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June 22, 2024 - Lionel Nation
01:11:09
Lynn's Warriors/Lionel Nation ⇋ The High Summit and Conference
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Good evening, dear friends, and welcome.
A happy Friday to you, from us, to you.
Mrs. L joins us, the beautiful, the ravishing.
So we're going to take it easy tonight.
Very easy.
We've had a rough day today.
Rough week.
A lot of disgust.
I'd love to tell you what we did last night, but we won't.
You can't say that.
Well, no.
I don't want to say where we were, but we went to an event and...
We'll talk about that.
Just a lot of stuff.
We're at a good night.
It's Friday.
I'm a bit screwed up because this weekend was Juneteenth, so I guess today's Friday.
I'm so confused.
That confused you?
Juneteenth?
Threw me off.
Really?
Didn't that throw you off as well?
We had a great pizza today, a plant-based pizza.
So good.
That was just, with the cauliflower crust, it was, I did a marvelous job.
You really did.
I mean, I just...
What was that?
I just ate it.
I mean, I did.
What was it?
Just sauce?
Mushrooms?
Well, it was a wonderful...
It was a great Victoria sauce, which I think is the best tomato sauce on the market today.
We use a kind of a...
We do the plant-based crumbles, which is kind of a meaty thing.
Some of the wildest mushrooms from this...
One little market that we go to, they have the funkiest mushrooms.
And it was just absolutely exquisite.
Well, I'm happy to be here on a Friday night.
It's reminding me of the old days when you did on the radio Ventilation Friday.
That's right.
That's exactly right.
This is Ventilation Friday.
We're going to be ventilating, as it were, but also in the different...
And I've got some surprises for you, which you don't know about.
For me?
For you.
But by the way, before we begin, let me just say right now, please make sure you're subscribed.
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They're not there anymore.
Yeah, they just, whatever.
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All right, my friends.
Thank God we're back.
I appreciate being back.
By the way, you probably don't know this.
I've got some brand new, brand new...
Oh, my God.
I've got some brand new information regarding...
Pictures from Delaware of President Biden preparing for his debate.
Is that a cheap fake or a deep fake?
I can't verify that's true.
I try to be highbrow with all of this.
I can't tell if that's real.
I can't tell if that's real.
I don't know.
Here's something which always will enrage Mrs. L. Listen to this one.
Known as the Weingart Tower, it's intended to help people currently without shelter on Skid Row.
This will be LA's largest permanent supportive housing project.
There is an entire floor of offices for caseworkers, and the list of amenities is pretty impressive.
As you mentioned, there's a gym, an art room, a music room, and a computer room and library.
People living here will enjoy six common balconies and a cafe.
The $165 million project is receiving permanent financing from Proposition HHH, which voters overwhelmingly passed in 2016.
The new tower is also receiving state housing funds and $56 million in state tax credits.
We have lost...
Wait a minute.
May I?
Yeah.
First of all.
No, nobody voted on this and passed this bill.
Second of all, these apartments, I was doing a little research about them the other day, are worth $500,000 to $600,000 each.
Where are the apartments for our homeless Americans, our vets, our communities, you know?
Seriously, where?
I don't understand.
This is just homeless.
That's a blanket statement.
From Skid Row.
No, no.
Well, which homeless are they referring?
You know how they change the narrative and the words around.
Are they referring to perhaps illegals?
I don't know.
I don't know.
If this doesn't in any way forge in people a sense of what has to be done, I don't know what does.
But on a greater note, we, luckily, I'm much older than you, but we come from relatively the same generation.
We're practically the same age.
Practically, but I'm older.
Slightly, slightly.
No, I'm significantly older.
So anyway, so...
But we remember things at the same time.
So we watched stuff, and by virtue of our generation, we look at it and we say, can you imagine this ever being popular?
We watched this classic the other night.
And, well, watch this.
Airport 1975.
We howled at this.
How did this ever get me?
This was the worst P.O.S.
ever.
An all-new motion picture inspired by the film Airport.
New screen excitement.
By the way, just to make sure you know the airport.
1975.
An all-new motion picture inspired by the film Airport.
Oh, I guess it was an airport before this.
This was 1975.
See, that's not good.
See, right off the bat, I'm no expert, but this is probably...
That's how Joe Biden gets off the plane now.
You probably don't know this.
He was...
Was it Dirty Filthy Apes?
So I didn't green up people.
They lowered him from a helicopter into the hole.
Karen Black was helping him get into the cockpit.
She was driving.
We'll get to Karen Black at a moment with an eye of hers.
One of the funniest ones was Charlton.
Remember the vagina monologues?
Charlton Heston doing the vagina monologue.
My vagina!
It was the funniest.
I think SNL did it.
Karen Black, by the way, whose one eye is kind of...
Forget her eyes.
She was driving the plane with no experience with the whole side of the plane.
Look at the graphics.
The graphics package that I have just on an iPhone is better than this.
Look at this.
I'm scared.
I'm scared.
She was, everybody in the plane was basically all of the pilot, Ephraim Zimelis Jr., Eric Estrada.
They were all wiped out when Dana Williams crashed into it.
He was really wiped out in the beginning, yeah.
George, a veteran, served in Patton's, I think, Third Army during the Battle of the Bulge.
Here's George Kennedy.
George Kennedy.
My wife and son are up there on that airplane.
I'm going to Salt Lake City.
Glory.
This was the worst.
Gloria Swanson on the balls of her career arse towards the end.
She's like all but three feet tall.
She was the big star.
By the way, check out how big the seats were.
I'm going to Salt Lake City.
Gloria Swanson.
The hell with the jewelry.
Let's put my book in here.
Ephraim Zimbalist Jr.
Susan Clark.
Comedian Sid Caesar.
Myrna Loy.
Myrna Loy.
I saw Myrna one time in Tax for Them years ago.
Look who this is.
Linda Blair.
Child star.
And when you look at Airplane, the movie, you realize where all of that came from.
She was on her way because of a transplant.
Linda Blair and award-winning singer Helen Reddy as Sister Ruth.
