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Dec. 21, 2025 - No Agenda
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1827 - "CIS-Lunar"

No Agenda Episode 1827 - "CIS-Lunar" "CIS-Lunar" Executive Producers: NO AGENDA SHOP - noagendashop.com James Morrin Joseph Gasz Matthew Martell - Martellhardware.com Associate Executive Producers: John Rucker Strike Christopher Graves - littlejohnscandies.com Sir Luca Josh Gladstone Maggie Carty - callthesuits.com douglas murray Eli the coffee guy - gigawattcoffeeroasters.com Dame Maria of the Greek Kingdoms Steve Peterson Ian Sloan Linda Lu, Duchess of jobs & writer of winning résumés - imagemakersink.com Paul Kroculick Become a member of the 1828 Club, support the show here Boost us with with Podcasting 2.0 Certified apps: Podverse - Podfriend - Breez - Sphinx - Podstation - Curiocaster - Fountain Knights & Dames Darius Miller > Sir "D" Art By: Jeffrey Rea End of Show Mixes:    MVP EOS The Files are Comin' to Town.mp3  Scaramanga EOS Christmas Sweater Puppies.mp3  Baron Darren O'Neill EOS GitmoNationChristmas.mp3   Mark van Dijk - Systems Master Ryan Bemrose - Program Director Back Office Jae Dvorak Chapters: Dreb Scott Clip Custodian: Neal Jones Clip Collectors: Steve Jones & Dave Ackerman NEW: Gitmo Jams Sign Up for the newsletter No Agenda Peerage ShowNotes Archive of links and Assets (clips etc) 1827.noagendanotes.com Directory Archive of Shownotes (includes all audio and video assets used) archive.noagendanotes.com RSS Podcast Feed Full Summaries in PDF No Agenda Lite in opus format Last Modified 12/21/2025 16:57:48This page created with the FreedomController Last Modified 12/21/2025 16:57:48 by Freedom Controller  

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Israeli moon bases.
Adam Curry, John C. DeVorax.
And Sunday, December 21st, 2025, this is your award-winning Give One Nation Media Assassination Episode 1827.
This is no agenda.
Fully redacted and broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country here in FEMA region number six in the morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where the weather is inclement.
I'm John C. Devorks.
It's Craig Bottom Buzzkill.
In the morning.
Yes.
Inclement weather.
Inclement weather.
Does that mean it's kind of gray?
It's wet.
Wet and gray.
Beautiful here today.
68 degrees, blue sky, no chemtrails.
Just perfect.
Just perfect.
Perfect for a day of media deconstruction.
Sounds like it.
Oh, man.
So much to talk about.
Epstein, Epstein, Epstein.
Oh, no, Epstein.
Oh, but Epstein.
Is anyone really surprised that there was nothing there?
why are people so mad because they well i have a couple of reports and the thing's obvious that that the only reason they wanted epstein stuff in fact this was i think from the bbc epstein uh if you listen to the report from actually pbs Listen to the report, PBS1, this clip.
You can tell the only reason for the whole inquisition about the Epstein files is revealed right here.
Overnight, the Justice Department released hundreds more heavily redacted pages of material it had gathered on convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Still, what's been made public so far falls well short of the full disclosure required by the law Congress passed last month.
These new releases come in addition to the thousands of pages of photos, correspondence, and other material released on Friday afternoon.
And the Justice Department says there will be much more to come in the coming weeks.
Among the latest batch released around midnight is a phone message slip that reads, she has females for Mr. J.E. Jeff Mason is a White House correspondent for Reuters.
Jeff, these new files, the files, even though we're released yesterday, tell us a lot about more detail about Jeffrey Epstein.
But does it tell us anything about his relationship with Donald Trump, with President Trump?
Get to it.
I have a couple, another, there's two more clips, but before we play that, did you see Clinton's response to this when he was interviewing on one of the shows?
No, I didn't.
I didn't.
Yeah, you're Clinton on Epstein.
Listen to this.
Okay.
Democrats thought they could finally get Trump with the Epstein files.
But instead, all they got was pictures of you buck naked in the jacuzzi with some girls.
Aren't you afraid of being arrested?
Well, to be honest, I'm more afraid of that crazy bitch waiting for me back home.
I'm not going back.
That bitch kills people.
She even killed Jeffrey.
Fuck that.
Oh, okay.
Can I stay at your place?
Okay, let's just slow down a bit.
Okay.
Even that AI stuff is getting a little old, and it wasn't all that good.
I agree.
It wasn't that good, but I thought I'd slip it in.
By the way, he wasn't buck naked.
He was wearing swimming trunks.
You can obviously see them.
Yeah.
Oh, I'm glad you corrected the AI on that.
Yeah, well, wherever you rip that off of, like whatever hilarious podcast that put that together and slaved over it.
Okay, back to PBS and Trump.
Very little, and that's one thing that people were maybe anticipating getting more information on.
But the files have some mentions of Trump and some conversations, but no photos.
One of the pieces of evidence that people were expecting was not in the release.
And in general, the files were focused on other people in Jeffrey Epstein's orbit and not the current president of the United States.
Even with that, this is now going to be spread out over several weeks.
It's not going to be a one-day story, one-day headline.
Does the White House have a strategy to deal with that?
Well, their strategy so far has been largely to say, A, that they are being very transparent by doing this document release and following the law.
A statement from a White House spokeswoman yesterday pretty much said just that and accused Democrats of not answering questions about their connections with Jeffrey Epstein.
I think broadly, the White House would be happy for this whole issue to go away, and that is evidenced by the fact that President Trump spent months trying to prevent these documents from coming out.
That led to a lot of discord within his MAGA base and led to some divisions within Congress amongst Republicans.
In the end, they ended up passing this law, and the president signed it.
But some Democrats, and in fact, at least one Republican are saying that the administration did not follow the law with its limited release on Friday.
Oh, brother.
Don't they understand how this works by now?
Like, of course you don't put everything out.
You give them the first stuff.
Everyone's disappointed.
Following the law, victims are protected.
What's a victim?
Not defined.
Anybody can be a victim.
And they put Copperfield in there.
They got all the people they wanted, Luke Brunel, Jean-Luc Brunel.
It's like, what were you expecting?
An entire trove of pictures of these dudes having sex.
I want to see the videotapes.
I don't care what you say.
There's victims in those videotapes.
You can't show that.
No, I think I know what's going on here, but I'll wait until you're finished with yourself.
Well, let's just play clip three and then what?
Well, one of those Republicans is the co-sponsor, Representative Thomas Massey of Kentucky.
He tweeted today that the release grossly fails to comply with the law.
What can they do?
Can they go to court and sue over this?
Well, that's a good question.
I don't know if that's something that they're thinking of doing.
Certainly I do know because this is what the Justice Department has said, is that they're planning to release more, but they are saying that there are so many things that have to go through that they just couldn't basically do it all in one batch, but that there will be multiple additional batches coming.
But as you say, even the co-sponsor of the bill on the Republican side, Congressman Massey, is upset about that.
Well, also, these documents are so heavily redacted.
There are some pages that are just totally black from being inked out.
Is anybody talking about that or complaining about that?
Yes, there are concerns about that.
I think in one case, there were 100 pages of grand jury testimony that were redacted.
Now, the law allows the Justice Department to release some of the files with redactions in specific instances with regard to victims of Jeffrey Epstein's crimes with regard to abuse.
But the amount of the redactions surprised people who are expecting to get more information than they felt they received.
And the law actually says they can't redact to protect the reputation of anybody, anybody.
Do we have any idea when these additional files are going to be released in the future?
All we know is that they'll be coming out in batches in the coming weeks.
So I would expect that journalists like ourselves will be watching this story over the holidays and probably well past that.
And some of the questions that people were hoping to get answered in this first batch are the ones that will continue to be asked in terms of connections that other people had and knowledge that other people had of Jeffrey Epstein and his crimes.
Batches.
Batches.
Lots of batches.
Yeah, I mean, this was the obvious result to be expected.
But they're going a little bit further.
Let's just troll everybody a little bit more.
Oh.
Oh, no, no.
We'll take that one down.
Oh, no, 16 are gone.
What's going on?
They were all drunk.
Tonight, questions for the Department of Justice around their initial release of the Jeffrey Epstein files.
More than a dozen photos that were available on the DOJ site Friday disappeared without explanation.
No!
Including a photo of President Donald Trump.
Photo of Trump.
One of the few examples of Trump appearing in the documents release.
NBC News has asked DOJ why the files were deleted and have not heard back.
It comes as the Department of Justice released never-before-seen grand jury testimony, including from a witness who described how Epstein and his partner Ghelane Maxwell lured her into their orbit.
The unnamed victim, recalling a situation in 2005, where at the age of 14, Epstein convinced her to give him a massage for $200.
$200.
The massage quickly turned sexual.
And she was told, quote, the more you do, the more you make.
Stories like this, a reminder of the horror.
That's the same for podcasts.
The more you do, the more you make.
Or you do, the more you make.
Stories like this, a reminder of the horror of Epstein's crimes for the survivors demanding transparency.
Some saying at this point, they feel like it's not enough.
It failed in our book.
We haven't received full transparency.
It's heavily redacted.
And it's an incomplete release of the files.
Some Republicans, Democrats, and survivors are warning the DOJ that they're not living up to the law passed almost unanimously by Congress.
The department says they'll release all the files within the next two weeks.
And NBC News analysis of the material shows that in the first release, more than 680 pages have been redacted.
So no surprise at all that we saw heavy redactions from DOJ because they had a lot of editorial discretion in this case.
But Congress believes they deserve an explanation and plan to keep the pressure on the DOJ to make sure everything that should be made public is.
I do think there's more here and it's worth more investigations to get to the bottom of this and put this to rest and respect the victims.
No.
Massey and Ro Korana, what do we call them?
Rokana.
Corana.
Corana.
That's even better.
Corana.
They wrote this law.
I mean, if you look at the law, this was the obvious result that was going to take place.
I don't know if they're in on the gag here.
By the way, they're not batches.
I'm surprised that PBS doesn't know what they're actually called.
They did dumps.
They call them dumps.
Big massive dumps.
Dumps, not batches, dumps, you dummy.
So a couple of things about the law.
You know, if you don't write the law with enforcement within the law, penalties.
Yeah.
And enforcement, like creating an agency to enforce the law or a group or somebody.
Nothing's going to happen.
Nothing's going to happen.
So it should have, it should have had an enforcement clause.
This has to be enforced in such a way by such and such a person.
And the penalties for not for not following the law would be 15 years in prison and blah, blah, blah, whatever.
They didn't put that in there.
If that's not in there, what's the point?
Well, the point was, is to do exactly what's happening now.
We need to continue.
This has to keep going for, I don't know.
Maybe we can keep it going for another six months, you know, get a little closer to the midterms.
And roll out the last batch.
Dump, dump, massive dump.
I'm convinced that Mike Benz is some form of limited hangout.
I know I said it.
And maybe not knowingly, but he did a five-hour, what he calls a super stream.
I'm doing a super stream, everybody.
Have you ever seen that guy?
I have seen him, yes.
In fact, I mentioned him somewhere.
And I got condemned for mentioning him.
By whom?
Somebody who condemned me.
I don't know.
Oh, a condemner.
Well, that's no good.
And here's the way Mike Ben says, I've solved it.
So, okay, I'll watch your super stream then, which I did.
And I think he has the he got the right information and he's on the right track.
His thesis, which he can back up with quite a lot of at least evidence that puts Epstein in the right place at the right time, is that he was much more of like a strategic middleman.
And he was doing this back in the day.
Well, a little bit, yeah, probably back in the day.
We had BCCI.
Now, I don't know if everybody remembers the Bank of Credit and Commerce International, BCCI, which had this spectacular collapse, as it turned out, that what this bank was, besides it being pretty much a Ponzi scheme, what they were doing is they were laundering money for intelligence agencies, certainly for the CIA, MI6.
I think, I don't know, was Mossad in there as well?
Everybody.
I don't remember if Mossad was involved.
There was a great movie about it called, was it The Internationalist?
It was called The International.
Yeah.
Oh, The International.
There you go.
The International.
And so if you needed to arm the movie.
Which is a great movie, by the way.
It's a fun movie.
It's a great movie to watch.
And it's based on facts, truth, real story.
Real story.
Okay.
So if you wanted to arm the Mujahideen, then you'd send the money through BCCI and BCCI would take care of everything.
Now, on the U.S. side, for our intelligence agencies, in order to move some of that money around, we had Bear Stearns.
This is where Jeffrey Epstein all of a sudden becomes the rising star.
Doesn't matter how much he steals from his expense account.
He's a protected man within the bank and he's moving money around.
This was his talent.
His talent was making all the connections, making sure everything worked, getting the money in, moving it around.
Eventually, he moves out to Epstein Island, not for privacy, for his little sexcapades.
And by the way, he was sick.
He definitely, he was into all this stuff.
So I'm sure there's all kinds of ancillary, hanky-panky stuff going on and some blackmail, possibly.
But he also had a bank, U.S. Virgin, the Virgin Islands.
So he now could move money back and forth.
He, you know, no scrutiny.
It would seem North Sea Nexus kind of like, but not that I want to draw that in per se, because it was really for our intelligence.
Remember, when they were prosecuted, you're writing him up for the first prosecution.
Oh, no, this guy, he belongs to intelligence.
Yeah, he belongs to intelligence.
He's moving the money.
And how do you do that?
Well, you get rich people to hang around you, and rich people love hanging around really rich people and they love doing dumb rich people things.
And, you know, yeah, cool dentist chair.
I got some ideas we can do with that.
Oh, once you're that wealthy, you just become ill and sick and people with power.
But that was his game.
Then we have 2008 Bear Stearns collapses.
Weren't they the only one that collapsed?
No, Lehman Brothers.
Lehman as well.
So everything had to be moved over to another bank, and that was JP Morgan.
And that makes total sense in Mike Benz's Superstream story because there's all these suspicious activity reports: 800,000 here, a couple million there.
We don't know where it's going.
We need some cash, pay that person.
For all we know, some of these women involved were carrying cash.
I think that is much more likely to be the real story.
And maybe, maybe this will come to light.
It seems kind of doubtful.
But the fact that Mike Benz was putting this together on a super stream at the same time these, you know, these batches or batches were coming out, I think that's the real story.
I just don't see.
And if you really think about it, the whole pedophiles started, it really was an online thing.
There was never any evidence for it.
It came on the heels of Pizzagate, and there's definitely creepy people involved in Pizzagate, you know, the Podesta Brothers, very creepy, absolutely.
And, you know, then we just had, you know, then it was the Democrats.
All the Democrats are pedophiles.
And Trump.
I like the idea of a pedophile cover for a bank scam.
I think it's a good one.
Yeah, because it draws all your attention.
Well, it certainly has.
And of course, all we want to see is Trump being a pedophile.
That's all we want to see.
So none of it really seems to pan out ever.
But maybe, maybe someone will be unmasked, uncovered.
It seems unlikely because what PR value does that even have?
Would people even care?
Oh, what?
He was laundering money for us to pay, you know, arm the Mujahideen or the Iran-Contras.
That's boring.
Show me the pizza.
It is boring.
Show me the pizza.
No, it's not interesting.
No.
And of course, Trump can't get a district attorney appointed at the moment.
Everyone's stopping stuff.
So I think that this is just going to keep on going.
Hopefully, there's some sacrificial lamb somewhere along the line at the end that we can point to just before the midterms.
I think that's what the ultimate idea would be.
And it makes a lot of sense with Maxwell.
You know, that was her family business was doing that stuff.
With Adnon Khashoggi, by the way.
Familiar name?
Khashoggi?
Yeah, the guy they shot.
Yeah, but his dad was the international arms dealer.
Yeah, the one, yeah, one of the world's richest men.
Yeah, buddies with Maxwell.
So all of that kind of fits in a lot better than anything else.
And of course, when you have this kind of money and, you know, Epstein had to have his own cover.
Well, I'm an international financier.
What does that mean?
Well, I finance things internationally.
What do you finance?
Oh, science.
MIT Media Lab?
No, he's a bag man.
He's just a bag man.
And he probably did a really good job.
I'm still surprised we don't have anything from Zoro Ranch that seems like that's something that's missing.
No one ever talks about it.
Zorro Ranch, it seems like that was the real ground zero.
Didn't it?
The thing that bothers me the most is that he always seemed to be, you know, never seemed to be the head guy.
And Wexler never comes up in the conversation.
Ever.
No.
And Wexler has to be one of the main players here because he's the one who put the house together and who knows what else he did.
Totally could be part of some Wexler property in New York that Epstein lived in.
Yes.
Yeah.
So, but we're also, and you remember then we got the Wayfair.
Remember, oh, Wayfair.
They're shipping kids in boxes.
You remember that?
No, I don't remember that.
You know what Wayfair is?
Wayfair is the furniture company, the furniture that make cheap furniture.
Yeah, and they would say, look at this.
Look at this cabinet.
It's priced at $99,000.
There's a kid inside.
That's why.
I can't.
It's funny you don't remember that.
I don't remember that.
That was a big thing.
I wonder, do we still have a...
Did we do clips on it?
Did we even talk about it?
Oh, no, we definitely talked about it.
Let me see.
Way.
Find me a clip.
I don't know.
I don't seem to have anything.
I'm pretty sure we did something on it.
Anyway, meanwhile, what no one's talking about is Operation Relentless Justice, which was announced on Friday.
205 child victims located, 293 child sex abuse offenders arrested in nationwide crackdown.
Seems like that's kind of important.
You didn't even hear about it.
No, the mainstream media is focused on Epstein and Trump.
Yeah.
And this was Texas, Raleigh, North Carolina, Miami, Greggie's Cult.
I mean, these are all good names.
Yeah, they can't do, they don't want to, I hate to say this, but it seems to be a fact.
They really don't want to even bring it up because it makes them look bad because they're supporting the idea that ICE are bad people and they should be protested against.
And let's keep it at that.
Yeah.
So I think this will just carry on.
They'll continue to wait for something on Trump, like morons.
They're really dumb.
And we'll see.
So CBS did say that there were videos released.
Did you see, were there no videos that anybody saw?
I didn't see any videos.
Photos tonight of many of the powerful who ran and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein's circle.
Bill Clinton seems swimming in a pool with Ghelane Maxwell and another woman with her face redacted.
Clinton with another unknown woman on his lap.
Celebrities, too, including Michael Jackson and Diana Ross.
Epstein with Mick Jagger and Chris Tucker with Maxwell.
Many of the records are heavily redacted and survivors say suspiciously so, including Epstein grand jury records.
We do see Epstein's book of contacts with the name of President Trump, his late wife, and his daughter, Ivanka.
A list of girls or young women listed as masseuses keeps the names private, but shows there were more than 250.
How confident are you?
At the end of the day, at the end of this period, you'll get everything.
I don't feel tremendously confident that everything will come out.
Survivors, including Annie Farmer, have been fighting for years for the release of records and say they're frustrated these records are incomplete.
There's been a lot of effort and money and time put into redactions, not to protect victims, but to protect people in power.
So these two people, you only hear the woman talking.
She is a family member of Virginia Guiffré, Gioffrey.
