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December 26, 2024 • 109 mins
The Best of Chad Benson
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You were listening to the best of Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 3 (00:15):
The Fall of a brutal, brutal dictator as bad as
Pops fifty years of rain, Rain no more.

Speaker 4 (00:23):
Ashah Lassad inherited power from his father Hafez in two thousand.
A London educated eye doctor, he was the respectable face
of a new Syria. World leaders rushed to work with.
Vogue even called his glamorous wife Asthma arose in the desert,
But as soon as he was challenged, he crushed the
twenty eleven protest movement, killing hundreds of thousands. Then President

(00:44):
Obama said use of chemical weapons would be a red line,
but Asad crossed it and the chaos that followed allowed
terror group ISIS to seize territory and launch attacks against
the West.

Speaker 3 (00:54):
Yes, now he's in Moscow. So not only did he
get the post, he's out gone. You look and you go,
oh my god, Russia, another L for you, Iran, another
L for you. Weakened portions of the access of a holes,
There's no doubt about that. But now comes the realization that,

(01:18):
oh my god, what an absolute nightmare this guy was.

Speaker 4 (01:23):
Syrian's a false discovering the truth of the Assad regime.

Speaker 5 (01:27):
Underground prisons full of women and children.

Speaker 4 (01:30):
Don't be afraid, young man says to this woman found
in an underground prison, he finds a child alongside her.

Speaker 3 (01:38):
Yeah, there's people that have been in there for decades.
In some of these places. The brutality of him propped
up by the Russians is definitely war crime stuff. And
he's in Moscow, tons of apartments. He's in Moscow with

(02:03):
about two billion dollars. He's never gonna have to worry
about anything because, much like the likes of Ed, I mean,
he will die in a lap of luxury unless something
happens in Moscow where there is a change of leadership
and they decide to exile him, which I don't think

(02:24):
is gonna happen anytime soon. But this is an embarrassment
for Moscow. This is an absolute embarrassment. You've now lost
port that you needed, a warm water port. You've lost
billions of dollars. You've seen somebody who tried to prop
up just essentially get run out of town by a

(02:47):
bunch of groups who don't like each other but had
one common goal and one common hate, which, by the way,
is the strongest things that bind people. If you're ever
gonna get married to somebody, it's not the things you
love they will keep you together. It's the thing you hate.
And for this group of people, their hatred of him

(03:09):
caused them to have should we say, the strange bedfellows.
So you had the Kourds over here, you had ISIS
and ISIS the line groups. You had the group that's
kind of running everything with this guy at one time
was part of Al Nustra and one time he was
part of ISIS. Now he's part of this other group,

(03:31):
and he led the charge. You had Turkish groups, you
had Israeli and US and Western groups. This was a
mixture of people that would never literally be caught dead
in the same room together together to oust him and

(03:52):
in doing so, another embarrassment for Putin and Iraq and
now a hornet's nest because this is going to be
absolutely ugly, because who's going to run this country? And
this country I said it last year, I'll say it again.
It is now the because you go look at Yemen,

(04:13):
it's an absolute dumpster fire. Lebanon portions of it were
a nightmare because of Hesblah Gaza absolutely a hot spot
and nightmare. But you know what, Syria is about to
jump all of those. You have too many groups that

(04:33):
can't stand each other that now that their mission is done,
they're all looking around going okay, now what and who
gets to run it? Who gets to say in it?
Turkey is gonna have a big say in this. Iran,
You're done. Sorry, another weakened situation for you. So you've
had your ass handed to you with the hooties, hes

(04:55):
blah and hamas and now you've seen this go sideways.
It is gonna be ugly. It's a hornet's nest, is
what I'm trying to say. And a little bit of
Saigon if you will, for the pooter, which doesn't help
you as you go into negotiations. Now for what's going
to go on with Ukraine three two, three, five, three eight,

(05:16):
twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson shows your Twitter,
tweet at US text the program. Meanwhile, in New York City.

Speaker 6 (05:23):
United Healthcare is declining to answer questions posed by ABC News,
including whether the company has offered to contribute to the
reward money for information leading to an arrest. Detectives are
optimistic they're closing in but heading in now to a
sixth day of searching, they still do not have an
identity of the suspect or anyone in custody.

Speaker 3 (05:41):
Interestingly enough, there are reports that they know who he is,
but they're not saying who he is because they don't
want to give him a sense that, Okay, they've got
him and he's going to start to panic and do something.
It is a distinctive weapon.

Speaker 6 (05:59):
They think it may be a veterinary type gun used
on ranches and farms to put down an animal because
it can fire a quiet shot with that long barrel.
They don't think it had a separate screwed in silence circuit.
The magazine is in the grip. It's bolt action, so
it has to be manually cycled. And he did show
some proficiency with the weapon.

Speaker 3 (06:17):
So that's interesting as well. They've been dragging some of
the ponds in Central Park. They found a backpack full
of monopoly money. And while all this is going on,
the search for the mysterious Robin Hood continues. While people
on the interwebs celebrate the death of him.

Speaker 7 (06:39):
Far left so called journalists are celebrating the death of
Brian Thompson, a dad, a husband, incredible, including Washington Post
columnist Keller Lorenz, who posted this disgusting piece titled quote
why we want insurance executive dead?

Speaker 3 (06:57):
And in New York a.

Speaker 7 (06:58):
Tasteless shooter looked contest was held mocking and celebrating the killing.

Speaker 3 (07:04):
Yeah, that happened this weekend. That's the disdain that people
have for the healthcare industry. Absolutely, and I'm gonna tell
you my story a little bit about living in both
private healthcare world and the quote unquote public option. Disgusting
is the only word to use her they I'll be honest.

Speaker 8 (07:23):
I think Colin jos and Michael Jay they were just
making fun of what was happening in the media, which
it's not comical by any stretch of the imagination, but
they're pulling real headlines like this is what we're seeing
right now.

Speaker 2 (07:32):
And listen.

Speaker 8 (07:32):
I understand the criticism of an imperfect healthcare system as
a physician. I feel the frustration with these health insurance
companies every single day. But a society that's praising the
murder of a father of a husband, that's a dangerous situation.
The answer is certainly not let's criticize, let's actually remove
the private healthcare system, because I assure you the alternative
government run healthcare, socialized medicine, is not better. The answer

(07:55):
is to reform, and.

Speaker 3 (07:57):
Reform is an absolute must. I have lived in both,
and I will tell you there's benefits to one benefits
to the other. I've said this for a very long time.
If you've got cancer, you want to be in America.
As far as treatments, I'm not talking about costs or
any of that stuff. I'm just saying, if it's treatments
you need, this is it. There's a reason that people

(08:17):
come here. There is. There's a reason that people come here,
famous people, people from all over the world, people with money.
There's a reason they come here because they recognize what
America has to offer. If you have to have your
appendix out, probably want to do it in a place
like Britain because I don't know what the bill's going
to be. How much is going to cost in two

(08:38):
days day is going to cost you? How much across
the street it cost you? This the mystery of the billing,
the what is going to be covered, what isn't going
to be covered. There's a lot of that. If you
break your arm, do it in Britain. Tell you guys,
And I know that sounds weird, but that's it now.

(08:59):
If it's the run of the mill stuff. If you
have to have your hip done, so reason that people
come from Canada down here to have their hips done
because the weight is too long. It is for ever
eighteen months, two years when you're in that kind of pain.
My god, it's awful. Knee replacement, same thing, there's no

(09:20):
doubt though the cost. I mean, you go look at
our bankruptcies in this country. A vast majority of them
are medical bankruptcies and the surprise billing. I mean, they're
worse than Hollywood when it comes to surprise billing. So
when I was in England, I got sick, I lost
a lot of weight, very very fast, and I was

(09:45):
a mess. And I mean I dropped like twenty pounds
in a week, and I couldn't get in to see somebody.
And I'm like, it's just easier to fly to America
to go see somebody comparatively to here. It was a
bit of a nightmare. Now that sounds like, yeah, that

(10:07):
is a nightmare. It absolutely is a nightmare. Again, if
it's an emergency, it's a totally different thing. They thought
maybe it was just a stomach bug or something like that,
and that's what it ended up being. But I lost
so much weight and part of that was because I
was playing soccer, wasn't eating, doing all these kind of things.
So I learned over there, Okay, you got to have
almost find a way to have some privatized to back

(10:29):
yourself up. But I'll say this cost over here. Told
you guys this last week. Tell you again, the cost
for insurance for my family up until this next year
coming was costing me enough to buy about a five
or six hundred thousand dollars home mortgage payment. And we

(10:49):
still had concierge medicine, meaning we paid a doctor a
separate fee where he doesn't take insurance so we could
have access because we couldn't get access with ours. It's
just not you know, just good luck. So the frustration,
I think everybody understands the way that this guy went

(11:12):
about it. Are there good things with socialized medicine? If
it is a broken arm and appendix stuff like that, yeah,
you could see how it is. If it's something bigger, no,
But when it comes to the cost, by the way,
as much and as high price as stuff is in

(11:33):
parts of Europe in other places. When you start breaking
down our stuff there, state tax, local tax, all that stuff,
it's not too much different. It really isn't. But do
I prefer ours over theres? Absolutely? But do I understand?
Oh yeah, three two three five three eight, twenty four
to twenty three at chat Benson Show is your Twitter

(11:55):
free dot has text the program loving from all of you,
but we're capital When you talk about Bud zach Abram
Chief investment Officer Bullworck, sit down and let him help
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(12:18):
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(12:42):
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not guarantee future results. Trek two four to three, seven eight.
Chad Benson, Joel.

Speaker 1 (12:56):
This is the best of Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (13:09):
Chad Benson, groceries.

Speaker 9 (13:11):
I won on two things, the border and more than immigration.
You know, they'd like to say immigration. I break it
down more to the border. But I went on the border,
and I went on groceries. It's very simple word, groceries.
I started using the word the groceries. When you buy apples,
when you buy bacon, when you buy eggs, they would
double and triple the price over a short period of time.

(13:33):
And I want an election based on that. We're gonna
bring those prices way down, groceries.

Speaker 3 (13:39):
I'm still trying to figure out why he went on
Meet the Press, but he did. Trump played some of
it throughout the day. That was a good interview. She's
what she is, Kristen Welker, and Trump handled himself quite well,
so it was interesting. A lot of it. She was
trying to get you other gotcha moments you're gonna are

(14:00):
in January sixth, people, are you gonna do this? You're
gonna pardon yourself. He just said it right there at
the end of the day. Groceries. I won on groceries.
One of the things he's going to have to do
coming out potentially is make a decision on the tick
and the talk barring a sale.

