Will Cain Country - Democrat Senator ADMITS Illegal Immigrants Come FIRST (ft. Guy Benson & Asra Nomani)
Episode Date: March 24, 2026Story 1: Host of ‘The Guy Benson Show,’ Guy Benson joins Will to explain how a horrific string of murders were enabled by Left-wing prosecutors across various sanctuary cities repeatedly refusing ...to incarcerate illegal immigrants, even when local law enforcement begs them to do the opposite.Story 2: Senior Editor of Investigations at Fox News Digital Asra Nomani unravels the sprawling connections of the multi-millionaire Maoist Neville Roy Singham, explaining his rise from tech entrepreneur to the man China trusts to disseminate pro-CCP propaganda across the entire Western world.Story 3: Will and The Crew react to comments from you, ‘The Willitia,’ before tackling one of the most ludicrous headlines of the day: a quadruple amputee professional cornhole player being arrested for fatally shooting an acquaintance… while driving. Plus, they also share some of their favorite moments from the late great Chuck Norris’ career.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
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College student murdered in Chicago by an illegal immigrant.
Meanwhile, an illegal immigrant kills another American in Virginia.
And yet another illegal immigrant kills another American in Utah.
Democrats protecting these criminals.
Instead of funding ICE, instead of protecting
elections in America with the host of the Guy Benson show, Guy Benson.
It is Wilcane Country streaming live at the Willcane Country YouTube channel, the Wilcane
Facebook page.
Hey, hit follow, Spotify or Apple, because they're hot on our trails, boys.
They're hot on our trail, tinfoil, they're hot on our trail, Dan.
Hit subscribe at Spotify or on Apple, or we might soon be caught by CNN.
They've cracked the code.
ratings look out
Jake Tapper
Anderson Cooper have finally figured out what it takes
and they looked no further than 4 o'clock
on the Fox News channel.
They've debuted if you'll notice
a brand new set for Jake Tapper and Anderson Cooper.
I don't know if this set is permanent
or if this is a temporary trial run
but take a look.
Feast your eyes
if you're watching on Facebook or on YouTube
if you're listening on Spotify or Apple
let me describe for you the scene that will lead
to a ratings resurgence.
Jake Tapper, sitting in his office.
Presidential posters adorned the walls.
And right there on his Chotchke-laden desk, a microphone.
An exposed microphone.
Not only has he cracked the code to look like a podcast.
He's gone full Pat McAfee.
Bobbleheads and Chotchkees.
No, no professional sports teams, but of former press.
residents adorn the desk, and now we are off and running, boys. They've done it. They have
finally done it. No. No, Dan. He looks right at home in his office. Don't you understand what
they're communicating? This is the real Jake Tapper. And if you want to see, by the way,
the real Anderson Cooper, it's just a little bit more boring than that Jake Tapper photo.
Here's Anderson Cooper in a newsroom. But oh, look, he has the microphone.
Look out, folks.
I got the memo.
CNN, soon to be in third place.
By the way, third place is a victory for CNN, at least according to the media.
I just want to share with you really quickly this article that was flagged for me yesterday in Forbes, okay?
The article is entitled, How Casey Hunt made 4 p.m. into the CNN power hour.
They must be doing big things over there at CNN at 4 p.m.
Casey Hunt, whoever she is, has really turned it into the power hour.
Of course, that competes with what we do over on the Fox News Channel.
But if you scroll down, not very far, you'll see a little context for how well they're doing.
And I'll read to you now from Forbes.
The arena with Casey Hunt, which debuted in the 4 p.m. Eastern Time Hour one year ago was posted some of the highest ratings seen as seen in a time slot in years.
Impressive.
Nice.
Congratulations, Casey.
Good job, guys.
Including several months as the network's highest rated show,
drawing an average total audience of more than 700,000 viewers.
That's pretty awesome.
Highest rated show on CNN.
That's cool.
Holy molly.
Oh, and then comes the next sentence.
The arena has room to grow compared to its competition as it trails Fox News channels
the Will Kane show at 4 p.m., which drew an average audience of 2.3 million viewers in February.
Bang.
A little room to grow from 700,000.
to 2.3 million. That's a very positive way to say you are sitting, not second, by the way, in a distant third.
We've got to give our flowers to Nicole Wallace over at MS. Now, who is beating that CNN power hour.
That CNN power hour at 4 p.m. That's right. With help from our next guest who held down the fort for me,
I heard through the grapevine because I was on spring break time. The President Trump commandeered all but seven minutes.
of your guest hosting hour of the Will Kane show. It's Guy Benson, the host of the Guy Benson show.
Is that right, Guy? Did President Trump take all but seven minutes of your guest hosting?
Well, I believe that our audience was 2.8 million people that day. And I'm going to ascribe all of that
success to me personally and not President Trump being on camera for 54 minutes of my work. I said hello at
the beginning, beautifully, by the way. Read the teleprompter, tossed to a,
live report from Israel, and then straight to the White House, the Oval. And then I said goodbye for
15 seconds and sent it over to the five. And it was some of my best work, honestly. And it was an
honor to sit in. You get credit. I'm taking the credit. The other thing is, well, you get credit guy.
I feel like this conversation that we're having so far isn't really authentic enough. So I'm just
going to add a little something here. Just here. There we go. Now I feel like really having
an authentic conversation with a with a vintage face.
microphone from my face.
There's a gigantic.
I would describe it as old.
It's a vintage microphone.
Oh, it's a penholder.
Sheaped as a microphone.
It's a prop.
Well, do you have any presidential posters on the wall?
I mean, you know, I don't, but I do have, hang on.
Let me see if I can, can I unclip this?
I do have this swag from back in the day.
My first presidential vote in 2000.
I have this lying around. I've got a little sports stuff. I got Willie the Wildcat from my Northwestern Wildcats here. And I've got a little Republican elephant action going on. So that's my swag here at home.
That's awesome. You know, the Jake Tapper office, which I can share another photo with you folks, if you're watching like, by the way, did you notice Will how. Relathing.
how relaxed they are, open collar for Jake.
Oh, yeah.
And then the loosened tie for Anderson.
That's authentic.
Yeah.
Look at the office.
It's just adorned in political posters.
You've got Romney Ryan, several Mitt Romney posters.
You've got a McCain-Palin.
You've got some that throw back to the 18-Hen.
I don't know who Smith is, the gigantic poster he has behind him.
Oh, you even see his closet.
He's some jackets and shirts.
there. It's, and he's got the presidential chotchkes on the desk. I mean, it's really, it's,
it is the McAfee style set. It's politics as sports. See, he's super into this. This is, this is his
gig. This is his thing, man. And this is authentic. You know that there was a meeting,
probably a long one, about whether or not to keep the rack with the hangers in the shot or out.
And it was decided, more authentic, keep it in, right? That totally happened.
They've cracked the code, man.
Here come the ratings.
I just want to tell you a quick story guy about your guest hosting duties and what that means for you getting credit and ultimately me as well.
Because you do well, I do well.
I got a call one time from the White House.
I got a call from President Trump.
I screened it because I didn't recognize the number and sometimes my number's too easily accessible.
And I had texted answer your damn phone.
It's the president.
So I said, please call back.
