It Could Happen Here - Are Workers Lighting Warehouses on Fire?
Episode Date: April 15, 2026Garrison investigates viral claims that a spree of warehouse fires across the country have been started by underpaid workers. Cool Zone is nominated for 3 Webby Awards! Submit your votes by April 16th... or we'll hunt down your family. Behind the Bastards - https://vote.webbyawards.com/PublicVoting#/2026/podcasts/features/experimental-innovation It Could Happen Here - https://vote.webbyawards.com/PublicVoting#/2026/podcasts/limited-series-specials/news-politics Migrating to America - https://vote.webbyawards.com/PublicVoting#/2026/podcasts/limited-series-specials/documentary Sources:See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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I'm Garrison Davis.
A revolution is igniting.
across America, at least according to viral posts on social media and TikTok videos with
hundreds of thousands of views, claiming that anywhere between three to six to nine warehouses
have been set on fire this past week for not paying their employees a living wage.
The revolution might be happy.
Got a warehouse fire in Ontario.
Warehouse fire in New York.
Warehouse fire in Bakersfield.
Amazon warehouse fire in Ohio.
So they set a mall on fire too.
It hasn't just been factories at the United.
this point, it's also malls. It seems as though people have begun to eat the rich.
Workers of the world ignite. Like most instances of viral misinformation, there is a kernel of
truth to this story and one worth focusing on, but through a massive game of cross-platform telephone,
facts and causality get warped and misconstrued. Selective reporting of similar but unrelated
events can be used to assert a connection between certain events, even if there is none.
But let's start with that kernel of truth. Just after midnight on April 7th, a 29-year-old
warehouse worker named Shemel Abdul-Karim allegedly set fire to a toilet paper warehouse in
Ontario, California. After multiple pallets of paper products were lit on fire, the flames overwhelmed
the fire suppression system and it collapsed the roof.
The blaze took over 12 hours to contain and ultimately destroyed the 1.2 million square foot
distribution center leased by Kimberly Clark, the company behind Kleenex, Huggies, and Cottonell toilet paper.
Local officials and the Justice Department has said the fire caused over $600 million
of damages. The 20 employees who were working midnight shifts at the warehouse when the fire started,
all evacuated safely, and there were no reported injuries.
The day after the fire, videos uploaded to social media the night of the fire resurfaced,
appearing to show the suspect intentionally lighting three fires inside the distribution center,
while speaking aloud about low wages, corporate profits, shareholders, and poor working conditions.
You know, if you're not going to pay us enough to live or afford to live,
at least pay us enough not to do the...
All you had to do was pay us enough to live.
All you had to do was pay us enough to...
There goes your inventory.
The affidavit filed with the criminal complaint,
alleges that Abdul Karim filmed himself setting fire
to multiple pallets of paper goods inside the warehouse.
And as he lit the fires, he stated,
quote,
If you're not going to pay us enough to fucking live or afford to live,
at least pay us enough not to do this shit, unquote.
Beyond the short videos Abdul Karim posted to his social media,
the affidavit alleges he made further statements to friends and coworkers on the phone and via text message
related to his motive for setting the fires.
He allegedly texted, quote,
I just cost these expletive billions,
and wrote that the, quote,
1% is an expletive joke.
U.S. Attorney Bill Assaley said in a press conference that after setting the fire,
quote, in a phone call to one witness,
Abdul Karim compared himself to Luigi Mangione, unquote.
Abdul Karim also allegedly texted, quote,
all you had to do was pay us enough to live.
Pay us more of the value we bring, not corporate.
Don't see the shareholders picking up a shift, unquote.
This past Monday, Abdul Karim pleaded not guilty to arson charges in court.
Though the warehouse stored Kimberly Clark products,
Abdul Karim was actually employed by NFI Industries, a third-party distribution company.
NFI Industries is a family-owned private company and does not report its profits,
but last year said they generated more than $3.7 billion in annual revenue and had over 18,000
employees.
