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Dec. 30, 2024 - Health Ranger - Mike Adams
02:21:19
BBN, Dec 30, 2024 – What 2025 brings will cause you to QUESTION REALITY
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All right, welcome to Brighton Broadcast News from Monday, December 30th, 2024.
The year 2024 is almost over.
Are you ready for New Year's?
Huh?
Well, I don't know what you're doing, but I'm writing music.
I've been doing a lot of music writing.
I'm working on our AI projects.
You know, we're going to have a new release in March called Enoch, and I am furiously putting together and submitting data sets for additional adaptation.
And when I say data sets, I mean, you know, text, unstructured text content in some cases.
In other cases, it's structured, but it's all part of the process.
We're going to be releasing that for free open source.
It's going to be revolutionary.
This will be the model that any nation would want to use if they want their people to be healthy, to just have the government hosted as a free online resource, you know, for people to just tune in.
If a government did that, Their people would be healthier.
Trust me.
You're going to want to see this model.
It's really cool.
We've been using it in-house in its earlier versions for quite some time here.
I mean, well, I don't know, six weeks, which is a long time in the AI world.
Something else happening.
This Thursday, I'm going to be appearing on the Alex Jones show and releasing a new song and music video.
five songs completed.
We're working on the music videos.
We're going to have seven or eight released in short order, all on Brighton, all free to download.
You can download the MP3s for free, free for non-commercial use, obviously.
But, you know, feel free to put it on your phone, enjoy these songs.
And the one that I'm releasing on Thursday on the Alex Jones show is, it's a friend told me it's lit and, It's a rap song with female rappers.
They're rapping about the failures of the Biden administration and some of the corruption that we've all lived through.
And this song takes no prisoners.
It's funny because I wrote the lyrics for this song.
Well, I'll just tell you the title because it's easier to refer to it.
It's called Where the Money Go, Joe.
And I started the lyrics, I don't know, three years ago.
And I had most of the song written out two years ago.
The lyrics are really quite intricate in terms of I always like to use really interesting rhyming structures and multiple rhymes within rhymes.
I don't just do like a poem would often rhyme.
I think that's pretty boring in a song usually.
So I do these really intricate structures and it takes a long time to come up with the words To say it and to just make it kick ass.
I wish I could play it for you here, but I'm going to save it for Thursday on the Alex Jones show.
And we've got a music video for it that's just rockin'.
And we've got the song also rockin'.
And as with all these projects, I am not singing this.
You know, we released a Christmas song.
Hopefully you heard that.
It's called, We Can't Love Our Christmas Without You.
It was a thank you song to you, our fans and customers and everybody that supports our mission here.
And some people responded to me and said, well, gosh, was that you singing that?
And hey, I love the compliment, but I don't have a singing voice like that Let me tell you, I wish I did.
If I did, I'd probably just be a professional singer.
But no, I don't have a voice like that.
But what I do is I create the songs.
So I write the lyrics, and then I use AI enhancement.
I tell the AI system what to make.
Here's how I want it structured.
Here's the tempo.
Here's the instruments.
Here's the qualities of the voice.
Here's the...
Here's the verses, the choruses, the breaks, the bridges, spoken word, this and that.
And then I render hundreds of variations, and then I tweak them, fix them, edit them, crop them, re-render, extend them.
And it's actually, it's a lot of fun.
It definitely takes some work.
And I'm using Suno, by the way, suno.com, S-U-N-O. To do the audio enhancements or the music enhancements, it's a very powerful engine, but you also have to know what you're doing.
It really helps to be a musician or have a musical ear or to understand how to put lyrics together and how to get them performed in the way that you want.
So I've been doing a lot of that, and the good news is you're going to get some amazing songs with amazing music videos all brought to you with the help of AI, but it's my...
Mind and my heart message.
And I'm bringing back old songs.
So I want my bailout money.
It's coming back.
I've already got the song done.
I don't think I can play that for you yet.
I'm going to save it until we have the music video release and everything.
But we're going to have that for you soon.
I've got I want my bailout money.
Let's see, I've got another song, a brand new song that I just created called Ignorance is Bliss, which is kind of a, it's a really funny song.
I've got Vaccine Zombie reworked, got the music video all done on that, and I've got, you know, some other new songs and the one I mentioned that we're going to release on the Alex Jones show.
So all this is coming.
I think you'll really enjoy it.
Now, for the interview today, I've interviewed my friend and business partner, Reno Rolle, from Boku Superfood, and we talked about three topics that I think might interest you.
First is Trump.
Reno did business with Donald Trump back in the 1980s, the late 1980s, and he's got a really surprising story about something that Trump did that he will never forget.
And Even though the story, it starts out kind of slow.
So stay with me on this.
It really picks up pace.
And then the second topic is AI and Hollywood in the music business because Reno has experience with the film industry, making films, working as a co-producer on films, and he knows a ton of people.
In the Hollywood scene and in the music business, high-level people.
Reno's one of those guys that just...
His Rolodex is like the who's who of influential creative people.
And he's got all these contacts.
He has a lot of knowledge about the business.
So he and I talk about how AI is going to radically change the music business and the movie business.
And I think for the better...
But Reno's not so sure.
So we have a discussion about that.
And a lot of people who are in the movie business, they are, of course, totally freaking out about AI and actors and actresses and so on.
They don't want to be replaced by digital versions of themselves, unless they get paid, of course.
If they get paid, it's all okay.
We'll see Liam Neeson forever.
It's like...
Your daughter got kidnapped again?
For the 10th time?
Liam Neeson is back kicking ass, you know?
Actors like that can live forever through AI, but of course they want to be compensated for their likeness, you know, for their body of work.
And that's understandable, but Hollywood sucks, overall.
Hollywood is producing garbage films, woke films, and they're trying to shove them down our throats.
Just like the music industry, in my opinion, mostly sucks.
That's why I never bought music, or at least not for the last decade plus.
I just don't buy music.
There's nothing that interests me in the music industry these days.
And so what AI allows us to do is to create the music that we want to hear pretty easily, relatively easily.
And engines like Suno help us enjoy the music that we want to hear that the music industry won't create.
Believe me, the lyrics that I'm putting out, the music industry would never touch those lyrics.
Number one, they're too positive and uplifting, and they're not demonic.
They're not, you know, Sodom and Gomorrah lyrics, which is what the music industry wants.
Everything's demonic and satanic and, you know, woke.
Or I've got other lyrics that dare to criticize, you know, criticize the Biden regime, criticize the vaccine industry.
Oh, they're not going to touch that.
Not in the music business.
They would never criticize the vaccine industry.
Well, I've got vaccine zombies.
Vaccine Zombie is a great song, and wait till you hear it again.
It's even better.
But thanks to engines like Suno, I can create this kind of music.
I could never do so, or I could never get it through the music industry.
And the same thing is going to happen with movies.
So soon you're going to be able to generate the movie that you want to hear or see without all the wokeness.
I talked about this in my previous podcast a little bit.
I'm just kind of summarizing it here.
But you'll be able to just generate the movie you want.
And so I talked to Reno in this interview about that, and I'm sort of explaining to Reno, at least my vision, is that Hollywood's obsolete.
Hollywood is obsolete.
We're not going to just have one script and one movie for one action feature for the summer, you know.
You're going to have, well, you'll be able to create, you know, a thousand movies.
Watch the one you want.
You want an undersea water adventure?
With a little bit of romance, but no graphic language?
Oh, guess what?
You type that in, boom.
You've got like deep sea underwater terror from beyond or whatever.
I mean, you can tell it what you want, and you'll have that movie.
So Hollywood's totally freaking out, and they should, because they are.
They're about to become obsolete, I should say.
They're not obsolete yet, but they're about to become obsolete.
And anyway, are there any actors that we really want to see other than Jon Voight?
I mean, or Kevin Sorbo, you know, I want to see actors that also have ethics as humans.
You know, I want an actor to also be a human being that is on the pro-human team.
Kevin Sorbo, Jon Voight, two good examples of that.
I don't want all these woke actors like all the Avengers actors that are like, vote for Kamala!
Did you see that Jimmy Carter died at 100?
Jimmy Carter.
And I feel sorry for the man because the Democrats rolled him out on a gurney with his mouth gaping open where we all thought he was already dead.
They rolled him out and said he voted for Kamala and they let Democrats take selfies with Jimmy Carter with his mouth gaping open on a gurney that they dragged him outside like, look, this is Jimmy Carter.
And it's like, was he even alive?
I mean, it's sick what the Democrats did to Jimmy Carter.
Let the man die with some dignity, man.
That's what I say.
But no, just anything to try to get more people to vote for Kamala, anything to defeat Trump, they have to roll out, you know, weekend at Bernie's.
They'll do it.
That's what they did to Jimmy Carter, poor man.
Jimmy Carter was, in his later years, known as a humanitarian.
His policies were, of course, a wreck in the 1970s, led to fuel shortages and sky-high inflation and crisis in the Middle East, etc., Well, what did you expect?
He wasn't really qualified to be president, but he wasn't a bad person.
He had ethics.
He had morals.
He had a good heart, regardless of what you think of his policies.
He was a good man.
And that kind of Democrat is long gone.
You don't see Democrats like that anymore, at least not the ones in power.
They're wicked now.
They're evil.
They hate you.
They hate humanity.
And they're willing to do anything to stay in power.
Anything.
Which brings me to, well, another topic I wanted to mention, which is what's coming in 2025. Well, we'll start with 2025. And let's say this is going to be a pretty big window.
Now, you know, I have a prediction on the record that the United States of America as we know it We'll cease to exist by the end of 2025. That's been my long-standing prediction.
And as of today, we have one year to see that prediction come true.
And I've said before that could mean states break away, states nullify or secede, or there's an invasion, or there's a collapse of Washington, D.C., or Collapse of the dollar in the geopolitical system or states declare independence or whatever.
Civil war, whatever.
I'm still sticking with that prediction.
As of now, obviously everything is subject to changing times and I'm not wishing for a breakup of the United States, but I do believe the Democrats are so desperate that they'll still try anything.
Anything they can get away with.
And they're probably scheming on ways to To try to get America nuked before January 20th or have a financial collapse, something like that.
Even if they don't collapse the financial system, it's become obvious to me that Trump or his administration, they're going to have to default on the debt.
There's going to be a debt jubilee.
Yep.
Which means if you hold treasuries, you're not going to get paid.
Woo, that's going to send some shockwaves through the global market.
Now, I'm not saying that's going to happen in 2025. That could be a couple years out, or it could be triggered by something sooner.
But even Elon Musk realizes this.
Well, I don't mean to say just even.
He definitely realizes this, that the debt is unsustainable.
You're going to have to somehow, you're going to have to reboot the government system in order to save America.
And how do you reboot the system if you're in charge, you know, if you're the Trump administration?
Well, conceivably, this is just a thought experiment, you would deliberately crash the system, the economic debt Ponzi system, and then you would have something new to replace it.
Now, what would that new thing be?
Hopefully not a CBDC. Hopefully something decentralized, hopefully something that they can't counterfeit, but Governments don't like something they can't counterfeit.
They depend on counterfeiting money in order to have their power.
You know, the power to create money is the power to control it.
It's also the power to destroy.
It's the power to fund their militaries, the power to fund their propaganda, the power to fund their plandemics.
So, of course, they always want the power to print money, which is a form of looting from the people.
But with so many alternative approaches to financial systems in the works, And with cryptocurrency proven as a decentralized, you know, essentially a peer-to-peer consensus-driven transaction, you know, ledger, a distributed ledger, that brings in that possibility as something that might replace the dollar or the banking system.
And we've got the BRICS settlement system that's rolling out globally, and that can't be counterfeited because it's backed 40% by gold, apparently.
So I'd like to see a currency that is backed by gold and that has a digital component so we can send it or use it easily and it's highly divisible and it's instant and so on and that isn't run by the government or the Federal Reserve.
So why should the government be involved in currency?
I don't know.
It's really got no business Printing money, except for the fact that it wants to print mo money all the time and use it to fund its schemes.
So the debt-based currency system is going to collapse at some point here.
Will that happen during the Trump administration?
Will the Trump administration even, will it even last four years?
I'm skeptical that it will.
I mean, will America even last four years?
I don't know.
I kind of doubt it.
That brings us to the orbs.
It's clear these are non-human technology.
I'm not talking about the drones that are chasing the orbs, but the orbs themselves, which have sort of cloaking technology and stealth, if they are run by humans, it's humans that got their hands on alien tech and then reverse engineered it and then built their own orbs.
And some people think it might be some kind of a coup.
Like some kind of secret agency is running alien orbs and trying to overthrow the government.
Maybe try to throw Trump out of office.
