Nick Di Paolo, John Ziegler, and Steven Crowder dissect media bias, arguing Democrats misuse "lynching" rhetoric while ignoring socialist candidates like Elizabeth Warren. Ziegler defends Matt Lauer against Ronan Farrow's rape allegations, claiming the firing was political, while Crowder exposes alleged Google conspiracies suppressing Tulsi Gabbard despite her 28-week abortion ban stance. They contend tech giants act as biased publishers rather than neutral platforms, threatening honest elections where candidates like Trump once thrived without big money donors. Ultimately, this collusion between Silicon Valley and progressive elites risks subverting democratic discourse through invisible algorithmic censorship. [Automatically generated summary]
This is, you know, everything else is downhill for the rest of the week.
But today's show is really a great one.
Nick DiPaolo is on with us.
Oh my, you really need to hear, you know, just the conversation, just the part about the history of lynching.
Because you can't say that word now.
And by the way, we debunk that.
Also, the Frenchy Frenchman, Mitt Romney, what a coward.
What's happening in the life of Matt Lauer?
John Ziegler is on.
He just sat down with him all day yesterday.
He's like, I think Rowan Farrow is the bad guy here.
It's an unbelievable interview, as is the interview with Steven Crowder.
All of it on today's Big Show Podcast.
You're listening to the Best of the Glenn Beck Program.
You know, another place that it's cold is in the DNC right now.
They're like, ah, ah, this could be McGovern.
This could be like a massive, massive loss.
Really?
You think?
Do you think?
Well, you'd think if you were confident in a victory, you wouldn't need impeachment, right?
If you thought that the American people would see things the same way you see them, why would you bother with all of this?
Yeah, you wouldn't do it.
You just win.
You'd just win.
You'd be like, it doesn't matter.
He's not going to be around long anyway.
They have zero confidence in a win.
Which is amazing.
I mean, like, look, for all the things, there are things that we really like that Trump has done, but it's not as if he's an invincible poll machine.
It's not like you're looking at, you know, Reagan 84 here.
No.
It's not like you're looking at.
You're looking at a guy who is wounded.
He's wounded, and he is also a guy who a lot of people didn't like.
Yeah.
A lot of people didn't like.
A lot of people still don't like.
And you haven't found anyone on your side that can beat him.
They all.
That's incredible.
It seems like they do see the vulnerability here.
And, you know, we've talked about the impeachment thing as a tactic when it comes to, you know, we go back to Clinton and people say, well, that didn't work.
Eventually, Clinton leaves office in a very popular state.
But I think what a lot of people have not looked at here is that it's never really been tested this way.
It's never really been tested impeachment before an election.
No.
It's always been in the second term, at least in modern times for sure, after the person got re-elected, right?
Like Nixon, you know, had a landslide election for 48 or 49 states.
No, 49.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I think it was, I think it was 49.
49 states.
He wins.
It's an absolute landslide.
And he comes in.
And think of that moment.
Like, is that moment even possible today?
49 states, and people start looking at this information.
And slowly the polls move and they change and they flip from him being incredibly popular to being incredibly unpopular.
And then he resigns before impeachment.
I think if it wasn't for impeachment, because the polls strangely are moving in that direction, if it wasn't for this impeachment process, I think he could have done 49 states.
Meaning.
48, maybe 48.
Who are you talking about?
Trump.
Trump.
I think I don't see any.
I mean, look, you never know.
You would not see any polling support that.
Elizabeth Warren.
But there's Liberal states.
I mean, like, you're not going to get there's 20 states that are never going to vote for a Republican right now.
Like, they're never going to vote for a Republican.
Elizabeth Warren.
You're going to go in and win Rhode Island with Donald Trump.
You're going to go win.
You're not going to win those states.
If you have.
Okay.
All right.
Anyway, let's say, say, 40, 40 states, 35 states.
Landslide in today's world.
Landslide.
If you had Elizabeth Warren who is talking about, yeah, we're going to get rid of the free market and yeah, babies can be killed after birth, all of these things.
The average Democrat would look at that as you're standing in the polling booth and you'd be like, I just can't.
I just can't do it.
There are this.
There's a group of people that I think you're right on.
And it's the group of people that changed the election for Donald Trump last time.
Yes.
It's the people that voted for Barack Obama.
No, but still have moved to Trump in 2016.
It was still Hillary Clinton.
And people didn't like her because she was corrupt.
They still saw her more in the vein of her husband that, you know, the Clintons, it was fine under the Clintons.
You know what I mean?
They saw her as corrupt, and that's what they didn't like, but they didn't see her as who she, I think, really is, a Sololinskyite that wants, you know, wants to fundamentally change America.
These people are not, they're saying it.
They're like, yeah, you know another thing.
I think we red, white, and blue.
Who's sick of that?
Because I'm sick of it.
What do you say?
We have black and red as our flag.
Red and yellow.
You ever see a hammer and a sickle intertwined?
I mean, it's crazy.
No, I know.
And I think that I do think the group is larger than last time with a person like Elizabeth Warren.
And it's funny that how the Democrats have quote unquote learned their lesson from last time.
Hey, let's run the exact same candidate, except more socialist, more overtly socialist than the last one.
So the people in the middle can't bring themselves to vote for the person, even if they don't like the way things are going.
I mean, this is what is being said in their press.
No, it's true, but that does not mean you get to 49 states.
I mean, like, you are not, that is not a borderline thing we're talking about.
We are way too partisan at this point for that type of election, with the exception of some massive event that we're not factoring in.
