of the case
is that the guy is pretending like he's transgender, pretending
like he's female. The guy clearly was just pretending so
that he could get housed in a women's prison so

(04:47):
that he could rape people. So thank you Gavin Newsom,
and thank you Scott Wiener for facilitating this horrific crime
against women. SB nine to twenty three from twenty twenty two.
Another Scott Wiener authored bill. This bill forces all medical
and health insurance personnel to attend transgender cultural competency training

(05:10):
classes over and over SB four zero seven from twenty
twenty three. This bill effectively excludes anyone who thinks transgenderism
is not a good idea from being able to serve
as a foster parent. And the maybe the Koudi Gral
one of the worst bills Scott Wiener is authored that
has become law. And all these, by the way, all

(05:33):
these bills that Scott Wiener authored, I believe all of
them came into law and were signed by Gavin Newsom.
I guess other than SB two thirty nine because I
was from twenty seventeen. I guess that was under Jerry Brown.
But here is SB three point fifty seven from twenty
twenty one. This law has been getting some more focused

(05:54):
attention in the last few weeks. This law legalized is
loitering with intent to commit prostitution. Loitering with intent to
commit prostitution. It decriminalizes it. So what does that mean? Okay,
generally speaking, if a police officers driving down the street

(06:15):
at night, if he's driving along Blackstone Avenue or somewhere
at night, and he sees someone standing on a corner
wearing stiletto heels, and not much else. Who seems to
be waving at cars that drive by, a police officer
is able to arrest that person, to detain that person
for loitering with intent to commit prostitution. Enough the signals

(06:39):
have gone off to give the police officer probable cause
that what this person is doing is prostitution. Now, the
benefit of this is not that we're trying to throw
every single prostitute in jail. I mean, if you're looking
at the order of things for how prostitution becomes a problem,

(07:05):
you would want to focus your attention more on the
johns than on the prostitutes, more on the pimps than
on the johns. The benefit, though, of being able to
detain women in that situation, is that many of them
are not free, voluntary sex workers in the full throes
of their free choice. They are being trafficked. They are

(07:29):
being forced into prostitution against their will. They could be minors.
So police having the ability to detain someone, arrest someone
for loitering with intent to commit prostitution is really critical
because it's often the only way that police can intervene

(07:52):
in the life of someone who is a victim of
sex trafficking. To get them away from their abuser, their traffic.
They're pimp anti sex trafficking organizations all up and down
the state, like breaking the chains here locally in Fresno,
and others were begging Scott Wiener not to introduce this bill.

(08:17):
We're begging Gavin Newsom not to sign it. They were ignored.
The bill was introduced by Scott Wiener, the California State
Senator from San Francisco. It was signed by Gavin Newsom
into law. What's happened since, well, there was a huge
story about this in the Loss Excuse Me in the

(08:40):
New York Times. In the New York Times magazine, they
wrote this big, long feature about it, talking about the
explosion in sex trafficking that's happened on Figaroa Avenue in
La right near the University of Southern California, where you

(09:00):
basically have an open sex slavery market with girls being
expected by their traffickers, by their pimps, some of these
girls as young as thirteen eleven years old. These girls
are being expected by their pimps to service men every
half hour in order to make whatever financial quote of

(09:20):
the pimp imposes on the women that he's trafficking and
police are hugely hindered in their ability to stop it.
Why because they can't just arrest somebody for loitering with
intent to commit prostitution. They have to wait around until
they can see or identify some higher crime being committed,

(09:45):
or the cops have to dangerously go undercover. In fact,
the New York Times magazine story, it talks about this
heroic female police officer who's twenty seven, but she's able
to pass like she's underage, standing on a corner dressed
like a prostitute in order to catch bad guys. In

(10:05):
order to catch traffickers. Scott Wiener has facilitated this. Scott
Wiener and Gavin Newsom have facilitated this. Now, Scott Wiener,
as I said, is a California state senator. However, he
just announced about a week ago he is running for
a seat in Congress. He is running to succeed Nancy Pelosi.