And they both have giant monarch butterfly pins on their sweaters during this interview.
We know what that means.
Wow, that's pretty peculiar.
MK Ultra.
It's meant to trim.
Remember that's a symbol, yeah, but what is the connection there?
MK Ultra.
Yeah, I know, but what are they trying to accomplish if true?
Oh, anyone who has information when the minute they see the butterflies, they're programming and then they're back into brainwash mode.
That's how it supposedly works.
I know you're skeptical.
I'm very skeptical.
You're skeptical.
But it's okay.
And then Mick Jagger, you know, oh, Mick Jagger.
Yeah, the photos you don't see are the 30 photos of him in concert.
I mean, they clearly went to the Rolling Stones concert, took pictures backstage, maybe had a dinner in the hotel.
Michael Jackson and Diana Ross.
Oh, yeah, they're probably involved.
Yeah, but see.
It seems unlikely.
Of course.
So cool your jets, everybody.
You're getting absolutely nothing.
Nothing.
And every and everywhere things are going to start falling apart in the poto sphere, or as you aptly said on Grimerica, the podcast circle jerk.
I think, is that what you said?
Something like that.
It was good.
People are reposting him.
Yeah, look at Devorix.
Yeah, podcast circle jerk.
Well, we're going to complete the circle jerk.
This came out this morning.
This is an important information.
As most of you that pay attention know, I am not the internet police.
Was anyone confused?
I just want to make sure.
Did anyone think Alex Jones was the internet police?
Okay.
Just checking.
I don't invite.
I don't try to focus on what other people are theoretizing about or doing.
I try to focus on what I'm doing.
Wait, wait, stop.
Is he in his car?
No, he's outside, though.
It is one of the selfie cam.
Yeah.
He's in the woods.
He's in nature.
He's in the woods.
He's in nature.
Okay.
This is his latest thing.
He's in the woods.
He's going to always be behind the table, but now he's in the woods.
No, he's in the woods.
He's in nature.
This is important.
This is what you do.
And so it's with a heavy heart that I am forced to put out another report either tonight or tomorrow morning.
We're adding all that information right now and a lot more research.
Dealing with Candace Owens.
Just as soon as the whole Egyptian plane thing gets debunked with all the facts, now she's moved to something else, and I'm really worried about her.
I'm worried about her and her mind.
And I'm also worried about the country and where this is going.
It's good to question Charlie Kirk's assassination.
I have big questions.
We know Cash Tell covered up an investigation to accomplices.
I broke that before it hit the mainstream news.
Yeah, I did it.
So I'm not saying no question.
I broke that months ago.
But her latest source and what she's done, implicating the U.S. military and all this other stuff is just so damaging.
When you go investigate it, it's so crazy.
And just like with the Egyptian plane, she says she has the metadata, then publish it.
And when she did publish it and it got fact-checked, it wasn't accurate.
Candace, we care about you.
But you just doubled down again with something even more absurd.
And I hate watching you destroy yourself like this.
We'll be covering it all with the reports coming out of Relox Jones on X on Rumble and InfoWars.com.
God bless you all.
You know that it's bad when Alex Jones is calling you out.
Yeah, I have to play two clips about Candace that showed up on Gutfeld.
Okay.
Mainly because Michael Malice said something that I thought was interesting.
You would find it interesting.
And Alex Jones just used the term double down.
So let's play, let's see, Candace, just a little clip from Michael on Owens.
No, Owens on Pierce Morgan.
This was the setup.
Brigitte McCrone has a penis.
I really want to.
Metron does not have a penis.
Brigitte Macron has a penis.
No, she doesn't.
I'm sorry.
She changed it.
Did she get it removed?
She had to get it removed.
Yeah, you can have adoptive children.
You can call somebody.
But Brigitte McCrone was born a dude named John Michelle Trog.
No.
And I just feel, I want you to know that.
I want you to know that Brigitte Macrone probably stands peeing up.
Probably peeking.
The beauty is.
The beauty is.
We have a big bet, and we're going to find out because he's going to court.
And, you know, you will lose that court case.
I think you know you will.
Yeah.
I am not going to lose a court case because Brigitte is presenting evidence that Brigitte was born a woman because that's never even been offered.
That's just their PR coming after and saying these things.
Nobody believes that Brigitte Macrone is just unable to present any pictures.
Nobody's asking for blood.
Let's wait for the court case.
Let's wait for the court case.
Okay, great.
And you will be proven wrong again.
And then the force.
And it's just federal corruption.
Okay.
Federal corruption.
She went off.
So can I just say, can I just say one thing about proof of stuff like that?
They humiliated, in fact, Kamala Harris, I believe, humiliated Michael Jackson and forced him to show his penis to the court.
Of course, it was, you know, it wasn't published because of certain distinguishing marks that had been claimed by children he allegedly had sex with or fooled around with.
Why can't they do the same to Brigitte Macrone?
They just might.
But the point is, is that they went around the horn, and out of the blue, at the very end, Michael Mala said the following thing that I thought you'd be interested in.
Before you, any conspiracy theory, I have to ask myself, what would need to be true for this to be true?
She has had biological children.
Yes.
And they say her brother vanished and now the brother replaced her.
The brother's still alive.
Yeah.
And he's given interviews.
So this doesn't make any sense on any level.
Yeah.
It's just like what he's, I mean, is she insane?
I think it's BPD.
And when they have that, they just always double down.
Yeah.
Which is borderline bipolar disorder.
Borderline personality.
Oh, personality disorder.
No.
Okay.
And he said the phrase, they always double down.
Oh, the reason John is bringing this up is my ex-wife had, I believe, I can't prove it, had this disorder.
Has.
And yeah.
Well, when he said they always double down, and he said it matter-of-factly in such a way that he's had relationships with a woman, I'm guessing, or he has a relative who has bipolar, or not bipolar, borderline personality, borderline personality disorder, the way he said it.
And then when Alex Jones said double down in the clip you played, which just kind of backs it up, I brought it up not to point out anything in your past.
Other than the double down.
But have you noticed the double down thing?
What does that even mean?
Here's how I experienced it because it wasn't in the context of doing a podcast, which I saw.
Now I really have to think about it.
But it wasn't even a double down.
It was a constant down.
So something would trigger it and it would be, it could be the smallest thing.
And you could see it go from zero to 150 in 30 seconds.
And it would, and then it was just bam, bam, bam, blah, blah, just verbal.
Oh, well, until it wasn't verbal, but verbal, verbal, and then double down, triple down, quadruple down.
This is it, and then poof, it would disappear just like snow before the sun.
And then the person wouldn't even know actually what had happened.
So I'm, I now have to look at Candace in that light.
Oh, crap.
No, I got to watch it again.
So, yes, it's kind of an insane thing.
Like, yes, I'm right.
I'm, this is absolutely right.
This is this is the truth.
This is how it is.
And just keep on going.
So I guess that's what she was doing right there with Pierce Morgan.
Yeah.
Got a penis, got a penis, got a penis.
All right.
End of show mixers.
There you go.
Got a penis.
Got a penis.
I don't think so.
Yeah.
Oh, I think so now.
I don't think so.
Well, that's that.
And that would make, you know, in light of her friendship with Kanye.
That would be awesome.
Oh, that's a nice twist.
That kind of fits in a way.
Yeah.
Well, I guess that could take us right to the new psyop of the day, which I think you identified this on X. Nick Reiner.
All of a sudden, all of a sudden, he changed his meds.
All of a sudden.
He did something with his meds.
It's all he went crazy.
Do you have any clips on that?
Do I?
I don't think so.
Because this just came up and it came up mostly.
It didn't come up so far as clips are concerned because there wasn't any reports on it.
Except it started showing up.
And when it showed up, it showed up bang, bang, bang.
Yeah, here I have a couple clips.
Hold on.
NBC.
Tonight, we're learning more about the mental state of Nick Reiner, now charged with two counts of first-degree murder for the killings of his parents, Hollywood actor and director Rob Reiner and his wife, Michelle.
A judge in Reiner's case signed a sealed medical order on Friday.
According to three sources with direct knowledge of the case, the 32-year-old was being treated for a serious psychiatric disorder at the time of the crime.
The sources tell NBC News Reiner had been diagnosed some years ago with schizophrenia and was on medication, which had been changed or adjusted before the killings.
How does this new information and what we're learning potentially impact the case moving forward?
It's almost certain that mental health will either be a defense or an issue that's raised right now as far as Nick Reiner's competency to move forward with the legal proceedings.
Nick Reiner did not enter a plea during his first court appearance Wednesday.
His attorneys standing to obscure his face and later urging the public not to rush to judgment.
There are very, very complex and serious issues that are associated with this case.
Legal analysts say if Reiner does stand trial, his defense may be setting the stage for an insanity plea, which means that the defendant says, I did it, but I was insane at the time.
That is an incredibly high bar.
Kind of fits with your where did that superstar defense attorney come from?
He just a couple of things that can't be explained.
Where did that guy come from?
I've watched and watched and watched.
No one has come up with anybody that referred him or how he got there in the first place.
The second little thing that keeps cropping up is that if he gets off on a insanity plea.
Insanity plea, it's the only way he can collect any of the inheritance.
Wow, the perfect crime.
So it's very, and it's a substantial amount of inheritance, and it's believed that the attorney will get a big piece of it.
Okay, that makes sense.
That makes sense.
Yeah, yeah, of course.
So he dreams this up because there is no reference to schizophrenia by the family, by Romi, by anybody.
And they'd ever said, well, you know, he's, they always thought he was a violent kid and his and his associates talked to him about, talk about him, you know, in other words, his friends had talked about him being kind of a spoiled brat and this sort of thing.
And there's no mention of schizophrenia.
I was watching this like a six-minute video.
I think the New York Post published it.
And it's someone kind of doing like a profile piece on this Reiner kid.
And, you know, he's a rapper and he's walking down the street and he's spitting lyrics.
And it's all in kind of this weird accent.
And he says, I love Trump.
Trump's my boy, which I just thought was interesting.
He's doing Coke, you know, smoking weed.
Just, but either that was an entire, well, if you're schizophrenic, I guess that would be an entire personality.
He kept that going pretty long.
But he had, you know, hangers on and all kinds of odd people that latch on to a person like this, you know, because they can hang out in the guest house.
Here's KTLA closer to the source.
Prosecutors say 32-year-old Nick Reiner murdered his parents, stabbing Rob and Michelle Reiner to death in their bedroom.
The fact that Nick battled drug addiction for much of his life is no secret.
But now TMZ is reporting, citing unnamed sources.
Unnamed sources.
The troubled son of Hollywood royalty had been diagnosed with schizophrenia, a brain disorder, and that medications he was taking were not working properly, but making him more erratic, dangerous, and out of his head.
What's more, TMZ says this information points to a defense of not guilty by reason of insanity.
KTLA spoke with doctors who say the idea that anti-psychotic medication can make a patient more violent or dangerous is unbelievable.
They say a problem would be the absence of medication.
The incidence of violence with schizophrenia is basically no different than any other regular human being.
If you add things like substance abuse, not taking medication, other factors, dangerous factors, does increase the risk of violence.
You know, on average, about, you know, across about five years, there's an odds of about 2.8% of people with schizophrenia will have violent actions compared to 0.8% of regular people.
So they're going to have to prove a lot in court.
Interesting report came out today, you know, because the Reiners were at Conan O'Brien's Christmas party.
I thought Conan O'Brien, I never really pegged Conan O'Brien to be such a Hollywood guy.
Did you ever think of him that way?
Well, he was always a writer.
He was with the Simpsons for a while.
He's yeah, kind of.
But you know, to have the Reiners over, the Obamas, and I don't know if the Obamas were there, but he had this big Christmas party.
And so that's where the fracas started.
It wasn't at his house.
It was at a restaurant.
Okay, at a restaurant, but at his party.
And it got...
Yeah, it was a private restaurant party.
So according to page six, oh, actually, this comes from the Daily Mail, even more credible.
That it got so bad and so loud that people wanted to call the police.
They wanted to call 911.
And Conan said, hey, this is, well, he said, it's my house, my party.
So I don't know if he says my house.
It's supposed to be a restaurant, but it could have been his house.
So he talked everybody out of calling 911.
How do you feel now if that's true?
I don't know if that's even, you know, it's in the Daily Mail, man.
Yeah, I guess the Reiners left and Rick stayed behind.
Nick.
Nick Rick.
Nick stayed behind and started grilling people about if they're famous and he was making a scene of some sort.
Well, yes.
Da-da-da-david is his hip-hop name.
Da-da-da-david.
That's crazy.
Well, he'll get some creds.
Yeah.
Yes.
Street cred.
It's all incredibly sad.
The other M5M fracas this week was the announcers for the Flyers game.
Oh my Lord, we have to, we got to jump in.
We have to penalize them for games.
This is horrible.
This went out over the airwaves.
I can't believe what the announcer said on a hot mic.
Did you hear what he said on the hot mic, John?
No, I did not hear what he said on the hot mic, Adam.
In Philadelphia, we said sometimes the flyers get a sense of urgency when they're playing from behind.
Now they're going to take the TV time out.
We'll take it as well.
Seven gone in the third.
It's 3-2 Buffalo and the Philadelphia Flyers Broadcast Network.
While you're down there, would you mind blowing me?
I think we're still on the air, Tim.
I love that.
This is like the oldest joke in broadcasting.
Someone's doing some wires or fixing your mic.
Yeah, yeah, under your feet.
Yeah, and everyone's made this joke.
Hey, when you're down there, would you mind blowing me?
And he says it, and it's still, and they're still on the air.
Everyone loses their mind.
Like, that's every podcast ever.
That sounds like it was set up.
No, I can see that happening.
The problem is I'm having now is I'm having trouble with the setup stuff that I'm seeing way too much of.
Well, the best example is the person going up to the porch, picking up a package.
The package, they run out to their car, and the package blows up and throws paint all over them, the car, the whole area.
Well, most of those are AI.
Well, most of those are bull crap.
I mean, there's one original guy.
There's hundreds of them.
There's hundreds of them.
No, those are all bullcrap.
But there's one original guy who really put in the work with the technology and had, you know, pumps and all kinds of stuff to spray fart spray.
That guy's fantastic.
Yeah, well, it's become a joke.
And it's like, and I think it's being done by Amazon Studios.
Oh, that would make sense, wouldn't it?
Yeah, to keep people from stealing packages.
And I think it's pretty.
And there's another fake one that's going around.
I've seen at least four examples.
It's a news, supposedly a newscast, the eyewitness crime report or something.
It's always got the same set, sometimes two different people.
And then they have, and then they show a picture of a, and then we have a, we have a drawing of the suspected assailant, and then they put a picture up, and there's some stupid drawing, like a, you know, just a round face with two dots for eyes.
Oh, with the hair on the side of the head.
Or whatever.
And then they show the guy, and it's the same guy, and they crack up, and one of them falls off his chair.
I have seen four versions of this.
And it's always the same set.
There's no reference to any station.
It's bullcrap.
There's so much bullcrap being put on this.
Wait, wait, are you telling me that AI slop is ruining your social media?
No, I don't think this is AI.
I think this was, I think it's done staged.
It doesn't have to be AI.
I think you're underestimating AI.
This stuff has gotten pretty good.
This doesn't look like AI to me, but whatever the case, it's just another phony below anything.
But the package is blowing up.
It's completely out of control.
And then they have one with the electricity starts and this.
And you can see the person, you know, in fact, you see somebody lift the package.
There's nothing in the package.
It's obvious.
You can't have a gallon of paint.
A gallon of paint weighs a lot.
I don't know if anyone's picked a gallon of paint up, but it's not like light.
No.
So anyway, so I'm seeing more and more of these stage.
Which, of course, throws me, which you should follow up with.
You should say to me, well, don't you think some of these women that you keep putting on the show with the TikTok complainers are phony?
Well, why would I do that if you're doing my work for me?
I'm doing your work for you.
Because I was watching a couple today and it was like, I don't think so.
No, of course not.
And even the ones that are real, they're just very sad, very lonely people who just want some likes to feel warmth.
That's all.
It's becoming a mess.
It's a nuisance.
It's a nuisance.
Actually, on my feet, it is a nuisance.
I mean, this is like the same thing you pointed out, which is these cooking demos.
Yeah.
Where somebody dumps a bunch of crap in a pan and they start stirring it up and then they put tons of cheese and they mix it up and then they throw this in cans and this and that and mix it up.
And then they serve it to the kids who go yum.
And it's just gross, whatever it is.
It's great.
The internet is deteriorating.
Well, it's, you know, that has a term and shittification.
That's the term.
But yeah, this is exactly what this is.
This is entropy of the social networks.
You don't even need AI for it.
Once you let everybody go, man, that's a huge conversation.
But podcastindex.social.
Like, we're the Americans with a Section 230, blah, blah, blah.
I said, listen, without Section 230, there would be no social media networks, period.
It wouldn't happen.
There's no way.
There would be too many lawsuits and tort and libel and it would never ever end.
Well, America should be there, here in Australia, we have sensible laws.
You can't say Nazi.
I said, oh, you mean you don't have free speech over there?
Well, they all think that it's about what you can say.
Man, my daughter's here.
I just got to tell you, she and her fiancé, Kevin, is giving me like boots on the ground of Rotterdam.
Holy crap.
First of all, it's a complete narco-state.
Everybody is involved in the drug trade one way or the other.
If they're an accountant, they're an accountant for drug pushers, dealers, wholesalers, whatever.
Of course, the macromafia, it's a lot of Moroccans who are mainly in the drug trade, but not exclusively.
One building a week is being blown up.
Just a whole building.
All drug related.
There are schools that are for Muslim children only.
They don't learn Dutch.
They only learn Arabic.
Honor killings are regular business.
Of course, all the asylum seekers are all getting housing free in a market where there's 400,000 home shortage for the Dutch.
These kids, they want a two-bedroom apartment.
They can't actually find one because the minute it goes on the market, there's 10,000 people ahead of them within five minutes.
And then there's these required salary.
You have to prove salary requirements.
For a two-bedroom apartment together, you have to make 115,000 euros a year.
Well, no.
And I said, well, can't you work more and then just get up to that level?
Oh, no.
The law, you can't work more than 32 hours a week.
Even if you want to work harder to make more money, you can't.
No.
No, because that's a 32-hour work week for everybody.
Justice is completely gone.
Like there was some asylum seeker who he stabbed multiple people, killed one of them.
Evidence in court showed they'd been watching extremist imams and ISIS beheading videos.
He watched videos in preparation of his attack, had Islamic chants on his phone that he played over his own little loudspeaker, shouted Alo Akbar while pulling out two knives, stabbing random tourists.
What does he get?
No jail time because of his mental condition.
I mean, wow.
So I don't even know how I got there, but what were we talking about?
So you talked about your daughter came and is visiting and you got an earful.
And then I said, what?
I triggered it.
Yeah.
I can't remember what was going on before that.
Well, we were talking about something else.
Yeah, something important.
So on top of all that, they're going to steal more of their money as we have a final decision, a final deal.
We figured out how to do it.
We know how to fund Ukraine.
All eyes were on Brussels as EU leaders met for a make-or-break summit, determined to find a way to lend billions of euros to Ukraine.
By the early hours of Friday, a deal was done.
