Tangle - What we know about the Texas floods.
Episode Date: July 7, 2025On Friday, flash flooding caused catastrophic damage in Texas Hill Country, a region of Central and South Texas, killing at least 89 people. As of Monday morning, at least 41 people are stil...l missing, and rescue operations remain underway. The majority of the fatalities occurred in Kerr County, where 75 deaths have been reported. Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said that the Guadalupe River rose about 26 feet in 45 minutes Friday morning, and the city of Kerrville said the river reached its second-highest height on record. On Sunday, President Donald Trump signed a major disaster declaration for the county, activating the Federal Emergency Management Agency to assist local officials with the disaster response.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: Do you think NOAA cuts were responsible for the deaths in Texas? Let us know.Disagree? That's okay. My opinion is just one of many. Write in and let us know why, and we'll consider publishing your feedback.You can subscribe to Tangle by clicking here or drop something in our tip jar by clicking here. Our Executive Editor and Founder is Isaac Saul. Our Executive Producer is Jon Lall.This podcast was 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, Senior Editor Will Kaback, Hunter Casperson, Kendall White, Bailey Saul, and Audrey Moorehead. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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From executive producer, Isaac Saul, this is Tangle. Good morning, good afternoon, and good evening, and welcome to the Tangle Podcast, the place
we get views from across the political spectrum, some independent thinking and a little bit
of my take.
I'm your host, Isaac Solland.
On today's episode, we're going to be talking about the floods in Texas.
I got to warn you guys upfront, this is an horrible story.
Just devastating.
I mean, yeah, I'll talk about it in my take. It's just really story, just devastating.
Yeah, I'll talk about it in my take.
It's just really, really awful.
But there are some important questions
that I think need to be answered
and we're gonna try and answer them today
while also being forthright
and taking into account the tragedy at hand.
So we're gonna do that.
It is Monday, July 7th.
If you are just tuning in back with us
after a little bit of the 4th of July break,
I hope you had a good break.
Be sure to go check out the essay I published last week
on Loving America on Thursday,
which sent us off into the 4th of July break.
And that's also up in our podcast feed.
And then if you're interested,
the live stream that we had on our YouTube channel
where Camille and I sat down and talked about his piece
on the 2020 racial reckoning,
that stream is up on our YouTube channel.
You can go find it there right now.
With that, I'm going to send it over to John
for today's main topic and I'll be back for my take.
Thanks Isaac and welcome everybody. I hope many of you were able to have a wonderful 4th of July weekend and enjoy some of the festivities and time with family and friends. And I just want to say
that my thoughts and prayers are with the people of Texas who are
experiencing the fallout of the tragic floods.
Here are your quick hits for today.
First up, President Donald Trump signed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act into law on Friday
after the House of Representatives voted to approve the bill on Thursday.
2.
The Justice Department and Federal Bureau of Investigation have reportedly concluded
that they have no evidence that Jeffrey Epstein blackmailed public figures, kept a client
list, or was murdered. The agencies also released video footage from Epstein's prison cell
the night he died, which purports to show no foul play was involved.
3. President Trump said he plans to restart talks with China this week over a deal to
seal the social media app TikTok's U.S. branch.
4. President Trump said he would send letters on Monday to 12 countries outlining the U.S.
tariffs they would face if trade deals are not reached.
Separately, Trump stated that he would levy an additional 10 percent tariff on any country
aligning themselves with anti-American policies
of the intergovernmental organization BRICS.
And number five, former White House advisor
and Tesla CEO, Elon Musk, announced his intention
to form a new political party called the America Party.
["The American Party"]
Catastrophic flooding in Texas where the lieutenant governor is now saying there are children unaccounted for from a girls camp in the state.
For the parents who are waiting, particularly that had children in Camp Mystic.
Camp Mystic is a camp that has over 750 kids.
Right now there are 20 some that aren't accounted for.
That does not mean they've been lost.
They could be in a tree, they could be out of communication.
We're praying for all of those missing to be found alive.
On Friday, flash flooding caused catastrophic damage in Texas Hill Country, a region of
central and south Texas, killing at least 89 people.
As of Monday morning, 41 people are still missing and rescue operations remain underway.
