All Episodes

November 12, 2025 17 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
This media is spending a lot of time today discussing

(00:04):
a white rail incident, but not the one you'd think.
Which one am I thinking? Probably that blond lady in
Charlotte that got stabbed to death.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
I know they don't want to talk about her. No, no, no,
this is a totally different thing. It's not even on
the East coast. It's an incident that took place over
on the West Coast in a city that I think
maybe mister Kenneth is more fond of than most of us.

Speaker 1 (00:28):
I used to be. What happened?

Speaker 2 (00:31):
Why don't you love the sidewalk poop thing? I find
just really destroyed it.

Speaker 1 (00:37):
Lenus of Paris in San Francisco, they have a smartphone
app that helps the local people that are going to
and from their jobs in the grocery store figure out
where the human feces and hypodermic needles are piling up at.

Speaker 2 (00:51):
So it's like a traffic app to help you avoid
maybe stepping in something like that, or even coming in
contact with the visually with the person who is currently
in a depository.

Speaker 1 (01:03):
You know. Fashion that sounds like a joke, but it's
a real thing. I'm sorry to say. It's real. A
video has now been released from an incident in September
where a light rail in San Francisco flew into a
curve at a high speed in jolted passengers after a
driver fell asleep. So it was like a roller coaster then, yeah,
kind of, but it wasn't like supposed to be. Did
the passengers appreciate the extra thrill? No, they didn't have to.

(01:26):
They didn't have to pay more for it, did they.
Here's the sound of the jolted passengers and the driver
trying to calm people. Didn't play fast, he's sleep, I'm sorry. Relaxed,

(01:46):
re live life. We didn't crash, so yeah, we didn't crash. Relax.

Speaker 2 (01:53):
Of course he had nothing to do with not crashing
or crashing because he was asleep at the wheel.

Speaker 1 (01:57):
Did that relax you when you heard him say that?
Not at all?

Speaker 3 (02:00):
Good morning?

Speaker 1 (02:02):
You know it would have been great, right then? Tony Bennett,
the last great croner, just put a little of his
music over the pa. That's all they needed. He left
his heart in San Francisco next to a pile of
feces and hypodermic needles right there. That's why I'm not
there now. Boy, my mom loved Tony Bennett. How you
mean from a distance, man, I don't think she ever

(02:25):
met him. No, well, you know, my mom's for the best.
My mom is a human. I hate to bring it up, Billy,
but who did your mom have a crush on a
couple of guys?

Speaker 2 (02:34):
Marty Robbins, Yeah, Sonny James, I think she liked him
pretty good too. And Whispering Bill Anderson. But it wasn't
wasn't you know, she just liked his voice or his nickname.
I think there was a guy named Whispering Bill Anderson.

Speaker 1 (02:47):
Told you this before.

Speaker 2 (02:48):
You just don't pay attention, son, Did he got to
go upside your head with a two by four just
to get you attention?

Speaker 1 (02:54):
Did he whisper? Or did he whispering? Bill whispered when
he sang? And it was sexy? You didn't care for
Conway though?

Speaker 3 (03:02):
Really?

Speaker 1 (03:02):
Well?

Speaker 2 (03:03):
He tried too hard, she thought he you know, he
tried to Marty Robinson didn't have to try. He was
just all, you know, according to her, You know, sexy man,
You know Conway's kind of looking at him. I don't
get it, but I get you know, that's why guys
joined bands, and that's why they become singers to get women.

Speaker 1 (03:20):
Conway Twitter did do some odd things at the end
of his career, like not a lot of people know this,
but kind of like Cat Stevens, he made a switch
from the Christian belief system to more Muslim Islamic ideology
our theology. Excuse are you sure about that?

Speaker 3 (03:36):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (03:36):
Yeah, when I'm not familiar with that switch. No, it's true.
One of the last songs he ever recorded was about
Barack Obama and the Johannist genetics. Seriously, Yeah, there's a
song of bom. Yeah, it was unaware. Yeah, this is
a rare You've got a rare release from Conway.

