Chewing the Fat with Jeff Fisher - 4/29/17 Jeff Fisher Show: Alex Jones, Trump, Rhino Looking for Love, Sis Sexism
Episode Date: April 29, 2017- Ohio drug addiction rates- Producer Chris injured in car wreck- Trump's Executive Orders - Congress whining over Obamacare- El Chapo's money should build the wall- Charlie Warzal from Buzzfeed talks... about the Alex Jones trial- Big show next week- Chuck from Florida with weird news- Robots are taking over- Animal news- Alex Jones hosts a press conference- Rhino looking for love- Riley J. Dennis talks Sis-Gender SexismFollow Jeffy on Twitter: @JeffyMRALike Jeffy on Facebook: www.facebook.com/JeffFisherRadioFollow Jeffy on Instagram: @jeffymra Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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2017 is going to be a volatile economic year.
We may see politicians throughout the world attempting to control central bank policies.
Several renowned financial analysts have warned that political interference in central bank policies
may mean our economic misses of inflation and growth targets.
Gold is an international currency that can't be issued or controlled by governments.
If you don't have the only hard currency that has outlasted every politician
and every failed idea of governments for centuries, you need to speak to Goldline right now and learn
how easy it is to add gold to your portfolio or IRA. Now is the time to diversify your financial
portfolio by adding gold. Call 1-800-913-Gold. Buying real gold is easy and fast at Goldline.
And you're going to be happy that you finally made the call. 1-800-913-4653. Goldline also offers
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This is the Jeff Fisher Show on the Blaze Radio Network.
Welcome to the broadcast.
888-90-3033 is the phone number to the Blaze Radio Network and the Jeff Fisher Show.
Today, the number is 100.
It's just like Sesame Street.
100.
100.
Now, of course, you know, we have 100 days of Trump.
We'll get to that.
because it's been an exciting 100 days of Trump.
First, though, with all the things that we have,
luxuries, some of them we don't even consider luxuries anymore,
did that make our lives better each day,
I was looking back at what they had and didn't have 100 years ago.
And some of them are fascists.
For instance, say, you know, in 1915, cocaine had only been illegal for a year.
Marijuana was perfectly legal and available for purchase.
Doctors regularly prescribed heroin to patients.
You most definitely don't get those days back.
In 1950, the word teenager was not in use yet.
The constitutional amendment granting American women the right to vote had not yet passed.
You most definitely don't get those days back.
In 1910, there were just over 14,000 people incarcerated in the U.S. for first or second degree murder.
The population of Las Vegas?
22 in 1900.
I mean, then it started to blast.
in 1910, 800.
And by 1920,
that over 2,300 residents in Las Vegas,
so, I mean, it was booming.
The average life expectancy for an American man in 1900,
48.3.
Women, of course, always have outlived men 51 to one.
I think you know why.
In 1913, the first dedicated gas station in the U.S. opened in Pittsburgh.
Before that, selling gas was a side business.
In 1940, now that's not 100 years ago, my friends.
Okay.
It's only 75.
When the census collected information on the plumbing in American homes,
almost half lacked the trifecta.
75 years ago, not even 100.
almost half of American homes did not have hot, cold water,
a tub or a shower, and a flush toilet.
Right?
So half of the houses, no hot water, no tub, no flushing toilet.
I mean, I can, I don't know that.
I mean, obviously everybody's gone camping and used outhouses.
But I think I can, I mean, I remember pictures of my great.
grandparents, right?
My grandparents, great-grandparents,
and they're home with the outhouse outside.
And I still have the nighttime potty
that my great-grandparents used.
So you'd have a, you know, you'd set the bowl
inside the box, a wooden box.
And so it was your nighttime urination bowl.
So you'd use that at night.
So you'd have to go outside,
and then you'd get up and take the bowl outside.
Hopefully, you know, you'd toss it away from the house.
In 1901, Connecticut passed a law that included the country's first speed limit.
15 miles an hour, 12 within the city, okay?
City limits is 12.
Slow it down.
In 1915, the Eiffel Tower was the tallest structure in the world.
And it held that until 19th,
30, right? In 1938, the U.S. said its first minimum wage.
1938, less than 100 years ago, first minimum wage, 25 cents an hour.
In 1910, the average annual per capita income in the U.S., $332.
Now, in today's dollars, that's, $332.000.
about, you know, $7,800.
Still, though.
In 1915, many practicing doctors in the U.S. had been educated haphazardly.
Medical schools had become mostly diploma mills,
and that slowly began to change when the John Hopkins University School of Medicine decided,
you know, we should probably make these people that want to work on other people
be educated.
That'd be nice.
In 1910,
agriculture was the most common industry
Americans worked in.
1910, most common industry
agriculture. By 1920,
manufacturing had passed
agriculture.
Wow. I mean, that happened fast.
In 1915,
the three leading causes of death in the U.S.
were heart disease, pneumonia, tuberculosis.
1915 canned beer, modern supermarkets, and Barbie dolls,
of course it had not been invented.
Nobody cares about Barbie dolls are supermarkets we care about,
but you could always get food, but canned beer.
In 1950, the U.S. did not have an official national anthem.
In 1910, 7, almost 8%, 7.7 of Americans said that they couldn't read or write.
In 1870, 20% said they couldn't read or write.
So 40 years later, only 7.7, we're picking up the pace a little bit.
In 1900, only about half of American children between 5 and 19 years old were enrolled in school.
Ending formal education for eighth grade was typical.
do at the farm right i mean i have more americans were it was an agricultural community
you know out there and hold that field i want to learn how to read and write and multiply and
add and subtract okay go count the rows of corn you're going to plant today's number 100
now think where we're going to be in another hundred years i mean it's going to be
you won't be able to imagine it.
I mean, the futures, what you're imagining now, you're seeing happening now,
100 years from now is going to seem like doctors were prescribing heroin.
A hundred years ago, that's what it's going to seem like 100 years from now.
Now, when you saw that the doctors, you know, cocaine had just become illegal in 1950, 1910,
1915, and they were still prescribing heroin.
And you know what you can't find?
By the way, because my wife has been looking for one, so if you have one, you can message me on Twitter.
You can't find the bear aspirin bottles of heroin.
They're out there somewhere.
You can get the bear.
Aspirants, you can get the bear.
There's other bear that they had here in America, but nobody has the original, or I say nobody,
we can't find one of the original bear heroin bottles.
There's remakes, but not an original.
If you have an original, I'm willing to give you like five bucks.
Let me know.
But since 1990, think of this.
Now, this is a change, miraculous change in the last few years that's gone on here in the United States.
That's fascinating and scary at the same time.
Since 1990, the number of Americans who have died every year from drug overdoses has increased
500%.
More Americans in 2015
died from drug overdoses
than from car accidents
and gun homicides combined.
In 2015, more Americans died from drug
overdoses than from car accidents.
It's the worst drug overdose
epidemic in American history.
Okay.
Spurred
you know because of the availability of prescription
opioids and the influx of
potent synthetics like fentanyl and carfentanol.
Now, when you look at the charts of that, it is amazing.
It is amazing how much the drug overdoses has gone up throughout the years.
We just did that chart not too long ago, and you know that it went up because you kept hearing about it so you go up, but you don't go up that far.
I mean, it just shoots up the last couple of years.
I mean, 500% since 1990?
Amazing.
I mean, young Americans, there's a huge, there was a big story about the age divide
of what's causing the overdoses and what age group you're in.
So younger Americans are overdosing on heroin.
Well, the old folks are just taking pain killers.
In 2015, heroin, not only do we have more Americans dying from drug overdoses than from car accidents and gun homicides combined in 2015.
We also have, for the first time, in 2015, heroin killing more people than prescription painkillers.
Now, obviously, you know, there are still a huge amount of people dying from prescription opioids,
but heroin in 2015 killed more people than prescription pain killers.
Now, there are some states, and we've talked about them here.
You know, the Northeast is on fire with this problem.
But states, and so, you know, so is, you know, West Virginia, Ohio,
Ohio is probably, I mean, they're in a full-blown crisis.
Ohio has double the heroin overdose rate of any of the surrounding states.
I mean, that is scary for the state of Ohio.
And one of the problems that one of the experts is talking about
is that a doctor can prescribe you one of the painkillers like hydrocodone,
but it can't prescribe you the treatment drugs like the naloxone.
And, you know, there's some states that are easing up a little bit on the naloxone prescriptions,
but it's also the insurance companies, right?
The insurance companies are like, you know, that particular drug is really expensive,
so no.
but if you'd like to, you know, give them some,
go ahead and give them some hydrocodone, that's fine.
Don't worry about it.
Act, they can take, you know,
the prescription is good, you're fine.
But, you know, if you need it, use it.
I know you can quote me on that.
If you need it, use it.
I am a bit, look, I've had a bunch of surgeries.
I understand.
I know about pain kill.
And I know what they do and what they won't do and how to use them.
But if you need them, use them.
And of course, if you're using them on a regular basis for whatever amount of, whatever thing is wrong with you,
you're going to be addicted.
And that's a strong, that's a strange word because it brings up meaning of being addicted.
Oh my gosh, he's addicted.
Well, yeah, but a lot of the people that are addicted aren't breaking into homes, aren't overdosing because they're using it so that I don't know they can be a productive member of society.
But it doesn't matter in today's world because you still get treated like a criminal.
You're on pain.
Today's number 100.
100.
100.
We'll talk a little bit about our president,
Donald Trump's first 100 days.
