Will Cain Country - Congressman Burchett: UFO Files Would Keep You Up at Night (ft. Dr. Sheila Nazarian)

Episode Date: April 15, 2026

For years, rumors have swirled about aliens living among us, but recent reports coming from within the U.S. Military and Congress have elevated them from conspiracy fuel to a topic of legitimate conce...rn. One of the biggest proponents of UAP disclosure on Capitol Hill, Congressman Tim Burchett (R-TN) helps shed some light on UAP claims after the Pentagon missed a deadline to release 46 clips, explaining what he knows about known evidence of extraterrestrial life, and who is trying to cover it up.Plus, Iranian-American Plastic Surgeon Dr. Sheila Nazarian joins Will to unpack the insane reality of Iranian “looksmaxxing” trends, explaining why fake nose casts and face filler take precedent for families who struggle to afford to put food on the table, and the "nepo-babies," relatives of Iran's regime, living in the U.S. while supporting radical policies back home.Subscribe to ‘Will Cain Country’ on YouTube here: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Watch Will Cain Country!⁠⁠⁠Follow ‘Will Cain Country’ on X (⁠⁠⁠@willcainshow⁠⁠⁠), Instagram (⁠⁠⁠@willcainshow⁠⁠⁠), TikTok (⁠⁠⁠@willcainshow⁠⁠⁠), and Facebook (⁠⁠⁠@willcainnews⁠⁠⁠)Follow Will on X: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@WillCain⁠ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Aliens Among Us. The Pentagon did not release 46 new videos of unidentified aerial phenomena. Congressman Tim Burchett has been lighting it up, talking about aliens among us on TMZ. Today, here we are joined by Congressman Tim Burchett. Plus, nepo babies of the Iran. Iranian regime, all getting plastic surgery with Dr. Sheila Nazarian, board certified, Iranian American, plastic surgeon. McCain Country, streaming live at the Wilcane Country YouTube channel, the Wilcane Facebook page. Here, as always, simply hit follow Spotify or on Apple.
Starting point is 00:01:11 Tinfoil Pat, two at A's Dan, and all of you in the Willisha and the aliens among. us here today hanging out on Wilkane country. Why didn't the Pentagon release the 46 videos of unidentified aerial phenomenon? What is happening, Secretary of War, Hegset? The headline reads, Pentagon accused of cover-up after failing to release UFO videos by deadline. There are apparently 46 new videos that show UFOs, dipping in and out of the ocean, showing advanced technology, clear, not grainy video, things we have not yet seen and things we still do not see as those videos were not released by the Pentagon.
Starting point is 00:02:05 Congressman Tim Burchett has been on TMZ and other places saying the government in fact does know that there are aliens among us. We did answers. Man, in about 15 minutes, we're going to get answers on this because we're going to be joined by Congressman Tim Burchard. Now, the question will always be, what does a congressman know? What is a congressman allowed to know? What is an elected politician given access to? What really is going on out there? Do you think he's talking about Roswell?
Starting point is 00:02:41 Is he talking about Area 51? Is he talking about UFO videos? What is he talking about? What do you want to know the most? Well, I mean, obviously, I want to know if the United States government has come into contact with confirmed space travelers, either crashed vehicles or biological beings. What if they've always been here? That have made, like they got here before us? There are a lot of different, yeah, there are a lot of different theories.
Starting point is 00:03:21 Well, that's interesting. Right. So, like, Tyrus just had on Dr. Stephen Greer on his show. And Dr. Greer believes they travel through the fourth dimension telepathically. Like, you know. So they are from different planets. Now, other people think that they have bases here in America, or not in America in the world, underwater, underground.
Starting point is 00:03:44 Right. That, I believe. I believe it's underwater. Yeah. Puerto Rico is a big hub, for one. But why are the most stunning... Ben Boni. Why is it a big hub in Puerto Rico?
Starting point is 00:03:55 Is Bad Bunny an alien? It could be. Well, he is an alien. Well, hey. Why is Puerto Rico the teleportation hub of the interstellar travel? I just watched a lot of history channel when I was a kid. Bermuda Triangle. I guess we have some military bases there.
Starting point is 00:04:14 And then there's just a lot of activity that comes out of Puerto Rico under the water there. Huh. They just like reggaeton, those aliens. They're like, first stop on our intergalactic tour. Puerto Rico, everybody all aboard, the interstellar teleportation to Puerto Rico, and it's just crowded. It's just jam-packed. The aliens are like, let's go. We're going to that regatone concert in Puerto Rico.
Starting point is 00:04:45 If you were an alien and you were on the interstellar teleportation highway, and it had multiple stops like a subway station. What would be your stop? Like where would you get off? You know, headed to Earth, presuming that Earth is your destination, but you had multiple choices of landing while on Earth. Do you think Puerto Rico would make your top five? Like you're like, I'm, maybe the aliens are into things that we can't even imagine, you know, who knows? But where, where would you go? Like, if you were an alien, you're like, I want to experience Earth. I want to experience humanity. Like, I want to see it in its not best light, but in its rawest light. I want to see and do a tour of Earth. Where would you go? I think you go to Rome. Time period? Now,
Starting point is 00:05:34 modern day Rome? I'm just saying, like, yeah, modern day Rome, because that's, like, you've heard the stories, probably. You picked up on, you know, different things. It's like Rome is like the center of the world for so long. I think you'd probably start there and work your way out. Well, I think they would be very disappointed. I mean, I've been to Rome. I like Rome a lot. It's a great tour, but it's like going to a museum. It's going to a museum.
Starting point is 00:05:58 You know, that's Rome. I mean, I would grant you that aliens would have a much broader sense of time that, you know, a thousand years you would presume, I don't know why I presume this, but in an alien's life is nothing in his mind frame. So, yeah, I mean, you look at the course of human civilization, and Rome, obviously, is a pretty, I don't know if it's the high watermark of human civilization, but it's a, it's, it's up there. It's up there. But that's not. I think they would get there. And it'd be like going to New York in 2026.
Starting point is 00:06:31 Like, you missed it, man. You missed it. New York was 1945. Like, that was when we were doing our best here in New York, and they'd be super disappointed. I feel like they'd say the same thing about Rome. Now, I'm not presuming that it's Dallas either. I'm not saying they'd be like, you guys have got to get off. at Dallas. Wait till you get a load of Dallas.
Starting point is 00:06:50 You got to watch this Cowboys team. Woof. They're like NFL drafts coming up, boys. Let's head back down there because I want to see if the Cowboys are going to trade up to number six and pick Sunny Stiles. And they're like Sunny Stiles. One of us, actually an alien. Have you seen his Combine Testing scores?
Starting point is 00:07:11 By the way, they would also possibly because they'd be like, we could also stop in San Antonio and see our cousin Victor, Victor Wimbunyama. He's clearly not, he's not an earthling. The second cousin Elon. There's a lot. Yeah, yeah, exactly. Elon's there. It's like they have points of contact in Texas.
Starting point is 00:07:31 Elon Musk, Victor Wimbunyama. So I think, and I really don't know if I can articulate this and say this in a way that makes sense. I think your stop would be Brazil. How about that? I think Brazil I've never been to Brazil I don't know I think that big doctor statue
Starting point is 00:07:53 It's dangerous I think in Brazil if you had to say to me give me the most unvarnished version of humanity from the highs and the lows
Starting point is 00:08:06 everything I think I'm going to get that in Rio de Janeiro I think I'm going to get it am I wrong I've never been am I too am I am I am I am I am I
Starting point is 00:08:14 is my Instagram algorithm giving me too many videos of what's that what's the what do they do in Brazil what's the celebration the festival uh oh my god it's it's it's it's like marty grapherty ball but what do they call it huh carnival yeah carnival yeah i don't know i i feel like europe has turned into a museum of its former self like europe's fun and all to go see but it's a little bit like going to a museum to a museum, just an outdoor museum
Starting point is 00:08:49 of a culture whose peak has long past. Iceland. America America, as great as it is, we all know that it gets too commodified, and you'd be like, okay, look, Gap, McDonald's, Old Navy, seen it,
Starting point is 00:09:06 right? How many of all of gardens can we go to? Right. Right. They've had unlimited breadsticks. They're like, let's go to Rio. I feel like, Brazil would be high. I don't think Puerto Rico would be top five.
