Tangle - Kash Patel’s confirmation and deputy appointment
Episode Date: February 26, 2025On Thursday, the Senate confirmed Kashyap “Kash” Patel as the next director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). Patel was a former federal prosecutor who served in the White Ho...use during President Donald Trump’s first term and is viewed by many as a Trump loyalist. On Sunday, Trump announced that Patel had named Dan Bongino as deputy FBI director. Bongino is a popular conservative podcaster who served in the New York Police Department and the Secret Service.Ad-free podcasts are here!Many listeners have been asking for an ad-free version of this podcast that they could subscribe to — and we finally launched it. You can go to ReadTangle.com to sign up!You can read today's podcast here, our “Under the Radar” story here and today’s “Have a nice day” story here.Take the survey: What do you think of Patel and Bongino? Let us know!You can subscribe to Tangle by clicking here or drop something in our tip jar by clicking here. Our podcast is written by Isaac Saul and edited and engineered by Dewey Thomas. Music for the podcast was produced by Diet 75. Our newsletter is edited by Managing Editor Ari Weitzman, Will Kaback, Bailey Saul, Sean Brady, and produced in conjunction with Tangle’s social media manager Magdalena Bokowa, who also created our logo. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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["Tangle"]
From executive producer Isaac Saul,
this is Tangle.
["Tangle"] This is Tangle. Good morning.
Good afternoon and good evening and welcome to the Tangle podcast, a place where you get
views from across the political spectrum, some independent thinking and a little bit
of my take.
I'm your host, Isaac Saul. And today's Wednesday, February 26th,
we are talking about Cash Patel and Dan Bongino
being put in the top of the leadership at the FBI,
for lack of a better term to summarize
what's happening with both of them.
Cash Patel obviously getting confirmed,
and Bongino, we just found out,
being appointed his deputy.
We're gonna talk about that.
I'm gonna share some of my perspectives
and experience I have with one of those guys personally.
Before we do though, I wanted to start off the show
with just a quick little editor's note.
Whenever I kind of sense the tides shifting
in US politics, I feel the need to reiterate
to our audience what Tangle is,
why we're here, and how you should use us as a resource.
Trump returning to the presidency is one of those title shifting moments.
Throughout my paternity leave and now that I'm back here in the arena, I've noticed two things.
One, there's just an increasing appreciation for our work in these very divisive times
with a lot of thoughtful and constructive feedback
that I'm deeply grateful for.
Two, though, is that Tangle readers
from across the political spectrum
are becoming increasingly incensed with our work.
Many positioned left of the middle
or in the never Trump conservative bucket
are accusing us of allowing fascism and authoritarianism
to rise by performing both sidesism
around an obvious threat to democracy.
Simultaneously, often in response to the very same pieces,
many Trump supporters accuse us of having Trump derangement syndrome,
being closet liberals or pretending to be neutral when we're not.
There's an old saying that when you're pissing everyone off, you're probably doing something right.
I actually don't subscribe to that view.
If everyone is mad at you, that might be because your work is genuinely bad or unhelpful.
And to be clear, not everyone is mad at us.
Tangle may be taking criticism from all directions, but certainly not from all voices.
Still, I'm observing that more of our criticisms lately are coming from the people
seeing what they want to see and attacking our work unfairly in my view.
It is true that I and Tangle have opinions
we express in my take.
It's true that those opinions sometimes strongly align
with the left like yesterday and today.
It's true that they sometimes strongly align
with the right.
It's true that this opens us up to a lot of avenues
for criticism and that these comments are not new.
I've been doing this work now for almost six years
and I've come to believe that accusations
of personal agenda or bias fundamentally
miss the point of our work
and fundamentally misunderstand both my personal views
and the Tangle team writ large.
So this Friday, I was planning to write
about my experience so far as a new father
and the way it's starting to shape some of my politics
and worldview, but instead I'm gonna push that piece out
back a week and try to take some time to redefine Tangle
and explain how we are going to cover this administration.
So for now, this is my reminder to embrace this experience,
even and especially when you disagree
with the opinions you are encountering.
That is after all, the whole point.
All right, with that, I'm gonna send it over to John for today's main story and I'll
be back for my take. We are skipping today's reader question because the take got a little
bit long.
Thanks, Isaac, and welcome, everybody. Here are your quick hits for today. First up, the
United States and Ukraine agreed to terms on a deal to develop Ukraine's critical
mineral resources.