Who knows?
I've heard these, I mean, credible theories about this, actually, given the craziness of our world today.
But it's clear they're not human technology or the tech is not of human origin.
It might be humans in control, but the tech is not human origin.
So that means something big is coming, perhaps before January 20th, something so big that it will change history.
A big revelation, like, oh, we're not alone.
Or, oh, yeah, your whole nation has been a scam run by a bunch of fraudsters.
The elections were never real.
The money was never real.
You know, your history wasn't even real.
Like, we're talking red pill galore, you know?
Red pill after red pill after red pill.
You're gulping so many red pills that you're choking on them.
It's like, what?
Is anything real?
You know?
That's what 2025 is going to be like, combined with all kinds of AI stuff going on.
So, of course, when you look at images or you watch videos or you hear even music, you're going to say, is that even real?
Like the lyrics, the vocals in the songs that I'm producing, well, those are not vocals from actual people.
Those are AI-generated vocals that I controlled.
You know, just like if you're a video game programmer, you're building a video game, right?
And someone could look at the video game screen and say, that's fake!
That screen is fake!
It's not real!
And if you're the programmer, you're like, well, of course it's not real.
It's a game.
It's on the screen.
It's a digital world.
I mean, only an idiot would say, why can't I reach through the screen and touch the aliens in the game, you know?
Because they're not real.
It's digital.
So it doesn't mean you can't play the game, right?
It doesn't mean you can't enjoy the game or interact with it.
Or if it's a song, it doesn't mean you can't listen to the song and enjoy the song.
I mean, think about it.
Of all the music you've ever bought and listened to, have you ever met the people that actually sang that song?
Have you ever seen them?
I mean, maybe you have.
Maybe you've gone to a concert here and there and you've seen your favorite artist.
I don't know.
Billy Joel or whoever.
Sting.
I don't know.
There's a couple of artists that I've appreciated over the years.
But for most of the music you've ever consumed, you've never seen the human behind it.
You've never met the person.
How do you know it's even real?
How do you know?
It's not.
You plug in a CD. It's the way it used to be.
You put in a CD-ROM and it spins around and you listen to sound vibrations in the air.
That's not a person.
That's a recording.
That's a rendition or a facsimile of the original person.
It's not the person.
Same thing with movie DVDs are now just downloadable content.
When you're watching Netflix, obviously...
That's not the real world.
You're watching moving images that create the illusion of motion.
That's why they used to be called motion pictures.
They were a bunch of pictures, and they smashed them together.
It looks like motion.
Motion pictures.
Get it?
They were just pictures.
They are pictures.
They're just pictures that look like they're moving.
It's all illusion.
It always has been.
So for people to tell me, well, AI, now the voices aren't real.
Now the images aren't real.
Now the animation is not real.
It never was real.
It was never real.
It was always fake.
It was always an illusion.
It was always moving pictures.
It was always a recording.
It was always a reproduction.
Unless you went to see a live band, which is definitely worth doing, like a jazz band that's live, you know, or an orchestra.
But I love the live jazz bands.
You know, there's the guy on the bass.
Maybe somebody's got a cello, maybe a trumpet, maybe a saxophone and a piano and a nice smooth drum set.
You know, and it's live, so it's analog.
That's not digital.
That's analog.
That's real.
That's in the real world.
You can see the artist right there.
You can talk to them.
They take breaks, too, you know.
That's how you know it's real.
Like, we're tired.
Give us five minutes to eat.
And then we'll come back, you know.
But that's not the way most people experience music or movies or content or anything.
News.
Most of the news you read is stuff you never saw, right?
Over the weekend, what was the big news?
The big tragedy?
A jet crashed in Korea, a passenger jet.
From the video that I saw, I'm assuming it's real, but we don't really know.
I mean, we weren't there unless you happen to live in Korea and you were at the airport and saw it with your own eyes.
The landing gear failed to extend for some reason.
The hydraulics failed, and usually there's a backup system like a hand crank or something, and for some reason that didn't work either.
And so the plane tried to land on its belly without landing gear, and it And that means it can't decelerate as quickly because the landing gear, they have brakes, you know, and they have traction.
So instead of breaking, the plane just slid along the tarmac without slowing down very much.
And at the end of the runway is a giant dirt berm, it turns out, in Korea.
I don't know if they just have really short runways or it's a crowded airport and there's, like, houses on the other side of that berm.
I'm not sure, but there was a berm there.
And that plane smashed right into it at high speed on its belly and burst into flames and killed 180 people.
Allegedly.
The point is, so that was the news over the weekend.
I saw a video.
Do I know that video is real?
I'm not actually saying that I think that that didn't happen.
I'm not trying to disparage the lives lost.
I believe it did happen.
But I'm saying that it's only because I'm extending a measure of faith in the news reporting system, which is actually kind of foolish given how much the news lies to us all the time.
You know, it's probably foolish to believe anything that the corporate media reports.
Like, oh, a plane crashed, 180 people died.
Our initial reaction should be, I don't believe you.
It's like, maybe you're making that up.
I mean, how do we know that that's even true?
The video could be AI generated, right?
How do we know?
Well, Maybe you know somebody in Korea that knows one of the family members whose daughter or spouse or whatever died.
Well then, okay, now you can start to verify it person to person.
Okay, that is real.
But for most of the ways that you consume news or that I consume news, we take it on faith because a lot of it's just completely fake.
We saw that during COVID, how much of that was totally faked.
Most of it.
Oh, COVID's spreading.
People are dying from COVID and they're showing up in the hospitals and they're dying from COVID. Turns out it was all fake.
The hospitals were killing them for profit.
They were dying later than from the vaccines.
The vaccines were being injected into them, harming them and killing them.
So everything was a lie.
Oh, they told us masks really work and we should all wear them.
Some people still wear masks, which seems absurd at this point.
But 2025 is going to be the year that you really learn to question your reality more than you ever have.
And, you know, I'll be helping you with that process as I give examples like this.
And we're going to see many things in 2025 that are not real, that we're told are real.
And one of those things that might be coming is the great false flag alien invasion.
Are you ready for that one?
I'll have to do a song about that when it happens.
We're going to have a big fake cosmic mothership in the sky.
Like aliens beaming down, at least apparently there's going to be footage.
CNN will just happen to be there.
You know, CNN will be given the footage in advance, probably with an embargo like, don't release this until it happens.
It'll all be CGI stuff.
And then we'll be given a narrative.
We'll be told something like, oh, Earth is under attack.
And because Earth is under attack, this is what the globalists will say, because Earth is under attack, you saw the alien motherships in the sky yourself with your own two eyes, you know, because they're projecting, you know, holograms, whatever, Project Blue Beam.
And the globalists will say, well, we have to end individual nations and cooperate under a global control, the United Nations.
And they'll say, well...
Trump can't be president because there can't be, you know, a sovereign nation known as the United States of America or Canada, the same thing.
It's going to be one world government.
Why?
Because the aliens.
That's what you're going to hear probably in 2025. Whatever they want to pull off, they're just going to say, because aliens.
Like when they want you to line up and get jabbed and injected again.
And you're going to say, what?
Why should we get injected again?
They're going to say, because aliens, man.
And Alex Jones, by the way, says that there's a big push coming for the bird flu.
And we saw, who is that?
Liana Nguyen, one of the key propagandists out of Boston.
Sometimes she's called a crisis actor.
She worked at a hospital, I think, and then she would come on and say what the media wants to hear.
She was pushing jabs and everything during COVID. And she's now pushing the bird flu vaccine.
It's like, that psycho woman's never met a jab she didn't like.
Well, Alex Jones has put out a video.
I want to share that with you here.
About the bird flu vaccine.
So they're going to push the panic.
They're going to say, everybody's dying from bird flu, man.
The bird flu, it's in the milk.
We found bird flu in the sewer.
I think they should.
Frankly, I think that the government workers should mostly focus on searching the sewers.
Because that's their habitat.
It's kind of like the swamp.
It's a stinky swamp.
But since they love the swamp, they'll probably feel right at home in the sewers.
They should pretty much just spend their time swabbing sewage.
I think that would be a great use of government resources right there.
But let's listen to Alex Jones and what he says.
Here we go.
H5N1 bird flu is going to kill everybody.
And we all need to have the government force us to start taking this new experimental shot For a bird flu that hasn't even mutated to be able to get into humans and make us sick, so that if it does magically mutate and we have no idea how it's going to, then this old shot that doesn't protect you from the mutation is supposedly out there for people.
Unless you study the science, and I've interviewed hundreds of virologists and experts on this.
When you give someone this type of so-called vaccine, When there's other wild viruses going on out there in the environment, it will cause and accelerate mutations in not just the, quote, bird flu types that people come in contact with, but other viruses and will accelerate its evolution and create a bunch of new variants.
And that's a butchered way of putting it because I'm not a scientist.
I've just read thousands of the reports, interviewed hundreds of scientists, but that's what they're saying.
I mean, if you give somebody a vaccine during a current pandemic for any type of virus, but particularly these, quote, bird flus, then it's what gives rise to mutations and could make it actually jump into humans, or they'll use that as the excuse to claim where it came from.
From all the past stuff we've seen in these weaponized labs, we know they've weaponized bird fluid and made it communicable to humans in airborne.
They're just waiting, in my view, that's where all the propaganda is aimed at, all the pre-programming, to release one soon and say, oh, look, it mutated.
But then again, they've not even come out with a, quote, vaccine guessing how it's mutated like they've done in the past with regular, quote, flus.
And if you really study the flu, they've never guessed the right mutation.
It's never worked.
And people that take a flu shot annually are way more likely to get the natural flu and have all sorts of health problems.
Look it up.
I mean, it is just crazy.
So there's something big going on here.
And I mean, clearly, you give people this type of experimental shot, it's going to cause a bunch of mutations and viruses, and they'll probably get the jump they want.
But they're just counting on people being totally ignorant about all this.
We need all the experts to chime in right now.
God bless you.
I'll be covering tomorrow on the air.
All right.
Alex is correct about that.
Absolutely correct.
Again, I'll be joining his show on Thursday.
We'll talk about bird flu a little bit then, and also introducing my new song, music video, that actually mentions Alex.
Kind of interesting.
So you don't want to miss that.
That's going to be tons of fun.
But Alex is right about the bird flu here, 100%.
The establishment is they're trying to pull another COVID. This is a test.
This is an IQ test to see who's dumb enough to believe the stage panic, who's dumb enough to line up and get injected.
And this time, they're actually, in my opinion, they're going to be injecting people with payloads.
Bird flu payloads, well, they'll call it bird flu, but it's actually payloads designed to shed Spike proteins or other morphological poisons onto other people.
You know how mRNA turns your body into a bioweapons factory or a chemical weapons factory?
That's probably what they'll do with the bird flu, quote, vaccine.
It won't be a vaccine.
It'll be a termination weapon.
The whole point is to reduce human population as quickly as possible.
And the globalists Look, they've got two choices here.
Because the rise of AI is happening so much more rapidly than any of them predicted.
I've seen stuff just in the last few months that, in terms of reasoning capabilities in AI models, that the experts thought could not happen until maybe the year 2035 or 2050 in some cases.
And it's happening now.
It's like, whoa, we've got to rethink the timeline here because this stuff is happening right now.
So AI is advancing in reasoning capabilities very rapidly.
And you have AI robotics advancing rapidly.
And now early models are being deployed of agentic enterprise-level orchestration AI coordinators, which will replace human remote workers.
So you're going to have, let's just say, as a rule of thumb, you're going to have 50% of the human population that currently works out of work.
It's going to take time, you know, a couple of years, whatever.
Maybe one to two years for the white-collar jobs and then another couple of years for the blue-collar physical jobs because the physical robots are harder to make work correctly.
But over the next few years, you're going to see, let's just say, 50% of the human population out of work.
So the globalists have two choices.
They can either, one, buy people off with a universal basic income, and that would require Resetting the global financial system and bringing people into some kind of a CBDC. Or two, they can kill people off.
Get rid of them before they revolt as they're all losing their jobs because of the robot AI revolution.
So those are two choices.
You pay people off or kill them off.
Pay them off, kill them off.
Pay them off, kill them off.
What should we do?
The globalists are going to do both.
They're going to kill off the sad, oblivious, gullible suckers that they can convince to line up for jabs.
You know people like that.
We all know people like that.
Just, you know, say your goodbyes to them if they're going to line up and get more jabs.
Or if they don't go get the jabs, then they'll live on the UBI for a while until the government's run, you know, engineered famine, engineered collapse, engineered...
Dirty bomb, nuclear weapons, whatever it takes to disrupt the systems, kill off a few billion people.
