No Agenda - 1838 - "Coup Afoot"

Episode Date: January 29, 2026

No Agenda Episode 1838 - "Coup Afoot" "Coup Afoot" Executive Producers: chris moore Dalton Fisher Alex Pellegrino bill taos Christine Sir Eric Associate Executive Producer: Linda Lu, Duchess of job...s & writer of winning résumés Become a member of the 1839 Club, support the show here Boost us with with Podcasting 2.0 Certified apps: Podverse - Podfriend - Breez - Sphinx - Podstation - Curiocaster - Fountain Knights & Dames Bob Raida > Sir Bob Raida Dalton Fisher > Sir Dalton Fisher the Commodore of Content. Art By: Redd End of Show Mixes:    MVP EOS Major Tom! Condom ON!.mp3  MVP EOS sirenGonnaDie.mp3   Mark van Dijk - Systems Master Ryan Bemrose - Program Director Back Office Jae Dvorak Chapters: Dreb Scott Clip Custodian: Neal Jones Clip Collectors: Steve Jones & Dave Ackerman NEW: Gitmo Jams Sign Up for the newsletter No Agenda Peerage ShowNotes Archive of links and Assets (clips etc) 1838.noagendanotes.com Directory Archive of Shownotes (includes all audio and video assets used) archive.noagendanotes.com RSS Podcast Feed Full Summaries in PDF No Agenda Lite in opus format Last Modified 01/29/2026 16:45:24This page created with the FreedomController Last Modified 01/29/2026 16:45:24 by Freedom Controller  

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Adam Curry, John C. DeVore. It's Thursday, January 29th, 2026. This is your award-winning Gibbonation Media Assassination Episode 1838. This is no agenda. Observing the ops and broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill country here in FEMA region number six. In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry. And from northern Silicon Valley where I have to tell you, I'll be at the Oakland meetup this Saturday. Thanks for asking.
Starting point is 00:00:28 I'm John C. DeVorak. It's Craigbott and Buzzkill. In the morning. Oh, man, I was so close this morning. To what? To doing the show on Linux. I was wondering. I'm so close.
Starting point is 00:00:47 But when I sat down this morning to, because I've been using it for the past couple of days, the production workflow from it, because I use Hindenberg Pro to do clips, using audacity, what did they do to that program? It's been slowly deteriorating. Did they screw that? You have an old version.
Starting point is 00:01:07 I don't, I, well, I didn't know there was an older, I mean, I don't know if there's older versions available, but you can't scrub properly, you know, because when I'm doing scrub. So you have the, you have the clip and then you hit a key and then it plays forward and you can hit another key and it goes faster or you hit. the shift key and it goes slower and then you can head an in point and an out point and then X and then you cut it and I mean I go super fast. This was a factor.
Starting point is 00:01:37 Why is it called scrub? Because it's analogous to the old scrubbing of the tapes across the head. Scroop, roop, roop, like that. Huh. Surely you've heard of this term scrubbing? No, never. Oh. So there was that.
Starting point is 00:01:55 And then, you know, Audacity is like, oh, I'm just going to crack. I'm just like, I can't. So now I have to find something. I'm just kind of crash. Yeah, I was like, I'm just going to crash. It's like your old buddy from college. Exactly. I'm just going to crash here.
Starting point is 00:02:11 I'm just not going to work. And then, uh, so I'm like, I, I mean, production wise, I'm just not there. The playout system is good. I was ready to use that. But I just could not get into a production flow. And I know everyone's going to tell me, Oh, you should do this year. Just run it on wine. Okay.
Starting point is 00:02:32 Run it on wine. There you go. That's what you should do. So I've got to find. If I don't have the right tools, then I can't do it. But the playout system was working pretty well. How close are you? Well, I mean, it's really just fixing the recording and editing.
Starting point is 00:02:55 And I think I'll be there. think. I don't know. It's, it's quite amazing. Why do you have to do the recording and, you're not doing any recording and editing during the show. No, but I mean, I, my, you want to switch completely over so you only have to, you don't want to even boot the, the Windows box. No, exactly. No, it's a separate. This is a whole, I don't want to be on the Windows box at all. I want to be, at all. I want to be free, man. Libre. I want to be free of the corporate overlords. Well, I was mentioning that I wanted, I'm going to be at the Oakland meetup, which should be at Villalettos in Oakland, the pizza place.
Starting point is 00:03:34 Yes. On Saturday. Well, that's related. And so people should think about donating. Oh, I see. I'm sorry. I'm thinking about Linux. You're thinking about donating.
Starting point is 00:03:46 Okay. Yeah, well, there's two things going on at the same time. You're a little toying with your little computer is one thing. But I did. I think I did get the robot working. Let me check. A robot, are you there? Can you hear me? Are you working? Yes, I'm here and working. I can hear you clearly.
Starting point is 00:04:07 Well, give her a break. Okay. Are you ready on the Linux box? Is that what you're talking to? I'm always ready. What's on your mind? Are you on the Linux box? Are you ready to go? I'm an AI operating from the cloud. And yes, I'm ready for whatever you need. Okay. Well, so whenever we need her, she's there now. What happened to her in the meantime? Was she gone? She was on vacation.
Starting point is 00:04:37 She was dating the GROC AI. She sounds nicer. Yeah. Oh, yeah. No, she's, I actually, I also tried to load that open source thing. Yeah, that didn't work out so well. Remember the open source version of 11 labs? Yeah, that when you were going on and on about.
Starting point is 00:04:54 Yeah, yeah. I have not succeeded in getting that working yet. You know, you get it all installed and says, I can't find the GPU. Well, I don't have a GPU. Oh. Oh, well, okay. And then we'll have to do some RAM and convert it to the CPU.
Starting point is 00:05:11 And I gave up. But we'll get there. We'll get there. We'll get there. I know you're disappointed because, you know, you just want to make your end-of-show ISOs with my bot. I got you. We'll get there.
Starting point is 00:05:24 Well, I'm not unhappy with the 11 labs except it's so limiting. and I go, you know, I can choose from five voices. And then there's, here's the other thing. To swap, they have a library of thousands of voices. But if you got the free version, you get to use five of them. You get to use the dinky ones. And you can swap them out. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:46 But once you get your five voices, and you try to swap one of them out as like pulling teeth. It's like, okay, well, I want to put this one. Well, okay. Well, maybe. It goes to it gives you a wrong screen. and then you don't have the right sliders and what happened by sliders? And then it's like one thing after another.
Starting point is 00:06:06 It's amazing. This AI stuff is so, and now everyone's sending me this, you got to try this Claudebot. Claudebot, man, you got to get a Claudebot. So a Claudebot, apparently, is an open source program that you run on a computer. You know, just running on any computer.
Starting point is 00:06:25 And, and, yeah, no, You know, the guys that you're portraying here are very familiar to me. Oh, yes. Do you know them? They're my friends. Just do this. Just do that.
Starting point is 00:06:36 It's easy. It's easy. It'll work. No problem. You know, the Claudebot, and so you can tell the cloud, it'll be like your friend. And your cloud bot will do all the stuff. Claude is already too much of a friend. Well, this is C-L-A-W-D, Claude.
Starting point is 00:06:50 Oh, another Claude. Oh, we got Claude and Claude. Well, the Claude bot communicates with your other AI accounts. and then it puts a really friendly face on it and you can say, hey, you know, make a reply to this email. Can you imagine? You imagine how that's going to work out?
Starting point is 00:07:09 And, oh, yeah, you use this. You know, you might need a $200 a month account, but you're going to love it. I don't think so. $200 a month? Yeah. Because of the amount of cycles. A month?
Starting point is 00:07:20 Yes. Yes. You want the pro account. So $2,400 a year so you can have something, do it crappy, email that you could be far easier. You can do it yourself. You can hire somebody for 24,000. A couple $24,000 a year. I can hire somebody. It's $2,400. Lowest, can you just quickly, you know, have a part part time. It'd be great. It's $2,400, not $24,000.
Starting point is 00:07:46 Oh, I'm sorry. Well, I think we can get some Somalis for that. No problem. 2400. I can still get an Indian. I can have it done remotely. I can have two Indians. Welcome to the Indians working in Bombay for 2400. Welcome to the racist no agenda show, everybody. And by the way, John, I appreciate. It's not racist. I'm going with them. Globalism.
Starting point is 00:08:06 I appreciate you, neighbor. This is the new thing now in Minneapolis. When you're out there protesting. Hey, neighbor, I appreciate you, neighbor. I appreciate you being here. I noticed this because there was your buddy. Not my buddy. I got no buddies.
Starting point is 00:08:25 That's true. I'm trying to be nice. Your buddy James O'Keefe, who almost got killed. Oh, they got a threat. He didn't almost get killed. Well, it was cute. It was cute. But whatever the case was, he was being called neighbor.
Starting point is 00:08:41 And I could see you see that as going on some sort of code. Yeah. Oh, yeah. It's what used to be comrade. Now we just say neighbor. Yeah. Wow. Hello.
Starting point is 00:08:50 I caught that one. I missed that one. I caught that one right away. Yeah, you're right. Exactly. Comrade. Yeah. exactly what it is. Hey, Comrade. And, well,
Starting point is 00:08:59 Comrade Bruce is all over this. I don't know if you've heard it yet, but here's a quickie report. More than 30 years after Bruce Springsteen won an Oscar for his song, Streets of Philadelphia, he has written a version called Streets of Minneapolis. Springsteen says it's dedicated to, quote, the people of Minneapolis are innocent immigrant neighbors and in memory. of Alex Pready and Renee Good.
Starting point is 00:09:29 Pretty good. You got to listen to a little bit of this song. Because even just the first verse... When did he become a communist? Oh, once he met to Patty Skelfa, as far as I'm concerned. Listen to this. You just got to listen to the first verse. A city of flame fought fire and ice.
Starting point is 00:09:49 Ethan occupier's boots. King Trump's private army from the... King Trump's private army. King Trump's private army. Listen again, this is great. City of flame fought fire and ice. Ethan occupier's boots. King Trump's private army from the DHS.
Starting point is 00:10:15 Guns belted to their coats. Came to Minneapolis to enforce the law or sow their stores. Oh, brother. Against smoking. You know, this is the worst thing that I think he could have done. He was already kind of out of, just off the reservation. It's living in Los Angeles still, I think. That's what happened to him.
Starting point is 00:10:43 No offense, Angelinos. Is there where he's living? Yeah, I believe so. I think he moved to Los Angeles like 10 years ago. He's the guy from Jersey. Why would a guy from Georgia? Jersey moved to Los Angeles. Because all the cool people are there, man.
Starting point is 00:10:59 That's where you hang. Hey, you know what? He might even do an appearance on the Grammys this Sunday. Wouldn't that be great? I hope he sings that song. Yeah, me too. Me too, absolutely. I don't think they'd let him.
Starting point is 00:11:13 Oh, are you kidding? Of course they will. Well, no, I don't know because the way it seems, if you're having the meeting, it's like, well, can we go that far? You think, wow, first fuck Trump. Well, yeah, but can we go that far? Maybe it's a little too much. I can see him backing off of it.
Starting point is 00:11:34 It's on CBS, I think, isn't it? Is it CBS? Oh, and CBS is lost control. Oh, hold on. Hold on. Let's see, wait, let's see if the robot knows. Hold on a second. What network does the Grammy Awards air on this weekend?
Starting point is 00:11:48 The Grammy Awards are typically broadcast on CBS. That didn't tell us the answer. That's not an answer. stupid robot Yeah That brings me to a three by three Oh everybody here we go For three by three
Starting point is 00:12:06 Are you ready? Experiment by JCP Wallace comparing stories from ABC CBS and NBC The never ending That's right We got the top three news networks We got
Starting point is 00:12:19 Do you have that new guy The new guy on the CBS Docapul Is that his name Docapol Docapole? Docapole So he, so these, I used to do this, if you remember about five, six years ago,
Starting point is 00:12:31 I used to do these every so often. This is the three or three of the openers. Oh, yes. The lively teasing openers. Yes, with nap pops and all kinds of groovy stuff. Yeah, they got the whole thing. Yeah. Well, I got the three networks, openers from yesterday.
Starting point is 00:12:49 It's all the news stories that they think is important. They don't talk about it. I got an Iraq clip that no one's reporting on that came from. NPD. I got a bunch of clips on today's shows. None of them will be in these teasers. No. But I'm going to, I'm going to explain what you're going to hear.
Starting point is 00:13:06 There's, and you can look at the length of each of the teasers. Yeah, I'm looking. NBC is the longest. CBS is the shortest and ABC's right in the middle. Right. And that's, and the quality matches that. What, the longer, the
Starting point is 00:13:22 lower the quality? No, the longer, the better the quality. The higher production values. Okay. The long two minute tease, which is what it is. Yeah. But NBC is well produced. You know, you got NBC Universal.
Starting point is 00:13:35 They got their Hollywood people doing, you know, they get the showbiz, pizzazz. I'm telling you the story in advance. By the way, official term, the showbiz pizzazz. Yes. Showbitt. You don't know what scrub means, but you know pizzazz. Okay. Pazz.
Starting point is 00:13:53 Pazz. Pazz, baby. Yeah. And so I also know the word blotto. Yes. We know, I know that word too. Yeah, you would. So you have that. And then you have CBS, I'm sorry, then ABC, which came in second. It's not as good. It doesn't have as much pizzazz. It doesn't have as much production value. They're kind of, but they do have Disney behind them. So there is some showbiz, pizzazz. Yes, yes.
Starting point is 00:14:21 But, but they're phoning it in. Okay, so who do we start with? They just don't really. Who do we start with? They don't have it. And then last, they're sabotaging this show. ABC? CBS is last.
Starting point is 00:14:38 Oh, okay. No, ABC is faxing it in, but it's still got a little zing. But CBS is there's nothing. They don't have, it's just not even, they're not even trying. Paramount either doesn't know what they're doing or they or the, I think it's the staff of CBS News. I think CBS News organization is sabotaging their shows so they can embarrass. And Barry Weiss. And Barry Weiss, yes.
Starting point is 00:15:08 So I, we'll start with the best one, which is a real teaser, a genuine old-fashioned tease that gets you into the news. Into the mood. In the mood. Yeah. All right. NBC. You're unfolding across the South. Hundreds of thousands without power in dangerously cold weather.
Starting point is 00:15:24 The bar sliding off an icy road, piling up in a ditch, an arena roof collapsing under heavy snow. Power crews hanging from a helicopter to restore electricity and pipes bursting inside the home of a family we... To restore electricity and pipes bursting inside the home of a family we introduced you to last night. How they're surviving. Surviving. Plus, we're tracking a bomb cyclone.
Starting point is 00:15:50 the areas that could see even more snow. The new video just in showing ICU nurse Alex Pretti in an altercation with federal officers days before he was killed. Plus, the two officers involved in the deadly shooting now placed on leave. And the attack on Congresswoman Ilhan Omar, what we just learned was sprayed on her. Also tonight, the man accused of murdering his wife so he could be with the family's au pair testifying in his own defense. You'll see that husband take the stand.
Starting point is 00:16:20 what he told the jury. FBI agents raiding a Georgia election center. What we're learning about the connection to the president's claims about the 2020 election. NBC News exclusive, the runway close call, a southwest jet nearly colliding with a private plane. You'll hear the frantic call inside the control tower that prevented disaster. Growing virus concerns. U.S. health officials monitoring an infectious outbreak overseas deadlier than COVID. Airport screening passengers what we're learning. Wild U-Haul chased thieves taking police on a daring pursuit through L.A. ditching their van and diving right into a getaway car.
Starting point is 00:17:02 And there's good news tonight. Puppies rescued from a raging house fire and the dog finding his forever home with the firefighter that saved him. Nightly news starts right now. Wow. Wow. This is NBC Nightly News with Tom Yamas. We're all be a dog. I mean, they saved me at the end with the puppy story.
Starting point is 00:17:23 That is classic. Could not be any better. It's dynamite. We're all going to die. Airplanes are crashing. Your pipes are bursting. Preti is, it was a horrible man 11 days before. But puppies got saved.
Starting point is 00:17:40 I'm telling you, in America, puppies rule the roost. That's why we have the sad puppy. So we have, puppies are good. So you heard the best. Best of the best. And NBC nails it. I mean, if you're not glued to the set after that, you don't know what you're doing. I'm pissed.
Starting point is 00:18:00 I missed it. I can't believe I didn't watch Tom Yamas. Give me the puppy story. This is great stuff. So Tom Yammas wins the award for Best of the Best. And by the way, the tension music is good. The tension music is dynamite. It's well produced.
Starting point is 00:18:16 This is the way you're, if you're going to do this on network television, that's how you do it right. Yeah, I agree. That's how you do it. Yes. Okay. So now. I feel all jacked up now.
Starting point is 00:18:27 Whoa. Yeah, well, you're not going to feel that way for much longer. Okay. So we're going to go to David Muir and the faxing it. And they have the right idea, but they don't have the, they don't have the energy. David Muir seems like he's ready to quit the business. I mean, the whole thing. He's not like Tom Yamas, who's all jacked up.
Starting point is 00:18:46 And it's like a, it's like a watered down. I don't know. What else do we want to talk about kind of thing? David Muir is too busy primping, looking at his muscles, making sure his t-shirt is tight. Yeah, he's a primper. We know that. Here we go. A Coast Guard cutter on the frozen Hudson River in New York City. Lee Goldberg is watching this new storm. He has the forecast tonight. This evening, the FBI raiding the election office in Fulton County, Georgia.
Starting point is 00:19:13 After President Trump lost in 2020, then asking elections officials in Georgia to find 11,000. 780 votes. What are the FBI agents looking for now? What ABC News has learned tonight? This evening the husband and father accused of having an affair with his opair and then murdering his wife and a man the husband allegedly arranged
Starting point is 00:19:33 to come to the house. What that husband said on the stand today. Tonight the Hall of Fame backlash. Head coach Bill Belichick snubbed on his first football Hall of Fame ballot. Six Super Bowl victories with the Patriots eight in all. What Tom Brady, Patrick Mahomes, LeBron James,
Starting point is 00:19:50 are all saying tonight. And ESPN and what they've learned about the reasoning behind the decision tonight. The high-speed police chase through Los Angeles suspects accused of loading a U-Haul with stolen property. Then another car they were in will have the latest. A town on edge dangling a landslide, leaving a community in danger of falling over a cliff.
