Glenn Beck, Riley Gaines, and Sabo dissect the Bud Light crisis, where an Anheuser-Busch heir's comments triggered a 26% sales drop. Gaines defends Texas legislation defining "woman" by citing Y chromosomes as proof of biological sex, while recounting her assault during protests. Sabo details his art campaigns against American Airlines' policies and anti-vaccine work at a synagogue that drew police scrutiny. Together, they argue corporate capitulation to progressive agendas fuels backlash, suggesting that ignoring biological realities and free speech invites economic and social collapse. [Automatically generated summary]
Adventures with Billy Bush and Riley Gaines00:01:46
Welcome to the podcast.
We have quite an adventure today as we visit, you'll understand this by the end of the program, the island of Monjaro.
But also, we talk about an adventurous experience of an interview that Billy Bush went on.
Now, not the Billy Bush who was on like Access Hollywood or whatever and then got canceled back in the day.
No, another one, an Anheuser-Busch heir who went on TMZ for some reason and talked about the Dylan Mulvaney experience.
It's quite an adventure.
We also talked about the Riley Gaines situation.
She was assaulted, spat upon, I guess the way you're supposed to say that, as she was trying to protect women's sports.
We talked to her.
Conservative street artist Sabo joins the show as well.
He has a he did another campaign here in Dallas, and like nobody's doing stuff like Sabo is.
It really is incredible.
And he is shaking things up.
We go through what his latest experience was going after American airlines and some of the woke policies here in America today.
That's all available now.
By the way, subscribe to this podcast if you would.
Also, Stu Does America, which is available five days a week for your listening pleasure, including tonight.
We're back on the air tonight.
So check that out.
I apparently had some legal troubles that Glenn may have talked about on the air while I was gone.
I'm going to have to get all the details on that later on.
But for now, enjoy the podcast.
You're listening to the best of the Glenn Beck Program.
So, Stu.
April 1st Beer Strategy00:13:50
I don't know if you've been following the heir to the Anheuser-Busch fortune.
Have you seen this?
A little bit, yeah.
This is an interesting strategy going on here.
Yeah, it is.
We're going to play a recording of it later on in the program.
And I just want to whet your appetite.
It is the worst self-inflicted industrial accident I have ever seen in my life.
It is as if the Anheuser-Busch guy is standing there in front of a table saw and he's asked by TMZ one question.
And he's like, Well, you know, hang on.
And he just flips the switch for the table saw.
And as he starts to answer, he just puts himself face down right directly into the saw.
It is a bloodbath, an absolute.
I don't think it's going to help Anheuser-Busch that much.
I really don't.
Really don't.
No.
I think when you go, when you go on, and halfway through, he's like, you know, I thought we were here to talk about my book.
Did you really think you were going to get onto television, any television show, and talk about your book when they know the table saw is right there in front of you?
No, no, no.
It's ugly.
I heard they had another, what, 26% year-over-year drop.
And, you know, people keep asking, like, how are you going to turn this around?
When is this going to stop?
And a lot of people are saying, well, you know, it's never going to stop, which is an understandable thought.
But in reality, eventually they'll get to a point where they're comparing themselves to the period of time that is after the drop.
So it'll be year over year against when it's already fallen off 26%.
And then it'll start coming down maybe.
I mean, that's their salvation is these numbers don't look so bad after a year of torture.
That's what I wanted to know.
What is the one-year anniversary?
Because every month, year over year, every month they're down another 28%.
And if you don't know how year over year works, you're kind of like, how many times does 25% go into 100?
They're like, it's letting me be down 10,000%.
How many months before we get to the one-year anniversary?
So we're going to start comparing it to the downtime.
And this shows the incompetence of Van Heiser-Busch because the actual date of this was April 1st.
And they could have and should have just said, April Fools.
You're just kidding with the Till Baby thing.
That was a joke.
Come on.
You guys know us.
Remember we make the funny commercials?
April Fools.
Hang on just a second.