As a matter of urgency, we will provide a loan backed by the European Union budget.
This will address the urgent financial needs of Ukraine.
And Ukraine will only repay this loan once Russia pays reparations.
Until then, the immobilized Russian assets will remain immobilized, and the Union reserves its right to make use of the cash balances to finance the loan.
The main option had been to tap some of the 200 billion euros of Russian central bank assets frozen in the EU.
But that scheme fell by the wayside when Belgium's PM pushed back.
His country hosts the bulk of the assets and feared Moscow retaliation in the courts or perhaps by other means.
Germany's chancellor called this decision a show of Europe's independence.
Today, we were really put to the dependence.
We were confronted with a question of whether we really understood the challenges of geopolitics, whether we really saw the provocations of a new world order and whether we had anything to counter them with.
And I want to say that the answer is a resounding yes.
The EU says Ukraine needs another 135 billion euros to stay afloat over the next two years, and the cash crunch could hit as soon as April.
So here's how I understand this deal.
Instead of just stealing the money, they've now come up with some word salad.
First of all, because of the powers they have under emergency situation, they no longer have to re- or re-ratify every six months that the Russian assets are frozen.
So now they're frozen indefinitely.
Instead of stealing the money, we're going to take the money and call it a loan backed by the European Union's own budget money.
And Ukraine gets that loan, then doesn't have to pay it back unless Russia pays reparations, which then will never do.
Of course, they'll never do that.
And that would Russia be paying their own pocket to get the money that was essentially stolen in the first place.
So they are stealing the money.
They're just calling it a loan.
I don't know if the international financial people see it that way, but this is just a different wording for we're stealing it.
Somebody pointed out that this is going to, I mean, the Europeans have to realize that this is not the way to encourage people to invest in Europe.
Well, so they've taken a different track.
They're going to steal your money.
Yeah.
You send your money over there and then basically nationalize your money.
That's exactly what they did.
That's what they did.
Yeah.
And called it a loan.
I didn't steal your money, man.
I just borrowed it temporarily, okay, Holmes.
Don't worry.
Are you going to get it back?
No, you can't get it back.
No, no, I'm waiting for those.
If I can't get it back, then you have my money and you haven't given it back.
This is no good.
No.
But at the same time, don't worry, citizens, because we're pretty much on track.
We've approved the digital euro.
We'll start rolling it out 2027, 2029.
It'll be in full effect.
And your money belonged to Fifi Lagarde.
I know these are important moments for the digital euro because we have done our work.
We've carried the water for the European Council and certainly later on for the European Parliament to identify.
Isn't carrying water typically seen as a negative?
He's carrying water for Putin.
Yeah, yes, it's a negative.
It's a what do you call it when you soft-pedaled a negative comment?
But it's bullshit.
No, no, it was something else.
There's a term I'm looking for.
I don't pardon me.
Yeah.
All right, let's go back.
Work, we've carried the water, but it's now for the European Council and certainly later on for the European Parliament to identify whether the Commission proposal is satisfactory, how it can be transformed into a piece of legislation or amended.
Our ambition is not to be role models.
Our ambition is to make sure.
That's great.
Hey, we don't want to be role models here.
We're going to actually screw you.
So we're not role models.
We're just thieves.
Our ambition is not to be role models.
Our ambition is to make sure that in the digital age, there is a currency that is the anchor of stability for the financial system.
For the moment, that anchor is central bank money, which essentially has material form.
It's the banknotes that you have in your wallet.
But in the digital age, it has to be a digital expression of that sovereignty and a digital anchor for the purpose of around your neck.
Wait, wait, back it up.
Does she say it has to be?
Let me listen again.
But in the digital age, it has to be a digital expression of that sovereignty and a digital anchor.
It has to be.
It has to be.
Stop a second.
What does it have to be?
A digital.
She says it has to be.
Oh, in the digital age, it has to be.
She says a digital expression of your central bank.
It has to be.
Well, yes, what does it have to be?
What makes it have to be?
Listen, she's wearing a green sash like she belongs to Starfleet Command.
It's really insane with this woman's fashion choices.
Like a broad, like one of those Miss Universe type sashes, only it's green and has some kind of nondescript bug on it.
She feels like Captain Pike.
It has to be.
It has to be a digital expression.
But in the digital age, it has to be a digital expression of that sovereignty and a digital anchor for the purpose of the financial system that we have.
So that's what we're pursuing.
In addition to making sure that it is user-friendly, not costly, fast, efficient, private, that it can work online, offline.
I mean, I could go on and on because you know that I followed that very carefully.
Colleagues and both Luis and myself are very strong supporters of this initiative, and we place great hopes in the work that will be done in parliament once the council has made its view as deterministic views.
It is a literal central bank digital currency.
But don't worry.
It'll be private.
Even if you're offline, you can exchange it with people.
We'll sink it back up later.
Yeah, what could go wrong with that?
Seems highly unlikely.
Well, it sounds like a good way to rob them.
I mean, seriously, so if I buy something and my phone is in offline mode, or I exchange something with you, and I just trash the phone, I'm good to go, aren't I?
I'm sure there's better scams than that, but this is scammable.
Possibly.
I mean, the printed bills are scammable.
They have to counterfeit them.
It's a lot of work.
But I think this is going to ease it, make it easier for especially the people that are talented, black hat types.
And I'm sure it's all going to run on XRP.
So everybody with XRP, you're going to be a billionaire.
Yeah, so amidst all of that, I'm just going to bop back to Russia for a second.
Looks like peace talks are not really moving the way they wanted at Steve's club in Miami.
A gated golf course.
What?
I was going to say they're not moving at all.
It's just a lot of drinking.
A gated golf course in Florida becomes the latest hub to host these talks as U.S. negotiators meet separately with both sides to try to end the war.
Russia's envoy spoke briefly to reporters after arriving in Miami.
The discussions are constructive.
They began and continued on Saturday and will also continue on Sunday.
Thank you very much.
Speaking in Kyiv, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky urged the U.S. to put more pressure on Moscow.
America must clearly say, if not diplomacy, then there will be full pressure.
There will be a very strong weapons package for Ukraine.
There will be a very strong support for Ukraine.
The United States will impose sanctions fully on the entire economy, on all sectors that bring money to the Russians.
Without this, it's simply impossible.
Putin does not yet feel the kind of pressure that should exist.
For months, the Trump administration has led high-profile talks.
While Kyiv has made some concessions, Russian President Vladimir Putin made it clear on Friday he is not in the mood to negotiate.
We are ready and willing to resolve the conflict by peaceful means on the basis of the principles that I set out in June of last year at the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and provided that the causes that led to this crisis are eliminated.
For both sides, that means territory.
The U.S. is proposing security guarantees for Ukraine, but Kyiv would need to cede land.
Something Zelensky said on Saturday would have to be put to the Ukrainian people in a referendum.
Hold on a second.
He can't hold elections, but a referendum is no problem.
Why does no one ever question that little tidbit?
That's a good catch.
President Putin wants the whole of the Donbass region and more and says Russia can take it by force if Kyiv doesn't cede to Moscow's terms.
Europe, and they're all psyoping this tiny dancer.
Say no, say no, son, say no.
Just say no.
Keep saying no.
We got your back.
Our kids are ready to die for you.
No.
Well, it's a question how much longer this can continue.
This money's going to run out.
Yeah, because it doesn't get used for anything other than lining people's pockets.
Yeah, the stealing it.
No doubt.
No doubt.
Let's see.
I had one more clip here.
I think it was the BBC.
Was it NBC?
Somebody asked Putin.
Putin did another one of those five-hour TV shows.
He's more than he's like Trump.
I think Trump got it from him.
Like, hey, I can do that.
I just don't own the station.
Yakiyak.
Our Kir Simmons is in Moscow tonight and questioned Vladimir Putin directly.
You pressed him on President Trump's peace plan.
That's right, Tom.
President Putin answering questions for four and a half hours.
Another brick.
Cooling claims Moscow is planning to attack Europe.
Nonsense.
I'm promising there will be no more wars after Ukraine if Russia is treated with respect.
And with more talks underway, I asked him about President Trump's push for peace.
If you reject President Trump's peace offer, will you be responsible for the deaths of Ukrainians and Russians in 2026?
What kind of an a-hole question is that?
I mean, seriously.
How are you supposed to respond?
Oh, yeah.
I take full responsibility for everyone who dies.
That's right.
Russians in 2026.
We're not consider ourselves responsible for the deaths of people.
It wasn't us who started this war.
The ball is entirely in the court of our Western so-called opponents.
It was Russia that invaded Ukraine in 2022, Tom.
And Secretary of State Markov Ruby said today the U.S. is not pressuring either side, just trying to see if a deal is possible.
President Putin says Russian forces are advancing on the battlefield, while today Ukraine said it had hit a Russian oil tanker.
Tom, Tom, Tom, Tom, Tom.
So that's enough.
Yeah, that's not enough.
That's all we have.
They stole the money.
They called it a loan.
It's just great.
It just so.
I wish that something would kick off so the kids wouldn't even be able to go back.
I'll just keep them here.
You're going to have to tie them up.
They're going to go back.
Yeah, I know.
I know.
So I have some clips from the Brown University killer thing that this is interesting.
This is an interesting case.
Yeah, and here's the thing.
I've had three clips, and they're all called Brown Killer Far-Fetched.
Yes.
So in other words, everything seems pretty screwy.
This whole thing seems like it doesn't sound right.
It doesn't make sense.
And they're all going, you know, they're all wiping their hands.
did it.
We're good.
We're good to go.
Let's end this whole thing and go do something else.
But listen to here we go with part one.
The suspect in the Brown University campus shooting and the murder of a professor from Massachusetts Institute of Technology has been found dead in New Hampshire.
We brought you that here on Fox.
Authorities say Claudio Neves Valente died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
He's a former student at Brown with ties to the MIT educator.
Correspondent Brooke Taylor is in Providence, Rhode Island tonight.
This was always going to be an investigation where something was going to break it open.
Providence leaders and police touting themselves for their work after dating.
First of all, what kind of I've never heard a statement like that.
This whole thing was an investigation.
We knew from the beginning something was going to break it wide open.
I've never heard someone say that.
We're hoping for a tip.
We're looking for leads.
We're trying to figure this out.
No, we knew something was going to blow this wide open.
That's your far-fetched bit right there.
Correspondent Brooke Taylor.
That's far-fetched one.
Yeah, I know.
Wait to the rest of it.
I know, I know.
Providence, Rhode Island tonight.
This was always going to be an investigation where something was going to break it open.
Providence leaders and police touting themselves for their work after days of criticism for the pace of their investigation and chaotic press conferences.
After a six-day manhunt across multiple states, police identified a 48-year-old former Brown PhD student as the man who opened fire at the Ivy League school last weekend, killing two students and wounding nine more.
He was a Brown student.
He was a Portuguese national.
And I will tell you that he took his own life tonight.
First reported by Fox, authorities found Coleadio Neves Valente dead in a New Hampshire storage facility, leaving many unanswered questions in a crime spree that investigators say included the murder of an MIT professor in Massachusetts.
Previously, he attended the same academic program as the MIT professor, Nuno Luriero, in Portugal between 1995 and 2000.
Yeah, that was an interesting connection.
Yeah, and how would they get to that connection so quickly?
How did they manage to find this out?
I know how.
The crack team at Redacted called their sources in Portugal.
And so we have that issue.
And we have to remember that the guy at MIT was an expert on a nuclear scientist, and his specialty was fusion power.
Yes.
This is kind of interesting because of all the Iranian scientists that have been killed over the years that are working on one thing or another.
Wait a minute.
So now you're putting him in the same line as the zero-point energy guys and cars that drive on water?
No, I don't think zero-point energy and fusion energy is the same whatsoever.
Fusion is a known technology.
Right, but they are going to disrupt the entire energy system.
They have to be eliminated.
It was the oil companies that killed him.
Yes, yes, Exxon.
Exactly.
Police say a Reddit tipster cracked open the case by posting the suspect's car description.
Now, hold on, stop.
Stop this clip.
This was great.
This is the worst.
This is the worst of the most far-fetched.
And I'm going to preview it for anybody.
They got a tip from a homeless man who was a Brown University living in the basement.
It was a Brown University drop.
No, he was a graduate from Brown, but he was homeless because if you graduate from Brown, you can't get work.
And he just so happened to be in the neighborhood walking around homeless.
He lived in the basement.
He lived in the same area where the killer was.
He lived in the basement.
He lived in the basement.
And then he, and then he would, yeah, that's not mentioned in the report.
Oh.
And then he, well, he's homeless.
He was living in the basement.
He has a home.
Yeah.
But he, but he, he saw the guy and immediately remembered his car for some reason or other.
I thought it and then told him about the car.
And once they knew about the car, they get the license plate.
But he did this by posting it on Reddit because the homeless, as you know, are on Reddit like nobody else.
I can't say one way or the other, but I do know it's what they train AI on, so it must be good.
So let's start this clip too.
Police say a Reddit tipster cracked open the case by posting the suspect's car description.
He was later identified as the man in these images.
Sources say he's a homeless man and a former Brown University grad.
He had an odd encounter with the shooter earlier in the day and remembered what his car looked like.
Police used license plate reader cameras to find the car, and eventually they were led to the storage facility in Salem, New Hampshire, where he was found dead with two firearms nearby.
Police say the tip was crucial due to the lack of security cameras at the Brown University building.
So the troll room did immediately show me a homeless subreddit where people who are homeless post.
And of course, that's monitored by the police just in case they post something about the car.
Well, that's only if they have a case that needs to be broke wide open.
Yeah, so that, so I'm sure that that's being monitored 24-7 by the police.
Okay.
So that makes sense.
Of course, the guy's found in a shed, a storage shed, shot.
Yeah, that's not suspicious.
And an autopsy.
Sorry.
Okay, onward.
Yeah, play the last clip.
And an autopsy shows that the shooter was dead two days before police found him.
The big question right now tonight is what is the motive here?
Sources say they still don't know.
There were also no writings found.
Sources also say that currently officials are going through his credit card transactions just to try to see where he's been the last few days.
Okay.
I have a few clips that will give us some additional information because I think there was another far-fetched bit.
And this concerns what you discussed, what you brought up on the last show, that he yelled something.
Now, I have to say, you said he probably yelled and killed because he was a Republican hater, killed the Republican girl.
But now we know kind of what he yelled.
After a nearly week-long manhunt that left the nation on edge, police have identified the shooting suspect who killed two Brown University students and an MIT professor.
Authorities were able to follow his trail thanks to the help of a homeless hero who provided them information.
Now that's better.
Homeless hero.
That's much led them to a storage facility in Salem, New Hampshire.
There, they found 48-year-old Claudio Denes Valente dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
So who is this demented person who reportedly barked like a dog while he opened fire on his victims?
Here's everything you need to know.
On Saturday, December 13th, a crazed gunman dressed in black stormed an engineering building at Brown University, killing two people and injuring nine others.
In a rampage which left the campus in a panic, a sophomore Ella Cook and a freshman, Mohammad Aziz Umirzakov, were named as the victims who lost their lives in the horrific massacre.
The killer managed to escape police and remained at large.
The Ivy League campus and parts of the Rhode Island capital of Providence were left under lockdown and in a state of terror as a desperate manhunt was underway.
Nothing was known about the shooter, whom police have since revealed made a disturbing sound during the massacre.
Some witnesses said he said nothing.
There are some that say he made a barking noise.
Don't ask me.
I don't know why.
And that's it.
There is no other spoken word beyond that that we are aware of.
So he made a barking noise.
So they changed the story.
Oh, yeah.
So he goes in there and goes, wolf, wolf, wolf, and shoots two people and shoots up a bunch of others and then rushes off to shoot the professor and then goes to a storage bin and shoots himself.
This is bull crap.
Then we have the homeless hero.
Here's some more details on this with ominous music.
He blew this case right open.
He blew it open.
He blew it open.
You're right.
This is very far-fetched, especially how they speak about it.
Instead of, well, what is that?
Where am I getting feedback from?
Instead of saying, you know, we're really grateful to this man.
You know, this is how the internet helps.
Whatever he is.
He blew it wide open.
Wait, one more thing.
The kind of the giveaway to the far-fetched aspect is the fact that they had a picture of this guy, the homeless man, in advance of Him posting on Reddit or something because they were one of their press conferences, we have this unidentified man that may have run into the shooter.
We don't know if he was working with him or whatever.
And it was all that in itself was far-fetched.
It was some guy.
There was, you never saw the two of them together.
It was just a bunch of rando photos of the homeless man who had to turn himself into the police.
And then he posts about because the homeless concern is that, oh, I saw a guy get in a car.
I mean, this is bull crap.
This stinks.
It's not even well written.
Blew this case right open.
He blew it open.
The tipster, known only as John, turned out to be a homeless man who had been living in the basement of the engineering building at the time.
Sources told Fox News.
He bumped into Valente and noticed he was acting suspiciously.
Working off John's information, authorities tapped into additional surveillance footage that ultimately led them to the gunman.
I just gotta, I can't get beyond the, he was living in the, in the university basement.
So, first of all, not homeless by the actual definition.
Houseless?
Well, maybe that.
How do you get to be living in the basement of the university?
It's bull crap.
The homeless hero has now been credited with cracking the shootings, as the Fed say he is now entitled to the staggering $50,000 reward.
Thanks to John's lead, authorities learned that Claudio Neves Valente rented.
I didn't even know there was a reward.
Did they put a $50,000 reward?
And there was a discussion when they found the dead guy about who's going to get the reward.
And they finally determined it was going to go to this guy, the homeless hero.
Didn't lead to the arrest.
$50,000 reward.
Thanks to John's lead, authorities learned that Claudio Neves Valente rented the Grain Nissan in Boston and changed his license plates.
According to prosecutors, he also used a phone that masked his location and had credit cards.
Who masked his location?
Do you think he had location off, perhaps?
Or what kind of?
I want one of those phones.
I want a phone that masks.
That is another little trick.
Explain that to me.
And also, how did they know he changed his plates unless they had pictures of him doing it?
Masked his location and had credit cards that weren't under his name.
The gunman was then connected to the death of Leraro through the rental car and other movements.
Security footage captured Valente within a half a mile of Leraro's home.
Authorities also say there is video footage of him entering an apartment building near the location of the professor's apartment.
Valente appeared to have shot Lerrero, then driven to a rented storage unit in Salem, New Hampshire.
Finally, on the night of Thursday, December 18th, authorities stormed the facility where they found Valente with a satchel and two firearms dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Well, and he was shot two days earlier, according to the police.
So he killed himself two days before they got there, which is like right after the shooting of the professor.
Why?
Why did he go there and do that?
What was in the satchel?
And what was in the satchel?
The satchel's new aspect.
I demand to know what's in the satchel.
And what do you keep adding?
You know, this is the kind of thing you always say.
Who even has a satchel anymore?
I don't even know what a satchel is.
It's just a butt bag, I think.
A satchel.
Satchel.
Like boomers.
It's like knapsack.
He had a knapsack.
Knapsacks.
Couldn't be a walking knapsack.
Knapsack.
Well, there is a problem reaction solution to all this.
I doubt it's related, but of course, this was the ultimate remedy that this is all the result of.
