All Episodes
Nov. 11, 2025 - The Culture War - Tim Pool
32:20
Berkeley Goes BALLISTIC Over TPUSA Event, Massive BRAWL ERUPTS ft. Tyler Bowyer

BUY CAST BREW COFFEE TO SUPPORT THE SHOW - https://castbrew.com/ Become A Member And Protect Our Work at http://www.timcast.com Host: Tate Brown @realTateBrown (everywhere) Guest: Tyler Bowyer @tylerbowyer (X) My Second Channel - https://www.youtube.com/timcastnews Podcast Channel - https://www.youtube.com/TimcastIRL

Participants
Main voices
t
tate brown
08:04
t
tyler bowyer
23:57
| Copy link to current segment

Speaker Time Text
tyler bowyer
This kind of explains how they prepare it, right?
Because obviously this is something that's been prepared.
I mean, this for days leading up to this, if not weeks, they were posting these flyers.
These were all around campus.
And, you know, we're not there.
We're not all over the city.
So you don't see them until you're actually there and people start reporting and tweeting about it and things like that.
But, you know, how they could call Turning Point violent after the murder of Charlie when there has been not a single case of this anywhere and they're actually burning things down.
tate brown
What's up, everybody?
This is Tate Brown here holding it down for Tim Pool.
We've got a great interview here with Tyler Boyer.
He is the lead of TP Action, Turning Point Action.
And we have him here to give his thoughts on the chaos in Berkeley last night.
So here's the interview.
Enjoy.
From Fox News, Bloody Brawl breaks out as agitators protest TP USA event at UC Berkeley in California.
The clash erupts ahead of a Turning Point USA event.
A bloody fight broke out near the University of California, Berkeley on Monday afternoon ahead of a Turning Point USA event on campus.
The event, which featured Dr. Frank Turek and Rob Schneider, marked the end of the This Is the Turning Point tour.
It took place just two months after TPUSA's founder Charlie Kirk was assassinated at a campus event in Utah on September 10th.
And I'm just going to play some clips from the insanity going on there.
As you can see here, this is via Savannah Hernandez.
Punch and Fadge, calls for violence, obviously.
We have some more action here.
This was some arrests being made following.
I think this is following the brawl.
yeah following the brawl so yeah there's just a lot of you know a lot of you know kumbaya going on there in berkeley again Again, this is Vintage Berkeley.
This was them antagonizing the attendees for the event.
Obviously, all the officers there with right here.
unidentified
This is from Bora Ventura.
tate brown
Just like, just absolute insanity, absolute insanity.
It's total carnage.
So we're going to bring in Tyler here.
Obviously, we were seeing the, we were watching the videos, everything beforehand.
The situation in Berkeley, I mean, it's a bit of a throwback.
I mean, a lot of things people forgot berserkly.
That's what it had the reputation of being back in the day.
Turning point returned.
That was the end of y'all's tour.
Obviously, you head to Berkeley.
Surely you had to be anticipating a little bit of this sort of carnage, right?
tyler bowyer
Yeah, I mean, it's actually really interesting because this is one of the first places that we kind of opened up a lot of campus activity on.
We went right into the belly of the beast about a decade ago, a little more than a decade ago.
I was privileged to be in charge of our entire field operation at the time, and we were really opening up a lot of the West.
And it just, ever since the very beginning, it's been nothing but crazy at Berkeley.
So kicking us off campus.
A lot of people don't realize this, but that was one of the first places that we had ever done a real tour stop for Charlie in the early, early days.
So we're very familiar with the Berkeley campus, but it's always been very insane, trying to shut down conservatives, trying to dehumanize conservatives every time that we show up.
And that's been the name of the game for Antifa and all the radicals that are there.
tate brown
Yeah.
So, I mean, I guess to start, how did the event go?
I mean, the event obviously was on campus.
Most of this carnage was off campus.
So did the event go forward as normally?
I mean, how was that?
tyler bowyer
Yeah, and actually a lot of it was right there on campus.
And we've seen this time and time again.
unidentified
But yeah, there was, you've seen the videos.
tyler bowyer
We've watched the videos.
It was insane.
I mean, there was literally hundreds and hundreds of radicalized protesters that were outside Antifa.
It's actually really funny because yesterday I was on with a reporter who was arguing with me about the existence of Antifa.
