All Episodes

August 5, 2025 34 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
When the takedown happened, I went, ha, the power of
my phone called a law enforcement made it happen. I
can't imagine making the call that you have the kind
of power that can move two nuclear subs around the world,
that commander in chief power. That's why it's so important

(00:20):
that the person we have in there has the right mind, temperament,
and soul and connection with the creator. The power of
the commander in chief of the United States or any
of these other countries around the world that have nuclear weapons.
You have the power to melt people. You know, it's

(00:45):
almost well, yeah, we don't like to talk about death,
do we. You bring up here's how I want to
be buried. Oh, why don't you have to bring that quid?
Don't We don't like talking about death, and we really
rarely really have conversation. Is about all these weapons that
have been created that could wipe us all out and

(01:06):
those that were left that survived, you'd be wiped out
over a time period from the radiation. And the thread
is there, and it's there every night. You don't think
right here in the Central Valley with the food, the agriculture,
Oh yeah, after the nuclear silos and military bases. Well,

(01:31):
we're probably right up there with them, the bread basket
of America. They'd want to melt the entire valley. Nine
days ago, President Trump reduced the fifty day ultimatum to
ten to twelve days for Russia to stop bombing Ukraine
and come to the table, the negotiating table. Six days ago,

(01:53):
Dmitri Medvedad, You I remember him. He's former Russian president.
He was he issould a statement that Trump's ultimate game
Moscow amounts to a threat to Russia and pushes the
United States itself closer to war. Each new ultimatum the
now Deputy Chief of Security Council the Russian Federation set

(02:14):
as a threat and a step towards war. And then
he tagged it up. He had to throw this in there,
not between Russia and Ukraine, but with his own country,
meaning President Trump's own country. This means your country, my country,
the United States of America. President Trump responded, Hey, highly

(02:38):
provocative statement. I've ordered two nuclear submarines to be positioned
in the appropriate region just in case. These foolish and
inflammatory statements are more than just that. Words are very
important and could often lead to unintended consequences. I hope
this will not be one of those instances. Thank you

(02:59):
for your attention to this matter. Exclamation point from the
President and Commander in Chief of the United States Donald J.
Trump to the Russians. What did Putin have to say? Back?
I read East in the bottom. In order to approach

(03:19):
the issue peacefully, it is necessary to conduct detailed conversations
and not in public. This must be done calmly, in
the quiet of the negotiation process. All right, momentary pause,
allergy sneeze. Thank you for the blessing. And it looks

(03:43):
like Putin kind of calming it down a little bit.
Little Putin's upset and rightfully so. Did I just say that?

Speaker 2 (03:49):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (03:51):
And let me let me rephrase that this way. Would
America be upset if Russia had been in Mexico, if
Russia had bases in Canada, if Russia had bases in Cuba. Oh,
we did get upset, remember Cuba. Yeah, right around our

(04:13):
country getting closer and closer. NATO was set up at
the end of World War Two to make sure that
Western nations could come together and have a mutual defense
against the Soviet Eastern Bloc expansion that was going on.
That was called the Cold War. The Cold War is

(04:34):
still going on. It's cold in Finland. Finland's now in NATO,
it's cold in Ukraine. Putin didn't want Ukraine to become
part of NATO. This is a quote from George Keenan
on NATO in nineteen ninety eight. He said, I think
it's the beginning of a new Cold War. I think
the Russians will gradually react and it will affect their policies.

(04:55):
I think it's a tragic mistake. There was no reason
for this whatsoever. No one was striting anybody else. This
expansion would make the founding fathers of this country turn
over in their graves. And that was in nineteen ninety
eight talking about the expansion of NATO. It is in
my opinion again not trained on foreign policy, never been

(05:21):
to a military school, but I think NATO's kind of
outlived what it was made for. Let Europe defend themselves,
let them negotiate themselves, let them rely on their own money.
I go, we're thirty seven trillion in debt. What don't
we worry about conditions on the other side of the world.

