No Jumper - Spencer Pratt on His Plan to Fix LA as Mayor, Rollin 60s Cookouts, The Homeless Problem & More
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podcast on the world. And today we're very, very excited to bring you a former high school class
A classmate of Lush.
Elementary.
Elementary and current mayoral candidate for the great city of Los Angeles, Spencer Pratt.
Thank you guys for having me.
Yeah, man.
It's amazing to have you here.
It's been pretty crazy seeing you just rise up and garner so much attention in such a short
period of time for your aspirations for the city, man.
Well, I only set out on this mission to expose corruption for my own community.
I didn't actually think I would end up being the mayor of L.A., which it looks like as God,
plan. I just wanted to have a bigger platform because I knew she would get reelected no matter
what after letting my neighbors burn alive. So I just, nobody was going to run against her. So I did
it. Right. Just to oppose to be the opposition. And then what I've now discovered is speaking the
truth is so powerful across the whole country. People just resonate because I hate politicians. I'm
not trying to be connected to any political party or any of these people. I just want that truth
and corruption to stop. Yeah. And from my perspective, even the most hardcore Democrats that I know,
it seems like they are very intently weighing the pros and cons of Spencer Pratt being the mayor
of Los Angeles because I feel like the state of L.A. and in particular, the homelessness crisis,
has just driven a lot of people to the brink. And they're looking for any possible change of pace.
and you are presenting change, and a lot of people are very, very excited about it.
Yeah, I had lunch with Biden's, the biggest donor in the Democratic Party in the whole game on Sunday.
She said I was the first, you know, technically I'm not either, but she said to me when I had her, you're the first non-democrat that's ever opened them in my house, and she's already maxed out, like, backing me.
Like, so I have the, you know, when they say, oh, Spitzer, how are you going to beat the Democratic machine?
the actual people pulling the levers, maybe not the party brand right now, but the people
on the ground with the write the checks, the people in the media. These people all back to me
because I have a common sense message and they know I'm not going to do any of this, you know,
national politics. We need somebody who just cares about Los Angeles, the streets, the drug addicts,
living all of this, you know, they're laundering billions of dollars to increase the people living
on our street. They don't want to stop this. They say we need more beds. But
Anybody knows anything about addiction.
You could have an empty bed, but you don't care about that bed.
You want to get high.
You get the new house.
Get the fenty, get the super meth.
You're not trying to see where the empty $100,000 bed is.
So is that the pharmaceutical industry you're talking about primarily?
I mean, they're all connected because everyone's profiting.
The people that are, you know, just right now last week, it came out, you know, we pay as tax payers.
We pay for all the needles that they're giving out in MacArthur Park.
So who's that needle company?
Who are they?
I don't know.
I'm just saying there's a lot of people connected.
The bigger scheme, though, is the real estate developers.
They're the ones that do the housing for the, you know, operation.
Section 8 and all that.
That's a whole other box.
But for the homeless, it's inside safe is what Mayor Karen Bass.
So last year, she spent $400 million to house.
When I say house, we don't even know.
This is her number.
1,400 people.
So with that 400 million.
she gives it to developers so they go buy buildings that should be $250 a square foot, it's $1,000
a square foot.
Then they spend five years redoing the building.
Oh, it needs to do.
It's everybody's getting kicked.
It's like the mafia.
I keep joking like back in the day, Gotti and these people wouldn't even believe the scam
that L.A. is doing with our tax money.
Jimmy Hopful would be proud.
I mean, they would just be shook.
It's more than the cartels.
It's more money.
$24 billion.
in California, but it's all run out of LA.
So, yeah, I mean, that's probably one of the biggest criticisms I see of you is that
you're capable of like naming the problems, but that you don't actually have that much
experience in terms of governing and that it, in reality, a lot of the same regulation
and bullshit that Karen Bass has to deal with is stuff that you're going to have to be
able to deal with realistically as well.
Do you think that she's just so corrupt that we have like a tainted idea of what it's
going to take to get our city back on track?
100%.
Because what people have just accepted, like, I've lived in L.A.
My whole life.
This is not L.A.
We are light years from, yeah, we always had homeless people.
That's society.
We have created a drug addiction complex in L.A.
Because we don't require treatment.
When you're naked in front of kids at the park or in front of schools, when I'm mayor,
I can enforce the laws we have.
And I will remove you from being naked.
doing whatever you're doing in front of kids.
These moms, why I'm getting elected, it's a rap,
is because moms are done with the naked drug addicts, having sex.
The amount of videos I can't post because my account will get deleted of just people
having sex on sidewalks in front of kids.
Street people of Los Angeles is doing the work for you.
I mean, he can't even post what's really like, I'm telling you when my DMs, I can't
even open them.
It's like, it's so gnarly.
Like, Jesus, right.
So, no, we have laws.
They're choosing not to enforce them because they're deep into an ideology where, oh, you can't, they're experiencing homelessness.
They can live there.
No, we need to use this 400 million plus that we have and get these people treatment, medical treatment.
And with SB 43, the state law, if you can't manage yourself, if you're banging your head through a glass window naked, jerking off, doing it, whatever you're doing, we can take you legally and put you into treatment.
starts with a 51-50 hole, goes to a 72-hour hold, can go to a 42-day hole.
It can go to a one-year conservorship.
They'll come back.
Where are you going to put all these people, Spencer?
Will you go to the federal government and you say, hello?
I would like some support here, the resources you have across the country.
There's medical facilities all over the country.
If we have to takes people to a different medical facility, we'll find it.
We're just not going to let them die on the street anymore.
This idea that we just have to accept this.
That's the empathetic choice, is that we're.
We should just let these people rot away in public.
That's what liberals want because that somehow embraces like freedom.
You know, I won't say liberals.
