The Breakfast Club - INTERVIEW: Dr. Puma Talks 'Sorin Heart Scan,' Power 105.1 Partnership, U.S. Healthcare Crisis, Health Solutions + More
Episode Date: March 30, 2026Today on The Breakfast Club, Dr. Puma Talks 'Sorin Heart Scan,' Power 105.1 Partnership, U.S. Healthcare Crisis, Health Solutions. Listen For More!YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@BreakfastClubPower1...051FMSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Morning, everybody. It's DJ NV. Just hilarious.
Salomey and the guy. We are the Breakfast Club.
Lawn LaRose is here as well.
special guests in the building.
We talk to you about him all the time.
All the time.
My man, Dr. Puma.
Ladies and gentlemen, Dr. Puma.
How you feeling that?
Great to be here again.
Thanks.
Thanks for having me.
And it's great to be here with Jess.
Yes.
I love and Lauren,
great to meet you as well.
Charlene always good to see you.
My guy, now we always tell you about Dr. Puma
and we encourage everybody to go to Sauran Medical
because cardiovascular health is very important.
But today we got something very special for listeners
because we're giving away free art scans.
Wow.
That's Sorn and Medical,
courtesy of Dr. Puma.
Hey.
That's right.
Well, for people that don't know who Dr. Puma is
or don't listen to the show
might not have heard us,
explain what Dr. Puma does
that helps and benefit so many people.
It keeps you from dying.
Well, in long form.
We hope so.
Yes.
I mean, in short form,
doctors can only do two things for people,
help you feel better or live longer.
But there's real differences in care
in this country and especially in New York.
And, you know, I'm a Brooklynite.
Come from South Brooklyn.
And it really focused the majority of my care, but especially the last third of my career on just improving care and underserved areas.
People who either don't have access, don't know how to have access.
And with our technology, with a three-minute heart scan, we can see your arteries in your body.
We can see if you have plaque.
We can see if you have blockage.
And truthfully, you know, as you know, Charlemagne,
the majority of people who go to the cardiologists just have anxiety
and are having all kinds of different symptoms, chest pain, palpitations,
shortness of breath.
And so a normal scan is as valuable as anything else.
So we're just trying to improve the health of the community
and really reaching out and giving people an access point.
How often should you get a heart scan?
Well, it depends.
It depends.
If you're having symptoms, it depends.
actually what the results are. If you have no calcification, no plaque buildup in your arteries and
normal coronaries, then that has the lowest risk of heart attack, stroke, or death over the next eight
years less than 2%. And so in that case, there's pretty much nothing you're going to do to have a heart
attack. So just, you know, we'll see you in eight years. And that should give you a peace of mind. So even if you
get chest pain or shortness of breath for some reason, you know it can't be coming for your heart.
But if you have severe blocked arteries, which we see every day and you end up getting bypass surgery or stents, then we personalize it for you.
And you may have a scan more frequently.
Now, the head to toe scan that you can do as well.
Full body and brain scan.
Yeah, full body and brain scan.
Now, of course, you do the veins and your arteries and those type of things.
But can you see cancer through those scans?
Yes.
And, you know, we're at a different time in the world today, right?
And I think that the two things that we really have to work hard on in medicine is access and trust.
We've lost, especially post-COVID, we've lost a lot of trust in people.
And underserved communities in particular already had a lower trust level.
So people are searching and people are trying to advocate for their own health.
And a full body scan, we see all the tissues, the organs.
but the way we do it is we also accentuate all the arteries in the body.
So if there's an aneurysm or any calcification or blockage,
we'll see that also from head to toe.
And that's what I went for because, you know,
for like the past year and some change,
I just kept hearing people catching an aneur, getting aneurysm,
getting aneurysm.
So I went and got the full body and brain scan
because you can detect for those, as you just said.
Who should be getting them?
Well, it depends.
I, you know, I work with you on mental wealth every year, Charlemagne.
I think there's so many people who have so much anxiety and don't have access even to a primary care doctor or they don't go to anyone who sits and listens to them.
Those are the people who are signing up most commonly because they're just trying to find answers, right?
