Mark Simone opens by speculating President Trump ordered Pam Bondi's firing before discussing Deputy AG Todd Blanche and the Epstein files, arguing famous names appear due to innocent associations. He defends Trump's Supreme Court attendance regarding birthright citizenship and critiques Chuck Schumer's reaction to Hamas strikes. Political strategist John Tillman joins to explain how media, public, and elite influencers create a vice trapping politicians, urging conservatives to build direct communication capacity. The segment concludes by mocking James Carville's rant as "Trump derangement syndrome," highlighting the liberal machine's dominance over narrative control. [Automatically generated summary]
These are definitely Chuck Schumer old lady specials here.
Hey, it's Mark Simone here for Sean Hannity.
Normally I'm on our big flagship station here in New York, W-O-R.
You know, I'm on 10 to noon.
Linda, you know who's now on before me?
Who?
Oh, you don't know?
Curtis Slewa.
Oh, yes, I did hear about that indeed.
Our buddy Curtis now working at WOR every morning.
And that's great.
Linda is here in the studio.
I am.
How could I miss you?
I have to be here when you're here.
There you go.
And we got lots to get to today.
We'll get to Pam Bondi.
We'll get to Tiger Woods.
We'll get to Bruce Springsteen.
We'll get to the ballroom.
We'll get to Iran and a whole lot more.
And, well, first, the big news Pam Bondi is out.
She's out.
From what I hear, she's already back in Florida.
She left quickly.
And, you know, yesterday the president went to the Supreme Court to sit in on the hearing, and Pam Bondi went with them.
So they were riding there in the car together.
They rode back to the White House in the car together in the Beast.
And, you know, you ever been in that Beast?
It's very tight inside there.
Have you been in the Beast?
Yeah, not with the president, but, you know, it's bomb proof and bullet proof.
The way they do that, the doors, the walls, everything's like a foot thick.
So inside, there's like two feet of room missing in there.
So when he was with Pam Bondi, you're like right on top of each other.
Must have been a little uncomfortable.
He must have known then he was going to get rid of her.
You think he said anything then?
I don't think so.
Absolutely.
Really?
You think he said?
Donald Trump?
Absolutely.
He's not holding that in.
He'd be like, listen, Pam, you're wonderful, but our time has come to pass.
Do you think he told her yesterday?
Yes.
I think he said to you, listen, the hammer's coming tomorrow.
Wear a good suit.
Do your hair and makeup.
Get ready.
Because they're going to come at you.
Interesting.
That's my thought.
You don't think he'd try to soften it up like, hey, you must really miss Florida, right?
I don't think that soft is in his vocabulary.
Well, I guess not.
Sometimes.
I don't know.
So she's back in Florida.
And as she was very good, she was a great attorney general of Florida.
Really, really good.
I think she just got in, went up one step too high.
That can happen.
It happens in the radio business.
You might be a local host in whatever city, and you're number one.
You're the best radio host in your city.
Linda, you'll attest to this.
Once in a while, you get called.
We're going to let you fill in for Sean Hannity.
Now you're on a network at 700 stations.
You're talking to 20 million people and the guy chokes.
You've seen that happen, right?
I had somebody fill in.
They shall remain nameless.
And they came in and they had papers and papers and notes and notes and more papers and more notes.
And I said, I'm going to tell you right now, you're not reading from those papers and you're not using those notes.
And if you use them, I will set them on fire.
Yeah.
They thought I was kidding.
I set those notes on fire during the break.
Yeah.
So if you're a local host, you come here and you get very intimidated.
The perfect person to have there is Linda yelling at you.
Very comforting.
That's exactly what you need.
You're terrified out of your mind.
And you got this one.
You'll just let me get through this.
Screaming at you.
So now, but I've seen it happen a million times.
You know, the guy.
I'm trying not to mention a city because that might indicate a host.
But, you know, he's from that city in the Midwest.
He hosts the local afternoon show.
He's great.
Now he's filling in for Hannity.
There's millions of, I mean, there's literally, literally like 18, 19 million people listening.
And he's used to his little studio.
Look at that control room.
There's like 4,000 computers in there.
It's intimidating.
So he freezes up or he's not as good.
He makes mistakes.
Takes a certain person to fill in here, like me, somebody who couldn't care less.
I was like, you're the perfect person.
Fight those off in the middle of the show.
So, what happens now?
