The Megyn Kelly Show - AOC vs. Vance, Bongino Leaving FBI, and Coldplay "Kiss Cam" Woman Speaks Out, with Glenn Greenwald | Ep. 1216
Episode Date: December 18, 2025Megyn Kelly is joined by Glenn Greenwald, host of Rumble's "System Update,” to discuss a new poll showing AOC leading JD Vance in a 2028 matchup, how her transformation into a theater kid-like polit...ical operative makes her vulnerable, new DNA evidence in the Brown University shooting case, alarming signs of police incompetence, why the lack of campus cameras may be tied to Providence’s sanctuary city policies, Dan Bongino’s exit from the Trump administration and FBI leadership, whether he can return to his podcast without any interruption after the government role, disturbing reports about Nick Reiner’s odd behavior at Conan O’Brien’s holiday party, the ongoing questions surrounding the Reiner murders, the woman at the center of the Coldplay "kiss cam" scandal speaking out, the broader morality and societal questions it raises, the latest New York Times reporting on Trump supposedly being "best friends" with Jeffrey Epstein, why the reporting doesn't show anything new or explosive, the viral video of a young woman confronting a Target employee for wearing a Charlie Kirk shirt, how the harasser posted it herself hoping for clout, the massive support that followed for the employee, and more. More from Greenwald: https://rumble.com/c/GGreenwald Geviti: Go to https://gogeviti.com/megynand get 20% off with code MEGYN.Grand Canyon University: https://GCU.edu/MYOFFERBirch Gold: Text MK to 989898 and get your free info kit on goldRiverbend Ranch: Visit https://riverbendranch.com/ | Use promo code MEGYN for $20 off your first order. Follow The Megyn Kelly Show on all social platforms:YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MegynKellyTwitter: http://Twitter.com/MegynKellyShowInstagram: http://Instagram.com/MegynKellyShowFacebook: http://Facebook.com/MegynKellyShow Find out more information at:https://www.devilmaycaremedia.com/megynkellyshow Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
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Welcome to the Megan Kelly Show, live on Sirius XM Channel 111 every weekday at New East.
Hey everyone, I'm Megan Kelly. Welcome to the Megan Kelly Show. Oh, it's such a festive set here today. We've got our twinkly Christmas trees and I've got a sparkly Christmas shirt. And it's happening. I mean, it is like happening now, people, like T minus what, seven days? What's today? The 18th? So yeah.
T-minus 7. My gosh, are you ready? I'm not 100% ready, but there's still time.
It's high noon, and we're going to tell you why that term is in the news today.
It's amazing. It's actually, I think, my favorite story of the day. It has something to do with that viral video of the couple at the Cole Play concert last summer.
But on the news, there's a lot happening. The shooter who killed two and wounded nine at Brown University Saturday, still on the loose.
amazingly, the completely dark, shaded, unreadable video that they put out of the suspect hasn't
ginned up any leads. I know, you're shocked. Shocked. And the authorities don't seem to have much more,
although there is one glimmer of hope, and we'll tell you what it is. Plus, it's AOC versus
JDV in a potential preview of 28. Very interesting development here. Here to talk about all
of this and more is Glenn Greenwald. He's a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and host of Rumble's
system update. We talk a lot about personal responsibility on this show. Well, here's one aspect
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Megan. With code Megan, don't forget to use that. That's gogevity, g-e-v-I-t-t-I-com
slash Megan, because no one should control your health decisions but you. Glenn's so
good to see you. Love the fact that you are here today. Good to see you. I did not come
festive. I feel a little bit like the Grinch after that big build-up you gave yourself about how
Christmassy you are, but I'm going to try and get in the holiday spirit, even if it's not with my clothing background.
Like, I have about 200 sparkly little diamonds, big diamonds on my black shirt makes me feel like, I'm ready for Santa and some nog.
Okay.
So there's so many fun things that I want to go through with you.
I'm like genuinely, some days you just wake up and the news cycle's amazing and then you see who the guest is and you're like, it's Mana from heaven.
This is exactly the man I want to be talking about this.
Let's have so much fun.
Exactly.
Exactly, exactly. All right, so let's kick it off with JDV versus AOC. A poll comes out. The Daily Beast published it. New poll puts Dem Star ahead of Vance in 2028 showdown. Newsweek. AOC leads J-D Vance for first time in 2008 election matchup, colon, poll. AOC retweeted the poll with just the word bloop, B-L-O-O-P, and an exclamation point. I'm not really sure what bloop is.
It's awfully close to poop.
I'm not, I don't, or boom, I don't know, pick one.
Bloop doesn't seem to work for me, but Grock says it seemed to be a playful exclamation,
like a lighthearted, there it is, or mic drop.
Okay, so this poll had her up 5149 over J.D. Vance in a poll of 1,500 registered voters
taken between December 5th and 11th in a hypothetical 2028.
match up. Great. So she's run with it. She's enjoying the fact that she's beating Vance and so is
the mainstream media running with it. We actually took a look at this poll done by argument
slash vera site. And the first thing we do with any poll here at the MK show is we go to 538,
which is an aggregator of polls, and we see whether they use it. Well, they, because they exclude
the least reliable polls, and it's not rated by 538. It is not accepted by 538 as a legitimate
poll. New York Times as well says it does not meet their standards to be included in their polling
aggregation. It is not a traditional independent polling outlet like Gallup or Pew. It is a media
organization offering proprietary polling alongside its opinion journalism. It's a DC-based
media company that employs people like Matt Iglesias. They say,
We make a positive, combative case for liberalism, and Veracite is their offshoot of the polling firm.
So this is not an objective poll.
You can be a partisan outlet like Fox and have an objecting polling outlet.
Fox does.
They have really good pollsters.
Doesn't sound like this is it.
But in any event, what do you make of bloop like she's beating J.D. Vance in a head-to-head matchup.
And what does it tell us about whether she's likely to run?
You know, I've been doing journalism for 20 years now.
I've been paying, as a result, very close attention to politics, and it's a passion of mind.
It's something I really love.
The very first thing that ever made me have, like, even a glimmer of wanting to turn away
is the way in which Democrats have decided that because it worked for Trump, they're now
supposed to be, you know, kind of like loose with their language and show how cool they are
and how they don't speak like D.C. politicians.
They have all these consultants.
advising them on what to do.
And AOC is a particularly horrible case of it because, you know, when she was elected,
she was 27.
It's like a very young generation.
She's no like heading into her mid to late 30s, heading into 40 years old.
And she's still trying on top of like that really cringy democratic effort to sound,
you know, like playful and relatable and cool to kind of have it infused with this very
young internet jargon.
and it's just the worst of all combinations.
And I also don't understand why if you are, you know, like a liberal outlet,
which of course this is trying to produce polling numbers that suggest that someone
who has no chance to be president could actually credibly run when it seems so counterproductive.
Like, why would you want to build up somebody with a fake poll who you know will get destroyed?
So it just, the whole thing seems so bizarre to me.
It's very true.
So she came out today and she was asked about it by Pablo Manriquez and listened to what she said.
This is from yesterday.
Just hit this morning.
Watch.
Do you think that you'll beat that you could beat J.D. Vance in a head-to-head race for president, as polling suggests in 2028?
Listen, these polls like three years out are, you know, they are what they are.
But let the record show, I would stop him.
I would stop him.
Thank you, Congresswoman.
I would stop him, to your point, Glenn.
That's what I mean, Megan.
If I really have to continue to watch Democrats behaving in this manner,
I don't know if I can take it.
Like, for as much as I love the work,
it might actually make me just go and want to, like,
open a car dealership or something because, you know,
it would be one thing of, like,
that's really how she were,
that were really her personality.
She just doesn't even have a personality.
Everything is just so contrived with her.
Like, was that funny at all?
was that was there anything you know like just smooth about that you know it's just i think that
is the main problem is is is democrat the big problem that democrats have is they stand for nothing
and if you don't even have a personality it's very hard to convince people that you actually
have a substantive set of beliefs as well like even if you're even your personality's fake it wasn't
clever it wasn't smart but she thought it was she was so pleased with herself
wait what did you say do we have a response to it we have a response to the video
Oh, okay. Stand by. Hold on. My team's always giving me the latest, which I appreciate. David Axelrod. Oh, God. He tweeted out. He tweeted out. AOC has something you can't teach. I mean, I think we can agree on that. What that thing is, we probably disagree on. I mean, here's my take on it, Glenn. She is all performative emotion, very little substance. And J.D. Vance is,
literally the opposite. He's got no performative emotion. He's extremely measured. Frankly,
as a lot of kids who grow up in alcoholic or drug adult households can be, like one of the
things they learn is to like tamp down emotions. They're like Presbyterians. I'm married to
one so I can make the Presbyterian jokes. But they are emotionally regulated because you can only
have one explosive personality in the house. And most kids born to drug addicts like J.D. Vance was,
She wasn't drug addict when he was born, but his whole life, they don't have, they're not prone to overly
emotional outbursts like AOC is. And so honestly, if you actually think it through, like her out on the trail
with her screaming, there's so many videos of her screaming at the crowds, none of J.D. ever performing
that way. He's clever. He's measured. He's funny, but he's always substantive. He would eviscerate her.
it would be like a surgeon with a scalpel against, like, a fish flopping on the deck
unable to control its last few moments.
For a long time, I think the way people thought who were Republicans on the right side,
right-wing side of media, was talk about her as though she was some sort of radical,
like some sort of far-left dissident, some sort of extremist.
And the first person who actually understood what AOC really is was Marjorie Taylor-Green,
who never attacked her as a radical,
but always attacked her as a fraud,
somebody who was actually really nothing more
than this empty careerist,
this Democratic Party partisan.
She had like a little bit of flavoring
of trying to sound like more on the left wing side
of the Democratic Party.
But very quickly, she just morphed into a Democratic Party operative.
And that's all she really is.
So whatever else is unique about her
is just pure show.
Like it's like a theater kid sort of,
behavior that draws attention to herself, but it's not because of any interesting or compelling
or substantive ideas. She's really, there is nothing radical about her unless you just think that
ordinary Democratic Party politics is radical. And then on the J.D. Vance side, I always wondered
about J.D. Vance's ability to be a compelling politician because of that lack of kind of overt
charisma. And the thing that really convinced me that I don't think it'll ever be, obviously, in
comparison to Trump that's it's almost like a bar too high for anybody or even like Obama or
Clinton like the great politicians he doesn't have that but when he debated Tim Waltz and he was able
to modulate how he was speaking and conducting himself while at the same time being uncompromising
on his views knowing that it was America's really first impression of him and it was a very kind of
you know kind of sandpaper the sharp edges off and the ability to do that for 90 minutes no matter how
much they're trying to provoke you while at the same time delivering your message effectively.
And I think the more he's on the national stage, the better he's going to get.
No Democrat, I promise you, wants 2028 to be J.D. Vance versus AOC, no matter how much AOC is
doing her little fake dances for journalists when asked.
I coined the term congressional Kardashian. That's what she is. She's a congressional Kardashian.
And I will say this. I just saw J.D. Vance. I told the audience about this earlier this week.