The average executive at the company has a $235,000 salary, with the highest paid, making $700,000
annually. Meanwhile, the average pay of an NFI Industries warehouse worker in California, per job listing
sites, is 1874 an hour. With forklift operators and warehouse specialists making $22.39
an hour, the median household income in Ontario, California is $82,806 a year, and the average salary is over $73,000 a year
or $35 hourly.
Ontario, California has a 28% higher cost of living
than the national average.
Last year, Kimberly Clark made $2.4 billion
in operating profit.
The footage of this worker, allegedly,
lighting the warehouse on fire,
went super viral on TikTok
with millions and millions of views,
sparking meme edits and hype videos.
Then, and the days after,
the toilet paper fire, footage of other warehouse fires started to spread around TikTok,
leading some people to believe that copycat incidents might be taking place across the country.
Here's a clip with over 300,000 views of a left-wing TikTok influencer,
claiming that since the toilet paper arson, more people have begun setting their workplaces on fire.
So, apparently, that guy that burns down the toilet paper warehouse because they were not paying him a
living wage or anyone the living wage for that matter.
Who the internet has dubbed Wau Luigi for Warehouse Luigi was not the only one with that
idea or to execute on it.
And I will say I am not 100% sure on the timelines of all of these.
Oh, you're not 100% sure?
Well, then that's fine.
Continue anyway.
This guy goes on to say that since Waluigi, he's seen, quote, four to five to six,
other warehouses that have, quote, burned down or at least been set on fire, unquote.
A lot of this social media reporting does not differentiate between a warehouse completely burning down
and a small fire that is quickly put out.
Neither do these social media reports provide evidence to the cause of these fires.
One of the most circulated videos of one of these other fires is from Queens.
At 7.30 p.m. on Friday night, someone reported smoke at an industrial complex in College Point, Queens.
Firefighters soon responded to a rapidly growing fire inside a lumberyard warehouse.
After the building was searched and no one was found inside, 300 firefighters worked all night to contain the blaze to the 64,000 square foot warehouse.
The lumberyard did burn down, but no injuries were reported, and the cause of the fire is still under
investigation. But a post on X the Everything app with almost a million quote-unquote views read,
quote, another disgruntled employee strikes at the heart of American capital. That TikTok influencer
I already mentioned was very excited to share news of an Amazon warehouse on fire, despite not
being quite sure of the details or how many warehouses were actually on fire. At least one of which,
I am beyond happy to announce was an Amazon warehouse, which is not to say more than one weren't
affected. I've seen multiple videos of an Amazon warehouse on fire. I'm just not sure if it was
multiple Amazon warehouses on fire or just multiple people recording the same Amazon warehouse that
was on fire. Either way. Either way. Bottom line, people are setting Amazon warehouses on fire.
There is no evidence anyone set this Amazon warehouse on fire.
and yes, it is just one warehouse, not multiple.
On April 8th, firefighters responded to a fire
at an Amazon warehouse in West Jefferson, Ohio.
The fulfillment center was evacuated
as smoke billowed from the roof of the warehouse.
The fire was extinguished quickly
and caused, quote-unquote, minimal damage
to the underside of the roof,
according to Jefferson Township Fire Chief Dan Gatley.
There is no evidence
that this fire was intentionally set
by an employee or by anyone, and was possibly caused by a simple solar panel malfunction.
Investigators believe 75 to 100 solar panels on the roof of the warehouse caught fire,
which burnt through, quote, just a little bit of the rubber membrane on the roofing and some of
the insulation, unquote, according to Fire Chief Gatley.
