Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:11):
The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
Give him a Nobel Peace Prize, damn it, he really
wants one. And I will say, while the economy is
what drives our voters historically, if and there's always an if,
(00:39):
there is peace in the Middle East, there is no
doubt that this will be Trump's greatest achievement, no doubt whatsoever.
So yeah, give him a damn Nobel Peace Prize. Stop
your bitching and moaning. He did something that no other
president really made a great effort outside of Clinton, could do,
(01:12):
and it's amazing. You cannot say it's all this is
pretty good or yeah, no because I saw some No,
this is effing huge, huge. Now it's the beginning of
a long process, but a process that wouldn't have gotten
(01:33):
here had Trump not looked BBI if you will, in
the eyes and told him you're going to take the
damn win. Everybody's over it. We're bringing everybody in. We're
going to sort this out. Enough is uh enough.
Speaker 3 (01:52):
I may go there sometime towards the end of the week,
maybe on Sunday actually, and we'll see, but there's a
very good chance to Negotiations are going along very well.
Speaker 2 (02:07):
That was him yesterday in his big Antifa roundtable, when
little Marco came up and whispered in his ear, sweet nothing, No,
he didn't. He said, we're getting really close. You may
have to go there. You may have to go there.
They are celebrating in Israel. They're celebrating in Gaza. This
(02:30):
is here, freaking historic.
Speaker 4 (02:33):
It looks like President Trump has actually pulled off something
here that many presidents before him have failed to do.
I think if this leads to something like a viable,
independent Palestinian state, then that will have been the crowning achievement,
(02:54):
arguably of President Trump's presidency.
Speaker 2 (02:56):
Not arguably. Again, what drives us is our economy, right,
That's what drives us as voters, as people that that's us,
that's our world. That's what drives us when we go
to the polls. There is no doubt about that. And
I have said domestically that drives us, and domestically his
biggest achievement may be the Supreme Court. But when it
(03:21):
comes to taking a step back and going, oh, let's
take a look at the history books, you cannot deny
how big this is. Not just for Israel. By the way,
I get a lot of blowback from my stance on
(03:45):
the conflict. Mostly, if not all, of it based though
on several people from BB down inside of the cabinet
and the way that they've acted. And I've been so
loud about it because I care enough about Israel that
(04:08):
I want Israel to not only succeed, but to do
it in a way where you won the battle and
the war and you're not a pariah. And that's what
they had become. They had shed support globally, and Trump
saw that. Trump heard from the base. He saw that
(04:31):
he realized that endless battle's going on here and BB
leading us chasing things. That's not a when America doesn't
want that and you're not winning. I got tons of blowback.
I was fine with that. I kept telling everybody, you
(04:52):
know what, you give them what they want. I'm going
to try to give them what they need. And that's
what Trump did. He said, you guys need this, take
the effing win.
Speaker 4 (05:02):
Scenes of jubilation, of relief. Finally, hope realize we're here
two days ago when we were talking about the anniversary
of the war, and there was still so many doubts.
In two years since this terrible war began, Palestinians and
Israelis can finally dare hope that their long nightmare is
coming to an end.
Speaker 2 (05:21):
And I think we all want that, we absolutely do. So.
The celebrations throughout Israel are huge. What about Gaza.
Speaker 4 (05:29):
As for Garzens some celebrations, but this morning the bombing
by Israel has not stopped, with plumes of smoke from
artillery and tank fire. As Desbert Garzans hope to return
to what's left of their home.
Speaker 2 (05:43):
And for the children of.
Speaker 4 (05:44):
Gaza, we've talked about so much, so many hungry and starving.
Their nightmare won't be over until the gates open and
the aid comes in.
Speaker 2 (05:53):
Now, there's still some stuff to be worked out. One
of those things is the cabinet itself Israel. They've got
a vote on this thing. And Ben Gevere as well
as Smodrich, he's the finance minister who's been so loud
about this. They were not thrilled by the process. They
were not thrilled with the take it or leave it
(06:15):
kind of thing with Trump. But I think they don't
really have a choice.
Speaker 4 (06:22):
Well expectedly use really government to ratify the deals. I mean,
then will the gun stop firing and the window opens
for the release of hostages, But there are still doubts
and concerns, and many details of the final deal have
not been resolved, or at least whether hamass will Disarmine.
Who's going to run Gaza.
Speaker 2 (06:39):
Who's going to run Gaza is Palestinians, But who's going
to help them get there in a real way, It's
going to be everybody at this point in time, everybody
who's involved in this. It is going to be a
coalition that will get them back on their feet, give
them hope, but in power them to lead their country forward,
(07:05):
and that everybody has a role in the rebuild of
their country. So this is going to be a very
interesting thing because as much as we talk about that,
Israel is still going to play a big role and
there is no trust there understandable. And it doesn't mean
that this is going to go super smooth all the way.
(07:28):
There's a lot still to be worked out. But the
fact that we're here is massive. It is huge. You
cannot overstate this how big the potential of this is.
I'm fifty four and the Middle East has been a
giant cluster since I was born and before that, and
(07:52):
are we moving to something that many people thought we
would never see and willness inspire others who live in
nations close to Palestine in Israel, who have their issues,
who d Hesbalah to maybe move forward and say, all right,
we don't we don't want to do this anymore. We
will see, we will see. It's the beginning, but it's
(08:14):
the beginning optimistically cautious, yes, but optimistically of something huge.
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chadmnton shows your ex your Insta, YouTube and more.
Will have more of this throughout the day. Meanwhile, back
at home, well, you you know it. You know what's
(08:37):
going on. Not a lot. Now it's time for ninety
seconds of government shutdown talk ninety seconds. Here we go
on your market set. What are you guys doing.
Speaker 5 (08:48):
Democrats say that they are trying to protect Americans' healthcare.
They refuse to budge on this until Republicans agree to
extend those expiring Obamacare subsidies so that healthcare premiums don't
rise for millions of Americans. On the other hand, Republicans say,
we're not going to talk while the government is shut down.
Speaker 2 (09:06):
So we're still here, still no government open up. It's
a weird situation where we kind of talk about it,
not as much as you know, like I said, I
give it ninety seconds, not as much as we have
in the past at these things because they're so ridiculous. Usually, also,
(09:26):
nobody seems to care. Outside of what has happened with
the travel issues in a few places, nobody's really paying
any attention to it. The latest polls say one in
three people had no idea the government was closed. What
does that say about us? Huh? Do tell what does
(09:47):
it say? I think it says, Uh, We've got our
priorities in the right place. Speaking of priorities, the National
Guard going into these cities not a priority. Shouldn't happen. Sorry,
some of you out there who want smaller government and
less overreach seemed to think that it's okay because it
(10:08):
is fighting crime, which is not what our military is about.
And Trump is he going to do it or is
he not going to do I don't think he's going
to invoke the I word, but you never know.
Speaker 6 (10:23):
After weeks of clashes that local officials in Chicago accuse
ICE agents of using excessive force. This video showing agents
shooting protesters with pepperballs, striking a Presbyterian minister in the head.
President Trump is now threatening to invoke the Insurrection Act,
a nineteenth century law allowing him to mobilize troops to
aid domestic law enforcement.
Speaker 1 (10:45):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (10:45):
No, is the best way to describe that. Do not
do it. Even you're getting more and more Republicans coming
out saying, no, I am not for this. They're not
there to fight crime. I'm sorry, and you're it is.
It is theater with some authoritarianism, and we don't need that.
(11:08):
You got a big win, the biggest win potentially with
all that is going on with Israel and Hamas. This
you can't. You just can't. It is not needed. It
is not and not to fight crime. That's the frustration
of him, right, mercurial, infuriating and at times hilarious. That's
(11:31):
our president. Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four
to twenty three at Chad Benson Show is your extra
And it's a lot of stuff to get to. Today.
They've arrested somebody in the Palisades fire in California, aid
that destroyed so much. Plus we got our scary movie
countdown among other things. Really, factor is amazing. I'm telling
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(12:59):
Chad Been and show.
Speaker 1 (13:10):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (13:12):
It was a massive fire that caused death destruction, changed
not just lives, landscapes and cities, and also showed the
world that LA has no idea what they're doing. Pretty
much California, for the most part, is on the struggle
bus of times.
Speaker 7 (13:33):
We are announcing the arrest of twenty nine year old
Jonathan Rindernecked for igniting a fire that ultimately burned down
the Palisades earlier this year, killing twelve people, destroying more
than sixty eight hundred structures, both homes and businesses, and
damaging over a thousand more buildings.
Speaker 2 (13:53):
Changing what I mean, changing people's lives. My friend, several
friends who worked in the fire, they're insurance suggester. They go.
They just said, look, there's nothing here, and we've talked
about that. But a couple of friends, including a good
friend of mine, who as kids, right, they're like sophomores.
(14:15):
Once the fire burned everything down, that was it. They
were done. They had to move. Well, there was nowhere
around there to move because everybody else is going through
the same thing. There was nowhere around even Orange County
to move. So they went to Mexico. They're in Mexico
for a while, finally back to Orange County. Here's the thing.
They're never going back anytime soon. Their kids are never
(14:38):
going to experience high school with the friends and people
they grew up with. Their life has been completely upended,
and they said far more than even covid did because
of this whack of do uber driver. The question is why, like,
what's the deal? And they got him through chat GPT,
which again is the chat GPT snitch on you.
Speaker 7 (15:00):
The complaint on sealed today charges the defendant with destruction
of property by means of fire, a felony that carries
a mandatory minimum five year federal prison sentence and is
punishable by up to twenty years in federal prison.