We have an interview with Charlie Warzel from a BuzzFeed
who covered the Alex Jones trial down in Austin, Texas,
the past nine or ten days.
And then we have news,
something that is just a news.
new trend around the world and on Instagram that is some people are going to be horrified.
I most definitely am not.
This is the Jeff Fisher Show on the Blaze Radio Network.
2017 is going to be a volatile economic year.
We may see politicians throughout the world attempting to control central bank policies.
Several renowned financial analysts have warned that political interference
and central bank policies may mean our economic misses of inflation and growth targets.
Gold is an international currency that can't be issued or controlled by governments.
If you don't have the only hard currency that has outlasted every politician and every failed
idea of governments for centuries, you need to speak to Gold Line right now and learn how easy
it is to add gold to your portfolio or IRA.
Now is the time to diversify your financial portfolio by adding gold.
Call 1-800-913 gold.
Buying real gold is easy and fast.
at Goldline.
And you're going to be happy that you finally made the call.
1-800-913-46-53.
Goldline also offers price protection
against short-term market fluctuations
on qualifying purchases.
So buy with confidence.
Read Goldline's important risk information
and find out of buying gold is right for you.
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The Jeff Fisher Show.
Welcome to the broadcast.
888-9033 is the phone number.
You can follow me on Twitter at
Jeff EMRA.
Instagram at
Jeff EMRA.
Facebook is Jeff Fisher
Radio.
So my Saturday
producer Chris
wasn't here last week
because he was in
an automobile accident.
Now those of you that have followed
my driving career
know that there's been
a number of automobile accidents
that I've been involved in.
So I'm fascinated to hear
how other people get into car accidents
because usually,
I mean there's only been a few accidents.
You know,
that have been kind of my fault, marginally my fault. Mostly it's the other people. So Chris,
yes. First of all, you okay? Yeah, I'm all right. I mean, I see you've got, you came in with the
big wrap around your foot and your leg and you're hobbling around here like you were actually
injured. Well, you know, I got to do that for the insurance. Insurance scam. Thank you. So what happened?
I was, you couldn't work. Well, I was waiting to turn into the parking garage and some guy decided he's
wasn't going to stop and rear-ended me.
Did you see it coming?
No.
No.
All I heard was the breaking glass and then what just happened.
Wow.
Yeah.
So were there any automobiles in front of you waiting to turn in?
No.
Luckily, that was clear as well.
You're very lucky.
Yeah.
So for your insurance scam, what happened?
So my foot got a nice gash in it from the seat.
and they had to patch that up.
So you had your foot just the one leg back up against the seat.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So you hit, the seat goes forward, you don't.
Yes.
Owl.
Yeah.
That kind of hurts.
A little bit, a little bit.
And that's the only thing, I mean, you didn't hurt your back, you didn't hurt your head?
No.
Airbag deploy?
No, the airbags did not go off.
However, it did knock the covers off the airbag.
So that was interesting.
Knock the covers off the airbag.
but they did deploy.
Yeah.
You might have a lawsuit there.
I know.
Right?
Found my, the sunglasses I was wearing in the back seat.
That was fun.
They flew off my head.
Okay.
I mean, were they your favorite pair?
I mean, did your mom give them to you or something?
You had to have that pair?
Well, their prescription.
I mean, you could purchase sunglasses pretty much anywhere in America.
Well, yeah, yeah.
I mean, usually they don't fly off your head, though.
It's been my experience.
So.
So is the kind of?
Are totaled?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, it wasn't worth much anyway, but yeah, it's bent.
Oh, that hurts.
Yeah, it's gone.
Oh, no.
So are you like Ubering now, or did you actually get to purchase a new automobile?
Well, they got around to give me a rental car on Monday.
So I was out of vehicle last weekend.
What?
Oh, yeah.
Okay.
And, but now I've got wheels and I'm hobbling around.
So they're giving you a rental car?
Yes.
And because they haven't given you a check for the other car yet or what?
Not yet, no.
And did the person who hit you?
I mean, is this an insurance person?
He had insurance.
He didn't speak English, but he had insurance.
Nice.
This is the Jeff Fisher Show.
Only on the Blaze Radio Network.
This is the Jeff Fisher Show.
What?
888-90-33-33 is the phone number.
Welcome to the broadcast.
That could turn into the word of the day, actually.
What?
Instead of 100, but we'll stick with 100 for now.
So today, congratulations.
Congratulations to President Donald J. Trump for surviving the first 100 days.
Today is the tremendous anniversary.
The wonderful anniversary.
He said earlier this week in an interview that he didn't think being president would be so darn hard.
You know, look, he was busy before with his previous life.
But now that he's president, he just, oh, man, it's a tough job.
He didn't plan on it being so hard.
But during a little one-on-one interview on Fox News, he reminded us of this.
I think we're doing tremendously well.
I don't think anybody has ever done this much in 100 days.
So President Trump started off as aggressive as anything.
president.
U.S. stock markets record high, million Americans are benefited in their retirement
savings account.
He had 66 executive orders, memoranda, proclamations.
He's going to sign another one today that is the same as these.
They all just issue for more work.
We'll do more studies.
So all of them pretty much are costing us money.
The executive order, 66 of them, notifying Congress of a strike on Syria,
after it was reported that the country used the eyes on his citizens.
And once he saw the video of the little babies, he had to do something.
I mean, you could see it in his face.
Disbandling Obama's climate change initiatives, let's hope that actually holds true
and they continue to do that.
Enforcing regulatory reform, protecting law enforcement,
mandating for every new regulation to eliminate,
too. Yeah, how's it coming? I'd like to just come back and take a look at that.
Reducing regulations on manufacturers, placing a hiring reason. You know, okay, these are all great.
But what do we really want? You and me. What do we really want? Right? We want health care.
We want to repeal. We can get to replacing, but let's get Obamacare off the books.
I heard an interview this week
on a local radio station with a congressman
and for the life of me, I cannot remember his stupid name.
Anyway, it's not important.
He's just a silly little congressman,
United States representative.
He said,
well, look, I've been saying it all along
to repeal or dilute
I about
I about
had swerved into the wall
That's the first time
I've ever heard anyone say
Dilute
Obamacare
Shut up
Whoever said that before ever
You all got elected
Because you told us you were going to get rid of it
And you got up there
And decided
You know
That's a lot of work
We really haven't been planning
It's only been eight years
Since
You know seven or eight years
We really didn't have time to work on anything
thing. It's pretty much agonizing.
Right? I mean, we want that gone.
You know, his big claim to fame, the wall.
I'm going to build a wall. You even said it again yesterday at the NRA.
He likes saying it.
Will it ever get done?
Doubtful. Do we really need it?
Well, you know, we probably should have it. Yeah.
It certainly hasn't heard. And the, the, the,
rhetoric that has slowed down illegal immigration will only work for some, you know, a little while longer.
And then they're going to decide, hey, you know what?
Nobody's doing anything.
We could probably just continue to go.
And then they'll come back.
So let's get the thing.
I know Ted Cruz issued, you know, he wants to use El Chapo's money to start building the wall, which I'm okay with.
What's El Chapo doing with it?
Nothing.
Right?
Nothing.
We've got a few countries in the first 100 days that the Donald does, I'm sorry, President Trump has, you know, created a little issue with, just a few.
I mean, he's a great negotiator and he's a, you know, he's a great person, everybody likes him.
So, you know, you find it hard to believe that we've already got a, you know, a little beef with Canada.
Of course, we still have the beef with Mexico with the wall.
even of course.
I mean, that's going to go on forever.
You know that.
Of course, we've got the beef going on in North Korea with a little Kimi.
Now, Kimmy fired another rocket yesterday just trying to, look.
China needs to get little Kimmy under control.
Gene needs to go over there.
Maybe, you know, order a cake from Mar-Lago,
big piece of chocolate cake, and bring it over to a little Kimi.
Sit down with them, have a big, beautiful, thick piece of chocolate cake.
and say, look, a little Kimmy.
Here's the deal.
Have a little buddy of your chocolate cake.
There you go.
If you want to continue to eat really good chocolate cake like that,
you'll stop firing your little missiles.
Otherwise, we're going to kill you.
And then he can go about his business,
keeping his people in the dark, literally.
Because it seems as though our people,
especially President Trump,
I mean, a time for, they want to use military might,
and it's going to be ugly when that happens,
because little Kimmy won't care.
Little Kimmy will not care.
And so there's going to be a lot of people in Seoul
that are going to pay the price, right?
Because Seoul itself, Seoul City Limits, I think, has, you know, 10 million,
and then the matroplex of Seoul has about 20 million.
This is a lot of people, man.
Australia, a little beef with Australia, but he's, you know,
he's friendly, he knows he's a good negotiator.
He's the best.
In fact, he's told us himself how good it's been.
I think we're doing tremendously well.
I don't think anybody has ever done this much in 100 days.
And, of course, we've got the little beef with Iran.
You know, that's going on.
worry about it, though. They've taken an aggressive position in the Gulf State.
We've got Germany. A little issue with Germany going on. Don't worry about it.
Don't forget about him being such a douche to Angela Merkel while she was here.
We even shake her hand. It was so bad. And of course, he's friends with Putin. He's such a great guy, but, you know, really, they're not.
And he's not. And we've got a little beef with Russia going on now, too.
And so that's it right now.
I mean, and really, we still kind of have the beef with China,
except that, you know, they went down to Mar-Lago and kissed and made up a little bit
with over-choclet cake, and so everything's okay.
