All Episodes

September 10, 2025 110 mins
Israel targets Hamas leadership in Qatar strike. ICE protests in Chicago. Trump reportedly weighing military strikes in Venezuela. FBI, DOT launch probes into killing of Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska on NC train. One-Hit Wonder Wednesday. Trump says signature on birthday note to Jeffrey Epstein is not his. Gen Z gender divide in politics. Pay gap between men and women growing wider. 
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
The Chat Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
That's how much Israel thinks of us. If you we're
gonna do what we want. And they did and yesterday
they did in a big way. And if Trump, if
you thought you were all that in a bag of chips, Bibi,
he don't care a lick about you. He gonna do
what he want to do. And you just metter make

(00:35):
sure when he asked for some you deliver it.

Speaker 3 (00:38):
Israeli missiles slamming into the Mass office in Qatar, targeting
the leadership of her mass responsible for negotiating, and then
to the conflict, a plume of smoke rising above the
capital Doha. Israel says the deadly strike was entirely justified.

Speaker 2 (00:56):
Everything is I don't know who said this quote. It
is a brilliant quote though, and the quote is and
this is coming from Israel. There is no justification. What
took place on October seventh and October seventh justifies everything
that has taken place since then. To give you guys

(01:16):
an understanding, cutter, guitar, whatever you want to call them,
because people are gonna go you said it wrong, you
said it. There are friends, there are allies. Let's go
over who Israel has bombed because the maps, we might

(01:37):
have to create a new map. So Cutter, Lebanon, Yemen, Iran,
Gaza a Gay Palestine into Jordan, Syria. We're at seven kids. No,
this is insane. And so the debate yesterday was did

(02:03):
we know? Didn't we know? When? Did we know? What
I understand is we knew, but we knew after the fact,
so we knew it was coming because nothing. See at first,

(02:24):
I'm like, there's no way they would do that without us.
There's just no way without informing us. They didn't inform us,
according to them, not if they're trying to give cover
to Trump. That doesn't help Trump makes them look even sorry,
it makes them look weak that you're not going to
inform him. But one of our commanders, because you've got

(02:51):
the set, come over there, and you've got all of
these bases throughout the Middle East, and obviously we have
a lot of people in Cutter. And what happens our
guys pick it up and say there's something coming. You're
like what what? Yeah, And by the time that Whitkough

(03:14):
knew what was happening, Trumpet instructed him to call his
counterparts over there, but it was too late. It was
too late.

Speaker 4 (03:23):
I'm not thrilled about the whole situation.

Speaker 5 (03:26):
It's not a good situation.

Speaker 4 (03:28):
But I will say this, we want the hostages back,
but we are not thrilled about the way that went
down today.

Speaker 2 (03:36):
He has no respect for Trump. If this is to
be true, that he knew nothing. I want you to
think about that. The amount of money that we get.
They survive because we pour billions into them. They survive

(03:57):
because of our military mind. They survive because we've gone
to the mat with them, not just when it comes
to the military might, but the political might as well.
And they've shown no respect. And Bibi doesn't care. He
doesn't Gatar cutter whatever. They're an ally close ally of

(04:21):
ours in that region. We have basses there, we have
men and women there, we have sentcom there. We have
a pretty big footprint there, and we couldn't warn them
because Israel thought so little of us outside of making

(04:42):
sure the spigot is still running. Now they're not allies,
but they've buried the hatchet, if you will. I mean,
there's nothing that they don't care, you know. I mean,
they don't recognize Israel, and they give a lot of

(05:02):
money to Gaza, but they they're not going to attack
at any moment. Well, we had to do this. Why'd
you have to do this? That's what I'm still waiting
to figure out. Why did you have to do this?
And what happens next, because i mean, Trump just gave

(05:25):
Hamas a one hundred word letter of conditions to end
the war, the conflict, and within what less than forty
eight hours, you attacked the leadership of the mass.

Speaker 6 (05:41):
The negotiators are now in hiding. Israel has stepped up
its attacks inside Gaza. It dropped leaflets on a Tuesday
across Gaza City, which is home to close to half
of the population, telling them all to leave their homes.

Speaker 2 (05:56):
Many people are.

Speaker 6 (05:56):
Saying they have nowhere else to go. So it seems
to leave any kind of cease five peace deal process
in tatters.

Speaker 2 (06:06):
And I'm saying this from the people I've talked to.
They're going hard now and gads, this is that they're done.
They're they're they're going to move on in they're going
to to to whatever is left, they're going to raise
and they're and these people have nowhere to go, nowhere

(06:26):
to go, So Baby doesn't care. Somebody needs to get
a hold of them. But what you've done in in
Gaza is horrific. What you have done to continually push

(06:47):
the envelope and use us is baffling. I've said it
for quite a while, and I get pushed back all
the time. I want no part of any ethnic cleansing
or involuntary nomadic movement with a bitcoin they're going to
give them, or whatever the hell they're coming up with

(07:09):
with this insane crap. I want no part of that,
starving women and children. And I heard from people yesterday
who were like, you know what they are the enemies.
I said, a six year old toy. Yes, I'm like,
I can't reason with you. I can't have a conversation
with you. I can't and you're not willing to listen
to the truth and look at stuff. This has nothing
to do, by the way, with Israel or the Jews.

(07:32):
It has all to do with Bibi and this government.
And people will come out and say, well, you know,
their God's chosen people and this is their land. I'm like,
have you rent the Bible? Have you gone through it?
Have you taken a look? You know? When they were
talking about Israel, they were like the government of Israel
is the one you absolutely must support no matter what

(07:54):
they do. It's just absolutely mind blowing. And to think,
while all this is going on here in America, Trump's
got to deal with something else that's become a nightmare
that may have Israel and Masade fingerprints all over it,
which of course is the Epstein stuff. Oh yeah, he

(08:16):
wants that thing to go away so bad. He's like,
I hope it goes away, and I was like, it's
not going away. You guys still thinking about that. Yeah,
everybody's still thinking about that. Everybody is. And I say
this to everybody listening out there. What happened to that
girl in North Carolina was horrific. We've talked about it,

(08:40):
and it's awful. There are hundreds of women that were
young girls who were abused my powerful people probably in
our government, powerful people in the world of finance, and
who knows what else, powerful people from other countries and leaders.

(09:06):
And their story is well, it's no story. It's a
hoax because of the Democrats.

Speaker 7 (09:12):
Trump and Epstein were friends for more than a decade,
but when Epstein was arrested in twenty nineteen, Trump said
the two men hadn't spoken in fifteen years. In the
so called birthday book included letters from other Epstein friends
and associates, including former President Bill Clinton, at that point,
just two years out of office, writing about Epstein's childlike

(09:33):
curiosity and drive to make a difference. After Epstein's twenty
nineteen arrest, a spokesperson for Clinton said, the president knows
nothing of his crimes.

Speaker 2 (09:44):
If you you could go look at the book, it
is twisted and sick, and you know, Trump's like, it's
not me, and the White House comes out it's a lie.
It's not me. I believe the president.

Speaker 8 (09:55):
Not my signature, and it's not the way I speak,
and anybody that's covered me for a long time, no,
that's not my language.

Speaker 2 (10:02):
It's nonsense. Is it his signature? Hmm, I mean it
looks like his signature. No, it's different now. Well it's
different now because it's his full name on there. Handwriting
experts all liars.

Speaker 9 (10:15):
In my professional opinion, the chances of this not being
his signature are too mini skilled to talk about the
signature that came up last night purported to be Donald Trump.
I can absolutely say it is Donald Trump, but it's
very much the signature that Donald Trump had in the
early two thousands as opposed to his signature now because

(10:36):
it's changed really quite a lot since he's become president.
And if we examine these under a microscope, which I
have done, you would see that they were exactly the same,
and the idea that it could be forged would be
almost impossible.

Speaker 2 (10:54):
I don't know, it's not mine. I don't even know Jeffrey.
So I want to ready just to go over this. Oh,
by the way, they got this book from the estate,
so there to make us believe that somebody forged his signature.

(11:14):
I'm teen years ago put it inside of a book
so they could get Trump when he was president. I
just want to make sure that we're all on the
same page years and years from when he became president.
I just even thought about running for president, just putting
that out there, just did say three two, three, five,

(11:36):
three eight, twenty four to twenty three.

Speaker 8 (11:37):
Act.

Speaker 2 (11:37):
You had Benton Schows, your extra inst YouTube, Facebook, and more.
A lot of stuff to get to today one hit
wonder Wednesday, among other things. But first, Birch Gold unsettled times.
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Speaker 1 (13:14):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (13:16):
How do you feel about the economy? Most people I
talked to their optimistically nervous, if that makes sense, which
I can get.

Speaker 10 (13:26):
That stocks are up, Wall Street hitting new records, fueled
by expectations that the Federal Reserve will begin cutting interest
rates next week, and gas prices are heading down now
taking the smallest bite out of American paychecks since two
thousand and five.

Speaker 2 (13:42):
That is a wonderful thing. I think we can all
agree on. That thing is with the stock market unless
you're drawing from it today or that's what you do
and you're pulling money out because you're an investor and
you're a day trader, that you are main street in
Wall Street, They've never been further apart in a lot
of things, and people are feeling it. The frustration that

(14:04):
people are feeling the young in particular, when we talk
about that in a little bit. But the Job's report
was also something that was ugly because they revised it
not a shocker, not a boom in time. And some
of this is is the Biden and well, I mean
you could pretty much put all of it on the
because while it goes to March, the reality is simply,

(14:28):
you know, Trump, Trump had been there for like a
month and a half, two months. So let's all settle down.