The goal of the globalists is to kill about 7.5 billion people in order to create their utopia, where the earth is mostly free of humans.
That's what they want.
There's going to be a lot of concrete left over, a lot of highway overpasses, a lot of concrete buildings for a while.
Some of them will stand for a century or two.
Think about it.
The highways will.
The roadways will start to crack and grow weeds pretty quickly.
But for the first few years, if you're one of the survivors, well, the roads are all yours and you can park anywhere you want.
It's just that, well, nobody's open for business because the economy's collapsed.
Uh, Free housing for the taking.
You know, anything that you can maintain, if you can get power to it, have it.
You know, any commercial building you want, right?
Because this is what it's going to be like if the globalists kill off the number of humans they're trying to kill.
Mass die-offs.
Not just the whatever it is right now from COVID. 20 million people around the world, 30 million people.
I've seen estimates in that range.
Maybe a million and a half in the U.S. have been killed.
So that's hardly anything.
That's like half a percent or something of the U.S. population.
That's nowhere near what the globalists want, so they've got to come up with something new.
Bird flu.
Which I think I'm going to start calling bird foo because you have to be acting a foo to believe it.
So I'm just going to call it bird foo.
Oh, did you get the bird foo jab, you foo?
Did you believe the bird foo news foo?
That's it.
I'm just calling it bird foo from now on.
You've got to be a foo to believe in bird foo.
Anyway, you get the idea.
So, that's what's coming.
It's going to be an interesting time to be alive, for sure.
It'll really be interesting as the masses start to die off from just being gullible, obedient, oblivious, completely unaware, uninformed, you know?
And it's like...
You know, at some point they'll panic.
It's like, we don't have any food.
Gosh, I thought your plan was to live on vaccines.
Seems like that's what you were most interested in acquiring.
So, wait, you mean the vaccines aren't going to keep you alive?
Oh, maybe you should have thought about it.
Perhaps.
Again, it's an IQ test from the globalists.
It's a global IQ test.
And not everybody's going to pass it, you know?
So we'll see.
In the meantime, you know, a lot of craziness is going to happen.
So if you're wise, you'll get prepared, obviously.
You probably are well prepared.
If you're not, let me give you a couple of resources.
One of our sponsors here, too.
But, of course, our store, healthrangerstore.com.
Certified organic, you know, lab-tested foods, superfoods, storable foods, and personal care products and supplements and survival products, all kinds of things.
Check it out, healthrangerstore.com.
We're shipping right now.
We're open and shipping.
We did not take the whole week off, no.
Some people did, but not us.
The Satellite Phone Store provides backup satellite communications through sat phones that are very affordable.
S-A-T-1-2-3.com You can afford a satellite phone.
You just pay for the monthly minutes plan, and then after a certain number of months, you own the phone.
Free and clear.
And the minutes roll over if you don't use them, so you can save them up for the big emergency.
You can get on your sat phone when the alien mothership hologram shows up in the sky.
Hey!
Check it out!
Power grid's down, but I can call people and tell them about the fake alien invasion, you know?
That's why you need sat phones.
They also work from anywhere on the planet.
Anywhere around the world.
From the oceans.
From all the land masses.
And they even work if you think the Earth is flat, by the way.
They also work somehow.
I think the flat Earth people, at least what some of them have said that I saw, is that they say there are no satellites because they're not orbiting Because they say the Earth is not a sphere.
Which seems troublesome, given that Venus and Mercury are spheres, and Mars is a sphere.
The Moon is obviously a sphere, and the Sun is a sphere, and there's Saturn and Jupiter, and there's Neptune and Pluto.
And the moons of Saturn are spheres.
Everything's a sphere.
You can see the shadow of the Earth On the moon during a lunar eclipse, right?
And the shape of the earth is round.
Huh.
You know when the earth is between the sun and the moon?
So that's one of the ways you know the earth is round.
And also when you look at the moon and it's like half moon, it's shadowed in the same way that a round or spherical object would be shadowed, right?
So it's obviously a sphere, right?
But even if you don't believe that, the satellite phones still work somehow.
I know, some kind of miracle must involve quantum teleportation of spin states or something.
But they do work.
That's SAT123.com.
Okay, now for the rest of this week, I don't really know my publishing schedule here.
I honestly don't know.
I'm going to be doing a lot of work on music and AI projects, and so as a result, I may not publish tomorrow or the next day.
So I don't know.
I'll put out podcasts as appropriate.
I know I'm doing interviews later this week in the studio, so I'll have something for sure on Friday for you, but in the meantime, I'm not really sure.
But here's one thing I do know for sure.
I'm not going out on New Year's Eve.
Oh, no, no.
That's for the younger generation.
The younger generation that wants to go out, the rave parties and the drinking, dancing and partying all night, driving home, dodging drunk people.
That's not for me.
I stay off the roads on New Year's Eve.
I know some of you listening in law enforcement, you're like, uh-huh, that's wise, because that's when you get all the calls, isn't it?
All you listening who are EMTs or first responders and paramedics and police officers and sheriffs, deputies, you know, you're going to be working New Year's Eve, I know, because you're going to be dragging people out of crumpled vehicles.
You're going to be using the jaws of life to open their smashed up doors and drag out, sadly, you know, banged up bodies of people who should have stayed home.
So, stay off the roads, folks.
My advice to you listening, you're probably with me on this.
You're probably like, hey, you know what sounds great for New Year's Eve?
Like a nice bowl of, like, cinnamon oatmeal, you know?
Yeah.
And maybe some eggnog.
Maybe a little bit of red wine if you're into some high-quality wine.
You know, some relaxing music.
A fun movie to watch or something.
I don't know, a fun song to listen to.
Put on some jazz.
And enjoy your New Year's Eve and stay off the roads.
Let other people go smash themselves up.
Those are probably the people that are going to take the bird flu jab anyway.
It's not like they make good decisions in life.
So get out of their way.
All right.
All right.
So be safe.
Prayers and blessings to all of you for the new year and for New Year's Eve.
And don't be convinced by the fake alien invasion when that day comes.
And be ready for anything in 2025. It's going to get interesting.
And also, I would just say, be very careful about dollars and banks and Where do you have your assets?
Where might they be vulnerable if there's a currency reset, a debt reset, a debt default?
What would happen to the banking system?
Oh, massive bail-ins, I think.
Oh, you thought that was your money?
It's our money now.
You just became a creditor to the bank.
Funny how that works, isn't it?
Yeah.
So just be ready for anything.
And enjoy the interview here with Reno Rolay.
And at the end of the interview, I play our new song, our Brighteon song.
I've reworked it, and we have the final song.
And I include that at the very end for you today.
And then a music video is coming out for the new Brighteon song, which is called Brighteon Turn It On.
Very cool.
I think you'll love the song.
It's very inspiring.
So enjoy the interview and enjoy the music.
Mike Adams here and I want to share a little nutritional secret with you.
So you know I drink these smoothies every day.
I make these out of avocados and bananas and whey protein.
I put some other powders in them as well.
I put a little black cumin seed oil in there and some vitamin D drops and things like that.
But what I've added today into my smoothie, because we now have it available in our store, is called Golden Milk.
I know it's kind of a funny name, but it's orange.
It's golden orange colored because it's got a lot of turmeric in it.
But let me show you this.
I've got it on my desk here.
There it is in the canisters there on the right and left-hand side.
Golden milk powder canisters.
Of course, it's certified organic and laboratory tested.
But if you show my screen, I want to walk you through some of the ingredients.
This is incredibly delicious.
It's great for the fall season here, too.
but it's made with organic coconut milk powder and then organic date sugar, which is a low glycemic natural sweetener.
And then the functional herbs are, you've got curcumin, which is an extract from turmeric.
You've got organic turmeric root powder, organic ginger root powder for that spice, that fall spice, ashwagandha powder, which is an adaptogen that's really potent, and then cinnamon powder gives it that just delicious flavor.
Cinnamon, by the way, is used a lot in traditional Chinese medicine, and it has its own health properties.
All this together is called Organic Golden Milk Superfood.
You can take the powder and you can blend it into water, or you can blend it like I did with avocados and bananas.
You can blend it with cashews and To make like a cashew milk, like a superfood fall eggnog nutrition drink.
You know, there's no eggs in it, and it's not all sugared up like typical eggnog.
It's way better than eggnog.
But it's great for the fall season.
Or you can use almond milk or any other kind of milk or raw cow's milk, whatever you have, fresh milk off the farm.
Mix this with it and you will have a superfood extravaganza that has so many functional benefits, it's too many to even name.
Now, in addition to that, here's what else we have available at the Health Ranger store.
I just mentioned ashwagandha.
We have an ashwagandha liquid extract available right now, too.
Here it is.
It's organic liquid extract, two fluid ounces.
This is a super high-end extract that's extracted with a combination of alcohol, water, and glycerin.
And as a result, because of those three different, quote, solvents or, you know, carriers, you actually extract more of the nutrients from the ashwagandha root than just using one of those.
So this is available now, and it's really fantastic.
And if you show my desk, I want to mention a couple other things.
We have asazanthin, Hawaiian asazanthin, now back in stock for the first time in a long time.
That is a fat-soluble carotenoid that has extraordinary properties.
If you haven't yet tried astaxanthin and just observe what it can help with in terms of your mobility and joints and cognitive protective support, things like that, Try astaxanthin.
I think you'll be really amazed at what it can do for you.
In addition, we have the Boku Superfood formulation now in stock for the first time.
This organic superfood is based on the original Boku formulation, but it's been upgraded, enhanced with our sourcing, our laboratory testing, and And the result is now the combination Boku Superfood, Health Ranger Store, combo formulation and lab testing product, available for the first time, plant-based, high-density nutrition, ready to blend into water or milk or anything like that.
It's available for the first time at our store.
And then finally, if you go back to my desk, yeah, we've got ginger latte powder, which is, you know, more of a sort of coffee-themed drink there that's also quite delicious.
And then we also have there, in the brown label, the organic freeze-dried crunchy munchies, banana, apple, cinnamon.
And these are fruit and herb purees that are freeze-dried into little snack chunks.
And they're called crunchy munchies.
They're fun to eat.
Kids love them too.
And the ingredients are just incredibly clean and nutritious.
We also have banana strawberry flavor available in the crunchy munchies as well.
So a great snack, a great travel food.
All of this and much more is available now at healthrangerstore.com.
And also don't want to forget iodine because everybody's freaking out about the risk of nuclear war right now.
And sure enough, we've got nascent iodine available at the store.
This is the cap version because the caps last much longer than the droppers, but you can also buy this with a dropper in it, or you can get bulk deals with this.
You can buy like six bottles with caps right here, a six pack.
And this stuff is going to just disappear off the shelves the minute, you know, let's pray it doesn't happen, but the minute war escalates Even more between Russia and Ukraine, especially if somebody starts launching nukes, or even if Israel starts launching nukes, which could happen on any given day, it seems, but you won't be able to find nascent iodine on the shelves.
So get it now while you can, and when it's relatively affordable and available, we've got it right now.
We're shipping right now out of our warehouse in central Texas.
So thank you for all your support.
Shop at healthrangerstore.com for all your nutrition needs.
And you can find many different products that we have available, hundreds to choose from, that are health and nutrition.
We've got hundreds of different products to choose from, themed on health and nutrition and superfoods, even personal care products.
We've got freeze-dried crunchy munchies and also storable food, certified organic storable food, Various nutritional supplements.
Yes, we test everything for glyphosate.
We test it for heavy metals.
We test for microbiology contamination, E. coli, salmonella, yeast and mold, total plate count, other testing as well.
So we do more testing than anybody that I know of in this business.
And so you can rest assured that whatever you purchase from our store is ultra clean, ultra tested, and has very high density nutrition without all the crazy high toxic heavy metals that are very commonly found in products like turmeric and ginger and moringa and many others.
So, hey...
As I say about the other nutritional product providers out there, if they're not testing for heavy metals, they're selling heavy metals.
You've got to test for it because heavy metals contamination is crazy common in certain types of foods and supplements like turmeric.
So we have...
Laboratory tested, certified organic.
Thank you for supporting HealthRangerStore.com and know that every purchase helps support our platforms like Brighttown.com, Natural News, Brighttown.io, our decentralized free speech platform, Brighttown.social, and much more, including our AI project, Brighttown.ai.
So thank you for all your support.
God bless you all.
Take care.
All right, welcome everyone to this year-end interview with one of my favorite people, Reno Rollet.
He's the founder of Boku Superfood.
He and I have partnered on providing his product, formulating, manufacturing his product for the world through our store, but that's a different story.
This interview is actually about three things.
One of them, we're going to start with Trump.