I saw him last weekend. And can I tell you, Glenn, he's gotten a lot better at the, like, he always
had charisma, but, like, I think he put up a wall. You know, I've known him for a long time. He put up
more of a wall. He wasn't really ready to let you in when he was younger. He was more defensive.
Obviously, I'm a member of the press, so we're used to people being defensive toward us.
Their instincts are dead on. And, but he is totally different now. I have to tell you, like,
he worked that room like Bill Clinton. He, like, remembered everybody's names.
He said the information back to them.
He was inquiring about people's children by name.
He was looking right at everybody.
He was making everyone feel like they were special in not an artificial way, not like an
Obama kind of way, but like a real, like a talent, like a political talent.
And I think he's grown into that.
And so my number one thought in watching him was he's using this vice presidency,
not just to help the nation, but to help his own political skills.
He's clearly sharpened them.
well and i think also you know we have to remember that he is still quite young and he has had a lot
of very kind of contradictory impulses right like he grew up as you know in the way that you
described with a like a very you know familiar now like working class family with addiction and
all kinds of family problems and then suddenly he's in ivy league schools and he's with peter teal
and he's you know in high finance in silicon valley hating donald trump and then he starts you know
evolving politically as well.
And sometimes it just takes a while in life to find yourself, like to feel comfortable with
who you are to really have a good sense of self-possession.
And that can take, you know, into your 30s or early 40s, which is where J.D. Vance is in
life.
And I don't think that's a very uncommon evolution.
And I do think that you can see a kind of greater comfort in J.D. Vance's own skin,
the more he kind of becomes convinced about the values he wants to pursue and the things
he believed it.
I still think he's going to take a lot of work,
given that people do have suspicions
when somebody has had so many different kinds
of manifestations of who they are
and what they believe.
But he's obviously very skilled
at expressing himself and at communicating,
and he has a lot of time to build that trust
that the public needs.
Well, it would be very interesting, too,
to see him up against an AOC
when they start talking about their personal backgrounds,
because AOC wants us to believe
that she grew up the way J.D. Vance actually did. You know, like, she had it rough. She came,
she knows poverty. She could barely get food onto the table. Like, these are lies. It's bullshit.
And J.D. Vance's history is actually extremely tumultuous. Middletown, Ohio is a working class
neighborhood when he grew up in it. It wasn't like he was not going to eat, but he did have
Pepsi in his baby bottle. I mean, he grew up in a way that is really not great.
and slept in his jeans, you know, read Hill, Billy Ellogy.
He writes about how when he was at Yale Law School, he went to a party that they offered,
and like, he didn't even understand, I think it was, I'm trying to remember the analogy,
but like they offered him maybe like Chardonnay.
He had no idea what they were talking about.
He did not understand the silverware on the plates, you know, next to the plates.
He really came from nothing and missed, you know, literally saying I could barely put food on the table.
that was all lies. She grew up in Yorktown Heights, which is a lovely suburb of Westchester.
She lived in the Bronx for about two minutes. So just from that standpoint, it would be fun to watch
them on the, you know, destitution derby that these politicians always engage in.
Well, and also, like, you know, she plays out that bartender thing. Like being a bartender
in Manhattan is not exactly like being on the factory line in the middle of, like, some, you know,
Michigan assembly line, the way she likes to pretend it is, you know, like in your mid-
20s, you're a bartender. Most people consider that, you know, quite fun. I think like,
but I think like the Donald Trump appeal makes, like illustrates a really important point.
I mean, Donald Trump didn't grow up poor. His, you know, father was, was quite wealthy.
He was a real estate developer who was quite wealthy. Nonetheless, the way in which he was kind
of a real estate developer, you know, they lived in Queens, the real estate that they had was
not very glamorous. And Trump was always looking at.
Manhattan and seeing this kind of, you know, glamour that he didn't have. And when he got to
Manhattan, he was always looked down upon because he came from the outer borough in Queens.
You need to live in New York to really understand that socioeconomic dynamic of how people in
Manhattan look at the outer boroughs. And that did develop in Donald Trump, this genuine
outsider resentment and mentality that I think is almost a prerequisite to being a popular
politician in the United States. And even in the broader West, because of how much contempt people have
for the elite class.
And if you seem like you're too comfortable within
or that you really are more identified with that elite class
and that you don't have that genuine outsider mentality,
I think a lot of people are going to sniff that out
and immediately kind of reject you.
I think it was Kamala Harris's big problem.
You know, I think I've done on your show before.
She always reminds me of somebody who just came out of like a board of directors
meeting at like a health insurance company where she's the general counsel.
You know, like there's everything about her reeks of like insider establishment comfort.
And if you're JD Vance, no matter how you end up, and you know, I had a working class background as well.
I'm not comparing it to J.D. Vantzes, but there's always a part of you.
You know, it's always something that you feel.
There's always a little bit of resentment in you that you grew up in a certain way and didn't have things that most other, that a lot of people, other people had.
And I think that is a prerequisite for being successful in American politics, given how much the establishment is hated in general.
All right. Speaking of the Democrat HR meeting that Kamala Harris just walked out of, there's a headline that just broke before air by Shane Goldmaker in the New York Times. The DNC is scrapping its report on what went wrong in 2024, Glenn. Listen to this. It's killing its autopsy of the 2024 election. Ken Martin, the chairman of the DNC, said on Thursday he had decided not to publish a report. So the report exists that he ordered months ago into what went wrong for the dams last year. Party official.
have conducted more than 300 interviews with Democrats in all 50 states to create a document
that Mr. Martin had once pitched as crucial to charting a path forward. Mr. Martin will instead
keep the findings under seal, saying he believes the following. Here's our North Star. Does this
help us win? If the answer is no, it's a distraction from the core mission. So we don't get to know.
he knows, but they don't want to release it to the public.
And my only thought on this is, does it read at the top?
Kamla Harris is a shitty candidate.
And he's like, holy shit, our entire base is black women who love her, but they're not
enough to get us over the top.
We cannot put that out.
They really have dug their own grave.
And it was so obvious in 2024 what that grave was, which was they were between, you know,
they were faced with two.
awful choices. Either they went with Kamala Harris, who they, you know, everybody, it was a
consensus until the day she became the nominee that she was one of the all-time worst politicians.
Every time she opened her mouth, she embarrassed herself. Everybody understood that.
Everybody knew that. Her 2020 campaign was a complete disaster. She had every advantage and
it couldn't even make it to the first primary. And then, of course, soon as she becomes nominee,
everybody just in the media comes together and says, oh, no, this is one of the most exciting
candidates ever. Look, Charlie X or XC or whoever is like Brat Summer and this was going to, you know,
take her over the line of victory. But everyone in the Democratic Party knew she was a terrible
candidate. The problem was they couldn't pass over her, even though she was second line,
because black women are an important part of their base. And there'd be a lot of anger and a lot of
resentment had they said gone to Calvin Newsome or some white man with whom they had a better chance
of winning.
What's so amazing is, so they took their medicine.
They held their noses and they swallowed their medicine like good boys and girls.
And now she's back.
She's not grateful that like, okay, we gate.
She's like, yo, bitches, you only gave me 107 days.
Because listen to what she said on a podcast.
This week, SOT 30.
You have said in previous interviews, your focus is on 20,
if you're not talking about 2028 yet.
But, you know, I have to ask you,
are you thinking about 2028?
Do you feel like you have unfinished business
that you want to do?
You can always break news at our table.
We'd love to have that.
I have not made any decisions about that.
Yeah.
Well, if you do make a decision,
and whatever the decision that you make,
there are going to be millions of people
will support you with whatever you want to do.
There's so much love for you.
you. And you're seeing it on your book tour.
So she didn't even downplay it. She was like, haven't made a decision. Like, that is
leaving the door as wide open as one possibly can without saying, obviously I'm doing it, Jamie.
I would bet any amount of money she's running. And first of all, when she decided not to run for
governor in 2026, meaning like that office is beneath her, that was already an announcement
that she's running in 2028. She certainly doesn't intend to disappear.
from political life, that's for sure.
But the whole point of her book,
starting with the title, as you just alluded to,
was that the only reason I lost
was not because I'm a terrible candidate
because I stood for nothing
because people don't really want to hear me speaking
because they don't trust me because I have no charisma.
No, it was because I only had 107 days.
And so if that really is in your mind,
the reason you lost,
which of course, in her mind it is,
of course you're going to then think, oh, but if I get to be the nominee, but this time with a
normal amount of time, I'm going to roll over everybody.
And I'm sure that's what she's convinced of.
And, you know, again, going back to that problem that Democrats have, if Kamala Harris wants
to be the nominee, there's going to be a lot of people on whom that party depends, who
believe that it is her entitlement.
And if she doesn't get it, there's going to be a lot of concern that those people are going
to be so angry that they're going to stay at home and the Democrats can't win.
again, with Kamala Harris
or without the people
who are going to be alienated
if she's not the nominee.
It's amazing.
This is like,
how lucky can the Republicans be?
She won't go away.
She really believes she can do it.
And you're right, girl.
Do not let them crap on you.
You come back.
It was the 100.
If you had 108,
could have had a different result.
You get in there and you fight.
You fight for your right
to rule the party.
All right, I want to keep going.
Staying on hard news
before we get to the really fun stuff.
which I'm looking forward to. We've got to talk about Brown University and the shit show. That is the
police situation there. Here is the one piece of good news. They are saying now that they have
DNA from the scene, like the killer's DNA. They said for the first time yesterday that
they have some DNA on shell casings. Chief Perez said, told reporters that they have it.
A law enforcement official familiar with the case who spoke on condition of anonymity
also said that the DNA as well as fingerprints came from the shell casings.
He just told reporters that they have DNA.
That's what the chief said.
And then on background, somebody else added it's on the shell casings, which is great.
If that's true, that's huge.
A Fox News on Wednesday asked Chief Perez whether investigators were able to find live
ammo on the scene.
And he said investigators were able to get physical evidence.
Oh, yeah, we seized a few physical evidence.
These are his words.
And we're in the process of examining that evidence.
And yes, we have some DNA that we manipulated,
so it just progresses every day.
And so what that means is that they're now going to run that through
the federal database of perps who are already in the system
and see if there are any matches.
And if there aren't,
then they're going to bring in a genetic genealogist
like a C.C. Moore, who can take
whatever DNA relational hit they might get, because, you know, if I commit a crime,
but I'm not in the, I think it's called CODIS, the system that they have, they're not going to
have a match. But they might, if like my fourth cousin twice removed, if their DNA is in there,
they might say, oh, the killer's fourth cousin twice removed is in here. And then you have a
genetic genealogy come in here and like map out that person's whole family tree, start,
figuring it out. It's investigative work and figure out, like, who could have been at Brown University
on Saturday, December X, and so on. So I do think it's great news that they have DNA, and that
hopefully will help us get a name and solve it. However, if you have doubts, you are more than
entitled because they really don't know what they're doing out there. They announced yesterday,
made clear, they haven't even interviewed all the students who were
in the classroom where the shooting took place.
They announced that it was a review course for an exam.
So we're not sure who showed up and who didn't.