They had that out and they didn't use it.
It came out on April 1st.
That was, yeah, that's the date that it was at least.
I think they may have obviously made it in advance of that and maybe sent it in advance.
Maybe when she posted the video, it was April 1st or he posted.
Sorry, I don't know.
Did you just call him her?
Did you just call her she?
I'm looking at a picture here.
It certainly doesn't look like a dude, but whatever.
The point is, you know, April 1st is the day.
So that's what they should have done.
That would have been the ultimate.
And they should have.
Get out of jail free car.
Now, they still would have got a left-wing protest.
You thought we would, but Dylan.
Come on.
We're April 1st.
We're like known for the WhatsApp, guys.
Like, this is our humor.
It's hilarious.
Come on.
And you know what?
Their sales would have gone up 10%, but they didn't attempt that one, unfortunately.
But what?
Sir!
That's us.
Like, we don't.
Hey!
I'm in chickdom.
That's me.
I'm a woman.
That all fits.
This is one of the heirs to Anheuser-Busch, The Fortune.
And he's just written a new book, and he decides, hey, you know what I'll do?
I'll go on TMZ because I bet they're not going to ask me a single question that's controversial.
Listen to the buzzsaw.
Go ahead.
You must have strong opinions about the Dylan Mulvaney campaign.
Yeah, Dylan Mulvaney campaign.
I think my family, my ancestors.
Stop.
This is where he should have said, no, I really want to just talk about my book.
Okay.
And then they would have said, well, we got to get at least one answer.
No, I'm here to talk about my book.
I think he should have said, hey, if you're not prepared.
I'm going to be living on the side of a mountain and I have a bunch of green technology that doesn't work.
I can't hear you anymore.
I'm sorry.
We have to cut this short.
And by the way, April Fools, I would have thrown everything at it to stay out of these questions if I were them.
Okay, so listen, he decides to answer.
Now listen to this.
I think my family, my ancestors would have rolling over in their grave.
They were very patriotic.
They loved this country and what it stood for.
They believed that transgender gays, that sort of thing was all a very personal issue.
They love this country because it is a free country and people are allowed to do what they want.
But it was never meant to be on a beer can and never meant to be pushed in people's faces.
The people for the majority who drink beer care about wholesome things, care about America, and believe that certain things in life should be kept private.
And transgenderism is one of them.
Why?
Okay.
Oh, gosh.
Here he goes.
Now, so far, that answer isn't terrible, right?
Like, that is.
Okay, all right.
Okay.
Now, forget the fact that you're on TMZ, right?
And you should know what direction these questions are coming from.
Like, if he gave that to a conservative host, like the conservative, I think that's kind of what we want at a Bud Light, right?
Just keep it out of your friggin beer stuff.
Like, just shut up about this stuff.
That's not what he said.
That's not what he said.
He should have said, no, he should have said, look, beer is beer.
It's not political.
And this isn't about transgenderism.
This is about shoving everything in everyone's face and making it political to where you cannot have a differing opinion.
I don't really, I don't really care how you live your life.
Why do would you want me, you know, having uh, you know, the you know, a straight couple humping on your on your beer can?
No, leave it alone.
Just leave it alone.
I just want a nice beer, okay?
I want the Clyde Stales.
I want raw raw.
We're not that bad of a place.
I don't want any political messages with my beer.
You're not even looking for like a great place.
It's like, hey, we're not that bad of a place.
Sure.
Brian, that's the only thing.
Oh, I've lowered my standards.
Yeah.
Oh, no, I've lowered my standards.
You know, America.
Wait, but okay.
I'll take it.
Now, I know this is about to get worse, but like, how is his answer so far really diverge from what the direction you know?
Okay.
Okay, because he said a couple of things.
He said, transgender, gay.
Okay, well, you better understand, Mr. Bruce.
Turning on the buzz saw.
He flubbed that.
Okay, we're going to flub that one a little bit.
A little bit.
A little bit.
