Sheila Gunn Reid guest-hosts Rebel Roundup, where David Menzies reveals Rebel News won a court order to access leaders’ debates—mainstream media like CBC (80 staff) resented their "double coverage" despite legal battles. Keean Bexte exposed Greta Thunberg’s Tesla packed with single-use waste and dodged election-advertiser scrutiny, while her team canceled Ezra Levant’s Calgary book signing due to NDP/Antifa pressure. Rebel News, funded by subscribers ($8/month), fights deplatforming unlike state-backed CBC or print media bailouts, vowing to challenge Canada’s media bias with unfiltered election coverage. [Automatically generated summary]
I'm Sheila Gunread, and you're listening to a free audio-only recording of David Menzies' Friday night show Rebel Roundup.
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Welcome to Rebel Roundup, ladies and gentlemen, and the rest of you, in which we look back on the very best commentaries of the last week from some of our favorite Rebels.
I'm your host, Sheila Gunread, filling in for the intrepid, as always, David Menzies, as he's out on the road chasing all that election news wherever he might find it.
Now, as you know, our Rebel team went to federal court to get access to the leadership debate.
Mainstream Media Blockade00:12:52
But our access doesn't mean the mainstream media journalists were happy to have our scrappy little organization outworking them in the post-debate scrums.
David Menzies joins me tonight to talk about how his fellow journalists tried to keep him from asking questions at the French language debate.
Then, Kian Bexti has been on Greta Thunberg Watch ever since the impish Swedish climate scold announced on the Thanksgiving weekend that she would be bringing her hectoring environmentalist roadshow up here to Oil Country.
Kian joins us to talk about his face-to-face meeting with Greta in an Edmonton hotel.
Then, finally, your comments on Ezra's live stream from outside the Plaza Theater in Calgary after they refused to open the doors and honor their contract for our LeBrano's book signing.
Those are your rebels.
Let's round them up.
Five CBC questions, since there's many, many medias.
I think your colleague here...
That's my colleague Kian, right?
Yeah, so I mean, just to make sure that every media gets a chance to ask questions.
Oh, you're first in line, right?
Yeah, not for me.
I'm just asking for everyone else.
I think you're a good passenger question.
I'm not talking about me, I'm just talking about lightning.
Yeah, yeah.
What I'm saying is that everyone can ask questions.
But you only want us to ask one question.
Sorry?
I'm just saying that there's a lot of media.
The two of you will have will have one question before I have mine.
That's his point.
Maybe every media could have one before you have two.
Sure, well, we're just all in line, right?
It's one at a time, right?
Yeah.
But I'm saying that some medias won't have questions and you'll have to.
Originally, we have none.
We have to get a court order, sir, to get it.
I understand everything.
I'm just saying that we're all here.
Oh, yeah, but we were never here.
That's the thing.
Are you here?
We are here now.
But you're telling me not to ask you a question because there's two of them.
I'm telling you not to ask a question.
I'm telling you, we can all play in a team.
Oh, 100%.
I'll it's not 100% since you're not bringing the team right now.
Well, because some medias won't have questions.
That's what I'm saying.
You're too ahead of me in the line.
Where's your friend?
You're not talking about the media.
Where is she from?
People here.
TV.
Okay.
Yeah.
Talking about other medias.
But we have been excluded, sir, from the entire campaign until you're here.
Is that right?
I am planning to ask a question.
Two questions.
Well, I don't know.
I mean, it depends on the question.
So that's a you are planning to ask two questions.
Well, as you know, the prime minister has a pension for not asking to follow up.
Right?
That's the rule.
That's what's going to happen.
Yes.
Question of follow-up.
Okay.
Why is that a problem?
Or well, it's not great.
It's my understanding, actually, that from what I was hearing from the gentleman that you've got two people here, and so you are planning to ask two questions, which makes it four.
Oh, sorry, what was that?
Done here.
Thanks.
Okay.
Now, Rebel News went to court to get a court order to get our reporters access to the leaders' debate and thus the scrums after the fact.
And after the first debate, it was pretty clear that it was worth every penny to get our reporters in.
And after the first debate, it became evident our journalists were going to ask the questions of politicians the mainstream media just refuses to ask.