Starting point is 00:09:22 But maybe the aliens, that's the thing. We have no idea what kind of taste the aliens might have. Representative Anna Paulina Luna is upset. She posted on X referencing the UAP deadline. No one from the Pentagon
Starting point is 00:09:37 had responded until we reached out. It appears that someone did not pass the letter to the appropriate authorities. How convenient. Nonetheless, we'll be getting the requested list. We are not waiting for brief at some unspecified future date. The Secretary of War is someone I consider a friend and someone who backs the president. The president has authorized the release so wherever is trying to be queued at the Pentagon
Starting point is 00:09:58 can take a hike. So that's what the Pentagon is saying. They didn't get the proper authorization request and forms for these videos, which, by the way, makes you think there's something more to these videos, right? It makes you think there is something to hide. and so we're going to be on the lookout in just a moment we're going to be joined again by congressman tim birch to talk to us about this but in the meantime um you know i don't know if she's an alien or just a um a boob but joy behar over at the view um would like you to know that of every earthling
Starting point is 00:10:39 out there she knows jesus watch Jesus himself did not run around saying I'm the Messiah, I'm the Messiah. Jesus kind of gets to hear you're supposed to have a little bit of him. That's exactly what Jesus said. I am the. No, he did not. She is it's been. Here's the thing.
Starting point is 00:10:59 The Pope's got in God. He's got God in time. She just said I knew Jesus. I think it goes on. Wait, wait. Does that go on? Okay. So they're talking about President Trump and they're saying that
Starting point is 00:11:14 with Joy Behar is making the point of President Trump as a narcissist for doing that picture that we talked about yesterday, where he portrays himself as Jesus. And she's making the argument that President Trump is a narcissist. Then she says, Jesus himself didn't walk around saying, I'm the Messiah, I'm the Messiah. And the two ladies that are kind of, have you ever noticed, and I don't watch the view? Is the view on right now? I'm not even sure when the view's on. Well, I don't even, what time is the time? the view on. It's syndicated, so it may be a different, I think it's different times across the country.
Starting point is 00:11:49 I think it's, okay, so it's like at 10 Eastern time. Yeah, you usually see the clips like kind of building up right before our show. Okay. Well, I mean, I'm not trying to, big time, Dan. I mean, I'll happily tell you about the three times I appeared on the view, but I don't watch the view. the two ladies that are not far left, doesn't it feel like they're kind of relegated to the kiddies table in these conversations? Like they're kind of apologetic for their point of view, and then Sonny Haust and Joy Behar and Whoopi Goldberg kind of bully them with the aggressiveness of their points of view? Have you ever noticed that?
Starting point is 00:12:29 It's like the two ladies, and they're not conservative, but they're not as far left. They are almost apologetic in when they have an opinion, I feel like. And one of them is Alyssa Farah, who I think worked for President Trump during the first administration, right? Then she sort of went anti-Trump, kind of went to the left. And the other is Sarah Haynes, who I believe was just an ABC reporter. And so when Joy Behr says, Jesus didn't walk around saying, I'm the Messiah, I'm the Messiah. Alyssa Farah says, actually, yes, he did. That's exactly what Jesus said.
Starting point is 00:13:04 And then Joy Behar, yeah, yeah. Joy of Bayard does not relent. Who, by the way, is Jewish, right? Joy's Jewish. So she's telling these presumably Christian women about Jesus and explaining to them something that she has superior knowledge on. And then she goes, Joy Bair is Roman Catholic? That's what the Internet says. No way.
Starting point is 00:13:27 She's a pretend. No way. She plays up the Jewish thing, but I don't, maybe she's not. It says she's from Brooklyn. Does she play it up? Of Italian descent. Patrick, does she play up the Jewish thing? Because I would have bet a million dollars that Joy Behar is Jewish.
Starting point is 00:13:42 I would have bet a million dollars. There's an article who says who isn't Jewish, but, yeah, everyone thinks this. There was a sports personality back in the day who pretended to be a certain race. And now kind of went away from that. But I feel like there are certain people that kind of lean into it. From Brooklyn, Italian. Who are you talking about? A sports personality that pretended to be a certain race?
Starting point is 00:14:07 What are you talking about? I'd rather not talk about this right now. You brought it up. Okay. I shouldn't have. Can I guess it? Sure. Yeah, you shouldn't have.
Starting point is 00:14:18 He has long hair now. Nick, right? Yeah. Oh. He pretended to be a certain race? I didn't know that. He didn't pretend. He just kind of like, you know, he cut his hair a certain way.
Starting point is 00:14:34 He kind of like embraced a certain lifestyle. He was leaning into the culture. He was leaning into the culture. And then you were like, you weren't sure. Now he's leaning into, now he's leaning into, now he's leaning into shady loan shark or booky look in culture, like whatever he's doing now. I completely with a pinky ring, I think. But, yeah, I'm shocked about that, which way they are.
Starting point is 00:14:58 I'm shocked. But anyway, then that Sarah Haynes steps in, and what did she say? She goes, she kind of had Farah's back and said, No, no, no, Jesus definitely said he was the Messiah. Jesus definitely said that. And then Joy goes, no, he's done. He didn't. No, he didn't.
Starting point is 00:15:16 Because Jesus wasn't a narcissist. Okay, so now her logic has gone full circle, right? Now, that is literally a self-fulfilling logic circle. Trump is a narcissist. Jesus didn't proclaim to be the Messiah because Jesus isn't a narcissist. Yes, he did proclaim to be the Messiah. No, he didn't because he can't be a narcissist. Like, I, like, this is a, this is a horrible, horrible, like, logical trap circle spiral you're in now.
Starting point is 00:15:49 And, but the result of it is that Joy Behar has basically proclaimed that Jesus was a narcissist. Because she has set the standard that if you proclaim to be the Messiah, then you are a narcissist. And definitely Jesus did proclaim it to be the Messiah. Therefore, in Joy Behar's estimation, apparently her Roman Catholic estimation, Jesus is a narcissist. Have some chill Jesus. Come on. Like, you're really, really talking about a show that is one of the dumbest possible shows you could put on television.
Starting point is 00:16:21 People love it. And they have to know it. Yeah, well, yeah. I don't think intelligence is the necessary factor to entertainment value. It's not just for women. It's a show that's on. It's just on. Like, people literally just hate watch it.
Starting point is 00:16:36 It's there so people can clip it and go, look, what the heck? these idiots are saying, you know, I think it's out there for a lot of different reasons. But people take it so seriously. Like, people listen to that and will be like, oh my gosh, Joy Behar's right. Jesus, Jesus didn't definitely didn't say any of that. And they'll go on thinking that for the rest of their life, probably. And she never relented. The two ladies at the kiddies table just couldn't tell her in a way that she would believe
Starting point is 00:17:02 that Jesus himself proclaimed to be the Messiah. I mean... By the way, really quickly, fellas, I've got this buddy. He's one of my best buddies. He is super upset about Trump and the Pope at Trump. Uh-oh. I haven't talked to him on the phone, but he keeps texting me. And I'm telling you, man, he is super upset.
Starting point is 00:17:22 Why are you nodding, Patrick? You're in the Catholic world. Are there a lot of Catholics that are really upset? Well, I know my wife is pretty upset. Catholics are divided 50-50 between Republican and Democrat. I'm talking about the 50% that's Republican. Are they really, really upset with President Trump? The ones who pay attention to politics, I bet they view it as sacrilegious or blasphemous.
Starting point is 00:17:46 It's a little toe over the line for that. I don't count because I think everything should be on the table and everything should be mocked and whatever. But that's just I'm going to ask you. I texted my buddy, but the Pope is weak on crime. And he didn't like the joke. That's what I'm saying. They can't handle it. That is an objectively funny line from President Trump.
Starting point is 00:18:08 The Pope, weak on crime. It's the funniest thing. Yeah, I mean, we're getting stories, like the Pope, the Pope sat down a week ago with David Axelrod, who is not Catholic, by the way, David Axelrod, Obama's whatever, political advisor. And then a week later, the Pope comes out kind of attacking Trump's policies on immigration in the war. That seems pretty odd, and I would think even a Catholic would be like, be like, well, isn't the Pope dipping his toes into political waters? I know there's a lot of overlap there in a way that, well, President Trump might have an opinion. It was just a one-way street.
