The Dana Show with Dana Loesch - Absurd Truth: Bernie's Homelessness Irony
Episode Date: August 22, 2025Bernie Sanders ironically says we need to build more homes for the homeless as he owns THREE luxury homes from a taxpayer salary. Gabe Eltaeb joins us to explain why he walked away from his dream job ...at DC comics over Hollywood’s garbage, his take on today’s woke superhero universe and his latest projects with Dean Cain.Thank you for supporting our sponsors that make The Dana Show possible…Boll & Branchhttps://bollandbranch.com/DANASHOWExperience your best sleep ever—get 15% off plus free shipping on your first set!Webroothttps://webroot.com/Dana Protect your digital life and get 50% off Webroot Total Protection or Essentials, exclusively with my URL!Relief Factorhttps://relieffactor.com OR CALL 1-800-4-RELIEFTurn the clock back on pain with Relief Factor. Get their 3-week Relief Factor Quick Start for only $19.95 today! Byrnahttps://byrna.com/danaGet your hands on the new compact Byrna CL. Visit Byrna.com/Dana receive 10% off Patriot Mobilehttps://patriotmobile.com/DanaDana’s personal cell phone provider is Patriot Mobile. Get a FREE MONTH of service code DANAHumanNhttps://humann.comSupport your cholesterol health with SuperBerine and the #1 bestselling SuperBeets Heart Chews—both on sale at Sam’s Club. Boost your metabolic health and save!Keltechttps://KelTecWeapons.comSee the third generation of the iconic SUB2000 and the NEW PS57 - Keltec Innovation & Performance at its bestAngel Studioshttps://Angel.com/danaDecide what gets made — join the Angel Studios Member’s Guild today. Sign up and start making a difference.All Family Pharmacyhttps://allfamilypharmacy.com/Dana Start today and take your health back with All Family Pharmacy. Use code DANA10 for savings and enjoy your health, your choice, no more waiting, no more “no’s.”
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Dana Lashes of Surtruth podcast, sponsored by Keltec.
It's his life mission to make bad decisions.
It's time for Florida Man.
A weirdo Florida man.
Golly, he has some serious red hair.
Sorry.
Wow.
Wow.
Wow.
There's no way.
Okay.
Anyway, I guess way.
Central Florida man is arrested for peeping into neighbors.
homes. Of course he is. An Auburndale man was arrested and accused of peeping into the homes of two
female neighbors. Residents of a mobile home park where he resided apparently, his name's Tyler
Mountain, 28 years old. They said he was surreptitiously recording and taking photographs of people
in their homes using his cell phone. And that, I mean, they got, they got him on voyeurism and some other
stuff, but he would peep inside and then he would get, I mean, he was like on the porch or on the
back porch or like right up against the window trying to get like video footage and photographs and
that. He was booked in a Polk County jail charged with burglary of an occupied dwelling two counts,
voyeurism, stalking, loitering, and prowling. And also in November of 23, he exposed himself
twice to two different women. So he's lucky that he's alive because I see you on my property doing
that, it's Glock o'clock. That's not even messing, man. Giggity Glock. It's what's happening.
Let's see. What is happening with this? Okay, Plato's closet is a resale shop. When I was younger,
I thought it was the coolest place ever. Florida Maine uses his phone to record underage girls in
fitting rooms. Again, Glock o'clock. He was arrested. Again, video voyeurism. He used to cell phone
to record girls inside a Seminole County store over the 4th of July weekend. Officers
bonded 39-year-old Brian Bishop. They got him on camera, the security camera, doing this. Like,
how does someone go into a store? They're so prolific. Security cameras are everywhere. They're
ubiquitous. And he goes in and he's doing this. And he's, I mean, you see him bending down and, like,
putting the phone under the doors to record on the other side of the doors. I mean, you can see him
in the video doing this. And one of the girls noticed the phone and began yelling. And that's when
he left the store. But they found him. They booked him in jail.
And now he goes before a judge.
He appeared before the judge yesterday.
I don't have any other updates to that, but he appeared before a judge yesterday.
I mean, I'm not kidding you.
The fact that these dudes like this do not get shot.
Yeah.
Are they like picking times or places where they think that nobody?