Investigators have since revealed that Claudio Neves Valente was a Portuguese national and a former Brown University graduate student.
He also studied in Lisbon with murdered MIT nuclear science professor Nuno Leraro between 1995 and 2000.
The nature of their relationship remains unclear, nor has it been revealed if they stayed in contact.
Valente was enrolled at Brown University between 2000 and 2001 in a graduate physics program.
He primarily took classes at the university's Barris and Holly building, where he opened fire on students inside a classroom, according to Brown University president Christina Paxson.
It is safe to assume that this man, when he was a student, spent a lot of time in that building, Paxson told reporters.
The gunman took a leave of absence from Brown University in April 2001 and formally withdrew from the Ivy League University in 2003.
He came to the United States from Portugal on a student visa.
Valenti received lawful permanent residence status in September 2017, officials said.
Homeland Security Secretary Christy Noam confirmed Valente entered the U.S. through the lottery immigrant visa program DV1 in 2017.
He was later granted a green card.
This heinous individual should never have been allowed in our country, she wrote.
And in a declaration that its implications far beyond this case, she continued, At President Trump's direction, I am immediately directing USCIS to pause the DV1 program to ensure no more Americans are harmed by this disastrous program.
By the way, the green card lottery.
Yeah, I know, but this is not the problem.
No, of course it's not the problem.
But it's not a problem.
So she's making a fuss about it.
This guy's like a peaceful character until right now, and all of a sudden he did this, that, and the other.
And they shot himself for some unknown reason.
You know why?
He could have gotten away with it, seems to me.
And what was the storage room being used for?
I mean, why was it in New Hampshire?
This is bull crap.
This is too many bullcraps.
I can't.
It's nothing makes sense about it.
And the fact that they're playing it straight is beyond me.
Yeah.
They can't come up with something better.
I don't know either.
I really don't know.
But it's.
I mean, this is probably beyond the shooting in Manhattan of the Blackstone girl.
Even though they blame, oh, he hated the NFL.
Yeah, okay.
He never played in the NFL, but that's okay.
He went to shoot up the NFL and accidentally shot one of the main people at Blackstone, an operation that's buying up all the housing where he came from.
And somebody obviously got screwed by him.
But that's pretty logical.
I don't get this one at all unless it has something to do with fusion or the oil companies.
I mean, there's nothing.
How about this?
How about what is the entire GDP at the moment built on?
On hyperscalers.
All the money that is circling around initially, basically coming from one source, which is NVIDIA and others, and now Saudi Arabia.
It's all going into power, all going into power generation.
Not the data centers, it's the power for the generation.
So let's just presume.
I know I'm going out on a ledge here.
Let's presume that this is all about the MIT professor.
They got to do something to cover up the hit on the MIT professor because there's very little evidence.
Well, you know, we saw the guy around there on some ring door video cam kind of looked like him.
So that was him and he killed the MIT guy.
So perhaps this MIT guy, maybe he had something.
Maybe it was a huge problem.
Like, look, I now have a gigawatt in a jar.
I mean, I don't know.
How does fusion even work?
Well, fusion works by combining Elements like atoms get combined in such a way that after that combination, energy is given off.
Right.
Can you do it in a jar?
No.
Would it impact the world tremendously at this moment in time, right when everyone's putting all of this money into gas-powered energy?
It's considered the holy grail.
Okay.
So let's listen to the Secretary of the Interior, Interior, Doug Bergham.
Bergum with the money, honey, this morning.
Tournament How is the Secretary of the Interior, Doug Bergham?
Septure, great to have you.
Thanks so much for being here this weekend.
What about that pushback on data centers?
Well, the data centers, it's all about decision-making made between the locals.
I mean, there are examples, including in my home state, where your data center comes in, you get an agreement with the local electric prices stay the same for the consumers, the local farmers or ranchers, or it can even go down.
There's deals that are being cut right now.
We're proposing that if somebody wants to come in and build a data center, but they're going to build power generation with it, have some of that be behind the meter off the grid to run the data center.
But when they build the power, build extra so that they can put like an extra 20% back into the grid and help ensure that prices either stay flat or go down for consumers.
There is certainly right now the economics.
Electricity has never been worth more now.
A kilowatt hour has never been worth more now than it ever has been in any time in history.
Okay, that was the key point.
He says something interesting later on, but that was the key point.
So first of all, oh, it's the same or it's going down, but a kilowatt hour has never been more valuable than now, which means expensive, yes.
These tech companies that are driving up the stock market have a record amount.
The top five tech companies in America have almost $400 billion of CapEx they want to spend on power generation, as long again, with these data centers.
And a data center is really a place where we're manufacturing intelligence.
Did you know that?
Were you aware?
We're back, baby.
America is back in the manufacturing business.
What are we manufacturing?
Intelligence.
With these data centers, which clearly this guy was not first in line for.
And a data center is really a place where we're manufacturing intelligence.
Intelligence lifts every sector of the economy.
So we want more intelligence, not less.
And so localities that are figuring out a way to have.
I think he meant to say artificial intelligence, but he keeps saying intelligence.
Intelligence manufactured in their local area and lower prices.
Those are the folks that are getting it.
People that are blocking and stopping these projects from coming in are actually hurting every second.
They're hurting their universities.
They're hurting their schools.
They're hurting the national, U.S. national security.
Sounds to me like if someone figured this out, it's going to hurt our schools, hurt our universities, hurt our national security.
We got to kill this guy.
This guy's too close.
What are we going to do?
And I got a homeless guy in the basement.
Yeah, how can we set him up?
Give him 50 grand.
Yeah, we'll give him 50 grand and he'll give us the backstory.
And then we'll take this other, the Patsy, who may have killed himself months ago for all we know.
Yeah, this whole thing is just stinks.
It stinks.
But what's behind it, it may stink, but to figure it out is going to be non-trivial.
I don't think anyone's going to do it unless it just straight up fusion.
Well, I think the first thing we need to do is establish the true link in Portugal with these two.
I'm skeptical of that.
I'm very skeptical saying it.
They just say it.
For the gay lovers.
And, you know, it's like, hey, this guy's also from, he's from Portugal.
Let me go investigate.
That's like a Whitney Webb five months later type thing.
That's not something that just pops up, seems to me.
Yeah, it's something you can't just can't make a phone call.
And there's very little evidence that he killed the MIT professor.
There just isn't.
You know, this a ring cam video of someone walking by.
Oh, that's him.
He switched the plates.
You know, there are identical cars with different plates, you know, that also happens.
Yeah.
It's just a grey Nissan.
Yeah.
That's so rare.
I don't know.
I'm just skeptical.
Yeah, okay.
Well, that's, that's, we're never, we might as well just give up on that.
Yeah, we'll give up on that.
But let's stay with AI because it's always super fun.
And the first thing we'll do is we'll go to the farmers.
The farmers are now being hurt by AI.
Gaver Farm in Maryland isn't ready for the holidays.
We give them a thaw.
We give them a tree cart.
They find their perfect tree.
I know.
It sounds like a human interestory for Christmas time, but hold on.
The Christmas trees are pruned, the chocolate fudge displayed.
But Lisa Gaver, a seventh generation farmer.
Dude, have you tried the Little John's Candies fudge yet?
I've had their fudge before.
Did you get the eggnog fudge?
No, not because it was in the package.
The package just still was sealed.
We cut into one and it was eggnog fudge.
It was delightful.
I've never even considered that.
It's almost, it should be in the egg book.
The Christmas trees are pruned, the chocolate fudge displayed.
But Lisa Gaver, a seventh generation farmer, is struggling to enjoy the season.
You're in a fight.
We are in a fight.
What do you think your chances are of winning it?
I don't know.
It's going to be a long road.
Ho.
The fight is over proposed high-voltage power lines that would cut right through this 40-acre Christmas tree field.
Gaver is part of a group of Maryland landowners battling the proposed 67-mile line that would cross three counties to deliver power from Pennsylvania to Northern Virginia, an area where data center growth has exploded because of AI and with it, the demand for electricity.
All of that computer processing needs power.
In a statement, the utility company says the lines are necessary to power data centers in both Virginia and Maryland, as well as strengthen the power grid.
Farmers in Maryland tried to block surveyors from coming onto their property.
The power company sued to gain access and won.
Now the company is threatening to use eminent domain, which gives the government authority to acquire private property from the comp that company can the company can't call eminent domain.
Only the government can, correct?
Yeah.
But that's not what I heard them say.
And one.
Now the company is threatening to use eminent domain.
The company is threatening to use eminent domain.
They can't use eminent domain.
They don't have the right to do that.
Which gives the government authority to acquire private property for public use to go forward with the project.
Ah, we all need to manufacture more intelligence.
Sorry, ma'am.
The battle playing out in similar ways all over the country.
Suddenly, we need a lot of power, and we weren't planning to have to build that much.
There are multiple regions where new data centers are creating a surge in power demand.
Do we have the kind of power infrastructure in place right now in this country to be able to supply enough power to the AI industry?
We don't really at this point, but we're having to get very creative.
At Gaver Farm, the power company just left notice that its surveyors would be there soon.
They could show up anytime.
This is going into our busiest tree season.
We're just honest and good, hardworking farmers that didn't ask for this.
Tonight, Lisa Gaber vowing to keep farming and fighting.
Okay, so there's your Christmas AI power story.
This brings to mind there's something scammish going on here.
Hence the need to kill the MIT professor, yes.
Well, I don't know if it has anything to do with that guy, but the whole idea of, oh, we got to build out all these data centers out of the blue all of a sudden so people can do AI art, you know, or whatever they're going to do.
It just doesn't make any sense.
And we can't get a better voice.
It's just.
And we got that.
Yes, I was bitching to Adam.
You'll hear these songs.
We have our AI songs at the end of the show in the show mix.
And the voice is the same guy.
It's a sung kind of a Broadway version of Sinatra that is with a good range.
He's got range.
A range.
He's got range.
He's got a range, but it's the same guy.
And they can't see.
I'd like to hear somebody else, you know, besides this guy's voice.
I mean, it's much more important that we improve that voice than have farms.
I mean, come on, let's be honest about it.
And they're not going to do it.
There's something going on that's that maybe we're getting, we're going to have a flood of excess oil that's got to be burned off.
And we got to bring the and energy prices are too high already.
Every place in the country in California is ridiculous.
Well, all these municipal power companies, they all went to their city councils or state or whatever they had to go to and say, hey, we need to a little more room in our pricing because of the demand.
So we need anywhere between 15 and 25% more room for prices increases.
And of course, the city council people, they're all like hanging out with the AI boys.
Like, oh, we'll take care of that for you.
Yeah, but you're bringing jobs or whatever.
Yeah, they're not.
But this is where all the money is.
All the money right now is in building data centers, building the actual data centers, because, of course, we have a lot of NVIDIA chips that need to go somewhere.
And the power generation for it.
As far as I can tell, that's where all the money is going.
Or into, you know, is there a shortage?
Is the demand for AI services so high that it's coming to a hole?
No, no.
Well, then what's the point?
The promise is if you just give us more power, Captain, if you just give us more power, then AI will really work.
We're almost there.
That's all I hear.
Really work doing what?
Getting that voice you want.
That's a little coding issue.
I think they could fix that.
No, I think it's harder than it looks.
All right, well, let's move from one fraud to another and go to Minnesota.
Oh, I was still on AI, but okay.
If you want to.
Oh, do you have any more AI stuff besides just complaining?
Because that's all I'm going to do.
Oh, you can complain, and this happened in your, in, oh, here we go.
Let me say it.
In your neck of the woods in the Bay Area.
Yarren McLaren used her debit card for gas at the 7-Eleven in Panol.
She went inside to buy a Powerball Dory.
Wow.
What?
Yeah, this is just ⁇ this is not a good story.
This is just ⁇ yeah, I know what happened.
Okay, then I'll end the clip.
Just give us the story.
Okay, well, I'm actually funny because I was going to get this.
You might as well play the clip because it might have the little kicker in there.
The gas stations were charging 1,000 times more.
Like if you bought a $20 gallon of gas, it was $20,000 or $2,000.
I think it was 100 times more.
100 times.
And it was all because of a software fix.
Yeron McLaren used her debit card for gas at the 7-Eleven in Panol.
She went inside to buy a Powerball ticket, but her card got declined.
So she used her cell phone to check her bank account right there in the store.
And then that's when I got the shock of my life.
That trick of gas that I put in wasn't $79.34 like I had thought.
It was $7,934.
7-Eleven charged her 100 times what the amount should have been.
Yeri told me the clerks were not helpful.
And they didn't shut the pumps down until I threatened to call the police and the Better Business Bureau.
After many calls and emails, 7-Eleven finally refunded Nyeri's $7,900 and gave her an extra $500 for her trouble.
How did this happen in the first place?
An internal company email obtained by the iTeam sites, a recent software update, and says, it appears the decimal point moved over for the pending transaction.
7-Eleven's corporate office in the magic moving decimal point.
It just moved over.
You mean someone made a coding error?
The decimal point moved over for the pending transaction.
7-Eleven's corporate office in Irving, Texas, tells me that a payment processor error affected six doors.
7-Eleven emailed me.
We are actively working with a payment processor to reverse these charges as soon as possible.
But this customer has not heard from the company, and it's been more than a week.
Yeah.
So the story I wanted to give you but couldn't find a clip for was the power outage in San Francisco.
It wasn't huge.
It was 130 homes and businesses.
But the minute that happened, and this was Richmond, Sunset, Presidio, Golden Gate.
So did you even see any of that or hear anything about it?
No, 130 houses.
This is common.
Yes.
It's normal for California.
Well, anywhere.
But the Waymo cars all stopped the minute that happened.
Oh, that's interesting.
They just parked right in the intersection, like wherever they were, they just stopped.
Yeah.
Really going to have to fix that.
Yeah.
Well, this story about the credit card run-up of 100X has some dubious aspects to it.
For one thing, when you have a debit card, it usually has a limit that's reasonably low because they're always fearful that debit cards are going to get ripped off.
That's typically with most cards is 400 bucks.
Yeah, good point.
You can't get a $7,900 bill on a $400 limit debit card.
It just can't be done.
So there's that element.
Wait a minute.
I don't know.
The news is just full of crap today.
It's just all.
I think it's just that way all the time.
No, what?
Yeah, gambling.
Which brings me to a clip.
I mean, we could play the Minnesota fraud clip, but I want to play this clip because it's kind of floating around and I thought I'd play it.
This is from 2018.
This is Megan Kelly.
And this just shows you, this is when she was working for NBC and she was, you know, had to get a million.
$60 million contracts.
Some ridiculous contract.
And so when you're working for somebody at that kind of money, you say what they tell you to say.
You end up with something like this.
And I always want to say, this is classic media problem.
This is the media in a nutshell.
It just epitomizes everything that's wrong with the M5M.
People with me on stage right now are all transgender kids who want others to know it is possible to transition socially with love and support and acceptance within a family and a community.
Please welcome 16-year-old Nicole, 12-year-old Daniel, 14-year-old Gia, 15-year-old Landon, and 13-year-old Stella.
Good morning, everyone.
Also joining me, also joining me in our special audience is Gira Goldstein, who's a transgender woman who is the co-founder, along with Jen Grosslandler, who you just met, of the Gender Cool Project, a new movement that is being launched today.
We're going to tell you all about it, and it's actually really important.
So, all right, welcome to you all.
Everybody nervous?
Everyone sufficiently nervous?
So if anything, you're proving that Megan Kelly will say whatever she has to for money because now she's so anti-trans, it's not even funny.
Yeah.
The comparison between the two.
So did she have an awakening?
No, she had a different pay.
Gold.
She has a different person signing the checks.
I mean, this is the problem with everybody in the media that they can't, they're dishonest.
This is just basically dishonesty.
I just have one series of clips.
I see you have a clip from PBS, but I got a couple of clips from it because I thought it's something it was my beat.
So I'd like to take the surveillance pricing, if you don't mind.
The reason my clip, which you should probably play initially, confirms that the problem was the terminology.
And I didn't fully understand because you're going on and on about things, prices and the rest of it.
And we had a letter from one of our producers that talked about how they change prices at the stores.
They don't do it that way.
Well, no, but what he said, he was saying, oh, surprise, surprise, you pay more when Instacart delivers it.
That's what he was saying.
Yes, the Instacart prices is different.
You play my clip and then you can play yours out.
If you're going online to buy some last-minute gifts, there's a chance the price you'll pay will be influenced by what's known as surveillance pricing.
That's the practice of some retailers to use the power of AI to sift all sorts of personal data to set individualized prices online.
Things like your age, gender, geographic location, and even browsing history could change the price you pay.
Allie Rogan spoke with Jay Stanley, senior policy analyst for the Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project at the ACLU.
Thank you so much for joining us.
So what is surveillance pricing and how does it work?
Surveillance pricing is basically when companies gather a huge amount of data about their individual customers.
And we're living in an era where more data is being collected about us than ever before.
Companies take that data and they use it to try to figure out basically how to wring more money out of you when you buy things from them.
What is your pain point?
What are you willing to pay?
Questions like that.
And there's a widespread experimentation happening with that kind of pricing in a number of business sectors today.
Yeah.
So that, yeah, that basically is my first two clips.
It's good because now I can continue on, get a little bit deeper into this.
And of course, this is really machine learning.
He'll say AI, which is just a code name for machine learning.
This has been around for a long time.
It's just more data, by the way, when you have more data centers and you have AI sucking everything up into the corpus, that's kind of handy.
And they have real brain scientists working at these outfits, specifically when it comes to pricing, at recommendations, pricing, price points, et cetera.
How do I know?
My sister, PhD, works for one of these companies and is actually, well, she does the, she helps customers implement it.
But this has been going on for a while and it's only gotten better.
So what are some examples of that?
How are these companies using the massive amounts of data that exists about all of us online to give us these?
I've heard it described as like personalized pricing.
I mean, right off the bat, there's a lot we don't know because, number one, they're going to claim trade secrets.
Number two, they're using AI, which is very opaque in the first place.
Even the businesses may not understand what the logic of the AI they're using is.
But this first came into public attention when the president of Delta Airlines, speaking to investors, said that they were planning on using AI to set an increasing proportion of their prices, their airline prices, and that they would use personal information about people to do so.
That created a bit of an uproar in Congress and elsewhere.
And Delta backed off and said, no, we're not going to do this.
But it really put the issue, which has been out there for 10, 15 years on a low-key level, really put into the headlines recently.
And so we're seeing attention by Congress, by state legislatures, by the Federal Trade Commission and others.
There was a recent report that Instacart has been doing differential pricing.
A consumer group did a test and they found that 75% of the products in Instacart were getting set with different prices with different people, with some of the prices 23% higher than for some people than for others.
The Wall Street Journal has reported that retailers like Home Depot were setting different prices for different customers with customers in affluent areas actually getting charged less.
I think that there's a lot we don't know about what's happening, but it's definitely going on.
As a quick aside, FTC announced that Instacart paid a $60 million fine in consumer refunds, I should say, to settle a lawsuit over allegations it engaged in deceptive tactics.
It almost to me sounds like, oh, man, if you leave us alone on this, we'll settle this bit of it.