Starting point is 00:18:52 Then the Pope does the thing. Didn't he just visit, what did he just do, Patrick? He just visited a Muslim. Algeria, yeah. Mosque or something like that? Yeah, yeah. And said you need to be less fearful of Islam? Or more inclusive, like almost in communion with, like how can we work out, live in a communion with Islam, which I think is not something that you want the vicar of Christ necessarily doing.
Starting point is 00:19:21 But, you know, it is a tricky game to play because there are Christians in a bunch of Muslim countries that you don't want just slaughtered, you know, if you say the wrong thing. So it is a fine line. Yeah. Look, I'm not Catholic, so I'm not well-versed on being able to speak on this. But this is the point of when you have a leader of a religious movement that is singular, and then that leader says or does things that you disagree with, are you free to disagree with that? And, you know, as a Protestant, there is no single figure that has that kind of position, so no single figure can command either the respect or the criticism. And so I think that's the risk and the odd position that you get put in as a Catholic.
Starting point is 00:20:03 like I would be curious with a lot of Catholics, like, what happens when you see the Pope say this about Islam? What happens when you see the Pope, you know, say this about immigration and so forth? And then you can still come back to, well, I don't think the president should be even acknowledging it or whatever, but I do think that puts you in a, in a interesting, a difficult position. It's tricky, but you do have something called potential judgment where you are allowed to disagree on anything that's not faith and morals. So like, you know, obviously there are certain political issues like abortion where it's like there's not really a question about it. But anything else, yeah, you know. Okay.
Starting point is 00:20:40 Wrap up theology. I don't have time for your theology right now because I got Congressman Tim Burchett here. And we have only, I think, 10 minutes with him. And we got basically to settle whether or not there is alien life among us now. Congressman, every time I look up, you're on some other show, not my show. You're on some other show, TMZ maybe. and you're basically revealing that there are aliens living amongst us. And the first thing I say is not, wow, that's wild.
Starting point is 00:21:06 The first thing I say is, why the hell didn't he say that on my show? Like, what's going on? That's not small news. Why are you giving it to Harvey Levin? Tell me what's going on with the aliens. Well, Harvey Levin is actually the one that broke the story. This guy walked out there and he was TMZ, and he asked me what I thought about some UFO report coming out.
Starting point is 00:21:26 And I said, it's supposed to have everything in it. And I said, it'll be delayed. And when it comes out, it will look like somebody shot it with a 12 gauge because it'll just be redacted. And then I said, more people will believe in UFOs and believe in Congress. End up putting that on a T-shirt and sold it pretty well on my website. But the truth is that the government is not telling us everything about what's going on. I believe there is something else going on.
Starting point is 00:21:55 It's not ours. It's not the Russians. It's not China. As either one of them had it, they would own us even more so than China does now. So I think the only other option is that there's something maybe not of this world or of this world that's been here for a while, and we're just not looking in the right places. And I believe there's some people in the government that might have a clue about what it is. I get briefed on something every week.
Starting point is 00:22:23 I was riding to baseball this morning, baseball practice on our van, and I was catching. the usual grief that I always do, and I said, you all should have been in the skiff with me yesterday. Y'all need to start coming to some of those meetings and listening to what federal agencies are saying and what they're not saying. And look at some of the pictures and look at some of the videos. And then it will shut them up pretty quick. And we better start addressing this, partly because we have a right to know.
Starting point is 00:23:01 It's your federal tax dollars. It's not about Little Green Manor Flying Saucers because there's a lot more than that to it. But it's about what are we spending tens of millions of dollars on? And if the government tells me they don't exist, then why do they have every alphabet agency except maybe the IRS? I'm not sure if they do.
Starting point is 00:23:22 But every alphabet agency has some investigation going on about this and they've got files. and they've got photos and I mean that includes the FBI and branches the military and because brother I've seen them I'm just in a
Starting point is 00:23:39 what have you seen I'm not allowed to describe exactly what I saw okay but you've seen do your best up to the limits of your constraints you've seen something
Starting point is 00:23:55 more I assume than what I've seen I mean, I've seen some videos, right, that have been released. We're waiting on these 46 from the Pentagon. But you've seen more is what you're telling me. That ain't happening. I mean, maybe, I don't know. The 46 will probably include some stuff that I've seen that hasn't been viewed before. But, yeah, it's just, it's nothing of our capability,
Starting point is 00:24:21 something that can turn on a dime and accelerate to speeds that maybe our rocket ships might, or, you know, or rockets, I guess rocket ship sounds like Buck Rogers, but might at some point, but the human body's not capable of withstanding those kind of Gs. It's, there's an element there that we just don't understand. And until the government discloses some of the stuff that they have and some of the stuff that they've had in the past, we're never going to happen. And I'll tell you this, I don't think it's we're ever going to get to the bottom of it until somebody walks out of one of those quasi government labs. Because what they do is it's, you know, FOIA, you're a member of the media, Freedom of Information Act. I can request something.
Starting point is 00:25:11 I can request something from Ford Motor Company, but they don't have to give it. But allegedly, if a government agency has something and I make a FOIA request, they have to turn it over within reason. Well, everything that we've had, every mid of material or objects or whatever that would fall under any of those categories that your wildest imagination can deliver to your brain is in a corporation probably that has a lab, but they're not foyerable. And that's on purpose. That keeps us out of it, but the government money is still flowing to them. And we got a real problem. We got a real problem when I sit in a meeting and some little punk with a man bun tells me that the president is on a need-to-know basis.
Starting point is 00:25:59 That's a real problem, brother. And whatever they're looking at or whatever is going on, there should be nothing that's beyond in our federal government the grasp of our chief executive. Let's take a quick break. We continue this conversation with Congressman Tim Burchett, blowing the lid on some things when it comes to aliens here on Will Kane, Welcome back to Will Kane Country. We're still hanging out with Congressman Tim Burchett of Tennessee. Was that something you just made up in your head or is that a scenario you drew on from real life?
Starting point is 00:26:26 Was there a dude in a man bun that told you the president's on a need-to-no basis? Yeah, yeah. There's a serious arrogance there. That is a complete and total activity. And it's, I've met with more than one arrogant government official on this issue. some will I mean I can remember tell this one cat was telling us he was he pointed out some really just stupid observations you know there's something that you know like a a kid's obvious you know those silver balloons that that you know what I'm talking about the metallic kind of balloons they're helium and and yeah and I guess you turn them sideways they'd look like a flying saucer but anyway they're up and up way up and a jet and an airplane flies by and they take a picture
Starting point is 00:27:14 or one of those. Well, obviously that's what that is. And they're showing us all this stuff that we'd seen before. And we asked about some some occurrences that have been documented. And I mean, it was the arrogance of this person drove me crazy because you had some military officials sitting there and they were highly decorated. And you could just read them, brother. You could tell they were just like, I can't believe I'm having to take orders from this punk, bureaucrat, unelected, and it's a political appointee. And I remember to ask specifically about an incident that had been documented. And he said, we have no data points on that, sir. And that was, and so they're not going to look into it because he was not provided. And that goes back to my other
Starting point is 00:28:04 thing. These things were so compartmentalized. You know, during the Second World War, I remember I knock on doors. People like me don't get elected to Congress very often. And so I, I, knock on doors. That's how I got elected. And the first time I ever ran for office, State House, I'm knocking over 6,000 doors. But, you know, I'm out knocking on doors in a little area called Farragut. And it's right outside of Knox County. It's right outside the city limits. And this guy, he had his flag out. And he was older. And I asked him if he served in the military. And he kind of looked down and said, no, I really, I didn't. And I said, I said, I worked at Oak Ridge on the bomb. And I said, well, brother, you know, my daddy was on.
Starting point is 00:28:44 Okinawa and they thought they were getting ready to invade mainland Japan. He was in the first Marine Division. So he said, and if he was alive today, my mama would hug your neck and daddy would shake your hand and tell you thank you. And he said, and I remember he said, you know, a funny thing. He said, my wife worked there as well and we did not know what each of us was working on. That's how compartmentalized it was. So you, you, you.
Starting point is 00:29:14 Multiply that times a billion of our incredible vastness of this worthless bureaucracy we're in. And you see the problems you've got. You've got so many people that understand one little thing and they don't go into the other. Well, take that guy that was stonewalling you and apparently some very decorated military figures as well. Can you tell me this? Who would he be with? Who has that power? Who has the knowledge and the power to deny you information?