Speaker 10 (14:32):
A bombshell number about the jobs market. Revised data shows
the economy added nine hundred and eleven thousand fewer jobs
over the twelve months ending in March than previously estimated.
The White House blaming the Biden administration and casting doubt
on the Bureau of Labor Statistics, which compiled the report.

Speaker 2 (14:50):
It's not the Bureau of Labor Statistics. It's the way
that it's done. So to say that people they are
all biased, and to say that people there are all evil,
and to say that people there only they're out, they're
only out to get you, that's not true. You'd to
proved for that. The way that data is collected is antiquated,
and it's it's a joke. And remember so much of

(15:12):
this stuff, the jobs are born, those things are meant
for Wall Street, they're not meant for Main Street. You
feel it on a daily basis, You live it on
a daily basis. When it comes to main Street.

Speaker 11 (15:25):
This does show a significant downward revision, actually the biggest
preliminary revision in decades, and that is raising some alarms
just about Okay, is the jobs market even weaker than
we thought at a time when we do know that
has been slowing down already, and.

Speaker 2 (15:43):
With AI being here, we have to be honest with ourselves.
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson Show, is your ext your insta radio?
In the Chad Benson Show, there are jobs that are
being eliminated, not because the company is struggling, but because
they've got a great way to replace people. But they

(16:04):
can replace them and increase productivity. And that's only going
to get greater in the coming years. And by years,
I mean next week. At the rate this damn thanks growing.
Let me know what you think. Meanwhile, Sonya Sotomaore is
on every talk show you could think of. She got
a book out there, but she was talking about nine
to eleven and I found it very fascinating. She's talking

(16:26):
about how we felt after nine to eleven. I'll be honest,
I don't think we could do that again. I don't
think we can come together again like we did. I
think we're so divided, and I think social media and
everything else. I just don't think we could. But I
do remember, and I think a lot of you do
after I mean, right after nine to eleven, how we
all felt it was interesting.

Speaker 12 (16:46):
For a moment as Americans during September eleventh, we stopped
thinking about race and language and our differences. We all
came together as Americans, but more importantly, as human beings.
So for a common tragedy, we shouldn't wait for tragedies.
That's what this book is talking about. This book is

(17:06):
talking about not waiting to be kind.

Speaker 2 (17:09):
I like that. I tried to be kind to as
many people as I possibly can, and we need more
of that. We do. But nine to eleven, when you
look at it today and think about the days after
nine to eleven, how we felt compared to today, when
there's a tragedy that happens and somebody runs to ex
or to somewhere to make sure that it was on

(17:31):
the right or the left so they could throw a
meme out there and laugh. I just don't think we
can get there I'd like to think we could. I mean,
maybe when the aliens come, we realized we've got to
fight on our hands, and this the whole world might
change people's turn who know this is the show Sham
when you've got the podcast.

Speaker 1 (17:43):
Chad Benson check Son, Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (18:07):
It's White Girl Wednesday. This is where a white progressive
girl tells all of us how much we suck about
everything that we do.

Speaker 13 (18:15):
Yeah, baby, I'm so tired of men, white men specifically,
completely dismissing experiences because they haven't personally been through it.

Speaker 14 (18:21):
I made a video about.

Speaker 13 (18:22):
How a lot of teachers are bullies and or racist
to their fellow students, and this guy commented, I've never
seen this before.

Speaker 14 (18:29):
That can't possibly happen. This woman is lying.

Speaker 13 (18:32):
I work in inner city schools around a lot of
white faculty with savior complexes, who genuinely think that just
because they are working in these schools around a lot
of people of color, that they deserve to be worshiped
in praise and that they are doing everybody as service.
And I would encourage you if you've either experienced racism
as a student or seen it happen in schools, or

(18:53):
even if you've been a teacher and you've experienced it,
please comment below and here are some other articles to
prove it. But this is your friendly reminder that just
because you haven't personally seen something, maybe you've been blind.

Speaker 14 (19:03):
To it because your own biases. It could have actually
happened right in front of you. You could have seen racism
and not process it as such.

Speaker 13 (19:08):
Doesn't mean that it doesn't happen because your experience is
not everybody else's experience, especially as a white man working
in schools.

Speaker 14 (19:19):
So annoying, bro.

Speaker 2 (19:21):
So annoying, bro. White guys, you suck. You're the worst
you are. Speaking of education, we're not doing so well.
It's COVID. It's not COVID. It isn't it's a broken
system and the scores are down and that's not good.
And I know some people want to go, what about COVID,

(19:42):
because you're gonna hear a lot of that, what about COVID. Nah, COVID,
THEO COVID played a role, but there's a lot that
goes into it, and our numbers aren't so good.

Speaker 9 (19:50):
Well.

Speaker 15 (19:50):
The leader of the center that conducted this testing calls
the results sobering, and we're hearing a similar level of
concern from Washington d C officials party lines. Really, and
this testing happened with twelfth graders in the areas of
math and rating and eighth graders in the area of science,
and I want to show you what exactly those scores found.

(20:12):
In that category of reading, the average score for twelfth
graders tested last year was three points lower than when
tested in twenty nineteen. Then if you take the scores
in math, that looks pretty similar. The average scores for
twelfth graders was also three points lower, and those average
scores for both math and rating are at their lowest
since the testing started back in two thousand and five.

(20:35):
In science, the average score for those eighth graders was
four points lower than in twenty nineteen, but those scores
are not measurably different than in two thousand and nine.

Speaker 2 (20:45):
So those are twelfth graders. I mean, there's a struggle.
There are plenty of adults out there who can't read.
There are adults out there that have actually gone through
college a degree, learned nothing and can't read. We've done
stories where people are suing their high schools and their

(21:09):
colleges because they can't read. They can't they've learned nothing
because they weren't equipped. What are we doing now?

Speaker 15 (21:18):
Of course, one of the significant differences here in these
rounds of testing is that these new test scores are
the first that have been done since the pandemic. But
those scores do follow a downward trend that really began
before the outbreak of COVID, and the reporting revealed especially
significant drops in scores among the lowest for forming students.

(21:40):
Of course, these scores also come amid significant changes from
the federal government and how they're organizing the Department of Education.
You know that President Trump has already made some pretty
deep cuts to the Department and has said he really
wants to eliminate the agency altogether.

Speaker 2 (21:56):
I mean, I'm more for the state having more control
because I think it's vitally important the state has more
control over the education. They're the ones doing it. The
Feds are like, no, we need to be more involved,
you know. That's that's but with Trump that's the one thing.
I mean, the Department Education hadn't been around. You know,
we act like we decided we're gonna have one school house.
Now we need to go to DC and we need

(22:19):
to get the Department of Education so it could regulate
the schoolhouse and decide what is going to be done here,
and federal dollars so we can have it. It wasn't
like that came along just last century, the latter part
of the last century. And before that, we we were
learning pretty good, right like we you know, we weren't

(22:42):
always so stupid. You know, I was, you know, I
was more better than a lot of folk. I don't.
It is frustrating and the kids. Something happened during COVID,
there's no doubt about that. Let's we can be honest.
But also we can look at this situation and go, okay,

(23:02):
what happened besides missing out on school in certain areas
where discipline, there's a lot of things we can start
chalking off here why these scores are so low? And
I'm not considering playing the teachers. More and more people
are being homeschooled. Now we homeschool our kids. It is

(23:23):
it's there's a lot going on right now, there is,
and there's a lot of frustration. And I said during COVID,
watch what happens with parents seeing what they're being taught?
Not just the woke ideology but a lot of the

(23:45):
other stuff and then saying to themselves, Okay, what are
we doing here? And that lower income brack the students
that are struggling the most, they are falling further and
further behind. It's like a wealth gap of knowledge. You're
not going to build a solid society based on that.

(24:06):
You're not three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four
to twenty three act you had Benson Show, is your acts?
Your Insta, YouTube, Facebook and more. I wanted to touch
on you know, we talked about it the top of
the hour, the woman Ukrainian young lady who was stabbed.
It's become a story and you know they're blaming the

(24:31):
media for not covering on the right. Why didn't you
cover it on the right? If this was a white
guy that did this to a black woman? This is
all to be out there, Yeah, because they're they're telling
their story. And I tell this to my friends and
my uncle when we do our stuff together. I don't
care what the media says. Why do you care what

(24:51):
the media says you? You don't. You think they're all liars,
So why do you care what they say? Well, because
they should. Yeah, but you're wanting something that's not going
to happen. They're not going to give you what you want.
And this became a story because it should have been
a story, but it became a bigger story because yes,

(25:13):
the MAGA influencers got on that, there's no doubt about this,
and they turned this into something where, you know, because
crime has been a very hot topic. You see what's
going on in Chicago and Memphis and and you know,
but I said, a lot of that's not real either, guys.
It's not because Chicago's going to higher murder rate than Memphis.

(25:37):
Their crime levels are through the roof. Nobody's going there.
Why it's you know, I live in Tennessee. Bill Lee
is our governor. It's a hard red state. He's not
going to come out here unless he gets a call
from Bill. Bill said, yeah, I think he should come

(25:57):
out here. It's not so much of it is overblown.
The murder was horrific, the guy is insane, and now
it's just become an issue of race and why didn't you?

(26:20):
And then the left going, you guys are trying to
compare it to George Floyd and you're thinking, wow, this
is this is where we are now, and several of
you have text in about that, like why haven't you
covered it more? I've covered it, but I'm not going
to cover it from the crazy side on either side.
It was a horrible situation that happened to a beautiful

(26:42):
young woman by a man who is out of his
effing mind, and questions need to be asked about a
lot of things, including the failure of the other people
on the train to do a gd thing as well.
Coming up, we've got to hit Wonder Wednesday. We'll change
pace here a little bit, you know, because sometimes we

(27:03):
get a little serious about stuff and we also like
to breathe and have fun. But first, Rough Greens are
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Speaker 16 (28:10):
Show, serving up talk radio medium, rare and dripping with irony.