And they called back.
And I was talking to the president for a minute.
And he goes, you're doing great.
You know, you're doing great.
Your ratings.
Fantastic.
And I said, well, Mr. President, I mean, I think I've been very generous with my time.
Every time you want to have a, you know, executive order signing ceremony or you celebrate some professional sports team visiting the White House or whatever may be.
You know, I think I've been very generous with my time.
He goes, yeah, but Will, you get credit, right?
you get credit in the ratings and I know it rates well. So, you know, Hannity wants me to do that at
nine. I can't do it at nine. That's too late at night. So, you know, you get credited for.
So the president is getting you ratings guy in your in your pocket. Take it home.
Yeah. I'm almost wondering was he, you know, elsewhere just off the oval watching the end of Martha,
then he saw me come on. He's just like, all right, it's Will's hour. Let's get out there. Let's get out there.
Let's sign some things. We're going to sign some things and talk for so.
long. And then he took some questions. You know how this goes. I'm talking your producers in my
year and we're going back and forth and we're contingency planning. Like if he stops, then what part
of the show do we keep? Because we have to, you know, start limiting guests who were standing by,
unfortunately. And once he took the first question and I watched him and listened to the answer,
I'm like, we are not coming back. But this is the rest of the hour. He is in a move. He is feeling it. And it's going to
all the way up until the five, I guarantee it, and that's exactly what happened.
And I felt back because we had such a good lineup for your audience.
But the president and the vice president and the Q&A took priority.
Dude, that is exactly that.
That is my life.
You build a show, and obviously you prepare every day as though you want to produce the best show you've ever done.
You know, and so, you know, we've got deep dive research.
We're going to use the walls.
We're going to explain.
We got this guest lined up.
amazing guest. And then when that happens, you start playing kind of jenga, like, which block can
we pull out and keep? And it is, it is sad for the guests, because you're like, oh, man, they
scheduled their day around this. And now I got to tell them, I'm sorry, we can't do it today.
And so you start, like, cutting segments out. And then you start cutting time, which really stinks.
Like, this was scheduled to be a five-minute interview. It's going to be now, like, two and a half.
You're like, that's not, but I can't get done what I wanted to get done.
amount of time. And so you just start playing this, this game of, of, of, of, of, of jenga.
And you just start cutting everything out of your show. I'm not complaining because it's
the president of the United States. And you're a hundred percent ride as well. You can tell
with the first question, oh, he's into this today. Yeah, he's on one. He's on one today.
So we're just going to, we're going to do all this work. Because it's funny, I got a bunch of
comments from, from viewers being like, hey, good job for the six minutes. You know, wish there
was more of you, whatever. But that must have been.
the easiest show you've ever done. And it's like, theoretically, yes, because you're sitting there
and he's doing all the talking. But, and you know this, I'm like taking copious notes of what he's
talking about. I'm thinking about what's news. What have we heard before? What's new? What could be a
headline out of this? So I'm, and like trying to keep a list of an attali of what's going on,
because if he then wraps, then I have to go into Anchorman mode and be like, we just heard
from the president and the Oval and he addressed this, this, and this, right? So I'm doing that work.
And then I'm also making these decisions with your great team behind the scenes about how we're reloading the rundown as time slips away.
And they're making me make these sad decisions like, all right, do you want to lose this guest or this guest?
I'm like, oh, I hate that.
Like I like them both.
Can't we have them both?
No, we can't.
And slowly but surely we're like drawing the red line through each guest name.
And then it's 459.
And I have to just say goodbye.
and hit the ball to Dana Perino.
Yeah.
Well, I appreciate that awesome six minutes if you filmed in last week.
It was strong.
It was strong work.
You just didn't have any chotchkees on the desk.
That really will blow the ratings up.
That is what will turn you into a power hour.
Let me shift gears into something that it's not quite as fun or uplifting.
Of course, you know the story, Guy.
It's not your hometown, but it's maybe your adopted hometown.
You went to college in Chicago.
You went to Northwestern.
young Loyola student, Sheridan Gorman, murdered on the lake front by illegal immigrant from Venezuela, Jose Medina Medina.
And we discussed this a little bit yesterday. I know you want to address that, but I don't know that we can even have that conversation without at least acknowledging everything else that's happening in the country as well.
And that is in Salt Lake, a Mexican illegal alien strangled a woman, slit her throat, left her to die.
Not sure when he came into the country, but Jesus Alejandro Ramirez Padilla is in custody now.
And then at the same time, in Virginia, a lady named Stephanie Mentor was murdered at a bus stop by an illegal immigrant with a lengthy record.
You know, if I were doing this properly guy, I feel like I'd have a catalog of all of these stories, of course, Lake and Riley,
some jocelyn nungeret so many others you know because these aren't isolated incidences and it's it's it's in
here's the thing for me guy it is an unforgivable price to pay for whatever has led this country
to not value citizenship and presence presence in the united states of america so um several things
to say i want to quickly talk about stephanie mentor because that's right down the road from
where I live in Fairfax County, Virginia. This woman was exactly my age. She was at a bus stop,
and this guy stabbed her in the neck until she bled out and died. That accused killer, an illegal
immigrant, had previously 40 criminal charges against him, including rape. This guy had a string
of crimes, including violent crimes. Some of the most violent of those crimes,
eventually the prosecutor in Fairfax County, a guy named Steve Descano, he's one of these Soros guys.
He dropped, as he so often does, the most serious charges against him.
There is in writing from local police in Fairfax a warning from the police to the prosecutor's office,
begging them not to let him go because the cops wrote it is a matter of time before he kills.
and they let him go anyway, because that's what they do.
Steve Descano is not a fan of prosecuting.
He's a prosecutor, but he doesn't like to prosecute.
He's a big fan of criminals, actually.
He's a pro-criminal prosecutor as elected by the people in the Deep Blue County,
funded by George Soros.
And so he let the guy go despite the warnings,
and then he did exactly what was predicted.
And he has been, this accused illegal immigrant killer,
protected, shielded by the sanctuary policy in Fairfax County, despite that massive rap sheet,
they could not work with ICE. They are banned from working with ICE because of progress
and sanctuary. And even after the murder, the governor, the new governor in Virginia,
who made the whole state a sanctuary state on her first day in office, the moderate Abigail Spanberger,
she was asked, would she now finally honor an ICE detainer on this guy?
And the answer was, no.
They'd have to get a judicial warrant, which involves federal crimes.
Like, they are this committed to that insanity that they won't even just say, you know what,
let's make an exception on the sanctuary rule for this guy.
They can't do it.
They won't do it.
This murder was preventable.
It should have been prevented.
The guy should have been in the country in the first place.
He should have been thrown out of the country after his first crime, let alone 40th.
He should have been let out after 40.
crimes. All of those things happened. They were warned he was going to kill, and he killed.
And the response from Democrats who created all those policies in Virginia was either silence,
didn't mention it at all, or some statement through a spokesperson, because they didn't want to be
on camera talking about it. The lieutenant governor, like, ran away from a reporter asking about
it, sort of smirking. And what we then landed on was a talking point for Virginia Democrats
that it was ICE's fault that she was murdered.
because ICE should have magically found a way to capture this guy despite the obstruction by their policies.