(05:43):
Easyron Paul, I know my Ron Paul's coming out not
an isolationist. But I'm also not against pulling in and defending.
Pull in and defend. It's a lot cheaper, a lot cheaper.
And if Europe needs help, ask for it, and let's
let our representatives in Congress vote on that help. And

(06:06):
I don't want if somebody in NATO country's attacked, I
don't know. I don't want American blood to spill. If
if we want to go to war, Congress will enact
and act of war, and then those representatives have to
come back to their to their meetings, back in their
home districts and have to face the grieving mother who
someone or daughter was killed in the war. That's how,

(06:28):
that's how it's supposed to be done. Not because Article
whatever of NATO whatever that we signed back and whenever
says that now we gotta go over. No, there's too
many idiots to control the nations these days. There's too
many global globalists, Luciferians, you know, going to their jaguar parties.

(06:53):
Oh look it's Dylan Milvany. Nice to meet you, Prime Minister.
Oh okay, yeah too, mey weirdos man. No, I don't
want their decisions to get an affect at the United
States military, and I am still hopeful. I was hopeful.
I'm still hopeful. I hope President Trump would just order
the United States of America out of NATO, but I

(07:14):
don't know if that's going to happen. He's making NATO
pay their fair share, which is a good kick. But
I don't know if anybody heard about. Let's see, two
days ago August second, Russian special forces reportedly captured three
senior British military personnel on a raid in Ukraine. There
was a colonel and a lieutenant. Two of the three

(07:34):
have been named a British British Ministry a defense official
with prior Middle Eastern deployment was a lieutenant. A British
Army psychological operations specialist was the colonel. Russian sources claimed
they were involved in coordinating dron and missile strikes against
Russian positions, but in all due fine fashion, the UK

(07:57):
Foreign Office denied this. The men were in Ukraine for
tourism purposes. Come on, come on with something better than that.
Say they were cryptocurrency guys over there trying to make
a score or something. You know, Oh, yeah, the old
UK vacation package. Well no, they call it on holiday. Yes,

(08:21):
on holiday. I learned that from locked up abroad. But yeah,
so the UK Foreign Office said they're on a what
a thirty one day, thirty night stay at the front line. Yeah,
that's not a holiday tour. I have to say, would
Foreign Policy and Trump two point zero, I am pleased.

(08:42):
I'm not let down. I am pleased what he did
with Iran. I didn't know how that was going to
end up. Man, None of us knew how that was
going to end up. I'm sure there were a lot
of people behind General Patton that said, we don't know
how this is going to end up, but go ahead,
we trust you. That's kind of how I felt with that.

(09:02):
And he's making some big changes and in the six months,
the kind of changes he's made, we can put politically
is overnight changes, and not only in the country, in
the world. And it's really amazing he's been able to
accomplish so much when there are so many Luciferian snakes

(09:24):
hissing in the grass. Surely been noever US president ever,
I would say, that has faced this kind of organized resistance. Well, yeah,
let's go all the way to organize treason that this
president has had to face in just these six months.

(09:48):
I knew there would be organized outrage from the left.
I knew there would be organized outrage from non governmental organizations,
you know. I knew there'd be outrage from the Sorosos
of the world and the Morning bress on MSN. I
don't think I heard too many people in the know
of the know say that we were going to face
what we faced from the judicial side of things. Didn't

(10:12):
see those kind of quote roagueblocks coming like they have,
but the speed of trump Man hit them like a whirlwind.
They didn't know what to do. And you want to
talk about chaos, and can you imagine coming into a
job as the president of the United States. And I

(10:33):
talked to Matt Boyle Bright part at three thirty podcasts available,
But I said, what's the difference between Trump one point
oh and Trump two point over the organization? He said,
I don't want to put down one point zero, but
two point zero is on point. And they're going to
have to be because if they want to be the
FAA up in the control tower and they want to
look down at on the tarmac or the runway of

(10:57):
everything that is waiting to take off or investigation for
hopeful justice in the end. I mean, Russian collusion is
being cleared for takeoff right now, but seth Rich murderer
is still back at the gate. Impeachment one and two,
back at the gate. We hadn't moved into twenty twenty
election fraud. We're still in twenty sixteen and seventeen attempted

(11:22):
assassination one and two, still back at the gate. We
got COVID gain of function, still back at the gate.
The Biden laptop. I don't even know if we sell
any tickets or that flight yet. Epstein investigation, it's pulled
away from the gate. Yeah, it's taxing out to the tarmac.