The draft of the agreement reportedly does not include U.S. security guarantees.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is reportedly planning to visit the White House on Friday
to formalize the deal.
Number two, the House of Representatives voted 217 to 215 to adopt the GOP's budget resolution,
which provides a framework for the party's spending priorities.
Representative Thomas Massey, the Republican from Kentucky, was the lone Republican to
vote against the resolution, which now heads to the Senate.
The Conference Board's consumer confidence index fell to 98.3 in February, the lowest
reading since June 2024 and the largest monthly drop since August 2021.
4. A federal judge ordered the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development
to unfreeze foreign aid funding within two days.
5. Representative Byron Donalds,
the Republican from Florida,
announced his 2026 candidacy for governor of Florida.
Current Florida governor Ron DeSantis
is ineligible to seek another term
after eight years in office.
This is the first day on the job for newly confirmed
This is the first day on the job for newly confirmed FBI Director Kash Patel. His nomination passed the Senate yesterday, but just barely, as changes to the bureau
are already taking place.
Critics of the Trump administration would say the FBI had not deviated from its core
mission and was not politicized.
So that's a bit of a political argument he's bringing.
And that's what concerns so many Trump critics, that there is a Trump loyalist running the
bureau, which is supposed to be independent of politics and making non-political arguments.
On Thursday, the Senate confirmed Kashyap Kash Patel as the next director of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation.
Patel was a former federal prosecutor
who served in the White House
during President Donald Trump's first term
and is viewed by many as a Trump loyalist.
On Sunday, Trump announced that Patel had named
Dan Bongino as Deputy FBI Director.
Bongino is a popular conservative podcaster
who served in the New York Police Department
and the Secret Service.
To back up a little, then-President-elect Trump nominated Patel as FBI Director in November,
praising Patel for his resistance to the investigation into Trump for alleged collusion with Russia
and for his service in Trump's first administration.
In January, Patel faced a contentious five-hour hearing in front of the Senate Judiciary Committee
and was later confirmed 51-49, with Republican Senators Susan Collins from Maine and Lisa
Murkowski from Alaska joining every Democrat in voting against his nomination.
Patel is the first person of color to lead the FBI.
You can read our coverage on Patel's nomination and his confirmation hearing with links in
today's episode description.
Unlike other Senate-confirmed appointments, the FBI head serves a 10-year term, though
former FBI Director and Trump appointee Christopher Wray resigned early, clearing the way for
Patel's nomination.
Conversely, Bongino's appointment does not require Senate confirmation.
The deputy director serves as the FBI's second-in-command,
responsible for day-to-day operations,
and is typically a career agent.
However, despite his background in law enforcement,
Bongino has not worked for the FBI.
He has run for Congress three times
and built a prominent media following,
having hosted podcasts as well as talk shows
on NRA TV and Fox News.
Both Patel and Bongino have made controversial statements prior to their nominations. podcasts, as well as talk shows on NRA TV and Fox News.
Both Patel and Bongino have made controversial statements prior to their nominations.
Patel has insinuated that the January 6th riot was provoked by agitators and was questioned
during his confirmation hearing for not plainly stating that President Joe Biden won the 2020
election and for publishing a list of enemies in his book, Government Gangsters.
Bongino has stated that the 2020 election was rigged and was banned from YouTube in
2022 for comments he made questioning COVID-19 vaccines and mask mandates.
He's a cop's cop, Patel said of Bongino.
Welcome aboard, Dan.
The country needs strong leadership and I know you will serve with honor and dedication. Today we'll get into what the right and the left are saying about Patel's
confirmation and his appointment of Bongino, and then Isaac's tape.
We'll be right back after this quick break.
We'll be right back after this quick break. details at phys.ca. Sonic the Hedgehog 3. Welcome home, my boy. Is now streaming on Paramount+.
He is much more impressive
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Dude, I'm standing right here.
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All right, first up, let's start with what the rate is saying.
The rate is mostly supportive of players
who are playing for the first time. The rate is mostly supportive of players who are playing for the first time. All right, first up, let's start with what the right is saying.
The right is mostly supportive of Patel and Bongino, arguing they will clean up the FBI's
excesses.
Some say Bongino has a strong vision for the agency despite his lack of qualifications.
Others worry that Patel will prioritize Trump's wishes over reasonable reform.
In the Federalist, Beth Breljai argued that Patel has a popular mandate to clean house
at the corrupt FBI.