And they were too busy murdering Americans in Minnesota to actually catch the guy who did the murdering.
That's where they landed, blaming ICE, the federal agency that they hate and undermine and obstruct.
That's where they landed. That's Virginia. And I don't want to go on too long, but I have strong thoughts on Chicago as well.
Let's take a quick break, but continue this conversation with the host of the Guy Benson show.
Guy Benson on Wilcane Country.
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Welcome back to Will Kane-Contra.
We're still hanging out with the host of the Guy Benson show, Guy Benson.
Yeah, well, okay, I want to hear your thoughts in Chicago as well.
That's all very well put about Virginia.
And the line that you uttered that I want to latch on to and revisit is that's how committed
they are to these policies.
And, you know, we could even dig deeper.
That's how committed they are to something more than a policy,
because it's really not about any particular policy.
It's about an idea and a vision.
Policies are only steps in service of a vision.
And it's very clear that there is a vision.
Now, whether or not that vision is a feeling or a plan, that's a conversation.
But I do think when I hear Chris Murphy, Senator from Connecticut, say the following,
we get some glimpse into that vision.
Watch.
Well, I mean, Chris, that's been a failed play for 20 years.
So you are right that that has been the democratic strategy for 30 years maybe.
And it has failed to deliver for the people we care about most, the undocumented Americans that are in this country.
Okay, that's the people we care about most.
The undocumented Americans.
By the way, there's no such thing as an undocumented American.
That's a new twist of phrase.
That's designed to make you think there's no difference between you and an illegal immigrant,
except for the filing of some overly burdensome paperwork, an undocumented American.
But that's who we, that's who matters most, says Chris Murphy.
Yep. It's the state of the union moment when Trump was like, hey, stand up if you agree that the job of the government is protect citizens over illegal immigrants and all the Democrats sat.
That was the viral moment.
And then here's a senator who was, by the way, boycotting the state of the union that night.
was out at some crazy rally outside,
saying it even louder and more clearly,
the people that we care about the most
are undocumented Americans.
I have a running joke with a friend of mine
that Democrats, most treasured Americans
are illegal immigrants.
Like the very best Americans, they believe,
are illegal immigrants.
And like, it's only somewhat tongue-in-cheek,
and then here's a U.S. Senator saying it out loud.
And that brings us to Chicago and Sheridan Gorman.
I did a pretty intense monologue on my radio show yesterday.
The clip of it, by the way, is on Fox News YouTube right now.
People can find it where I had to sort of control my rage talking about this story.
And I feel like you listed off Lake and Riley.
We could talk about Molly Tibitz.
We could talk about Rachel Morin.
I mean, Jocelyn Nunn-Gray, Stephanie Minter.
There is this long and growing list and all these, you know, angel families that the media generally ignores because they're inconvenient.
This one has bothered me most viscerally, I think.
And I was trying to figure out why.
And then I realized not to make it all about me,
because it's not at all about me.
But I remember what it was like to be an 18-year-old kid from the New York area,
like Sheridan was, picking up and moving my life to Chicago,
and living the life of a college freshman, like a few minutes from where she was murdered.
I lived after college blocks from where that campus is, Loyola.
So it hit home hard for me, seeing the photos of this girl from Westchester County in New York
and the details of this case where her accused killer, who by the way couldn't appear in court
for his first court appearance because he's being treated presumably on taxpayer dime
in a hospital for tuberculosis,
which I don't think he contracted in the last few days.
He was out there walking around with TB committing murders,
but now he can't show up to court
because we're paying for his health care that he's getting,
having just stolen the life of this girl, allegedly.
This guy crossed the border illegally,
knowingly, willfully in 2023.
Weeks after one of the many times,
Alejandro Mayorkas, then the DHS secretary,
said under oath that the border was secure.
He walked across that not secure border.
he was not vetted, obviously, by the Biden administration, and he was proactively released.
Within days of him breaking that law and being released, he was already in Chicago.
We know that because he was arrested in Chicago within days of crossing the border illegally.
And I just pause there because think about the arrogance and the sense of impunity
to come illegally to a country and have so little respect for the rule of
law and so little fear that there's any consequence or anything that you commit a new crime
within days of entering that country illegally. He did it. And because it's Chicago, they immediately
cut him loose because they have another one of these Soros-style prosecutors. They're not going to
keep him. They're not going to cooperate with the feds to deport him because they have a sanctuary
law. In fact, it was debated last year. There were a few aldermen saying, we shouldn't have this same
policy anymore. The mayor, Brandon Johnson, fought it hard and they kept their sanctuary policy
exactly as is. The vote was 39 to 11, total blowout. That's the representatives of Chicago.
This is what they want. And so because that guy was protected by soft on crime prosecutors and
protected by sanctuary policies, he's been walking free for the last couple of years, God knows
what he's been up to. And then allegedly, he shot this girl to death in what seems to be
be a thrill kill. And it's like the open border policy, the soft on crime policies, the sanctuary
policies combined led to this crime, to this murder. And the point that I made in my monologue,
will, I know it's a little bit provocative, but I think it is true. People will say there's all
these cliches around it, wrong place, wrong time, which I think is nonsense. The Chicago Tribune
called this guy a Rogers Parkman, you know, shades of Maryland dad. But the other thing you've heard is,
well, the system failed, Sheridan Gorman.
And my point is, no, it didn't.
The system did not fail her.
The system caused the death.
The system worked as designed.
This is the system under Democrats.
And I know that sounds very partisan and very judgmental.
And people do the blood on the hands, all the thing in politics and that's too much.
I think it's overused.
But they created a system at the federal level, at the state level, and in the city of Chicago,
Democrats, as the architects at each step of that, the system that they wanted and created led to her murder.
The system didn't fail her.
The system caused the death.
So here, let me just, I've been curious about your perspective on this.
I told the guys when I was planning the show this morning.
So I think it's going to come off as provocative to the point that you just made.
But I see, before I went on spring break, guy, here's what I was talking about and where we were.
We were on the tail end of legal immigrants committing horrific murders in Austin.
And remind me where, you know, I need my memory refreshed.
There was three of them in a row.
Yeah, there was Michigan.
There was synagogue attack.
There was Austin, Texas.
There was the attempted bombing in New York City.
Yeah, and old men in Virginia.
That's right.
And, okay, so it's four. Four in like a week, right?
Yep. Maybe a week and a half.
And I don't see these two issues is actually separate.
I don't see the illegal immigration conversation and their distinctions without a gigantic difference to me.
And it's whether or not someone is legal or illegal.
It is a system that is designed to only allow people to come into this country who have passed certain standards.
those standards include requirement of assimilation, you know, some proof of devotion to this new project to which you're signing up.
I think there's plenty of models across the world, Turkey, many other countries with much stricter legal immigration policies.
And it's really led to, oh yeah, you're right. Yeah, most other countries.
A conversation which, by the way, Congressman Andy Ogles of Tennessee is pushing forward, but about like, listen,
we need to start talking about denaturalization.
We need to talk about taking away this legal status from people who have proven to be not invested in the American project, not good Americans, and at worst, you know, murderers, terrorists.