Speaker 1 (28:26):
It's Chad Beenson.

Speaker 2 (28:28):
It is one hit Wonder Wednesday. It's one of our
favorite times of the week. Or we don't get to
talk about wool and immigration battles and all the things
that are going out there that make you go, we
get to have a little fun smile on our face.
This is where you take a deep dive, a deeper
look into an artist. Maybe they're a solo artist, maybe

(28:49):
they're in a band, maybe they're a duo. But for
a brief moment in time, they craft something that gets
America and at times the world paying attention to them
and their music, and then as quick as they show up,
they're gone, disappeared, never to be heard from again, except

(29:12):
in situations where there's a retro festival or maybe a fair.
We call this one Hit Wonder Wednesday.

Speaker 17 (29:21):
Now it's time for another edition of One Hit Wonder Wednesday.

Speaker 2 (29:32):
You may not remember the name of the.

Speaker 18 (29:34):
Band, but you definitely know the song.

Speaker 2 (29:49):
This Bruiser, This is One Hit Wonder Wednesday. All right,
So today is very interesting. So we have a person
that had two one hit wonders, one as the lead
singer of a band and one a year after he

(30:11):
was kicked out the band. So I said, you know what, Yeah,
those are one hit Wonders. So today's artist, his name
is Christopher Hamill, born in England, starts to get into

(30:32):
the punk scene. So here he is. He's born in
the fifties. In the mid seventies, the punk scene is exploding,
so he joins a couple bands. They go nowhere. On
top of that, he's cutting hair, doing some acting. He's
got a small role in an ITV that's a British

(30:52):
thing called the Gentle Touch naty one. He appeared as
an extra in the promotional video for Adam and the
Ants and their number one uksele Stand and Deliver. So
he's continuing to try to rock and roll through his
own thing and he answers an ad and there's a band.
There's four of them, but they're missing something and they
put the ad in melody Maker. They're asking for a

(31:15):
front man who could sing and look good. That was him.
He knew it was a good looking dude. So he
joined the band and he changed his name, decided he
was going to spin his last name around. Instead of
being Christopher Hamill, he was just going to be Lamal.

(31:37):
The name of the band would become Kajha Goo Goo
and they had one major major.

Speaker 5 (31:44):
Hit, Anah.

Speaker 2 (32:05):
But after their major hit went number one everywhere within
a year, they kicked him out of the band, said
we don't want him here anymore. They fired him, the
manager did. He said it was a massive betrayal and
he was crushed. Subsequently, the next year, he gets a
phone call from Georgio Moroder. This guy's famous big time

(32:26):
when it comes to disco and synth pioneer, and he
built the likes of Donna Summer and Blondie and all
of these major superstars. Says, hey, I need a song
for a movie and I want you to do it.
And the movie it's called The never Ending Story. And
they said, well, you're going to sing the English version

(32:49):
and there's going to be a French version, so you're
gonna sing both of those. But the Germans are gonna
have their own version, which you're not gonna have any
part of. And by the way, we've got an American singer.
Her name is Beth Anderson. She's gonna sing You're never
gonna meet her. So after being fired from his band
getting an opportunity to sing a single for a movie

(33:10):
called The never Ending Story, Lamal had achieved something that
very few do. He became a one hit wonder, not once,
but twice. Here is that song from the movie The
never Ending Story. This is Lamal with The never Ending Story.

Speaker 19 (33:34):
Why you see the never Inning started.

Speaker 2 (34:12):
Global success, massive hit all over, number one in several countries,
number six here in America. Still a song that people
loved to sing. When they hear it, they think of
that movie. That is one of the things they think about.
And you know this guy. It's one of those things.
It's weird to have two one hits, but you were

(34:32):
in a band and you did it on your own.

Speaker 20 (34:37):
In a recent interview this is in the last five years,
Georgia was asked about this. Why did he ask me
to sing the song? And he said, and he's a
lovely German Italian accent. He is Italian for he did
all that. You know, he did all the recordings in
Munich because it was he lived close to the border.
But I was I liked this song and all this

(34:58):
shy shy he sings it out of tune, which made
me laugh. In the interview, I like this guy's voice,
you know, so I thought, let's try that guy.

Speaker 2 (35:12):
Oh, there you go. Lamal. He is a one hit slash,
two hit wonder one with Katcha gougu but one on
his own with a never ending story. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four twenty three At Chad Benson Show,
it's your Acts, your instant YouTube Facebook. Top of that,
we go live every night. You guys know that. So

(35:33):
if you have a chance, check us out posting videos
doing lots of things and hit the like button and
make sure you subscribe. That really helps us out right
here on the Chad Benson Show. Coming up, our number
two of the program. I think we're heading to a conflict.
I don't know if you call it war, but I

(35:54):
think you can put that out there, maybe make the
case for it. We're going to talk about that and
it comes off what we touch on yesterday with Mike Lyons.
If you missed any of that, grabbed the podcast. But
I think we're headed towards something when it comes to Venezuela.
We're gonna talk a bit about that more on Israel
and Cutter as well as Epstein, because I don't know

(36:15):
if you're aware of this. I know he wants it
to go away. It's not going away. Talk about that
as well. You missing the show, Shad when you read
the podcast our number two of the Chad Benson Shows.

Speaker 1 (36:26):
Good, This is the Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (36:59):
So how much this this Israel think about us when
it comes to making decisions. They like our money, they
like our power that we have, and we are the
dog that they wag. And what they did yesterday by

(37:22):
bombing an ally of ours, a very close ally, was
absolute horsecrap. Trump's saying I didn't know about it. Really,
I don't know if I come out and say that,
so you didn't know about it, you didn't. I'm I
shouldn't be shocked. It was the fact that their jets
had taken off and that our people picked it up.

(37:45):
Where were they cutter and they said, hey, here they come.
And by the time that we found out through one
of the generals who alerted Witkoff, who then called his
counterpart over there, it was too late. Salute crap.

Speaker 3 (38:02):
I'm that's saying the attack didn't kill a single leader,
that it was a failure, instead killing three Hamass security guards,
the son of one of the leaders, along with a
worker and the Katari guard. The White House acknowledging it
knew about the attack just a short time before, but
suggesting it didn't know soon enough to warn Qatar.

Speaker 2 (38:23):
A key US ally, Yeah, more than a key US ally.
It's embarrassing. Trump should be pissed. I think, well, I mean,
when you've listened to him, he sounds angry. Rightly so,

(38:44):
but it doesn't matter. BB's going to do whatever the
hell Bbe wants to do. I've been telling you guys
this for a while. I am in the super minority
in my industry talking about the fact that Israel the
government itself, not the people, right, You've always got to

(39:08):
preface that because everything you hate the Jews. I always
get that a lot all the time. We joke at
work to burn a bagel. Oh you hate the Jews
like that's the that's the that's their go to, that
is and whenever you talk to somebody about it, you do.
So you must want the the terrorist to win. I'm like,

(39:29):
is that I said?

Speaker 5 (39:29):
Is that it?

Speaker 2 (39:30):
I mean, you can you can decipher that from like, man,
I don't think you should go women and children and
stop bombing all your freaking neighbors and using us behind
you to fund it. Ah, you hate the Jews. Okay,
well you can't argue with people like that. But Trump
was pissed and I would be too. Babe, just told

(39:52):
Donald Trump, I do what I want. I can do
what I want and you aren't going to stop me.
Think about that. You told the president who has been
I can't remember a president that has been so pro Israel,

(40:12):
and yet what did they do? Because Bbi's not interested.
Dude is not interested in any kind of peace negotiation
or ceasefire. He's not interested. I tell you guys this
over and over again. It would take us leaning on
them in a way that I don't know if this
administration and these politicians have the konees for they have

(40:40):
an actual architect drawn up PowerPoint maps of what they're
going to do with Gaza, and don't think they're stopping
there because the West Bank will be next. I'm not
thrilled about the whole situation. It's not a good situation.

Speaker 4 (40:58):
But uh, I will say this, we want the hostages back,
but we are not thrilled about the way that went
down today.

Speaker 2 (41:06):
We're not thrilled. It wasn't good. It's embarrassing. It is
over the last Well, let's go over this. Let's take
a look at how much money we've given them, which
because everybody's like, well we give them three billion, No, no,
we've given them a lot more than that over the
last two plus years. So if you want to start

(41:29):
talking about how much money we've given them, and we're
going to break it down for you over the last
couple of years, because of the battles, the wars, the
whole nine yards, this is what it looks like we
have given them a total of let's do when the
war began. Okay, so twenty three twenty four, almost eighteen
billion dollars, we've upped it and added another four billion,

(42:00):
and nobody has a sweetheart deal like this. So we
should be a little pissed, and we should ask what
the hell's going on? Our money over there being spent
the war machine in full effect, BB do whatever the
hell he wants. And then you've got these people over
here who are run around going, well, it's what Jesus wants. No, No,

(42:20):
I'm pretty sure that's not what Jesus wants. I read
my Bible. My wife she reads her Bible. We talk
about this a lot. This Probably I'm going to go
out there and say, I don't think he'd be thrilled
by this, and I ain't. People yesterday telling me straight
out that's exactly what he wants. I said, So he's
cool killing you know, six year old fight. Yeah, they're

(42:43):
the enemy. I'm like, okay, well there you go, then
there you go. Then you can't have a conversation. But
they're doing it on our dimes. So know that the famine,
know that the ethnic cleansing, that's on our time, Our
names those bullets might as well sign our names on that,

(43:06):
might as well attack an ally of ours. It's okay, right,
because you can do what you want. So frustrating, so frustrating,
which also brings you to the whole Epstein thing, because
you know, that's always been one of the things that's
dangled out there about Epstein and the you know, was

(43:28):
he a actual Masad agent or was he an agent
of several agencies? Does he you know, even in death
because of what he has done, does he hold sway
over our politics? I don't know. I would like to

(43:51):
think no, but I couldn't tell you. But I think
it's a fair question to ask. Do I think it's
ever going to come all the way out?