Starting point is 00:20:10 News tonight about Bruce Willis, what his wife is now sharing. And America's Strong tonight, take a close look at this snowplow right here, clearing the way on the highway. for an ambulance right behind. What that plow driver did, you have to see this tonight.
Starting point is 00:20:25 Yeah, got to see it, got to watch it. I'm David Muir. I'm hot. From ABC News, World Headquarters in New York. Look at me! This is World News Tonight with David Muir. This must still work. I mean, otherwise they wouldn't be doing it.
Starting point is 00:20:40 It's just like, I mean, we all... There's the enthusiasm. They had the one good story in there. besides, why are they talking about the coach, so what? But the one good story, they did have a picture of this hillside that's collapsing with all these homes right on the edge of falling over the cliff. But no, no, not pops. There was no, I heard a little, little siren.
Starting point is 00:21:02 No, no, no. Well, they did have Bruce Willis in there. So there's your sad puppy. That's like cringy. That's your sad puppy story. That's your sad puppy story. But it's cringy. Do people watch this?
Starting point is 00:21:15 Do people watch this? Does it make sure we feel bad? John, do people watch? They still? Do they still watch these? Oh, yeah. Yeah, there's tens of millions. Oh, my gosh. So, okay, so that was, to compare
Starting point is 00:21:24 to NBC, that stinks. But let's go to the real, the real clinker. This is a piece of crap. It's short. It's only, it's like, it's half the length of the NBC one. And it's, it's boring.
Starting point is 00:21:38 They have, their heart's not in it at all. But I think this is sabotage. They're sabotaging CBS News. Good to be with you. I'm Tony DeCopold. the breaking news right now. Another winter storm on the way, when and where it will hit, and the dangerous cold snap that
Starting point is 00:21:55 just won't quit. Millions under cold weather alerts tonight, wind chills could reach 20 below. Rob Marciano will have it all. Also developing tonight, the attack on Congresswoman Ilhan Omar sprayed by a man with a syringe, what we know about the suspect and the reaction from the White House tonight. Also, President Trump promotes the new so-called Trump. accounts for kids. We're giving them ownership of America's fusion.
Starting point is 00:22:21 No. The U.S. government will kick in the first thousand dollars. Who else can contribute and how much? Kelly O'Grady tonight on what you need to know. I'm not a scientist. I'll move on to Cincinnati. T.A.M. as in team. And the Hall of Fame mystery, outrage
Starting point is 00:22:37 and confusion as former Patriots coach Bill Belichick is snubbed by the NFL Hall of Fame. Someone, anyone, explain it to me. from CBS News headquarters in New York. This is the CBS Evening News with Tony DeCopal. Now, the first thing I'd do, if we were consultants, get rid of that voice at the end. This is a CBS News.
Starting point is 00:23:02 No. I think a sexy female voice at the end would be cool. Anything that rather than that. Why don't they use female voices for that particular intro? Because they're misogynist. There's a number of voiceover women out there. They hate women. have these.
Starting point is 00:23:16 Sorry. They hate women. They hate women. They're Barry Weiss. Yeah. Well, she's running the place. Yeah. But there's a number of female voiceover women out there that have terrific voices.
Starting point is 00:23:27 I mean, they're just fabulous and they're not exploited. Enough. Enough. They're not. And they should be. And they would appreciate to work, believe me. So that ends. That's no puppy story.
Starting point is 00:23:44 there's no good news story. They end on the sour thing about the coach. You notice NBC didn't even put the coach story in there. And even I got the coach story. I'm like, oh, I got sports ball news. Here's something I kind of understand. Yeah, it's easy enough to understand, but it's not like tease-worthy, it seems to me.
Starting point is 00:24:07 I mean, everyone who's a sports fan. No, here's the problem. Anyone who's the sports fans all over this. Well, it's about the prop bets. Yeah, and they're all over it. Everyone who's a sports fan, believe me, including myself, we know everything there is to know about this particular situation. I didn't know anything.
Starting point is 00:24:26 From every perspective already. I didn't. So you have a problem not just with the presentation, but the editorial is below par. Well, that was just the presentation of the tease. Yeah. The fact that they're teasing a story about this coach, about Belichick,
Starting point is 00:24:45 is not, should not be in the tease line. That, I mean, the ones at NBC did, they didn't do it because it's, because it's not teasing, because nobody's going to, oh, what? I've got to hear that. No one's going to, no one's drawn to that story if you're a sports fan, who would be drawn to the story. Because you already know the story. I'm with you.
Starting point is 00:25:06 Yeah, that they could have thrown the snow plow in front of the ambulance in there. That's a good story. There's a bunch of good stuff they could have. And CBS had very little. extra material. It was just lame. Well, local news... The point is that this is what's going on. NBC is going to dominate the situation in the future if this continues. Local news from Fredericksburg. Once we could finally get out of our homes, we could not go to the only supermarket we have
Starting point is 00:25:32 here, H.E.B, because the ceiling was about to collapse. Was bulging down. Oh, yeah. Wow. Really? Yeah. And then, and so now on the text group, You know, this ice storm was not an accident. It was done on purpose. Oh, yeah, for sure. I'm like, okay, for what reason?
Starting point is 00:25:57 Yeah, what's the reason? It's like, so Minneapolis, let's just talk about this for a moment. So everywhere, everybody's talking about, but I was a green beret. And we used these exact same tactics. Fuluzia and we did this in the Maidan. This is not a color revolution. This is what everyone's saying.
Starting point is 00:26:22 No, this is the same group that did Black Lives Matter in Minneapolis, George Floyd. There may be one or two new nonprofits. They're not NGOs. They're not NGOs. Now, there's some nonprofits. They're well funded. It comes from, you know, different government pots, national endowment for democracy is the one who just got refunded, which is, I think, a mistake.
Starting point is 00:26:46 But everyone's talking about color revolution. Yeah, I noticed. It's not a color revolution. You can't do a color revolution in America that easily. It's just not going to happen. It's Minneapolis. Minneapolis has, they've activated people. And, man, they have activated people.
Starting point is 00:27:04 And it's, it's painful to watch. Yeah, I want you to talk about that. But before you veer off of the ice store story, which you just did. I was done. There's a big thaw coming tomorrow in your neck of the woods, I understand. It's going to be like 55 or something. Oh, no, we're going up to 80.
Starting point is 00:27:23 We get our swim trunks ready. Going back into the pool. So is it icy now? No, no. It's already thawing out? It was thawing out Tuesday. We couldn't get down our driveway Tuesday because it's on the back side of the house. So we would have just slid all the way down.
Starting point is 00:27:42 You were frozen in Sunday, Monday, Tuesday. That's it. Three days, which is what I predicted, by the way. Saturday, Sunday, four days, really. Okay, four days. Well, that's a lot. I love my wife. It's easy.
Starting point is 00:27:57 We had a good time. And the dog liked the cold weather, I guess. Oh, this dog loves this. This is like her culture. She, oh, let me go out. Let me go, just jump around. But it wasn't all, it was not all that bad. It was, and, you know, I talked to my buddy, the
Starting point is 00:28:12 sheriff, lieutenant, you know, the former Curville cop with anger management issues. Doesn't like a cop with anger management issues. He's now the lieutenant. Yes, sir. What else do you want? He's the lieutenant. It's sheriff's office.
Starting point is 00:28:28 No, God. You know, because I said, you know, I said it's not that bad. We did have two tractor trailers, jackknife, tip over on 87, which is a real problem for traffic. But no, everything was relatively calm. I was pleasantly surprised. You know, we kept it all together.
Starting point is 00:28:49 And, you know, never lost your power. I never lost power once. Some friends of ours went out for about an hour. You would have if you hadn't bought that Generac. Oh, then it would have been freezing. The Generac saved the day by not letting the power go. But that's also C-Tech. They did a lot of, that's our co-op electric company.
Starting point is 00:29:08 They did a lot of upgrades a couple months ago. So I think they got smart. It's a co-op, of course. It's not like, you know, some government things. This is owned by the people, man. The people demand better service and we got it. So I'm very happy. That was good.
Starting point is 00:29:26 Anything else about the big storm? No, I just wanted to get everyone up to speed. Yeah. But the thing that is just everything now is the government did. Yeah, the government did this. Yeah. This is not on accident. But why?
Starting point is 00:29:39 why did they do this? Well, it's just dead. Because they're messing with you, man. Yeah, they're messing with it. I am getting so old and jaded like you. It's not funny anymore. Like, I can't get it. I think it's funny.
Starting point is 00:29:54 So you can't be getting like me. I can't get into the, into the conspiracies like I used to. I'm just like, no. Oh, yeah, this is true. This is ruined. This is bad. It's ruining the show.
Starting point is 00:30:04 Yeah. It's hurting the show. It has, I genuinely believe it's hurt the show as, just as the bomb cyclones going to hurt donations, which is why I'm going to Oakland. I'll be at the Vialettist Pizzeria. Bring your envelopes.
Starting point is 00:30:18 I'll be bringing Jay's books to give the Violet, girl. Like he said, bride at a Jewish wedding. Stick those envelopes on the back, on his back. Come on, people. Hook him up. Hook him up. Do your best. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:30:29 Exactly. And last night we had dinner with some friends. Like an early dinner, AARP time, you know, 5 o'clock. and at Friedhelm's, man, it's the best. It's great. That's our Bavarian place. I hear the fried catfish is phenomenal. It's just...
Starting point is 00:30:51 Is it? Oh, yes, it is. It's a... Fried catfish is a fabulous dish. I try to cook it every so often when I have enough fry... When I feel like loading up the frying oil, because it makes a mess. It does.
Starting point is 00:31:04 The frying oil is hard to reuse it, and you get a... bunch of grime all over it. It's a messy thing to cook. But catfish is perfect. It's just an amazingly delicious product fried, deep fat fried with batter. Yep. Very good. So, you know, and then it's like, okay, tell me about crisis actors.
Starting point is 00:31:26 I'm like, uh, was that, was that guy a crisis actor? Did he really get killed? I said, yeah, he's really dead. Believe me, he's really dead. yeah, but, you know, he showed up at five. These are people who agitate. And or they get activated to agitate. It happens all the time.
Starting point is 00:31:47 You know, it's like, hey, look, I can't explain the astronauts from the challenger who show up everywhere and you're looking the same with the same name. I don't know what that's about. But crisis actors, I have to withdraw a little bit from that. And, you know, everyone's like, you know, they got 16 million. million dollars from the government. To back you up on this, people who are totally into this kind of thinking do a lot of homework. They spend a lot of time online.
Starting point is 00:32:19 And if there are crisis actors involved, they have documented it. There will be pictures of the, oh, this woman is here, she's here, she's there, she's here. And there's a number of them that have been documented. But if they're not documented, because we know there's enough people out there to do the documentation, then we have to assume they're not crisis actors. No. And also, you know, it's like, there's another Adam Curry out there. And I keep getting emails inviting me to speak at these conferences. What is he known for?
Starting point is 00:32:52 He's known for, uh, for, um, aliens and, uh, zero. I think someone stole my old identity. I think is you. No. And for zero point zero point energy and, and, and, and, you okay. Zero point energy. and these are big conferences too, really big. And like, hey, was good seeing you? And I'm like, I don't know why they're emailing me. I'm not, I can understand Adam McCurry.com. You should just tell them you do the speech for $15,000. $12.
Starting point is 00:33:20 This is my new exit strategy by DeVorec. I'm going to go talk about aliens for $12,000. I'm going to go back and talk about aliens. And they're going to say, you look a little different than when I met you at the other conference. What's with the Tourette's? I didn't notice that the first time around. Someone emailed me, said, do you know that you're actually neurodivergent? Say, yes, is there money in it for me?
Starting point is 00:33:41 Is there some grant I can get for being neurodivergent? No, okay. Then I just, it used to be called a tick. Then it became Tourette's and now it's neurodivergent. I don't need to, I don't need any help. So anyway, what's happening in Minneapolis is not a color revolution. And people, it's just, no, it's not. It is some people who are very, very, very confused about the law, about the restrictions of the First Amendment,
Starting point is 00:34:22 about responsibility of yourself, if you want to film somebody, or if you want to carry a gun. You know, you have to actually be more restrictive of yourself if you're carrying a weapon. legally. There's all kinds of stuff that, you know, it's like people have taken this stupid pill. It's really quite amazing. And everyone's so jacked up about it. It's like, yeah, this is really bad.
Starting point is 00:34:52 But we saw this already. And this is kind of tame compared to BLM. Oh, yeah, it's very tame. BLM was much, much worse. But it's the same. And it was all over the country. Yeah. And that color of it,
Starting point is 00:35:06 revolution didn't work either. And actually, this is, let me see, I have this here. Let me see. Well, it did work for the women who collected all those dough and bought a bunch of property. Oh, well, yes, yes. The BLM ladies.
Starting point is 00:35:22 That's true. That's true. Let me see. I had, where is this? What is this under? Oh, yeah, I've got it here. So two clips I'm going to play. The first one, is, yeah. So do you remember Molly Ringwald, the actress?
Starting point is 00:35:42 Yeah, Molly Ringwald, the redheaded actress. Yeah, so now she wears a do-rag. And, uh, yeah, she's wearing a do rag. She doesn't do this very often. Uh, but I do, and this is a narrative, so I'm just going to lay out the narrative so you can, so you can understand what people are doing. And, you know, we might even discuss, you know, this, we had this great article you when I were reading about how this all started with phones,
Starting point is 00:36:07 particularly with women, really, really has affected women. It goes far beyond phones. I mean, it's algorithms, it's fashion, is all of entertainment. But this is the result of it. I don't spend a lot of time doing this, talking to you like this, unless I'm, I don't know, recommending a foundation or telling you to...
Starting point is 00:36:30 I guess she does a lot of makeup videos. She's selling makeup videos. up now, Molly Ringwall, so unless she's recommending a foundation. Or telling you to get your kids vaccinated against meningitis. But I feel like I can't
Starting point is 00:36:46 stay silent and neither should you. There's something horrible, horrible going on in our country right now. And we have one of the greatest countries had, one of the greatest countries in the world. And I've always been so proud to be an American.
Starting point is 00:37:01 But right now, this is a fascist government. It's not becoming a fascist government. It is a fascist government. And ICE is brutalizing people. And I don't care how you identify if you're a Democrat, if you're a Republican, if you're independent, if you don't like to be political at all, it doesn't matter. You have to look at what kind of country you want to live in. And I don't think that I need to remind you, I'll just give a little history lesson here quick. But if you look at what happened in France where I lived for a few years in my 20s, they were taken over by the Nazis.
Starting point is 00:37:47 They were invaded. They were taking over. And a lot of people, a lot of people collaborated. And then there were people that did not collaborate and were part of the resistance. Eventually they got their country back. and those people who collaborated were found to be criminal. Aha. So here's where the narrative starts.
Starting point is 00:38:09 And I'm going to get back up a little more on this. I don't have clips, but I will tell you that I could have had clip after clip after clip of not anyone of her. I don't know, she's not famous anymore. Or make up the skills. But just a bunch of these ladies on the, screaming at the TikTok, all threatening. Yes.
Starting point is 00:38:36 They're threatening everybody who voted for Trump basically with the same theme. Well, she's saying something a little different. She's saying the collaborators were found guilty. Yeah. This is, no, this is what they're all saying. Okay. Well, so now let's go to my favorite hate listen. Just short, short, short, so I won't torture you too much.
Starting point is 00:38:56 There was a clip I wanted to get from this. Well, here it is. I know this is the clip you want. This is a pivot. Scott and Kara. What I'm suggesting is, and again, I've struggled with this my whole life. The difference between being right and being effective. And we're angry.
Starting point is 00:39:10 And I get it. Protesting is powerful. Promising them that there will be an accountability. And I've said this. I think there should be something equivalent to the Nuremberg trials. I agree. This is all over. And to make it clear that once we're back in power, which we will be, this is going to happen.
Starting point is 00:39:26 And the statute of limitations on murder is never. Nuremberg trials. There you go. Yeah, this guy, by the way, lives in London. Yeah, he does. Most of the time. Here is a Democrat candidate for Ohio Attorney General. Oh, this is the guy? Yeah, Elliot Forehand, here we go.
Starting point is 00:39:52 Yeah, I'm glad, you know, you're taking all the clips I wished I had made. You got to get it up early, man. No, it's not about that. The reason was once I fill my clip list, I stop. You're done. Yes. You're like CBS. Like, man, it's done.
Starting point is 00:40:09 I don't need the puppy story. I don't need the puppy story. I'm more like ABC. Oh, okay. Here we go. Hi. This is Elliot Forehand, candidate for Ohio Attorney General. I want to tell you what I mean when I say that I am going to kill Donald Trump.
Starting point is 00:40:26 I mean I'm going to obtain a conviction. rendered by a jury of his peers at a standard of proof beyond a reasonable doubt based on evidence, presented at a trial conducted in accordance with the requirements of due process, resulting in a sentence duly executed of capital punishment. That is what I mean when I say that I'm going to kill Donald Trump. I'm going to kill him. Yeah. That's borderline, I think, to say that.
Starting point is 00:40:59 I think it's beyond borderline. I think it's illegal. I think they should arrest this guy immediately. He said that what he said is illegal. Well, he qualified it that he was going to. Qualified doesn't mean anything. Oh, I qualified it. Oh, I'm just joking.
Starting point is 00:41:16 Let me tell you what I, let me tell you a scenario that could happen here. And I'll pay anybody to do it. But I'm just joking. No, no. This is you can, that's not an excuse for, there's a statute. about this. You cannot do this. This guy should be arrested by the Secret Service immediately. And killed. Well, I mean, that would be ideally, but no. Hey, I appreciate you, neighbor. So the violent threats against lawmakers is happening more and more. Here's Scott McFarlane to explain.
Starting point is 00:41:51 Police tell CBS News, Congresswoman Ilhan Omar has recently been the victim of a particularly large number of threats. President Trump has fixated on her, blasting her regularly, including initial marks in Iowa. What kind of news reporting in this? Blasting her with a super soaker? I mean, can we use a different, what's the verb, maybe? It's just, it feels. Criticizing, I would think it would be a good one. Which would be more accurate.
Starting point is 00:42:19 Yeah, but no. Because what is blasting? Blasting has, that's the problem, you know, this is what we're supposed to do, is deconstructing. is what we're doing. Blasting has intonate, or it has a lot of double, it's got meanings, other meanings than just, and it's not, it's not journalistic. No, no, that's, thank you, that's my point. But this is CBS Even News, blasting.