Our guest here, Reno, has had a lot of personal experience with Donald Trump in years past.
We're going to talk about that.
Some of these things will really surprise you, I think.
And then secondly, we're going to talk about Hollywood and the music business and the AI influence because our guest, Reno, has a lot of contacts and experience in the Hollywood business.
He's from California.
And then third, we're going to talk about the nutrition and food supply chain challenges for 2025 and how to get good nutrition, even though the supply chain is really fragile in many areas.
So welcome to the interview, Reno.
It's great to have you on today.
All right.
Hey, Mike, great to be here, buddy.
I'm just thrilled to have you here.
I just want to let our audience know there's no video here in case they're wondering, like, my video's not working.
It's just you and I chatting with audio here, but it's been too long.
I always love catching up with you.
What are you feeling right now about 2024, by the way, before we get into the Trump topic?
Well, I have to say, Mike, I'm, well, I guess more optimistic about 2025, you know, in the future ahead for America.
Actually, I couldn't be more excited.
Cool.
No, I'm really optimistic about 2025 also.
Oh, I guess we'll get into some of that.
So Trump is, you know, wow.
Trump's about to become president.
This will be the third election he's won, in my book anyway.
He's going to be sworn in in just a few weeks.
You actually, long before Trump was running for president, you had direct business dealings with Trump.
And you've shared this story with me, but perhaps not with the public.
Trump did some very interesting things that no one knew about.
And I think it's time for that story to be told.
Would you share that with us?
Yeah.
Yeah, sure, Mike.
Well, you know, I've been an entrepreneur my whole life.
I started back in 1986. My first business was Rolay Limited, and I started the business to manufacture and market my patented beach blanket.
You know, I invented a beach blanket way back in 86, and it just stemmed from this idea that I had that I would like to create the ultimate beach blanket.
So I teamed up with Lynn, who you know, my wife at the time.
She was my girlfriend.
And I shared an idea with her.
We were just talking about, you know, opportunities to make money, different business ideas, you know, just sort of contemplating the way entrepreneurs do.
And we were very young at that time.
And I told her, you know, I always had this idea that I'd create the ultimate beach blanket.
Put weighted corners, you know, a hidden pocket, inflatable pillow, you know, and it would come in a bag and it would just do all these amazing things and it would be the ultimate beach blanket.
Okay, wait a second, Reno.
Is that because you go to the beach a lot or something?
Because...
Or what?
Good question.
I did.
You know, I grew up in South Jersey.
You know, we spent summers at the beach.
But it was really, the idea came from an experience.
I was with some friends and we rode motorcycles down to the beach.
And we did what guys do.
You know, we took the sheet off of, you know, the motel bed and drug it down to the beach and set it on the sand.
And we put our, you know, shoes on the corners to hold it down and then, you know, our wallets in the shoes.
Well, we came back after, you know, swimming around for a little bit.
And my one friend, they had picked up his wallet out of the shoe and made off with it.
And I just remember thinking like, wow, you know, here we are.
Look at this scenario.
You know, there should be a better way to do this.
And it inspired me really to come up with my first...
Invention.
And it was an idea at the time, and I shared it with Lynn, kind of half expecting her to shoot it down, because at the time, you know, I apparently had nothing but bad ideas.
The girl I was dating, every time I came up with an idea, she would kind of shoot it down and other people would ridicule the idea, which is, I think, a typical process for inventive people, right?
But Lynn, different from these other folks, Lynn encouraged me.
She said, well, that's a great idea.
You should do it.
So I set out to learn the textile business, which wasn't easy in the days before the internet.
Again, this is the mid-80s, so I get on a bus and take it to the train, take the train into the city up in New York.
And I just spent days and days pounding the pavement in what they call the garment district.
And I learned about different textiles and findings and things.
I didn't even know these words existed.
But, you know, in that process, I came up with a combination of fabrics that I thought would be ideal.
And these fabrics would, you know, ideally work collectively to keep you cool and comfortable, draw moisture down from your body, resist the heat from the beach and the sand.
And so it was a combination of cotton terry.
Which we all know is, you know, like a beach towel and cotton twill, which is like a light gauge denim.
And these two fabrics, I would just sew them together and test and test.
And it was amazing how the combination of those two fabrics would the moisture that we would subject the fabrics to would evaporate very quick.
And this is, again, before we had these state of the art synthetic fabrics.
You know, this is mid 80s technology.
But anyway, I came up.
Can I just say, you know, an awful lot about fabric for some for a guy who's not gay.
It's like, the only people I've ever heard talk about fabric like this Are men of a different persuasion and they're experts in this area.
Well, I don't consider myself an expert, but I did take a pretty deep dive.
I spent a lot of time in the library and researched carefully because, you know, I really believed in what I was doing.
And so I ended up with a patent.
I applied for a patent and the patent was basically surrounding how the two fabrics would work together to keep you cool and comfortable.
And of course, weighted corners in the pocket.
Long story short, I made some noise with this thing.
I made the blankets, took them to market, and I started to get some pretty decent sales and drew the attention of some really cool people like Kevin Harrington, who later was the first cast on Shark Tank by Mark Burnett.
So anyway, I started selling, and it's really interesting.
This is a good lesson for entrepreneurs.
I was selling to retail stores.
And I would be in trade shows and I would show these buyers my blanket.
Here are the weighted corners.
Here are the two fabrics.
Here's how they work.
Here's the bag.
It comes in.
Isn't it great?
And I'd get an order.
And we would ship those blankets to these stores.
And I'm thinking, man, this is going to be amazing.
I'm going to be super successful.
I'm going to be the next Ralph Lauren.
You know, the Rolay brand is really going to be something.
Well, what happened was...
The sales were not...
The blankets weren't selling through.
I would sell into the stores, and they would sit on the shelf.
This is a bright yellow bag with a $69 price tag.
At that time, it was a lot of money.
My blankets were, you know, $70 a pop.
And so what I learned was...
I had a problem because I wasn't there to explain to the consumer why this blanket was so great and why they should spend 70 bucks.
So long story short, this is a fascinating story.
I was invited to a concert.
It was Gloria Estefan, the Miami Sound Machine.
Lynn's best friend's brother was her sound engineer.
Well, I thought we're going to meet her after the show.
I should present her with a blanket.
I think she'd love it.
She's from Cuba.
She lives in Miami.
So I gift her this blanket, and she treated me, I felt like I was the celebrity.
Gloria Estefan loved this blanket.
This was, by the way, when Miami Sound Machine was super hot.
They were like the top band in the country.
And so the very next day, I go home to my little Rolet Limited World Headquarters, which was a little apartment we were renting, and my phone rang, and it was Emilio Estefan, her husband.
And he called and said, Yeah, so I thought about it for a second.
At first, I thought, no, I'm not going to do that, because I imagine the Role logo.
I just imagine being this next big brand.
But when I thought it through the question, I thought, well, I could embroider the Miami Sound Machine logo opposite mine, and I could print it on the bag.
So I answered, I said, yeah, we could do that.
So we ordered 200 blankets.
And it was amazing because, you know, that was the largest order, single order I'd ever had.
It was a famous, you know, music star at the time.
So we got to work and started making these blankets.
And it got to where my embroiderer, it really took time to stitch all this embroidery and then reassemble the product and everything.
So we were really creeping up on Christmas.
And I called Emilio and I said, look, I've got most of these blankets done, but these last recipients, this last handful, maybe a dozen people, if we want them there by Christmas, send me their list.
This was back in the day, the fax machines.
Send me their addresses and I'll ship them directly from my factory in Pennsylvania.
So he did.
He faxed me over that list.
And Mike, I still have that list.
And the people on this list were at the time the who's who of the entertainment industry.
I mean, Sammy Davis Jr., Frank Sinatra.
I could go on and on, music industry executives.
And on that list was Donald Trump.
And so I sent him a blanket, along with Steve Wynn and some other real, you know, business sort of luminaries.
And so what ended up happening, I ended up shortly after that time being contacted by Trump's, you know, head of marketing, woman by the name of Kim Townsend.
Beautiful, beautiful, amazing woman.
And she called and ended up ordering a bunch of blankets.
It started out for a golf tournament, and then it was the hotel, and then it's the yacht.
My business was completely reinvented.
Wait, were these like branded Trump?
That's exactly what we did.
We customized the blankets.
And the way I sold this to the casino, to Kim and the rest of these customers that followed, was look, they wanted them as gifts for their high-end gamblers.
And they would send their whales, their big gamblers, fly them private.
They'd send them bottles of champagne.
That was the big one, was Dom Perignon.
And my argument was, look, these people are all wealthy.
They're big gamblers.
They know about Dom.
They're going to pop the cork.
They're going to drink it.
And that's it.
But if you give them a role, a blanket, they're going to have that product for the rest of their lives.
They're going to open that blanket up.
They're going to see your logo on that blanket.
And most important, they're going to create memories.
They're going to have a beautiful time on the beach with family and friends at the lake, out on the boat, at a concert, whatever they're doing with this blanket, they're going to have memories, positive memories, and they're going to think of your brand.
And so that was it.
I started selling these blankets like crazy all over to Steve Wynn at different casinos, Coca-Cola, Miller Brewing Company, Anheuser-Busch, Snap-on Tools.
I built a business.
That actually provided a living for me for many years.
But back to the Trump story, and this is how it kind of began.
That same woman that I was dealing with came to me at one point in 1989. And we had a track record at this point.
We were doing considerable business together.
And she said, Reno, we're opening Donald Trump's billion dollar dream come true.
The Taj Mahal in Atlantic City, New Jersey.
And I'm looking for a great gift.
And I know you've got your finger on the pulse.
You know, what can we buy a hundred thousand of?
Well, I almost fell out of my chair.
Like a hundred thousand is a lot of anything, right?
So I just, I started thinking like, what could I realistically get to her?
You know, that's cost effective, is really going to get the job done, you know, get people excited.
What's hot that's out there, that's affordable, that's customizable.
So I threw it out there, the idea of a fanny pack.
I had been traveling around and I see tourists with these fanny bags and I said, you know, we could do these little fanny bags.
I can get them made in Korea.
Or in China, I can get them done very inexpensively.
We can do them in the day-glow colors, which were really hot at the time.
And so, long story short, we made the deal.
She ordered 100,000 of these fanny bags for the Taj Mahal grand opening in 1989. So, of course, I got to work.
I had the factory all, you know, figured out who I wanted to deal with, but I had to finance the project, and I needed what they call, it's a letter of credit.
So in order to get the bank to open a letter of credit, I needed security.
And I lived at this time in a little townhouse.
And it wasn't too terribly valuable.
It wasn't valuable enough to provide the full security for this letter of credit.
So I partnered with a gentleman in the area, you know, pretty well-known businessman.
He was in the electrical supply business.
And, you know, he ended up guaranteeing my letter of credit, and that took him putting up his house.
So we had two houses mortgaged on this deal.
And, you know, I set up with the factory.
They're going to town.
Everything's happening according to schedule.
And I get a call.
We're probably...
I'm going to guess a week or less away from the deadline where I need to get paid for these jackpockets.
And the news hits that Donald Trump filed bankruptcy for the Taj Mahal.
And I get this phone call from my partner and he's out of his mind.
What are we going to do?
Did you hear what happened?
Donald Trump filed bankruptcy.
We are going to get so screwed.
He's offering me pennies on a dollar.
At the time, he was really in pretty deep.
He supplied a bunch of this electrical material for the project, and he was owed a lot of money compared to me.
I was on the hook for about half a million dollars, which was an awful lot of money to a young guy, but not as much as what he was in for.
So I said, boy, I hadn't heard.
I better figure out what's going on.
And I get on the phone.
I get to work.
I start calling everybody.
Of course, I call Kim.
I call everyone I knew that had anything to do with the Taj Mahal.
I called a girlfriend of mine that I went to high school with, and she turned out pure serendipity, I suppose.
She was the financial controller.
For the company.
And she's like, Reno, yeah, it's really tough out there, man.
We're doing everything we can, but I'll try to do what I can for you, but I can't make any promises.
And I'm explaining to her, Pat, if I lose this deal, if I don't get paid 100% in full, I'm going to lose my home.
And this is a big problem, right?
So I, of course, called Donald Trump.
And I spoke to his secretary, and I tried to explain to her what was going on.
What year was this?
1989. Okay.
Yeah, so I probably called this woman, I could almost tell you her name, a dozen times.
I practically badgered her with phone calls to try to get through to Donald Trump, and I just couldn't get him on the phone.
And finally, she said to me, it was great advice, she said, Reno, if you really want to communicate with Donald Trump, put it in writing.
Write him a letter.
He will respond.