(10:28):
Pelosi who just announced, i think today or yesterday, just
announced that she is not going to seek reelection. Scott
Wiener is gonna run for her seat. Now, it's not
guaranteed Wiener will get this job. There's a couple of
other Democrats running, including AOC's former chief of staff and

(10:51):
who's got a lot of money on his own. And
also there's another person who's kind of seems like she's
more or in the Nancy Pelosi orbit. We're not sure
whom Nancy Pelosi will endorse, but Scott Wiener's got name recognition,
he's got financial backing. He's a very serious candidate to

(11:14):
win this. Now. I used to joke that Scott Wiener
was so despicable, so loathsome, the worst member of the
California State Legislature by far. I thought that I would
if it was a choice of if it was an

(11:35):
election between Nancy Pelosi and Scott Wiener, I would campaign
for Nancy Pelosi. That's how bad he is. That's how
much I despise. As much as I don't like Nancy
Pelosi or all her pomps or all her works, she
is a very savvy financial advent advisor. However, very savvy investor,

(11:55):
I would practically be willing to campaign for one of
the Pelosis just so that Scott Wiener would be blocked
from getting that seat in Congress. That's how much I
despise him. That's how much I low him. However, there's
a little part of me that's wondering, maybe it would
be a good thing. Maybe it would be a good

(12:17):
thing if he wins in twenty twenty six. Why to
tie him to Gavin Newsom. Gavin Newsom obviously is flush
with victory right now, having pulled off Proposition fifty in

(12:39):
less than three months. He went from threatening Donald Trump
over Twitter about redistricting in California to actually accomplishing it.
From August to now, it went from we had no
earthly idea that we were gonna have any kind of
election of any sort. Gavin Newsom introduces the measure, He

(13:00):
gets it passed with supermajorities through both houses of the
California State Legislature. Finess's California Election Law, so that we
can vote on it on in November of twenty twenty five,
which is not even an off yr election. It's an
off off year election. Nobody was voting. Nobody in California
was voting on anything. Everyone had a ballot that had

(13:23):
one issue on it, just Prop fifty. My wife was
like astonished when she saw her sample ballot. She was like, wait,
there's nothing else we're voting on. There's no other ballot initiatives.
There's no other local election. We're literally just voting on this. Yes, yes,
Honeywa're literally just voting on this. And he gets it passed.

(13:45):
He fundraises the heck out of it. He gets Democrats
from all across the country to sit down to do
commercials for it. He gets Barack Obama, he gets AOC
to cut an ad for AOC who might be his
rival in twenty twenty eight. He gets Elizabeth Warren to
cut ads for He's bringing out all the Democrat heavy
hitters from across the country. He's got his buddy Alex
Padilla doing ads, bing bang boom. Gavin Newsom gets Prop

(14:11):
fifty and now he's the darling. He's the darling of
the Democrats nationwide. He's probably delivered them as assuming Prop
fifty survives the legal challenge that David Tongapa just filed
against it, he's probably given the Democrats five extra seats
in the House, which could be decisive, that could give
control of the Chamber to the Democrats in twenty twenty six,

(14:39):
and it sets Gavin Newsom up for the ultimate prize,
the thing he's really gunning for, to win the presidency
in twenty twenty eight, when he doesn't have to run
against Donald Trump. Now my thought is knowing that his
presidential run is coming up, there's part of me actually

(15:01):
that maybe kind of hopes Scott Wiener is elected to Congress.
Why the minute Scott Wiener enters Congress, he's going to
join the list the list of the most well known
nationwide Democrat psychos in the House. The House Representatives has

(15:22):
always been a thief of the hive of scum and villainy,
as they said in Star Wars, And there have always
been colorful characters in the House. And Democrats have their
list of colorful characters that all the Republicans know and dislike.
You got Maxine Waters, you got AOC, you got Ilha
and Omar you got. You know, They've got their cast