Patel enters with his eyes wide open and a solid idea of where to look for the bad actors
that cost this nation millions in bogus political investigations designed to stop or hobble
Trump's agenda during his last term, Relge said.
Patel unraveled Russiagate, debunked the Steele dossier at the core of the crossfire hurricane,
the FBI investigation that falsely claimed Trump colluded with Russians during the presidential
campaign against Hillary Clinton.
Others welcomed Patel, who was endorsed by organizations representing more than 680,000
law enforcement officers
and by dozens of former and current FBI agents, state attorneys general, and U.S. attorneys,
Senator Chuck Grassley, the Republican from Iowa said on the Senate floor the day before
Patel was confirmed.
It won't be surprising when the media that has long partnered with the FBI continues
to write negative stories about Patel doing the necessary work of cleaning up corruption within the FBI.
In hot air, Ed Morrissey said, Cash Patel gets a hatchet man at the FBI.
Bongino's appointment sends a very clear message that Trump wants to clear the decks at the
FBI and the rank and file had better get ready for it.
This is not just a doge-deadwood clearing exercise.
Trump means to wring all of the political chicanery out of the FBI
and do it toot-sweet, Morrissey wrote.
Bongino has enough qualifications to justify the pick.
However, it's still a bit curious.
First, I assume Bongino might step up for Secret Service director,
where his experience fits better.
The fit at Secret Service would have been self-explaining, but seems a little less apt
at the FBI.
The benefit of having a rank-and-file agent in that position is that such an appointment
will help connect the new director to the everyday realities at the Bureau, as well
as maintain operational status quo and equilibrium.
Clearly, operational status quo and equilibrium are not what Trump has in mind, however, and
that's why an outsider like Bongino makes sense," Morrissey said.
The trick will be to get rid of the others without pushing out those who truly contribute
and balancing reform zeal with organizational wisdom.
Let's hope both Patel and Bongino are up to the task.
In Reason, Jacob Sulem asked, will FBI Director Cash Patel be a principled reformer or a Trump
hatchet man?
Patel's public comments and published works provide plenty of reason to be skeptical of
his new persona.
In his podcast interviews, he comes across as a reckless partisan whose overridden concern
is loyalty to Trump, Sulem wrote.
However, Patel also highlights the threat to civil liberties posed by surveillance justified
in the name of national security.
He says applications for warrants under the Federal Intelligence Surveillance Act should
always be vetted by the Justice Department instead of the FBI's General Counsel.
On the face of it, putting a harsh FBI critic in charge of the agency is a welcome development,
but this particular critic also has a history of advocating politically motivated investigations,
even while condemning them.
The question is whether Patel can move beyond his Trump-centric critique of the FBI
and apply his avowed principles consistently,
which might require resisting the president's repeatedly expressed desire to punish his
political opponents
under the guise of enforcing the law.
Patel's record as an embarrassingly OBS and Trump toady does not inspire much confidence
on that score.
Alright, that is for what the right is saying, which brings us to what the left is saying.
The left is critical of Patel's confirmation, suggesting that he was nominated to target
Trump's enemies.
Some say Bongino's appointment is antithetical to the Trump administration's supposed emphasis
on merit.
Others say Patel and Bongino will transform the FBI into an unrecognizable institution.
In New York Magazine, Andrew Rice wrote, the FBI is bracing for payback under Patel. Patel will now
take control of an institution with the capacity to surveil, interrogate, and arrest. He will sit
in a building named for Hoover, the Bureau's complicated patriarch, who put its powers to
political and sometimes illegal uses for presidents from Coolidge to Nixon, Rice said.
Since the revelation of Hoover's abuses in the 1970s, each subsequent director kept a
deliberate distance from the presidents he served, but the next FBI director and Trump
could not be more closely aligned in their plans.
Patel has articulated some substantive proposals for structural reforms. Government gangsters contain several
incongruously wonky chapters that read like they're coming from a former public
defender. He says he wants greater transparency and increased safeguards
for civil liberties," Rice wrote. But in Patel, Trump picked a director who will
take his phone calls and respond to his interests, and it is not hard to guess what he will want next.
Patel has theorized that once he clears out the disloyal, cooperators in the government
will offer incriminating information about the deep state.
In the New York Times, Michelle Goldberg said Bongino has a doubt for the commie Libs.
Bongino's boss, of course, will be Cash Patel, the Trump world enforcer whom the supine Senate
confirmed as FBI director last week.