She was trying to allege to me, this was a reporter actually in a more conservative state, believe it or not, that Antifa isn't real and doesn't exist.
And yesterday we saw. the congregation of Antifa activists acting like terrorists that had gotten together.
They were very prepared.
They were very organized.
They had bullhorns, shouting and screaming in people's faces.
There was actually reports, direct reports from first person sources here.
So this isn't like I'm pulling it off the internet or from third parties, first person that they were throwing glass at people.
They were throwing like actually things that were shattering and blowing up and shards of glass everywhere, which was left behind and everywhere.
There was activists, Antifa activists that were spitting on people directly, right?
And they're while they were waiting in line to get in.
And we're talking about, you know, pretty calm, normal, you know, regular people showing up for this thing, bringing their kids and waiting outside sometimes for hours until the school will actually let them in.
And essentially what they had to do was start letting people in, but they had an abundance of police resources outside, which they had to do because of how violent and aggressive the Antifa activists were outside.
tate brown
I mean, yeah, we were looking at some of the videos from y'all's frontlines coverage with Savannah.
And it's just insane.
Like, because like you said, I mean, these are people that are just here for an event.
I mean, it's Rob Schneider, Frank Teric, like people love him.
People know him, turning point, obviously.
And the response is just like militant.
What is the relationship like in Berkeley with the local authorities?
I mean, the local officials, I mean, it seems like this keeps happening, obviously.
What has been your experience with them compared to maybe like red states, red governments, that sort of thing?
tyler bowyer
Yeah, no, it's actually a really interesting question.
And by the way, I just want to shout out Savannah and how good, great of a job she does.
I know she's been on quite a bit.
She's an incredible talent.
The entire team at Frontlines is incredible.
They really go into the belly of the beast everywhere we go.
But yeah, it's actually a really interesting conversation because you have a couple of different layers here that the public isn't really talking too much about.
First, you have the blue cities versus red cities issue.
In general, and I want to be like very clear about this.
Most of the police are on our side.
And even the bluest, the bluest cities, you have a dramatic number of police that are conservative, that are fans, that are supportive of what we do.
And so they're happy to be there.
There's obviously always a fraction of police that are probably pretty annoyed about the danger that's presented mainly by the other side that shows up to these things and causes tense situations or violent situations like we saw last night in Berkeley.
And so obviously in a city like Berkeley, you're not attracting the most conservative police, I would say.
I would say there are some people that enjoy the drama that probably exists around Berkeley's campus.
But the most important part about the police is that they're always doing their job.
They've always been, and everywhere that we've gone, and I can say this over the years, the decade plus that I've done this, is that we've always had a great response.
And I think it's only increased over the number of years that they've, I think, police have embraced the fact that this is coming from one side that started realizing, oh my gosh, like we have to defend, you know, essentially the ideology that they support, which is a more conservative one because of how crazy and radical the country's getting, you know, under the guise of, you know, BLM or the different,
the various factions that have been created out of the Soros regimes.
It's really important to focus on, though, this topic of campus police versus normal municipal police.
Campus police is a totally different ballgame.
And this has come up actually in kind of light of the murder of Charlie, is that campus police sometimes are a different animal to deal with than your normal regular municipal police.
And so, again, I don't want to speak directly to the UVU situation or even Berkeley last night with some of these because, again, there's a lot of police departments on campus that are just trying their best with what they've been given.
But most of these departments have to report to the administration rather than to the infrastructure that's normally funded and ran by taxpayers within a municipality.
So that's a big deal.
And that's actually a real problem when you talk about safety and public safety because when police are answering to the university system and what their end goals are, sometimes bad results happen.
And again, I don't want to point directly to Charlie's murder on that, but there are some things that could have been done and should have been done to prevent his assassination that I think that a larger police department would be able to handle.
Now, given that fact, sometimes there's police departments that are smaller in the city where the university is, and the university actually has a bigger police presence than the rest of the city.
But those are all things that need to be looked at and talked about and debated.
And, you know, there should be some introspection, especially following Charlie's death.
Yeah.
Especially when you look at last night, you know, Blue City, you know, relatively small city, big college campus, you know, is safety priority number one.
tate brown
Yeah, I mean, I've spot checked Berkeley as like if you look at the New York Times as the precinct voting map and you can like check and see how many people in each precinct voted for what.
And if you spot check Berkeley, it's actually something wild to do at home.