Speaker 10 (14:16):
The law makes it illegal after January nineteenth to allow
for TikTok to be offered in the Google or Apple
app stores, for instance. The law also makes it illegal
for any company to provide hosting services for TikTok, think
of cloud storage and other kinds of back end support.
Trump's Justice Department could decide it's going to look the
other way and not enforce this law, but the firms

(14:36):
in question would have to decide whether it's worth the
risk to them of running a foul of the law.
It's a pretty big bet.

Speaker 3 (14:41):
Yeah, So court again this past week doing everything they
can to try to stop it, forcing the sale of
bye edance and TikTok or else bye bye.

Speaker 10 (14:52):
The judges here cited China's quote hybrid commercial threat to
US national security. They cited Beijing's established practice of gathering
data on Americans, and the judges deferred to the government's
concerns that China could order byte Dance to use TikTok's
algorithm to influence American politics.

Speaker 3 (15:12):
Which it's already doing. But everybody argued, but it's going
to take away free speech. That was never ever the argument.
This isn't about what goes on on there in the
free speech, and that's their argument they were kind of making.
You're taking away an opportunity to have a voice here,
but there are other places you can go have voices.

Speaker 10 (15:30):
The government isn't saying that it prefers certain speech on
TikTok and disfavors other speech and is making a decision
as to what kind of things people can say on TikTok.

Speaker 3 (15:38):
Three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson's show, is your Twitter tweeted? Is
text program? Right here on the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 10 (15:49):
Viewpoint discrimination, That's not what's going on here. There's no
right to use a particular foreign owned app, especially when
Congress and the White House have come to the conclude
usion that there are national security concerns with that app.

Speaker 3 (16:04):
What do you think the likes of Instagram and Facebook
and YouTube are pulling forth just out of curiosity. Of course,
they're pulling for it. Make it go away, make it
go away, make it go away. So they want be great.
Why would it be great? Because then you'd have an
absolutely captive audience that's going to looking for places to

(16:26):
do their content. So if you go on TikTok, now
all of the big people are saying, go find me
on Instagram, Go find me on Twitter, go find me
on you know, YouTube, find me on fate wherever. Go there,
because their thought is in the next month or two
that this is going to go away. It's possibility. I

(16:47):
don't know if that's going to happen or not. I
don't know what it's going to look like. And I
don't know how big of a deal this is at
this moment in time with Trump and all the other
things like immigration, which was a big part of yesterday's
conversation with Kristen Welker. So how big of a deal
is it? Well, it should be because it's China. It's
a much bigger deal because it's China. If it wasn't China,

(17:12):
I don't think it'd be as big of a deal,
but it's a bigger deal than nothing. But it's not
the top priority for Trump. I'm the top priority. If
you listened yesterday to any of that interview, it's simple.
It's the border, the border, the border, the border, the border,
the border with some groceries. Got through the groceries in
there again, because that's also why he won three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three. At Chad Benson

(17:33):
show's your Twitter, You're gonna seeing the show, the podcast,
Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (17:38):
Sun Chad Benson, Joe, You're listening to the best of
Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (18:02):
The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 3 (18:04):
As we talk about Syria and the downfall of Syria
and the nightmare that is the Middle East, Bill Clinton
is reminiscing about the opportunity when Arafat said, naw.

Speaker 11 (18:17):
Look, I think what's happened there in the last twenty
five years is one of the great tragedies of the
twenty first century.

Speaker 12 (18:24):
When I tell young people, let's say.

Speaker 11 (18:26):
They're super sympathetic with the Palestinians, and all they know
is a lot more Palatians and been.

Speaker 12 (18:32):
Killed than Israelis, and I tell them what.

Speaker 11 (18:36):
Arafat walked away from and they like, can't believe it.
I said, oh, yeah, he walked away from a Falansian
state with a capital in East Jerusalem.

Speaker 3 (18:45):
Of course he did because it was never about getting
the things that everybody said they wanted it for Erafat
and everybody else. It was about power, and it was
about being able to hate the Jews. And I think
the young kids don't understand.

Speaker 11 (18:56):
That ninety six percent of the West Bank Son of Israel,
to make up for the four percent settler was occupied
that were beyond the borders in the sixt or seven war.
And I go through all the stuff that was in
the deal, and it's not on their radar screen. They
can't even imagine. Does that happened? You walk away from
these once in a lifetime peace opportunities and you can't

(19:20):
complain twenty five years later, when the doors weren't all
still open and all.

Speaker 12 (19:24):
The possibilities weren't still there. You can't do it.

Speaker 3 (19:27):
It's just your voice just cracked when you said that.

Speaker 12 (19:29):
Yeah, I'm an old guy. I have my regrets. That's
one of them.

Speaker 3 (19:34):
By the way, I think he has mentioned this on
numerous occasions. Clinton this was his biggest regret. I think
as far as trying to get a deal done or
doing anything on the political side, I'm not talking about
you know what I'm talking about on the other political side. No,
I'm talking about this was the biggest swing and miss,
and it wasn't him. I mean, he got Israel to

(19:54):
agree to all of this stuff, but it's never about that.
And that's why twenty five years on, still a hot
mess throughout their case in points Ce Syria and the
nightmare that it is and what it's going to be
in the coming days, weeks, months, and years. Because if
you think this thing's going to be settled and everybody's
going to go do their own thing, you are wrong.
Turkey's gonna have a hand, There's going to be all
kinds of splinter groups, isis is going to start to

(20:15):
do its thing again. How are we going to be
dragged into this? I believe it is going to be
an absolute effing nightmare and chaos is going to consume
that area and what happens with Iran and Israel and
jim Andy Cricket, what a freaking nightmare that place is.
Speaking of nightmares, the left is still bemoaning the loss

(20:36):
of this last.

Speaker 13 (20:37):
Election President Biden. So he said, I'd never pardon the kid. Okay,
I don't believe. I don't believe any when anybody says
I never had sex with that person.

Speaker 14 (20:47):
I've never pardon my kid.

Speaker 13 (20:48):
I don't pay any attention to it, because I think
everybody alive about sex, and everybody is going to do
whatever they're going to do with their own children. But
the different scenario would be if he would have in
September of twenty twenty three, August said that he wasn't
going to run.

Speaker 14 (21:05):
God, we would have won this selection.

Speaker 3 (21:08):
Settled down there, James, James Carville still pissed about this.
I don't know if you would have, gonna be honest
with now, would you have had a better chance. Oh absolutely.
I mean there was mistake after mistake after mistake in
the way that the campaign handled so much, and the
Democrats handled a lot, and the powers to be behind
the scenes who pushed all the buttons, who drove the

(21:29):
knife into to Biden, handled a lot of this stuff.
But there is no doubt it would have been probably
a closer thing. But that still to you still have
to think about inflation, the chaos around the globe, et cetera.
It wasn't just if we got somebody else that was
going to be a smooth and easy win. Do I
think it might have been closer?

Speaker 13 (21:50):
Yes, And it wouldn't have been that close, because we'd
have had so many freaking talented people that were running,
and he would be sitting here right now, being ready
to leave on a high note. There would be naming
commissions to figure out what we're going to name after him.

Speaker 14 (22:07):
He would be the toast of Washington.

Speaker 13 (22:09):
It would be a Democratic inauguration coming up in a
new Democratic president. Could have sort of gotten away with
commuting any sentence. It didn't have to be this way.
He bought it all on himself. Joe Biden is and
will continue to be the most tragic figure in modern

(22:30):
American politics.

Speaker 14 (22:32):
I don't think there's any doubt about that.

Speaker 12 (22:34):
Ken.

Speaker 3 (22:34):
He brought it on himself. There's no doubt. God, you
were going to be here for one. You decided to
go for two. Once that happened, and then they pushed
you out, you decided, well, you know, I'm not going
to do anything to help her. You guys hurt me,
So let's see what I can do well not help you,
and maybe throw some roadblocks up. There's no doubt these
books that will be written in the coming years are

(22:55):
going to be very interesting. Speaking of the person who
did win yesterday, the President elect Trump on with Krista
Welker on the press.

Speaker 15 (23:03):
You are now proposing tariffs against the United States three
biggest trading partners. Economists of all stripes say that ultimately consumers.

Speaker 2 (23:13):
Pay the price of terroists.

Speaker 14 (23:14):
I don't believe.

Speaker 15 (23:15):
Can you guarantee American families won't pay more?

Speaker 12 (23:17):
I can't guarantee anything.

Speaker 9 (23:18):
I can't guarantee tomorrow, but I can say that if
you look at my just pre COVID, we had the
greatest economy in the history of our country.

Speaker 12 (23:27):
And I had a lot.

Speaker 9 (23:28):
Of tariffs on a lot of different countries, but in
particular China. We took in hundreds of billions of dollars
and we had no inflation.

Speaker 3 (23:36):
Well, we didn't have any inflation. It was definitely very low.
Our interest rates were low. The economy was pretty damn good.
We can argue whether that was the greatest economy of
all time, but it was up there. There's no doubt
about that. And he had put stuff on to China,
which by the way Biden kept and increased. But now
you're talking about place like Mexico, and look, there's no

(23:58):
doubt it's where the tariffs are and how long they
last because they're negotiating. Point, that's what they are. You
use tariffs to negotiate, and if we don't produce it,
we don't teriff it. If we do produce it and
you won't let us sell in your country, well then
there's going to be issues.

Speaker 9 (24:18):
In fact, when I handed it over, they didn't have
inflation for a year and a half.

Speaker 12 (24:24):
They went almost two years just.

Speaker 9 (24:26):
Based on what I had created, and then they created
inflation with energy and with spending too much. So I
think we will. I'm a big believer in tariffs. I
think tariffs are the most beautiful word. I think they're beautiful.
It's going to make us rich. We're subsidizing Canada to
the tune of over one hundred billion dollars a year,

(24:47):
with subsidizing Mexico for almost three hundred billion dollars. We
shouldn't be subsidized. Why are we subsidizing these countries. If
we're going to subsidize them, let her become a state.

Speaker 3 (24:57):
He's really big into that. He really was. He said
the other day, why not just let what Canada fifty first,
Mexico fifty second, Let's just do that. There you go,
we got that going on. Huh, who's with us? So
funny on? Uh? The way he handles like, let's just
what's can we do it? Let's just do it? I

(25:20):
think he's kidding, but he's kind of not kidding. It's
one of those things where like, I'm totally kidding. But
if they said yes, I'm not saying no, sir.