Speaker 2 (15:16):
And the deaths, because there were twelve people that died,
I would assume it would be more than twenty years
that he would get. If indeed he was convicted and
the twelve deaths were a part of that conviction, then
that's a big if. Three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show, is Your
(15:37):
ex Your Insta, YouTube, Facebook, and more will be live
again tonight if you have a chance to check us
out on YouTube and grab the podcast if you miss
the show. Helps us out right here on the Chad
Benson Show. Out of chat GPT snitched on him.
Speaker 7 (15:53):
The allegations in the affidavit are supported by digital evidence,
including the defendant's chat GPT prompt of a dystopian painting
showing in part a burning forest and a crowd fleeing
from it.
Speaker 8 (16:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (16:09):
Interesting. Obviously, the big story of the day is what
is happening potentially in the Middle East, as it looks
like they're getting close to hammering out a deal. And
while we talked about that a little bit earlier, when
we talked about you know, this is a major story.
You cannot downplay this. You can't. You can't even overstate
this deal gets done. It is incredible, and you can
(16:34):
think about the people that are on the ground there
in Israel that lost loved ones, and we've talked about
the amount of people that have gone out over the
last several months and have been angry at the government
of Israel feeling like they weren't doing anything. And this
guy here, I think he says a lot about who
(16:56):
is the one that should get the credit.
Speaker 9 (16:59):
It looks like it's not because of this on the government.
Speaker 1 (17:02):
Not because of this environmentister, despite of their environment.
Speaker 10 (17:06):
The it's happening because mostly and personal and foremost because
of President Trump.
Speaker 2 (17:14):
Trump, get in the credit. I know I hammer Trump
at times for some of the insanity and craziness, but
the reality is there may have only been one person
politically that had the will and strength to get this done,
and that's probably this guy, President Trump. Talk a little
(17:34):
bit more about that bunch of stuff to get to,
including number seventeen or scary movie countdown. This is the
Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (17:41):
Then Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (18:05):
Optimism, hope, cautious. Yet it's the first step of what
will be several steps along the way. But how can
you not be pumped over the potential for peace in
the Middle East.
Speaker 8 (18:20):
This agreement is really only about the first phase of
the first few points in President Trump's plan, and it
ensures that Hamas will turn over all the living hostages
in one foul swoop.
Speaker 2 (18:35):
So looking like it could be as early as Monday
that they could get the hostages back. And remember there
are twenty steps, so twenty points if you will, of this,
So there's a lot of steps to go. But you're
(18:57):
never going to get where you need to go without
that first step. That's the old saying about eating an elephant.
How do you do it one bite at a time? Well,
we're taking a bite.
Speaker 8 (19:05):
It's going to take several months before the sides agree
on and start to implement a new governing body and
a new security force, and it'll take a while before
the Israelis will pull back even further to a security
buffer zone.
Speaker 2 (19:25):
That right, there's Jordana Miller. She's in the Middle East.
I'm actually going to try to get her on later
on tonight and hopefully have an opportunity to have a
conversation with her. And I remember Gatos and I had
a conversation with her the local show in Phoenix. It was,
I believe a day or two after, maybe been the
(19:45):
next day after October seventh, and what was going on,
and you know, juxtaposed that time from this and the
optimism and the frustration. So again, the steps are there.
It's going to take while eating that you know, elephant,
one bite at a time. But this is the first step.
(20:06):
Somebody texted earlier and feel free to do that. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four, twenty three you can also leave
a voicemail there and said do you trust Hamas? Not really? Look,
anything could make these things go sideways here fast, And
I will tell you there's going to be moments where
(20:27):
you may have the leadership telling everybody lay their weapons down,
it's over, and ninety five percent of them might, but
you may have five percent that is pissed and angry
and said screw you. That is a possibility, and you
may still have some pushback from Israel, and you may
(20:48):
get Israel saying no, you know, we're we'll agree to this,
but then we won't follow through. So this is going
to be again several months of negotiation work, but it
is that first step, and it's the first step that
was absolutely needed. Where do you get your information from?
It's interesting because being in the business that I've been
(21:11):
in for a very long time, I have a lot
of sources, so I will get stuff sent to me.
I will ask people questions when I see certain things.
But for the average person, the establishment media has changed,
and it's really moving in a way where the Republicans
the right side of the aisle where they're getting their
information from now, isn't that establishment news. It's the place
(21:34):
that I always think everybody gets their news from TikTok Twitter,
excuse me X, but they get their news from social media.
Take a look here. I think this is a very
clear shift.
Speaker 11 (21:49):
I would argue it's a monumental ship because traditionally speaking
folks who.
Speaker 2 (21:53):
Got their news off of social media.
Speaker 11 (21:54):
With Democrats, you go back to twenty twenty one, fifty
two percent of Democrats got their news off of social
media to just forty five percent of Republicans.
Speaker 2 (22:02):
Jump ahead now to this year.
Speaker 1 (22:03):
What do we see.
Speaker 11 (22:04):
We see the Republican number up like a rocket, and
now you get fifty five percent of Republicans who get
their news on social media.
Speaker 2 (22:10):
Compared to just fifty two percent of Democrats.
Speaker 11 (22:12):
So Democrats have stayed steady over the last four years
at this point in the Joe Biden administration, while Republicans
have seen a ten point climb. And now more Republicans
get their news off of social media. And if you're
on social media a lot like I am, I don't
think that's too much of a surprise.
Speaker 2 (22:26):
No, you know why, because you get stuff that you're
not going to get from because of independent journalism, because
you get stories that aren't from the media or news organizations,
but from the people themselves, which is also very interesting.
And yes, there's a lot of crap out there. This
(22:46):
is a perfect example of crap. I'm a little side.
It has to do with you know, online and social media.
But yesterday, flying around on the the Twitter sphere and
the TikTok sphere, if that's what you call it, was
(23:07):
the head of the National Guard for organ who, in
his words, was going to defend all of the protesters
from the National Guard from California and the Ice and police.
(23:28):
It wasn't real, it was ai, but people were passing
it on as if there was news, and nobody bothered
to check. That's the other part of it. People go
to social media now because they're frustrated with the local media.
They frustrated not getting, you know, the whole story, and
they've just decided, you know what I would like like
a burger, I want it my way. So they go
(23:49):
when they find the places that they trust, and that's
where they're getting their news from. But make sure it's real.
And the beauty of it is what you're on your
computer that happens to mimic a phone that has other
places you can go with a few quick key strokes
to find out if something's real or not. And I'm
surprised that more people don't. But that's also part of
(24:11):
the problem is nobody holds people responsible when they knowingly
BSU or get you know, eight out of ten things
wrong in their stories over and over again.
Speaker 1 (24:26):
No, not at all.
Speaker 12 (24:27):
Specifically Twitter, if you're on Twitter, you've noticed a shift here?
Speaker 1 (24:31):
Oh, I would think so.
Speaker 11 (24:32):
I think there are a lot of folks who have
been on Twitter and may have realized, Wait a minute,
there seem to be a lot more Republicans on my feet,
especially since Elon must took over, and oh my goodness, gracious,
what a tremendous, monumental shift on the regular news consumers
on Twitter slash ACKs.
Speaker 2 (24:49):
You go back to twenty twenty one.
Speaker 11 (24:50):
The Party i D margin, Democrats were thirty seven points
more likely. You're thirty seven points more likely to be
a Democrat on Twitter or X than a Republican.
Speaker 2 (24:59):
Jump ahead to this side of the screen. It's completely
changed around.
Speaker 11 (25:02):
Oh my goodness, gracious, Now it's a fourteen point ly
for Republicans on Twitter slash X.
Speaker 2 (25:07):
We're talking about a.
Speaker 11 (25:08):
Fifty one point shift in the margin and John and
I were talking about it just before.
Speaker 13 (25:14):
You can see it.
Speaker 2 (25:14):
With your own eyes.
Speaker 11 (25:15):
This is polling reflecting what you're seeing in the social
media real world where all of a sudden, John, you
just see a lot a lot more Republicans in your feet.
Speaker 2 (25:24):
Yes, there's no doubt that it's gone. I don't even
want to say it's right. But the right was always there.
The difference is their voice now amplified at times, but
it's also not stopped. And we saw that through the
Twitter files how it was. On the other side of that,
you've got Blue and On and where the left is gone,
(25:44):
which is Blue Sky and elsewhere. We're going to get
into it next hour about Blue Sky because Blue Sky
has a hate problem that as bad as they quote
unquote say, the right is the Blue Sky folks in
the Blue and On people, they're a hot mess and
it's crazy to watch them fight.
Speaker 14 (26:02):
It is.
Speaker 2 (26:03):
I have an account, but I never go there. I
originally set up the account so I could just play
refeeds of Alex Jones because I thought it would be funny,
but I never did anything with it. Oh my lord,
three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson Show, is your ex your insta
coming up number seventeen today of our Scary Movie Countdown.
(26:24):
Remember our Scary Movie Countdown. We're still taking some submissions
because there's some movies out there maybe I've never seen
and they're terrifying, and you would like to let me know,
and I would love to hear from you. But today, oh,
it's a good one. And remember it's not just about
the scares. That's a huge part of it. The cultural
reach that the movie has is also very big. So
(26:46):
we got a a scary one coming up. Poor capital
not scary, you know, it could be scary the economy.
That's why you want to talk to my friends at Bullwork.
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Trick two five to eighty four. This is the Chad
Benson Show.