And so I said, okay, and I put together probably a three or four page letter outlining, you know, who I was, my situation.
Please, I'm not a big company.
I'm just starting a family.
My wife is eight months pregnant at that time with our first son.
And I just, you know, laid out my case.
And with that, I never heard back and I thought, boy, you know, I've done everything I can possibly do.
I've called everyone.
I've talked to everyone.
I've sought advice.
Really, there was nothing left to do.
I figured that, you know, if Donald Trump, if I'm going to end up getting screwed in this deal, well, I'm going to get screwed and I'm just going to have to get back to work and, you know, I'll be okay.
I'll start from scratch.
It's one of those that didn't go well because I've done everything I possibly could do.
So at that point...
My partner calls this guy, Bruce, and God bless him, man.
He calls up and he says, what are we going to do?
He's still panicking.
And I said, well, I said, Bruce, I've got tickets to Jamaica.
I'm going to Reggae Sunsplash in Jamaica.
And he just lost it.
What do you mean you're going to Jamaica?
That's so irresponsible.
Are you kidding?
We stand to lose everything.
You're going to Jamaica.
I said, Bruce, I bought the tickets months ago.
I've done everything I possibly can do.
I checked in with my wife.
She understood.
And she was so, by the way, so courageous through this whole process.
So it was very difficult.
And I'll never forget Lynn saying, look, I think you've obviously done everything you can do.
It's in God's hands.
I'm pregnant.
We're about to have a child.
Our lives are going to change.
You may as well go now and have your fun.
I'll be fine.
And I know that sounds crazy.
And looking back, you know, it was a bit crazy.
But I went to Jamaica.
And I ended up having the time of my life.
I won't bore you with the details of Reggae Sunsplash and the music and the people from all over the world uniting the world through music.
The music starts at sunset and doesn't stop until sundown.
It's an unbelievable week-long festival in Montego Bay, Jamaica.
Well, I go through that whole night.
Unbelievable, memorable night.
I wake up in the, you know, I'm up in the morning, the music's playing, it's Dennis Brown on stage.
And it's one of the most incredible experiences I'll ever recall.
But wait, wait, why wasn't, why didn't Lynn go with you?
She was eight months pregnant.
It just, it was just me and a buddy of mine.
And it was like this kind of boy's trip that he had planned six months ago.
And she was totally okay with that.
She was okay with it, yeah.
Huh.
It was okay.
I mean, I had done this a bunch, you know, travel independently.
Yeah, okay.
Lynn was always a trooper.
So anyway, I get up, you know, again, spectacular night.
I can't wipe the smile off my face.
My cheeks are aching because of the fun that we had.
And I'm driving home from Montego Bay to Negril, Jamaica, to the place where we're staying.
And we're in this little place called the Rock House.
Gorgeous little cottages on the cliffs.
It's got an outdoor shower.
And we just show up and at the gate...
Is the old gate man, Alfred Dunn, sorry.
And he waves us in and he could just see on our faces what we had been through.
And he just kind of smiles.
We pull into the little cottage and I go right to the shower.
I just want to get cleaned up, rinsed off, and I'm going to crash.
And I'm in the shower and I'm, you know, washing up.
And I just, again, my cheeks, I'm sure you've experienced that, where you just smiled and laughed so hard for so long, your face is aching.
It was a beautiful feeling.
And I'm under the water and reflecting on what an unbelievable night and how blessed.
And all of a sudden, Alfred calls out from the front.
He says, Reno, your wife Linman, she called on the phone.
Well, immediately, I'm like shocked, right?
Because number one, I forgot all about my wife.
Like I forgot about my life.
I was like deeply immersed in this incredible experience, incredible night.
And then I remember, not only do I have a wife, she's eight months pregnant.
I mean, holy cow, what's going on, right?
So I said, well, what did she say, Alfred?
Yeah, that seems like an important issue to keep in mind.
I said, what did she say, Alfred?
He said, the casino man, him pay in full, everything cool.
That's Donald Trump, obviously.
The day the check was due, It showed up in my mailbox.
He paid me on time and in full.
And frankly, it was probably the greatest deal I ever made, certainly at that time, because of just the lessons I learned, how profitable it was, and how meaningful that money, that success was to me at that time in my career, because it enabled me to really vault my business to the next level.
So wait a second.
Wait, let me back up here.
So Trump's company had declared bankruptcy, which meant, or at least whatever that business unit was.
And that's, you know, just for the listeners, I got to say that if you're a real estate developer, you know, some projects go bust.
That's not actually unusual.
Like, some work and some don't, right?
But he did not legally have to pay you that money, correct?
Right.
Well, I think, you know, contractually, he had an obligation to pay me.
There was a purchase order, which is essentially a contract.
No, but I mean, the bankruptcy protects him from creditors.
You're right.
In terms of bankruptcy law, yeah, I somehow earned some priority on that, you know, creditors list.
And I believe, you know, because you're right.
I mean, he had every opportunity to screw me if he wanted to.
Yeah, I mean, he could have just said, talk to the bankruptcy lawyers.
And then eventually you would have been offered a settlement of like 12 cents on the dollar or something, you know, 18 months later, maybe.
I was told, Mike, that's a great question, by the way, because, you know, I hadn't considered the bankruptcy issue.
I have always believed that the letter that I wrote to Donald Trump, where I explained about my family and about how we were, you know, a startup entrepreneurs with a dream and the rest of it.
I chose to believe that he read that.
It resonated with him.
And somehow they figured out a way to get me paid in full.
In fact, I was told by Pat Sandland, the financial controller for Taj Mahal, who, again, coincidentally, I happened to go to high school with.
That, to her knowledge, I was the only vendor of record paid in full.
So, I mean, that's a bad thing for a lot of the other vendors.
But I was probably the only, you know, small-time startup guy peddling his patented beach blanket dreams, you know?
Uh-huh.
Okay.
So, you believe that your letter moved Trump to...
To pay this obligation in full, even though under bankruptcy laws he did not have to, did this Did this change your opinion of Trump?
Did you have a positive or negative view of him before this?
Or what were you thinking?
I only had a positive view because he was a sort of business role model for me.
I read his book, The Art of the Deal.
I saw what he was doing in New York.
I was born in Mount Vernon, raised in New Jersey, spent a lot of time up in the city.
To me, he was a hero.
So that's the only feeling I had about him.
Again, this is back in the late 80s.
I'll tell you what it did.
It gave me faith and belief in miracles because I thought so hard and long about why me and how did I end up when everyone else was so concerned and things went terribly wrong for them.
And for me, I got paid in full, on time, was able to satisfy the letter of credit, put a bunch of money in the bank, and start a wonderful career.
So, yeah, it's just kind of like, for me personally, I just, I like to give credit to a Mr. Trump, I really do believe that I choose to believe my letter made a difference, and he's a good man.
In business, like you said, not all ventures succeed.
There's a long list of companies and successful people who have filed bankruptcy.
Anyone in business understands that.
It's not something you look forward to or are necessarily proud of, but it happens a lot.
I just, you know, I chose to believe that Donald Trump did the right thing by me.
And now that I've seen him in action over the years, I'm absolutely convinced.
I'm right.
The guy's amazing, you know, ethically and otherwise.
You know, he's a genius businessman.
He's an incredible leader.
He's probably the greatest strategist we'll ever see.
You know, and I look to The Apprentice.
I don't know if you ever watched it, Mike.
No, I've never seen an episode.
But of course, I'm familiar with the fact that that was a popular show.
Yeah, that was required viewing in my household for my kids.
No kidding.
Yeah.
We didn't force him, but it was like, we're all going to sit down as a family, we're going to watch The Apprentice, because I felt the lessons of accountability, of work ethic, of responsibility, of integrity, of production, performance.
That show was such a wellspring of knowledge and information and inspiration.
Yeah.
To me, I see it in what he's doing now.
To me, it's like this whole election was like a giant apprentice episode, and there was no way Kamala Harris wasn't going to get fired.
Okay.
So then let me ask you this, and we need to wrap up this section because we've got two more topics here.
Do you then believe that this humanity that Trump demonstrated, this generosity, this human connection that you believe that your letter, your appeal letter invoked from Trump Do you believe that he is going to govern in the same way that is keeping in mind the human spirit,
the human side of America and the people who are trying hard, the people who are trying to get ahead and people like you, your younger self as an entrepreneur, you're trying to get ahead and today all of us are just burdened by all these regulations and the FDA and the EPA and the CDC. Is Trump going to Help the country in the way he helped you, you think?
Is that a fair assessment?
I hope so.
And I believe that if he has a clear path, you know, if he's not beat up and badgered and assailed by all these lies and false charges and distracted by all this nonsense, if he can just do what he's capable of and what I believe he wants to do to make America great again, I absolutely think he will.
I think he'll govern with compassion.
I think that's who he is, Mike.
You know, I've never met any of his kids.
But to me, just look at them.
They're amazing.
And you see his family and the way he is with his children and his grandchildren.
And the things I've heard about him from people who do know him and interact with him on a daily basis.
He's a good man.
He doesn't like to be messed with.
I mean, and neither do I. So I can completely relate to it.
People say, oh, you should just, you know, dismiss this or not engage or let it go.
But I mean, the relentless...
The badgering, the assaults, the nonsense that this guy had to withstand.
I mean, yeah, I think if you take that away, he will absolutely govern with that kind of humanity, consciousness, ethics, the kinds of things we'd love to see, and I know he would love to see in America.
Well, I'm really happy to hear that assessment from you, because I'm saying this as my opinion.
It has felt like, for the last four years, we have been suffering under a regime that hates us, that hates America, that hates the people, that hates the flag, that hates humanity, that hates men, that hates women, that hates everything about America.
And it sucks.
You know, I think that's why the voters said, we got to do something different.
So Trump has a truly historic opportunity here, right?
Let's just hope he takes advantage of it.
And, you know, time will tell, right?
I think you will, Mike.
I think we're in really good shape.
As long as he stays alive and these people, you know, settle down and just accept the fact that things are going to get much, much better.
People just aren't thinking critically, Mike.
It occurs to me like half the country's, you know, sort of in some state of hypnosis.
It's just crazy.
I mean, clear-thinking people, people who I respect and align with, Love Donald Trump.
Like Dana White.
I've looked up to Dana White for years and years and years.
Dana White is an unbelievable person.
Head of the UFC for the audience here.
Yeah, and I knew Dana when he hadn't fully taken control of the UFC. It was in the early stages, and I just knew him then as an awesome, awesome person.
I don't know him well, and I've only met him a few times, but he struck me.
He's one of those kind of guys you don't have to meet many times to be impressed.
So it's not just him.
I have other people that I know are closely aligned with Donald Trump, and I believe in my heart he's going to go down in history as the greatest president in American history.
Oh, I think I concur with you on that as a very strong possibility for reasons that I think we're going to get into.
Let me just remind our audience, as we're about to move to the next topic here, but remind our audience, you're listening to an interview with Reno Rollet, R-O-L-L-E. Of course, I'm Mike Adams, the health ranger.
Reno and I have known each other for a couple of decades, and we are actually collaborating on Boku Superfood, And Reno and his wife and his family formulated it, refined it over the years.
And then last year, we did a deal together where we are manufacturing it, sourcing it, doing all the lab testing for it, and then selling it at healthrangerstore.com.
It's a plant-based, superfood, high-nutrient density formula that...
People rave about, especially vegetarians and vegans that don't want whey protein, let's say.
This formula is really fantastic.
So, Reno, we'll get more into that in the third section here today, but I just want to thank you for all the years you put into Boku Superfood.
Mike, thank you, because Boku wouldn't even exist if it weren't for your early support that got behind us in our dream to create the world's greatest superfood.
So I'm eternally grateful to you and your team as well, Mike.
It's been a great journey.
Yeah, I agree.
Thank you for mentioning that.
I was plugging your company from the very beginning back in the day before I was censored.
We could say whatever we wanted on YouTube or Facebook or wherever.
Those were interesting times.
But, of course, we've all lived through extreme censorship.
And I pray that Donald Trump And who is it?
Brandon Carr of the FCC and others are going to roll back all that censorship to help make America great again with freedom of speech.
So let's go to the next topic, which is about...
Are you okay with that, Reno?
Oh, for sure.
Follow your lead.
I'm really happy to be here.
Next topic is...
This is actually a good segue because for America...
For the U.S. government to function...
There's got to be some technology applied, some automation, some sensibility.
Right now, did you know that 84% of federal workers only show up to work one day a month in the office?
The rest of the time they're, quote, working from home, which means they're really not working very much at all.
And so there's so much waste and fraud in the system.
And of course, Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy are coming in with the Department of Government Efficiency.
It's kind of a colloquial name.