Well, Pam Bondi's back in Florida.
The Deputy Attorney General, Todd Blanche, is great.
Trump loves him, trusts him.
He's really good.
Give me a funny look.
You don't agree?
I do not like Todd Blanche.
There you go.
I rest my case.
He must be pretty good.
I'm like, nope.
I like Todd Blanche.
He's pretty good.
But my point, though, is he wants Lee Zeldin.
That's the word.
We can't absolutely confirm that.
I've heard he talked it over with Lee Zeldin on Monday, but he wants Lee Zeldin.
Now, the Democrats will do everything to screw this up in Congress.
He's already been confirmed as EPA director, but it's a different committee to be attorney general.
So they'll want to reconfirm him.
They'll delay forever.
Now, the only good news is Trump loves Todd Blanch.
So if this confirmation takes eight months, he'll have Todd Blanch treatment.
So he's fine either way.
Most likely it'll be Lee Zeldin.
There's rumors everywhere what Mike Lee.
I'm sure every time the president's phone rings, it says Janine Pirro on the caller ID.
What the hell is that noise?
You have noise?
Oh, you know what it is?
It's a little known fact for the audience.
Sean Hannity loves ice.
Oh, it's the ice maker.
Many moons ago, we bought an ice maker, and you guys can't hear it over the air, but when you're in studio, it is loud and it comes out of nowhere.
Yeah, I'm talking.
All of a sudden, you're yeah, sorry about that.
Fair warning.
I thought it was a radio studio.
It's like I'm at Hugh Hefner's house.
There's an ice maker going.
If it's not ticking, you're fine.
So, anyway, where were we?
Oh, yeah, we're talking about.
Janine Pirro.
Janine Pirro.
I would imagine there's a lot of.
You know what happens?
A lot of senators, a lot of people that know Trump call and try to push somebody of their own in there.
So you've got to have a few days of that.
But again, he loves Todd Blanch.
So he'll be fine for Todd Blanch for a while.
Again, Bondi was great.
The problem is when you get into the highest level of the biggest, you're in the national government, everything's different.
The press is different.
You know, in Florida, you had a couple of state house reporters that you got to know, but now you got the most vicious, evil, monstrous press corps in the world after you.
And the Epstein files, well, she did kind of botch it up there.
Definitely as far as the public relations, the optics, you know, you got to know how to handle that.
And again, coming from the sleepy state of Florida, she might not have been ready for that.
And I mean, I have to remember all the Epstein things she did.
She said, I have the client list.
Which she shouldn't have said.
There's no such thing.
Epstein never had a sex business.
There's no client list.
I mean, there were young girls and God knows what going on, but there weren't clients for that.
The only client list he had was his wealth management business, and that's five names on it.
So, and was he?
Oh, she said she brought in the reporters to show him binders.
Here's the Epstein files, millions of binders.
I don't think it was really in those binders, but then nothing happened for a long time.
So the.
And Trump's very big on that.
You can't screw up the public relations or the optics.
I think that was the problem with Christy Noam.
What happened in Minneapolis was ugly with the shooting and all that, but she shouldn't have shot her mouth off.
She went there huffing and puffing and shooting her mouth off too fast and just made the whole thing, the optics, worse than they had to be.
And botching up the Epstein files, it really didn't need to get botched up.
It's not that bad.
You know, I'm in the Epstein files.
Did you know that?
Should I be surprised or should I pretend to be surprised?
Nothing bad.
Nothing bad.
What are you in there for?
Well, if you go to the Epstein files online, it'll take you to the government site.
There's a search bar.
You can type in names.
There's guys I know that were involved with Epstein.
I'm typing in their names.
Everything's coming up.
Just for the hell of it, I typed in my name.
I came up six times.
Nothing bad.
A couple of times he was going to an event where I was the emcee.
My name was on the invitation.
That's how it showed up.
Another one, our buddy Jackie Martling apparently was friends with him, emailing back and forth, and was telling him something about my show.
That came up.
Yeah, you'd be surprised what comes up in there.
They had all of his American Express bills in there.
So millions of restaurants come up if you search millions of stores.
But you remember the ladies of the view, how they said, if you're in these files, that's it.
You're done.
You know, forget about it.
You're in here.
And then who appears in there?
But none other than Whoopi Goldberg and Joy Behar.
Exactly.
Everything.
And then suddenly, that wasn't the case.