Speaker 15 (28:17):
Hashtag me too, hashtag immigration reforms, hashtag help. I'm trapped
in a hashtag factory and I can't get out.
Speaker 1 (28:24):
The Chat Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (28:27):
As we do we count down the twenty greatest horror
movies of all time. We do it every single year.
We count them down, and the way we do it
is based on the fear factor, the cultural impact. I mean,
it's not just about the fear, but the fear has
to play a huge role in it, the scares, but
(28:47):
also the cultural impact. And today Number seventeen is a
movie that not only had an impact as far as
the fright and the universe, if you will, because there
is a universe that comes with these movies, it also
has an impact even today when it comes to the place.
M oh, you'll find out, kids, you'll find out.
Speaker 16 (29:11):
The time has come, So prepare yourself for a journey
of fear from the darkest corner of cinema, the most
bone chilling tales ever told. It's the countdown you've been
waiting for. Which movie will take the top spot? How
(29:32):
about a fish tail so big because the jaws open
wide or the story of a young innocent girl battling
evil with some help.
Speaker 1 (29:46):
Well, then let's introduce ourselves. I'm Damien Karras and I'm
that Carol.
Speaker 16 (29:50):
You'll have to listen to find out.
Speaker 2 (29:54):
Are you ready?
Speaker 16 (29:55):
Number seventeen?
Speaker 2 (29:57):
All right? Number seventeen Today the Conjuring its.
Speaker 17 (30:00):
November one, nineteen seventy one. I'm sitting here with Carolyn Perrin,
who with her family has been experiencing supernatural occurrencis you're
picking up anything in here.
Speaker 18 (30:08):
Hunt something awful happened to hear ed?
Speaker 2 (30:11):
What is it?
Speaker 19 (30:15):
Whatever Lorraine sees feels touches and it takes a toll
on her a little peace each time.
Speaker 20 (30:23):
You have a lot of spirits in here, But there's
the one that I'm most worried about because it is
so hateful.
Speaker 18 (30:31):
We have to get out of here.
Speaker 17 (30:32):
That's not gonna help.
Speaker 1 (30:33):
This thing has latched itself to your family.
Speaker 19 (30:36):
We never seen nothing like this.
Speaker 1 (30:40):
I'm coming with you, no way. You can't lose you.
Speaker 21 (30:46):
There's a leady in a dirty nigown that I seen
in my dreams. She's standing in front of my mom's bed.
Speaker 2 (30:55):
Based on one of Ed and Lorraine Warren's real life
paranormal investigations, this was about a family farm, the Peronne
Farm in Rhode Island. They lived there from seventy one
to nineteen eighty and it inspired the film. Their story
was directed by James Wand who very interestingly enough, decided
(31:18):
to shoot the film in thirty five millimeter stock, so
he said to they had that nineteen seventies kind of texture.
Cold color grading enhanced its documentary style feel, as well
as using long takes that built tension rather than CGI.
The movie itself was given a rated R, which some
(31:39):
people were like rated R because there was really no
foul language new to Your Gore, but the scares alone
apparently forced a rated R on it. Now here's some
of the scary stuff. Cast and crew reported all kinds
of crazy occurrences going on at the farmhouse, objects removing
hysterious calls, and one night Pharah for Me laptop showed
(32:01):
claw marks on the screen out of nowhere. Why this
is such a fascinating thing is because the house still exists,
and up until yesterday you could have been on the house.
But the auction was canceled because somebody bought the debt
of the house, so somebody purchased it and they have
(32:25):
now canceled the auction which was set for Halloween. The
other thing that's interesting is they're all still alive, outside
of the mother, who passed away about a year ago,
and she has been very open up until she died
about the house itself and how much it absolutely terrified her.
(32:47):
She said there was always something off about the house,
always something eerie about the house. And then she met
the neighbors one day.
Speaker 18 (32:53):
I'm at one of the neighbors and she said to me,
you know, when the Kenyans lived here, left the lights
burning in the house all the time, all day long,
all night long. And I thought that was kind of strange.
But we that was clarified for us by mister Kane.
He said, for the sake of the children, you should
(33:15):
leave lights on it at night.
Speaker 2 (33:17):
That's funny. That's what Tom Bodett used to say, leave
the lights on at night. She thought it was kind
of odd, but she started to realize, yeah, you know what,
there's some things going on here that just aren't right.
And it's not just one thing. There are several things
going on, and everybody feels it. It had gotten to
the point where desperation sunk in. And that's when she
(33:39):
turned to the warrants.
Speaker 18 (33:40):
Lorraine came. She was very sweet, she was very gentle
with the children, but she started to issue warnings to me.
Speaker 1 (33:54):
I knew the house was haunted.
Speaker 22 (33:56):
All I had to do was walk in it.
Speaker 2 (33:58):
That was Lorraine more in there, talking of out the
house itself and what she felt the minute she walked
in there. Now the Parne family lived there for a
long time, and not all memories are bad.
Speaker 18 (34:10):
That house. We had much happiness and many happy times
to get there, but we had horrible things happen too.
Speaker 2 (34:18):
And the interview they did with her, with Carolyn, who
was obviously the movie, so much of it was built
around her and her experience there. They asked her, and
this is just before the Conjuring movie came out, the original,
do you want to see the movie itself?
Speaker 18 (34:36):
I don't know that I'll be willing to see the film.
In fact, I had doubt very much that I will
be willing to see the film.
Speaker 2 (34:43):
That was Carolyn Perone. She passed away last year. She
is the subject of the movie. It's an amazing movie.
It is scary, it is tense. James Want did an
amazing job with it. From this it birthed the Conjuring
universe that included the last Conjuring this year, which did
huge money, the non Annabel The Chris of La Rona
(35:05):
two billion dollars from these movies gross worldwide, absolutely incredible.
Number seventeen of the Chad Benson Shows Scariest Greatest Horror
Movies of All Time countdown The Conjuring three, two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show is your
extra Insta, YouTube, Facebook. If you have any suggestions, let
(35:27):
us know. We'd love to hear from me. We're still
taking some suggestions because there may be something I haven't seen,
and I've seen a lot of stuff out there, so
let us know and feel free to tweet at us
or text program right here on The Chad Benson Show.
Coming up, our number two of the program. More on
the historic events that seem to be taking place when
(35:48):
it comes to Israel hamas a ceasefire. Where does it
go from here? Government shutdown talk is always interesting as well,
plus the National Oh Guard. We got your urban word
of the Day, and a bunch of other stuff including
Antifa and Katie Porter she wants to be governor of California,
(36:10):
and boy, I don't think based on what we've seen
and now what is coming out, that you have the
temperament to be Guvner. You're missing the show, Shaman. You
grabbed the podcast our number two straight ahead Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (36:25):
This is the Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (36:54):
One dude pulled this off. Peace in the Middle East?
Now is everything said? Done, sign, sealed and delivered. No,
will there be setbacks? Absolutely? Would this have happened with
any other president.
Speaker 23 (37:12):
No.
Speaker 2 (37:13):
And the reason is for all the flaws and the
frustration I have with Trump and the way at times
he is a bull in a China store. You needed
a bull in a China store to pull this off.
You needed somebody who could look at Bibe. The only
(37:35):
president who could look at him and say, no, we're
done here. You are not going into the West Bank.
Let's put an end to that, and you're going to
sort this out asap or we're done. He had heard
(37:57):
Israel controls you. He had heard all of the things,
and he also looked and said, dude, the next generation
they don't care about you the way that you think
they should. And no amount of money you toss at
(38:20):
influencers is going to get that back. People have had enough.
My people America, they're done. They don't want to support
this war anymore. They are saying this is a genocide, ethnics, cleansing,
(38:41):
whatever you want to call it. We're done, you're done,
You take the fing win and you go. No other
president could have done that. Trump is a sledgehammer. I've
always said this about Trump. Trump when the voiceless flyover
(39:07):
States as they like to call them, got so frustrated
with the way that the elites were and when he
came about in twenty fifteen, I said, the thing is,
he is that sledgehammer for you. Sometimes you need somebody
who's going to go I know it's a square peg,
(39:29):
and I know it's a round hole, but damn it,
we're going to put it through it and it's going
to go like this or else We're done.
Speaker 1 (39:40):
Oh.
Speaker 23 (39:40):
But the real key is President Trump. He's the one
that made this happen. Certainly, Envoys Witkoff and Jared Kushner
were a very big part of sealing the deal, bringing
it together. That this would never have happened without the
leadership of President Trump. He brought people together that no
one thought would ever sit together, talk and come to
(40:00):
an agreement. And it's really a remarkable day. And I'll
tell you there is a great sigh of relief being
heaved throughout Israel today because this is a day that
everyone here has been praying to happen for two solid years.
Speaker 2 (40:17):
And one guy got that done. Yeah, he had help.
The fact that he called, you know, like look Kushner
and Witkoff. They all have got their reasons for being
there right the investment. They see the opportunity there, and
they also understand, especially somebody like Jared Kushner, who everybody thought,
(40:40):
well there, you know, he's done with politics, and lo
and behold, he's the one, you know what, because the
Abraham Accords all of this stuff. The other thing that
Trump did is he went to the Arabs. He went
to the Arabs and he said, hey, we're all doing this,
every one of us. All right, we're going to have
(41:01):
a consensus. So we're going to get this done. Nobody
thinks we can get this done. Dammit, We're going to
get it done. Where others have dealt mostly with Bbie
following the party line that he would feed, and Trump said,
(41:23):
now we're going to do all sides. Everybody's going to
have a spot at the table. Well on the two
sides of that.