Would you be more forgiving of your human imperfections if you realized your best friend was yourself?
Look at this.
Your mother darns socks in hell.
She broke into her head, spins around as she spewed green pea soup.
That's from...
Are you backing that same old kick about us?
Maybe I'm tired of one night stands.
She's scheduled for a transplant in the kidneys in L.A. Now we can't have her off the dialysis machine too long.
It had taken off as regular flight 409.
Dallas Airport to LAX.
We loved it.
Look at this plane!
And then it happened.
Oh, then it...
I don't know what it was.
It wasn't like that.
By the way, they had no onboard radar.
They had no onboard radar.
They can't tell a plane that's coming.
Normally you have all of a sudden, oh my God, there's a plane.
Well, remember it 50 years ago.
They hit radar then.
And Hollywood, no, but Hollywood takes liberties with facts.
All of a sudden, they're cruising along.
What do you two do on your time off?
We watch that.
In the middle of the night, yes.
Gloria Swanson.
Not much of a role for her.
We also loved how airports, you could walk right up to the ticket, right up to the gate.
No checking.
I remember that.
You don't remember that as a kid?
Oh, absolutely.
You could just go and hang out at the airport if you want, watch planes taking off, and there was no security back then.
None whatsoever.
Yeah, the good old days, right?
Meanwhile, back to Wilmington at the Biden House, preparing for the campaign.
I don't know if this is real.
I can't tell.
I can't put my money in.
I'm not sure.
It might be a cheap fake.
I don't know.
Okay.
Excuse me, stewardess, I speak jive.
Absolutely.
Oh, the dialogue was so, like, sexist and it was so...
Well, in this, right.
In Airport 1975.
Yes, Erica Estrada was horrible.
Hey, honey.
He was like, hey, mama.
Hey, mommy.
And all that.
Well, that was good to have a couple of laughs over there.
No, we're not done yet.
We're not done.
It is absolutely...
You want to talk about reality.
I, as I eruptate, I saw this.
Remember, we watched this.
Maybe you didn't watch it.
I watched it.
I was mesmerized by this.
Mesmerized.
You know I love going to the stores.
My favorite.
Grocery stores?
Or grocery, as people say.
You just love it.
This, in that weird kind of nostalgic look, this took me back.
And most people think in the old days, being a checkout person, especially the one we go to, who yells, How are you?
Anyway.
Well, she's out working.
She's out working.
That's what I always say about it.
She's out from behind bars.
She's working.
But she could have, I think, benefited tremendously from this.
What's this?
The front line.
Sorry, run along.
Enjoy having fun.
This was the best year.
What's this?
Come on.
Well, the supermarket is a good one.
I'm a ball to the other.
Isn't this wonderful?
This is how to be a checkout.
Well, I do remember in New Jersey, people working in the supermarket.
My mother one time said, her famous line was, if you can't read, you can't buy soup.
And I remember, I know this isn't soup, but it was one of my funniest jokes, and most people didn't get it, but remember Campbell's Soup, there was one huge line of red and white.
Well, she had a point.
She had a point.
She had a point.
Some people call this a war.
War or not.
A battle.
A battle for the customer's dollar.
And this is exactly how people look today.
Have you noticed that?
Exactly.
With the scuffies today and their keisters hanging out.
Isn't this beautiful?
If a store is to make a profit in the face of today's stiff competition, everyone in it must give its full effort.
That's a very good point.
But like any battle, victory in this conflict is finally won or lost on the front line.
Did you miss riding in the basket?
Yes, don't you?
I do.
Remember that?
That was always fun.
Getting in the basket, being pushed around.
even a Mayan.
With literally millions of dollars at stake, success is measured in pennies.
The checker plays a key role in this daily struggle.
I am not gonna put you through this.
But I was mesmerized by this.
Those were industrial films.
They had one on how to...
But they had competition.
They had two real experienced ones.
Did you see the apron they wore?
By the way, not very diverse.
I know what you were thinking.
Not very diverse.
A good industrial film today on a business.
What do you think?
I don't know.
I have no idea.
In any event.
So, last night we did it.
We went to an event.
And I'm not going to say where it was, but it was one of the funniest things I've ever been to, I think, in my life.
Because we're looking at each other and we're laughing.
I mean, I'm laughing.
It was nice in some respects because it was people trying their best to get the point across.
It happened to be a Republican club in New York, which is very rare, as you can imagine.
And don't ask me why, but they had...
A delegate, a representative from the Bobby Kennedy campaign.
I didn't understand.
I was there observing everyone.
So I had to bite my tongue.
I was observing some things and focusing.
I did not understand when the goal is to engage and empower and educate about the Republican Party and candidates.
Why Bobby Kennedy?
I really didn't.
Follow this.
Everybody's pushing for Trump.
Bobby Kennedy would pull votes away either from Biden or I don't know what.
So this guy shows up.
He's a lawyer.
And he has his wife with him.
I'm not going to mention her name.
Something like a name like Ramona.
Don't say it.
So she's sitting there.
And she's sitting there like this.
Not saying anything.
And he's coming out for reasons I have no idea to explain to the people there who's Bobby Kennedy.
So we said, his father was killed, as you know, and his uncle was also killed.
I said, I did not.
Oh, that Bobby came.
Oh!
And we're having a terrible time getting on the ballot, as you can imagine.
And we're looking at each other like, what are we seeing?
What is going on here?
Another great movement was there was a fellow who was an Asian man.
Who was, I guess, filming what he was doing.
He was kind of like filming, I guess, or reading his thing.
And I'm not trying to do an Asian accent.
Well, anyway.
But he was, all of a sudden, he was, I will do it in a regular accent.
And you imagine a very thick Asian contingent.
As he sits there with his phone up like this, he said, and how come when you want to get ammunition here, they've got to find out who you are?
But in Jersey, he's looking at his phone, I'm thinking, is he reading this?
And he's angry, and he's talking about he can't get ammunition here.
It had nothing to do with anything that was being spoken about.
He was going on, he was filming it.
He was going on and on about the ammunition you can buy in Jersey.
You know, I just tuned him out.