Starting point is 00:29:44 What department? Well, it's a well-documented case when Matt Gates, myself, and Luna, Representative Luna, went down to Florida to Eglon. We went down there to be briefed. We'd been told there was some activity, and there might have been photographs and some drawings, and the pilots were down there who saw something. So we go into the skiff, and they start briefing us on some pretty high-level.
Starting point is 00:30:14 stuff that would that made me a little nervous but had nothing to do with UFOs and Matt said you know this is not what we came down here for and they said well you all don't have the clearance to see that that's just totally in error we're members of the united states congress we got clearance to see everything if we know what to ask for they're not going to volunteer it of course and so the head man there said well obviously he said i have a meeting in tennessee and i got a drive there which i I thought it was kind of odd. Being Air Force, he should have flown to Tennessee. I couldn't figure out what that was about,
Starting point is 00:30:47 and maybe in from Tennessee, but he said, we're gonna, we'll let y'all go upstairs. You wanna make some phone calls. And whoever Matt called, they said it was big Air Force. I'm not sure Matt was on the Armed Services Committee and he knew the trees to shake. And I remember they came back in. They took us upstairs in some room
Starting point is 00:31:06 and had a really nice fruit tray that you paid for as the taxpayers, which I enjoy. So thank you very much. And then the guy came back in and said, I don't know who you called, but, you know, these pilots were coming in. And they came in in their flight suits. I mean, they were out flying and they brought them in to talk to us. But that's the kind of stuff you're running to every day.
Starting point is 00:31:30 And you've got to know who to ask for because I wouldn't have known. You know, I would have just said, all right, I'm headed back to Tennessee then. This is worthless like all these other meetings I've been in. And that actually cracked it open a little bit because there was. And you go back, I'm not going to talk about it, but I'm still a member of Congress. You can go back and review what Matt said about those pilots and what they showed us. And that would have been, that should have been public knowledge, and you would have demanded answers. You would have demanded to know what does the government know.
Starting point is 00:32:03 And then it would force all these other agencies because there's so many different departments studying this. And I'm in one group, and they're showing me some stuff that I verified yesterday with another group that was, and they were familiar, and they filled in a lot of the gaps of what they told me in this other meeting. And they just continue down this path of obstruction. And so finally, you know, we break this thing open a little bit and a few people are talking. but yeah I mean it's a complicated mess and until we got somebody walks out and hides the information
Starting point is 00:32:46 or President Trump just says open it up, show them everything and that's what they're trying to do Hedge Seth and Tulsi Gabbard are involved in it so hopefully that'll come out all right so you've seen things
Starting point is 00:33:03 what you described for me here is you've seen things we'll call them whatever they call them UAPs UFOs whatever And what you just told me is they're cutting on a dime, they're turning, they're doing things that the human body couldn't withstand with G-Force, which, by the way, you could also wonder, is there a human being or any being in that? We are developing drone technology, presumably so with the Chinese, everybody else that they would have things that it can do that the human body wouldn't withstand. What about the stuff I've seen about like going in and out of water, down, up, in and out, all that stuff? Those are the Tic Tac videos. And then the pilots, one of the pilots that was involved in that.
Starting point is 00:33:42 Yeah, they had no, they showed no heat signature. Yeah, an admiral met in my office. And you can see that door right there. That's the side door. He left by that door, which was kind of odd. And the last thing he told me was Tim, they're real. But he discussed a situation where they had tracked on sonar, something under the water that was big as a football field doing over 200 miles an hour.
Starting point is 00:34:05 and we don't have anything that'll do that'll probably crack 40 miles an hour. And this is something operating in some of these deep water areas. And that's where they see a lot of, there's a higher propensity of these orbs and disks or whatever. But that one was, as a documented case, that you can, I've heard the audio from the pilots talking about it. And, I mean, these things, they're capable of it, they hover, some of them have hovered for hours. And we don't have anything with fuel to do that.
Starting point is 00:34:36 Nothing's refueling it. And then all of a sudden, it just goes, shoot straight up. And the power to do that, one of the pilots, you know, these pilots, they always show them as cowboys on television shows. But generally, they're kind of eggheads. They're very mathematically in-tuned. And, you know, the amount of energy to do that was just phenomenal. It would like you could power Los Angeles, I mean, literally. And the one thing about drones is, though, they can't be.
Starting point is 00:35:03 be our drones and I'll tell you why. Because we would not put American military fighting men and women in harm in our own harm's way. We would not risk a half a, you know, half a billion dollar airplane and a person's life. And we saw what we spent just to get one pilot out of Iran. You know, we're not going to risk that. That's not ours. We've got too many, I guess more or less documented cases of where we had to call off operations. I'll say because these objects are spotted, these pilots. And the problem you got with the pilots is, is that when they report it, they end up having to go get a psych evaluation and they get a blemish on their records.
Starting point is 00:35:47 Of course they're not going to report all this stuff that's going on. And not every one of them saying it. There are certain areas, these deep water, there's about five deep water areas in the world that we know of. And we're seeing a lot of it out there. Whatever that is, I don't know. I mean, I can draw my own conclusion. And your argument is that it won't be drones from the Chinese or the Russians or anybody because they'd be dominating us if they had that technology. That's where you started today. Russia wouldn't be bogged down in Ukraine. And China would just control the world, which someone would question wherever they do or not now. But they don't, nobody has that kind of technology. So when that you said, I think you said Air Force General walked out of your office and he said, Tim, they're real. What was he talking about?
Starting point is 00:36:32 He was an admiral. The objects? Admiral. Okay, Admiral. What was you talking about? The objects are real or aliens are real? Aliens. Really?
Starting point is 00:36:45 Really. I mean, you know, it's very prevalent. And there's a circle. And that's why everybody's freaked out over these 10 or 12 scientists that have disappeared or died or whatever mysteriously. And I don't want to cast any disparaging remarks on anybody that, unless I really want to. But say you had a chef, you and your family owned a nice restaurant, but you had a chef you were afraid was giving away all your family recipes. You know, you might rough up a couple of busboys send that message. And I just think that that we better start paying attention.
Starting point is 00:37:35 We better start paying attention to what's going on in this country. What does that mean? That's a story that I've covered. What do you mean giving away the family recipes? What is the presumption? And I know that it's not these particular scientists. Your analogy is making these particular 10, the bus boys. So somebody higher up than these people, they're sending a message that is doing what is not liked?
Starting point is 00:37:54 What recipes? Obviously, you want to keep this secret, whatever it is. and for whatever reason, whether it's zero energy, you know, these zero energy sources or what have, quantum physics. And that's something that's science. I mean, to me, it actually proves God because something can move instantaneously from one spot to the other in no time. But if I wanted to shut somebody up, you know, there's a couple of ways you do it. you kill them or you maybe take somebody out that's under you and you see the and you see the writing on the wall.
Starting point is 00:38:38 And I know that sounds crazy. I know people want to think our government. There's people in government that really want to do the right thing. But that's not the case with all of them. The vast majority are, but I think there's some string pullers in there that it operate kind of within the gray area. All right. Let me go back real quick.
Starting point is 00:38:59 to this aliens concept. I think I have to ask you a question. We're really getting deep on this stuff, brother. I apologize. Well, it's a big deal. I think you think it's a big deal, too. That's why you keep looking into it. I think it's a big deal. I don't think it should be a deal that kind of poof goes away at a 12-hour news cycle. I mean, this is the sort of thing that human beings should sit back and consider our own existence if it's true, you know, and our future and our place and all that. By the way, you make longboards? I'd learn that about you this morning. Longboard, skateboards? Yeah. I mean, that's crazy. That did not fit my image.
Starting point is 00:39:31 Do what? That did not fit my image of you. What I thought, I mean, small town, Tennessee, longboard, skateboards? Yeah, I make them, I made one for Tulsi Gabbard. And, you know, she outed me during Trump's first state of the union address. She said, Tim, my birthday's next month. Where's my dad gum skateboard?
Starting point is 00:39:52 And I said, I thought, oh, crap. She said that right in front of the national press and everybody. So I had to, I've been telling her I was going to make her one. You know, she's from Hawaii, and I know she's homesick. She works really hard, and she's a surfer and a skateboarder. So I made one and four out of banana fibers off the plant, bamboo, and oak. And so everybody in the world wants a merchant board, right? So I'm thinking, well, great, I'm a capitalist.
