Chewing the Fat with Jeff Fisher - Under Surveillance…| 5/26/26
Episode Date: May 26, 2026Most & least reputable companies… OnlyFans Hacked?... Flock surveillance growing daily… Garden Grove California evacuated… Found money returned… Email: ChewingTheFat@theblaze.com ht...tp://www.blazetv,com/jeffy]www.blazetv,com/jeffy Save $20 on an annual subscription Beyonce thief gets five years… Who Died Today: Sonny Rollins 95 / David Allen Coe 85 / Tom Kane 64… Joke of The Day… Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Last week, we talked about which companies have the best and, well, we didn't mention worst.
Last week, we only mentioned best.
Reputations, according to Americans.
Now, this is a 2026 poll.
It's a Harris poll and Axios, and they've published an annual ranking based on corporate reputations since 2019.
So this is the 2026 poll with market research firms surveying 6,200.
226 U.S. adults from a nationally representative online sample in December of 2025.
Okay. So let's see if you agree with it. Now, the top 10 most reputable companies that we mentioned last week,
Patagonia, number 10, Trader Joe's, Athletic Brewing Company, a low yoga. I love a low yoga.
Oh, man. A Honda Motor Company, Costco, Invidia, Samsung, Toyota Motor Corporation.
and number one, most reputable company, Chewy.
Okay, all right.
Sure, if you say so.
But what we didn't get to was the 10 least reputable companies per this Axio Harris poll.
Okay?
So the bottom 10 will go 90 to 100.
90.
Tesla.
What?
91, Sheen.
That's the apparel company.
92.
Fargo and company.
All right, sure.
Fox Corporation,
I guess.
Comcast, RBI,
which is, I guess,
Burger King.
Okay?
Metta.
97 is TikTok.
98 is X.
Wow.
Elon Musk is not doing well on this list.
Two of the bottom
10 are Elon Musk companies.
99 is TEMU.
And the 100, this doesn't even count anymore as Spirit Airlines,
they were the least reputable company.
Yeah, that's what happens to least reputable companies.
They go out of business.
I will say this.
Today, at this time, today, if you're listening live,
is Tuesday, the 26th of May, 2026.
The least reputable company right now, for me, is great value,
which is from Walmart.
and these great value water bottles.
Now, I open it, every time you open into it,
and I like to reuse my water bottles, okay?
The plastic that great value uses
to recycle and make their water bottles
is terrible, listen to that.
It's already squeezy and bent,
and you can't even hardly drink out of it
without it bending the plastic.
Come on, great value.
You got to do better on.
recycling. I know you can do it. You do it with the Walmart brand, or I mean with the Sam's Club brand.
Their bottles are sturdy enough to last, you know, at least a day. But great value.
You know, I realize it's cheaper. I got it. So you pay what you give it. I get it. I got it.
But please do better. Welcome. Welcome to chewing the fat. Fat 5 plus.
Thankfully, it looked.
as though this may not be real.
The alleged only fans data leak
that was posted on a popular data leak forum
where attackers often share stolen details.
The attackers are apparently selling 340 million records
scraped from internal only fans databases.
The listing provides exclusive access
to an alleged only fan's internal database
and contains approximately 350 million user records.
Yeah.
Both fan and created accounts,
exposing a broad range of personal identical information
and detailed account activity metrics.
But this doesn't really necessarily look real.
Hackers claim that they have 340 million plus only fans' user records,
emails, usernames, account activity metrics, as I've said,
the allegedly could expose real identity.
of only fans creators and subscribers who value anonymity on the platform.
Attackers reportedly compiled the database from previous only fans leaks,
public sources, and other platform data breaches.
Exposed email addresses enable threat actors to cross-reference data from multiple breaches
for profiling and fishing attacks.
However, I will say this.
It just doesn't sound like it's real.
So if you're concerned,
though. If you're an only fan's
account maker
and an only fan's
viewer, listener, watcher,
you may be concerned. Usernames,
join dates, email addresses, follower accounts,
like counts, picture accounts, video accounts,
stream counts, payment card data,
linked profiles. Holy cow.
If that is true,
you know, that's information is out there.
And look, we've talked about this before.
we just kind of have to agree that our information is out there, right?
Right.
So even if you're on Onlyfans, so what?
Right.
Right.