(11:43):
It's taxing. The Auto pen investigation. Who was running the
country when Bill Beck better Biden was in there. Now
they're still trying to find a pilot for that flight.
We haven't gotten the tickets ready for that. The unlawful
spying on Americans with FAISA. I don't even know if
that's a destination in the airport yet. So there's a

(12:03):
lot to take off, and our country is still very
much on edge. We're thirty seven trillion in debt. I mean,
politics is nuclear hot. Our culture, we're at the crossroads.
You have people like me saying, if it's going to

(12:24):
be real and you're gonna get some justice, you're gonna
have to have military tribunals. I say, that's the US
on the edge with this deep state and these activist
judges blocking it. I don't know what the Trump administration
is going to do if they got a plan to
go full scorched Earth on this, because twenty twenty and

(12:45):
what happened there, that still could be one of the
biggest nukes that goes off. And I'm not one of
the trust the plan guys. I don't you know. Just wait,
President Trump knows knows what he's doing. He didn't know
what he was doing by telling a large number of
his supporters that he done one our support for being
too pushy on the Epstein issue. I did not like that,

(13:10):
but I do like everything else that's going on, and
it seems like Americans across the country do as well.

Speaker 3 (13:16):
Donald Trump administration is arguably the most influential this century
and probably as well dating back a good portion of
the last century as well.

Speaker 1 (13:25):
Wow, this century portional last century as well influential as
the president of the United States, and that's coming from CNN.
So things can't be.

Speaker 3 (13:35):
That bad, right, love it like it lumpet. Trump is
remaking in the United States of America. Let's talk about
taris first, Right, there's all this talk that Donald Trump
always chickens out when it comes to tarris.

Speaker 4 (13:46):
Uh uh no tacos for Trump.

Speaker 3 (13:48):
The effective tariff rate, get this, it's eighteen percent, the highest,
the highest since the fd R administration in the nineteen thirties,
up from get this, just two percent last year, From
just two percent last year. We're talking about a level,
an effective tariffraith level.

Speaker 4 (14:03):
Get this, nine times as high this year than last year.

Speaker 1 (14:07):
Well, you brought up tacos, and America has to be
upset about immigration, correct, I mean that's a given. I
watched the news.

Speaker 3 (14:13):
But it is not just on tariffs, which of course
Donald Trump ran on, in which you're seeing a tremendously
influential presidency.

Speaker 4 (14:20):
What about immigration.

Speaker 3 (14:21):
Of course Trump ran and has always run on a
very hawkish immigration platform.

Speaker 4 (14:26):
Get this.

Speaker 3 (14:26):
Twenty twenty five net migration in the United States down
at least sixty percent from last year. In fact, we
may be heading for the first time and at least
fifty years in which we have negative.

Speaker 1 (14:38):
Negative fifty years. Get this, Get this, get this net migration.

Speaker 3 (14:44):
And last year, of course, in twenty twenty four, the
net migration in the US was two point eight million.
This year we might be talking about negative net migracious,
my goodness, gracious. Now, of course this is part of
a larger story. As I was mentioning, we're talking about immigration, migration,
we're talking about the effective tariff rate.

Speaker 1 (15:02):
That's Harry on CNN. He sounds like he's some Jersey
but he throws out those My goodness, gracious, sounds like
he's from Birmingham or Memphis or something like that.

Speaker 4 (15:10):
But how is.

Speaker 1 (15:11):
President Trump getting it done so quickly?

Speaker 3 (15:14):
But get this, How is Donald Trump doing it well?
He is signing a ton of executive orders. Get this,
one hundred and eighty, the most in a year since
Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Oh, my goodness, you have to go
back to the first half of the twentieth century, the
last century, And to make a comparison, Joe Biden signed
get this, just seventy seven during his entire first year,

(15:35):
and we're only a little bit in August so far,
and Donald Trump making history with one hundred and eighty,
one hundred and eighty executive orders signed so far this year.
So that's why I said that, in my mind, Donald
Trump is the most influential president of this century and
probably dating back a good portion of the last century.