Starting point is 00:42:44 President Trump has fixated on her, blasting her regularly, including in these remarks in Iowa, just hours before last night's assault. They have to show that they can love our country. This is tricky what they do, but this is very tricky. So he said something just hours before the assault, which to me is insinuating Trump motivated someone to do something. You're right. Blasting her regularly, including in these remarks in Iowa, just hours before last night's assault. They have to show that they can love our country.
Starting point is 00:43:16 I have to be proud. Blasting her. Not like Ilhan Omar. Trump later claimed. Where's the blast? Where's the blast? Where's the blast? That's a blast.
Starting point is 00:43:27 Parks in Iowa, just hours before last night's assault. They have to show that they can love our country. They have to be proud. Not like Ilhan, Omar. Trump later claimed, without evidence, Omar, without evidence. Conspiracy theory Trump's supporters have since latched onto. What? Did he, let's see what he said?
Starting point is 00:43:47 Michael Sullivan. No, he didn't say it. It's U.S. Capitol Police Chief. We are confident this actually was a criminal act, because there's a lot of conspiracy theories about this being staged. I've received no information that indicates that. The assault on Omar comes amid a growing wave of threats against members of Congress. I don't care who does the attacking or the disrupting.
Starting point is 00:44:08 That's wrong and it's also illegal. The U.S. Capitol Police launched nearly 15,000 threat investigations last year, 5,000 more than the year before, including just days ago when Florida Democrat Maxwell Frost says he was punched in the face while at an event in Utah. And former Georgia, Republican Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Green, the subject of scorn from Trump, says she received a death threat on the day she resigned. Again, insinuating Trump is responsible. Yes, that's clear insinuation. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:44:40 Sharp and increase. And by the stop. It was a clear insinuation when, in fact, Marjorie Taylor Green was always a loose cannon that was attracting these sorts of these sorts of weirdos that would hate on her. And you loved her. With or without Trump being on, even when she was on Trump's side and there were buddies this was going on. And just the fact that we're even doing this breakdown of this news report means that I'll be getting emails. Oh, man. You're a Trump fan boy.
Starting point is 00:45:13 Why don't just kiss his ass more, man? Yeah, you will. And you deserve it. I know. Death threat on the day she resigned. To what do you attribute that, that sharp an increase? tempo and pace of events that evoke strong emotion. I don't know that I've seen anything like it for like 30 years in law enforcement. And Scott, I understand you're following some additional
Starting point is 00:45:35 breaking news tonight out of Georgia. The FBI searching the Fulton County Election Office. What do we know about that? Yeah, local officials in Atlanta say the search is related to the 2020 election results. The county clerk's office has possession of the 2020 ballots and that's where the FBI agents were seen. Tony President Trump continues to make baseless claims about winning Georgia. In 2020. It's very interesting that you catch that. You know, why don't they just say claims? Well, no, that is, that is, the memo went out and it's just all baseless here.
Starting point is 00:46:07 Witness the CNN report of this with some hokey music, of course. So we are learning more details about what is going on down in Fulton County, where we have learned that the FBI is serving a search warrant at the county's election offices. The FBI confirming, this is connected to an ongoing investigation. and a source tells CNN that this is part of an effort by the Justice Department to seize election records and allegations of voter fraud back in the 2020 election. Now, the Atlanta metro area has been a centerpiece of President Trump's baseless allegations that the 2020 election was stolen from him. Another important piece of context here is that in the first Trump administration, when he first started making these claims, his Justice Department then led by Bill Barr. looked into this and didn't find enough evidence to pursue a full-blown investigation. The Justice Department has sued the county to try to get these records.
Starting point is 00:47:03 That litigation is ongoing. So it is notable that now they have gone to a judge and gotten a search warrant to pursue these records. So I know a business guy in Florida who was funded a lot of people looking into Georgia. I think they've got something. I really do. Well, here's what I agree with you. I think it goes this way. They've already done the investigation to a point.
Starting point is 00:47:31 And then somebody, I wish whistleblower, somebody behind the scenes, did you guys ever look at this and this and this? Because this is really what they're doing. They're not doing what you think. Yeah. They did this. Yes. I mean, for example, they have this kind of corruption up in Washington State.
Starting point is 00:47:48 And Mimi's political. So she's gone on to some of it. Mimi, political? What? Yeah, yeah, she is. And so she found how they're rigging their elections is they have, it's all mail in in Washington State. So it's very easily corruptible. And they take teams of people that go to all the sanitariums and old folks' homes and all they just teams and teams.
Starting point is 00:48:13 That's why, oh, the older people are, they vote more. No. Sign here. They're in nursing homes. And a team of people go in there with their back. with ballots and they have them sign them and they pre filled out okay what i should do i'll i'll sign it what is it what is it okay yeah and so they sign off on all these and they they bring in hundreds and thousands and maybe tens of thousands of votes just enough to flip things and there's
Starting point is 00:48:45 something in georgia that took place that's similar to this kind of scam would it which is what it is and it's like the kind of thing I remember hearing about when I was in high school and they were bitching about the South and how the Democrats would go door to door to black people's house and make them signed ballots. And it's very, and then they stuff them in the ballot box.
Starting point is 00:49:07 This has been going on forever. This is corruption. And it has to be rooted out. Yes. I think they're going to, this, they will actually do something. I think that's happening. There was some, I think, Oh, I have another guy.
Starting point is 00:49:22 Let me just say with ICE for a second. Because now, and the prop bets are in, by the way. You can get your prop bet in if the government's going to partially shut down on Saturday. But there's something really stupid with what the Democrats are doing. In fact, Chuck Schumer specifically in the Senate about this shutdown. This is just a report to get us into the mood. After initial hopes of a bipartisan compromise to approve government spending, A partial U.S. government shut down is looking more and more likely.
Starting point is 00:49:55 Democratic senators say they will not approve a budget bill for the Department of Homeland Security after federal agents that it employs fatally shot a second U.S. citizen in Minneapolis over the weekend. The DHS bill is woefully inadequate to rein in the abuses of ICE. I will vote no. Senate Democrats will not provide the votes to proceed to the appropriations bill if the DHS funding bill is included. The DHS spending bill is part of a law. larger package that outlines funding for other government agencies, Republicans will need some democratic support to pass it before existing funding expires on January 31st. Catherine Cortez-Mastow,
Starting point is 00:50:34 the Democratic Senator from Nevada and one of the possible swing voters, said she would not support the legislation without changes to how immigration and customs enforcement or ICE is operated. Meanwhile, Washington Senator Patty Murray, who had been pushing her colleagues to vote for the spending package, reversed her stance, saying federal agents cannot murder people in broad daylight and face zero consequences. She also called for the DHS budget bill to be split off from the larger funding package, in which $64.4 billion is appropriated for homeland security, including $10 billion for ICE. However, even splitting off this segment wouldn't avoid a shutdown for sure. The House,
Starting point is 00:51:16 which is currently on recess, would have to return to pass the funding package if it's changed, and then send the legislation back to the Senate for approval before the January 31st deadline. Okay, so she doesn't get it entirely right in this report. And here's the problem. You know, we have people who work at DHS. And interestingly enough, one of the guys who shot Preddy was Customs and Border Patrol. He wasn't even ICE. But the so-called one big, beautiful bill has a separate, this passed, done,
Starting point is 00:51:49 has a separate appropriation for $75 billion for ICE specifically. This minibus, as they're calling it, even though it's huge. Even if they ripped it up right now, the $75 billion for ice is already in appropriated, etc. The crazy thing is that what this minibus does is they want to, if they would pass it, it would set the annual ICE operating budget at 10 billion. So right now they could take $35 billion, $50 billion, whatever they want. This bill that they now want to stop would actually mandate body cameras. They are in fact trying to stop something that gives them more oversight over ice,
Starting point is 00:52:35 but will never defund ICE. So it's just a political mind game that they're playing. It has nothing to do with ICE at all. It's just all hate Trump. Even the protests. I don't hear anybody talking about immigrants. All I hear is ICE. Ice.
Starting point is 00:52:55 It's all about ICE. And just when you ever hear ICE think Trump, that's it. All these people who are saying they, you know, the Gestapo. It's just, it's all about Trump. They really just hate the guy. It's not even really as much about Trump as it is 2016, Well, that's what I mean. The 20-26 midterms.
Starting point is 00:53:19 Yeah, well, you heard Scott there from Pivot. Once we get back in power and we will, those words should scare you when someone talks like that. Okay, so you mean if you win the midterm elections, if your party wins the midterm elections, he equates that to when we get back in power and we will, we're going to hang you, Nuremberg trials. Who's the crazy person?
Starting point is 00:53:42 He? He's nuts. Yes. that to me is more frightening than anything. But going back to Molly Ringwald, yes. That is so pathetic that that is a person who's got serious issues. She should really be in a facility.
Starting point is 00:54:04 Well, she's selling makeup on Instagram. So, you know, I can understand. And even if you just look at Instagram, There's all these, it's so sad to see people who, I guess they make money as being influencers with lots of followers and, you know, some of them do cooking tips, John, you know them. You know, put some cheese on it, lots of, Tina tried to make something from Instagram. She did. Let me do a little detour. She says, I'm going to try this cottage cheese pizza crust.
Starting point is 00:54:37 Oh, I bet. She says, hmm, didn't turn out the way it looked on Instagram. I said, no, of course. It's cottage cheese. She ate it, though. I'll give her that. I'll give her that. The people who are on Instagram who have, you know, they have their followers for whatever
Starting point is 00:55:01 they do, woodworking, you know, leather stuff, you know, leather, you know, stitching. Yeah, needlework. needlework, they're all being forced. This is your audience capture. They're all being forced, well, you have to take a stand. You got to say something. I'm unfollowing you. And then of course, they take a stand.
Starting point is 00:55:19 Like, yes, this is horrible. I'm against this. And then, you know, it's like people like, I'm not following you for a political opinion. I'm following you for the cottage cheese crust. It's like, no. It's just big no. No, no, no.
Starting point is 00:55:36 Now, on the other hand, this is a possible exit strategy for us. I was quite interested by this, although we don't do video. This is our ever-enduring problem. We really have to do video because there's money in there. There's money in doing video and being an influencer. I caught this on Planet Money on NPR, which is turned into some kind of vocal fry up-talk fest. I don't remember. No, it's terrible.
Starting point is 00:56:05 The show, I can't even watch it anymore. You know, you're not watching it. They listen to it. Yeah. So here's their report. All right. So my indicator of the week is a hundred million dollars. That is how much the Trump administration has set aside to spend on a one year, so-called wartime recruitment strategy to hire more immigration and customs enforcement workers. So this is all according to a document that the Washington Post got a hold of. It says that immigration officials plan to flood the market with millions of dollars worth of social media ads.
Starting point is 00:56:36 and to pay pro-ice social media influencers and other online creators to normalize and humanize careers at ICE through storytelling and lived experiences. Yeah, storytelling. That's a quote. Well, they're already making these, right? I mean, I've seen footage of videographers trailing after agents and then they put together these slick videos and post them on social media. So I think some of it's already happening, right? The Washington Post couldn't confirm whether this strategy has been implemented or how much of this strategy. but it certainly seems to coincide with ads and ad campaigns and social media content that we're saying online.
Starting point is 00:57:13 Apparently, at least $8 million of the $100 million is supposed to be spent on this influencer program. They say that they are particularly interested in veterans, former agents, and pro-ice creators. And like the idea behind recruiting influencers, according to this document, is to build trust through authentic peer-to-peer messaging. So they want to reach people with like a big Gen Zian millennial following and apparently also people who are tactical lifestyle enthusiasts. Woo, that's us. Tactical lifestyle enthusiasts. That's us. It's $100 million they've got for this.
Starting point is 00:57:51 Well, that's $92.92 million. They already spent eight if you listen to the report. Eight's gone. So there's 92 left in the pot. Let's see if we can do it. There are some deliverables. We have to do the right thing. deliverables now we're getting back to the game
Starting point is 00:58:08 I mean this is the kind of language you know like build trust through authentic peer-to-peer messaging this is language that I'm used to hearing from the advertising industry when they talk about working with influencers but how unusual is it for the government to be recruiting influencers in this way I mean this is where you reach people these days right and they do partner with like marketing organization so the Biden administration So after you've made my cottage cheese pizza crust, let me tell you about ice. This is a great place to work.
Starting point is 00:58:43 Also did recruit influencers for its own public hub. I have a meta idea that would actually work and be more profitable. Okay. Which is and gets us off the video. Okay. Middleman. Agents. Oh, agents.
Starting point is 00:59:06 We take the money from the government and dole it out. Trolls, send me an email. Adam McCurry.com. If you've got what it takes to be an influencer, we will hook you up. And we also track down the influencers that are kind of naive about what's going on and that there's free money. Yeah. And we just say, hey, here's the deal. You want to do this?
Starting point is 00:59:30 We'll give you like, you know, 50 grand, right? We'll give you 50 grand right now if you get started. And it would be doling out that. kind of money. You know, most of these guys are on there. They'll take 50, 50 grand's a lot. And so we can be that, we can be that team. We can be the same. We don't
Starting point is 00:59:46 have to change. It's still Korean-Divore-C consulting. Consulting group, yeah. But we are now agents and we're, we have cred. We have enough, you know, it's not like we're slouches. We have cred. So the government would say, well,
Starting point is 01:00:02 these guys know what they're doing. They know what they're talking about. You in particular, And so we could just nail it. We could be the middleman. We'd take a, we'd take a, we had to know, 20% cut. And, but we'll have to take meetings with them. Not necessarily.
Starting point is 01:00:19 With the government. Yeah, you got to do a meeting with the government. Oh, yeah. Well, you can do that. They all, everyone wants to meet Adam Curry. What's your hair looking? Oh, what happened to your hair? Oh, you're not going to grow hair like in.
Starting point is 01:00:32 Oh, well, it's always good meeting anyway. Yeah, you're a good meeting. autograph for my mom who used to watch you? Yeah, a couple autographs for the guy's mom. I get that all the time. My mom loves you. I'm like, could you load up the 9mm. If there's techies involved, I can do that.
Starting point is 01:00:50 But for the normal, you know, old MTV folks with moms that need autographs, you'd be right. Perfect. Yeah, rock and roll, baby. And if you're thinking about the millions that are involved in this deal, you would do it. And we can still do the show. It's great. Once a week instead of twice. Yeah, perfect.
Starting point is 01:01:10 We can still do the show. But anyway. We can use the show. We can tell them this. And I'm going to give this out in advance so people will recognize it when it actually happens. We will plug, just casually plug the people that are getting the money through us from the government. There are podcasts. Hey, you know, hey, did you see Jenny Jones's podcast the other day?
Starting point is 01:01:35 Well, it's not for podcast. The thing is they're not asking for podcasts. She's like, not a podcast. She's an influence. You know, I have to say she is, there are influences out there, but she's one of the best. And they'll get tons of traffic and likes. Whether they get traffic or not, it's part of the deal. We don't care about the numbers at the end of the day.
Starting point is 01:01:56 You use a term. I'm going to say it. Yes, yes. But we don't care about the numbers. We care about the deal. Anyway. Anyway, I find it all incredibly. sad what's taking place.
Starting point is 01:02:07 The whole thing is messed up. It's spinning people up. They're all focused on one thing. And again, people are missing the greatest. Molly Ringwald is this dumb woman. I'm not talking about Molly. I'm talking about our own people. I'm irked by her conversation because she was so dead serious about this.
Starting point is 01:02:26 Well, I mean, Bruce Springsteen kind of irked me, to be honest about it. That's the one that got me. But, you know, people are really. the blatant communist. Yes. But with a lot of money. I'll just say, this is not a color revolution.
Starting point is 01:02:44 The country is not falling when it's not over. It's a political operation done by professionals. There's no doubt about it. But it seems pretty contained to Minneapolis. I just haven't seen anything spark up anywhere else. So I don't know if this doesn't seem to be good network if they want to do because you have to do it in multiple cities at the same time you've got to well they have to have cooperation with local police yes well they're not going to have a bunch of wimpy
Starting point is 01:03:16 local police though the police chief who's not even not going to get that i'm not going to get that you're not going to get it you got it in minnesota that's about it right but might go ahead get it in l a yeah i could do this yeah but l but l a but l a well they tried that sorry l a la is already over it's past stands. Yeah, it's where Bruce Springsteen lives. There you go. There you go. Let me see if I had anything else.
Starting point is 01:03:42 You know, I guess on the last show we were talking about how this unfortunate guy, Freddie, that he was carrying a concealed weapon legally. And I'm like, okay, where's everyone now about guns and gun control? Yes, yes. Well, the view came up with it. If we have to endure conversations about guns after every school shooting and kids being shot and how we need good people with guns, well, Alex Preti was a good guy with a gun, and we see how that turned out for him. But I think if one more person talks about the gun and not having the right, it's going to really piss me off because there was no movement after any school shooting. There are a lot of people like myself that believe in the Second Amendment, responsible gun ownership.
Starting point is 01:04:32 every state. Right now, we have everything from Idaho who has the weakest guns. You could just kind of walk in and they'll give you one. That's a joke. And California has the strongest laws. I'd like to see everyone get on board with more reasonable, responsible gun laws. This is the time. If we're going to now throw it all out the window on one second amendment right because it doesn't suit the narrative, let's have real conversation about responsible gun ownership. Because people seem open to it now. I don't know.
Starting point is 01:05:01 No, you don't. Is Sarah Haynes the token conservative on the show? No, she's not actually. The token conservative is the one that's sitting next to Whoopie, as I recall. Oh. The blonde. Okay. No, Sarah Haynes is a, is, you used to work for the Trump administration as a people in the
Starting point is 01:05:19 PR and the press. Oh, well, there you go. There you go. And she turned on Trump. Defected, yes. And so she became a conservative that hates Trump. Yes. But she also, she does.
Starting point is 01:05:30 But I think underneath. it all. She's not as nutty as the rest of them. Not yet. So you can What? Not yet. Not yet. They'll grind her down. But she, because I can see her bristle once in a while. But she's not the token
Starting point is 01:05:47 technically. I think it's that blonde. I can't even remember her name. She never speaks up. Oh, well. Okay. Well, I got to ask Adam if you want to change topics. Oh, yes. Because it came up. The new virus, the killer virus. that NBC is promoting. Hold on.