Speaker 24 (41:31):
I can remember in the month or so after October
seventh and Israeli, a senior official saying to me, we
are so disoriented and traumatized by this war. The United
States is going to have to make decisions for us.
Joe Biden could never do that, and Donald Trump was
(41:51):
able to do it, and did it at the decisive
moment when he said essentially this war must end and
Israel cannot annexlos Back, which many right wing Israelis wanted.
Speaker 2 (42:03):
David Ignatius Washington posts, I will tell you this right now.
Two things happen here. The bombing of Cutter absolutely pissed
Trump off in a way where I don't think BB thought,
you know, it's better to ask for forgiveness than for permission.
(42:28):
The other side of it was Trump was hearing one
thing from BB, and then it was being told a
whole bunch of other things that they were saying out
loud in front of everybody, that we are going to
do this and we're going to do that and nobody's
going to stop us. And Trump had said I had enough,
(42:48):
and you know BB this weekend when he told him
take thefing win, he also told them you better tell
everybody when this gets done. There is no pushback, smoke Rich,
there is no pushback. Ben Giverer. If you guys you
know in the cabinet want to continue this, you're going
(43:10):
to do it all on your own. So think about that.
More from mister David Ignatius in.
Speaker 24 (43:20):
The same way, he reached out to the Arabs and
said I'm serious about peace and began to work with
them quietly. Since Steve Whitcoff and unlikely emissary, but Witcoff
developed an extraordinarily close relationship, in particular with the Qataris,
and behind the scenes they have moved week by week
(43:42):
toward the deal that they announced a week ago, the
twenty Point Plan. What's interesting about that, John Miika, is
that it took ideas from all over the Arab world,
from the UAE, from Gutter, from Saudi Arabia, from Tony
Blair and Britain, and pulled them all together into a
single plan with the US weight of support behind it.
Speaker 2 (44:04):
That's how he got here.
Speaker 24 (44:06):
And in each case it's Trump deciding these people, endless combatants,
cannot do it on their own. I'm going to intervene forcefully, tragically.
That is something that Joe Biden, for all his desire
for peace, wasn't able to do because he was.
Speaker 2 (44:24):
Four hundred years old and didn't know where he was
and he didn't have the balls to do it because
he was part of the machine. And while Trump is
building his own machine and not always happy with what's
going on, the reality is it took something else to
get something done, and that something else was Trump, and
(44:47):
that's something getting done was peace in a way that
others weren't willing even to try. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show,
as your ex your Insta YouTube face spoken more several
of your chiming in about this the Nobel Peace Prize.
I said, give it to him, and I may freaking
give it to him. This morning on CNN They're just like, oh, fine,
(45:12):
just give it to them.
Speaker 9 (45:13):
So I would say, give it to him so we
could stop talking about it because it is so obnoxious.
Speaker 1 (45:16):
That he thinks he should get it.
Speaker 9 (45:18):
I mean, let's we could go through all the number
of reasons why he shouldn't get it.
Speaker 1 (45:21):
He's going to invade.
Speaker 9 (45:22):
Greenland, the rights he wants to take away from press,
pulling out the world.
Speaker 1 (45:25):
I've been talking about invading Greenland. I mean, listen, Donald
Trump said.
Speaker 10 (45:30):
The Billy origin story of this.
Speaker 1 (45:32):
Is when Obama won the Nobel.
Speaker 13 (45:34):
Prize, and the perception on the right was he did
not deserve it.
Speaker 9 (45:37):
What he is doing to this country, what he is doing,
pulling out of the World Health Organization, the how he
treats journalists and doesn't want free speech for folks that
I mean, there's a lot of reasons why you shouldn't
get it.
Speaker 25 (45:47):
All of your reasons, all of your reasons have nothing
to do with the prize is given for. It's like
somebody goes into the Hall of Fame, but we're not
going to put them in the Hall of fame for
their for their actions on the field, because of their
personal life.
Speaker 2 (46:00):
Yeah, you can go look at every sport. Oh, Jason
the hall of fame for a reason, not because of
what he did afterwards. Share, No, give it to him,
Hell yeah, give it to him. He really wants it. Yes,
you know what, Trump driven by ego. Let's not pretend
he isn't. That dude's driven by ego. So you know what,
(46:23):
why not you don't want to give it to him
because the way that you do things is not that way.
Very stuffy, Right, he's the friends in low places, right,
I got friends. Yeah, he's that guy. But you know what,
if this works out, and this would be for next year,
because this year, this would be for next year. If
(46:44):
it works out, how do you not give it to him?
Now you may give it to them all as a group,
I guess. But here's the thing. The group doesn't exist
without him and it doesn't get done without him. So yeah,
the ego plays a huge role in it. Get over yourself,
(47:07):
give it to him and the whole thing with Obama.
By the way, Obama got it, and he said he
was surprised. He didn't really think that he should have
gotten the Nobel Peace Prize like that it was for
what international relations? So they gave it to him for
(47:29):
the nuclear non proliferation and new climate in international relations
fostered by Obama in reaching out to the Muslim world. Well,
I think you could say this may actually be a
little bit more hm real. And let's not forget Obama.
(47:55):
Baba hell out of the Middle East. There wasn't a
wedding you couldn't see getting blown up because of one
of his drones putting that out there. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Bedson
Show is your Acts, your Insta, YouTube and Facebook. We
will be live tonight on the old eutube. If you
have a chance to join us. I appreciate it when
(48:17):
you do that and talk to you about my friends Chapter.
You know, we talk a lot about healthcare Medicare plans.
They love to say this, it's like reality TV. Every season,
somebody's getting voted off the island. What do you mean.
You may love your plan, but your plan may be
getting voted off the island. So you need a group
that's going to help you, and that's Chapter. Let me
(48:39):
tell you why Chapter is amazing. They don't work for
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(49:00):
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Dial pound two fifty and say keyword Medicare plan. Medicare
is too important. Don't risk it. Work with a partner
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Medicare plan for our friends over at chapter. This is
the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (49:50):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (49:53):
It's that time of the program where we dedicate to
whopping ninety seconds to the government shutdown. Now it's time
for ninety seconds of government shutdown talk ninety seconds. How
close are we to being back the vote today?
Speaker 5 (50:10):
That was the six failed vote, and it was exactly
as we expected, with negotiations at a standstill. With the
numbers there, you had the same senators vote the same
way they did in the previous times. You only had
a couple of Democratic senators breaking ranks, including one independent.
But in order for the short term funding bill to
pass and for the government to reopen, Republicans need to
get five four Democrats on their side, and for now,
(50:33):
neither side is budging.
Speaker 2 (50:35):
No budge. We're in the no budge zone. That's uh.
I don't think they're let me tell you, I don't
think there's a reason to budge for either side right now,
because nobody is putting one hundred percent of the blame
because people aren't feeling it. In fact, I saw poll
yesterday and I don't know if this is good or bad,
probably a little bit of both. That a third of
Americans had no idea the government to shutdown. That's the
(50:57):
impact it has in their life. And out of the
other two thirds, only a small percentage that had any
impact whatsoever on their life. So think about that for
a second. A third of our nation had no idea
that the doors currently are shut on the government. A
(51:18):
is your ninety seconds right there? Very exciting talk. The
one thing where we've said this that the issue comes
really front and center is when it comes to travel,
and that's the biggest effect that it's had on people
who don't directly work for the government. Aviation Union say
(51:39):
the shutdown is placing a heavy burden on critical workers,
and the longer it drags on, the less safe the
skies will be.
Speaker 13 (51:46):
Newark and Washington Reagan facing shortages, forcing those facilities to reduce.
Speaker 2 (51:51):
Or slow flights in and out.
Speaker 13 (51:54):
Federal authorities are hoping the air traffic controllers who are
still showing up will be enough to keep air travel
going and passengers safe and.
Speaker 2 (52:02):
That's the most important thing. Keeping people safe obviously is
a big deal, But that really is the only thing
right now that we've seen that has put real any
kind of pressure on people in government. Is air traffic
control and travel three two, three, five, three eight, twenty
(52:24):
four to twenty three at Chad Benson shows your ex
your Insta, YouTube, and more right here on the Chad
Benson Show. So as I continue to say, once it
gets to fifty point one percent of blame going to
one party or the other, then you'll see a shift. Obviously,
(52:45):
we're following all the big stories of the day, and
this may be one of the biggest stories of the year.
She's going to be fine.
Speaker 26 (52:53):
I know lately everybody thinks that I am sicker than
I am.
Speaker 18 (52:57):
Do I look sick to you?
Speaker 26 (52:59):
I'm more hard here anyway, I wanted to put everybody's
mind at ease. Those Zobi that seemed to be real concerned,
which I appreciate.
Speaker 2 (53:08):
Yeah, her sister, that's Dolly parton Treasure by the way,
an American treasure. She did a video on the insta
as the kids would say, saying, Hey, do I look
sick to you? Because her sister asked the day before
for prayers after Dolly had canceled shows, and everybody started
(53:29):
freaking out. Oh oh no, we can't lose no, no, no, no, no,
we can't lose her. She can't be sick. What's wrong
with her? Obviously she lost her husband this year. So no,
from what I hear, she's got herself some stones and
as we all know, very painful. If you've known anybody
who's had her, maybe you've had them. So she's dealing
(53:50):
with that. She said she's had a few procedures and
she is going to be updating people soon. So there
we go. Let me take a deep breath. American Treasure
still alive and doing well. Three two, three, five, four,
twenty three At Chad Benson Show, It's your Ax, your Insta,
YouTube and more. If you missed your show, grabbed the podcast.