Speaker 15 (25:28):
Your previous tariffs during your first administration cost Americans some
eighty billion dollars, and now you have major companies from Walmart, Blackendecker,
AutoZone saying that any tariffs are going to force them
to drive up prices for their consumers. How do you
make sure that these CEOs that these companies don't in

(25:49):
fact pass on the cost of tariffs to their consumers.

Speaker 9 (25:52):
They cost Americans nothing. They made a great economy for us.
They also solve another problem if we were going to
have problems having to do with wars and having to
do with other things tariffs. I have stopped wars with
tariffs by saying, you guys want to fight, it's great,
but both of you are going to pay tariffs to
the United States at one hundred percent.

Speaker 3 (26:15):
He loves tariffs. Look, there's no doubt tariffs are going
to cost us, and that's just the reality of it.
The question is, and what he's betting on, is I
can outlast you. We can outlast you. You want to
sell your goods here, but you're going to hurt our
people trying to sell goods there. Well, then you're going
to pay a price. You want to move your jobs

(26:36):
there because it's much cheaper. Well, guess what, now you're
going to pay a price. Those are the things that
he is pushing for. Is it understandable. Yes? Do I
think they are a ploy to get better deals? Of
course they are. Are some of them for punishment, Yeah,
there's no doubt about that. And will it cost us more?

(26:58):
Of course it will. It really depends on what it
is that they're terrific. Remember, some of the stuff he's
looking at we don't make here, so he's not gonna
terrif it. So some of the stuff though, it's not
just about the product and the country. It's also about
the jobs in America that may eve and go elsewhere.
Remember what happened with John Deere wanted to move all

(27:20):
those jobs in Mexico. Trub's like, fine, we'll tear if
the hell out of everything. Move those jobs. It's going
to cost more to buy one of your tractors. Now,
oh oh well, maybe that's not a good idea. So
there's a lot to go into this, But like everything else,
you've got to let it play itself out. You know,
the last couple of days, the amount of people that

(27:40):
are like Pete hegxeth and you know, and she's a
trader in TOLSI gaart all this stuff and I so,
you know, let's give him their time. Let's give him
their shot. Let's put him in front of these committees.
Let's see what they have to say. Let's see how
they come at it and how they handle themselves. Because
the people that you're saying all these things about it's

(28:01):
all anonymous or it's been debunked, and because Trump nominated
them automatically, they're evil and we know that's not true.
And we know it's tough to listen to the media
because they're full of it, from tariffs to his nominations.
Let's see how they play out before everybody decides to
make up their mind three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show, is

(28:23):
your Twitter Mypello fantastic fourteen eighty eight for the Classic
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But the Classic Mypellow, the one that started it all,
the it one, just fourteen eighty eight. Now how do
you get it? You at a mypelaw dot com slash Benson.
Make sure you use that code Benson save big. It
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Benson Chad Benson shoe.

Speaker 1 (29:21):
This is the best of Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (29:33):
Irreverence. Like, yeah, so what, it's the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 16 (29:39):
Disney's Moana two continues to dominate, leading the box office
for a second weekend with fifty two million dollars, bringing
it to US total to three hundred million dollars in
a staggering six hundred million worldwide. It's set a record
for the post Thanksgiving weekends, or passing twenty nineteen to
Frozen two. Disney is the parent company of ABC.

Speaker 17 (29:57):
News, Wick and Witch of the West is dev It.

Speaker 16 (30:00):
Held strong in second place with thirty four point nine million.
Gladiator two took third with twelve point five mil. Red
one followed in fourth with seven million, and the re
release of Interstellar earned four point four million.

Speaker 3 (30:11):
I do you know Interstellar was re released? I will
say this about Moana too. We'll take the kids here
probably next week or so to see it. First of all,
the budget was about the same, a little bit smaller
than the first one, and it's already beaten the numbers.
How big that is. And they're working on the live
action version of Moana, which will be interesting. I hope

(30:35):
it's better than Snow White and the not seven Dwarfs,
because we don't want to offend anybody. Speaking of record breaking,
it's come to an end.

Speaker 17 (30:47):
The tour started in March of twenty twenty three in Glendale, Arizona,
becoming the highest grossing tour of all time, pulling in
and estimated two point two billion dollars. Her concerts was
attracted in estimated eleven million fans, with the Federal Reserve
even crediting the megastar with boosting the US economy.

Speaker 3 (31:07):
I remember when it started because I was in Glendhill.
It was actually in Phoenix at the time, and we
had several friends who went to see the Aires Tour kickoff.
A couple people we know are Swifties and they were
pregaming early they went there. It was look, you can

(31:27):
have a disdain for all you want. She is a machine.
She's a money printing machine.

Speaker 17 (31:35):
Three concerts in Vienna were called off after officials discovered
a plot to launch an attack at an event in
this city, and at several stops.

Speaker 2 (31:43):
She performed in torrential rain.

Speaker 3 (31:45):
This rain show in an ever rain show forever.

Speaker 17 (31:50):
Some fans traveling in average of three hundred and thirty
eight miles to see her perform, with some diehard Swifties
saying they flew overseas to see her in Europe because
it was cheaper than attending her concert closer to home.

Speaker 3 (32:04):
People are willing to do that. That shows you the
power that she has, and it pisses a lot of
people off that she got that kind of power. No good, good.
I mean, how long does it last? And didn't last
forever for Michael Jackson or the Beatles although they broke up.
Will it last forever for her?

Speaker 18 (32:21):
No?

Speaker 3 (32:21):
I don't think so, because it never does. But right
now she is. There is nobody bigger in music.

Speaker 17 (32:29):
During the tour, she was also named Times Person of
the Year and sent NFL viewership skyrocketing, when, of course,
she began dating chief star Travis Kelce, which, by the way,
I think she made about seventeen million per show, which
is more than Travis made per year.

Speaker 3 (32:44):
Yeah. Yeah, and his job's harder because he got to
get crushed by their folk. It's how huge. I just
want to anybody understand that the size of the machine
that is Taylor Swift. I mean, you're I mean that
you are a You're not not just a brand, You're

(33:07):
an industry all to yourself, which is huge speaking of
music and staying with it. So Sean Diddy Colms may
have a person who will also face said music.

Speaker 19 (33:21):
What The woman who was identified as Jane Doe in
this amended lawsuit says she was just thirteen at the
time and had wandered into a nearby bedroom when Carter
raped her, followed by Combs. Now jay Z has wasted
no time blasting in the attorney who's representing the alleged
victim accusing him of extortion, saying, in part quote, these
allegations are so heinous in nature that I implore you

(33:44):
to file a criminal complaint, not a civil one. Whoever
would commit such a crime against a minor should be
locked away.

Speaker 3 (33:52):
So he is now, jay Z. Sean Carter being named
in a lawsuit is not a criminal complaint. This is
a lawsuit against him for allegedly being raped by both
him and Sean Combs. So that's it is. You knew

(34:18):
there was going to be more, and we've talked about it. Busby,
who is the lawyer representing everybody, said there are several big,
big stars that everybody would know who are at these
parties who were involved in these situations, who are being
told you better pay up or else. So and the

(34:40):
fact that Sean Comb's videotaped everything, had all of this stuff,
you wonder what's out there because remember he has been
charged with all kinds like the Rico Act and conspiracy. Well,
there's not a conspiracy of one. You've got to conspire
with others. And that's what people are still waiting for

(35:01):
that other shoe to drop on who are some of
these other people in this indictment because that hasn't happened yet.
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty three
At Chad Benson Show is your Twitter tweet at us
text the program. I do love hearing from every single
one of you. Make sure you like us on the Facebook, Twitter,

(35:23):
follow us across the board, Instagram, all that stuff, as
well as Chad Benson Show TV, which is our YouTube,
which is going to be up and running in a
full time way at the beginning of the year. Right
here for the Chad Benson Show coming up, third hour,
little watch trending going on, as well as a look

(35:44):
at more on what's happening in Syria. What does this
look like going forward. The reality is you've got a
lot of people who would like to be leaders, and
you and I both know that doesn't always go that well.
The guy that is heading up everything, that seems to
be the mouthpiece, says he wants to essentially have no revenge.

(36:06):
He wants to have, for a lack of a better term,
a little inclusion. But I think we all know that
doesn't happen well, especially in these Middle Eastern countries like Syria.
Talk about that a bunch of other things. You missed
the show. Grab the podcast. It is the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (36:22):
This is the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (36:38):
You're listening to the best of Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (36:51):
The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 3 (36:53):
If Luige's gold was to get a conversation in this
country started about the evil of healthcare companies and how
people are treated in the world of health care as
just a number. If that was his goal, mission accomplished.

(37:16):
If his goal was to get away with it, well
that didn't happen. But the conversation's been started. There's no
doubt about that. The conversation has absolutely been started. If
you can get past all the ladies that are fawning
over him, which is tough because there's a plenty of them. Yesterday,

(37:38):
made an appearance in court. He was not thrilled, wanted
the world to know.

Speaker 17 (37:44):
And experience.

Speaker 3 (37:52):
Yeah, they had to shove him on in there, and
apparently during the hearing, his attorney Thomas Dicky, had to say, shush,
stop it. Right, this is a good will hunting. You're smart,
but you're not that smart. We're going to talk your
way it say shush. I have a feeling he's going

(38:13):
to have his hands full with him. Last night, the
attorney Thomas Dickie, he's been making the rounds, was on
our News Nation Chris Cuomo last night talking about a
lot of things, including why they're going to fight extradition.

Speaker 20 (38:29):
Dicky made some knowing decisions today when we decided that
we're challenging this extradition. I don't make you know those
evaluations necessarily at this level. And so I he seemed
to understand my questions. He seemed to be able to
interact with me, and so I.

Speaker 3 (38:49):
Was pleased with that, so interact with him. Pleased with it.
And of course the question everybody wants to know. There's
a lot of different things in there, right, Like he's
got this manifesto, This two hundred and sixty two word manifesto.
He hates, you know, everything that is capitalism, all of
these things. What about the gun?

Speaker 20 (39:09):
The first of all, you know, Chris, you're making a
statement of that gun that.

Speaker 14 (39:12):
They found matched at the shooting in New York.

Speaker 20 (39:15):
I haven't been certainly made aware of that. I haven't
seen any realistic reports. So if you've seen that already,
then that's interesting because I certainly haven't seen that.