This insulation fell onto two racks of Amazon products, but Gatley estimated that more
damage was caused by the water used to put out the solar panel fire than from the smoke or the fire
itself. The exact cause of the fire is still under investigation. A post on X-the- Everything app with
1.1 million, quote-unquote views and 27,000 likes. Shared video of smoke billowing from the roof
of the Amazon warehouse and was captioned, this is beginning to feel like something of a
movement. Another post from a monetized blue check account with one million quote-unquote views and
26,000 likes, also shared footage of the Amazon fire with the caption, another warehouse fire,
this time in Amazon fulfillment center in West Jefferson, Ohio. Warehouse employees across the
country are using their unique position to attack the substructure and base of the Epstein class, unquote.
We'll return to talk more about these fires.
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Okay, we're back.
By the weekend, this warehouse fire meme really exploded.
And people started collecting reports of warehouse fires from all across the country.
This next video went viral across TikTok and also spread to Reddit and Instagram.
I was tagged about this.
This is an Amazon warehouse that also just caught on fire.
So this is the third one after we just heard about New York in Queens.
And then the other one in California where we saw the big video behind it, right?
Now, this is breaking news.
I don't know much about it.
I was tagged in this.
This happened.
I think perhaps today.
I'm going to pause right here because next, she includes a severe weather alert warning for risk of fire spreading in the northeast.
As if wildfires and this weather alert was somehow related to warehouse fires on the other side of the country.
And I haven't been able to find any news about it online yet, but there's this special weather statement, moderate,
for a fire spread in Pennsylvania right now.
So that's four, five right here where somebody said a jeans store was set in fire in California.
Again, I can't corroborate these things right now.
These are just comments.
And somebody also said New Jersey for another warehouse fire.
So that is literally California, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New Jersey.
I'm getting comments and reports in right now that there have been five different warehouse.
or storefront fires in the last three days.
This shit is fucking wild.
Holy shit.
I think that's six because it's two in California, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey.
And again, I'm trying to find these items online right now, but like, I don't think the
new cycle is caught up fast enough to it.
So, like, who, class war, 2026?
This person describes herself on,
as a quote-unquote guerrilla journalist, and that video got almost half a million views on
TikTok and 74,000 likes by baselessly claiming that a string of fires that may or may not even be
real are actually intentional arsons in an escalating class war, hashtag eat the rich.
Let's go over some of the details of a few of the fires that she and others have mentioned.
In New Jersey, there were actually three fires this past week, one at a chemical plant,
one at a battery warehouse and a wild fire which sent smoke into Pennsylvania.
On Thursday, April 9th, a three-alarm fire spread through a chemical warehouse in Newark, New Jersey.
Over 100 firefighters brought the fire under control that afternoon.
No employees were harmed and the cause is under investigation.
On the morning of April 13th, there was another three-alarm warehouse fire in Rawway, New Jersey.
While searching the structure, firefighters discovered the blaze of,
emerged from pallets of lithium ion batteries.
The exact cause of the fire still remains under investigation.
And this past weekend, a wildfire spread through South New Jersey,
burning up to 160 acres, and sending smoke into Pennsylvania.
The National Weather Service warned beforehand
that there was an elevated risk of wildfires last Saturday
due to low humidity and 25-mile-per-hour wind gusts.
On the afternoon of Friday, April 10th, firefighters responded to a commercial structure fire
at a trash disposal business near Atlanta, Georgia. The blaze stemmed from a garbage fire in the
warehouse that grew out of control when adult was sent to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.
Per Aguette County News release, quote,
The incident presented several operational challenges, including a downed power line,
a deep-seated fire within large debris piles,
structural components exposed to prolonged heat,
and nearby hazards involving liquid petroleum gas tanks,
and a diesel-fuel reservoir, unquote.
Firefighters brought this fire under control in less than four hours.
According to employees, the fire originated from a small trash fire
near the edge of the warehouse.