No such department actually exists.
But they're going to be using, I have no doubt, they're going to deploy various forms of AI technology where it can be helpful to...
You know, carry out the, quote, the business of government at a reasonable cost.
Now, I've got an AI engine.
We're building a whole new one at brighton.ai.
We'll be releasing it for free, open source, March of 2025. And Reno, you have a background in the movie business, and you have contacts with all kinds of high-level people in music, And Hollywood, and you've seen AI, you've seen what it can do, you've seen, you know, AI songs created in minutes that are, you know, almost like top class songs, right?
What do you think is the...
The implications, like the music business is freaking out right now.
Let's start with the music business.
They're flipping out because people can go to suno.com and just put in their own lyrics and put in their own descriptions and they can create the music they want to hear, which is what I'm doing.
Like, Reno, I'm enjoying music for the first time in years, again, because I can't buy the crap that they sell, you know, the mainstream music companies.
I don't want their stuff.
I want the stuff that speaks to me.
Well, Suno can create that AI. What do you think, Reno, are the implications for the music business?
That's such a big, big question, Mike.
They're so vast.
And I mean, let's just, you know, I guess break it down a little bit.
From my perspective, it's incredibly exciting.
You know, the idea that, you know, someone that has shot and produced and, you know, at least experienced the editing process and seen what it takes on the film side, the television side, and understanding creative and the magic, the gift, which can also be a curse for a lot of people that, you know, to be a creative human is something extraordinary.
It's something very, very special.
And to a large extent, it drives the arts.
It drives, you know, industry.
It's hard to put a value on creativity.
It's just impossible, I believe, to value.
And now with the idea that creativity can essentially be, you know, commandeered in a way by technology and, you know, everything can happen so fast and you can get such quality So quickly.
That's the part that blows my mind is like, how can it read it so quickly?
How can it interpret and how can it then produce so quickly?
So part of me says, man, that's super exciting.
There's going to be this really great content that's going to be everywhere.
And I understand there's a sort of a problem right now with Coming up with new creative, right?
It's like, it seems like everything that's being done is being redone.
It's like, you know, King Kong 5 and, you know, classic Prius 25. It's like, it's so hard to come up with original ideas.
So I think there's going to be some really, it's going to be very exciting to see, and it's going to happen very quickly in my estimation.
But the part that, so that's the kind of the good part, I guess.
A lot of content's happening very quickly, happening very cost effectively.
It's really going to have a dramatic impact on the industry from how it will impact people and their jobs and the rest of that.
But the part that concerns me is I also understand Hollywood's role in influencing culture.
And I've seen it happen over the years.
I mean, it seems like Hollywood dictates so many trends.
You know, the cars we drive, the hairstyles, the clothes we wear, the things we say, our tolerance for, you know, violence and other things.
You know, the fact that I think over the years we've become desensitized to a lot of things that would have horrified people not too terribly long ago.
So I think about You know, Hollywood, I'm so disappointed in Hollywood.
When I look at what's going on, it's really, it's appalling.
And I felt this way for a long time, by the way.
When I worked in Hollywood, I couldn't wait to get out of there.
I was in Hollywood right in the thick of it.
I mean, I literally had an apartment just above the Chateau Marmont Hotel off of Hollywood Boulevard.
And I'd be there, you know, at National Lampoon.
Five days a week, sometimes four, and I would dart out of there to just get the energy.
I just didn't like it.
And again, if you consider the violence in Hollywood, the things that they support, the things that they promote, while sort of subtly or covertly I blame Hollywood for a lot of what's happening in our culture today, and not just here in America, but all over the world.
It's that powerful.
And so if you take away the human element and AI's in there and starts just churning out all of this content, if it's not, you know, at least guided by, you know, consciousness, morals, Values, the things that we're going to need desperately to straighten ourselves out, we could be in deep trouble.
Well, yeah, 100%.
Technology without morality is disastrous.
However...
I've got an angle on this I want to share with you or discuss with you, but I think I've managed...
I've got a song called Brighteon, Turn It On, where I wrote the lyrics, and then I used the Suno AI music engine to generate the music in the style that I wanted, which is an electronica style with certain types of vocals.
I'm going to see if I can play it for us right here, okay?
In a world of angry lies There's a place of truth and light For those who seek sweet freedom The doorways are open, the sensors are closed.
The world now awaits to hear the things you know.
Knowledge is treasure, unlimited flows.
The truth now it beckons And you're the one it shows Brighty on Bring it on Brighty on Let's get it on Brighty on Staying strong Brighty on Let's turn it on Yeah, I just want to play that first verse in the first chorus Let the audience hear it, let you hear it
Now, you and I both know, Reno, that before AI, to produce that, that's tens of thousands of dollars of talent and time and recording studio, right?
Oh, yeah.
Easy.
And...
It would not be as good.
I created that song using AI in a few hours.
So I wrote the lyrics, described everything I wanted, then went through, generated hundreds of variations, picked out the parts I wanted, did extensions, things like that.
But I got the sound I wanted.
That music speaks to the message I want for Brighteon, which is about enlightenment.
It's about sharing knowledge.
It's about telling the truth.
I can't find Jack from Hollywood or the music industry that gives me that kind of message.
And thus, what I see the music industry as is being itself algorithmic.
Whereas I can put humanity into my song using AI But the humans building music in the music industry are just corporate robots.
You see what I mean?
Isn't it a weird contrast?
Yeah, it really is.
Your thoughts?
Well, I mean, when I hear that, Mike, and by the way, it's a really catchy tune.
That, to me, that's the part of AI that excites me.
That you can quickly, cost-effectively create brilliant content with positive messaging that will help shape the minds of the people listening to the music in a positive way.
That's super cool.
The next question becomes, well, how do you distribute it?
How do you get it out there?
And that's where the Hollywood machine really...
It's so dangerous because they control distribution.
It's all about the ears and eyeballs.
Right?
And a guy like you, you have a platform, a song like that, you know, and others.
By the way, music is so powerful.
You know, I told you at that reggae festival, Uniting the World Through Music, it's incredibly powerful.
And I even thought, you know, as we were going through, you know, the COVID crisis, and even before then, like, I often thought music...
Is likely the answer.
Like because it cuts through, it transcends, you know, groups and ethical groups and culture and like Michael Jackson.
He was beloved everywhere.
Yeah.
And, you know, if you took a guy like that or created music, if AI could do it, come up with the ultimate song that everyone in the world will love.
And everyone in the world will listen to over and over and over.
And it happens to have positive messaging, uplifting lyrics.
Think of the effect of that.
Well, let me add to that, Reno.
The way I see this kind of technology, Suno.com in this case, and no, they don't pay me to plug them.
I'm just happy they exist.
Each person can personalize their experience of music.
Now, And the reason I wanted to ask you this question, Reno, is because I want to talk about movies.
Because, see, the movie industry right now is mostly very centrally controlled.
And the Hollywood studios push very damaging messages into the cultural pipeline.
For example, you'll have animated cartoons for children that are pushing transgenderism for children, you know.
A lot of LGBT themes, a lot of woke themes, a lot of anti-white themes these days.
It's crazy.
And for some reason, every action hero is a 100-pound tiny woman who beats up all the hulking men in the scene.
It's like, okay, whatever.
We've seen that like 100 times now.
Coming soon, Reno, you'll be able to have a service...
Render a movie for you, just like we rendered this song.
So I'll be able to log in.
Maybe it's going to be called like Suno Films or whatever.
And I'll say, hey, make a movie for me.
It's kind of like Die Hard.
I like Bruce Willis.
I like Samuel Jackson.
I like all these 1980s action figures.
Arnold Schwarzenegger before he...
Went a little crazy, but, you know, I want to see, like, Predator.
I want to see Die Hard.
I want to see, just throwback.
Give me some...
Yeah, right, right.
And you can tell, I want comedy, or I want action, or I want drama, I want romantic comedy, whatever.
Man, Reno, it's going to render the movie you want to see.
And Hollywood is going to lose their minds.
Yeah, I mean, it's quite possible.
If we can figure out a way to replace the machine's distribution system, and I think we're seeing that, you know, you're seeing, you know, sort of the emergence of this, what are we even calling it nowadays, new media?
Yeah.
And so it could be, because certainly the production piece, the creative piece, tapping into AI for treatments, for scripts, and now to actually go ahead and produce the music or the film, whichever it is.
I mean, that's fantastic, and I think it could be done and done well and certainly cost-effectively.
The question then becomes, how do you get that piece of art in front of the eyeballs?
How do you get the distribution?
There, I think it's decentralization.
I mean, we already have, of course, Netflix and Amazon Prime and Hulu and other services.
Those are still pretty centralized.
But they're very decentralized compared to the old days of the theater, the theatrical release and that control.
I see as films become less expensive to produce because there's so much AI generation of the content, They will be able to be released online for, you know, 99 cents.
The cost of generating good content is going to plummet by orders of magnitude here.
And I'm seeing it.
Like, let me tell you, I have another song called Ignorance is Bliss.
I don't think you've heard it yet.
But I'm rendering a Pixar-style animation of a squirrel that's seeking knowledge with an acorn.
And...
It's got some morphing problems and things like that, but the quality of the Pixar-style animation that I'm producing in kind of a five-minute short film, it would have been $10 million five years ago.
Now I'm doing it on my desk with an AI tool.
And it's like, man, the cost just dropped 10,000 times here.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, no question, the economics are going to be incredibly impactful.
But again, in Hollywood, as an example, what I saw an awful lot, there's so many brilliantly creative, talented people, millions of scripts that were written by these talented people that get peddled around town and never see the light of day.
Sure.
With AI, I tend to agree, I think, which would be amazing, is you would give these writers an opportunity to get their project made.
That's true.
So much more cost effective.
So you could see just an incredible, you know, flood of...
New content.
Because all of a sudden those barriers, you know, having to deal with studios and being that one in a million that gets chosen.
And, you know, but so you'll be able to get the movie made.
But again, how do you get the people to see it?
Because there'll be so much of it out there.
Well, first to answer the first part of your question there.
I have run across a service.
I forgot the name of it, but the entire purpose of this service is to storyboard your film project using AI. So you put in the script, right?
And it generates the storyboard so you can pitch it to a studio.
You know that process.
So if I can storyboard this thing in, you know, 12 hours instead of 200 hours, then I can pitch it more easily, or I can help the studio visualize it, or even if some of those can be animated, the studio can see the angles, the lighting, the characters, whatever.
That's going to be the process in the interim.
But long term, Mark my words, there are going to be online services that render full feature films.
And maybe Netflix ends up doing this because Netflix used to rent DVDs in the freaking mail.
Remember that?
You would mail them back and wait for the mail to get a DVD, right?
So that begins to answer your distribution question.
It's like, Your distribution is not going to be a challenge.
The challenge is going to be finding the needle in the haystack of the film that you want to see because the systems can generate whatever you want to watch.
Well, that's what I mean by distribution.
Ultimately, how do you get the content in front of the eyeballs when there's, you know, in this scenario, potentially just millions of new movies getting made super cost-effectively and probably some good ones.
You know, how, I mean, maybe through some like, kind of like YouTube, the one that's going to get the most likes and the most views will just sort of organically rise to the top.
It's all very exciting, and to be honest, Mike, it's a little bit overwhelming.
Yeah, that's true.
You've seen what I did, and I know you're deep into it right now.
AI is a potentially overwhelming concept, and when you dip your toe in the water, as I have, and I've only just dipped my toe, it is.
I mean, it's a lot to process because it's almost like the difference between PAL football and the NFL. It just happens so fast.
Yeah.
Well, let me give you my take on this, which is that AI, the rise of AI and all these tools that we're talking about, text generation tools, writing screenplays, writing novels, writing documentary books, creating music, creating films, creating short films, creating how-to films, YouTube, everything.
These tools are great for people who have good creativity and good imaginations because it's going to put at their fingertips the ability to take what's in their head and bring it into the world very quickly.
But not everybody's a creative type.
Some people are hands-on, skilled craftspeople, and they're always going to have a place in society.
But there's also a group of people that Really don't have any ideas, and they're just kind of cogs in the machine.
A lot of them work at the DMV. And for those people, they're either going to have to change the way they interact with the world, Or they're going to be obsolete pretty quickly.
So I think as a society, we're going to see mass unemployment among a certain group of people unless they can be taught how to command the systems, how to run AI, how to direct AI. Because just, you know, approving forms or whatever, that's over.
That's obsolete this year, really.
You know, insurance adjusters, medical claims classifiers, right?
All that stuff, obsolete.
Yeah, it's going to be a different landscape altogether.
It's, again, on one hand, super exciting, on the other, a bit overwhelming.