It was one of the funniest things.
And then that man got up from, what country was he from?
He said something like, if you do well here in my country, it will help.
It was an African country, and he's running for president.
He was running for president in an African country.
I swear to God, I don't know what he's doing.
We're laughing.
We are laughing.
I know, and I'm trying to be a little light-hearted about everything.
I can't really laugh these days.
Things are serious.
Well, I was laughing.
Well, I was biting the inside of my mouth so I wouldn't laugh because I don't want to laugh.
What are we doing?
But that is the problem with what's going on right now.
People don't seem to be knowing anything or trying to say, how can we come together with a couple of months later?
We were in the basement of a church.
It was like an AA meeting, I guess, where people were eating cake.
And this guy, he looked like somebody from a blues.
He was dressed like a jazz musician.
Yeah.
And he's African.
He's from an African country.
And he's running for president.
I was glad to see people come together.
That's the first step.
People come together.
But then it just devolved from there.
Then before it starts, they read the minutes.
The minutes were longer than the meeting.
And one guy in the front row turns and says, by the way, yes, point of order.
I never said I was in favor of the Russian Revolution.
I said merely it goes to show you what happens when people get together and what a difference they can make.
That's my only part about the Russian Revolution.
So we got the Russian Revolution.
We got a guy from Chinatown who's pissed off because he can't buy ammunition.
A guy running for president.
I'm not kidding you.
Am I exaggerating?
He's running for president of some African country.
And then another woman says, what do you mean pro-choice?
You're what?
And finally I said, let's go.
Let's go.
But here's the thing.
They should have used that opportunity, having the community there, to have one statement, a couple of facts that they educated everybody on that.
Everybody, you take away from this meeting.
Wonderful.
And go forth.
One of the funniest.
With this, and it was a waste.
And this is the problem going on right now with the Republican Party.
Don't say it was a waste.
It was a moment of comedy.
By the way...
Look what his white monkey says.
Isn't it wonderful to experience these real-life absurdities firsthand?
Yes!
Well, yes, because you couldn't write them.
No!
They just...
I mean, I was biting the inside of my mouth.
I didn't want to laugh.
And I'm always the type, when we go somewhere, that sits in the front of the room.
I just do that.
You know how people sit in the back of the room?
I always sit...
Right in the front so I can stare at people and stare them down.
And that's exactly what I've been doing since the 8th grade.
This woman came up with a MAGA hat.
She hands us newspapers and made no...
She was like eating chips at the same time.
She took the bag.
It was one of the fun...
It was so surreal.
Interesting.
But it was America.
It was a bunch of people.
At least people came together.
They cared about something.
Guy running for president of some African country.
This was it.
I am not a part of the Russian Revolution.
Thank you for clarifying that.
But it really made me think.
I think we really have to get down and explain some rudimentary aspects of people.
Yes.
Because some have this kind of like that wild Steve Bannon, Alex Jones.
Oh, we got it.
Don't.
Don't.
It's too identifiable, I think.
Oh, yeah.
The difference between sacred and solemn.
I don't know.
He started crying.
It was tough for me to keep my mouth shut.
It was the best.
And there is no...
Being a Republican...
By the way, neither of us are Republicans.
We are absolutely...
Just to let you know.
And this convinced me probably more than anything else.
Well, I'm an American.
That's what I like to say.
I am an American.
We're independent so we can vote.
Bull Moose, the Whig Party, the American Party, I think.
But it goes to show you this anger.
This anger.
And this, maybe perhaps, not ill-conceived, but people are just upset.
They can't take this anymore.
They can't take it anymore.
They can't go through this.
And it's a very simple thing.
Do you want four more years of this?
That's the question.
It's very simple.
I don't want to laugh at that because the country is in a dire situation.
I'm sorry.
I can't laugh.
Listen.
You know, after speaking with Derek Maltz today, you know, and he's such a great...
You must, you must, you must watch her, Lynn's Warriors.
It'll go up tomorrow, that interview.
He is great.
And he's a colleague, and he's become a friend.
And we did a wonderful one, Lionel Nation members, you can see it right now, it'll be up later this evening.
We did a little ditty, didn't we?
We did one.
Can we tell them one good news about the UN?
Yes.
Yes.
Just watch what you say.
Certain algorithms go crazy.
I'm going to watch what I say, which is tough.
I will watch what I say.
Now, the UN in a shocking twist.
Shocking.
Shocking, because I have not Having anything to do with them as of late.
Put out their special repertoire, they call this woman, put out a report.
She's in Geneva right now at the UN conference that prostitution is violence to girls and women.
And they have been nothing.
I don't even know if I can say this.
They have been nothing, the UN, but promoting sex workers.
Am I allowed to say that?
Yeah.
Everybody hear okay?
Can we hear okay?
Can you hear?
Can you hear okay?
Let me know.
Just let me know.
So they had a stunning reversal.
Now remember, we work here in New York and also on the national level with many bipartisan groups.
And everyone is shocked.
Shocked that this woman, thank goodness, and it's on my Twitter and Facebook, shameless plug at Lynn's Warriors.
That she finally has been, she stood up to everybody and said, we have all the studies that show what is being done to women and girls, and it is violence.
Okay, so this is good news.
Let me also tell you something that we're seeing, and ladies, maybe you can tell me, you might see this in your hometown or where you live.
Last night, we're driving back from this place, from the...
By the way, this is Mrs. L's X or Twitter link.
And we're driving back in the Yugo.
It's a stretch, by the way.
Got a lot of looks.
And she looks over and she says, Oh my God, there's a woman in a bathing suit.
Right by Ed Sullivan Theater.
Remember that word?
Colbert.
Well, I would say she was maybe 19. In a bathing suit.
And she was wearing a hot pink...
Bathing suit.
It was not shorts.
It was not clots.
It was not...
As clothes.
It was a bathing suit.
A bathing suit.
We are seeing people walking around half.
This year is bad.
Not half.
It's really bad.
I've never seen anything like this in my life.
And I've had other women say this to me without my prompting them or saying anything.