Speaker 4 (15:52):
That is because he is remaking.

Speaker 3 (15:54):
The country in terms of tariffs, he is remaking the
country in terms of net migration, and he is remaking
the country in terms of how much policy changes he's
putting through in executive orders. As I said, it truly
is history making. Love it, like it or lump it.

Speaker 2 (16:09):
Well, this is a good one. Is everybody listening.

Speaker 4 (16:13):
This is the Trevor Cherry Show, Condom Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (16:18):
So say, we've had a really mild summer so far,
I'll say kind of easy again, it's been what, Oh,
it's been the most mild since two thousand and one.
You saw something on that good good, Well look at that.
So it wasn't a pigment of my non sweaty imagination.

(16:39):
I was listening to a podcast Mike bens b and Z.
He was going over Epstein's life and what's publicly known
and archived about the guy. In nineteen eighty seven, Epstein
gave an interview. He said one of his top clients
was ad Non Koshagi Koshogi, CIA middleman between the US
and Israel. Going back to Iran contra. You know when

(17:04):
Oliver North would be asked something in his attorney would
go into his ear and then Oliver North would say,
I don't recall all of that. I don't recall I
ran contra. Well, this guy ad Non was an arms runner,

(17:24):
one of the top commission agents of Lockey, Martin and Raytheon,
one of the world's largest arm runners. And Epstein said
the guy was one of his top clients. He handled
his money to invest it right. Well, we know CIA
during an Iran contra they were running drugs. We know

(17:45):
that that's a fact, man. We know that all the
San Jose Mercury News reports that came out on that.
We know that they were trying to get cash to
fund in illegal war. The Southern air Transport, the CIA Airline,
all of this is public and knowledge. In nineteen ninety four,
Epstein negotiates the transfer a Southern air transport, that very

(18:08):
CIA Airline to move from Miami to Columbus, Ohio, where
Epstein was given this big giant townhouse up there as well.
This is a backscery again on Epstein and when Epstein
bought little Saint James Island and all this property down
in the Virgin Islands, Southern air Transport, the CIA airline

(18:29):
that was the airline that funneled the money for Iran Contra,
they at the same time moved to US Virgin Islands
and then they would funnel money to Swiss and Panamanian
bank accounts. Very interesting, all of this. I could go
on forever about all this, and I can't because Girarti's
coming up at six here. But and uncovering all the

(18:51):
dirty deeds done dirt cheap. I'm going to say, Telsea,
Gabbard and the DNI they've uncovered in a few months
more than Durham did and is his sold lifetime. There's
a lot coming out about this. And let's remember the playbook.
Never forget the playbook. It doesn't matter if the playbook

(19:12):
was during the Obama administration, during a Biden administration, during
George Floyd, during Trump one point zero. The playbook goes
all the way back to the nineteen hundred and sixties.
Sala Lensky's Rules for Radicals, the book that he dedicated
to Satan.

Speaker 5 (19:32):
I don't care if you think I'm Satan reincarnated.

Speaker 1 (19:37):
Hillary dedicated her senior thesis to Sala Lynsky, the man
that wrote Rules for radicals and dedicated his book to
Biels above. So that makes Hillary one step away from Satan.
Here's the rules. I'm just going to read them real quick.
Power is not only what you have, but what you
think your enemy thinks you have. Number two. Never go

(19:58):
outside the experience of your Peopleumber three. Whenever possible, go
outside of the experience of the enemy. Number four. Make
the enemy live up to its own book of rules.
Number five ridicule. This man's most potent weapon. There is
no defense. It's almost impossible to counterattack. Ridicule. Also, it
infuriates the opposition, who then react to your advantage. It's ah, yeah,

(20:23):
there you go, that's right. Ridicule. Number six. A good
tactic is one your people enjoy. Number seven. A tactic
that drags on too long becomes a drag, So maybe
they need to get off the drag. Transvestites. Number eight.
Keep the pressure on Number nine. The threats usually more
terrifying than thing itself. Number ten. The major premise for

(20:44):
a tactics is the development of operations that will maintain
a constant pressure upon the opposition, and you wonder why
they don't give up. Just constant number eleven. If you
push a negative heart and deep enough, it'll break through
its counter site. This is based on the principle that
every positive has its negative number twelve. The price of

(21:04):
a successful attack is a constructive alternative number thirteen. Pick
the target, freeze it, personalize it, and polarize it well.
Hillary is one step away from satan. Is that fair
to say?