We were not in there for the same reasons.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
And Epstein had all these friends.
They thought they were political experts.
So they're all listening to talk radio, watching all the.
Cable news shows, and they're emailing him all the time.
But Sean Hannity said this last night, and so and so said this, and so that comes up in the files.
And then there's names you wouldn't like.
Woody Allen is all through there, but no, he was always there with his wife.
He can't raise money in Hollywood anymore, they will not finance his films.
So he goes to these uh private zillionaires to get funding.
He was all over Epstein to get his films funded.
And then I see Dick Cavett in there, he was trying to put together a PBS special.
PBS, you got to get somebody to finance it.
He was trying to get Epstein to finance so.
There's a lot of innocent stuff in there.
You know, I didn't Google your name in that search.
Have at it.
Yeah.
Go for it.
You could be in there.
So we'll see.
The president went to the Supreme Court yesterday.
They said it was so wrong of him to be there.
He was there to intimidate them, to stare them down.
Well, first of all, he's actually named in the lawsuit.
He's the guy that executive order, get rid of the birthright stuff.
States sued him.
It's the states versus him.
He lost.
It's been appealed.
It's gone to the Supreme Court.
He's what do you call that?
The defendant or the whatever?
He's named in the lawsuit.
And if you check the history of the Supreme Court, they always urge the parties named to attend the hearing.
So he had every right to be there.
He didn't stay the whole day.
I knew he wouldn't.
Did you ever go to a Supreme Court hearing?
I'm sure after about 20 minutes, he wanted to kill himself.
What the heck did I get myself into here?
So we'll get to that with Greg Jarrett, who will be with us later, a great legal expert.
The president made a big primetime address later.
You know what?
We'll play a bit of that for you because we now realize the reason you did a primetime television address was so the whole nation would hear you.
And we now realize, in fact, that was probably the last primetime address you'll ever see.
We now realize nobody in the population watches network television anymore.
Nobody watches ABC, CBS, NBC anymore.
They're all streaming and beaming and whatever the heck they're doing.
But there were streaming and beaming.
There were people watching, like if you ever watch Right Side Broadcasting Network online, you can watch that on YouTube.
There was a lot of people streaming it on X, but I do think it's worth playing because a lot of people don't watch those main channels.
Yeah, in the good old days, if it was, you know, Jimmy Carter.
Jimmy Carter.
Jimmy Carter addresses the nation, Iran hostage crisis.
There'd be like literally 90 million people.
You'd be lucky.
If you hit 10 million now.
So we'll go over that.
We'll go over the reaction, too.
I love Chuck Schumer.
Boy, he put his finger on it.
He said, this rambling incoherence seemed fine to me.
I understood every word.
And then Schumer said, the biggest foreign policy blunder ever in history.
You know, if you took out the most evil terrorist leader in the world, how could you ever call that a blunder?
You could argue it wasn't the right moment.
It wasn't the right exact way.
But the biggest blunder ever.
Can you imagine if Schumer was around for World War II and we got rid of Hitler?
Biggest foreign policy blunder ever.
Anyway, we'll take some calls too.
1 800 941 Sean is the number.
1 800 941 Sean.
Mark Simone here for Sean.
Hey, follow me on Instagram.
Mark Simone, NYC at Instagram.
I like Instagram.
No TikTok.
I hate it.
Nah.
Why?
It's too stupid.
What's wrong with it?
Instagram.
TikTok for adults.
That's actually pretty funny.
Actually, and make sure you check out Hannity.com.
Always a lot of good stories there.
Back in a moment on the Sean Hannity Show.
Hey, speaking of the real truth about DC there now, John Tillman, leading political strategist, author.
The Pressurized System00:08:22
He's the CEO of the American Culture Project, founder and CEO of the Hall of Giants.
Now, he's got this new book, The Political Vice How the Radical Left Controls America and the Path to Regaining Our Liberty.
Interesting book, lots to talk about.
John Tillman, how are you?
I'm doing great.
Thanks for having me on.
Yeah, this is quite a book.
This is somebody who needed to explain all this because, and I see this all the time a young guy runs for Congress, he gets elected, he's going to go to Washington, he's going to change the world.
And then he gets into that swamp, and that's where the political vice comes in.
Explain what the political vice is.