Have you noticed the way women and girls are walking around the streets of New York?
They're missing their clothes, a lot of them.
You know what I'm talking about.
Travis, Nightingale, Smiling Sue, Cosgrove, you know what I'm talking about.
I've seen how you grow.
Is Liz here?
You know what she does.
But that's another story.
We also see people...
People have lost their minds.
Tell us about, without mentioning the name of it, the text you got from a friend of yours.
What she saw today?
She sent me a text at the end of her workday, walking in a very nice neighborhood, that she saw a young woman in a bra top.
She said maybe eight months pregnant, really tremendously pregnant, but her whole stomach, every inch, was covered in tattoos.
And she just said it was just so...
What was it, 97 here today?
Or thereabouts in the 90s?
Walking around practically naked with her.
And she said, I'm going to throw up.
It just looks so awful.
And we have groups of people from other countries.
There are other people who are not nice people at all who are savages.
Do you hear me?
They are savages.
And they live, these people live, and they're from areas in jungles or something, where they see a woman and they think nothing of it.
Grabbing, and I mean, this is...
Well, I see that on the streets when I'm walking behind my sunglasses and I'm taking in again, everything is a focus group.
I'm seeing these people stare at girls and women the way they look, and they are savages.
I'll just say that.
That's the word I'm using.
You know they are going to just, to a woman, to be raised either because of, not everybody from this country, but these folks, criminals who, well look at this guy who, that the Ecuadorian, that the Good Samaritan's got in Queens.
We don't want to say what he did.
We have a lot of cases lately.
Now they're, you know, children.
And this guy recorded it?
And the media, of course, does not report all the details.
They just don't, okay?
We know there are a lot more cases like these cases.
And by the by, what's it called?
The train de...
The Aragua.
Aragua.
The.
El train de Aragua.
El train de Aragua.
Train de Aragua.
Anyway, forget MS-13.
These are the Venezuelans.
This is another story.
Am I allowed to say this?
I don't know.
I don't know.
They're vicious and violent.
We don't know.
You know how this thing works.
Vicious and violent towards their own mothers.
Now, another thing we have in this city, just want to let you know.
If you come here, and tourism is packed!
Times Square, where were you today?
Downtown, even in the village, Broome.
Oh, Soho is beyond, and friends of mine that live down there or have...
Businesses tell me the weekends.
You can't even walk on the sidewalk.
There are more people here.
But here is the thing.
If you come here, what you should be most worried about, believe it or not, is being hit or run over by one of these scooters, these electric scooters or e-bikes or whatever it is, from people who are, many of them, involved in delivery.
You should see me.
If you saw me cross the street, I look like Biden.
I'm like this.
I look like this.
You don't look left.
You just wait out of nowhere.
They turn the corner.
They have no interest at all in lights, red lights.
Well, it's got to change.
Laws have to be enforced.
They can't be riding on sidewalks or jumping into buildings, so I'm not hit.
And I'm not leaving my city, so if anybody says...
And nobody...
Leave the city.
I'm not leaving.
Are you seeing this in your cities as well?
Nobody's got a license tag.
They've got paper that they go and they'll just write five letters and numbers.
I do want to say something.
And put it on and it's with no state, no dealers, nothing, just a piece of paper with just numbers.
People will say to me on a daily basis, well, you live in New York, you know, or this one lives in Chicago.
I am here to tell you, If it's not in your town or rural area or city, it is coming your way.
You just have not seen it yet.
And that is the most frightening thing all 50 states are affected right now.
You just don't know it yet, perhaps.
And people are saying, you know, I'm not going to be in New York City.
It's not in my bucket list.
Good.
We don't need any more people.
There are so many great places.
If you believe it or not, If you are...
How do I say this?
If you are into food, you do not...
You can't believe food here.
You cannot believe it would spend...
There are people...
This place is so big.
There are parts I've never been to.
Never been there.
And vice versa.
And it's huge.
Eight million just in the five boroughs.
Plus, Jersey, Westchester, Connecticut, all this area.
It's more people than you can imagine.
It's enormous.
I do have hope, because I'm seeing a lot of new businesses sprout up, so that's very encouraging.
Also down on Broom Street, Soho, that area, which I love, I'm seeing a lot of new art galleries open up, and I'm hearing about there coming, the art galleries, so that is very hopeful.
And bookstores.
And a tremendous bookstore I just saw on West 48th Street, and I stopped in my tracks.
Because it is not a Barnes& Noble.
And I thought, great.
It's an independent bookstore, large, and it was crowded.
And that's what we like.
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All right, dear friends.
Now, a couple of things, too, which is important.
Do you remember, tell the folks, the good folks, what it was like to be in the era of Studio 54, when disco was big in the city, when there were skating and roller, all that stuff, when it was really rocky.
When you could go in the subway in the middle of the night.
I mean, I was a teenager.
I came here at 18. You know, after high school.
And although it was always gritty and, you know, at least now we have, there's so much to say about this, we have places you can sit, little parks between buildings and benches.
We didn't have all that stuff.
We didn't have all this fast food.
You could go in and get a cup of coffee.
And, you know, you had to go to a coffee shop and kind of sit down.
People weren't walking around holding cups of coffee and water like we see today.
But there was something very exciting about it.
You had to have your wits about you, be careful.
Certainly, you didn't go on the subway 2, 3 in the morning, but you did if you were out with a whole group of people.
The fastest way to get around, go downtown, come uptown, was we all jumped on the subway as a group and everything was fine.
Again, you had to be careful, but it was just being aware.
It was just being aware of not going in certain neighborhoods after dark.
It was so exciting at that time.
Now, I don't know if that is a combination of Because I was young, and everything's exciting when you're young, and you have your whole future ahead of you.
I don't know if it's, you know, when I learned years later that the whole Studio 54, and by the way, don't tell anybody, I was brought in there.
I mean, I was underage, but I looked older when I was a teenager.
And it was exciting, though.
Sure, there were things going on, but just the idea.
I remember being on the balcony, looking down.
Thinking, wow, look at all these people dancing and having fun in their clothes and this and that.
That was my focus.
