¶ Introduction and John's Return
Oh my god, what a shocker! Adam Couric, John C. Dvorak. It's Sunday, June 7th, 2026. This is your award-winning Gimbo Nation Media Assassination Episode 1875. This is no agenda. We... Photorama! And we're broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country. Agent number six. Good morning everybody, I'm Adam Curry. And from Northern Silicon Valley where we've discovered the Antichrist. It's the iPhone. I'm John C. Dvorak. In the morning. Well, a couple observations right off the
¶ Smartphone Addiction and Security Concerns
top here. One. You're coming to us from Northern Silicon Valley. Which means you're back home. Yeah, I'm at the house. Excellent. They're still banging away back there, working on that place. What do you mean, banging? What happened? They're redoing the bed. There's a bunch of work being done on the house. Yeah. I'm making sure they don't wreck the place. That's why I'm here. Is they Mimi? Does she have a crew? Does she have a crew of Mexicans? Illegal immigrants? It varies. So what do they do?
Well, first of all... Welcome back. Good to have you back home. That's good news. Second of all, Are we close to being able to see your studio? Well, you're talking about the challenge for people who go to the new Instagram No Agenda account, which is... no agenda podcast yeah the official no agenda account on instagram And once it gets to 5,000, we take a picture of the studio. How close are we? I'm sorry, I don't keep up with the Insta. I think we're around 3. 3,000?
yeah wow that that went pretty fast shouldn't we get should we be like uh trending somewhere if we get that many followers in one go i know we're not oh those guys those guys are uh no no not those guys just don't don't no no no no you don't you know it's a fake anyway so why would
¶ California Election Fraud Allegations
put them on it it's all fake. And what's this with the Antichrist iPhone? I mean, is this a news? I'm determined that the iPhone is the Antichrist. Why not? Well, it's possible. I mean, is it only... Oh, I see. I'm floating around. I'm seeing... I'm telling you, like, yesterday, we went to the store, and there's, like, people getting out of their car there. looking at the phone as they get out, stumble out, walking into the store, always eyes on the phone. I don't know how people
can navigate. I mean, you remember the early days of these phones, people were banging into poles and walking over curbs and falling into manholes. Yeah, sure. They stopped doing that. There's this new radar or some sense that phone has kept them from banging into stuff. You know what? Go ahead. Walking around with the phone and the same person comes out still looking at the phone. What is on the phone? I don't think it's the Antichrist, I think it's It's a national security issue. We are a
vulnerable. You don't think the anti-crisis is a national security issue? Okay, fair point. Fair point. It's just these people, I mean, we are very vulnerable as a country when we have robots, you know, NPCs just roaming around looking at their phones. That is a national security issue. And you spotted a cup number years ago. Oh, 10 years ago at least, maybe even longer. You spotted the fact that people are walking around with their phone in their
hand. Yeah. You know, women mostly, but now men too, men and women, walking around with the phone in their hand. All the time. Yeah. You know, we forget that this is happening. We kind of got used to it. No, it's so normal now. I mean, on Mondays, I go play chess with this guy. And so it means... I park on Main Street and I get out. Is this in the park? No, I park on Main Street. No, I know. You park the car, yeah, but I'm saying, is it in the park outside? No, no. Is
it a black guy, an old black guy? No. It's inside a Java ranch. You know, your favorite, Java Ranch. It's with Willie. That's why I play with Willie. And he was not a black guy. And, uh, but just walk. And so I have to, I have to cross two streets. Two traffic lights. And all you see is people walking with their phones, looking at their phones. It's everywhere. It's rampant. And we've kind of gotten used to
it. It's a national security issue. And yes, if it is the anti- Is it only the iPhone or is Android also the antichrist? Well, obviously it's the smartphone in general. Yeah. Because I see people looking at... They're all... operate the same people are looking at them they're carrying around it's the same you know no it's all the phones all the smartphones And what are we going to do with it? Everything but a flip phone. And I'm
not even so sure about that. Yeah. Well, you know, I had to give up on the flip phone because they made it impossible to communicate. If you don't have RCS, then you can't communicate with the Antichrist people on the iPhone. Yeah, but it's not people communicating with each other so much, it's they're just... Well, no, I understand what you're saying. But if you have a flip phone, it used to be doable when everything was still kind of over. SMS or you know It's like you had.
MMS. Remember this protocol? Yeah, MMS. So someone will send out a video to me and it comes in like... You know, like a little postage stamp because you can't see that because everyone's doing it over IP. All the iPhones and the iPhones got connected to the Android with RCS. And, you know, it was really Apple that screwed all this up. They had their own little protocol. And then, you know, you couldn't participate. You can't be in a text group anymore. And if it actually worked, then
people yell at you. Who's the green bubble? Who's the green bubble? Who's ruining my text group? Yeah, that's me
¶ Slow Vote Counting and Media Bias
now. Anyway, so. How's that voting going in California? Oh, I do have a clip. Oh, please. What's your clip? Yeah, we got Stella, one of our podcast friends. Stella, the Stella Show. Yes. Talks about the Cal voting situation. U.S. Attorney Bill Assele says his office... has multiple election fraud investigations now underway in coordination with the FBI as California officials are still counting the ballots from this week's primary. It could go on for weeks and weeks and
weeks. What is your reaction to this? Because I know you're following it very closely. I mean, this is your lane. This is what you do. It is about time that. all eyes are on California's election process. And we're looking at 37 days to get counted for our mail-in ballots. And it's just about time. And I'm really appreciative of Bill Asseili. You know, he was a former assembly member and he has always done everything he could to