Almost all there's a good chunk of the precincts that the Green Party receive more votes than Trump.
So you guys really went into the belly of the beast here.
Obviously, you know, you talked about the relationship with the campus police, municipal police.
What about the locals?
I mean, I imagine you guys probably weren't able to get out and about that much, but was the response from the locals as hostile as, you know, obviously probably not anything close to Antifa, but was there a degree of hostility with the locals?
tyler bowyer
Yeah, I mean, the most severely leftist college campus, you know, just to kind of give everybody an idea, the most severe leftist areas are pretty radicalized, you know, with the folk.
It's actually hard to comprehend for a lot of people that go into these places.
So Berkeley is a good example of one.
UC Boulder, University of Colorado Boulder, our CU Boulder.
I'm sorry, not UC Boulder.
CU Boulder is another good example of that.
UW Madison is a really good example of that.
I've walked the streets of most of these places when we've done events.
And even just last year, again, I'll kind of point to Madison.
You walk around some of these communities and you're kind of expecting just people to be a little bit more normal, a little bit more common sense.
It's actually bizarre how prepared the community is to be anti whatever's going on, if that makes sense.
It's almost like the community rallies behind and creates the animosity that is basically okayed for like an Antifa violent situation to happen.
I think that that's really the story when you see all these crazy things happen.
We saw it in Minneapolis.
We've seen it in Philadelphia.
We've seen it in Portland.
You saw what happened last night in Berkeley.
A lot of that is on the shoulders of the community.
I mean, that is the reason why it exists is because they feel like they have, you know, the ability to go out and be harassing in that way.
I mean, like I said, like we were just there last year in Madison with Charlie walking the streets right before a football game.
You know, so you're within the college area, but I mean, Madison is largely engulfed in University of Wisconsin culture.
And this is the same with Berkeley.
You walk around that place.
I mean, especially with someone with credibility like Charlie had, I mean, people were shouting at him like more violently than I've ever seen before.
People get in your face and kind of almost start pushing you and start screaming in your face and telling you to go home or get out of their state or do whatever.
Right.
And those are just things that you just don't see in more conservative areas ever.
Like you just don't have that.
So I think a lot of people have no clue that this is happening in some of these really deep blue violent cities where violence is being stoked and it's really not being taken care of because I don't think the police really know what to do with it.
I don't know.
I don't think they have any idea of how to prevent it other than, you know, this is just how things operate here.
It's kind of like the feedback that we've gotten.
This is just how it works here.
Yeah.
tate brown
Yeah.
I mean, I imagine you guys probably like you're talking about the community, local community organizing, right?
Anticipating y'all's arrival.
There had to be some foresight that there was going to be some carnage, right?
I mean, especially in Berkeley.
And I mean, we've seen obviously, you know, the people with effigies of Charlie's, you know, these really horrible effigies of Charlie and the taunting and these sorts of things.
I mean, that lead up had to be, you know, pretty intense.
tyler bowyer
Yeah, I mean, there was actually flyers being posted all around Berkeley on and off campus.
We found these off campus as well that said Berkeley in the fascist turning point youth-oriented campaign of incitement of violence.
So they, so this is this is how backwards it is.
This is how, you know, you study this in school.
Like we, everybody goes through that, the Fahrenheit 451, you know, you know, thought prevention type stuff.
The syllabus that all of us have gone through in elementary sorry, junior high and high school.
And you see it happening in real time at Berkeley where they're calling our side violent while actually committing violence on campus.
It's the most insane backwards thing that you've ever seen.
tate brown
Yeah.
tyler bowyer
But this kind of explains how they prepare it, right?
Because obviously this is something that's been prepared.
I mean, this for days leading up to this, if not weeks, they were posting these flyers.
These were all around campus and we're not there.
We're not all over the city.
So you don't see them until you're actually there and people start reporting it and tweeting about it and things like that.
But how they could call turning point violent after the murder of Charlie when there has been not a single case of this anywhere and they're actually burning things down and again, you mentioned lighting effigies on fire outside of events, screaming at people with bullhorns in their face as like these sweet moms with their daughters and kids are walking in.
It's unlike anything anyone ever can really comprehend in America.
unidentified
Yeah.
tate brown
Well, I mean, there's something to be said about that, which is, you know, there's all these people on the right that are, you know, like we're these based fringe, you know, radicals or whatever, and they're hosting these events or whatever, but nothing really agitates the left like Turning Point USA.