So by the time the second debate rolled around, the mainstream media had a solution to their little problem of rebel reporters eating their lunches and exposing their intellectual incuriosity.
They were going to stop us from asking questions in the interest of some newfound journalistic solidarity.
Joining me now from somewhere on the campaign trail in Ontario is the regular host of the show David Menzies.
David, I've got to ask you, why aren't you a team player, huh?
You know, what is perversely ironic about that question, Sheila, is he's saying, be a team player by quitting the team, stepping down from the team, getting off the bench, and going back into the parking lot.
Because what he meant by that, you know, I'll frame the event as it happened last Thursday in Ottawa.
Both Kian and I and Andrew Lawton of True North came in, and I would assume they lumped the three of us together kind of like the three musketeers.
Although the mainstream media certainly doesn't subscribe to the slogan, one for all, all for one, one for all, united we stand, divided we fall to them.
I think the three musketeers is the name of a chocolate bar.
Anyway, this fellow comes up to me and at first I thought because it was absolutely precedent setting, this federal court decision, Sheila, to get us in the door, call me a delusional optimist, but I thought he was going to say something, you know, hey man, that was fantastic.
What a win for freedom of the press.
Instead, the fact that the Rebel had two reporters there, the temerity of our organization having two reporters asking questions, to them, this was double coverage.
This was an unfair advantage.
He said, there's two of you there.
And to which I think I said something along the lines, yeah, well, the problem is we were never there.
It took a court order to get us here.
We're kind of making up for lost time.
And the, but sure enough, and then another journalist, the fellow with the Paisley shirt, chipped in.
And, You know, he was also, you know, baggering us that, you know, we shouldn't be, you know, having two representatives of the same media organization there.
And somebody told me, I don't know if this is true or not, Sheila, maybe you know for sure, the CBC had altogether something like 80 people.
And I know they're all not all on-camera people, but my goodness, talk about the pot calling the kettle black.
I mean, it wasn't double coverage by the CBC, it was quintuple coverage.
So, yeah, it's depressing, Sheila, because if you believe in freedom of speech and freedom of the press and freedom of expression, there's no such thing as being a little bit pregnant.
And if they, even if our point of view disgusts them or bothers them or upsets them, that's irrelevant.
Because I'll tell you, Sheila, and I think the same would go for you, and it would go for Kian and Andrew Lawn.
If any other media organization, including the CBC, was excluded for something, we would stand up, even though we don't like the CBC, would like to see it privatized.
But still, we would stand up on the basis of journalistic ethics and say, let them in.
But it's clearly not a two-way street, my friend.
Yeah, I mean, these people, while we were engaged in a court battle to get you guys in, and while Andrew Lawton is being turfed from liberal events, while you were handcuffed at a conservative event, these people never opened their mouths.
They shut their mouths.
There was no such thing as the team back then.
And not a single one of them offered their spot at a conservative event or a liberal event for Andrew Lawton or you.
There's no team unless it means hampering our ability to ask questions that they won't.
In fact, it was the parliamentary press gallery who have they've denied you credentials to cover things in the past.
So it's actually these people, these other journalists who are going about their business excluding us.
And yet when we show up to ask questions after winning a court battle, they say, oh, you guys, you got to be on the team.
Well, we shouldn't have had to get a court order to get on their team.
Now, I will make a caveat.
When I was at the Media Freedom Conference, the other journalists refused to go to a press conference if Andrew Lawton and I were excluded from Freeland's conference.
But those weren't parliamentary press gallery journalists.
They weren't this clique of mean girls in Ottawa who have exclusive access to politicians.
These were Foreign Bureau people, people who are just interested in journalism.
And, you know, they're just trying to report the news as it happens without a particular lens and without protecting politicians.
And it's so funny to see the difference between journalists who work nearly exclusively in Ottawa, tagging along behind the liberals, and journalists who are actually doing journalism everywhere but Ottawa.
Oh, yeah, Sheila.
I mean, I remember that footage very well.
And A, it was incredible to see some other journalists stand up for us.
But as you point out rightly, these aren't the Canadian bought and paid for state stenographer journalists.
These were members of the foreign press, and which I guess still have still subscribed to ethics.
And they stood up for you guys.