And look, we've talked about it before.
We're under surveillance at all times, right?
We might as well, if you're outside,
you might as well pretend like you're being watched and viewed
and possibly listen to wherever you're at.
Like I saw a story from the Dallas Police Department, Dallas, Texas.
DFW is where this show originates from.
And so this was a Dallas Police Department ex post.
On Thursday, May 21st, 2026, at about 4.15 p.m.,
the Dallas Police Department received a call from in the 3,900 block of northbound
Julius Schwep's freeway reporting a male suspect walking into traffic.
A pilot from the drone first responder program utilized an unmanned aerial system to respond to the call.
The pilot was able to locate the man walking on the freeway, maintain a view of the suspect, and direct uniformed elements to this location.
Uniformed elements quickly located the man and successfully safely removed him from the freeway before any harm came to him.
Oh, well, that is great.
is just the first of many positive results from the drone first responder program. It is yielding.
Uh-huh. So I got me wondering, uh, drone first responder program. What? I mean, that is great.
I'm happy for the, that we're safe and creating a safe zone. Well, this is from flock safety.
We've talked about them before. They've created these citywide, uh, citywide, uh,
surveillance programs that keep cities safe.
So I'm looking at, I asked Flock,
I asked their AI assistant when I went to their website,
how many communities are you keeping safe?
According to Flock's own AI,
Flock, I'm sorry, the help center,
Flock safety is currently assisting 6,000 communities
and more than 5,000 law enforcement agencies
with our public safety solutions.
If you're interested in learning more
about how we can support your community,
you can check it out at our Safe Cities page.
Oh, that's wonderful.
So let's go to the Safe Cities page, shall we?
I mean, immediately their Flock help assistant page pops up.
Hey, I'm Flock, the AI sales assistant.
Is there anything specific you'd like to learn
about Flock's public safety solutions?
Thank you. Thanks for the chat a while back about how many cities were assisting you.
Oh, see, it remembers. That's good. Remembers that it was me?
I feel safer already. It talks about the investigation arm, the response arms,
how one Tennessee city became a safer place. That is awesome. So are you ready to see safe
city in action? I sure am. We already have here in Dallas. I don't know if Fort Worth or
any of the other surrounding cities in DFW have it,
but I feel safer already.
Yeah, I sure do.
I mean, you know what's good about the fastest, most capable drone
as first responder, DFR system,
purpose built for public safety, designed, assembled,
and supported in the good old US of A.
86 second average response.
Reach calls for service faster than patrol with a 71% reduction in response time from the moment a call comes in.
Dron first on scene, 78% of the time.
Get aerial eyes on the situation before officers arrive so every responder knows what they're walking into before they step out of the car.
One in five calls cleared without dispatching patrol.
Wow, do I feel better already?
the unmatched speed, endurance and coverage,
purpose built to see more air support
without the helicopter price tag.
Flock.
I love them.
We've talked about them before,
and they are making America safer.
Aren't they?
No, really, aren't they?
So by the time that this show airs,
the evacuation zone around a failing chemical tank
in Southern California,
probably has shrunk down to nothing.
I don't know.
As far as I know,
there were still 16,000 people
that remained under evacuation orders.
Garden Grove Police Chief Amir El Farah,
interesting in and of itself,
said during a press briefing
that that's down for 50,000.
That's great, though.
They've let 40-some thousand back in
or actually 34,000 back in.
I do the math.
And I was just incredible.
They evacuated this entire
50,000 people were under an evacuation notice.
Incredible.
They thought this tank was going to blow.
They kept it cool and they did not explode.
The chemical tank is located at an aerospace facility.
So we now, I guess, have eliminated the threat of the explosion, okay?
Because they were concerned of the B.S.
L-E-V-E-E, believe, bellow, a boiling liquid expanding vapor explosion.
Yeah, you don't want that.
You do not want that.
I'm glad that it's off the table.
Yeah, no kidding.
Now, the tank was filled with methyl metacryolate.
And that's not good.
And it's an industrial chemical used in plastic manufacturing.
This was only a 34,000 gallon tank.
The chemical is primarily a respiratory irritant.
Short-term exposure can cause skin and eye irritation as well as breathing problems,
but we didn't have to worry about that.