Speaker 21 (44:00):
No?

Speaker 2 (44:00):
I don't. I think that everybody was lied to. All
the people that thought MAGA was all the things they
said they were, that's all a lie, it is. It's

(44:20):
all well. I mean, first of all, never put your
trust into any politician at all, the way that I
think too many people have when it comes to Trump
or the Democrats or whatever. But you know, when I
get people telling me, you know, we should care about crime,
we should care about this, and then I'm like, well,
you didn't care about this. This didn't seem to be

(44:42):
a big deal. I mean, it was until it wasn't
and then it's just lie. But look at the book,
that crazy creepy ass book that's out that is absolutely insane. You.
It is so creepy. And Trump's like, I didn't write that.

(45:05):
Wasn't me? Wasn't me?

Speaker 22 (45:06):
The President insisting the signed birthday message for Jeffrey Epstein
that bears his name is forged, not.

Speaker 8 (45:13):
My signature, and it's not the way I speak, and
anybody that's covered me for a long time, no, that's
not my language.

Speaker 2 (45:20):
It's nonsense.

Speaker 22 (45:21):
The letter, included in a compilation for Epstein's fiftieth birthday,
shows the crudely drawn outline of a woman's body around
a typed message, including the lines we have certain things
in common Jeffrey Enigma's never age.

Speaker 2 (45:37):
Wasn't me? Right, wasn't me? Couldn't do it? Wasn't me. No,
we should be frustrated. I'm frustrated this administration is I
thought was gonna be way better, and they have done
some things that have been okay, but they have swung
and missed way more than I thought they would. And

(46:04):
then to gaslight people, and it again the older generation.
It's funny because Trump now is leaning on the older
generation of MAGA, the younger generation, the more independent generation.

Speaker 5 (46:20):
They are.

Speaker 2 (46:22):
Not giving this up when it comes to Epstein. They
do not think that Israel can do no wrong and
to support them through throughout everything and to fund them
forever in a day, especially while they're struggling to make
ends meet and survive. No, he's counting on the seventy

(46:47):
plus MAGA folk to basically to help him get through
the midterms and everything and just push, push, push. I
think he's swinging and missing on this. And don't think

(47:08):
now that some of this stuff isn't going to get
out and there's gonna be far more questions and you've
turned this into something. And I was talking to somebody
yesterday who's trying to argue with me about why this
doesn't matter, and I'm like, I said, well, you just
said this thing in North Carolina matters. Why does it
matter to you because it's crime and it's bad and
this young lady was innocent, And I said, these young
girls were innocent. Your fear is this hurts your narrative

(47:34):
when it comes to Trump, where You're fine if you
think the narrative and this crime and this horrific act
that took place in North Carolina helps your narrative. Stop
thinking that way. Both can be bad and we should
want justice. Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four
to twenty three at Chad Benson shows your ex, your Insta, YouTube, Facebook,

(47:57):
and more. Kids on you guys right now Webroot. The
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It has to be talked about because they want to

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Coming up, White Woman Wednesday Plus we're going to talk
a little bit of immigration, and then later on we're
going to talk about another nightmare that may be coming
when it comes to conflict. Venezuela, Chad Benson.

Speaker 1 (49:44):
Joe, you're listening to the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (49:56):
It is Wednesday. We see woke stuff on Wednesday, but
now we do White Girl w If you don't know
what that is, Star girl Kinley here, who likes to
tell everybody how horrible they are. Luckily for me, I
do the work each and every week trying to be
less racist, less homophobic, less sexist, biased, whatever that we're doing,
and today immigration for her.

Speaker 13 (50:16):
If you are someone who has voted against human rights
multiple times and something happens to you, you do not
get to get on here and say, oh my god,
where is your empathy? You gleefully voted other people's rights away,
and now that there are consequences to those choices, you
expect us to rally around you. This lady has been
talking online, Oh my god, like my fiance he got deported.

Speaker 14 (50:34):
My boyfriend got deported. He's one of the good ones. Yeah,
he's a white immigrant from Europe.

Speaker 13 (50:39):
This lady voted for Trump thinking that he was going
to deport essentially the black and brown immigrants and that
her husband, for some weird reason, would be exempt from this,
and now that he has been deported, she seriously expects
the left and people who are members of these marginalized
groups like immigrants, black and brown people, and queer people
to rally around her to have empathy for her. I

(51:01):
don't know how many times I have to say this,
but Trump does not care about you.

Speaker 14 (51:04):
His regime does not care about you. Do not get
to have selective empathy.

Speaker 13 (51:07):
For people that look like you and then scream, oh
my god, help me, help me when something bad happens
as a result of your choices. And I hope that
your boyfriend fives you because you're clearly a very bad
person who has no sympathy for his status as an immigrant.

Speaker 2 (51:20):
I love the left. Oh, by the way, I hope
believes you. Oh my lord, that is spectacular. Again, You've
got to put in the work. She knows she's doing
the work. She's doing the work for all. She can't
do all the heavy lifting we have to do some
immigration kids, I'm telling you got to pay attention to it.

Speaker 23 (51:41):
Speaking of that, another day of anti immigration and customs
enforcement protest in Chicago, as what the departure fall.

Speaker 2 (51:47):
I'm going to put a pause on that for a second.
It's not immigration. It's illegal immigration that people are upset
about on the right and even yes, some on the left.
So protest against the system. Okay, I'm okay with that.
I get that, but remember this is illegal immigration.

Speaker 23 (52:10):
Another day of anti immigration and customs enforcement protests in Chicago,
as what the Department Homeland Security calls Operation Midway Blitz
is underway. ABC News was given access to one of
the first operations with the at AP and ICE working together.

Speaker 2 (52:26):
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty three
at Chad Benson Shows, Your ex inst to YouTube and
more radio.

Speaker 23 (52:31):
On The Chad Benson Show, dozens of heavily armed agents
meeting at an undisclosed location to track suspected members of
the Trend de Ragua gang accused of selling guns.

Speaker 2 (52:44):
The Trend de Ragua gang gotta say like they gotta
put a little some ours ruled the hours Trend de Ragua,
Chad mentioned show speaking of that, check us out across
all of our social media. The interesting part about so
we're to talk about in a minute Venezuela because I
you're hearing it first, but well I've been breaking it

(53:06):
for a while, but you're gon we're going to get
into this thing. It's happening. I just want everybody understand
Venezuela is our next target. If you don't know, we're
gonna go free the people of Venezuela from all that
oil under the ground. But what about all the drugs.
Trende Aragua, by the way, is not a player that

(53:29):
the Trumpet Miss administration wants to make them out to be.
They're not comparatively to the Cartels of the Sun, which
kind of the trende a Ragua is like a franchise,
wholly owned subsidiary of of that. But they're a prison gay.

(53:50):
They're bad news, don't get me wrong, and I don't
want them here. But this is the face they've decided,
you know, because you've got to you've got to sell it.
Understand this, go back and look at the Iraq War.
They had to find a way to sell it. So
what did they do. They put together groups and then
tested it to see if this would sell to the

(54:12):
American people. Trend is the group that we're being sold
is the end all to be all of evil, so
we can invade Venezuela. Missity Show grabbed the podcast. We're
gonna talk about that straight ahead Chad Benson check then Chad.

Speaker 1 (54:25):
Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (54:47):
Yesterday we interviewed we have him on every Tuesday, our
buddy Mike Lion's military Analysts. Great guy, like the best
in the biz. Saw him later on a bunch of
TV station CNN and whatnot, and he's great. But they
were talking about Qatar, Qatar, cutter Qatar whatever as they
were talking about that though. One of the things yesterday
that I brought up with him that he and I

(55:10):
have talked about off the air as well as on
the air. And we need to pay attention to this
way more than people realize. And that is what is
going on in Venezuela, Venezuela and the potential for this
thing to get serious soon, and by soon I mean
very soon. So here's some of our interview yesterday with

(55:31):
Mike Lyons about the potential conflict or whatever it's going
to be, because remember this is about drugs or freedom
or oil and stuff. Venezuela we touched on the last week.
Now a lot of people are talking about it, starting
to get news now that we've blown up allegedly a
you know, a drug you know boat or whatever it was,

(55:52):
you know, trying to get here. We don't move ships
the way we've moved them, and we don't move troops
the way we've moved them without worry about something that
may happen, and nobody's really paying that much attention to it.

Speaker 24 (56:05):
You know, great point, and I'm a little bit concerned
about this, and it's almost you know, you saw also
the Secretary of Defense or whatever he's called himself today,
is now pushing for this new strategy that shifts attention
away from China and Russia to defending the homeland western
the Western hemisphere.

Speaker 25 (56:22):
I saw a paper come out. I'm just shaking my head.

Speaker 24 (56:24):
Is this kind of like some kind of play with
regard to you know, just projecting power, you know in
South America?

Speaker 25 (56:33):
But it just doesn't make any sense.