I think the socialists, the DSA have hijacked the liberal Democratic Party.
I think Democrats that support me care about people.
They don't want them to die on the street.
And they paid their tax money expecting these people.
They put in office to get these people off the street.
We have seven people dying in the street and their own feces a day.
We use Narcan all day long using our firefighter.
our money resources to let people, oh, die,
OD, die maybe.
And then, you know, this cycle that needs to stop.
And that's why as mayor, when people say,
he doesn't have the plan.
No, you're voting for me to say, enough of this.
We're stopping this.
We're going to find the support these people need.
Not to mention, over 60% of these people are not from California.
You know why?
They've been brought in here by scam rehabs,
Medicaid hustles, these NGOs.
A lot of these people, once you get them,
sober for a minute. They're like, can you get me back to Oklahoma? Like, I'm stuck. I got a cousin.
You can actually, and there's been success, private people do this where you can get these people
home. Because if you're an addict, one of the hardest things about recovery is you need support,
you need community, you need people that you trust that care about you. The other problem with
being an addict is people give up on you because it's like enough is enough is enough and they let you
go. But we can come in, help this people. And then, you know, I've talked to a lot of straight up
billionaires that would finance scholarships for like your uncle back in Missouri.
You break you off to like, here's some money.
We're sending your nephew back to you.
Incentivize them.
Yeah, like to give you support and resources to help you help like a family member or a friend
and not just give it all in one lump some so then they take it,
but like break it off.
That was one very big billionaire.
I would love to do a program like that.
So we just need to find, you know, that's my energy.
We got to find a change.
These people I'm running against will tell you they need more beds.
Now we're going to get more beds, but they need to be able to sleep in the bed.
What about like neighboring municipalities like Santa Monica, which has its own infrastructure, its own mayor,
but they've been basically allowing homeless people to colonize their city for the past 50 years and stuff like that.
Is there like plans to work with the other neighboring municipalities?
So why I think I have so much support across the country is because people want somebody to step in and say the community, the voters, the constituents, we're done with this.
And by doing that other neighborhoods, like other cities, Santa Mont, their constituents are like if Spencer can come in in L.A. and clean it up and get people help, show them the working model.
and I think it'll inspire because people forget whether the Republicans or dumbiness.
They all work for us.
We are paying so much money for these people's salaries to fail us.
So we need to show like somebody like me get in and say, we're done with this.
And then other people are going to be like, he did it.
Why is L.A. did it.
Like my goal is to turn downtown L.A. into the most popping city in the history of the world.
And you know how you do that?
because I've met with realistically 30 billionaires that tell me we want to invest in L.A.
We want to build affordable housing.
We want to build mid-level housing.
We want to build top-tier housing.
But we can't because the city blocks us because they just want to put homeless scams into this money.
And they're not.
So the reality is you say we're done with this.
The money is going to come into L.A.
We're going to build again.
There's no cranes in L.A.
When I was growing up, there was cranes everywhere.
I haven't seen a crane in realistically like four years.
Like we need to have LA be like to buy the people there's creatives here.
There's people that love the city.
But we've just let the city take over and just be like,
nah, you have to live like this and pay up, pay up, tax, tax, tax.
I keep saying, you know, because people are all hyped on the socialist.
They want to give me money.
They're going to run out of money to give you because these people were taxing.
They're leaving.
50,000 a year are leaving L.A.
These are the people we're taxing.
I'm Robin Hood.
I'm coming in.
We're already getting taxing.
but I'm going to make sure this tax money that's being stolen by other rich people
and put into their little scams to increase problems.
I'm going to get that money.
And the way I'll be a successful mayor is accountability and transparency.
We need to know where every dollar goes, not these confusing dashboards.
Like my eight-year-old needs to be able to go on a different version of the government
site for kids and it should be laid out every dollar.
The $15 billion budget, you can spend two days on it with cartoons and figure out.
And that way we can all hold these people accountable.
Why you spend, you know, I go to the fire stations,
they're charging 50 grand for refrigerators.
The city may, like, you know, if the fire station refrigerator goes down,
there's only one vendor that can come in.
It's mafia stuff.
We need to know the firefighter doors that open up, $250,000 a door.
They're like, this door is not $250,000.
That's a racket.
Yeah, there's a racket going on in the city, whether it's trash,
whether I just met with, why do we have so many people?
potholes all over a city. Why don't we do the streets? Because when Mayor Bass first got in,
she canceled an over 130 year contract. It's a federal contract. These independent truckers,
there was like 82 of these family business passed down generations. I met them all in South Central.
They told me the whole game. She came in, canceled it, took that $100 million as for our infrastructure,
put it into the homeless scam. So that's why they used to do 300 miles of roads fixing the potholes.
she does like 90 now.
Well, it seems like there's been a big misappropriation of funds.
Like even like that $4 million that she got to reinvigorate MacArthur Park and clean it up.
I don't, just to build fences.
Like that doesn't make it.
Four million dollars to build fences.
That four million should go to help recovery treatment for the people that are living in the park dying on fentanyl.
We don't need fences.
We need to get these.
Everything's fences and putting plants on the sidewalk.
all like Bush no these people need help like addicts need help they don't need fences it's not going to change they'll climb the fence we just spent four million dollars for him to climb a fence so I feel like I've actually seen in my neighborhood that a lot of my neighbors have become radicalized potential Spencer pro voters on behalf of just the fact that a homeless dude just moved into our neighborhood and just posted up right in front of my gate and just managed to live.
there for like two weeks, people called the cops over and over. And the cops would come. They would
say and they would basically like have community activists come. They would give the guy food,
supplies, et cetera. So all of a sudden he's super comfortable posted up in this neighborhood. He's
yelling at parents who are walking their kids and stuff. He yelled at this mom who had a baby. All of a
sudden now I'm in the WhatsApp group with the whole neighborhood. And finally they were able to remove
them because of a technicality that it's like a high risk fire zone. But I think like,
So many of my neighbors just saw this and just realized how incompetent the city is.