And even pushing that provocatively one step further, it's like, and we can tie it into the conversation about the Democrat vision here, it's, it is diluting, watering down, and fundamentally changing what we know of it means to be an American.
American, okay? What it means to be American. And I don't care really. I don't care what race you are. I do care what culture you are because your culture suggests your ability to become an American. And I think that both of these things have to be tied together where we get much more strict. And by the way, I'm pessimistic guy. If this is the outrage that we incur in deporting illegal immigrants, really honestly, violent criminal illegal immigrants, but maybe even some who aren't violent criminals, illegal immigrants. How are we going to have a conversation?
that I think we should be having about also denaturalizing legal immigrants who don't fit in America?
It's not going to happen.
The Democrats are fully committed to preventing the deportation of criminal, illegal immigrants.
The idea that they're going to be open to any denaturalization conversations, I think is a fantasy.
I mean, I do think maybe one place to start.
So the old Dominion terrorist.
And by the way, four jihadist attacks on the homeland
while the Homeland Security Department
shut down by Democrats,
and they did not bat an eye about their shutdown.
Not at all.
They voted that the day that there was a synagogue attacked
by a jihadist in Michigan,
both senators from Michigan,
that day voted to keep the shutdown going
and they're blaming it on Trump, right?
So this is, if they're not going to be moved
by four jihadists,
attacks on the homeland while they've shut down the homeland security agency for political reasons,
I don't know what is going to move them. And so, I think in Virginia, the old Dominion shooter,
I mean, I mean, I can go off on this one too. That guy was a naturalized citizen. He was then
arrested by the FBI for trying to join ISIS. He was trying to send money to ISIS, trying to join
ISIS trying to buy a gun to commit a terrorist act during Ramadan. This was, what was it,
2016 or so. Convicted, a convicted ISIS terrorist. And the judge didn't even consider the maximum
sentence, sentenced him to about half the maximum sentence, and they released him years short of even
the short sentence that he got. And then they put him right back out on the street, a convicted
terrorist. He applied to Old Dominion and under a Virginia law signed by former Governor Ralph
Northam, the blackface guy, Democrat. Old Dominion and state colleges in Virginia are not allowed
to ask about criminal record at all when considering an application to their school because of
equity concerns and justice. And so the school had no idea that they were admitting into their
community a convicted ISIS terrorist who then bought a gun illegally from a guy that Democrats had
not prosecuted for illegal gun sales in the recent past,
and committed the exact jihadist attack that he said he wanted to do back in 26,
and he finished the job in 2026, having the system done its work on him,
and this is what we got.
And I made the humble suggestion on the Big Weekend Show right after this happened.
Could we at least, I know it's bare bones.
This should not be hard, but it is.
Could we at least say, if you are a naturalized citizen,
and you're convicted of terrorism offenses.
We denaturalize you and send you home.
Can we do that?
And I'm not sure there's been a bill introduced
even by the Republicans on that.
And I wonder how many knows we would get
from Democrats on that.
Like that seems like a pretty basic thing to do.
Like it's cynical will, but there's a news hook.
We've got a dead ROTC American hero instructor
at Old Dominion University who gave his life to the country,
one of our actual finest, not, you know, not Chris Murphy's definition of the finest American.
A real American hero is dead because of this jihadist terrorist.
What are we doing, not having a bill that comes up within a week that says,
hello, if you're a naturalized citizen or in the country as a non-citizen, either one,
and you're convicted of terrorism, you are automatically denaturalized and deported as soon as your prison sentence is over.
I think 98% of Americans, 98, 99% of Americans would be in support of that.
But I think you're right.
I don't know if you get a single Democrat vote.
I don't think you get a single.
And then much less what I want, which is a much more rigorous process that if you cannot pass, you don't get to maintain your citizenship.
I mean, there's the door.
There's like controlling the door.
But then, like, I think there's a trial period after you're through the door of, like, have you assimilated?
You've got X amount of years to show certain characteristics of assimilation and love and devotion and understanding of America.
I mean, I know it's a pipe dream.
There's no chance.
Will, you have.
I don't know if we survive without this.
You have multiple United States senators who celebrated the release from prison of Kilmar-Abrego-Garcia, a gang members.
human trafficker, child pornography possessing, wife beating illegal immigrant. That guy was
released back to Maryland to his home, the Maryland man, and you had multiple members of the United
States Senate, one of whom went to visit him in El Salvador, cheering. You think that political party
is going to even entertain anything that you just talked about? They celebrate illegal immigrants,
including criminals. I mean, I mean, we sound like the crazy one.
will describing what they do. And this is part of the problem. I've spoken to Republican pollsters
and ad makers, and they talked about this during the 2024 cycle, some of the positions that the
Democrats have taken are so radical and insane that when Republicans make attack ads about those
things, they poll test poorly. They focus group poorly because people do not believe they can
possibly be true. They assume it is a complicated lie.
simply telling the truth because that is how demented the Democrats have gotten on this stuff.
So Republicans are left having to scale back their own accurate attacks because they are so potent
that people assume they're made up. And that's, I feel like we sound like crazy people
saying factual information about what's happening in the country. And we just seem like all these
right-wing hacks on Fox doing their thing. And like, we're truthfully saying reality.
And it is so crazy to the ear of normal people that they probably aren't sure that we're the ones telling the truth and assume we've got to be doing some hackery.
That's the, it's almost the genius of what the Democrats are doing that you go so crazy.
There used to be a guy on radio.
There used to be a guy on radio in Oklahoma.
And his tagline was, wake up America.
It's great.
I got to steal that thing.
I got to start using it.
Like, wake up.
Wake up.
we're going to lose this country, like, not have already, if you can't. I don't know.
I try not to be a pessimist. I really do. I try not to be a pessimist. All right, by the way,
that was awesome analysis from start to finish. See, that's what you would have gotten if you
didn't just get six minutes of Guy Benson last week. But let not your heart be troubled.
You're going to get three hours of Guy Benson on Fox News Radio, which is also available to
you at Spotify and Apple. So go check him out. Go check out the Guy Benson show. Guy, good to talk to you,
man, thank you for being here.
Thank you, Will.
See you soon.
Coming up, Fox News Digital investigative reporter,
Azar Namani has a five-part series
deep diving into the Maoist
Marxist behind the left.
Neville Roy Singham on Wilcane Country.
Okay, we'll see you soon.
We do have to run because we've got,
oh, I got to do this really quickly, guys.
You just sent this to me.
This is nice.
In radio, you call it a P.
right? We call it a member of the Wallycia. Big Jep, OKC. By the way, Will it's my birthday today
celebrating with Will Kane Country. Woohoo. Happy birthday, Big Jep. Yeah, happy birthday. We love
having you here every week. There's Osra and Amani. Bring her back up. She can also say happy birthday
in Big Jep. Sorry, that's usually the computer Patrick's on. So Asra is joining us for this conversation.
Hi there. There's Oz her right there. Yeah. Yeah. How you doing? I'm at home today.
That is it.
Yeah, that's an awesome looking.
I don't know what that is.
Is that an attic?
Is that a beautiful, big windows behind you?
Yeah, it's a ski.
The only standing ski chalet home, I think, in the D.C. area, literally founded on Craigslist.
Yeah, it is a ski chalet.
