All right, guys, happy Thursday, especially happy Thursday to me, because it's Black History Month, so you guys just have to adore me and love me so much, because I am black, and that's what this month means.
Today on the show, we're gonna be discussing Russell Brand.
What do you guys think?
Are you believing in this redemption arc?
He's saying that he's exploring Christianity.
Is this some bizarre PR move, or is it real?
Plus, we're gonna be talking about E. Jean Carroll.
She's the lady that just won $83 million in a defamation lawsuit against Trump.
You don't have to like Donald Trump, but I gotta ask you, do you like E. Jean Carroll?
Lastly, we'll be talking about Ice Cube, the rapper, and I want to say he is not suicidal.
Because in a video, he is talking about how the record company executives also funded and pushed the creation of gangster rap in the 1980s as a form of weaponized culture.
And I think that might land him in some hot water, because you can't just be talking that much truth.
All that and more today coming up on Candace Owens.
Russell Brand, Russell Brand.
Very interesting celebrity.
If you guys are not familiar with Russell Brand, then that means you didn't see Forgetting Sarah Marshall.
That was an absolutely great movie.
He's also known because he was very briefly married to Katy Perry.
He's been in tons of other films.
And now he's been in the press a lot because he's moved away from Hollywood and he is just talking about a lot of political issues.
Obviously, he is an Englishman.
And among other things, we know that as he was coming up in Hollywood and as he was growing up, he had a lot of issues.
He talked about the fact that he developed bulimia when he was just 16 years old.
By the time he was 19, he was addicted to not just heroin but other drugs, but his main addiction was heroin.
But he also lists amphetamines, LSD, ecstasy.
And despite having all of these problems, Hollywood still loved him.
They adored him and they protected him because that's what Hollywood is about.
I do have this operating theory that they particularly like you if you are
in addictions, because then they can control you, and then they can just hold on to
stories that they know about you and use it as blackmail.
But I'm not going to go deep into conspiracy land here, because I'd rather just stick with
Russell Brand and this sort of redemption arc that he's been on, because I find it to
be remarkably curious.
So quick story, I actually met Russell Brand years ago, almost like five to six years ago
now.
He reached out to me to come on his podcast, Under the Skin, and at this time, Russell
podcast, Under the Skin.
And at this time, Russell Brand was a committed socialist.
Brand was a committed socialist.
He was in the streets of the UK protesting for every other political cause.
He was in the streets of the U.K.
protesting for every other political cause. I didn't know what to expect sitting down
I didn't know what to expect sitting down with him, but I to six years ago now, they reached out to me to come on his
with him, but I at least knew that despite the fact that he was presenting as a leftist,
he wasn't one, because he was willing to have a conversation with me. And I obviously was
somebody who was being recognized as a black Trump supporter. How dare this woman support
Trump? How dare she be a conservative when she is black?
And we had a remarkable conversation. Honestly, it went on for two hours. I'm going to show
you a very brief segment of it. We're both very energized because this was almost two
hours into the discussion, a socialist sitting down with a Trump supporter capitalist. It
was tons of fun.
Here is just a brief listen.
These are times when the old divides, excuse me, and the old polarities are starting to dissolve.
While we feel like people are becoming more and more opposed to each other, I think we're becoming closer and closer to rejecting the systems that oppress us, not just economically, these are the crumbs.
I'm talking about spiritually, preventing people from realizing their potential.
So I do believe in the power of previously oppressed people, but I think to As an individual, I wouldn't like to continue to revel in my misery.
That's what people want to do.
People do need to progress.
But to deny something as, God, historically scarring... I didn't live through slavery, so why would I be scarred by that?
Well, there is some evidence to suggest that there is a hereditary trauma.
I mean, even psychological.
Sounds like it was written by a leftist professor, probably at Cambridge.
Because, well, the same way that we evolve features, we evolve emotionally, and something as recent as that... That is so ridiculous!
Everybody then has, that everybody feels like, everyone has been a slave at some point!
There was slavery here too!
I know that!
I'm not saying England's great, I know what... So did you feel your slavery pain the other week?
I'm from Essex.
So you can see we're really enjoying each other despite the fact that we disagree.
And one of the things that I walked away from this conversation recognizing was he kept trying to pry.