It began unfolding on Thursday the chemical tank filled with this chemical at the GKN Aerospace,
a manufacturing company that builds engines and landing gear for both commercial
and military aircraft.
Ooh, that's showing signs of overheating,
which could cause it a problem, and it could explode.
So they took care of.
I mean, they handled it quite well, actually.
I guess they evacuated all these people,
and they eventually cooled the tank down so it wouldn't explode.
But, I mean, that's a lot of people to evacuate,
and then keep the area safe as long as the people are gone.
That would be where flock would come in.
I hope they had it because they could just fly drones around
and make sure that there was no crime happening in those evacuation zones.
Right?
Of course.
Florida construction worker is being praised.
After returning $30,000 he found in a Wawa restroom to its rightful owner.
The Grateful owner had sold off his entire Pokemon collection
to help pay for a medical procedure for his...
sister. The money was that important to him that he hung it in the bathroom at a wawa's and forgot it.
Luis Salazar, the man who found it, said he stopped at the Revere Beach Wawa earlier,
and he used the restroom where he found a fanny pack hanging in the safety railing,
said he thought the bag that belonged to the person who would use the restroom immediately before him
and remembered what the person looked like. He actually come to find out later,
remembered the man's flip-flops, but that was it.
as he returned it.
And I grabbed it and I tried to locate the person that was there.
I was unable to locate the owner and I opened the bag to look for identification.
Instead, I found thousands of dollars in cash.
My body was just numb, just seeing all this money that belonged to somebody else.
Actually, in my world, that now belonged to me.
But that's not the story we're reading.
He didn't trust the employees at the convenience store or the police to find the bag's owner.
attempted to find the owner himself. The 24-year-old man who left the bag behind said he didn't
realize he had left the bag until he got to Broward County. And I was like, oh my God, my freaking
money's gone. I'm out all this bread. I don't know what I'm going to do. The bag contained
$30,000, $23, which were proceeds from the man selling off his Pokemon collectibles. He had $30,000
worth of Pokemon collectibles. He returned to the Wawa location to look for the bag, but found it was
gone. I was like, oh my God, my freaking money's gone. I'm out of all this bread. I don't know what
I'm going to do. Yeah, I know we got that. I thought I was absolutely screwed. Well, good news.
He called the Revere Police Department the day it went missing and officers opened a grand
theft investigation. No, it wasn't theft. It was, it was, he lost $30,000. Should be a grand
loss look for investigation.
So they were searching for the man who grabbed the bag.
Surveillance camera footage,
ha, recorded Salazar walking out of the restroom with the fanny pack in hand.
And he was seen searching the store and the parking lot for the bag's owner.
Yeah, you would not have seen Jeff Fisher doing that.
Salazar was identified by police through the van he was driving.
Oh, that's special.
Police asked Salazar to meet at the police station to return the bag to its owner.
He said that when he went to the station, he recognized the owner's sandals.
I gave him the bag.
This is yours.
He was crying.
He hugged me.
And I was just thankful to get my money back to completely honest.
Yeah, because you left it in a bathroom.
Body camera footage captured all the moments.
And it was pretty astonishing that anybody could have done that.
Yeah, no kidding.
It's life-changing money, said Zalzar.
It's really not.
It's $30,000.
People would kill for that kind of money.
Well, that's true.
but people kill for a lot less than 30,000.
I never considered keeping the money,
but it's not mine to keep.
I like to earn my money.
The owner said he even offered to buy Salazar dinner for his efforts,
but Salazar declined.
I just did the right thing.
I don't need to be put on a pedestal.
Oh, that's special.
The owner said, reflecting on the experience,
I guess maybe there's just more good people in the world
than most people think.
You never know who you'll run into.
And Luis is just one of those good people.
Boy, that is for sure.
Because had you run into, I don't know, Jeff Fisher,
you would not have gotten $30,000 back.
Now, knowing about all the cameras everywhere,
what do you do?
Do you just be the nice person and give the $30,000 back
because you're not really sure?
Or, because there's no surveillance cameras in the bathroom yet,
so you can deep pocket some
and then return the fanny bag to the store
say somebody left this in the bathroom and it's not mine and you give it to the store.
So then now you've got what, maybe 10 grand you're stuck in your pocket and you walk out of
there. You're done with it. Police can look at all the footage from the store they want.