Starting point is 01:06:06 I completely was not ready for it. Here we go. All right. You have a question, I guess? It's kind of in the clip. This is the discussion of the new virus that is just going nuts. Health. And this is the one they're talking about on,
Starting point is 01:06:29 that was teased on the NBC teaser. Oh, yeah. And this is, I'm going to play just at the beginning of the clip and then I have the question for you and then we can play the clip hole. Okay. Health officials in the U.S. tonight are. Oh, wait a minute. Which one of my, the, the one that doesn't say answer. Well, they're both 57 seconds. Okay, they're different.
Starting point is 01:06:52 I can see it. They're different. Health officials in the U.S. tonight are monitoring a deadly virus that is spreading overseas, spreading overseas. airports in the Southeast Asia are now heightening their airport screenings. Ralph Sanchez is following this from London for us. And Ralph, what more do we know? So, Tom, airports across the region are stepping up their screening for what's known as the NEPA virus. This is a far more deadly virus than COVID.
Starting point is 01:07:16 It has a fatality rate of between 40 and 75 percent, according to the World Health Organization. Now, it's usually carried by fruit bats and human-to-human transmission seems to be rare. but there is no vaccine at this point, which is why these two cases in India are being taken so seriously. The Indian Ministry of Health says it's been doing contact tracing and it believes the virus is contained. And the CDC says it is monitoring the situation and it stands ready to assist if needed. Tom. Keeping a close eye on that one. All right, Raf, we thank you.
Starting point is 01:07:51 When we return. Okay, so that I screwed that up. Hold on. I told you you you screwed this up. I told you it was too long. Yeah, it screwed it up. Well, let me do the jingle. Oh, really won't.
Starting point is 01:08:03 I don't know, but here we go. Ask Adam. Answer the question. Well, you heard the answer in there, but I'm going to ask anyway. What is? It's spreading. It's spreading. You know, this horrible NEPA virus is spreading.
Starting point is 01:08:17 How many cases, you know, it was the question. Two people in India. Two people in India. So how is that spreading? It's spreading fear. It is spreading. fear through your news media. That's what they do.
Starting point is 01:08:31 That's what they're paid to do and they love it. It's good. I think what they're trying to do here is they're trying to keep it in mind that's a pandemic around the corner. You know, that last pandemic, we have to remember that this COVID pandemic, which is dubious, whether it was a genuine one or not, it really was on the heels of the 1917 Spanish flu pandemic, which is the only real pandemic we've. we've had, that was a hundred years ago.
Starting point is 01:09:01 So every hundred years, we have something that, that is a real pandemic. Yeah. Assuming it COVID was. And so we're not going to see another one for a hundred years. I mean, who are we kidding here with this pandemic, pandemic, pandemic that could happen any minute? Well, they're not kidding you. That's for sure. Oh.
Starting point is 01:09:23 Yeah, but, but you, we played the whole, um, we played the teasers. This is what they do. That's all that they have. It's just fear, fear, fear, fear, fear. It's make it all fear. It's just fear. That's the whole idea.
Starting point is 01:09:39 And to a degree, it works. On all kinds of people. This is what I'm trying to tell you. It's like I hear people. I'm trying to tell you, man. Keep trying to tell me that, Adam. You never know. I might get through eventually.
Starting point is 01:09:53 You might, eventually. No, what I'm. Okay. So let's go to Florida and listen to a city council having a meeting whether they're discussing some sort of on Florida local access. This is the Anita Dick clip. Hold on. Oh, okay. Key Florida station of counties, waves in opposition.
Starting point is 01:10:16 Pamela, Birch Fort, Florida State Conference of NAACP branches, waves in opposition. Anita Dick is an opponent. Waves in opposition. Holden Hiscock is also an opponent. Waves in opposition. Jimmy, only Jimmy. Florida. How come those people never donate to our show?
Starting point is 01:10:42 Holden Hiscock. How, we're all 15 years old in America. It's great. It was unfortunate I didn't do the clip to it. If you saw it visually. No, no. You got to, you got to. You got a clip of the day.
Starting point is 01:10:55 That was good. Oh, thank you. It's about time. So when he says Anita Dick, there's actually a long pause, and he looks up and gives a dirty look at everybody around him and then goes back to reading. And then he says the Hitchcock joke. Yeah. Holden Hitchcock. Let's listen again.
Starting point is 01:11:15 Pamela, Birch Fort, Florida State Conference of NAACP branches, waves in opposition. Anita Dick is an opponent. Waves in opposition. Holden Hiscock is also an opponent. God. Waves in opposition. No. Jimmy, only Jimmy.
Starting point is 01:11:33 Florida. I'm sure he had a last name, but you decided not to use it. Jimmy. Only Jimmy. Oh, man, Holden Hiscock. That is good. It's good. It's good.
Starting point is 01:11:47 That's the kind of, that's who America used to be. No, no, no. Now we're all out there. 16 degrees. Moting and groaning about fascism. Yeah. Yeah. Well, I just want to thank everybody.
Starting point is 01:12:03 And it is everybody who wrote to us to say, Hey, man, exploding trees are real. And so I concede. Yes, they're not exploding, of course. But yes, I guess bark does. burst from time to time, but everyone had an opinion on this and was all universal. Yes. Yes, trees explode.
Starting point is 01:12:32 You may have seen the videos appearing to show trees exploding under the constraints of the cold. Yep, and I've seen this one as well. But what is crackually happening here? But generally what you're going to get is wood separating, creating the frost crack. It's not really going to explode like people are saying. The appropriately named Zachary Froster is a certified. He also runs his own tree care business. That's my name, Zachary Froster, in Muskegon County.
Starting point is 01:13:01 What you got is the wood on the outside is getting colder than the inside. It's creating a bunch of pressure on the inside, and that tree has to release that pressure, which creates the crack in the wood. He showed us one tree in his backyard that has slowly opened up over the years. He says the separation does make a sound, but it's not the kind of explosion you may have seen online. No, it'll make a gunshot sound when it cracks. sound, you'll hear it. All right.
Starting point is 01:13:26 Okay. We believe you. It's all true. Although some of those videos were definitely AI. But. Yeah, that's what you do. Yeah. Have you seen the latest Amelia video?
Starting point is 01:13:39 No, I have not. Is it good? You know, they're, now they're doing real short things. She's in a boxing ring with Starmer and she just beats the crap out of him. Is he wearing a bikini? No, he's wearing patron. She looks like a boxer. Okay.
Starting point is 01:13:53 That would have been funnier. Yeah. So we got the latest update from the, we got the bulletin from the atomic scientists. This happens, I think it is every year. We don't catch it every year, but we have been tracking this probably almost every year for the 18 plus years in the existence of this show. And it is now even worse than ever. Thank you for joining us today. My name is Alexandra Bell, and I am the president and CEO of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.
Starting point is 01:14:23 It is the determination of the bulletins' Science and Security Board that humanity has not made sufficient progress on the existential risks that endanger us all. We thus move the clock forward. The doomsday clock is a tool for communicating how close we are to destroying the world with technologies of our own making. The risks we face from nuclear weapons, climate change, and disruptive technologies are all growing. Every second counts, and we are running out of time. It is a hard truth, but this is our reality.
Starting point is 01:14:58 It is now 85 seconds to midnight. This is the closest the world has ever been to midnight. I am a robot. 85 seconds. But that's, isn't that a minute and 15 seconds? Why does she say 85 seconds? I thought that was kind of bizarre. Because you say it's two minutes before midnight.
Starting point is 01:15:22 Is it a minute and 25 seconds? It's not 15. It's 85. So it's, yes, a minute 25. I'm sorry. It's like they're already, this is already a thing that doesn't work anymore. The doomsday clock was, I think,
Starting point is 01:15:40 a big thing in the 70s maybe. Yeah, 70s. The same thing of the population bomb. Yeah. And now it's like, oh, it's 85 seconds to midnight. The clock is ticking. We have not done enough. Well, they're trying to do it in Los Angeles.
Starting point is 01:15:54 They're trying to save humanity. Access is easy and social media users can get sucked in for hours scrolling. But some families say it could turn deadly. In this case, nearly suicide. These companies have been orchestrating an addiction crisis in our country and actually the world. Mark Lanier says big tech companies deliberately built their platforms to addict users. At the center of this case is now 19 years old. She's identified in court documents as KGM. M, and she's suing some of the biggest tech companies, including META, the parent companies of
Starting point is 01:16:30 Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube. She alleges these popular platforms were harming her mental health and contributing to depression, anxiety, and body image issues. Her attorney says features like infinite scrolling on a play, constant notifications and recommended algorithms kept her hooked for nearly a decade. This is the first time these kind of claims will be decided by a jury. Legal experts say the case is being compared to. to the early tobacco lawsuits of the 90s, raising the question of whether tech companies knew their
Starting point is 01:17:01 product could be harmful and failed to act. The company recognized that in a sense, they were cigarettes for the eyes. What? The company strongly denied yelling. I love the cigarettes for the eyes. Wasn't it, didn't Dave Letterman have some, Howard Stern have a guy and who could blow smoke out of his eyes? Remember that?
Starting point is 01:17:22 Yes, there are people that can do stuff like that. Who was the, I think it's, I think it was, who's the magician out of Texas who's, magician. Magician. Oh, Bradshawwood. Copperfield. Brian Brushwood. I think Brian Brushwood can run a, I don't, can run a.
Starting point is 01:17:43 Who are you? Hey, man, I'm the Texas comedian who had a magician who had a vasectomy. All right. According to the no agenda. He can run a, well, but which brings me before I, he could run. Let me finish this. Dental floss through his eyeball. Yeah, that's nice.
Starting point is 01:17:59 The company recognized that in a sense they were cigarettes for the eyes. The companies strongly deny the allegations arguing there's no clinical diagnosis for social media addiction. Not yet. Adding the apps have safety features built in for teens. Representatives of these media giants are also relying on Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which generally shields platforms from liability. Either way, this trial could shape how social media. platforms are designed and how children use them.
Starting point is 01:18:29 This case is not ultimately about money. This case is about responsibility. Of course it is. It's not about money. What's the point? I think the poison pill they're going to use if they ever get anywhere with this is going to be what we talked about on the last show, moral injury. That's now, that's in the DSM now.
Starting point is 01:18:48 It is a mental condition. Maybe the whole thing was a scheme. It wouldn't surprise me. Set it up as moral injury. I have moral injury. And you don't have to, you can be anywhere on any spectrum to get morally. I get moral injury just listening to you. I'm going to file a lawsuit.
Starting point is 01:19:03 Yeah, you do. And I take full responsibility. Yeah. Well, you heard it here first. That'll be $10 million for the moral injury I suffered at your hands. Yeah, well, I'm going to counter sue. Okay. Meanwhile, although for some reason not really the top of the news, it wasn't, I don't think
Starting point is 01:19:22 it was any of the three by threes. you know, the new owners of TikTok have taken over. I'm not even quite sure who's actually managing it. We only know about the shareholders. I'm not, do you have any idea who's running it? There was some guy named, and he's, I can't remember his name, but there is a person, I think, for Wente's, I think, is the one who brought him up because he's Jewish, of course.
Starting point is 01:19:49 Oh, yeah. Well, that's Ellison. No, everyone says it's Ellison, Ellison. Ellison, Ellison, Ellison is, it's no, Ellison is, yeah, but the guy running TikTok, there's a CEO. Oh. Well, it's Mossad. So Mossad is running TikTok.
Starting point is 01:20:05 And that would be right. That's exactly. And they suck at it. TikTok's new American owner is apologizing to thousands of users after reported issues with the video sharing app. Over the weekend, there were more than 600,000 reports of glitches. The companies said the issues were because of a power outage at a U.S. data center that the company uses. Content creators are also noticing bugs, slower load times, and zero views on videos.
Starting point is 01:20:30 The company says it will be back to full capacity soon. And that's the outrage. I have no views. Yeah. That's the outrage. You're right. Oh, yeah. The previous owners would just, oh, you got a million views. They put phony numbers up. Believe me. Make everybody feel good. That's, that's a little trick that they, you know, that should be employed. Yeah. Oh, yeah, you're really popular. It's too. great. Yeah. And they just, they didn't get that part. I want to do an aside of, because I mentioned Brian Brushwood and you went on and on about
Starting point is 01:21:03 the vasectomy. Yes. Which is personal. I don't think we should be discussing it. You brought it up. But it, but it was brought up at the dinner table, not Brian Brushwood, but it was brought up at the dinner table by J.C. Because, you know, he's at the ages, he's in the 30s, I guess. And he's, but he's noticing, he says that he knows.
Starting point is 01:21:23 people that have had vasectomies and they immediately lose their sense of humor. Hmm. All that? Yeah. I just thought I'd throw that out there because it's one of the elements because my thing it was they all end up looking like old lesbians, but which is, you know, bad enough. But losing your sense of humor can't be good. Well, we have producers out there who have who have had vasectomies.
Starting point is 01:21:49 Or maybe. Yeah. If we start getting notes from them saying, That's not funny. Then we know. Then we know the answer. All caps. So there was a big rumor going around in Europe.
Starting point is 01:22:04 You know, Europe has done all these, the EU, I should say, has done this big deal with India. Actually, let me just play that clip for a second because it does have to do with this. Here we go. Big deal. India and the EU began talking about a trade deal nearly 20 years ago. Now they say they have one. Prime Minister, this English friend, we did it. We did it.
Starting point is 01:22:26 We delivered the mother of all deals. We are creating a market of 2 billion people, and this is the tale of two giants. Giants. The world's second and fourth largest economies. Said the lady who's 4'9. Two giants who choose partnership in a true win-win fashion. The Indian Prime Minister sees the deal as a new blueprint for shared prosperity in an increasingly uncertain world. We are seeing a lot of turmoil today in the global order.
Starting point is 01:22:57 At such a time, the partnership between India and the European Union will strengthen stability in international systems. India is one of the world's largest textile exporters, with around one-sixth of its annual product heading to the EU, worth more than $7 billion each year. Annual trade between India and the EU represents more than $214 billion. dollars. Many European exports are in the form of chemicals, machinery and pharmaceuticals. Tariffs on all will be radically reduced within the next 10 years.
Starting point is 01:23:30 But those on cars will drop the most down to as little as 10% for an annual limit of around 250,000 vehicles. Germany's motor manufacturers say this represents a competitive boost for them. Our ministers say it's a great opportunity for growth. So the big thing, yeah, whatever. The big thing is a hundred thousand tech workers will be allowed to come into the EU now. A hundred thousand Indian tech workers, which is, I mean. Which is a nightmare. It is.
Starting point is 01:24:08 It's a bad idea. You know, we've gone through that. We're still struggling with it in America. If you look at all these scam companies that they have, they got a thousand Indian guys and, you know, there's all these immigration paper schemes they do so they can stay longer. And as long as they, then they have a company who's vouching for them.
Starting point is 01:24:29 The whole thing is messed up. And I have to say, they're very racist, very. They don't want to hire white men, women, even lower class Indians. They just hate it. No, no, they have to be in the right cast. Yeah, that has to be in the right cast. So this immediately launched, although this is the debunk from Euro News, but this is how it's playing out. Well, we're going to have a competitor to X. It'll be all European. It's going to be great.
Starting point is 01:24:57 Claims are spreading online like wildfire that the European Union is setting up its own social media platform to rival X. These posts have spread primarily on X itself, some with thousands of views and say that taxpayers' money will be used to set up W as an alternative. to Elon Musk's platform. Some posts describe it as a state-run censorship platform that has received funding from the European Executive. But these claims are misleading. A European Commission spokesperson told the cube that the EU is not launching, funding or operating any social media platform.
Starting point is 01:25:31 There is no EU-backed project called W. So what then is W? According to its CEO, Anna Zaita, is a privately owned social media startup, incorporated in Sweden, funded by private investors mainly from the Nordics. W will be hosted on European servers, limit ownership to European investors and operate under the DSA. False claims about EU involvement spread after a group of 54 MEPs urged European Commission President
Starting point is 01:25:59 Ursula von der Leyen to build European social media and back alternatives to the main platforms. This was in the wake of multiple scandals involving Elon Musk's X, including pornographic material and the amplification of false conspiracy. The letter which... Yeah, that's a typical Euro News report. I haven't seen any porn on Twitter ever. And that's also... I mean, I'm sure it's there.
Starting point is 01:26:22 But I can't find it. I've been looking. If you search, you don't find. I'm looking. I don't see anything. You can't find it when you're looking. Elon Musk. Ex, including pornographic material and the amplification of false conspiracies.
Starting point is 01:26:36 The letter, which is in no way binding, has no connection to W, which is not an EU initiative. A recent European Parliament resolution calls for more technological sovereignty in areas like cloud computing and AI, but it doesn't propose creating a new EU social media platform. W plans are gradual rolling out this year, using passport and selfie verification to check the identities of its users. So here's the thing. They've got all this heat, all this talk about them. I can't find it. I can't find W.
Starting point is 01:27:08 W.com, W.com, W. I think they're going to do a social network. Look up blue curry. Blue curry as in, you know, the spicy dish. Blue curry? I'm just kidding. You don't have to look it up. You know, there is a, there are a blue curry, yes.
Starting point is 01:27:27 A Bahamian artist living and working in London. So, you know, the things that are wrong with this is like you can do. You don't need investors. You can use Mastodon. You can use Blue Cry. And there's all these different alternatives. The European Union, people need to stand up to these nuts. This really is.
Starting point is 01:27:54 Yeah, talk about fascist. Yes. Yes. Well, listen to this. This is from the UK, GB News. I'm saying it so you know it's slanted. But this takes it. Good evening.
Starting point is 01:28:06 A convicted terrorist is standing for us. election in Birmingham. Shahid Bhatt was convicted in Yemen in 1999 for conspiring to bond the British consulate in Yemen, an Anglican church and a hotel. Now, he claims to have been wrongly convicted, saying that the charges were not terrorism-related and he was forced into signing a confession. He was reported in links to an armed Islamist jihadi group of radicals who kidnapped 16 Westerners in 1998. They were accused during the criminal proceedings on being sent to Yemen by this guy. He is the hook-handed hate cleric, the former preacher of London's Finnsbury Park Mosque, who was found guilty of 11 charges of terrorism and kidnapping in a Manhattan court.