The whole point is that politicians you're describing, whether they're that rookie that you're talking about who we all think is idealized and he's going to be great, or the veteran like Mitch McConnell has been there forever, they're all operating inside a pressurized system.
They're in the middle of a three-sided vice, and they're getting pressure from the media, they're getting pressure from the public or the American people, and they're getting pressure from elite influencers.
And the elite influencers are important because they also manipulate the media and the American people, and they apply pressure to the system.
Put or policy pronouncements come from.
And this explains what you kind of alluded to.
Why is it when conservatives get elected, they begin to move left?
When liberals get elected, they just move further left.
The reason is because the liberal machine, the progressive machine, controls all three sides of the vice.
And the recipe for us is we have to build capacity to compete to get our hands on the levers of the vice and put pressure for liberty instead of the extremism of the political left.
Yeah.
Has anybody figured out why the media is so left?
If you go in there, I mean, I've been in all these newsrooms.
Working there.
They are all left wing people.
Why is that?
Do we know?
I do think it's been a generational thing.
I think the Watergate era, I came of age during the Watergate era.
I actually started out as a journalism major and a political science minor before I came to my senses and went into business.
And even then, in the late 70s, early 80s, it was already leaning left.
And that era attracted a lot of do gooders.
Essentially, activists, political activists, started to go to journalism schools and become journalists for two reasons.
One is it was a way they could see they could affect.
Narrative and how people consumed information and how people were essentially propagandized through the news media.
And secondly, they thought they were on the righteous side of history because of that era.
And so people that are conservative bent tend to go into business, engineering, and those sort of things, and it doesn't attract the same kind of people into journalism.
I think that's a big reason why over a couple generations.
That's interesting.
You know, every time I was ever on MSNBC, everybody in the newsroom would glare at you.
Too conservative and they glare at you.
But everybody that worked on the crew, the cameraman, would come up to you and whisper in your ear, I agree with you.
I agree with you.
Working people.
But is that the problem that conservatives generally tend to not go into government?
They tend not to go into the media.
They tend to actually go to work and do some real things?
I think that's exactly right.
And part of that is because people who are naturally conservative, who believe in the founding principles, they tend to go into business or they just are agnostic about government.
They're just not interested in government.
It doesn't seem like an appealing thing.
But those who are on the political left, they believe in government.
They want the government to have more power, more say, and they love for them to be in the control chair of the government wielding its power over how we all live our lives.
And so for them, an activist government that's always trying to tweak the dials to tune in our society better by those elite influencers that I talked about who are telling us all, like Anthony Fauci, all of them trying to tell us how to live our lives better and better over time, Bill Gates, they really believe that if they just put the right people in the seats in government, they will help.
All of us live a much better life worthy of their great wisdom, which of course is false and never really works out.
And that's how you get to totalitarianism.
Yeah, I guess that is a big key to the liberal mentality.
They're very smart.
You're very stupid.
They should tell you how to live your life, they should set the rules for you.
How do you cure that?
It seems built in.
I think that one of the chapters in the book, I talk about picking different elites.
I think that part of the problem is we've allowed too many elites of the left to take over our key institutions, obviously higher education, K through 12 education, the health care system, the deep state itself, corporate communications.
We have to fight back to get those jobs back.
And there's a number of ways that people are doing that.
And one of the ways you pick new different elites that are pro-America and pro-liberty and reject the sort of centralizing authority that the political left seems to be pursuing. Is by picking better politicians.
And I think the election of Trump is just a really good example of that.
That is the ultimate choice to pick a rebel who is not part of the elite consensus governing over the American people.
And that is why they've been so vociferous and just unbelievably ruthless in going after him, is because he rejects the entire governing philosophy of that technocratic political left.
And that's one of the things I talk about in the book Trump is probably the greatest politician ever at resisting the powers of the Political vice when they really have unleashed on him on a daily basis.
It's going on right now with the war.
It's going on right now with the Save Act.
You can see the power of the left as they try to control the narrative of the war, which is going really well, but the American people don't know that because of the way the media reports it.
And all of these things, he is still very good at resisting it.
And he's a unicorn when it comes to that.
Most politicians don't have that kind of courage and willpower.
Yeah.
Well, this is fascinating stuff.
If you want to read more, get the book.
This is John Tillman's new book, The Political Vice.
John Tillman, The Political Vice.
You can order the book.
Hey, when you say deep state, there's a lot of liberals or even media, they'll say, deep state, you're being paranoid.