Because I absolutely will mark a dude for doing, for like praying on women like this and minors.
No way, man.
Let's see this.
Oh, let's do this one.
Driver shoots fireworks from his car while doing donuts in Orlando Street.
I thought this was America.
This, it doesn't really seem that crazy, except, you know, you can't be driving on the streets like this.
Like, you'd take an old beater car into a cornfield, old cornfield and do this.
We just had a story yesterday of an old man dying from fireworks, so it's pretty serious.
Yeah, you got to be careful with that stuff.
So these people, they were launching them from a moving vehicle while doing donuts in a busy intersection.
That's okay. You can't be doing that. You can't be getting on Michael Bay in the middle of an intersection. Let's not. They arrested Roderick Baez 20. He had Roman candles and he was writing shotgun. This is like they were his emotional support explosives, is what they said. And he was on his way to another street party. And then they got Anthony Colon, 33. Imagine your last name is colon. C-O-L-O-N. You can't say Cologne, could you? Because there's no other way to do that. Colon.
He was selling booze to people out of his trunk, the car that was doing the donuts.
And then Stoyne Volchev and Dion Custard.
Your name is Dion Kustard.
Okay, 18 and 31 respectively.
They were also doing donuts with fireworks.
So it seemed like a street circus happening.
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Tell them Dana sent you.
Okay, so Sanders, Bernie Sanders, was on, he was on the socials,
and he was given, talking to some reporters,
giving them some quotes from some pieces and stuff.
And one of the things that he said kind of,
hit me the wrong way. He said, quote, instead of forcibly removing the homeless from D.C. as Trump wants
to do, we need to build millions of affordable housing units in America. Instead of giving tax breaks to
Wall Street billionaires who are buying up housing and jacking up rent, we need to put a cap on rent prices.
So I had asked them, I said, well, why haven't you offered to donate one of your houses?
He's got a lot of property.
A lot of property.
I mean, he owns three homes.
He owns a house in Burlington, Vermont.
Vermont's very pretty.
You know, he's very pretty.
He's a big socialist, you know.
He's a socialist senator.
Forbes did a huge study on his multimillion dollar fortune.
And he's got millions of dollars from real estate.
Now, sidebar, real quick.
Remember, again,
this, Bernie Sanders was one of those people who never had a job.
Do you remember what his one, like, private sector job was?
He did a zine.
Cain last dude, for real, that's what he did.
And then his wife, like, bankrupted at a girls' school.
Anyway, so he's made millions of dollars from his book.
I'm not, no, no, no.
He also, he's got a lot of books.
He's made lots of money.
He's written three books, all about the same.
thing imagine people buy that oh it's a book about the same thing again i would love to purchase this
in support of socialism with a capitalist practice and he's got three super nice houses he has a waterfront home
he's got two houses in vermont one in burlington and one in north hero and that's waterfront that is swank e
cane i don't have waterfront property can't do you have waterfront property man well he briney sanders is a socialist so isn't that our waterfront
property?
Technically, I think you're right.
We own that house too, apparently.
I mean, unless he's, you know, not what he says he is.
He's got a super fancy house in D.C. as well, most of his,
a lot of his money is tied up, well, not a lot, but a good chunk of his money.
He's a four-bedroom, two and a half bath colonial in Burlington.
And he has a row house, which is super expensive, just a couple of blocks from the capital.
That's a lot of money, because those houses are not cheap.
Steve, you know in D.C., them row houses right there by the capital, them fancy ones.
They're not cheap, right?
Start at a million and a half.
Oh, is that all?
Is that all?
A million and a half, Jiminy, Christmas.
So he's got his two-story that's in Burlington.
I think that's the one he started in.
And then he's got this beautiful waterfront home.
Cain, it's like two-thirds of it are on the water.
Yeah.
Look at that.
So Juan's going to show up the...
It's gorgeous.
Look at the detail on his historic row house there in D.C.
I mean, that's just swank, man.
That's just luxury.
Holy cow.
It's like a corner lot with surrounded by water.
He paid for that in cash.
What?
You know, the socialist Bernie Sanders paid for in cash.
What cash?
He's only making $174,000.
Juan is showing you the houses.
So let me explain.
So you viewers are looking at the television.