I mean, you know, we let's get rid of all health insurance.
No private health insurance.
You look at those things and those things poll, let's say, they're not popular, by the way.
We should point out that Medicare for All as a policy is not popular.
Even among Democrats, it's not all that popular.
However, there are still plenty of voters to win 20 states that like Medicare for All.
And you get it to Medicare for all who want it, it winds up being relatively popular.
That is not something that I think is a sane policy.
Certainly not something that we can afford.
I don't know if anyone has an extra 30, 40 trillion laying around.
If you do, let me know.
But it is a it is, I think we are part of the partisan divide is wide enough, and the voting splits in a lot of these states is wide enough that, like, you know, if you had the best Democrat in the world, some, you know, incredible candidate, and you had the worst Republican in the world, like, they're still not winning Utah.
They're still not winning Wyoming.
That's just not going to happen in a presidential election at this time.
These were, you know, Reagan was the last one really who was able to do this.
Nixon before.
I mean, I think you're right about that because we have proof.
Mitt Romney wins in Utah, and he's probably one of the worst Republicans I've ever seen.
He won with 61% of the vote in that election.
Yeah, he's this guy is sad.
He's sad.
I feel sorry for Mitt Romney.
What is sad about a guy who was pretty close to being president of the United States feeling the need to hide on Twitter?
Yeah.
What is sad about that is that here's a guy who said, I could be president of the United States and I'll stand up for what I believe.
Really, will you?
Here's a guy who ran Bain Capital, who has, I don't know, hundreds of millions of dollars, has a great family, is loved in his state, won with 61% of the vote, is a respected guy, and he doesn't have the courage to voice his opinion on Twitter.
What a coward.
What a sad, pathetic life.
I don't understand it.
I mean, look, the things he would put on his little account there were generally, it's not like he was like, but he also picked a French name.
It's like, French, the French surrender to our ship.
There's no one on the ship.
It's just, just, you know, get a tugboat, take one of our carriers over to France.
They'll surrender the ship.
I mean, it really is pathetic.
It's pretty much it.
His surrender is a great way.
He surrendered essentially to Twitter.
Oh, my God.
He's embarrassed.
Like, he can't deal with the ramifications of his own opinions.
Like, this is a man who wanted to be president of the United States.
How sad and pathetic.
I, you know, I just, I feel sorry for him.
I feel sorry for him.
I feel sorry that he is so worried that he, that he's just going to be unpopular with somebody that he just can't really say what he believes.
I mean, and listen to what he does say.
So can you imagine how far out of the mainstream he really is?
If this is his, oh, I'm, I'm going to say these things.
Those things are not popular with conservatives.
Is he just.
I mean, you look at the stuff he liked.
I mean, it was, you know, certainly anti-Trump, pro-Romney content, but it wasn't like he was, you know, I really like this content from Elizabeth Warren.
Right.
I mean, like, he's liking, you know.
I don't know because I don't know who the guy is.
He's hiding behind Mr. Franché Franchiman.
So I have no idea.
He may be a French spy.
I don't know, but it's sad.
Imagine being a spy for France.
Let me just give you this one quote here.
There is speculation that Hillary Clinton may run for to be the nominee of the party.
Those close to Clinton, speaking on the condition of amenity, because they were not authorized to comment on her behalf, say that she has felt vindicated over the past few weeks after Trump's political difficulties.
And that sentiment was reinforced when the State Department announced its probe into emails sent by her private server, blah, blah, blah.
Ultimately, said one of the insiders, it's unlikely that she would run.
But put it this way: it ain't zero.
And does she think about it all the time?
I'm quoting.
And does she think about it all the time?
Absolutely.
End quote.
Hang on, we have Pierre on the phone.
Yes.
Oh, Mr. Nick.
Yes, Pierre.
This is Pierre de Lecto.
Yeah.
I believe I heard you talking.
Yes, we were just talking about Hillary.
If she does run for president, what about Vice President Mitt Romney?
This is Mitt Romney, isn't it?
This is Pierre DeLecto.
Right, okay.
Thank you very much.
Thank you, Pierre.
The best of the Glenn Beck Program.
Hey, it's Glenn, and you're listening to the Glenn Beck Program.
If you like what you're hearing on this show, make sure you check out Pat Gray Unleashed.
It's available wherever you download your favorite podcasts.
So I don't know if this is actually Nick DiPaulo from nickdip.com or if it is his French pseudo pseudonym here, like Mitt Romney.
I don't know.
Do you have one of those?
Because Mitt Romney is so brave, he's willing to hide behind a French alias on Twitter.
You know, he's the biggest disappointment.
I actually believed in that stiff two years ago.
I did too.
You know, I saw a documentary.
I go, he's a good family man.
Yep.
He's very bright.
He destroyed Obama in those debates.
First, even the second one, I think he won.
But anyways, but now he's just, it turns out he's just another backstabbing, two-faced GOP relic.
He really disappointed me.
That's why I'm voting for a Liz Warren.
Okay, so what do you think the odds are that Hillary Clinton is, did you see the quote?
I gave it earlier.
There was a quote from somebody on her staff that said, look, I don't think this is going to happen.
Is it possible?
Yes.
Does she think about it all the time?
Absolutely.
That's a quote.
Does she think about it all the time?
Is that news?
No, it's not.
This power-hungry, she's the most disgusting person on the planet.
She's a sellout.
She was part of the lib revolution and became a corporate shill.
She slept with a guy who was very important, and that's how she got to the top.