possibly bring some course correction to our state. It's incredible. You know, I ran for state assembly. And so I looked at our voter rolls. People were registered to vote in empty parking lots and old houses and buildings. It's about time that we start cleaning this mess up because we deserve to be represented. And, you know, California is such a beautiful state, but we've got a problem. So
there's a fighting chance right now. Voting infrastructure that... that the Democrats and Gavin has created here allows for this. We have every single Californian and even Californians who have left the state are getting mail-in ballots. You can register same day and get a provisional ballot. It is incredible that there's no voter ID. We're seeing helicopters bringing in
ballots. Why is this even happening? Gavin actually had the nerve to go on to his public platform and pass SB 73 saying that the signatures on mail-in ballots no longer have to be verified. So, you know, what exactly does that do? That enables cheaters to happen. So they're
really bringing in ballots with helicopters? yeah there was a bunch of choppers coming in that's great dropping off dropping off ballots by the truckload talk about an airdrop well since you played stella let me play state of daniel this uh there's one of our podcast friends last night there was a drop of about who's not gay 24 000 ballots and spencer did not get a single one let's take a look at the results over here. So last night, you can see before the drop, it was
308, 878,000. After the drop, 333,712,000. And as you can see, Spencer Pratt did not gain a single vote. He still had, before and after the drop, 86,323. Meanwhile, all of the other contenders here, all of the other candidates... did gain vote totals. What are the odds of that? That, quite frankly, is impossible. By the way, when that 24,000 vote drop came in, there were also drops that
included the votes for governor. What are the odds here that even Steve Hilton would be gaining votes overnight, but none for Spencer Pratt? Are people not voting down? No. Are they just voting for governor and they're not voting for L.A.' 's mayoral race? I get that there are many people voting for governor who would not be able to vote in this mayoral race. Like, obviously, if you live in the northernmost part of California, you would not
be eligible to vote for L.A.' 's mayor. But you're telling me that not a single person who cast a ballot in those. 24,000 votes in LA. Not a single one. Voted for mayor, but they voted for governor. All of this just does not make sense. That's almost like the election where you saw the counts go down live on TV. Yeah, the counts reversed. That was great. That was fantastic. Some of the negative votes for Trump during that Biden election. Let's move. From our podcast crew to
¶ Trump's Interview and Press Confrontation
Ms. Now. President Trump is sticking with the playbook, election denial. The president hopped on Truth Social, as he does on most nights, to claim without a doubt. I like the election denial. Then said Democrats were, quote, trying to steal the primaries for California governor and L.A. mayor. He offered, surprise, surprise, no. facts to support no facts no evidence claim pointing only to a predictably slow counting process in a state wait a minute is this Now, let
me ask you a question. You're in California. You're the man on the scene, boots on the ground. I'm the boots on the ground. California. Is this predictable, this slow counting process? Is this something that... always happens with California? It's been getting progressively worse ever since Newsom got in office. It never used to be this way. In fact, there was a couple of memes floating around showing them, you know. finishing the vote count within two or three
days of the election. And that's been stretching and stretching, largely due to the fact that Newsom decided to Newsom. And, you know, you can't just blame Newsom. It's also the state legislature. They're the ones who create the bull crop. And they, uh... decided to send everybody whether you ask for you don't have to ask for absentee ballots. Years ago, if you wanted to vote by mail, you had to request. Yeah, you had to request it. You
get a package. A package. If you signed this package and sent the package back, then they send you an absentee ballot. No, everybody gets an absentee ballot. We continue. Portis claim pointing only to a predictably slow counting process. in a state with a huge volume of mail-in voters. which has always been the case and he is always known after all he's now been in politics for more than 12 years joining us former democratic congressman for new
york and Senior advisor for VoteVets, Max Rose. James Sample, still with us as well. All right, so. All right. Is this Katie Turr? Turr? Yes, Turr. It's got to be. It sounds like her. She's so snide. Yeah, well, that's what you do. Very slowly, Max. Very slowly. Very slowly. It's always been the case. How much? It's always been the case. Oh, what? I got boots on the ground here that says that's not true. They do count very slowly, Max. Very slowly. But this has always been
the case. How much traction does he get? on an accusation like that. This is what Donald Trump always does. Yeah, it's kind of tiresome, isn't it? It's horrifying because... I think really the Democratic Party has turned. I'm so tired of these people saying Democratic Party. We really have to keep calling this out because it just it makes it sound like they're democratic, but they're not. Democrat party.
Come on, dude. Amidst the I think really. The Democratic Party has turned itself in the right direction in terms of its willingness to go on the offense, its willingness to really use the power at its disposal. It's been a change, right direction. On this front, though, I still think it's a blind spot that somehow there's this thing about Donald Trump where we're like, you know, yeah. 2020, did the steal, January 6th, the whole thing. That won't
happen again. There's zero doubt in my mind. that he will be using this language and attempting to use the powers at his disposal for this midterm election. So he said they're under investigation. The California vote process is under investigation. Under investigation. Should we take him at his word that it's under investigation and that something might be happening
at DOJ? We should take him at his word that he wants there to be an investigation, and we should take him at his word that what he wants from DOJ, he typically gets. Yes, of course, he gets that.