(54:11):
This is the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 27 (54:21):
Then Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (54:42):
The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (54:44):
We'll get back to Israel and Jamas and Gaza in
the Middle East. But we have Shirak his note that
is that is Chicago's so dangerous. It's like Iraq. We
got issues there, there's no doubt, but it's not the
I word kind of issues.
Speaker 6 (55:08):
After weeks of clashes at local officials in Chicago accuse
ICE agents of using excessive force, video showing agents shooting
protesters with pepperballs, striking a Presbyterian minister in the head.
President Trump is now threatening to invoke the Insurrection Act,
a nineteenth century law allowing him to mobilize troops to
aid domestic law enforcement.
Speaker 2 (55:28):
No, don't do it. Don't do it. It's ridiculous. There's
no need. And remember so much of this is show.
Trump likes it. He likes the fight. He likes this.
You know, he's okay with the slings and arrows coming
at him, and he enjoys the fight. He's not if
(55:53):
you go and do this, it is sitting a horrible precedent.
And while some inside of your cabinet may cheer you on,
you're getting a lot of people, even in the Republican Party, saying, no,
this is a bridge too far. We don't need you
don't need to deploy any of these people to fight
crime or to quell a protest. Have you seen the protest? Honestly,
(56:17):
have you seen the protests? I was watching yesterday? What
was it? Immigration? Barbie Christy Nome, she was in Portland Immigration.
Barbie's what I think of her as and she's on
top of the roof and there was like maybe twenty
five or so protesters out there, a guy dressed like
(56:42):
a chicken. It was funny, and they were playing Benny
Hill music, which also again was hilarious. And this is
not an insurrection. It's not. And no matter how much
you say Antifa is some sort of devil or whatever,
(57:03):
because they're idiots. And I've said, don't charge them or
try to come at them in a way where you're gonna,
you know, classify them as a terror organization, go after
their money, which sounds like what they're probably gonna do
because it's easier to do that. But there's no need
for this. There isn't. They're not. And you heard our
(57:27):
buddy Mike Lyons this week, our military guy come on
and say, look, this is a no go. We've got
a constitution. Now. Were there issues in two thousand, you know,
the Summer of Love twenty twenty where there's some serious issues, Yeah,
there was, and in Portland where they were out of control.
Eventually you had to step up and try to protect
(57:50):
some of the federal stuff. But it lasted way too long.
But when it comes to the fighting crime side of
stuff that is not for military, it isn't not at all.
Now they're spreading them out the National Guard. And as
(58:12):
much as Trump says it's going to fight the crime,
it still feels like they're just going to go to
ICE facilities.
Speaker 12 (58:16):
We're talking about five hundred National Guardsmen, two hundred of
them coming from the Texas National Guard, three hundred form Illinois.
We know that the Illinois National Guardsmen are currently mustering
in the Chicago area and are training for their future
deployment over the next couple of days. The Texas National Guardsmen,
what they are going to be doing is heading to
a town called Broadview, which is south of Chicago. That
is the location for an ICE facility that has been
(58:38):
under protesting now for the last couple of weeks. And
that is the area where they are going to go now.
Speaker 2 (58:45):
And that is the area that federally Okay, you can
make that argument. Is it a strong argument? No, but
you can make it, and left you don't get a
pass on this insanity over ice is so ridiculous. Ice
(59:06):
has been around since before Trump and a lot of
people out there voted for fixing the immigration system, deporting
people that were here illegally, and stopping the influx of
(59:27):
people from the border. Trump has absolutely fixed the border problem. Yesterday,
I'm reading an article in a study. We haven't seen
this level of illegal crossings, this low of a level
(59:52):
since the year nineteen seventy. How mean you think about that.
I'm fifty f that's fifty four years ago. Well fifty five.
I'm just going by my age that we saw levels
this low, that problem solved. But I do talk to
(01:00:15):
a lot of Republicans because here's the thing. We say stuff,
and this is the consequences of the actions of which
we want to happen. We want to clean up the
illegal immigration, we want to get the bad ombres out
of here. But seeing how the sausage is made has
(01:00:37):
made people feel uncomfortable because it's in their face. Okay,
you've got to see. This is what you know, this
is what you voted for. And what I hear from
a lot of people is like, well, I thought they
were telling us they were get rid of bad people.
Well this goes back to you know, whether it's Chicago, right,
or whether it's or any any place, any big blue city,
(01:00:58):
We're not going to work with us. Okay, Well then
they're going to go out and try to hit their
numbers elsewhere. What Yeah, that's what. What do you think they're
going to do? You just stop doing their job. No,
have they been over zealous at times? I think they
have been. But has the media and many of these
(01:01:23):
protesters been ridiculous see Dallas in the shooting. So yeah,
there's a lot of issues here. But as far as
deploying the National Guard, it's not necessary. And when it
comes to immigration, illegal immigration, if you don't want to
(01:01:47):
work with ICE to help get the bad ombrays out
because you're you're being told by your mayor that you're
going to make the stand, ICE is going to go
elsewhere to do their fishing. Three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson's show, It's
your ex, your Insta YouTube and more more, I say more.
Speaker 13 (01:02:08):
According to prosecutors, twenty nine year old Jonathan Rinderneck was
an Uber driver and had seemed agitated. On January first,
he allegedly created an AI image on chat GPT showing
people fleeing from fire, and US Attorney Bill A. Slee
says right before the fire was set render neck listen.
Speaker 7 (01:02:24):
To a rap song whose music video including objects being
lit on.
Speaker 13 (01:02:29):
Fire, then he allegedly watched and recorded the fire department response.
Prosecutors say that fire was put out, then seven days later,
in high wind, it rekindled as a Palisades fire and
killed twelve victims.
Speaker 2 (01:02:42):
Dude faces, I think twenty years in prison. How they
caught him though? AI? What?
Speaker 26 (01:02:51):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (01:02:51):
Yeah, yeah, how they caught him? I'm still trying to
put I'm still trying to piece this together. How they
caught the guy who started the Palisades fire through a
chat GPT prompt.
Speaker 7 (01:03:03):
The allegations in the affidavit are supported by digital evidence,
including the defendant's chat GPT prompt of a dystopian painting
showing in part a burning forest and a crowd fleeing
from it.
Speaker 2 (01:03:19):
Yeah, but how did you know that? See? That's what
I want to know. He had that on his chat GPT.
You want to know how I know? Because chat GPT
could be your friend or maybe could snitch again, I was,
(01:03:40):
I'm everywhere I read on this it says well that's
how we caught him, And I'm thinking, okay, but how
did you know? Chat GPT, you're not getting to that point.
You haven't explained that point so well that you knew
that the chat GPT is the thing. How how is
(01:04:06):
did did they call you? That is chat Gypt? Call
you better watch out rem we tell you about chat Gypt.
Better tell you chat Gypt. Snitches get stitches and end
up in ditches, Just saying, still haven't explained that one
to me yet. Speaking of AI, for all the bad
(01:04:27):
it may be giving us a shorter work week, the
prediction before AI takes over the globe is it's going
to move it to a three day work week for
a lot of people. I would have no problem with
a three day work week. It means that only works
sixty hours a week. Yes, I work with a lot
(01:04:49):
of hours, sometimes too many hours. I say to myself jokingly,
I love what I do, and so it doesn't you know,
I'm not crazy about Oh God, I can't believe. But
there are and I'm like, you know what I would like,
I would like to take a deep breath, but I
do love what I do. Like I got up today
at two thirty and I'm one of these people that
(01:05:11):
I was ready to go hit the ground running and
I will work probably till eight o'clock tonight. But the
three day work week, yeah, I could see that four
day work week first, and I think most people would
like a four day work week. If you gave people
the opportunity to work four ten hour days, I think
(01:05:32):
just about every single person would say yes. So we'll see.
There's good and bad with AI, including the fact that
they may be snitching on you. I'm still trying to
figure out how they determined was him. We're just talking
about the guys that they caught with the Palisades fire,
allegedly the guy who set the fire, and the way
(01:05:52):
they come at it is and he had stuff on
his chat ept and there was a rap song or something,
and I'm like, I'm trying to figure out again how
you got to that point. He was there, but there
were a lot of people around. We'll see three two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three at you had bent to
(01:06:13):
show it's your extra ends to coming up. Katie Porter.
You guys haven't heard Katie Porter. She's running to be
governor of California. And in the last twenty four hours, uh,
she has had stuff that has come out and let's
just say moved her from she may be governor to no,
(01:06:38):
you need to drop out. Talk about that. Got your
urban word of the day as well. But first, Raycon
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the Classics earbuds twenty percent off right now when you
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dot com slash Chad Chad Benson.
Speaker 26 (01:07:49):
Joe.
Speaker 2 (01:07:59):
Irrever.
Speaker 1 (01:08:00):
I'm like, yeah, so what it's the Jat Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (01:08:06):
Ladies and gentlemen. How not to respond to a person
doing an interview for you when you want to be
governor of the fifth largest economy in the globe, Katie
Porter take it away, well.
Speaker 1 (01:08:19):
To those voters.
Speaker 14 (01:08:20):
Okay, so you I don't want to keep doing this,
I'm gonna call it.
Speaker 2 (01:08:23):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (01:08:26):
You're not gonna do the interview with them?
Speaker 14 (01:08:28):
No, not like this. I'm not not with seven follow
ups to every single question you.
Speaker 1 (01:08:31):
Ask every other candidate has. I don't care.