I found it on Craigslist.
Yeah.
When you could actually find legal stuff on Craigslist, yeah.
And raised my son here.
This is my
My safe haven
From the troubles that plague you will
Really?
Yeah
Never Roy Singham can't get you there in the ski chalet
Well I hope
I hope not you know I live in Fairfax County Virginia
It is the hub of a lot of trouble
Of all kinds from the far left to the Islamist
And so, yeah, I made sure that I didn't have a house with a sidewalk out front.
Okay.
Azra Mani is an investigative reporter with Fox News Digital.
And in the last two days, she's begun uploading, posting to FoxNews.com, a series.
We, I believe I just got to text, Aja.
We're going to have you for the next couple of days to talk with us.
And we're going to do this sort of an installment, the same way you are doing this at FoxNews.com.
have five installments you are doing on this investigation. You have already published two. And the
investigation is into a figure that you and I have talked about on this program that you have
written about in the past. Now, just to bring the audience up to speed, Osra and I have had
conversations both here and on television about the paid funding of organized protesters,
regardless of the cause, whether or not it is free Palestine, whether or not it's in support of
Iran and antagonism to the United States in this most current war, whether or not it's about Cuba, whether or not it's about ICE in Minnesota.
The same groups show up behind the seemingly spontaneous protests on the streets of America.
And these groups are well funded, well organized.
And one of the common figures that you see behind these groups is an American who lives, I believe, Osra, in Hong Kong, who is an avowed Marxist.
More importantly in Shanghai.
Okay.
Yeah.
More importantly, true.
Yes.
A Maoist, a Marxist named Neville Roy Singham.
And now you are doing a several-part series investigating Neville Roy Singham.
So let's start with sharing with the audience what you've already published.
Well, Neville Roy Singham is this tycoon who is an example of what America provides.
His father was an immigrant, his mother was an immigrant to the United States.
He was born in Massachusetts.
He built a little empire in Chicago called ThoughtWorks, sold it for $700 million plus dollars
in 2017.
And what I've done in this series in the beginning that we first published is document how
it is that he funneled about $278 million into a hub.
of nonprofits that then kept delivering money through other nonprofits and into the world.
So what we've established, Will, is that Neville Roy Shingham from Shanghai has created this
machine in the United States that is now one of the world's biggest exporters of pro-China,
anti-U.S., communist propaganda into the world.
Hey, Azra, have you so far, and we'll talk about this over a series of days, is he particularly focused on America?
So when you're exporting this pro-China Marxism, is it also showing up in Europe?
Or is it exclusively focused on affecting Americans?
It is primarily focused on dismantling America's power in the world, but it is very much focused on becoming a,
threat to other economies really is a way to look at it, like the European economy, even the
economy in Africa and in Latin America. What I definitely established is that
Never Boy Shingham has funded this hub of organizations about 60-some in the United States that then
feed into a network of about 2,000 organizations around the world. And why those organizations are
important is because they are then battlefronts for China in its economic and trade war with
the United States. And so what are some of those countries? Venezuela, Brazil, even Greenland,
and go to South Africa, go into Europe in order to make Europe weaker in order to turn towards
China instead of the United States. So the money and some of
up coming into the United States as it did, starting in 2017, and then going into the world
in order to basically push anti-American pro-China propaganda.
Okay, let's go back to who he is for just a moment. I know he's married to the founder, right?
I have this right. He's married to one of the co-founders of Code Pink, right?
Yeah. So this weekend, Jody Evans became, you know, a celebrity again. She was part of the
convoy that went to Cuba, stayed in these five-star hotels, and they have the flashy fuchsia pink
signs that people are now seeing in the news.
Yeah.
Okay.
You said Neverroy Singham's parents were immigrants.
Where were they immigrants from?
So Archibald Singham is of Sri Lankan heritage, and then his mom is from Jamaica.
And that's where Neville Roy went back to.
Jamaica to have his wedding in 2017 to Jody Evans with the Ben of Ben and Jerry's also as one of
the wedding guests. Okay. And now tell me more about this company that he sold for $700 million.
I had not heard of it. So what did it do? Yeah, it's just so fascinating because exactly,
it's not a household name, but what this company did is programming. I mean, some people
actually attributed to some of the immigration problems that we've had regarding H-1B visas and
other issues like that. But he created this global technology company. He ended up in partnership
in China with some of the controversies that China has had regarding technology firms.
And that's when he moved to Shanghai and settled there and then sold the,
saltworks in 2017 to a private equity firm.
What I'm trying to investigate, Will, is who were the investors in this firm?
You know, there's a lot of questions being raised about whether this was a operation in which
investors from China were actually able to put money into his pockets in order to then promote
China into the world.
So this I do not have established.
The equity firm does not reveal its investors.
and but it made him a gazillionaire, you know, overnight.
And that is then what he turned into this hub of nonprofits with very familiar names to you now,
People's Forum, Breakthrough Media, Tri-Continental, Code Pink, and a couple others.
And then that hub of organizations started feeding money into more.
organizations that then led to this layered network that he created over the almost a decade now.
I hope everyone listening, if this is the first time they're hearing of this conversation,
they can go back.
Ozra and I've probably had at least two or three other deep dive conversations on these
organizations, the People's Forum, Code Pink, many others.
He is the tie.
Is it fair to say, Osir, do you think, is he the singular tie?
You know, because whenever I do this story on the Fox News Channel or with you, people often bring up George Soros to me, like on social media and other places.
Because people have become familiar with George Soros's philanthropy and activism on the left.
They're not as familiar with Neville Roy Singham.
They're beginning to learn who he is.
But is it fair the way I'd like take all the organizations you and I,
I have talked about in the past. Is Soros also involved in those? Or is this really a Neville Roy
Singham project, and he's the tie that binds these organizations? Yeah, there's a brave
dissident from China named Shee Van Fleet, and she survived the Cultural Revolution,
and she describes Neville Roy Singham as the George Soros of China. So George Soros is far left,
as people know, never really singham is even further left than George Soros.
Neverway Singham has self-avowed allegiance to the Chinese Communist Party.
She, you know, she has talked about how also the rhetoric that he repeats is that of Mao.
And I did a large language model analysis of Singham's own.
speeches that I found a big document that I'm going to talk to you about, hopefully later on this
week, in which, you know, he really repeats the Chinese talking points about World War II.
He rewrites history.
So if there's any history buffs out there, stay tuned this week because we're going to dive into
that, I hope.
Yeah.
Well, that's actually a question I was going to ask you.
So you've seen some of his own words, and that's coming in the series this week.
You have, because I was curious when you say self-avowed Marxist, math.
You have that in his own words.
Yeah.
And I think, you know, we can plan to play a video that I found.
I unearthed it from a conference that he organized in Shanghai in the fall.
And it was an innocuously named the Global South Academic Forum.
But there were ideologues of this Marxist-Maoist continuum.
he partnered with a university in China called East Normal China University.
They have kind of funny names for the universities.
And that university has its own Marxist Studies school,
in case you want to go to China at will and learn a little Marxism,
take a semester off.
And sure enough, of course, like any university in China,
it is run and administered by
the Ministry of Education, which is run by the Chinese Communist Party.