And the deceptive tactics were they automatically enrolled you in some things without telling you, but it wasn't really about this differential pricing because that's it.
There's a difference between dynamic pricing, and that's a terminology.
So dynamic pricing, it changes based upon demand at the time and differential or surveillance pricing.
Here is this guy to explain.
Can I ask you just an overview question?
Yeah.
How does this surveillance pricing differ from where people pay different amounts of money?
From going into a car dealership and dickering about a car price and then coming up and down and going back and forth with the manager and coming back and forth and back and forth.
And so I pay $52,000 for the Chrysler and then you go in there and you really are good at it and you pay $48,000.
Somebody else pays full ticker price $60,000.
How is that different?
Well, there's a negotiation that took place.
There's no negotiating in this.
There's no way you can say, I don't want to pay that other than I don't want the service.
Don't you think there's a virtual negotiation going on?
Because for example, the little kicker in that little report there, he said that people in affluent areas paid less because people in affluent areas, sometimes the reason people are affluent is because they pay less than cheap.
They don't buy retail.
So the legalities, I have two clips.
The legalities in the second quip.
In the second clip, first let's define the difference between the two, which you kind of need to understand where it probably isn't legal what they're doing versus your car dealership example.
What is the difference between this type of surveillance pricing and some other examples and types of differential pricing that we've seen out there already, like dynamic pricing?
I think that the core element of surveillance pricing or personalized pricing is that it's based on data they have about you.
It's different from charging more for an umbrella when it's raining.
It's different from Uber charging different prices at different times of day depending on the amount of demand for their cars.
Although there have been allegations that Uber, for example, charges more to people whose battery is about to die.
By the way, I thought that was phenomenal.
And it makes total sense.
Your Uber app is monitoring your battery level.
And if you're ordering an Uber and your battery is at 5%, they're going to jump.
Yeah, they're going to jack your price up.
Is that data available?
Can anyone confirm that?
Oh, absolutely.
I mean, you just say, yes, I agree to all the things that this app can access.
I've never seen, I've looked at those lists and I've never seen one about battery.
Absolutely.
All of them have a version of it to know if they need to go to sleep.
Should they be in the background?
They always ask you, can we have access to batteries?
They always ask for access to the photos and all the other bullcrap to your address book.
I've never seen anything about the battery.
But okay.
I mean, I'll go along with the idea because it is a good idea if you think about it.
Let me just see.
Let me see.
I'm pretty sure.
Well, I mean, that's the claim that's being made.
We'll go with it.
But if somebody out there, I've just never seen it.
Both Android and iOS have battery APIs that allow developers to see the current charge level, whether the device is plugged in or not.
Then you'd have to give them permission for that.
I've never seen it on the permissions list.
It'll say, can we app developers post in the troll room?
And allegations that Uber, for example, charges more to people whose battery is about to die and things like that, that would be personalized pricing.
Uber has denied that.
There can be very complex and sometimes subtle differences among the different types of pricing, and that can make it complicated.
But at the end of the day, they have a lot more of information about the way the world works, about how different people react to different pricing than any individual does.
And they are seeking to use that advantage in information against individuals.
Okay, according to Gemini, I'm just going to take that because they're a Google shop.
Under the privacy rules for both Android and iOS, battery level is considered low-risk information because it doesn't reveal your identity or your private files.
The system allows apps to see it automatically without showing you a pop-up.
Does that answer your question?
That answers your question.
It doesn't answer my question.
It answers my concerns.
Oh, I'm glad you're going to be picky about language.
So let's find out what's legal.
But all of this is legal, right?
And the corollary question to that is what regulations exist or should exist to put some guardrails around this practice.
It's not totally clear that it's legal.
It's a bit of a legal gray area.
There are, for example, privacy laws, state privacy laws, such as California's, that may have things to say about this and the way data is used.
There are civil rights laws that have to do with discrimination based on anything based on ethnicity, religion, age, gender, disability status could get a company in hot water if what they're doing starts to implicate those things.
There are state consumer laws, and then there's the Federal Trade Commission, which has a charge to go after deceptive and unfair trade practices.
And there could be claims that some of these fall under that.
And in fact, the FTC has been investigating this.
They did an investigation, a report last January.
And there's a Reuters report that they're looking at it again under the current administration.
So if you're a business that are doing this, you are not necessarily on solid legal ground.
Is there anything that consumers can do to protect themselves from the possibility of being targeted with surveillance pricing?
Yeah, stop eating groceries.
Stop.
Just don't eat fruit.
It's difficult.
I mean, at the end of the day, a lot of these are bigger than any one of us.
They're social questions.
For example, I mean, one of the big problems here is that so much data about us is being collected and flowing to the companies that give them advantages over us.
And that's because Congress hasn't failed to pass an overarching privacy law.
Oh, that's right.
Almost all the other sort of advanced industrial countries have done.
That would cut off the flow of data at the source that is fueling this kind of strategy.
But certainly you can do your best to hide your identity when you're searching for prices.
You can do your best to protect your privacy and be aware of it and check and see whether people you know are getting charged the same price.
So to answer your question, you are the answer to the question.
How about this?
You said don't eat fruit.
You can eat fruit.
Go to the store and buy the fruit.
It's the Instacart.
It's all these people.
Oh, I have everything delivered.
I mean, come on, you want to stop this problem?
Put your phone in a drawer.
There it is.
The attack vector is always the phone.
All your information, all your behavioral information.
The attack vector is the phone.
That's a great phrase.
That's it.
But it is.
It is the number one attack vector in all of our lives.
When you scroll and you just pause, boom, another data point.
Exactly.
It's true.
When you see the puppy, you're like, oh, slow down.
You see the cooking demo?
Ah, oh, you're perfect.
You'll get ads for cheese.
Jeez.
Grated cheese.
You need to grade it.
Degraded already.
Ads for cheese is what you get.
Cheese, man.
I'm telling you, cheese.
It's all about the cheese.
And just winding it all up, 15 seconds, because this is, along with your phone, this is attack vector number two.
Late today, the owners of TikTok signing a deal to sell the app to mostly American investors, including Oracle and Silver Lake.
The sale has been in the works for months.
Congress passed a law last year banning the app in the U.S. unless it was sold.
President Trump has postponed the ban through a series of executive orders.
So from what I understand in the deal, they don't get the algo, which is, I don't know, the point of the whole thing.
That would, well, eyeballs.
They get the eyeballs.
Okay.
So how much eyeballs?
They're all Silicon Valley guys.
They don't think of algos.
They figure out we can do our own.
This is the classic American thing.
I remember this story.
This is from years ago.
Here we go.
When Micheloe was sold to Budweiser.
Yeah.
Was it Dark?
Yeah, this is a long time ago.
And so Micheloe sold to Budweiser.
It's a German beer, a very famous beer at the time.
It's in the 70s.
Was it not the king of beers?
No, Budweiser is the king of beers.
And so Micheloe was a German beer with just a beautiful lager.
And they sold it to Budweiser and they said, we'll send you our brewmaster so you can make it exactly the same.
And the Budweiser people said, hey, we know how to make beer.
Forget it.
With rice.
And that's exactly.
Yes.
And so that's the way it is in Silicon Valley.
We can do algos.
Forget it.
Yeah.
Well, so they don't need the algos.
They just wanted the eyeballs.
That's Silicon Valley eyeballs.
Yeah.
Well, I'd love to know a little more because this was such a, this was the number one deal months ago.
Oh, everyone.
Oh, China, China's seen.
Everyone, hair on fire.
And now it's just, yeah, Larry Ellison bought it.
Okay.
We knew that.
We know he's doing it for Mossad.
We know he's doing it for the Jews to spy on us.
I got a note from somebody.
Hey, man, what do you think it feels like to be on the other end of those quips you guys are making?
I said, do you even listen to the show?
Yeah.
What does he say?
What was that supposed to refer to?
Well, he was hurt whenever I make a joke and say, well, it's for Mossad.
The Jews are in control, which is obvious.
I mean, this is what you said.
You made such a good point.
Satire and mocking should not be done.
Sarcasm.
Sarcasm.
Sarcasm should just not be done.
No, because people don't get it.
No, and then they think that I'm serious about it.
Yeah, you're a big promo side guy.
Funny enough, I don't get any of those people with their name in brackets saying, Yeah, you're right, Curry.
They're not falling for it.
So, I don't know.
Guess it's me.
That's true.
It's funny.
You're right.
They're not falling for it.
Those guys.
Those guys aren't falling.
Which is who you're mocking.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They just keep posting in the troll room.
Dear Curry, you're part of the problem.
All right.
Adam Sandler, Adam Curry.
Just noticing.
Adam.
Adam Carolla.
Yeah.
Just noticing.
That's the term you got to use.
I'm just noticing.
I got no punchline here.
You might have to.
No, this is curry.
There's no punchline.
All right.
Off you go.
Jake Paul.
I've been waiting for Jake Paul.
I mean, I saw the ads on Netflix.
I saw the ads.
I'm like, wow, this is the fight of the century.
Let's watch a Christmas movie because I'm not interested.
So I guess she was.
Paul goes out.
Okay, this will be the eclipse before the break.
Yeah.
Jake Paul got beaten up by a real heavyweight, not an old guy or anything.
A guy who's just pretty much just recently.
The guy was a head taller than him.
Yeah, he's a monster.
And he was two weight classes ahead.
Busted Jake Paul's jaw in two places, knocked him for a loop.
Oh, no.
Just basically put him in the hospital.
Oh, wow.
And so here's a good kind of report.
I think this is from the BBC.
Whit old doctors have fitted YouTuber Jake Paul with two titanium plates to fix his jaw, which was broken in two places.
They've also removed several teeth.
Mr. Paul sustained the injuries during a fight with two-time heavyweight boxing champion Anthony Joshua last night in Miami.
The fight has been described by some as a dangerous stunt, not least because of the height, weight, and experience difference between the two men.
It was streamed live on Netflix and was worth millions to both of them.
But I've been speaking to boxing journalist Gareth A. Davis, and he's been explaining why it was such a controversial bout.
Boxing is an inherently dangerous sport.
I've covered it for 35 years.
People pass away and get killed in the ring.
And that was the fear for Jake Paul, that the golfing experience in class was so enormous, apart from the size as well, because Jake Paul is a few weight divisions below Anthony Joshua, that people feared for his safety and his health.
Look, he got a beating.
He had his jaw broken.
He had some teeth altered by Anthony Joshua.
Eventually beat him up in the sixth round after marinading him for several rounds, maybe carrying him a little bit as well.
So it was a one-off.
But Jake Paul's an anomaly, Rebecca, because he is an extraordinary young man with 70 million followers online, and he wants to push the boundaries of things.
And I say an anomaly because he was an athlete growing up and he's fallen in love with boxing over the last five years.
It was a horrible mismatch in many ways, but for some reason, for the modern audience, it's very compelling.
Yeah, this is where we are in our culture.
This is where we're at.
Wait a minute.
As you sound like you're condemning it, you are the one always advocating for public executions on television.
So let's make sure we remember that.
Yes, if I have the television deal, if I can be the production with Brunetti.
Yes.
You're cutting me out of the deal already.
No, no, for now.
You're the announcer.
You're the talent.
Ladies and gentlemen.
Okay.
Now connected by thousands of megawatts brought to you by meta because we got to get a sponsor in there.
Yeah, Meta or NVIDIA.
Okay, let's go at part two, Jake Paul.
As you say, you know, a lot of risks being taken by YouTuber Jake Paul then, but also risks for Anthony Joshua.
I mean, he doesn't want to unnecessarily damage somebody who probably shouldn't actually be in the ring against him.
Yeah, there's that.
There's two sides to that as well with Anthony Joshua.
One, and some people have accused him of being embarrassed by Jake Paul that he was able to go five or six rounds with him last night here in Miami at the club.
Oh, no, that was for the prop bets, no doubt.
This thing was rigged to the hill.
Sent to the home of my Miami Heat, the basketball team, because people were shocked that Jake Paul was able to be so elusive and Joshua missed him.
The debate is, did Anthony Joshua take it easy on him till the fifth or sixth round when Jake Paul got tired?
Should we be allowing this kind of event?
I spoke to Robert Smith, the secretary of the Boxing Board of Control in the UK, and he said he'd never have licensed it.
So there is a bit of criticism of the bout.
I believe that myself as well.
I don't think this kind of mismatch should be allowed or sanctioned again.
I think this is a one and done.
As you say, what does this do to the actual sport of boxing, though?
At what point does it sort of become exhibitionism and actually away from the very technical nature of the sport of boxing?
Jake Paul was actually pretty good last night, better than anyone thought he was going to be.
But overall, I think it doesn't do a lot for boxing.
It did a lot for their bank balances.
They both earned in the region of 50 million each last night, I believe, 50 million US dollars.
So it's extraordinarily big in business terms.
And it will be a huge audience on Netflix, which is the bigger picture here, by the way, as well, with what's happening because of the resonance of 300 million subscribers to Netflix who are getting in the sports broadcast streaming business.
Yeah, Netflix deal.
Yeah, makes sense.
50 mil.
Netflix.
Well, I wouldn't, would you get your jaw broken in two places for that kind of money?
I like cash flow.
Well, it would be flowing.
And that blood flow.
Okay, here's the kicker.
All right.
The funny thing is, Jake Paul had his jaw broken last night, and within half an hour, he's in the hospital putting pictures on Instagram of him in the bed and the kind of x-rays of his jaw being fixed, almost like a trophy from something he had achieved on the night.
You know, and tens of millions of people have viewed it on Instagram.
So we have to be careful about what the game is here.
Yeah, it's all about the clicks.
The odds for Joshua to win in round six were 12 plus 1,200.
Is that a lot?
Yeah, that's a ridiculous.
That means you'd have to bet $1,200 to win one.
So Joshua round one, $250, round two, $350, $5, $900, $6, $1,200.
And then go the distance.
Right.
So those odds don't seem to be put up correctly.
Yeah.
But moneymaker, whatever the case it was, there was probably, I think when you said prop bet, there's probably some element of truth to that.
Yeah.
You know, let's do this and then we'll do that.
Besides getting, if you, it's not like 50 million is not enough.
No, but let's just get all of our friends in on this deal.
Let's just, let's just face it.
Netflix is the king.
They figured it out.
They know what we degenerates really want.
We want this kind of blood with an influencer.
I mean, can we get Candace Owens to get in the ring with somebody and get beat up?
That would be interesting to watch.
Well, people would flock to see that.
Yes, exactly.
You know, I got a note from one of our producers who dated an assistant director who has worked on some of those Christmas movies I was complaining about.
Yeah.
It looks like the guys come out of gay porn.
Yeah, because the guys come out of gay porn.
According to this assistant director, who this person dated, the directors, producers, and some talent are indeed from the porn world.
We're cheap.
Well, the problem was that this woman who worked as an assistant director hated it because the overall vibe on the set was dead, dry, and boring.
Zero creativity.
Yeah.
It makes sense.
Just like the category.
Yeah, they can't do dick.
Hey, and with that, I want to thank you for your courage.
Say in the morning to you, the man who put the C in carrying the water.
Say hello to my friend on the other end, the one, the only, Mr. John C. DeMoray.
Yeah, in the morning here, Miss Anna Curtain tomorrow.
Should I see a boot telegraphy in here?
Subs in the water at all.
Aim is a night sound.
1698 today on the trolls.
$16.98 listening live to the best podcast in the universe.
You know, so people, Jason Callicanis is now saying, oh, the All-In podcast is the best podcast in the universe.
He didn't say that.
Yes, he did.
We should have trademarked it.
Yeah.
But he can say what he wants.
It hurts his credibility because he listens to our podcast.
He knows it.
He knows it.
I think he's saying it just to see if we're watching his podcast, which, of course, I'm not, but my spies are everywhere.
You might be correct.
My mommy's spies are everywhere.
A lot of people like his podcast.
Oh, it's a very good podcast.
And he's well, he's and he's clean-shaven.
He has a.
It's odd to see him with the big glasses and the clean shaven.
Yeah, he looks like, you know who there was a he he look.
I know it's going to, it's probably not going to go over well with you, but with him, he probably might like this comment.
But he looks a little like George Clooney.
No, he does not.
Yeah, I saw Clooney in one of his movies when he went in that black and white film.
He had his hair pushed back flat and he just was roaming around doing some goofball thing he had likes to do.
And I looked at him, I said, that looks like Callicanis.
He looks like Callicanis has an oddly looks enough like George Clooney that it's noticeable to me.
He looks like an accountant.
You know, like a CPA type dude with the glasses.
Like, I'm here to do Naksen's.
Welcome to the podcast.
I'm just telling you what it is.
He also did some speech therapy, doesn't he?
I know.
We badgered him enough.
Yeah, well, he used to talk like kids.
And he doesn't talk like that anymore.
Now he's clear, very clear.
And all this week, there was on my timeline, somebody somewhere said, well, Tom Green invented the podcast.
Tom Green?
What?
Well, that's off the wall.
Because Rogan was on his video.
He was doing a video show from home or wherever he was.
And Rogan was like, I got to be doing this.
That was kind of the spark.
But Joe Rogan has long, long since confirmed where it came from.
But it's just interesting how people like, oh, I was at WMAU in 1932 when we were putting up our WAV files on real audio.
We were podcasting before Curry came up with the name podcasting, which I never came up with the name.
The whole thing is like, you know, it's skewed.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, people have just decided that a podcast is, you know, some people with cans on talking at a table.
That's a podcast.
They don't, the technology is no longer understood, honestly.
You know, it's just not understood.
It's like, and to be kind of fair about it, I mean, we did the initial idea for the RSS feed with the enclosure was because we were on dial-up modems, practically.
Well, yeah, we had ADSL.
We had kind of always on computing.
The idea was your computer would download the mainline into the house.
Yeah.
ISDN, ADSL, the early cable modems.
They weren't really fast.
It wasn't click and you get the experience right away.
But that was the whole genesis of it.
So now, but what people miss about it is that if you don't put it on RSS feed and distribute it that way, you have no control and your audience can be eliminated from you.
And then you got to go cry and go, they demonetize me.
That's the part that people are missing.
So I don't care.
I mean, I was just there.
I don't even think I invented it.
It just through God.
It was a gift from God to the universe.
I was just the guy.
Well, I know who invented podcasting.
It was you.
And everyone can, you know, make up any story they want.
Who cares?
It doesn't matter.
It was just interesting.
I'm working with the original, the OG.
Yeah, OG.
Yes.
That's the only reason, by the way.
It's not because you like me.
Because it's a business.
It's like a business.
Attracted to the dollar signs.
How'd that work out for you?
Well, it didn't work out as well as I'd hoped.
But it's beside the point.
We have a good product.
Outstanding product.
It's the best product in the universe, people.
Come on, get with it.
So, yes, you should be listening to this on a modern podcast app because I haven't stopped.
We continue to improve what is being done.
And I love that Apple is picking up on what we're doing.
They make no money off of it.
They really don't.
The lost leader.
It's good for them.
It's very good for them.
You have to have a lost leader if you're in business.
Yeah, well, they got it.
They got their lost leader.
Congratulations, Apple.
You're losing money because of me.
And John C. Dvorak is making money because of me.
There you go.
I'm your meal ticket, baby.
That's it.