And when you talk to the cops, you realize how handcuffed they feel in these situations.
And they wish that they could be a little bit more aggressive,
but they feel like they just can't do anything without getting in trouble or violating some kind of law at this point.
And you combine that with the fact that my neighborhood has had like a huge amount of burglaries going on,
people breaking into houses and stuff.
It feels like even just regular Los Angeles citizens are just getting unbelievably
fed up. No, there's people I've talked to that have been robbed in their house three times. They're
putting signs out like nothing left on the front yard because criminals, this is like Disneyland now.
You can do anything you want in L.A. and get away with it. When I was growing up in L.A., obviously
there's crime and everything, but I was concerned about throwing something out of window. Like,
I would be like littering. I'm going to hit with the thing. You know, there was just that mindset.
Now you can just, like, I'm not saying there aren't great artists.
You know, I have no problem.
Trickster, family friend, great graffiti arts.
But now you can literally just do any, any, you can spray paint on anything in front of a, there's nothing.
We know some of these graffiti artists and they are not worried.
They talk about the 80s back when they used to prosecute this kind of thing.
Like that was the craziest thing imaginable because now we're in the golden days where nobody gets prosecuted for graffiti anymore.
And I'm not like, I just feel like we need to set up areas.
Like, how do you fix this?
We need to have, there's a lot of property in Los Angeles,
graffiti designated zones where if you're doing a dope piece,
you get, you know, maybe you could beat it and almost have like a level where if it's bad,
you could catch a misdemeanor, you know, but we need to, for instance, street race,
street takeovers.
We need to designate places where, you know, the youth who feels aspiring want to make TikToks and do the thing,
but it can't be where small businesses are getting destroyed.
And these people forget they think that they're just going against like the cops.
You're hurting these community small businesses, these mom and pop shops, making it not safe.
So we need to have like, for instance, the other day that I don't know, some metal,
I don't know if it's metal or anarchy or hardcore.
The density punks.
Yeah, like there should be a place.
And as a mayor, I'll find a dope spot, whether it's in a riverbed where we give you like,
you want to do this thing.
Here's your spot.
and we coordinate it and give you the opportunity
to have city property, but not where, you know,
hardworking moms and nurses are trying to get up in the more,
like we have to society respect everybody,
but also work with some people want to, you know,
get wild and mosh and bang each other in the head,
but give them that opportunity,
but not just waiting until that night,
hit them with the pepper's balls,
but we got to, you know, as a mayor,
I want to work with these type of people in the society
and figure out like,
because they're really a response to the,
lack of resources, those things wouldn't even happen. If they had a designated area, this never
would even come to fruition. Exactly. So I got to be the mayor that works with all types of the
city to make it. Because we want dope music. We want artists. We want careers. We want people making
good. But we just got to have boxes where these check. And it's back to what you're saying about
your neighborhood. One of my opponents, I have moms sending me the emails who's running, the councilman,
ramen, they had a like a purve living on their street all summer, looking in on the windows
are like moms and kids.
They kept on telling the councilments, like, nothing we could do about it.
I got us all the emails, blah, blah, blah.
So these parents got together and they figure out that this person is, as broke parole, is a sex
offender on the run, living on their block in front of all their kids in the windows.
So they tracked down the parole officer from Riverside.
That person is now in prison because they were a straight sex offender that the city council,
woman who's running for mayor was just nothing we could do.
Like, I'm going to be the mayor that talks to the constituents.
Like, I don't ever want to be in the office in city hall.
I want to be the voice because that's all I got.
Be like, what's your experience?
I'm a fighter for the truth now because you burn my life down, my house, my parents' house down,
my neighbor's room.
The Spencer of these people think they know is not who they know.
January 7 made a new version of me.
And I just want to be the mayor that fights for communities.
and all the communities I go to, I hear the same thing.
No matter, you know, people, though, he's only here.
I'm everywhere.
A lot of communities don't want to post because of retaliation because they're scared,
their city council member who already's not listening to them or the mayors am like,
oh, you know, retaliation, the city of L.A. in politics and it's for real.
It's like when the fire chief told the truth, she got fired.
They really come after people.
So what they keep telling me is what they say, the city council members ignore them.
The mayor ignores them.
To be a successful mayor, I just need to be the,
voice of these people because if I get elected it's the people that put me in I went against the
full machine and that's my whole duty is to be like I'm going to be out here in these streets with
the people have you been cultivating relationships with the constituents in like some of those
other districts like in south L.A and E.C.L. and places like that that are kind of further away from
where you typically be at. Yeah, I just had a cookout on 10th in South Central with the rolling 60s.
So, you know, they back me.
You know, I think they're going to the voter polls.
That's right.
I'm going to the jungle on Saturday, even though the jungle is not what we think it is anymore.
It's ever since.
It's becoming a little bit gentrified.
You know, it's a little nicer, but I think some of the OGs are coming through because
these are community leaders.
As much as people think, like, gang, gang, the reality is these people know how the
cities failed them.
And the community needs a mayor that, like, gets in at the ground level because we got to
stop at the youth from these people getting on drugs. I had this lady, this mom come up to me crying
in South Central goes, my daughter's not homeless. I love her. She's got a home, but she's on Skit Row right
now addicted to meth, but she's not homeless. I hate when they say these people are homeless.