There's no such thing.
Well, it's an actual thing.
You appoint the secretary of this department, he appoints 30 people under him, but there's like 5,000 under him that are permanent government.
That's what we mean, right, with the deep state.
We're talking about millions of employees at the federal and state level.
Essentially, for every one elected official in the country, there's 33 people working in an administrative role.
implementing policy out of sight and out of mind and wielding tremendous power.
It's a real thing.
Yeah, and it's what they also call it the permanent government.
They never leave.
And they really believe they control things.
The president is just a temporary blip on their radar.
So how do you ever fix that?
You're never going to get rid of those people.
The only way to fix that over time is to change the civil laws governing civil employees in government.
We have to really change that.
We need term limits for government employees, and I think that would be a very popular measure.
Yeah.
I thought about pursuing that.
We do need term limits for the permanent institutions of government.
When people have been there 10 years or more, it's time for them to move on and go work in the private sector for a change and find out what the real world's like.
So, whenever you get a new president, a Democrat or a Republican, they're part of the system, they're part of the club.
They speak in that formal.
Official political way.
Is that why there's so much Trump derangement syndrome?
Is it that they've never felt themselves threatened, the system, the deep state, by Trump?
The fact that he's going to try to grab them right by the throat, is that why they're so outraged at him?
I think that's one aspect of it.
And I think that's an important aspect of it he speaks in every man's language.
He's worked with the trades his whole life.
He's talked to carpenters and electricians and welders and steelworkers and all the rest of it.
He knows everyday language.
And they don't like that he doesn't speak in the Harvard language of Barack Obama.
So that's one aspect of it.
He's like a foreign animal to them.
But the other aspect of it that they really hate is that Trump holds them accountable.
He says, You stink.
You guys are failing over and over again.
You've had all this power for decades, and look at the condition of the country.
You all are failing.
And he says that to the deep state.
He says that to the professional careers working in government.
And he says that to establishment Republicans and Democrats alike.
And nobody likes to be held accountable.
The one thing that unites Democrats and Republicans.
In Congress, they don't want to be held accountable by their voters.
And that is why they don't like Trump, because he's holding them accountable on a daily basis.
Conservative Media Rise00:03:57
Yeah.
But you get these politicians, these Gavin Newsom types.
They look great.
They sound great.
Meantime, they get nothing done.
The place gets 100 times worse under their leadership.
How do voters fall for that, even Democratic voters?
The great challenge we face, and it's one of the reasons I wrote the book, is because voters are, you know, most voters are, you know, people that are listening to the Hannity show or watch Hannity on Fox News.
And people that read this kind of book are really into this subject matter.
But the vast majority of American voters, maybe as much as 60 or 70 percent of them, are dipping in and out of politics lightly.
They get deeper involved every two to four years when elections come around, but they're not paying a lot of attention.
So the propaganda does slowly work to blindfold them and blindfold them, and they don't fully see the truth of what is going on.
And part of my thesis is that we need to build more capacity in media to reach those untethered people in the middle who surface skim on politics.
Yeah.
Now, what more can you build?
Talk radio, detailed coverage, Fox News, that's it.
What more could you build?
We need to build capacity in entertainment, film, music, every aspect of that.
There's been a lot.
One of the things that's going on, you can look at radio as a really good example, and podcasting as another really good example, that conservative outlets in both of those have really come on very strongly.
And same thing with cable news.
They're leading, they're the tip of the spear and the vanguard.
But what's following behind that now are big investments by a lot of philanthropists and business investors in film and entertainment.
I think that's a key aspect of it.
And then also another part of it is.
Data capacity.
We have to continue to build out our data mining capacity and really build.
You know, the 20th century was the century of mass communication for the first time in human history.
The 21st century is going to be the century of one to one communication where we can literally dial down a specific customized message to individual people.
The political left is pursuing those capacities right now, and we need to do some of that.
Now, on the right, we need to do a lot more of it so that we can peep for mindshare outside of the less powerful narrative in traditional media.
Wow.
Hey, explain that a little more one to one.
In what format, in what specific thing would you do that?
He who controls data controls the messaging.
So, what we need to do is build tools such as your show.
If somebody comes to your site and signs up and gets on your email list, now you have their email address.
You run it against social media accounts.
You find out how to reach them through Facebook, Instagram, and the other accounts, X platform.