What?
Why wouldn't you just go to all students who take the class door by door and interview all of them?
Why is it like, gee, I don't know.
Listen to here to stop five.
You now just explain to us five days later how many students were in that classroom.
Can you now say how many kids were in that classroom and did the gun come in from the back so these people never knew it was coming?
Or did he come in front with a full view of everybody?
That's all part of the interviews and actually we cooperating with Brown to get the roster.
That was a study hall so we don't have the number.
We still get information as far as who was there.
I know Brown sent out an email to the search.
students to notify us if they were present and we're still getting that. So I can't give you
an exact account now. Well, Brown said on an email, Glenn, so they're on it. I think what's
amazing here, Megan, is that I mean, you know, any human institution, no matter how capable you think
it is, is going to have incompetence, is going to have mistakes, is going to have failures.
And obviously, that includes the police and investigators. They make mistakes all the time.
But for a crime of this magnitude at one of our nation's top universities, for 11 people to have been shot, two of whom have been killed on campus, where everything is monitored, there are cameras everywhere, or at least there should be, it turns out apparently that there aren't for whatever reasons that there's speculation about why.
When you see police incompetence on this level, it really is, it's alarming.
I think the other interesting aspect of it is
is because I've spent a lot of time in my work
on things like mass surveillance
and facial recognition
and all the ways that we might be surveilled.
There's obviously real dangers
to having mass surveillance,
but in a case like this,
you kind of wish that police were able to trace everybody's movements
in a way that's a lot easier.
And it kind of points to this conflict that we have.
But I think everybody finds it inconceivable
not that there's police incompetence, but that on a case of this magnitude, of this scale at
at a place like Brown, it looks like the keystone cops.
And you really do start wondering why, like, is this just really how incompetent they are?
Or is there something about this case and like the university environment and academia
and all the values that we know prevail there that are causing impediments in the investigation
that's making this incompetence worse?
I want, like, it's amazing to me that they have not yet interviewed all the students present,
the immediate eyewitnesses to the shooting, not only because they may have identifying information
about the shooter, they may be able to actually clarify what he yelled, because so far all
we've heard is from that one TA who said to me it was incomprehensible and to the students
I know of, they couldn't understand what he was yelling either. Maybe some other student has a
different story, and maybe a lot of these students record prep meetings. They have a lot of
like one of those newfangled apps that everybody has in their phone who are college students,
Glenn, where they record these things. And maybe one of those students has a whole recording
of it. Um, and the police just need to find them. Why wouldn't they get the full roster of 200
students and in one day knock on all of their doors? This is so crazy. Oh, well, they sent out
an email. Oh, well, great. Okay. Terrific. Because the killer's on a loose. So you might actually
want to put pedal to the metal and get on this. Now, there was another sort of heated moment where
the Providence Mayor, who's really just the worst actor. I mean, he's, there's a lot to choose
from. The University President seems like a complete Nimrod. Not impressed at all with the police
chief. The AG is contradicting the, the Providence Mayor, but the Providence Mayor is the
worst. He is the worst. And he's the one who's like, I don't think there's an ongoing threat.
Why not? Well, because no one's been shot since Saturday. Oh, okay. Terrific. I'm sure we'll
fine then. He was asked a question about the lack of cameras.
And I have heard this from multiple people who I know who are like in the area and asking
these same questions.
Whether the lack of cameras is somehow related to the fact that Providence is a sanctuary
city and whether there was a conscious decision to take down some of the cameras or
deactivate some of the cameras so as not to get alleged illegals on camera in a way that
would be used by the feds or capturable by the feds.
This guy's going to ask this question.
It's hard to understand him, and I'm going to summarize it when we come back.
So just take a list and see what you can glean, and then I'll clarify what he's asking.
His name is Chaz Kalanda, and he's speaking to the Providence Mayor yesterday.
Sanctuary City law that we have.
You don't want to recall illegal immigrants and you don't want to provide the footage to the FPR or immigration authority.
One camera and that people, he comes out from your detectives, they are friends of mine.
They're angry at this investigation that these people in Brown University put the camera off.
They can identify that person.
You imagine how the family want to go through?
We tell the truth to the media here.
We heard from both the Brown police chief and the provost of Brown who have shared that they have been fully cooperative and shared,
been forthcoming with all data and evidence that they have.
Okay, but that doesn't answer the question.
Just to reiterate what the question was because we went back and verbated it.
we have a sanctuary city law here you don't want to record illegal immigrants and you don't want to
provide the footage to the FBI or immigration authorities one camera and now it's come out from
your detectives they're friends of mine they're angry at this investigation these people at
brown university put the camera out that's how he phrased it they can identify that person you
imagine how the family is going through what they're going through tell the truth to the media
put the cameras open so that was our best verbated it he's suggested
that they turned off cameras.
I've heard this from others on the scene,
that they believe Brown Providence residents
that some of these cameras were intentionally turned off
for the very reasons that reporter stated,
your thoughts on it.
Here's the thing.
So there's been a lot of speculation online
about what happened at Brown
and also what happened with the killing
that some people think might be related
of this nuclear physicist
who was also killed
at MIT.
in roughly this at MIT, exactly.
And a lot of the speculation, some of it turned out to be false,
others of it turned out to be very unfounded.
And a lot of people are saying not unreasonably
that one of the problems with this kind of online sleuth thing
is that it often leads to politically motivated speculation or things.
Okay, I agree with that.
I do think that's an issue.
The reason that happens, though,
is because of the inability or refusal
of people in power and in authorities
to answer the most basic questions
to give us the most basic information
about a crime that of course
is a great concern to huge numbers of people
and ought to be.
And it's in that vacuum
of like this evasive kind of answer,
this refusal to give any kind of
do it be accountable in any way
that citizens start thinking
we can't trust the police,
we can't trust investigators.
They lied to us.
They're incompetent.
They cover things up.
And this is,
why you see so much this kind of doubting, like with the Charlie Kirk shooting, or with any
kind of crime, any kind of major event where people no longer trust institutions of authority.
And I think in that exchange, you see the reason.
Like, if that's the reason they turned off the cameras, say so, where the cameras turned off,
like, why can't you just give straight answers on that?
And when we don't get those, that's the people start thinking, we have to figure out on our
own and we can't trust the information we're being given.
And although it can be a problem, because it leads to false speculation that spread
like wildfire, it's also the fault of the people who are supposed to be exercising
this power responsibly when they do things that make other people lose trust in what they're
saying.
All right, I want to keep going.
There's a lot of news to get to.
Speaking of lack of trust, the FBI has been suffering that for many years now.
And the two people at the top of it under Trump are, of course, Cash Patel and Dan Bongino,
who I think most Republicans, I mean, maybe not the establishment types, but most
Maga faithful supported going into those two top roles. And then there was some real questioning
after the Epstein debacle, both when the pair of them went on with Maria Bartoromo and said
they believe Epstein did kill himself and that there wasn't a murder and you just had to look at
the tape from the prison cell. And then even the left wing media started to challenge that.
So there was a real crisis of confidence then. Dan Bongino threatened to quit.
over his blowout with Pam Bondi, but he didn't quit. He stayed. And it's been a tumultuous
nine, ten months, I think it's fair to say, even for two guys who had previously been trusted
by MAGA, but there's no question there's been an erosion of that since they went on the inside,
you know, as can happen, especially when you go to an organization that distrusted. Now we get news
that Dan Bongino's stepping down. He sent out a tweet yesterday. I think he said effective early January.
he did not make it a year, and now he's already getting some blowback. This is what the left
is saying, but the reason I'm playing this is you're also hearing this online from some on
the right, which is kind of telling because I love Bongino, and I've been kind of taken
it back at like the, I don't know, the shift in opinion by some, even on the right. But here's
Nicole Wallace with her two-cent take.
This guy is a freaking joke.
He wears T-shirts that are obviously too small,
and he went on Fox News and complained about how long the workday is
as the number two at the FBI.
The FBI, as you two know better than anyone,
protects children from child sex traffickers.
And on that topic, Dan Bongino had a successful podcast,
in part because he peddled conspiracy theories about Jeffrey Epstein
and then got to the FBI and let Pam Bondi roll over him when they decided to cover up the files
because Donald Trump's name is in them, a fact confirmed by Susie Wiles this week in 11 on-the-record
interviews with Chris Whipple. I want to know if either of you can speak to the lasting damage
or the danger that we're in because a guy that is a joke was the number two with the FBI.
Okay. First of all, they did not let Pam Bondi roll over them. She's their boss. The FBI's not
an independent agency that doesn't answer to anybody.
They answer to Pam Bondi.
If Pam Bondi directs the strategy that we're not releasing anything more on the Epstein's file,
then that is what Cash and Dan had to do.
I'm sorry that they were very outspoken on Epstein beforehand,
but like to pretend that they had independent autonomy when DOJ, and frankly, let's face it,
it must have been Trump's call, made a call, is to ignore reality.
However, I'm going to give you one more sound by Glenn.
And it is the moment she referenced when Dan went on.
Fox in May of 2025, SOT 20C.
I gave up everything for this.
I mean, you know, my wife is struggling and I'm not a victim.
I'm not Jim Comey.
It's fine.
I did this and I'm proud that I did it.
But if you think we're there for tea and crumpets, well, I mean, cash is there all day.
We share our offices are linked.
He turns on the faucet.
I hear it.
He's there at, he gets in like 6 o'clock in the morning.
He doesn't leave till 7 at night.
You know, I'm in.
there at 7.30 in the morning. He uses the gym. I work out in my apartment. But I stare at these
four walls all day in D.C. by myself, divorce from my wife. Not divorced, but I mean, separated
divorce. And it's hard. I mean, you know, we love each other. And it's hard to be apart.
So she mocked him for it. Many did. But to me, that explains why he's leaving. I mean,
there's a thankless job where he's losing support, even amongst some MAGA faithful because of the
nature of the FBI and what I said with Epstein, even though I think Dan was very opposed to how
was handled by Bondi. And I'm sure he, I haven't talked to him, but I'm sure he's like,
this is a fucking thankless job. I'm out of here. I want to go back to my family, my wife,
and my podcast. So my question to you is, can he do that now, given some of those issues
that I just highlighted? I don't know if people realize. Dan Bongino is, had his podcast
on Rumble, where he's also a major investor.
And that podcast was, I mean, to call it a success is to wildly understate the case.
He was making enormous amounts of money.
He had a massive audience of people unbelievably loyal to him and loyal to him because of how much trust they had in him.
And one of the reasons they had so much trust in him was because he was such an emphatic critic of the deep state of these organizations.
and among the things he was telling them was that the U.S. government was concealing the Epstein files because it was trying to protect the world's most powerful people from being exposed as child predators because they know that Jeffrey Epstein didn't kill himself and because Jeffrey Epstein had blackmail power over all these people and were therefore forcing them to keep these files concealed. This was not an ancillary issue for Dan Bongino. This was something
think he talked about over and over and over.
And then also other things as well, you know, like the guy who killed Trump and all the stuff
that supposedly was being covered up about that, none of which has been released under the FBI's
leadership.