Later on, we went under the rooms downstairs and whatever else.
It was a different fashion.
Anybody could dress any way they wanted to and they were not made fun of.
It was post-hippie, pre-AIDS, post-Vietnam, happy, frivolous.
Lots of art and things like that.
You will never, ever, ever hear anybody truly explain the importance of disco during that time.
It doesn't matter what I thought.
It was going on at the time.
I don't know if anybody...
Let me ask you something.
Do your kids dance?
Does anybody dance?
We went to a wedding not too long ago and people were jumping up and down.
It wasn't even dancing.
I don't even know what the hell it was.
Well, they go like this and everybody jumps up and down.
That's not dancing.
There was an actual...
We dance.
And we really cut the rug.
We dance.
But it was a time.
It was a different time.
We were watching a documentary before on...
ABBA.
I love them.
I'm sorry.
I have always loved them.
I have always loved, you know who I really love, the Bee Gees.
The Bee Gees.
I'm sorry.
I love the Bee Gees.
Do you know how big these people were?
Do you have, forget what, and people always, I'm not asking you whether you like it or not.
It doesn't matter what you like.
People always say, but I don't like it.
I'm not talking about you.
One of the biggest, remember we saw a documentary one time on Guy Lombardo.
He was huge!
Well, that was interesting.
And do you know who the greatest entertainer pound for pound ever?
When you look back and you go back to the times of Chaplin, but the number one who outdid the Beatles in terms of, not in terms of talent, but in terms of pound for, I keep saying pound for pound.
Well, let people guess.
Who?
Who was the biggest ever?
Who was the biggest ever?
Look at this.
Abba was great and the Carpenters.
Oh, I love.
Oh, Karen Carpenter's voice was absolutely pure.
She could sing.
A great drummer!
Just a musician, and the brother as well.
I mean, just musicians.
We don't have musicians anymore.
Travis McNevin says Bing Crosby was it.
That's it.
Movies, radio, and sheet music.
He was unbelievable.
There was a song, you watch this, I swear to God, I listened to...
To her and I. And when you look at Barry Gibb and you look at how prolific he was.
But how prolific he was in all the songs he did.
And even Andy.
I like Fanny B. Tender and he did this song, whatever.
What's that song?
Don't Throw It All Away.
Don't Throw It All Away.
And now Barry Gibb, who is the sole survivor, He has this, I don't know what the hell he has.
He's got that Sean Connery.
He's in Miami now.
He was a genius.
He's the last one of the family left and he's the oldest one.
And his mother was 95 or 96. She passed just a couple of years ago.
She was well into her 90s, I think.
But also, I started in the music business, as you know, with jingles.
And I loved, I've been thinking about that a lot lately.
The creative process of doing the demo and shopping it with the ad agencies and going into the studio.
And I think something most people don't realize is many, many famous musicians played on TV commercials.
We did radio and television and then movie scores anonymously.
And they made a lot of good money through the musicians' union doing that.
And I really loved that process.
And as we were doing that...
That was when they introduced, in the very early 80s, the synthesizer.
And I remember they said, this will replace now the musicians with, you know, certain instruments.
And we bought one for the office, a small one.
And I just couldn't believe that that was going to replace the actual live musician, because there was nothing, I maintain, there was nothing like a live music, live orchestra.
I digress a little bit.
The curtain going up on a Broadway stage, the thrill, the excitement, if there's even a curtain anymore.
Most shows don't even have a curtain anymore.
There's nothing like that.
You can't replace that.
I used to love to hear the motor of the curtain in a theater.
When they had a curtain in a movie theater.
And the people that you had to, without mentioning, but the people that you had to pick up the phone.
I had to call them.
Call them?
They had an answering service?
I did it all.
Yes, we had an answering service.
I did it all.
Or some of them that we worked with repeatedly were constantly touring and working, so I called directly.
But we had no...
Yeah, there were no cell phones or anything like that.
We had to...
I'd sometimes be 2, 3, 4 in the morning worried because I couldn't get, you know, the trombone player.
It was that constant, but it was exciting.
And it was...
Great.
And then you hear the music on a TV commercial.
It was very exciting.
And the other thing is the art.
I'm very happy now that the art studios are coming back downtown and opening up.
And I went to a wonderful exhibit and it was all political cartoons from 50 and 60 years ago.
And all of them, I kid you not, all done in black and white, all of them still resonate today.
With what this artist was saying.
I was very...
I have that Ben Garrison that my friend commissioned or got for me.
He's one of the few who's...
Because now it's memes and Oliphant and others were...
But to see actual work.
Again, you can't replace that to be in that presence of...
And the artist's son was there.
He's also an artist explaining.
You know, a lot of his dad's work.
And those are the things we have to bring back into, you know, society, the culture, and to kids and things like that.
There was a cartoon.
I hate when people try to describe a cartoon because you can't.
But there was a cartoon that was so perfect where you've got one shot, one picture, one moment.
Not a panel, not a series of panels, but one picture.
And it was after JFK and I and you see...
Lincoln, with his head in his hands, crying at the Lincoln Memorial.
That was it!
That's it!
That's it!
Tells you everything.
That's it!
That's the story.
We were listening before.
Listen to this.
You want to see how wild we are?
Wild!
I don't know.
They heard about our homemade pizza on cauliflower crust.
We're listening to old interviews with Nixon.
He was brilliant.
Brilliant!
He actually was.
I said to you, I think he's kind of smart, isn't he?
Oh, he was so...
He lived on Saddle River, and he just was kind of modest.
He just, you know...
They lived on something like...
It was up from Bloomingdale's East 64th in a townhouse, and then they moved to Saddle River.
Right.
Saddle River, right.
Something like that.
Saddle Brooks and Hillsborough.
Right.
But there he was, and we remember those...
He was eloquent.
And as much as we think Donald Trump's great and everything, Nobody was like that.
There hasn't been a...
They don't speak like that anymore at all.
So to hear that...
You know who was a great speaker?
Obama did it.
Clinton to an extent.
Whatever.
But he was brilliant.
There it ended.