(15:44):
of characters. And these are the kinds of people that like,
there are these different kinds of Republicans who take advantage
of this, the fact that those people have kind of
national name recognition. So you know, AOC's seat is like
a plus thirty or plus Fortymocrat registration. Etch. The reason
she's able to be so crazy is because she's in
such a safe Democrat seat. So you'll get some random

(16:07):
Republican dude. We'll see you give me money. I'm gonna
take down AOC, and you'll have people from all over
the country saying, yeah, I don't like AOC, and they'll
send the guy ten dollars. The guy will raise, like,
you know, twelve million dollars for his campaign, live high
on the hog on his campaign funds for the duration

(16:27):
of the election, and then of course not come within
a mile of challenging AOC, and those Republican donors will
have wasted all their money. Scott Wiener will launch to
the top of that list. It'll be him, AOC, Ilhanomar,
all those people, and that might give us an opportunity

(16:55):
to stop Gavin Newsom on the national stage. Because all
the crazy, evil things that Scott Wiener and has authored
in the California state legislature, none of it would have
mattered if there hadn't been a governor ready to sign
it into leads.

Speaker 2 (17:11):
This is the tremor carry show on the Valley's Power.

Speaker 1 (17:15):
Talk, because let me give you the state of affairs
what Gavin Newsom was looking at just four months ago,
four or five months ago. You know, actually, let's go
back to May. Here's what Gavin Newsom was looking at
in May. He had nothing to run on. Twenty twenty

(17:39):
five had been a disaster for Newsom up to that point.
His approval numbers were at some of his lowest that
he's had during his governorship. He started the year in
twenty twenty five with some of the worst wildfires that
we've ever seen in California, worst most destructive wildfires. By

(18:05):
the time we got to May, though, the wildfires were
done and basically local government and lost in the La
area where the wildfires had been had approved a tiny,
tiny fraction of all of the housing permits needed to
start rebuilding the houses that have been destroyed. This is
five months along Newsome. At this point. His record was

(18:30):
basically a series of things that can be recognized by
both sides of the aisle. Bipartisan failures, wildfires. Nobody likes wildfires.
We had horrible wildfires in twenty nineteen and twenty twenty
early in his governorship. We still have him in twenty

(18:50):
twenty five, the worst most destructive wildfire ever. Homelessness. Homelessness
was bad before he took office, it's worse now. And
we had the big scandal that he had spent fourteen
billion dollars in homeless on homelessness programs that had no
actual trackable metrics to even know or guess whether they

(19:13):
even worked or not. Housing continues to be a disaster
in California, where Newsome and Democrats talk about, Oh, we
need more housing, we need more housing, we need more housing,
we need to build more we need more building, we
need to build more housing. Bob blah brah brh bla
blah blah blah blah blah blah blah. But they don't
do anything to actually effectively create more housing. They have

(19:38):
one build that they pass to sort of limit the
application of SEQUA, the California Environmental Quality Act to limit
the application of SEQUA for basically urban infill residential building.
So if you have space within a city that you
want to build a multi unit dwelling on, you can

(19:59):
do that and people can't sue you with a sequel lawsuits.
So basically the way sequel works one of the worst
things Governor Reagan signed. Basically, in order to build new stuff,
you have to provide the state with an environmental impact report,
and it's really complicated, complex, expensive, difficult, time consuming to

(20:23):
write it. But then even if you do write it,
and even if the state's okay with it, any other
YAHOO can sue to try to stop your building project
on the grounds that your environmental impact report was somehow inadequate.
So this has been weaponized by all kinds of people
who don't even sincerely give a dang about the environment,

(20:46):
competing builders or environmental WACO groups, or people who just
don't want an apartment building near their house. Anyway, the
whole the state of California builds fewer houses per year
than just the Dallas Fort Worth metro area of Texas.

(21:08):
Just the Dallas Fort Worth metro area is outpacing California
in new units. The high speed rail train has exactly
as much operable track today as it does when Newsom
took office. That would be zero point zero inches. Newsom

(21:33):
caused a potential for gas prices to spike horrifically with
his environmental policies. Why well, basically, he passed laws requiring
oil refineries in California. By the way, let's remember, California
has a very specific blend of gasoline that we sell
at the pump. It's different from what other states have.