During his confirmation hearings, Patel insisted that despite publishing an actual enemies
list of people he considered deep state villains, he had no intention of turning the FBI into
an instrument of retribution.
It seemed obvious at the time that he was lying, making Bongino, his deputy, simply
rubs it in our faces.
If you wanted to turn the FBI into a Trumpist-Pratorian guard, Bongino is exactly the kind of guy
you'd hire.
This administration professes a devotion to merit-based hiring, blaming diversity, equity,
and inclusion initiatives for fostering mediocrity.
It should go without saying, however, that excellence is of little interest to the Trumpists,
who delight in scandalizing a meritocracy that spurned them," Goldberg wrote.
We're in an uncanny interregnum where Trump and his coterie are laying the foundation
for autocracy, but have yet to fully consolidate their power.
An FBI run by Patella Mangino is a sign that the system, which for all of its
manifold flaws has provided Americans a level of stability uncommon in history, is falling
apart.
In MSNBC, Steve Benin asked if the FBI will ever be the same.
The deputy director position is effectively responsible for running the Bureau's day-to-day
operations, as the New York Times reported. it is a complicated and grueling job
that requires working closely with foreign partners
and navigating sensitive investigations.
For generations, the administrative position
has gone to senior agents with extensive FBI experience,"
Bannon said.
Trump instead shows a podcaster
with literally no FBI experience for the job.
The fact that Bongino worked as a Secret Service agent
and an NYPD officer is of interest,
but it's also not altogether relevant.
The president wants an unqualified
conservative media personality
to help run the FBI's operations,
and so an unqualified conservative media personality
will now help run the FBI's operations.
Even by Trump's standards,
this is truly bonkers, Benin wrote.
This is a step a president takes
when he wants to tear down the FBI
and turn it into something new and twisted.
And I don't doubt there will be an institution
called the Federal Bureau of Investigation,
but with Patel and Bongino at the helm,
it will not be the FBI.
All right, let's head over to Isaac for his take. All right, that is it for with the left and the right are saying, which brings us to my
take.
Let's play a game.
I'm going to share seven quotes.
Some of them are real things, cash, Pat, and Demba, and Gino have said.
Some of them are made up.
Let's see if you can spot the fake ones.
Number one, we're blessed by God to have Donald Trump be our juggernaut of justice, to be
our leader, to be our continued warrior in the arena.
Number two, my recommendation is Donald Trump should ignore this court order.
Who's going to arrest him?
The marshals?
You guys know who the US marshals work for?
The Department of Justice.
That is under the, oh yeah, the executive branch.
Donald Trump is going to order his own arrest.
This is ridiculous.
Number three, the only thing that matters now is power.
That is all that matters.
No, it doesn't.
We have a system of checks and balances.
Ha, that's a good one.
That's really funny.
We do?
Number four, the irony about this
for the scumbag commie libs
is that the cold civil war they're pushing for
will end really badly for them.
Libs are the biggest pussies I've ever seen
and they use others to do their dirty work.
Their mamas are still doing their laundry for them
as they celebrate tonight that their long sought goal
of the destruction of the Republic has been reached,
but they're not ready for what comes next.
Number five, my entire life now is about owning the libs.
Number six, and you've got to harness that following that Q of QAnon has garnered and just sort of tweak it a little bit.
That's all I'm saying. He should get credit for all the things he has accomplished because it's hard to establish a movement.
all the things he has accomplished because it's hard to establish a movement.
And number seven, we're going to come after the people in the media who lied about American citizens who helped Joe Biden rig presidential elections.
We're going to come after you, whether it's criminally or civilly.
We'll figure that out, but yeah, we're putting you all on notice."
End quote.
I'm just kidding.
All of these quotes are real.
One, six, and seven, where things Cash Patel has said, two, three, four, and
five are all real things Dan Bongino has said. Two, three, four, and five are all real things
Dan Bongino has said.
It isn't hard to understand how he got here.
During Donald Trump's first term,
he surrounded himself with some of the shadiest
and most corrupt people in politics.
The Paul Manaforts of the world invited questions
about his connections to places like Russia.
Those questions turned into a media frenzy.
That media frenzy drove FBI investigations. Those investigations led to a special counsel. That special counsel nearly
cost Trump his presidency. I've written before about the many things we got wrong about Trump
and Russia. I don't want to relitigate all of it here, but I think Trump both deserved
to be investigated and also was not guilty of colluding with Russia to win the 2016 election.