When you really had somebody who said, this guy knows.
And the last time, we've never had anybody even remotely close to like Adlai Stevenson who was known for being, oh, I'm just into nostalgia.
But let me ask you something.
So we have this debate very soon.
What do you think that's going to be like?
Well, from what I'm seeing in terms of the preparation, I don't know.
I think it's...
I think, from what I hear, and I don't know for sure...
Now, I was actually trying to be a tad serious here.
And you ruined that.
I'm sorry.
But I don't...
Wow.
I mean, Joe did the State of the Union.
Remember that?
First of all, debates don't mean anything.
Debates don't mean anything.
They mean nothing, but of course they'll make this...
You have these moments that are just these...
The best debate I ever saw.
It wasn't even a debate.
It was Joe Lieberman and Dick Cheney.
They were like two gentlemen talking.
It was the most beautiful.
Get a hold of that.
I remember that.
They were saying, well, that's a good point there.
You know, my good friend, you know, James, you have a very good point.
I said, forget these two.
I'll take these.
I want this.
I want an adult.
I want an adult.
Reagan with a, well, you know.
I would never make, and he was waiting for this, make a point out of the age, the youth, and inexperience of my opponent.
And poor Dan Quayle.
I always felt sorry for Dan Quayle.
I don't know why.
Dan Quayle was Niels Bohr compared to his judge rule we have now.
Oh my goodness.
But I'll be watching it.
Because I want to see...
These two together.
I would have loved to have stood up last night and asked the guy running for president of some African country, the Chinese dude with the ammunition, the other one, and say, let me ask you a question.
Who runs the country?
Who?
And let them argue that.
Oh, I also saw something, a picture, an interview with the Shah of Iran talking about the Jewish lobby, not the Jewish lobby, actually the Israeli lobby.
You've got to hear this.
You've got to hear this.
This was then.
Where do people hear that?
It's online.
60 Minutes.
It was 60 Minutes Rewind.
YouTube.
YouTube is the greatest thing in the world.
I'm telling you.
I was in today to the American policy, the American school, the American Henry Clay.
Tariffs, national banks, and infrastructure.
This is what they cared about.
It was a different country then.
I'm listening to this.
We are so...
This foundation.
Imagine having a house that is so riddled, so riddled with termites.
You can say, well, I've got to prop this part up first, but this could fall at any moment.
This may look good, but it's...
We are really...
This system...
It would take 20, 30, 40 years of Donald Trump to make maybe an impact.
It's rotten to the core.
The system is rotten.
This isn't a Democrat or Republican.
Don't kid yourself.
Oh, it's going to be great.
He wins.
But what is extant?
It's horrible.
We need...
A leadership.
But we need a country that appreciates intelligence.
We don't anymore.
I don't know if you were listening to me today.
What?
When I did my interview with Derek Maltz.
And if you're not familiar, again, the interview will be up tomorrow.
Linz Warriors ran the DEA extensive law enforcement career now.
He's with Tom Homan, Border 911.
I will recommend that site for everybody because people need to start educating themselves and get involved.
You are right now.
Order911.com.
They will be doing July 13th, an event in D.C. with fentanyl, because we have Fentanyl Awareness Day coming up on August 21st.
They'll be in New York City, Long Island City.
They're going to go around.
Sarah Carter from Fox is part of it.
Our friend Jason Jones is part of it.
He's good.
These are colleagues of the Warriors.
And technically, and this was such a sad thing to hear from him, Right now, we really do not have a country because we don't have borders.
We just have open borders.
He said, technically, we actually do not have a country.
Makes sense to me.
And it hit me as he's telling me this, but it makes complete sense.
But that being said, we as Americans and taxpayers and all of our history, we have to, and our kids and grandkids and family members.
We have to take our country back appropriately any way possible.
And if that just means you go out and vote, we have to try our hardest to do what we can do because we're here.
We don't have a choice.
We cannot allow what has been going on.
I mean, this is sheer craziness.
And when I ask all the so-called experts, men, women that have been working in all different fields, from tech to, you know, drugs, border, everybody we work with, I will say, why is this happening?
And everybody will say the same thing.
Nobody knows.
Well, I think we do know.
But we'll leave that for another program.
It is our duty.
Our duty to take back what we can take back.
And if you can't take back anything in your own home, make it right.
In your own community.
In your own circle.
That is the best we can do because this is just sheer craziness.
And criminal.
But...
It was crazy.
Don't kid yourself though.
Sometimes I was going back and I'm still looking at the insanity of Vietnam.
I look at people like how we did that with all of these smart people there.
Let me jump in.
There's always been craziness.
There's always been a deceptive media when you study it and analyze everything and parse everything.
However, we never had on our soil like we have now on a constant daily basis.
We never had, even if we didn't know the education system, we never had the way they were attacking our children through libraries and books and teachers unions and things like that.
We never had open borders like this.
We're starting to see the effects of all the criminals.
With all the retail theft.
There's always been theft and shoplifting.
Not organized crime rings.
Right?
Our good friend George Lenz says there is no accountability.
Change starts there.
That's the tagline.
That's it.
Change starts here.
No accountability.
That's it.
Open borders.
We have no country.
That's what I wanted to hear last night.
I want somebody to put forth some easy things like that.
Taglines people could take home.
Because I'll tell you, these Democrats, they do it.
They're very well-oiled.
They put out the agenda and every one of them sticks to it over and over and over again.
But I'm talking about city council members.
I'm talking about on that level.
I'm not talking about on the occupant of the White House.
I don't even like to say that because...
I'm not really convinced myself, in my opinion, there is an occupant of the White House.
No, there is not.
The closest we ever came to this was Woodrow Wilson, who had a stroke, and I think what we're seeing right now is something similar to that.
But in any event, it is so sad to hear the...
I don't even know where you want to go first.
The good news is, the good news, and this is one thing, The good news is that I think prototypical corporate statist media are dead.
We listen to a lot.
And it may not be perfect, but this new band with breaking points and even the hell, well, I'm not sure about the hell now, but independent folks.