Starting point is 00:40:18 I'll make a little money. So I go down to ethics downstairs, make sure they want to do everything right. Man, I got to incorporate under my wife. I got to work for her. I got to put my farm in an LLC. It's just a nightmare. And so I tell the guy, the little attorney down there, I said, dude, so you're telling me I can do insider stock trading as a member of Congress, but I can't sell skateboards? And he said, that's about that.
Starting point is 00:40:43 So, so. Are you a skateboarder? Are you a carpenter? What brought you to making longboards? You skateboarder? Yeah, it's cheaper than a psychiatrist, dude. I have insomnia. So I go out in the barn every night, one of our, the back barn, which oddly enough, when we bought that property, my wife said, oh, honey, it's a big barn.
Starting point is 00:41:01 You can put all your stuff in here and your motorcycles, your cars and everything, and nobody will bother you. And you can just do whatever you want. And what you tell me the other day, honey, you need to clean up this barn. I'm going to bring a dimster dumpster in here. We're going to throw everything away, so because we've got to do stuff out here. So anyway, lesson learned in marriage, but I'm a happy man. But no. So I make these boards, you know, they're not.
Starting point is 00:41:23 I tell everybody they're kind of like me. They're not perfect, but they're just forgiven. And as soon as I can get incorporated, the ethics people, I'm going to put them out. I'm going to, my wife is. Yeah, I want a birchard board. I want a virtue board right here on set. Without a doubt, I do. All right.
Starting point is 00:41:41 They're not like, you know, not like any of these cats are going to skate one in the Olympics. But, you know, you go down the curb and you're not too, you can run into a curve and not too worried about banging it up. But, you know, we'll see. I'm working on them. Okay. All right, good. Okay. Here's the two questions. If I asked you, put a percentage on it that we have made contacts with aliens, your certainty would be at what percentage? When you say we, what do you mean? The government has made contact?
Starting point is 00:42:14 Human beings. Or they have been here. I think 100%. Yeah, I guess they've been here. 100% 100% I've talked to too many people I've talked to too much
Starting point is 00:42:27 no I mean some of these people they got nothing to risk but their lives and their reputation and there's no reason for them most of them just little eggheads
Starting point is 00:42:39 you know guys you and I would have probably stood up for when somebody's trying to stuff them in a locker in junior high school these are just and they're just loyal Americans dude just loyal Americans and they and they want the truth to come out.
Starting point is 00:42:55 And I know it gets stereotyped and everybody wants to make fun of it. But again, it's your money. We deserve to know. And it's not the government's job to decide what I can and cannot handle. All right. Congressman Tim Burchett, really fascinating stuff. Also, hey, it's in the Bible. Ezekiel saw the will.
Starting point is 00:43:21 Read Ezekiel in the old text. Testament. Genesis 1, Chapter 1, God created the heavens and the earth. But Ezekiel ought to, you could read that and it's a little, it's out there. Okay. Yeah. I'm going to look at that. Always fascinating, Congressman Tim Burchard of Tennessee, Longborder as well, farm boy and long border from outside Knox County. Always going to talk to you, Congressman. Thanks for being here with us. We never even get to talk about Swalwell and my theory on that, but that's okay. Go ahead. Go ahead. No. I mean, go.
Starting point is 00:43:54 You know, everybody, Pelosi and everybody, when he had a relationship with an alleged Chinese communist spy, it was okay for him to be on the Intelligence Committee. And the intelligence community told them what he was doing. It was okay for that. But now, all of a sudden, he's a bad guy. He did not, they needed to move him out of the way.
Starting point is 00:44:17 They got a billionaire running for governor in California, and he could make it rain for all of those. of them. So he was expendable. They get in here and they own you. They know you're doing dirt and they cover it up. And then it's the classic honey pot, one or the other. And they did. And he was useful up to a point. He's not useful anymore. So they throw him to the curb. And that's exactly what they did. I mean, you know, I'm not vouching for any of his horrible things he's done. But it's not news up here. And then all of a sudden all these people are coming out, you know, like that's news. The president. covered for him for years. And the left media and the Democrats did. And just go look it up. I mean, it's the easiest thing to find about him and what's their name? I think you're spot on.
Starting point is 00:45:04 Does that happen within, does that happen in the Republican Party? Not right now, not currently. I just think we've got some dirt bags that need to be kicked out. But I don't know if we'll ever get to them or not. And some are, yeah, there's people talking about it's going to be a purge. We've got to go through the process, though. Some of them are, some people get accused of stuff. and then it's not true.
Starting point is 00:45:24 But, you know, I was asked yesterday about some of this stuff, and I said, I haven't even read the files on them, so I'm going to go back and review them. Right. Well, I think you're spot on about Swalwell. I am curious if that's not done across bipartisan lines. I mean, clearly both the party in the media coverage for... The big boys.
Starting point is 00:45:41 The big boys want to own it. You know, that's what these lobbyists. That's how they work. I mean, not all of them, not the vast majority of them, but there's a small percentage. You always wonder why somebody voted one way when you thought, wow, that they're on our side. There's always something in the back. And it's not necessarily some
Starting point is 00:45:56 kind of sex pot deal. But, you know, some guy's wife and or girlfriend works for some NGO pulling in a half a billion dollars a year. You know, a hundred thousand dollar no show job is pretty easy for them to find. And that's, and you know, they don't want to lose that. So that's how they get their hooks into you. All right. Like I said, always fascinating. Congressman Tim Burchett. Thank you so much, Congressman. Look forward to talking again next time. Hey, brother. And I'm not suicidal for the record. After everything he said here today, he wants everyone to know he's not suicidal. Thank you, Congressman, noted. Coming up, Dr. Sheila Nazarian is featured in a new Fox Nation special, the Nepo Babies of Iran's regime.
Starting point is 00:46:43 Posting on Instagram, safe from America, but connected to the IRC. That's coming up on Will King Country. All right, there you go. It's Congressman Tim Burchett here. One of the reasons that I need to say goodbye to that fascinating conversations because waiting on deck is Dr. Sheila Nazari. She's a board certified plastic surgery at the Nazarian plastic surgery. And she is also an Iranian-American refugee. Came here, by the way, I think, as a young child, right, doctor? That's right.
Starting point is 00:47:12 Were you born in America? Or you came? I was born in America in Long Island. and my family went back to Iran, and the revolution started shortly thereafter. So I was actually born in 1979. Iran-Iraq War started a year later, and we were stuck. We were bombs flying in, no bomb shelters. Lots of stuff happening there, and my family ultimately decided to escape.
Starting point is 00:47:36 And that's the whole story, if you want to talk about it. I have a lot of different things I'm actually interested in talking with you about, including, by the way, plastic surgery. But I notice here at the beginning of our conference, conversation. Is that a star, David, that you're wearing around your neck? It is. Yes, it is. So you're an Iranian Jew? Yes, many of us here in L.A. and New York. What about in Iran? What's left of the Iranian Jewish population in Iran? There's about 8,000 Iranian Jews left in Iran, and they're treated as second-class citizens
Starting point is 00:48:09 and basically have to denounce Israel or any love or allegiance to Israel whatsoever. And And, you know, when I was there, Will, we would change our last names to not sound Jewish. We would never say we were Jewish in school because they would beat you up or ostracize you. My father, ultimately, he was the chief medical officer of the Shah's Heart Hospital, and his lab tech told him that he was on the list to be killed. And ultimately, that's why my family decided that was the final straw, obviously, and that's how we ended up finally escaping through Pakistan to come to this. amazing country that we're so blessed to be in. Yeah. And you went to Los Angeles. We went to New York for about a month. Winter hit and we were like, nope, not for us. And then I also had family. My mom's side of the family was also in L.A. And so we came here. We lived in a two-bedroom
Starting point is 00:49:04 apartment with my aunt. So it was like eight of us living in a two-bedroom apartment. My dad would drive his bicycle to the public library to study for the board exam so he could practice medicine and get a job and get us on our feet. So we'd like to. We'd like to. We'd like to left a very comfortable life will in Iran, left almost everything behind, came here with nothing. And this is the story of many Iranian Jews, by the way, here in LA. It's not just my story.