Speaker 24 (56:34):
I mean, what he needs the military to go after
the drug cartels is another one of these crazy missions
that you know, we could try to cut off boats
and blow them up as we saw on the sea there,
but we're going to take marines and invade Venezuela.

Speaker 25 (56:46):
I don't get it. I don't know where this is
kind of going.

Speaker 24 (56:48):
I'm not sure this is this threat that's doesn't really
make sense that the military uses is being used in
that mission. But no, for sure, this mission is being
intensified there, putting a lot of pressure on the Navy.
The Navy does not need this this mission. They need
to focus in the Pacific. They need to project the
power gunboat diplomacy in that direction towards China and protect

(57:09):
our allies out there. But for whatever reason, they've decided
to take those the ships in Norfolk and send them
send them to South. I got a little inside information
on that, and I think that there's real concern there
that they're being oversubscribed. But but this pivot to the
to the Venezuela and South America is is a little
surprising to me, do.

Speaker 2 (57:28):
You I mean, you know, because I've talked about my
buddies who were in the Marines, like, you don't move
marines like that if you're not going to have them
do something, and you're you're moving these people because you know,
whether it's the oil underneath the ground in Guiana, which
of course Venezuela now claims is theirs, or they really
are trying to have a war on drugs. This feels
more than just the usual show.

Speaker 25 (57:48):
Yeah, I'll check. You're right. Those guys are right.

Speaker 24 (57:50):
You don't move marines unless you're going to do something
with them that they don't do well sitting on a
boat rocking around the sea.

Speaker 2 (57:56):
Uh.

Speaker 24 (57:57):
And they want to get off that boat and go
do something, and you know, at some point you got
to bring them back. And you know, a training exercise
maybe turns into something else, but it's definitely you know,
maybe they're going to go to Puerto Rico or something.

Speaker 25 (58:11):
I don't know.

Speaker 24 (58:11):
But but again, there's just there's just too much going
on there that looks like it's focused on this counter
narcotic mission. Uh, and it's being you know, over militarized,
and I think that you know, you're bringing We've seen
reports of the F thirty five's going out there like that,
you know, projecting power to drug cartels that don't have
the same weapons systems. I'm not sure they're going to

(58:32):
buy into it. They're just going to go under ground
for a while and lay low until until the heat
comes off.

Speaker 2 (58:37):
It was a portion of our interview yesterday with Mike
Lyons military analysts. I have them on every Tuesday. This
isn't about drugs, you guys, do get that. Eastern Pacific,
Western Caribbean, Mexico, Brazil, West Africa, Venezuela minimal impact to
the US. Minimal, I mean, it's super secondary, maybe ten

(58:58):
percent at compared to eighty to ninety percent that comes
from Central America. So I sit there and I go,
what are we doing? Because it feels like so we
shot a boat right twenty seven hundred miles away from
our coast, twenty seven hundred miles away from our coast,
not a threat to us. But they were bringing drugs.

(59:19):
We think they were drugs, but it was twenty seven
hundred miles away from US, and they went Judge dread
and blew them up. Now, I don't think any of
us feel too sorry for drug dealers. No, if indeed
they were, But if we made mistakes before, I'm thinking
we have. And Trump yesterday telling everybody, hey, hey, generals,

(59:41):
if they get squirrely on us, I feel free to,
you know, do whatever you want to them, shoot down
their planes. I'm not going to take a chance a
venezuela flass genus over US.

Speaker 26 (59:51):
Angel Justice.

Speaker 2 (59:52):
Well, I would say they're going to be in trouble.
We'll let them know about that.

Speaker 8 (59:56):
We heard that happen, but it wasn't really over like
they described.

Speaker 2 (01:00:01):
But I would say, general, if they do that, you
have a choice of doing anything you want.

Speaker 8 (01:00:06):
If they fly in a dangerous physician, I would say
that you can, you or your captains can make the
decision as to what they want to do.

Speaker 2 (01:00:14):
In Paris.

Speaker 26 (01:00:17):
And he said they didn't go over.

Speaker 2 (01:00:19):
Say how close did they get?

Speaker 26 (01:00:20):
He said, the planes?

Speaker 2 (01:00:22):
Well, I don't want to talk about that.

Speaker 8 (01:00:23):
But if they do put us in a dangerous position,
let's be shut down.

Speaker 2 (01:00:28):
Oh by the way, their foreign ministry came out and said,
we don't want any conflict Trump. We put a fifty
million dollar bounty on Maduro's head, which had the drugs. Right,
because this is the this is the the you can
give everybody the facts and data. It's not. Trendy Agua
is perfect. They're they're great. Scare tactic is everything you want.
You could build them up, right, it's it's there there,

(01:00:49):
it is right. They're selling it to us. Trendy Agua.
They're a small player. They're mostly a prison gang. They're
bad hombres. We don't want them here. But beyond it,
you know who is honest. This is a general, one
of our generals talking about all the goodies that Venezuela

(01:01:09):
and parts of South America have.

Speaker 21 (01:01:12):
Why this region matters with all of its rich resources
and rare earth elements. You've got the lithium triangle, which
is needed for technology. Today, sixty percent of the world's
lithium is in the lithium triangle. Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, you
just have the largest oil Reserve's Light Sweet crew discovered

(01:01:32):
off of Guyana over a year ago. You have Venezuela's
resources as well, with oil, copper, gold. We have the
Amazon lungs of the world. We have the thirty one
percent of the world's fresh water in this region too.
I mean, it's just off the charts. We have a

(01:01:53):
lot to do. This region matters. It has a lot
to do with national security and we need to up
up our game.

Speaker 2 (01:02:01):
And what exactly national security was. So I gotta wait
for the hooties. They're coming for us, Iran at any
given time, we've got to wait for Hesbelah and now
South America. They're all coming for us. Did you ever
once hear her say, you know what else? These people
are oppressed and they need freedom.

Speaker 5 (01:02:23):
It's any of that.

Speaker 2 (01:02:25):
And why Guiana matters is because there's a big battle
going on. So there's a bunch of oil rigs off
the coast that are owned by I don't know, maybe
some of our companies, and they've already had issues as
you know what, they nationalize everything in Venezuela. So what
ended up happening is Venezuela said, hey, some of that

(01:02:48):
Light Sweet crude is probably all ours. We should take it,
and so there's a potential there. This is not don't
tell when somebody said this is about it's not about drugs,
it's not. It's not. This is about the opportunity to
flex your muscles and drill, baby, drill, just not here.

(01:03:13):
Let me know what you think. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chet Benson,
show Jarrex your Insta, YouTube, Facebook, and more. I love
hearing from every single one of you, the good and
the bad, because I get a lot of it both,
and I'm fine with that. Price picks. Maybe you ready
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Speaker 1 (01:04:57):
If you like talk radio, like Chad Benson his meals,
you've come to the perfect place for takeout.

Speaker 2 (01:05:05):
So today September tenth, the Year of the Lord twenty
twenty five, we like to look back and see what
happened on other September tenth throughout history. Obviously, tomorrow we
know what a big part of this day in history
is going to be about. But there were things that
happened on this day in history, But it happened a

(01:05:26):
while ago.

Speaker 1 (01:05:27):
Once upon in time, a long time ago.

Speaker 2 (01:05:30):
Now it's time for this day in history. We look
back on this set to find out what the famous
things took place. Let's take a look at some of
the things it took place on this day in the history.
September tenth. Let's start way back eighteen thirteen. The Battle
of Lake Erie I was during the War of eighteen twelve.
So hold on, I want to get this. So it's

(01:05:52):
eighteen thirteen, but this is the War of eight Yes,
it's the War of eighteenth tween. This when it started
the war. But there were the fights still going on,
and it's the Battleflake herey. US naval commander Oliver hazard
Perry defeated the British fleet. Afterwards he sent his famous message,
we have met the enemy and they are os speaking

(01:06:14):
of the British. On this day in history, eighteen ninety seven,
this is the first d w Irs in London. George Smith.
He crashed his taxi to a building. He got fired
twenty five shillings for bleeding. Guilty Day. In nineteen thirty nine,
Canada declares war on Germany. Just one week after Britain

(01:06:35):
and France they entered the war, joining the Allies. As
you guys know, stay in history nineteen sixty three, twentieth
century Limited ends. This is the famous New York Central
Railroad's luxury passenger train, known as the Train of the Stars.
Two thousand and two. Switzerland joined the UN on this
day in history and has been pretty neutral ever since.

(01:07:00):
Also on this day in history, two thousand and eight,
the large Hadron Collider. You guys know what that is, Okay,
So it first fired up. So this is the Adrin Collider.
It's big, huge, and it's a particle accelerator. And people
were terrified because they thought, oh my god, this is
going to be great until there's the black hole, which

(01:07:21):
never came. Famous birthdays, Big Daddy Camee was born in
nineteen sixty eight. Christopher Columbus, not the explorer, but the
director herm alone and Harry Potter was born on this
day in fifty one. Also on this day in eighteen ninety,
Elsa Chiaparelli was born. She made Surreala's styles and what

(01:07:43):
we think of this kind of modern fashion, and if
you go way back sixteen oh seven, John Smith the
English explorer Key figured in Jamestown was born on this
day in history. See, now we know a little bit
more that we didn't know. And obviously tomorrow's going to
be one of those things where there's gonna be a
lot of talk, obviously about nine to eleven, as you

(01:08:03):
would expect. Could you imagine if you like had big
doings that day, and you had big life moments and
or something big happened, and it just like you were
relegated and then forever whatever that big moment was, maybe
you got married. He ran out of the courthouse, like

(01:08:24):
we're gonna get married because we're in love. And now
you're gonna be forever known as the you know, nine
to eleven or you were born. Jeez, oh my goodness.