They watch you walk out of the bathroom with the bag and then walk over to the front desk
and hand it to the people and say here this was in the bathroom. I don't know who it belongs to.
And now it's out of your hands. And the extra 10 grand,
is in your pocket and you walk out of the store and you are done with it.
Mr. Zalzard, what happened?
I found the bag in the bathroom.
I took it to the front counter.
That's all I did.
Sorry.
And, you know, just don't put the extra 10 grand in your bank account.
Just use it to pay for things around the house with cash.
And you're good to go.
The man left $30,000 that it was so important to him.
He left it hanging in a wah-was bathroom.
So, come on now.
I'm sorry.
Do you deserve to keep that?
Well, of course you do, and it's important.
And now he's got his money back.
And Mr. Zelzar, thank you.
Thank you for being such an upstanding citizen.
No, really, I mean that.
This is a very, I mean, this is a very basic chewing the fat rule.
I mean, you never keep it all, and you just take a little bit.
You're not greedy, and you just return.
It's so simple.
It's such a simple process.
You're on camera.
That's what, you know, like let's say the bank truck tips over.
We've talked about this at length.
The bank car tips over, the truck tips over.
And people are running crazy and they're grabbing, picking up mounds of money.
And you do the very same.
But as soon as you get in your car, you count the money and just put some aside and take some to the police department immediately and say, hey, you know, back there where the, you know, the Wells Fargo truck.
tipped over, you know, the company that's on the bottom end of the most reputable,
Wells Fargo, when the truck tipped over, I got caught up in the frenzy.
And you can probably see, you'll probably see me on camera, you know, picking up cash and
throwing it in my pockets and getting in my car.
I came right here afterwards, I feel so bad, got caught up in the moment here.
This is what I, this is the money that I picked up.
Now you're the good guy.
Now you've taken care.
You felt guilty.
You turned it in.
and you still have some cash in your pocket.
It's just not that hard.
Be sure to follow me on my socials
at Jeffy JFR on X, Jeff Fisher Radio,
on Instagram and Facebook,
and chewing the fat with Jeff Fisher on YouTube.
You can also get a cameo from me
at Jeffy JFR on the cameo app.
That, of course, is not free,
but it is worth every doggone shiny nickel that you spend down at Jeffey JFR on the Cameo app.
Please subscribe to this Chewing the Fat.
Please rate and review 20 stars.
Best podcast ever would be great.
You can email the show anytime chewing the fat at blazemedia.com
or chewing the fat at the blaze.com.
Either one works.
I know those of you went, wait, I was emailing you and I wasn't using blazmedia.com.
I know it's okay. Chewing the Fat of the Blaze.com gets to me as well.
So I appreciate you all very much.
And you can listen to my Saturday morning live broadcast.
We do that on Saturday mornings.
That's why it's called Saturday morning live.
And I do that with Brad Stags.
And I put it up on my ex account at Jeffrey JFR.
He puts it up on his ex account, I think, at Real Brad Staggs.
I think he puts it up on some other platforms on Rumble.
and maybe up on his little cute little thing he does there called the Daily Mojo and the DailyMojo.com, whatever it is.
I think it might be up on there.
I don't know what he does.
I don't care.
I just know that it's up on my ex at Jeffrey JFR every Saturday, beginning at 9 a.m. Central.
But we do start early a lot of times.
So you might want to be ready, you know, because we're there.
Sometimes it's, sometimes it's 45 minutes early, sometimes it's, you know, 30 minutes early, sometimes.
This 20 minutes early, you never know.
And once in a while we run late.
Brad doesn't like that, though.
Satellite time gets expensive, so most of the time we try not to run late, but we do start early.
So it's weird how that works, isn't it?
Wow.
So remember the guy who stole the hard drives that contained Beyonce's music?
And I think there was other stuff in there as well.
And he broke into a car.
This was in Atlanta.
His name was Kelvin Evans, and he was 40.
And he did not want to take the case to trial.
And so he entered a guilty plea to single counts of criminal trespass and entering a vehicle with the intent to commit theft in Fulton County.
Well, yeah.
Well, this Fulton County Superior Court judge handed him a sentence of five years, five years.
That includes two years in prison and the rest on probation.
So he's got to spend two years in prison and still then another three years on probation.
And he was ordered to stay away from the victims and location of the theft.