Speaker 23 (01:08:34):
I don't care.
Speaker 14 (01:08:35):
I want to have a pleasant, positive conversation which you
asked me about every issue on this list. And if
every question you're going to make up a follow up question,
then we're never going to get there and we're.
Speaker 1 (01:08:46):
Just going to circle around. And I have ever had
to do this before.
Speaker 2 (01:08:49):
Ever, You've never had had annversation or because you're used
to being loved by reporters, because you're on the left,
you're used to being fluffed soft balls. You're not used
(01:09:10):
to having somebody push back on you. So you got
uncomfortable and you're like, I'm done. She got an attitude.
Oh you don't think she does. Check this out. This
is now surface. This is her doing another interview. I
think it was a while ago, and somehow I think
it was at her house. But they were talking about
evs and she was trying to do something with that,
(01:09:33):
and well, let's just say her, probably one of her
campaign folks, that it's not really it, and well, let
you just just listen.
Speaker 22 (01:09:43):
Electrified or transportation sept for that, we're going to lose
more than half a million Californians dying prematurely to air
pollution and other problems, and the state could lose. You're
out of my shot.
Speaker 2 (01:09:59):
That's actually correct.
Speaker 1 (01:10:00):
It's not that it's electric vehicles.
Speaker 25 (01:10:02):
It's that you don't need the commitments any Paris climb.
Speaker 14 (01:10:06):
Okay, it does.
Speaker 22 (01:10:07):
Okay, you also were in my shot before that. Stay
out of my shot.
Speaker 14 (01:10:14):
Okay, I'm gonna start again with electric vehicle Sabius money.
Speaker 2 (01:10:18):
Wow, so uh yeah, this this you're done? Well, you
know what, let me phrase that, are you done? Pt
pre Trump? Absolutely? At after Trump? I don't know, but
there's no doubt that that was an epic fail right there.
Epic fail. Speaking of epic fails, it leads us to this,
(01:10:40):
which is perfect for this.
Speaker 28 (01:10:44):
Now it's time for the urban word of the day.
The young have a vocabulary all their own, and we
break it down for you. It's called the urban word
of the day.
Speaker 2 (01:10:55):
All right, Well, you just heard Katie Porter and her fail,
and boy was it a fail, epic fail. And the
way that she's going about handling this shows that she
is a choke artist. When things get serious, she gets
(01:11:19):
frazzled and she chokes. And when there was a little
bit of pushback, guess what, she got frazzled and she failed.
Choke cartiste your urban word of the day.
Speaker 1 (01:11:34):
That was the urban word of the day.
Speaker 2 (01:11:37):
Now you know, yeah, I would say this dropping out.
Maybe she won't. But and a lot of dropping out
also has to do with money. But you've got to
think about this before Trump, that would have ended people.
(01:11:59):
After Trump. You've got the ag Jay Jones in Virginia
who sent those horrific text messages, and he's like refusing
to drop out before Trump, after Trump. There's something to that.
Three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson Shows, Your X and Your Instant
and all the other things right here in the Chad
Benson Show. Coming up, our number three of the program,
(01:12:23):
more on the potential for the most historic peacetime deal
that we have seen maybe since well, I can't even
think maybe World War two. I mean, that's how big
the potential for this is, and the ramifications throughout the
Middle East. Talk about that. We've also got some interesting
(01:12:43):
stuff about social media and the news and how people
are getting their news on a daily basis. And yes, kids,
you little what's trending. But we've got number seventeen today
on a scurry movie count, So be prepared for that.
Speaker 4 (01:13:01):
Hour.
Speaker 2 (01:13:01):
Number three in the program. Should have had Chat Benson job.
Speaker 1 (01:13:04):
This is the Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (01:13:35):
Sometimes in life you need somebody who is willing to go.
I know it's square and that's round, but I got
a hammer and it's going through and we're getting this done.
And that's what happened. Donald Trump looked at Biebie and said,
(01:13:55):
we're done. Take the effing wind. We're done. We are done.
The negotiations there. You've undermined on several occasions. It's never
good enough. Well guess what, it's good enough now. And
we've been talking to them and you bombed our buddies
(01:14:17):
in cutter. You have continually told us one thing, then
did something else. This ain't happening. It's over period. And
we hear you want to go to the West Bank.
I don't think that can be underplayed. Where last Friday
(01:14:44):
somebody asked Trump about Israel going to the West Bank
because they're taking out on their television shows and Ben
Gevie and Smodrich, these are part of the cabinet. Smodrich
is the finance manager, so they're part of the cabinet
and they're very they're right of Babie. But they're talking
(01:15:08):
about we're not going to stop, we're not moving our
tanks out of there, we're not going to not occupy
it's ours, we're taking it all. And the West Bank
was part of it. And somebody asked Trump, hey, what
about the West Bank? And he's like, no, they won't
be going in their period. Sometimes you need somebody that's
(01:15:29):
a sledgehammer, and that was Trump.
Speaker 29 (01:15:32):
That's about the role President Trump Playdon and bringing all
of this about well, Robin, there's no question that if
this goes as planned, if we see those remaining hostages
freed in Israel begin its withdrawal, it is a remarkable
achievement and President Trump most certainly deserves credit for his role.
He has done this through diplomacy, pressure, and the sheer
(01:15:53):
force of his personality and persistence. He dispatched diplomats again
and again, made threats just in the last few days
to Hamas say again, if they did not sign the deal,
all hell would break loose, and they had the bombing
of Iran as an example of that. But perhaps most importantly,
he pushed Benjamin Nett and Yahoo in wighs his predecessor
(01:16:14):
and others have not.
Speaker 2 (01:16:15):
Most important, Trump can deal with the air world, He
could even deal with Hamas. That was it was Benjamin
and most importantly the Liquid Party that was the big
issue here, and we've talked about it. Net Yahoo, by
(01:16:40):
the way, doesn't want any of this to end just yet,
because he recognizes he's got three trials coming up for
massive corruption charges that were on the plate of his
world before October seventh, and there's also going to be
some serious investigations in to what happened on October seven.
(01:17:00):
But Trump needed to get it through his head that
I am not like the other guys. I have supported
you more than maybe any other president ever. I have
bent over backwards. I have done a lot, But dude,
(01:17:21):
you need to take the w you need to do it.
Biden could never have done that. Obama was never going
to do that. Maybe Trump in his first administration might
not have been able to do that, but this time. Yeah. Also,
(01:17:47):
the one thing about Trump that gets lost because everybody's
focused on, you know, his hyperbolic ways and the stuff
that he says. And I keep going back to that,
the thing that Nigel Faraj said, the English politician who said,
(01:18:09):
don't take Trump's words literal, but take what he says seriously.
Trump is great at pivoting, He's great at reading the room.
(01:18:31):
He's great at doing things that other politicians they don't
do because they don't put themselves in a situation where
they're going to fail. Really, right, it's always just kind
of very you know, just it's always a little bit
first gear. Maybe second nothing. Trump will drive the tires
off something and sometimes he crashes, there's no doubt. But
(01:18:59):
he's also to pivot and being able to read a
room I e. America, Trump's like very good at that,
like maybe the best we have seen at reading a room.
(01:19:19):
Others are better orators than Trump. Others will command an
audience during speeches better than Trump, but reading a room
no understanding. Hey, bbe, guess what. A vast majority of Americans,
including American Jews, sympathize with Palestine. You're bleeding out support.
(01:19:45):
The younger generation's not with you. And if you want
to have a chance of trying to re you know,
reinvigorate your image, reposition yourself, you're going to have to
do something. You better take the w because if not,
we're not going to be a party to little kids starving.
(01:20:07):
Because I'm hearing it from my people going, hey, guess
what you uh? You see that there? Yeah, those are
kids dying and our names are written on the bombs.
We're paying for that. We want no part of that. Ooh,
and it took somebody like Trump to get it did.
Speaker 13 (01:20:27):
And what finally got the two sides to this point
and we'll it be able to get Phase two off
the ground. Well, you know, Robin.
Speaker 29 (01:20:34):
Throughout this process, President Trump never wavered in his support
for Israel. But when netan Yahoo ignored much of what
Trump was trying to accomplish by continuing to bomb over
the last few months, Trump laid down the hammer with
net Yahoo, essentially saying enough is enough. Trump had also
told net Yahoo that he was opening indirect negotiations with
(01:20:55):
the Iranians, which put even more pressure on the Israeli
Prime minister. Obviously, the coming days will prove whether the
rest of the plan comes to fruition. But if those
hostages are freed, which would leave Hamas without their major
bargaining tool, this is a huge moment.
Speaker 2 (01:21:12):
For Donald Trump. That's a huge moment for the world.
And by the way, the Iranian thing is very serious
because Beebe's already been making noise about Iran and we're
going to talk about that in a little bit. But
I give Trump hell all the time because I think
a lot of crap that he does is I get frustrated.
(01:21:34):
Somebody asked me, well, several people over the last couple
weeks have asked me, do you regret your support? And
you know of Trump prior to the election. I'm like, no,
because this would be way worse. I don't regret any
of that. Do I wish he would do some things better. Yeah,
(01:21:54):
but that should be anybody. We're not going to agree
on everything. But I'll tell you this, this wouldn't be
happening if Biden was still there or if Kamala was there.
This wouldn't be happening at all. We'd be just giving
more money. It would just be the same old same,
(01:22:17):
and they would run rough shot and do whatever they
want and probably drag us into more. So No, I
don't regret it. I get frustrated because I think he
makes his job ten times harder, but I think he
kind of enjoys it at times he does. So you've
(01:22:40):
got to give credit where credit's due. And I've said this,
here's what you're gonna get from me. People always ask me,
are you back, are you left? You know what I am.