You know, and the head guy, you know, China, President Xi,
said something nice about him, so Donald likes him now.
I think we're doing tremendously well.
I don't think anybody has ever done this much in 100 days.
Congratulations.
First 100 days.
first hundred days to our
president, Donald J. Trump.
And look, if you
don't know
and he's been busy, right? I mean, he actually has
been busy. Has he been
busy to the point where he's accomplishing something?
That is another question, right?
But he's been busy. There's been reports that
they got to keep him busy because
he, you know, he gets bored, he goes down to Florida,
when he goes to Mar-a-Lago, then he's on his own, right?
He's out there golfing.
He's able to tweet.
He talks to friends of his, and then he gets an idea,
gets a hair up his butt, and then it's all over.
So they've got to keep him, you know, keep him focused,
keep him busy in Washington's sea.
He brought, he bust in all the senators for their little North Korea chat.
All of them came out of there going, huh?
Because there was nothing new.
It was kind of a,
whirlwind cluster.
Originally we heard that
it was
the turtle that called them all together.
Mitch McConnell.
And then to give them a little update
and then Donald was like, hey, you know what?
Mitch, bring him over here to the White House.
Don't worry about that building over there
that you've got for a year, people.
Bring him over to the White House.
Look, I got nothing going on.
We'll set them up in the back.
We'll have a meeting. We'll bring everybody.
You know what? I'll get the generals over here.
I'll get pants. I'll pull pants back from North Korea day early.
Everybody'll think it's where a war reason.
And then, you know, we'll have a little meeting here.
So just set that up.
I'd call my buddy, my buddy Frank's got some buses.
He's going to rent to us.
That ship is over.
Don't worry about it.
And one of the things he said, I heard, and I didn't see this.
So I've got to find it where he said that he missed driving.
You ever see Donald Trump drive?
Now, seriously.
Now, you've seen pictures of him with cars.
But every time you see Donald Trump, he's getting out of some kind of limousine.
Right?
Now, maybe he, you know, likes to take the, you know, take the speedster out on the weekends.
Because there's nothing like, you know, taking the speedster out in Manhattan on the weekends.
But, uh, I get it.
But I can kind of understand that, actually.
If he actually is a driver,
which I barely believe,
I can kind of understand that.
Because while I really love to be driven around
and it's nice, it's nice, not to have to drive,
it's also a pretty nice to drive.
That's a pretty freeing experience, right?
I mean, that time is yours.
You're in an automobile, it's your automobile,
which you either purchase, rented, whatever, stolen,
whatever, however you got the car.
But you're in there on your own going where you want to go.
You listen to what you want to listen to.
You're thinking about what you want to.
I mean, that's you.
That's your time.
Your space.
I mean, that's the American dream, right?
The American roads.
We had the lady on the Glenn Beck radio program yesterday telling us that she looks for,
she's looking at the automobile industry as a beacon of how the economy and what's going to happen in the future to the country.
and her thoughts were that it's the next, you know, it's going to crash soon.
And when it does, there's going to be big trouble.
Well, the reason that has been propped up for so long is that that's the American dream, right?
I mean, freedom, cars, we go where we want.
To drive where we want, we do, that's the American deal.
Automobiles, we're based on that.
So if that goes away, you might not be hearing.
Our President Donald J. Trump saying this.
I think we're doing tremendously well.
I don't think anybody has ever done this much in 100 days.
How can you disagree with that?
I think we're doing tremendously well.
I don't think anybody has ever done this much in 100 days.
Seriously.
This is the Jeff Fisher Show on the Blaze Radio Network.
The Jeff Fisher Show.
I love driving cars.
you know, to me a great event is getting into a car and driving someplace.
I can't do that anymore and I haven't been able to do that really since the primary is.
Oh, see, see.
It's so sad.
So sad.
I don't necessarily believe it.
But, you know, whatever.
I guess I have to because he said it.
So it's the truth.
Right?
Because I, you know, Donald and I don't hang out.
I know it's a surprise.
But I seriously do not remember.
There's been some pictures.
Remember there was a couple of pictures of him with his daughter on his lap,
and everybody was figuring that they were all wound up about his daughter being on his lap.
But they were sitting in the car or on the car or side of the car or whatever.
So there's been pictures of him around automobiles.
But I never seen him drive a car.
Maybe he drive, you know, maybe he still gets to drive the golf carts, right?
So shut up.
Just get a souped-up golf card.
Security will let you drive that thing around.
No problem.
All right.
So we have Charlie Warzel coming up from BuzzFeed
who covered the Alex Jones trial all last week.
I had the last nine or ten days.
And he had some fascinating tweets and some fascinating stories
about the entire trial.
So it'll be interesting to talk to Charlie.
One of my, I think this could be my new favorite trend on Instagram.
people are now taking pictures of landscape.
You know, Instagram, everybody wants to take a picture of where they are,
and they show their feet, and there's the beach.
Or looking at this, look at this beautiful site, and there's their feet.
Well, now the trend is they show the landscape,
but it also has your naked butt in the picture.
I think that's my new favorite trend.
Whenever you're looking at, you can have somebody snap your shot,
with your pants pulled down and your butt showing.
And there's some examples I'll tweet out here in this story about the new trend on Instagram.
And I think we might have to do some new Instagram trending.
Maybe we'll do that on Facebook live exactly.
Practice the new trend.
This is the Jeff Fisher Show.
Only on the Blaze Radio Network.
The experiment was a success.
begin life force reboot program now
stand clear
life signs stable
it's alive
set it loose
this is the Jeff Fisher show
on the Blaze Radio Network
welcome to it
888 9003393 is the phone number
if you'd like to participate you can always follow me on Twitter
at Jeff EMRA and my guest
Charlie Warzel, you can follow him at C. Warzel on Twitter.
Charlie, you had a fascinating last 10, 11 days of your life following the Alex Jones trial down in Austin, Texas.
I did.
Welcome to the broadcast.
Thanks for having me.
How in the world are you?
Are you making out okay with Alex being that close to Alex for 10 days?
Yeah, you know, it was honestly everything about the last.
10 days has been incredibly surreal, but also really illuminating in a way that, you know,
I almost, I don't know if I expected, to be honest.
Really?
Yeah.
I think, I think, you know, the reason why myself and a gaggle of other reporters kind
of showed up was really around this premise of Alex's lawyers hinted at a defense of his
custody of his three children under the
under the
sort of guys that everything
he's done in his professional career has been
political satire and we should
I just a quick reminder that this
was a custody battle that
the jury came back
Thursday night late
with the verdict and it was a custody
battle to do with their three kids
and Alex had custody
but he was had
they had joint I'm sorry they both
had joint custody but Alex
had control and was able to divvy out the time that the wife got to see the kids.
And so, right, right?
So then this trial was for her to, A, get full custody or joint custody with her having
control of the kids.
Correct.
And the judge ruled on the second of that, granting her joint custody with the ability
to dictate residents.
And this is going to be, you know, before we get to the trial, I mean, I saw,
one of her posts, one of the
feeds after the trial where she talked
about parental alienation syndrome.
I mean, if that's the case, if you actually
believe that, and we've seen it, you know,
I mean, I do kind of believe it.
The, you know, it's going to be tough because
the other, the parent who's had the kids has just
driven the other parent right into the ground. They didn't even want
anything to do with her.
Right. You know, the whole sort of
of one of the main premises of this was that, I mean, A, as most of these custody things are,
you know, they are both very nasty and also in a way, you know, very sort of ordinary in the sense
that, you know, you're dealing with sort of like the general issues of, you know, of parents
and their kids and the conflicts and the, you know, the alliances and grievances. So it,
But, but yeah, the parental alienation sort of charge against Alex was really kind of borne out, sort of without saying so, of, you know, his personality that we know in his public life.
Right.
And that leads us right.
Right.
And that leads us right back into what they were going to do, how they were going to defend Alex for this trial.
Right.
Yeah.
And so his legal team's defense was this performance art political satire defense, or that's sort of what they foreshadowed right at the start of the trial.
And so that's really what led, I think, a lot of the media, the national media attention.
You know, I came down and didn't really expect it to sort of blow up as big as it did in terms of interest from the national media.
But I think what the alluring question here was was, can, you know,
Can we sort of under oath get to see a separation of Alex Jones the person and Alex Jones, the professional?
And how much of this stuff does he really believe?
Yeah, because, I mean, for a long time, having been a fan of Alex, and I say fan, not really a fan, but more as a looking at him as a sideshow, that he would, I mean, his belief was, this is me.
as me.
And so for him to have to say in court that it wasn't him,
I mean, that puts a big cringe on his business.
Yeah, there was this real, it was sort of a,
a situation that, unless you were trying to, you know,
settle a dispute over the custody of your children,
you'd probably never find yourself in a situation where you would have to,
where you'd have to, you know, argue that your career was based on something different.
But I think that he, you know, that line sort of really disappeared after the first couple days of the trial.
It's Alex sort of issued a very full-throated defense of Info Wars and what he does.
He claimed 95% of it was hard news and that about, you know, 5% is this satire, which the media cherry picks and uses to, you know, dismiss him as a lunatic as a, um, you know,
as a far fringe figure.
And I can say as someone who, for my job,
has to watch a lot of Info Wars,
I don't know if I agree with that character.
I certainly don't.
I'll guarantee you that.
But he got lucky with the judge taking away
the merging of InfoWars and himself, right?