So get a modern podcast app, one that does all kinds of cool things, like listening to shows live when they're being podcast, when they're being recorded, actually.
Be a part of the live suit of the audience.
Become a part of the troll room at noagendastream.com.
And we did actually, I think no one has ever questioned us on the value for value concept.
And we did name that value for value.
And we learned that just because we're students of behavior.
It's our own version of, what was that term?
Begging for money.
Surveillance pricing.
This surveillance begging for money.
Yeah, you're right.
It's begging for money, surveillance.
I have to say this, so I'm getting, I got to, I do not understand why people don't understand the value for value concept and how it works.
Well, who says that I get it?
I got a thing from 404 media.
They said, oh, we got this, that, and the other thing.
We got all this new story for subscribers only.
It's like, what do you mean for subscribers only?
You know, there's never been a moment where journalism is behind a firewall to such an extent as it is today.
You could, even when newspapers were out there and they cost 25 cents, you could still go to the library and they had these sticks with the newspapers on it.
Yes, the roll-up sticks.
Big giant stick.
And the newspaper would be, and you'd read the newspaper free.
It was free.
It was always free.
When television came into being, it was always designed to be free.
And people would say, well, I don't like advertising.
So they created public television.
They said, no advertising.
Just give us some money if you want to donate.
And it was the same.
That was the value for value thing.
It's like, and the churches, of course, have been using value for value forever.
They don't charge you to go into the church.
No.
You go and you want to hear a free sermon.
You can get it.
You don't have to give them money.
But if you feel it was worth something, you give them money.
It's not a big deal.
And it's a very common practice and it works.
And the fact that people put stuff behind firewalls, especially journalists, and I'm including Matt Taibbi in this, he does it.
It's not right.
You know, I don't think I've ever told you the story, but when Tina was first going to church here, and I was doing the show, same as I've always been doing it.
But I like to get up at seven o'clock and then do the prep and do the show and go through in one deal.
These days I get up early, prep, go to church, come back, prep, and then we do the show.
But I would be watching it on YouTube.
And so to me, it was just, it was YouTube and I was seeing this YouTube stuff the whole time.
And she come home, we discuss it.
And then so eventually we have a dinner with Pastor Jimmy and his wife, Day Manette.
And the first thing that comes out of my mouth is, oh, Pastor Jimmy, I love your show.
And he starts cracking up.
And I'm like, he says, yeah, I guess it is kind of, Tina's like, oh my God, what did he just say?
I said, yeah, you start off.
You got your worship team, which is Christian for band.
Then you got your promos because they got promos.
Then you get your donation segment.
Then you got your deconstruction.
And then you wind up with another song.
It's a complete show.
And yet, they are the OG value for value.
And they just say, hey, do you want to support us?
This is where it's going.
This is what we're doing.
This is what happens with it.
And no one's holding a gun to your head.
You're absolutely right.
But we studied some of the big mega churches early on, didn't we?
Yeah.
Yeah.
There was a guy who put a book together.
I can't remember the name of Breaking the Glass or something.
He tried to buy all the books back because it was too revealing.
And it was a megachurch.
That is true.
And it had all the tricks and every little thing you can do to get more money out of people.
And it was like, wow, these guys know what they're doing.
The megachurch guys are no slouches.
They've got a lot going on.
And they come in from all kinds of dimensions.
They're very talented at maintaining a big operation.
I always love the guys like, who's that one guy?
He's kind of icky.
He has like three jets.
And then some girl rounds.
Oh, you're thinking of Copeland.
Copeland, yeah.
Copeland's the ickiest of the group, yeah.
And some journalist comes up and starts at the airport.
And he's like, no, no, I went to spread the gospel around the world.
I flew for 26 hours.
You know, it's like, I don't know.
I don't know.
That seems a bit much.
One of my favorite guys on this group was Robert Tilton, another Texas preacher.
I've heard of him.
Robert Tilton, yeah, he's kind of disappeared.
He did a lot of, he would, he would, he would scrunch his face up in all kinds of weird contortions.
That's what you do when he talked.
And it was just like, wow, you couldn't keep your eyes off him because he was always scrunching his face up.
And then he would just out of the blue while just saying whatever he was talking about, go right into tongues.
Yeah, you're not supposed to do that in public.
Well, he does it, did it all the time.
And he was very, very entertaining character, but he was, he always seemed like a scammer, like a lot of these guys seemed like to me.
But the one I still like the most, I think, in terms of just his ability to do, not that this is not boring people stiff with this discussion, but I still think Joel Osteen is one of the he's very successful, but I think he's underrated.
He is, I think he's incredibly talented guy.
You know, what's interesting about him is he takes no money from the church.
He gets all his money from his books.
Is that what he says?
Let's send our accountant, Jason Callacanis, to investigate.
Hey, go see him here.
Investigate.
See what's going on with money flows.
Anyway, so that was a little discussion, a little side street we took there on value for value.
We accept multiple versions of value for value.
Turns out churches use this as well.
We didn't even know this when we said time, talent, and treasure.
I love it when people send me some pastor who's talking about time, talents, and treasure.
This guy must be listening to the show.
That's right.
Even though this has been going on for hundreds of years.
But I didn't know it at the time when we came up with it.
So one of the ways you can support the show is with your time, with your talent.
You can organize meetups.
You can help us.
We have Sir Donald Winkler stepped up.
He's doing a really nice Christmas special for us for Thursday.
And he says, there's really been a lot of really nice discussions around Christmas on the show.
He says it's going to be very nice and happy and friendly.
And I'm like, I don't believe it.
I'll see it when I hear it.
So that's an incredible.
And he says, you know, I used to be able to donate a lot of cash, but after COVID, things got really tight.
And so I'm really happy I can support the show.
And that makes me equally as happy as anything.
How about you?
Yeah, I love the volunteerism aspect of the show.
It's fantastic.
Such is the art, which, of course, is.
The volunteerism of these art machines that are cranking this stuff out with the prompt jockeys that are now considered themselves artists.
Yes.
It's a fabulous new era.
Consider themselves our.
So Scaramanga sent me a note because he did an end of show mix for the show.
And also on X, he put it, he did a video for it, which is always kind of cool.
It's like a bonus.
And he says, no, I got no problem with it.
He says, I just feel like.
Didn't Scaramanga turn against us on the old No Agenda social once before?
I think this is his personality.
BPD, babe.
Maybe.
He's doubling down.
He's doubling down.
No, I don't think so.
Apparently, as some kind of supermodel wife, which now it all makes sense.
Oh, now it makes sense.
Right.
It makes sense.
He's preoccupied.
He said, maybe we should limit uploads to two or three.
He says, there's just too much slop.
I said, that's, we're not, we can't limit how many times people want to upload.
The other thing, the other thing he ignores, since we're the art directors in this regard, even though, you know, we're not technically, but yes, we are technically.
Yeah, but is that you want everything?
We, you know, it's like the photograph.
You know, there's two kinds of photographers: the guys who always make the perfect shot, and the guys who take 1,000 pictures.
It's called Spray and Pray.
And they just take 1,000 pictures and they find one of you that looks good.
Yeah.
We know we don't.
There's no reason to limit.
If you want to submit 100 pictures, if there's 100 of the exact same picture, don't do it.
Don't, don't.
But, you know, be judicious.
Yeah, it was kind of, I took it a bit like, is that a slight against us?
You think we can?
Yeah, we're not telling people what to do.
No, we're not telling people what to do ever.
That's our motto.
But you should support us with your cash.
Yeah, we tell them that.
Yeah.
So Jeffrey Rhea did the artwork for episode 1826.
We titled it The Sauerkraut Kid, which is the German version of Noodle Boy.
And I couldn't argue with you on this one.
It was a pretty piece of AI.
No agenda, Curry Dvorak, got a little microphone there, always so original.
Little microphone and little transmitter waves.
But it's stuff you hated.
Yeah, but it said, give these guys a bonus.
And I little money bags and gold coins.
And yeah, how could I argue with that?
It was our subliminal messaging.
Give these guys a bonus.
Yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
So we chose that.
We chose it over.
Oh, man, there's already a lot up there.
Darren's been doing a lot of comic book-looking covers.
Yeah.
I don't know how to do it.
Well, we kind of like Darren's eggnog, no agenda eggnog.
Yeah, we did like the eggnog.
That was probably came in second.
Yes, it was a classic.
Do you like the comic book, the media deconstructionists comic book punk rock album work art?
Yes, I did like that.
I like the one next to it, too.
I like all these comic book ones, but they're not going to you since you hate them to such an extreme.
You said hang it up, print it out and hang it on your wall if you like it so much, man.
And I did.
But we did give a special mention to Blue Acorn for the disappointed Scaramanga walking away from his easel.
Oh, yes, that was cute.
It's on page two.
And we also had Jeffrey Ria with the razor blades and the bread.
Yeah, we didn't think that was a great connection to make with the show.
Like we're putting razor blades in.
No.
Yeah, it was an associative issue.
Yeah.
People have to understand that a little bit.
What people did send me is because this came about as we were talking about, I think we were talking about PC Magazine and photographers.
And they, and so people sent me that wired picture where you were supposedly in a trench coat looking like some kind of spook.
That was done.
Yeah, that photo.
It's a good picture.
You know, it's a great picture.
I had him give me a copy of it.
That was done with an infrared filter.
That coat was actually dark navy.
Oh, different color.
Interesting.
It wasn't changed.
I mean, because it was an infrared filter.
The whole shot was done with an infrared.
Hold on a second.
Kids, come over to your boomer uncles for a second.
Back in the day, we'd go out with a camera and we had something called a camera case.
And this isn't like a case that you put around your iPhone.
So if you drop it, it doesn't shatter into a thousand pieces.
The case had things in it, like extra film.
It had different lenses that you would click one lens off and click another lens on.
And it had filters, which are these little pieces of glass, I guess.
I don't know what it was, plastic glass.
And you would screw those onto the lens itself to get certain effects.
Can you believe how analog the world was back then?
So that's what he shot.
And yeah, it was a funny picture.
Cute.
But that was finally, that's the one we finally ended up with.
That was shot over at Golden Gate Fields at the horse park.
And that was after he tried to get me to jump stand on my head, you know, stick my tongue out, all the other stuff that I say that you just refuse to do.
And so I kept refusing to do everything until that picture came out.
I did that.
There's all kinds of ugly troll talk about you and Jolie O'Dell.
I'm just going to have to look away from it.
Jolie O'Dell.
Yeah, I want to look away from it.
They're saying horrible things.
What's Jolie O'Dell got to do with idiots?
Nothing.
Nothing.
And then, of course, the fabulous interview with the hit piece that turned out to be not a hit piece.
I got all that now.
I got all of it.
I have an archive now of Dvorak's scandalous moments.
Oh, yeah.
Hey, that's why I'm working with you, man.
So I can build up an archive of scandalous moments.
So congratulations to Jeffrey Rhea for bringing us the artwork.
Now, we already see a lot has been uploaded.
We appreciate everything that you do.
Keep on prompting.
Sometimes an actual artist pops up.
We do pay attention to that.
So extra points if you do it.
Noagendaartgenerator.com.
And we always want to thank everyone who supports the show financially.
We'll mention everybody $50 and above.
And we start in this portion of the program with something we have deemed our executive and associate executive producers segment.
Why?
Because just like Hollywood, when you really are financing the whole deal, which can pay off in spades in Hollywood here, we just give you part of the payoff, and that is a credit right there on the show in the show notes.
You can use this credit anywhere Hollywood style credits are accepted, including imdb.com.
$200 and above, you get an associate executive producer credit, and we will read your note.
$300 and above, you get an executive producer credit, and we will also read your note.
And back with a vengeance with $501.56, which I presume is some fees were added, is the NoAgenda Shop, NoAgendashop.com, which is fantastic.
Noagendashop.com is we have a deal with them, which consists of no deal.
You can do whatever you want.
Just send us a lot of stuff.
They sell nice hats.
They sell beautiful hats.
They sell all kinds of good stuff.
And No Agenda Shop says, they're in Georgia, by the way.
ITM, John and Adam.
Sorry for being MIA so long, but AI and the decimated economy have thrown me overboard.
Ben overboard.
I had to focus all my time on staying employed.
Thank you for your consistent courage and any positive karma you can throw my way.
Well, of course, we'll give you some karma and karma is always positive.
You've got karma.
Okay.
So now you have James Morin in Jackson.
Oh, Jackson, California, which is a cool place.
500 bucks from him.
Merry Christmas.
I heard you guys talk about AI advertisements in the past and wanted to share this experience.
When I talked to Claude, which is supposed to be the kindest, gentlest AI at the time.
Is that true?
Yeah, that's what everyone says.
It's kinder and gentler.
When I talk to Claude about LL, and I've never used it about LLMs.
It always recommends itself as the best.
Well, the coders say that Claude is really good at coding.
Is that right?
That's what they say.
I don't know.
Well, they probably would know what they're talking about.
He says it's the best, but the other day I was asking about AI data center water usage and Claude threw open AI and chat or and GPT-4 under the bus, talking about how much water they use.
AI manipulation is already here.
Yes, indeed.
Those guys stink.
I also wanted to share that I've created a pirate AI radio station and my friends and I build celebrity DJs for the station.
By far, the best DJ has been DJ Trump.
Sharing one of the most recent segments for your listening pleasure.
I was inspired by Adam's vibe coding and put together an ice cast and liquid soap audio stream for the station.
And he has it here.
You'll put a link into the thing, I hope.
Well, what he did was the link goes to DJ Trump, and so I downloaded DJ Trump.
He didn't actually link to the station, so I don't know what the state we do have.
GitmoJams.com is our AI slop station that MVP and I are running.
But have a listen to DJ Trump.
Folks, we're listening to Soundgarden here.
Tremendous band.
Really tremendous.
Chris Cornell had an amazing voice.
Maybe one of the best voices ever.
Many people are saying this.
Seattle Grunge.
But you know what?
Not electronic.
Fake news from the teleprompter folks.
Totally fake news.
This is pure American rock and roll.
The best rock and roll.
Some say better than the Rolling Stones, who, by the way, should pay tariffs.
They're British, not sending their best, but Soundgarden their Rs.
They're American.
And this song fell on Black Days.
Very dark, very powerful.
Nobody does dark and powerful like Americans.
Believe me.
Yeah, there you go.
Not bad.
Yeah, that sounds like it's good.
It could be a little better.
DJ Dross, a little bit of Callicanis in that for some reason.
I am an engineer.
I'm going to finish this note.
I'm an engineer working with AI Technologies.
And these things are fantastic for entertainment purposes.
I agree with him.
That's it.
James Morin in Jackson.
Jackson.
That's Gold Country, California.
Joseph Gass is from Wilmington, Delaware, and he sends 343.
We appreciate that.
We'll return the favor with an executive producer.
And since you didn't have a note, we will give you a double up karma.
You've got karma.
Look at this.
This is Matthew Martell in Blue Brumo.
Martell Hardware.
333.
Merry Christmas, everybody.
Repetition gets the sale.
At some point, you'll visit MartellHardware.com and use coupon code green eggs and ham for an additional 10% off your order.
JCD Hot Pockets.
Karma for everybody.
Hot Pockets.
You've got Karma.
Yeah, then I just want to insert a make good since that was our last executive producer.
The last show we had Parker, whose note got lost, apparently.
And let me see, he had some jingles.
I just wanted to read his note because he sent me a copy of it.
ITM Adam, it's an honor.
That's Parker Geiswite.
It's an honor to be called your mentee.
I am truly blessed to call you my friend.
I wanted to thank you again for taking me to visit Rogan.
It was truly an amazing experience.
Before listening to your podcast, I was lost and trying to find a sense of direction of what is real and fake in the media and pado sphere.
Thanks to you, I am now a Bitcoin maximalist.
You made me realize that the entire financial system is rigged, and it gave me hope for the future of our family ranch.
Everything is fake and gay.
Also, your guidance and wisdom have helped me open exploring my faith in God and Jesus.
And John, when my Texas AM Aggies win a national championship, I'll send you a hoodie.
Well, that's good news.
Yeah, well, send me the hoodie anyway because you already lost.
Hot pockets, mac and cheese, and jobs karma.
Hot pockets.
You slaves can get used to mac and cheese.
Mac and cheese.
Mac and cheese.
Macaroni and she'll melt together.
Mac and cheese, mac and cheese, mac and cheese.
Jobs.
Jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's go for jobs.
You saw karma.
And oh, go ahead.
It was me, but you're fine to do it.
Let me do this one.
Then you got an empty one next.
It's good.
It's good balance.
Yeah, I just wanted to say something.
Sure.
Texas AM.
I just do not understand how that team could only score three points and lose to the University of Miami in the playoff game, but they did.
How did the Horns do, the Austin Longhorns?
They're not in the playoffs.
Oh, so they suck even more?
Well, they never suck.
They just, you know, they're just not one of the best teams.
Because, you know, there's the big rivalry, the Hookam Horns versus the Aggies.
Well, the Aggies were far superior, but Texas did beat the Aggies head to head.
But here, this is Aggie Country by default here because Austin bad, just Austin bad.
So more Aggies here.
What about the Rangers?
Texas Tech.
What's their team?
Texas Tech?
I don't know.
The Techies.
Woo!
John Rucker comes in with a Bitcoin donation in the amount of 0.0033 BTC on behalf of me and Naeem Pinto.
A dedouching for both of us, please.
You've been deduced.
So we'll say that's the dedouching for John, and here's the dedouching for Naeem.
You've been deduced.
By the way, that works out to $287.75.
And he winds up by saying, more Africa news.
Oh, there's a.
Hey, there you go.
That's exactly right.
Yep.
If you send us value, we'll give you more valuable African news.
I think it's the Red Riders, by the way.
Strike, this is just a blanket.
287.68.
There's nothing.
Let me go to the next one.
To give this strike donor who sent in $287.68 to double up Karma.
All right, you got to send us an OK.
You've got.
Karma.
Christopher Graves.
Graves.
In Mount Ockham, California.
I still don't know where that is.
242.
Oh, this is, of course, our little John's guy.
Yes, Little John's.
Short and sweet.
That last stays until Christmas.
You already gave him a promotion today for their eggnog fudge.
Can we just order that?
Yes.
Go to little John'sCandies.com.
Use code IT.
Oh, I got the hiccups now.
Oh, no.
Use code ITM 10 plus 10.
Save 10.
Donate 10.
Little John's Candies, 242.
Good for them.
Sir Luca is in Walla Walla, Washington.
Sends the classic 234.56.
He says, Merry Christmas, Adam and John.
A jingle and a double karma request for Christmas.
Well, what is the jingle he wants?
It doesn't specify the jingle.
Oh, he does.
No, actually, he specifies it below.
I didn't even see this.
He wants a Scott Simon.
Okay, a Schott Scheiman, that is.
Yes, we've got a Scott Scheiman, Faba Health Karma, the Yak variety, and finish with a TPP Jobs Karma.
Okay, we're gonna have to have to put the we'll have to put it together.
There we go.
Sir Luca of the Southeast.
Suffering suckatash.
I'm Scott.
Simon.
Jobs.
Joe.
Jobs.
You've got.
There we go.
There we go.
You got it.
Rebecca Gladstone's up.