The majority of the fatalities occurred in Kerr County, where 75 deaths have been reported.
Texas Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick said that the Guadalupe River rose about 26 feet
in 45 minutes Friday morning, and the city of Kerrville said the river reached its second
highest height on record.
On Sunday, President Donald Trump signed a major disaster declaration for the county,
activating the Federal Emergency Management Agency to assist local officials with the disaster response.
On Wednesday, the Texas Division of Emergency Management announced it had activated emergency
response resources in anticipation of possible flash flooding in the region.
The next day, the National Weather Service's Austin-San Antonio office posted a flood watch
for parts of western
hill country, saying it expected pockets of heavy rain. Early Friday morning, the NWS office posted
repeated flash flood warnings, culminating in a flash flood emergency at 5.23 a.m. Central Time.
The NWS reserves emergency advisories for exceedingly rare situations when extreme
heavy rain is leading to a severe threat to
human life.
The flooding was particularly devastating at Camp Mystic, a Christian summer camp for
girls located along the Guadalupe in Hunt, Texas.
At least 27 campers and counselors were killed, and 10 girls and one counselor from the camp
are still missing as of Monday morning.
The camp's director was also killed while attempting to rescue campers.
The intensity of the storm prompted questions about whether local and regional weather services
issued proper warnings or accurately predicted the scale of the weather event.
The first warning of life-threatening flash flooding in Kerrville was issued at 1.14 a.m.
Central Time, triggering an alert on cell phones in the area.
However, many phones along the river
may have not had service,
or users may have had emergency weather alerts turned off.
Furthermore, Kerr County does not have weather sirens,
which are used in other areas
where severe weather events are common.
Tom Faye, the legislative director for the union
that represents weather service workers, claimed that key positions at the local NWS offices
were unfilled during the storm, suggesting the Trump administration's
budget cuts and attempts to reduce the federal workforce caused the vacancies.
However, Greg Waller, a service coordination hydrologist with the NWS
West Gulf River Forecast Center in Fort Worth called its staffing adequate, adding,
"...this was us doing our job to the best of our abilities."
More than 1,700 people have taken part in rescue operations since Friday, and over 850
people have been rescued as of Saturday.
As the efforts continue, a large portion of South and Central Texas remain under flash
flood warnings until Monday. The efforts continue, a large portion of south and central Texas remain under flash flood
warnings until Monday.
Today, we'll break down the latest on the floods with views from the left, right, and
writers in Texas, and then Isaac's tape. We'll be right back after this quick break.
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Alright, first up, let's start with some agreement. Writers on all sides mourn the
loss of life in the floods.
Many commentators say the state and weather services must improve their warning systems
and preparedness measures.
Alright, let's go on to what the left is saying.
Many on the left argue the Trump administration cuts are hurting agencies' ability to respond
to these disasters.
Others say climate change makes forecasting the severity of storms like this more difficult.
In the New York Times, Mary Ann Tierney wrote, America's emergency lifeline is fraying.
When a flash flood inundates your town or a wildfire devours your neighborhood, you
expect the federal government to show up, fast, focused, and fully mobilized.
That expectation underpins our national resilience.
But today, that system is cracking.
The help Americans rely on in their darkest hours is in danger of arriving late, underpowered,
or not at all," Tierney said.
Since January, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which helps people before, during,
and after disasters, has lost more than 20% of its permanent staff, its most experienced
field-ready responders.
Thousands of temporary employees remain on the job, but their contracts are running out.
These are people trained to work with disaster survivors.
Mr. Trump recently announced his intention to phase out FEMA after the 2025 hurricane
season and shift long-term recovery responsibilities to states or other parts of the federal government.
That may appeal to those who want a smaller federal footprint, but the reality is that
states are not ready to absorb this role," Tierney wrote.
And that's the heart of the problem.
This isn't a thoughtful rebalancing of responsibilities.
Critical government tasks are being dumped on state and local partners who are without
the staffing,
funding, or infrastructure to succeed.
Yes, we do need to modernize, but recovery isn't a handoff, it's a partnership.
What we are witnessing isn't a system evolving, it's a system unraveling."
In The Guardian, Eric Holthaus said the flooding reveals the limitations of disaster forecasting
under the climate
crisis.