(21:55):
This means that our supply chain is sort of isolated.
We live in a basically a gas island, so if
we lose one of our refineries, we're in deep trouble.
It's not like we can just buy gas from Oklahoma
or Texas or Nevada or Arizona or something. No, we
have our own specific blend. Newsome passes a law in

(22:18):
twenty twenty four because he can't deal with the idea
that gas prices are high in California because of liberal policies.
He has to say, oh, no, it's the gas companies
are being greedy. Yes, the gas companies are greedy only
in California, not in all these other states, just California. Anyway.
He says to the gas companies, you need to maintain

(22:40):
high levels of supply coming out of your refineries so
that we don't have price spikes in the summer, to
which the oil company said, that's a really stupid idea.
That's gonna cost us more money all year round, rather
than just having our prices jump in the summer when

(23:02):
people are driving more. This is stupid. If you pass this,
we might decide to stop operating our refineries because it
costs us hundreds of millions of dollars to keep maintaining them,
and it's not gonna be worth it if we have
to jack up our prices so high. And Newsom ignores
all of their threats and does it anyway, So great job, gav.

(23:28):
Then guess what, Oh, we were staring down the barrel
of gas prices jumping to six dollars a gallon. So
Newsom in May of this year was just surrounded by failure. Oh,
and budget. The California governor introduces his budget in January,

(23:48):
and then in May he has to issue issue what
he calls the May revise, where basically, you look at
what tax revenue we actually got in after April fifteenth
tax day, and you have to adjust the budget to
fit it. Maybe we overbudgeted, maybe we under budgeted, maybe
we got it just about right. Newsome realized he had
to cut all kinds of stuff because not only do

(24:11):
we have tens of billions of dollar deficit, we are
looking down the barrel of structural deficits. What this means
is that our ongoing spending commitments are outpacing revenues. It's
not a one year thing. It's not a one time
bad year. It's a consistent state of US having over

(24:33):
committed on spending and under receiving on revenue. This forced
Newsom to roll back one of his signature accomplishments, extending
medical coverage to illegal aliens, which infuriated the left. So
look at all these problems wildfires, homelessness, not building enough

(24:59):
high speed rail, introducing and then rolling back medical for
illegal aliens. All of these have a non partisan or
bipartisan or a partisan sort of character to them. As
Newsom failures. It's not things that like Democrats love but

(25:19):
Republicans hate. It's all stuff that everybody hates. Nobody likes wildfires,
nobody likes homelessness, nobody likes you know, oh, the employement,
the EDD the California State Unemployment Division got scammed out
of thirty billion dollars approximately during COVID. Nobody likes that
that happened under his watch. So he has all these

(25:41):
problems that are bipartisan or non partisan in nature where
he could be just as open to attack from a
Democrat as from a Republican. And that's why, for the
longest time I've been ranting on my show, I don't
think Newsom can win the Democrat nomination. He's gonna get
on that debate stage on CNN or MSNBC sometime in

(26:03):
twenty twenty seven, and someone's gonna go after him really hard.
All those people are ambitious, and they're all gonna take it.
Someone's gonna take it to Gavin Newsom, and they're gonna say, listen,
you've been governor for a long time. We agree on
a lot of stuff, but you've not been a very
good governor. You haven't gotten an inch of this high
speed rail done. You keep talking about more housing, but

(26:24):
you haven't delivered. You talked about stopping wildfires and you
didn't stop the worst wildfire ever. You talk about stopping homelessness,
and homelessness just keeps getting worse under you. On and
on it. You give medical coverage to illegal aliens, then
you pull it back. You're the worst, on and on
and on, and a Democrat could say that just as
well as a Republican. But now all of that is muted.

(26:51):
Politics is a what have you done for me lately? Game?
And frankly Newsom's done something out he can shut them
all up.

Speaker 2 (27:03):
Is the Trevor carry Show on the Valley's Power.