She's in Amherst, Massachusetts nuts.
2333.
All right.
Hello, Adam and John.
Please deduce my husband, Josh.
You've been deduced.
And this is on the Sunday before the Christmas episode.
And that's exactly right.
I think she put this note aside.
He hit me in the mouth over a year ago, and I'd like to gift him the title of Associate Executive Producer.
This is Switcheroo.
That's beautiful.
All right.
So that is Josh.
Okay.
Would you play the shut up slave jingle?
And I guess I have an apple in my room.
I guess I'll, oh, I guess I'll have an apple in my room.
That's the Peggy or whatever.
That's me, Gigi, on Gigi.
Gigi.
If you have it, readily available.
Thank you for everything you do.
And Merry Christmas, Becca.
Yes.
Well, I'll have to do that live because on Gigi is long gone.
Shut up, slave.
I'll just have an apple in my room.
Next we have, what is this?
This is a note.
Oh, this is from Suits and Boots.
This is from Sir Rob, the Constitutional Lawyer.
at callthesuits.com.
He has a whole, is this Chad GPT's got?
He's got all kinds of artwork on this.
All right.
An official injury lawyer.
233.33.
Regarding donations slash Switcheroo.
ITM, boys.
Sorry I haven't donated in a while.
We started the new law firm, Suits and Boots this year, and it's consumed all my resources.
Producers can and should check us out at callthesuits.com.
That's right.
If you have a hangnail, callthesuits.com.
They'll get you money.
December brings two special occasions that compel a donation.
First, my 33rd wedding anniversary.
Oh, yes, indeed.
Was on December 19th.
On that day in 1992, I married the love of my life, the beautiful and talented Maggie.
I agree.
She is beautiful and talented.
At the stunning St. Mary's Cathedral in downtown Austin.
Second, Maggie will turn and it has a big redacted years old on December 24th.
Yes, Christmas Eve.
But never fear, we always take care of her.
Kindly add her to the birthday list.
Done.
To mark these occasions, I've enclosed the check for $233.33.
Please credit this donation to Maggie and please deduce her.
You've been deduced.
So he says, he says, to mark these occasions, deducer, I respectfully request the 33 is a magic number jingle for obvious reasons.
Wishing you, your families, and all my fellow producers a Merry Christmas and a safe, peaceful, and prosperous 2026.
With love and admiration, Robert J. Cardy Jr., aka Sir Rob, the Constitutional Lawyer, P.S.
That Darren O'Neill is an asset.
Double his salary.
Done.
Done.
Consider it done.
33.
That's the magic number.
It's the magic number.
Douglas Murray in Missoula, Montana.
2-15-25.
You guys rock.
He writes.
Your show is triple tits.
71.75 times 3.
That's 215 to 75, I guess.
Wow, okay.
Also, you have, I don't know how I guess that would, okay.
Also, you have the best troll room in the universe.
Ah, no jingles, no karma love.
Digital.
Eli the coffee guy, 21221.
He always brings the date in with $200.
He says it's the last chance to wish everyone in Gitmo a Merry Christmas before the big day.
Thank you, Adam and John, for giving us something to look forward to besides presents under the tree.
And thank you to all the producers who gave the gift of Gigawatt this holiday.
You helped make our season bright.
It's never too late to send someone some coffee.
Just visit gigawattcoffeeroasters.com and use code ITM20 for 20% off your order.
Merry Christmas and stay caffeinated.
And Eli Darren O'Neal said he wants some coffee sent to him.
I don't know if you can put him on the free list, but you could practically deliver it because he's in Chicago.
You walk over there.
Yeah, Eli the Coffee Guy.
Thank you, Eli.
Indy in a meetup in Greenwood, Indiana, 205.
And we have a switcheroo that is the Indy No Agenda Meetup raffle winner is Dame Maria.
Oh, the organizer.
Yes.
Of the Greek kingdoms.
Maria's note.
Sir Mark and I wish all of our No Agenda family Merry Christmas and happy holidays and blessings to all and especially to Adam and John and all your families.
Karma to all and to all a good night.
With K. With a K.
Yes.
You've got karma.
So now we have two $200 associate executive producer donations without a note.
So I will combine their double up karma.
Thank you, Steve Peterson from Kingaroy, Queensland, Australia.
Let us know how things are going there in Kingaroy.
And Ian Sloan from Attedale, Washington, Western Australia.
Wait a minute.
Two Aussies in a row?
No notes?
This cannot be coincidence.
Please send us some notes to make up.
You've got.
Karma.
Very suspicious.
Linda Lou Patkin's up.
She's in Castle Rock, Colorado.
We know that.
200 bucks.
Jobs, Karma.
Need a last-minute gift?
Give the gift of a resume that gets results.
Go to imagemakersinc.com for all your executive resume and job search needs.
That's ImageMakers Inc. with a K.
And work with Linda Liu, Duchess of Jobs and writer of winning resumes.
Merry Christmas, Linda.
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Let's go for jobs.
You've got karma.
And finally on our list, we have Paul Krashulik.
Then I pronounce that properly because he sent a pronunciation guide.
He just said, Paul Krashulik, $200.
He's in Binghamton, New York.
Thank you very much.
And I also want to thank Lady Vox.
Lady Vox sent me a beautiful Christmas package with a card and some sockey salmon from she's in Alaska and some like a little box with salted fish.
Have you ever had one of those?
I had the sock.
She sent me the sockeye salmon.
Yeah.
Have you had it yet?
I haven't opened it yet.
No, I put it in the refrigerator, actually.
Yeah.
But did you try the salted fish?
I didn't see the salted fish.
All I got was a sockeye salmon.
Oh, well, you got jipped, man.
The sockeye, the salted fish is good.
It comes like in a, looks like a pack of a deck of cards.
Oh, I saw, yeah, I did get the deck of cards.
I thought it was a deck of cards.
So that I'm like, what kind of cards are these?
Wait a minute, that's fishy.
Yeah, salted fish.
Oh, I had the deck of cards put aside.
There you go.
Thank you all to these executive and associate executive producers for this pre-Christmas show.
1827 is the episode.
We appreciate what everyone does here to keep the best podcast in the universe rolling.
You can go to noagendadonations.com.
And that is where you can support us any amount, anytime you want to.
That is how value for value works.
No subscriptions, no hoops, no jumps, no levels, just whatever you feel the show is worth to you according to your own budget.
Just send that back to the show.
That's how you keep it rolling.
Noagendadonations.com.
Congratulations to these producers.
Our formula is this.
We hit people in the mouth.
I just got to play this one clip because it was so funny.
It's even better with video, but you'll get the idea.
This president just keeps on entertaining, as far as I'm concerned.
Sleepy, divisive, and a fan of a young Donald Trump.
These are just some of the descriptions to be found in a series of new plaques affixed below the portraits of all U.S. presidents, including Donald Trump himself.
While the plaques may look like many official markers, they are written in the style of one of Trump's true social posts and contain his haphazard capitalizations and numerous exclamation points.
They are the latest addition to Trump's presidential walk of fame, which he unveiled in September and contain many insults and unfounded claims about most of his predecessors.
Joe Biden, who was referred to as Sleepy Joe and by far the worst president in American history, is still the only leader in the world.
That's the actual plaque reading.
Not to have his portrait in a face.
Instead, a photo of an auto pen with his signature was used.
Barack Obama was deemed one of the most divisive political figures in American history, while Ronald Reagan was described as a fan of President Donald J. Trump before President Trump's historic run for the White House.
The White House confirmed the plaques convey Trump's opinion.
The plaques are eloquently written descriptions of each president and the legacy they left behind.
As a student of history, many were written directly by the president himself.
This installation is just Trump's latest effort to remake the White House in his own image and reshape U.S. history to his own viewpoint.
Well, that goes hand in hand with this clip then.
Massive troll.
I just love Trump.
No, he's a massive troll.
It's actually embarrassing.
This is the Trump renaming the Kennedy Center.
Oh, this is another good one.
Friday revealing the new Trump Kennedy Center to the horror of the late President John F. Kennedy's family.
Jeff K.'s niece, Maria Shriver, posting, it is beyond wild that Trump would think adding his name in front of President Kennedy's name is acceptable.
Next thing, perhaps, you will want to rename JFK Airport, rename the Lincoln Memorial.
The list goes on.
Democrats indicating action ahead.
We may not be able to stop it today.
Obviously, the lettering is going up, but let's just see how long that lettering stays up.
Ex-official members of the Kennedy Center Board said federal law established the center as a memorial to President Kennedy and prohibits changing its name without congressional action.
But Trump also moved ahead, rebranding the Department of Defense without congressional approval.
No opening an executive order today.
So far, no vote in Congress making the Department of War official.
That change, implemented worldwide, would reportedly cost $2 billion.
So by the way, the Democrats have changed Ford Hood to some other name, changing all these Fords and then tearing down statues and all the rest.
That was fine.
And by the way, it was named by LBJ a year after he was assassinated.
Probably more like LBJ, like, yeah, I did that.
You know, it's like, okay.
The president has also been very busy with his pen.
No auto pen with him.
The ensuring American Space Superiority Executive Order.
This is a doozy.
Yes.
My administration will focus its space policy.
Ah, we need a space policy on the show.
We do.
On achieving the following priorities.
Of course, leading the world in space exploration and expanding human reach and American presence in space by colon.
Returning Americans to the moon.
Returning.
Returning Americans to the moon by 2028 through the Artemis program to assert American leadership in space.
Well, we're already there.
Lay the foundations for lunar economic development.
Woo!
Prepare for the journey to Mars and inspire the next generation of American explorers.
Along with that, establishing initial elements of a permanent lunar outpost by 2030 to ensure... Israeli moon bases.
That's right.
To ensure a sustained American presence in space and enable the next steps in Mars exploration.
This is fantastic.
Enhancing, this is for Elon, enhancing sustainability and cost-effectiveness of launch and exploration architectures, including enabling commercial launch services and prioritizing lunar exploration.
Though we explored that thing already.
And then there's some missile stuff by 2028 to kill everybody.
Ensuring the ability to detect, characterize, and counter threats to the United space interests from very low Earth orbit and through cislunar space.
Cislunar space?
S-C-I-S-L-U-N-A-R?
What is cis?
I have no idea.
Is that like a white?
You have not talked to the robot for weeks.
I don't want to talk to the robot.
Situated between the Earth and the moon, cislunar.
Well, what is cisgendered then?
Between the earth and the moon.
Yeah, no, I've given up on the road.
The robot, it takes too long for the robot to respond.
If the robot could just, you know, you just say, hey, robot, and the robot says, yes.
Yes, master, what can I do for you?
AI just doesn't do that yet.
It's not a great conversational partner.
So the Zeds are at it again.
Oh, no.
Are they in Discord?
I don't know.
They don't say, and they don't even mention it as though it was a, you know, a Gen Z revolution or anything, but it's going on a Zed uprising once again.
This time it's in Korea.
And they kind of soft-peddled it.
I don't know exactly why, and I'm not absolutely sure who's behind it.
I mean, I still have to assume it's our Intel people, but I don't know.
But listen to this.
South Korea recently marked a year since President Yoon-suk-yool's failed martial law attempt.
While the country's new leader is trying to move on from the chaos and division, Mr. Yoon is finding new fans amid disaffected young people, to young people, did young people.
Earlier this month, thousands took to the street calling for Mr. Yoon's release from prison and claiming that his martial law was justified.
Our Seoul correspondent, Jake Kwan, sent us this report.
Hmm.
Okay.
Well, that's interesting.
Yeah, this is against China.
Wait a minute, so kids actually are going to the street saying, get a politician out of jail?
That's how the Jensen.
Yeah, this is that Korean president who declared martial law, if you remember.
It was during, you know, a couple of years ago.
I remember it.
He goes nuts and declares martial law for some reason and they throw him in jail.
And now the kids want him out because he was so loved by Gen Z.
It makes nothing but sense.
No, it doesn't.
It makes nothing.
They try to explain it as best they can.
I'm standing in front of the iconic Wangamen Gate where South Korean people gather every weekend to protest.
And in front of me are thousands of people here waving South Korean flag and waving a sign that says, release Yoon Seogyeol and martial law was justified.
It really has this air of a festival rather than a political rally.
One booth invited people to a mock presidential podium to declare martial law like Mr. Yoon had done.
Last December, in the middle of the night, Mr. Yoon had put the country under military rule.
He had made baseless claims that Chinese spies have stolen past elections and that the opposition party was complicit.
When Mr. Yoon was eventually removed from the office and jailed, it was considered his political death.
But now he has a new life among these young people as a hero who opposed the Chinese takeover.
This is Pak Joon Young, the leader of Freedom University.
He and his group of far-right students are behind these pro-Yun anti-China rallies.
Korean people's rights are being stolen.
Our sovereignty is at risk.
And the Chinese are coming in without visa.
The crimes are becoming frequent.
Their claims were refuted over and over by the government.
The police stats show, in fact, that the crime rate among Chinese is lower than among South Koreans.
Oh, this has us written all over it.
Doesn't it?
The whole Trump agenda.
Lock the borders down.
These Chinese are coming.
Just replace Trenderagua or Venezuelans or Haitians.
I can't wait until an actual Korean says, these Chinese are eating the dogs.
That will become victory comes close.
Their protests are more energized and provocative than any other this country has seen in a long time.
Most people joined us because of a simple message.
Korea is for Koreans.
Today, Pak's message, spread through social media, is drawing in young people who share his suspicion on China.
CCP!
27 years old.
There are times when I don't hear Korean on the street.
Even when I go to the corner store, I only hear Chinese.
That really scares me.
Here in Seoul, they wear red hats with the words, make Korea great again.
And if the American youth voters swung over to bring back an impeached president, why not in Korea?
For years, these people have held a deep grudge for what they saw as lack of opportunities and overbearing woke politics.
And when Mr. Yoon named the enemy, they signed up to fight.
See, unlike you, I'm going to give you a full clip of the day for that.
Clip of the day.
You always give me like weak, like borderline.
Oh, I deserve it so much.
That was good.
Well, that one was pretty good because you caught you off guard.
You only give me a clip of the day when it's something you never heard about.
Well, yeah, that's why it's clip of the day.
Of course, if I'd already heard about it, then I would be playing it before you because I control the clips.
I'd be like, I'm going to grab that clip of the day.
And then you wouldn't give it to me because, like, I had that clip.
Yeah.
That's how it works.
Exactly how it works.
So the motivation without the voice.
So this is, you're right.
This has got us written all over it.
It's pretty good.
And they got the hats.
Maca.
Really?
Maca.
Maka, Maca, McCaffrey.
Wait, make Korea great again.
Makga.
Mukra.
Make Korea great.
Yeah, make Korea great.
Yeah, well, they probably have it in Korean.
It probably has a different to it.
I'd like to get, by the way, anyone.
Any Korean listeners?
I want the hat.
We want a hat.
It's in Korean.
Yes, we want a hat.
So the Mo prophecy strikes once again.
Mo's prophecy, if you recall, was all of the DEI ladies who were put up in important positions.
Yeah, set up to fail, blamed for everything.
In this case, I believe that DC's police chief, Pamela Smith, probably was really set up.
She is being accused of fudging crime statistics.
And so she's resigning.
And then in her resignation, she says, no, no, no, I didn't change it.
They changed it, insinuating that they are blaming her.
And she had quite a meltdown over it during her resignation speech.
Never would I compromise my integrity.
Never would I compromise 28 years and law enforcement for a few folk who couldn't stand to be held accountable.
And if I had to do it all over again, I do what you do.
So she waits.
So she pulls out the angry black woman as a methodology.
What is she nuts?
Let's continue the clip.
So I'm going to the Bible when I say this to my haters.
F you.
The same folks who said in that report that they changed their numbers and I did not.
The report is very clear.
I did not direct anyone.
You should investigate those folks.
So I tend to believe her, but you made an interesting point there.
When I heard, and I had to listen to the clip three times, I'm like, I have heard this lady somewhere.
This is going to come across as very racist, but no one will be able to argue with me that this lady doesn't sound like a different lady.
Never would I compromise my integrity.
Never would I compromise.
Everybody in Cleveland, no minority got Obama falls.
Keep Obama in president, you know?
He gave us a phone.
Come on, man.
It sounds a lot.
You love that Obama phone girl.
Everybody in Cleveland, no minority got Obama fall.
Keep Obama in president, you know?
He gave us a phone.
You know, I got the note from our female black producer.
She's like, do you only play black women when they're mad?
I'm like, well, it's the funniest.
We play the funniest clips.
And she said, how about Nikki Minaj?
I'm like, send me a link.
She didn't send me a link.
Anyway, I just saw that Nikki Minaj was on stage at America Fest with Erica Kirk.
I'll get some clips for the next show.
Nikki Minaj is, she's got her head on straight, man.
It's very surprising.
She's taken, I think she can be an important part of the movement in America for the young, the young kids.
She got something going on.
Well, she's been, like I said last show, she's been a Republican for a while.
Yes.
She voted for Romney.
We have to remember that.
Romney?
Romney sucks.
Let me hear that lady again.
I love her.
Everybody in Cleveland, no minority got Obama fall.
Keep Obama in president, you know?
He gave us a phone.
Oh, she doesn't have the Romney sucks in there.
I got to get the Romney sucks part.
Anyway, that was so another Mo prophecy coming true as far as I'm concerned.
Yeah, I always thought it was a good prophecy.
Let's go talking about angry black women.
Let's go to the Minnesota because they, oh, that's right.
Hakeem Jeffries is the guy.
Angry black woman, Hakeem Jefferson.
So here's the Minnesota fraud, two clips, and one of them, I think, the second clip when Hakeem Jeffries comes out, is hilarious, but I kind of have to agree.
Here we go.
The chairman of the House Oversight Committee is warning he may issue subpoenas if he does not get cooperation from Minnesota officials over the billion-dollar taxpayer fraud scheme in that state.
Officials say this could just be the tip of the iceberg across the country.
Chairman James Comer says Minnesota's governor and attorney general have provided only minimal responses so far.
Here's Congressional correspondent Bill Maluzhan.
They got nothing to run on except complain about this.
So you complain at me, you bring it at me, but I'll have it fixed and then we'll see how you talk about it.
Minnesota Governor Tim Waltz defiant today as House Republicans accuse him and Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison of stonewalling their investigation in a widespread Somali social services fraud in the state.
Well, they're not cooperating with us.
They're acting like there was no scandal.
And if there were a scandal, they didn't have anything to do with it.
Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer tells Fox Walls and Ellison's initial response to the committee's questions was, quote, anemic, providing no substantive information on how Medicaid is paid out in the state.
We're going to start bringing people in.
We're going to start subpoenaing people.
We're also going to be looking at bank records.
That's my favorite way to conduct an investigation.
On Thursday, automatic attorney in Minnesota announced that at least half of the $18 billion paid out by Medicaid to Minnesota-run programs may have been fraudulent, with at least 14 programs exploited.
The magnitude of the fraud in Minnesota cannot be overstated.
It's staggering amounts of money.
Yeah, I've been following this and reading some of it.
It's pretty brazen, particularly the Autism Fund.
You know, basically, they were setting up autism, what is it, therapy stuff.
And they just grab some Somalis.