And it must have felt like an out-of-body experience because you mentioned the handcuffing incident.
What I'll never forget about that is that I was asking, you know, the people recording the incident, and I'm glad they actually recorded it because obviously I was unable to do so with my hands behind my back.
But I was saying things like, hey, how about a little solidarity here?
And what really bothered me was just like, there was no answer.
It was almost as though they were, you know, they had drank the Kool-Aid so much that we dare not show disrespect to our monetary masters who are cutting the checks, be it the $600 million bailout for the print media in Canada, Sheila, or the $1.6 billion in taxpayer welfare that the CBC gets every year.
And so, you know, I'm not so much upset as I am sad that this is what the profession has been reduced to.
Yeah, and I watched with great fascination the online confusion of the other journalists after Kian got those very powerful questions in the first debate in the scrum there.
They were saying stuff like, well, how did Rebel and True North get all those questions?
How did they get to the front of the line?
Hustle, hard work, foresight, planning, all those things that you're supposed to have as a journalist.
And it just shows how, I guess, complacent the mainstream media is and how entitled they feel to that spot in line and how offended they are that somebody from outside could outwork them.
I'm trying to get inside the head of people I truly don't understand, but it was interesting to see just how in and again, in the exchange with you, and I think his name was Philippe Vincent Foisey or Fossey, like you.
I'm unilingual.
And I like it that way.
But he was so entitled to the spot in line, a spot in line that you guys worked for.
Indeed, and Sheila, on the second debate, you know, on Thursday, we left the debate.
That was the French debate.
So we were in a room watching the translated version.
We left a good half hour early so that we would be the first in line.
So one, two, three in line was Kian, myself, and Andrew Lawton.
And I can tell you when the other media came, there were two that butted in in front of Andrew and I. Kean still maintained his first spot.
But, you know, you're right, even though we showed some initiative and hustle and waited a solid half hour to be led into the scrum area, these people still felt that they weren't going to follow the protocol of a queue.
And also, I want to say something.
Accreditation Controversy00:02:25
You alluded to it earlier, Sheila, this whole idea of whether it's the liberals or the conservatives, as I discovered a couple of weeks ago in Whitby with that infamous incident.
They say, well, they're not accredited journalists.
And I just want to tell the people out there, who might not be as familiar with the journalistic world as you and I, that this sounds almost as though, oh, well, they didn't have their accreditation.
They didn't have their license, their papers.
You know, folks, what accreditation means is a piece of paper that you sign in, right?
It's like RSVPing to a party.
There's no ministry of journalists and broadcasters that you apply to and some bureaucrat goes, hmm, yes, that one's okay.
No, I don't like that one.
So they're creating, I think, Sheila, this falsified milieu that there is some kind of ultra-formal red, cemented way of getting these so-called credentials when, i'm sorry folks, journalists unlike say doctors, unlike lawyers there's no governing body uh, anyone can call themselves a journalist so.
So don't believe this red herring about oh, they weren't accredited, because it means nothing.
Yeah, it's literally a sign-in sheet where you write your name, the time sorry, the time, your name and the organization that you're with.
Yes and, and it is a.
It's this piece of paper that you'll see at a conservative event, a liberal event, a government event.
That's literally what it is.
It's just a sign-in sheet.
And this idea that you need to have rsvp'd and have had security clearance, I mean, it's just garbage and it.
I really resent the fact that both parties are just allowing this sort of foggy lie to linger out there.
Um, and so are the journalists, because they know what accreditation means too.
It's a sign-in sheet on a loosely piece of paper at the door, and even if you haven't emailed ahead, if you haven't called ahead, you can still sign into that sheet and they say, come on in that.
I mean, that's literally what accreditation is, and both parties involved are not bothering to clear this up, because they benefit from this fog of confusion from lay people.
Who Pays for the Tesla?00:12:37
Well, you know Sheila I, I obviously, the liberals uh, you know, detest us.
I mean our uh Rebel, Rebel Media.
Rebel NEWS has been mentioned in the House OF Commons by Trudea a couple of times, sometimes referred to as Rebel Magazine.
Yeah, Rebel Magazine.
But you know so there is a bit of obsession about the fact that we are these, you know, untamed Broncos that uh are reporting stuff that isn't supposed to be reported.