He kept wanting to talk about, you know, my childhood, my traumas, to understand what could have possibly brought me to where I am in life.
And I walked away thinking that Russell Brand is actually not a person that is a leftist or is a socialist, but rather he is using that because he wants to absolve some guilt that he holds because he was allowed, right, to be really an awful person, a person that was addicted to sex, addicted to drugs, and still hailed as a hero by the media and the press for years.
I sensed that he felt guilty for his success, and he was trying to rinse it off of himself via all of these protests.
But I knew that eventually he was going to come to sense because Russell Brand is incredibly intelligent and there was no way that he was going to keep holding on to these ideas, these leftist principles.
And as it tends to be, at least in my own personal experience, I do find that a lot of these leftists are bad people.
It's a way for them not to acknowledge what's happening on the inside.
I'm not talking about liberals.
I'm talking about leftists.
You know, these radicals who are on the street, pink hair, screaming at you, yelling.
It allows them not to have to engage with themselves and instead to offset all of that externally to say, oh, well, look what's going on over here.
I'm not a bad person.
Don't even look at me.
Isn't it horrible that women have no control over their bodies, what the Supreme Court is doing?
They don't care about those actual causes.
They just want to feel like they're doing good because they are potentially not actually good people.
They don't want to do the real work, the internal work.
And so it's interesting to see Russell Brand come over and recognize that perhaps that former self of him was doing just that.
And what changed?
Well, I think what represented a sea change for him was the one thing that socialists hate.
The concept of family.
Russell Brand got married and he had children and something shifted inside of him.
Take a listen to him talking to Tucker Carlson.
I went into the entertainment industry really with the giddy trajectory that propels a lot of people into those spaces, believing that there might be some fulfillment and certainly there would be excitement.
And when I was a denizen of that world, I was fostered and adored and celebrated and facilitated and lived the kind of lifestyle which I think is kind of common for people in that area.
Single people, in my case drug and alcohol free, but certainly with an appetite for a promiscuous lifestyle.
When I was part of it, I found it empty and unfulfilling, of course, as it would be, as anyone who's had those kind of experiences ultimately realizes.
When I departed it as a result really of various spiritual crises or commercial failures or a combination of those events, I really felt like a coming home to the type of values that I grew up with.
I grew up in a normal blue-collar town, greys, kind of like a place that's like New Jersey, I guess.
A kind of suburban, outside of the city, normal people, good values kind of place.
And what I feel like happened is like, well, since I've had a family, since I've got a young son, I've got a couple of daughters, is I feel like that I was able to deploy the skills learned through working in entertainment as a man in recovery in a new space.
And what simply began with myself and my partners is tell the truth about things you care about I also want to mention here that he's now been sober for 19 years.
And as I said, he's married.
He has, I think, three children now, actually.
And he's talking in that clip about home, and he's talking about family.
And I talk about these topics on my podcast because it's so crucial in really defeating
so much of the evil that we see in society for people to aspire to these sorts of things.
People don't like to hear that sometimes.
Oh, you don't have to have a family to be a good person.
Well, there is a reason why Karl Marx, who you could argue, one of the most successful
philosophers ever, he is the most successful philosopher in terms of having his ideas implemented
in society.
Why he wrote so excitedly against the concept of family, not just the Communist Manifesto,
but all of his other works too.
It became a tenet of the government.
If the government wishes to grow and supersede individuals and supersede families, we need
to make the nuclear family look bad because they knew that what it would produce if you
don't aspire to family, if you don't aspire to children, is a fundamentally selfish individual
and an individual that is willing to get into this almost intimate relationship with the
They don't believe in God.
They're atheists.
They believe in more governance as a solution to everything.
Everything is temporal.
Everything is instantaneous and in the moment.
And so it's interesting that as Russell Brand moves away from his socialist and communist radical-leaning past and moves toward family, he is now also talking about faith.
Listen to what he said about why he has begun wearing a cross and reading the Bible.
The reason I wear a cross is because Christianity, and in particular the figure of Christ, are, it seems to me, inevitably becoming more important as I become more familiar with suffering, purpose, self, and not-self.
I'm reading the Bible a lot more and as I've told you before I'm reading Rick Warren's Purpose Driven Life.