On the third, on the left, that's the where it has all the trees in front of it.
that's his row house in D.C.
And so that's a couple blocks from the capital.
Now, I think it's even, Stevie, I think it's probably even more than a mill and a half
because, I mean, look at all the, a lot of those row houses have that green space in front.
So it looks like there's, they actually has a little sliver of property in addition to that,
you know, with that row house.
The middle house is the one in Burlington.
And I think that's the one he started in.
And then the one on the right, that is his big lakefront property in North Hero.
and that's what he paid for in cash.
And that is a four,
it's described as a tranquil four-bed
three-bath home
with shorefront access
on Lake Champlain.
50 minutes north of Burlington.
So see, he's a socialist,
so he really needed one house
and then 50 minutes away.
He needed another house.
I think I'm just too lazy
to have that much property.
Even if I were a trillionaire,
I don't like having that
much responsibility over property.
You know what I mean?
Like I don't want to have.
I mean, I understand that's a smart investment,
but you got to take care of it.
And then like I just don't want to have to have like two coffee machines, you know,
or three coffee.
It's annoying.
Like you got to have pans for those houses.
That's what I think of.
I'm like, golly, you got to have chlorox wipes on every one of them things.
Good night.
Like what else you got to have?
I have a bed jet.
You need to tell Jennifer, our salesperson, that bedjet needs to advertise in this program.
You have to have three bed jets.
You're going to take your bedjet.
to like all three different houses, no.
So he's got a lot of money.
Now, Cain, look at them houses.
I see him.
Why, do you mind throwing that back up there?
Because I'm just saying, if you're a homeless in D.C.,
do you think would any or all three of these properties work to house the homeless in D.C.?
Yeah.
I mean, we could do like a little round robin sort of thing where, you know, one week the homeless stays at one place.
The next week they switch over to another place.
Yeah.
Why can't the waterfront property be like,
a homeless camp. I mean, they can even camp outside in the summer. Right? Right.
Get a couple of pontoon boats. They can sleep out on the water. Yeah. So he says, just going back to
his tweet, he says, well, instead of forcibly removing the homeless, you know, we need to build millions
of affordable. What do you mean we need to build? I don't need to do jack. I don't need to do nothing.
What do you mean? We need to. We don't need to do nothing. You know, he was the one who, by the way,
voted to expand and make things more expensive with the Green New Deal.
He voted to do all of that stuff.
So, and he vote, I don't understand why he's complaining about this because he's, I mean,
I just am shocked at the tone deafness of this.
He has not offered one of his properties at all whatsoever.
Not one.
The one in D.C. there that's blocks from the Capitol.
My gosh.
I mean, that's the one that's, what, four bedrooms?
I mean, you could bunk up, man.
Like some of these dudes could bunk, some of these homeless people could bunk up.
And they could all be staying in that row house, blocks from the Capitol.
So they didn't even need to relocate them to Vermont.
So I don't know.
I mean, it doesn't make any sense.
I'm just saying, you know, what he's saying isn't really jive with his belief set.
And this was the guy, he wants to throw billions at housing subsidies.
Okay, when has this worked?
when did that work giving billions of dollars in housing subsidies when has that ever worked before
and then what about like zoning and things like that that's also a big issue what happens when
you know with zone you got to deal with that i mean this is this is in california they spent
over 24 billion dollars in just a few years remember they were supposed to address homelessness
in california that was their whole point they were supposed to address homelessness
in California. Do you think they did it? The addressing of the homelessness? I don't think so.
Because they kept spending billions and billions of dollars and then, in fact, it actually increased
California's KTLA. It actually increased California's homeless population. This has never worked
in any state or just never worked where it's been implemented. But that's how these people are.
J.B. Pritzker, you know, he comes and talks a good game about it. J.B. Pritzker is a
per trillionaire. He hasn't offered any of his properties, especially the property in Florida. Remember
when he locked down his state in Illinois? And then he high-tailed it to his horse ranch down in Florida.
Mm-hmm. He made sure to get out of Dodge quick, didn't he? It just to make any sense. Now,
in the meantime, you've got the guard going in, clearing everyone out. You had protesters that were
pro. I don't know why they were protesting. And the Democrats are saying, oh, well, you're
you know, we need to push back. Yeah, that's the problem. Residents, all these polls of residents,
is just destroying these narratives, these claims that they're making about crime. Because it's,
it's real, obviously. It's just unbelievable. Did you know the whole higher thread count means
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Exclusions apply.