I mean, she made that split that they couldn't use in court.
Info Wars had to be separate, and Alex was separate.
So he kind of, in my estimation, I mean, he got lucky because he didn't have to make that statement then.
He was able to say all the time, hey, InfoWars is completely separate.
So, you know, it's real.
Let me alone.
It was honestly, I think, a really big shock to some of the legal professionals involved.
And a lot of people who reached out to me in, you know, who were lawyers who dealt with family custody cases.
is not related to this sort of saying it's almost unheard of for someone's professional life
to be taken out of context in a custody trial.
I mean, that's the whole point, right?
I mean, the point is, is that you're unable to care for the children because you do this.
Right.
And I think that, you know, it's not even, I understand with the initial impulse of, you know,
you want to leave policy.
politics out of it. You don't want to say that, you know, so-and-so has these, these, you know,
views about who should be an elected official. And, you know, if you're a Trump supporter,
or if you're a Bernie supporter, that means, you know, you deserve X amount of hours with your
kids. That's a, that's a, you know, a very sort of hairy and sticky proposition, which the judge
rightly wanted to, um, to keep out of. But I think the, the general exclusion of, of,
almost anything having to relate to InfoWars under the,
under the justification that it's a political show,
really sort of, you know,
sort of strips away a lot of what you,
of what you can, you know, learn about and level at Alex.
Who's, you know, he's somebody who, if you spend a lot of time watching him,
you see he broadcasts, you know, videos from home or will he's driving in the
car, he sort of, you know, he doesn't have that nine to five work life balance that, you know,
some people might have. His work in his life are very much intertwined. And look, in today's world,
and, you know, somebody will say, no, that's not right. But I believe in today's world,
if you're in the media, you know, the evil media, it is that way. Now, it isn't go to the office
and sit down at the desk and say, good evening.
It's 6 o'clock, time for the news.
That just isn't a person's life anymore.
Absolutely.
And, you know, he has made a real name for himself.
Yes, he has.
Over the past two decades, being somebody who has sort of this monomaniacal obsession.
Yep, and 24-7 with it.
That's right.
Yeah, and InfoWars, you know, has that sort of,
this is going to sound wrong for them,
but it has that sort of CNN,
sort of cable news feel,
you know,
the high production value,
the constant, you know,
updates,
the always going live.
I mean,
that's what they were,
that's what they were going for,
whether, you know,
just never mind the stories
or whether you believe it or not.
I mean, that's what they wanted,
that 24-7 feel,
and we're here for you,
24-7 around the globe.
I mean, that's the deal.
That's his life.
It's really,
it was really,
it was hard for me to understand that as well.
And I am in no way, you know, I only pretend to be an attorney.
I'm not even close to me.
So what's your biggest?
So they, besides that, we talked to the, I saw some quotes from,
you had an opportunity to talk to a couple of jurors.
Yeah, yeah.
And we caught up with them last night outside the courthouse, just a few.
And their sense, the way that I got was, was that,
that info wars really wasn't a factor in this trial.
In the sense of, you know, the judge got her wish, the court got its wish.
And it was unclear how many of the jurors going in knew of him.
The juror, the one juror I spoke with said it was a, you know, a roughly equal split of people who are somewhat familiar and not.
But that deliberations really actually took so long.
It was a nine and a half hour deliberation, which is abnormal.
Yeah, it's a long time.
It took so long, actually, because they both, the jury thought that both parents were actually
pretty adequate guardians, and they wanted to make sure that they got that right.
So it's really, there's a real disconnect that I noticed between sort of the narrative that had
to play out inside the courtroom and what would happen when you would grab your phone.
check on Twitter or see, you know, what people were commenting on outside.
It was a real, it was a real split.
Alex is sort of this villain out in the world, and in the courtroom he was presented as
this dad who was, you know, devoted and perhaps, you know, a little colorful, but...
A little colorful, but he's providing for his family and he was a good dad, yeah.
And, you know, look, do I want to give him the benefit of the doubt?
No.
but it is possible, I guess.
You know, I think that these things are very,
I think that they're very complicated.
And I think that, you know, it's actually a very,
it's a dicey thing to delve into somebody's family matters in this way.
But I think at the end of the day,
there really was actually a bit of, you know,
the trial proved instructive to people who wanted to know more about him and especially to know more
about whether he's the man that he is on camera when he's off camera. I think that we actually saw
people who stuck it out with me for the for the full nine days really saw that he maintains a lot
of the same characteristics when the cameras aren't rolling that he has on air.
Oh my gosh, which leads you to believe that it is
isn't a show. Charlie Worsel from BuzzFeed, who covered the Alex Jones trial, Charlie down in
Austin the last nine or ten days covering the Jones trial. What was your, I mean, that's a
fascinating takeaway. When the judge said that, you know, we're going to distinguish between
no Info Wars and Alex away from Info Wars. Well, I mean, during,
the trial he was posting stuff on
Info Wars which was going against
the gag order right
there yeah
so you know the press was kept
the press was kept kind of
in the dark on that to some degree
we did get some snippets
if you leading close enough to the
lawyers when they had to approach the bench talking
about it okay it appeared that sort of
in the first
you know the real media storm around this
hit um
on the night before the trial when
the Austin statesman, the one of local papers here, sort of broke the story that his lawyers
were going to use this performance art defense.
So, you know, then the sort of, you know, Stephen Colbert ran with it and sort of, you know,
he became sort of like the butt of the internet and late night TV jokes.
So, you know, Alex is someone who when he's in the news, he has to respond.
He has almost, you know, a, it's like brief.
for him. And I think that, you know, initially he put out a couple of, or I know he put out
two initial videos calling, you know, the claims outrageous and saying it was a media attempt to
discredit him and that he is who he is and, you know, I'm 100% real baby. And I think that he was
admonished for that. And, and so those videos kind of took a different turn. They stopped being about
the trial necessarily and you know mentioning custody of his kids and sort of focused more on
i'm a i'm a target it's all on me one of the things that came from this trial
that i found a very fascinating was uh the profitability of Alex Jones's company
uh more people involved with this damn info wars and making millions of dollars
I'm doing it wrong.
I don't know about you, Charlie.
I mean, maybe you're doing it right,
but when Alex Jones and the wife and the mom and dad
are all making millions for selling tree bark supplements,
I'm doing it wrong.
Conspiracy is good business, I think,
is one thing that we learned here.
You know, there was, I believe at one point
there was a report of, you know, roughly,
$40,000 a month or something to that degree, something very, very high being paid to his ex-wife.
Plus, he gave her, I think, in the initial divorce, there was reported that he gave her a $3 million on top,
three or $4 million on top of that, right? Plus the month.
And a few numbers, a few numbers trickled out, including at one point Alex's parents both testified on his behalf
and mentioned that the quote unquote family business, which is a great way, I think, to refer to InfoWars.
Yeah, no kidding.
The family business netted them a couple of million of dollars, millions of dollars.
And that's just, you know, his parents.
I think his father has some stake in the business.
But it does sort of speak to the sort of, you know, InfoWars' finances aren't public.
and he is uh he's placed those things pretty close to the vest but it needs you sort of these
glimmers of insight into um yeah i mean i know i get the plan i mean i get the plan all the
you know all the product that advertises on his radio tv internet and website is all his product
and so that product you know it just rolls back into the company i got i got the plan i'm just
doing it wrong and i feel like an idiot
there's still time
to start hawking the supplements
I think
Dad is that you
Charlie Worsle from Buzzfeed
All right Charlie
Alex
Alex is back to be in Alex Jones
And he can pretend once in a while
That he's really bummed
That he didn't
He doesn't have the
Joint Co he doesn't have his kids
The wife tells him when
And when he can't have the kids
but he'll be able to eat
as much chili as he wants
and forget how old the kids are
whenever he wants
which was a great piece from that
it was a very surreal moment
to hear somebody
claim that their short-term memory
had been erased by
by some five-alarm chili
right yeah it was certainly
we were we were kind of agape in the
mouth agape in the courtroom when we heard that
not sure if it was
something that we'd missheard
and it turns out
it turns out to be true.
Yeah.
Was it now when in the courtroom,
I mean,
he had talked about that in a deposition, right?
You didn't remember how old his kids were,
whatever.
And then who asked him about it in the courtroom?
One of,
one of his ex-wife's attorneys.
Right.
Okay, that's what I thought.
Yeah.
He started the,
one of,
one of the attorneys was a sort of a fierce
cross-examiner.
And the real,
sort of drama came from.
I believe his charge
was to sort of throw Alex off of his game
and sort of to rile him up.
And he started via Alex's cross-examination
asking him,
he didn't have any chili this morning, did you, sir?
And Alex shot back.
Was that a joke?
And then the attorney sort of went into
the deposition anecdote.
And it really sort of,
it started him off on a note,
a very surreal sort of ridiculous note,
and it only kind of increased from there.
All right, Charlie Worsel from BuzzFeed,
so what's next on your agenda?
Whose trial you're going to sit through now?
Well, you know, I'm not a court reporter.
Get out of here.
What?
And it was incredibly fascinating.
I don't know if I'll be sitting through
any more trials in the very near future.
But, you know, I've,
at Budsweed we've always kind of been
you know one of our sort of hallmarks is
being on the on the sort of the
cutting edge of new
sort of internet movements and and I've
spent the last probably six or so months
you know really kind of digging into
the rise of sort of new pro-Trump
media and the figures and the personalities
there and and the you know
the financials and the relationship with the White House.