And I think if you drill down on that, the reason is because you guys are the effective ones.
You're the ones that are stepping into the mainstream, occupying the mainstream and like reorienting.
I mean, that was Charlie's legacy is he stepped in and he changed the game.
And I think that specifically is what animates the leftists so much more than, you know, all these people that are, you know, doing whatever, no shade, obviously, but there's something about turning point specifically that just infuriates these leftists.
I don't know, maybe you could drill down on what you've seen, why that might be the case.
tyler bowyer
No, I mean, yeah, I appreciate that.
I mean, I think it's effectivity, right?
I mean, at the end of the day, the left has always kind of, especially since the Obama era, has dominated this idea of being able to organize events and get people excited and do things.
And they've really struggled with that over the course of the last five plus years where they just haven't had excitement.
So you can't find it really anywhere.
I mean, during the 2020 race, we saw this.
I think this is what kind of lit fire alarms off for them was that nobody was showing up to their stuff organically.
And this was prior to COVID.
And then, you know, you go into COVID and, you know, we know all the reasons why, you know, many believe, you know, they really leaned into that and utilized that for their own political benefits.
But they, you know, there was no, there hasn't been anyone that's been able to really harness that.
And I think they came off of this high of Obama having the capacity of doing that to now they're really struggling to consolidate around voices and people.
And that's the one thing about Charlie that Charlie was able to do as a personality and then transfuse that into an organization and make an organization that we've been, you know, I've been blessed to be part of and our group has been working diligently at.
But that's been part of the effort, which is that it can't just be a person.
It has to be, it has to be people.
It has to be community that you build.
And once they see you do that, they start getting very nervous because it's like, well, you know, you know, Charlie's gone, Charlie's been assassinated, you know, but they can't assassinate a million small versions of Charlie all over the country, which is what we're seeing.
And this, and this is like to your point, is like, you know, when you talk about mainstream, we, we, we, and this is not unique or new.
I've been with Charlie, you know, for the last 11 years, plus years, and we have been attacked from both sides.
tate brown
Yeah.
tyler bowyer
We felt like we've had people attacking us.
And the weirdest part is that sometimes it feels like it's simultaneous, where the harder the left is going at us, the harder it's like fringe elements of the right feel like they have gone at us.
And, you know, people trying to just like get cheap shots and things like that.
We've seen that all throughout the last decade.
And you're seeing a little bit of that now, where there are people like trying to really attack.
I mean, we've seen this with pretty sick attacks on us and Erica and so many and not to bring that in.
But I think part of that's the element of when you see some of those left-wing insane things happening like we saw last night, you also get elements.
And actually, that's what's pretty much the catalyst to reaffirm that we're pretty much in the mainstream, pretty much the middle of the road when it comes to how things are going in America and at least where the conservative movement is.
And again, those things actually make the left more nervous because they start going, oh, wow, that's really, that really is the middle of the road for conservative thought.
And they're actually attracting more people.
And that's what we've tried to do.
tate brown
Yeah.
I mean, that's exactly right.
And that's, I think that's what infuriates a lot of these more fringe elements you're talking about.
And it certainly infuriates leftists is that you guys are just able, you're so effective as an organization.
And again, like as a testament to Charlie, but the whole organization as a whole, is that you're just single-handedly able to move the Overton window.
I mean, that's just incredible stuff.
And yeah, that's got to be petrifying if you're a leftist, especially watching you guys roll up to Berkeley right into the belly of the beast.
unidentified
Yeah.
tate brown
That probably keeps them up at night.
tyler bowyer
There's two elements to that.
It's like we haven't really feared going into those places.
And again, I'm not trying to disparage any other elements of the conservative movement, but the conservative movement in the recent history, you know, kind of prior to the Trump era, was very scared to go into the belly of the beast.
They were very scared to fight the battles on the front lines.
And that's just, that's not a way to win a war.
Like you have to go to the front lines.
You have to send your best soldiers to the front.
You have to send your most emphatic, most patriotic, most passionate people to lead the charge.
I mean, that's like the George Washingtonian model, which is like, you've got to have a leader out front.
And if you're not doing that on the front lines where the battle is actually, the lines are drawn, then you're not going to be able to win because they're going to keep taking and you're going to keep ceding ground.