There's nothing authentic about her.
She disgusts me.
Of course she's thinking about it.
And she's out there touting her book with her daughter.
They had 11 people, I think, at the Barnes ⁇ Noble in San Antonio.
I have so much to say about who would buy her book.
The Power-Hungry Sellout00:11:18
I was reading it.
I bought it.
Did you?
Yes, I did.
I took a shotgun in my backyard hanging up on my shed.
Yeah, right through the eyes.
I tell you, I thought, who is paying her for another book?
And then I realized, oh, it's Simon ⁇ Schuster, the people I'm publishing my last book with.
So I'll save my commentary for a while.
What's it like to write a book?
I can't even push out a pamphlet.
It's a nightmare.
It's a nightmare.
I'm in the middle of the final thing.
And I just said to somebody, you know, I know authors and they all say, I can't talk to anybody for like six months.
I've got to do all my jobs and write the book.
I have been sequestered for the last few days, except for this, trying to get the final part on the book, but it's really good.
This one is about socialism and Elizabeth Warren and AOC and all that.
You know a lot about that.
Didn't you spend your honeymoon in Cuba?
Was that you?
No, that was strangely strangely not.
So let's go through some of the news of the day.
First of all, the lynching thing.
Oh, geez.
Please.
And I was watching your friend Hillary there.
She does a story.
She does a story on Biden and all these Democrats back in the day using the lynching term.
And then her next story is about Alzheimer's.
They have a new test for it.
I say they give it to the Democrat Party and Biden.
And may I say the media.
Did you see, do we have the thing we played a little while ago, the Ali Veltger thing from CNN?
Please play this so Nick can see this.
This is crazy.
They all have amnesia or Alzheimer's.
And they can't remember that the reason why they made Bill Clinton the first black president was because they said his impeachment was a lynching, a modern day lynching.
Here is MSNBC yesterday trying to teach people what lynchings really are.
Listen to this.
God help us.
President Trump invoked lynching today when talking about the constitutionally protected impeachment inquiry.
He said, quote, all Republicans must remember what they are witnessing here, a lynching.
Let's be clear.
Lynchings were terrorism, plain and simple.
Slaughter used to testify to terrify Africans.
I can't take it, Nick.
I can't take it.
Thank you for educating me, MSNBC.
I had no idea that lynching was terrorism.
I'm sick of calling.
Here's the problem, Glenn.
We always call out the double standards.
I know.
I can't take it anymore.
But we do nothing about it.
I know.
They're double and triple standards, but we do nothing.
So what are we going to do?
What do you suggest?
Okay, let's change it.
It's a raping.
Does that make you feel better?
It's not a lynching.
It's a rape.
I mean, this whole thing where you can't use terms, you know, from back in the day, because I'm afraid to buy Cool Whip because you can't use slavery terms.
You know, we are getting nothing.
Okay, so I agree with you.
I come in every day.
Every day I come in and I'm like, I don't want to talk about the double standard because it's just.
But then you just look at the news and you're like, how?
How do these people sleep at night?
They don't.
Well, they sleep with each other from CNN.
I just saw some of the Project Veritas apparently.
See that guy?
What's his name?
Brusk?
Steve Rusk?
Oh, my God.
He looks like he's in his late hundreds.
Ugliest guy ever seen.
He's making moves on 20-year-olds.
What am I doing comedy for?
A guy like Jack.
But what were we talking about?
We were talking about a tangential.
I'm tired of talking about the hypocrisy and the double standards.
Yeah.
But it's like it's so bad and so crazy.
Yeah.
We have to, you know.
We have to get tougher.
Why are we always chasing them, Glenn?
Why are we always chasing them?
Seriously, I want this answered by you're a smart guy.
You're a zillionaire.
Why are we always chasing them?
Do they have better lawyers than Democrats?
Are they smarter?
Why are we, I know they control the media, all the institutions, the colleges.
Why are we always chasing them?
I will tell you this.
This is why I am following on the chalkboard.
Next week, I'm going to do another special because we have listened to them and we're going to present their argument.
But I'm also going to show you what the media has done since our last chalkboard.
And I've been saying this since the day we had it.
Stop playing defense.
Play offense.
You got them.
You have them on this.
And what are we doing?
We're talking about quid pro quo.
There was no quo.
Lots of quid.
No quo.
What are you doing?
Stop defending and go on the offense.
Isn't that because they control the message still?
The mainstream media, the internet, isn't that why?
Until we wrestle that from them, and that's going to take 40, 50 years to turn this ship around.
I won't be around for it.
Yeah, there's no, it's not turning around.
That ship's not turning around.
So how do we?
Get into a lifeboat.
I just want to throw that in real quick.
I know I hear the guys playing in the band as the deck is getting soaked.
Why is everybody in a tuxedo smoking cigars and saying, let's die like gentlemen?
No, get your ass in the boat.
Oh, I'd be throwing women overboard.
I'd be punching kids in the face.
Get out of the way.
Go on the offensive.
But how do we answer this for me?
I asked the guy that runs a media research center when I was feeling it for Dennis Miller, how did the liberals get control of media in the first place?
I know there's a theory out there when after World War II.
No, I'm not going to bring that.
No, it was the progressive.
It was the progressive era.
It was Woodrow Wilson, Colonel House.
I know, Colonel House, Edward Bernays, and the guy who ran CBS.
And they know this sounds like a conspiracy because when you say these words, everybody's like, oh, it's a conspiracy.
No, it's out in the open.