Starting point is 00:49:28 And eventually, through hard work and talent and grit, we were able to become very successful. I believe Iranians are one of the most successful minority groups in America. Because we appreciate, you know, there's no discrimination here. We can practice our religion freely. We can work as hard. hard as we want and succeed. And Iran will, if you were valedictorian of your high school and you were
Starting point is 00:49:52 Jewish, they wouldn't give it to you. They would give it to the runner up who wasn't Jewish. You know, just microaggressions from that all the way up to being killed. So, very grateful to be here. Yeah. One of the things we're going to talk about in just a moment is a Fox Nation special that is called Nepo Babies of Iran's regime. We've already talked about a few of them here on this show. but I'm going to follow my curiosity where it is right now. You're also a plastic surgeon. And yes, I find that interesting on multiple levels. Because when we were talking about the niece of Kassim Soleimani,
Starting point is 00:50:32 who was killed by President Trump during the first administration, the head of the IRC, I believe that's what he was, or he's the Quds force. But his niece was living, I believe it is in Los Angeles, and so was his grand niece. You know, I was showing pictures of them here, right? And they're in their bikinis and they're glamorous. And I'm going to use a term that the kids use, and maybe people watching this on YouTube know, but maybe those listening on podcasts, it might be an older audience, don't know.
Starting point is 00:50:59 Looks maxing, okay? Looks maxing. I'm sure you know what it is, right? All the kids talk about looks maxing, basically doing whatever it takes, including plastic surgery, but diet and everything, to look your best. Those ladies were clearly doing that. And this is just a casual observation. It does feel like Iranians are very into making sure they have a great physical appearance.
Starting point is 00:51:24 Is that a great, is that a fair observation that like, I mean, I do think Iranians happen to be very beautiful people, but I also think that they lean into it and really. So like, here you are in the business from Iran. There's got to be some overlap here. No, for sure. I mean, appearances are very important on all levels in Iranian culture. I remember there was a book I read a long time ago called House of Sand and Fog. I don't know if you've heard of it, but basically it's the story of, you know, Iranian family. They're poor.
Starting point is 00:51:56 They can't even afford food, but they have to drive a Mercedes-Benz because they don't want to look, you know, like they don't have anything because no one will marry their children. So, you know, looks maxing was probably invented in the Middle East, I would say, where, you know, Plastic surgery has always pretty much been very big in Iran. And to the point where women will walk around with, you know, the little nose job casts on their nose, even if they haven't had a nose job will. Because it's a status thing. Really? Yes. Yes. If you can afford plastic surgery, it means that you have a certain status.
Starting point is 00:52:32 It's like driving a nice car equivalent here in America. So, yeah, no, definitely plastic surgery has always been big. It's a big industry in Iran. A lot of them go to Turkey for plastic surgery as well, if it's a little bit cheaper there. But no, appearances with what you wear, with how you look, your body, your face has always been an important part of Iranian culture, I would say. You know what's fascinating about that is the counterintuitiveness of it when you live in a culture that is in forced modesty. women forced to cover their hair, women forced to live a certain way. And you're telling me it's not only Iranian-American expats who are doing this, but in Iran, it is as well a cultural value. It's just an interesting dichotomy with the forced modesty of Islam.
Starting point is 00:53:22 But if you think about it, well, like, you know, we had a Muslim friend, a fellow surgeon who was single. And I've seen Americans make videos of this, too, how they went to Iran. and they're like, I've never been to bigger parties. I have never seen more drugs, more prostitution, more wildness at a rave, these underground raves. So you can imagine in a country where 47 years ago, they were very westernized, they were into fashion, they were into entertaining,
Starting point is 00:53:52 they were into having a good time, and then they're forced, you know, the government is basically using the backs of women to say we're in charge if you think about it. If you have to get up every day, day will and the government is forcing you to put a head covering on. And using you as a visual symbol as you go about your daily life to everyone else, Islam is in charge here.
Starting point is 00:54:14 Think about it. You're going to want to rebel. So a lot of women actually do a lot of overdone plastic surgery, overdone cheeks, overdone lips, very pointy noses in Iran. It's almost like the only way they can express themselves is through their face because everything else has to be covered. But also at the parties, you know, the women will take off their, you know, nicabs, their full, full body coverings, and they're wearing Chanel,
Starting point is 00:54:41 and they're wearing amazing outfits for each other, in each other's company, because it's a way of self-expression in a country that is so oppressive. And we've seen this with other countries. There's definitely in Japan, an underground, you know, way of people express themselves because, you know, culturally it is more restricted. And so, you know, it's not shocking. I'm sure after hearing all that to hear, yes, you know, women as an act of self-expression or as an act of we still have a sense of ourselves and a sense of identity. They're going to use clothing.
Starting point is 00:55:16 They're going to use plastic surgery. They're going to use makeup. They're going to use different things to sort of hold on to their sense of self. Is makeup okay in Iran? So you wear the Nicar, but you can wear makeup? They wear it. They wear it. They wear it.
Starting point is 00:55:33 And there's certain areas in Tehran in big cities where they won't even wear a hijab anymore. But you never know who's watching. You know, I had a friend who escaped North Korea. She said they would tell them since they were children that the birds were listening. So it's very similar. You don't know who lives next door to you. You don't know who your classmates' parents are. You don't know who's listening.
Starting point is 00:55:51 You don't know who's morality police. Who's going to report you? Who's going to knock at your door in 2 a.m. and take you away. You know, not to be seen again for a year. So it's, you know, people will do it as an act of rebellion. but it's not fully safe, you know. People will dance in the streets, but they can be taken away the next day.
Starting point is 00:56:10 It makes sense that if the culture only allows you to show any semblance of self-expression through your face, that the arc would bend towards even more dramatic expression through your face. Like you said, whatever it is, the nose, the lips, the cheeks. It wouldn't just be looks maxing. It would be beyond looks maxing. You would probably get to some places where it needs. needs to be super pronounced because everything else is so muted.
Starting point is 00:56:37 Exactly, exactly. But again, culturally, even before the revolution, you know, in the time of the Shah, beauty is such a big part of Iranian culture. If you look at old photos, you'd be easily able to tell. Yeah, right. Okay, a couple more on this note before we get to the Nepo babies. Because now you live in Los Angeles. Basically, I don't know, Los Angeles or,
Starting point is 00:57:03 Miami. Which one's the capital of plastics? It could be Dallas, too. I live in Dallas. The plastic surgery capital of the United States. Got to be one of those three. Yeah, it's probably in between New York, Miami, and Texas is big, and L.A. Yeah, I would say one of those four. Okay, so business is booming on filler, right? That's what you're doing. You got to be doing a ton of filler. Actually, the pendulum has swung. I would say about five to 10 years ago in that range, well, people swung away from surgery. And they wanted all the minimally invasive things.
Starting point is 00:57:41 They wanted non-surgical. They wanted devices and fillers and things like that. Now, I think there's been some pretty high profile facelifts and surgical procedures that have swung the pendulum back to surgery. So there's actually less demand for devices and then injectables right now. Yes, you know, neurotoxins to relax muscle.
Starting point is 00:58:06 That's always kind of like a steady-fretty. Laser hair removal. That's a nuisance. That's a steady-fretty. But I would say the pendulum has definitely swung more towards just fix it. You know, I don't want to come in every month for this device. Just cut off the skin or just tighten my muscle. Let's get it over with.
Starting point is 00:58:25 Yes. What's device? I don't know what devices. So devices are lasers or radio frequency microneedling that, you know, does refreferquency. fine and tighten the skin to a certain extent. But people want more quick fixes. Because a lot of times, Will, the downtime from a laser or from a radio frequency device that is non-surgical, no cutting, the downtime is the same as surgery.
Starting point is 00:58:48 So people are just like, you know, I don't have time. Time is money. Let's just fix it. And I'll get on with my life. I'll see you in 10 years. Let's take a quick break. But continue this conversation with Dr. Sheila Nazarian on Wilkane Country. Welcome back to Will Kane Country. We're still hanging out with Dr. Sheila Nazarian, who is featured on a new Fox Nation special, Nepo Babies of Iran's regime, the women, the men, posting on Instagram, fabulous, living the big life in America while praising the IRGC.
Starting point is 00:59:16 Hasn't there been some, like, also social media has highlighted some of the ways that filler seems to have gone wrong for some people, celebrities? So, full disclosure, well, I probably have 10 to 15 syringes of filler in my face right now. Uh-huh. So the double, yes, the double, I've been using filler and Botox since I was 28 years old. I'm 46 now. So I would say the double-edged sword of my work is that when it's done well, no one attributes how good that looks to anything fake or, you know, not authentic. But when it looks bad, everyone's like, oh, filler's awful, surgery is awful. But when it looks good, everyone's like, oh, she's so lucky, great genes.