¶ Trump Accuses Media of Crookedness
Now, wait, wait, wait. We should take him at his word that he wants there to be... An investigation? When did he say he wanted... That's not his words. No. Well, how can we take him at his words when they misquote him? This whole station is set up to defend the Democrat Party. I mean, we know this. The station is pathetic. Well. So This morning on... Face the press, spank the press, meet the press, meet the press. Spank Depressed. That would be a great show. Wouldn't that,
though? Can you imagine? Who would host? Well, Manhans Welker is hosting Meet the Press. Well, she'd be perfect. She's got the hands. for it. Have her spanking the press. So she was in Wisconsin interviewing the president and things did not go well for her. Just to be very clear, there's no evidence of what you're saying. No evidence. No evidence. No evidence. Let me ask you about Todd Blanche. Listen to me. Listen to me. Let's talk about
Todd Blanche. This tremendous evidence is. nothing but evidence. The election was rigged. It was a dirty election. And it's happening again right now in California. It's happening right now in California. Right now, it's looking, look at what's happening in California. It's four days in California. It's, no, they're not, they're dropping fast because... It's a rigged election. Let me tell you, it's four days and they aren't even close to coming up with it. You know why they're
doing that? Because they're cheating on the election. Do you have evidence to support that? All I have to do is look. All I have to do is look. That's not evidence. And I listen. And I listen to people. And let's see what happens. But sir, that's not evidence. Do you think it's appropriate? That's how they do it. Count the votes in California. Do you think it's appropriate that they have an election and five days later they're nowhere close to picking the winner? State and local officials
acknowledge they are slow. They're urging. No, they're crooked. They're urging the votes to be counted. That's how they vote in California. You're crooked just like you're crooked. Your press is crooked. Oh, here we go. You're crooked. Oh, here we go. Here we go. Here we go. No, they're crooked. They're crooked. They're urging the votes to be counted quickly. That's how they vote in California. They're crooked, just like you're crooked. Your press is crooked. And meet the
press is crooked. To be fair, I'm not crooked. Really? Well, you play right into their hands. To be fair, Mr. President, I'm not crooked. To be fair, I'm not crooked. Just to be fair now. Let's be fair now. I'm not crooked, Mr. President. That is a great... Isn't that great? To be fair, I'm not crooked, but let's continue. Really? Well, you play right into their hands then. Let's continue. You're either crooked or you're stupid. You play right into their hands with this rep. You know that
these elections are rigged. Your network knows that they're rigged. You know that I won an election. in a landslide and I got 94% bad press. You know why I got that? Because you have no credibility. No, that's wrong. That was a mistake he made. What did he say? He says, I got a 94% I don't know. Whatever. promoting himself he says and then no you know you got 94 bad press after being a winning in a landslide as he calls it not 93 And he says, why? Because you have no credibility? No, no, he was
on the crooked theme, pounding home crooked. and then he switches it to credibility. That was a blunder. Well, he's about to rectify it. Elections are rigged. Your network knows that they're rigged. You know that I won an election in a landslide and I got 94% bad press. But Mr. President, you've never presented evidence. You know why I got that? Because you have no credibility. But you've never presented evidence that it was rigged. Let's keep talking about
it. I want to talk about Todd Lynch. You have more evidence. There's more evidence than ever presented. Let's talk about it. Your elections in this country, we're like a third world country. Your elections are crooked. And you're crooked. And Mr. Press is crooked. And so is ABC and CBS. and CNN. Your one-sided crooked network. Let's call it quits because I've had enough. Thank you, darling. Have a good time. And he walks off the set. This is
¶ Trump's Meet the Press Walk-Off
the best part. You know, there's a Welker standing... No, hold on. What? Now, I didn't get to see this because it was, you know... Past my bedtime. I was still getting up. Yeah. I understood the whole thing was 50 minutes. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. It wasn't like he just walked in and walked off. No, I didn't say that. No, I know you didn't say it, but it sounds like it, the way it comes across. Well, it's because I'm playing a clip. 50 minutes? How much time
is he supposed to be there? I mean, I'm playing a clip, but the point is... He says, okay, we're done. He pulls off the mic, gets up. Thanks, darling. You're crooked. And then Welker is, her eyes are bugging out of her head. She's like looking at the producer, looking at the crew like. Like, what just happened here? Now, is this the one that aired? This is what
aired, yeah. Because I know they put a... transcript and they i guess they posted a secondary complete interview well somewhere so at the end They come back to her in the studio. And here's what she says. Please, I travel all the way to Wisconsin. This is actually the, this is how it went on air. I travel all the way to Wisconsin. On and off in the rain, and I've given you enough time. You hear what he says? I've given you an hour, he says this. I travel all the way to Wisconsin. On and off in
the rain, and I've given you enough time. You ought to straighten out your press because you know what? A country can never be great with a dishonest press. Listen, we traveled all the way to Wisconsin for the press. There goes the microphone. Now they switch back to the studio and here's her tag. I spoke with President Trump on Saturday and we both acknowledged the complications during the interview posed by the rain. He agreed to sit down
with me for another Meet the Press interview. It's because
¶ Supreme Court on Mail-In Ballots
of the rain, I say. Okay. Well, there was some talk about the rain. They were in a barn with a tin roof. Yeah, with a tractor in the back. It was raining and they had to cut it a number of times and they had to stop them. interview a number of times supposedly according to the report i read the whole thing was crazy The whole thing was crazy. Now, there was some... There's a Supreme Court case that may stop some of these ballots. I have a, this is back to Muz now. Tell me about SCOTUS
and mail-in ballots. Well, so there's a pending, I mean, California, we're tracking the mail-in vote. We're tracking how long it takes them to count. California is one of the states that allows for a grace period for ballots that are postmarked. by election day, but arrive. It's not just a ballot that goes right into a post box. You have to get it posted and signed off on, certified
essentially by somebody at the post office. Just as when you mail your taxes, you can mail them out on April 15th at 11 o'clock at night if you can get to a post office and make sure you get that postmarked. The IRS isn't going to reject your money, but there is a movement afoot to reject votes that would meet that same standard. And the Supreme Court has a case pending before it right now called Watson v.
Republican National Committee that has not yet been decided. And at oral argument, there were essentially three groups of three. There are three votes that were a little bit... hard to read based on oral argument. There are clearly three votes to end this practice by this, to have the Supreme Court end this practice. There may be five votes to end the practice. Would it be retroactive? It would not be retroactive. There's no way you could make it
retroactive. Certainly not for California. Well, could it work for November if they decided? Yes, conceivably. That would be a massive change. There's a principle called the Purcell Principle. which says we shouldn't interfere, but realistically... Alabama. Right, right. Realistically, this Supreme Court applies that principle when it's convenient for this Supreme Court to apply that principle for its partisan ends. Yeah, okay. Well, we'll see where that goes. Nowhere.
There was a... See, this is a... It was an interesting commentary on Kate. about why they are taking so much time. Tonight, election fraud investigations underway in L.A. as some, including Republican candidate for governor Steve Hilton, express their frustration that final results of Tuesday's primary election could be weeks away. This is an absolute... shambles, a humiliation for California. It is making our state a laughingstock here in
America. President Trump, without releasing any evidence, accusing Democrats of, quote, grieving the election, saying Americans are ashamed of what is happening. U.S. Attorney Bill Assele announcing his office is coordinating with the... FBI in multiple investigation. But political experts say there is nothing to indicate widespread election fraud. And the delay is expected because of California's mail-in ballot process. It's nothing fraudulent. It's nothing untoward. The reason it's taking
a long time is that. The people counting the ballots take their time matching signatures. Oh, that's it. Matching signatures. Please. SB25, they mentioned in the Stella podcast, says you don't have to do that anymore. According to... The bill, SB 25- I'm sorry, SB 75 that Newsom signed says you don't have to match the signatures. So how does this come into play? Well, they're lying. Somebody's lying. Yeah.