Great, what Judge Knapp is doing, what Rogue is doing, what Lex Freedman is doing, what a lot of people are doing, and Tucker and others.
It doesn't really matter.
Forget what they've said individually.
There is this new wave where he can watch 2 million people will watch this.
There is hope.
There is a new group of citizens where being a part of this is cool again.
And he's making it okay to ask...
And that is something that we never had.
These people don't recognize it.
How many people do we talk to who say, hey, why don't you go on the radio again?
You know, WABC.
Are you kidding me?
That's like shortwave.
I'd rather go on something that's like a baby monitor for a nursery.
When?
This is something where we have to train the children, you know, mainstream media.
So they're brought up now.
Do not.
There's a group of people stuck.
They do, across the country, listen to mainstream media or cable news.
That is what they follow.
That is their routine.
So we have to wean them off it and give them alternative sites, good vetted information, and get our young people not to look at us.
What do I watch?
When I walk by and there's a TV, and you'll scour just to hear it, because Fox will have some good stuff.
But I see that morning crew, and I swear to God, I say, would you look at...
It's so sad because I scream for this idea of people who appreciate complexity.
By the way, do you remember in the old days when...
Remember when we would go to Bed Bath& Beyond and they had the MyPillow section in this one area where they had all the MyPillow products.
Yes, I remember.
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It was like...
Right around COVID and sort of.
And anyway, when all this TDS business came about, when all of a sudden, lo and behold, they went after Mike Lindell.
And I still don't know what he did that was so hard.
I still, other than being, you know, a Trump supporter.
And they went after him and went after him.
Well, guess what?
Every time we drive by.
Bed Bath& Beyond, gone.
Harmon, which we kind of like.
Well, they're online now, Bed Bath& Beyond.
They have an online store.
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What are we going to do tonight?
What are we going to watch?
Well, I think we should go a little crazy on a Friday night.
I think there's a Marilyn Monroe documentary.
I kind of want to check into this.
Why is she so sad?
You know, they whacked her.
It was either Bobby Kennedy or Peter Lawford with the old suppository bit.
I want to check it out.
You know, I'm working on a few different things, so I like to look into what documentaries are happening, how they're made, who the writers are, things of that nature.
And I don't know, but I think there's another episode of Acapulco.
You love that!
I end up staying up all night watching four or five episodes when I binge, pretty much all night.
What else did you watch?
I don't know.
It's just when I start something, even if I don't like it, I like to finish it.
As opposed to not watching any more of it, because I'm always in the hopes it's going to tie up, it's going to get better.
It's going to end up the storyline.
But I wake up at 3, 4. We've got on Mannix or Cannon.
I love this.
Remember when we thought William Conrad was so fat?
Remember when we thought Jackie Gleason was like, this is the fattest man?
Nothing.
There was a time in this country where around the turn of the 20th century, people would travel.
Hundreds of miles to see a 300-pound man.
It was a fat man at the carnival, the freak show.
300 pounds.
There's kids 300 pounds.
It's incredible.
Those are things we have to be working on as a society.
Well, I would think so.
People getting healthy, eating healthy, exercising, cutting out the soda.
I see people walking around drinking kids out of cans.
Got to get rid of all that.
Look at this, my friends.
Oh, PBS 10 p.m.
Roots of Comedy tonight.
Howie Brown.
We're going to do that.
I like that.
The Roots of Comedy.
What did we watch the other night?
I'm doing that a lot now.
We watch something and the next morning I say, what were we watching?
Oh, always.
Just lately we're doing that.
That was good last night.
That thing that we were watching.
This is what we do.
I don't know.
We watched something good about two nights ago.
And then I can't remember because I watch other stuff too.
Oh, we watched the Gene Wilder.
Oh, yes.
He was wonderful.
And finally, not finally, Gilda's Place right down from Film Forum, they closed.
I guess now it's something else.
For years it was Gilda's Place.
Gilda's Place for cancer.
Oh, and Varick right there.
And now it's gone.
We went one time, one of our early...
One of our early periods of...
On Barrick Street?
Is that what you're going to realize?
Yeah, one of our early, as we were...
Ages ago.
As we were getting to know each other.
Barrick Street was...
We walked into this place.
We walked into this place.
It was the fun...
We laughed like hell.
It was this little pizza joint, and we were, for some reason, everybody got there as but ours.
What's going on?
And they were taking notes.
Well, that was another one.
But the last one served.
I want my pizza.
And we laugh.
What is this?
What's going on?
I'm sorry.
It's a new machine.
It's a new machine.
There's three people here.
Those people came in an hour after us.
They got their pizza.
The next week.
I'll never do that again.
They had a shootout there.
There was an auxiliary cop that was killed.
I mean, it was bad.
The guy was running around with a machete.
Yeah.
In our place.
They closed it.
They boarded it up.
There were bullet holes in the windows.
Terrible.
Very, very, very, very sad.
That was a harbinger.
That was vatic.
Of what's to come.
Oh my goodness.
Wow.
We also did some other...
But it was very shady down there then.
Now it's more homogenized and built up.
We're very, how do I say this, very, very ordinary, but like little things that we do, little projects, like just going to buy stuff.
Going to a store.
Well, we do live in New York City.
There's a lot of wonderful things.
Yeah, we'll go.
But somebody says, you know what I really like to do?
I really like to.
I like to go to the store.
I like to just spend the day just doing stupid stuff.
That's when you can tell you love somebody.
When you like stupid things, you don't have to go out and do some, you know, large thing.
Just going to the store is laughing.
We've done all that.
We've done all that stuff.
Oh, yeah.
We've done it all.
Wild.
Wild.
Not proud of it.
I like going to farms.
The farm season is coming.
I can't wait for that.
So July, that's July and August.
That's good for all the corn and peaches.
Corn and tomatoes.
But corn is my, I live, I eat.
You really do eat a lot of corn.
I swear to God.
Really?
Why do you like that so much?
Why do you like that corn so much?
To microwave it in the husk.
In the husk.
You do the husk.
Because I clean the microwave.
Or get.
Silk threads are left in the microwave.
Unbelievable.