When I grew up Christianity seemed like it was either really irrelevant and old-fashioned and sort of dusty and sort of incensed and sort of... or they tried to modernize it and it seems just like...
Right, okay, we're going to talk about Jesus.
And like both of those routes seem like, well, I don't know if there's anything for me.
And I suppose it takes a certain amount of adulthood and it might be different for all of us.
For me, it seems that it's taken quite a lot.
To recognise that you need, I need, a personal relationship with God.
It occurred to me that if instead of always talking to myself inwardly, I could replace one of those voices with an indwelling God.
It says in Galatians, it is our job to die so that as Christ died on the cross, he might be reborn in us.
Now ladies and gentlemen, the mainstream media, who absolutely adored him when he was deep in his addictions, hates him.
Really think about that.
And I will tell you, I am a big believer that Hollywood was created by the CIA.
I believe that.
I firmly believe that.
You can say that's a conspiracy theory.
When I think about all of the societal ills, when I think about how they artificially Place people at the top of Hollywood who are preaching toxic principles, routinely anti-family principles, now definitively satanic principles.
It just should make you pause and wonder, why is that?
Why is that?
Why do they reject someone like Russell Brand when he's coming up and recognizing that family and faith is turning him into a good person, and yet adore individuals as they're deep in their addictions?
I'm just going to leave you guys with that thought.
And that's all I'm going to say on that topic.
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Okay, now it's time for some Topics Du Jour.
Man, a lot of articles are written about me in my review of Ice Spice's song,
You Think You the Sh** Part.
I didn't expect that review to go so viral.
Most people agreed with my assessment that obviously music has fallen.
I grew up listening to The Temptations.
Lauryn Hill produced one of the greatest albums of all time, The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill.
And now we have this young woman, nothing personal against her, but writing about sh** farts.
That she, you think you the sh** fart, whatever the song is.
It does.
We should probably pause and just wonder what we're doing here.
What's the purpose of this?
How it is that these sorts of individuals are winning awards at all.
You should not be allowed to win an award for writing a song like this or a song that's like WAP, which won many awards, and yet these songs routinely go viral.
And I think, as I said in monologue today, that a lot of this is artificial.
Something about this seems particularly evil that Hollywood decides to say, We are going to make this person really relevant.
I think about this even in terms of Lil Nas X. Suddenly he embraces Satan, and they're like, oh my God, you're amazing.
He's not the most talented individual, so why is he everywhere?
Because he's being artificially pushed.
Well, take a listen to this.
This is Ice Cube.
He's formerly a rapper, and this clip has been making the rounds because he appeared on Bill Maher.
He is deeply respected.
To talk about this intentional pushing of thug culture and what's actually behind it, or rather, who's behind it.
Take a listen.
Let's take rap music.
Let's take it.
Same people who own the labels own the prisons.
So... Literally the same people?
Literally the same people who own the labels own private prisons.
The records that come out are really geared to push people towards their prison industry.
But they didn't make you write those lyrics.
It's not about making somebody write the lyrics.
It's about being there as guardrails to make sure certain songs make it through and certain
songs don't.
This, to me, is somewhat, you know, some social engineering going on here to make sure those prisons stay full.
Do they actually, like, Monday, Tuesday, go to work as a record company executive and Wednesday through Friday go to work at the prisons?
No.
No, no, no.
Of course.
Of course, they're not actually running the labels.
They have financial interests.
They have financial interests.
I mean, what should I say here?
Ice Cube didn't kill himself.
We've been talking about this topic on this show as well, because I showed you guys an old clip of one of these record executives.
His name is Lior Cohen, basically talking about how he knows what he puts out is absolute filth, but he wants to make money.
And profit is the reason behind why he allows these sorts of things to hit the airwaves.
And I do want to push back on Bill Maher saying, well, we didn't tell you to write the music.
Yeah, but you're signing them.
For a record deal.
Why?
That is the question.
You don't have to sign this person.
You know the music doesn't sound good.
You know that when Cardi B comes to you and says, I'm going to write a song about my vagina, you could just be like, no, actually that's filth and we're not going to allow it onto the airwaves.
You are intentionally finding the worst people in black America and you are giving them money so that they can influence another generation of black individuals.
And obviously these kids tend to be in a circumstance where they're growing up in single family homes.