¶ Political Funding and Becerra's Role
Well. For sure, we will not see Xavier Becerra. He's the guy now leading? *laughs* Yeah. Wasn't he healthy? Didn't we laugh him out of town when he was at Health and Human Services? Now he's the front runner? He's the front runner in California? I think he was. Was he the one that was impeached, too, I think? It might have been. Let's ask the robot. Yeah, look it up. That's a good one. Book of Knowledge. Was Javier Becerra impeached? when he was in HHS. Let's see. I
think you're right. Well, one of them was. I think it was him. It could have been. It could have been. Well, it's taken a long time to figure it out. According to the Book of Knowledge, Xavier Becerra served as the 25th United States Secretary of Health. and human services under President Joe Biden from 2021 to 2005. But no impeachment proceedings occurred during his tenure. It was the Homeland Security guy that was impeached. Oh, yeah, you're right.
Different brown guy. Yeah, Becerra was a do-nothing, do-nothing. guy. He oversaw the vacs. Isn't he a pharma guy? Yeah, he's a big pharma, he's a big business guy. The advantage that he has, or the only good news for him, is that he's like pro-refinery. And well, he's pro-oil. He's pro-oil. He's big oil. Chevron has paid, financed his campaign. What? The Jews haven't done it? Well, no, the Jews, I think the Jews want to stire. So Steyer's out. Of course. How could they fail? Nobody likes Steyer.
Steyer's a creep. Yeah, but how could he fail? fail. I mean, he had all the money. I'm sure he had APAC. And how can it fail? I don't understand. People always tell me. If you got all the money, then you win. You should also mention the fact that I was watching one of these old clips and Hillary had twice as much money as Trump in 2016. How come she didn't win? I'm just saying. Twice as much. Anomaly. So we were pretty much correct about Pulte. Now,
¶ The Deep State Chainsaw Strategy
is Pulte the guy? That was probably more you than me on this one. Is he the guy from the big construction company? Is that this Pulte? Isn't there a Pulte Construction? I don't know if it's the same guy or not. But he's definitely got nothing to do with intelligence. I think it's one of these things. I think Trump does this a lot. I'm going to put you up for this. You're going to be able to say you're going to put in your bio that you were
nominated. Your wife's going to like it. Everybody's going to think you're great, but you're not going to get it. Well. The theory goes a little deeper. Let's listen first to CBS. Now we're taking you to Washington where acting Attorney General Todd Blanch has just confirmed that a controversial $1.8 billion payout fund for Trump allies has now been totally canceled. In the meantime, there's new controversy over the president's decision to name a close... ally as acting director
of national intelligence. Weijia Zhang is at the White House with the latest on this. Weijia, good morning to you. What's the issue? Good morning, Gail. Good morning to everybody. President Trump passed over other high-ranking intelligence officials and appointed Bill Pulte, the head of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, to also be the acting director. of National Intelligence. When we asked the White House about why Potee was picked for the role, they only said he would do a
great job. President Trump named Bill Potee to oversee 18 intelligence agencies and organizations, touting his, quote, deep experience managing the most sensitive matters in America. But even some Republicans were quick to point out those sensitive matters don't include national security. No evidence of any qualifications for that. No evidence. The director of national intelligence position was created after 9-11 to coordinate communication for the intelligence community. Pulte currently
runs. an agency that regulates home loans. I don't know of any national security experience he has. Dr. Mehmet Oz, who led Tuesday's White House press briefing. Good afternoon, everybody. Said he didn't know anything about Pocchi's situation, but added. I do trust the president's judgment. He is a very sharp and quick study. I love the, CBS does this a lot. They're doing very, very short quotes from everybody,
just popping it. I mean, I have to say, it's fast, but it's all, you know, it's either a gnat pop or it's going to be a quote of, you know, there's no evidence he has any experience. And he is the home builder. It is the Pulte home builder. according to the total. Okay, that makes sense, because he would be a FHA guy, sure. Yeah, of course. Here's a second clip. Pulte also earned the president's praise for pushing prosecutions of the president's perceived political opponents. Like California's
Perceived political opponents. This is great. Senator Adam Schiff, New York Attorney General. That's not perceived. That's a political opponent. Tisha James and Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook for alleged mortgage fraud. We refer people who are Democrats, Republicans, it doesn't matter. Congress doesn't have a role in confirming acting cabinet-level officials like Potee or Acting Attorney General Todd Blanch. fund is something that President Trump talked about for a
long time. Blanche faced fierce backlash even after the Justice Department dropped plans to set up a proposed one point which is really inherently dishonest. Yeah, but the way they're doing it, I like it because it keeps the pace
and flow going like crazy. It's augmenting, it's not... confirm in other words they don't say something and then the guy says the same thing exactly blanch faced fierce backlash even after the justice department dropped plans to set up a proposed 1.8 billion dollar fund to pay people who feel they were victims of government weaponization But we are
not moving forward with the fund, period. A federal judge ruled to temporarily block the fund until next month, but Blanche says even after that date, the administration will not try to... Okay, so now we go to the president himself. It's an acting position. It's not a permanent. He's not going to be permanent because, you know, I don't think he'd want to be permanent. But he's a very smart guy, and you may find out some things about the rigged elections, et cetera, et cetera. I think you'd
like to do it. I'd like to. I think he wants to do it very much. Got a lot of energy. But he'll be very good. A lot of energy. Again, it's not a permanent position. We're interviewing people right now. But it's somebody just to... Take it over for a little while. Does he have a necessary, in your view, Mr. President, a necessary national security experience to take on that position? Well, I do, and I think he does, actually, because he's smart. He's smart. His national security
experience. Yeah, he's smart. So what we deconstructed. is that this what he's doing here is getting a guy bull in a china shop look at this look at this look at this look at this and there's a guy behind him which is the same guy who was behind tulsi and that's the guy he said okay here's bill pulte he's going to be the acting director of national intelligence which has them completely in a conniption fit. Why? Because Pulte is like a bull in a china shop.