But they put together the, what is that organization called?
Old Stu that they put together, remember?
And double ACP?
No, no.
It's for the news.
All of the eggheads get together.
Bloomberg.
No, no, a White House correspondence there.
Shoot, it's the conspiracy place that everybody's like, oh, yeah, because you're in the.
Oh, the InfoWars.
No.
Another one.
Anyway.
Pilligan's Island.
I'm trying to remember what the name of it is.
I know somebody's in their car right now going, dummy, it's this.
Council of Foreign Relations.
Oh, I read about them.
They put that together.
And what it was is we're going to, we'll handpick the experts and they will meet with the press, and the experts will teach the press what the people are too stupid to understand.
And the press will then go sell that to the people.
And do you know who, I'm going to show you a little savvy, I'm not just a comic.
Do you know who headed up the Council on Foreign Relations?
Mika Brzezinski's old man.
Yeah, I think he did.
Yeah.
He did.
That scumbag, and that's why she's in it.
She's with me.
Nick DePaulo from nickdip.com.
If you have not seen his special, there's no rating for it.
It just goes right down to the lowest, most foul, but it's funny as hell.
You can find it at nickdip.com, nickdickdip.com.
So let me, Nick, let me ask you this.
Let me ask you this.
A couple of stories here.
One, the Daily Caller.
We asked every GOP senator about impeachment and only seven ruled it out.
And they're making it into a big deal, but only seven ruled it out.
Would you, if you were a senator, would you rule it out or you'd say, I'd like to see the evidence.
I want to see the case.
Or would you just rule it out?
I fight like the Democrats.
I fight 30.
I'd go, I rule it out.
I wouldn't even think twice.
But this is all kabuki theater anyways, Glenn.
Let me ask you this, okay?
As from my understanding of impeachment, if it passes in the House, then the Senate, if there's an impeachment trial, becomes the jury.
Yes.
This is how it works.
You really think the Republicans are going to convict Trump and cut their own political throats and then no longer exist as a party?
This is all symbolic on Nancy Pelosi's part and shift to cancers and blights on this country.
It's all kabuki theater.
He's not going to get impeached just for that reason.
The Senate controls the Republicans control the Senate.
What are we talking about here?
We're wasting our time.
If it goes to the Senate in a way, I actually would like to see it go through because they can call witnesses the other side.
And if they're smart, they turn this whole thing around because the Senate will.
Trump could make his case That I think is very, very clear that the media is just not covering.
Bill O'Reilly thinks I'm wrong on that because he said nobody's going to watch it, but I think people would.
I mean, everybody watched the OJ trial.
Everybody watched the impeachment of Bill Clinton.
I think they're going to watch this.
Yeah, they also watched American Idol and record numbers.
So don't be too sure.
I mean, if there's something on AE that night, you're right about the Kardashians.
It'll be neck and neck.
That's why we're in this soup.
Let me get your thoughts on this.
A new bill brought by a Massachusetts state legislature would make it a crime to maliciously call somebody, excuse the expression, a bitch within the Commonwealth.
That's the reason I moved out of Massachusetts a couple weeks ago.
I use that term a lot.
No, you got that.
You got the three kids in Connecticut who were yelling racial slurs.
Did you see that?
They got arrested.
Yeah.
Yelling racial slurs.
They got arrested.
So they were yelling the N-word around a college campus.
And it was fascinating.
The Washington Post wrote a whole story about it.
And at no point did they bring up the First Amendment question here.
Can you get arrested for saying a word?
Did you notice that Ali Velchi, what he said on that MSNBC thing?
The first thing he said was the constitutionally protected impeachment.
It's the only time those guys ever talk about constitution.
Only time.
Only time.
Well, the other time they talk about it, they say it's a living and breathing document.
And I wish they felt that way about nine-month-old fetuses.
That is a great joke, ladies and gentlemen.
That is a great line.
Stephen Markle advanced.
Constitutional Impeachment Debates00:15:20
What's the life of a comedian really like?
My son wants to be a comedian.
And he's not.
I suggest you find a methanol clinic real soon.
Well, it depends on what level you're at.
It's fun when you're in your 20s.
You're on the road getting STDs in every city, and you can laugh about it.
You know, that part's fun.
Then you hit your 30s and you're like checking into the Holiday Express in Cleveland again for the eighth time.
And you're like, do I really want to see the Bowling Hall of Fame again or the spam factory?
And then you're like, this isn't that fun.
And then you start calling escort services.
You know, I called one call.
It was called Visiting Angels.
I thought it was an escort service.
It turns out it's for all people healthcare.
The nurse showed up with a bedpan.
We worked it into the fun.
But let me tell you something.
You better be good at it because it can get pretty lonely out there.
When you're on stage, Glenn, it's the best thing in the world.
When you come off stage, like Billy Crystal said, Mrs. Saturday night, all the guys want to be your friends.
All the girls over 400 pounds want to sleep with you.
It's great.
I haven't had a boss.
I haven't had a boss since 1988.
And, you know, I used to be able to get up at noontime on a Monday.
I was saying that until I met my manager and we started to do this streaming show.
Now I keep the hours of a fisherman.
My alarm goes off at 5 a.m.
Look at me.
I've aged 300 years and left.
So my son is only 20.
Tell your son to, I mean, you got to get it out of your system.
You got to do it.
And if he goes up and even two people laugh, I'm telling you, it's a drug.
I mean, there can't be anything better than making people laugh and feel good and laugh hard.