Starting point is 01:28:55 He's currently being sentenced to two life sentences, plus 100 years with no possibility of parole in America. In the early 1990, Shahid, who is standing for election in Birmingham's Spark Hill Ward, apparently travelled to Bosnia as an aid worker and then just stayed and joined the Foreign Fighters Brigade of the Bosnian Army. Before that, he had been jailed in Birmingham for violence and was in trouble regularly through the 1980s, linked to his role in the notorious Lynx gang. According to reports in the Birmingham Mail, he has openly encouraged the city's Muslim youth to, quote, work out at the gym and learn to fight in readiness for potential attacks and urge Muslims
Starting point is 01:29:40 to stand together and hold their ground against people of other faiths who he describes as disbelievers. Yeah, well, there's G.B. News freaking everybody out in the UK. Yeah, they're men of fighting age and they're training in the gym. They're going to the gym and they're going to beat you up. Wsocial.com.E.U. Well, that's... You found it. Well, the troll room found it for me. That's snappy. Trust your feed.
Starting point is 01:30:09 Wait, w.soc. No, no. No, W-social. W-Social. Yeah. Dot EU. Yes. I would have done W.
Starting point is 01:30:20 dot EU if it was available. Well, they probably can't get w. You'd want you to look, once you just put that in there, see what do you come up with? W. So listen to this. Trust your feed. We believe in the need for a global trusted, social media platform owned, run, and hosted in Europe.
Starting point is 01:30:38 W is built on verified human users. Transparency, privacy, and free speech, like free beer. We want to build W together with you. How is that going to work in the UK? Beta access will be rolled out gradually starting in March 2026. You have to be a beta? Yes, for betas only. Or as they say, beta.
Starting point is 01:30:59 Beta, yeah. Yeah, well, I signed up. I did not have a, uh, confirmation email, but I signed up. But it's global. It's not just for the EU, it's global. Global. Yeah, it's global. I have one
Starting point is 01:31:16 unreported story that nobody's reporting on in any of the mainstream. And I thought I'd at least get it out of the way early. Okay. And it's under underreported. It's where you'd expect it to be. And in another development, the United States is apparently keeping a close eye on the upcoming
Starting point is 01:31:33 elections in Iraq. President Trump posted on truth social that if former Iraqi prime minister Nuri al-Maliki is elected, then the U.S. will, quote, no longer help Iraq. Trump added that under al-Maliki's former leadership, the country, quote, descended into poverty and total chaos. Al-Maliki, who was recently nominated by the country's dominant political party, responded by saying, quote, we reject the blatant American interference in Iraq's internal affairs and consider it a violation of its sovereignty. Jason Perry in TD News. Hmm. That got a little bit of coverage, but yeah, of course, not.
Starting point is 01:32:15 Well, you heard about it? Okay. We got to have the Zapruder film running over and over again on the quad screen. But that said, all of a sudden, and this just happened without, I didn't get a notification. Iran opened up. The Internet is reconnected. everything's back to normal. CNN is on the scene doing man on the street and hilarious results
Starting point is 01:32:38 because it's exactly what we've always heard from our Iranians. Iran's leadership is sending a very strong and defiant message to the United States. And specifically, of course, to the Trump administration. You can see it here on this gigantic poster on Revolution Square in central Tehran. The message on this massive poster is, if you sow the wind, you will reap the whirlwind, obviously meaning if the United States attacks Iran, Iran will retaliate in a massive way, which could of course lead to a major military confrontation between the United States and Iran.
Starting point is 01:33:14 And that's also something that's on the minds of many of the people that we've been speaking to here as well. I'm not sure what to say. I think they're all collaborating with one another against the interest of the Iranian people. I don't think Trump dares to attack. He's more bluffing. All this, of course, comes as President Trump weighs his options on what to do next. The U.S. has pulled together a substantial military force here in this region. But the Iranians also say they've replenished their stockpiles of ballistic missiles
Starting point is 01:33:46 and are ready to hit back hard any time. Now, of course, all this comes in the wake of those large protests that happened here in Iran in the early part of January. and when you're out on the streets here, you can see that there are people who are still traumatized by what happened then. There were lots of people out there in the streets when I had to leave home.
Starting point is 01:34:07 I don't know what to say, but the situation was very bad. Now that the internet connection is restored, we only now know that so many were killed. So we've got the latest, sorry for the audio, we've got the lady on the street saying, I think they're all just colluding with each other, the Americans and the Iranian leadership,
Starting point is 01:34:25 which is what we've... Yeah, I sure. I think too. I'm, consistently. But I'm, I'm just kind of missing the, you know,
Starting point is 01:34:33 the videos, the horrible video, like real videos, not the ones that were from Egypt from five years ago or whatever. You know, the reports are 30, 40,000 people slaughtered.
Starting point is 01:34:47 How come we're not seeing that video? Yeah, where's our videos? Everyone's got a phone cam. So, everyone. The whole thing is, is very suss, as the kids would say. Suss.
Starting point is 01:34:59 What? Yes, it's suss. As in suspect. Suss. Oh, suspect. Yes, suss. It's hard to say the whole word. Here we have, well, that's something.
Starting point is 01:35:07 As the kids say, I qualified it. Here's the France 24 report about the Armada. With anti-U.S. messaging on billboards and in headlines on Iranian newspapers, tensions are simmering amid threats of a U.S. attack on Iran. On Wednesday, President Donald Trump again renewed. his warnings, referring to a U.S. naval strike group that is now in Middle East waters. Trump said the fleet was larger than one sent to Venezuela before the kidnapping of that country's president. He called on Iran to negotiate a, quote, fair and equitable deal,
Starting point is 01:35:41 mentioning no nuclear weapons. Trump suggested that if there was no response, the next attack would be far worse than last year's U.S. strikes on Iran under Operation Midnight Hammer. The Iranian mission to the United Nations hit out at the three. threat on social media, saying Iran stands ready for dialogue based on mutual respect and interests, but if pushed, it will defend itself and respond like never before. Speaking at the UN later, China warned against what it called military adventurism in Iran. Earlier this month, Trump pulled back from threats of military action over Tehran's deadly crackdown against anti-government demonstrations, claiming the regime had reversed a decision to hang
Starting point is 01:36:23 hundreds of protesters and amid pleas from Gulf nations to de-escalate. Last week, though, Washington said it was sending a massive fleet to the region just in case. Analysts say U.S. options include strikes on military facilities or targeted hits against the leadership under Ayatollah Ali-Hamenei in a full-scale bid to bring down the regime. Meanwhile, in Europe, German Chancellor Friedrich Mertz said Wednesday that the Iranian government's days were numbered. The EU is expected to sign off on a first volley of sanctions over the deadly crackdown this Thursday. There are also discussions to add Iran's revolutionary guards to the bloc's terrorist list.
Starting point is 01:37:04 So when the president says, or when the news says, they're sending a giant fleet, an armada to the region. So where is that? The Gulf of Oman? The Persian Gulf? Qatar? I'm thinking the same thing. Where is this fleet? Where's it going to be Arabian Sea?
Starting point is 01:37:27 It's going to be sitting out there. You know, Iran. I mean, yeah, they have... Does anybody identified exactly where it's going to be positioned? I haven't heard that. We don't even know that there's a fleet being moved at all. No. And so that kind of comes back to the lady on the street.
Starting point is 01:37:44 And people who we know have said this consistently, no, America and the Iranian- leadership. They do this all the time. They're doing stuff together. Yeah, that's the, that would be the cafe chat. Yes. In the, in most of the Middle East. I'm just like, where, where are they sending this? Where are, you know, what's that water off of Baku, Baku, Azerbaijan. I'm thinking where that, where the gate is. That's the Caspian Sea. The Caspian Sea. Well, you can't get to the Caspian Sea. Where the gate, where's that gate? There's a starry gate going. The, the Gulf of Aden.
Starting point is 01:38:22 Yeah. It's supposed to be. You know what comes out of that? Yeah, fish. Yes. When the porthole opens up, that's when the fish. Yeah, fish. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:38:32 To feed us. But even then, it's like, okay, I guess. Yes. Well, we have Navy boys and girls. Let us know. Are you underway? Are you full steam underway? No, they probably can't tell us.
Starting point is 01:38:46 Yes, they can. Yes, they can. Yes, they can't. They know what they can do and what they can't. So I've been thinking. about the Chinese military guys. I think that... Who's they?
Starting point is 01:38:59 The Chinese military guys who were kicked out by Xi? You said they're thinking about. I've been thinking. I said, well, I meant to say... Oh, you're thinking. I know. It's dangerous. I'm thinking. I think that there might have been a coup. I think there was a coup. I think there was a coup afoot. Where? In China. Oh, you mean in China? That's why they got rid of all this gym.
Starting point is 01:39:22 generals out of the blue. Yes. These were top guys. A coup of foot. Yes. I'm, that's, I never thought of that, but I, you might be right. Why else would they do that? And it would be the military who'd pull the coup. Yeah. Because that's what they do in these. Top guys. Top guys, too. And they're top guys. I got a minute long report. Just weeks after holding war games that encircled Taiwan, which alarmed the island's government, China announced it's investigating its most senior uniformed military officer. General Zhang Jiao, second in command of China's military behind President Xi Jinping, along with Lu Zheng Li, another general, are suspected of serious violations of discipline and law.
Starting point is 01:40:02 The University of Toronto's Lynette Ong says, following the recent dismissal of other generals, the probes could be about loyalty. I think President Xi is trying to consolidate power. Zhang is one of the few Chinese officers with combat experience, and his father marched with Mao Zedong, making him part of an end. elite hardcore. A former ambassador to China says it appears Zhang always saw himself as equal to Xi who holds more power than even Chairman Mao did. It shows that Xi is not as powerful as people may take. Taiwan's defense minister says the country is closely monitoring the changes in China's military. China views Taiwan as a breakaway province and Xi previously pledged reunification and has not ruled out using the military to achieve it. I think they're just throwing the
Starting point is 01:40:51 Taiwan thing in just for effect. But it just feels like... Yeah, the Taiwan would be a distraction to keep you... Oh, yeah, Taiwan, Taiwan, instead of thinking what's really going on, which was an attempted or a suspected or a plot. Yeah. Feels...
Starting point is 01:41:06 That he got wind up because there's always, you know, you got too many people and, you know, got to keep it to three or four guys max and hope that none of them are... Yes. Yeah. Not easy, not easy. Especially with a guy like she,
Starting point is 01:41:20 it was just a complete, he's kind of paranoid. He gets rid of people real fast. Yeah. But I can see being the second in command and this guy who's never going to die, who took to, who changed the rules and said, no, I'm going to be the premier forever. Mm-hmm. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:41:37 Irksome. I just felt, if we look at Arc, you know, I'm still hoping that Arc comes together, America, Russia, China. Now President Putin has said, you know, I'm kind of all in. Board of Peace, billion dollars, no problem. Ask the Europeans for it. They're holding our money for us. It's the funniest thing. Is that what he did? Really? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's a lot of work. Yeah, we're good. We are ready to direct one billion dollars to this new structure. He says, we got some frozen assets over there. Ask the Europeans to send it over. I'll sign the check.
Starting point is 01:42:22 Cute. Well, I have a Ukraine update that talks about this, not about that, but about what's going on. Okay. The U.S. continues efforts to end the fighting between Russia and Ukraine. Both President Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky are praising the ongoing progress. And to these international correspondent, Aryan Pazdar, has more. Ukrainian president Vladimir Zelensky posted this video on X on Wednesday, praising post-war recovery plans that are being developed with the U.S. Zelensky says work with the American side. progressing actively, I thank the envoys of the President of the United States for their constructive approach in the negotiations. Just on Tuesday, President Trump also praised the progress that's being made to end the Russia-Ukraine war. We're looking at some very good things happening
Starting point is 01:43:07 on Ukraine and Russia. Very good things. Very good. Very good things are happening on Ukraine and Russia. And the Kremlin on Wednesday, saying Zelensky is being invited to visit Moscow for a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin. We have never declined and will not decline such contacts. The main thing is that these contacts are well prepared. If Zelensky is truly ready
Starting point is 01:43:32 for a meeting, we invite him to Moscow and guarantee his safety. The Kremlin official added that Putin already discussed a possible meeting with Zelensky during phone calls with Trump. Meanwhile, the fighting in Ukraine continues. Ukrainian officials report
Starting point is 01:43:50 strikes on various cities across the country. A monastery in Odessa came under attack on Wednesday. Another attack also damaged port infrastructure in the Odessa region. Officials say three people were hurt in the strikes. And in Kiev, a couple died in an overnight attack. According to Zelensky, the couple was at home with their daughter during the attack. Yeah, everything I see, the Ukrainian people are sick of Zelensky. They're sick of the war. They're so done with it. Yeah, they should be. Of course. wear for them. And by the way,
Starting point is 01:44:24 if Zelensky takes a meeting in Moscow. You said, by the way, I just caught this one. Ah, thank you. Yeah. I'm going to have a lot of trouble breaking that. Well, we need a different phrase.
Starting point is 01:44:36 We need to program something else. Well, if I could program myself to say something different, I will. Okay. But I, and I've thought about it. But if Zelensky takes the meeting in Moscow,
Starting point is 01:44:48 I advise him going to by train. Yeah. Could be one of those unfortunate accidents. Kim John Un has got the right idea. Trains. Trains. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:44:59 Well, this gives me the opportunity to check in with our boy, Mark Rutter. He's a man constantly treading a delicate line between Donald Trump and Europe. But NATO Secretary General Mark Ritter swung largely in the favor of the U.S. as he addressed the European Parliament in Brussels on Monday. If anyone thinks here again that the European Union or Europe as a whole can defend itself without the U.S., Keep on dreaming. Keep on dreaming. Keep on dreaming.
Starting point is 01:45:27 You will be... Just run over. You can't. We can't. We need each other. You need each other. I think you need us more than we need you. I'm just saying.
Starting point is 01:45:38 Warning for Europe, but also a stress on mutual dependence. As a Dutchman at the head of the military alliance between the US, Canada and 30 European countries, Ruta has been central to calming transatlantic tensions since Trump's renewed threats to annex Greenland, a semi-autonomous territory of Denmark. Duff the Trump whisperer, Rutter has been carefully cultivating his relationship with Trump. Then they go in the whole daddy thing a bit. But there is some news on Greenland, and it seems like the framework is coming into view. It's been one week since the U.S. president abruptly announced that the framework of a deal
Starting point is 01:46:16 had been reached with the head of NATO over the semi-autonomous territory of Greenland. I think it's a really good deal for everybody. And the details are still scarce. But one thing both Greenland and Denmark's leaders have reiterated is that sovereignty remains a red line. There's no need for US to acquire Greenland in order to accommodate the security concerns. We have a defence agreement from 51. We are open to discuss whether that should be any amendments. Since 1951, under the Defence of Greenland Treaty, Washington has had near unlimited access to the territory to construct military facilities.
Starting point is 01:46:52 in coordination with Danish authorities. According to the New York Times, citing anonymous diplomats, the framework could include an updated pack to effectively create pockets of American soil in the territory. This would give the US greater control over the land to assist Donald Trump's plans for a Golden Dome Missile Defense program. NATO has also been discussing a so-called Arctic century, a new mission in the region, similar to those in the Baltic Sea,
Starting point is 01:47:20 and on Europe's eastern flank that would dial up the alliance's defense. So that's a good idea. At the very beginning, it says an agreement with NATO. NATO doesn't own Greenland. But that's just France 24. No, that's what I've heard before. They keep talking about an agreement with NATO. No, that's wishful thinking.
Starting point is 01:47:42 But I like the idea, just like embassies. If you're in a U.S. embassy, you are on U.S. soil. So we could just create all these cool embassy like green zones in green land. Hey, how about that? That are American soil. And we give those 57,000 people a crust. They all seem to be on the edge of the beach there. You know, it's where all those homes are.
Starting point is 01:48:06 Yeah. You know, kind of in one spot. Yeah, because it's one spot where they can huddle up and fish. And then you expand the 1951. an agreement. That's probably what it was all along. He just wanted to make it, you know, this part of the deal. Yell, yell, yell, yell, oh, I want the, I want the moon. I want everything. And then, hey, you know what?
Starting point is 01:48:32 I want the moon. When are those guys going? Aren't they going to? I got an Artemis clip. Play it. Oh, oh, good. Okay, Artemis. I'm excited. Here we go. The Artemis 2 mission is getting closer and closer. And now, NASA says, is your chance to orbit in the moon with the astronauts. Well, kind of. Your name
Starting point is 01:48:51 can, anyway. Along with the four astronauts or the Orion spacecraft, there's going to be an SD card. And your name could be on it. The mission may launch in early February. That all depends on whether the vehicle and the crew are ready. And the weather, you know, the forecast. It's pretty easy to submit your name at nassah.gov.
Starting point is 01:49:07 Or the name of that X you never, ever want to see again. Where was that? Was that? PR? Yeah. Oh, boy. I like the horrible laugh. An SD card. I mean, let's, how about one of those? You're going to have an SD card on. I mean, they used to carry a whole, a whole car, whatever, that vehicle, the Luter Rover. That dune buggy. A huge dune buggy on these things. And now they can only barely get an SD card on.
Starting point is 01:49:46 Can't we send one of those 22 terabyte drives with all the no agenda shows on it and all the jingles and everything? So the, you know, the green. We don't need, but I don't even need it. I need one terabyte. We're under a terabyte for all that stuff. 22 terabytes you can put a lot of good stuff on there. Well, we have producers who have stuff to add. You know, we could create an open repository.
Starting point is 01:50:08 The drive's probably too heavy for the mission. Oh, man. Yeah. the moon, but they're not even landing on the moon. Aren't they going? No, not this time. Not this time. No, yeah.
Starting point is 01:50:21 They're going to flip around it. Which is the furthest in space anyone's ever been. That's how they're billing it. Yeah, I don't know how that works, but that's what they're saying. Yeah. And so they're going to flip around it and come, which means they still have to go through the Van Allen belts, which is one of the issues. That's an issue.
Starting point is 01:50:38 And so we'll find out about that if they do it. And I don't know. We'll see. Well, I always have to remember when. Elon Musk launched his roadster into space with the spacesuit guy in it. Yeah, with the dummy, with the crash dummy. Yeah, and then he says, I know it looks like, well, at the time we didn't have AI, we called it CGI. Because I know it looks like CGI, but it's real, man.