Workers attempted to remove the burning debris
before the fire rapidly intensified and spread to the fire.
structure. The fire was ruled accidental, and department spokesperson Lieutenant Jessica Joyner said that
it appears to have been caused by trash piled in an unsafe manner, which can combust when mixed
together at such garbage facilities. But two days later, a viral post read, quote, Atlanta, Queens,
Bakersfield, Ontario, I'm starting to lose track. Many people are saying, only living wages can
prevent warehouse fires. Speaking of Bakersfield, a quote-unquote communist Twitter account
quote tweeted a video of a warehouse fire in Bakersfield, California, from a monetized
news aggregator account, and got 21,000 likes by writing, let it be a pattern. Another account
shared a different video ripped from TikTok, captioned, it's almost like electing billionaires
was a bad idea. A socialist-branded, monetized account, posted another and
of the Bakersfield fire, getting 14,000 likes with the caption,
Is a rebellion actually brewing in the Imperial Corps?
On the afternoon of April 11th, firefighters responded to a fire at a 30,000 square foot
warehouse in East Bakersfield.
The Kern County Fire Department said this is the third time buildings at this warehouse
complex have caught on fire in the past few years, with similar fires in November of
2024 and January 2025.
The cause of this new fire is still unknown and under investigation,
but we know it was definitely not caused by warehouse employees
because this is an abandoned warehouse.
The previous owner of the buildings told local news
that the fires have been started by quote-unquote vagrants.
A massive fire engulfed another lumber yard last Saturday night in Wayne County, Ohio.
It took 24 fire departments across three counties working together to extinguish the flames.
This lumberyard was home to a wooden pallet manufacturing business.
On Sunday afternoon, the owners of the pallet manufacturing plant said in a statement,
quote,
We are grateful no one was injured and that the fire was contained.
We are working with investigators to determine the cause
and with our insurance carrier to begin recovery.
Southwood Palet has served this community for 42 years,
and we intend to rebuild and be stronger than ever, unquote.
Footage of this fire racked up over half a million, quote-unquote, views on a socialist-branded,
monetized X account, captioned, now there is a five-alarm fire at a lumber pallet warehouse
in Wayne County, Ohio.
There are too many fires to be a coincidence.
The working class has had it.
And quote tweets of the video got tens of thousands of likes, with users writing, quote,
love to see people finally standing up against their employers.
eight in a week, and no more thoughts and prayers only fire, unquote.
Here's another video with over 300,000 views from that TikTok guerrilla journalist,
going through a few more of these warehouse fires that I've mentioned.
Based on all of my comments and my research online, based on what people are telling me and from what I can see,
the ones that I can corroborate right now, was that last one was Ohio in a lumberyard,
And then we had the Ohio Amazon, which was apparently due to the solar panels, we'll say.
And then we have one in the Queens, New York one, which was lumber as well.
New Jersey was a chemical warehouse.
Georgia was a commercial structure.
And then lastly, the one that y'all have been tagging me in is the California jeans store,
which spread throughout them all from what I can hear and have seen online.
So that is a total of seven since our original Luigi man set fire to the toilet paper facility,
that one. So that's where we are right now. A total of seven in about three, four days of warehouse
storefront fires throughout the United States. Now, we don't know about all of them, but these are
the ones that are on the radar right now. So if there's more out there, let me know, but we're up to
seven now. Out of all the fires that she's talked about, the only one that we know is arson, besides the
toilet paper warehouse, is this fire at a mall in the same city in California, where a man
who does not work at the mall allegedly lit multiple fires across several stores. The mall reopened
later that same day, and authorities have said there's no connection to the warehouse fire,
though the investigation is still ongoing. Before I discuss what's actually happening with all
these warehouse fires, let's go on one more ad break.
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I went and sat on the little ottoman in front of him.
And I said, hi, dad.
And just when I said that, my mom comes out of the kitchen.
She says, I have some cookies and milk.
This is a badass convict man.
Right.
Just finished five years.
I'm going to have cookies and milk at my mom.
Yeah.
On the Ceno Show podcast, each episode invites you into a raw, unfiltered conversations about recovery, resilience, and redemption.