They're not even sure what the questions are, but they're trying to find answers.
But certainly anyone at risk.
Anyone, if you're a male over 40 or a woman over 50 and you have any risk,
for cardiovascular disease, high blood pressure, diabetes, high cholesterol, cigarette smoking.
And then again, anyone who's having symptoms.
So let's separate people who have no symptoms versus people who have symptoms.
If you're having pain somewhere, dizziness, lightheadedness, shortness of breath,
those types of symptoms.
I was going to ask, you know, when people do go for the skin, how often should they go for the scan?
Because, see, the first time when I go there, the first thing you say is, what did you see on TV?
that made you come in it.
You know, what does Charlemagne say to you?
And that's usually what it is, right?
That's what he said to me when I went to the full body brain?
He's like, what are you here for?
I said something about you guys, no, what are you really here for?
And I said, I just been hearing about all these aneurysms.
The same, well, see, Charlemagne gets me going.
Showman is like, yo, I just went and I got a full skater and I'm good.
And then I just start seeing stuff on TV and this person just passed.
And then I wind up going, he goes, what are you here for?
What did you see on television?
And we go through the scared.
Like all morning, I'm even talking about ass warts.
Yes.
Oh my God.
I have not been talking about ass words,
but my question to you is how often should people go
and also stroke, silent killer?
If I go to you and I get a clear,
should I have to worry about a stroke
or is there other things that can happen
or can you see it from your skin?
Because that's another thing that scares me now.
So first of all, I'm not talking about warts.
Thank you.
I came insane, I talked about it.
Yes, I said I talk about anything,
but I have a limit.
He's good with ass wards.
Between here and here, I'm not talking.
Okay.
Got you got you.
Fair enough.
So if there's a vascular abnormality in your arteries, if there's blockage, if there's aneurysm, you'll see it,
and then I can give you a risk score of what your risk is over time, right?
Because the body changes over time.
But the key is, especially in the black community, is high blood pressure.
Damage or death from high blood pressure and complications of high blood pressure now in the black community is higher than heart attacks.
Okay? And most commonly because black Americans compared to white Americans develop high blood pressure sooner. It's usually more resistant to treatment. And they have it longer in life. They develop complications. Congestive heart failure, stroke, and heart attack. And so. And it's no symptoms. And the high blood pressure is what we call the silent killer. That's exactly right. So in those cases, again, everything is customized. But you're right, Charlotte.
And when people come in, usually there's some event that happened.
A friend died young or a coworker or a family member.
And there's always something.
And, you know, put yourself in my position.
I've spent 40 years primarily in an 8 by 10 room sitting interviewing people.
Not the way you interview them, but hearing their worries, their anxieties, their symptom.
And you learn what the right questions are to ask to get them to open up.
And it's usually, so what's bringing you to, you know, to see me?
What are you worried about?
And usually that's one of their triggers.
How often do you see somebody and they have to go straight to the hospital?
Like maybe you do their blood pressure and you're like, oh, this is too high.
You're going to go now.
Every day.
Really?
Wow.
Every single day.
And I can tell you, the work you've done here and I appreciate that you talk about it.
And by the way, puts a lot of pressure on me, by the way, because when people leave,
I said, please make sure you tell them I did okay.
Because we don't want anything negative.
but so many people have come in that would otherwise not see a doctor or have gone to doctors
and they're not listened to or they go to the hospital and, you know, they don't have their specific doctor.
And, you know, Lauren and I have.
I just recently went through that.
And I called Dr. Puma and he literally, like, saved one of my family members' lives.
Nice.
Like, literally, like, they were, I had a family.
I'm not going to, not too much detail, but I had a family member who was going through something in the hospital.
hospital. Her family wasn't there at the moment when something was happening, but when they got
there, they knew something was wrong. And the hospital was telling them, oh, no, no, no. And it was
something very seriously wrong. And I called Dr. Puma, and I'm like, I know something's wrong.