Wow.
I mean, I know they had surveillance on the guy.
Of course they had surveillance on the guy in the Atlanta parking garage.
And he was in the vehicle.
He stole the hard drives.
It's just incredible.
He removed black suitcase.
and later carried them into a building connected to his sister.
It's all on video.
And so really he just should have played out earlier.
Got five years, though.
Wow, you don't want to mess with Beyonce, man.
Do not mess with the queen.
I mean, Queen B, sorry.
Don't come after me.
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Who died today?
Who died today?
Well, let's begin with sunny row.
Sonny Rollins, a jazz aficionado, big time Sunny Rollins.
I've listened to his stuff.
I really didn't like Sunny Rollins stuff that much, but I appreciated him.
I mean, he's a jazz.
I love the jazz stuff, so, you know, I appreciate Sonny's work.
I mean, the guy had, I don't know, 80 albums or something.
It was a lot.
All right.
AI says 60.
I still think it was 80.
But anyway, the man had a lot of albums.
And remember he used to take what he called sabbaticals.
And his first sabbatical, he just went up on the bridge, the Brooklyn Bridge, and played music.
He did that for a couple of years.
Just went on the bridge and played.
Oh, okay.
And then he said, once in a while he would leave and he would go get a drink,
and then he would go back to the bridge and play.
And he just wanted to change.
A lot of times he would go on stage, and there would be no set music that he would play.
It just whatever felt right.
credible. So, I mean, he was arrested, well, I think a long time ago for armed robbery in like
1950, and they spent 10 months in jail. And then so he said that was my first sabbatical.
The rest of them were self-imposed. But he did say it was a learning place. So he said prison was a
brutal place. Fortunately, I was involved in music and I largely avoided brutality.
He had 10 months in 1950 in prison.
Okay.
He said then he took other sabbaticals,
69, spent time in Japan and India,
did a spell at a monastery before returning
and he wanted to make more records.
Really incredible.
And then he said that he went to jail another time.
He was re-arrested for breaking the terms of his parole
by using heroin.
That was in 52 a long time ago.
He said later I swapped for exercise and yoga practice.
Shunning the all-night partying that destroyed the careers of so many other musicians.
Yeah, no kidding.
So back in the 50s, he even was realizing, hey, I got to kick this heroin or it's going to kick me.
So rest in peace to jazz legend, Sonny Rollins, dead.
at the age of 95.
Then we have another musician who died not too long ago.
You know, it's about a while since I've done chewing the fat.
I want to thank you for coming along for the ride today.
And I'm back.
Feel better.
I've got a schedule.
I've got some things worked out.
So, you know, I'm planning on giving you some regular chewing the fat,
fat five plus issue.
Well, it's not really issues.
It's chewing the fat, fat, fat five plus.
let's just go with shows
or issues or whatever you want to call it, I don't care.
David Allen Co.
David Allen Coe, a singer who was, you know, Outlaw Country, Mr. Outlaw Country,
dead at the age of 86.
David Allen Coe.
That guy, there's another guy that was, you know,
kind of that had this legendary status that I just, I never really liked much.
And I appreciate him.
Kind of like Sonny Rollins.
I appreciate him.
But it was just like, you know, I just, I just, I don't know, I just can't do David Allen Co.
But many of, many of you can, so, and are bum that he passed away.
So, rest in peace, to David Allen Coe, dead at the age of 86.
Then we had Tom Kane, a Tom Kane voice actor behind Yoda in Star Wars, the Clone Wars,
the Professor Eutonium in the Powder Pump.
girls. He died at the age of 64. He died from complications. This is 2026. He died of
complications from a stroke he had in 2020. Wow. So rest in peace to Tom Kane dead at the age of 64.
All right, let's get out of here. I'm going to give you the joke of the day since yesterday was
Memorial Day and we were all honoring all the vets that have paid the ultimate price.
I want to do this joke of the day.
Sent in from Denny.
He's still trying, still writing, still out there.
He sent it in to Chewing the Fat at the Blaze.com.
And I appreciate the hard work that many of you put in to try to be, you know, get your joke on chewing the fat.
So this one's from Denny.
My grandfather fought in World War II.
And sadly, he came out with one leg.
We never did figure out whose leg it was.
See.
No, I think you got it.