So here we go. Back to my thing. It's a community issue. There are a lot of people from out of state,
but a lot of people in the city are now. People don't get how crazy fentanyl is and super meth.
these are drugs that aren't like drugs we grow this is like scientific mad mad like
and and even now they have like synthetic drugs the New York Times actually drop a big piece about
it today that are like 10 times more powerful than fentanyl and they're they're coming up with
new drugs by the day that are able to skirt around regulations whatever as soon as you tell
China that they can't process fentanyl the same way they're going to find another way to do it
so that the crisis seems like it's only going to get worse significantly 100% and as mayor
They're like, oh, you can do this.
We need to work with the DEA and to really go after these drugs that kill people.
You know, these drugs kill people.
I know people are like, oh, I love drugs.
They're cool.
Yeah, but that Xanax you thought you were taking is going to have fentanyl.
You're dead.
Like the amount of just kids that I've talked to, their parents that are dead because they got
Xanax or narco off of Snapchat and are dead at 15 because they were just wanting to experiment.
They thought they're just going to get a little warm and fuzzy and are dead.
So that's what people like, oh, he's a lot.
like anti-drug, no, I'm anti-Ginney you dead.
Like, that's what people need to wake up.
These are not the drugs you get high off anymore.
These are the drugs that kill you and your friends and your loved one,
your little sister or your nephew.
So we need to work with the DEA, get them out here,
and go after these cartels that do not care about killing us Angelenos.
Yeah.
Do you have a specific plan for Figueroa?
Because I know that at least on this podcast,
we're like pretty concerned about the prostitution epidemic.
You got to give it to Karen Bass,
that she has set up a lot of cameras,
facial recognition around there.
We're actually friends with this guy Smack
who worked directly with her
to help take down some of the gangs in that area
who've been dealing with child prostitution
and stuff like that.
Is that something that you have a specific plan for?
For me, if you're selling your body,
you have an addiction problem.
99% of the time over there, for sure.
So we got a substance abuse or otherwise.
So my heart is helping addicts
get these people on a path where they don't need to sell themselves for their addiction.
So it's difficult because now with the new state law, you can't, even if it's a minor and it's
clear, you can't just be like, hey, you're a minor being trafficked.
That's how crazy our laws are.
But we need to, again, work with the community leaders, figure out how we get to these people
and offer them.
These people want treatment.
They just don't want what's offered to them, which is a cell square box with scary people
in a prison-like structure.
That's why my plan, working with the billionaires
and the federal government
and building a beautiful place in nature
on the federal land with trees
that actually looks like somewhere you show,
hey, ma'am, we can get you out here.
Three meals a day, we have a chef.
They've got sound bowls and yoga.
We need to treat these people
like if you're a rich celebrity
going to a Malibu treatment.
Is that tangible?
Is there a way to execute that financially?
I met with a billionaire, quote unquote, like fact, fans, like they already put 300 million into a place in New York just as like a family.
He offered me $500 million to help people.
The thing is these billionaires want to make sure it's helping people because right now everyone was just grifting and scamming.
Not to mention our current state and our current leadership has a terrible relationship with the federal government.
I'm going to work with Democrats, Republicans, however we help people.
That means going to Washington and saying, this is how much it costs right now to have people dying on the street is what we're paying.
This is how much is going to cost to get these people on your federal land.
Here's the plan.
Working with FEMA HUD.
You know, this is not an overnight.
I'm planning to be the mayor for eight years, but we got to build out a structure where we have this place where they go.
We're already spending the money.
This idea that we've spent $24 billion in California to increase it.
So why can't we say we're done?
getting scammed. Let's put this into a real. And then when you get sober, we also have to have
tradecraft like this billionaire in Italy, does it with addicts where you learn how to, you know,
well, I don't know what they're actually making over the office pasta or whatever. They're
teaching you how to once you come back and aside. For me, I think we need to teach if they want to
stay in California how to clear dead brush. We had a really, we have a really successful program
with the prisons where they come out and they work with the firefighters to clear dead brush
and has a really good results.
That's the type of thing we need in California.
So we train, get you sober, get you on a path,
start teaching how to do brush clearance,
which we have enough of that for California to, you know,
have a job for a long time,
come back to, you want to come back to California,
get in with the fire department
and be part of a new program
where we do dev fuels around community brush clearance.
We have a lot of trash in L.A.
My friend Juan from Clean L.A.,
let me tell you how much trash is.
There's opportunity to bring people
how to train people out
and we're going to actually clean all this trash
and come back and help
give you a job clean.
If you want to come back to L.A.
I think a lot of these people
that we're going to help
are going to want to go to where their homes are
and their friends and memories.
I think they're just stuck in this vicious cycle of hell.
These people are in hell.
And they try to be like,
oh, Spencer hates homeless people.
He calls them zombies.
We have zombies right now.
Let me tell you.
I'm not going to do...
I see him daily.
I'm not going to do the...
nice lingo because yes they're here they go you don't care about human i do but even a zombie you've got
to get unzombied so we have to acknowledge what we're dealing with these aren't just like the single
mother who lost a check these are people deep in a level of like we got to bring you out if we can
you may just need to be in a in a mental facility like dr phil will tell you right i've talked to him
there's some people that just need psychiatric medicine and psychiatric health that's a real
Because he lives around the corner from MacArthur Park, so he gets to see it on a daily basis of just how bad it's gotten.
And me and my wife, like recently went to a Lakers game.
We ended up kind of routed through that area.
And I used to live there in 2016 in Ktown.
And we're driving on the street.
And I'm seeing, you know, hundreds of dudes slumped over doing the famous fentoline.
Monster Mash.
Yo.
And I mean, I just couldn't believe it.