Speaker 4 (03:53):
He tried to hide it with the president show close
a war and you can tell he's never give a
damn about us before, and he talks to us like
peasants who worship a queen.

Speaker 3 (04:08):
Obama, he's got privilege in his getty jeans.

Speaker 1 (04:13):
Say not a lot genetic evolution for Oh yeah, not
a lot of people knew about this. It's that's a rarity.
You really got to dig deep to find that Conway cut.

Speaker 2 (04:22):
You know, only you, of all people, would would have
that available. You probably have the entire catalog.

Speaker 1 (04:29):
I do have access to some very rare music from
Conway Twitter that most people don't have, like the song
that he did with a local Houstonian, a former New
York City rapper. You wouldn't expect him to start rapping,
would you.

Speaker 4 (04:42):
Now?

Speaker 1 (04:42):
You wouldn't think so, But honestly, he's actually he was
actually pretty good at it when he tried. You know,
listen to this.

Speaker 3 (04:50):
You can find me in the club a bottle full
of bob I mean, the having sex in the make
in the boom.

Speaker 5 (05:01):
Come give me if you're into getting room. Oh go shorty,
it's your birthday. You're gonna party like it. It's your birthday. Yeah,
good times. That's just nothing but fun, good times, right.

Speaker 1 (05:15):
There, boy, I feel like it's a good time.

Speaker 3 (05:16):
You know.

Speaker 1 (05:17):
It makes everybody happy and we need it. Nowadays. The
world's become a dark, morbid place where people just walk
around with this bitter resentment in their hearts all the time.
Let go, you know, forgive. If not, if not for
the person you hate, then for yourself. But for yourself,
that's right, it'll it'll make you live longer. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (05:34):
Well, that's stress and anger and holding it in and
all that bitterness. And oh there's resentment that's just gonna
shorten your life.

Speaker 1 (05:42):
I tend to feel the same way. Right now, A
lot of air traffic controllers are mad at Transportation Secretary
Sean Duffy for trying to call them all back to work.
If you need to have like medication or something overnighted
to you, don't do it until the government shut down ends.

Speaker 6 (05:56):
There you go.

Speaker 1 (05:57):
That'd be my advice.

Speaker 2 (05:58):
And I thought it ended. I thought Monday they said
the Senate voted, and that put an end to it.
They kept telling us that Senate vote was the only
thing holding it up. In the Senate voted, is still
something else holding it up?

Speaker 1 (06:11):
Well, then it had to go to the House Committee,
and then it goes to the floor of the House.

Speaker 2 (06:14):
One time they changed something, they got to shift it
back and forth. We moved to comma and now we
took the com out and we put three dots right.

Speaker 1 (06:23):
So now the husband of Fox News hostess Rachel Duffy
is calling on air traffic controllers to return to work,
Air traffic controllers to come back to work and sterting
that I think were it only plays in one aar
but just diad my word for it. That's what.

Speaker 2 (06:35):
And didn't Trump offer the air traffic controllers that didn't
quit the you know, walk away even though they weren't
getting paid because they knew they would eventually get paid.
It'll be back paid, but they were I think he
offered them like a ten thousand dollars bonus for sticking around. Yeah,
I bet the other guys wish they'd just stuck around.

Speaker 1 (06:52):
My favorite thing right now in the liberal media is
everybody getting mad at Chuck Schumer for not working out deal,
but then also getting mad at the other eight Democrats
for agreeing with the Republicans.

Speaker 2 (07:04):
Which say, your favorite thing is watching everybody get you mean,
watching democrats get mad at democrats.

Speaker 1 (07:08):
I guess that's a better way of explaining it. It's
fun to watch. Here's a little tip here. If your
name is Sunny Houston and you work on the View,
don't try to lecture John Fetterman. It's not gonna go
al for well.