But on the flip side, I just continue to scratch my head and I wish Andrew Shear would give his head a shake.
That you know, considering us, you know hostile, when we have almost 1.3 million Youtube subscribers, the vast majority of which, I would assume uh, lean right of center and would be voters of the Conservative Party, why we are being treated so shabbily and with such disrespect in order to what earn the approval of the mean girls out there, the Globe AND MAIL, the Toronto STAR, the CBC,
which will um forever um, uh.
You know, uh hate uh conservatives and Andrew Shear, but it it seems that it doesn't matter.
I mean, I just find that strategy Sheila, so self-defeating, to the point that you know when.
Hey, a couple of days ago, when I was in Calgary at Ezra's book signing, a lot the people who were voting conservative, um, almost every one of them said, i'm diverting my eyes, holding my nose.
Gee, that's not a ringing endorsement of the leader a party.
I mean it's like, are you guys purposely trying to blow this?
It is staggering.
Well yeah, and a lot of those people are we're, We're saying, like, look, we just want Andrew Scheer to say it was a mistake and it's not going to happen again.
That's all they want to hear.
I think that's all we want to hear.
You know, actually, I don't even need to hear that it was a mistake.
I just would like to know that it is not going to happen again and that the conservatives are at least better on press freedom, freedom of speech than the liberals.
That's all I want to hear.
David, I know that you are very busy on the campaign trail.
I want to give you a chance to let everybody know where they can find your coverage from the campaign trail and how they can support your work and Kian's work out there on the road.
Well, I guess that would be right here on the Rebel News Channel.
I would hope.
And of course, campaign2019.com.
You know, if you want to go there, folks, and by the way, if you're able to, I mentioned the $600 million and the $1.6 billion.
We get none of that, nor would we take it if it were offered.
We depend on our subscribers, we depend on donations.
So if anyone likes the kind of journalism that Ezra and Kian and Sheila and myself that we're trying to deliver on this campaign trail, and Jessica too, of course, please, if you have it in you, make a donation because that's what keeps us alive.
That's what keeps the lights on.
And we're going to continue covering this election to the bitter end on Monday.
And we're trying our best to bring you what we like to say is the other side of the story because nobody else out there, folks, is bringing you that other side of the story.
Amen, David.
I think this election is going to kill us all.
As long as we collapse on the other side of the finish line on Monday, I think that's going to be great.
David, thanks for calling into your own show.
Good luck out there on the road.
Stay with us more up next after the break.
I'm curious, you know, Carrie's in our city.
Why don't you guys go to China or Saudi Arabia?
Protestant?
Because right now I'm here and I stopped flying.
So to go there, that would have to.
But I mean, I want to because I received an invitation to go here.
Will you be disclosing your finances?
Will you be telling us who is paying for your trip, your Tesla, and bringing you to our country in the middle of an election?
Thank you very much.
You're paying for everything.
You paid for the Tesla?
Borrow the Tesla for free from New York.
Have you registered as a third-party advertiser coming to this country in the middle of an election period?
It's the middle of an election.
You understand that?
Have you registered as a third-party advertiser?
I'm sure she will not talk about the elections at all.
I have never mentioned the election period.
You understand that climate change is a pivotal policy.
It is a ballot box question in this election.
This is a ballot box question this election.
And you're rallying, you're engaging in our political discourse as a foreigner.
Climate change is politics, is it not?
Climate.
So is science going to solve it?
Would you like a technical solution to climate change or would you like politicians to solve it?
I would really appreciate it if you stop talking to us right now.
We have a meeting.
So you're engaging in political discourse in a foreign country as a foreigner.
Thank you very much.
Will you be slightly arresting and I do have to do some classes if you need to be able to do it?
Will you be disclosing your finances and will you be registering as a third-party operative?
Will you be registering as a third-party operative?
Please.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
While the mainstream media patiently waits for the next Extinction Rebellion or Greenpeace press release on the visit of Greta Thunberg to Alberta's capital city so they can report on it completely verbatim and then call it journalism, our roving reporter Kian Bexty was doing some real shoe leather journalism to find the tiny climate tyrant and ask her some real questions that would throw her off her foreign-funded script.