Speaker 6 (01:08:35):
Me.

Speaker 2 (01:08:35):
It's interesting because you have kids, you know, like she
I have younger kids, and like what was nine to eleven?
And you you live through something like that where you
forget that they didn't, so they kind of take it
for you know, we take it for granted that they
know what it is, but they don't. But I came
across this Scotis Justice Sonia, so I own she's got

(01:08:59):
a book. She's out there, but she brought up nine
to eleven, and I found it fascinating what she said
because I remember that day, the gut punch, the just
this bizarre feeling, streets are empty, and then subsequent days

(01:09:20):
where American flags everywhere, people saying hi to everybody, didn't
matter what color you were, what race you were. It
was a different time. I don't think we get that today.

Speaker 12 (01:09:29):
I don't for a moment as Americans during September eleventh,
we stopped thinking about race and language and our differences.
We all came together as Americans, but more importantly, as
human being suffering a common tragedy. We shouldn't wait for tragedies.

(01:09:50):
That's what this book is talking about. This book is
talking about not waiting to be kind.

Speaker 2 (01:09:57):
And I love that. You know, I have a lot
of friends on the left and the right, and I
don't pick my friends based on who they love, or
what they identify as, or who they voted for. But
we are in as such a divided, bizarre world right now,
and I think back to those days afterwards, and how

(01:10:24):
people you know, were trying to drag themselves up by
their bootstraps after being kicked in the grundle and feeling
like they were just what the hell happened to us?
And you know the pictures and the video of Ground
Zero and the smoldering you know, fires that were just
put out and all of that stuff. And I don't
know if we could get that back today. I don't

(01:10:46):
know what would make us rally around each other because
I think today, well, I think a few things. First
of all, with the media the way it is and
as fragmented as it is, people are always out looking
to make a big splash. They're gonna say stuff, they're
gonna throw things out there because they want the clicks.
You know, We've talked about that throughout the day. And
then the other side of it is there's so much

(01:11:09):
news available and I know Tucker's got a new nine
to eleven, you know report out there that we're so
conspiratorial on everything. You know, there used to be like
the kind of the big one or two conspiracies that
everybody's like, oh, you know JFK and Martin Luther King

(01:11:31):
and UFOs. Now everything is that way, and so I
don't know, I don't know what it would look like
with social media. I don't think it'd be good. I
think there'd be a lot of people out there celebrate
in this, you know, on the left, saying we got
what we deserved. You find some people on the right

(01:11:52):
gun we shouldn't be meddling in certain places, I think,
And I think you'd also find some people out there
who would say, you know, this is what God wants.
And then you find those people out there today that
would say, well, you know, is an inside job. So
I don't know what it would be like though, because
social media wasn't a thing yet. Three two, three, five, three, eight,

(01:12:13):
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show, is
Your ex Insta, YouTube, Facebook, and more Fastey Show Grab
the podcast helps us out right here in the Chad
Benson Show. Coming up our number three of the program.
Talk a little abstinct, cause I know Trump wants it
to go a He's like, I hope this goes away,
and there is not. I hope all you want? What

(01:12:36):
do they say in one hand and wishing the other,
See which one fills up faster. It's kind of what
you're doing right now. Talk a bit about that Israel
attack yesterday and Doha cutter is our friend or Katar
depending on how you want to phrase it there are
ally we have lots of service people there and uh
bbe did what he wanted to do. Talk about that

(01:12:58):
among other things. We got what's training and of course
one hit wonder Wednesday. You're listening to the show. Grab
the podcast hour number three of The Chad Benson Show,
straight Ahead.

Speaker 1 (01:13:08):
This is the Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (01:13:39):
Crime is awful. What happened to that woman the other
day was horrific. This is not about racism, Oh Chad,
you can't say stuff like that, or dare you say stuff?
This is exactly what No. This is about a mentally
ill man who should not be public, who killed an

(01:14:06):
innocent young woman who escaped from Ukraine in the war
and lost her life on a light rail because a
guy who thinks he is being controlled by his sister
through some sort of device in his brain killed her.

(01:14:30):
And the right is like, the media is horrible. They're
not covering it. If this was reversed, it would be
all over the place. Some of that's true, But as
I tell all my friends out there who freak out
about this, you don't care about the media anyway. You
don't watch MSNBC, you don't want CNN. You don't want
you any of that stuff. You don't read the New

(01:14:52):
York Times. I know who you are. You pretend you do,
but you don't. You don't read the Washington Post. You
don't do any of that stuff. You just want them
to come out and say, look at this horror. It
was horrific, it was awful. Society failed her. Now they

(01:15:18):
want the judge gone. Some questions to be asked there
about what treatment was offered when you when he went
in front of you, you were like, oh, you could go.
You're cool. We'll get back at this a little bit.
There's a treatment program should go to this schizophrenic. The
guys he was gone. His mother had to get a

(01:15:43):
protection order. But this has become a rallying cry for
the right, not a dog whistle, by the way, that's
the whole. Like I love that he uses dog whistle
because every time they bring this up, it's, you know, oh,
this is what it is. It's everything's been turned into race, right,

(01:16:07):
because then the left it's like, fine, what about George Floyd.
You're like, okay, so what are we doing here? Honestly,
but that's what modern politics has become. Everybody's going to
talk over the lady, much like they did on the
train when she got stabbed, and nobody did anything. If

(01:16:33):
you've not seen it, don't but nobody does anything. It
wasn't like they were the only two people in the train.
There were several people in view. Now some people and
I was talking to my uncle, but and I've talked
to about this last couple of days. Let their heads down, right,
they're looking at their phone, and it's a train, so

(01:16:55):
they're they're pointing in a different direction. They're not paying
attention what's going on behind them. They've got their earbuds on.
Some people got off the train never knew what happened
because they were so oblivious. But there were others who
just seem to ignore it. And so of course this
has become a big deal. Yesterday Trump spoke about it.

Speaker 8 (01:17:13):
For far too long, Americans have been forced to put
up with Democrat run cities and set loose savage, bloodthirsty
criminals to pray on innocent people, really very very innocent people.

Speaker 2 (01:17:27):
In every place.

Speaker 8 (01:17:28):
They control radical left judges, politicians, and activists, and they've
adopted a policy of catch and release for thugs and killers.

Speaker 2 (01:17:37):
In Charlotte, North Carolina.

Speaker 8 (01:17:38):
We saw the results of these policies when a twenty
three year old woman who came here from Ukraine met
her bloody end on a public train. And here's a
picture of it. This is the picture of it. And
this is a picture of the woman, a beautiful young

(01:17:59):
girl that never had problems in life, with a magnificent
future in this country. And now she's dead.

Speaker 2 (01:18:12):
Now she's dead Trump, she'd ever had problems except for
the part when she had to escape her country because
they were invaded by the Russians. Well there was that,
but outside of that, everything's been coming up. Roses. Just
can we just even if you love Trump, he doesn't

(01:18:36):
do the empathy thing, well he doesn't. But this is
what this has become. Nobody's nobody really, I mean, they
care because it's horrible and it's awful. I mean, there's
a lot of things I could say of everybody go
oh my god, but you know I should say it.
She's hot. She was hot, she was stunning. She was

(01:18:59):
what you think like a Ukrainian woman would look like.
If this is a three hundred pound woman, do we
feel the same. That's not a very nice chet. By
the way, her name is Arena Zerutzka. Arena Zerutzka, and
this guy's a nut. We have nuts roaming the streets.

(01:19:20):
We have wackadoo's mentally ill, you know, five sandwhich is
short of a picnic basket, whatever you want to call them,
that are hopped up on drugs, that are in and
out of facilities, that shouldn't be alone with themselves, let
alone other people that are living on the fringe of society,

(01:19:45):
that easily can slip in and out of things and
do stuff, and that's scary.

Speaker 27 (01:19:53):
We know that de Carlos Brown had a lengthy rapsheet
of offenses that range from things like burglary to assault.
His family had repeatedly reported instances of potential mental health issues,
that he had been hearing voices, that he had some
types of schizophrenic behavior, and actually, even after this crime
was committed, his sister told a news outlet that he

(01:20:15):
believed that Arena was controlling his mind and that's why
he carried out this act.

Speaker 2 (01:20:22):
Arena was controlling his mind, So a sister, Arena, the
girl that he the young woman that he killed, is
not well, should never have been on the streets. And maybe,
you know, we don't want to overstep and take away

(01:20:43):
people's constitutional rights and infringe upon them. But that also
includes the fact that by not recognizing the issues that
are going on, addressing them, and yes, having to pay
for them, we didn't get in so many wars right Israel.

(01:21:04):
We could start to really address these things, and Democrats,
you guys are gonna have to get your heads out
your butt. Being soft on crime, being pro Allowing people
to live their life by crapping in the street, eating
bugs and talking to a fire hydrant is not a

(01:21:24):
lifestyle choice that anybody should have.

Speaker 27 (01:21:27):
Brown is quickly placed under arrest by police, and he
faced a statement charge. But the decision by prosecutors to
bring a federal charge like this, it's actually a statute
that was passed under the Patriot Act following the nine
to eleven terror attacks. So in bringing this federal charge
they again elevate this case. It's clear they're trying to
send a message nationally with this charge.

Speaker 2 (01:21:48):
And nationally they're sitting a message to democrats. Soft on
crime doesn't pay. Nobody wants to be terrorized all the time.
People to get out of jail, willy nilly.