Here are her symptoms. What do you think? And he's like, here's exactly what you need to tell
them to do. So I called and I'm like, hey, like, this is what we need to say to them. And on the other
side, advocating, like, and that's what I wanted you to talk about too, like having an advocate
in the hospital. On the advocate side, I also talked to him.
about if they don't do it legally, like what can she say?
Who should we talk to?
Who in the hospital should she talk to?
And everything got going within like the next hour.
And it probably saved her life, even though there is damage that's done because they
had neglected some things for some time.
But I called you in the airport.
And he just like stopped everything he was doing to help me figure it out.
And people like you really save people's lives from phone calls like that.
But I guess the thing that concerns me more than anything is this is a national problem.
Now people don't have primary care doctors anymore that they're going to.
connected to that advocate for them.
How would the patient know what to advocate for, right?
You talk about it all the time, Charlemagne,
and I hear you talking about on the show,
about insurance issues, insurance doesn't cover this procedure
or that doctor or this medication.
I heard you're talking about, I heard a caller this morning.
They're alternating every month.
Rationing of medicine.
I mean, in what universe do we live in?
Right?
So.
You got a ration.
I just say rational.
Rational.
Yeah.
Yeah, rationing medication.
So I think there's a lot we can do.
I've tried to use, you know, I got a tiny little platform,
but I'm screaming from the top of my lungs and, you know,
bringing people in that relate to different communities.
And instead of just talking to doctors, you know,
like we had our conference this year, you were at it last year, Charlemagne.
And I'm trying to open their eyes.
And, you know, we had the last, let's wrap about it, podcast there this year.
And we just have an honest, open conversations and trying to go direct to the community.
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You know Roaldahl, the writer who thought up Willie Wonka, Matilda, and the BFG.
But did you know he was also a spy?
Was this before he wrote his stories?
It must have been.
Our new podcast series, The Secret World of Roll Doll,
is a wild journey through the hidden chapters of his extraordinary, controversial life.
His job was literally to seduce the wives of powerful Americans.
What?
And he was really good at it.
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Okay, I don't think that's true.
I'm telling you, the guy was a spy.
Did you know Dahl got cozy with the Roosevelt's?
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How did this secret agent wind up as the most successful children's author ever?
And what darkness from his covert past
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The true story is stranger.
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In 2023,
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found himself at the center of a paternity scandal.
The family court hearings that followed
revealed glaring inconsistencies in her story.
This began a years-long court battle
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You doctored this particular test twice in someone, correct?
I doctored the test ones.
It took an army of internet
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Sunlight's the greatest disinfected.
They would uncover a disturbing pattern.
Two more men who'd been through the same thing.
Greg Alesspian and Michael Marantini.
My mind was blown.
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This is Love Trap.
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As the season continues, Laura Owens finally faces consequences.
Ladies and gentlemen, breaking news at Americopa County as Laura,
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Why hasn't a woman formally participated in a Formula One race weekend in over a decade?
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What can we learn from all of the new F1 romance novels suddenly popping up every year?
He still smelled of podium champagne and expensive friction.
And how did a 2023 event called Wag Ageddon change the paddock forever?
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From IHeart podcasts and Best Case Studios.
This is Rorschach, murder at City Hall.
How could this have happened in City Hall?
Somebody tell me that.
July 2003, Councilman James, James.
James E. Davis arrives at New York City Hall with a guest.
Both men are carrying concealed weapons.
And in less than 30 minutes, both of them will be dead.
Now everybody in the chamber is doth.
A shocking public murder.
I scream, get down, get down.
Those are shots.
Those are shots, get down.
A charismatic politician.
You know, he just bent the rules all the time.
I still have a weapon and I could shoot you.
And an outsider with a guy.
a secret. He alleged he was a victim of flat down. That may or may not have been political.
That may have been about sex. Listen to Rorschach, murder at City Hall on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. And that's why I love coming on the show,
because it definitely triggers something in people, and they come in, and then we find diabetes,
we find high blood pressure, we find things that weren't treated or inadequately treated.
we find blocked arteries DJ NVV every day
or blood pressure that's over 200
and we send them straight to the hospital every single day.
I wanted to ask, you know, when you do have those situations,
what do you do, right?