Starting point is 01:51:06 It's real. It's really up there. Where is that thing? Well, that's a good question. I think it's probably gone into the deep space. It borders on a great question. It borders on a great question, but it's not because there's no such thing. Anyway, before we take a break and have a very short thank you for a couple of people who supported the show today.
Starting point is 01:51:33 Following along with what you pegged right away with the prediction markets, Washington is under the loop. On these websites like Polymarket and Kalshi, gambling or betting or purchasing contracts on political events is becoming increasingly more popular. As I mentioned in my story, people are betting on when the White House briefing will start, what the press secretary will say. They're betting on geopolitical events. They're betting on legislation. There's an active bet right now about whether or not the government will shut down this weekend. So as that becomes more and more prevalent, people who are in Washington are uniquely positioned to potentially misuse information that they have access to to profit on these websites, which is why advocates and experts are saying there need to be more rules in place.
Starting point is 01:52:21 One of the most fascinating parts of your piece was the revelation that there are two places in Washington where these prediction sites are inaccessible. and one, where it is, where are these locations, and does that reveal to you there are fears of a possible new form of insider trading, as you alluded to? Right. So as you said, there are at least two places in Washington where access to polymarket and Kalshi is blocked on the internet. And that would be the White House press Wi-Fi in the briefing room that reporters use and the Wi-Fi and the House of Representatives that reporters and other members of people who are there use. And that would really seem to suggest a sort of awareness in the wake of all this sort of discussion about betting on what's happening in the briefing room. The White House has been sort of quiet. But the fact that they've blocked holly market and calci on the White House would suggest that they sensed the potential for some sort of a problem. Can't you just use your cell phone?
Starting point is 01:53:20 Why are people on the White House Wi-Fi? It's the last thing I would connect to. We got to get into this. Good point. We got to get into this prediction market. I think we could make a killing. I want to bet on... Well, we definitely be good at it.
Starting point is 01:53:34 Yeah, I want to bet on the winner of the Eurovision song contest. Oh, we get those long... Yeah, the way you make a killing with the long shots. Surefire long shot. That's the kicker. You know, everyone's doing law... Filing lawsuits about X. This is the problem.
Starting point is 01:53:54 This is just gambling for kids. These predictions... So I have... Before we jump to that, I have a clip that could take us right into the donations. Can I do something beforehand because it was a good idea? I want to ask the robot where Elon Musk's roadster is? Yes, why don't you do that? Okay, robot.
Starting point is 01:54:15 What is the current location of Elon Musk's roadster and spaceman that he sent into space years ago? That roadster with Starman in the driver's seat is currently in a heliocentric orbit, essentially orbiting the sun. You can actually track its approximate location on websites that provide real-time simulations of its path. It's quite a journey. Yeah, well, okay, that was... So it's melted. It's underwhelming. This is an underwhelming answer.
Starting point is 01:54:48 This robot's no good. The robot's no good. It's no good. All right, what do we have? I have a good... Do you this right into the donation. This is the old... Now, this is an interesting clip.
Starting point is 01:55:01 This is floating around. This is an old coot. Yes. Actually, I clipped it twice. Old Farts, the other one. Same clip. Same clip. And it sounds like it was done in the 40s or something, but in fact, this is a, because based on the information he provides, this is some old fart that's on, on TikTok with this commentary, which I thought was, was relevant.
Starting point is 01:55:21 We wanted to see the brain. So somebody invented the MRI. Wanted to see bones. invented the x-ray wanted to see babies in the womb ultrasound hell we got cat scans PET scans
Starting point is 01:55:44 3D imaging we got machines that can look through clothes at the airport we got satellites that can read a license plate from space they can print organs now
Starting point is 01:55:59 they can do remote surgery with a robot sitting in another state. So would somebody please explain to me why my doctor's got to stick his finger up my ass. And with that, I want to thank you for your courage, say in the morning to you the man who put the sea in the coup that's afoot, say hello to my friend on the other end, the one, the only Mr. John C. de Moray. Hey, good.
Starting point is 01:56:32 See, what's a graph in the air? Subs and the water in the dames and nights out there. In the morning to the trolls in the troll room, let me count you. Okay, 1,536. Okay. By the way, the robot could have just said, where's the Tesla Roadster.com? The troll room is better than the robot.
Starting point is 01:56:57 That's not good. No, but that's, and this is the Gemini. I'm tapped into the Gemini API right now. And it's just, it's all so disappointing. You guys talk about that. Did you do a DH unplug this week? I haven't listened yet. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:57:14 Yeah. And what was Andrew saying about the AI trade? What's he think? Is it going to blow up soon? What's the, what's the thinking? There's no evidence that's going to blow up soon. No. How about the dollar?
Starting point is 01:57:28 The dollar went down like, Yeah, it went down, but, you know, everyone was, I think, a little overdoing. I look at it. What is it today? It's like a book 19 Europe versus the year? Around 120. Is it 120? Around 120.
Starting point is 01:57:43 Yeah, it's around 120. Well, it was 119 last I saw. And a penny's a big deal to. I heard Trump say, I can make it go up and down like a yo-yo whenever I want. I'm not sure he can, but he said that. I don't remember him saying that. Yeah, I should have clipped it. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:57:58 Yeah, he said, bah, and he says, and he says, good. I like it. I like the dollar like this. All those other countries were always devaluing. And now, without saying it, we've done it, I guess. How do you devalue just by printing money? You just say it. Huh? Yeah, well, you do it by printing money. Oh, well, everyone's out there now.
Starting point is 01:58:17 Oh, oh, it's going to collapse. I'm going to have a collapse. Yeah. Well, there's going to be a, there's always going to be a collapse. So you can say that. Yeah. You can say it all the time, eventually be right. Yeah. And with gold, gold, gold.
Starting point is 01:58:33 Gold, man, we should have gotten in that gold advertising a long time again ago. Yeah, should have. I mean, we could have gotten paid in gold. Yeah. Or silver. I know somebody had a gold bar once. Oh, don't start. All right, everybody.
Starting point is 01:58:51 Thank you for tuning in, you trolls. They're listening at noagendastream.com. There's always something live going on at noagendastream.com, which is just dynam. And if you use the modern podcast app, and there are many who have this functionality at podcast apps.com, when you subscribe, like if you're following Planet Rage, of course, you follow the No Agenda Show. When we go live, when those guys go live, boom, you get a notification. I think it's like Tuesday or Wednesday whenever they do that.
Starting point is 01:59:22 I'm usually walking the dog, like, oh, they're live. Boom, I listen. And if I'm tired of listening to them and I want to get the podcast, the minute, it's like 90 seconds after we upload the show, boom, it's available on those apps. That's the kind of app you want. Don't settle for less from some of those Silicon Valley companies who just can't do what we're doing because we're agile. Value for value is the name of the game for us, which means we give you this show. I've been doing it for over 18 years.
Starting point is 01:59:54 We give you the entire program. We don't have any restrictions. It's no premium content somewhere else. We're not available on fast. This is a new acronym I learned. Fast. What's fast? Fast.
Starting point is 02:00:09 It's free ad-supported television. Supposedly, they're really picking up the fasts. So that's Pluto. Wait, wait. Free ad-supported television, that's different than broadcast television. How? Because it's streaming. It's only streaming.
Starting point is 02:00:28 It's not. broadcast. But it's the same thing, basically. It's ads. Look, I'm just giving you some information from out there in the world. This is what it's called. And now you're arguing about whether it's broadcast or not. That's not the point. No, I'm not arguing that. I'm arguing they make it sound as like a, like a great new idea. Golly. No one's ever thought of this before. Well, the reason I bring it up is because more and more people are giving, I mean, this is what I'm hearing, that are thinking or are actively starting to give up their subscriptions to one or more of the many subscriptions they have. A, and this is a complaint you and I have, because there's
Starting point is 02:01:10 nothing good on it anymore. And if you want to see old muck, you might as well just get 2B or Pluto and just watch that and deal with the ads. We've come full circle. I mean, come on, has there been anything good on any of these streamers lately? We talk about it after the show. By the way, we are giving you a behind the scenes look after the show, after we've had all of this fantastic music. We grouse at each other basically. We grouse like, well, what are you watching? There's nothing good.
Starting point is 02:01:39 There's nothing. There's nothing. Well, I brought Brunetti into the conversation as best I could, and he can't find anything, except he says Turan is kind of worth watching. So I tried watching it. Unwatchable. It's kind of unwatchable. It's a little, I don't mind the, here.
Starting point is 02:01:57 Here's the problem I have with some of these things like Turan, which is an Apple TV show. And I've had it with other shows, too. When you get older, and by older, I mean anybody over 40. Suspense is annoying. Yeah, you're right. Another, I mean, it must be the low T because ever since I got my T measured and I'm low, I'm like, suspense is annoying. Everything's annoying.
Starting point is 02:02:26 It's just no good. I don't see how low T would affect annoyance. But I will say that it's annoying. I mean, and super good suspense people like Alfred Hitchcock actually, unfortunately, made it popular, but nobody can do it as well as he does. So it's annoying. Nobody, it's like a farce. Farses are very difficult to pull off as a dramatic.
Starting point is 02:02:50 Give an example of a farce. A farce's tip of the Fraser show. was mostly farses. Oh, yeah, Fars. And Fars is typically a misunderstanding taken to a maximum limit. And the great farses that were produced on Broadway, they tend to come out of England. England is the great farsers. Yes.
Starting point is 02:03:11 And they get, for people who like to see a farsers, they're the mother of all farsers, the mother of all farsers. There are. And the two great ones are noises off for people like go, ever see it on, ever get to see it on Broadway, noises off is one of them. And there's something with my wife, all your wife. Isn't also a lot of those, and the British shows do this a lot
Starting point is 02:03:35 where the coming in and out of doors, the next person comes in and they misunderstood it and then they leave. Yeah, that's a farce. That's a farce. And a lot of doors opening and closing. A run for your wife is a really good one. That's where a guy who's a bigomist
Starting point is 02:03:50 ends up in the hospital and his two wives come to see him, but never at the same time quite and he's trying to keep him from showing up. It's a very good farce. Run for your wife. And there's a bunch of them. There's probably,
Starting point is 02:04:03 when I go to London, which I don't do anymore, but when I used to go all the time, I would always see a farce. You won't even be allowed in anymore. They'll be at the board. They'll be like, oh, Dvorak. Hmm.
Starting point is 02:04:16 They don't let anybody. No agenda. No agenda. You know, you're Landererk. And. Michael Savage will... Wait, what was her nickname for her? And it was McGillicuddy or something.
Starting point is 02:04:29 Even McGillicuddy. I'll remember it now. Even McGillacutty. Anyway, yeah, so, you know, people... And eventually they're all going to get sick of watching the podcasts on YouTube. It's a cycle.
Starting point is 02:04:46 We've been... It takes about six, seven years. We're now in year three. Yeah, year two. And there is a... an advertising cycle too that you and I both know of because we've seen it collapse at least twice. Yep. And it's due for a third collapse.
Starting point is 02:04:59 Yes. And we're due for a third awakening. All these things are happening. The season of reveal is upon us, ladies and gentlemen. Yeah, sure. Value for value can be returned to us in many ways, time, talent, or treasure. And we always thank our supporters, our financial supporters who are critical, critical for our mission. and it doesn't take much.
Starting point is 02:05:23 It can be just five bucks a show or whatever value you get out of it. Send it back to us. If you're spending two, three hours listening to us, you must be getting something out of it. And just think of it as a cup of frappuccino. Not even. Not even. That's all we expect. It's just a cup of coffee.
Starting point is 02:05:42 And I might want to point out that even with inflation and the devaluation of the dollar, we have never changed the level ratio for becoming. a night. We've never changed it. No. You know, it's worth about 600 bucks now. Yeah. Yeah, that's a deal.
Starting point is 02:06:01 20 years, 18 years, yeah. It's a deal. It's a deal, he said. It's a deal, man. It's a deal and a steel. Exactly. Of course, time, talent, treasure. We talked about the treasure.
Starting point is 02:06:14 Time and talent done in many different ways. So, for instance, you're going to a meetup this Saturday. Oakland. It's a perfect example of people putting together a meetup. You know, you got to organize. You got to make sure people are coming and it's appreciated. These are things that help the show, always help the show. Particularly if you treat John like a bride at a Jewish wedding
Starting point is 02:06:36 and stick envelopes full of cash to his back with scotch tape. We recommend gaffer tape. And then there's art. And this is interesting for today's episode. We're actually episode 1837, which we titled Moral Injury. lawsuits are coming. Darren O'Neill just nailed it once again with the no agenda cosmic barrier condom, which because it didn't have kind of like a circular impression in it,
Starting point is 02:07:04 I think it took everybody maybe three or four seconds to realize what they were looking at. But when we saw this and we just like, we just cracked up, and Darren sent us the actual prompts and what he went through to create this art. And I thought this was interesting to communicate to the potential artists out there or prompters. Here was his prompt. And I'm surprised at how simple this was. Yeah, his prompts are pretty simple. I've gotten them from him every so often when I want one.
Starting point is 02:07:41 Square aspect ratio, photorealistic, product mock-up. And then all caps, no agenda space condom produced by the, Curry and DeVorac Company made especially for no gravity fornication, make the packaging vibrant and space themed, to which he got from ChatGBT, GBT, where he's making this, apparently. I can't generate or generate, I can't create or generate sexual content or image for someone under 18, including product concepts centered on sex or explicit activity. If you have another design idea that's non-sexual, like a parody space cadet, sci-fi snack,
Starting point is 02:08:19 or humorous, no agenda space product. I'm happy to help bring that to life. And then Darren gets into an actual conversation, an argument with his butt. Well, but I'm 55. And this thing keeps on coming back. No, I believe you. I'm genuinely sorry for the friction this creates.
Starting point is 02:08:42 It's not about me doubting you, Darren. This specific chat session is operating under a teen safe mode. flag, which hardlocked certain categories. And so Darren had to go around it. And then he said, just make it no agenda 0G safety sleeve, no agenda orbital wrapper, no agenda space protector, no agenda cosmic barrier. And somehow he got it, he got it to work. But what's kind of weird is that he had this whole conversation, I put it in the show notes,
Starting point is 02:09:18 this whole conversation with the chatbot. I'm getting a little concerned about, Darren. I mean, this could reel you in. It was producing quality product. Yeah, but he's talking to it like it's a human. Well, it thinks it is. It does not think. No, it doesn't think it is.
Starting point is 02:09:37 It's programmed to behave that way. Yes. It's bogus. It is. But he has to deal with it because this is like, you know, It's like a nut that you can't get to fit on the screw and on the threads. It won't fit because something's wrong. You've got to force it on.
Starting point is 02:09:56 Oh, Darren said that's what chat GPT suggested. Okay. Well, anyway. You know what, Darren, it worked. It was good. And I'm sure you couldn't do the little round circle impression thing. That would have violated its terms of service. You could have done that by Photoshop if you put a little.
Starting point is 02:10:10 Oh, please. No one's going to do any. No one's doing any extra work. Yeah, somebody could. I think we had a No agenda, art generator.com is where you can upload your prompted beauties. Let me see.
Starting point is 02:10:23 Was there anything else we liked? That was pretty much, I like something I think Jeffrey Rea did. I used for the newsletter. Yeah. I can't find. I'm looking for it. Or blue acorn.
Starting point is 02:10:38 Blue acorn, by the way. Acorn's doing stuff again. Blue acorns are really cranking it up because he, you know, he wasn't mentioned. He hates Darren. The way I see.
Starting point is 02:10:47 Right. Yeah, if we don't mention. All right, so let's mention comics or blogger, Rocket Boy, Jeffrey Ria. I don't see Scaramanga. Didn't mention him, so Scaramanga left. No, that was the Scaramanga piece I used for the news. That's right. Yes, the Snow Games.
Starting point is 02:11:01 Yeah. That was a good piece. Very good piece. I don't think, was that uploaded when we were looking for? I don't know. I don't think so because I would have noticed it. Yeah, I don't think so. I was kind of surprised when I saw it.
Starting point is 02:11:11 I don't see it. I mean, maybe it came and went. I don't know. No, I see it. I see it on the right hand side. Anyway, no agenda art generator.com, the value is right there in the prompting. Thank you so much. And now, as we thank everyone, $50 and above, we start with our executive and associate executive producers.
Starting point is 02:11:28 We are, after all, Hollywood guys. And we like to give these credits out because they're real and they are something that you can keep forever. They last your lifetime. You can ensconce this. You can eternalize this at IMD.com. In fact, eternalize. I said internalize. Eternalize this at IMDB.com.
Starting point is 02:11:50 It might have already been done for you, interestingly. Some friend of the show seems to be doing this for people, but we're okay with that, I guess. Although people like to maintain their own accounts. And of course, you can put it on your social media profile, on your LinkedIn. You can call yourself a podcast producer. You might get gigs out of it, side hustle.
Starting point is 02:12:09 It sounds good. $200 or above gets you an associate executive. executive producer credit, and we will read your note. $300 and above an executive producer credit, and we also read your note. And there's no note to read for our top exec today. Chris Moore from Indianapolis, Indiana, comes in with $590. No note. So if you want to send that for the next show, we'll read it, Chris.
Starting point is 02:12:30 In the meantime, you get a double-up karma. You've got. Karma. And you can take this one from Dalton. Why? I don't want to take it. I can't read it. It just doesn't know good.
Starting point is 02:12:46 I have the same problem. Okay, I'm one of your many Zoomer listeners. I'm an older Zoomer, 28 years old. We love the Zoomers. We love, the Zeds who listen are smart, and they're here to get educated, and they know the, yeah, we talk about Bakelite phones, but you're going to learn something.
Starting point is 02:13:03 You will learn things that are good for your future in this world. I believe so. And this Zoomer has not missed an episode in almost 12, years. So he started listening when he was 16. After listening to Sunday show, I felt compelled to donate and to say this. Congratulations. The stupid-ass clip of Scott Simon talking about exploding trees is the single worst clip you have ever played on the no agenda show. Yes. Nice. Yes, the premise of the clip is asinine, but here are some Scott Simon journalistic gems I think you missed. One, Scott asks what a cracking tree sounds like.
Starting point is 02:13:44 The guy says, it sounds like a large cracking sound. I can't believe we didn't catch that. Two, Scott asks if any trees crack more than others. The guy says, maple trees, hardwood trees, and conifer trees. In other words, all trees. Yeah, that's a good point. Then the guy says this only happens if the temperature is under minus 20 degrees. Scott says, that's pretty cold, isn't it?