And so when you then months into Dan Bongino's stint, watch him go on Fox and obviously
in a very uncomfortable way, say, we found no evidence of blackmail, we don't think it's
appropriate to release these files.
Please trust us when we tell you that he absolutely killed himself.
obviously the people who have been listening to Dan Bongino for all these years and believing
that this was like one of the very few people who they could trust, turn around and in an instant,
soon as they're inside, abandon so many of the core beliefs that they had been insisting were true
is obviously going to erode the confidence and trust that people have in you.
And I also think one of the things that it's worth remembering, you know, we all have talents
And we all have talents, which means we're not talented at everything.
Usually, we're all talented at something.
And it's important to be humble enough to realize that because you succeed in one thing,
doesn't mean you can succeed in anything else.
Dan Vonjino is a very effective outsider, like a very effective critic.
He brings people along with him.
Running the FBI is an entirely different skill set.
And I think a lot of people in the MAGA movement, because of how validly,
critical they were of these institutions decided that the people who are there for their
whole career who have the quote unquote expertise all need to be thrown out. And I totally
understand that and in part of even agree with it. But it doesn't mean that you can just
pop up some guy who's a very talented podcaster and put him in this like administrative
job that he obviously doesn't want to be in. Like sorry, but getting to work at 7.30 and
leaving at 7 o'clock inside an office, that is not exactly uncommon. That's not a backbreaking job.
That's the experience of most Americans, like you go out to your office, you're separated from your family, your kids, because you're working.
Like Dan Bongino made it sound like, you know, he was like carrying the cross of the crucifix on his back for days.
And I just think it kind of illustrates that humility is needed, like to realize what you're good at and what you're not.
So I think, I think he didn't really want to do that.
That's what I think.
I think he didn't really want to do this.
But he, I'm guessing here, I haven't talked to anybody about this, but I'm guessing that,
Trump thought he'd be the perfect person to do it, he in cash, because they'd been so critical of
the FBI. So he found FBI critics to come in so that the MAGA base would trust the new
leadership. But then I think neither one of them fully appreciated, just like they didn't appreciate
over at HHS or DHS or DOJ, the fact that these organizations are completely replete with
leftists. And it's very freaking hard to change the culture, to change the motion, the forward
motion of these things in a leftist direction, just because you have leadership that's different.
They're trying. They're definitely trying. And so I've felt very much for both of them. And I will say
this, I think really the catching of the January 6th, the pipe bomber, you know, assuming this is
the guy, which so far I believe it is, was huge. Like I almost feel like if you're Dan Bongino, you can say,
But it was a divine right order.
Like they put me in there because it seems like he really spearheaded that.
I did something that really mattered.
Who knows what this guy was capable of?
What if he had tried to bomb something else?
And maybe he saved lives.
You know, maybe he was there at that time, which was another one of his quote-unquote conspiracy theories.
I'm not citing you there, but like another thing that people point to.
And he pushed it and he wanted January 6 pipe bomber found.
And he found him.
And maybe Dan just said, you know what?
I did something that really mattered.
You know, I let cops be cops again, as he and cash keeps saying.
And now I just want to get back to, as you point out, the thing that I'm great at and my family and government service is not for me.
Yeah, let me just say one thing, though, and it's not really like disagreeing per se, but I think just for me, at least a more precise way to explain it.
I don't think these institutions are filled with what I would call leftists.
Like, I've never met a leftist who says my goal is to go work at the FBI or become like a CIA operative.
I think what these people are are more like establishment operatives.
They're like institutionalists.
These are people who want to protect the permanent power faction in Washington that's
really not subject to elections.
And you can put people at the top who are determined to kind of blow it all up.
But, you know, being at the top doesn't mean that the entire infrastructure under you
that's been cultivated for decades.
And these people are inculcated about how these institutions should work.
they can easily resist, you know, the comings and goings of politicians.
Every American president has discovered that, that there's this huge part of Washington
that they nominally control, but that they don't really have any ability to change at all,
no matter how much they want to.
And I bet you that was also part of Dan Bongino's frustration is you can get in there
and say, okay, we're in control now.
We're going to fix this institution.
And yet, you know, you can't just get rid of the entire FBI.
There's experience, you know, operatives in there and investigate.
and they have, like, an ideology about how things should be done,
and they're not going to just instantly give up the power that they have
and the ideology that they've been trained to have forever
simply because a couple of guys at the top have been critics on a podcast.
And I'm sure that has to be frustrating to try and reform the deep state
and find that you're actually not able to do so,
even though you have a democratic mandate from the American people to do it.
And then you get what to me seems like a clear order from the president himself,
not to keep going on Epstein. Oh, my God. It's a, it's a worst case scenario.
But by the way, I do believe, I totally agree with it. It's an important point about the FBI,
more institutionalists. But I do know for a fact that over at DOJ, they're having a problem with
actual leftists in the lawyer class up and down the ranks who will not just do what the leadership
wants them to do. You know, they're, and that makes sense, right? You and I are both lawyers.
We know how lawyers are. Okay, I want to keep going. Cash Patel went on.
with Katie Miller. And again, I like cash. And he was just on the show two weeks ago today.
But while under fire for like paying too much attention to his girlfriend, Alexis, he brought his
girlfriend Alexis. And they did a joint interview, which I don't think was a great move. Like I
understand why Katie Miller wanted it. That makes sense. I understand why Alexis wanted it.
But cash, like my advice to cash, this is free, take it or leave it. The romance should not be in
the papers. It should not be in the news. It should not be on podcasts.
You know, it should just be off the radar because too much attention has been brought to it already
because he's been flying around in the FBI plane to, like, go see her.
That was raised in the interview.
And here is what that sounded like, SOT 18.
This nonsense about, oh, you're taking a private jet.
We're taking the FBI plane because Congress, 20 years ago, said FBI directors are not allowed to take commercial air travel, ever.
It's ironic that they're saying, oh, you're going on vacation or you're going to
see your girlfriend perform.
And if I was actually abusing it,
I would go see every one of her shows.
I think I get to like 15%.
Okay, I'm just going to give you one more.
SOT 19.
Just stand by.
Sot 19.
What's an area that you disagree with cash on?
Oh.
Come on now.
Oh, no.
I think that it's really in like,
random things like
I don't like spice and he does
like I like spice
I just I can't handle spicy foods
I'm working on it like I said
I'm Mediterranean so I have it in me I just
I need to get there with it
no the going out to eat is hilarious
because I'm Hindu and I don't eat beef
and she has a really significant
seafood allergy so when we sit down at a dinner
table or go to
an event we have to like
make sure we've provided these
instructions and so then when we're out to dinner
at a nice dinner.
She'll order, like, a steak, which is great.
And then I'll order, like, the seafood and everything else.
And it's, like, on a divided line.
Like, it can't cross over.
But we make a really good surf and turf team at, like, events.
If it's like, hey, it's going to be steak and lobster.
Like, that's great.
Perfect.
Just different place.
Divvy us up.
Like, we're happy.
It's less than ideal, Glenn.
It's less than ideal when they're already in the news.
Well, let me just say, first of all, I'm uncomfortable with this whole Keene Miller
podcast.
not because I don't think she should be able to have a podcast.
She's, you know, perfectly entitled to one.
She, she, before the Trump administration,
what was doing this sort of works,
not like she just invented this.
At the same time, her husband is, I would say,
the most powerful person in the Trump administration.
Wait, do me favor.
And, like, hold that point right there.
So at the same time, Stephen Miller's one of the most powerful people
because I got to hit this hard break
and we'll come back right after Glenn.
Lucky for us is here for the whole show.
show. What a great Thursday. Don't go away.
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Glenn Greenwald is back with me now.
He is the host of Rumbles system update.
If you want to get smarter, listen to Glenn.
Glenn, you were saying you have a problem with the podcast
because Katie Miller's married to one of the administration's
most powerful people, Stephen Miller.
Right.
And so, first of all, I'm not even sure
that people who get invited onto Katie Miller's show
really feel the ability to say no,
given the power that her husband has.
But also, I don't have any problem with partisan media.
I used to compliment you on the fact of audience,
and yet you interview, you know,
Republican and conservative politicians as a journalist,
like in an adversarial way.
This podcast is not designed to do that.
It's almost like a form of state TV.
but then it does it like it tries to personalize these people like the last one she had
before cash and his girlfriend she had a mike johnson and for some reason mike johnson's
wife like there's a lot to ask mike johnson he's the speaker of the house but because she's trying
to do a softer you know there's like a million angles of mike johnson being asked tough questions
he's trying to do like a more a softer side i know but like you know i ended up learning that like
the person who wears the pants in the family, as they put it, the one with the veto power,
the one who makes all the decisions, is Mike Johnson's wife. And I'm like, why am I listening
to this? But that doesn't mean it's not for anybody. By the way, I mean, Mike Johnson is actually
quite funny. And I think showing his softer side and like his personal side might be of interest
to some people. I like Mike Johnson, too. I just don't know why I have to hear the details of
you don't have to. Don't click on her face.
telling his girlfriend, like, and that is even something like, oh, man, Glenn, your, your connection is
struggling. We're like, struggling to get. Okay, but like that, that's fine, but the speaker of the
house is the FBI director. And I get what you're saying, like, not everything has to be very
substantive. And these are people who have, you know, personal lives and private lives. It just
all seems a bit incestuous because it's Katie Miller. So it's just, it, it seems very propagandistic to
me. It all seems like designed to promote these people and not really get to know them.
Well, I mean, you can know that. You know, I mean, Laura Trump has a show on Fox. So, of course,
you go on with Laura Trump, who I love. Obviously, you know you're not getting an objective
interviewer, but so you take it for what it's worth. You know, you take it with that grain of salt.
But it's no different than you'd see over on MSNBC where they're more in the tank for the
Democrats than Katie Miller is for the Republicans. You know, it's like she's doing a different
thing over there when it comes to like hard versus softer news, which is fine.
I guess. I mean, but like, but you were even making the point, you know, like cash Patel and his
girlfriend and their relationship has been waiting on cash for that. A lot of people talk about it.
A lot of people have questions about it. That's not Katie Miller's fault. That's like,
Katie Miller wanted to do that with their show, which is like, okay, great. And cash,
but cash should have said no in my view, not because Katie's inappropriate, but because there's too much
news already about cash and his girlfriend, which I'm sure they would love to put to bed.
But could you say no? They would love that to go away. Can you say no? Like, isn't the weight
of our husband behind her? I'm not even saying like you're using that. I'm just saying like
I feel that's what I feel like there's a dynamic there that is, you know, her husband doesn't
just work in the White House. I do think he's the one who Trump listens to more than anybody.
Well, let's hope so. Stand by. I want to play.
a little bit more from Cash and Alexis on the show. Watch this.
So what's the ideal date night?
Staying in.
Yeah, I was going to say at this point probably like doing that thing.
Sitting on the couch, watching whatever, sleeping.
Our favorite restaurant is Missoumi in Las Vegas.
We go there as often as we can, but Las Vegas has the best food in the country.
So we're spoiled in that manner.
But D.C., I don't know. What do you like?