Speaker 3 (39:25):
And nobody's seen that yet. I'm sure we will. He's
a plant, he's not a can't get over that plan?
Do you know what can conspiracy people? It is amazing
And even if you go and yout debunk at a
thousand times, it doesn't matter. They'll come up with something new.
So oh kidding aside, he started a conversation was going

(39:49):
to spend the rest of his life in jail. He's
going to spend the rest of his life in jail.
And that conversation isn't going to lead to us getting
national healthcare or anything like that, which, by the way,
he should be very excited because he's now going to
get himself a little national healthcare. So you wanted you
got it now? And the realization of what is sinking

(40:14):
in has to be there as well, that there is
probably no get out of jail card unless they screwed
something up during the investigation, didn't do your morande, I mean, whatever,
one of those things. Outside of that, you're done starting
to realize that the only light you're going to see
for the next couple millennia is going to be going

(40:38):
to the courtrooms and then eventually on your way to
New York. At twenty six, man that is uh had everything.
Like I said yesterday, people have traded with him in
a heartbeat. Ninety nine percent of the planet would have
traded with him in a heartbeat, and now he's going
through the rest of his life in jail. But he

(40:59):
did start a convert So if that was your goal,
you started in a heinous, vile way. You started a conversation.
So I guess in that way your mission is accomplished.
But is the mission to get other people to do this?
Maybe because they're starting to send warnings out there to

(41:21):
healthcare executives, to executives across the board in major corporations.

Speaker 21 (41:27):
A bulletin from the NYPD warns of new threats to
executives in the insurance industry, including an online hit list
showing names and salaries of eight top executives. The bulletin
also shows wanted posters of corporate executives hung up near
Wall Street, and warns of social media users celebrating Thompson's death,
one person writing, CEOs should all act like they have

(41:48):
targets on their backs.

Speaker 3 (41:50):
Which is terrifying, because, by the way, if you want
to know what terrorism is, that's what terrorism is. You
are using violence to try to change politics. The best
way to describe it. You're using that as a means

(42:12):
through which you feel that you can change something, and
so you'll terrify people into changing that. And there are
plenty of people out there that feel this way.

Speaker 2 (42:23):
I don't give them that he shot that CEO.

Speaker 14 (42:26):
I hope he's got a list.

Speaker 2 (42:27):
I hope he's working.

Speaker 3 (42:28):
Down, which is disgusting, it is. And I sit here
and I shake my hand. I think, is this When
do we get to this point where people are so angry?
What are you angry at? Well, life is expensive or
this that, and okay, all of us have our moments
of anger and being pissed off at certain situations. When

(42:51):
do we look at ourselves and say is it me?
Maybe I did something? Could I do something else? Could
I do something different? And I'm not saying everything's going
to be fair, and I'm not saying that that there
isn't a conversation we had around some of this difference
between a conversation and killing people, those are separate issues.
And now you've got guys and gals who are running

(43:15):
corporations who are surrounded like the president because they're terrified.
Oh my god, who's the next person that's going to
take up the cause duchure which is apparently hunting CEOs.

Speaker 22 (43:30):
You look at social media, at the posters on the street,
and you have to say, this is not a one
person problem. This is a societal issue that we better
figure out how to deal with.

Speaker 3 (43:47):
Yeah, you're better, You better figure it out, because it's
easy now to start the revolution of whatever it is
that you're hoping to start to get people who are
a little unhinged on the left to do some stuff
that's crazy on the left, who go out and let's
destroy capitalism on the left and tear everything down. These
are the lefties. So we got to get a handle

(44:09):
on this. We do because you and I both know,
we talk about this all the time. Not everybody understands
that some of this stuff is a bit theatrical and
that people that are egging people on, not everybody understands
that they may actually take up arms and do something
stupid and be inspired. This guy, by the way, is

(44:34):
getting all the love you can get of some sort
of like I said, modern day Robin Hood who didn't
do anything but murder. Could you imagine the bank robbers
of old that everybody like, you know, fonds over and
think about, you know, Jesse James, he's getting back at
the man. You know, you go back and Butch Cassidy

(44:56):
in the Sundance kid It, by the way, never killed anybody.
Could you imagine if they got on a train and
then they just killed some people and then just got
off without any of the money and didn't give anything
to anybody. No, but people are like, he's so dreaming.

Speaker 22 (45:10):
There is vitriol in social media across the board about
the corporate America.

Speaker 3 (45:20):
That's understandable when you got a bunch of these kids.
The funny thing is they're learning this where they're going
to big colleges, Ivy League schools. They're being indoctrinated and
being told that everybody is oppressed. White people suck, the

(45:41):
man is evil. You need to tear down the entire
system and get out there and do it. And they're
all going to schools that cost god knows how much,
And you're thinking to yourself, wait a minute, here, you're
telling everybody how horrible the world is from your vaunted

(46:04):
place of privilege at ivy League schools or big colleges
across this country, and you're going to go out and
start the revolution that nobody's asking you to start except
for you. I mean, we see think about what we're
seeing on the streets, especially college campuses. You've got open

(46:29):
hostility to Jews, to whites, you have a singular mindset
that is to the left or else. It is not
a good place to be. And you're getting people out
there that are completely fine with trying to tear down

(46:52):
a system they see as absolutely evil. Yet they bet
fit from it. The shoes they wear. They're not making
their own shoes, the iPhone, they benefit from it across
the board. They're at schools that cost god knows how

(47:16):
much to be told how horrible it is to live
in a place like this. It is so the height
of privilege. And we're gonna get into a little bit
of Syria coming up in a minute. But when you
think about what those people are going through, every one
of them would say, no, you don't want whatever it is.
You think that the colonist's evil will have a bit

(47:38):
of that. We'd like a bit of that, if that's possible. Yeah, there,
I have a feeling there'll be another copycat. I could
easily see that for sure. Three two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benton Show, to your Twitter,
your Instagram coming out this hour. Talk a little bit

(48:00):
about Nancy Masping attacked last night, talk a little bit
about Syria. Then we've got a hodgepodge of fun stuff,
including I told you I was gonna do it. I'm
gonna give you a breakdown of the movie. They got
sixteen Golden Globe nominations that we have no idea what
the hell it is. And I'm gonna tell you whyatt

(48:20):
reminds me of the worst television show in history, and
it is the worst television show in history. In fact,
I might do a whole day on it's how bad
it is. Oh my goodness me Rough Greens, are you
ff Greens, doc coms lash, jed vitamins and minerals probiotics
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(48:41):
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(49:02):
They've got it. They have knocked it out of the
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when you go to Roughgreens dot com and use my
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ruff Greens dot Com, use co Chad at twenty dollars value.
Jumpstart trial bag yours for free. You cover the cost
of shipping Roughgreens dot Com use Cochad. It is the
Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (49:35):
This is the best of Chadbenson.

Speaker 2 (49:47):
Chadbenson.

Speaker 3 (49:52):
I want it.

Speaker 23 (49:53):
Huh.

Speaker 24 (49:53):
I've told you?

Speaker 14 (49:55):
Ohoa, whoa.

Speaker 3 (49:59):
What was that? That is a man who got a
car earlier in the day and wasn't happy about it
and decided he was going to return it by driving
through the front of their building into their showroom at
the tim Dale Mazda Southtown in Sandy, Utah. He wasn't
playing was He apparently was sold as is and he
wasn't thrilled by something. I don't know what it was.

(50:22):
Maybe he bought it without his wife's permission. It was
a super U. Maybe found out he wasn't a lesbian.
I don't know, Chad. He drove right through and then
he kind's like, did I hit anybody? But when you
get out of because I wasn't playing, was I well,
guy's like, no, you weren't. You were Actually you were
pretty honest about that. He drove it right through. I've
posted on the old interwebs. You want to go check

(50:42):
it out again. You have many places to shop, but
when you're in Sandy only go to tim Dale Mazda Southtown.
So insane. Speaking of insane, it is one of the
worst prisons. As all the stuff is being sussed out
in Syria that is going to take forever in a day.
Now people are starting to get a look at the

(51:04):
killing machine that was the Asad regime.

Speaker 5 (51:07):
This was almost unbelievable. Sidnaya Jail is one of the
most notorious in the whole region, maybe the world.

Speaker 14 (51:15):
Now.

Speaker 5 (51:16):
It's been a place where the Assaid regime, first under
Hafaz and then his son Bashah, would put political prisoners
and people would go.

Speaker 3 (51:23):
And they would never come back.

Speaker 5 (51:25):
The word said naya was a byword for disappearing. So
the idea that you could go in there and come
back out again was just completely mind blowing to most Syrians.
But now that's exactly what they're doing.

Speaker 3 (51:36):
Yeah, as they go in there and it is all
these people whose family members just disappeared, nobody ever knows
what happened to them. They kept some records.

Speaker 5 (51:45):
We walked up to the building and there was a
large group of people outside. There was a man standing
up reading out a list of names. I asked a
man stood next to me what he was reading. Then
he just looked at me and he said, these are
the names of everybody he was hanged. And I realized
that he was waiting to hear a name that he recognized,
and it was that of his brother.

Speaker 12 (52:06):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (52:07):
And here's the other thing, nobody's which is creepy.

Speaker 5 (52:11):
And there was a printing press. They said to me
that this is how they disposed of the bodies. They
put them on this large hydraulic press.

Speaker 3 (52:18):
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson Show. It's your Twitter, your Instagram
reread here on the Chad Benson Show. Absolutely horrific. And
we're going to find out a lot more about that
in the coming days and weeks, I'm sure. Meanwhile, last night,
more of the caring and understanding of people when it
comes to the gender debate in DC. Somebody who's at

(52:41):
the head of the fight, if you will. Nancy Mace
was assaulted.

Speaker 25 (52:45):
Capitol police confirming and arrest after an alleged assault against
Congresswoman Nancy Mace inside a congressional office building. Mace, describing
her assailant as quote a pro trans man. Police have
released few details about the suspect, identified as a thirty
three year old from Illinois who now faces a charge
of assaulting a government official. Mey says she has a
brace on her wrist, but says she'll be just fine.

Speaker 3 (53:08):
She's got a brace on her wrists, She's got love
in her heart. What is a pro trans man? Is
that somebody who is trans used to be a woman
or is this just somebody who's like, I'm I'm an
ally and I'm willing to just hurt anybody I need
to the insanity of that. First of all, you made
a choice to drive somewhere to assault a human being

(53:30):
that you know nothing about. That She well, she doesn't
like trans people. She doesn't want them in her bathroom.
By the way, I don't want anybody in my bathroom period,
But she doesn't want them changing with her. There's nothing
wrong with that. Women are allowed to have their opinions
as well, and if they feel uncomfortable in that situation,
shouldn't they be able to say that. That's a lot

(53:50):
more than that chat. It's full of hate. Ah a
bunch of nutjobs. Three two, three, five three eight, twenty four,
twenty three at Chad Benson Show to Twitter you Instagram,
I'm missing the show. Grab the podcast.