Speaker 2 (21:24):
It depends upon what the meaning of the word is.

Speaker 1 (21:28):
I agree, Bill the assistant Trevor Cherry show on the
Valley's Power Talk and iHeart wants to think of teacher
power by donors choose. What you need to do is
nominate your favorite teacher at iHeartRadio dot com slash teachers.
I think back to mister Roberts in high school. He
was an English teacher and I knew, man, you messed

(21:50):
up one word, you would get an F. That word
was a lot. If you put it as one word alot,
you got an F rate the a from the l
uh space lot. He is a great teacher and a lot.
Do nominate one of your public school teachers that's gone
above and beyond. You can win five thousand dollars in

(22:13):
their classroom to put in whatever they need. As well. Locally,
we are honoring teacher Eugena Rose at Alexander Hamilton's School.
People that know Miss Rose there she goes above and beyond,
not for the students, but even for her the teachers
she works with. They say she doesn't think twice when
somebody's in need of something. I tell these teachers it's

(22:36):
an extra gift that you have when your feet hit
the floor each morning to go take care of these kids.
If you know of one of those out there, nominate
them at iHeartRadio dot com slash teachers. John Fetterman teaching
us a thing or two about He said his party,
the Democrats, are wrong, and that Trump's tariffs appear to

(22:57):
be working. Nothing wrong inmitting when you're wrong. Did anybody
notice that any of you Democrats? Notice something? Recently? Many
Republicans when President Trump said, hey, I don't want your
support this epscent thing, leave it alone. No, they stood up.
We don't go lock and step. We're not a cult.

(23:20):
We're not like the Manson family and Squeaky from that
were in our parking lot. Last week on Terraffs, Betterman said,
it appears a lot of people who doubted Trump might
have been wrong good and that's true. Bill Maher even
admitting that he was wrong about it. And guess what
under build back better with Biden? If he had everything

(23:41):
he said that I said he was going to be
wrong about doing. If he were correct and things turned
around and got good, I'd say, yeah, I was wrong
about that. That basement boy sat down there and did
create this, build back better. I was wrong to say
that we got to tear everything down to build back better.
Now he tore, he tore he a lot down. We've

(24:04):
seen now this movement from the left. I don't know
who their leader is. Kamala was asked by Colbert the
guy loses forty million a year as the lady that
lost one point three billion in one hundred and seven
days for her wisdom, Kamala, Kamala Harris couldn't even name
who the leader of the Democrat Party is. Oh boy,

(24:29):
they're loving that New York City Commy.

Speaker 4 (24:33):
Zorn.

Speaker 1 (24:36):
Listen to Morning Breath Joe Scarborough on with Senator prison
Warden Senator Elizabeth Warren. They love them some New York Commies.

Speaker 2 (24:44):
How was this not a unifying message, not just for
Democrats but for everybody in the working class, in the
middle class.

Speaker 4 (24:51):
You got it, Joe, it is.

Speaker 5 (24:53):
And in fact, that's the mayoral race right now in
New York City.

Speaker 4 (24:58):
That's zorro on, mom, Donnie.

Speaker 5 (25:00):
How does this young guy come in, doesn't have the
money to spend that Cuomo has, doesn't have the position
that Adams has, doesn't have the backing of the billionaires.
How does that work? He comes in and he talks
about how to make New York City affordable for families.

Speaker 1 (25:18):
Yeah, we're gonna give away free things. It's worked in
every socialist, communist country. We're going to level the playing field.
So the guy at Park Avenue is making the same
as the guy down on the New Jersey Dock. I
guess I should say the New York doc since we're
talking New York City here, right, We're gonna eaven it
all out. Man. It's going to do free this giveaway
free transvestite surgeries. And he's going to help all the

(25:43):
young families that just can't make it in New York City.
They can't do it. How did that happen? Elizabeth Democrat rule,
Democrat policy, all the fine hotels flooded with illegal from
your party, saying surge, surge. Oh, but she cares, Pocahontas,

(26:08):
cares about the young families and their wigwams.