And now, all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick Five.
Well, listen to this.
So Bed Bath, Bath and Beyond says they are not going to open.
retail stores in California.
Now remember, they said that they were
going to be closing a bunch of stuff, but now apparently
it doesn't look like that's going to happen.
They said they're just not going to open or operate retail
stores in California with a statement that they posted
to their ex account. They said
that their system in California
makes it impossible for businesses to
succeed. And the
Marcus Limonis, who
released the statement
from the company said that
it's our responsibility to our
customers and shareholders. We're not going to participate
a system that undermines both.
We're investing in a California strategy that works.
So delivering like drop shipping, essentially,
is what it looks like. And they said that
Californians can still get it, but they're not going to
have an unsustainable model by having like a
storefront in California.
So they said that they, Californians can go
to the dot com. Everyone else
will be able to have stores literally in
every other state. And that is from
the head of it, Marcus
Limonis, who
and who's on Fox Business and all. That's crazy.
By the way, he's the executive
chairman of Bedbath and Beyond and I just realized that he
follows me. Yeah, I was reading it
and I'm like, oh, wait a minute, wait a second.
Yeah, so that's interesting. I mean, can
I just be honest? Who doesn't love a bed bath
and beyond?
There's few places
that I love more. You know, I love going into
like the Sam's Club and then I love going
into a bedbath and beyond. We've got to talk about
Keynes glasses here coming up. Kane's got some blue light
blockers, guys. I don't know what to make of it.
He looks like Robert Evans sitting
in the corner over there. You know,
from Paramount, Robert Evans.
You look like him.
Like, hey, Bubby, he's like getting ready to cut some deals back there.
We got it.
We really have to talk about this.
Let's, what is this?
What is a wire sexual?
This is a Kane headline right here.
Kane Robert Evans.
A new movement of women, they're in love with AI generated men.
And they said they're a, oh my gosh, everybody wants a flag.
They're a marginalized group that deserves their own alphabet flag.
So I guess if you're, if you fall in love, can you fall in love with an AI thing?
If you think that you've fallen in love with an AI thing, then you're a wire sexual.
Why wouldn't it be like an internet sexual?
How can we divide us up into more groups?
I mean, I'm made of questions.
A growing cohort of single dads by choice because bishes be crazy.
So the growing cohort, apparently a lot of men, they said, this is the Atlantic, they said a lot of dudes are
being single dads. That's, I kind of find that, I find that sad. I find that sad for the kids.
I was having a conversation with someone the other day. I'm talking about how, especially
during COVID and lockdown, I just was so tired of everything, all entertainment. Everything
coming out of, coming out of Hollywood is horrible. And I got really into anime. Like,
I mean, I think I've seen almost every, everything for a monster to attack on Titan,
manga, started getting into comics.
And I don't think it would have happened had it not been for COVID.
And then what I realize is that there's so many great stories to tell.
And now here we are in 2025.
And Hollywood, which has never been, I mean, lately it's been so incredibly derivative
and predictable.
I feel like they've been looking for things to ruin.
So they go back and they've been looking at like different series to ruin, different comics
to ruin, different iconic characters.
to ruin. And I remember seeing this story. And it was a couple of years ago. And it had to do with
Superman. And there was, how to put it, a storyline coming out in Superman, DC Comics, where they were
talking about the man of steel and bisexuality and all this stuff. And I'm like, how does this
have to do with Superman? This is, what is, this is true justice in the American way? Like, what does this
have to do with Superman? Come on. And there was, and there was,
was an artist with DC Comics who is done with it. And it was very, very high profile. He was like,
I'm done with it. I'm out. And he left. And he's been doing his own thing over at Big Man Comics.
Gabe L. Taib is joining me now. He's writer, artist, publisher of Big Man Comics. And I love his story.
And I like how he was done dealing with it and suffering that stupidity. And he said enough's enough.
And he joins us now. Gabe, it's so good to see you. Welcome.
them. Finally, you
were one of the first people to reach out to me
those almost four years ago this coming
September, October. And I hadn't
done a lot of media, so I was like, I don't know, I don't want to
go on some show. You know, who's this lady or whatever?