Starting point is 01:00:00 right right right so you're saying basically it comes down to the quality of the person doing it as opposed to a total indictment on the process absolutely it's like the equivalent of me giving you a set of paint paint and me giving Leonardo da Vinci a set of the same paint and then you you know come up with some you know whack-a-doodle thing and you say oh something was wrong with the paint no it's the artist right right right I always say one more thing too as a as a precautionary tale. I always say if you're a surgeon or your injector looks like an alien, you're about to look like one too. So just make sure if you're, if you're, if you want to look normal, make sure the person. The one thing, and I don't know if the audience is
Starting point is 01:00:48 into this as I am, but I am, the one thing that gets me, and I believe you, I believe everything you're saying about the quality of the artist is that the one thing that gets me on this is when I see someone who presumably could afford the absolute best, and then it doesn't go well for them. I'll give you two examples. Well, I can give you more. And I don't know. This is just my Instagram algorithm. This is like Ryan Gosling and Bradley Cooper can pay for the best, but it didn't turn out as it looks like the best. Or LeBron James gets a, I don't know if you did the work on either of those guys. I'm sorry. But LeBron James gets a hair transplant, right? But it didn't seemed to work and he could have gotten the best ever like Matthew McConaughey. Again, I think
Starting point is 01:01:32 that's what McConae did and got a great one, apparently. So it just feels like if you're rich, you shouldn't be in the variable of I got the wrong artist. I think what happens with that, and it's a great point. I always said the same thing. They listen to their hairstylist or they listen to their wardrobe stylist and that's who they're getting their referrals from, believe it or or their personal assistant. They're not, they don't have time to sit there and do their own research. They're just trusting the people within their, you know, stratosphere to tell them where to go. And unfortunately, you're right.
Starting point is 01:02:08 Some of the people you mentioned, you know, especially with men, you can't overdo it. You can't do a man's upper eyelids like you do a woman's upper eyelids. If a man needs to look rugged, you need to leave some sagging. You need to leave some wrinkles. Otherwise, they lose their ruggedness, and they start to look like a kendall. And I see that with male plastic surgeons, too. I'm like, where are your wrinkles? I think a really good example of great male plastic surgery is Ricky Martin.
Starting point is 01:02:40 If you look, he still has heaviness in his upper eyelids, but his lower face looks better. So that is like, you know, a male, if you want to go get something done, take a picture of Ricky Martin with you. Because that that is a male, that is a male natural result that looks believable and leaves their masculinity intact. What about what's your best example of woman, of a woman? Like I always see, it looks like Lindsay Lohan knocked it out of the park. Lindsay Lohan looks great. Anne Hathaway looks great. Yeah. I mean, there's a lot of people recently that, you know, look very natural. And I'll tell you it's not the deep plane facelift that everyone's talking about. It's a smas lift. It's a placation. I feel like that's the other problem with plastic surgery is
Starting point is 01:03:32 people just come out with different names of things for marketing purposes that might be higher risk and might not actually lead to better results. And I always say I like my life will. I want to sleep well at night. I want people to come in, get the simplest procedure that will satisfy them, make them look natural, and help them get on with their day, give them confidence, and help me sleep well at night. So that's sort of my motto. Here is Ricky Martin, by the way. Look at how great he looks. In the studio. See, look at his upper eyelids. They're male. You know, he doesn't look like he can apply eye shadow, you know, and now if you pull up Bradley Cooper. I mean, he's had, he's, he's, he's, how old is he
Starting point is 01:04:16 now? How old is he now? I don't know. How old is you guys? Like, How old is Ricky Martin? Late 50s? Mid-50s? Ricky Martin. Probably, be my guess? It's 54 years old. Okay, so have you ever seen a 54-year-old with no sagging neck skin?
Starting point is 01:04:31 Zero. No. Right, right. So he's had a facelift. I don't know what the beard's covering is my thing in this picture. Yeah, but even without beers. But I see what you're saying. I allege, I don't know for sure, but I allege, you know, probably a facelift.
Starting point is 01:04:47 And he's probably had eyelid work too, you know. the lower eyelids typically start to get bags. Like, I'm starting to develop them myself. I wish I could operate on me, but I can't. And, you know, but. Because you're the only one you trust? Trust me, I would have done it by now if I could. But yeah, I mean, you know, he's 54 and he looks great.
Starting point is 01:05:10 He looks youthful. He looks virile. He looks healthy. And, you know, presumably someone with his status in the spotlight at his age has probably had some work done. Presumably. I think that's a fair presumption. Okay. Now we're going to take this full circle back to the ladies we introduced a little bit earlier. One of them looked like she had a lot of work done. This is the niece of Kassim Solomani.
Starting point is 01:05:34 We talked about her. There was also, I believe it's the son of screaming Mary. Screaming Mary was the propagandist from the early 1970s, early 1980s during the revolution. Her son had moved to America as well and was living a pretty nice life in America. you've participated in with Fox Nation is a show entitled Nepo Babies. And it covers the extent of Iranian regime figures whose progeny or relatives have decided, no, that's not for us. We're going to live in America. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:06:09 And there's a lot of them. There's thousands of them in America. I believe Marco Rubio came out and said he's looking at revoking thousands of visas for similar people. A lot of them are living in Los Angeles and Orange County will, but also in Europe, in Canada and Australia as well.
Starting point is 01:06:29 And it's rules for thee, but not for me, right? So in Iran, you show a few strands of hair, 74 lashes. I've seen women, you know, kicked in the back, kicked in the head while they're down, raped before they're murdered, because if a virgin is killed, she goes to heaven.
Starting point is 01:06:46 So in their twisted ideology, they rape her or gang rape her and then kill her so that she won't even have a good afterlife. So, you know, imagine that for showing a few strands of hair. And then these women who are literally wearing V-neck outfits down to their belly button, you know, living on stolen money from the Iranian people, you know, there's houses owned on billionaires row in London by these leaders and their progeny. And, you know, they're showing it off like there's some sort of Instagram influencer. Meanwhile, you know, their parents are literally murdering innocent people in Iran just to hold on to that power and money and a supposed worldwide caliphate.
Starting point is 01:07:33 And the other problem will is these kids, while they're posting these provocative pictures, you know, bikinis on yachts and all the stuff and getting into helicopters and designer dresses and shopping on Rodeo Drive, they're doing. so while shilling for the IRGC. They're defending the Islamic regime while they're literally naked on Instagram. So it's just peak hypocrisy and I'm so happy it's being exposed. And by the way, Will, everyone's terrified of them. So there was a quote from one of their hairdressers that was literally like, everyone's terrified of them. We're terrified to say anything because we're afraid the regime is going to come get us. And I, you know, there is a real threat of that, Will. But the bigger picture is that the people who escaped Iran like my family, there's a real trauma there. Okay, because in Iran you were so scared. Imagine your family coming to you will one day be like,
Starting point is 01:08:27 our last name can't be Kane anymore. We have to change it to Smith because Kane sounds too Christian and we're going to get killed for being Christian, right? So that level of fear, we would never put a Mizuzza on the door. We would never tell anybody we were Jewish in school. We would never, we wouldn't even put, like, I remember my kids were small, I have three kids. I wanted to put a cardboard menorah, like a cutout for Hanukkah on our gate of my house. And my husband's reaction was, somebody's going to get us. Like, we're going to be attacked. Like, that's how vivid the trauma is still. And so people that escaped from Iran and came here for a better life still, they didn't leave that trauma behind.
Starting point is 01:09:09 It's still very real. And so for anyone to speak up against, these children of the regime or to even have them be mad at them. The hairdresser was like we were terrified that she would be mad at us for something. That trauma and that fear is still so vivid and real to Iranian, you know, people living in the diaspora. Why so many regime offspring living in Orange County? Is it because they form a community together? It's like any immigrant group.
Starting point is 01:09:41 That's often the case, right? I live in Texas. Yeah, it's just the immigrant group. So most of the, yeah, so most of the Persian Jews moved to Los Angeles and like Great Neck and New York City and there's a small faction in Atlanta. And that's it. Okay, that's where like 95% of the Persian Jews are. And then a lot of the Persian Muslims, whether they're, you know, pro-IRGC or whether their families were literally killed by the regime because they had some sort of connection to the Shah. A lot of the Muslims moved to Orange County and Newport Beach.