I mean, I can't imagine how that's, how they could not be addicting.
Well, the reason I did it, somebody told me when I was young, if you can make a woman laugh, you can make her do anything.
So that's why I got to do it.
But I turned, I grew up and a loaded handgun has the same effect.
And in today's world, they're both kind of the same.
Yes, they are.
So, Nick, how's the special going?
We are at about 920,000 views.
We only released this in May.
So I say we hit a million views by probably Thanksgiving.
Breath of Fresh Air.
I'm the pioneer in this stuff, folks.
I hate to keep blowing my own horn here, but I was pushing these anti-PC things and doing this type of comedy late 90s.
So I've taken a beaten.
I've been assaulted by a woman after a show.
I've been on the phone with the FBI twice this year about threats.
And I've put in my dues.
Anybody that comes out to my show, it's not because they saw me on TV or because I'm famous.
It's because of my comedy.
And I'm doing it the hard way.
But the special is really, it really is Nick DiPaulo essence.
I let it fly.
And even Billy Burr said to me, you know, he's politically a little opposite to me, but he said this special is good for comedy.
So I think, you know, people are looking for something like this.
Breath of Fresh Air.
It's on YouTube.
And go to nickdip.com if you want.
All right.
NickDip.com.
Nick, good talking to you, brother.
You're the best.
Thanks.
Thank you.
You bet.
This is the best of the Glenn Beck program.
Hey, it's Glenn.
And if you like what you hear on the program, you should check out Pat Gray Unleashed.
His podcast is available wherever you download your favorite podcast.
Hi, it's Glenn.
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You can subscribe on iTunes.
Thanks.
We have John Ziegler on the program today.
Now, if you're a longtime listener of this program, you may have heard him in the past, and he generally seems to make a lot of sense.
He generally, well, he's not popular, and he's not popular because he's always on the other side of things.
Always.
And many times he's right.
Now, he just spent the day yesterday with Matt Lauer.
And I thought, you know, we should have John on the radio program because we haven't heard Matt Lauer's side of the story.
But I'm concerned that John Ziegler, because there isn't anybody that's rushing and saying, hey, John, I was part of the Armenian genocide.
Please defend me.
I think he may end up being the most hated man in America.
Welcome to the program, John Ziegler.
Wow, I've had a lot of interesting intros on this program, but that one takes the cake.
Wow.
Well, I mean, you know, you don't, you did, and like I said, you're generally right.
I think the things that you've said, I'm just afraid of where you're going to take this one.
Well, look, here's the bottom line of this.
You know, Matt Lauer, as you guys obviously know, was one of the biggest media stars in the world in November of 2017, got fired in the midst of the post-Harvey Weinstein Me Too situation, and has never done an interview of any kind since then.
And now with Ronan Farrow's new book, alleging that he raped an NBC, former NBC producer named Brooke Nevilles at the SoChi Olympics in 2014, something that she never claimed before by any evidence until she spoke to Ronan Farrow, which I don't think is coincidental.
Matt Lauer, who I have known in the past because I've done three major interviews with him on other issues, he called me about a week and a half ago and said, can we talk?
I said, sure.
And we've probably spoke about three hours on the phone, partially about the facts of the case, partially about negotiating a potential meeting, get-together, off-the-record interview.
And so eventually we did that.
And yesterday, I took, this is so crazy.
Only John Ziegler would be dumb enough to do this.
I took a red-eye flight from Los Angeles to New York, drove out to the Hamptons, spent the entire day with Matt Lauer, and flew back.
Also, I didn't have to pay for a damn hotel room.
So I'm a little tired right now because I'm back in L.A. Sleep deprivation is like truth serum.
So tell us what you're thinking, John.
Well, I can assure you that if anybody if there was some way to have aired live video of the five and a half hours I spent grilling Matt Lauer yesterday in the Hamptons, And then that was somehow accessible to the public.
It would have been a Super Bowl rating.
Oh, I'm sure it would have.
This was – I have done a lot of very high-profile interviews in my career.
And this was the most extraordinary of its kind that I've ever done.
This is on multiple levels, on a human level.
I'm talking about just on a human level.
I mean, this is a man who admits to making enormous mistakes, and I grill him over those.
And by the way, all this is in a column entitled, After Meeting with Matt Lauer, He has a Compelling Story, but Does He Have a Fair Place to Tell It?
Which has just gone out on Mediate.
I thought it was going to go out a little earlier than it did, but you know how these things work in this business.
So that apparently is now out.
And I urge people to read it.
We took a photo together to prove that we had met.
That was one of the conditions of the meeting.
And I'll just say it because this is the way I am.
I am convinced that the idea that he raped this woman is absurd.
I mean, it is.
And I think that there are people who are very, very, very close to this story and to her who know that the allegation is absurd.
And they have not been willing to come forward publicly.
They've done so privately.
I would urge them to come forward publicly and tell the real truth of what happened here.
But I also think, and I said there's multiple levels to this.
There's the human level.
There's the allegation, you know, what actually happened.
And then there's also the Ron and Farrow issue.
And I got to tell you, Glenn, I bought into the whole Ronan Farrow thing back during Harvey Weinstein.
And then when he went after Brett Kavanaugh and what I refer to as an urban legend, I started to go, I started, whoa, what's going on here?
And now after I've gotten deep into this Matt Lauer thing, and when I read his two chapters on Matt Lauer, which are a freaking joke, I mean, they are journalistic garbage.
This is page six meets Alex Jones type stuff.
This is insanity, what he was allowed to write.