And my friend The NSA veteran, Kirk Wiebe, once told me, I asked him the question. How would you go about reforming the deep state? What would you do? And he said, first, you need some... with a chainsaw weed whacker who's willing to go in there and just Tear everything down. And then you need somebody from the intelligence community who actually knows how to direct the weed whacker to where he's got to go. So Tulsi Gabbard did
that in the first term. capable of doing that. He's got Tulsi Gabbard's chief assistant, Aaron Lucas, who is the deputy DNI under Tulsi, to show him exactly where to go. And people like Mark Warner, the senator who was probably most responsible for Russiagate. is completely flipping out. He says, this guy's going to have access to every classified secret in the United States. What does that mean? In his interview with Miranda Devine yesterday, Trump hinted at it.
He kept coming back over and over again to the rigging of the 2020 elections. And my bet. is the way he's seeing Pulte is this is the guy who can prevent the fraud coming up in the midterms. All right. So chainsaw weed whacker. There you go. Who is that? Who said that? Who was that last? Clip from Barbara Boyd. Is that a Prometheus person? Yes. Old lady. Yeah. They have a bunch of them. They only have two of them. Well, it seems like a bunch to me, Susan and Barbara, but. I mean, that's the guy.
He's been a spook for 20 years. Of course he knows where everything is. And you get Pulte, yeah, I'm sure the guy's going to have fun. It's just like demoing a house. This is basically, in the private sector, this is the same act that we're seeing with Nick Shirley. Oh, do tell. Nick Shirley's always got some guy. Oh yeah, yeah, he has Dave. Bob. Bob or Dave or... Fred, there's some guy telling him what to do. Yes, yes, exactly right. It's fantastic. It's a good bit
because you have a front man. And then when all hell breaks loose and you got to ax him, you just, okay, you're out. Yeah. And but meanwhile, the real damage is being done by the second guy there. He's still there. And you bring another front man in, he does the same exact thing. It doesn't make any difference who it is. And so the whole thing, it reminds me, there used to be a... The guy who ran Computer World and IDP. Oh, here we go. Here we
¶ Todd Blanche Appointment and Precedents
go. I'm already loving it. I'm already loving it. This is the one I've not heard. I don't think I've heard this one. It's possible. I have told this before because it's a very good story. It's not my story. It's a story that everyone knows. Pat McGovern used to run Computer World, Info World, all these magazines, and IDG, the publishing company, is really big in Asia. They're everywhere. And Pat used his gambit. He'd do the same. He pulled a similar kind of stunt to have somebody who
was a... Like just a prick writing nasty stuff. By the way, that's a classic word we need to bring back. Prick is not used often enough because, you know, it's a word you can use. People aren't offended, but it really explains like a, just a nasty. Yeah, beyond a dick. Yeah. Oh, yeah. It's dick and beyond. So this guy, so the idea, so he'd create these people that didn't exist and he'd have somebody. Ghost writing. for
him. So he had all these different writers that would go on and on and on about something or other and they'd slam some company and say, these guys are no good. Of course, this may be a company that didn't advertise a lot. There's a lot of reasons to do it. Obviously. and it would get the company all bent out of shape. And so McGovern would always go up to the company and say, well, you know, if you guys maybe advertise a little bit. Well, we can
advertise, but that guy's got to go. And McGovern would always say, no problem, I'm firing him tomorrow. Some guy who didn't exist. A guy who didn't exist. That's perfect. He's out. He's out. We're with you, buddy. That's great. Do you think that stuff must still happen at publications, I'm sure? Sure it does. Everything is like that. When we mess up, we're going to fire our producer. That guy's gotta go. So this next clip, because we're kind
of moving into... Todd Blanch, which everyone is also really upset about because he's the president's personal lawyer. How many times have we heard this? Oh, the attorney general's acting like the president's personal lawyer. Now it actually is his personal lawyer and they're losing their minds over it. But I caught this on Miz Now. I'm obsessed with Miz Now. It's so bad. I must be single-handedly raising their
ratings through the roof. Listen to this. Doubling them. Blanche has been auditioning for this since Bondi was ousted in April. Auditioning! Oh yeah! And pushing to go even farther than she would on cases that even if they ultimately lose or are overturned, reflect Trump's demands for a partisan, political, revenge-oriented DOJ. The move does follow on what Trump wanted in Telegraph. Many are concerned that this obvious... Legal. Conflict will only get worse if he goes from temporary
to permanent. Remember, it is a scandal and a legal breach. Isn't that Ari Flyer, the guy with the 6 o'clock shadow? The guy who does rap lyrics at the end of his show. I remember in the great words of Q West. Conflict will only get worse if he
goes from temporary to permanent. Remember, it is a scandal and a legal breach in and of itself for any president to take someone who was their personal defense attorney, someone who was loyal to them on a personal basis, and say they should also run the DOJ, run the law firm, if you will, for the country. Because throughout modern history... of the DOJ, it was a huge dividing line that it is supposed to be independent. That of course, any president is entitled to their... Well, this is
a very good question. He says modern history, but let's just go through the history because I did a deep dive. Oh good for you. Let's start with... Number one, George Washington. His... Department of Justice. This is he actually established. This is before the Department of Justice was established. This is 1789. Edmund Randolph. was his private personal attorney. managing his extensive personal legal affairs and estates in Virginia, and he appointed him as the nation's very first U.S.
Attorney General. Huh. Well, there's the precedent has been set. The precedent has been set. The precedent has been set. Let's go to Warren G. Harding, 1921. Harry Daugherty, Ohio lawyer who served Harding's personal attorney, close political confidant. Upon taking office, Harding appointed Daugherty. as Attorney General. Well, there you have it. That's pretty modern. Now, how about this one? This is my favorite because it's not just the old guys. It's not just the Republicans. John F. Kennedy
literally appointed his brother. Robert F. Kennedy. There you go. As his brother, his brother became Attorney General. Yeah, there's no conflict there, that's not crazy. Richard Nixon. appointed John Mitchell. And Richard, he was Nixon's law partner at their firm. Ronald Reagan, William French Smith, and Edwin Meese. Both in the inner circle. And, of course, George W. Bush with Alberto Gonzalez. So this is bull crap. This is bull crap. This is basically a lie being put on
the poor, dumb viewers of MS Now. Low IQ viewers is how we call that. Yes, exactly. So this whole thing... But, you know, it's a new day, it's a new dawn. I guess that's, I guess that's, I don't know. I don't know what I'm saying, but you know, you know what I mean? Since we're talking about the
¶ Hegseth's D-Day Speech Controversy
Department of Justice, I have an interesting little tidbit for you. Okay. This is an Ask Adam. Oh, hold on a second. You surprised me with the Ask Adam, but... Ask Adam. Ask Adam. Yeah. All right. Here we go. Ask Adam. What are we doing? So this is... I want you to listen to this clip. And this is about Hegseth. Talking about, you know, he hexes. came out with this speech that got all the EU people bent out of shape saying you guys are on D-Day. It's
a D-Day speech. Yeah, June 6th, yes. We had D-Day yesterday for people. It wasn't celebrating the United States at all anymore. Nobody cares. 22,000 dead on the beach, but now that's... Whatever. Let's skip it. Yeah. Whatever. Whatever. Whatever. Yeah. Okay. So this is Ask Adam Hegseth on EU. The US Defense Secretary Pete Hegsov has criticized European nations for allowing what he described as an invasion of migrants on their shores during a D-Day anniversary speech in France.