And he set himself up to say being transgender is un-American.
He's like, you know, my relatives, they loved America.
Not this transgender stuff.
Right.
Wait.
He did set himself up.
He made some ground.
He made himself, it made it okay.
But he also said, you got to keep things quiet.
Well, do you see this is you?
I don't want to push you in the closet.
I don't care.
Just don't force me to claim you're a good-looking woman when you're a dude.
No, you could be a dude in a dress and that's fine.
And you could go, I am beautiful and I am a woman.
That's great.
But I have the right to go, no, he's not.
I mean, the execution of this point was suboptimal, as we might say.
Oh, you haven't.
No, but I'm just saying, like, his point so far, I think you could, you know, the left could say, oh, well, he's talking about transgender should stay in the closet, but he's clearly not actually saying that.
He's saying, like, look, it's not something to put on a beer can.
I'm saying, again, so far, I've not heard this whole clip.
Maybe he does say that.
Oh, I know.
Just second.
I was with you.
Stu, I was with you before I heard the whole clip.
I was like, okay, it's not good.
No, but.
And then he keeps talking.
Listen.
He kept private?
Because I mean, if I'm gay and he's gay, should we keep that private?
Yeah, you know, you don't have to keep it private, but I don't think you should advertise it on a beer can.
Do you?
I mean, if I like.
We just looked at Bud Light Rainbow Cans.
I mean, the company advertised on there and that seemed to be okay.
Yep.
Yep.
Well, I don't know.
Why do you think then, you guys, that people are turning away and boycotting Bud Light now?
Prejudice.
Prejudice.
You believe it's prejudice?
Oh, yeah.
Absolutely.
Oh, absolutely.
It's prejudice.
I mean, could these guys, honestly, could you find two dumber people to be conducting this interview?
No.
TMZ.
Right.
It's like, why would you go on?
I mean, that's the first step here.
Why would you go on TMZ?
What possible?
What are you going to sell?
Eight books?
I mean, when's the last time someone who read TMZ read a book?
1995?
Like, there is no.
Look at the Venn diagram of TMZ viewers and book readers.
They do not come together at any point.
Stu, Stu, see the horse laying there in the field?
Please put your club away for a second.
Okay.
All right.
Go ahead.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
Oh, absolutely.
It's prejudice.
I mean, the same argument could have been made.
Look, I remember my dad telling me stories that there were bars in LA that used to have signs that said no dogs, no Jews.
So there's been a history of prejudice in the country.
People get over certain things.
It's happened to Jews.
It's happened to black people.
It's happened to gay people.
And it's happening transgender.
It's happened to white people.
To me, it is absolutely prejudice.
Evasions.
Well, I just think, I just think, you know, I think prejudice against Jews, against black people, those kinds of things is a totally different deal than advertising.
I'm sorry, my dog.
His dog's trying to stop it.
His dog's dog's trying to stop it.
Get out of the room.
You pay me.
You bought me to protect you.
Come out of the room.
Come out of the room.
They're going to kill you.
Come out of the room.
Doc just starts jumping on him in the middle of the interview, doing everything that I want to do.
Like, I want to jump in there and just pull him off the camera.
And the dog is attempting the same thing.
Even the dog knows you don't do this interview.
All right, go ahead.
Takes three of us.
Excuse me, one second.
Let me move him out of the house.
Sorry about that, guys.
You still there?
Yeah, I'm dogs leave.
Okay.
I just happen to think that your sexual preference is meant to stay private.
I just don't think, you know, I think it's not when you talk about racism, race connection.
I got to stop you for a second.
Being a transgender person is not a sexual preference.
That's different from a sexual preference.
It's an identity.
This is an identity.
That's a fault.
It's an identity.
No.
It's at the majority level they don't identify and don't.
It's a mental illness.
That's prejudice.
That's what prejudice.
I agree with you.
That's what prejudice is.
It's intolerance.
And it's saying, I will turn my back on your beer if it's supported by somebody I don't like.