Like this was an area where when Pokemon Go was released famously in 2016, we were walking around at midday.
night playing Pokemon in the neighborhood and now and it was a little sketchy then sure but now it's
on a completely different level like what are your concerns in terms of like what you think could
really help that community that you're so embedded in i think that my my biggest primary concern the
whole time i've been there is like the actual community that lives there like you know like i see
everything that we're discussing i see but i also see at 730 in the morning when the kids are
walking to the elementary school down the street you know what i mean and the
These are just people trying to coexist in this hellish community.
When they really are trying to forge like a strong identity, there's a big Central American presence right there, which is a huge part of like the fabric and lifeblood of Los Angeles.
And to see them have to deal with not only the drugs, but the gangs and all the issues that plague the neighborhood.
That's kind of my primary concern.
I was at Langer's Deli with Norm on Saturday morning.
and he's a fighter.
I could have given up, but he wants to fight for this community.
The park, he said, is for the kids.
MacArthur Park is for the kids.
When him and his dad had, when he was growing up, his dad had Norms,
that was for the kids.
You would go on boats out there.
We need to fight to get L.A. back for the kids so they don't grow up.
I didn't see growing up naked drug addicts.
These kids now, that's a daily thing.
I met a mom there day.
She said, my kids play homeless.
Like it's a, we are creating with, yeah, like it's a game.
Yeah, like it's a game. We need to fight for the future of LA with these kids.
And that's what I keep saying.
If I win, it's obviously it's God and then the moms because moms don't want their kids growing up in this.
If you also, when you just see that, oh, yeah, they're on drugs.
They're on drugs.
Oh, he's on drug.
They have to tell their parents, you just, your brain is going to say, oh, we do that's society.
You just do drugs.
We need to get kids off of drugs.
Drugs are like.
100%.
Yeah.
And on top of that.
By the way, I'm paying $2,000 a month to live next to this in supposedly a luxury apartment building.
So that's another inherent problem right there.
Well, that's back to all the developers I meet.
They don't want to build anything in L.A. anymore because out front of it, they know this investment is taking.
They're sitting on so much property right now and so much stuff that they don't put money in.
If we enforce laws, we get people off the street and get them treatment, now developers can put money into L.A.
We can build.
Prices go down.
There's more opportunity.
There's more jobs.
We're losing over 100 restaurants a year minimum in L.A.
And when people hear that, that's not Chipotle,
even though the Chipotle just closed in the Palisades this week.
So even though so even Chipotle's can't even stay open anymore.
But you're losing these family businesses.
This is like, then you're losing the bussers.
You're losing the servers, potentially if it's a nicer spot of valet,
when you hear over 100 restaurants,
These are huge pieces of the Los Angeles economy.
And then we bring back to Hollywood.
You know, right now all of a sudden Mayor Bass and Councilman,
we got to get Hollywood back.
We got to get Hollywood.
These people have been combined in power for 10 years.
Now when they're got somebody calling them out, now let's do it.
They already let it fail.
We got to bring it back red alert.
Mayor Bass would be like, oh, I cut the price to film at the observatory to $30,000.
These indie film productions are a pop podcast.
Nobody has a budget for $30,000 to get a shot of an observatory back.
We need to support independent creators and artists as a city because that's the lifeblood.
Like when I was growing up, the only reason I wanted to be famous or being like is Hollywood
was here, the energy, whether it's music or film and TV, that's gone.
It's in Georgia now, England, all these.
It's not even here.
We need to fight to bring it back because people think when it's Hollywood, they think about
like Tom Cruise and these people.
No, it's the guys building.
the set. It's the light. It's the grips.
It's the glam people. People forget
the hair and makeup people are hurting now.
Because all these jobs, they
work in the salon, but now
all the Hollywood shoots, whatever's left Hollywood
out of the state. They don't get to go.
So these are their clients that leave.
Now that was their side, second check.
Now they're on OnlyFans.
You know,
it's so crazy
about OnlyFans. Like my friend who's like,
you know, he's like, bro, this
she's like a lovely girl. He was ready
to like wifey up. And I'm like,
oh, what happens, bro?
She's like, she couldn't afford here.
This is a very attractive girl that back in the day,
she could do bottle service, be a server and go on auditions.
Even the attractive people in L.A. can't afford to live in here.
That's L.A. is supposed to be where the attractive people could go work,
that's gone.
Like, we've lost even what the, like, shiny part of L.A. is.
And then, yeah, all due respect to any woman on whatever the thing,
but who knows how many of these people wouldn't go to that way,
just because they got to pay rent.
It's understandable at this point.
And I don't judge anybody's.
But my point is, we need to may have more opportunities.
So if you don't want to do that platform, there's other routes.
But slowly but surely we're just cutting off all the routes to feed yourself, have a nice
outfit, pay your bills.
And that's the problem with the socialists.
They get everybody thinking, oh, they're going to give me more money.
All the people they're taxing are going to leave the city.
They're leaving the state.
Who are they going to get the money from?
coming after each tier goes down.
So that formula, it's a nice little dream that fails in Venezuela, fails in Cuba.
You can't.
So we need the only way to make more things affordable is put more money in your pocket.
And the way you do that is more opportunity, more business.
But the way we have it set up with L.A., we are not getting more business.
They make it hard to have a business.
They overtax you.
They allow stuff in front of your streets that is hurting the restaurant or hurting them.
There's so much.
they're like how Spencer has no experience.
All the people I talk to are the ones fighting this city who are on the outside that know
exactly what we just got to change.
And it'll always be a fight because these people are,
lots of people are crazy.
Right.
Well, that's the stuff they throw at you.
They always want to say Spencer has no experience.
And then like people always want to tell me Spencer, uh, uh, like lost all his money on crystals.
Like what was the deal with the crystals?
I haven't been in the Spencer Pratt hive long enough to know about this.
So to be clear, my Christmas.
went up more money than Bitcoin.
They all burned, but they were all great investments at the time.