How do you keep your personal relationship strong when,
so much of what you do during the day isn't discussed outside of, you know, a classified
setting. She has this great ability to not only never ask me about my job, but never
care to because she knows we're not going to discuss it. What's the most important meeting
she's ever called and you stepped out of? I've never had to step out of a meeting because
if it was an emergency, I obviously would. I really never had to do that. I think I had to call you
during a dinner, though, when I cut my finger open.
Oh, yeah, there was that.
That was a lot.
I was, yes, I was not in D.C.
And she informed me she accidentally cut her finger open.
And I said, okay, were we getting stitches?
Are we at the hospital?
Were we going to go?
And her mom was sending me funny text, and I knew it was fine.
Yeah.
Have you written any love songs about cash?
You know, it's funny.
I don't think anyone's ever asked that.
um you know yeah i have okay so again this is my advice is my free advice that they they are free to
ignore but i i think and i believe they're in love i actually think they'll wind up married and
it'll actually be quite sweet um and good for them it's hard to find love in washington but
but since she's so much like this relationship has been too much in the news and it's undermining
cash now it's undermined i know he doesn't like that because he loves her and he's been
defensive of her which is also sweet but i think
She, no, she should be off air.
It should be just cash.
And if he wants to personalize himself by going on a softer interview, you know, format, that works.
That's good.
But this is calling too much attention to something that's already become an Achilles heel for him.
The right doesn't like it.
Go look at Twitter.
Go look at X.
Like there are no positive comments about it.
So that's fine.
We may not like reality, but we should accept reality and just keep the private life private.
keep it over there. Stop talking about it. Stop making news on it. You know, people are going to try to make
news about every time he goes to visit her for a concert anyway. There's no reason to, like, lean in.
Yeah. I mean, I do think part of the issue is that it is different. Like, Mike Johnson and his wife have
been married 20 years. They have seven kids. They adopted two. They have five biological kids.
You know, so I think people are more open to the fact that, you know, if you want to know Mike
Johnson, you kind of have to know his family and his wife.
Like, that is an important part of a politician's public profile.
A girlfriend is different.
They're young.
There have been.
And even though, yes, it is true, he does have to fly on the FBI private plane.
When you have enemies inside the FBI, as we just talked about, resisting his reform,
and they're leaking things like he's constantly taking his private plane to Las Vegas.
He's constantly taking it to Nashville to see her shows.
I just, as you said, it just, it rubs people the wrong way when people are economically
struggling when there's already a perception that people in the political class live this
way. And I agree with you. It's a poor decision to go in and do it. But I do question whether he
felt kind of compelled. It just, I don't know. That's an interesting wrinkle. I'm not the
target audience. I think they should follow the Doug Brunt rule. I didn't enjoy listening to those
clips. Doug's family when he was younger before we had met, they would take a big trip every
year, like a big family vacation. And their rules,
when their kids, they had four kids,
Doug's one of four.
Their rule when the kids started to get,
you know, in their 20s was no one can,
no significant other can come
unless you're at least engaged
because they didn't want
the cast of girlfriends or boyfriends
temporarily coming with their family
on like their biggest memories
and biggest vacations.
And that's probably not a bad rule
for administration officials.
Like, don't, for an interview,
like don't bring the person in for an interview
if you're not at least,
engaged because you're probably going to take a lot of shit. And God forbid, they break up.
It's going to get even worse. But I don't think they will. I actually think they're a very sweet
couple. My money is on them getting married. But okay, let's move on. And all the best to them,
because I am rooting for them. Okay. Where do we go next? Oh, well, let's spend a minute on Rob Reiner.
There's really not a lot of news in that case today. He, Nick Reiner was arraigned. He was brought in.
He was charged officially. And the judge confirmed that he had waived his right.
to a speedy arraignment, and they continued it until January 7th.
He was wearing a suicide smock, they called it.
We weren't allowed to see him in court.
And then his attorney, Alan Jackson, who's like a famous attorney, came out after the fact
and called the whole situation very complex and serious.
Let's allow the system to move forward in a way it was designed.
No one understood exactly what he was telegraphing, but he wants you to know this is very
complex.
Is it?
And then there was this, which I thought was worth playing.
Wall Street Journal reporter John Jurgensen had an interesting report yesterday on the party at Conan O'Brien's, the night that Rob and Michelle were killed.
They had been there, and they had brought their son, Nick, who by all accounts had been acting inappropriately, and he filled in some of those details in this report, which he then spoke about on CNN, SOT3.
During the party, he was approaching people there asking questions that in that context seemed confrontational, strange, especially Are You Famous? Asking people there, are you famous? So you can imagine a party of actual famous people and fame-adjacent people who are really used to strange behavior out in public, but here they are at a gathering of their peers at a party hosted by Conan. It was unsettling to us.
So Bill Hader was one of the people he approached at the party.
There was an awkward exchange made more awkward by the fact that he had met Hater earlier in the night.
So when he's- Through Rob had introduced him.
So when he came up and asked him questions such as, what's your name?
Are you famous?
It was unsettling and described as scary from Hater's perspective.
So think about it, Glenn.
It wasn't just this guy Hater, but apparently Nick was going up to all these famous people,
if you listen to the longer interview, all these famous people at Conan O'Brien's house.
And he was making the point, the reporter there, that, you know, in a room full of famous people at Conan O'Brien's Christmas party, it's very strange to keep asking people, are you famous?
Right?
It's one thing if one famous person shows up at a party of non-famous people and then meets somebody who doesn't know who they are, and the person says, oh, are you famous?
You know, like, that's happened to all of us.
Actually, funny story, just as an aside, Doug and I, one year we went to the...
the Met Gala. We went to the after party after we went to the gala. We're standing in the
red rope line waiting to get into the after party. We're speaking with this young woman. And
you know, one thing leads to another and it's pretty clear that she's some sort of an athlete.
Like, oh, what do you do? She goes, I play soccer. I'm like, oh, are you any good? She's like,
yeah, yeah, I'm pretty good. That woman was Alex Morgan, who is in fact very, very good at soccer.
So I'm just saying sometimes you meet somebody who's famous.
And if it's not in your wheelhouse, you don't know.
That's not what was happening with Nick Reiner.
He was behaving weirdly and inappropriately.
And it just sort of sets the stage for his bizarre behavior that evening.
But not so bizarre he's going to get off on an insanity defense.
So I haven't had the chance to ask you about this whole case.
Where are you on it?
What do you think of it?
Because of my husband's political career, I used to be at parties all the time.
with like big Brazilian celebrities so I don't actually recognize. And probably Brazil's most
famous singer came up to me once and said, oh, I'm so happy to meet you. I really respect your work.
And I said, oh, what do you do? Just to get it off me? I was like, do you work for this political
candidate whose event we're at? And he's like, no, I'm in music. And I pictured him like,
you know, kind of playing like a clarinet on the corner. And then my husband was dying of
embarrassment. And he interrupted. Like, Kaitano, I'm a huge fan. His name was Kaitano Veloso, like,
the most famous musician in all of Brazil, kind of like the Michael Jackson or Bob Del.
And I was like, what do you do? Do you like or do you work? Yeah, it was horrible.
Anyway, I think, you know, one of the thing I think is interesting about this case is that
a lot of American families suffer from addiction. It used to be a lot more stigmatized than it
was in the sense that people really thought it was like a moral failing. And here you see,
you know, the son of an extremely famous, wealthy person who by all accounts was like a very
dedicated father and his wife of the very dedicated mother doing everything they could for this kid
and then even into adulthood to save him in some way from addiction. And as so many American
families have experienced, like sometimes that demon is the hardest one to battle. I think it's a
good reminder that it cuts across all socioeconomic lines. And then I also think there's this sort of
interesting aspect. You know, if you're poor and you're trying to raise kids, that's very difficult.
but sometimes if you're very rich and your kid is born into great wealth, that also can be very
difficult because they might not have motivation. They might, you know, feel like too heavy of an
expectation. I think there's a lot of things in this story kind of like as a morality play that
Americans can learn from. And especially when it comes to addiction because of what a pervasive
problem it is for families across the country, I think every time there's a story that involves
addiction, it can be important to kind of break down the stigma and and, and create a problem.
some empathy for families who, you know, might feel like it's their fault. But in reality,
it's something that, you know, infects so many parts of society. And it sounds like Nick Reiner
had some significant mental health issues prior to the addiction, which, you know, from all
accounts, like by age 10, we're really manifesting in the family. It's a nightmare. I mean,
what do you do with a child who is mentally disturbed in a way that they have really upsetting
social behaviors, but they're not committable. It's not at that level. They haven't broken the
criminal law, so they're not going to go to jail. They're just going to be dependent on you in an
upsetting and disruptive, negative way forever. I mean, that's a curse. That is why you sit around,
if you're lucky enough to have healthy children and look at, you know, your life and say,
thank you, God, thank you God, thank you God for giving me three healthy children.
And it's not saddling me with that burden.
I feel like the Reiner's got saddled with that burden.
That's how it looks to me.
Yeah.
And like in their situations, like impossible know what to do.
You can like let them, you know, end up on the street and be homeless.
But it's still your kid.
Like you love him.
You've raised him.
He's your, you know, your family.
But then if you let him stay in your guest house and support him, are you like
enable, it's just such an awful dilemma.
And to go through that for so many years and have your payment be dying in that manner
at the hands of that person, it's, it's like uniquely sickening.
And it's so sad because Rob Reiner was 78.
His dad, Carl Reiner, also famous, a Rob had been in a similar situation to that of his
son, lived to 98.
You know, I mean, clearly he had some good genes even on the male side, which is rare.
And who knows how much.
longer he could have lived, you know, the other two children seem to be madly in love with their
parents. And there's a third child to, a first daughter that he adopted when he's married to
Penny Marshall. So, you know, your heart has to go out to them. All right, I want to keep going
because there's a lot of other stuff we want to get to. And this is the story that I've been
waiting for. The cold play kiss cam lady has decided to speak out. And the headline is
she's the victim, just in case you didn't know. She's the victim. We made her the victim. We made her the
victim. She really, she did something very minor that was wrong, but it wasn't really that
big. People are nasty, and they need to stop harassing her. The only part of that that I agree with
is people should stop harassing her. Apparently, she said some in-person and like nasty
writings and so on. That's unnecessary. But the rest of us are fully free to comment on her
behavior, and she's going to have to deal with it because it happened, it happened on camera,
and it wasn't well handled. So she has sat, she has now sat with the New York
Times and also with the Telegraph, I think, or no, Times of London for dueling interviews.
She sat for an entire day with the New York Times and Lucy Lou, who writes, okay, about how,
okay, Coldplay, Kiskem, HR boss, Kristen Cabot on 16 seconds that ruined her life.
And this whole piece is an attempt, I think, to show.
shame us for shaming her and to talk about how she's been sort of slut shamed and also to paint
it as totally unfair because according to Kristen Cabot, when she got caught on the kiss cam with
with her boss of this company astronomer, she was head of HR. Her sin was simply, quote,
I made a bad decision and had a couple of high noons and danced and acted inappropriately with
my boss, and it's not nothing, and I took accountability, and I gave up my career for that.