Speaker 1 (27:06):
Talk as Tuesday with a prop fifty. I think it's
more or less sealed the deal for Gavin Newsom to
get the Democrat nomination for president right the very least.
It's I mean, obviously a lot can happen between now
and twenty twenty eight of all times, but look, Gavin
Newsom was already somewhat the leader in the clubhouse just

(27:31):
on name recognition. I think there's clearly Kamala fatigue, and
I don't know how many other Democrats really sort of
stand out, you know, I don't know how much Democrats
are getting revved up for Pete Bootage, who has basically
zero percent support among African Americans. And Democrats are not

(27:51):
going to win if they don't get good African American turnout.
That's that they need that in order to win, and
none of the other folks in the Democrats state seem
to be doing much. Now. I had long maintained as
recently as this past May, I long maintained that I
didn't really think Avin Newsom could win the nomination. Why well,

(28:12):
because he hasn't been that successful a governor, and his
failures all have this sort of non partisan character to them.
It's not just that, you know, it's not just that
he's done things Republicans don't like. He has failures that
nobody likes, and we'll dig into them more, probably in

(28:36):
the next segment. But what he's done now is finally
gotten himself a W and a W when he really
needed it. His approval among Democrats back in May was
at a real low. I mean, his California approval numbers
were doing terribly this past May when he revised, he

(28:57):
introduced his budget revisions and it turns out, oh crap,
we have to roll back our funding for medical coverage
for illegal aliens, which that just infuriated the left against him.
But now now he's got a W. Now he's giving

(29:19):
the Democrats five more seats in the House Representatives. He
might be the reason Democrats retake control of the House
Representatives in twenty twenty six. And I'll tell you what,
when those five or six new Democrat House members get
sworn in in January of twenty twenty seven, Gavin Newsom's

(29:41):
probably gonna stand right with all of them to announce
his presidential bit. And I think that win can cover
up the multitude of his failures. And that's why I
think the Scott Wiener thing is important. Scott Wiener exists
as this walking sort of loathsome reminder because of how

(30:05):
many horrible pieces of legislation Wiener is authored, of just
how radical Gavin Newsom is and while his stunts work
well in Democrat primary season, is the Trevor.

Speaker 2 (30:20):
Carry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (30:23):
Oh for a big time run for president in twenty
twenty eight. I think he is set up to win
the Democrat nomination. Why well, because one it flips the script.
His win with Prop fifty flips the script of what
had been really a string of failures and bipartisan failures. Now,
if one of his opponents for the Democrat primary, if

(30:46):
they try to say, oh you didn't handle this, well,
oh you didn't handle wildfire as well, Oh you didn't
handle homelessness, well, Newsom can just kind of pooh pooh
it and be like, hey, listen, buddy, what have you
done lately? The party a majority in the House of Representatives.
You didn't do Jack. He also has kind of muted

(31:12):
a couple of potential rivals because they were all desperate
to appear in his Yes on Prop fifty ads. AOC
was in his ads. Elizabeth Warren was in his ads.
If they start criticizing him, Gavin can just come back with, oh, well,

(31:33):
you know, you weren't so critical of me when you were,
you know, begging to be in one of my TV
ads for Prop fifty. You know, get all those eyeballs
on you. Oh you're plenty happy to have, you know,
to be friendly with me back then. Apparently you think
now I'm some bad governor, But you thought then I
was a great guy. Basically, he's muted a lot of

(31:57):
that stuff. And guess who who's impromoter. He's got not
Barack Obama. Barack Obama was front and center and all
those ads. And I still think Barack Obama's influence in
the Democratic Party is huge. I don't think Obama's going
to endorse people in the Democratic primary, but you know

(32:19):
he can make his influence known and felt. And Newsome
already had an advantage over a lot of the other nominees,
which is closeness to the Willie Brown, Nancy Pelosi magic circle,
the magic circle of big time Democrat donors, who I

(32:41):
think were a major reason why Kamala Harris was the
vice president. Look, Biden had no reason to pick her
to be his vice president other than sort of putting
himself into this corner of needing to pick an African
American woman. But the fact is a California donor class
liked her. They were pushing her. They pushed her all