Starting point is 02:14:14 Wow, what a journalist. Thanks, Scott, Simon. Truly, NPR is America's national treasure. He has his own podcast. He makes around $450,000 a year, by the way, he says. I hate this clip. It is a prime example of how listening to the media actually makes you dumber. Good thing no one listens to NPR, but you two.
Starting point is 02:14:37 Everyone's just watching TikTok and Instagram. and if your blue-collar company still isn't posting high enough quality content and social media. Oh, here we go. Check out Fisher Multimedia.com. Oh, he slips in. He slips in a side hustle. We scripts, shoot, and edit and post all of your content for you so you don't have to. Hey, here's an idea. Here's an idea.
Starting point is 02:15:00 Why don't you do some of that for the No Agenda Show? Now, he says he does lawn care, landscapers, roofers, plumbers, contractors. We got you covered. We made over 117 posts with at least 1 million views each all organically. We're based in Phoenix, but we travel nationwide to shoot video. Visit Fisher Multimedia.com or email Dalton. Yeah, give us a bone. Yeah, let's do that.
Starting point is 02:15:28 Please. By the way, he becomes a night today, which I'm so happy to hear. It was $369.12. Well, he's spot on with the deconstruction of Scott Simon. And I would say, you know, we enjoy the products of people who have plugs as executive and associate executive producers. If you're any good, you won't even have to plug. We'll talk about it. So, I mean, I know John Haney's saying that.
Starting point is 02:15:54 We talk about a lot of stuff. We talk about lots of it. We like a product. We'll tell you. So if you got this service, looking forward to it. He says, please play the Scott Simon jingle for me to celebrate my nighting. And please order me some PlayStation 2 and PTC. Scots for the round table.
Starting point is 02:16:10 God bless, gents. The show has never been better. Suffer and succotash. I'm Scott. Simon. All right. Dynamo. Good.
Starting point is 02:16:24 All right, then we go to Alex Pellegrino in Franklin, Tennessee at the hub of Tennessee. $350 is no note here, so we'll give him a double up karma. Pretty sure I know, Alex. You've got. Double up. Karma. I'll get the next one, too, because that one was too short. I'm going to go to Bill Taos or Daos possibly in Pasadena, California, 333.33.
Starting point is 02:16:49 And he, uh, rubbleized aristocrats, Bill Taos, whatever, rebelized. I don't know what he's saying there. That's what it came in as a note. So, uh, oh, hi, Bill. Oh, I see what you did. Okay. That was really funny, John. So now, so now I get to read this long note again. That's why I guess. I'll take two in a row.
Starting point is 02:17:13 I'm a nice guy. I'll just do two, no problem. Because you know that there it is, Christine from Raleigh, North Carolina, 33.33. And she says, hi, Adam. I work at a large venue in Raleigh, North Carolina as a ticket taker. So when many folks come through my lane this weekend, who were sitting in Section 333, I knew it was assigned to donate. That's how it works.
Starting point is 02:17:37 I'm also a professional event planner. I sent you an email inviting you to come. come to North Carolina. I didn't receive a response. So maybe if there's some money attached to the invitation, it helps. Plain tickets, money, hotel room. It will carry more weight. Please come to North Carolina. I've been listening to the show since. What are you going to do there? What what she wants you to do? I don't know. I can't remember this email. So I just have to send it to me again. I've attended many meetups since then. Y'all have a lot of loyal listeners here. And I'm surprised at how many I've met that I've been listening since day one. I would love to work with
Starting point is 02:18:11 you and the many folks here in our great community to plan and host a good old southern shindig. You know, Tina and I would be happy to come to North Carolina in, you know, the summer. Let's do it in the summer. I think spring and fall is better. No, we're going to be busy. As long as it includes whole pig barbecue. Yes, that is a whole hog. Whole hog. That is a must.
Starting point is 02:18:33 I'm hoping all the infamous North Carolina Knights and Dames and those aspiring to be who donate and listen regularly. We'll consider this an invitation as well. Thank you for your courage. Christine in North Carolina. And if you want her contact details, you can email us and we'll give them to you if you're looking for an event planner. And yeah, well, let's send me another email. Christina, no, I can't remember it, so I guess I didn't see it. But thank you. Tina and I do always try to at least go to another state once a year for one of the meetups. You do all the meetups local as much as we can. But it would be fun. North Carolina. We've done South Carolina.
Starting point is 02:19:11 Let's do North Carolina. Raleigh's a good area, too. Yeah. Meanwhile, also in North Carolina and Carborough, which I have no idea where that is, Sir Erie, $300. Sir Erie here, love the show. Please play the shape-shifting Jews and some relationship karma, which is much needed and appreciated. Please, thank you for your courage. You've got karma.
Starting point is 02:19:52 And we're at Linda Lou Packin, Castle Rock, Colorado. We know what she wants. Jobs karma. It's always the same. And for a reason, because for a competitive edge with a resume that gets results, you can just go to ImageMakersink.com. It's for all of your executive resume and job search needs. That is ImageMakers Inc. with a K.
Starting point is 02:20:13 And work with Linda Lou. She's the Duchess of Jobs and writer of winning resumes. One of our daughters. She works in this program. I think she's like a Forest Ranger now or something in Illinois. And I think it's only a two-year thing. She's been there a year. And so the company said, all right, everybody, we want you to write your resume.
Starting point is 02:20:41 And we've hired this company who will then review it and send it back. What do you think happened? They said to AI. Exactly. They said they just literally charge this company. any money, took the resumes that these young people wrote, ran it through Chad GPT, whatever it spit out, they sent it back and said, look, this is much better. Can you believe that nonsense? Yeah, I can believe it. Go to Imagemakers, Inc.com if you want resumes that get results.
Starting point is 02:21:12 Best from Linda Lou. Jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs. Let's vote for jobs. You saw karma. Consultants. Oh, that was it. That was the last one. That was it. Yeah, you hit the bottom right there. That was a quickie.
Starting point is 02:21:32 We didn't get a lot of support this show. No, we didn't. But we will continue because we'll get a couple more of those silver coins at the meet. There's two. The ones. Bear in a San Francisco and somebody else always gives me a silver coin. I think they're going to probably hold on to them now. Well, the ones we,
Starting point is 02:21:51 We got them at like, because I remember we got some donated. And you, I think you sent my half. Yeah, you had some. They've doubled in value by now. What's it? I think they're more now. Right now I think silver's up to over 110. What is going on with that?
Starting point is 02:22:08 Well, that just keep, is there a top to this trade? Well, it turns out, if you want to know the story. Yes, of course. Although it was explained on Horowitz. Yeah, I hadn't listened yet. You should listen. So there's a new patent by Samsung that is employing silver into the anode to make a silver carbon anode, I think is what it is, for electric batteries for lithium ion that doesn't produce dendrites. And it's the dendrites, which is the little crystalline formations that take place in a battery structure that crack the battery and they or catch the battery on fire or they hurt the battery's life and all the rest of it.
Starting point is 02:22:49 So this thing will take a charge now, a high-speed charge without making dendrites. It'll last longer if it goes through thousands more cycles and it doesn't wear out so fast. It's a killer. And it's going to chew and people started doing the calculation on how much silver is going to be needed just for the lithium ion technology using these, these anodes. And the number was like, well, that's a little more than the supply that's currently available. And wait a minute, there's a huge shortfall. Now all these guys are doing calculations on Bank of America and J.P. Morgan, who have both shorted to death silver. I thought they were, but they already went long. Didn't they all flip to long?
Starting point is 02:23:30 They've been trying to buy back, but they can't buy back fast enough. Because there's not enough supply. And so they, so they've created this ridiculous situation where it's like it's a sense of realization. Oh, my God. The silver has been. purposely manipulated but manipulate on the downside and now that everyone's coming to this realization and all the shorts
Starting point is 02:23:57 have to cover and everything in between people are expecting it to go to $400 but I don't want to discourage anyone from giving me a silver coin at current prices. That's interesting because you know Max Kaiser has been saying this for at least 10 years.
Starting point is 02:24:14 You're saying you know silver you know we need to created a run on silver that'll ruin I think this is not a run on silver this is a calculation that was done in everyone looks at the numbers and says we haven't got enough silver for what you're proposing here
Starting point is 02:24:30 we need to get more silver into this it's not like a run on silver it's a new technology I think that's the was the last straw that that's this battery thing it was the last straw that broke the camels back and now silver is like wait a minute
Starting point is 02:24:46 were you okay well let's rethink this and boom now silver's way up there that i keep looking at that donut lab battery and uh someone sent me a video of this guy he was at maybe c s or some type of conference talking about the battery yeah it's fine but then he sent me another video the same guy also was running some kind of a i company that has real intelligence i'm like oh okay all right yeah something fishy about this guy some fishy about that guy hey thank you very much executive and associate executive producer, we'll be thanking the rest of our supporters for today, $50 and above in our second segment.
Starting point is 02:25:22 Congratulations with your credits. Our formula is this. We go out, we hit people in the mouth. Shut up. Shut up. Yeah, maybe we should go digging for silver. Maybe there's some silver, the mines that we can find.
Starting point is 02:25:50 We've got to buy us a silver mine. Or something. Yeah. Yeah. Something. I have a drunk or not drunk clip. Okay. Where's your clip?
Starting point is 02:26:04 Chick drunk or not drunk. Sounds... She could, might, maybe she's not drunk. Okay, we'll find out. Another Friday night question for the chat. Should broke men be allowed to date? A loud is doing a lot of work. My mom is literally listening to this.
Starting point is 02:26:26 on TikTok Live right now. This has not been something I've been pondering, but I want to know what y'all think. It was hilarious listening to me because some woman was like, oh, you know, if he doesn't have any money, we'll just build him up. You know, we'll just build up his confidence
Starting point is 02:26:41 and get him some skills. And someone was like, this ain't build a bear? What is this? Another man was like, oh, they ain't got no money. They can't get into the game and play all four quarters. Just tremendous commentary. But, chat, let me know.
Starting point is 02:26:55 What do you think? A loud is kind of a crazy thing. But should you date if you don't have any money? Men? No, not drunk. You know what? She sounds like, was she white or black, this lady? She's a white girl and I think she's drunk.
Starting point is 02:27:11 Did you see Nikki Minaj? No, I've heard about, this is the clip where she goes off on how great Trump is or which one? Yes. Yes, well, first let's hear Trump going off on how great she is. This was during the Trump accounts announcement. Actually, I think that's only 30 seconds. Let me play the Trump account announcement. President Donald Trump is urging families to sign up for the so-called Trump accounts
Starting point is 02:27:38 when they file their 2025 income tax returns. The president joined Treasury Secretary Scott Messent, CEOs and investors. At an all-day summit today in Washington, the accounts are set to become active in July. Under President Trump's signature tax and spending legislation, the federal government government will deposit $1,000 for every baby born between 2025 and 28. It's like all these different people are jumping in. Like the Dells are given $500 per baby. Did I hear J.P. Morgan might be doing something.
Starting point is 02:28:15 Yeah, I heard this too, that everyone's going to, I'll top it. I'll top it off for you. There's no, but it's not tax deductible. It's not a, you know, a gift in that regard. It's not a grant. No, what is the benefit? What is the benefit? Is there a financial benefit or is it just, look at me?
Starting point is 02:28:33 It supposedly goes into an account that accrues. Yeah, but that's for the baby, not for the person who puts it in. Yeah, it's for the baby. Yeah, but is it, is these, is there any benefit for the people giving the money other than just being a good person? Well, no way. Well, good person. What? We're also pleased. My daughter, she went crazy when she heard that this was, I want to go.
Starting point is 02:28:58 You know, she happens to be in the wrong state right now for that, but when she heard that there's a certain person that's here, who's the greatest and most successful female rapper in history, Nikki Minaj. Nicky Minaj. Come on. And Nikki makes a lot of cash. Not as much as Michael Dell. Not quite. Not as much. But that's okay. But Nikki makes a lot of money, and she's generously stepping up. She's investing hundreds of thousands of dollars in Trump accounts to support the children. And really the children of her incredible fans, that's great. Focus on that.
Starting point is 02:29:39 Why should you give to somebody else's fans? Give to your friends. I like that. And I just think she's great. You know, I've been hearing so much over the years because I didn't know, Nikki, and I've been hearing over the years, she's a big Trump supporter or a Trump fan, and she took a little heat on occasion. Her community isn't necessarily.
Starting point is 02:29:57 I'll tell you, we did pretty damn well with that, with your community, as we say. There's an 80-year-old white man trying to say black people. Your community is your community. But Nikki has been an unbelievable supporter. She gets more, she gets almost as much as Mr. Wonderful over here. He's been another one. Oh, Mr. Wonderful.
Starting point is 02:30:18 But I'd like to ask you to come up, Nikki. Come on up. So she comes on up. And now I'm fulfilling a wish from a couple of our female producers who said, do you only play black women clips when they're mad and retarded and crazy? I say, well, that's a good point. So here you go. I play very few black women clips who are mad and retarded and crazy.
Starting point is 02:30:42 You're the one that plays the Obama phone. That's what they're talking about. That would have actually been better. Let me see. So if we, I'll say, where's Trump here? Okay.
Starting point is 02:30:58 So, there we go. She gets more, she gets almost as much as Mr. Wonderful over here. He's been another one. This has been so good. But,
Starting point is 02:31:07 uh, I'd like to ask you to come up, Nikki. Come on up. Everybody in, keep Obama in president, you know? He gave us a phone.
Starting point is 02:31:18 No, that was not Nikki Minaj. Here's Nikki Minaj. Hello. Obama phone. Well, I don't know what to say, but I will say that I am probably... Oh, did you hear that? She's hyperventilating.
Starting point is 02:31:36 She's actually... She's nervous. She's taken. She's nervous. Yeah, she's at the, with the president, and she's now... And it's a little not as different. And so she's hyperventilating that she's nervous. That's funny.
Starting point is 02:31:49 Yeah, but she regains her composure quickly. Well, I don't know what to say, but I would... I will say that I am probably the president's number one fan, and that's not going to change. And the hate or what people have to say, it does not affect me at all. It actually motivates me to support him more. And it's going to motivate all of us to support him more.
Starting point is 02:32:24 We're not going to let them get away with bullying him. and, you know, the smear campaigns, it's not going to work, okay? He has a lot of force behind him, and God is protecting him. There you go. And nailed it. He got two communities and one. Got the black people and the Christians with Nikki Minaj. Right on, Nikki.
Starting point is 02:32:50 I thought that was... The whole thing is just sounds good. It's fun that everyone's jumping in on it. I'm glad that she's taken aside and doesn't sound like Molly Ringwald. Geez. Speaking of music artists, Kanye West is now apologizing. Yay, formerly Kanye West apologized for his anti-Semitic remarks and other behavior in a full-page ad he bought in the Wall Street Journal.
Starting point is 02:33:20 He said he, quote, lost touch with reality, regrets his actions, and is not a Nazi or anti-Semite. Ye also apologized to the black community and said his wife encouraged him to get help after hitting rock bottom. He says he now follows a treatment plan for his bipolar disorder, including medication, therapy, and clean living. And of course, the timing is always a purpose. The apology comes ahead of his new album, bully, which is set to drop soon. It's dropping. The album's dropping. The album's dropping.
Starting point is 02:33:51 First of all, album. Pick it up. Pick it up. Hey, what is that? You drop. Pick it up. So I, since we're on black people. Well, I was on musicians, but okay.
Starting point is 02:34:02 And, and, uh, and anti-Semites. But okay, you want to, because I, you know, I got, I can stay with the anti-Semites as an anti-Semite. Well, I got this clear. But, you know, they're going after Candice. Yeah. Yeah, they are. Because she can't pronounce words and she keeps making these mistakes.
Starting point is 02:34:20 She's getting like, I'm thinking, well, maybe we can substitute her stuff or Reverend Al which is not quite as silly because it's usually single words. And this one here, somebody put on this website. Oh, this is the compilation? No, it's a compilation of one word. She's trying to say compartmentalize.
Starting point is 02:34:41 Now, you can say compartmentalize. Yes. Compartmentalize. And you can say it. And after you listen to this, you'll never be able to say it again because she keeps pronouncing it. some crazy way. And so it becomes what you're going to hear. We want the CEO and the chairman
Starting point is 02:35:03 of Turning Point USA to answer. Okay. Okay. You got, if you can't complementalize, then I don't see how you're going to be able to, we don't like them. We don't agree with the industries they went into. All of that can be true. But you have to be able to complementalize that when you are looking at a case. Compromat. Long before this ever broke out between her and Justin Baldani, that we have to Complementalize. Blake lively is not a good person. Donald Trump from the hashtag Me Too movement. It is very important to complementalize how you feel about somebody personally from how you are comprominalize. Complementalize. Complementalize that. Complementalize. Complementalize.
Starting point is 02:35:41 Complementalize. That's so low. I mean, I was complimentalize, okay. Now I have to say it that way. Complementalize. It's hard to go back to compartmentalize. Well, I know you got this clip as well. I just had to play it because it was just so, so crazy. Speaking of Turning Point USA, I know you yelled at the person who sent this clip to us, but I'm like, oh, I'm going to clip that. It's good. This is the Arizona R&C committee woman. And this has to be Liz Harris is her name. And this has to be from a couple of years ago, I'm thinking. because she talks about TPUSA as if Charlie Kirk is still alive, so maybe a year ago. But just so you know, almost odd, baby, all of it. The other very delicate thing we have going on is all the stuff with Israel. Now, Thaler is Jewish. Breger is Jewish.
Starting point is 02:36:48 Like, when I say Jewish, I mean, like, not, they're very Jewish, meaning very, very, I have gold team. There's so many names I can throw out that I do believe. I do believe. When we look at turning point and we look at all of this, I do see Lossad. I see. I see.
Starting point is 02:37:16 Again, there's so many other things where I'm connecting dots. I'm connecting dots. I think Alex Jones is controlled by them. Charlie Kirk's controlled by them. There you go. Missy Bannon. This is... I can't believe nobody's killed me.
Starting point is 02:37:32 I really can't. That's the best. I have no idea why. Because God is protecting right now. There's a lot of people that are not dead right now, but nobody gets to do anything unless God gives it permission. And I'm with you, Liz. I mean, I've already had people show up to my door from what I've exposed.