Hey, kid, go like this.
You're autistic.
In you go.
And they just took the money.
Yeah.
Yeah, they were taking money left and right.
I mean, for a country whose average IQ in Somalia is 65.
Oh, well, there you go.
They qualify.
These guys are pretty smart for 65.
Right?
About taking money.
I think there's some scammish underlying thing going on here.
But here's the, of course, the Democrats are all in.
Yeah, they're fine.
These Somalians are great.
Yes, they're great.
House Republicans are expressing outrage about the fraud on social media, pointing the finger at Governor Walls.
But House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries isn't impressed with Chairman Comer or his committee's probe of Minnesota's leaders.
Do you think they should cooperate with the committee's investigation and do you have concerns about what's happening in the state?
James Comer is a joke, an embarrassment, an unserious individual, and a malignant clown.
So clearly, there's still some bad blood there between Comer and Jeffries after a dispute about the Epstein files last month.
As for the Minnesota fraud, Congressman Comer tells Fox that he is prepared to subpoena Governor Walz to come in and testify before the House Oversight Committee if Walls doesn't cooperate with their investigation, Brad.
Bill, sometimes these things take time.
What's the next step here?
So you heard Congressman Comer talk about wanting to get those bank records.
He said specifically what he's looking for, things called suspicious activity reports.
He wants to try to track what, if any, money was sent from Minnesota back to Somalia, who was sending it, who got it, how much of it was taxpayer dollars.
All right, we'll follow it.
Bill, thank you.
Yep.
But will they be able to nail waltz is the question?
They won't be able to nail anybody if comer's involved.
This is where I agree with Jeffrey.
He says he's a joke.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, what happened to Hunter Biden's laptop?
We're going to connect the Biden crime family because all I get the bank records.
That's what he's a big banker.
Oh, so look at this.
The money's coming from here to here to here to here.
And here it is.
It shows that there's a bunch of corruption going on.
They're just stealing money left and right.
And what then?
So?
I mean, it's just at some point you have to be annoyed with certain people that just talk a big game.
Do you have anything nice for us to leave on before we thank people?
All we're doing is grousing.
Everything is a scam, man.
Everything's a scam.
The whole world is a scam.
I'm going to show my school by donating to no agenda.
Imagine all the people who could do this.
Well, we have a few people who think, I was looking for the clips to see if there's anything I could actually go out on that was positive.
It's all like this, except that, you know, another oil tanker was seized.
Oh, that's fun.
Yay.
Yeah, well, it's free oil.
That's true.
That's true.
So, you know, free oil is good.
So we have a few people more to thank, and there are people that donate $50 and above.
And Adam's going to read them off for us one at a time.
Yes, I shall.
We start with Legacy 3r LLC in Dallas.
What do you think Legacy 3rd LLC is?
I don't know.
We'd have to look it up.
I wonder what they do.
Must do something interesting.
Well, thank you.
Yes.
No, I was going to say they donate.
They donate, which is good.
Thank you very much.
$198.
Dame Rita, Sparks, Nevada, always coming in.
$168 today.
ITM John Adam.
Merry Christmas.
Thank you.
Nathan Cochran.
There he is.
Franklin, Tennessee from Mercy Me, 123.45.
It's always the introverted bass player who's really supporting us.
Where are all these other guys?
Where's the drummer?
The drummer's never going to donate.
It's only Nathan and Mike and, you know, I'm going to be and Barry.
That's it.
Julie Noll, Glenn Day.
What happened to our Weezer drummer?
I think he's man overboard.
I think so, too.
Julie Null, Glendale, Arizona, 123.45.
Thank you, PayPal, for $118.50.
Glad you're listening.
Karma Ovandipur.
Karma Ovandipur, maybe.
Allen, Texas, $100.
Megan Coffold in Grove City, Ohio, $100.
Thank you.
Maria Rickert, Hong Nutritional Healing.
Maria Rickert from Hong Nutritional Healing.
Westport, Connecticut, where all the Hoity Toities live, $100.
Thank you to another Bitcoiner.
Just came in to strike.
No notes.
So we don't know who sent us the $94, but we appreciate it.
And PayPal, underneath the strikers with $92.96.
How does that even happen?
It just says PayPal.
I don't understand.
I think that could be refunds.
Do we get these refunds because we use the PayPal account for buying stamps and things that ship out the rings and things like that?
And so PayPal gives you money back if you use their card.
All right.
All right.
Well, thank you, PayPal.
Tatiana Prince, Marlboro, New Jersey, 89.
Kevin McLaughlin, Concord, North Carolina.
He is the Archduke of Luna and lover of America and boobs.
He says, I love boobs and the U.S. Constitution and sends us the requisite $80.8, 8008.
Chris Perry, Silver Spring, Maryland, 77.77.
I figured out what that is.
77.77 is $69.69 plus fees, believe it or not.
Wow.
Yes.
Well, he sent me a note about it.
Art Tucker in Berhambacht in the Netherlands, 77, so that's probably a 69.
Lydia Terry Dominelli, Rochester, New Hampshire, 75.
Monica Lansing, Drayton Valley, Alberta, Canada, 6576.
Nicole Weerman in Tualatin, Oregon.
Tualatin, 55.55.
And Sir Patsy in Bellevue, Nebraska.
Double nickels on the dime, and it's blue, so I'm going to read the note because he's becoming a knight.
He says, ITM, Adam, and John, this 5510 pushes me over another $1,000 donated.
Accounting attached.
I'd like to bestow a knight.
Oh, a knighthood on my brother, Darius Miller.
So it's a knight switcheroo.
Please deduce it.
You've been deduced.
Though he has never donated his own cash, to my knowledge anyway, he has hit a lot of people in the mouth.
Three of those people have gone on to become knights, including myself.
He's a great example of what spreading the formula, propagating the formula, can accomplish.
Please knight him, Sir D. If we could get him some Weller Antique 107 bourbon and fried catfish nuggets for the roundtable, I know he would appreciate it.
Jingles, chemtrails, and that's true if possible.
Much love.
Merry Christmas from Sir Patsy.
It's true.
No, it's not the one we wanted.
That's true.
This is the one I wanted.
That's true.
No, that's not the one either.
We have too many.
It's true.
Is this the one?
Is this it?
We welcome in.
What is going on?
Chicks.
There we go.
That's true.
Got it.
I knew it was labeled right.
Zachary D. Barker from Beaver Creek, Oregon, also double nickels on the dime.
Kent O'Rourke in Frostburg, Maryland, 5272.
Ronald Ronald Montesano, 5272.
Ryan Asito in Argyle, Texas, 50.
These are the 50s.
Terrence Boyer in Tuscola, Illinois.
Andrew Gusek in Greenborough, North Carolina.
Todd Voss in Davenport, Iowa.
And C.T. from Parts Unknown, $50.
Thank you very much to all of these producers and those who came in under $50, which we won't mention for reasons of anonymity.
And of course, again, our executive and associate executive producers.
We really do appreciate everything that you do.
And you can support us for the next show.
Now, the next show will be a best of.
Doesn't mean you can't support us.
In fact, we encourage it.
So the show on next Sunday will be an extra long for thanking all the people who've sent us their Christmas wishes.
NoAgendadonations.com is where you can support the show.
We are the best podcast in the universe.
Except no imitations.
We are the best podcast in the universe.
Noagendadonation.com But we do have important people there.
Dame Nikki Ray turns 55 on December 23rd.
And on the night before Christmas, we say happy birthday in advance from Rob Cardi, our constitutional lawyer, for his beautiful wife, Maggie.
She'll be turning redacted years old.
Happy birthday from everybody here at the best podcast in the universe.
So we got one night, and there is the sword.
Here you go.
One for me.
Ooh, a nice one.
Darius Miller, hop on up, sir.
You are about to become a knight, and apparently you deserve every single piece of silver coating on that ring.
Thanks to your brother who hooked you up in the amount of $1,000 or more.
I'm very proud to pronounce the KD as Sir D. You are now an official knight of the No Agenda Roundtable.
For you, we have Hookers and Blow, Red Boys, and Chardonnay.
Perhaps you'd like some Weller antique 107 bourbon and fried catfish nuggets.
We got them here for you at the roundtable, along with geishas and sake, bak and vanilla, bong hits and bourbon, sparkling sidear, and escorts, gin drill, and gerbils.
We got breast milk and pablum, but as always, the favorite of the roundtable is the mutton and the mead.
You, sir, head on over with your brother, perhaps to noagendarings.com.
You'll see the handsome signet ring that we bestow upon the knights and dames of the No Agenda Roundtable.
With that, a certificate of authenticity and some wax which you can use to seal your important correspondence, just like Lady Vox when she sent it to me.
It was nice.
It's always fun to see this red sealing wax with the night ring embedded into it.
Thank you all very much.
Time for the meetups.
No one should be up.
Yep.
The meetups is where you will find your future mate, perhaps, or for sure connection that gives you protection.
The producers you will meet there will be your responders in a first, in a first responders in an emergency.
And of course, we had the big Indy NA meetup with Sir Mark and Dame Maria.
Dame Maria received the credit from the raffle.
And of course, we have Annette, Dame Annette Miller, who gave us a little report from the Indy meetup.
Hi, this is Sir Mark.
And this is Dame Maria in Minus 13 Celsium here, having an amazing time.
And it's so good to end the year with this No Agenda family.
Merry Christmas to all and happy new year.
Sir Benny here, and actually, Adam, we're going to take your example of hearing aids tomorrow and go see the J-Bros and see if they're any good later.
In the morning, Dame Swine.
Merry Christmas, John and Adam.
It's Annette in Millville, and I hope you guys have a great one.
Also, shout out to Cindy and Gary and it's Emily and Bruce.
In the morning, Dame Trinity have a great time in Indy in the frozen tundra at nine degrees.
In the morning, John and Adam, Sir PBR Street Gang, still working on my gay British accent.
In the morning, this is Syrup of the Maple, and I'm giving Sir PBR Street King a really hard time trying to master that gay British accent.
In the morning, John and Adam, this is Nick, and I'm still working on my straight American accent.
Wait, what?
Hi, this is Christine.
I work at the Blind Owl Brewery, and I had the pleasure of serving this wonderful group today.
And I even won a prize in the morning.
Merry Christmas!
We denounce everybody.
They are the best group.
I tell you, we denounce everybody.
Thank you all very much.
And thank you for getting your server in there.
We love that.
Yeah, this is the kind of fun you can have at a No Agenda meetup.
And if it can happen in Indiana, it can happen anywhere.
Coming up, we have a meetup on December 23rd, Tuesday.
This is the North Idaho Sanity Brigade, and they sent in a promo.
Dreaming of a just like the ones I use.
Yes, reverse cultural appropriation will abound since I, Sir Scott the Jew, will be hosting the North Idaho Sanity Brigade's Christmas party this Tuesday, the 23rd, at our usual haunt, the Trails and Brewery in Coe d'Alene.
Yes, that's Cordeline.
That number again is Coeur d'Alene.
Great food, great beer, and some of the best company in Gitmo Nation.
Maybe I'll even kick in some of that Jew money and we'll crowdfund a donation as has become our tradition.
Hope to see you there and remember, joy to the world, even though the world's a scam.
Core Delane.
Got it.
Rhymes with Core Delane.
I'll never forget.
On Friday the 26th, that's Boxing Day for some of you.
A recalcitrant Christmas hangover meetup will take place at 2:33 p.m. in the Backyard Social Club in Clovis, California.
Oh, Sue Recalcitrant, Crazy Steve II will be hosting that.
And on December 27th, that's Saturday, the Fort Wayne Club 33 NVIDIA Navidat post-Christmas meetup, 3 o'clock at Cibola's Mexican Grill, and that is in Fort Wayne, Indiana.
And the final meetup for this year, December 30th, Evansville, Indiana.
Want to find all these?
Want to get some details?
Hang out with some cool people.
Go to Noagendameetups.com.
You'll find it all there.
If you can't find anything there near you, you know what you do?
Start one yourself.
It'll be easy and a hoot nanny.
Sometimes you want to go hang out with all the nights and days.
You to be where you want me, trigger to hell.
You to be where everybody feels the same.
It's like a party.
And it's time for man versus machine.
That is the moment when we select our end of show ISO.
And it has just become a man versus machine competition, as I tend to choose humans who say something cute or funny.
And John chooses to use robots for this segment.
I have a real one today.
You mean a human?
A real human.
Do you want to play your real human first?
No, I let you play yours and I can defer.
I had a great time.
Let's go.
I don't like how that cut off.
Here's my second one.
On it like a hobo or a ham sandwich.
Okay, that's all I got.
Wow.
Yeah.
Well, sorry.
I mean, I can't just prompt my way to success like some.
So let's go with the real one.
This is dump.
Massive dump.
A massive dump.
No, that was the real one.
Okay, so there we'll go to machine.
Machine?
I don't see machine.
Oh, no, no, no, I'm different.
I got you.
I got you.
Yes, you're welcome.
Let's start with capture.
It's not audience capture.
It's audience rapture.
Okay.
I like the writing.
I like the writing.
It's okay.
Okay, here's the other one for effort.
These boys get an A for effort and an S for sexy.
It's a little too long and a little too contrived because let's face it, we're not sexy.
Okay, let's go to Fab.
What a fabulous show.
No, I think it's not audience capture.
It's audience rapture.
I think that's the one.
It's the way it says rapture that just gets me.
I love it.
Hey, everybody.
I'm sorry.
What do you want to say?
I was just going to say the weird thing about those three clips.
It was the same voice.
Oh, yeah.
That's the voice that for some reason, if you change the speed, it turns it to a different person.
And now, everybody, just in time for Christmas, it's time for John's tip of the day.
Green master you and me.
Just the cheap with JCD.
And sometimes Adam.
Okay, people always want a Costco wine recommendation, so I'm going to do one.
Yeah.
This is a cheapie.
This is the idea.
It's a cheap wine for people who want to have something that's drinkable.
It's quite good, surprisingly good, for $6.99.
Whoa, that is a deal and a steal all in one.
What's super cheap?
And there's two versions.
There's a $14.99 version, and there's a $6.99 version.
The $6.99 is better because you can buy two bottles of that for the same price.
So this is a new wine that just showed up.
This is a 2023 Kirkland Cabernet Sauvignon, Sonoma County, California, 2023.
It's got a maroon label.
The words Cabernet Sauvignon.
That means it's military.
It's got a maroon label, and the Cabernet Sauvignon is what's highlighted on the label writing.
It's just this Cabernet Sauvignon real big.
It's $6.99.
There's one that also says Napa Valley, same thing, only it's got a navy blue label.
It's $14.99.
It's not as good as this in terms for the price, that's for sure.
It's a very, if you give it an hour to breathe, so it breathes a little bit, airs out.
This is a just neither one of these wines tastes like Cabernet Sauvignon, by the way.
What do they taste like though?
They taste like a really good quality wine, a good table wine, a general, you know, a blend, a Bordeaux blend.
Cabernet has a very distinctive flavor, and I always expect to find, hope to find, hope to find it in California wines.
I find it less and less because nobody's blending for it anymore.
They've gotten to this idea of, well, let's just blend all these grapes together so it tastes like a Bordeaux.
If it tastes like a Bordeaux, I'll go buy a Bordeaux, cost a buck more.
And those little wooden crates are better.
But besides that, this is a very drinkable, perfect turkey wine that is cheap.
And so this is your Costco tip of the day.
Okay, so I think I will buy some of this Costco cheap wine because the kids were telling me, I call them the kids, they're in the 30s, that the hip drink these days is a mixed drink of red wine and Coca-Cola.
Have you ever heard of this?
I have, actually.
What is it called?
It's called a disgrace.
Noagendafun.com, tipoftheday.net for all of them.
Christmas nails it.
Just a cheap JC Green.
And sometimes Adam.
Created by Dana Bernetti.
And that, ladies and gentlemen, is a perfect example of the comedic stylings of John C. Dvorak and Adam Curry.
As set up Alley U. Bam!
Two points right there.
Can't get that from your AI.
Uh-uh.
Not going to happen.
What you also can't get is the show that's coming up after we vacate the stream.
That will be Hawk Story with my man Fletcher there up a little bit north in Texas.
And end of show mixes, very Christmassy themed.
We've got Scaramanga with his sweater puppies, MVP with the files coming to town, and Baron Darren O'Neill with a Gibbon Nation Christmas.
You will not want to miss these.
They are all in the show notes because it's AI slop and no one cares about the rights.
No one makes any money.
So please make sure you tune in for our special Sir Donald Winkler end of special show on Christmas.
And of course, we'll be back on next Sunday.
So have yourselves a very Merry Christmas coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country right here in Fredericksburg in the morning, everybody.
I'm Adam Curry.
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where it remains inclement.
I'm John C. Dvorak.
We'll see you right after Christmas.
Until then, take care, everybody.
Remember us at NoAgendadonations.com.
Adiosmo, folks.
A hooey, hooey, and sun.
Look at those Christmas sweater puppies.
Oh, what a sight.
Bouncing so merry and bright.
Those willy wonders wrapped up so snug.
Make this old Santa, wanna give them a hug.
Christmas sweater puppies.
Jing, jing, jingling all the way.
Best gift under the tree any day If Santa asks what I want this year, I'll point to your sweater and whisper those two Christmas sweater puppies.
Oh, what a delight Keeping me warm on a cold winter's night.
Those woolly wonders wrapped up so tight.
Baby, you're making Christmas feel just right.
Christmas sweater puppies Jing, jing, jingling all the way.
Merriest, cheeriest, happiest holiday.
Christmas sweater puppy.
Better watch out.
Keep your lawyers nearby.
Don't delete the cloud.
I'm telling you why.
Epstein files are coming to town.
They're making a list.
Todd Blanch checked it twice.
Some names were redacted, but some aren't so nice.
The Epstein files are on their way down.
They've got the grand jury from the Florida case They've got photos of passports and every rich face They know who signed the birthday book though they claim it's all a fake They know who took the payoff check for goodness sakes Oh you better watch out Don't start to cry The transparency act means you cannot hide
Bring down the clown, knock down.
Where's my sundown rubbed down?
They see Bill on the tarmac.
They see Dawn at the club.
Dersh with a nurse, Woody Allen, just palin'.
They see the Lolita quotes and the island sub.
They've got the flight manifest from the private jets.
And hundreds of thousands of docks that we haven't seen yet.
The files are near, yeah, the list is coming.
Midnight Friday deadline passes, nothing to see here.
It's Christmas time and get monation
It's a wonderful season of giving The best gifts come right from the heart And make life worth living really pop Add a cup of gigawatts from Eli the coffee case Just watch your holiday spirit fly
Possum, you just need cows, magic blossoms Or if a new job is what you need There's Linda Lou with the Image Makers With a chaos So make all of your lists and check them at least twice And if you need a little help, here's my bud
Some homemade coffee from Little John's Candy Shop will make Christmas morning really pop.
Add a cup of gigawatt from Eli, the coffee die.
Just watch your holiday spirit fly.
If you're feeling sore and moving like a possum, you just need cow's magic lavender blossoms.
Or if a new job is what you need, there's little ooh with a mimic baker's ink with a cake.
Christmas kid monation.
Mofo.
Vorak.org slash na.
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