But sorry. Sorry,
I'm here better late than never. How are you doing? Thank you for him.
I'm doing good. I'm doing good. I wanted to, like, tell
people who might not be familiar with your story
and talk about what you're doing now, because I know
you're doing some stuff with Dean Cane, and you got a lot
of stuff in the works, but you had your
dream job. Like, that
I can't even imagine how
terrifying that you get your dream job and then you realize, is it my dream job or is this the dream
environment? Because it got real weird fast for you. It did. You know, I've been drawing since I could
remember since I was like three years old, whatever. And I wanted to be a comic book artist when
I was 12 or 13. I decided my favorite artist Jim Lee. He's still there at DC Comics. He's a great
illustrator, vice president of the company there. And he hired me in my 20s. I worked my butt off to
earn that. It's an elite job. There are less people
that make a good living in comics than in the NFL
or the NBA. It's so hard to get that job.
And it wasn't woke at first.
2008, I started working for them.
And as we know, during the Obama years,
things started getting weirder and weirder and
pronouns and all the stuff that start
happening in media and comics and movies.
And I just kind of kept my head down. I didn't really
tell them. I was conservative, this and that. And it's like,
well, it's not my book. It's not my book. And then
eventually it was my book. And we're
getting rid of Superman's Truth, Justice, the American
way slogan. That's disrespectful.
And we're going to explore the sex life of Superman's underage son.
And I said, we're not going to do that.
You're going to do that.
I'm going to go and do my own thing.
So see you guys later.
Thank you.
But I'm out of here.
So that, yeah, that was four years ago, I think, this October.
What was their reason for doing that?
Did they think that they were going to bring in, like, other people who might not be
into comics?
And that was going to, because you're alienating your hardcore base that supported you for so long.
They don't want to read that stuff.
No, well, that's the cover story.
Oh, we need to do the modern audience, the big audience, capture more people, more diverse, whatever.
No, if you've ever read Atlas Shrugged, Ryan nails these people, right?
She nails the resentful leftists.
And they hate truth and beauty.
They're the kind of people, they see the quarterback and the cheerleader kissing, and they're like, oh.
And when you see excellence, when you see success, when you see, you know, all that stuff, you should be inspired and go, oh, my gosh, how did they do that?
I want to do that.
How do I become a radio TV big shot like Dana?
What's she doing?
Instead of going, oh, Dana's dad probably owns the network.
You know, she does like, so leftist, they see Batman, they see all this stuff that's awesome, and they get mad.
And they, you know, they grit their teeth and like, let me destroy it.
So the misery is a big part of it for them.
They like knowing that they're ruining something you love.
Ooh, that's good.
We're talking with Gabe L. Taib, who's with Big Man Comics.
And I'm going to talk about some of the other stuff that you had.
That's a psychological deep dive.
That's like a whole other topic of discussion, like why people think that way.
And they, like you said, they see success.
They see exceptionalism, whether it's American exceptionalism, just individualistic exceptionalism.
And maybe it's something that they don't have within and they feel like they got to destroy it.
Or it's a threat to what, I mean, it is a threat to control.
Exceptionalism is a threat to control.
Right.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
I feel like people either believe in God or they think they are God.
And it's like one of my favorite writers.
There's Corny McCartney.
There's a villain in one of his books,
and he tells people,
that that exists without my knowledge,
exists without my consent.
It was one of the most chilling things I ever read.
And it's like, that's how the left is.
It's like, if something is better than me
and it's not mine, then I have to destroy it.
Instead of going, oh, how did they make Batman so great?
Let me make my own Batman, my own original character,
but like, no, I'm going to stick my agenda on it, my politics.
In recent issues of Batman, they have him fighting billionaires
and sticking up for Antifa, basically.
You know what I mean?
It's like they're just injecting their politics.
They're moralizing their lecturing.
And all stories have a message and a moral, but what you should never do is antagonize your audience.
You should never have Superman saying, hey, audience, you're a bunch of racist and polluters and bigots.
And this is why you're terrible.
Because really, that's just the writers speaking through Superman trying to tell you why the writer's a better person than you.