They're looking at these people like idols.
Oh, they have some money in their pocket and they're dancing in front of a Lamborghini.
I want to be like him, as opposed to wanting to be like their father, who is absent from their lives.
And it does create a cycle where they go into the prison system.
So it is curious to hear that they have a vested interest in the security, in the prison systems.
And also I will add this, guys, if you think that all of this is conspiracy
and that the CIA has never been involved in any shenanigans, you need to wake up,
you need to learn about the history of the DEA, you should learn about what the CIA did in the South.
They absolutely knew that crack was being flooded into communities, but they were making a profit
and they had initiatives in South America, which they wanted that profit for,
to be able to fund certain groups.
It's very bizarre to me that we have just so much concrete proof that exists that you can look up
of what the CIA has been involved in all over the world, how the CIA was okay with drugs coming over our border,
as long as it allowed them to fund their initiatives.
And yet people still don't want to accept this.
They want to believe it's a conspiracy.
And I often ask myself, why is that?
Why is it so hard for people to accept these things as true, even when they're proven to be true?
And I think the answer is that it's scary to understand that your government can be
evil.
It's nicer to want to believe that, no, they just want my best interests at heart.
I don't want to believe that big pharma is evil and intentionally creating addicts and
intentionally giving our children vaccines to make them sick so they can make more money.
No, no, no, no.
I want to call that person a conspiracy theory because I still want to live in this cloud
of ignorance because it's easier to be ignorant.
It's more comfortable to be ignorant.
I think that's the reason.
Anyways, Alex Jones, who is now back on Twitter, hopped on this and he tweeted this.
What Ice Cube is laying out here is 100% historical.
Record company executives funded and pushed the creation of gangster rap music in the
1980s as a form of weaponized culture.
The CIA supplied the crack to supercharge the crime wave.
Now Hollywood pushes thug culture on the world with devastating effects.
The transgender cult is also a CIA creation.
Reject both.
If it comes out of the system, it is designed to kill you.
Now, I know nothing about the transgenderism, but I do absolutely know that the CIA was very much involved in crack and cocaine, and as I said, that is historical.
So don't dismiss it.
If you're interested, go pursue more information about those facts.
Alright guys, moving on.
Now I know that there are some people who don't like Trump.
I am not one of those people.
I think he's very funny.
But I have to ask you the question, do you like E. Jean Carroll?
Can we all agree that E. Jean Carroll, the person who has just won a defamation suit against him, is absolutely unbearable?
I will very quickly recap to you what happened.
Nobody had heard of E. Jean Carroll.
Suddenly, in 2019, while Donald Trump is the sitting president of the United States, she releases a book.
And in this book, she says that Donald Trump sexually assaulted her.
Actually, she uses the word rape in the book, that he raped her.
And, of course, suddenly, the mainstream media, who absolutely hated Trump, turned this woman into a hero.
They wanted to put her on every news station because, yeah, he's a rapist, and so now we can say more that Donald Trump is bad.
Except what ended up happening was that we started to recognize that this woman appeared to be clinically insane.
Here is one clip of her talking to Anderson Cooper.
And Anderson Cooper is all of us when he just tries to get out of this conversation as soon as possible.
Take a listen.
You don't feel like a victim.
I was not thrown on the ground and ravished.
The word rape carries so many sexual connotations.
This was not sexual.
It hurt.
I think most people think of rape as a violent assault.
I think most people think of rape as being sexy.
Let's take a short break.
Think of the fantasies.
We're going to take a quick break.
If you can stick around, we'll talk more on the other side.
You're fascinating to talk to.
I mean, clearly this woman is certifiable.
What is even happening here?
Now she's saying it's not rape in the traditional sense.
She wasn't ravished.
She wasn't thrown on the ground.
Rape is sexy.
Totally bonkers.
It somehow gets worse.
This is her speaking to Lawrence O'Donnell.
Take a listen.
And he looked at me and he said, how old are you?
And the way he looked at me, you could see he was trying to calibrate how old a person, my thigh bone, in a Neanderthal cave, you know, it was like that kind of look.
Okay.
So I just, Lawrence, I wish I had said, I wish I said, I'll tell you my age if you show me your tax returns.