Starting point is 02:37:51 But I'm still alive. man john we're we're lucky to be alive you know with all the things we've exposed shape shifting juice yeah but we do it from a we do it from an we're so objective in the middle of everything that we don't draw attention to ourselves because we're we're not taking political positions no the reason we're just showing what a bunch of bone heads everyone is and we and everyone that includes you know stupid stuff trump by the way i did catch a trump clip I think it's on here. I think the reason is because we don't do video.
Starting point is 02:38:29 If you do video, that's when people clip you and you get mocked. Maybe. Yeah. We probably, well, we are OG. By the way, Trump used the term OG recently. Oh, no. We're OG podcasters, which is an audio format that was developed largely by you, the originator. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:38:52 And it doesn't include videos. It's YouTube. It requires all kinds of, it costs more. Yes. Yes. We're trying to keep costs low. Like running stuff on Linux. Yeah, we have to, especially with today's donations.
Starting point is 02:39:06 Trying to run stuff on Linux, you know, so we don't have to pay for upgrades. Yeah, he's running stuff on this. How bad it's gotten. Linux. It's supposed to be an upgrade I'm working on. All right. What's your Trump clip? This is, unfortunately, I spell Trump Trump.
Starting point is 02:39:20 Yeah. But this is a little subtlety that I caught. I had to be like, what? Wait, wait a minute. So just play this clip and then we'll talk about it. Most than most administrations achieve. Oh, wait, stop. Stop the clip.
Starting point is 02:39:32 This is from, he's now, he's got a new speech. He's rolling out every city once a week. This is his Iowa speech. This is his initial version. He's going to be developing material, a stand-up material. And as it goes along about, I'd say six or seven weeks into it, since it's kind of like, you know, workshopping it, he will have some good jokes.
Starting point is 02:39:56 Oh, he's doing the comedy circuit. He's doing the comedy circuit. So in about five, I think in about five weeks, about a month from now, we'll be able to clip stuff that's funny. Most than most administrations achieve in four years or eight years, and we've done a lot. I've recently introduced my plan to repair the damage of the unaffordable care act, the worst disaster, which now costs many families more than a mortgage.
Starting point is 02:40:22 If you look, it's a number came out, bigger cost of a mortgage and it's bad health care. Obamacare was created to make insurance companies rich with government subsidies. I want all that money that gets paid to the insurance companies to get paid directly to the people. That's all I want. And what? The unaffordable care act? He's been saying that for weeks. Has he?
Starting point is 02:40:44 This is the first time I noticed he slips it in as though that's the term for it. But he's doing that for a long time. Okay, I just, I haven't caught it. I guess I was out. No good. That's the problem. Imagine all the people who could do that. Oh, yeah, that'd be fabulous.
Starting point is 02:41:02 Buffaloed. Yeah. In the morning. We do have a few people to thank, despite my ignoring Trump saying, unaffordable care act, which is funny. Yeah. We have a few people who thanked $50 and up, and Adam's going to read them off one by one and see if he can see the difference
Starting point is 02:41:20 in Mississippi and Missouri. Oh, okay. Sir Hugger of Kitties comes in at the top of this list, 1, 2, 3.4, 5, and he says, more cat memes brings more hugs. Hug more kitties and health karma for my aunt. Yes, soon to be from the free state of Alberta. And for my dad, whose name is Albert. Coincidence?
Starting point is 02:41:42 Gambling? Okay. Danielle Williams, Manchester, California, also 1,23.45. birthday call out for Jessica Jerry's, I think, January 30. Thank you, John Adam. We appreciate your analysis. Thank you. Eric Hokel from Melrose, Deutschland.
Starting point is 02:41:59 Murrose, Deutschland, 104. Bart Offeringha from Dordrecht in the Netherlands, 100. He says, Fridays and Mondays, they wake up happy because a new show is waiting. Saturdays and Tuesdays have finished listening leftovers. He's happy. God bless both of you guys. Thank you for your sublime production. introductions. Sir Woody, the, what is he? The Phantom. Madison, New Jersey, $100. He has a birthday on January 29th. That's today. Happy birthday. Darren Curry, hmm, related perhaps. Huntington Beach, California, 100. Chris Rink in Austin, Texas with the boob donation, 80.08. John Carney from Canton, Georgia, also with the boob donation. Hey, wait a minute. I'm missing. I'm missing.
Starting point is 02:42:45 Yes, I'm noticing this, too. Uh-oh. Where is our Archduke of Luna? Well, you know, he's going to be doing it every show. So something was a glitch. There's a glitch in the system. Well, we hope. I hope he's okay. No, he's fine. We'll hear from him on the next show. Anonymous is in Monrovia, Liberia, Washington.
Starting point is 02:43:04 And wants to deduished. You've been deduished. I've been listening since episode one. He's in West Africa, not Washington. It says, W, oh, you're right. Liberia. No, Western Australia. No.
Starting point is 02:43:21 What is W.A. West Africa? West Africa? Yeah, Liberia. Very famous place. Oh, it's like the, okay, but you understand that that comes under the state column. So this is my confusion. You can act.
Starting point is 02:43:36 Yeah, the Liberia is the state, which is a country. Yeah, but you could be a little nicer about it. No, I'm just saying that it's West Africa, not West Australia. It's just, the only reason I say this because it's right at the top there he mentions it. You read the D-Doo. but you didn't see the West Africa. Okay. You're a backseat donation driver.
Starting point is 02:43:53 That's what I'm a backseat driver. This is what you used to do to me. Except I read them faster than you. I just make it. Well, I'm not going to deny that. But after having two cataract surgeries. Oh, oh, I'm playing the tiny violin. Anonymous from Monrovia, Liberia, West Africa.
Starting point is 02:44:15 There you go. He's been listening since episode one and was just tired of being a douchebag. Well, I think you know, where are our African listeners? Yes. From the Great Commonwealth. 77.77. Thank you. He loves the show. Dame Dana Carroll
Starting point is 02:44:33 in Lothlin, Nevada, 7227. I see that palindrome. Very nice. John Albarini, parts unknown, 7026. We have Chad Larson, St. Paul, Minnesota, 6601. Dame Denise, Queen. of Cobalt programmers, Camden, Ohio, 6580.
Starting point is 02:44:54 We get the joke. Sir Occo. Yeah, we do. Sir Occo of the Land Down Under in Mill Park, Victoria, Australia. I got that one. This is on behalf of Commodore Spooky. Last week's donation was missed, hopefully getting it early enough to be read this week. No notes, no jingles.
Starting point is 02:45:10 Well, you got it. You have a note. I read your note. Sir Kevin O'Brien, Chicago, Illinois, Small Boob 6.06. Les Tarkowski, Kingman, Arizona. He's always there with a small boob. 6-006. Kristen Hanlon,
Starting point is 02:45:21 the Woodlands, Texas, $60, that's up near Houston, I think. Nicholas St. Armour, Rodden in Quebec, Canada, 55. Jeffrey Freeze, parts unknown, 5377, says Ice, Ice Baby, I get the joke.
Starting point is 02:45:37 Nathan Gwyn, Jackson, Tennessee, 52, 72, and we hit the 50s with Richard Gardner, Aaron Wiseberger, Gerber, in Bend, Oregon, Benjamin Ryan, and Alliance, Ohio, Bobby Bow, Bluegrass, Iowa. Kevin Corchmarros, Corch Maros, I think, in Ipsilanti, Michigan.
Starting point is 02:46:01 I got it. Daniel Bradley, Knoxville, he got me all flustered. Daniel Bradley in Knoxville, Tennessee. And there's Sir Hugger of Kitty's again with 50. He says, almost forgot. January 30th birthday call out for at least Duke, Sandra Hoxbergin, protector of the Alps, $1 for every year on this quickly warming flat disc called Earth.
Starting point is 02:46:23 And please hug more kitties. There you go. Tony Helps, Oklahoma City, $50 for the great newsletter from Dame Tony. And finally, Ox Otherx in Buffalo, New York, as our last $50 donor. We do not mention anyone under 50 for reasons of anonymity, but we see all of you. We appreciate it. We appreciate the checks that come in. You can go to Knowogunthodonadonatons.com.
Starting point is 02:46:44 Very easy to do. Multiple ways for you to support the show. value for value donate any amount you want we love the numerology anytime you want if you want to set up a recurring donation if you have one already make sure you check it that it's still valid just go to no agenda donations.com any amount any frequency no agenda donations.com and so here's the full list scott merrill the calabasasas highlands turns 44 today sir woody the phantom also celebrating today chad larsson happy birthday to his brother ashley larsson tomorrow daniel williams happy birthday to just Jessica Jerry's tomorrow was well. Shogger of Kiddies, there he is again, wishes Duke, Sir, Sander Hawksbeck, and Protector of the Alps, a happy one for his birthday tomorrow.
Starting point is 02:47:32 And Kevin Kay wishes Seth Tandit, a happy birthday. He'll be celebrating on January 31st. Happy birthday from everybody here at the best podcast in the universe. We have a layaway night and a second night to bring up on the stage. This is from Bob Ryda, who's been donating for 12 years. starting at $5 a month, working his way up to his current amount of 4629. So it's 11-11 plus 30. He has a whole account.
Starting point is 02:48:01 We trust you. It's all in the honor system. He says, don't ask for a note to be read, but just want to get one of those cool signet rings. And, well, we're looking forward to send it out to you. But first, we have to get you up on the podium along with your fellow knight-to-be. So here's my blade.
Starting point is 02:48:19 Here you can grab yours. Here's a big one. That's beautiful. So Bob Ryda, jump on up, along with Dalton Fisher. Both of you have supported the Noah Jenna show and the amount of $1,000 or more. I am hereby very proud to pronounce the KV as Sir Bob Ryda and Sir Dalton Fisher, the Commander of Content. Yes, both of you, gentlemen, get ready for this wonderful list of goodies we have at the roundtable.
Starting point is 02:48:44 We've got Hookers and Blow, Rent Boys, and Chardonnay, PlayStation 2, and PT Scotch. Oh, but that's not all. We've got much more for you. We've got ruminous women and rosé, Gase and Asake, vodka, vanilla, bongets and bourbon, ginger ale and gerbils, breast milk and pavum, sparkling cider and escorts. And, of course, as always, the mutton and meat is right there for you. Go to no agenda rings.com. Yes, that beautiful signet ring is waiting there for you. All you have to do is give us your ring size.
Starting point is 02:49:12 There's a ring sizing guide on the website. And as always, it is accompanied with some sticks of wax for you to seal your important correspondence with just like the queen does. in the crown, which we've been watching. That season four now. Boy, that lady die puked a lot. It's very annoying in that series. Poor girl. There you go.
Starting point is 02:49:35 What, the crown? Yeah, the crown, yeah. We're in like a historical thing. So the crown. Yeah. Charles, man. That guy, he never loved her. He never loved her.
Starting point is 02:49:49 No, he was a douchebag. Two Shagg. No agenda. We can place everywhere. Important ones coming up this weekend. But first we have one today, which kicks off at 6 o'clock. It is the North Georgia quarterly meetup at Cherry Street Brewing, Alfreda, Georgia. And then on Saturday, up in the Los Angeles area, Flight of the No Agendas,
Starting point is 02:50:18 number 71 already, 11 in the morning, at Marina Cafe in Wilmington, California. Leo Bravo, does a great job, has a great turnout. And then we have a... have the northern Silicon Valley. Get John out of the house meetup. That'll be at 333 p.m. at Pizzeria Violetta Prescott Market, Oakland, California.
Starting point is 02:50:38 And John will be there himself. Are you bringing the family? Is Jay coming? Is Jay's going to be up north? And Jay C's, I think, well, I don't know. Maybe Brandon might show up. Do you have a chaperone? You just going by yourself?
Starting point is 02:50:52 Do you have a bodyguard? You need a bodyguard, man. You need someone to look out for it. You need a handler. You need a handler. A handler, you know, I don't need that either. Sunday, which is February 1st. This is the climate change alert. This is the changed meetup, the IndyNA still shining New Year meetup.
Starting point is 02:51:13 That'll be at St. Joseph's Brewery in Public House in Indianapolis, Indiana. That's Dame Maria and Sir Mark of the Greenwood. That got canceled due to weather, but it's rescheduled. Also on Sunday, the Central Jersey meetup, we drink and we know things. Maybe edition. That is 3 o'clock, and that will be at 3BR Distillery in Keyport, New Jersey. Many more coming up this month. Let me see. We got Raleigh, we got Mount Laurel, New Jersey, Eagle Ido, Camp Hill, Pennsylvania, Longview, Texas, Charlotte, North Carolina.
Starting point is 02:51:44 Again, of course, Fort Wayne, Indiana, Coleyville, Texas, Dallas, Fort Worth, and San Francisco, California. That's just February. They go all the way through May and beyond. Go to Noagenda Meetups.com. You can find them all over the globe. no matter where you are. And the good news is it's free. It doesn't cost anything.
Starting point is 02:52:02 You can list it at noagenda meetups.com. If you can't find one in your town, in your burg, in your city, in your country, hello, Africa, we're looking at you. Start one yourself. Noagenda meetups.com. Very easy and guaranteed. Always a party. Sometimes you want to go hang out with all the nights and days.
Starting point is 02:52:23 Don't be triggered or hell lame. You want to be where everybody feels the same It's like a party Yeah Now we have John's tip of the day coming up We have some pretty nice end-of-show mixes Some semi-toe tapers for you And we always like to
Starting point is 02:52:47 Play a couple of end-of-show isos here for you This is the continuing Are these the same thing? No Continuing contest that John and I have it is man against the machine. John is still using his free account on 11 labs. Let's see. You put these in a bayon, I think, because mine just killed last show. So do you want to hear mine? Good one. Do you want to hear mine again? Or do you want to? Yeah, go for it.
Starting point is 02:53:15 And nothing makes sense. No, I think one of these next two is a possibility. Oh, that's very beautiful. Thank you. It's our buddy Scott. One more from him. Wow. That's amazing. Come on. I got that same one. Really? Wow. Yeah. That's amazing. Yeah. Oh, wow. How about that? That's amazing. Well, I think that would have to be the one. No, it doesn't. Your other ones are four seconds. They're too long. Okay, let's go. That's the first joint pick.
Starting point is 02:53:50 It's a joint pick, everybody. And you'll hear it. But first, John's tip of the day. Great advice for you and me. Just the tip with JCD. And sometimes Adam. All right. I'm kind of family forced to promote this product. My wife is, I think a lot of women are, obsessed with pressure washers.
Starting point is 02:54:18 Ha. They are handy things to have. Yeah. Yeah. And she said four of these types, which are, I mean, the gas ones, which are the ones that can, you know, clean the driveways to get the moss off. Yeah. You know, after winter.
Starting point is 02:54:38 These aren't, is necessary in California. Yes, there are places like Washington. But there is a electric pressure washer. She thinks it's the best thing she's ever run into. It doesn't have the high pressure of a gasoline one, but it's perfect for like wood decks and furniture, patio furniture and things outside. where you don't want to blow the paint off stuff. These things are- Or rip up the deck, which you will do with it.
Starting point is 02:55:04 These things are pretty expensive, typically, aren't they? $179. Hmm. Okay. That's not expensive. And it's high pressure, but not too high pressure. It's 20, it's the pressure, no, it's not, it's the, it's, the electric ones are not as high pressure as the gasoline ones.
Starting point is 02:55:21 But the convenience of the electric, you just hook a hose up to it. You flip a switch is going. You flip a switch. You go take a break. you flip us but you have to start it and start it and pull and get the thing going and then you got to turn it off it's a pain in the ass yeah it's horrible you have to be serious when you're using a gas one with the electric one it's like a flip a switch you do it this is the westing house w px 2300 e for electric the westinghouse wpx 2300 e and and it should be mentioned that uh most of these things fall apart they're poorly made
Starting point is 02:55:58 believes this to be one that will hold up for season after season for years and years as opposed to breaking the second year you have it can you use it on on the protesters like the videos where they get hit with the water you could use it on your car you but protesters would be good but the fire hose is better if you have a fire hose that's what you want all right well and but will it clean like tire stuff off of cement? No, it's good for all that. It has a little container. You put soap in it, actually. Well, then I think I'm in the market for one of these.
Starting point is 02:56:35 I think you could get one of these and it would it's good for cleaning the car. It's not going to rip off the paint. It's easy to use. It's small. It's not a big monstrous thing, like a regular pressure washer. They're huge. They're crazy. It's a genius device.
Starting point is 02:56:50 It sounds like a winner, John. It is. It's a winner. There it is. And more winners can be found at noagenda fun.com, two for the day.net. Create advice for you and me, just the tip with JCD. And sometimes Adam, created by Dana Burnettie. Yes, all right. Hey, everybody.
Starting point is 02:57:14 You know what? I got to do a quick, I got to do a quick karma for Nick the Rat here. Hold on a second. You've got karma. He's up next on the No Agenda Stream. York City economy apparently has gotten to him there in the sewer. And so his latest episode will be up next on the No Agenda Stream if you're listening live. End of show mixes coming to you from MVP and Gary Youngling with a classic.
Starting point is 02:57:42 Sometimes they just never go out of style. It's amazing how that works. And we will return at our regularly scheduled time, which will be, gosh, Sunday. We'll do another three and a half hours for you, whatever it takes to bring the world into focus for you, deconstruct the media, and show you how they do it and how dumb it all really is. We love doing it. Coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country right here in Fredericksburg, Texas in the morning, everybody. I'm Adam Curry.
Starting point is 02:58:10 And from Northern Silicon Valley, well, it'll be in Oakland on Saturday. I'm John C. DeBore. That's right. Go visit John in Oakland, Saturday, 3.33 p.m. Until then, remember us, please. No agenda donations.com. Until then, a Sunday that is, adios, mophos. A hooey-hooey and such
Starting point is 02:58:28 The IP It's my border of your cross Ice is back with a brand new detentions Daily and nightly When the borders and in their flow Extreme left throwing rocks like vandals Effigy Trump burning up like a candle Chance
Starting point is 03:00:41 A merchant speaker that dines maxine water calls you all to undermine Crazy What about Obama You know he started all that drama Dimension B Full of That's amazing. Old meat is calling it a fight.
Starting point is 03:00:53 If there's a problem, they'll never solve it. Check the fake news in five memory ball. The curse of my dad is my tape. To miss all the fuck. That's amazing.

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