Speaker 7 (07:20):
The Senator Bernie Sanders said the vote was a horrific mistake.
Governor Gavin Newsom called it pathetic and a surrender pole
after poll found more Americans on both sides of the
aisle blaming Republicans even Marjorie Taylor Green blamed the GOP.
As you mentioned, Democrats have big wins last week, so
you had momentum.

Speaker 1 (07:40):
Why give in?

Speaker 3 (07:41):
Now?

Speaker 7 (07:41):
Why bring a butter knife to a gunfight? Are you
willing to gamble that big deal?

Speaker 1 (07:47):
Yeah, butter knife, that's a good line, it says applause
up here.

Speaker 7 (07:50):
I'm gonna cr reopen is because if that gamble is wrong,
half a million Pennsylvanians that you represent, their healthcare cost
will skyrocket.

Speaker 2 (07:59):
If you watch legal immigrants watching his face while she
just goes on her rant.

Speaker 1 (08:03):
It's supposed to be a question.

Speaker 6 (08:04):
First of all, you know MTG is quite literally the
last person in America that I'm going to take advice
or to get their kinds of my leadership and values from.

Speaker 1 (08:14):
And by the way, a month or two ago, everybody
on the View said Marjorie Taylor Green was hitler. Now
they all like her because she doesn't like Trump exactly.

Speaker 6 (08:22):
That's all Democrats are celebrating crazy pants like that. Then
that's on them. And I don't need and I don't
need a lecture. I don't need a lecture from from
whether it's Bernie or the governor in California because they
are representing very deep blue blue kinds of populations, and
a lot of those things, a lot of those things

(08:42):
were part of the extreme. And I'll remember what really
needs to win, to win, the big win is involving
my state and other states and those things. And why
have we arrived here after the election a year ago.
We want to forget. We got to forget some of
the things that caused that election.

Speaker 1 (09:01):
Larn Now for me, Georgia, North Carolina, Michigan, three swing
states that are going to have a Senate race next year.
What's the guy's name in Georgia, Aweso? Is that his name?
Beach Me? Do you think people in Georgia are happy
with him right now? Beach Me? I know they're not.
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (09:17):
I wish they'd let us know. I mean, we've got
a lot of people in Georgia listening. They just don't
They're not complainers, buying lards. They just listened to the
show and going about their business.

Speaker 1 (09:26):
I like that, you know, probably because it's pretty there,
the weather's nice.

Speaker 2 (09:29):
It's just a stoic area, you know, the Deep South.
They just recently passed the anniversary of having Atlanta burned
to the ground by that yankee you know, mean guy,
and they shook it off.

Speaker 1 (09:42):
They're back, they're fine. Well yeah, I mean, you know,
it happened like one hundred or years ago or so.
Still they're not whining about it today, are they? You
know what I think it is? In Georgia they eat
a lot of peaches and they got fried green tomatoes.
If you've got good food around, you can't be mad
all the time. Sounds really healthy, don't I think?

Speaker 5 (09:56):
So?

Speaker 2 (09:57):
You are so woke Walton and Johnson network, if you're
even prepared for this and not hold on to something.
This is a shock gun play it on me. Did
he is not behaving well in prison? What I thought
he would have been a model citizen or prisoner. I
thought he was teaching classes about business.

Speaker 1 (10:14):
He's also breaking the rules and they don't care for that.

Speaker 2 (10:17):
In prison, they put rules in place for a reason,
and unlike this you know government, at the prison, they.

Speaker 1 (10:24):
Actually enforced these rules. Okay, so tell me what happened.

Speaker 2 (10:27):
Well, first of all, did he guy called drinking alcohol?
Now that that's a rule you're not supposed to rink.
But also who got him to alcohol? Where'd that come?
From He was on the phone with his woman and
he was telling her, next time she come to visit,
bring him some cash money.

Speaker 1 (10:48):
He needed two hundred singles singles? What is he going
to a strip club? He didn't say exactly what the
money would be for.