Even though watches and warnings were issued on time throughout the disaster, contrasting
what local officials have said in press conferences, rainfall totals specified in the first flash
flood watch were about half of what ultimately fell, Holthaus wrote.
Current weather forecasting technology is capable of knowing that near-record rainfall
may occur somewhere in a given region about a day in advance, but knowing exactly how
much and in which part of a specific river's drainage basin over hilly terrain makes flood
forecasting much more difficult, analogous to predicting exactly which neighborhood a
tornado might strike a day ahead of time.
Though it's unclear to what extent staffing shortages across CNWS complicated the advance
notice that local officials had of an impending flooding disaster, it's clear that this was
a complex compound tragedy of a type that climate warming is making more frequent, Holthouse
said.
Rainfall intensity in central Texas has been trending upward for decades, and this week's
rains were enhanced by the remnants of Tropical Storm Berry,
which made landfall in northern Mexico last week.
The mix of berry circulation and climate warming helped create conditions
of record-high atmospheric moisture content over central Texas. Alright, that is it for what the left is saying, which brings us to what the right is saying.
Many on the right say the floods are a tragic reminder of our continued vulnerability to
nature.
Others push back on the notion that the Trump administration cuts contributed to the disaster.
In hot air, David Strom said, no amount of government spending can prevent natural disasters.
The first slander that the NWS fell down on the job and failed to warn that floods were imminent is just false.
The first warnings were put out about 12 hours before the flash flood.
Updated flood warnings, this time flash flood warnings, came out hours before, and anybody
with a weather radio or a smartphone should have been warned, Strom wrote.
Further, the NWS had more than doubled its staff in the region when it looked like storms
might be coming, paying three people overtime to ensure that information was gathered and
dispersed as quickly as possible. Flash floods happen, and while tragedies of the scale of the one in Texas are thankfully
rare, people dying in flash floods is not.
No amount of government spending will stop that from being a reality," Strom wrote.
"'Whatever people think, we have not tamed nature.
The best we can do is give people warnings about the dangers that exist.
But if you think governments can prevent bad things from happening, you are deluded.
And if you think that warnings will prevent tragedies, you are also mistaken.
In his substack, Eric Woods Erickson criticized the Left's response to the floods.
Democrats, many more than the number of Republicans who suggested the Biden administration,
steered hurricanes for political gain, along with members of the American press corps, have
ghoulishly rushed to blame the Trump administration for the deaths in Texas.
Some of them have even mocked Texas for voting for the instruments of its citizens' deaths,
Erickson wrote.
There is no evidence the cuts impacted Texas.
In fact, by all professional accounts, the meteorological services and local media all
work together well to raise alarms.
Normal people do not rush to assign blame to politicians.
The ghouls seek to find political advantage.
In seeking that political advantage, as we've seen in the national press coverage over the
last 48 hours, blame is prioritized over heroism, Erikson said.
The stories are there of the camp counselor who saved as many girls as possible, the Coast
Guard rescue swimmer who saved 165 people, the HEB staff who sprang into action to help
the area, and countless others, some losing their lives in the process.
But those who worship government, the ghouls of disaster, elevate the political process
over those who went through the process of rescuing their neighbors.
Alright, that is it for what the left and the right are saying, which brings us to what
writers in Texas are saying.
Some Texan writers say the region needs a full review of early warning systems and disaster
response policies.
Others note that while these kinds of storms are endemic to Texas,
the state can still do more to protect residents.
The Dallas Morning News editorial board
wrote about the what-ifs of the disaster.
It's hard to know what words to share
in a moment of such unimaginable pain and shock
as the one our state is experiencing right now.
The loss of so much life,
of little girls from all over Texas camping near a river bank,
of grandmas and grandpas and mothers and fathers, people swept away from us so suddenly, it
defies understanding," the board said.
We are Texans, and we understand that our rivers are dual beings, that they can shift
from gently rolling water to massive surges before our eyes.
But even by that understanding, what happened on July 4th exceeds anything most of us can
remember.
Texas River flooding is unlike most natural disasters, not only in its speed and ferocity,
but in its unpredictability.
Rainfall frequently triggers flash flood warnings, but the severity of the actual flooding is
so variable that many people too often disregard those warnings," the board wrote.