Speaker 5 (26:10):
Yes, and he says, we got to talk about housing,
we got to talk about the price of groceries, and
we got to talk about childcare because without those young families,
families who are trying to make it, people can up
make it in New York City unless they're rich. And
he wants to make this city work for working people.
And that's what it's all about. That's why I think

(26:32):
this race in New York City is so important. Because
Zoron managed to win by talking about affordability. Democrats across
this country will win by talking about affordability and then,
and here's the key, not just talking about it, delivering
on it.

Speaker 1 (26:50):
Yeah, guys, it's not friends anymore. This is a sitty
old woman Democrat, Senator Elizabeth Warren going along with the
the leftist Marxist communists now, the ones that were out
with their anti semitism on the campuses. Bill Maher. He
gets a lot of credit, doesn't he, for saying things

(27:12):
that we found his common sense our whole lives and
especially in the last ten years. But one of the
former whacked out libs out there says something with common sense,
we have to applaud them. Here's Bill Maher talking about
how these well, these young Democrats love comedies.

Speaker 6 (27:31):
What about the younger people in your party though? How
are you going to get them to understand? No matter
how many times people like Jamie and I say to them,
it's the world is a complicated place and it's not
just about oppressor and oppress. They have a thought in
their head that white people did some very bad things,
and white people did some very bad things, and they're
all calm, but so did everybody else.

Speaker 1 (27:52):
In the world, thank you.

Speaker 6 (27:53):
But they don't know that. They just see the world
through this one prism. And until they do, I don't
think you're going to get them off this issue. And
I don't think the Democratic Party is going to be
able to go forward until they make a decision. Whose
side do you on here? Are you on the side
of Western civilization and Western values or are you on
the side of the terrorists? Are you with those kids?
Because you know Mendami, he's the perfect candidate for them, Yep,

(28:17):
that's what they think is cool. I mean, that's what
the campus protests were. So I just be curious what
you say in our last minute that we have. How
does the Democratic Party address your younger people, because there's
the energy of the party.

Speaker 1 (28:30):
Well, they keep dropping in the polls with the voters
in the party.

Speaker 4 (28:34):
That's an applause line.

Speaker 1 (28:35):
Yes, the youngies love them Commies and Senator Elizabeth Warren
gone along with it. I'm sure Pelosi you'll be given
old Zorana a thumbs up. But you know what we
have to fear now. And I really thought about this
over the weekend. It's Kamala Harris now being on the outside. Wow,

(28:57):
the damage that she can do to the constitution of
the United States being on the outside. She's not gonna
do anything. I again, I'm going to see NNS nineteen
thirty eight. Price shed he's one of those announcers sounding guys.
Harry ented he she wants to work on the outside.

Speaker 3 (29:20):
I can't possibly believe that someone who was Attorney General
for a good period of time, the United States senator
for a good period of time, and then vice president
for four years and then ran for president all of
a sudden believes that the best way to solve it
is from being outside the system. Oh, police, not a
chance on God's green Earth that.

Speaker 4 (29:37):
That's necessarily the case.

Speaker 3 (29:39):
What's probably going on is she saw what the polling
numbers were, perhaps for her running for governor of California.

Speaker 1 (29:45):
Yeah, she saw it. She obsessed on it. Doug had
a talker down off the roof of the garage out back.
Let's go look at the numbers.

Speaker 4 (29:56):
The numbers, Kamala Kamala Harris numbers.

Speaker 3 (30:00):
Yes, she has left open the idea that maybe she
could run in twenty twenty eight for the Democratic nomination.
But I'll tell you, Abby, I've looked at those numbers.
She would be the weakest front runner since nineteen hundred
and ninety two.

Speaker 4 (30:11):
So the bottom line is this, she.

Speaker 3 (30:13):
Is looking at the numbers, she knows what's cooking, and
then all of a sudden, you know what, Actually, this
lifelong politician, I want to be outside.