Speaker 14 (54:01):
Thank you.

Speaker 3 (54:01):
It's the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 26 (54:17):
Son, Chad Benson Shoe.

Speaker 1 (54:27):
You are listening to the best of Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (54:41):
The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 19 (54:43):
Time.

Speaker 3 (54:44):
You guys know that you've not seen this video. What's
out there? You can do anything with music in AI
and this one spectacular, ladies and gentlemen, AI creed with
Rudolph the Red Nose Range here, rude.

Speaker 27 (55:02):
Off the rains range and a very shiny no and
you you have salt it.

Speaker 12 (55:19):
You already even say it hollow.

Speaker 3 (55:28):
It's so amazing range and you do it a minute
or two. I haven't got here. It is so crazy,
how fast that you can do this stuff.

Speaker 27 (55:38):
We never let rude off John and any range games
in one call me Christmas Eve. Oh Santa came to say,
chill you change me high sure square snow man. See

(56:03):
so awesome, jamnuilty high.

Speaker 3 (56:11):
Sure sque slave. Wait the hints everybody little free right there.
Rudolph the Red Nose Reindeer. Oh yeah, that is just
so awesome. I was playing around today with Sono I
for youa s U n O. I think that's how
you pronounce it. You can produce a song in a
minute that sounds good. It's just so fascinating and terrifying

(56:36):
at the same time. And I will say, you know,
the voice over side of things is getting a lot better,
video is getting a lot better, but the music side
of AI is just light years ahead of everything else.
And it's just it's it's only going to get better.
I mean, it's remember when chat GPT first came out
and everybody's like, oh yeah, like it's pretty neat. You

(56:57):
can do a couple things here and there. Now now
it's crazy how amazing it is. And with computer chips
and stuff getting faster, they had that breakthrough that computer chip,
so Google had that the other day that a normal
computer trying to solve this math problem, it would take
it infinity essentially, and this thing does it like that.

(57:21):
I mean, it's so freaking amazing. I'm excited for the future.
The rest of the world not so much. Right, They're
like it's over, we should kill CEOs and everything's bad.
I'm looking at this going this is aw time. All
this stuff is so cool. Speaking of cool, microdosing not
that way though, with the drugs, not that way microdosing

(57:45):
with weight loss medication, because when everybody started taking the
weight loss medication, there were a few side effects that
people struggled with. So they're like, maybe I should try
something else this morning.

Speaker 28 (58:00):
Microdosing meds used for weight loss.

Speaker 29 (58:03):
It just makes me feel better about myself psychologically that
I can say no and I that I don't have
to eat sweets or too much food.

Speaker 28 (58:09):
Erica Liebman, a psychologist in Philadelphia, was worried about all
the possible side effects taking nozempic, so under the supervision
of her doctor, she decided to try microdosing, or taking
very small amounts of the medication.

Speaker 29 (58:23):
What I have found is that I'm able to put
my fork down when I want to, when it's a
healthy time, instead of when I've already started to regret
how much I've eaten.

Speaker 3 (58:33):
Okay, that's good, that's good. It's actually somebody named microdose
who just follows you around, SOE put your fork down.
Put it down. So they're just taking bits of it
a little bit. My uncle went on ozempic, and you're
supposed to like it starts you at like five miligrams
and like seven and he gets first days just like
he just gave himself the whole like kitt in kaboodle,

(58:54):
and he goes to the doctors and he's like, did
you feelings? Now, just give it to myself and look
it's worked. He's like, I am never hungry, and whenever
I take like five bytes, I'm full.

Speaker 28 (59:05):
People on GLP one medications typically start by taking lower
doses before gradually working up to higher doses over the
course of several weeks. This is what is FDA approved
and has been studied for safety and effectiveness in clinical trials.

Speaker 23 (59:20):
Sometimes you started at a lower dose, you get the body
kind of acclimated, acclimated to the drug, and you minimize
those side effects, and then you uptitrate the dose over time.

Speaker 28 (59:29):
For Michael Hammer of Los Angeles, after taking the recommended
dose of a zembic for three months, he was ready
to give it up because he says his side effects
were unbearable.

Speaker 30 (59:38):
I would order food and when the first bite came in,
I would just immediately get overwhelmingly full, a nauseous, and
it would just make to the point that I was
not consuming enough calories and really was worried about malnourishment.

Speaker 3 (59:52):
Wow, that's the nauseous thing. I know, no, thank you,
but the full thing I think we could all use
a little bit of that. You know, all you have
do is go online now and there's five thousand studies
about how much weight you're gonna put on between you know,
like Thanksgiving essentially and New Year and how much we're
still trying to work off last year's wait, which just

(01:00:14):
it's not going anywhere. I'm staying, you can't get rid
of me. But should you microdose? So let's say you've
tried these things and it's not gone well for you.
You tried them, you felt like it was going to
be okay, but then all of a sudden, your stomach's upset,
you can't eat, you look malnourished. Because that's a lot

(01:00:35):
of what some people are saying is how bad it is.
They just don't eat it at all, which like, well, why
don't you just give a drug that makes everybody feel
like crap and everybody lose weight.

Speaker 28 (01:00:43):
That's when he says a medical professional who prescribed the
medication to him through a telehealth company suggested he tried
microdosing instead. He's been doing it for two years. Now
and says it changed his life.

Speaker 30 (01:00:57):
It allowed me to lose the weight that would have
taken me, you know, I did it in eight months
instead of two years. But also it allowed me to
reset my lifestyle.

Speaker 28 (01:01:09):
Well, Michael and Erica say microdosing is working for them.
Doctors say there's no science right now that shows microdosing
these medications is effective. There isn't even a true dosage
range for microdosing.

Speaker 23 (01:01:22):
I don't recommend microdosing to my patients. There's just not
enough research there and it's much easier to titrate these
medications along the FDA approved indications and doses.

Speaker 3 (01:01:32):
Here's my thing. Is it going to hurt anybody? Because
if you're taking it and then you're just taking less,
I don't see how that's going to hurt you. So
because it's like, hey, you're supposed to take ten milligrams,
she took five. That could be dangerous. What that's so
if it makes you feel better and it works, maybe
it's psychological. I don't know. But micro dosing is the
new thing because we can't just get something without changing it,

(01:01:55):
and that's the new thing, and weight loss we move
from there to the skies of new New Jersey. What
is in the skies of New Jersey, Sir.

Speaker 31 (01:02:04):
The FBI in our Newark Field office, along with the
state and local partners there, the Bureau is actively investigating
the unexplained sighting of drone activity over that part of
New Jersey, including proximity to sensitive sites and areas of concern.

Speaker 3 (01:02:24):
Nobody knows what these drones are. They are massive. The
FBI is concerned about it because they're seeing these huge
drones that are flying around coming out from the ocean,
not like up from the water, but out over the ocean.
And the minute it gets anywhere near where people could

(01:02:44):
see it and they would flash a light on it,
they go dark, which is coreapy.

Speaker 31 (01:02:49):
So we do not attribute that to an individual or
a group yet. We're investigating, but I don't have an
answer of who's responsible for that of one or more
people that are responsible for those drone flights that we're
actively in investigating.

Speaker 3 (01:03:08):
Is the public at risk?

Speaker 12 (01:03:09):
Is public safety at risk?

Speaker 32 (01:03:10):
Are we concerned that there are nefarious intentions that could.

Speaker 3 (01:03:13):
Cause either a national security or a public safety incident
that would put Americans at risk.

Speaker 31 (01:03:19):
There's nothing that is known that would lead me to
say that, but we just don't know.

Speaker 3 (01:03:26):
Some state senators are calling for a limited state emergency
in these certain areas. Forty seven foot coast Guard ship
was out and these things followed it. It is really weird.
They are a trip and like the minute they flash light,
the minute any kind of light is shown in and
around it, they go dark like that, which is again creepy. Hello, enemies.

Speaker 31 (01:03:51):
What the Bureau has done to aid our state and
local partners is what we generally do. Enlist the help
of the inner agency. En List the help of the public.
There's a tip line there that one eight hundred call
FBI tips dot FBI for information from the public that

(01:04:13):
could help us resolve this. It is concerning.

Speaker 3 (01:04:17):
You better figure it out. And that is concerning. I mean,
take the UFO side away from it because it's hard
to but take it away, enemies. That's a serious issue
right there, because these things are big and our people
don't know what it is, which again very serious. Three two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chadbenton shows your Twitter, tweet, text,

(01:04:40):
love hearing from all of you. Coming up. My review
of the movie that got sixteen Golden Globe nominations that
I've never heard of, but I found out about yesterday
and oh my god, it's pretty bad. And then I
will let you in on to the worst television show
of all time that kind of reminds me of it.
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(01:05:00):
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(01:05:44):
com slash Chad that's buy raycon dot com slash Chat.
It's a Chad Benson show. This is the best of
Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (01:06:01):
If you like talk radio like Chad Benson likes his meals,
You've come to the perfect place for takeout.

Speaker 3 (01:06:07):
Told you guys yesterday, I don't know how I got
sixteen nominations. I couldn't tell you. I couldn't. I'm like,
what the hell is this movie? This? What Emily Press?
I've never heard of this movie. Never never heard of
this movie. And I know a lot of movies. I
watch a lot of silly trailers. Don't really watch the movies.
We watch a lot of the trailers. I's not time,

(01:06:31):
but sixteen Golden Clothes, My god, I mean, you are
winning a ton of the Oscars. So I delved into
it and said to everybody out there, everybody out there,
that's you, guys. I am going to give you a
breakdown of this movie from top to bottom, and it
is everything that is awful. Somebody got greenlit for this.

(01:06:56):
I don't know who or why. I couldn't even tell
you how that happened. But my god, oh, are you
ready for a little bit of the trailer? Are you English?

Speaker 11 (01:07:10):
No?

Speaker 2 (01:07:11):
I'm not English.

Speaker 27 (01:07:13):
Because you you are pretty.

Speaker 14 (01:07:19):
If you're not willing to accept, I don't think it's
worth talking.

Speaker 3 (01:07:23):
Just cut to the chase.

Speaker 24 (01:07:26):
To listen is to accept.

Speaker 3 (01:07:39):
A ding. So just a smitch of it, that's all
you guys get smitche Now you're thinking chat That didn't
really what was that about? So the movie is about
Zoe Seltana, who plays an attorney for a cartel kingpin

(01:08:04):
follow me here because it's all over the place, who's
married to Selena Gomez. He wants to live his most
authentic life, and he's trans and is going to transition
into a woman so he can live his authentic life.