There's a clip in which he says hello, comrades,
and then later stands at attention to the song that's called International,
and it is the communist theme song of this last century.
It was formerly the Soviet national anthem.
And in the clips that I've watched and that we'll share,
He says that, you know, they showed work to realize this new world order that the president of China and the Chinese Communist Party are putting forward into the world.
I don't know what you would call that.
Yeah.
I'm interested in what you said about looking into his investors and who helped create, essentially who helped create Neville Roycingham.
Do you know when his relationship with China began?
Like, can you date that back yet?
I know you're looking into that because you're curious, not just if it began in 2017,
but did it begin when the company itself was founded, which I don't know what year that was.
But how far back do we know his relationship with China?
So he started his company in the early 1990s in Chicago, and by 2017, you know, his relationship was well as,
with China. So that at least gives us, you know, a period. Now, his dad, Archibald Singham,
was a Marxist himself. He was a teacher of Marxism. He was a professor, and he was an advocate of
these ideas of Marxism, Leninism, Maoism. That's what that Warwick Singham grew up in.
How did we let him become an American? Wait, wait, let me get this straight. I can tie this into my
conversation with Guy. So we allowed this immigrant who was an avowed Marxist. And by the way,
that is subject for grounds for denaturalization already.
Like that in our current laws, if you are in any way a Marxist or a communist, that is subject for denatualization.
And yet, Neverroy Singham's dad comes on into America from Sri Lanka.
Yeah.
And what happens?
I mean, I was listening really carefully to what your conversation was about because, you know, this, he's an American citizen standing in China, Neverson Singh.
advocating the Chinese Communist Party strategy for the world.
So I just wonder what that we would call that.
You know, I was about to ask you just, even as an adjective, do we say that he has, you know,
vowed allegiance to the Chinese Communist Party?
We can definitely say he has allied himself with the Chinese Communist Party, but there he
stands.
So there's a lot of curious questions that I've got about these loyalty.
you know, laws that we have, these laws that relate to citizenship and China obviously is a business
partner with the United States on many fronts, but now, as you know, his network is allied
with the Communist Party of Cuba, and that has been declared an enemy of the United States.
So there's a lot of laws that they're pushing up against, that I know also one of the
the points that we've established is that we've got officials now at Justice Department,
Treasury Department, and State Department, all investigating this network.
Let's take a quick break, but continue this conversation with Fox News Digital's,
Azra and Amani on Wilkine Country.
In communities across Canada, hourly Amazon employees earn an average of over $24.50 an hour.
employees also have the opportunity to grow their skills and their paycheck by enrolling in free skills training programs for in-demand fields like software development and information technology.
Learn more at aboutamazon.ca. Welcome back to Will Kane Country. We're still hanging out with Fox News Digital investigative reporter, Osir Namani.
Well, I'm excited that you and I are going to be talking over the next couple of days and continuing this conversation.
You're doing an incredible deep dive into this guy.
I want to use my platforms, both of them as much as possible, to put as much energy behind the work that you're doing and then share with everyone what exactly who this guy is and the influence he has on America.
Because he and of himself is important.
But he's also a symbol of a larger conversation, which you're alluding to about who we invite in to be Americans.
What does it take to no longer be an American?
You know, you published parts one and two.
Before we go, Asri, like, what would you suggest to the audience you'll find out in parts one and two about Neville Roy Shingham?
You will know where every dollar went from Neville Roy Singham's treasure chest to these nonprofits.
What you will also discover is his own words.
We'll talk more about it.
but he published this 170-plus-page research paper about World War II,
and people will be shocked to read what he says about the American service members who died there.
That's going to be shocking.
And the last thing that I believe will happen, which is why your work is so important, Will,
is that you will inoculate yourself to the tactics of,
this campaign that many people call cognitive warfare for the hearts and minds of Americans.
We're all, you know, potential targets of the messaging, propaganda and information operations
that Nubber Wai-Singham's network has unleashed on the world.
And the best thing that we can do for our own brains and for them the nation is to
inoculate yourself with a shield, a sort of, you know, Israel's,
talks about the Iron Dome, and I think a lot of times we need that around our brains,
but insight gives us an Iron Dome around our brains against this cognitive warfare.
And I think that's one of the greatest benefits that readers will have when they dive into the series.
That's the thing. There is a cognitive warfare going on. We might as well learn its impact on us
and the players behind it. That's the work. Ajana Amati's done at the Wall Street Journal.
She's now doing it at Fox News Digital. You can go over there right now and check out parts one and two.
should be with us to talk about parts three, four, and five. We really appreciate, Azra.
Please, we'd love to have you on the TV show as well, Azra. We'd love to really help this message get out.
Thanks for your time today, Osra. Thank you.
All right, there she goes, Osir Namani, Fox News, investigative journalist.
I want to check in with you guys here. I've got a couple different messages.
Kimberly Cole says on YouTube, I'm also in Virginia. The sheriffs are elected law enforcement officers.
they do not report to the mayor or governor.
That sheriff in Fairfax County can choose to work with ICE but refuses.
Call her out.
Russell Smith says undocumented Americans, oxymoron.
Yeah, exactly.
That is an oxymoron.
There's no such thing.
Let's head over to Facebook.
Zachariah Rossi says this is all due to the fact that the last administration did
absolutely nothing for the American people.
The only thing I would take issue with Zachariah is it's all due.
It is in large part due to the last administration, but we, in my opinion, have a problem.
The illegal immigration problem is gigantic.
And we've shown the charts of what happened under the Biden administration.
And we will pay the price.
And here's the truth.
We will pay the price for those four years for decades.
Generations.
Generations, we will pay the price.
However, that is not the end of the story.
The story is we've had multiple administrations, both parties, way too open to refugee.
to legal immigration and tolerant of illegal immigration.
And no matter how radical it sounds like to the point of guys, what guy was saying,
it's not radical to say that a terrorist should be denaturalized and not be American.
I don't think it's radical to go as far as I want.
Even I agree.
I don't know, some kind of loyalty test.
I believe that's the moderate position.
A loyalty test?
What would that look like?
maybe I could be the czar of loyalty
and you have to sit down in front of Will
and I ask you questions like
I ask you questions like
God that would be so good
Michael Phelps is
snowboarding
against Elizabeth Eileen Gou
who do you root for
right
and if you don't say Michael Phelps
and I'm very aware that neither of them snowboard
Eileen might in her free time
Michael might in his free time
If you don't say Michael Phelps, automatic denaturalization.
She's a freestyle skier.
You're done.
Oh, I had no idea.
Get out of here.
I don't follow that.
Oh, look at Daisy May Fox over on Facebook.
It says the biggest problem are white men.
Sorry, but true.
It is true.
I had to give me that one.
I had to give me that one.
We did put this show together.
All three of us are the problem.
That's a very big of shit.
Can you believe that Joe Biden actually
said that while this was happening
while this was happening
the biggest problem are white men
it sucks but true
you know i have so much i want to say
daisy but i'm not going to say it i'm just
just going to say
cute dog daisy
in your in your profile
pick
we'll do an after hour show where you could say that
Debbie
shockler mcnight says
CNN is the new national
inquirer
Let's go back to that for just a moment.
Okay, where is my picture of Jake Tapper?