Yeah, it would have been helpful.
This is totally serious, guys.
Show me your tax returns.
She's recounting there, by the way, the story that she recounted in her book.
She said that she was at Bergdorf Goodman and she ran into Donald Trump in the 90s.
And by the way, he was unbelievably famous at this time.
We are talking about Donald Trump in New York City.
But nobody saw this, but he took her into a room and I would say raped her.
I don't know if it's rape, because then in that clip with Anderson Cooper, she says rape is sexy, and actually it wasn't rape, and she's not really sure.
Again, we should all just be able to judge this woman and say that she is certifiable.
But instead what happened, because there was such a thirst and a hatred for Donald Trump, and obviously any claims that she made would have expired, naturally, because she's talking about something that happened in 95, and she never pursued him criminally, or even socially and civilly.
But she got a phone call from the co-owner of LinkedIn, and he is a Democratic operative, I would say.
He's a major funder to the Democratic Party, and he said, I will fund you to sue Trump for anything.
And she did.
She decided to pursue him civilly in court.
In 2019 for this alleged rape.
Now, when you're suing someone civilly, obviously you're saying that there are no criminal allegations here.
So now this is obviously just your word against my word.
And whether or not I can convince a jury of peers in New York City, where they absolutely hate Donald Trump, in New York, pardon, that you did do something to me way back in the 90s, despite the fact that obviously I have no proof.
And she was able to do it because Trump derangement syndrome is a real thing.
On May 9th, 2023, a jury of six men and three women found Trump liable for sexual abuse, battery and defamation.
And obviously, Trump said this was ridiculous, and he went out to the press and talked about how this woman was clinically insane, and that he did not know her, and that she made up these claims out of thin air, and the only reason they were getting any air at all was because the mainstream media hates him, as well as Democratic operatives and people who fund the Democratic Party.
that should be abundantly clear to everyone, irrespective of how you feel about Donald
Trump, that that is exactly what took place.
So she saw that and she said, oh, he's still saying bad stuff about me.
I'm going to sue him for $10 million for defamation, for saying that I'm crazy and that my allegations
aren't real.
Now, it would be beyond ludicrous for her to receive $10 million.
But guess what?
So fair is the justice system in New York, but not only they award her $10 million for defamation, they actually said, even though we have no proof that he raped you, because you're not trying him criminally and obviously there is no evidence, because we just really hate Donald Trump, that's what we all recognize to be the truth, we're not going to give you the $10 million you asked for.
We're going to give you $83 million.
Now, why should you guys care about this, right?
Maybe some of you guys watching this are not a fan of Trump, and you're like, I was in DeSantis' camp.
Or maybe you're saying, I was in Republican camp.
Or you're watching this from all over the world, and you're like, why does this matter?
It matters because we are talking about what is supposed to be a justice system, OK?
And if they can just go after a person who was once a sitting president simply because they don't like him and do not want him to run again, then you and I are not safe.
For those of you that are watching this and you have a husband, a brother, a male cousin, a son, they are not safe within this justice system.
That is what we are learning.
When the justice system can be so corrupted that it can operate and say, we don't like you, we will go after you and we will bankrupt you simply because we do not like you, none of us are safe.
I want to live in a world where all of us can acknowledge that E. Jean Carroll is not a stable human being, because she's not.
She's clearly not okay.
It is why they have to keep cutting her and laughing awkwardly when she says things and flip-flops, it was rape, but not like rape, but it is rape, but it's not rape.
This just should not be allowed in a country that operates on principles and morals, and yet it is.
Lastly, I will show you guys this clip of her after she won the $83 million.
What you're about to see, guys, is a rape victim.
Take a listen.
You've talked about using some of Trump's money that you're about to get to help shore up women's rights.
Do you know what that might be, what that might look like?
Yes, Rachel.
Yes.
Tell me.
I had such, such great ideas for all the good I'm going to do with this money.
First thing, Rachel, You and I are going to go shopping.
We're going to get completely new wardrobes, new shoes, motorcycle for Crowley, new fishing rod for Robbie.
Rachel, what do you want?
A penthouse?
It's yours, Rachel!
Nothing.
Penthouse and France?
You want France?
You want to go fishing in France?
No?
All right, all right, okay.
That's a joke.