That's the price I chose to pay. You did not choose. It was not your choice. I want my kids to know
that you can make mistakes and you can really screw up, but you don't have to be threatened
or be killed for them. Well, obviously, that last line is true. But she's trying to turn this
into like a heroic moment for her.
First of all, it's too soon.
We're still too fresh on the mind.
You have demanded that we restore you
to your pedestal in life
before we're kind of over what we saw.
And second of all,
I don't believe you
that you were both separated
when that happened at all,
which seems to be her main defense, Glenn.
She says she was separated
from her husband and the reason she
recoiled when the spotlight,
the kiss cam, was placed on her
and this astronomer guy, the CEO,
was that her soon-to-be ex-husband was in the audience that night at Coldplay,
and she didn't want to humiliate him.
And you have to go, like, halfway into the New York Times article, which is lengthy,
before they even mentioned the fact that her boss was also married.
And that was the focus of the outrage.
It only came out weeks into it that she, too, Kristen Cabot, was also married.
And it did come out at that time that they were in some sort of a separation.
but the boss was not separated, even though he now claims that he was.
I don't believe him for one second.
What his wife did when the story broke was to take down her socials, to change her last name
back to her maiden name immediately on some of her socials.
And you know, here's the most telling part.
You know what the boss didn't do?
His name is Andy Byron.
You know what he didn't do when this scandal broke and he was about to get fired and he'd been
publicly humiliated?
He did not release a statement saying, my wife and I are separated.
That is literally all he had to do for me to believe him.
But he did not do that.
And his wife did not do that.
By the way, there are reports that they are together right now.
They are still together.
So I don't believe that he was separated.
I accept that this gal, Kristen Cabot was.
But that was the scandal, that it was a cheating situation, as called out by Chris Martin,
when we all saw their reaction.
We should play the video just so we can remind.
people how it looked. Here it is.
Look at these two. Okay, there. All right. Come on. You're okay?
Oh, what? Either they're having an affair or they're just very shy.
Either they're having an affair or they're very shy. Okay, so your thoughts on Kristen Cabot,
trying to rehabilitate herself. I don't know how many months is that happened in July.
So, what, five months after the event?
I'm a little conflicted on this.
I don't know if we see this the same way.
I think the thing that was most bothersome was that she's head of HR, and that's a job where you're supposed to be enforcing rules of workplace propriety.
And so for all the people who might, you know, be having an affair with their boss to have it be the head of the HR who a lot of people, like, there are few worse people.
in general, I don't mean to like overly generalize, but usually like HR managers are the worst.
Like those are the worst.
People who are just constantly like monitoring you and like pretending they're trying to support you.
And in reality, they're really just working for the corporation to protect the corporation against you.
So I think a lot of this, yeah, yeah, for anything.
I think a lot of the shot in Freud is is from people's experience with HR and the fact that she was an HR manager.
I do think there's a question when,
there's a married couple, and then there's a woman who ends up having sex with the man in that married couple, who actually bears most of the blame in that situation.
Like, to me, it has always seemed like the person in the marriage who has promised the fidelity is the one who bears most of the blame and not the woman who doesn't have a similar commitment.
And then, you know, we also have people.
I don't disagree with that.
The person who's breaking the vow has to answer to the person they made the vow to.
That's really the main sin.
Right.
And a lot of times we don't know what's taking place on other people's marriages.
I mean, the fact that they are still together might signify that for whatever reason,
she, the wife, didn't react in the way that other people reacted on her behalf.
Well, why did she change all her social media then?
I mean, she clearly did have a reaction to it.
that right she was probably embarrassed yeah she was a very embarrassing situation like i don't blame her
for wanting to distance herself but the fact that she's still with him who knows why and then finally
we have a lot of people in very exactly probably that's that's one of the reasons um but then they're
also like there are people in very high political positions that we elect and that we let lead us
these days who 40 years ago would never have been even remotely conceivably possible.
Gary Hart got driven out of, you know, the 1988 race when he was discovered having an affair
with Donna Rice, probably for anyone younger, enough that's old, that's things they've never heard
of.
And yet, you know, you fast forward it and you have people like Bill Clinton who gets reelected
and Donald Trump, who has had his own very public adulteries and affairs and overlapping
sorts of things.
This makes me start to wonder, like, why are we?
so obsessed with that couple and shaming them when the mores have clearly changed around the
people who have a lot more power and influence than they?
Okay.
So it's interesting.
I mean, like, you're not wrong that they hold women to different standards than they hold
men to, like the public.
And that's wrong.
I mean, a shitty marriage can lead to infidelity on either side.
And not to quote Woody Allen, but I am going to quote Woody Allen, who I don't believe.
leave did anything to his daughter Dylan at all. These are lies that were made up against him by
Mia Farrow, who was trying to manipulate her daughter to avoid losing custody during a divorce
and to hurt Woody. But in any event, he did have an affair with and fall in love with and
then marry Mia's adopted daughter, Sunyi, when she was young. She was, I don't know, 19.
The heart wants what it wants. So these, you know, it is true that couples and bad marriage,
sometimes make bad decisions. And this only became the public's business because they were caught
on the cold play kiss cam. I guess what I think they should have done is just come out right away.
Like, come out right away and give, just give an interview. And don't have even a hint of a tone
that you're the victim. Just come out and say, I'm totally humiliated. I shouldn't have done it.
And she is calling herself out for being the head of HR here. She just, she acknowledges.
That's bad to be with the head of the company.
But, I mean, I had a couple of high noons and danced and acted inappropriately with my boss.
And it's not nothing.
It's not nothing.
But, I mean, come on.
Like that, now that is downplaying what happened.
And I will tell you just from talking to other women, they get very angry when they see this kind of thing
because they start to picture their own husband up there with another woman.
And even though the husband made the vow, they start to think about like, well, who's working against me and how without thinking about their own role in sending the marriage south to where the husband would be potentially in a position to want to look at another woman, right?
And it's like it raises very complicated feelings for everyone involved.
People look at it through the prism of their own lives and what has either happened in their own lives, what they've done, what their spouse.
has done, what they fear might happen. And I think that's where the kind of, that's why some of
these things resonate. I guess all I'm saying is that the public morality being imposed on them
seems inconsistent for me with the public morality that we've kind of allowed to take root where
we know that a lot of people with a lot of power in politics or in business do this.
and far worse, and we seem to come to the conclusion. It's a society. That's not our business.
Let me ask you a question. Is it because of the way they reacted on Cam? Like, they telegraphed shame
immediately, which is something Trump has never done, right? Like, I think that changed the way we all felt
about it. I totally agree. I totally agree. They, exactly, I think that's, you're absolutely right.
I haven't thought about it that, but I think that's exactly the key to it, is that,
they, and Chris, Chris Martin noticed it right away, right?
He said, oh my God, look at how ashamed they are.
Like, they must be doing something wrong.
So if they react like they're doing something wrong, of course the public is going to say,
oh, yeah, they've done something wrong.
And so I do think that's the part where, like, either you do this behavior and you say,
look, this is my life, this is my choice.
This is not your business.
Or, you know, if you're going to act like you just got caught doing something
terribly wrong, don't be surprised when everybody else sees it the same way. And I think that is the
key to why that became such a big story. I think you're very right about that. She's now trying
to turn it around into like an example for her children. I don't know. I think leave the kids out
of it. Just keep out of it. That's just meant to humanize her in the public's eye. Like she's
trying to play up the death threat she got. She's trying to play up. Like certain people have said
something to her like she alleges that the gas station, some woman was like, oh, how can you live with
yourself or whatever. Okay, when you are embroiled in a public scandal, people are going
to react. Like, that's modern day America 2025. And for whatever reason, her moment was caught
on tape. She's going to have to live with that. Yeah, I can't stand when people act like
that is something that has only happened to them. You know, if you're at all in the public
realm, and I guess in defense of her, like, they didn't choose to be, although if you
you know if you want to do that go to a place that's private um keep it behind closed doors
don't do it at the cold play concert everybody in the public exactly but if you're you know if you're in the
public realm you're going to get people angry at you you're going to hear terrible things said about
you and so often like we all know this happens you know to to any of us in the public realm
and i really can't stand when people whined about it as though they're uniquely victimized by it
especially when they've made a choice to enter the public realm and to do that.
Like, there's benefits from having a public platform, and that's one of the costs,
and just accept that and stop whining about it because it happens to everybody.
Totally.
In my own case, if somebody says something nasty to me, I usually just blow them off,
or if they're particularly aggressive, I'll shoot a remark back.
But I don't take it any further than that unless they actually physically threaten me or my family,
and then they're going to get a visit from the cops.
But that's my general rule.
Like, and if they're truly nuts, then they're going to get a restraining order against them.
Like, you have to assess whether this is an actual threat to you and your family or whether
this is just some critic, which is like, if you're in the public eye, you have to take criticism,
you have to take pot shots.
Sadly, it's part of the deal.
Like, toughen up.
Get a thicker skin.
And unfortunately for this woman, her bad moment, you know, her bad decision was caught on
camera.
That wouldn't have happened had she kept her bad decision private behind closed doors.
like civilized people having it affairs,
like in a dark corner of some bar.
Not on the Cole play kiss cam,
something with which she's always going to be associated.
Okay, so that was it.
She's back and she really, really would like us to know.
She's not exactly sorry, but she's kind of pissed off at the rest of us.
All right, standby.
We have to take a quick break.
And then we're going to be right back more with Glenn Greenwald.
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Glenn Greenwald is back with me.
Glenn, the news is breaking right now from the New York Times
on Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein. They think they've got him this time. They've really got
them this time. Here are some highlights. Hold on a second. My team is sending me the name of the
article. It's Don's best friend, how Epstein and Trump bonded over the pursuit of women. And
left-wing X is going nuts over what's in this article right now. Here are some highlights.
The Times interviewed more than 30 former Epstein employees, victims of his abuse,
and others who crossed paths with the two men over the years.
Again, I feel the need to point out,
victims of his abuse gets used very loosely by everyone about Jeffrey Epstein,
who, have their claims been proven in a court of law or otherwise?
Like, we don't know.
They continue to just accept, like, certain women who are adults,
who were allegedly, quote, molested by Jeffrey Epstein when they were 22.
this is tricky. In any event, that's what they say. An examination of their history by the New York Times
has found no evidence implicating Mr. Trump and Mr. Epstein's abuse and trafficking of minors.
Okay, that's great. That seems like an important thing to remember. During a flight together in the
early 1990s, Mr. Trump came on to another Epstein employee traveling with them, telling her that he
could have anyone he wanted, according to a different Epstein worker who learned of the incident.
A separate Epstein employee from that era recalled, Trump would occasionally
send over modeling cards to Epstein to peruse like a menu.
Okay. So he sent over modeling cards to Epstein, and he said on a plane that he could have
anyone he wanted. Got it? A few times a week, the phone would ring in Mr. Epstein's office.
Trump would be on the line. On one occasion, recalled an Epstein assistant from the mid-1990s.