State and local officials need to wrestle with improved warning systems.
We need to understand whether improved staffing or technology at either the National Weather
Service or the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration could give more accurate advance warning.
Local officials, meanwhile,
must review their own practices and policies.
In the eyewall,
Matt Lanza explored the weather that led
to a horrible Texas flooding tragedy.
As is often the case in Interior Texas,
one of the culprits involved last night
was the remnant of a tropical storm.
Remember Tropical Storm Barry? It lasted all of 12 hours before coming ashore in Mexico. Because of this, you had
abundant moisture coming from that storm's source region in the Gulf. You had strong
moisture transportation coming northward as well, with a strong low-level jet stream,
Lanza said. So tallying that all together, a remnant tropical
storm, moisture levels in the 99th percentile or higher,
forced upward motion due to geography and wind direction,
and plentiful instability.
That's a recipe for flash flooding.
So how do you go from flash flooding
to catastrophic flash flooding?
Because the difference is clearly enormous.
When you put those parameters in concert
with a weather pattern that allows
for maximum efficiency of rainfall, a monsoonal pattern, and slow movement, as well as geography
that allows for rapid buildup of water on dry ground and riverbeds that funnel that
through an area, that's when you flip from ordinary to potentially tragic, Lanza wrote.
We need to think much bigger than just the areas impacted this time and more about flash flood alley as a whole.
Flooding risk is high in Texas.
People learn to live with it in some ways, but something like this absolutely cannot
happen again.
All right.
Let's head over to us to my take.
So one of the core principles here at Tangle is to be human and thinking about how to deliver
and analyze the news.
I found that adding the genuinely human touch, some personality, some authenticity,
helps to reach people from all different backgrounds.
On days like today though,
it's not as hard to be human as it is to just find the words.
I just, I don't know what to say.
Nightmarish, horrific, devastating,
those words don't seem sufficient
to describe a group
of elementary school age children being overrun
by rushing flood waters while sleeping soundly
at a summer camp.
I read one story of a father charging through the debris
on the banks of the Guadalupe River,
trying to find the body of his eight-year-old daughter
who was still missing and I just had to stop.
As unimaginable and heartbreaking as it is to put yourself
in the shoes of these kids or their families,
their situation demands accountability.
I've seen a number of conservatives criticize Democrats
for quote unquote using this tragedy,
the hammer President Trump's cuts
to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
or NOAA.
Scoring political
points in the wake of a tragedy may be distasteful, but it's far from new behavior.
Only a few months ago, Republicans were using the horrors of Hurricane Helene in North Carolina
to hammer Biden. In fact, even in this case, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem is already justifying
Trump's reforms by pointing the finger at the National Weather Service, which operates under the NOAA. This is politics, and it's how it's played now, whether we like it
or not. Personally, I have two big questions. Number one, how did the systems in place fail
in central Texas? And number two, did NOAA cuts in any way cause or exasperate those failures?
To answer the first question, I think it's worth going through what transpired. Did NOAA cuts in any way cause or exasperate those failures?
To answer the first question,
I think it's worth going through what transpired.
The NWS sent out a series of increasingly urgent
flash flood warnings throughout the night.
Unfortunately, Care County only implemented
a cell phone alert system.
Many counselors at Camp Mystic did not have cell service
and flood waters rose in the dead of the night
and they rose incredibly fast. As
David Strom wrote under what the right is saying, the typical warning systems may have
just been inadequate for a storm of this nature. But those systems may also not have been operating
adequately, which brings us to the second question. Did NOAA cuts in any way cause or
exasperate those failures? The best evidence that the Trump administration cuts are to blame for any shortcomings in
the notification system came from the current and former National Weather Service employees
who spoke to the New York Times.
Tom Fahey, the Legislative Director for the National Weather Service Employees Organization,
said the agency was experiencing staffing shortages for forecasting and emergency management
positions which worsened after
Trump took office.
John Sokich, the former director of congressional affairs for NWS, said those unfilled positions
made coordinating with local officials during the flood more difficult.
Given that Texas officials are blaming an inaccurate NWS forecast, one could easily
speculate that the staffing shortages impacted the accuracy of the rainfall forecast.