(01:08:25):
It is from what I've went and watched. Twenty different
people give reviews of this, and most of them give
you four different things that aren't in the other reviews.
And it is all over the place, But all of
them say, hey, it's a hodgepodge of all kinds of
crap and it's supposed to take place over time. I

(01:08:46):
couldn't tell you it is. How in God's name anybody
greenlit this? How somebody said, hey, I got a great idea,
tell me about it. We're gonna take a cartel guy
Oh like Pablo Escobar. Yeah, like Pablo Escobar. And it's
going to be a family kind of drama. Oh my god,
like the god yet just like the Godfather, but it's

(01:09:09):
going to be a musical. And he's trans what and
he wants to live his best, authentic life, is what
you said? Yeah, so he's not doing it so he
can hide out with all of his billions of dollars. Nope,
He's always been that way underneath it. Did I mention
it was musical?

Speaker 12 (01:09:30):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (01:09:30):
It is a uh I don't get it, but it's
not made for people like me or you or anybody else.
That's normal. But it did get me thinking about all
horrible musical things that have happened when it comes to
silly stuff like entertainment, some stuff is built for musicals,
wicked things of that nature. I get it. Cop Rock

(01:09:52):
was a show that came out in the eighties nineties,
right around there. Cop Rock one of those serious crime dramas,
but with a twist. They sing the really important parts.
What if you don't believe me? This guy here? It's

(01:10:15):
just did you have to see it to believe it?
But I'm gonna give you a taste of it. So
imagine a courtroom where a juror standing up and he's
got a spotlight on him, and then there is the
judge who also has a spotlight on him, and then
everywhere else is pretty black, so it's dark, and there

(01:10:36):
you go. The judge says, as the jury reached a verdict,
we have you on it.

Speaker 14 (01:10:43):
Hit it now.

Speaker 3 (01:10:44):
When he says hit it, the guy that's normally the
stenographer or whatever, the court reporter, pulls up his thing
and he's got a piano, as you would do in
this situation. Do you guys see absurd? This, this movie
that's got sixteen nominations is oh Jamming, He's guilty, judge,

(01:11:13):
he's guilty. You could see it in his he did
the crown.

Speaker 14 (01:11:18):
And now here's.

Speaker 3 (01:11:19):
God thing, Oh my god it is. If you have
a chance, just google it, go watch anything. You will
come back to me with like that was the worst
best thing I've ever seen. It is a car wreck
that was a television show that happened to be a
nuclear disaster that happened to also be The Titanic that
happened to be a comedy and a musical. And I

(01:11:41):
would rather watch that than this stupid movie. That has
sixteen Golden Globe nominations. You won't get entertainment reporting like
this anywhere else, for god's sakes, three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson's show.
That is your Twitter, that is your Insta, that is
also your YouTube. Go to Champan the show TV check.
Got the Facebook as well. We have h what is

(01:12:04):
that TikTok? While it lasts, we don't know how long
it's gonna last, But while it lasts, we've got that
as well. So make sure you follow all of those
things right here on the Chad Benson Show. Coming up
third hour, got a little what trending for you. Plus
we've got your number one song for Christmas, as ranked

(01:12:28):
by me because it's my show doing that as well.
Talking more about the CEO Assassin because that's just not
going anywhere, And of course the weirdness over the fact
that there's merch out there which is creepy and speaking
of creepy kids, the hell are they doing in Guyana?
That sounds familiar think Jonestown. Yeah, this is disturbing, Yet

(01:12:50):
somebody thought this might be a good idea. Write that down.
Are you really gonna do it? We might, we might not.
Wait do you hear this story so much more? If
you missing the show, the podcast, It is the Chat
Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (01:13:01):
This is the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:13:17):
You're listening to the best of Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (01:13:30):
The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 3 (01:13:32):
Look in the sky? What could it be? Is that
an alien staring at me?

Speaker 18 (01:13:52):
Twenty years ago they filmed War the World's on Staten
Island and now we feel like we're characters in that movie.

Speaker 3 (01:14:01):
Are you characters in that movie? Is it happening or
is this just shenanigans played by our government. I don't know.
I don't think it's aliens the way that we want
it to be aliens, those of us who truly believe.
I think it is maybe some alien technology based on
the fact that there is no heat coming off of

(01:14:24):
any of this, so it's tough. We can't detect any
of that, and a lot of times when we send
our drones up there, it is based on heat detection
and we can't find any of that on this, So
it's thrown off no heat. Man, that's kind of creepy.

Speaker 12 (01:14:35):
Cool.

Speaker 3 (01:14:37):
But do I think it is foreign adversaries? I do not.
Do I think it is aliens the way that we
would again myself, I'd like to get it out in
the open lesus. Of course they want to kill us
and just keep us in the dark. We're fine with that.
But do I think that.

Speaker 20 (01:14:53):
It is.

Speaker 3 (01:14:56):
This nefarious alien attack that's just probing us Like the
movie signs, they're probing us. They're probing us, They're probing us. Now,
I don't think it's that.

Speaker 33 (01:15:07):
The Department of Homeland Security and the FBI are investigating
these sightings, and they're working closely with state and local
law enforcement to provide resources. We have no evidence at
this time that the reported drone sightings pose a national
security or a public safety threat. The United States Coast
Guard is providing support to the state of New Jersey
and has confirmed that there is no evidence of any

(01:15:27):
foreign based involvement from coastal vessels.

Speaker 3 (01:15:30):
No evidence of that, dude, There are some weird things
out there's some things that are unexplainable. By and large,
a vast majority of these drones are probably our stuff.
That's why they have lights on them, lights that are
acquired by the FAA. That's why they're not signaling something.

(01:15:55):
They're not doing any of that these are probably just
very advanced drones that we are playing a game, if
you will, against our own radar and whatnot to find
out can we penetrate it? Is this new stuff able
to be completely cloakable and get into radars, which is

(01:16:20):
a win for us. I don't know. Could be aliens?

Speaker 2 (01:16:26):
It could be.

Speaker 3 (01:16:28):
And it was nice enough for them to just you know,
come on in and put on the fa lights. What
about the basis closed chat?

Speaker 12 (01:16:37):
Huh?

Speaker 3 (01:16:38):
How about that? Smart ass? There's been some Look, I'm
not saying everything that we're seeing is all our drones.
Some of them are our drones, as in people are
flying their own drones. Some of them are different for sure.
That you know. If you've seen a lot of that,

(01:17:00):
you're just like, what is that? And why are they dark?
Where they have no lights on a few of those
we've seen, and then the orbs are kind of a
trip as well, but alas here we are. It is
a fear factor though. People are frustrated. They feel like, hey,

(01:17:22):
you guys have no idea what the hell's going on?
You're not telling us anything. And I think they enjoy
some of that. Let everybody fight over everything, Let everybody
get worried over something something that we know is ours,
even though we pretend it's not ours because essentially it's
ours adjacent. We funded it, we help in the participation
of building it, but it'll be a private company that

(01:17:45):
will sell it back to us. And this is kind
of just a you know, standard operating procedure when it
comes to testing these things.

Speaker 34 (01:17:55):
We were briefed by Colonel Callahan from the State Police,
who told us you're going to leave this room knowing
everything we know.

Speaker 3 (01:18:03):
And here we were like, okay, here we go.

Speaker 34 (01:18:05):
You know, we're going to find out what's going on,
and then he proceeded to tell us he knew absolutely
nothing more about who's firing them, where they're coming from,
where they're going, and what they're doing there.

Speaker 3 (01:18:16):
You go, how about that? So you've learned everything that
they know. What do you guys know nothing? Now we
all know the same.

Speaker 34 (01:18:24):
But now we're in week four, we're still seeing drones.
We continue to believe that there's no threat, but we
just don't know what's going on, and that's all we're
looking for. If it is a national security issue, fine, tell.

Speaker 3 (01:18:36):
Us why would they want to though they're enjoying it.
The government's like, and you know, here's something else. There
are parts of the government that know way more than
other parts of the government, and I mean way more,
and they may be testing things out, and a vast

(01:18:57):
majority of government officials have no idea that things are
being tested. And because they don't know that, they're saying,
we don't think there are any threats. We don't think
there're any of the little Green men or any of
that stuff, but we're not quite sure. Because they're not
quite sure, it doesn't mean all of the government is

(01:19:20):
in the dark. It just means some of the government's
in the dark. I'd like to think that there's no danger.

Speaker 34 (01:19:26):
They haven't had any aggressive patterns, they haven't done anything
other than.

Speaker 3 (01:19:30):
Hover fly in erratic patterns.

Speaker 34 (01:19:32):
But if they are up there watching videoing or something,
what are they looking at.

Speaker 3 (01:19:39):
What if they're part of our government somewhat spying on us,
taking advanced pictures of our homes and areas just in
case something was to go down where there was incidents?
What about that? Oh well, that's interesting. I mean, look,

(01:20:00):
you got to throw everything out there. I still am
of the belief that we are not the only ones
in the universe. When you think about how big the
universe is, because we cannot fathom how big it is.
And people will say, well, how would they get here?
Stop thinking about time and the way that an advanced

(01:20:22):
civilization would think about it, Think about it in dimensions
and things of that nature. And with that new computer chip,
willow that is out of this world for us, like
so advanced we can't even we can't even bap our
minds around it. Let me just give you an example

(01:20:43):
of how advanced this computer chip is. It solved a
complex mathematical equation that if a supercomputer tried to do it.
So our most advanced computer that isn't this It would
take ten septilian years. That is a one with twenty

(01:21:10):
four zeros behind it. That's how crazy it is. How
long did it take five minutes to do it? Oh
my god? And it's now saying that we're multi dimensional,
so different dimensions again, Stop thinking of it in the

(01:21:34):
context of traveling through space. Time would be totally different
in that context. So I don't know what these are.
It's fun to speculate, do I am? I worried that
it is as some people say, that's a second coming. No,
I'm not God's gonna come. When he comes, he's not
telling any of us. Am I worried that it is

(01:21:57):
an alien invasion now because if they wanted to, there's
nothing we're gonna be able to do to stop them.
And we always have this kind of bizarre notion that
they're coming here to invade and destroy us. It's possible,
of course, if you believe in you know, other life
out there, is that possible. They're that advance, of course
it is that were their pets, remember the TV show

(01:22:20):
Twilight Zone to serve man.

Speaker 14 (01:22:23):
Ah.