On a recent episode, I sit down with actor, cultural icon Danny Trail,
talk about addiction, transformation, and the power of second chances.
The entire season two is now available to binge,
featuring powerful conversations with the guests like Tiffany Addish,
Johnny Knoxville, and more.
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until I really start making money.
It's Financial Literacy Month,
and the podcast, Eating While Broke,
is bringing real conversations about money,
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This month, hear from top streamer, Zoe Spencer,
and venture capitalist Lakeisha Landrum-Pierre,
as they share their journeys from starting out to leveling up.
If I'm outside with my parents
and they're seeing all these people come up to me for pictures,
it's like, what?
Today now, obviously, it's like 100%.
They believe everything,
But at first it was just like, you got to go get a real job.
There's an economic component to communities thriving.
If there's not enough money and entrepreneurship happening in communities, they fail.
And what I mean by fail is they don't have money to pay for food.
They cannot feed their kids.
They do not have homes.
Communities don't work unless there's money flowing through them.
Listen to eating while broke from the Black Effect Podcast Network on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast.
Ever feel like you're being chased by the marriage,
police.
Welcome to boys and girls, the podcast where dating isn't dating.
Arranged marriage is basically a reality show, except the contestants are strangers and your
entire family is judging.
You're sipping coffee with one maybe, grabbing dinner with another and praying your
karmic Ken or Barbie appears before your shelf life runs out.
Trust me, I've been through this ancient and unshakable tradition.
I jumped in hoping to find love the right way
and instead I found chaos, cringe and comedy.
And now I'm looking for healing.
Boys and Girls dives into every twist and turn
of the arranged marriage carousel,
the meat-awquard, the near-misses, the heartbreak,
and let's not forget all the jokes.
Listen to boys and girls on the I-heart radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right, we are back.
So what's really going on with all these
warehouse fires? There's all this reporting just a coincidence. Are these fires really labor-related?
Are these all disgruntled employees? Is there even more fires happening than usual? All good
questions. Even if the exact cause of most of these fires hasn't yet been determined,
it does seem from watching all these videos that there's been an increase of warehouse fires
since the first toilet paper inferno. Though, just because you're more aware of where,
warehouse fires happening across the country doesn't mean that these fires are actually happening
at a higher rate. A report from the National Fire Protection Association found that from 2020 to
24, an estimated 1,544 warehouse fires occur every year. That's an average of four fires per day.
warehouses are home to a lot of high-heed equipment and materials that are easily combustible,
like lumber, paper products, batteries, and chemicals.
The recent National Fire Protection Association report found that most warehouse structure fires
had an unintentional cause, 29%.
10% were caused by failure of equipment or a heat source,
and intentional fires accounted for just 7% of warehouses.
warehouse fires. Operating equipment was the leading heat source in warehouse fires, responsible for
43 percent, and shop tools and industrial equipment were involved in the ignition of 19 percent of
warehouse fires. Misuse of material or product and electrical failure are the leading factors
contributing to ignition. Improper storage of flammable materials and human error are also
contributing factors. Intentionally set fires or arson does happen, but it's not the most common
cause of modern warehouse fires. And again, warehouse structure fires happen four times a day on average.
So not only is there no proof that underpaid employees have begun a spree of lighting fire to their
workplace, but there hasn't even been a recent increase in warehouse fires. On Monday afternoon,
Footage spread online of another warehouse fire outside Miami,
with the caption,
Living Wages Prevent Warehouse Fires.
But this fire actually took place over a month ago
on March 5, 2026,
at an inventory storage warehouse.
An employee told NBC Miami,
quote, apparently there was a short circuit
and a spark fell on one of the carpets we have,
and that's how the fire started.
We tried to put it out, but it happened to,
fast, unquote.
Officials have not yet confirmed those details and the exact cause the fire is still under investigation,
but it is literally impossible for this fire to in any way be related to the toilet paper warehouse
because it happened a month prior, and the footage is just circulating now to boost social media
engagement.