Speaker 27 (01:22:01):
He's been charged with committing an act causing death on
a mass transportation system, and that's a statute which could,
if he's convicted, make him eligible for the death penalty
or life in prison if he is convicted. And Attorney
General Pam Bondi said in a statement yesterday when this
was announced that she has urged prosecutors in the Western
District of North Carolina to pursue the mac sentence they

(01:22:25):
are able to get against this individual.

Speaker 2 (01:22:28):
No offense, Pam, You've let me down on numerous occasions,
and let's first and foremost see if he's capable of
standing trial before you go and do whatever it is
you're going to You can hand out binders for this one.
Oh chead.

Speaker 27 (01:22:41):
They believe that this is an instance where they argue
that democratic policies in big cities around the country incentivize
letting people who have clear mental health issues out of
police custody rather than having them behind bars where they
will not be harming people.

Speaker 2 (01:22:59):
That's pretty much spot on. But what are you going
to do? You know? I was talking last night my
uncle and I we debated this. I said, what are
you going to do?

Speaker 5 (01:23:08):
Man?

Speaker 2 (01:23:10):
You're gonna hold them indefinitely without any trial or hearing
you've got no room at the end. The largest mental
health facility in America is the Twin Towers in downtown
Los Angeles. The jail and do you think that everybody's

(01:23:30):
got their own you know psychotherapist there. No, it's just
lock them up and they're an award and they're cuckoo
for cocoa puffs and how long are you to keep them? Now?
We need to rethink this, but you can't have a

(01:23:51):
conversation about rethinking, fixing or addressing it because in today's
modern world, it's about what anyone anyone scoring points and
the best memes. There you go. That's what it's always about.
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty three
at Chad Benson Show, it's your ex, your insta, YouTube, Facebook,

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and more. If you work out like me, Relief Factor
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eight hundred four Relief. That's eight hundred the number four
Relief coming up. We got a little what's trending straight
ahead as well as one hit wonder Wednesday. Got a

(01:26:02):
good one for you today. And uh, the gender gap
with politics and with life is widening, especially among jen z.
We'll discuss that as well. Three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Shows your extra Insta.
This is the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:26:35):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (01:26:38):
Now it's time to find out what's trending. What's trending?

Speaker 28 (01:26:43):
Signed James Dean, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Seracames.

Speaker 5 (01:27:02):
What Trump?

Speaker 2 (01:27:07):
It's fight? I was trending on the old interwebs on
this most festive Wednesday? Why is it festiveout? I know
it sounds good. iPhone air number training thing along with Qatar.
It's a cutter is a guitar Doha? You see Israel
bomb them yesterday. They're an ally of ours because that's

(01:27:31):
how much they think of us and everybody else. Poland
you're not paying any attention. Apparently it was a drones.
It was planes Russian Poland's itching for a fight? How
many there itching for a fight? Now? I don't know
how you say this name d forded or d ford

(01:27:53):
d D four day? I don't know d the number
four VD streamer singer was just that aella. His car
was in like an inn pound. Apparently they found a
dead body in. It's that good haru urrara?

Speaker 5 (01:28:13):
Like, what's that? Jed?

Speaker 2 (01:28:14):
It's a Japanese horse passed away yesterday. Why is that important?
He was lovable because of his sweet style. He wore
a Hello Kiddie mask and he never won a race.
He lost one hundred and thirteen races. All how to
Yahoo Chicago Ice, Ice, Ice Baby, Denver Broncos, Ben Johnson football,

(01:28:39):
Caitlin Clark basketball, WNBA, if you're not keeping score, all
things trending over there, and finally over to Tulle Tear
Qatar Yerina Zarutzka, the young lady that was murdered the
other day on the light rail in Charlotte, Nepal. Three two, three,

(01:29:00):
five three eight twenty four twenty three bad Chad Benson
show to your ex your Insta, YouTube, like and subscribe
Facebook as well, if you're missing the show, make sure
you grab that podcast right here. On the Chad Benson Show,
The Fan Jones Doha Hamas haru Ura also trending the

(01:29:22):
horse Israel and Epstein, which is never going away. I
hope does Trump understand you? You do get that right?
If you understand you could hope it goes away. But
it's not. It's really not going away. It is not.
We've talked about that. You can hope, you like, I

(01:29:43):
hope it goes away? No, but why isn't going to it?
It's not going away? But I wanted to go. It's
not gonna happen. But what it's not gonna happen? Just
but what about? No? But it's not my signature? That's funny.
This is a signature expert.

Speaker 9 (01:29:56):
In my professional opinion, the chances of this not being
his signature are two minute skill to talk about the
signature that came up last night purported to be Donald Trump.
I can absolutely say it is Donald Trump, but it's
very much the signature that Donald Trump had in the
early two thousands as opposed to his signature now because

(01:30:17):
it's changed really quite a lot since he's become president.

Speaker 14 (01:30:20):
We can compare it.

Speaker 9 (01:30:22):
This was purported to have been written in two thousand
and three, I believe, and this is two thousand, so
it's only three years apart, so it's relatively recent. If
we look at the final stroke there there's a very
gentle going down at the stroke and then a long
horizontal stroke and it's exactly the same formation in this

(01:30:44):
letter of two thousand.

Speaker 2 (01:30:46):
So there you go. She's an expert with the British accent.
So it's got to be doubly important. Well, it's not
really jed, but it is because it matters. That's why
it matters. You really have to ask that any cricket
three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four, twenty three
at Chad Benson shows your actually instant This is the
Chad Bets shown Chad.

Speaker 1 (01:31:07):
Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (01:31:29):
What the Hell's going on with the kids? What so
new poll out? I think it's a you Gov NBC
poll And this is about gen z And let's just say,
between the male and the female there is quite a
divide in the way that they look at things, and

(01:31:49):
that divide and it's okay, I'm gonna say it's an
interesting poll. And I think we already know there's a
divide when it comes to politics, But I want everybody
to keep in mind they're asked young people questions about
certain things. We think, I don't know, you know, cause
you're going to wrap your head around like I did yesterday.
The first time I heard it, I thought, but I

(01:32:10):
thought about it in my world at my age, not
at twenty two when you get asked a question like this.
But there's no doubt there's a divide as far as
the genders go, in the way that they view certain
things in life and the importance of them. Yeah, let's
talk about the kids.

Speaker 29 (01:32:26):
You know, oftentimes we talk about a gender divide in
our politics, but the gender divide with gen Z is
wider than the Grand Canyon. My goodness, gracious, what are
we talking about here. Well, let's just first talk about
party id margin. Look, there's a gender divide no matter
where you look, but among generations ze it's significantly wider.
Look at this among female gen Z. Look Democrats plus
nineteen points, but look at Republicans. Among men, they have

(01:32:48):
an eighteen point advantage. That is a get this thirty
seven point gender gap. Now among all others. Again you
see that Democrats lead among females, but only by seven,
significantly less than nineteen.

Speaker 2 (01:32:59):
And then among all others.

Speaker 29 (01:33:01):
Male again you see a Republican leap, but instead of
plus eighteen, it's plus thirteen. So what we see is
a gender gap of twenty points among all others. And
get that thirty seven points nearly double among generations. As
I said, the gender gap is a grand canyon wide, baby,
it's a grand canyon wo massive you it is.

Speaker 2 (01:33:21):
And it goes down to the importance of certain things.
So you remember women, the growth of women and coming
into the workforce and getting an education. And you know,
then the way that the education has decided that we
only want to educate women and boys can sit over
the quarter and shut up or whatever, and that kind
of got a little skewed, as we all know, but

(01:33:43):
things have gone in that direction. College is now way
more women in college than men. They're graduating faster, so
they're thinking about what their life, their bills, what they
gots to pay, you know, those kind of things like career.
It's a big deal where men are thinking about things

(01:34:03):
that that they find to be more important than you
would think. Thirty years ago, this would have probably flipped.

Speaker 29 (01:34:08):
So I think it's just so important the attributes. It's
not just on politics about it's about how they see life.
So generation Z importing your own view of success having children.
Look at this, male Trump voters, thirty four percent say
that that is important to your own view of success
having children. That ranks number one, number one on the
list of attributes that are recent NBC News Paul put out. Now,

(01:34:30):
compare that to female Harris voters saying having children is
important to your own view of success. It's only six percent,
six percent. That's twenty eight points less. And get this
on the list of attributes, it ranks less. So ranking
less for female Harris voters having children in your own
view of success compared to ranking Numero uno to male
Trump voters. Again, a schism a mile wide.

Speaker 2 (01:34:52):
Now think about this. You're asking a twenty two to
twenty three year old where forty years ago married house,
that kindind of stuff was achievable. And those were the
the milestones that in the seventies, right in eighties, that
you checked off a little bit earlier than you do. Now,
women have careers. It's what they wanted, right, They don't

(01:35:15):
need men. They can hate men you know. So that's
all they got, all the things they've dreamed of, and
kids aren't a part of it. Younger men they're foregoing college,
they're going into the trades, they're staying they're starting their
pathway to building their future much earlier, not in the
ways that we've been telling kids for the last thirty

(01:35:37):
years they have to go. So they're more it's oddly
to say, they're more family values that are looking at
these kind of things are a little bit more traditional.
And these are younger kids, remember that. So it's it's
also how you ask some of these questions. You also
take in to, you know, to play the age of
the people.

Speaker 29 (01:35:57):
Okay, so having kids is one thing. How about this attribute, okay,
importing your own view of success, having emotional stability. That
ranks three three among Harris voters, thirty nine percent. But
get this, among male Trump voters, it's just nine percent,
a thirty point gap, and it ranks last for Trump voters.
So again, just very different attributes on how the different

(01:36:19):
genders are seeing life in general. And that is of
course magnified when you look at female Harris voters, who
say having emotional stability is far more important than male
Trump voters, and again having children, which male Trump voters
say is far more important in order their view of
life success than female Harris voters. Again, it's just so
much difference between the genders when you look at Generation Z,

(01:36:42):
and it's not just politics.