Because I just remember my daughter when she was in the hospital, right?
So she was in the hospital in December
and Dr. Puma helped out, like, made sure everything was great.
But in January, the hospital stopped taking her insurance, right?
Why?
They just cut off the insurance that they took.
Instead of using that provider, they used another provider.
So now they basically said they can't see her anymore.
And they said you have to go to somebody else.
But what we were explaining, and Dr. Puma helped out with this, is if she goes to another doctor, they don't know what the other doctors did.
They don't know the medicine that she's on.
They've never seen her.
So, like, how does that work?
And, you know, we had to yell and scream and we got it done.
But for people that don't have the platform, that people that don't know what's going on, like what can they do?
It's a big challenge.
If they're part of our practice, we advocate for them.
And we take everybody and anyone, whether they have insurance or not, I've said it before here,
and, you know, if they come in for a scan or they need care or they lose their insurance,
we don't cut them away.
We don't play that game.
But that's a huge problem because all these health systems now, remember, 15 years ago,
we didn't have any such thing as health systems, right?
These health systems are basically corporate practice of medicine.
These are just business deals between the hospital and the, um,
and the insurance company.
And so the patients are getting cut out.
Independent physicians, I think, are critically important.
You know, 15 years ago, 80% of the doctors in the U.S.
were independent in private practices.
Now it's less than 20%.
But they're the ones who advocate for you.
They're the ones who know you.
And I think, Lauren, I would say this to you or DJ Envy.
I think that's why you all call me,
because I work for you or I work for the people.
patient, when you go to a hospital system, you just found out now, sadly, after all you went through,
which was traumatizing, that everyone there works for the hospital and for the health system.
They're not working for you. So it's a challenge. But what you need to do is just keep advocating.
Everybody knows when they're not being treated properly. You feel it in your gut. You know it.
Everybody knows when they're being disrespected or they're not, you know, being treated with dignity.
and you need to keep advocating.
And it might not be the doctor or the hospital that you're in front of.
You may have to find somewhere else.
And that's unfortunate,
but you have to keep advocating for yourself
because everyone deserves high-quality health care
at low or no-cost.
This is America.
I mean, can you imagine we're having this conversation in 2026?
We say this is America as if this isn't America.
Like, to me, this is the American way.
The system being corrupt, I've never known it any other way.
I've never known a country, I've never known this country to have affordable health care for people.
I've never seen it easy for people to access the health care system.
Me personally, when we say this is America, you're actually the exception to the rule, Dr. Pum.
Well, we were supposed to have fixed all of that, right, with everyone getting health care.
But now in New York, for instance, 40% of New York City is on Medicaid.
You know, so when you listen.
So I'm with you, right?
I mean, you know, I think our politics actually are very similar, and we may advocate in different ways.
And I can't say the things you always say because you have the statute that you have.
But I agree with you.
I think it's crazy.
We should all have affordable health care.
And it shouldn't matter, you know, who you are.
But we don't.
And I think that there's a lot in the Affordable Care Act that we need to look back at now and needs to be fixed.
People can't afford medications, right?
Remember, no one was supposed to be in medical debt, Jess.
Remember that?
We have more people in medical debt today than we did 15 years ago.
We have more people being taken to court by hospital systems, right?
And it's harder for us in independent practice to figure out how to, you know, pay the electric and pay everyone's salaries.
But I can tell you, in 40 years, I've never put anyone in collection.
And if people can't pay, they can't pay.
Before you move on from that point, can I ask you, how does that work then?
Like, how can you figure out to afford that?
But every, or to do that, I don't know if it's an affording thing.
That's a great question.
Every other hospital can't.
Well, they can or they won't.
They can or they won't.
Now, by the law, we have to ask for the deductible.
We have to ask for the co-pay.
But also by the law, if you came in, Jess, or, or,
a family member and said, I can't afford it.
We're allowed to click that in the computer and not collect it.
Interesting.
And we're allowed to say, don't build a patient.
Yeah.
But that's why your scans are so affordable just because of that?
No, my scans are so affordable.
That's part of it.