Speaker 2 (10:57):
However, they also have one of these rules in prison
where you can't bring in mates cash money unless it's
change for the vending machines they have for change. Does
make sense because it's easier to hide a roll of quarters.
Obviously a lot of pelly. I know that's not we

(11:19):
don't want to make that point. Yeah, right though, but
I'm not saying it. Don't sneak nothing in the prison
and you know whatever you sneaking it.

Speaker 1 (11:26):
In in prison wallet? Is that what you're talking about?

Speaker 2 (11:28):
But now they said did he went and broke another rule?
Made a three person phone call less than a week
after arriving at his new Uh. He got that new
prison where it's like low uh uh, you know, impact
or whatever. I don't know what the low security. That's right,
he's not a high risk, he told officials. He was
in a conversation with his legal team about making a

(11:49):
statement for the New York Times, but after you know,
they listen in and they get a transcript all that
stuff for what you talk about on there. And he
asked that woman he was talking to, he said, you
want me to bring in this other person? And he said, yeah,
bring them in, put them on the line, and she did,
looped in an unknown male who then that means.

Speaker 1 (12:08):
He violated prison policy yet again.

Speaker 2 (12:11):
Not no, I mean he gonna be a more trouble
now once he's in prison than stuff he did to
put him there.

Speaker 1 (12:17):
And then a thing that happens a lot though. Guys
will get sent to prison for two years and then
they'll get another decade for stabbing a guy, or they'll
try to escape or you know, breaking the rules. Well,
while we're on the topic of the incarcerated, the Bureau
of Prisons has been ordered to provide if you're one
of those people that doesn't like when children get preyed
on by transgenders, I'm warning you they're going to piss

(12:37):
you off. I don't care for it, saying, the Bureau
of Prison has been ordered to provide laser hair removal
and other cosmetic services to a transgender pedophile oh Lord,
currently incarcerated for sexually abusing his own ten year old son,
very own son. This stuff pisces me off so much,

(13:00):
and we have to do what for him now that
he's in jail. Provide him with laser hair removal and
cosmetic services. Brian Buckingham, aged forty seven.

Speaker 2 (13:09):
Change pay for that when you're not in prison. Why
don't you have to pay for it when you're in prison?
For you just don't get it at all, exactly. The guys,
they say, right, what prison is this? We're gonna go
down there.

Speaker 1 (13:18):
Here's the story. Brian Buckingham's forty seven. He's changed his
name to Nanny Love and declared that he identifies his
female just before he was sentenced for this horrific crime.
So an investigation took place in February twenty twenty over
a popular chat service called Discord. Perhaps you've heard of it.
I have, And I don't really blame Discord for this.
It's just a popular app. I know people commit crimes.

(13:40):
That's where the dark web exists.

Speaker 2 (13:42):
But didn't Pete Hegseth once Good accused of doing something
wrong on Discord?

Speaker 1 (13:46):
That was a different app. What was that one? Not sling?
What am I thinking of? Something with an ass? Something else? Anyway,
became aware of the fact that there were people on
the platform discussing child sexual abuse exchanging pornography, and so
the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children got involved
and Discord received a report from a concerned user about

(14:08):
the images. This guy gets arrested by Washington State A
detectives assigned to the case reviewed the evidence from Discord. YadA, YadA, YadA.
He gets convicted. He's been there now, he's been in jail,
gets to prison, right. It takes a few years. Government
moves at the speed of glacier. As you know, he's
now in prison. And so in prison, he's just decided

(14:29):
as he shows up, oh I'm a woman. Oh you're
a woman, Well then you get to go to the
women's part of the prison. Yeah, that handy, And so
the Washington State Patrol found that Buckingham had done all. Anyways, convicted,
he gets to prison, and now apparently he's decided that
since I'm a woman, there's certain services I'm going to need.
And the State of Washington seems to agree with that.