Speaker 3 (01:22:24):
Is it possible that is some deep government secret that
they're here to destroy us, take control of us forever.
Anything is possible, But the reality is, if I had
to bet money at this moment in time, like, it's

(01:22:45):
more likely that we've got advanced technology, maybe from aliens,
and that no foreign adversary is doing anything to us,
and that we know everything for the most part, at least.
So some people in the government know everything they need
to know about this, and they're fine with that. So

(01:23:06):
there you go. You can freak out about it, you
can want it to be a certain way, but I'm.

Speaker 18 (01:23:13):
Not I don't believe that the United States of America
with its military capabilities.

Speaker 2 (01:23:20):
Does not know what these objects are.

Speaker 18 (01:23:23):
And what I'm asking and what we're all asking is
for you to be straight with us.

Speaker 3 (01:23:28):
Well, you can ask away all day, you are not
going to get the answer you probably want. Reality is,
there are people that probably know everything that is going on,
and many people in the government know bits and pieces,
but we're on a need to know basis, and right
now they're saying you don't need to know. Maybe it's
a study in hysteria. Maybe it's a test to find out,

(01:23:53):
should aliens arrive, should it come out that there are
other beings from other dimensions, or wherever, are we capable
enough and adult enough, mature enough to handle the truth.
Maybe it's that there's so many things you can go with,
or maybe we got some awesome drones and with drones

(01:24:14):
and AI being the future of warfare and protection that
we're practicing to see if we can even breach our
own airspace with these things. There's so many things this
thing could be. We'll see, we'll find out one day,

(01:24:38):
will we we have no idea? Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four, twenty three At Cheed Benson's show,
is Your twitterch wait at is tex that Prograham. I
love hearing from every single one of you. Remember this
week countdown the greatest Christmas movies of all time. So
last week we did action and horror, so we had

(01:24:58):
Crampis and Diehard. Today Animation today is the greatest animation
Christmas movie of all time. We'll do that in a
little bit. Rough Greens are uff greens dot com, slash
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Use co chat at twenty dollars value Jumpstar trial bag
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dot Com Use co Chad. It is the Chad Benson Show.
This is the best of Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (01:26:26):
Chad Benson.

Speaker 3 (01:26:27):
No, it's time to find out what's trending. What's trending?

Speaker 35 (01:26:32):
Signed James Dean, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Serena.

Speaker 3 (01:26:48):
Checum what tring?

Speaker 12 (01:26:55):
That's fine?

Speaker 3 (01:26:56):
I was trending on the interwebs on this most magical
Monday in the Year of the Lord twenty twenty four,
not too far away from twenty twenty five. Start with Twitter. Obviously, drones, drones.

Speaker 36 (01:27:08):
What are they?

Speaker 3 (01:27:09):
What are they doing here? Are they coming for us?
Josh Allen football player, pretty damn good, Bill's Colt Steeler.
Sam Howe football player, not so good Heisman, Travis Hunter
won the Heisman. Over the weekend, Cardi b UFC Tempo,
Josh Jacobs see where're going with this? Gmail? Why because

(01:27:32):
X man coming? O, Mahomes injured, will play, won't play?
We'll find out soon. Ravens Buffalo, Timboyle all trending in
the magical world of Twitter. Over too Yeahoo, Scott's Valley, Tornado,

(01:27:52):
tu Alipa, TikTok, Lakers, drones, more drones, drones over New
Jersey Granted boas football player hurt yesterday, sit in the
hospital overnight, ugly hit. Jill Jacobson, actress passed away over
the weekend, Detroit Lions. It's a hell of a game yesterday.
They put up a lot of points. Defense was not

(01:28:13):
the strongest thing. And then finally over to Google, Grant
to boast no one training thing after his injury yesterday,
said in Miami hospital Packers, Seahawks, Cowboys, Panthers, Mahomes injured,
Yellowstone Finale drones. Are you guys are getting the theme
here with the drones? Does anybody picking up what I'm

(01:28:34):
putting down with the whole drones? Lots of drone stuff
is what I'm trying to say, there seems to be
a lot of drones stuff. Yeah, there is a ton
of drones stuff, as as you would expect. Gotta be
honest with you. There's the number one thing trending over
there in the magical world of Google three two, three, five,

(01:28:56):
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benton Show.
That's your Twitter, your Instagram right here on the Chad
Benson Show. There's a lot of drone stuff. I it is.
You know, football is usually the dominant thing on a

(01:29:17):
Monday during football season, as you would expect because it's
football season. But I'm not gonna lie to you. It
is bizarre, right, Like we can all admit this is everywhere? Now,
is it hysteria?

Speaker 37 (01:29:31):
Now?

Speaker 3 (01:29:31):
Some people are playing with drones. They've got drones, they're big,
they're out there having fun with them, thinking they're looking
for other drones. But there's a ton of stuff out
there that cannot be explained, or at least isn't be
explained by our government. I gotta be honest here.

Speaker 38 (01:29:45):
When this story first came out a few weeks ago,
as a resident of New Jersey, as a journalist.

Speaker 12 (01:29:49):
I didn't pay it much credence.

Speaker 38 (01:29:51):
I thought it would turn out to be a bunch
of pranksters and this would all be over by now.
The experience I had last night, however, changed the way
I feel about this story completely. What I saw was
more sophistic kid than I ever imagine. Take a look one, two, three, four,
at least five lights, six lights. I didn't believe what
I was seeing. What was I seeing? We're here in

(01:30:13):
Central Jersey. We've been looking for the past hour. I
think we've seen about forty or fifty of these strones.
In fact, there's one over my shoulder right there.

Speaker 3 (01:30:22):
Local reporter there who is hearing more and more of
this been out there himself, starting to see it, and
you're getting more and more of this. It's like I
didn't quite believe it. I thought it was kind of
a joke. Next thing, you know, they're shutting down Air
Force Base. Is there's orbs with the drones. What the
heck is all of this about? And our government, which
you know, as I've pointed out today, there's a portion
of me that thanks the government's enjoying every second of this.

(01:30:42):
They know exactly what this stuff is. They're just screwing around.
Three two three fuck three eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson Show. Is your Twitter? If're missing
the show, grab the podcast. It is the Chad Benson.

Speaker 26 (01:30:52):
Shown, Chad Benson Shoe.

Speaker 1 (01:31:05):
You're listening to the best of Chad Benson, The Chad
Benson Show.

Speaker 26 (01:31:22):
I'm Nancy Grace.

Speaker 39 (01:31:23):
Our top story tonight, the masked CEO shooter.

Speaker 28 (01:31:27):
Has been unmasked, and guess what it's game over.

Speaker 3 (01:31:32):
Luigi and of course.

Speaker 7 (01:31:36):
Everyone on LAWE celebrated the hard work of law enforcement
and apprehending this dangerous criminal.

Speaker 2 (01:31:44):
Just kidding, y'all. Night him a sex and all.

Speaker 3 (01:31:49):
SNL mocking the insanity of the sex symbol that is
Luigi car Assassin.

Speaker 40 (01:31:55):
Luigi Mangioni has got women and gay guys a lot
and bothered, I mean soriously. This guy looks like Dave
Franca with you, Jene Lovey's ayebrows.

Speaker 3 (01:32:10):
What is going on in this country, y'all? This man
is not a sex i coon. Okay, This man is
and I cannot say this any clearer, a mortal.

Speaker 12 (01:32:26):
Immortal.

Speaker 3 (01:32:29):
But there is love for Luigi, There's no doubt. Margaret
Choe comedian kinda, what are you holding space for right now?

Speaker 15 (01:32:36):
The United Healthcare CIA show shooter.

Speaker 37 (01:32:38):
We're holding space for those eyebrows, the body, the abs.

Speaker 3 (01:32:43):
It raised one hundred and ten thousand dollars from some
of these uh GoFundMe for his defense. Now he has
got a new defense attorney over the weekend. She spoke
before she was his attorney about what maybe some of
the arguments they could make in the case to I

(01:33:07):
don't even know at this point, because freeing him is
it going to be the answer, Because even if they
make these arguments, he isn't getting out of jail anytime soon.

Speaker 29 (01:33:14):
There might be an not guilty by reason of insanity
defense that they're going to be thinking about, because the
evidence is going to be so overwhelming that he did
what he did.

Speaker 3 (01:33:24):
Not guilty by reason of insanity. Here's the other thing.
Remember in New York City, the highest crime that he's
going to be charged with is second degree murder, which
carries fifteen to life. I think so he's not going
to get forever without the possibility of parole.

Speaker 39 (01:33:47):
If he was convicted and a good guy and whatever.
Oh my god, he was a model prison inside a prison.
He was a model prisoner at the prison of the
prison of the prison and everybody loved Luigi, which is
a possibility. He might be out by the time he's
forty one. That's a big if, obviously. So they reserved,
by the way, first degree murder for hit men. So

(01:34:08):
you've hired somebody, but most of it is reserved for
killing a police officer, terrorism, or killing a government official.

Speaker 3 (01:34:17):
That's it. They expect him to be extradited in the
coming days.

Speaker 36 (01:34:24):
Prosecutors are preparing for Luigi Mangione to arrive back in
New York as early as tomorrow after charging him in
the murder of United Healthcare chief Brian Thompson. Sources tell
ABC News Mangioni is almost certain to waive extradition from Pennsylvania,
and a grand jury in New York could also hand
down an indictment at any moment.

Speaker 3 (01:34:43):
At any moment, here's something else. The FBI spoke with
mom because I guess mom had learned the FBI. Hey,
that might be my dude.

Speaker 36 (01:34:50):
Mangioni was arrested in Altoona, Pennsylvania, last week, five days
after Thompson was gunned down. ABC News has learned Mangioni's
mom spoke with FBiH and detectives from the NYPD the
day before his arrest, she indicated surveillance photos being circulated
at the time could be her son.

Speaker 3 (01:35:09):
I think, and it's just me. With the amount of
money that this family has and what they're throwing behind him,
they're going to be able to plea it out by
reagion of insanity. That's what I'm going with. Anybody else,
anyone anybody else have that by reason of insanity or
as your hand are you over there? You over there?
He had gone off the grid for a while, and

(01:35:31):
that's why mom and them had had some serious fears
about what he might be. And when they saw the pictures,
I think they put one on one together and realized, Luigi,
what are you've done? A Luig not guilty by waving.
I can't even remember the last time there was a
not guilty by way of insanity in a high profile case.
Can if you can remember, let me know three two, three, five,

(01:35:53):
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show,
is your Twitter tweet? Had his text the program? It
has been I I'm trying to think. I can't remember,
because normally, right, no matter what, like not even Dahmer
was insane. He ate people They're like, eah, he's okay,
just lil on okay. So we'll see, we'll see if

(01:36:15):
this will be that. Speaking of lawsuits, guess what, Donald
Trump got a little money from ABC.