Speaking in Normandy, he said different European beaches were being invaded by dangerous ideologies. Sadly, today, different European beaches are stormed by different dangerous ideologies. Beaches in Spain, in Italy, in Greece, Bulgaria, boats. And men arrive. When will European capitals do something about that invasion? Migration has become a major political issue across Europe with parties supporting hardline immigration policies surging in the polls. Ask Adam, ask Adam, will
he know or will he want to know? ♪ Slow as cattle ♪ Answer the question. Go. All right. What is the question? Well, this is a BBC report, and I'm asking you, what subtle insult? to the Trump administration was made in that clip. That doesn't come to mind immediately. No. Because you didn't catch it right away. So I'm going to play a short clip. Yes. Which is another BBC clip with another presenter doing the same insult. The U.S. Defense Secretary, Pete Hegseth, has called on European
countries. to resist what he called an invasion of foreign migrants. An invasion of four... Wait, she said countries, which was... That caught my ear right away. He's the Secretary of War. Oh. The U.S. Defense Secretary, Pete Hagsner, was called on European... countries to resist what he called an invasion of foreign migrants. Yeah, very good. Very good. I did not pick up on that. No, because it's meant for you not to. They're just not giving, you know,
we don't care what you call it. We're going to call it what we're going to call it. We're British. You're right. It's not the Gulf of America. I tell you, it's the Gulf of Mexico. So we have, uh,
¶ New World Screwworm and Famine
panic. Panic, everybody, panic! Panic! here in Texas. The new world screw worm. The new world screw worm. The screw worm is back. So, Texas Slim. stayed here overnight. He's on his way to, uh, Baylor White. Baylor Scott White Hospital. He has like acute pancreatitis. Not from drinking, because he hasn't, I don't think he's had a drink in a decade. Yeah, how do you get it from drinking? It's just something else. It's like a virus. So I really want everybody, you know, think of Slim. Pray for
Slim. It's not great. And Slim is even slimmer than he was. But, you know, this is Mr. Beef Intelligence, and he's like... oh man, this screw worm. He told me the whole history of the screw worm. He said, back in the day. He had screw worm. Yeah, we had screw worm. And you dug a trough and you walked all the cows through it with poison and they came out the other end and the screw worm was gone. That's what we did with screw worm. It was that simple. I said, but now, he says, now there's
two things. One, the vaccine's got to be coming. We've got to have a vaccine for the screwworm. And the other one is really... What's this? What? A vaccine against a worm. course it's ridiculous he says it's just to reduce the herd even further they're going to want to call them you know it's all regulatory capture is what he said i listened to because you know slim is the one who said six years ago Our herd's going to go down. You have no idea how bad it's
going to get. Now, he said to me last night, he said, there's going to be a famine within 90 days. It may not be America. It could be Asia. This is a very big problem. And there's a couple of things I caught in this. Fox. Live Now report. Does he think this famine is being... the wood. Don't change. so quickly? What is the indicator for a famine
and what is the trigger? Well, the trigger is stuff like this, where the herd gets reduced to where, I mean, have you been to a restaurant lately and ordered a... A ribeye? I mean, you're talking $89. $1,000. There's literally in Austin at, what is that place called? Three Forks, Five Forks, I don't know, Fork and Spoon. It's a fancy restaurant. Do you get one of those Flintstone ribeyes? What is it called? What's the big one called? You know, the huge one? Yeah, bone-in. Yeah, no, no,
but big, like you eat it with three people. Oh, a double cut. No, no, no, no, no. No, a high collar. No, what is that thing called? A low pocket. No, what is that thing? Come on, there's a name for it. It's a tomahawk, the jumbo tomahawk. A tomahawk steak, yeah. They sell them at Costco. Those things are great. How much do you think they charge for it at the fancy restaurant in Austin? And you can, three people can eat. You could do four if you
really wanted to. but you and I could probably devour one ourselves. Well, maybe not. You need three people. What is the price, do you think, in the fancy Austin restaurant for a jumbo? tomahawk rib eye. A jumbo tomahawk rib at a fancy Austin, which is overpriced. This is New York prices. Yep. For some unknown reason. I would say $95. $875. What? No. Yes. Yes. Dude, I was in a... What? Yes, I was in Nashville and one little stupid rib by $110. We didn't eat it, by
the way. We didn't go to the restaurant. $110 for just a little ribeye. No, no. It's out of control. Let's back this up. $895 for a... $875. 875. 875, the Tomahawk, which you can buy at Costco, by the way, for about... 50 bucks maybe? 40? No, I don't think it's that much. It's probably less. Like 30. No, that's the best price. So, but this is what's happening. And I'm sure that, you know, There's a whole bunch of things that come into this. Well, hold on a
second. This doesn't cost them. What are they marking the thing up and why? Well, the thing that Slim told me years ago. Or maybe they don't have it and it's just bull crap. No. I'm going back to what he said five, six years ago. ago. He says, mark my words. He says, Texas beef will be sold as caviar. You remember that? You're saying it's gonna be like caviar. And that's what's happening. And as a little aside,
we don't get most of this beef. Most of this beef is going to the rich Chinese and the Japanese, and it's all going overseas. We're not even eating Texas beef, which brings me to this report. First about the scary screwworm. So first of all, let's just break down what exactly this new world screwworm is and the threat that it poses to livestock. Yeah, so like you said earlier, it is a fly and it's a parasitic blowfly
and it lays eggs on wounds. of animals or any type of opening or orifice that it has access to and then those larvae will hatch off and start eating on the flesh of that animal. And when it eats this flesh, I mean, like, does it just eat away at the whole animal? Well, I mean, since it's fly larvae, it is a little tough for them to eat
and consume an entire animal, but they will. feed on it and make wounds very grotesque in a sense and what really ends up happening is the animal doesn't survive these infestations so normally the animal will pass before full consumption by the larva, but the impact is severe while they're there and while they're feeding. Okay. So now this is... I think it's Laredo where this happened. They've got a 12-mile radius zone. And the worm doesn't fly, okay?