I mean, I thought we were going to talk about my book, Charles.
I did too.
I mean, here we are talking about the politics of transgender.
You opened the door, Annie.
He opened the door.
Oh, that was his fault.
Yeah.
Politics.
Politics.
He got it right.
I mean, he hasn't stepped into the buzzsaw yet, but he at least got it right there and didn't realize it.
Politics of Transgender Sports Bans00:14:48
Politics is what it's all about.
This is the best of the Glen Beck program.
Welcome to the Glen Beck program.
We're so glad that you have joined us today.
We've got Riley Gaines joining us now.
Is she on the phone yet?
She is a 12-time NCAA All-American Swimmer Independent Women's Forum spokesperson.
She was in Texas.
New legislation to protect women in college sports from competing against males.
That's how much of a bigot she is.
Riley, welcome to the program.
How are you?
I'm doing great.
Thank you so much for having me on.
Yeah, you're welcome.
So I heard you were spat upon yesterday.
Is that true?
I mean, are we even surprised anymore?
There was, you know, the protesters spitting.
They were throwing drinks and bottles.
They were using the most profane language to third graders who were there supporting the chance and the opportunity to be able to compete at the level that I was fortunate enough to be able to compete at.
At third graders who had already dealt with this at their schools in Texas competing against boys.
And so I think that says a lot about the movement.
I think that says a lot about really where we are as a nation when you see these grown adults really throwing temper tantrums like little babies, entitled babies.
So Oklahoma governor Kevin Stitt, he led the way.
He signed the women's Bill of Rights by executive order.
Then Texas did it, and you were with the governor yesterday.
What exactly does this bill do?
The Bill of Rights is a law defined sex-based term such as male and female and woman and man and girl and boy and mother and father.
I mean, it's crazy that we need this common sense law.
Nearly 250 years that we've been established as a country, and of course, human civilization has been around a lot longer than that.
We've never struggled to understand what man and woman is, but we've reached a point where, unfortunately, we are.
And so that's all this bill does.
It doesn't prevent laws from being made as it pertains to transgender individuals.
It doesn't create any new laws.
It just defines the word woman where it already exists in law.
So take, for example, the Fairness in Women's Sports Act.
That's great, but what good is it if we can't agree on the definition of a woman?
That's what the Women's Bill of Rights does.
Well, let me tell you something, Riley.
As a man who's now a woman, I am so glad that I can break the glass ceiling and take all of the awards from you because I'm clearly stronger as a woman.
This is really nuts.
And what I think is the craziest about it is the people who are saying they are protecting women are not protecting women.
They're protecting men who are claiming that they're women and violating the rights of actual women.
It's the patriarchy, right?
I mean, didn't they preach down your throat about this?
Think of the original Me Too movement.
I mean, oh my goodness, they would roll over in their grave, the people who once fought for this, to know what's happening now.
But you're exactly right.
We've seen this fall almost entirely on party lines.
Especially, I mean, look at what the U.S. House of Representatives did as it pertained to the Protection for Women and Girls Sports Act put forward by Greg Suby.
It did fall entirely on party lines.
All 203, every single one of them, Democrat representatives in the House, voted in opposition of protecting women and girls.
All of them.
And these are mothers and fathers of young daughters, of young sons who play in sports, certainly.
And so it's just, it's confusing, right?
Like, doesn't it just make you scratch your head?
Like, how did we get here?
But really, it feels like betrayal.
So, Riley, why do you because I urge people to ask their friends who are suddenly finding themselves going, that is not only a woman, that is the most beautiful woman I've ever seen.
And if you don't say that, I can't be your friend anymore.
And they should compete in women's sports.
They should be showering in our high school locker rooms, all of this stuff.
10 years ago, that didn't happen.
10 years ago, you would not have had 203 Democrats stand up and do that.
What new information do you think they think they got that is making them march in lockstep?
People, here's my conclusion of why I think people are taking this approach.