So I bought them in like 2007, 2008.
These are the crystals you see in museums.
Okay.
These are collector, these things like they were going to go into the Natural History Museum.
I was going to say collection by the Pratt family.
People were trying to lead me to think that you were like a psychic or something.
You know, I was tapped into the bay tracts.
So, you know, I'm going to say, I didn't have.
There's certain properties of the crystals exhibit.
Yeah.
Again, they all burned down.
So everything I ever spent money on, they act like I didn't have it.
So yes, I spent all this money.
I was also 22, 23 years old, was planning on being Kim Kardashian rich and famous.
So I wasn't hoarding my money like this was my one run at the game.
You know, if I didn't get unplugged, which that's the game, like the Kardashians Comcast stayed with them.
Via Com said, oh, this crew's too expensive.
So I wasn't wrong and I wasn't right.
but that idea, again, that's my money.
It wasn't tax money.
So if we're going to say he spent 10 million of his own money when he's 23,
this lady, Karen Bass, just spent $400 million last year of our money
to house allegedly 1,400 people.
And that's just one of her little boxes of spending our money.
So if we're going to do the who spends more reckless money,
and mine wasn't reckless, I had great dinners, I treated a lot of friends.
It's not even fair to hold you accountable to that in my opinion.
It's crazy talk.
Because really it hasn't.
You weren't spending that money with like some type of political ambition or anything like that.
This is just you being young and flexing.
Actually being insanely successful for your age and the fact that you were even able to blow that much money.
I think that should say something.
My dad, who's a dentist, called me.
My dad called me up because, you know, he hears all this stuff.
And he goes, when they say you spend over $10 million, he goes, you ask them how many other people have made $10 million,
on their own with no connect, like, as the bad guy, you know, doing all my own hustle.
You ask them how many people can do that.
Like, that's what people forget how hard it is to make a million dollars, let alone
lots of million dollars.
And again, I was the home, like I was supporting people.
I was funding, you know, rappers, MMA fighter.
I had so many people I was taking care of with that money that you go ask them right now,
buying my friend's suits so they could go try to be real estate.
Like, I was a very good person to be friends with, like, with that money.
So there's people still wearing Spencer Pratt and May's shirts from like 2007.
100%.
Even in my BMX group chat, a bunch of the dudes in the group chat had like positive stories from
like partying at Spencer's house back in the day and stuff like that.
It was just kind of bring worlds together.
I felt like every dollar I spent was for the good of lots of people to have fun.
And I mean, again, I'll.
I'll run it back right now.
This is what's going to stop me from being mayor, like those decisions.
I would have done all those decisions again.
I've learned so many life lessons to get to this point about human nature, about people,
about different cultures.
Like, they act like, oh, he's from the palat.
I'm from L.A.
I knew everybody, you know, at one time, you know, I know this person that was part of this
podcast.
I've seen clips on TikTok.
When I was managing a fighter, his music manager at the time was Big You.
So I spent a lot of time in that world, like Big You and his friends,
we all would go to fights in different states.
And again, I'm 23 years old, exposed to a whole part of L.A. at that time, you know,
whatever is happening.
And you're a celebrity at the time as well, too.
So it's like.
And Big U has been charged with murder and you're running from there.
You know, so I didn't know, we didn't know each other at that time.
Different paths.
Different paths.
But my point is like I've been a part of all L.A.
just being supporting people in different you know because I love rap you know we tried to sell before
they did it we were trying to do rap battle show before it was even trending because i was in they got
stolen got stolen so i mean i was deep in the rap battle culture all day long and he's sending me
this is the guy like anything you can think of i've like tried that hustle i could see you two in a rap
group yeah like the migos maybe i'll join two we need three you know yeah you can be the third i just did
my last rap song, hopefully with my Fresh Prince of Bel Air video last year ago.
Oh, yeah, no, you were.
Yeah, that was amazing.
Do you think Gavin Newsom's going to be willing to work with you?
Or do you think he's going to be so aggrieved by the idea of LA having a non-liberal mayor
or Republican mayor that he might try to stonewall you?
Well, thankfully, as a mayor, it's a nonpartisan race.
And it's a nonpartisan seat.
That's what LA needs to keep.
They've hijacked it and made it a political position.
There's no letter next to my name and there's no letter next to Mayor Bass.
My name just says Spencer Prack, community advocate.
So that idea of like who's, they've made that.
It's not supposed to be.
It's not designed that way.
But Newsom's gone.
He's done in, you know, his terms up.
So actually as mayor, I'll be exposing his fraud with our tax money.
So I'll probably actually eliminate him from being the president because I'm going to
bring in the criminal investigation team of the IRS to go back in time and get all the
documents. So all the people have jacked all of our tax money. We're going to find their
bentleys. We're going to find their house. We're going to put them up to sale and we're going to
put that money back into neighborhoods, the parks and the kids, the boys and girls club after
school because these people are stealing our money and it's not going to the kids and the
communities. Yeah. And I mean, Gavin Newsom's already screwed with the presidency because even the
most low information voters when they have this conversation, they end up saying if his
business card right now is the current state of California, there is
absolutely no way that America as a whole is going to get behind him.
Well, I wish that was true.
But my experience being deep in this battle, people just believe lies, lies, lies.
Like, they're so especially a good, even though he's not a good liar, he's like a smooth,
snaky liar.
And who he's targeting, it's, they just go, oh, he's better than the other side.
It's like, we got to get past the other sides and who's actually got the results.
That's what he's been captain since he was the mayor.
Oh, saying that, oh, it's crazy.
So I wish that was true.
But I have to fight people all day long.
Now they're like, oh, I'd rather have Bass because she wasn't on a reality show.
Yeah, but you know what Bass was doing when she was 20?