However, far more evidence suggests
that Texas officials in Kerr County
actually had what they needed to avoid this disaster.
Politico published a helpful roundup of comments
from people involved with the response,
which included numerous current NWS officials
saying they were adequately staffed
and using the available technology to the
best of their abilities. If there was a problem, it appears to have been with decisions made by
local officials who chose long ago not to spend money on installing warning systems like sirens.
As Matt Lanza, a meteorologist who has criticized the Trump administration's NOAA cuts, put it,
in this particular case, we have seen absolutely nothing
to suggest that current staffing or budget issues within NOAA and the NWS played any role at all in
this event. Anyone using this event to claim that is being dishonest. In fact, weather balloon
launches played a vital role in forecast messaging on Thursday night as the event was beginning to
unfold. If you want to go that route, use this event as a symbol
of the value NOAA and NWS bring to society,
understanding that as horrific as this is,
yes, it could have always been worse.
To me, the root cause of the failure here
seemed to come from alert systems.
Texas officials issued dire emergency warnings
about the flood and understood the risks of this storm.
Those warnings did not reach some of the counselors and kids who needed to hear
them, but it's not at all clear if there were ever systems in place before Trump or
NWS cuts that would have saved them. However, even if staffing and funding cuts were not
directly responsible for this tragedy, I think these events provide a clear warning about
what could happen if these systems break down.
Some 600 staffers in a workforce of 4,000 had already left the weather surface by this
spring.
Imagine how your company would handle a 15% workforce reduction.
And the organization has been warning for many months that it is closing forecasting
offices at night, flying fewer weather balloons, and expects degraded operations in the future.
Federal cuts weren't just executed by Doge and the Office of Management and Budget,
but are being extended through legislation. President Trump's just-passed reconciliation
bills cuts NOAA funding deeply enough that weather research labs may end up shutting down.
It's reasonable to worry that cutting NOAA research and staffing could lead to more incidents
where dire weather warnings don't reach the people they need to, regardless of whether
these specific systems in Texas were impacted by the cuts.
Accurately forecasting and communicating danger is the kind of work these researchers and
meteorologists are responsible for.
And trying to understand what this tragedy tells us about how cuts could directly impact
the public isn't only fair, it's prudent.
Of course, NOAA may have been overstaffed before Trump's cuts, and the level it's operating
at currently may actually be sufficient to achieve its mission.
But sadly, in our degraded discourse, a fair-minded discussion about the agency's appropriate
staffing levels seems unlikely.
While many on the left are blaming Trump
for dead young girls in Texas,
the Department of Homeland Security
is busy bashing the mainstream media,
and I'm on X watching, jaw agape,
as conspiracy theories go viral,
alleging the weather in Texas was being weaponized
by some kind of Bill Gates-run weather experimentation.
It's all very dark and discouraging.
With any luck, Texas and Congress have enough serious legislators willing to consider how
funding cuts may impact their own constituencies going forward. One obvious takeaway is that
dedicating a small fraction of budgets in at-risk states or localities to implementing
better warning systems like storm sirens would be a good use of taxpayer dollars. But those warning systems won't matter
if we aren't investing in forecasting services.
NWS employees and staff have been ringing alarm bells
for months.
And even if these staffing shortages
weren't the root cause of this tragedy,
that doesn't mean we can't take it as a wake-up call
for improving how all these systems work together.
I, for one, would sleep a bit more soundly
knowing these meteorologists and local officials felt they had the tools necessary all these systems work together. I, for one, would sleep a bit more soundly
knowing these meteorologists and local officials
felt they had the tools necessary
to keep us safe in the future.
We'll be right back after this quick break.
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All right, that is it for my take, which brings us to your questions answered. This one's from Alicia in San Mateo, California. Alicia said, how are the unemployment numbers generated?
Is it just people currently on unemployment?
So great question, and actually one that's been answered
pretty sufficiently by the government agency
that measures unemployment,
the Bureau of Labor Statistics or BLS.
The short version is that the BLS calculates unemployment
through a survey of a large pool of the population.
Because unemployment insurance records relate only to people who have applied for such benefits,
and since it is impractical to count every unemployed person each month, the government
conducts a monthly survey called the Current Population Survey, CPS, to measure the extent
of unemployment in the country, the agency explains.