We very much live in a society, and we have the media ultimately to blame, along with other things, but we very much live in a society where you're either an oppressor or you're oppressed.
And people shiver at the thought of being an oppressor.
And you know what qualifies you to be an oppressor?
Being white, especially a white man.
Oh my gosh, if you're a white man, forget it.
Being a Christian.
That's why I'm a woman and a black woman.
Hey, you can be whatever you want.
But being those people makes you an oppressor.
And people are terrified of that thought.
And they're scared they're going to end up on the wrong side of history.
But let me tell you what, asking a young girl to undress in front of a grown, fully intact man, that puts you on the wrong side of history.
And if you even try to combat that, to disagree, it says a whole lot about you and what you think about girls, what you think about women, and truthfully, what you think about the truth.
So I could go on.
I've got theories and theories, but you get it.
Give me a reaction to these headlines.
Headline number one, when it comes to trans sports bans, don't be fooled by the language of protection.
Well, I mean, the way they even, look, this Women's Bill of Rights, they label it as anti-trans.
It doesn't mention the word transgender anywhere in the Women's Bill of Rights.
Nowhere in the Women's Bill of Rights does it talk about being transgender.
But that's what this is.
Any attempt to protect women is immediately an attack on trans.
And what does that tell you?
What does that tell you?
When protecting women has become this attack, it means they want to erase us.
It's not anti-trans.
We're not banning athletes from competing.
Anyone, regardless of your sexual orientation or your gender identity or your race or what sports you play, everybody should play sports.
Of course, everyone should.
I encourage everyone to play sports.
But play where it's fair and where it's safe.
And that's how it aligns with your biological sex, not with your gender identity.
Everyone should play sports.
I'll be the first to put it on the record and say it.
So if you really believe you're a woman and you're born a man and you were misgendered by the doctor in society, where are you supposed to play?
With the men?
With the ladies?
Aren't you kind of nowhere?
Are you referring to intersex individuals?
Yeah, transgender individuals that are saying, you know, I can't play with the men because I'm not a man.
I identify as a woman.
And the women now won't let me play in their sports.
But they are male.
To deny that is to deny reality, is to deny biological truth.
They are a male.
You have a Y chromosome and you've gone through male puberty, despite if you've gone through male puberty.
Now, if you have a Y chromosome, you are a male.
Therefore, you should compete with the men.
That's why any category in sport is made.
It's not to segregate anyone.
We do it for this foundational sense of fairness.
Think about boxing, right?
We have the heavyweights and we have the feather weights and we have the classifications in between, but we're not putting the heavyweights in the heavyweight category because we're fat-shaming them.
That's silly.
We're doing it because it would be unfair if you had a man who's 280 pounds competing against fighting a guy who's 180, right?
I mean, that would be crazy.
And we all know the outcome.
It's the same thing in regards to this whole debate.
And think of Lance Armstrong.
What did we call it when he took testosterone and beat everyone?
We called it cheating.
And that's what this is as well.
The best of the Glenn Bank program.
Sebo, my man.
Corey, how are you?
I am very good.
I love what you did to the American Airlines arena.
I am so sick of the woke policies that are coming through these airlines, especially.
And let me just read some of the text.
You described the picture.
It says, Welcome to the woke American Airlines.
My pronouns are he, she, it, lost, baggage.
Who said AI doesn't work with that image?
So this image is, I can't tell, woman, man, light blue suit, looks almost like a military uniform, but it's American Airlines and pink hair.
I don't know.
I just don't want whatever that thing is flying my plane.
Then you have a poster that looks like a poster for the real fight.
It says gender inclusive, Jake Paul versus Nate Diaz.
He, him versus he, him.
Asterisks.
American Airlines Center policy is gender inclusive.
Welcome to the woke American Airlines.
How was the response to this from American Airlines in the American Airlines arena?
You know, I haven't heard directly.
Thank God.
I'm just lucky I'm not in a jail cell.