As I feared at the time,
one of the great consequences of the Trump investigation,
the reason I desperately wanted the federal government's
probe to be on the up and up in every manner
was the politicized arms race that set it off.
Once you open that Pandora's box, there is no going back,
especially not in the American partisan warfare
of the 21st century.
Of all the ways the Trump investigation could have gone, our current reality is one of the
worst possible iterations.
Not only did it fail to land any kind of conviction, but the investigators committed some legitimate
malpractice.
Not only did this destroy trust in the FBI and the media for half the country, but it
watered down the potency of the other FBI investigation at the conclusion of Trump's
term, which included his home being raided. Not only did Trump not walk off into the sunset, but he left the January
6th riot behind him on the way out. Not only did Trump refuse to leave the political arena,
but he got reelected, survived two assassination attempts on the way back, and inherited a
country somehow more divided than the one he left us in January of 2021. Not only is
he back in office now, but he won on a campaign largely centered
around personal grievances and a promise of revenge.
And Trump quite literally is taking no chances.
He has no interest in depoliticizing federal institutions
like the FBI.
He wants to remake them in his mold.
He has no interest in leaving anything in the past.
He wants payback.
He wants to fire every lawyer that was hired under Biden
and fire every prosecutor that was involved,
not just in the Russia hoax,
but also in prosecuting January 6th,
a day full of very real crimes.
All of these motivations are evident
in putting Cash Patel at the head of the FBI.
When Patel was first tapped by Trump,
I wrote about a phenomenon I described
as the Trump circularity.
When Trump does some norm breaking thing for better or for worse, that puts all of
our political footing onto new ground, that he then gets to define to his own political
advantage and around we go.
We often live in the Trump circularity and he is incredibly good at keeping us there.
Cash Patel and Dan Bongino are part of this circularity.
Patel at least has some relevant experience, but I'm not thrilled about him leading the Bureau.
Patel has openly promised retribution
against Trump's political enemies.
He's made his entire career a loyalty show to Trump.
He said the figure at the center of the QAnon cult
should get credit for all the things he has accomplished.
He hawks dietary supplements to reverse the Vax
and get healthy, and he claims he's going to crack down
on leakers and prosecute journalists.
He also still will not admit
that Joe Biden won the 2020 election.
And we found out during his confirmation hearing,
he has a massive conflict of interest in China.
All of this might be why former Attorney General Bill Barr,
upon hearing Trump was considering Patel at the FBI
during his first term,
famously responded, over my dead body.
Well, Barr is now a TV pundit
and Patel is the head of the FBI.
Say what you want about James Comey or Christopher Wray,
and there's plenty to criticize,
but neither of them is even close
to as politically compromised as Patel.
They're not even in the same galaxy.
And if the politicization of the FBI
is a thing you were worried about and loathe, if you were mad about Comey undermining Hillary Clinton or investigating Trump or
upset Ray's FBI raided a president's home, then this is the wrong direction to go. This
leads us deeper down the hole. As for Bongino, well, he's someone even more out there. A
personal disclosure here. Soon after Trump came into office in 2016,
before he was a famous podcaster,
Bongino was constantly spreading easy
to debunk nonsense on Twitter.
And I used to call him out on it.
We tangled on social media pretty regularly arguing
and calling each other not so nice names.
In response, he blocked me.
And then I watched his star rise,
slowly at first and then all at once. And then I watched his star rise, slowly at first
and then all at once, and now he's a major celebrity with the online right. Mostly, his
fame was driven by the kind of nonsense I used to call him out for. In this line of
work, I'm always conscious how my readers and listeners might view me. I'm wary, sometimes,
of being too hard on one side of the aisle for consecutive days. We have a politically
diverse audience looking for fair takes and a diversity of viewpoints,
but in the My Takes section,
my promise is not to seek a centrist position
or toe the line.
Instead, my promise is to be honest,
even if it's inconvenient for me and risky for my business.
And the honest truth is that Kash Patel
is an alarming FBI director with a smattering of good ideas
that weighed against
everything else he said and done completely fail to reassure us that he will act apolitically
and in respect of the law.
I'm not naive and sycophantic enough about the government to believe the FBI is some
deeply ethical non-political organization.
It isn't and never has been.
But it just got a lot worse.
Bongino leading these agents is just simply hard to fathom.
He's so radical, again, just read a few sample codes above
and so power hungry that I struggle to imagine
what he'll try to do with so much control.