Starting point is 01:10:15 There's some in Los Angeles as well, but the majority are in more of that Orange County about an hour south. Okay. And so anybody connected to the regime often ended up in those communities because they were Muslim. Correct. They ended up in Orange County or great. Correct. No, Great Neck we said was Jewish. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:10:32 Yes. That's really interesting. And how do they continue to sort of sing the praises of the IRGC? Do they do that on social media? They just kind of do it in casual conversation you're talking about. Like that's a pretty bold move to be out there continuing while living this lifestyle, enjoying the benefits of America, to be praising the regime in Iran. But that's where their money is coming from.
Starting point is 01:10:55 So you know how they're, you know, and yes, to answer your question, they do it on social media. They'll post things like no war with Iran. You know, it's their dream to continue to have Democrats be elected because they're the useful idiots that are helping usher in Islam and a caliphate, just like what happened in Iran. You know, it was the kids on the college campuses. It was the leftists on the college campuses that joined hands with the Islamists to usher in, you know, the Khomeini and to overthrow the Shah.
Starting point is 01:11:27 And then the first thing the Islamists did was to kill the college students that helped them. So they're trying to use the exact same formula here in America. So that's why I've been so loud because I live that movie. I know how that movie ends. And so we have to prevent America from going down the same road. But yeah, they will put down anybody who is anti-regime.
Starting point is 01:11:48 They will post in support of the regime. They'll support, you know, no war with Iran, hands-off Iran, things like that. All right. Well, it's entitled Nepo Babies. The Nepo Babies of Iran's regime is streaming now at Fox Nation. It does feature Dr. Sheila Nazarian, who's told us a lot of fascinating things, not just about nepo babies, but about plastic surgery as well, which is a personal curiosity of mine.
Starting point is 01:12:13 It's been a fascinating conversation, Dr. Zerian. Thanks so much for being with us here today. Thanks, Will. Thanks for having me. All right, there she goes. She's in the Los Angeles Bureau, I can see, talking to us. They're like, I'm sure when they booked, they're like, how long is she going to be? What was it, 20 minutes, 30 minutes?
Starting point is 01:12:31 And they're talking about somewhere there was somebody, one of your old friend Scott in L.A. going, what are they doing? Like, why is that going so long? And what are they talking about? and there may be a good chunk of the audience as well, but I'm fascinated by it. Dan, I know you are. You wanted to ask, did you get satisfied, Dan? You wanted to ask about every celebrity under the sun.
Starting point is 01:12:49 Don't do it here right now. You did say one in my ear. I don't want to go down that path. That's fine. That's why I said it in your ear and not on the show. Just, you know, it's a check. You're my buffer. Yeah, I'm fascinated by this stuff.
Starting point is 01:13:00 My wife and I talk about all the time because she works in that world. Like she works with models every day, like famous ones and like Gigi Hadid's and the Kardashian ones. and she says in person, you can notice it a lot, lot more, like what she was saying. Really? Yeah. Really? But she does notice the difference. I mean, there's a huge difference, like she was saying, between the rich ones that can afford it all and then the ones not so much.
Starting point is 01:13:24 So it's a fine line, but yeah, it's fascinating. But that's what I'm fascinated by, the rich people that get, that don't seem to end up with good work. I'm just, I'm fascinated by it. Like, how? When that happens, it makes me lose faith in, like, when Lerner, like, when Lerickie, that LeBron's hair transplant doesn't take. It makes me lose faith in the concept of hair transplants. Like, there's no reason LeBron should not, I mean, he's got all the money in the world to make sure he gets the best job possible.
Starting point is 01:13:49 He should get, like, the best in the world that there is possible to do, right? I mean, but it's just, it's so interesting to see, like, different kinds and different ones. Like, I don't know. It's scary. I mean, but wouldn't you think if you go to a dentist, right, you would think it would be like that. You get a tooth taken out or you get teeth put in. you would think it would all be the same, but it's absolutely not like she was saying. You need a good artist.
Starting point is 01:14:14 Oh, I think there's varying qualities of dentists, for sure. I definitely think you can come away with two very different experiences. But there's less of a disparity, I would say. Patrick, what look am I seeing on your face? I'm just really curious. So, like, she's got me thinking, she's talking about Ricky Martin's neck. And now I'm like, here you're older now. So what's your neck look like?
Starting point is 01:14:36 Have you had any work done there? Will looks like he's 35. It's really annoying. I'm showing my neck for anybody listening on podcasts. Laser. No, nothing. People are asking what you've had done. Remember what you're saying yesterday?
Starting point is 01:14:50 When people are accusatory about something, they usually do it themselves? Projection. Projection. Yeah. You project a lot about this. Curiosity. I'm not condemning these people. What you're listening to is curiosity.
Starting point is 01:15:03 I am, I'm looks maxing curious. You know? And so I haven't done anything. I don't think that I will because of the same thing as the hair transplant thing. Like I don't think that I would. Can't do Botox. The wild thing about what do you mean is too late? Botox is preventative. It's not a cure. So like my crease in my forehead right here, my 11. I've got an 11 between the eyes. That's going to stay no matter what. Yeah, most likely, yeah. It's usually... I've had a lot of filler done.
Starting point is 01:15:39 A lot of Taco Bell. You have Patrick? Yeah. There's another way to get filler. Every time there's a kid, he gets filler. No, I'm not projecting. I am curious. Because what I was saying is, it's changing, right?
Starting point is 01:15:59 Like, it's getting better. That's quite clear. Absolutely. That's quite clear. and it's getting to be a thing where it's like, oh, I mean, it's just not the plastic surgery in our heads from the 1980s and 1990s where it's like, geez, you turned into an alien, you know? So I start to see these people and I'm like, whoa, look at these people like, they do look better. I would say the problem is, would you say it's six out of ten look better and four still don't? So the ratio is not right there yet.
Starting point is 01:16:37 Yeah. I would say six or seven probably. It's not there. But like you said, Ryan Gosling, he's one of the most handsome leading men in Hollywood. Like, how do you mess that up? It's crazy. Plus, men get better looking when they get older. I just don't get it.
Starting point is 01:16:57 Right. So I have a question. I was replying to Clay Travis the other day. He was talking about how TVs or, like one of the only things that have gotten substantially better and also cost way less. And I was like, is there anything else in society that's gotten like that? And the only reply... Everything.
Starting point is 01:17:17 No, everything has gotten better and cheaper. Nothing's better and cheaper. Eventually, yeah, everything does. Yes, that's not true. Everything is. So what's better and cheaper? The only things, Patrick, this is the nature of capitalism. Do you believe in the long arc of capitalism?
Starting point is 01:17:35 everything gets better and cheaper. These are better and cheaper than they used to be. I know you're like, well, it costs, what is a phone these days? I get a new one so rarely. I'm not a technology guy. About a thousand. Is it a thousand now? I was going to guess six to seven hundred bucks.
Starting point is 01:17:50 See? But, okay, but adjust for inflation. Yeah. Technology is the most obvious thing that gets better. But yes, plastic surgery. But process surgery is the one thing that somebody said where I'm like, that might be true. It's expensive.
Starting point is 01:18:06 Look at the hair transplant we're talking about. People go to Turkey. Well, how much are those? That's probably in the 5 grand region, and then the good ones are about 10 grand region. So it's about 50% off, I think, if you go to Turkey. I think if you were in the pool of this, however long it took you to collect the 5 grand,
Starting point is 01:18:27 I would go ahead and give a little more time to getting it to 10 to get to the better one. That's what I would do. Sell some old clothes or something. Whatever it took to get to five, do that again, and go ahead and get to 10 and get the good one. That's my advice on that. Got it. All right.
Starting point is 01:18:46 That ought to do it for us today. We appreciate you hanging out. I think that was two fascinating conversations with Congressman Tim Burchett and Dr. Sheila Lazarian. We hope you enjoyed it. Leave us a five-star review. Follow us on Spotify or Apple, and we'll see you again next time. Listen to ad-free with a Fox News Podcast plus subscription on Apple Podcast, and Amazon Prime members. You can listen to this show, ad-free, on the Amazon Music app.

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