I could say the second I put up the first poster, security was pretty much all on me.
I had like five instances where police were driving past watching what I was doing.
So I didn't know if I was going to have a heart attack or an aneurysm.
So the response that I had was fear.
So how do you get away with this?
Honestly, you do this all over California.
I, by the way, I highly recommend that you buy his art.
I think he is going to be remembered.
Sorry to talk about you like you're not here.
But I think Sabo is going to be remembered as one of the most important artists of our day.
He doesn't get any press really except negative because he is on the freedom side.
And his stuff is very, very powerful.
And I think an investment.
So go to unsavoryagents.com.
That's still your address, isn't it?
Unsavoryagents.com.
Okay.
So how do you get away with this, Sabo?
I have no idea.
You know, when that first police officer drove by and stopped, I was in such fear because I had no idea what I was going to tell him.
And when he left, my assistant said, I think you're invisible.
And so I have no idea.
I think someone's just smiling on you.
In Texas, they may have agreed with you.
One of my favorites is kind of a flashback to the old airplane movies.
And it says, American Airlines, if you like old comedies, then you'll love our corporate policies.
Get woke with American Airlines, where diversity comes before safety.
We have a first-class, business class, and woke class where your middle seat can identify as a window seat.
Oh, yeah.
So great.
Now, this was brought on by their idea that they're going to have diversity in the cockpit.
Is that what brought this on?
Yes.
And when I hear something like that, all I can think of is 300 people's lives in the hands of someone who got hired as a token or a diversity hire.
And we see how diversity hires work out with Kamala Harris.
So not very well.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I have to tell you, the airlines, I think they're getting worse and worse.
They're more militant than ever.
My family has been flying back and forth on another airline, Delta, who's always been pretty good.
And it is, I mean, they've been delayed for two days.
I mean, it's been really bad.
And some of these airlines, the way they're going and what the government is saying that, you know, you're not going to go on vacation on an airplane anymore.
It seems like they're working hand in hand to make airlines less desirable, to have them not really function other than like a third world country.
Just sometimes I've been on airplanes where I feel like I'm a hostage.
Yeah, sometimes you are.
They'll let you sit on the tarmac for an hour and not even let you get up and use a restroom.
But I think corporations are starting to figure this out.
I mean, we saw what happened to Bud Light and with Target and with all the boycotts.
I mean, from what I understand, even BlackRock is starting to jump off that little wagon of theirs.
It's almost like you woke up one morning and corporations just said, screw profits.
Who needs them?
Yep.
It is.
But they're learning.
Well, I hope they are.
I hope they are.
I think some of these are going to play it to the death.
And, you know, the death of their corporation couldn't come to a group of more deserving companies than the ones that are out.
Playing It to the Death00:07:27
Two of my favorite pieces of art that you've done recently, the Pinhead Fauci is absolutely fantastic.
And then you go into, explain that one.
So if anybody hasn't seen him.
You know, it's Pinhead from that movie Hellraiser, and it just looks like Anthony Fauci.
I can tell you when I was putting that poster up, I saw my container of glue get kicked over.
I thought it was my assistant, but it was the owner of the building with a screwdriver pointed at my back.
So that's all I remember when I think of that poster.
But yeah, that was the reaction to COVID.
That was my reaction to COVID.
And I did quite a number of hits for COVID.
So, you know, at least that was busy.
You did some of your best work.
I think the best political, I don't know, poster that I've ever seen that hits harder and is more well done than anything that you usually see is your anti-vaxxer, where your A and your V are made to look like a Star of David.
And it absolutely looks like it could be pulled out of the 30s.
And it just says report anti-vaxxers, call 310, and then it gives the number, which I think is what you were supposed to do in California, would call a number and report on people.
And it says, because you care and they don't.
But the picture you have on your website is you've posted it on a Jewish synagogue, it appears to be.
How did that go over?
It didn't go over well.
It was kind of disappointing.
Some of my best friends are Jewish.