And I think that, you know, that's one of the sort of biggest stories of 2017 right now.
There's no doubt about that.
But listen, I mean, I mean, our president said just the other day that he didn't realize that the, you know, the job was going to be so hard.
So, you know, it's good.
He's at the hell.
Anyway.
It is a pretty wild interview there.
Charlie, thank you for coming on that.
I appreciate it.
I know it's Saturday.
I'm eating up some of your time.
You had a busy last nine or ten days,
and you want to get some rest.
So Charlie Worsel from BuzzFeed at C. Warzel on Twitter.
Thank you, man.
I appreciate it.
Thanks for having me.
This is The Jeff Fisher Show.
On the Blaze Radio Network.
The Jeff Fisher Show is on.
That it is.
Welcome to it.
Thank you so much for Charlie Worsel for stopping by and talking a little Alex Jones.
It was good to talk to him.
And we got some little inside information.
about Alex Jones that was fascinating.
We also, a little bit later on in the program,
we'll air a little bit of the Alex Jones post-trial press conference,
which has had some fascinating information.
Next week on this broadcast, I am excited.
Next week, we're going to be broadcasting from the Kentucky Derby.
The Kentucky Derby.
I am excited about going to the Kentucky Derby.
I had an opportunity to say yes or no,
and when I said something to my wife,
my wife is like, oh, you're going.
Apparently she's in love with going to the Kentucky Derby
and wearing the hats and sipping mint julep.
So fun we will have at the Kentucky Derby broadcasting live next week right here on the Blaze Radio.
This is the Jeff Fisher Show.
Only on the Blaze Radio Network.
Jeff Fisher.
888-903.33 is the phone number.
Coming up immediately after this broadcast, Lawrence Jones.
Then Mike Slater, then Joe Pags, all rounding out your Saturday and brand new spanking programming on the Blaze Radio Network.
Thanks for coming along for the ride.
And then, of course, Sunday, you've got David Barton, Bill Handel, Jackie D.
Then Monday through Friday, Doc Thompson, Glenn Beck.
Who's the other guy that comes?
Oh, yeah, Michael Pelka, and then Chris Salcedo, and then Pat and Stu.
Oh, yeah.
And then Buck Sexton ends the evening.
9 to Midnight Central on the Blaze Radio Network.
You know, you wonder about how robots are going to affect your lives.
Well, in Spokane, Washington, harvesting Washington state's vast fruit orchards requires thousands of farm workers.
Thousands of farm workers.
Where do they come from?
Oh, I know.
Other countries.
They're illegally working in the United States.
What?
Well, now they have robot pickers.
The robot pickers are going to be working 20.
They don't get tired either.
And I will say that, no, I better not say that.
The robot pickers don't get tired.
They work 24-7.
And that is what's coming around the corner for you illegal aliens
and for Americans that just won't do the work.
Now, that having been said, it was going to come around the corner anyway,
even if you were an American that said, hey, I'll pick apples, I'll pick oranges, I'll do it, I'll do it, I'll do it.
No thanks.
We have a robot here that won't get tired and continue to do it for 24 hours a day and just pick them, okay?
So have a nice day.
We will need someone to pull the weeds in a couple of weeks, stop back.
But these robotic pickers are what's coming.
This is Washington State.
When I lived in Florida, same thing.
a lot of times the workers who most of the time are less than legal here in the United States,
they just travel from place to place around the country when it's harvest time.
So you go up north, up to the northeast, and you pick blueberries,
and then you come back into the Midwest, and you pick whatever is harvesting,
and you go back out on the West Coast, and you do that.
But now, no need for that.
Robot Pickers.
And so maybe, maybe, especially with the lack we, I talked to someone here in Dallas
Ford Worth in the Metroplex that his father's company, he has a landscaping company,
and they had to cut customers, cut customers after the first of the year because so many
of his workers who were less than legal did not come back from Mexico.
Mexico. So, I mean, he did not have the workers to do the work, which, you know, proves the rhetoric is working, but it also is taking a little bit of bite out of crime and it takes a little bit of bite out of capitalism for businesses around America.
So even in any state, Washington, Maine, or Florida will feel the effects of that.
and soon to be, you'll be driving by those fields and those orchards and you'll be seeing
the robot pickers.
Fun, fun, fun, fun.
And speaking of Florida, Chuck in Florida.com is on the broadcast.
Hello, Chuck.
Greetings from Florida, Jeffie, where I am sporting my brand new Talking Walking Dead t-shirt.
Nice.
Yes, and I'm tweeting out a picture right after the show.
It somehow didn't upload, but I've got it.
I'm the man today.
eyes. We didn't give that to you for free, did we?
Are you kidding me?
Okay, good.
Man.
No, in fact, I hate to complain on the air, but it took quite a while to get here.
Yeah, I have a story about that, and there were some issues.
For those of you that had to wait, I want to say, I apologize.
I appreciate you.
I didn't apologize to you.
I was talking to the other people.
I'm sorry.
There was an issue between financing and a T-shirt.
people. Oh, you ran out of money. I get it. Okay. It's kind of a
Ponzi scheme that we're running on these t-shirts. Right, right. And so,
and I don't know the whole story. I just know that the lady who takes care of the
t-shirts said that she had become frustrated. I,
I questioned why she was frustrated in an email and then she wasn't frustrated anymore.
She unloaded on you, huh?
I mean, I got amazingly, not long after the email, there was funds to purchase the T-shirts.
Very nice.
So, it was just a mix.
Very well done.
And I love the graphic.
It was just a mix-up.
It was an awesome graphic on the front of the teacher.
It was just a mix-up.
And the graphic was actually, you know, my wife did that.
I got to give her a prowess for that.
The real Mrs.
Jeffie did that graphic, yes.
Yes.
Yeah, she loves it.
She was happy with it.
She did a great job.
I showed my wife.
And she was like, wow.
Kudos to Amber. That was awesome.
Well, listen, and I want to be sure to let you realize now.
I mean, you might not know this yet, but that's not real blood.
What?
I know. I know.
I want to refund.
I'm just saying, I spent long hours working on zombies last weekend, and again, this afternoon, we got more zombies.
For what?
Did you hear about the contest?
Did you hear about it?
Tell me the contest.
It's a Florida story. Does that help?
Just tell me the contest.
Okay, the contest.
BMW had somehow acquired Daryl Dixon's bike.
And we had a contest in Florida to see what filmmaker could make the best BMW Walking Dead commercial.
What?
It was a fun day.
You had a bunch of volunteer filmmakers and actors show up and get made up in zombies.
We poured blood all over everybody.
We shot a commercial.
It was awesome.
And we might win a bike.
If I get the bike.
I'm taking pictures.
Just saying I'll send you pictures.
That's the best I can do.
When do you find out if you want?
This evening, as a matter of fact.
We're going to Sarasota, BMW for BimmerCon is the hashtag, and we will be displaying our video.
It's on Facebook and YouTube today if you do the hashtag B-I-M-M-E-R-C-L-N.
And, yeah, I'm pretty proud because we had probably one of the best teams I've ever worked with,
and they all volunteered an entire Saturday to make that work.
This whole volunteer thing is starting to piss me off.
Well, come on.
That's supposed to volunteer thing.
We're not exactly paying filmmakers down here.
That's a good point.
Yeah.
So I have some other interesting Florida news if you should be interested.
I might be in a minute, but let me, I'd like to ask you a couple more questions about your stupid thing.
What's your stupid BeamerCon thing.
So have you seen any of the other ads?
Shall we say the competition was.
light.
Really?
Yeah.
So are you throwing down the gauntlet saying you're going to win?
Not not kind of like doing a neener-neener in your face thing, but oh yeah, we got some
really good quality film on our side.
Chuckofofof-Florida.com.
You know, the other guys did nice.
They put forth an effort, you know, I'm not going to bad mouth them much.
Wow.
So what do you win if you win?
We win a 40,000, valued at 40,000.
thousand dollar uh actually walking dead shown and ridden by uh darrell dixon his his old bike they're gonna
give you the bike we are we are getting the bike yeah if we look that's where darrell's butt was
that's exciting charge people to sit on the bike where his butt was yes i was butt to butt with
daryl dixon you can hashtag that butt to butt they could have got to butt they could of but
Darrell Dixon. That's just what I needed on my Facebook and Twitter feed.
There you go. It's all you. You're welcome. I'm here. I'm here for you.
Yeah, so what do you got for me?
So today, one of my new favorite stories I just found as I was coming on the air,
catch a Florida Python win a T-shirt.
Really?
You know, just so people realize the Python is not native to Florida.
these dumb butts who go out there and get this massive snake as a pet,
they usually buy it when it's a cute little baby,
and they put it in an aquarium, and they feed it mice,
and they think it's cool,
and then it's 15 feet long,
and they don't what the hell to do with it.
So they set it free.
And it's just pervasive,
especially in the Everglades and the swamp lands.
So Florida Wildlife Commission has, for the last, oh, several years,
sent out people on a python hunt.
Python hunt. They do that with Gators, too.
Yeah, but they actually licensed the guys with gators and they sell, you know, the tags and so forth.
But you've got to love Florida.
Florida, Fish and Wildlife Commission has announced Monday that it's launching the Python pickup program
in which anybody who captures a python in the wild can simply submit a photo of the snake he or she caught in order to win.
I think I just got a sign.
I think I just got a sign.
I'm sorry.
I don't mean to cut you off.
I got a sign that I could actually win something today.