And he's allowed to do it because he's now a media darling who gets no scrutiny whatsoever.
He is a dangerous man, Glenn.
The idea that he is now the arbiter of adult male-female sexual relationships is just unbelievable.
I thought the Kavanaugh thing was an interesting moment with Ronan Farrow because he really tried to parlay his credibility with the Weinstein thing into taking Kavanaugh out, including embracing the ninth string accusers of Kavanaugh, not even the main ones.
And he didn't seem to be.
Like the ones that Avenatti was like, okay, this is ridiculous.
I mean, he really went to the well.
I thought it was the moment where he jumped the shark.
I thought, and it was an eye-opening moment.
I agree with you, Stu 100%, that that's what he tried to do.
He tried to use his street cred on Weinstein to take out Kavanaugh.
Now, at that point, to me, he was an activist.
But that doesn't mean you're always wrong.
I mean, maybe he just missed one.
Maybe he just missed one on that.
But now that I've gotten in the details on this, what did you find out from that?
Well, one of the more amazing things is that, you know, Ronan Farrow met with Matt Lauer just before publication.
And Ronan Farrow acknowledged to Matt and to another person, who I spoke to, this other person as well, that Brooke Nevilles came, these are Ronan Farrow's words, came to her conclusion that Lauer had, quote-unquote, raped her, quote, in hindsight, in hindsight.
In other words, after many years after it happens, after the firing where she never tells NBC anything about a rape, she tells NBC about a consensual affair on company property.
That's why Matt Lauer got fired.
And there's been a lot of media smoke surrounding all of that.
But people don't need, they need to understand that that's how this all went down.
It was in the midst of that moral panic post-Weinstein, Me Too.
NBC needs a scout because they're being attacked on their rejection of the Ronan Farrow Weinstein story.
And they decapitate Matt Lauer in 24 hours for what I believe was more political purposes than anything else.
The rules changed.
And by the way, Lauer never even fought that.
He never fought his contract being broken.
He didn't do an interview about it because he felt horrible about what he had done to his family.
He didn't want to fight it.
He accepted responsibility for his mistakes, and he thought that was going to be the end of it.
And now he's being accused of rape because, as you guys know, once the media decapitates you, now they feel like they can feed off your carcass.
And so this is what's happened here.
Farrow is promoting what I believe to be an activist position on Me Too using Matt Lauer's carcass.
Well, now Matt Lauer's like, well, wait a minute, I got to fight back.
But he doesn't know how to do it because we don't live in a world where there is any sense of media fairness on this issue, especially.
And so, you know, and he's being bombarded with interview requests constantly.
And of course, you know, it's perfectly logical that when that happens, you go to John Ziegler instead.
Well, I will tell you this, John.
I mean, I wouldn't go to the mainstream media.
I wouldn't.
I'd go to somebody like you.
I'd go someplace where the guy has a reputation of listening to the other side.
Because I've done too many interviews and seen, and Matt is, you know, Matt knows this.
Too many interviews where the interviewer is just coming in for a ratings hit or to increase their popularity or whatever.
They don't actually care to listen.
They know what they're looking for.
And that's the way most people are.
100% on this issue.
That's exactly what has happened.
And as far as me assessing his credibility, let me just tell you how this went down.
I mean, I am the person who told Matt Lauer, I don't know what percentage, but a huge percentage of what is in Ronan Farrow's book because he didn't even want to read it.
He's so disgusted by it.
So I'm getting his reaction to in real time, real time, to the allegations.
Now, you've done a million interviews as well.
That's about as credible as it gets in determining someone's, you know, whether or not their story makes sense because this isn't a cover story he's coming to me with.
Let me tell you my version of events, and I've got X, Y, and Z all nailed down.
He's literally reacting to me in real time to things he's never heard before and has extraordinary detail, extraordinary detail in his responses.
He didn't sidestep any of my inquiries.
I mean, you guys know me.
I mean, we spent five and a half hours talking about this.
We weren't talking about why the Yankees didn't make the World Series, okay?
I mean, this was as excruciating five and a half hours as Matt Lauer could possibly have ever experienced verbally in his life.
Tulsi Gabbard Search Issues00:13:44
I mean, it was emotional at times.
It was extremely fact-based.
He was as open as I could have possibly imagined.
He has an incredibly compelling story.
And this story goes way beyond Matt Lauer.
This is the best of the Glenn Beck program.
Like listening to this podcast?
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We welcome to the program.
The host of Louder with Crowder, Stephen Crowder.
Hey, Stephen, how are you?
Not good, Glenn.
Not good?
What'd you just do?
I was listening to your advertisements, you and your sponsors, and wonderful.
You do a great job.
Thank you.
I will say this, Glenn.
You're probably one of the best guys I know when I used to watch on Fox.
When you would use a prompter and I know the scandal prompter right, because you're doing a full hour show it's really hard to tell if something is written or you're off the cuff and that's really just the the performance artist in you it's.
It's a real skill and I envy it.
But I'm not doing well, because I was waiting here while you're doing your sponsors and I found myself reading a BuzzFeed listicle.
I guess they call them, you know, top 25 and yeah, I mean now.
Now I, just now, I want to kill myself why.
What is the?
What is the listicle about?
What did you find?
It doesn't matter, it's the fact that it's Buzzfeed.
So I know it's national awareness day and I just think these are, these are the, these are the issues that slide in between the cracks.
And if we were to look at, you know, the the current uh suicide epidemic, it's a pandemic.