Speaker 37 (01:36:22):
So Trump filed a defamation suit. It was working its
way through the courts. ABC was unable to get it
thrown out initially, and actually in the next few days,
Trump was set to be deposed in the case. But
ABC's avoiding going any further by settling. They're paying out
fifteen million dollars plus a million in attorney's fees. They
say this is going to go to a nonprofit, basically

(01:36:43):
to Trump's future library. That's the idea. But maybe most
importantly Jessica, ABC is also apologizing, issuing a statement of regret.

Speaker 3 (01:36:51):
A statement of regret. Now, this this came from the
X abuse case that Trump was found libel for, and
they said, they being Stephanopoulos, that he was libel for rape.

(01:37:12):
Sex abuse and rape are two separate things, and there
is a specific definition under New York law of which
he said rape. And they got in a tit for tat.
He sued them and he got fifteen million. It's what

(01:37:33):
it is. People are like, look at them they're lying, Yeah,
they can we just get over the lawsuits? Can we
just get over the court cases? Can we just get
on with our life? Fifteen million for a library. Let
me ask you guys a question. How many of his
books do you think they're gonna be in there? Whole

(01:37:56):
thing's just gonna be the art of the deal. Jaed
just saying, speaking of saying, look at the sky, everybody,
what do you think it is? Could it be aliens?

Speaker 19 (01:38:09):
Now?

Speaker 40 (01:38:10):
Can we stop calling them drones? They're obviously UFO's people.
It's all over the world now, It's not just in
a little thing in New Jersey. Just saw one from
China today. It's over the world. What do you think
that some country Iran as the capacity and the capability
to monitor and fly these drones all over the world

(01:38:30):
at the same time, not trying to scare everybody, But
they're here. They're here, Oh.

Speaker 3 (01:38:35):
My god, they're here. Who are they? Huh? Who are
the they you're talking about? You know what I'm talking about?
Those people? No, who are those people? It seems very racist.

Speaker 40 (01:38:47):
And the powers that be don't want to acknowledge that
because that leaves them with a higher authority. Nobody's going
to care about Trump or Putin or all of the
strong men in the world who are dictators and cruel
and evil.

Speaker 3 (01:39:01):
No, they're not going to have the power that they have.

Speaker 40 (01:39:03):
If this is true, the aliens are here and they're
obviously superior to us in many many ways. Let's hope
they don't want to just, you know, blow us up.

Speaker 3 (01:39:13):
I hope, so I hope that they don't want to
blow us up? Can we We're always thinking they're here
for nefarious reasons. Maybe we're their pets and they like us,
they don't like the way we treat each other. Because
if they come from a different dimension and they're able
to come here like that, the reality is kind of
their pets. We're kind of their pets. Well, this is

(01:39:35):
their Petrie dish to see what grows out of it.
That's a big if. But I will continue at this
point even though I am a believer that we are
not alone. I think there's too much stuff to you know,
that we just cannot explain. And I'm of the belief
that this situation is more about drones that are ours

(01:40:02):
that may be in conjunction with technology that we have
gotten from other places that we don't quite understand that
these things are things that we're just testing out, and
that it's uncomfortable and it's eerie. There's no doubt about that,
because the facts are if there is something else out there,

(01:40:26):
and I believe there is, we as human beings are
going to struggle to understand that we're not the smartest
thing in the universe. We are not the highest on
the food chain, and that will make us uncomfortable. But
I believe at this moment in time, what we're seeing
is our stuff that we partnered with some sort of

(01:40:50):
defense contractor to build something that we are testing on
our own stuff, because in the event that something might
go sideways, we want to know we're ahead of the game.
And I'm talking mostly about war here on this planet,
not intergalactic war three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty
four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show to your Twitter.

(01:41:10):
Coming up, we've got the greatest Christmas animation movie of
all time. That'll be straight ahead. But first, Bullwark Capital
right now, Bulwark has something for you. How about a
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(01:41:31):
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Jeck Financial LLC and sec Register Investment Advisor investments of

(01:42:14):
all risks and are not a guarantee past performance, is
not guarantee future results. Trek two four to three, seven eight.
It is the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:42:20):
This is the best of Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (01:42:29):
Deep States, No Deep doo doo Eah, The Chat Benson Show.

Speaker 3 (01:42:36):
We're counting down the greatest Christmas movies based on genres. Now,
come Wednesday, we're gonna give you the greatest Christmas movie
of all time. But today we're looking at animation kids movies,
and there's a lot of great kids movies out there.
Let's be real, there is some amazing ones, and we're

(01:42:56):
not limiting this just to movies in theaters. There's also television,
because you can't not have that because so many of
these great animations we've seen they were made for TV.
And there's some amazing ones out there. But this one
actually made it to the theaters itself, and it did
so in nineteen eighty three. The Greatest Christmas Animation movie

(01:43:19):
of all time. Merry Christmas.

Speaker 11 (01:43:26):
It's time for the Great Christmas count down, The five
Greatest Christmas Movies of all time.

Speaker 14 (01:43:36):
Merry Christmas. I felt the animal.

Speaker 12 (01:43:39):
Surprised, Eddie.

Speaker 4 (01:43:40):
If I woke up tomorrow my headphone at the carpet,
I wouldn't be more surprised than I am right now.

Speaker 3 (01:43:44):
Oh no, incomination, you want to read my lessle.

Speaker 14 (01:43:48):
You should your eye out, kid?

Speaker 12 (01:43:50):
What us do you want?

Speaker 1 (01:43:50):
Mary?

Speaker 12 (01:43:51):
What do you want? You want the moon?

Speaker 13 (01:43:53):
Just say the word and I'll throw asshole around and
plug down.

Speaker 3 (01:43:57):
Well, this movie is amazing, It is incredible, and it
is painstakingly made. In nineteen eighty three, Tim Burton came
out with this amazing classic, The Nightmare before Christmas, and
it is everything that is awesome. It really is, but

(01:44:19):
painstaking the maid. Are you ready for this? It took
three years to make this movie because it's stop motion animation.
If you don't know anything about that, it takes a
long time to do things like that. They're all puppets, eh.
Jack Skellington has over four hundred different heads, so the
disprection could be varied. By the way, here's a little
side note for you. I actually have a Jack skeleton puppet,

(01:44:41):
a real one from Green Jelly Studios. Pretty awesome. They
used over two hundred puppets in the movie. The suit
that they designed originally was all black, but they decided
it's a little bit much, so let's make him stand
out put pin stripes on him. Disney liked the movie,
but it was two dark for Disney. So they went

(01:45:01):
and they said, all right, touchdown, why don't you guys
release this movie because it's too dark for our peeps.
And the movie itself as you know, is incredible. It
is song, It is dance in a creepy, weird style.
It is the night Member before Christmas.

Speaker 24 (01:45:22):
Welcome to an extraordinary world filled with magic and wonder
and open your mind and let yourself go to a
place where every day is Halloween and every night Jack's
coming to dreams of something different.

Speaker 3 (01:45:44):
What is this? It's someplace news? WHOA What's this? What's this?
It's called ever? What's this?

Speaker 14 (01:45:57):
Why?

Speaker 12 (01:45:59):
I can't believe?

Speaker 3 (01:46:00):
Must be dreaming? Wakem Jacks?

Speaker 12 (01:46:03):
What clue?

Speaker 1 (01:46:06):
But you heard off?

Speaker 3 (01:46:07):
Peace on Earth? And go thrill Coortmt.

Speaker 24 (01:46:11):
The Touchstone Pictures presents the enchanting story of two very
special dreamers and the holiday spirit that brought them together.
From the imagination of Tim Burton, comes The Nightmare before Christmas?

Speaker 2 (01:46:25):
And what did SA to bring you?

Speaker 40 (01:46:26):
Honey?

Speaker 3 (01:46:34):
So amazing? Here's the funny thing. Tim Burton didn't direct
the film, No everybody thinks he did. He produced it.
This was kind of his creation. But Henry Selik did
and that was his directorial debut. He had served as
a producer and some other stuff. But Burton did the producing.
Burton lend his name, created the story and the characters

(01:46:56):
but he did not actually direct the movie. It was
so incredible, it really was film. Big inspiration was commercialism
in the holidays, as you know, and they live in
a land of Halloween. Of course there's Santa and Jack
longs for more. He wants more. So Jack Skellington's actually

(01:47:20):
played by two characters. Great actor named Chris Sarendon played him.
And the singing point that you hear throughout the movie,
What's this, What's this is actually done by Tim Burton's
favorite pal man by the name of Danny Elfman, who
was the lead singer of Oingo Boingo but really became
a left that band and became a huge composer in

(01:47:43):
the film industry and works from primarily with the likes
of Tim Burton, which is awesome and I love Oingo Boingo.
By the way, weird science, Yes, that's that's him. Shooting
started before the script was even finished. By the way,
just let you guys know, twenty four frames per second,

(01:48:07):
that's the unique movement for one hundred and ten thousand
frames one minute of film. Took a week to shoot.
And if you want to know, are there Mickey Mouse's
and some hidden eggs in there? As they'd like to say, yes,
there are more than a few. If you want to
talk about animation. For all the great claimation shows and
all the great things that are out there, and great
animated movies, the Polar Express and everything. Something about this movie, though,

(01:48:31):
that is just amazing and it is incredible. Our number
one Christmas animation movie of all time is A Nightmare
Before Christmas three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four
to twenty three at Chad Benson Show, is your Twitter
tweet at as texta program love to hear from each
and every one. Have you right here on the Chad

(01:48:52):
Benson Show. We couldn't leave you this Monday without some
spiring words from Uncle Gary. No, it's time for the
Gary puc moment of the day.

Speaker 32 (01:49:06):
Each month we live in has a particular identity to it,
and particular weather to it, and particularly seasonal planning what
we do in that month that makes our life better.
We must respect every month we're living in because every
month has a different identity with the weather and what
the social structure and what the families are gonna do together.

(01:49:28):
And it's a beautiful thing to be in understanding the
power of the month. Make up your mind You're gonna
have fun in the month you're living in.

Speaker 3 (01:49:34):
That is the key. As always, uncle Gary, you guys
have a blessed rest of your Monday. As always, night
that Jack.

Speaker 2 (01:49:39):
This is the chat that'son show.
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