It doesn't like jump, fly around. I'm going to go hit hill country. I'm going to go over here. No, it doesn't. You have to have contact, pretty much contact. with the other animal to get that. But now listen to this piece. Unfortunately, it began moving out of South America through Central America and up into Mexico a couple years ago, right? We've been watching it since 2022 or 2023. But most of that movement is due to moving
of animals that were infested with these. larva and when you move those animals without treating them ahead of time it can lead to further infestations in other areas. So what's wrong with this picture? It comes from animals that were moved up from Mexico and South America. This is beef country. That's not a Texas cow! They're moving. We're
eating the crap. That's what's going on. You go to the supermarket, H-E-B, you're eating South American crap that has been touched by Lord knows how many hands, what they've injected into these animals to get them here. And our beef, the big Flintstone stuff, that's going overseas. This is not even our beef. Why are we driving cattle up through Texas? We got cattle. Now, it doesn't matter because
we need to reduce the herd. They're probably, well, you got to cull them or shoot them up, which will make them inedible and make them die eventually as well. So how do we, what do you do? So wait, let's back up. So initially. In the olden days, they would just run them through a bath and that would be the end of it. Yep. a poison bat which you do which you can do with dogs too uh you know it's kind of bastard or Got malathion in them or whatever it is. Yeah. What's wrong with that
process? No, there's no more knowledge. It's all... you know It's all... rules and regulations that have been written over decades. and you know it's regulations these regulations these regulators coming now you can't do that It's toxic. Yeah. It gets into the groundwater. Exactly. And maybe Brooke Rollins, I think that's her name, our Ag Secretary, maybe she'll figure this out. But the media, and this is Fox. They still want to scare you. They want to scare the
bejesus out of you. Now, how do we scare Americans? What's the best way? You're gonna die. No, even worse than you dying. Your children are going to die. No, worse than the kids. I don't know. Your dog! Let's talk about pets. There are a lot of dog owners out there, a lot of cat owners out there. Do they need to be worried? Can this impact their pets?
Definitely. Especially if you're in an area. Definitely. I don't know if we have anybody listening from outside the United States, but if you're in an area, you definitely need to be concerned if the screwworms have returned in that area. And in that area of Texas right now, we do want to watch our pets. We want to look at them just as much as we would our livestock because, yes, they will infest animals. Dogs seem to be.
high on the list right now out of Mexico, not as high as cattle, but still over 5,000 have been identified as having infestations, and that's a large number. Is this, does it pose a threat to humans? Yes, even humans have to be concerned. It is rare in humans, and even rarer in birds. We get asked a lot about that too. Now it's like a 1% or so or less of the population of the cases they've recorded that impact humans. But we still, we want humans to
be aware it is a possibility. I wouldn't put high on your list, but we still want them to realize that it is, it can happen. We've had cases of it over the last several days. decades of travelers going to places where they still can get into, where they still find New World's screw worms, and then coming back to the United States with infestations. Yeah, you should still be worried, no matter what you say. Be worried, be worried. You want to hear the CBS version of this,
and we'll close it out? Yeah, and I'd be very interested to see if they use the Nat Pop style of... of analysis. We've been holding off the fly for years from Panama. Scientists developed a way in the 60s to breed sterile screw worm flies. Then when they would drop them out of airplanes, by the millions, the flies out in the wild were unable to reproduce. Using that strategy, they pushed this fly south, out of the United States, out of Mexico, all the way down through Central
America, using that exact same strategy. During the pandemic, there were some breakdowns in the process and in surveillance. There was additional movement of people and animals to the north. People? The fly. What? The people with screwworms, come on. Screwworms started to spread again. And I rubbed against the cow and the cow got my screwworm. Once that became evident, the U.S. started devoting more resources to trying to stop it. They started to prepare a location in Mexico
to breed more sterile flies. They prepared an old base in the South U.S. to be able to receive sterile flies and drop them again. And right now the work is ongoing to try to breed sterile flies again in the U.S. That in itself is significant. Researchers have told me that the flies considered to be so dangerous, they can't even get their hands on live samples. They've had to go south to Panama. to study them. They were all over the place. Nah, this is bogus. So, do
you know who got money to do this? This is going to kill you. What company in America, amongst many others, got money to do the sterile fly, the sterile mosquito, the sterile ticks. Bill Gates. Now, we already know he does. No, Google. Google. Google, yes. Oh, yeah. You know what? I did know this because I saw this run past the wire. Yep. Google. Yeah, Google. How does that even work? Say Kessler. Go, yeah, right? Why don't
you go make your AI better, Google? If these flies impact the ability of ranchers to have calves, they have to limit the seasons because they can't have calves in the warm season when the fly is active. That starts to impact how much they're able to rebuild their herds. There you go. It impacts. the ability of wildlife to survive. And yes, in some cases, it could impact pets and people. There's been surveillance ongoing for months and months
and months. State and federal agencies have been training on where to watch for the fly, how to trap it, how to recognize it. They have been developing therapeutics. and treatments and hope that once it was here they could get on it right away but now it is called Melithia across the border it's about a hundred miles southwest of San Antonio And the battle is now not just something that scientists are expecting to happen. It is here. It's here. San Antone. Like, I could have screwworm at
any moment. You could. You probably do. I was wondering about that itch. I got a screwworm. This is, uh, yeah, this is bad. And, uh... Okay, we'll see. We'll see what Brooke does. Nothing. I'm afraid you're right. The whole thing's an op. Well, it is an op. It's an op to collapse the herd even further. Yeah, well, they don't want people eating meat. We had a couple of clips. Then we played that clip where the guy says we've got to poison the public with Alpha Gal
so people stop eating beef. Well, that's an old clip. Save the planet. Yeah, that is an old clip of that guy. I know it's an old clip, but that's... What's new? Yeah. Yep. So. We're just going to continue
¶ Ukraine Drone Attacks and Peace Efforts