Speaker 25 (01:36:43):
It's about how they view success in life.

Speaker 2 (01:36:45):
It's interesting about that most guys don't wallow in misery
all the time. Go look at the emotions of a
lot of young women when you see a lot of
these protests, We see a lot of these screaming, yelling,
all this chaos. It's ninety percent women, all based on emotion.
And go to a therapist office, if there is fifty

(01:37:08):
patients that day, how many of them are men. So
that's a much more important thing it is, especially amongst
liberal women. Just being honest, We've talked about this in
the past, and I had a lot of people ate
honesty when it comes to stuff like this, because you know,
they've wrapped themselves up in their ideology and anything that

(01:37:29):
may not land on the side that they want, well
they get all but hurt about it. But in fairness,
the emotional side of things, and we've talked to throughout
the years of psychologists and psychiatrists and counselors that say,
if it wasn't for progressive women, I wouldn't have a practice.
I'm like, yeah, there you go. Oh yeah, that's not

(01:37:52):
very nice. It is an honest thing, kids, speaking of
the ladies. With all the stuff going on in the economy,
how's that whole pay thing working out? We got that
fixed right now? Or no?

Speaker 10 (01:38:09):
For the first time on record, the pay gap between
men and women has grown wider for two consecutive years.
New data from the Census Bureau shows women working full
time last year were paid just eighty one cents for
every one dollar men earned, down from eighty three cents
the previous year, and while men's wages went up nearly
four percent in the last year, women's wages did not

(01:38:31):
change significantly.

Speaker 2 (01:38:33):
I voted for that, ladies. I voted for my wages
to go faster than yours. So you recognize we go
over this every time you hear something like this, thirty
five hours is full time. She worked thirty five hours,
he worked forty two hours. There's going to be a

(01:38:55):
gap there because of that. On top of that, he's
working at a job where he could blow up at
any given time and or have his arms sucked off,
and you're working in a position where you're a counselor
and so it doesn't pay as much. You went into
something that feelings, and it's always that like deep sea fishermen,

(01:39:20):
longshore people, they're going to make more money than a
youth counselor. That's the truth. So we always preface these
things because we have to. Women are earning more, they
should earn the exact same when all things are equal.

(01:39:45):
But if you are working less, but it still counts
as full time and I'm working more, well, then my
ten or twelve or fourteen or nineteen percent isn't because
they thought, oh he's got a winger, we gotta get
more money. Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four

(01:40:05):
to twenty three atch Hedbenton shows your extuer, insta, YouTube,
Facebook and more coming up. You guys ready for it?
You know what it is? One hit wonder Wednesday. Got
a unique one today somebody who had not one, but
two one hit wonders one with a band one solo.
We'll discuss that. But Bullwark Capital first, bullwork. You know

(01:40:27):
my buddy and your buddy, Zach A bram Chie Investment
Officer Bullard Capital. They're doing something amazing which is holding
another amazing webinar. So it's October second, that is a Thursday,
and our buddy Zach is going to be leading it.
It's called back to Basics, the basic fundamentals, the value
investing perspectives and outlooks on the remainder of this year,

(01:40:50):
plus full reveal of what Bullwork does, how they're always
looking for opportunities, lower risk, lower costs, lower volatility and
give you the most upside possible when it comes to
your investments and retirement. So that's what I want you
to do here directly from Zach. He's going to share
all this stuff. It is absolutely free. It's called back
to Basics Webinar October second, three thirty Pacific six point

(01:41:11):
thirty on the East Coast. Register now at Know Your
Riskpodcast dot com. Know Risk Podcast dot com get back
to basics on your retirement portfolio today and your investments
schedule your free Know your Risk Portfolio review as well
Investment Advisor Reservice Officer, your check Financial LLC and sec
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doesn't guarantee future results. Teck two, five, two, nine eight

(01:41:32):
Chat Benson Show, a hashtag me too, hashtag immigration reforms,
hashtag help, I'm trapped in a hashtag factory and I
can't get out the Chat Benson Show. We have talked

(01:41:54):
about a lot of serious stuff today, but today is
arguably one of our favorite days when we do fun
stuff like this. So if you're new to the program,
we do think called One Hit Wonder Wednesday. This is
where we dive into a song done by an artist
that you know, could be a band, could be somebody
who is solo, could be a duet, who knows, but
they have a hit for whatever reason that moment, that

(01:42:17):
time they got something going and it rocked and it
rolled and its new waved and it discoed or whatever
it did. But then as quickly as they came, they disappeared,
and we like to look at what the hell happened
and why did it work and some of the stories
behind that, because trust me, there's plenty of stories behind
the songs that made these people superstars, if only for
a moment. It is time for our favorite time of

(01:42:39):
the week, Chad Benson Show presents One Hit Wonder Wednesday.
Now it's time for another edition of One Hit Wonder Wednesday.
You may not remember the name of the.

Speaker 18 (01:42:58):
Band, but you definitely know the song.

Speaker 17 (01:43:12):
This Bruiser, This is one Hit Wonder Wednesday.

Speaker 2 (01:43:19):
All right, So today is very interesting. So we have
a person that had two one hit Wonders, one as
the lead singer of a band and one a year
after he was kicked out the band. So I said,

(01:43:39):
you know what, Yeah, those are one hit Wonders. So
today's artist, his name is Christopher Hamil born in England,
starts to get into the punk scene. So here he is.
He's born in the fifties. In the mid seventies, the
punk scene is exploding, so he joins a couple bands.

(01:44:05):
They go nowhere. On top of that, he's cutting hair,
doing some acting. He's got a small role in an
ITV that's a British thing called The Gentle Touch Naty one.
He appeared as an extra in the promotional video for
Adam and the Ants and their number one UK single
Stand and Deliver. So he's continuing to try to rock

(01:44:26):
and roll, do his own thing. And he answers an
ad and there's a band, there's four of them, but
they're missing something and they put the ad in Melody Maker.
They're asking for a front man who could sing and
look good. That was him. He was a good looking dude.
So he joined the band and he changed his name,

(01:44:52):
decided he was going to spin his last name around.
Instead of being Christopher Hamill, he was just going to
be Lamal. The name of the band would become Kashakugu
and they had one major, major hit.

Speaker 5 (01:45:28):
Ah.

Speaker 2 (01:45:28):
But after their major hit went number one everywhere within
a year, they kicked him out of the band, said
we don't want him here anymore. They fired him the
manager did. He said it was a massive betrayal and
he was crushed. Subsequently, the next year, he gets a
phone call from Georgio Moroder. This guy's famous big time

(01:45:49):
when it comes to disco and synth pioneer and he
built the likes of Donna, Summer and Blondie and all
of these major superstars. Said hey, I need a song
for a movie and I want you to do it.
And the movie it's called The Never Ending Story. And
they said, well, you're gonna sing the English version and

(01:46:12):
there's gonna be a French version, so you're gonna sing
both of those. But the Germans are gonna have their
own version, which you're not gonna have any part of.
And by the way, we've got an American singer. Her
name is Beth Anderson. She's gonna sing You're never gonna
meet her. So after being fired from his band getting
an opportunity to sing a single for a movie called

(01:46:33):
The never Ending Story, Lamal had achieved something that very
few do. He became a one hit wonder, not once,
but twice. Here is that song from the movie The
never Ending Story. This is Lamal with the never Ending Story.

Speaker 26 (01:46:57):
You see.

Speaker 2 (01:47:24):
Still the never stop global success, massive hit all over,
number one in several countries, number six here in America.
Still a song that people love to sing. When they
hear it, they think of that movie. That is one

(01:47:45):
of the things they think about. And you know, this guy,
it's one of those things. It's weird to have two
one hits, but you were in a band and you
did it.

Speaker 26 (01:47:56):
On your own.

Speaker 20 (01:48:00):
Recent interview, this is in the last five years, Georgia
was asked about this, why did he ask me to
sing the song? And he said, and he's a lovely
German Italian accident. He is Italian for he did all
the you know, he did all the recordings in Munich
because it was he lived close to the border. But
I was I liked this song and all this shy

(01:48:21):
shy he sings it out of tune, which made me
laugh in the interview. I like this guy's voice, you know,
so I thought, let's try that guy.

Speaker 2 (01:48:34):
Ah, there you go. Lamal. He is a one hit
slash two hit wonder one with katcha Google, but one
on his own with a never ending story. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four, twenty three. At Chad Benson Show,
it's your action, your instant YouTube, Facebook. Top of that,
we go live every night. You guys know that. So

(01:48:55):
if you have a chance, check us out posting videos,
doing lots of things and hit the like button and
make sure you subscribe. That really helps us out right
here on the Chad Benson Show. Solid amazing show as
always award winning. I say fun Wednesday, one hit wonder
Wednesday is always fun. I enjoy it because if we
talk about a lot of serious stuff Venezuela, the potential

(01:49:17):
to go to war, there crime, the divide going on
between the gen Z folks that is a little alarming
if you want to know the truth, especially when we
look at our future. Top of that, we talked about
the economy, Israel, cutter immigration. I mean, we gave you
a lot of stuff today. And let's not forget Epstein.

(01:49:37):
How could you forget Epstein? Drop can't. He wants to,
but he can't. You guys have an amazing, blessed rest
of your Wednesday. We'll do it again tomorrow as always,
Night Night Jack.

Speaker 1 (01:49:50):
This is the Chad Benson Show.
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