Mr. Trump refused to give any name at all. The first assistant, who often worked late,
recalled that sometimes when the office emptied out. Mr. Epstein, oh, this is the part that they're
loving. Mr. Epstein would check to see that she was at her desk, and then he would put Trump
on speaker. Mr. Trump, she said, seemed to enjoy regaling Mr. Epstein with tales of his sexual
exploits, and Mr. Epstein seemed to delight in how uncomfortable it made her to overhear
them. She remembered one call in the mid-1990s on which the two men discussed how much
pubic-caro woman, particular woman, had, and whether there was enough for Mr. Epstein to floss his
teeth with. On another, Mr. Trump told Epstein about having sex with another woman on a pool table,
according to the former assistant.
Now there's this other woman who says
she's afraid to be identified
or even to be talking to the New York Times
because she is afraid she will be executed.
One woman, then a model
and a college student in her early 20s living in Manhattan,
said she attended four parties at Epstein's mansion.
It was like a pissing contest.
Who had the most women, she recalled?
She requested anonymity to describe her experiences in detail,
saying she feared for her family's safety
after Mr. Trump said some of his critics
could be executed for sedition.
Okay, that was, that's, I think, very different from her situation.
Last but not least, this one involves Marla Maples, Trump's second wife.
Tina Davis, who modeled for Ford in the mid-1990s and her mother, Sandra Coleman,
attended a Mar-a-Lago party in late 1994 when Tina was 14.
During a trip to the bathroom, they ran into Trump's new wife, Marla Maples.
They had not met her earlier.
Ms. Maples clasped her hands, Ms. Coleman recalled, and looked her.
in the eye, quote, whatever you do, do not let her around any of these men, and especially my
husband, she told Ms. Coleman, protect her. Okay. Ms. Maples, because you remember like all the
negative comments Ms. Maples has said about Trump since their divorce, since Trump ran for office,
she's constantly been out there saying, he's a me too or he's an Epstein enabler. He, no, not a
word. She's never disparaged him. Ms. Maples denied making the comment. I would always protect
young women in any way I could, she said, but I am sure I did not specifically say that
about my daughter's father. So that's the big dump from the New York Times, Trump and his
best friend Epstein. Your thoughts on it, Glenn. Okay. Is it actually breaking news that
Donald Trump in the 80s and 90s as a young, good-looking, extremely rich Manhattan real estate
developer had a strong interest in women and even womanized.
Like we heard the Access Hollywood tape in 2016.
People thought it was going to sabotage this campaign and it didn't.
Yes, Donald Trump had a very active sex life, a very strong interest in women, even when
he was married.
This is kind of what I was talking about earlier.
And people have decided that this is not disqualifying.
And the other part of it is, and this is something that I think is so important, the whole
Jeffrey Epstein thing, and I have to say, in a way, the American right kind of made this monster
and it's now sort of attacking them, where it became like every person who ever talked to Jeffrey
Epstein, who ever met Jeffrey Epstein, somehow had suspicion on them that they were a pedophile
or had an interest in underage girls. A lot of the so-called victims, as you said, Michael
Tracy has been really doing among the most courageous work on this because he's been fighting
against the tide in this. A lot of these women who claim to have been victims of
sex trafficking or Epstein victims, never met Jeffrey Epstein until they're like 22 or 23 or
24, not underage at all. So he was also surrounded by a lot of women who were definitely young,
but well above the age of consent. And all of this is being done now with innuendo by the New York
Times and by the American left, just trying in any way to take some of this dirt from Jeffrey
Epstein and throw as much of it as they can on Trump, which might be politically effective,
have given everybody watch Trump fight so hard to conceal the files.
But until there's evidence that Trump actually had any kind of relationship with an
underage girl, and there actually has never been anything remotely close to that,
all this is is political activism disguised as journalism, which is everything that you read
me from New York Times, which I haven't read yet, but the parts that you read me are empty in
terms of anything significant.
I know.
I'm yawning.
Like, okay.
I mean, he was a playboy, and he loved to talk about his sexual exploits.
Got it.
I want to tell you this is just in.
This is breaking from WPRI.com, which I think is a local news outlet.
The headline is police probe potential ties between Brown University attack and MIT professor slaying.
That is interesting.
It doesn't mean there is a link.
It's police are probing it.
And previously, they had said, we don't believe there's a link.
So now it's, it is news that there could be.
Here's the excerpt.
Target 12 is confirmed law enforcement is now examining possible ties between the two crimes.
Multiple people familiar with the investigation said they have discovered evidence showing the two may be linked.
Well, now that's interesting.
And I don't know how.
I'm not jumping to conclusions, but I will know.
the MIT professor was Jewish.
The professor whose class was attacked,
though she wasn't, he wasn't, he wasn't, he wasn't Jewish.
There was a lot of, my team just told me that he was.
No, the latest I saw is that he wasn't.
I think he was like a defender of Israel,
but not himself Jewish.
But, you know, there's a lot of stuff going on around line.
Yeah.
Yeah, okay.
So I don't know that, as my team told me,
that they had seen he was.
In any event, we have no idea what the team.
ties were. And the woman whose class was attacked at Brown is an Israeli, a pro-Israeli activist. However,
she was not even there that day. It was a review class. She was not even in the class.
And it does not look like, you know, there hasn't been a mention that like the kids targeted
were Jewish, et cetera, inside. In fact, all we know so far is that the one girl who was killed
was the vice president of the college Republicans and the other young man who was killed
was a naturalized citizen from Uzbekistan, who was studying to be a neurosurgeon.
And so we don't see the pattern so far, and it may not emerge, but it is news that they are probing it.
And there's potential links.
I mean, but don't worry, Glenn, everyone's safe.
Don't worry.
Go out there and live your life as normal, just like the mayor of Providence said, because, you know, no one's been shot since Saturday.
Oh, wait, maybe they have.
I don't know.
Keep sending your child into this classroom.
And also, these are super sophisticated investigators.
Don't worry.
They're going to catch this person any times now.
I think the confidence level should be very high in these police investigators and the,
the local politicians.
I know.
All right.
One other thing I want to get to.
Well, there's two if I have time.
The Vanity Fair photographer who took those hideous pictures of the Trump administration for their big piece.
Susie Wiles gives them 11 months of access, 11 interviews with this guy, Chris Whipple.
Then the thanks that they get is what Susie says are out of context, pull quotes.
I get it.
Shame on her for trusting them.
but the pictures were so offensively unflattering of a good-looking group.
J.D. Vance is attractive. Caroline Levitt's attractive. Susie Wiles is attractive. It's not hard
to take a nice picture of them at all. This photographer went out of his way to make them look
bad. His name is Christopher Anderson. He works for Vanity Fair as a freelancer, showing the extreme
close-up of poor Caroline Levitt, who is like so much more attractive than this. J.D. Vans,
who looks like some sort of a demon in this weird picture. And then Susie Wiles, who really looks like
she is not, Marco Rubio, who looks like ruddy and poorly complexed and, I don't know, dirty.
There's Susie Wiles and what looks like a mugshot with somebody potentially pinching her ass.
That's what that looks like to me.
It's just so bad all around.
And this photographer says, he's not sorry.
He says, what?
Because you can see Caroline Levitt's lip injections.
You can see the little marks where the needles had gone in, not too long before this.
And just note to all ladies, do not sit for a photo.
or a photo shoot. If you have those marks on your face, trust no one. She had to learn that the
hard way, sadly. But here's what he says. I didn't put the injection sites on her. People seem to be
shocked that I didn't use Photoshop to retouch out blemishes in her injection marks. I find it shocking
that someone would expect me to retouch out those things. I'm surprised that a journalist
would even need to ask me the question of why didn't I retouch out the blemishes. Because if I had,
that would be a lie. I would be hiding the truth of what I saw there. Well, what can I say?
that's the makeup she puts on. Those are the injections she gave herself. If they show up in a photo,
what do you want me to say? I don't know if it says something about the world we live in,
the age of Photoshop, the age of AI filters on your Insta, but the fact that the internet is
freaking out because they're seeing real photos and not retouched ones, says something to me.
And he says, I've been doing this for a long, long time. He points to his picture the photos he
took of Barack and Michelle Obama. Now let me show you what those look like. The photo
of Barack Obama. It's close, but it is a one-third shot. It's got his necktie. Here's Michelle Obama,
who, by the way, looks pretty. She's doing like a kissing face. And it's a profile,
which, by the way, will look better on virtually everybody instead of straight on. And
she looks cute because she's like making like a kissing motion and she's got shadows on her
face that are kind of flattering. And there's Barack Obama. Again, a profile, which is better for
anybody who's going super up close. And you've got enough of his shoulders and chest that you can see
necktie, collar, and the lapels of his jacket. Same thing here. You can see his neck and the neck
of his shirt. And again, it's in profile, which I'm just telling you, is more flattering on
everyone. And this is his defense to trying to make them obviously, Glenn, look terrible. Your
thoughts? Two things. One is, that is such a disingenuous statement from the photographer or
okay, I just take pictures.
However, they come out.
That's not my fault.
You know, I would, when I went during the Snowden reporting, I had, you know, profiles in every single
magazine, they were almost overwhelmingly positive because people, the media like the work.
And the pictures were great.
And then I had a whole new set of profiles when I kind of started splitting over at the
left over Russiagate and Trump and going on Fox a lot.
And they all looked like I was some kind of like demon troll unleashed from the depths of hell.
You know, it's so obvious, like, that they play that game.
they picked the photos and make you look good or bad based on whether they like you or not.
Everybody who has any role in media understands that.
But I will say, I do think, like, Trump has spent 10 years calling these media outlets fake news.
Everybody knows, like, Vanity Fair, a Rolling Stone, or whatever, hates Trump and the Trump administration.
So I do kind of blame, you know, Susie Wiles, and like, these Trump officials who continuously give access to these media outlets that they know hate to.
them and then act like surprised or indignant when they're not treated fairly.
Like, you know, if, like, you know, Trump used to get, Trump gave Maggie Haberman, you know,
full access to the Oval Office.
And every article that came out would be incredibly negative.
And he'd be like, she's a liar.
She's a fake reporter.
And then the next week, she'd read right back in the office.
Michael Wolf too.
Exactly.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, Michael Wolfe.
So many of those kind of choices.
And I get, you know, maybe you hope that this time they're going to be fair, especially
if you give them a lot. They're not going to be fair to you ever. That it's embedded in their
DNA, like, don't have any expectation other than the fact that this is going to be the result.
But that statement by the photographer, like, why are you blaming me for the fact that her like
pock marks or her injection marks as though he has no choice or the editors have no choice
over which photo they use? Please, it's like so insultingly deceitful. Totally. And to think,
like, he would ever have done this to Michelle Obama, which he's,
didn't, or Kamala Harris, uh, is a lie. It's a lie. And there is no question he did his level
best to take attractive people and make them look bad. Um, and so yeah, I mean, to quote,
the, the genius of animal house, you fucked up. You trusted us. Um, and yeah, that's, that's live and
learn. Now wait, stay with me another 10 minutes, Glenn, because there's one other story I want to talk
to you about. It's a great, great story. Doesn't start great, but it finishes great. I've been
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Hey everyone. It's me, Megan Kelly. I've got some exciting news. I now have my very own channel on Sirius XM.