She was in Cuba training with terrorists to go bomb the U.S. Capitol.
So that's what people forget.
I'll take my hated, every dumb thing I've done in my life background, but I was never
trying to blow up America, anti-American.
I love America.
So if you really go and look at the pass, my past goes against hers all day long.
And you know, like us growing up in like the far west side of L.A. and all that, it's predominantly very liberal.
You know what I mean?
It's like you're surrounded in a sea of blue.
Would you say that your family was particularly liberal or Democrat?
My oldest sister is the most progressive Democrat.
And, of course, all over France.
they're all backing me because I don't talk politics.
I talk common sense.
Everyone I know from high school, everyone I grow with is a liberal Democrat.
95% I guess I heard there's a couple of little Facebook groups from I don't even remember
them in high school.
They're like, I knew him.
You can't vote.
I'm like, that's how crazy it's got.
There's like different graduation years beefing to like back me.
I'm like, this planet is crazy right now.
But yes, I don't know any Republicans.
because I don't know any.
And then like I said on CNN, they go, why are you Republican?
Well, when you're the most hated person in America beating OJ Simpson,
beating Casey Anthony, like straight alleged murderers, I don't know the cases,
but maybe they did, maybe they didn't.
And you're beating these people.
I had cops that were bodyguards.
I had, you know, Delta Force bodyguards.
You know what they'd all tell me?
You better get your own gun for when we're not here.
So what in my wife and I do?
We got guns.
And then when you get a gun and you train and you learn and you properly,
and I'm not just winging it here.
and once you know how to operate and have a safe handling of a gun, what do you learn?
Oh, I need a CCW, concealed carry weapons for, do you know how hard that is to get?
Very difficult.
So, you know who hates that?
We're the Democrats.
So that's the only time I ever can now.
I'm like, oh, the Republicans are down with me having a CCW to protect my wife and kids
because I can't afford security anymore.
So, like, that is my, and, you know, we should be able to have straps more easily and stuff.
Unless they make, I would love the streets where you don't need them.
Right.
But if people are getting home evasion three times a night, people are getting into,
you need to be able to protect yourself.
It's a foundation of the American identity of being American.
You've got to have to be able to protect yourself.
So if Democrats all of a sudden flipped in were like CCWs, I would have been a registered
Democrat.
That's my only thing this political is keeping my wife safe and my kids safe.
And if you try to mess with that, like I don't do any of the other.
I don't care about anybody's other party stuff.
like that's my you don't yeah because that's life or death and I know a lot of people myself included who
are liberalness was definitely put to the test once you realize how difficult it is to get a CCW
or even just get a gun in the first place in Los Angeles and I feel like that is one thing that is just
it's hard to justify from our perspective because it's the city feels so dangerous like both
things can't be in place at the same time yeah and you know like a Democrat mom will hear this and be like
oh my God, he doesn't like guns.
And what I'll tell them is, no, but I'm going to be the mayor that every school in L.A.,
there's going to be one patrol unit that's got a pin for that school.
Even though L.A.USD, supposedly, there's some little drama with that.
They have their own police on campus.
I'm going to make sure the LAPD keeps that block on patrol.
So we need to make sure kids are safe at school.
That's going to be one of my number one priority.
So most people hate guns, you know, the people hate because they're concerned.
about kids in schools. My priority is to make kids safe, whether it's at the park, walking to
school, or in their school. So I'm more aware of the dangers of guns than somebody who's anti-gun.
So I will be fighting for these moms who are concerned about guns in society to make sure their
kids are safe at school, a whole new tier that we've ever experienced in L.A. But again,
the whole point of everything is safety. If you don't have safety, you can't have a functioning
city. That's the foundation of a successful city.
Something I've always wanted to ask you, Spencer, because we both grew up with a lot of the same
kids. And something I realized is drug addiction is not mutually exclusive to socioeconomic
status or race or gender or preference or anything like that has evidenced by the fact
that these kids we grew up with some of the best schools in America and all that.
They're dropping like flies. You know what I mean?
I know we both know like five or six kids that grew up within two,
within a half mile of 26th Street in Santa Monica that are all dead from overdoses and things of that nature.
To the point where it's like Brentwood Park is damn near,
not as bad as MacArthur Park, but there's a lot of per capita.
These kids are still having a hard time with addiction.
What do you think is the cause of that and what can we do to address that?
Well, first off, I would be dead.
because when I was a freshman in college,
Zani bars had just dropped.
And I thought, oh, these are safe.
These are from like a doctor.
I'll be dead now with the way they mix whatever.
You know, that's the point.
We have created a society where they can feel safe doing drugs without, like,
one time you're dead.
Like that's a new,
that was very rare.
Like in the movies we were growing up,
if you got a hot dose of heroin and you shoot up,
you could OD.
Like, that's a movie scene.
Now that could be.
anything you take.
So I think the problem is,
I don't think kids have enough dare commercials
with the stakes.
So even if, you know,
you're never going to not have kids experiment,
but they need to know how dangerous it is now.
And it's back to when I meet with the fire station guys,
they tell me when they were growing up,
even they would teach you out of when to call 911.
All of our resources of the fire department,
they go to these houses for toothaches,
ankles, we need to have a real marketing campaign
to the youth, whether it's when to call 911, how dangerous these drugs are.
You know, your friend on Snapchat tells you, try this Vicodin.
You could die.
I just don't think when you're 15, you think, oh, no, this dealer is good.
My friend gets, like, we just need the public's awareness.
You know, people who know, no, because they know somebody who's died.
But I just don't think when you're 15, 16, like the real death reality and the choices are put on the youth.
but kids are always going to want to experiment.
We just need to make it a lot safer by stopping the cartels
from getting this, you know, danger.