The video of the employee allegedly setting fire to pallets a toilet paper channeled such a strong
feeling across American workers that people invented and circulated a whole fake news cycle about a
string of copycat incidents.
Something tells me we're not done with the warehouse fires. Just a hunch.
Because only if you had paid us a livable wage. And I'm pretty sure everyone is fucking over
corporate America at this point. Like over it. People are starting to realize that there are
more of us than there are of them. And the only thing that they care about is their profits,
not the people. So if you burn down the profits, the people will find other jobs.
companies have insurance.
The message really sent.
I'm not condoning it or encouraging it,
but I am saying it makes a point.
That TikTok clip demonstrates
why people are so primed to share these fire spree claims
and memes of Smokey the Bear saying
only living wages can prevent warehouse fires.
This whole warehouse fire social media news cycle
is an instance of selective reporting,
which happens when there is a big national news story,
like someone filming themselves burning down a 1.2 million square foot warehouse,
and then that causes people to share what they believe are related stories,
often from local news reporting,
even if the connection is minor or tangential at best.
A local report from Wayne County, Ohio,
ordinarily would not circulate as national news.
But on social media, a relatively unremarkable lumberyard fire
can become part of a new increasing.
trend. Sometimes local news agencies themselves may be incentivized to cover smaller stories in a certain
way to ride the coattails of a national story that shares a few similar details. Or national news outlets
fishing for clicks may themselves cover what would typically only be a local story if it relates
to a currently viral topic. A post on X the Everything app with 1.4 million quote-unquote views and 67,000
likes, read, quote, we're up to six warehouses set on fire now across the country,
and I feel like it's being severely underreported, unquote.
If anything, these fires are being overreported.
Another example of selective reporting is aviation accidents, where in the weeks after a high
profile commercial airline crash, local news reports will spread around social media
about even more plane crashes.
even if these are mostly small private planes which get into accidents semi-regularly a la
Harrison Ford or minor runway incidents that usually don't make the news.
A 2025 poll from Data for Progress showed 72% of likely voters believed plane crashes were
becoming more frequent. A CNN report analyzing National Transportation Safety Board data
from January 2024 to March 2025 found that out of 1,200,000,000,000, found that out of 1,200,
108 flight safety incidents, only 60 incidents involved commercial carriers. Some of these
incidents included turbulence or incursions, that's unauthorized aircraft, vehicles, or pedestrians on
the runway. Half of these 60 incidents resulted in injuries and two involved fatalities, the helicopter
collision in Washington, D.C., and a plane crash in Alaska. While those fatal tragedies and other
high-profile incidents, like the runway flip in Toronto and
the door flying off in Alaska Airlines plane mid-flight, have sowed fear in the general public.
Statistically, air travel is not getting more dangerous. The number of yearly safety incidents
have remained mostly steady the past decade and only dropped around that pandemic due to a decrease
in total air travel. In fact, on average, flying has only gotten safer. Even including private
and recreational flights, the average number of annual deadly incidents has fallen by more than half
since 2000, excluding 9-11.
Despite viral news clips of near misses on the runway and an air traffic controller shortage,
those runway incursions have also steadily dropped in recent years.
But such data can be hard to stomach if in the days after a high-profile aviation incident,
you keep seeing more reports about plane crashes all across the country.
But that itself is selective reporting.
On average, three to four planes crash every day.
and these are typically small private planes, not commercial airliners.
And typically, a small Cessna crashing in Kentucky doesn't make national news.
The same thing is happening with these warehouse fires.
Lefty TikTok influencers and many others participating in this warehouse fire meme
are ascribing the motive of one person onto a collection of unrelated incidents,
trying to create a pattern when there probably isn't one.
that this one guy said that he did it because of his, like, anger towards capitalism.
And I don't know if that was the original toilet paper guy or, like, another one of these
warehouse fires.
But to each and every one of them, period.