While I'm talking to you, I look up at the television screen, and there's Burt Reynolds, telling me that I have an opportunity to win a fully restored 1977 Bandit Trans Am.
And I mean, come on, that's a sign, right?
That is totally a sign.
It's a sign.
It's a 2017 Bandit Dream giveaway.
And there's Bert.
and Bert, I know is your hero.
And, I mean, with you on the air talking to me and I see Bert Reynolds on the screen,
I mean, that's a sign.
He's going to give you an autographed hat.
He's going to autograph the bandit.
I mean, those, it's a sign, right?
I can win.
Do we have to submit a video or something?
Can we use the same one, the Daryl Dixon but one?
Sure, why not?
I'm sorry, I cut you up because you were so mad at the, you were so mad at the Python people.
No, I think it's a great contest.
You know, every amateur snake catcher gets a Python pickup t-shirt and has entered in drawings for prizes that include snake hooks, custom engraved Yeti tumblers, Plano Sportsman Trunks, Go-ProCampers, and Badlands Backpacks, according to a news release.
That's kind of cool.
Plus, the next month, you have a chance at winning a $100 gas card.
I mean, come on, gas is gas, right?
And when you're running around in the Everglades, you get the truck.
So I get the stuff after I get the Python?
Because it would seem to me to get that, you need that stuff before you get the Python.
If you're going to give me a snake hook, you know, I mean, and a GoPro.
Right.
It would be sensible if you equipped your teams with this stuff.
But no, anybody can enter.
Says, where was it?
The quote here was he contended that it would be smarter for anyone who spots a Python to call the Wildlife Agency hotline and let a professional catch it.
That's possible that might be a smart move.
Yeah, this is a Bill Booth, who is a Brandon-based Python hunter,
who was featured in National Geographic, said,
I'm pretty shocked that they would allow somebody to do something like this.
Are you, Bill?
Bill's only shocked because you're taking business away from him.
Right, right, and they doesn't have the wild geographic team out there chasing him
and showing how he picks up snakes.
That's great.
So I see a headline earlier this week about something that I'm very familiar with.
And that is xylophones?
First time ever, a defendant has been charged in connection with a xylophone rage incident.
This is pretty fascinating.
Do you know about xylophones?
I'm very familiar.
I actually played percussion in high school and got to tinkle the ivories there.
And, okay, well, maybe more like wood.
But they were, yeah, they were xylophones abounding.
and according to investigators
Floridian April and
Carcion 43
was collared earlier this month on domestic
battery after police responded
to a residence in Fort Walden Beach
where she had taken a
pot of grease and
poured it on the male victim
now luckily
this was cold grease
that she dumped on him
but yeah I was thinking
this is going to get really nasty
but no
yeah the victim had wet spots
on his t-shirt and shorts and there was a puddle
of liquid in the ground and
that was it.
She poured a bucket of cold grease on him?
And apparently she went to do with $3,000
bond and confessed
to the attack, but she was also
outstanding on a contest plea
of felony charges of battery on a police officer.
So she threw cold grease on this guy
for what again? He wouldn't
stop playing the xylophone and she
asked him twice. I mean, you know, what are you going to do? You've been told, I told you again,
now you get the bucket. I asked nicely, you didn't do it. I'm asking one more time. You didn't do it.
I'm going to pour a bucket of cold grease on you. Who has a bucket of cold grease just laying
around? I'm wondering. Oh, I mean, everyone does. That's what you cook with.
In Florida, if you have bacon grease now, that's, you know, good for making biscuits. It's good for the pan.
whatever you have it for, it's just handy to have around.
And for those of you that have buckets of grease on your stove or in your kitchen,
don't get caught pouring it down the drain outside on the street.
The drain is on the side of the street is a bad place.
They get mad when you do that.
You didn't get like find or anything for that, did you?
They get mad when you do that.
You're listening to the Jeff Fisher Show.
The Blaze Radio Network.
This is the Jeff Fisher Show.
Welcome to it.
888-90-3-33 is the phone number.
A couple of breaking animal stories from this past week.
One was a huge fake news story, and it's everywhere.
The wild boars overrun Islamic State and kill three militants.
You know that's fake news.
That story is too good.
It's too good.
It's too perfect.
and it
it
it's fake news
wild boys
everybody
oh it's so great
drop bacon on them
yeah ISIS
kill ISIS
sorry
I don't buy it
and then we had the
rhino
on Tinder
looking for a little bit of love
and he
he's looking for a little bit of love
on Tinder
and I love his
his Tinder profile
is
pretty sweet.
This is the Jeff Fisher Show.
Only on the Blaze Radio
Network.
It was a success.
Begin Life Force reboot
program. Now.
It's stable.
It's alive.
Set it loose.
This is the Jeff Fisher
Show on the Blaze Radio
Network.
You know,
we talked to Charlie Ward.
earlier in the broadcast who covered the Alex Jones trial for BuzzFeed
and gave us a little insight on the trial.
And Charlie was, you know, he was impressed with Alex.
And look, Alex is a, is being a, you know, a character,
or however you want to think of him, a crazy man.
He definitely is, definitely is whacked out of his mind.
Crazy.
A star.
Knows how to work the game.
plays the game.
He knows how to work the system.
He's worked it well for many years and made quite a bit of money.
Good for him.
Well, after the trial was over,
they did a live feed.
There were press out there for this press conference.
And the whole thing lasted about 40 minutes.
I mean, it never added.
And then when he got done talking to the press,
he walked over to some building a block away,
went upstairs into some room,
and then he went over all the court documents with everybody
and talked about see you on Sunday.
God willing.
And it was absolutely pre-planned.
I know that there was the gaggle of press going on.
But also, you could, you know,
he had his Info Wars guy there.
He went up to one, you know,
the one guy started grabbing his camera
and started showing the press with the camera.
and I was thinking,
if I'm going to grab my camera,
I would have punched him right in the face.
Alex would have been in another lawsuit right in front of the courtroom,
so it had to be his guy.
What are he doing?
And then in the middle of it, there's this guy.
I wish I was late last night,
and I couldn't take any more,
because I've got a couple of clips from the press conference.
But in the middle of this press conference,
when he's busy yapping a little bit more
when the press conference is technically over,
there's this homeless guy that comes out of nowhere
and he is
he's standing there and how about that
Alex would say something and he's like how about that
and so Alex is loving this guy laughing at him
and he's having him and said that's the new
segment on the show that how about that guy
it's kind of funny
the rest of the press conference though
so he comes walking up down this
Strutton is Alex Jones strut with his limp
And he's got his sunglasses on and his jacket
And he comes
He comes walking up to the press
Okay everybody's got their feeding frenzy going here
All the fake news media
You can edit in all their little fake clips
And everything to this but folks watching online
I'll see the truth
A little statement I want to make
And then later I'm going to put online some of these documents
We're going back three years ago
I didn't file for divorce.
I never tried to take my kids away from my ex-wife.
Four separate times she filed to take him away.
The courts, the guardian of the items, the system thought it was horrible.
I got to say, actually, the system here in Liverpool Austin said,
this is child abuse.
We're taking your kids away and give them to you.
And I said, well, I want to be with her mom, too.
She said, no, they're with me and not with you.
In five separate filings, four just in the first three years of it.
We're now over three years into this.
So that's the reality.
I know the media won't get that right.
It continued.
Remember, this whole thing went out for 40 minutes.
Now, he had one question asked to him that he actually thought was a great question.
That was, what is he going to say to his kids?
Any real questions?
What do you see your kids?
This is a very public.
Absolutely.
That's a great question.
What do I say to my children, who I never in three years brought into this,
who I never made public, I never called the media to come here.
I was never involved in any of them.
It was other people that called the little vampires in
to be all part of this in the attempt
to sit there and point their finger and go,
there's the bad man. There's the bad man. Let's shut him down.
Let's put words in his mouth. I mean, my children know that
the corporate media lies, and they go to school and they hear about this,
and they know the truth, and they say, why does the media say that?
Why does the media say this? And I explain it, they're not the media.
They're the people that, with the corporate globalists,
helped hijack this country, and they're being torn out of the
control now. They're being removed
like a tick off of dogs, rear
end, being torn off this country, and
they realize it as parasites, as
little followers, as
conformance, posing as trendies,
the third time is short.
That's good stuff right
there. We may have to play that again.
Keep that one in cue.
That is
very important knowledge to have
right there. And then
a little bit after that, he gets
asked about the
Chibani situation in the lawsuit with Chibani.
Well, I know that. I've talked to four lawyers about the Chabani lawsuit.
They say it's totally frivolous, an absolute complete PR stunt.
And I was on the phone with my D.C. lawyers and my Idaho lawyers today.
And we were thinking about an aggressive corporate strategy to actually go after the New York Federal Reserve that he's a more member of.
And the school lunch program that he's part of and these other loans and deals he's got going that are monopolistic.
My lawyers also dealt with some of the suits that were lost in Herald.
When they found the Saudi money going to the local group, that got shut down and then everything got paid back.
So, yeah, I've got those lawyers right now.
They're all handling that.
So we're looking at counter lawsuits because we reported on news about the reported sexual assaults that the media said didn't happen,
but they've now pled guilty for.
Then they argue, well, that's not connected to the yogurt maker.
No, just the owner who pushes for refugees to be brought in with George Soros and George Soros's founded law firm
that's suing me. So technically I'm not saying the owner of it himself imported these people.
The point is they're being brought in unvetted. So we covered other people's reports.