I think this is my favorite one.
It's actually pretty visually stimulating.
There's a lot going on.
A lot of Romney.
What's up with Romney?
Is that his office?
You know, I'm going to profess a little bit of ignorance.
Was this actually his TV show?
Like, this is what they're doing on the TV shows now, right?
If I tune in today, will I see this on Tapper and Cooper?
I want to check.
I don't really.
I don't know if they kept it going, but I know this is what it was last week for at least a day.
Okay, okay.
Our road, did you, I think you grabbed this, Patrick, somewhere.
Maybe I don't have it.
Road M.N. who covers ratings.
Oh, yeah, here it is.
He said, I wonder we're seeing it got the massive desk microphone idea from.
Dylan Byers tries to deflect to Edward R. Murrow, but we all know Will Kane's.
show.
Boom.
That was the first show, too, by the way, that picture.
Yeah, that's day one.
Yeah.
That's day one of the Will Cain show.
Right there.
Do I look younger one year ago?
No, stop.
Don't even break here.
You're Tanner now.
Yeah.
I am Tanner.
I haven't even gotten a hold of that stuff that doctor.
That is not a doctor.
That longevity guy told us about yesterday.
Yeah.
There's a guy at my gym.
There's a guy at my gym that takes,
that stuff. I said something to him this morning.
Really? I said, hey, Patrick.
His name's Patrick. Yeah, I was like, hey,
is that, I heard you talk, because I heard him talking about it one time.
I heard him talking about taking this shot that makes you tan.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. And he has gotten a lot tanner, a lot tanner. And I said,
are you doing that tanning peptide, melon tan or whatever? And he's like, dude, I double-dosed
it. He's like, I've lost my white privilege.
You have to identify as something else.
He doubled-dosed it.
He said it takes three months to wear off.
To wear off.
It can't be good for you.
That's kind of interesting.
It cannot be good for you.
I need to do some research.
Is it better than a sunburn?
It's got to be better than a sunburn for you.
So CNN, here's the deal.
Like all this, the bottom line truth is this.
I don't have record ratings at 4 p.m. because of a big microphone.
Joe Rogan is not the number one podcast because of a relaxed environment.
It's that those environments in the microphone speak to something else,
and that something else is authenticity.
Unfortunately, authenticity has been turned into the modern day synergy,
a word that everyone use and very little understand.
It's become business jargon, media jargon.
But authenticity is simply just being real, being true to yourself, to your message, and with your audience.
And that's the only promise that I've ever tried to make.
I won't always get it right.
I will sometimes lose a debate.
But I will always try to be real with my audience.
And that authenticity starts with.
This is what I believe to be true.
Here are the facts.
Here are the news.
And here's what I believe to be true about this information.
In order to try to validate that truth, I will try to bring on people that disagree with me if there's some subjective interpretation of that truth.
But CNN starts everything and has for their entire existence with a lie.
they say they are objective, that they don't have a point of view.
And you can't subject your point of view to any rebuttal.
And thus trust the audience to get to the truth if you pretend to be the Word of God.
If you pretend to be Edward R. Murrow, who was pretending himself back then.
Objectivity is an aspiration, but it's not a status.
So when you tell everybody that you don't have a bias, you don't have a point of view.
You've started with a lie.
And then everything after that is a lie, including the microphone on your desk.
And the image of authenticity is the opposite.
You're just not being real, no matter how many political posters and exposed wardrobe, you put in your shot.
Try being real.
And by this point, it's too far gone.
Like it would take a radical, radical reinvention to get back to something that is real.
I do feel like
And that applies to us
Any human being
If you spend too much time
Not being real
You just aren't real anymore
And you can't get back to it
I truly believe that
It's like you've lost
You've lost who you are
There's no there's no getting back
To that real
Go ahead Dan
I wonder I bet
I wonder if Tapper actually feels that way
About like the new sets
He's like this is just
Absolutely disingenuous
Like what are we doing here
Or do you think he just goes along with it
Because like you said
You know you just got to fake it
until you think that you are.
I mean, it's the proverbial lipstick on a pig,
and they've got to even understand
it's lipstick on a pig.
You're not going to stylistically change.
What's up fellow kids?
That's what they're doing.
Yeah.
That's exactly what it is.
Like, what do you...
You're not fooling us there, bud.
I'm excited that we're going to have Azra Nomani here
the next couple of days to talk about this series.
It's never always saying.
I think it's really, really, really, really fascinating.
fascinating. All right. Patrick, you have two other stories we want to hit before we go today. One is Ron DeSantis. Ron DeSantis is being asked about another run in 2028 from the New York Post. DeSantis doesn't rule out 2028 presidential run. Quote, we'll see. DeSantis and Patrick is a Floridian. So I know that you feel this way. I think most people do. He's a phenomenal governor.
He's a phenomenal government.
Unfortunately, I don't think DeSantis is a phenomenal candidate.
That doesn't mean he wouldn't be a phenomenal president.
He's just not a phenomenal candidate.
And I don't know that any lessons learned from prior runs
wouldn't necessarily be any different in 2028.
Yeah, I think if he just stays himself and who he is,
he'll be a much better candidate.
I feel like there was like the transition.
Like between I have to be a different person.
I have to try to one up Trump maybe or whomever I'm going up against.
I have to be different.
If he just leans into who he is, I think he would be way better of a candidate.
Do you think what Trump said about it?
Well, there's also the moment.
There's the moment.
Often the man meets the moment.
And the country's attitude at a given time can reward a different type of person,
depending on who that person is, their personality.
You know, famously, what was it?
Was it, was it, Warren G. Harding?
Like his, his campaign was a return to normalcy?
Do you, it wasn't Hoover.
It may have been Hoover.
I can't remember.
Well, Coolidge.
Wow.
It was pretty quiet.
Yeah, Harding.
Okay.
I had a right.
It was Harding.
A return to normalcy.
You know, the country was in a place where it's like, okay, boring and normal was what, what we wanted.
And you never know what the country will want at any given time.
and what kind of personality it will respond to.
And maybe that will change the calculus for the candidate that is Ron DeSantis.
And, you know, I don't know.
Maybe that moment will be for Marco Rubio.
Maybe that moment will be for J.D. Vance.
Don't you think what Trump said about DeSantis kind of hurts him
after being after the guy after Trump?
I mean, because they were kind of going at it pretty good during that campaign?
No, because everybody else does.
No. You don't think that's too far away?
Because it would be Rubio.
That's true.
It would be all of them.
Yeah, it would be all of them.
You're right.
You're right.
But I feel like he really went after DeSantis because he was worried about DeSantis.
Well, he really went after Marco, too.
That's true.
In 16.
Yeah.
Really went after Marco.
Went after Ted Cruz.
I mean, Trump forgives and forgets.
Right.
And I think the country forgets.
Yeah, Trump follows.
We move very, very fast.
Short attention span.
The other story is just impossible.
In fact, I didn't really read into this story, Patrick, so you're going to have to have the details, but here is the headline, okay?
Quadruple amputee, aka no arms, no legs.
Quadruple amputee pro-cornhole player.
Let's just stop there.
Quadruple amputee pro-cornhole player.
So he is a pro-cornhole with player with no arms and no legs.