You know, we need to target the cartels.
They don't care if they kill us.
Do you feel like there is any progress made in the recent MacArthur Park operation?
No. I was just down there.
The whole new bag of Fenty gets dropped off by the plug the next day.
They get one out.
The volume of this stuff, not to mention, ready for this?
Did you see what the DOJ did?
We pay for those needles, right?
They just bussed one of the city workers, the path guys.
Not only did we pay for the needle,
he got caught slanging the drugs to the addicts.
So our tax money is giving them the needles
and then he's slanging the drugs.
So no, we need to be like DEA needs to be there every day till there's gone.
But the problem is there will always be the consumer.
The dealers will always,
we need to get the consumer off the streets and get them help.
And it's funny because it's like
their program to go there. You know what I mean? Like they people have been going to that same corner since
we were kids, you know, like what's going to stop? But there's, there's no instruction manuals. Like,
they're instinctually just. There was eras. I've talked to certain law enforcement people. There was
eras where they cleared the park for real, like not cleared it for like a day. And it was back to
the community and the family. So it's doable. Like I know the specific area. I know the captain who
was in charge of it. I talked to him. It's been done. The idea that we can't take our parks back for
the communities, it's been done.
And I can't wait to be the mayor
that fights for the kids and the moms.
And they go, oh, like, Spencer,
I'm like, you don't realize who's behind me.
If I get elected, that means the people
were enough. And I'm fine.
I'm fine if I don't get elected. It's not God's
plan. If I'm right here this close,
God is putting me into play.
And if I don't get elected, I'm going to
go back to selling healing crystals and be with my
family. And hummingbirds, baby.
Hummingbirds will be back. I'll just be eating my tacos
of Don Antonio. So I only have
the pressure of doing my hardest effort so I can look at me like it was not God's plan because once
you lose everything, your family lose everything, your parents, you look to God, you're like,
why? And then everything lines up like this. I'm like, okay, is this my path? Is this where God wants
my destiny? I don't know. But I will do everything so that when I look back to tell my kids,
like I was almost the mayor, I put it in the work and the energy and I fought, but it wasn't for me.
I'll be able to have that on my heart. And I won't be like, oh, I should, maybe God did set me up,
but I didn't do the work because a lot of people forget that, you know,
God or angels can get behind you,
but if you don't do everything in your power to deliver,
then it's not on God.
You got set up and you didn't follow through.
And I've learned that in my journey about consistency and regret.
I'm going to put in every bit of my DNA into this until the election.
And then if I'm not married, I'm not married.
But that doesn't mean I'm not going to keep fighting, exposing these people
have destroyed my life and my community, but I'm just not going to be, that wasn't God's plan
to have me do it from the inside.
For sure.
I know you got to go.
Can we just get your pitch to the no-jumber fans out there who are largely young, probably
largely not terribly politically devoted to one side or the other?
Tell them why they should want you to be mayor of Los Angeles.
You know, my pitch is even broader.
I think from the experience I have in this journey, my close friends who love me,
people don't even vote.
Your votes should matter.
So even if you're not voting for me, go vote.
Like be involved, care about who the city councilor.
Don't go off of a lot of these influencers.
You see, they're paid ops without the, you know,
I got a civic violation.
I'm just going to sue my opponents because they're paying the ops to make videos
to cook on me.
So a lot of things you see, they don't have the proper little tag on it.
The clippers need to have it.
Don't just believe.
what you see on your algorithm and just do the work.
Like I wish I had done the work in my community,
found out both the reservoirs were empty,
found out the fire department was underfunded by our mayor,
found out that they let all this dead brush.
Like my pitch is just like be a concerned citizen
because you are paying taxes.
You may not realize it,
but you're paying sales tax on all your macha or whatever you get
on your blunt wraps, your cush.
Everything's got taxes.
So you are paying for.
for the failure.
You're selling a crush of the country mart now.
So I would say I'm more concerned about people like doing their own due diligence.
Don't go off of what I'm saying on this.
Go investigate where your money's going.
Go investigate what all their cook numbers.
I'm going to win if it's God.
I don't need to convert voters.
I don't go out and try to like hustle people and like vote for me.
I,
my message is going to connect to the people who want what I'm saying,
just the true accountability, transparency.
But if that's not for you,
then just vote though.
Vote against me if you have to, but just vote.
That's the key how we're failing as Americans, as citizens.
We've let the people that vote who are actually against our own what we want,
like humanity.
The people that are really voting are the, a lot of these people are bad, like evil.
I'll say straight up evil.
They're like people who are really, it's for the destruction of America.
So, you know, you could be on this and already be all hyped as a socialist.
Like I hate America.
Good luck with that.
It does not work and it's a lie.
They're lying to you.
So I would say research socialism and stop believing you can mix socialism with.
It's all that.
It's all like, no, we got to work hard.
We got to make sure that people aren't stealing our money and we're not hold them accountable.
But, yeah, there's no pitch.
It's just like, I'm with God.
So if I'm going to win, it's the Holy Spirit.
You're with God.
You've got a beautiful family supporting you.
Like clearly, like your wife's behind you, your family's behind you.
you're good.
I've had to leave my family the most since I've had a wife and had kids.
This is like people are always doing this for clout.
It's a same fun clout.
Political clout is scary.
I got to have now armed cops with me, 24 hours security on my kids.
People are crazy.
This is not like fun.
I'm doing this like for the real like for my heart.
Like I'm risking a lot to do this.
I'm not doing this like ooh I want to be the men.
No, I want to make a change.
So again
You got my vote
Let's do it
Spencer man
Appreciate you so much
Thank you
No Jumper
Coolest podcast in the world
Like comment and subscribe
Appreciate you
Y'all
Thanks so much man