And then they sit there and play games, a little factoid parts of it. So we're very, very
confident with that. And what happens is when we get attacked, the listenership and support just goes
up exponential. So attacks go up to here, support goes up to there. And then attacks go up to here,
support goes up to those trees. And then support goes up and it just goes up and up and up.
It's like an absolute elevator.
So that's what's happening, is people get it.
They understand it's a war.
They understand it's a fight.
They understand what's going on with the corporate media,
and they absolutely love it.
So we understand the democratic strategy.
We were already aware of it months ago.
Months ago.
But there's all sorts of slap statutes in Texas
and a lot of really serious issues.
We're looking forward to discovery on Chabani,
and we're looking really, really forward to looking into Turkey,
the Kurds and the funding of the operation.
We've also got our intel sources on that.
There's a lot of slap.
Slap schedules in Texas.
We got to worry about it.
I mean, we were aware of that months ago.
Not a corporate strategy.
We were aware that months ago.
Now, like it went on for 40 minutes.
40 minutes.
But I want to go back to his question about what does he say to his kids?
Because after the first.
30 or 40 seconds, he starts to go off the rails a little bit and I want to hear it again.
Any real questions?
What if I see your kids in a lot?
This is a very public.
Absolutely.
That's a great question.
What do I say to my children who I never in three years brought into this, who I never made
public, I never called the media to come here.
I was never involved in any of them.
It was other people that called the little vampires in, you know, to be all part of this.
attempt, you know, to sit there and, you know, point their finger and go, there's the bad man.
There's the bad man. Let's shut him down. Let's put words in his mouth.
I mean, my children know that the corporate media lies, and they go to school and they hear about this.
And they know the truth, and they say, why does the media say that? Why does the media say this?
And I explain it, they're not the media. They're the people that with the corporate globalist
helped hijack this country, and they're being torn out of control now.
They're being removed like a tick off a dog rear end, being torn off this country, and they realize it is
parasites as little followers as conformance.
Yes.
As trending, the third time is short.
Yes.
Thank you.
Then we're going to develop a corporate strategy.
I mean, our lawyers were well aware.
They were aware of this months ago.
And we'll put it into this right away.
Truth.
People watching online will know the truth.
So Alex is back in business.
He was able to try to separate a little bit of info wars.
from his real life.
And thank you to the judge for allowing that
because it really isn't true.
You can't really separate your life
and your Info Wars life
when they're pretty much one and the same.
But hey, who am I?
I'm just a tick on a dog's butt.
This is the Jeff Fisher Show
on the Blaze Radio Network.
The Jeff Fisher Show returns
on the Blaze Radio.
Network.
Happy day.
888-903.33 is the phone number.
Lawrence Jones, he's around the building somewhere, waiting to take over the helm here
at the top of next hour.
And the Lawrence Jones.
So, Mike Slater, be on after that, and Joe Pags after that, rounding out your Saturday,
brand spank and new programming on the Blaze Radio Network.
So a little bit earlier, I mentioned the headline of the world's white northern rhino,
the last one who is up on Tinder now.
And I'm in love with this.
He's looking, what the problem is is that he's the last,
he's the last white northern rhino.
So, and they're trying to get him to mate.
And they brought in, you know, other rhinos,
and they took him out into a wild area.
So it wasn't more, it wasn't like a zoo.
And, you know, then he's mated a couple times with a couple of the,
a couple of the female rhinos they've brought in for a little rhino love.
And they've even tried to help them.
One of my favorite lines is one of the, one of the Rangers.
When we first tried to mount the girl, the Rangers guided him.
But it was difficult with the rhino.
No kidding.
How about you just figure, you know, the rhinos probably got this?
Right?
The rhino probably got a feel for it.
He knows what he's doing.
Maybe he doesn't.
Maybe he's a virgin white rhino northern.
That's why he's the last one.
So what they're trying to do is get him some fertility treatments, right?
Because he's had a couple of opportunities to make some animal pregnant.
I'm guessing it's another rhino.
And he hasn't done it.
So they're concerned about it.
And it's going to cost a lot of money.
You don't just
You don't just
We've up to our fertilization
Now up yours
Costs a little cash for rhinos
So they're trying to raise some money
So they put a profile on Tinder
And if you swipe right
On Tinder if you swipe right
That means you like
And it takes you to another page
Which you know then you can link up
And donate some money to help
Sudan
The Rhino
Now his profile
You can't have
You can't be on Tinder without a profile.
You don't be stupid.
And his profile is,
I don't mean to be forward,
but the fate of my species literally depends on me.
That's a good line,
and for him it works because it's true.
I perform well under pressure.
I like to eat grass and chill in the mud.
No problems.
Six feet tall, 5,000 pounds if it matters.
That's good stuff right there.
I don't care who you are.
That's good stuff.
Six feet tall, 5,000 pounds, if it matters.
So good luck to Sudan.
And I hope that they find somebody that they can guide you into
to make a little northern white rhino.
I think you know what I'm saying.
You get this, poachers are selling northern white rhino horns.
All right?
So my man Sudan, got those big ass horns on his head.
My man, Sudan, white rhino horns, $50,000 a kilo, making them more valuable than gold or cocaine.
Wow.
Rhino horn.
What, it takes them.
So you got to help, you got to help my man, Sudan.
I'll go swipe right.
I mean, really.
the fate of his species literally depends on him.
And he's six feet tall, five thousand pounds, if it matters.
Good stuff.
Great news from the television world.
And I mean this with every, oh man, ounce of being in me.
You know how shows are really big and you like them and they're really strong and then they go away?
And you think, yep, I used to watch that.
But we evolve.
We evolve.
and they try to bring shows back and nobody has any new ideas
so they try to bring them back and you think
you know I don't know that it will actually work
not sure
so news out now that Rosanne Barr, John Goodman and Sarah Gilbert
are on board for the eight-episode project
which is currently being shopped at networks
Roseanne the Revival in the Works
now
I personally remember
when Roseanne was really really
big.
You know, the show.
I got it. Don't worry.
Thank you.
The show was huge, right?
I mean, it was ran on ABC from
1988 to 1997.
I mean, it was huge. I mean,
I remember my
first wife,
love that stupid show.
Love that stupid show.
And I enjoyed
it as well. It was very good. And John Goodman
was great. Rosanne was great.
The kids were, they were, it was a good show.
Okay, but it's pretty much run its course, right?
I mean, you understood the process.
And so now they're shopping to bring eight episodes back.
I mean, I'd rather watch this than Bill Nye on Netflix.
So if Netflix is going to spend some cash,
they might as well spend some cash on this.
Let them produce a eight episode Roseanne Revival,
then rather watch that than 13 episodes of Bill Nye.
telling me what a vagina is.
I mean, that guy out of control.
And Bill Nye's idea of, you know, the vagina and the dating process and climate change is out of control.
But there's another person, Riley J. Dennis.
Riley Dennis
YouTuber, activist, and educator.
She
worked as editor-in-chief of the Quaker
campus newspaper where she
pushed
Whittier College to reform how they
dealt with cases of sexual assault.
She received a bachelor's degree in writing words.
She received a bachelor's degree
in writing words.
She, he.
A combination of creative writing and anthropology
and used her expertise to publish a series of three young adult fantasy books with characters from diverse backgrounds.
She works to educate the public on a range of issues all connected through social justice and intersectional feminism,
mainly focusing on rape culture, gender identity, sexuality, and fat phobia.
Fat phobia is real and live today and strangely socially acceptable.
Presentations looks at the Society of Conflated Health with Weight of Decades for decades.
It examines language that is harmful.
I got to read this right.
The printed version is not right.
We're going to read more about Riley Genes.
So I want to find out about fighting rape culture, which is, I mean, it's important to fight rape culture since there really isn't one.
How to college newspaper can create social change.
I don't know.
Does anyone read newspapers anymore?
figuring out your gender, how we know who we are.
I think I can figure that one out.
How we know who we are.
What gender am I?
And fat phobia.
Why society hates fat people and how we can stop.
I mean, I might agree with Riley, J. Dennis, she, he,
on fat phobia.
Living example.
Okay.
of someone who is
well I mean I'm not
fat phobic
I've been surrounded by people I think who are
they use that
my fear of being fat
to scare me but how can I be feared of being fat
if I'm fat phobia
I don't know
maybe I don't have a phobia at all
I'll figure it out
we'll hear from Riley
coming up or how'd be going
the Jeff Fisher show
The Blaze Radio Network
The Jeff Fisher Show
On the Blaze Radio Network
Funny business
Funny funny business is what that is
All right let's talk
Let's do a little Riley
We do have Riley here right
I sent you some audio of Riley right
Two big cuts of Riley
Important to rally Jay Dennis
It's important to know that Riley cares
and she's, you can book Riley right now.
You can book her, him right now,
and she'll, he'll speak at your event
about fighting rape culture
and how we can make our campuses safe.
Er.
How your college newspaper can create social change,
figuring out your gender.
how we know who we are and fat phobia why society hates fat people and how we can stop i mean it's important right
it's important now one of the things you can have her he talk about is intersectionality
how to bring others into your feminism.
Riley has a bunch of videos and goes on and on and on,
but one of my favorite ones,
she likes to come up with words.
He likes to come up with words.
And he has a new word called cis-sexism.
Cis-sexism.
Which means prejudiced or discrimination against trans people.
What other word?
means discrimination against transpeotia.
Oh, you transomia?
We can't just use that, though.