He gets paid to throw bean bags.
I think you just stop right there.
Yeah.
I think you just stop right there in process.
We've got to process that.
He's really good at throwing beanbags into a hole with no arms.
But I think you've got to go one step back.
People don't realize there's pro-cornhole.
Let's start there.
I think they do.
I've seen it on the Ocho.
Yeah, that's true.
Just watch ESPN2 on Memorial Day.
You're going to see it.
It's like darts.
I love watching darts now, by the way.
Is it 4th of July or Memorial Day?
I can't remember what it is.
It's all of them.
You guys ever think, like, in Cornhole, you always think about your steps and, like, which leg you're launching off of in front?
Like, I'm always like – it should be, like, throwing a ball, right?
Like, your opposite leg, if you're throwing right-handed in Cornhole, shouldn't your left foot be the advancing foot?
You wouldn't want the same side your right foot, right arm.
You'd want left foot right arm, right?
To off balance the –
See, we're all thinking of it.
Your weight, yeah, yeah.
I can't tell which one I'd do.
I don't know.
The point is, like in every sport, your base is your legs.
This guy doesn't have any legs.
Like, it's all about your legs and your hips and your core.
I mean, listen to Tom Brady talk about throwing a football.
This guy doesn't have any of that.
And he's a pro.
And we hadn't even gotten to the arms part, which is kind of key in tossing a beanbag.
quadruple amputee pro cornhole player
allegedly shot and killed acquaintance during argument
we'll stop there
okay
now he's used a gun
to shoot and kill his acquaintance
now Patrick I saw a video of this guy
I think it was this guy right
we have it on the internet
showing how he he you have the video
I'm a little worried about playing
with you
Oh, yeah, I don't know if YouTube allows gun videos.
Yeah.
Anyway, go look it up on X.
Well, he takes a handgun and he puts the magazine in, which he's got little, he's got, he's not cut off.
He has something.
It's not just at the shoulders, right?
And he can put the magazine in.
I don't know how he jacks went into the chamber.
He's kind of covering that up in the video, so you can't really see how he does it, but he does it.
and then he holds it, and he is capable of pulling the trigger with what he's got.
And so, okay, all right, he shoots and kills somebody.
Then the last part of the headline, then drove off with the body.
So then he drives a car as well.
Impressive.
And isn't there a detail in here that he did the shooting while driving?
I believe so.
Is that correct?
That's what I read.
That's what I read.
He was driving and shot the person.
And so I'm very confused how all this worked at the same time, but that's what I read.
Very.
Is this inappropriate to say?
Very impressive.
Like, not impressive, obviously.
Right, we don't condone.
Terrible act.
But he pulled off a series of things in one headline that seemed not just improbable, but perhaps impossible.
Being a pro-cornhole player, driving a car, and shooting a gun.
All.
has a quadruple amputee.
Allegedly.
I mean, allegedly.
Thank you.
Yes.
Not the quadruple amputee part and not the pro-cornhole player part, but the rest, allegedly.
Right.
That's a good point.
Real quick.
Something.
I don't know if you mind.
Chuck Norris passed away this weekend, and I have a clip.
Oh, yes.
I'm glad you brought this up.
And I just think it's hilarious.
And he's very well known for his martial arts and Walker, Texas Ranger.
And Conan O'Brien used to have a lot of fun playing Walker, Texas Ranger clips.
And this is one of the most popular ones.
Well, folks, there is one clip from Walker, Texas Ranger that we've been holding back on.
In fact, this is true, we've been afraid to show it.
But it's spring cleaning,
and I want to test just how good a crowd this is.
So here it is.
The one Walker clip we've never shown,
once you see it, you'll understand why.
And how are you doing, little partner?
Fine.
And it's a little visitor now.
Adoyoli's how you say it in Cherokee.
Oh, well, pardon my French, but I'll be damned.
Walker told me I had AIDS
What
That's a young
Haley Joe Osmond
Wilford Brimley
Was that Wilford Brimley?
Yeah
In that clip
Age 42
Donies were a different time
I beat us
It's very interesting
Walker told me I have AIDS
Like
But it was out of nowhere
It's a little bit like Donald Sterling
My favorite clips, Donald Sterling and V. Stiviano, you know, big Magic Johnson.
What is he ever done? Anderson Cooper replies, well, he's a successful businessman.
He's got AIDS.
Sterling interrupts.
Have you guys seen that clip?
It's my favorite clip.
Remember the whole situation?
Donald Sterling was taped secretly by his mistress, V. Stiviano, and he is saying racist things about all the guys.
She's his mistress, right?
And she's having also affairs with all these other guys like Magic Johnson.
And a lot of them are black.
And he's going on and on being racist about this, right?
And then he gets the L.A. Clippers basically taken away from him.
At this point, then two of the best interviews in television history take place.
V. Steviano with Barbara Walters.
And it's my number one.
It's my favorite interview ever done, period.
He's my silly rabbit.
Is that what he called you?
No.
So he's my right-hand man.
I'm his right-hand man-woman.
Go look it up.
It's amazing.
But it's separately, Donald Sterling had to sit down with Anderson Cooper.
And Anderson, he says that.
Big Magic Johnson.
What he's ever, what has he ever done, Sterling?
To which Anderson Cooper goes, well, I mean, he's successful businessman.
He's created.
And then Sterling blurs out, he's got AIDS.
And then, and then it's not over.
Then Cooper goes, well, I don't.
think he's been diagnosed with full-blown AIDS. I think he has HIV. Like, I don't know that
you needed to clarify that. The interview is off the rails. The plane has crashed into the
mountain, Anderson. I'm not sure the audience needs to be a prize of the differences between
HIV and AIDS at this point. That whole time was so weird when that was happening.
The whole situation. The clip I saw of Norris that I liked, Patrick, and it made me think about
this. Talk about this real quick before we go. It was
from the 70s, and it was Chuck Norris fighting Bruce Lee.
And I think it's a Bruce Lee movie, so ultimately Bruce Lee wins the fight, right?
But in the clip from the movie, Chuck Norris is so hairy, his body, right?
One of the things is Bruce Lee grabs his chest hair and like rips off a chunk.
But it wasn't just his chest hair.
Chuck Norris had hair like on his back, on his shoulders, you know, high shoulder,
center of the back.
And I was just watching that clip going,
you would never see that today.
You would never see an action star
that hairy.
They would wax it.
They'd shave it. They'd laser it.
Like back hair, whether or not chest hair
makes a comeback, we're far,
far away from back hair
being like, yeah, cool.
Do the kung fu shirtless with back hair.
Yeah, back when men were men.
It's a real shame.
Yeah, we have low tea now, so we don't grow.
back hair.
I got a little.
Can't really reach it.
Yes, rest in peace.
Chuck Norris.
Okay, but we came full circle.
All right, that's going to do it for us today here on Will King.
What?
We came full circle.
So we started with Anderson Cooper and CNN, and we ended up talking about Anderson Cooper's
interview with Sterling.
Look at that.
That is how you create unintentionally a power hour.
Take notes, CNN.
Not the microphone.
It's bringing it all together.
That's going to do it for us today.
On Will Kane Country.
We'll be back again tomorrow.
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