There's something that just hits me.
You love the corner.
Look at this.
Here we go.
We've got...
Look at this.
My pillow tells me all the gossip.
Look, we've got Raphael here.
Why don't you ask people what's on their minds on this Friday night?
After all, it is...
Ventilation Friday.
What's the biggest thing on your mind?
Give me one word.
One word.
One word that explains something.
Something that you want to say.
Something that you...
Let the people speak.
Yes.
I'm trying to inspire them.
There's a little bit of a lag time there.
Oh, yes.
Woof.
Okay, very good.
Thank you.
Thank you so much.
Woof.
Blackberries.
Never been a Blackberry fan.
Raspberries, blackberries.
Yeah, you're into blueberries.
Trudeau.
Daniel's into Trudeau.
Who is that?
Who is that?
Commie.
Castro's boy.
That's a popcorn thing.
By the way, one of the best ways to make popcorn is one of those microwave, those Tupperware things.
Nothing on it.
Nothing.
No oil.
No butter.
Three minutes.
Right.
Four minutes.
That's it.
Put nooch.
Put whatever you want on it.
You don't need oil to boil it.
Just it's...
Oh, my God.
I love it.
Robot calls.
Oranges.
Paula's dead.
Billy Shears.
We had a friend of ours years ago who was so into the...
Paul is dead in fall, and I say, okay.
No, you don't.
She really.
Yeah, she went over the edge.
She really.
She went over the edge.
And I said, well, I hate to bring it to you, but whoever this Paul is, I think he's more talented than the other Paul.
This guy's great.
He did wings.
I loved this.
I loved wings.
I like wings better.
I loved wings.
I like wings better.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I do, too.
I like wings better myself, come to think of it.
Adam says, in my college dorm, we used to use popcorn to cover up the marijuana smell.
Remember Ozium?
Like Jiffy Pop?
Remember Jiffy Pop had that smell?
Yes.
That weird kind of...
It had the smell.
Yes, yes.
Like a...
I don't know what it was.
Right.
But there was also...
There was a particular chemical or something that they use in that.
Cantaloupe.
Beautiful.
Cantaloupe.
There is something to me, evidence of a god.
When you get to see...
Why do people...
Why, for example, I've got to say something.
Brian Hayes.
Why are you putting Josh...
I mean, seriously.
This is annoying.
It's a free country, but every now and then we'll have somebody who just says one thing and say, we see you.
Well, my question is, why?
Well, what's your point?
No, we see you.
I got it.
But I'm just wondering.
We're having fun.
We just keep hitting the...
I'm just curious.
I'm just curious.
It's a free country.
I'm not upset.
Sometimes people...
Look, we don't have any rules.
Sometimes people are just not good or they're...
I'm afraid they might kick into some weird algorithm.
But they're not even a good scammer.
That's a spammer, rather.
It's not even funny.
It's not good.
It's not...
Well, that's the point.
They just do it to do it, perhaps.
No, but it's like it's...
No, Brian, it's okay if you think it's funny, but just work with us.
Okay, we got it.
We got it.
Still one of the best ones ever was a guy who called up Homegrown tomatoes.
Oh, yes.
And the smell of the leaf and the tomato itself, that smell combined.
The leaf is just sometimes the smells of things.
It's evidence of God.
I'm serious.
All right, my friends.
I think that's it.
Isn't she great?
Isn't she fantastic?
Well, thank you for having me tonight with your wonderful, wonderful family.
On a Friday night, we just felt like sticking together on this Friday night.
Absolutely.
Now we're going to watch our Marilyn Monroe.
We're going to get away from all of this.
This is Mrs. L. Please follow her YouTube.
I need you to follow.
I want to have everybody here make sure you follow her on YouTube.
She's got some incredible stuff.
And by the way, here, folks who are following Lionel Nation, we have our interview later, which we'll drop later on this eve.
Lionel Nation members always get them first.
All right.
Thank you so much, Edwin.
Thank you so much, Stanley.
Smiling Sue, the usual suspects.
Hillbilly.
Look at this.
Darlene's there.
Nightingale.
Nightingale is nothing but trouble.
I think...
Laura Floyd.
Is that Nick Nightingale?
Yes, Nick.
I think Nick is the one that under my comments section will put for the algorithm, which I always put a thumbs up or a heart because I appreciate a comment.
Oh, they're the best.
But I do want to encourage everybody.
There's Gloria Hanley.
You can sign up for my newsletter if you go to the website, lenswarriors.org.
Yes.
Because I want people to really, with all of this going on, people are overwhelmed, blocking it out.
Honey, I'm making an impassioned little speech here at the end of the evening.
I want to help everybody.
I want to help everybody, easy lifting as I like to call it, to share information you need to know about your families, your kids, your grandkids.
So please sign up.
You can go to the website, e-newsletter, and thank you.
Thank you all for those of you who have been kindly following me, watching the videos, making comments, donating, offering volunteering.
Thank you.
I'm very humbled and honored by it, and I'm very happy to be here with you tonight.
Oh, indeed.
Our Friday night date.
Our date.
Let me give you Mrs. L's YouTube.
Let me see.
I've got this.
Let me see.
You've got your...
I'm looking for your...
My newsletter?
Yeah, I've got it up here somewhere.
It's my newsletter.
Well, you can just go to the...
It's somewhere here.
Whatever.
You can scroll down.
It says e-newsletter.
Come here, sugar.
Thank you so much, my friends.
And thank you, dear friends.
Thank you.
Thank you also.
White Monkey.
Can you say that?
George Lenz.
Howie Brown and his band of renown.
Thank you so much.
We will see you tomorrow at 8 a.m.
Don't forget.
Until then, my friends, I always say.
And by the way, tonight was just fun.
And just remember, whenever you're feeling bad, whenever you're feeling kind of blue.
Come on over.
No, just remember this.
Just remember this.
That's it.
Just to bring you back.
Just to scream and do something to me.
Call me wacky.
All right, my friends.
See you tomorrow at 8 a.m.
Don't forget the monkey's dead.
The show's over.
Sue ya.
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