Speaker 4 (30:19):
This isn't give me a break. This is the Trevor
Jerry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.

Speaker 1 (30:25):
All right, let's go, let's count them down. Trevor Carey
soundtrack of Insanity Number three. Susan Glasser with the Republicans
have well, we've lost our souls. Here she was and
in miss NBC.

Speaker 7 (30:38):
You know, these are people who've lost their souls, and
you know, ultimately it's for a political power that may
or may not last more than you know, two or
four years. And you got to ask, you know, was
it really worth it for them?

Speaker 1 (30:51):
Yeah? Giving it all up, losing our souls, selling ourselves
away like that, you know, trying to protect baby souls
in the Constitution of the United States. Two good old
Chuck Todd, Well, he's on point with the First Amendment.

Speaker 2 (31:06):
Brendan Karr at the SEC who has now decided to
just blow up the First Amendment and it made CBS
state TV. The restrictions have been put on CBS now
make it state television. But he wants a bias monitor. Well,
bias through whose prison is CBS? Is he going to

(31:27):
look out to make your CBS does a percentage of
programming that's communist, a percentage of programming that's fascist, a
percentage of programming that's MAGA, A percentage of programming that's progressive,
A percentage of programming that is quote centrist, that is
not Who's what what are his qualifications.

Speaker 1 (31:47):
Former anchor of Meet the Press on NBC Now with
this podcast. So thought I'd played out there so you
get a few more ears on Chuck's podcast. Here's the
EXCBS anchor. We were, remember her Mari Povitch's wife. Actually
she he was Connie Chung's husband. Yeah. Here she was

(32:11):
on seeing in New Central. Boy. This is a good one.
Come on, Hannity, come on there, gut Feld, come on Waters.
You all need ankle monitors.

Speaker 8 (32:24):
I think they should be putting Uh what's the name
of that ankle bracelets?

Speaker 1 (32:30):
Yes, on.

Speaker 8 (32:33):
Anchor ankle an.

Speaker 1 (32:37):
We got ankle monitors.

Speaker 8 (32:39):
On certain anchors at certain cable stations in prime time.

Speaker 1 (32:47):
Those are the breath the lyser This is Psycho, still
being Psycho. Okay, ankle brace the things on their feet.
Woo doggy. This is a great story, guys. The Portland Pickles.

(33:08):
They had a fan day and they let a fan
come up and get it at bat and play in
the game for an ending or two. Listen to how
it went here.

Speaker 4 (33:15):
This is our lucky fan.

Speaker 1 (33:17):
He gets a walk. Got match night.

Speaker 4 (33:20):
Dixie.

Speaker 1 (33:22):
Dixie knows how to get a crowd going.

Speaker 4 (33:27):
Pat you on the way to Dixie up.

Speaker 2 (33:29):
Ball four and then is quite the backflips? Want you
swung on a fantasy?

Speaker 4 (33:35):
Guys, why would you lie?

Speaker 1 (33:39):
Slid into second? Safely? Come fine? Swung on in a
line in the left front up. Dixie came in to
score much all right? So he walked toll second, made
a good play in the outfield out.

Speaker 6 (33:55):
To Dixie, are you shooting?

Speaker 1 (34:00):
He caught the ball overreaction. This guy had to be
about twenty years old. Then he comes up to bat,

(34:22):
Oh my bord overreaction. But the fan hit a home run.

Speaker 4 (34:26):
This sister. Trevor Kerry show London Valley's Power Talk
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Fudd Around And Find Out

Fudd Around And Find Out

UConn basketball star Azzi Fudd brings her championship swag to iHeart Women’s Sports with Fudd Around and Find Out, a weekly podcast that takes fans along for the ride as Azzi spends her final year of college trying to reclaim the National Championship and prepare to be a first round WNBA draft pick. Ever wonder what it’s like to be a world-class athlete in the public spotlight while still managing schoolwork, friendships and family time? It’s time to Fudd Around and Find Out!

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

The Breakfast Club

The Breakfast Club

The World's Most Dangerous Morning Show, The Breakfast Club, With DJ Envy, Jess Hilarious, And Charlamagne Tha God!

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.