I think there's some responsibility of Buzzfeed articles.
I think Buzzfeed articles lead to mass suicide.
That's a theory.
I think it's a pretty good theory.
Myself, it's why I don't go to BuzzFeed.
Just, you know what that's.
Maybe that's why no one's talking about it.
Yeah, probably has a.
It sounds like a relatively simple solution.
Yeah, I've got a listicle.
Uh, number one, don't go there and right yeah, all right.
So Stephen, yesterday your show was really compelling and you were trending on YouTube as you were, as you were taking YouTube apart.
I love this about you because they they don't want to hide you anymore, because you're just exposing them.
Tell it, tell the audience, go ahead.
I think they're stuck between a rock and a hard place and I want to make sure people understand, like with my channel and the demonetization, all that stuff is separate from from what we stumbled across.
So for people who haven't found uh, who haven't watched this video yet, it's available at YouTube, it's available at the blaze.
Listen, we were demonetized last summer and so when that started happening, that wasn't really what concerned us.
What concerned us was this all of a sudden drop off in organic reach and search, and we realized that we weren't.
You know, we weren't showing up.
If you type in Steven Crowder Or change my mind, my stuff doesn't show up.
And we told people in the audience, hundreds of thousands of people responded or sent screenshots.
And some of them coming online saying, no, you show up perfectly fine.
We're going, why is there such a discrepancy in the search results?
Well, we realized that if people were searching in the United States exclusively, my content wouldn't show up.
But if they switched their VPN, you know, effectively, which is like a digital web kind of address to Germany or Spain, anywhere that's not the U.S., it would show up.
So we said, okay, let's run some more tests on this.
And we just happened to be running some tests because we've been going back and forth with YouTube on Tulsi Gabbard because everyone was talking about some suspicion, everyone has some suspicions that she's being kind of silenced by the DNC.
And what happened was immediately the night when Hillary Clinton accused Tulsi Gabbard of being a Russian asset, which, by the way, apparently I'm paid by the Russians to reveal this information as well.
That was another conspiracy.
That's really good.
Stephen, Stephen, honestly, honestly, hang on just a sec.
I have to ask you this aside question.
As a comedian, as a guy who makes a lot of money writing comedy and delivering comedy, you couldn't have even come up with the Hillary Clinton story that she is peddling now about her, the election, Tulsi Gabbard.
I mean, it's beyond reason.
Right.
No, I mean, last week we just had a sketch with Donald Trump Twitch streaming Minecraft, and it's less absurd than the current story with Hillary Clinton.
Right.
So what happened was, if you searched Tulsi Gabbard anywhere, not in the United States, her channel showed up and videos from her channel showed up.
She switched her VPN exclusively to the United States.
She was nowhere to be found.
And then it switched right back when she stopped trending.
So effectively, she was not able to defend herself.
And keep in mind, Tulsi Gabbard has a lawsuit, a pending lawsuit against Google and YouTube for shutting her out from Google ads during a debate.
And you and I know this, Glenn.
You have a window of opportunity with a debate, especially if you're kind of seen as a second-tier candidate and you gain some momentum.
And that's what's happened with Tulsi.
She's kind of like the left Carly Fiorina.
You know, she's done really well in the debate and impressed a lot of people.
And then people can't find her when they search her.
So this is one of those things.
It was so bizarre to me.
YouTube says, well, it's geographically based and we want to best serve our audience.
I would love for YouTube and Google to answer me, you, anyone, and particularly their shareholders, why they think it is best serving the audience to not offer them up the channel of a sitting representative who is currently running for president of the United States only in the United States.
It just doesn't make any sense.
We don't know exactly what's happening, but we do know that we tested this for multiple different VPNs and the same results came up all the time.
Okay, so let me just break this down for people in case you, one more time, in case you didn't get this.
Tulsi Gabbard was trending outside of the United States, where you would think the trend would be lower because why does somebody in Spain care about this thing with Tulsi Gabbard?
Most Americans don't even know Tulsi Gabbard.
How do the, you know, how do the Spanish, why are they, why is she trending there?
Okay.
Not trending here until she stops for Spanish to their defense.
She has that sort of, she could be confused for Spanish.
And in their defense, she has that really very, very appealing, generically like Abercrombie ethnic look where you're like, ooh, Spanish.
Is she there Polynesian?
I will say this.
I find her very attractive.
Her and Nikki Haley, very attractive.
But I do have to correct you.
Tulsi Gabbard was trending in the United States on Twitter and on Facebook.
So she was trending even in the United States.
But if you search Tulsi Gabbard on YouTube, where she has a channel, by the way, you didn't find Tulsi Gabbard's content.
You found other content from people accusing her or news outlets accusing her of being a Russian outlet.
So she was trending.
Okay, so wait a minute, So her content, and that includes one of the things she was doing on her channel that was live, right?
I can't confirm that she was doing something live at that moment.
But again, her channel wasn't showing up, nor videos from her channel.
So she was trending.
And then if you go onto YouTube from any country that's not the United States and you search Tulsi Gabbard, boom, Tulsi Gabbard's direct channel and video show up.
The only place where it was like a ghost, she didn't show up at all, was the United States.
Do we have any idea yet of what their defense is of this, Stephen?
Well, you know, in our case, we stumbled across it because they've been doing this with Change My Mind.
Like, I don't know why if you type in Steven Crowder, Change My Mind, someone, I don't know why YouTube would serve them, you know, a rebuttal video from an atheist with two subscribers saying that I work for the Russians, but that's what happened.