(33:03):
the way to the US Senate. Everyone was yapping about, Oh,
Kamala Harris, Kamala Harris, Kamala Harris Boom. All of a sudden,
Joe Biden, who never once worked with Kamala Harris, didn't
overlap with her at all in government. She wasn't in
the Senate when he was. She only joined the Senate
after he left the vice presidency. All of a sudden,
she's in there. And the two great scions of that lineage,

(33:28):
the Willie Brown political lineage, His two great proteges have
been Kamala Harris and Gavin Newsom. So Newsom already had
a lot of those big time donors behind him. He
was recruiting more of those big time donors for Prop fifty,

(33:49):
So I think he's in really, really good shape. But
most of all, here's why Newsom won Prop fifty by
making it an anti Donald Trump campaign, long and short
of it. Every single ad you all noticed, every single
ad four Prop fifty. Who was the villain. It was

(34:09):
Donald Trump, Donald Trump attacking democracy. Donald Trump is pushing
Texas to redistrict Donald Trump, Donald Trump, Donald Trump, Donald Trump.
And that is hugely ingratiating because the one point of
unity for all Democrat voters. I don't care if you're
an AOC Democrat. I don't care if you're a Bernie
Sanders Democrat. I don't care if you're a Hillary Democrat.

(34:30):
I don't care if you're a Barack Obama Democrat. The
one point of unity is that they all hate Donald Trump.
And Newsom has a w. He's got this one w
over Trump. He was able to strike a blow against him,

(34:51):
run against him, win and nullify this Trumpian effort to
get Republicans to a aggressively redistrict. And now basically it's
going to be a wash. Basically between Republicans aggressively redistricting
and Democrats aggressively redistricting. It seems like the whole thing

(35:12):
is going to be a wash. That neither one's going
to get much of an advantage, and that helps. That's
good for the Democrats. The party out of power always
does really well in off your elections, and Trump's not
doing so hot on one issue, the one issue that
he was absolutely clabbering Biden and Harrison last year, which

(35:36):
is the economy. People aren't thrilled that, they're not really
thinking that the economy has improved all that much over
the last year, and stuff is still expensive, stuff is
still unaffordable, and it's resulting in Trump's numbers on the
economy are getting worse and worse and worse.

Speaker 2 (35:56):
The assisted tremor carry show on the Valley's powers
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I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Ruthie's Table 4

Ruthie's Table 4

For more than 30 years The River Cafe in London, has been the home-from-home of artists, architects, designers, actors, collectors, writers, activists, and politicians. Michael Caine, Glenn Close, JJ Abrams, Steve McQueen, Victoria and David Beckham, and Lily Allen, are just some of the people who love to call The River Cafe home. On River Cafe Table 4, Rogers sits down with her customers—who have become friends—to talk about food memories. Table 4 explores how food impacts every aspect of our lives. “Foods is politics, food is cultural, food is how you express love, food is about your heritage, it defines who you and who you want to be,” says Rogers. Each week, Rogers invites her guest to reminisce about family suppers and first dates, what they cook, how they eat when performing, the restaurants they choose, and what food they seek when they need comfort. And to punctuate each episode of Table 4, guests such as Ralph Fiennes, Emily Blunt, and Alfonso Cuarón, read their favourite recipe from one of the best-selling River Cafe cookbooks. Table 4 itself, is situated near The River Cafe’s open kitchen, close to the bright pink wood-fired oven and next to the glossy yellow pass, where Ruthie oversees the restaurant. You are invited to take a seat at this intimate table and join the conversation. For more information, recipes, and ingredients, go to https://shoptherivercafe.co.uk/ Web: https://rivercafe.co.uk/ Instagram: www.instagram.com/therivercafelondon/ Facebook: https://en-gb.facebook.com/therivercafelondon/ For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iheartradio app, apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

The Joe Rogan Experience

The Joe Rogan Experience

The official podcast of comedian Joe Rogan.

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