Instead of inspiring you the way Superman always has.
So, you know, art is about truth and beauty.
Art is just patterns.
It really is scientific patterns.
So when you write woke stuff and you put agenda ahead of just the patterns of how story and character work, you can't write good stories.
And that's why the Marvel stuff that came out at first that everybody liked up to the Avengers thing was very normal, pretty straight.
And then when they went with the M.C.U where it was all the girl power woke stuff.
Oh, my gosh.
You see those movies just flopping over and over.
And M. She was not mine.
That belongs to my friend Nerd Herodic.
He coined that term.
That is so, yeah, I remember reading that.
That's true.
I liked what you said, too, about when they were changing, you know, stuff like with Superman.
You were saying that your grandfather was reading this interview with you.
He almost died in World War II.
And, I mean, because that's, as Americans, I mean, we have like such, it's so ingrained, like everything to get this republic to where it is right now.
And everybody's got a connection to that.
And when you, when they do stuff the way that they've been doing it, it sort of feels like they are stepping all over that.
It's like they're disrespecting everything that so many people have given for to create for what we enjoy now.
Right. Well, what is the left, one of their big mantras is smash the patriarchy, right?
Well, what does Pater mean in Latin? It means father.
Right. These are people who are heartbroken and hate their father, and they want to destroy his world in everything he ever built.
It's why they destroy Star Wars. It's why they destroy Superman. They hate their dad. That's what this is what this is right. And I'm not here to say whether their dad was right or wrong.
But the whole thing stems back to family and fathers. It's your cultural patrimony is what this stuff is called, right?
Yes. You are doing a project.
with Dean Kane, who is also signed up with ICE.
Tell me about this, because you started, this was announced.
It's the All-American Lawman.
And I love the logo for this, by the way.
Oh, that's a Glock 17, my first gun I ever had.
And I know you're a big gun rights advocate.
I work for San Diego gun owners.
I speak at their events.
So we're sympathetic on that.
But when DC Commerce got rid of the slogan,
Truth Justice American Way, that was the first thing that made me really mad.
And then it was the underage bisexual storyline.
No, like, no thanks.
That's not why I got into drawing comics.
And so the first book I made was analogs for Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman,
and we called the book Truth, Justice, American Way.
Those were the code names of the heroes.
People loved it, and it was a classic throwback.
And it wasn't lecturing you if you were left wing either.
It was an old Democrat suck.
I don't do that either.
I just entertain you.
Like in the 80s, the way you loved it.
I make fresh stuff that feels like the old Indiana Jones, the old Star Wars, but it's fresh
because it's a new take from me.
And I'm not lecturing anyone.
I'm just inspiring you.
And the first thing I'm doing is just entertaining.
it. So we had Truth Justice American Way. And then Dean Kane, he noticed me on Twitter. He saw what I was doing. I got his attention. So we became very good friends. He's a really nice guy, by the way. We're actually friends and not just business partners. We came up with a James Bond, Indiana Jones kind of comic called Dean Kane, All-American Lawman. And it's just a cool man of adventure, travels the globe, beautiful women, awful bad guys. And it's like the stuff from the 80s where, like Indiana Jones from the 80s, where you could watch it as an adult and it's four adults, but you can let a kid see it and you don't have to worry that it's.
It's nasty with sex scenes and gore and perversion and cussing.
So it's safe to hand to your eight-year-old nephew, but as a 40-year-old, you could read it and you're fully engaged and you love it.
Yeah.
There's something to that.
The way that stories were told then where you could have multi-generations read them.
You could be in the same room.
You could be with your grandparents and your kids and your cousins or whatever, and everybody could watch it.
No one's cringing because it's inappropriate.
What happened to the art of storytelling where everything is so silent or everything is so hyper-sex?
sexualize that we don't, I mean, we don't see as much you're doing it, but there's so few people
that are doing that type of storytelling anymore.
Well, I think I'm a Christian. I'm never going to apologize for that. And in the Bible,
that's out of the abundance of the heart of the mouth speaks is a verse, right? So what's in
who's going to come out of you, whether you like it or not? So when you have ugly, filthy stories,
well, guess what kind of people they're coming out of, right? That's what's in their heart.