Joining me now to discuss his incredible scoop of every single journalist in Alberta and his confrontation with Greta and her handlers is Kian Bexty from some airport somewhere out on the campaign trail.
Kian, tell me, is Greta as inspirational and Joan of Arc-like in person?
Not so much.
And this maybe is an aside.
She's incredibly short.
I was very surprised.
They say she's 16.
I think she's maybe we should start a like a birther movement.
I don't think she's actually 16.
She's so short.
I think they're just saying that so they don't feel so bad parading her around North America and letting her go on a dangerous yacht across the Atlantic Ocean.
She wasn't the saint Greta that she's been made out to be.
She was kind.
She was gentle and she was polite.
Her handlers, however, were very upset that I was asking questions outside of a press conference style event.
I asked a few questions regarding, well, why isn't she in China?
Why isn't she in India?
Why doesn't she go to Saudi Arabia?
And then I continued to ask questions about their registration with Elections Canada, whether or not they were foreign, whether or not they were going to disclose their finances, because, of course, we're in the middle of an election and they just decide to come to Canada twice, first to Montreal and now to Alberta, to stage major political rallies in the middle of a general election.
Something's a little fishy there.
So I wanted to ask some questions.
And right when I did, their handlers kind of lost it.
We should play that clip of when I ask, are you registered as a third-party advertiser?
And listen to this girl's response.
So you're engaging in political discourse in a foreign country as a foreigner.
Thank you very much.
Will you be slightly interesting?
And I think now, there's more to the story than just your incredible confrontation with Greta and her handlers who were pretty prickly with you about you asking questions.
I think a big part of this story is just how we came about the scoop because it was real old-fashioned journalism.
You know, we got a tip.
We chased the tip from an anonymous tipster who trusted us, unlike the mainstream media.
They trusted that if they gave this information to us, we would do the right thing with it.
And it was really shoe leather journalism.
We found the Tesla 3 that Greta has been driving in her slow travel movement.
And she's got that thing filled up like a couple of raccoons are driving around in it.
Oh my gosh, Sheila.
I don't know if you must decide.
It was full of baked bean cans.
It looked like a dumpster.
Baked bean cans, plastic garbage bags as well.
There are tons of single-use plastics in there.
And of course, the bright yellow New York plate.
So it was pretty obvious when I got pulled into the parking lot.
I see this Tesla, very expensive state-of-the-art Tesla with New York plates.
I thought, hmm, I wonder who could be driving that around Alberta.
And funny story about the Tesla, before they realized who I was, I was kind of just sitting next to Greta and her handlers while they were plotting their next moves.
After they leave Edmonton, after they stage a major political rally in Alberta's capital, their next plans, and you heard it here first, is to go to Jasper.
They're going to go to Jasper, and they're extremely concerned about whether or not the Tesla will actually be able to manage in Jasper, whether or not the battery will die.
Of course, Greta wants everyone to switch to electric vehicles, battery-operated cars.
But deep down, they know that Canada isn't suited for it, so much so that they're planning on contingency for contingency plans in case the Tesla doesn't work out in Jasper in those high, low-temperature mountain regions.
You know, I think it's funny.
I think they better clean up that car before they go to Jasper or the Bears are going to get them.
By the time people see this video, because we're recording it Thursday, because I fill in for David and I have to sort of work around everybody's schedule who's on the road.
But by the time this goes to air, Greta will have, like you say, staged a major political rally in Edmonton in the final hours of our federal election campaign.
And I'm going to take umbrage with some of the tone from the pro-oil groups out there.
And I'm not saying the grassroots groups.
I'm saying the guys like Canada Action and to some extent the Alberta government.
They welcome Greta to the province because they hope she's here to learn.
Well, give me a break.
She's not here to learn.
This is just the social license argument over again.
If we entertain these people, maybe they'll like us.
She's not here to learn from us.
And if she wanted to learn about oil and gas in the world, there are a lot of places that were closer to home for her to visit, like Norway, like Russia.
But she didn't go to Norway or Russia.
She took a boat across the ocean to plague us with her scolding.
By the way, I would love to know what the inside of that boat looked like when she was done with it.
I bet she garbaged it right up too.
To answer your question, Sheila, about her trash in the boat, there's some pictures actually which are kind of funny.