My only hope is that there are still enough ethical
and law abiding agents and lawyers among the FBI's
roughly 38,000 employees to check Patel
and Bongino's worst desires from manifesting.
But I can't say I'm enthusiastic about our odds.
We'll be right back after this quick break. Sonic the Hedgehog 3 is now streaming on Paramount Plus.
With the Fizz loyalty program, you get rewarded just for having a mobile plan.
You know, for texting and stuff. And if you're not getting rewards like extra data and dollars for having a mobile plan, you know, for texting and stuff.
And if you're not getting rewards like extra data and dollars off with your mobile plan,
you're not with Fizz. Switch today. Conditions apply. Details at fizz.ca.
All right, that is it for my take. We're skipping today's reader question and I'll be back tomorrow.
So I'm going to send it back to John.
Have a good one.
Peace.
Thanks, Isaac.
Here's your under the radar story for today, folks.
The Texas Department of State Health Services reported its first death in a measles outbreak
that has infected at least 124 people in the state across nine counties, Texas's
largest outbreak in decades.
Measles is one of the most contagious viruses in the world.
It can be transmitted through the air and on surfaces, and it spreads mostly among people
who are not vaccinated against the virus.
Texas says almost all of the confirmed cases are in people who are either unvaccinated
or whose vaccination status could not be confirmed.
Health experts worry that the case count will continue to rise in the coming weeks, noting
that the outbreak corresponds with decreasing rates of childhood vaccinations nationwide.
The Associated Press has the latest on this story, and the Dallas Morning News has the
background on the outbreak.
Both are linked in today's episode description.
Alright next up is our numbers section. The number of confirmed directors in the history
of the Federal Bureau of Investigation is 9. The number of FBI directors confirmed between
1935 and 2001 is 5. The number of FBI directors confirmed between 2001 and 2025 is 4. The number of
confirmed deputy directors in the history of the FBI is 19. The number of FBI deputy
directors confirmed between 1930 and 2001 is 10. The number of FBI directors confirmed
between 2002 and 2025 is 9. The Dan Bongino Show's rank of
PodTrack's list of top U.S. podcasts in January 2025 is number seven. The percentage of U.S.
adults who are extremely or somewhat confident the FBI will act in a fair and nonpartisan manner
during Donald Trump's second term is 52 percent, according to a January 2025 APNORC poll.
And the percentage of Democrats and Republicans respectively who are extremely or somewhat
confident the FBI will act in a fair and nonpartisan manner during Donald Trump's second term is
44% and 63%.
And last but not least, our Have a Nice Day story.
In 1960, Ruby Bridges faced the monumental challenge of being the first black student
to integrate into an all-white school in the South.
Now, Bridges has published a children's book about the experience that she describes as
a love letter to her first grade teacher, Barbara Henry.
Unlike the teachers who quit their jobs to avoid teaching black children, Henry taught 6-year-old Bridges in an empty classroom and became her best friend.
I wouldn't have gotten through that if it hadn't been for my teacher, Bridges said.
Despite all of the hate that was going on outside, inside that room, it was filled with
love.
Today has this story and there's a link in today's episode description.
Alright everyone, that is it for today's episode.
As always, if you'd like to support our work,
please go to readtangle.com,
where you can sign up for a newsletter membership,
podcast membership, or a bundled membership
that gets you the best discount we have.
We'll be right back here tomorrow.
For Isaac and the rest of the crew,
this is John Law signing off.
Have a great day, y'all.
Peace.
Our podcast is written by me, Isaac Saul, and edited and engineered by Duke Thomas.
Our script is edited by Ari Weitzman, Will Kavak, Gellysol, and Sean Brady.
The logo for our podcast was made by Magdalena Bikova, who is also our social media manager.
The music for the podcast was produced by Diet 75.
And if you're looking for more from Tangle, please go check out our website at readtangle.com.
That's readtangle.com.
["Sonic the Hedgehog 3"]
Sonic the Hedgehog 3.
Welcome home, my boy. He's now now streaming on Paramount Plus.
He is much more impressive than the hedgehog I fought previously.
Dude, I'm standing right here.
Sonic the Hedgehog 3 is now streaming on Paramount Plus.
With the Fizz loyalty program, you get rewarded just for having a mobile plan.
You know, for texting and stuff.
And if you're not getting rewards like extra data and dollars off with your mobile plan,
you're not with Fizz. Switch today. Conditions apply. Details at Fizz.ca.