They're going to keep taking ground and you're going to have to have alternative ways to win that war.
And the truth of the matter is the conservative movement just wasn't doing that.
And part of the reason why I believe where we are today, where we're actually being able to win some battles, is because we actually took up those fights on the front lines.
And, you know, that's why we call our division front lines that SAV runs and they do such a good job is because we want to be at those places so America could actually see this.
Imagine a world in which nobody actually saw any of this content.
And honestly, if we weren't there reporting on it and recording it, nobody would have this.
It's not like the mainstream outlets that are even on our side are showing up to this stuff.
It's too dangerous.
It's not interesting enough in a lot of cases for them.
So they don't.
tate brown
Yeah.
I mean, that's what's so refreshing about this is it feels like there's this affliction or tendency on the right at large where people just say, oh, well, it's California, just whatever, cut it loose.
Oh, it's New York City, whatever, cut it loose.
And I hate that retreatist mentality because it's like, actually, no, Trump won, you know, he won the popular vote.
He won the election.
Like, we're actually kind of entitled to the whole country.
We don't have to just seed ground to these people.
These people are evil, like quite a lot of these people, a lot of these, you know, leftist agitators who are running these streets are evil people.
I mean, they demonstrated it with Charlie and they've demonstrated it in Berkeley.
So that's why I love what you guys are doing because I just don't understand this tendency to just like, oh, just cut it loose.
It's fine.
Let's just retreat.
tyler bowyer
Well, there's more places than just college campuses for this too.
I mean, this is Probably the biggest problem within the conservative movement in general is that the generation, my parents' generation, and again, this isn't an attack on Gen Xers, but Gen Xers weren't hyper politically motivated.
They just, they didn't throughout.
And, you know, this is this is just, this is an admitting moment.
Baby boomers were far more political because a lot of them were raised and saw during the 60s and 70s an era, right, that spurred different eras.
You know, you have kind of the hippie, you know, situation that is kind of similar to a lot of millennials that like hippies and hipsters share a lot of similarities with environmentalism and anti-war and all this, which is, I think, has kind of turned what we saw like in the early 80s in particular that started that the whole yuppie movement through the 90s, 80s, 90s.
You are starting to see a lot of that with our own generation.
You know, history doesn't repeat itself, but it rhymes.
You have a lot of yuppie type mentality that's happening at a millennials now, where you're seeing people actually take on their parents' businesses and actually start families later in life because they got started late.
And they're starting to figure out like, oh, well, some of these things that I was living weren't exactly helping my life.
And now I'm buckled in and focused on that.
And so you have a lot of that that's happening.
And so the conflict that's happening with young people in particular is that they're figuring this out, but it's not just on college campuses now.
Now it's spread to the church culture, like in the communities that they're moving out to.
So a lot are moving out of the city and even out of the suburbs into more rural suburban areas or more rural areas.
And they're taking on their businesses or they're moving into gentrified neighborhoods that are taking over the family business that was their dad's or their grandpa's for the last 30 or 40 years.
And so it's a really unique moment, but it's really important for us to capture that and then say, hey, there's other groups that need to show up and show out in a big way to help support a lot of these activists as they start to age.
And I brought up Gen Xers for this reason because a lot of Gen Xers were kind of this tail end yuppie dot-com boom era people that they, you know, their activism was listening to Rush Limbaugh, and that's awesome.
And they listened to it, but they didn't go out and do something.
And that's the big piece is that you have to actually translate that from listening, you know, kind of taking this on, seeing the problems that are happening around you, and then going out and doing something.
And a lot of, as a lot of these Gen Xers are starting to retire at a higher rate, it's really important for them to get involved and do a lot more in the community.
tate brown
Totally.
I mean, yeah, that mindset has really kind of poisoned the conservative movement.
So that's when Trump came in.
He's actually just like doing things.
It's blowing the back of people's heads.
They can't believe it.
They're like, wait, well, you can just do that?
It's like, yeah, actually, you can.
If you want to like save America, you got to get your hands dirty a little bit.
I was going to ask, I mean, I guess this would be the last question.
We're kind of running out of time here, but the DOJ, they probably had their eye on Berkeley, obviously, with this happening.
Has there been sort of any indication that they're investigating here, that they're taking a look?