It's called the Megan Kelly Channel, and it is where you will hear the truth, unfiltered, with no agenda, and no apologies.
Along with the Megan Kelly show, you're going to hear from people like Mark Halperin, Link Lauren, Morin Callahan, Emily Dyshinsky, Jesse Kelly, Real Clear Politics, and many more.
It's bold, no BS news, only on the Megan Kelly channel,
SiriusXM 111 and on the Sirius XM app.
Glenn Greenwald is back with me.
So tomorrow we're going to do the show in the morning.
And then I will be getting on a plane to go to Arizona to speak at the turning point.
Big event, their Amfest production stands for America Fest 2025.
And it was very important to me to go to this.
though normally I can't go to this one because we're usually going off to our family
vacation for the holidays in Montana. So this year I said I'm absolutely going, try to keep me away
because we're all getting out there to try to honor Charlie. This is the first big event
since he died. And the last one I was at as well, which was in July where he interviewed me and
we talked all about Epstein. So I will be there. And Charlie's been on my mind a lot lately for many
reasons. And that's why this news jumped out at me and what I wanted to talk to you about, Glenn.
There is a woman named Jeannie Beeman, and she works at a Target store in Orlando, California.
She's older, Jeannie is, and she was minding her own business doing her job when a much younger
woman, who we now know is named Michaela Ponce, P-O-N-C-E, came over and harassed poor Jeannie,
over the fact that she was wearing a shirt honoring Charlie.
And here is the video that we know of
because the videographer, Michaela Ponce,
posted it to her TikTok.
Saw it 26.
Let you wear that shirt here?
Yes.
Why?
Why are you taking my picture?
Why are you wearing that shirt?
You're working.
It's not a red shirt.
I can wear any red shirt.
It's not a plane shirt.
It doesn't have to be a...
To Charlie Kirk's shirt.
Yes.
Oh, yes, I know.
Are you fucking stupid?
No.
Why the fuck would you wear that?
You're at work at Target.
That's a not Target shirt.
It's not a plain red shirt.
You support a racist.
It's not racist.
You support a racist.
He's not a racist.
Yes, he is.
Yes, he fucking is.
I'm sorry, but I'm not going to stand here and argue with...
You're not. You should go get your manager.
You should not be allowed to wear that at work.
unacceptable
un fucking acceptable
that's your opinion
is he's a fucking racist
and you support him
and you should
you should not be allowed
to wear that
this is going to be taken
above your fucking head
that's insane
insane
and saying
and fucking safe
piece of shit
oh
it's infuri
It's really, really infuriating.
This is an older woman.
Jeannie's obviously, you know, not a spring chicken.
And she's obviously not a rich woman.
And she's working at Target, paying her bills, making an honest living, trying to pick up after people.
And she gets harassed by this absolute prick, Michaela Ponce.
And Michaela's so proud of herself for harassing Jeannie that Michaela posts it.
on her own TikTok because she's looking for likes.
Glenn, she's looking for a thumbs up and hearts and props from her leftist crowd
that's going to think she's awesome for saying Charlie Kirk's a racist and calling
Jeannie fucking stupid.
You're fucking stupid.
Well, that's not how it went.
What happened since then is Michaela has, we've now found out, who works.
as a medical assistant employed by Enlo Health,
a nonprofit health care system in Chico, Northern California.
Michaela's place of employment, the medical center,
has now received over 6,000 calls from some very upset Charlie Kirk fans.
Here is the CEO of Enlo Health,
the employer of Michaela Ponce, who spoke out on it the other day.
Saw 27.
Hello Health acknowledges that the off-hours behavior by a medical assistant employed in one of our allocation clinics,
as depicted in a recent social media post, was more than deeply concerning.
We appreciate the many individuals who have seen this post and exercised restraint as they voice their personal views regarding the situation.
Unfortunately, many thousands of others have chosen to use profanity-laced language to express their disapproval to NLO caregivers.
I believe there was a period of a few hours where we received over 6,000 calls, and those are starting to evade a little bit right now.
I can tell from my own e-mail box that the emails were starting to subside a little bit.
But, yeah, we were over wrong there for a while.
That's Mike Wiltermood, the CEO.
And had I had his number, I probably would have been one of the people leaving a profanity-laced message.
Like, Mike, what the fuck is going on with Michaela?
She sucks because you feel better when you express your outrage about her abject harassment of an elderly woman just trying to pay her bills and honor Charlie Kirk while doing it who was assassinated three months ago.
Now, clearly, Michaela has learned that there are millions of us who loved Charlie and have felt inspired by his faith-based conservative messaging and who are 100% in Jeannie's Corner because Michaela
has been forced to issue the following statement to action news now.
I want to take full of responsibility for my actions and say clearly and sincerely that I was wrong.
I behave badly and I regret it deeply.
I want to directly apologize to Jeannie.
I'm truly sorry for approaching you at your workplace and putting you in an uncomfortable and unfair position.
You did not deserve that and my behavior was wrong.
She's not, she hasn't changed your mind about Charlie or apparently about thinking Jeannie's
fucking stupid. She's just sorry that she approached her at work and acknowledges maybe Jeannie
didn't deserve that. And I would submit to you the reason that Michaela issued that statement
is because old Mike Wither mood, Wiltermood, is probably thinking about firing her ass because
of the 6,000 profanity-laced phone calls he's received. Now, let's check back in with Jeannie at this
point in our story and see how she's doing. She gave an interview and did not know
that this had turned into a thing
because Jeannie's older
and probably is not following
Michaela on TikTok.
But she did speak to action news now
on Wednesday. Watch.
I know people are calling
for her to be fired
for this. Do you think that that's right?
Would you like that to write? No.
I don't think that's
right. Like, one saying
I have two wrongs
don't make a right.
You know, she wronged to me, but I
want to wrong her, or I don't want her wrong, because it's not going to make it right.
I didn't, that was her opinion.
She, but she's the one that put it on Facebook or put it on, on that.
So, you know, but I, I really wouldn't want to see her, somebody lose their job over it.
That is so sweet.
Jeannie is so sweet.
I mean, it had it been me, I would have been like, fire her ass, Mike.
She's terrible.
Why would you employ this person?
But I'm a hothead on these things.
And here is the final piece of the story, Glenn, that will make you believe in the power of the American people just one week before Christmas and in the middle of Hanukkah.
Here it is.
Since the incident, multiple fundraising campaigns have been set up to help Jeannie from Target, recover from the United.
the incident. She wasn't fired. Target, to its credit, is standing by Jeannie and not telling her she
does not, she cannot wear that shirt. But people are, they just want to make Jeannie feel good and
show her that we love her. And they originally were trying to raise $20,000 to send Jeannie
on a nice vacation. When we last checked, the Give, Send Go campaign had already raised over $200,000 for
genie just to show her that we love her. So this story has it all. It's got the outrage factor. It's got
the benevolent genie who didn't call for the firing. It's got the berated Mike with Wilter
Mood who would like the profanity Lace phone calls to stop. And it's got our villain, Michaela,
who was very well forced into issuing an apology, which I'll take. It's better than no apology.
and the great American people who said we love Jeannie and we're on her side and we want her life
to be better. So here's 200,000 bucks. All right. Now, tell me everything you think.
Well, first of all, I can't wait to go donate right when I'm done with this interview. And I'll tell you
why. It's not because she wore the Charlie Kirk shirt. It's because imagine like the generosity
of spirit to have somebody. I mean, this is a woman who works at Target. That is a hard
job. That is not an easy life. She's making very poor money. And, you know, you can be filled with
resentment. Obviously, the woman that Michaela wanted her fired. So imagine her around and saying,
no, I don't want her fired just because she did that to me. That already is such an admirable
person. Like how many of us would react that way? As you said, like you're kind of a hot ad. I don't
know at all that that would be my reaction, but I respected and admire it. So,
So much, but I also think there's like this generational thing, which is like, I don't mind that people dislike Charlie Kirk's ideology.
He was a very political person.
He had very strong political views.
People disagreed with that.
That's totally fine.
The idea, though, that like we now attack each other, like not politicians, right?
Like you can yell at politicians for the, you go into a target and see some like older woman working because she has to at a very difficult job standing on her feet all day.
and you're going to berate her and attack her and film it and put it on the internet
like you've done something noble,
that to me signifies like this very rotted spirit that has entered our discourse based
on the idea that anyone who has different political views than us is an evil person
who should suffer in every single way.
And the fact that you have this one woman who's supposedly the villain because she's
wearing a t-shirt of a racist evil person being so clearly the better person while you
of this other woman so self-righteous, thinking she's so moral, acting in a way that no matter
your ideology is so revolting, I think there's a lot of lessons in there that I hope people take
away who are like Michaela, but I doubt will. It does happen on both sides. There have been a lot of
people who have been attacked for other kinds of views, for wearing, and I think we need to get back
to the spirit that part of what is America, like part of what we love about it, is that if you're a
private citizen, you can express whatever views you want, and you don't lose your job over it,
you don't get publicly attacked for it.
You know, that behavior needs to be scorned.
And it was scorned in this case.
And the cherry on top is that that woman,
who displayed so much like moral kindness
and generosity of a spirit got a just reward.
Like, it's so rare to have karmic justice like that
on every aspect of the story.
So it is a really enjoyable one.
It's one I hadn't heard.
So I went with you on that journey
and was so happy at the end.
Shout out to Jeannie for keeping it together in the moment, too, right?
when your blood could really be boiling.
You could be, you know, I'm sure she felt under attack.
The woman called her a piece of shit.
She called her fucking stupid.
She was saying that she was supporting.
Yeah, threatened her job, which I'm sure Jeannie needs.
Exactly.
Obviously was saying that she supported a racist, which implies that Jeannie's racist.
Like, it had it all.
And then she tried to publicly shame Jeannie by putting on her TikTok,
just waiting for all the likes.
Michaela just could, which she couldn't wait for everyone to give her props and, you know, finger snaps.
And the side of reason roared, roared.
I love it.
And I kind of do support the profanity-laced phone calls, though it's not Mike's fault.
But he heard us.
He, Mike, sorry, sorry, Mike Wilterspoon.
Wilter mood.
Wilter mood.
It's an interesting name, CEO of California-based and low health.
But I do think you should keep an eye on this one.
Mike, because I have a feeling, Michaela does not have a generosity of spirit when it comes to people who are on the right side of the aisle, who may indeed walk into your clinic one day, wearing a Charlie Kirk shirt or not, but deserve to be treated with respect and kindness, even if they happen to be right leaning.
So there's that, Glenn.
It's a nice story to end our segment with reason and reason and sanity prevail, even in California.
Yeah. Great to see you, my friend. Have a Merry Christmas. Happy holidays. And we'll see you on the back end.
Always great to see, Megan. You too. Same to your family. We'll see you shortly.
Lots of love. Thanks for everything this year. We are back tomorrow with Buck Sexton. We'll see you then.
Thanks for listening to the Megan Kelly Show. No BS, no agenda, and no fear.