(14:50):
State of Washington. It's Washington, yeah, yeah, but they get
federal funding for their prisons. Guys. It's really I'll not
do that no more. Buckingham was also active in the
Native American suicid side prevention campaigns as a neurobiology student
at Washington State University.

Speaker 2 (15:04):
So they would only prevot Native Americans from killing themselves
if somebody else wanted to.

Speaker 1 (15:09):
They were good with it. Isn't that the weirdest thing? Huh?
Leftists just suicide prevention for all. Why is it so
important for leftists to divide everybody up based on race
and skin color? They control us, but they don't want
to do that with crime statistics. Oh anyway, because Buckingham
he looks like a white guy to me, but it
says he's a member of the Maca Indian nation. And

(15:30):
since the crimes were committed on Indian land, the case
gets referred to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Guess who
funds that, you, Billy ed, I'll do that. Yeah, that's well,
I'm funding a lot of stuff. Major crimes committed in
Indian country are often prosecuted by the federal government. So
Buckingham was initially indicted on two counts. His case was
a slow moving case through the justice system. Happened during

(15:51):
COVID and now that he's finally in prison. He needs stuff.
He needs laser hair removal. Well, he's not the only one.
He needs hormone therapy. There's a lot of stories like
this today. Here's another one. A transactivist who secured pre
trial transfer to women's jail is convicted after threatening a
neighbor with a knife for misgendering him. Uh, here's another one.

(16:12):
I think this one happened in Canada. Still Oh no,
Georgia to Calb County, Georgia.

Speaker 4 (16:17):
Oh boy.

Speaker 1 (16:17):
A police officer into Calb County, Georgia is under investigation
after asking a trans identified male to leave the women's
restroom at a local library. Look, I don't care if
you're a cross dressing weirdo as long as it doesn't
affect me. I don't have to pay for it, though,
But you do, and I don't want to. And if
it affects me and my paycheck and you're hurting little kids,
I say death penalty for this guy there. Why do

(16:39):
we let why don't we repeat child sex offenders? Certainly
there should be the death penalty for that. That's that's
producer Kenny's law. That's a new one. Yeah, I like it. Yeah,
let's do it. Let's institute capital punishment, repeat child sex
offenders who are cross dressing weirdos. I'm sorry, you can't
cure that. No amount of time in prison is going
to make your instinct to want to do that to people.

Speaker 2 (17:00):
Go Away'll tell you what if they keep that hemp thing,
and they're banning hemp in the new you know, reopening
the government plan, then I think we put Kenny's low
in there, right up.

Speaker 1 (17:09):
Next to it. Isn't that crazy. We're gonna have one
or the other or both. We're cracking down on low
level marijuana users. And yet this is a priority. This
isn't a priority. No, it's not even a big deal.
It might be best if you just let it go, Okay,
Walton and Johnson
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
Medal of Honor: Stories of Courage

Medal of Honor: Stories of Courage

Rewarded for bravery that goes above and beyond the call of duty, the Medal of Honor is the United States’ top military decoration. The stories we tell are about the heroes who have distinguished themselves by acts of heroism and courage that have saved lives. From Judith Resnik, the second woman in space, to Daniel Daly, one of only 19 people to have received the Medal of Honor twice, these are stories about those who have done the improbable and unexpected, who have sacrificed something in the name of something much bigger than themselves. Every Wednesday on Medal of Honor, uncover what their experiences tell us about the nature of sacrifice, why people put their lives in danger for others, and what happens after you’ve become a hero. Special thanks to series creator Dan McGinn, to the Congressional Medal of Honor Society and Adam Plumpton. Medal of Honor begins on May 28. Subscribe to Pushkin+ to hear ad-free episodes one week early. Find Pushkin+ on the Medal of Honor show page in Apple or at Pushkin.fm. Subscribe on Apple: apple.co/pushkin Subscribe on Pushkin: pushkin.fm/plus

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

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

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.