The CPS is composed of 110,000 individuals,
large enough that you probably know someone
who has been surveyed, chosen by the BLS
to represent the demographic makeup
and geographic distribution of the country.
Roughly 60,000 households from the CPS
are contacted monthly through a computerized questionnaire
and the BLS will periodically add and remove members
from its survey
to keep it representative and random.
You can read a lot more about how BLS reaches the people,
its surveys, updates, its survey pool,
ways, its responses and more in their complete answer,
which is on their website.
And there's a link to it in our episode description.
All right, that is it for your questions answered.
I'm gonna send it back to John for the rest of the pod
and I'll see you guys tomorrow.
Have a good one. Peace.
Thanks, Isaac. Here's your under the radar story for today, folks.
On Friday, the Trump administration deported eight non-citizens convicted of violent crimes to South Sudan,
despite none of them hailing from the country.
The deportations have been the source of a protracted legal dispute.
In May, a federal judge blocked an attempt to deport the men, finding that they must
first have the opportunity to challenge their removals.
However, the Supreme Court stayed that decision in June, then clarified on Thursday that their
ruling paused the federal judge's order, meaning the deportations could no longer be blocked.
South Sudan said it would offer the deportees temporary immigration status, but further details about their futures are unknown.
CBS News has this story and there's a link in today's episode description.
Alright, next up is our numbers section.
The amount of rain in inches predicted by the National Weather Service on Thursday afternoon
for portions of south central Texas was 5 to 7 inches.
The amount of rain in inches that fell on parts of the region early Friday morning was
12 inches, according to the National Weather Service radar estimates. The height in feet at which the Guadalupe River in Kerr County is considered major flooding
is 20 feet.
The height in feet that the Guadalupe River in Kerr reached on Friday at 6.45 a.m. Central
Time is 36.6 feet.
The river's height in feet at 5.15 a.m. Central Time in Curville was 1.8 feet.
The height in feet that the Guadalupe River reached at the unincorporated community of
Hunt before the gauge became completely submerged and failed was 29.5 feet.
The current number of vacancies at the National Weather Service's San Angelo Forecasting
Office is 4 out of
23 positions, according to the NWS's labor union, and the current number of vacancies
at the NWS's San Antonio Forecasting Office is 6 out of 26 positions.
And last but not least, our Have a Nice Day story.
Amid the horrors of the flooding in Kerr County, Texas over the weekend, stories of brave rescuers
are starting to circulate.
One of the most impactful rescuers was Scott Ruskin, an aviation survival technician, third
class stationed in Corpus Christi, Texas.
Ruskin was one of the first to respond to Camp Mystic, where he said he saw about 200
campers gathered. This was the first rescue mission of his career, where he said he saw about 200 campers gathered.
This was the first rescue mission of his career, and he was the only triage coordinator at
the scene, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristian Noem said.
Ruskin is credited with saving 165 people.
Fox News has this story and there's a link in today's episode description.
Alright, everybody, 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 a discount on both.
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 executive editor and founder is me, Isaac Saul, and our executive producer is John Lull.
Today's episode was edited and engineered by Dewey Thomas. Our editorial staff is led by managing
editor Ari Weitzman with senior editor Will K. Back and associate editors Hunter Kaspersen,
Audrey Morehead, Bailey Saul, Lindsay Knuth, and Kendall White.
Music for the podcast was produced by Dyett75. To learn more about Tangle
and to sign up for a membership, please visit our website at retangle.com.
This episode is sponsored by the OCS Summer Pre-Roll Sale. Sometimes when you roll your own joint, things can turn out a little differently than what you expected.
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at ocs.ca and participating retailers.
Some things just take too long.
A meeting that could have been an email,
someone explaining crypto, or switching mobile providers.
Except with Fizz.
Switching to Fizz is quick and easy.
Mobile plans start at $17 a month.
Certain conditions apply, details at fizz.ca.
The Holt Renfrew beauty refresh offer starts soon.
Enjoy up to 20% off select beauty and grooming
so that you can shop brands you love
and ones you've always wanted to try.
July 10 to 13 in store and online.
Terms and conditions apply.
Don't miss it.