We can't just use one word.
We've got to come up with something else.
A new one.
So we'll call it cis-sexism.
And Raleigh is very informative.
Very, very informative.
And, well, let's hear from Raleigh.
Shall we?
Let's start it off with the beginning of Raleigh.
Recently on the Internet,
there's been a lot of discussion
around genital preferences and transphobia.
In this video, I'm going to use the word cis-sexism instead of transphobia, but they're really similar
word.
At its most basic, cis-sexism means prejudice or discrimination against transgender people.
So what's been happening is that some people are making the argument that it's not cis-sexist
at all to only be attracted to people with one kind of genitals.
For example, these people might argue that being attracted to only women with vaginas
in no way negatively affects trans people.
On the other hand, I would argue that it's more complicated than that.
We all have our implicit biases built into our preferences, and gender is
isn't as simple as just the genitals you have.
But after I say that, I usually get a bunch of blatantly cis-sexist responses.
Right.
I can address all of those responses at once.
Okay.
Now, she goes on to explain the typical response is.
Number one, you're being homophobic.
You're upholding rape culture.
I'm allowed to have my preferences.
I have a trans friend who says this is okay.
Now, I think that she happens to mention a body part in this next.
when she says goodbye, so just be prepared for that.
I was going to edit it out, and then I thought, you know what, I don't want to do that
because I don't want to be a cis-sexist.
I don't want to be part of cis-sexism.
I don't want to be a part of Riley's feminist website, Everydayfeminist.com.
I want to be a part of that.
I don't want to be homophobic or transphobic or cis-sexist.
and I don't want to be allowed to have my preferences.
I want to know that my preferences are wrong and others are right.
And I want my trans friend to know that even though they say it's okay, it's not okay.
It's not, even though my trans friend says it is.
So when she gets done going down her, typical responses, rally wraps up.
The first two responses in particular come from turf, rad femme, and gender critical ideal.
Which are all proudly anti-trans
Even if you don't consider yourself a part of those movements,
you're siding with them when you use their argument.
Right.
The platform is cis-sexist, and their arguments reflect that.
So even if you say you believe trans women are women,
it doesn't do a whole lot of good if you're still completely siding with folks
who don't believe that trans women are women.
Thank you.
Thank you.
If you'd rather not have sex with a woman who has a penis,
you just don't make such a huge deal of it.
Trans women are often afraid of not being found attractive or desirable after coming out,
and you're not helping.
If you really want to be an ally to trans people, you could just not talk about.
You could just not talk about it.
And by that, I am in love with that idea.
You have the freedom to say whatever you want.
I'm just asking you to consider if it's necessary to say those things when they reflect harmful or violent rhetoric.
Because if you have an opinion that you know is only going to make people feel bad about themselves, why constantly share it with the world?
It's fine.
Thank you.
That's enough.
We don't need to hear Riley anymore.
Thank you.
I think we agree.
We found something to agree on.
That's what we're looking for here at the blaze.
Something to agree on.
come together.
I think we can all come together with,
if you don't have something nice to say,
don't say it.
If you think trans people are weird or bad people,
don't say it.
Because it makes them feel weird
when they come out and they feel strange.
How about they don't come out?
How about that?
How about they just stay in the closet?
How about that?
How about the 1% of the people that are transgender?
just stay in the closet. How about that?
Oh, no, no. I can't say that. No. Oh, I'm sorry. Don't stay in the closet.
Don't stay in the closet, but don't talk about it.
All right? I am a cis-sexist. I am. And I don't mean to promote cis-sexism.
I don't mean to promote transphobia. Because I don't have transphobia. In fact, I believe I'm the one who said,
if you have to go to the bathroom, go ahead and go.
I don't care.
But don't make a big deal about it, i.e. Riley.
Why you got to keep ramming it down my throat, so to speak.
Why?
Just go.
Nobody stopped you before.
All it is now is that you want to be able to,
I'm trans and I'm going into this bathroom.
So?
How about
Shut up
And go to the bathroom
How about that?
I don't announce when I have to go
Usually
I don't know times
You know you might have to
There was this one time
There was one time a bad camp
Very few will get that reference
But those that do will laugh
Okay
Now I will say that
A new report
Claims a
dramatic shift in millennials who identify as LGBT
compared to other age groups.
Well, A, let's, I want to be a little ticked at this story because it's LGBTQIA.
Okay?
I've had just about enough of IA not getting the respect that it deserves, but will I digress?
Okay.
All right.
LGBT.
IA.
All right.
That's what it is.
Sorry to disappoint you, but the IA is there now.
Okay?
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex, asexual.
Got it?
People line the sidewalk during the Gay Pride March in New York, and boy, what a
look, what a crowd that was.
What a crowd that was, this picture that I'm looking at right now.
Oh, man.
20% of millennials, ages 18 to 34,
identify as LGBT
again minus the IA
it's going to be hard for me to let that go
accelerating acceptance is the
latest report
20% of elemental annals
ages 18 to 34 identify as
LGBTQIA
compared to 7% of baby boomers
ages 52 to 71 who answer the same way
the total population who identifies as
LGBTQ
is 12%.
12%?
12% lesbian, gay, bisexual,
transgender, queer, intersex, asexual.
So 12% of the population are all of those.
That doesn't mean that lesbians or gays or bisexuals or transgenders or queers or
intersex or asexuals are 12%.
That means that the entire package is 12%.
and we have to go through so many hoops
I have to get so many things rammed down our throats
so to speak over this topic
unbelievable
unbelievable
all right
also let's see a new Harris poll
also compares those who define themselves as
cisgendered
or the same gender they were assigned at birth
I hate those people
man do I hate those people
No, I want to be the gender I was assigned at birth.
Get out!
Oh, wait.
Let's see.
Harris Poll also compares those who define themselves as cisgendered or the same gender they were assigned at birth.
To those who say they are non-sigendered or transgendered, according to the report, 12% of millennials identify as non-sistgendered,
indicating they do not identify as the same gender they were assigned at birth, but only 3% of baby boomers and 6% of Generation X, ages 35 to 51, identify.
as non-sigendered.
I can't read any more of that.
Oh my God, was that cis-sexism?
Yes, it was.
Sorry.
No, I'm not really sorry.
This is the Jeff Fisher Show
on the Blaze Radio Network.
This is the Jeff Fisher Show.
That's one of the stupid things I've ever heard in my life.
No one.
A statement that should never be spoken
from a human being.
Oh, no, Doc, I'm fine.
I don't need any painkillers.
What?
Anyway.
Oh, no, good for you.
I'm glad you're doing better.
I mean that.
So I've been thinking about car accidents for all day because Chris was telling,
my producer here on Saturday was telling us about his accident earlier in the broadcast,
and I was just giving him a hard time because, oh, no, Doc, I'm fine.
I'll just, you know, I don't worry about the pain.
I'll live through it.
I'm tough.
those words should never be spoken by humans
but he was
we're glad you're okay
most of the people here are glad you're okay
so
thanks for coming into work today
we appreciate it
so
how many of you like to be under big covers
comfy
you want to be
nice and comfy and cozy
and warm
not supposed to be that way.
You know what?
Doctors say, hey, you're supposed to fall asleep naked, and it's supposed to be cold.
Okay?
Life is much better when you sleep naked and you keep it cold.
And when I say keep it cold, like I keep my house at about 52, so this really isn't cold?
I don't.
But one of the things is I love it cold.
hold here at work because I'm like 800 pounds and I sweat so I don't like to sweat.
But at home, I like it comfortable.
I don't necessarily like it cold, like I like it here.
But they're telling me here that according to Dr. Chris Winter,
science dictates, science dictates that temperatures between 60 and 67,
degrees Fahrenheit are ideal sleeping conditions.
Now, that having been said, now I'm also supposed to sleep naked.
Okay?
Now, I realize, I don't know if you realize what cold weather does to human beings,
but it does something in particular to males that's not pretty.
By sleeping at cooler temperatures, your body will thank you, according to the study,
published in diabetes.
Who doesn't get, I mean, my copy has not been,
I went out to the mailbox yesterday looking for my copy of diabetes,
and it hasn't arrived yet.
Lowering your thermostat a few degrees before bed can help decrease your risk of certain
metabolic diseases such as diabetes.
Huh?
So keep it between 60 and 67 degrees.
Wow.
That is amazing.
According to the naturopathic doctor and bestselling author Natasha Turner,
sleeping under conditions that are warmer than 70 degrees will inhibit your body from cooling down naturally.
Ah, I got to tell you.
Oh, yeah.
And also what happens is sleeping in a colder environment,
the amount of brown fat or good fat.
It's created, so it's always good to have brown fat as good fat.
And we never did get to the big fire festival.
I'm told that Doc Thompson, the morning show on the Blaze Radio Network, Monday through Friday,
did an exclusive interview with the guy from fire.
So that's a fascinating story.
They charged a bunch of money, brought a bunch of people in.
It was supposed to be a big party all weekend, two weekends, two weekends, right?
right? And they got there and it was supposed to be all laid out. And it was nothing.
Thanks for coming, but there's nothing here. And I love that. In particular, I like the story that
everyone was supposed to have their own little custom tent. And there was only a few tents out
in the field. And the guy was like, it's raining. First come, first serve, run to the tents.
And so they had a big fight over tents. That's a good weekend right there. That's a good weekend right
there. Thanks for coming along to the ride.
This is the Jeff Fisher
Show. Only on the
Blaze Radio Network.