She, St. Greta, I'm talking about, has a bunch of single-use plastics in her boat, plastic water bottles.
And, you know, here's the thing.
I use plastic water bottles.
Everyone I know uses plastic water bottles, uses Tupperware containers.
And I'm not criticizing them for that.
What I'm criticizing is Greta telling everyone that we need to get off petroleum products and then being a hypocrite and using them herself.
I think it's kind of pathetic.
Now, you might notice the audio switched a little bit here.
My headphones just crash and my plane's about to board.
So I should probably get going.
Yes, thank you, Kian.
Thanks for always making the time for the show.
Stay with us more up next after the break.
Right now it's 504.
And these are the law from Electro.
Js Writes: Legion Edition00:05:01
I do believe there are people inside there probably peeking out because that's what it was like.
The thing is, we had a great crowd like we had here, and it was sort of chilly like here.
But all these tough guys online, none of them showed up except for the one village idiot named Rick Shawnee.
He shows us everything in his haulers.
There was a couple hundred of my friends.
There was two private security.
There was probably 10 cops.
They were just excited.
What was going on?
What's the big crowd?
And Rick Shaudet.
And we sort of were worried, so we had a plan B.
And we all walked two blocks over to Rosie's pub.
And we had, we got warm, and some folks had a beer or two.
I'm not saying how many.
And we had a book talk and we signed a lot of books and we had a great night.
But it was also a terrible night for free speech because Mike Broward was bullied into deplatforming not only me and my right to speak, but 200 people and their rights to hear.
They chose to hear and I've signed a contract and I paid it in pay.
And I'm a good customer because I've done it before.
And we were deplatformed.
That's the word the left uses.
I said to Mike, if you have any critics, invite them in.
We'll have a Q ⁇ A.
They can put their toughest question to me.
I'm used to it by now.
But that's not what the left is about.
They don't believe in debating anymore.
They believe in censorship and silencing.
That was the big boss, Ezra Levant, orating from outside the Plaza Theater in Calgary after the theater breached their contract with us after an NDP Antifa-inspired internet outrage mob put pressure on the theater's owner to cancel our book signing event.
Now, not to be deterred, we arranged for busing to take our folks down to the local Royal Canadian Legion who accommodated our librarians' book signing on some pretty short notice.
Now, Soylent Knight writes, this happened again.
If nothing else, this election has opened my eyes to the fact that Canada is as backward as the UK when it comes to press freedom and freedom of speech in general.
Yeah, you know, us Canadians like to get a little uppity about the fact that we don't have journalism licenses like they do in the UK.
But when our journalists have to take the federal government to court and spend tens of thousands of dollars just to get access to a political debate in a free country, we're really not any better than the UK, are we?
We are different, but in the same bad sort of way.
MD Prule writes, I wasn't going to buy the book, Ezra, but now that the NDP thugs are trying to prevent folks from getting a copy, I will now procure a copy and can't wait to see what they're so scared of and trying to hide.
Canada is a free speech country and we need to keep it that way.
Yeah, it's a bit of the Streisand effect happening here.
The more these authoritarian wingnuts try to shut us up, the more ears get turned our way to find out exactly what it is they don't want you to be hearing.
JS writes, absolutely awesome that you booked at the Legion.
My father landed on Juneau Beach.
I have to say it has caused me pain in the last couple of years to know that his and his generation risked everything so we could be free.
My parents used to go to their local Legion and they were proud people.
JS, you know, we try to use the Legion as often as we can.
In fact, the very next night in Toronto, we use the Legion there as a venue for our book signing.
I'm a member of my local Legion and I think it's my duty to support an organization that works to support our veterans and honor their proud legacies.
And you can learn more about Ezra's legal plan to fight for freedom of speech and against these deplatforming bullies who try to stop free speech at stopdeplatforming.com.
Well, everybody, that's the show for tonight.
This is the last Rebel Roundup before the election, which means it's probably my last time hosting in the big chair.
I get to turn this job back over to its rightful owner again.
Thank you, everybody at home, for tuning in, and thank you, David, for trusting me with your baby of a show.
Thank you everybody in the office for creating a cinematic masterpiece out of the jumbled handful of clips and audio I send you every single week.