But my scans are so affordable because I decided to go the opposite way.
So if you go to the Upper East Side, you're paying $2,000.
You come to us, we're charging the $300.
And if you can't pay, you know, we just do it.
Damn.
Okay? And then I think what happens, it's kind of like what my dad told me when I was young.
If you just do a good job and try and do the right thing, you know, someone will figure it out.
Someone will, you know, people will come. And that's what's happened. And I think that we've built a robust, vibrant, diverse practice.
You know, we go to communities nobody wants to go to. And we open, you know, we're about to open with basilica management in June, over 50,000 square foot facility in the Bronx on the Grand Concourse.
that'll have multiple specialties, OBGYN, primary care, cardiac, vascular, radiology.
Who's investing there?
Right?
Is it the big health systems?
You know, that do $10 billion a year?
Is it United Health Care?
That's a $400 billion a year.
Now I'm really sounding like an activist, but no, it's small little us, and we're doing it out of our own pocket.
But we're figuring out because people are coming.
We don't have the scale of some of these places, but people come.
And by the way, when you all bring us up, it's like an extra obligation for us.
We even work harder because we would never want to not make sure that you were proud
or that you were associated with something that was good and positive.
I am, because every time we tell people to go to Dr. Puma,
they always leave with the same sensory relief that I felt when I first was.
You know what I'm saying?
And as somebody who deals in anxiety and always think they got some type of heart issues.
It wasn't until I went to Soaring Medical did my first, you know, cardiovascular scan that I felt an extreme sensory.
And to me, that, that's priceless.
Now, I know you specialize in cardiovascular issues, but uterine fibroids, they affect many women, especially black women at higher rates.
Is that something that you addressed at Storm Medical?
So we're an integrated group now with vascular surgery, interventional radiology.
We have offices all over New York, the boroughs.
We even have offices now in New Jersey, Orange County.
Our ambulatory surgical centers on Wall Street, on the corner of Wall Street and South Street,
and yes, we treat embolized uterine fibroids.
We've innovated in non-surgical techniques, simple outpatient procedures where patients come in in in the morning.
They get a 30 to 60-minute procedure, and within two hours, they're walking out the door.
And you're right about uterine fibroids.
Uterine fibroids are significantly higher in black women than in white or Hispanic women.
In fact, I think the statistic is up to 70 percent of black women will develop uterine fibroids.
And many of them, you know, have heavy periods or abdominal discomfort, and they just suffer through it when, you know, they get anemic.
when it's easily treatable.
And I think that the way we treated is a huge advance with embolizations
because essentially getting an intravenous in your wrist,
you're under sedation, so you don't feel anything,
takes us about 30 to 45 minutes to embolize.
We use these little microbeads that we get into the arteries that are feeding the fibroids,
because the fibers are essentially just benign tumors.
And so we're just basically cut off the blood supply,
and then within a couple of weeks the tumors just contract and all the symptoms go away.
It's highly effective.
It essentially markedly reduces the need forever needing a hysterectomy.
Right.
That was the next question.
Which is a barbaric.
Yeah.
Right.
I mean, think if men had a problem when we told them that's what they needed to have done.
How many of them would go for that?
Exactly.
So a hysterectomy, that's something that would prevent getting one a little little
because I notice women are having to get them even earlier in their lives.
That's exactly right.
Yeah.
Damn.
So how do we give away some free heart scans, Dr. Puma?
Right now.
Right now, you can give away as many as you want, anyone who calls in.
Don't say that now.
We got millions and millions of listeners now.
Sholovan, you know we give away one every week.
That is true.
We've been doing it for last year, this year.
We give away one every week.
That's amazing.
And we, you know, these patients that come in, you know, last week or two weeks
go, a woman came in, she won a free heart scan, ended up getting two stents one day and coming back
for her, you know what I mean? So people are finding things, so we're glad to do it. So I'll leave it
open to you. You know my heart is open. It's all love here. So we'll give away 50, 100, whatever
you'd like to do. We just want people, because when people come in for their free heart scans,
we're checking their blood pressure. If they let us, we check blood. We find out if they're diabetic,
you know, we'll go over their medicines with them.