And you start marketing to them through those third party platforms.
But you have direct communication with them through email and texting.
And so that.
They might be watching the ABC Evening News or the CBS Evening News, but they're also being reached through text, through email, and then through proprietary channels.
So, for example, Fox obviously is a proprietary channel that's owned by Fox News.
Your radio station's owned by whoever owns that.
But part of this is you use those third-party channels while building a direct marketing machine to reach people primarily through text and email in the modern digital world.
And the point of this is we don't want to just rely on broadcast network, you know, CBS, ABC, NBC, Fox television shows and run ads.
We want to be building channels of communication to individual people one at a time.
So, for example, when you're streaming a show on your television, the tools are now available where I can send you an ad on Budweiser beer because you love that, but your neighbor is going to get an ad on Medello because we know he likes that.
The same idea can apply to politics, and that's what we need to be doing.
Very interesting.
Well, obviously, this is a fascinating book.
You want to get the book, John Tillman's new book, The Political Vice.
Order it now, Amazon, The Political Vice, or wherever you get your books.
John Tillman, great stuff.
Thanks for being with us.
Thanks for having me on.
I appreciate it.
All right.
Take care.
Now, that's very interesting stuff.
Oh, wait.
Hang on.
This could be for you.
Nope, it's not.
Trump Derangement Syndrome00:03:01
My phone going off.
Hey, it's Mark Simone here for Sean Hannity.
Normally, I'm on our big flagship here in New York, W-O-R, or you can get my podcast on iHeart.
You can get Linda's podcast there, too, which is called.
You mean you don't listen to it every day and have it memorized?
I do it, Mark.
In fact, you have commercials for it during my show here in New York.
Yeah, yeah.
It's Rogue Recap.
Rogue.
Rogue.
You go on Rogue.
Rogue recap.
You suck at this.
Aren't you listening to John?
This one-to-one?
All right.
Rogue recap.
Anyway, we've got a lot coming up.
Greg Jarrett will be with us in a few minutes.
We'll talk about Pam Bondi, SCOTUS, and all that stuff coming up on The Sean Hannity Show.
Hey, it's Mark Simone here for Sean Hannity.
Sean will be back soon.
Let's take a couple of calls.
Let's go to Jeff in New Hampshire.
Jeff, welcome to the Sean Hannity Show.
Hi, Mark.
How are you doing today?
Good.
Good.
I was calling because I wanted to get your take on psycho, what's his name, Carville, James Carville, and his new rant about how he wants to prosecute the Trump family and put them behind bars.
Yeah, well, actually, I enjoy that.
I really like, you know, the one thing about the Trump Dimension Syndrome, I enjoy seeing those people get so crazy.
I love seeing the fact that they're totally enraged.
You know, Carville is kind of retired.
He's sitting at home.
He could be enjoying his life.
Instead, he's fuming.
Smoke's coming out of his ears.
His glasses are fogging up.
He's in a total rage 24-7.
They just can't deal with it.
And Trump is one.
He's like the little kid who, you know, in the zoo, Rick, has to rattle the cage.
He has to, like, hit the cage with a stick and rile up the tiger.
But, yeah, I mean, I didn't like Biden.
I didn't think he was very good.
But I certainly didn't walk around thinking about him all day.
I certainly didn't get into a rage and start yelling and screaming about him.
I can't even imagine that.
That's why I like that.
No kings.
That was great.
They're protesting stuff that doesn't even exist anymore.
Why don't we listen to Carville?
He's crazy.
Oh, you haven't?
You fat Trump.
If you listen to this, you listen good.
Because what I'm getting ready to say is what a lot of people in this country speak for, who I speak for.
And I speak for a lot of people.
You hear me?
You fat.
This is what we believe.
You're right.
I got Trump derangement syndrome.
I hate the mother.
And you know what?
I don't want to get rid of it.
I don't want to get better.
I want to get worse.
I want to hate him more.
I pray to God in heaven, God reign the righteous reign of Trump derangement syndrome in me.
Pray for me, Lord.
I'm your vessel on this earth.
Pray for the people that listen to this.
We want more.
We want to hate the son of a so much that we can't see straight.
Yeah, I like that.
You know, if I ever hate somebody, I don't want to walk by and see that they're happy, they're enjoying themselves, they got a smile.
I like to walk by and see that they're punching the wall, they're going crazy, they're nuts.