Keep it up.
Again, out of all the incidents I've mentioned, the only two we know were intentional was
the toilet paper warehouse and the Ontario Mall.
And the only one we have a suspected motive for is the toilet paper warehouse.
An Emerson College poll found that 41% of young voters thought the actions of the United
Healthcare Assassin were acceptable.
Another 19% said that they were neutral on the question.
Luigi Mangione memes and reactions to this toilet paper fire do demonstrate a form of class
consciousness.
This same week, people have cheered the attacks on the home of OpenAI CEO Sam Altman.
Even if influencers are just trying to make a profit, there is an active willingness among the consumers sharing memes and this living wage warehouse fire content to rally behind such action.
The working conditions at these warehouses can be inhumane.
Just last week, a 47-year-old worker at an Amazon warehouse in Troutdale, Oregon, collapsed and died.
Supervisors prevented someone with CPR training to assist with chest compressions,
and instructed employees to continue work as usual
as the body laid still on the floor.
Oregon OSHA has said the death was not work-related.
In a catastrophic vibe shift,
let's go back to our left-wing TikTok influencer for his analysis.
I really hope this is a sign of what we all hope it's a sign of.
I can't be the only one who has felt like the time.
are turning, the tables are turning, the winds are shifting. It really feels like there's actual
movement being made in just the last few days. And now all these warehouse fires, which sure,
could be a coincidence, but I don't think so. At least I hope not. But what do you guys think?
Comment below. And if this really is truly the beginning of it all ending, give me a follow
for more like this.
Everyone knows.
The most important thing to do when the revolution starts is to give me a follow.
Speaking of, there is just two days left of Webby voting for It Could Happen Here,
behind the bastards and migrating to America.
And we may need a supermajority to beat the MS now filibuster,
so go make your voices heard before voting ends on April 16th.
That does it for me today at It Could Happen here.
See you on the other side.
It Could Happen Here is a production of Cool Zone Media.
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Thanks for listening.
On paper, the three hosts of the Nick Dick and Poll show are geniuses.
We can explain how AI works, data centers,
but there are certain things that we don't necessarily understand.
Better version of Play Stupid Games, win Stupid prizes.
Yes.
Which, by the way, wasn't Taylor Swift, who said that for the first time.
I actually thought it was.
I got that wrong.
But hey, no one's perfect.
We're pretty close, though.
Listen to the Nick, Dick, and Paul show on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
It's Financial Literacy Month, and the podcast, Eating While Broke, is bringing real conversations about money, growth, and building your
future. This month, hear from top streamer, Zoe Spencer, and venture capitalist Lakeisha Landrum
Pierre, as they share their journeys from starting out to leveling up. There's an economic
component to communities. If there's not enough money and entrepreneurship happening in communities,
they failed. Listen to Eating While Broke from the Black Effect Podcast Network on the IHeart Radio
app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. If you're watching the latest season of the
Real Housewives of Atlanta, you already know.
there's a lot to break down.
Gorsha accusing Kelly of sleeping with
a merry man. They holding
Kay Michelle back from fighting Drew.
Pinky has financial issues.
On the podcast, Reality with the King,
I, Carlos King,
recap the biggest moments from your favorite
reality shows, including
the Real House Wise franchise,
the drama, the alliances,
M&T, everybody's talking about.
To hear this and more,
listen to Reality with the King
on the IHard Radio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever
you get your podcast.
You know the famous author, Roald Dahl.
He thought up Willie Wonka and the BFG.
But did you know he was a spy?
Neither did I.
You can hear all about his wildlife story
in the podcast, The Secret World of Roll Dahl.
All episodes are out now.
Was this before he wrote his stories?
It must have been.
What?
Okay, I don't think that's true.
I'm telling you.
I was a spy.
Binge all 10 episodes of The Secret World of Roll Dahl.
Now on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
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This is an IHeart podcast.
Guaranteed human.