I'm an American period. I care about us. I will
criticize and I will praise, depending on which one it
calls for. That's what we want talk about the Purple Revolution.
(01:23:02):
We're gonna get more into that over the next couple
you know, tomorrow, but I will tell you this right now,
he deserves praise. Is it going to go all the
way across the finish line? Maybe not the way it's
designed right now. Are there going to be ebbs and flows,
gives and takes? Are there going to be two steps forward,
(01:23:22):
three steps back, four steps forward, one step back. Yeah,
but we don't get here without his will and imposing
it on people three two, three, five, three eight, twenty
four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show, is your ex,
your Insta, YouTube, Facebook, and more? Love? Hearing from all
(01:23:45):
of you and several of you over the last you know,
a couple of days have chimed in. You know, your text,
you tweet, you know. Why don't you support Israel? I
support Israel? But as I have said over and over again,
I'm America first. And when I have friends and I
(01:24:10):
think my friends are being dumbasses potentially destroying their world,
I will speak up because that's what friends do. I
support more than most because I'm willing to tell the
truth and tell them what they need to hear, not
what they want to hear. And I'm okay with the pushback.
(01:24:33):
And when somebody says you're anti Semitic. I laugh. When
somebody says that you hate the Jews again, I laugh.
I would hope if I was going to do something
absolutely insane and ridiculous that could destroy my world, that
(01:24:54):
one of my friends would stand up and say, dude,
don't do that. You would hope you never know. Three two, three, five, eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson shows your
ex coming up little what's trending? Prize picks? Maybe? Are
you ready? Are you ready for prize picks? All right,
(01:25:16):
so let me tell you about prize picks. First of all,
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and there's this guy named Jalen Hurts pretty darn good.
(01:25:37):
Do you think he's going to throw for more than
half a touchdown? You mean like one? Well, yeah, there
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good to be right Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (01:26:32):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (01:26:34):
Now it's time to find out what's trending. What's trending?
Speaker 30 (01:26:39):
Signed James Dean, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Serene.
Speaker 2 (01:26:59):
What Trut's found out? What's trending? On is Thursday. We're
gonna start on the uh Donald Trump big doings. Obviously
(01:27:19):
when it comes to the Middle East. I don't think
we can you can't overstate how big this could be.
I mean, it's it's it is that big. Also, yesterday
he had a round table to fight in Tifa The
Fight and Tifa Disneyland trending visitor died after riding the
Haunted Mansion ride Dancing with the Stars Thatch, Oh my
(01:27:43):
good National Guard. Did you guys know that they were
in Chicago?
Speaker 1 (01:27:48):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:27:49):
I bet you didn't, Bill Belichick. Rumors are swirling that, uh,
North Carolina has had enough of the experiments and trying
to figure out what's the escape route? Is there some
sort of you know, special button? How much do they
have to pay him to go away? Katie Porter's also
trending over to Twitter obviously Middle East piece Kershaw Katie Porter,
(01:28:18):
things aren't going well. Paradise Fire, Dolly pardon. She came
out said, I am fine, okay, I'm I'm okay. So
we'll talk a little bit about that. Antifa Israel Hamas,
Pam Bondi Rand Paul Lee Greenwood trending, Oh Lee And
(01:28:40):
over to Google. Phillies Dyer's Joan Kennedy passed away. She
was married into the dynasty of the Kennedy Dynasty, Edward
Kennedy's first wife. Phillies Freeze warning Geene Simmons in a
car accident three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four,
twenty three at Chad Benson Show. Is your ex your Insta, YouTube, Facebook,
(01:29:05):
and morph? You missing the show? Shame on you. Grab
the podcast right here on The Chad Benson Show. Gaza
Trending Bill Belichick trending a lot of things trending when
it comes to the Middle East peace process and the
Palisades fire. So they got somebody for the Palisades fire.
(01:29:30):
They got somebody. Who'd they get?
Speaker 7 (01:29:32):
We are announcing the arrest of twenty nine year old
Jonathan Rinderneckt for igniting a fire that ultimately burned down
the Palisades earlier this year, killing twelve people, destroying more
than sixty eight hundred structures, both homes and businesses, and
damaging over one thousand more buildings.
Speaker 2 (01:29:52):
Yeah, and I had friends who both worked in the
fire and friends who lost in the fire everything, And
they you know, the things they talk about isn't so
much the house and the views and whatever. It's the
fact that their lives have been completely uprooted to the
(01:30:12):
point where they're never going to go back there, their
kids' lives. They talk about it. The fact that their
kids were you know, there were sophomores and they grew
up there and now they're never going to go back there.
House isn't going to be built anytime soon. They had
to stay at Mexico for a long time because they
(01:30:34):
couldn't get anything in southern California, and they finally got
a place in Orange County. But what a nightmare. And
he asked the question, what the hell is wrong with you, dude?
We'll find out, I'm sure three two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benton Shows, Your
ex Your Instant YouTube and more coming up boys struggling
with social media will talk about that, among other things.
Speaker 27 (01:30:56):
Chad Benton Show, The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (01:31:24):
The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (01:31:27):
It's that portion of the program where we get serious
about government doing their job or not doing their job.
Now it's time for ninety seconds of government shutdown talk.
Speaker 31 (01:31:39):
We have heard Republicans soften in recent days, saying that
they do believe that issue is one that should be
taken up, and even some Republicans have gone further than that.
Marjorie Taylor Green has broken with the President and Speaker Johnson,
saying that she believes Republicans should take up this issue now,
and she is deeply concerned about the expiration of these
Obamacare tax While she says she's no fan of the
(01:32:02):
law itself, she believes it would negatively impact her constituents,
even her children.
Speaker 2 (01:32:08):
Yes, and we talked about that yesterday. We played some
of her and her tweets about health care and the
cost of health care. She is spot on and the
reason she got kind of really into politics was because
she was part of that early tea Party movement and
(01:32:29):
then came at it later to get into the politics world.
But that kind of drove her because she saw what
was happening. And last week, I think was last week
the Washington Post finally admitted, Yeah, Obamacare didn't make anything cheaper.
There was nothing about that was affordable. Healthcare is an
issue and the Republicans need to understand price equals voice
(01:32:53):
and votes. And the quicker you really get that, the
better it's going to be for the Republicans. It's not
really shut down talks. So we'll keep talking about it.
And what I mean it means voice and votes. If
prices are too damn high, people are pissed and they're
(01:33:17):
looking for what who do I blame? They're going to
take that voice and get loud, and then they're going
to take their vote and they'll turn it on you.
And healthcare prices are beyond ridiculous. You do realize, I
don't think people get this. We spend double on healthcare
(01:33:41):
than any other nation. We spend double not to ensure everybody.
And let's not forget insurance is not healthcare. We've got
(01:34:07):
to fix it. And the Republicans will pay the price
for this. They will absolutely pay the price for this
if they can't figure this out. So you're starting to
see some of them have, Yeah, maybe we need to
have a conversation about this. Even Trump yesterday came out
and said Obamacare sucks, even if we've got to spend
(01:34:28):
more money. We need to figure this out because much
like I talked about earlier, somebody who reads the room,
he understands, Hey, those are twenty five million Americans that
may lose their coverage. And then if you throw that
in with the how many other millions of Americans may
see their premiums go up even for their healthcare at work,
(01:34:49):
not through the exchange twenty percent. This is an issue,
a serious issue. He gets it. We need to fix this.
You want to know why the young are fascinated with
communism and socialism and crap like that. Well, first of
all they're young, but because they look around and go,
(01:35:15):
I bust my ass. I did everything right. I'm broke
af I can't afford to do anything. I can't afford
to go anywhere. I live off credit cards. This isn't right.
Somebody's offering you an easier way. Why not look at it?
That's why, that's why see a younger general. And this
(01:35:37):
always explained this the other day to my my buddy
because his kid who's gone off to college, has you know,
started to get that kind of liberal super liberal like
not like you know, but's starting to go in that direction.
I said, do you gotta understand something. We lived through
the Cold War. Their world of communism is China, which
(01:36:03):
is a hybrid version of communism. They've never seen what
happened in the Soviet Union and the you know, all
of that stuff, the Eastern Block. They didn't see that.
They've only grown up with Chinese people are cool. They
come here, we can go there. They've got a great culture.
(01:36:26):
They just build a giant bridge. Everything is great. They're communists.
Everybody's got you know, X, Y and Z. They never
saw the breadlines, they never saw it collapse, And the
only other thing you could point at would be North Korea.
But they're a death cult. The people don't even consider
them communists. They're just a death cult. So they look
(01:36:49):
around and say, well, why can't we be more like China?
Not understanding the full ramifications for that. But do I
get that. Absolutely?
Speaker 32 (01:37:00):
If I was young, I'd be saying the same damn thing,
wouldn't you If you feel like you did everything right
and you're bro kf and now you're getting ready to
lose mom and dad's healthcare and.
Speaker 2 (01:37:11):
Then you're not gonna be able to afford any of it,
don't get hurt. So yeah, I get it. I totally understand.
That doesn't mean it's right. But the example that is
in front of them is China. It is not what
(01:37:32):
we went through where it seemed to be that everything
over the wall was gray and dingy and sad. Ooh yeah, tomorrow,
we're gonna get really deep into healthcare because I've been
working on this for a bit, and I'm gonna say
(01:37:53):
I got a plan. I don't know if it's a
good plan. I think it's a great plan. But it's
a smart plan, no doubt about that.