Because I mean, for a lot of people that just want to go to see Dr. Frank Turek speak, and then they might have to worry about something like this, that's got to kind of freak them out a little bit.
So I was wondering, you know, what turning point, you know, what their relationship with the DOJ has been like with this specific incident.
tyler bowyer
Yeah, you know, it's actually been really interesting.
I actually feel the call, like, I won't say from who, but this morning, early this morning, from someone high up within the administration who was Super supportive that they've got our back, that they're doing more to anticipate some of these problems so that I think the government can actually step in and be more helpful for the safety and protection of people.
Because I think a lot of people, you know, for us, a lot of times it's a little bit concerning because we don't really know how bad it's going to be until you show up.
You know, part of us was that we thought that this would actually be a little bit easier in Berkeley this year because, you know, mistakenly, because of Charlie's assassination, we thought that they would probably take a softer approach.
We now know that's the answer is no.
These crazy people exist and they're going to come at you hard, if not harder, than ever before.
And the DOJ, you know, as we know, are currently spending their time investigating these cells of Antifa activism that's happening.
And this is the left's new trick: they're trying to tell people, just as I mentioned, journalists, everyone else, that Antifa doesn't exist, that it's not, you know, a network, that it's just random people showing up at random times.
We know that's not true.
This is, in fact, organized criminal activity that's happening in most cases where they want to harm people, they want to scare people.
At a minimum, they want to impede people's civil rights.
And that is a huge issue of our time.
And so the DOJ, especially in the civil rights division, Harmee Dylan is fantastic.
She's actually from the Northern California area.
So that's, you know, her team has been very, very much interested in going after the individuals who are involved specifically with this case.
So I think we're going to see some outcomes coming from last night.
But I also think that we're going to see a lot more anticipation on our side over the course of the next three years as we see how the reactive, it'll be less reactive and more proactive.
That the federal government's going to go in and help protect the citizens that are just kind of just doing normal, ordinary citizen stuff.
tate brown
Yeah.
tyler bowyer
And that's important.
tate brown
Yeah, totally.
Well, Tyler, thank you so much, dude.
I don't leave any closing thoughts and where people can find you, find TPUSA, stuff like that.
tyler bowyer
Yeah, we, I mean, like I said, there's nothing more important than for people to get involved.
This next year, we have Turning Point USA that is flying at its highest number.
So you can go to tpsa.com slash get involved.
You can go to tpusastudents.com as well.
If you have a student that you know that wants to get involved, they can sign up to be part of a chapter.
On our activism side, we have Turning Point Action.
So tpaction.com.
Please go there, get signed up.
You can follow us at TPACTIN underscore on Twitter or anywhere a Turning Point Action exists to get involved, to actually contribute as we have a huge election this next year where the country needs to step up and actually not just sit on our haunches and let the Democrats roll us next year.
We actually need to get out and be more active to push back against a lot of this radical ideology that we're seeing on campus and beyond.
tate brown
So absolutely.
Well, dude, thank you so much, man.
We'll catch you next time.
tyler bowyer
Thanks for having me.
Appreciate it.
unidentified
All right.
tate brown
See ya.
All right.
Well, that was that was Tyler.
Boyer, man.
It's insane.
It's insane.
Like he said, you were kind of anticipating that maybe they would paper back the violence a little bit, considering everything that we've seen.
No, they're doubling down.
These people hate you.
They want to destroy you.
Enough.
I mean, I was saying earlier, sometimes it feels like maybe the window is closing, but it's good to hear that DOJ is taking a look.
We have to break these people.
Full stop.
End of story.
Enough is enough.
But with that, we are out of time.
So let me see.
We're going to raid Dvore Darkens, I believe.
Let's see, make sure he's live.
Davore Darkens.
Yep, here we go.
And I will get us going here.
With that, you can find me, your host, Tate Brown, on X and Instagram at RealTate Brown.
We will be back tonight for Timcast IRL at 8 p.m.
It's going to be a great show.
Come hang out.
And I'm going to get you guys going on the raid.
Let's see.
Confirm raid bang.
So yeah, come give me a follow.
Make sure you go check out TPUSA.
Obviously, and Tyler.
Tyler's fantastic.
He's a great guy, doing excellent, excellent work.
They've been through a lot, but they're still just, you know, full steam ahead.
It's fantastic.
Come hang out.
Come hang out with Timcast IRL.
Export Selection