Although if me fishing in France could do something for women's rights, I would take the hint.
So funny, you guys.
We're talking about a rape victim and she just penthouse shoes shopping.
Yeah, I definitely, definitely believe those allegations.
By the way, guys, brief update.
They also threw a party for her.
The mainstream media threw an actual party for her.
It was hosted by Molly Zhang Fass, I think is her, how you say her name correctly.
She is a Washington Post reporter.
They invited all of the media elites to celebrate the fact that she won $83 million from Trump.
So yeah, in case you guys are thinking, wow, has the media been skewed?
Are they totally even-handed in matters?
Yeah, absolutely not.
They are not.
They hate us.
They hate you.
They hate any person who stands in their way when it comes to them being able to control the narrative.
And Donald J. Trump, obviously, is one of those individuals that they also hate.
All right, guys.
We are somehow already out of time.
It is now time to dive into a few of your comments before we end this episode.
First thing I want to say, by the way, you guys are always on YouTube.
If you're watching this, you're always like, oh, is this actually Candice that's in the live chat?
Yes, it's actually me.
I do not have a team, a fleet of people working for me.
It is actually me.
I like to live watch with you guys.
It's something that I really enjoy.
And also, I always get comments about my fashion and like, oh, her stylist needs a raise.
I'm my stylist.
I dress myself.
I'm a normal human being.
I don't have a fleet of people supporting me.
that are pulling out outfits for me.
I've always loved clothes, so I just wanted to answer some of your comments
that I see live when this show is airing on YouTube.
All right, these first set of comments are pertaining to Ice Spices'
So You Think You the Sh** Fart song.
Robles writes, oh my effing God, Candice.
This is the best video ever.
Hearing you repeatedly say, F**k art has made my day.
Thank you.
You are welcome.
I'm very happy that I could make your day.
I was honestly just shocked that that song was on the airwaves and that there was even one human being in the world that would defend it.
But there always is.
And Hot New Hip Hop wrote a wonderful article about it.
Naya writes, all I can think is what her parents must think.
I would be mortified if any of my children did this.
That is such a good point.
I didn't even think about it in the context of my daughter writing a song like that.
But I think what tends to be the case, and I don't know about this in terms of Ice Spice, I'm kind of making a larger point here, is that a lot of these people, as we talked about earlier, come from broken homes, right?
And so they don't have that guide in their life where they would feel ashamed if their father or their mother heard this.
I mean, oh my gosh, if my daughter did that.
Bahia writes, I laughed so hard listening to this song and seeing the video because my daughter had just made a joke a while back saying, next you're going to see idiots doing songs about farts.
I couldn't believe this mess.
We all lost brain cells listening to that hot trash.
And I think, ladies and gentlemen, that is the purpose.
They want us to lose brain cells.
I think the government wants us all super dumb and super medicated.
And by the way, I saw this comment circulating.
Some hip-hop blog had posted on Instagram what I had said.
Most of the comments were in agreement with me, but this guy wrote this about me, and I thought it was brilliant.
He said, I like how she professionally be upset.
And there we have it, guys.
I have never seen a more accurate description of what I do for a living.
I am professionally upset at the circumstances that are happening in America and our society at large.
I consider myself a professional when it comes to being upset on behalf Of the people.
Moving on, I am very sorry that I shared with you the information pertaining to the diaper spa in New Hampshire.
Adults wearing diapers to deal with their past traumas because they're totally sane, guys.
Those adults are totally sane.
Batman for President writes, who else wants to make asylums great again?
Ladies and gentlemen, if I run to be the dictator of the United States with your vote, I promise we will make asylums great again.
Eli writes, if the police were interested in doing a major bust of explicit material involving kids, they could check the computers of anyone who goes to that spa.
Absolutely, ladies and gentlemen.
Where there is smoke, there is fire.
By the way, I didn't look into it, and I will for you.
I will try to look into this for tomorrow, but somebody said to me that there is some commentary on this website that suggests that it is a fetish.
Like, you will be spanked if you don't listen.
I need to look into that, but I'm just putting that little tidbit out there.
All right, ladies and gentlemen, unfortunately, that is all the time that we have for today.
I really do feel like time flies when you're having fun, and we are having fun, and we will have more of it tomorrow.