Usually when we talk with YouTube, they offer three defenses, right?
It's an algorithm.
Okay.
Well, an algorithm is created by a person, right?
And here's the thing.
We've talked with YouTube quite a bit, and they actually switched our channel recently to whatever it's called, like an official verified preferred channel when we complained.
So someone flipped the switch so that our channel shows up now, which means it's not an algorithm.
We are in a position to prove and say, no, no, no, no, we spoke with high lips at YouTube.
They fixed our channel.
So that would be one defense.
That's not true.
That's just an algorithm.
Another ultimately is someone who makes this call.
Then they can say, well, the algorithms are geographically based to best serve an audience.
Again, how does it best serve the American audience for them to exclusively not find someone running for president of the United States?
Right.
And they might try and say, well, just some lower level employee.
But I've got to imagine, because my name is, I mean, they've been watching our narcos parody and our transgender breastfeeding Hitler sketches at YouTube headquarters because they've talked with us about it.
They've talked with us about these sketches.
To me, it's hysterical that in Palo Alto, they're watching a lot of private content.
I can just imagine the counseling that has to take place.
I'm trying to imagine that the management of a channel of a sitting presidential candidate who is currently suing the company wouldn't be passed off to some taxi for the higher-up.
And while we're talking about preferred channel status, because that's a new change YouTube has made, shouldn't all people running for president of the United States right now, shouldn't there be a meeting that all of them have official verified channel status?
Why would Tulsi Gabbard not?
So they can make those arguments.
I don't think it passes the SNF test, and I don't think it passes the common sense test.
Most people will go, well, of course I assume that if Google, who, by the way, control 90% of the search market globally, Google, if we talk about, you know, the example I use is if JFK were not able to get an NBC, ABC, CBS stack, and they have blacklisted him, he would have never been the candidate.
He would have never been president.
Well, Google has at least that much power, much more globally, and they're in more households and used by more Americans than all TV networks combined.
And if they are not acting truthfully, or at least most Americans would assume, well, if I'm going into Google or if I'm going to YouTube, I just like Tulsi Gabbard and debate.
I want to see what she has to say.
How do you think anyone in their right mind would ever assume that YouTube would be preventing them from seeing Tulsi Gabbard's content?
But that's the problem.
There's a bias by proactive lies, which we see, but this is far more subversive because people never know it.
And that really, really worries me.
This is the most powerful company in the history of the world.
And I mean that.
I mean that.
You go to the left-hand Indian Trading Company.
You can look at the English Empire.
No one has the influence over the delivery of information right now that Google, YouTube have, maybe if you add up Facebook, Twitter.
And all of them tend to be lean significantly left.
I will tell you, Stephen, that this is the first time I've said this recently a couple of times and maybe somebody can correct me on this, but this is the first time that I think that our founders just couldn't even imagine.
And it's not like they could imagine that we weren't, you know, we were going to go to the moon or something like that.
I mean that when they're putting the Constitution together, they couldn't imagine that people in power in the government would cede their power to each other and then to a corporation.
And a corporation would be bigger than any government and possibly all governments of the world.
They just would have never seen that.
Right.
And like you said, I don't want to go down that slippery slope of, you know, people say, well, the First Amendment doesn't apply to iPhones.
No, it applies to everything.
But in this case, it's a little different because YouTube and Google, by the way, have hosted political debates.
People send in their questions via YouTube.
They have chosen to engage in the political sphere right now.
And they have come out and said, we are a public platform.
They are not a publisher.
But if they are creating algorithms or if someone is manually removing search results from a current presidential candidate, that is not acting like a platform.
That is acting like a publisher.
What we need is transparency.
What we need are answers.
And I'm going to be really clear.
I can't stand most of Tulsi Gabbard's policies.
You know, and when people say, well, she's one of the more reasonable ones, that's because she's the only current Democratic candidate who said there should be some cutoff for abortion.
And it was 28 weeks.
That's seven months.
So she says, let's stop abortion after seven months.
How about that?
And they go, Russia, Russia, Russia, Russian plan.
So it's odd to me that Google and these tech companies like Tulsi Gabbard isn't far left enough.
It's mind-boggling.
And I think it's super important because, listen, I think Donald Trump's going to win.
And of course, I don't want Tulsi Gabbard to be president.
Of course, I don't want Bernie Sanders to be president.
But I want it to be an honest win.
I want the Democrats to still get the candidate that they've chosen, right?
Donald Trump was not supported by donors.
That's a great example.
How did Donald Trump become president?
People wanted him, and he was using new media, social media, right?
It wasn't, if you were to compare the power that's wielded from big money, be it the Koch brothers or big oil, to Google and big tech, it's not even close because we have a president who doesn't have the backing of that big money.
He had his own mediums on new media, and they've come out and said, we didn't do enough to stop Donald Trump.
And now it looks like they're trying to stop Tulsi Gabbard.
I can't say it with 100% fact, but I can absolutely say that when this was trending, if you searched Tulsi Gabbard on YouTube, you did not get Tulsi Gabbard.
And that is either an oversight, there's such complete ineptitude that they cannot be running 90% of search information.
There needs to be more transparency, or they need to answer for something more sinister going on.
YouTube Censorship Concerns00:00:25
Steven Crowder from Lowder with Crowder.
You can sign up, follow him on YouTube, and you can find him at louderwithcrowder.com.
Also, he is a member of the Blaze, where you can see the show he's talking about, either on YouTube or if you're a member of the Blaze.