Speaker 10 (01:38:03):
Meanwhile, five hundred National Guard troops are on the ground
in the Chicago area, tasked with protecting federal facilities on
the order of President Trump. It comes despite fierce opposition
from local leaders and residents, who took to the streets
in protest overnight.
Speaker 2 (01:38:17):
No Trump, No, I don't you. No.
Speaker 10 (01:38:21):
Illinois governor, attorney general, and Chicago's mayor have all called
Trump's move unconstitutional.
Speaker 2 (01:38:27):
Because it is. Uh. I've seen several prominent Republicans come
out and are weighing in more and more that no,
this doesn't need to be done. But you know, Trump,
you know what got us to this position right now
in the Middle East with Hamas and Israel is the
(01:38:50):
same thing that Trump feels, Well, why can't I just
go and do this? I want to do this, this
and this, and why are they It's again, he's in
immovable object times, he's a sledgehammer, and sometimes you need
a scalpel. And so this is where we're at, and
we'll see. Do I think that this is a overreach? Yes?
(01:39:13):
And I also think Trump is one of those people where,
oh you want to fight me, Well, I'm going to
double dig in. And I said I was going to
send fifty, Now I'm sending five hundred. They told me
I can't do it, so I'm double gonna do it.
And that's not who we are and what we're about.
So I don't think there should be guard and I
(01:39:35):
don't think they need to police. This is not an insurrection.
It is not an out of control riot like the
nineteen ninety two riots in Los Angeles. Doesn't mean that
maybe you couldn't put some especially if you have real
information that the ICE facility could be in a situation
(01:39:55):
like you saw with Dallas and the shooting there, that
maybe you might need some protection. That's a federal area. Yeah,
you could make that argument, but policing. Come on three, two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show. Is
your ex your insta. We're going to wrap it up
straight ahead with your scary movie countdown number seventeen. But first,
(01:40:16):
Birch Gold. Are you guys looking at gold gold through
the roof dollar weekend? Still unrest globally? Next up is
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lot of big institutions who people are losing faith in,
and so Gold is taking off. It's a great way
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to hedge and protect yourself for the hard things that
you've worked so hard for. So what I want you
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So text the word Benson now to ninety eight ninety
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physical They can help in any way, shape or form.
Text the word Benson now to ninety eight ninety eight
ninety eight for Birch Gold. We are going to wrap
(01:41:22):
it up. It is scary movie countdown time number seventeen,
Straight ahead, Chad Benson.
Speaker 15 (01:41:28):
Show, Deep States, No Deep Doo doo e, The Chad
Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (01:41:44):
As we put a bow on this fine Thursday edition
of The Chad Benson Show, we head over to our movie,
Our Kid, because the Countdown is on of the twenty
greatest Scariest movies of all time based on not only
fear More, but also the cultural impact that movies like
(01:42:07):
this have. And today we've got a doozy for you
that includes something where culturally, up until yesterday, you may
have been able to own a piece or the whole
thing of this. What are you talking about, Chad? Oh,
you'll find out. You know what time it is. The
time has.
Speaker 16 (01:42:28):
Come, so prepare yourself for a journey of fear from
the darkest corner of cinema, the most bone chilling tales
ever told.
Speaker 2 (01:42:38):
It's the Countdown you've been waiting for.
Speaker 16 (01:42:44):
Which movie will take the top spot? How about a
fish tail so big because the jaws open wide? Or
the story of a young innocent girl battling evil with
some Hell, well.
Speaker 23 (01:43:02):
Then let's introduce ourselves.
Speaker 1 (01:43:04):
I'm Damien Karros and I'm that devil.
Speaker 16 (01:43:06):
You'll have to listen to find out.
Speaker 2 (01:43:10):
Are you ready?
Speaker 16 (01:43:11):
Number seventeen?
Speaker 2 (01:43:13):
All right? Number seventeen? Today The Conjuring It.
Speaker 17 (01:43:17):
November one, nineteen seventy one. I'm sitting here with Carolyn Perrin,
who with her family has been experiencing supernatural currencies.
Speaker 1 (01:43:23):
You're picking up anything in here.
Speaker 18 (01:43:25):
On something awful happened here, Ed, What is it?
Speaker 19 (01:43:32):
Whatever Lorraine sees feels touches and it takes a toll
on her little peace each time.
Speaker 20 (01:43:39):
You have a lot of spirits in here, but there
was the one that I'm most worried about because it
is so hateful.
Speaker 23 (01:43:48):
We have to get out of here.
Speaker 17 (01:43:49):
That's not gonna help.
Speaker 1 (01:43:50):
This thing has latched itself to your family.
Speaker 2 (01:43:53):
We never seen nothing like this. I'm coming with you,
no way.
Speaker 1 (01:43:58):
You can't lose you.
Speaker 21 (01:44:03):
There's a leading in a dirty night Gilm that I
see in right dreams. She's standing in front of my
mom's pet.
Speaker 2 (01:44:12):
Based on one of Ed and Lorraine Warren's real life
paranormal investigations, this was about a family farm, the Peronne
Farm in Rhode Island. They lived there from seventy one
to nineteen eighty and it inspired the film. Their story
was directed by James Wand who very interestingly enough, decided
(01:44:35):
to shoot the film in thirty five millimeter stock. So
he said to they had that nineteen seventies kind of texture,
cold color, grading enhanced its documentary style feel, as well
as using long takes that built tension rather than CGI.
The movie itself was given a rated R, which some
(01:44:57):
people were like rated R because there was really no
foul language new to Your Gore, but the scares alone
apparently forced a rated R on it. Now here's some
of the scary stuff. Cast and crew reported all kinds
of crazy occurrences going on at the farmhouse, objects removing
hysterious calls, and one night parah Vermiga laptop showed claw
(01:45:20):
marks on the screen out of nowhere. Why this is
such a fascinating thing is because the house still exists,
and up until yesterday you could have bid on the house,
but the auction was canceled because somebody bought the debt
of the house, so somebody purchased it, and they have
(01:45:44):
now canceled the auction which was set for Halloween. The
other thing that's interesting is they're all still alive, outside
of the mother, who passed away about a year ago,
and she has been very open up until she died
about the house itself and how much it absolutely terrified her.
(01:46:05):
She said there was always something off about the house,
always something eerie about the house, and then she met
the neighbors.
Speaker 18 (01:46:11):
One day, I'm at one of the neighbors and she
said to me, you know, when the Kenyans lived here,
they left the lights burning in the house all the time,
all day long, all night long. And I thought that
was kind of strange. But that was clarified for us
by mister King. He said, for the sake of the children,
(01:46:34):
you should leave lights on it at night.
Speaker 2 (01:46:36):
That's funny. That's what Tom Bodett used to say, leave
the lights on at night. She thought it was kind
of odd, but she started to realize, yeah, you know what,
there's some things going on here that just aren't right.
And it's not just one thing. There are several things
going on, and everybody feels it. It had gotten to
the point where desperation sunk in. And that's when she
(01:46:58):
turned to the warrants.
Speaker 18 (01:47:00):
Rain came. She was very sweet, she was very gentle
with the children, but she started to issue warnings to me.
Speaker 1 (01:47:14):
I knew the house was haunted.
Speaker 23 (01:47:15):
All I had to do was walk in it.
Speaker 2 (01:47:18):
That was Lorraine Warren there talking about the house itself
and what she felt the minute she walked in there.
Now the Prone family lived there for a long time,
and not all memories are bad. That house.
Speaker 18 (01:47:30):
We had much happiness and many happy times to get there,
but we had horrible things happen too.
Speaker 2 (01:47:38):
And the interview they did with here, with Carolyn, who
was obviously the movie, so much of it was built
around her and her experience there. They asked her, and
this is just before the Conjurying movie came out, the original,
do you want to see the movie itself?
Speaker 18 (01:47:56):
I don't know that I'll be willing to see the film.
In fact, I've had doubt very much that I will
be willing to see them film.
Speaker 2 (01:48:03):
That was Carolyn Berne passed away last year. She is
the subject of the movie. It's an amazing movie. It
is scary, it is tense. James wanted an amazing job
with it. From this, it birthed the Conjuring universe that
included the last Conjuring this year, which did huge money,
The nun Annabel The Curse of La Larna two billion
(01:48:26):
dollars from these movies grossed worldwide, absolutely incredible. Number seventeen
of the Chad Benson Show Scariest Greatest Horror Movies of
All Time countdown. The Conjuring three two three, five, three, eight,
twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show is your
extra Insta, YouTube, Facebook. If you have any suggestions, let
(01:48:48):
us know. We'd love to hear from me. We're still
taking some suggestions because there may be something I haven't seen,
and I've seen a lot of stuff out there, so
let us know and feel free to tweet at us
or text program right here on The Chad Benz Show.
Another chlid edition of The Chad Benson Show. Man. We
talked about a lot of stuff today and as I
(01:49:10):
continue to say, you cannot overstate how big this potentially
is in the Middle East. And yes, there's gonna be
some bumps in the road, be prepared for that, but
this is huge. We'll have more on that tomorrow among
other things. Plus we'll have number sixteen and some finally
(01:49:31):
Friday as well. Reach out to us across all of
our social media. If you're missing the show, we say,
shame on you. Make sure you grab that podcast. We
will do it again. To hold on a second, I
see you Friday. We'll do it again tomorrow. As always,
Night Night Jack.
Speaker 1 (01:49:46):
This is the Chad Benson Show.