It'll be a fun ride, that's for sure.
I'm eager to see, you know, how this thing develops.
Well, we're going to have a lot of music during the ride, that's for sure.
We'll just write a song a day, you know?
Movies too, video content, tons.
Yep, you're going to have all the content.
The question is going to be, Not, where do I find content?
It's going to be, what content do I want?
What speaks to me as a person in terms of my news ingestion?
Books, novels, videos, music, how-to, podcasts, you name it.
I saw a demo, a tool on Google, where you can upload a science paper And Google's AI system turns it into a podcast conversation between two people talking about the science paper, and it's actually fun to listen to.
Yeah, well, imagine that, because science papers aren't often that much fun.
No, that's the thing.
That would be kind of cool.
I mean, my big concern is, look, if there was a way to ensure that there's some element of morality, you know, some ethics and consciousness in AI, because it could easily spin out of control,
and all of the things that we know are sort of wrong, With the influential machine that is Hollywood would only sort of be elevated and the harm, all that, call it evil, would be sort of exacerbated.
That's the part that concerns me because it could get bad quickly.
It's happened so fast.
Well, I completely agree with what you just said.
But my answer to that is decentralization.
So I think what makes technology evil is when it's centrally controlled in the hands of the few.
Then they weaponize it against the people.
Just like when they can control censorship, they weaponize the internet.
Or when they control money, they weaponize the currency.
When they control medicine, they weaponize the medical system.
But if we can decentralize and put knowledge and tools Through open source projects into the hands of people everywhere, then the central controllers, they lose control, and they can no longer set the agenda.
And I think that's our best defense against the weaponization of AI. I agree with you.
A big enough project, they can give birth to Skynet and try to take over all of us.
But if we have open-source, decentralized AI systems that are rooted in our local human ethics and values, we can fight back against that, either digitally or maybe one day with our open-source robot.
That, you know, it's like, my open source robot is defending against your, you know, government kill bot.
And it's like, robot wars in the backyard, that kind of thing.
That day may be coming.
Yeah, well, again, I just hope that because understanding the potential, understanding the power, if AI is guided by some good moral foundation, or at least some, to keep it from spinning out of control.
Because we see what happens, Mike.
I mean, it's the movies, the video games, the songs.
If you keep pounding people over the head about how it's okay, you know, to go mass murder or shoot up or rape or beat up or...
You know, whatever.
And then society moves accordingly.
And that's a problem because we are, you know, to a large extent, you know, sort of influenced, gullible, malleable, easily persuaded.
You know, it's a dangerous landscape.
You know, people...
Are, you know, subject to this kind of feedback and input.
And I think there's a responsibility that anyone in the entertainment industry, music, film, any, all these content producers, if we could just shift, and I'm not saying all become born-again Christians or, you know, go crazy with religion and spirituality, but just some moral guidelines, because otherwise it could, in my opinion, it could get very bad very quickly.
Mm-hmm.
Right there with you.
So let's keep our eyes on this topic.
We're going to move on to the next topic, but let me remind our listeners that this is an interview with Reno Rolet, the founder of Boku Superfood.
I'm Mike Adams, of course, the health ranger.
And we are partners with the Boku Superfood product line, which is a plant-based, high-nutrient density, superfood meal replacement and other Boku formulas that We at the Health Ranger store are now manufacturing, sourcing, and doing the lab testing, multiple layers of lab testing, you know, microbiology, heavy metals, glyphosate, you name it.
And then we're selling the Boku products at our store.
HealthRangerStore.com is the website where you can find those.
And Reno, I really appreciate your values and ethics there.
I share those with you, of course.
And we are, you and I have always, we've been dissidents, you know, we've always been on the side of humanity against the system that seems so destructive, right?
And we're always trying to help people be healthier and more awake and alive.
And that's a good segue to our third topic here today, which is the food supply chain, and especially organic ingredients.
Now, Your product, Boku Superfood, is honestly one of the most difficult products to make because it has so many ingredients.
It's got so many different micronutrients and different plants and different medicinal mushrooms and microalgae and so on.
It's becoming more and more difficult to find those and then to get them in the quantities we need, get them tested in a timely manner, get them into the product.
Reno, you've been steeped in this industry for many years now as the head of Boku Superfood, and your wife Lynn has worked tirelessly as well, and your children have been involved in different ways, formulations and so on.
What do you see as the future of the nutritional ecosystem in America?
You know, I think it points, Mike, directly to what we're doing.
I mean, we see the unsustainable waste in traditional industrial farming, food processing, distribution, all of it.
It's just ridiculous how much food is wasted.
And the idea behind Boku is really not to waste anything.
But, you know, beginning with the purest, most nutrient dense ingredients on Earth, Ours are dried.
You know, they're powdered.
So you're removing the water and you're essentially taking perishability out of the equation.
So you've got this beautiful concentrated nutrition with a shelf life of years.
Versus, you know, days in some cases.
And this is the reason we see, you know, fresh produce being raced around the world in refrigerated containers, you know, leaving massive global or carbon footprints, you know, all over the place.
And I believe that the future of food, at least a good portion of it, It has to be rooted in, you know, sustainability and efficiency.
And there's nothing more efficient than what we do.
Now, you know, some of our formulas, as you mentioned, the Boku Superfood formula, wow.
I mean, we really set the bar high almost 20 years ago.
And it was a lot like when I set out to make the beach blanket.
I just wanted it to be the absolute best.
I didn't really think too much about cost.
I didn't think too much about what we'd sell it for, how much money we would make.
I just wanted to obsolete everything on the market.
And I didn't want to win that contest by having the most ingredients.
It just happened that we settled on, you know, 55 of them in some cases.
Some of the formulas have even more.
But it's the alchemy.
It's the magic.
It's the functionality of these ingredients when they work together.
And it's our refusal to compromise.
So we end up with these, as you said, very complex formulas, and they're very challenging from a business perspective because it's a lot to source, especially in the quality that we demand, as you, Mike, know better than anyone.
So I do think the future points to powdered foods.
High, high quality, concentrated nutrition, which is what we do, and drying and powdering some of this produce that's being ridiculously wasted.
I mean, I don't know what study you want to, you know, really believe in, but it's estimated more than 50% in some cases of the fresh produce, that's fruits and vegetables cultivated in North America, are wasted.
Yeah.
You know, they're not pretty enough, so they don't get chosen.
They end up in the waste bin.
They rot on the way to the grocery store.
They get thrown away.
They rot while they're in the grocery store.
They get thrown away.
People take them home.
They sit in the refrigerator.
They rot.
They get wasted and thrown away.
It's unbelievably wasteful.
What we do is source these amazing ingredients, we dry them and powder them immediately after harvesting, and we're locking in all that nutritional potency for years.
Let me interject.
The trend that I'm seeing that's really important here is that as certain smallish companies like yours and mine are doing extraordinary high-density nutrition that is just setting the bar, We live in a world where the masses are eating food that is less and less nutritious.
So there is this growing chasm between the nutritional haves and the nutritional have-nots.
You know, the grocery store foods, for example, If you buy them off the shelf today, fresh vegetables and fruits even, and you have them tested for their micronutrients, they are a fraction of what was published in the 1970s by the USDA of what green beans would contain then versus what they are now.
Today, they're a shadow of what they once were.
The soils are being depleted, of course, generation after generation of the micronutrients.
And putting back just NPK as fertilizer, that doesn't bring back the selenium, the copper, everything else that goes in it.
So the foods are depleted, the foods are more processed, there's a strong push towards cricket protein and things like that for the masses, but the people who know about amazing nutrition, and like what you've done with Boku Superfood, they can access the most potent Nutritional supplements and superfoods that have ever existed in the history of our world.
I mean, just the ingredients in your product, Reno, come from many different countries.
I don't know how many, but it's a lot of different countries.
This would have been the food for kings centuries ago.
This would have been the spice trade, the camel route.
This one's from the Far East.
This one's from the Far West.
This one's from India.
This one's from...
Even Kings couldn't have eaten like this.
Today, you know, you can buy it online.
But a lot of people don't.
Well, they don't know about it.
They're not aware.
And that goes back to, you know, that whole distribution.
How do you get the information out there?
Wouldn't it be amazing if we taught children in school about superfoods?
Yeah.
Instead of, like, how to dance on a pole and, you know...
Dress up like a, you know, if we taught children about nutrition, superfoods, how they can help you, how they can change you, how they can fuel you to excellence, if we began there with the kids, just imagine, and going back to, you know, Hollywood, I wanted to do this years ago through our Studio Store Direct, which you may recall, we were going to try to put commercials for Boku Superfood embedded in the Shrek DVDs.
Remember that, Mike, back in the early 2000s?
Trying to get the message out there, and not just to make money, but to make a positive difference, to make these people aware.
These are the foods of kings.
These foods have been revered in cultures all over the world since before Christ.
And all we're doing is honoring that tradition, honoring that proven history, and bringing these foods together in a way that people can enjoy them quickly, simply, effectively, so that they're delicious.
Because as you know, many of them alone aren't very delicious.
They've got to be blended with fruits and berries, and that's the magic of Boku.
But honestly, I'm so encouraged now, and more than ever, by Bobby Kennedy.
Who is a passionate advocate, you know, in our space.
And I'm really hopeful that he's going to go in there and make a positive difference for the drug companies, the food companies.
I mean, it's all about the money for these corporations.
Well, RFK Jr., he's saying that he's going to push to ban direct-to-consumer drug advertising, which is exactly what needs to be done.
It's crazy that that was ever even legalized in the 1990s.
Well, look how effective they've been at getting their message in front of the eyeballs of consumers all over the world.
They flood the television airwaves, the radio airwaves, with commercials for their pharmaceutical drugs.
That's distribution.
They're just pounding it into the minds of millions of people all over the world.
Well, right, but they have 50,000% markups so they can just buy the media.
Exactly.
Their cost of production is nothing compared to like Boku Superfood.
It has real costs, you know, real ingredients versus just churning out a synthetic molecule and calling it a, you know, a blood pressure drug.
It costs them pennies per pill.
They can sell it for whatever.
Yeah.
And we, on the other hand, you know, are sourcing the highest quality rare earth ingredients.
We don't compromise.
And we can't compete.
I mean, the fact is, like, even in our space, let's face it, Mike, we've been at this for 20 years.
A lot of other companies have come and gone, most of them, you know, funded by big institutional money.
And they come in and just flood, you know, Facebook and Instagram and YouTube with these ads because they've raised all this money.
They drive the ad rates so far ridiculously high.
We can't afford, as a small family business, we can't afford to continue on that stage.
And so we become, you know, diminished.
We're squashed by these big guys funded with institutional money.
So it happens across the board, and it's really hard to get your message out there.
That's part of the reason why, you know, I'm so...
Honored to be, you know, aligned with you now in this capacity where you have a platform where you're courageous and I can come on here and share the truth and we can speak openly about what's really going on.
And I just hope and I really do believe that we're seeing a new era.
Ushered in here by Bobby Kennedy in the new Trump administration, because if he does a fraction of what he's talking about doing, it will raise massive awareness.
Well, and what Bobby understands, he's talked about this at length, the perverse incentives.
Of how much profit there is to be made by big pharma in keeping people sick.
You know, continuing diabetes, continuing depression, or even inventing new diseases like, oh, you have a brain chemistry imbalance.
You have restless leg syndrome, whatever.
Or even...
You know, hyping up pandemics to push more jabs that ultimately are admitted they never worked, you know?
Whereas you and I, Reno, we would never sell that stuff.
I mean, morally, I can't make money from something that harms people.
Period.
Can't do it, right?
Nope.
But we end up in an industry then where we are only willing to be involved in commerce, in products and concepts that help people.
But it's obviously not that profitable to make people well.
But it is spiritually profitable.
You know, I'm not complaining.
Don't get me wrong.
I'm just saying, financially, it cannot compete.
With the easy, wicked, evil money of keeping people sick.
And that's got to change, man.
Yeah, 100%.
I agree, Mike.
And even if they don't align to support us and our voice, just back off on the attacks.
I mean, stop putting people in jail for selling milk.
Right.
Give people a voice and let them pursue their passion.
We know what we do is meaningful and makes a positive difference.
Just...
We don't need you to necessarily buy in entirely, but just get out of the way.
Let us reach these people and let us share.
Look, it's tricky because there's bad people in every industry, and I'm sure there's plenty of bad people that entered the superfood space and made unsubstantive claims or misled people.
You know, look, there's always been, in my estimation since we started this business almost 20 years ago, a trend back to nature.
People are just waking up and realizing that the answer is not necessarily in a pharmaceutical drug.
And I'm not banging pharmaceuticals altogether.