And so we find so many other things
that we could be helpful, whether they stay with us or not,
or they take it back to their, you know, their community.
So we're glad to do it.
So you name the number.
Pick a number. Pick a number.
One through...
105.
Huh? God damn.
I was going to say one through 50.
48.
48. All right. First 48 people call right now.
Let's just round it up to 50 then.
Your number.
All right.
And this is what you got a chance.
I'll tell you, I pick 50.
All right.
50.
All right.
First 50 people right now.
Don't call right now.
In New York, though.
At Power 1051.1.com.
Oh, that's good.
You got to register on the website, Power 1051.com.
I didn't know we still had a website.
Register on the site.
It doesn't matter where you're from.
If you drive them out of town, they can still come, right?
Absolutely.
Yeah, so it's not just New York.
Wherever you at.
So you got to go register on the website?
Register on the website.
I was going to say first 50 people called from New York,
give it to them right now.
No, no, no, no.
Let's do anybody.
Anybody that wants to get to New York and do this,
you just register on the website.
What's the website again?
Power 105.1.com.
I had to dust that website off.
Please do it.
All right.
Thank you.
We appreciate you so much for joining us.
Thank you so much.
Thank you, Dr. Puma.
Thank you.
No sense.
You're a angel.
And last day, I was going to say,
make it a family thing.
Bring your home family when you go see Dr.
I brought my wife.
I brought my kids.
I'm trying.
They don't want to go.
How many times I don't call you said, I'm bringing my family
Trying to get them out the house
You have ball spots?
Shut up.
Oh my God.
All right.
Is that the Pooh?
You should accept it before you dot that hair.
It's the breakfast club, good morning.
Every day I wake up.
Wake your ass up.
The breakfast club.
You're all finished or y'all?
You know Roll Dahl.
He thought up Willie Wonka in the BFG.
But did you know he was a spy?
In the new podcast, the secret world of Roll Dahl,
I'll tell you that story, and much, much more.
What?
You probably won't believe it either.
Was this before he wrote his stories?
It must have been.
Okay, I don't think that's true.
I'm telling you.
I was a spy.
Listen to the secret world of Roald Dahl
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Lori Siegel, and on my new podcast,
mostly human, I'll take you to some wild corners of the tech world.
I'm about to go on a date with an AI companion
at a real world cafe, right?
here in New York City.
There's no playbook for what to do when an AI model hallucinates a story about you.
Mostly Human is your playbook for how tech can work for you.
Anyone can now be an entrepreneur.
Anyone can build an app.
And it's very empowering.
Listen to Mostly Human on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
In 2023, Bachelor star Clayton Eckerd was accused of fathering twins.
But the pregnancy appeared to be a hoax.
You doctored this particular test twice, Ms. Owens, correct?
I doctored the test once.
It took an army of internet detectives to uncover a disturbing pattern.
Two more men who'd been through the same thing.
Greg Gillespie and Michael Ranchini.
My mind was blown.
I'm Stephanie Young.
This is Love Trapped.
Laura, Scottsdale Police.
As the season continues, Laura Owens finally faces consequences.
Listen to Love Trapped podcast on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you
get your podcasts.
Ready for a different take on Formula One?
Look no further than No Grip,
a new podcast tackling the culture of motor racing's most coveted series.
Join me, Lily Herman, as we dive into the under-explored pockets of F-1,
including the story of the woman who last participated in a Formula One race weekend,
the recent uptick in F-1 romance novels,
and plenty of mishap scandals and sagas that have made Formula One
a delightful, decadent dumpster fire for more than 75 years.
Listen to No Grip on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
How could this have happened in City Hall?
Somebody tell me that.
A shocking public murder.
This is one of the most dramatic events
that really ever happened in New York City politics.
I scream, get down, get down.
Those are shots.
A tragedy that's now forgotten.
And a mystery.
That may or may not have been political.
That may have been about sex.
Listen to Roershack,
murder at City Hall on the I-Heart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
This is an IHeart podcast.
Guaranteed human.