I have absolutely no problem with Jewish people.
Believe me, I have friends who don't seem to like them for whatever reason.
But I knew that there was going to be some heat for this.
And from what I understand, the West Hollywood police were looking for me and they were comparing me with all these anti-Jewish hate messages that are going around the country.
And what I always try and say is, no, this is a cautionary tale.
We don't want to go back to where we were in the 30s.
And, you know, the saying, never forget, well, I'm trying to help you not forget.
And the sad part is, you know, I get labeled anti-Semite for doing it.
And I picked that location because you want a nice photograph, something that applies.
And so, yeah, I know the synagogue.
And, you know, I think it just fit.
I tell you, the bravery that it takes, and I know you and your cohorts do it in the middle of the night, but you have a huge target on your back.
And it amazes me that you aren't more famous than you are.
And I think that's just because the powers of beat do not want to expose you to people because some of the stuff you do is just so powerful.
I appreciate you saying that.
And honestly, professionally speaking, all I ever focused on was the next hit.
It's like I wasn't the kind of person that really tried to milk the attention that I get.
And I would probably be a lot further along financially if I did.
Oh, sure.
But you're right.
It's like the art community isn't going to embrace me.
But I've learned that if you just fight hard and push hard, you'll get there.
So hopefully this will be a, it's definitely going to be an interesting year coming up.
So I have the towers painting that you did, which was the Twin Towers kind of looks like a tarot card.
Can you explain that one just a little bit?
I did that like a day or two after 9-11.
And if you look into the meaning of the tarot cards, there's a card called the Tower.
And it was obviously for me, it was very difficult.
I'm an ex-Marine or I'm a Marine.
And to see what happened in New York really hit hard.
But I think if you really want to either take on or understand the people that did this, you kind of have to put yourself in their mindset.
And that's what that piece, that was an exercise for me.
I was like, what were these people on those planes thinking when they hit those towers?
And they were thinking that they were knocking the crown off of the great Satan.
And I think to be a good communicator or a good artist, you have to be like a good lawyer.
Your mind has to go to these places in order to find the art, the art that you want to do.
And yeah, so that was one of the first pieces I did after 9-11.
The next one was the F piece, a warbird that I did.
I don't know if I can cuss on you.
Yeah.
No, you can't.
It's broadcast.
Two of my oldest pieces, actually.
I think I may own that one as well.
Have you sold The Death, The COVID?
That is brilliant, the tarot card of death that's co-faced.
No, I'm making a series.
I've got a death one, and what was the other one?
I have a third one that anti-war, wasn't it?
No, it was Stop the Steel.
It was the gentleman with the horn hat, and he's like stepping off the cliff.
Those are all based on tarot cards.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I'm hoping that that series touches on very important pivotal moments in the country.
And, you know, one could say COVID was just COVID, but no, COVID destroyed a lot, not only in the country, but the world.
It's still destroying.
We're not the same country at all.
No, we're not the same world.
Definitely not the same country.
And one could say that January 6th was the American Reichstaff.
And we're starting to see how the feds were involved and just how much rot is around this country.
So I believe that that was a very pivotal moment in our history.
Well, I really appreciate your work.
As you know, I collect your work, and I highly recommend anybody collect the poster or whatever you can.
I think what Sabo does is so incredibly important, insightful.
You may not agree with everything that he says or what he prints, but it is absolutely brilliantly done.
And I think in time, his work will be remembered as very, very important in the American story.
Go to unsavoryagents.com.
That's unsavoryagents.com.
If you haven't sold the death original yet, please hold that for me because I'll contact you because that is just brilliant stuff.
Brilliantly Done: The American Story00:00:34
Just brilliant stuff.
I will.
I appreciate that.
I just finished a 400-page table book, and I'm looking for a publisher.
So call me.
Oh.
Okay, I will.
I will.
I think your work should absolutely be on coffee tables.
I mean, coffee tables of people who are, you know, maybe a little edgy, but I put it on mine.