Sure, there's great drugs.
I'm sure there's wonderful drugs.
And I'm sure there are drugs that saved a lot of people's lives.
But there's also nature, and there are a lot of answers right at our feet.
And I think people deserve to understand that there are alternatives, just like during COVID. You know, yeah, vaccine may be great, but there's alternatives, like your innate immune system.
Wouldn't you like to learn about what you could possibly do to help that and see how you fare without the pharmaceuticals?
Again, it's just this censorship, this idea that who's got the most money is going to control the narrative, and that's the way it's been forever.
Yeah, I'm sorry.
But you're speaking exactly to the point here, which is during COVID, the truth about nutrition, about zinc, quercetin, vitamin C, vitamin D, etc., that truth was suppressed.
Maliciously.
The truth about ivermectin, even hydroxychloroquine.
Doctors lost their licenses.
They lost their livelihoods because they were prescribing things that in their experience and in their research, they knew would help people.
Like the centrally controlled medical boards of the states literally conspired to maximize the deaths of So they could say COVID was worse.
I mean, that's how crazy it got.
We all lived through that.
That's true.
A really crazy time in history.
Once again, you know, sort of underscoring how vulnerable people are, how fear-based many people, you know, live their lives, how unwilling so many people are to simply peel back a couple layers and dig and learn for themselves, which that's okay.
I'm not criticizing these people.
It really just emphasizes how important our role is and Bobby Kennedy's role and your role in sharing the truth and just not stopping, not quitting, you know, staying true to the things that you believe in, continuing to deliver that message with the hope that it'll resonate for one person, another person, and that we can make a positive difference.
And I believe, having done this now for 20 years, what we practice in these concentrated superfoods It's incredibly important, incredibly functional, incredibly beneficial.
And that's the reason we keep doing it.
Well, and I always have something to add to what you just said.
Are you still doing okay on time?
Oh, I'm great.
Yeah, Mike.
No worries.
Okay.
Well, people ask me all the time.
I mean, you know, Reno, I'm a super productive person.
And as long as you've known me, I've been that way.
But people ask me a lot, like, how is it that you just get so much done or you do so much, you do this?
I always tell them the same thing.
Yeah.
It's nutrition for the brain.
It's literally nutrition.
And for some reason, that answer is so simple, really.
It's like, look, I drink superfoods every day.
I blend them up.
I'll tell you the recipes.
Here's the formulas.
I have turmeric.
I have neurological protectors.
I have sulforaphane from broccoli sprouts.
I've got all these things.
And yet, we often hear, like, people hear that, and the reaction I get from people is like, well, I would love to have a brain that just works like yours, but I don't really want to have to change what I eat.
And I'm like, well, you know?
Pick whatever you want.
It's your life.
But if you want brain performance, I guarantee you, I'm not a superhuman.
You and I have the same genes.
I got the same brain you have.
I just choose to power it.
And as a result, yeah, I'm getting a lot more done.
And also, I don't waste time watching TV and things like that.
And I'm not trying to, I'm not bragging.
I'm just trying to be practical here.
Like, haven't you seen this with your own customers, people whose lives were just transformed when they got onto really high-density nutrition?
Exactly.
And that's what keeps me going.
It's what keeps me fired up and dedicated to what it is that we do and my mission to want to share and get this word out.
Because you're right, the answer's not that complicated.
It really isn't.
It's a little tricky for people to understand.
It's a little tricky for people to embrace change.
Right away, oh, I just eat this.
Well, gosh, I like my steaks or my burgers.
It's a little tricky to break through and get to them.
We have to continue trying because it's not that difficult to see amazing benefits of transformation.
Mike, over 20 years, I can't even tell you the stories of people's lives that I've seen completely 180, like switching.
And I'm not talking about curing and halting disease, even though we've seen our fair share of that for sure.
But it's just like, it's everything.
It's this holistic reboot where people's moods change, their attitudes change, they get more energy, they get more active, they start to move more and exercise more.
And then you hear about the inflammation going away.
And especially me at this point in my life, because I'm living it.
You know, as we get older, we start to sort of, you know, feel the result of our abuses when we were younger, you know, flying off these things and landing and jumping and crashing and those injuries come back.
But to me, it's just like you said, the answer is nutrition.
Food is fuel.
How you look, how you feel, how you perform, how you think.
It's all fueled by the food that we consume.
And if we keep eating poison, we're just gonna get worse.
If we start consuming these concentrated superfoods, and that's what I want more than anything, is for people out there to just understand that these are beautiful gifts from nature.
They're available for all of us, and they can make a huge difference.
You don't have to be so overweight.
You don't have to be inflamed with achy joints and pain.
You don't have to be foggy.
And feel like you're losing your memory and all the rest.
There's pretty much something for all of that.
And I'm not here to say that we can fix any of it.
I'm just saying give it a try.
Open your mind.
Listen to the people that have experienced it, like me, like you, like the millions of other people out there that are consuming these foods on a daily basis.
There's a reason.
And it's because they work.
And we just have to kind of, again, break through because so many people, we've been groomed to follow doctor's orders.
If it's on TV and the news people are saying it, it's got to be true.
And we're just brainwashed into believing this narrative that's fueled or funded by the bad guys, quite frankly.
What's amazing to me also, you know, we all have physical brains that are powered by whatever's in our blood.
Because that's how it works.
If you're not getting blood to your brain, you're not conscious, right?
So what's in your blood obviously affects what's happening in your brain.
And we have entire industries, Reno, of mental health practitioners and psychiatry and counselors that People often turn to, and I'm not saying that they don't have a useful role in cases of trauma or whatever, but a lot of people that end up feeling depressed or feeling down or having mood swings or whatever, they've got food problems, man.
It's like, hey, you are bathing your brain in poison.
Of course you're going to have weird things happening with your brain.
Like, before you go talk to a counselor, look at your pantry.
Like, clean up your diet.
And then, you know, clean up your diet.
Give yourself 60, 90 days on clean foods.
If you still have a mental health problem, yeah, seek out a professional.
But, my God, if you're living on poison, you're going to have a poisonous consciousness, really.
And that is such a basic, such a fundamental message, Mike.
It's just got to get out there.
We've got to find the ears and the eyes of these people that need to hear this stuff the most.
And I think we are.
And again, why I'm excited about our future, you know, as sort of superfood ambassadors, if you will, and advocates for this movement, Is what's happening with Bobby Kennedy.
I think it's enormous.
Like, really?
This guy's going to be...
He knows what's going on with these agencies.
He knows about the collusion.
He knows about all the corruption.
He understands it.
And if he's empowered to really make a change, even a small one, It'll have a massive impact and we'll get more and more ears.
People will start turning away.
And again, I'm not saying abandoned pharmaceuticals.
I'm not saying all, you know, food from the processed food giants is going to kill you.
I'm just saying open your eyes to the new possibilities.
And it takes someone like Bobby Kennedy, someone, you know, aligned with the president, someone in an influential, powerful position who's credible.
To cut through this clutter, because again, we've been beaten over the heads with this horrible messaging for far too long.
And it's not about us.
It's all about the money.
And if people just kind of embrace that reality, right?
Yeah.
It's just follow the money and understand you are being played.
It's not about what's good for you.
It's about how fast you can empty your wallet.
That's exactly – I mean that's the food system, the corporate food system.
That's the pharmaceutical system.
That's frankly – that's the health insurance system.
The more premiums they can charge, the more they make a percentage.
The medical industry, the media, they're all complicit.
Absolutely.
Yeah, and you said something key there, that people need to realize that this system that's always telling you to do stuff like lockdown, wear a mask, take this, take a jab, do this, they do not have your best interests at heart.
They have the opposite of your best interests.
They want to profit off of you staying sick because if you get well, they lose a customer for life.
It's that simple.
Yeah, totally.
I mean, it sounds criminal, but, you know, So many things are criminal happening around us every day.
Weaponizing the judicial system.
You know, what is the research that they did on the COVID virus?
You know, that gain of function?
Like, what?
Really?
Like, that should be illegal.
There's so many things that just...
But it is illegal.
It's a violation of the bioweapons.
Like, their actual criminals did that in our country.
Yeah.
So you wake up and you start to realize that, you know, not everything you see or hear on television is true and you've got to take some personal responsibility.
That's really what I think my message would be to so many people is please just don't.
Life is an amazing adventure.
Don't just cruise through it blindly.
You know, pay attention.
There's so many more beautiful things you can learn, so many more beautiful things you can experience.
At the same time, you can protect yourself by being responsible for yourself because if you allow yourself just to go through life and believe everything that's being beaten into your head You're just a pawn.
You're being played.
And again, for me, it starts there.
Because we all deserve to have our best life ever.
We're not all going to have our best life ever.
We're going to have ups and downs.
But again, just take some personal responsibility.
Well, I love what you just said.
I'm going to use that to wrap this up.
We all deserve to have our best life ever.
And I can just guarantee everybody listening, one of the requirements for that is to have the best nutrition, the best food.
I mean, that's not going to solve all your problems, but if you don't have the best nutrition, you can never get to your best self.
And I'm talking about emotionally, I'm talking about relationships, physical performance, longevity, freedom from pain, cognitive enhancement, quality sleep, quality sex life, like all of it.
Your body needs nutrients, and those nutrients are missing from the food supply.
And if you don't seek them out, if you don't make an effort to find them, you're missing.
You're missing a key component.
So, with that said, Reena, let me just, again, remind our audience, you and your wife are the founders of Boku Superfood, and we've got your products now manufactured, sourced, and laboratory tested by our team at healthrangerstore.com.
People can go there and just search for Boku, B-O-K-U, Boku, and find the meal replacement, the different varieties, and the protein products, and so much more with more yet to come.
Reno, your final thoughts on wrapping this up?
This has been a great discussion, by the way.
I could do this every day with you, Mike.
You're such a fascinating person.
You're so inspirational and so important to me as a friend and also the work that you do that I appreciate so deeply.
Yeah, just final thoughts.
I want to thank you for allowing me to be here and also for our partnership.
People out there who know me, people who know Boku, know that this company was started by a fierce commitment to being the absolute best.
And it's cost us because we always paid more for the ingredients.
We never sold out.
We always stayed true.
We always prioritized integrity.
And it's obvious that not every company operates that way.
But when we aligned with you, Mike, here recently and partnered To where you're now sourcing our ingredients, blending our products, distributing our products.
It's such an incredible opportunity for us to continue our legacy in a way that we know Boku and the integrity of our formulations and the ingredients for the benefit of our customers and potential customers.
Yeah.
It's better now than it's ever been.
That's what I'd like to say to these listeners, to beautiful people out there that are listening.
Boku has never been better than it is right now in the capable hands of the Health Ranger.
Thank you so much.
That's great to hear that.
We're so thrilled to have you as a partner, as a formulator, and we can't talk about what you've got coming up yet, but I'll just tease that there are some Boku surprises on the way that will be really interesting to people because you, Reno, you're a lifelong creator, an entrepreneur, and You're an idea person, but you also have the practical ability to bring it together.
And we're just thrilled to partner with you and bring this high-density nutrition to people.
And folks, if you want to have a great 2025, get yourself great nutrition.
Listen to positive...
You know, sources, which I would consider this to be a positive podcast overall, doesn't mean we're hiding from the risks that are out there, but we also, we do have a positive outlook on life.
And, but we got to step up as adults and understand what's necessary, you know, learn the tools.
Learn about nutrition.
Learn about taking care of yourself.
And also be skeptical of any of the centralized messages and propaganda and all that nonsense that's trying to get you to do things that aren't good for you, that are not in your own self-interest.
So thank you all for joining us today.
Reno, thank you for your time.
It's been a pleasure.
Thanks, Mike.
All right.
Take care, Reno.
Folks, on the end of this here, I'm going to put the full song, the Brighteon Bring It On song.
We'll put it on the end here for you so you can hear the whole thing, in case you wanted to hear that.
And enjoy and find more interviews at brighteon.com.
And also, if you want to...
Get our new free open-source AI model coming out March 1st.
That's brighteon.ai.
Or you can read our articles about nutrition and superfoods and much more at naturalnews.com.
And thank you for joining.
Take care. Take care.
Take care.
Take care.
Take care. Take care. Take care. Take care. Take care.
informed, be forewarned, be aware.
If it matters, you'll find it there.
Where free speech is allowed, write on.
Come and say it strong and loud Brighton Get excited, a world enlightened You'll see it clearly now Break out from the crowd Get the news that really matters Brighton Hit the scoop on inside, chatter Brighton If you really wanna know, come on, let's go
To brighton when the truth is false To brighton when the truth is false Party on, bring it on.
Party on, let's get it on.
Party on, stay strong.
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