It's what they believe. All art is is one thing only. It's self-expression. What do I
think about the world, what I think about myself
and my place in it. That's what art
is. I'm saying something about life and myself
and the world. So what I believe in
truth and justice and heroicism,
being a good father. You know,
the theme of the first Dean Kane book is, you do
the right thing no matter what, no matter how scary it is.
That's the theme of that one. The
theme in truth, justice, is the same thing.
In the Tyrus book that I'm doing with Fox News
superstar Tyrus, it's about being a
screw up and finally getting things right. And the Imperion,
Earth Illuminate, which I have right
now, big mancomiccom, go there and get it.
It's about, are we living the right way?
Are we being fooled?
Is there a better world?
Is there a better path?
That's my love letter to the old Star Wars stuff that inspired me.
I was born in 78, started watching Star Wars as a very little kid, and that was the first thing
that just ignited my imagination.
The first things I ever remember drawing were Star Wars space battles in the back of
my grandparents' Mexican restaurant.
Nobody could watch me, and my brother was in a kindergarten, so I'd just pull out
butcher paper and just draw spaceships all day.
That's amazing.
You will absolutely love this.
You know, it's a fresh take on sci-fi stuff, but it goes back to, you know, I'm 47,
decades of me loving adventure and sci-fi and stuff like that.
I love it.
And so, and you live it, you love it, and it comes out that way.
Just, you know, pure appreciation for that genre and great storytelling, great art as well.
We'd love to have you back.
Thank you.
We'd love to have you back.
Gabe Altayib.
And make sure you go to bigmancom.
And he's got all kinds of stuff up there.
You've got merch.
You've got your T-shirts.
You've got your comics.
You have absolutely everything.
up there and you can see
about Dean Cain, All-American Lawman.
Would you say, Kane?
Crowdfunding, yeah.
Because I, and I definitely believe that
people need to get involved and, like, help
bring this stuff to life, because everybody complains
about the stuff that comes out that's in the
theaters or on TV or Netflix or whatever.
And it's like, okay, well, then put your money where your mouth
is and support this stuff. So these other people don't
come and take that influence over from you.
You have a duty. It's like a duty,
like the opportunity and the
freedom to be able to do that.
So big mancomcom.com.
Gabe, God bless you. I so appreciate what you do. Thank you for doing the real art that you're doing because that's going to be appreciated for years to come. It's iconic.
It's an art. Can I say one last thing to you and the audience? The reason I do all this is because I felt what you felt.
audience. I felt what you felt like. My culture. It's slipping away. My dad almost died. He's an
immigrant from Libya. They killed my dad's friends and relatives. My grandfather, that side has
been here for hundreds of years, almost died in the Pacific of World War II. This country is the
greatest country in the history world, the greatest culture, and it was fought and died for.
And we just watch it melting away, turning a perversion, perverting kids, messing everything up.
And I'm like, I can't be a part of that. I will not put my name on that as part of the people
who made that mess. So I did something about it. And I gambled my
career that I fought so hard to get. I said, no, I can't do this. And the power of story,
it is the most potent form of persuasion. And when I was quitting my job at DC, I was terrified.
I live in San Diego. It's kind of expensive. And I didn't have a job lined up. But here's the power
of story. Indiana Jones from 1989, he steps into that bottomless pit where there's the invisible
bridge. You remember that? The one was Sean Connery. But he had to take the leap of faith.
And I kept picturing that leap of faith when I was watching, when I was thinking about quitting and
resigning. And I just prayed, I said, God, don't let me fall. And I was lifted higher than ever.
You know what I mean? I'm making art that I'm so proud of, doing very good business. And I would
challenge all of you out there to join me, you know, make good art, stand up, tell the truth,
and support people like me. Go to bigmancomic.com. Get our books. They're awesome. It's great
entertainment for you and your family. And we can save this culture. We can bring it back. People are
going to have entertainment no matter what. Let's give them something good. Amen to that. Gabe Altie.
big mancomics.com.
Gabe, always a pleasure.
And you can find him on X, Facebook,
obviously the website as well.
Do great work.
It's an honor to know you, my friend.
Would love to have you back.
Thank you.
Thanks for tuning in to today's edition
of Dana Lash's Absurd Truth Podcast.
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