eating our Texas beef. Straight from the rancher. That's where you want to get it. So I got a couple of oddball clips today. Okay. I would like to get some non-oddball clips. It turns out that the... Ukraine attacks St. Petersburg as we played last Thursday, but they did it again on Saturday, and everybody's making it sound like this was the first attack, when it's obviously not, since
we report. or played clips from NTD last show. And Russia has suffered what it's called an unprecedented attack on the city of St. Petersburg and the surrounding areas. Ukraine fired hundreds of drones at Russian targets early on Saturday, and many of those drones targeted St. Petersburg itself, coinciding with the... final day of a flagship economic forum being held in the city. Moscow and Kiev have intensified drone strikes on each other in recent months amid US-led diplomatic
efforts to end the war. But does this latest attack risk escalating the conflict? Our correspondent in Kiev, Vitaly Shevchenko, told me more. The Ukrainians are saying that they hit a weapons storage facility, a navy base and an oil depot outside St. Petersburg. The Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelensky, called the attack a just response to... Russia's aggression. The Russian
authorities say that this was an unprecedented strike. The governor of Leningrad region said that hundreds of people were evacuated from outside a military facility which caught fire. So a pretty big incident in St. Petersburg. And were there any deaths or any injuries? The local authorities are sort of vague on that subject. They're talking of a number of
people injured. They say the damage to buildings in the area is... insignificant but i've seen videos of smoke billowing outside in biedersberg and there's one video of a man who appears to be a local resident and he says that weapon stores have caught fire and you can hear a lot of explosions happening in the background Was there any video with this report? Or did they just say that there's smoke and weapons deposed? This is the BBC World Service, so I didn't get to see any videos.
Oh, okay. I don't hear any nat pops. I don't hear any explosions. The BBC World Service, they don't do that. They should. If they want to stay relevant, they need to do nat pops. Get on board, BBC. Well, you know, they're still from the old shortwave days. and they know if they did a nat pop it would sound like interference on the wireless. This is the BBC World Service. We have no nat pops. We have a... from a guy on the street who said, "I heard
some explosions." That's exactly what it sounds like. Yeah. I'm a shortwave listener. You can't find anything anymore. On shortwave? It's pretty hard to come by. And, you know, it's kind of pathetic compared to what it was when you were a kid. Yeah. So let's go and play part two of this. We had long waves. You had medium wave, which is AM. They had long wave. And Longwave was what... *Sigh* Was it, what was the thing in Luxembourg? Radio Luxembourg. Yeah, a lot of these stations weren't
long, but it was always called shortwave. No, no, you had... I mean, the receiver was called a shortwave receiver. Yeah, but... Yeah, it had longwave. It had longwave. LW. LW. Your band on there said LW. Yes, yes, that was great. And you had a switch. Oh, now I'm on long wave. Hey, and you know what you hear? I'm ready, Alexander! Long way! Yeah, you would get a lot of that wave sound. That's what we grew up with, kids. That's what we grew up with. Next, I'll
do the modem sound of a dial-up. All right, here we go. How did Ukraine manage to get their drones so far into Russian territory again? Well, I've spoken to the commander of one of the Ukrainian drone units involved in the strike. And he basically told me that Russian air defenses were useless. We take part in many operations in the north region of Russia. And it's very interesting
that in these days... Keep those balls. Is there a fear, Vitaly, that given the potential humiliation that Russia has suffered, Thank you. accusing each other of carrying out all sorts of atrocities and saying, well, look, we have to respond. But my view is that this is basically political rhetoric. And the truth is that all these attacks, they would be hampered. happening anyway because for different reasons Ukraine and Russia are still willing and able to fight foreign
You know... They went on forever, by the way. You should thank me for stopping it there. Yes, in my view, in my view. That's the point. That's why I had to stop it. So this has resulted in a powwow. The French, German and British leaders will meet their
Ukrainian counterpart in London on Sunday. French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer will discuss with Zelensky the way forwards at a time when Russia... in a state of military, economic and strategic failure, is persisting unsuccessfully with a deadly war, the Élysée Palace said. On Friday, Macron welcomed the letter from Volodymyr Zelensky to Vladimir Putin aimed at achieving peace. So he
¶ Iran Protests and Stolen Revolution
sent a letter. sent a letter. A curse letter. Do they really? Do they still send letters? Yeah, a turd. But I mean, seriously, do they, like with a big wax seal on it? I mean, do they really send letters? Well, Trump keeps saying he's waiting for a letter. From who? From the Iranians. Oh, yeah. I got a... It's funny you bring that up. I've got... I got to. A clip from Toosie, your guy, Toosie. Toosie? Remember
Toosie? Toosie? Toosie. T-O-U-S-I. The YouTuber guy. The Toosie guy who... who we suspect might be a spook, but we're not quite sure. Oh yeah, right. He does all the Iranian news. And so he shows... All these videos, because, you know, the Internet is back open. So IRGC decided, okay, everybody's got Internet now. We'll turn it back on. And there's tons of videos of protests, students protesting. interesting to watch because what you don't see is There's almost
no headscarves. All the girls just got their hair flapping in the wind or tied up in a bun. Persian women, they actually are attractive. Very. Oh, sometimes they get thick ankles. Well, you know, it's... I'm just saying. It's the food. you That's only when we're auditioning Persian women, okay? That's the context in which we say this as producers. So he had a little report, which I figured
I'd share. Doing protests against the Islamic occupation is quite dangerous, as you've also seen back in December and January.
Having said that... The regime is getting weaker every day because thanks to President Trump and the US military because the President Trump has not abandoned the mission as you've seen over the last couple of months and few weeks the US military continues their operation against the regime in the Strait of Hormuz the blockade continues There have been some clashes, but of course the blockade is doing its job, draining the resources, draining the finances of the regime,
creating uncertainty and infighting inside the regime. And that's why the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps are trying their best to drag the Americans and everybody else and the Arabs into an all-out war because it's in the interest of the people. of the regime in Iran to have an all-out war because at least it will create unity inside the regime and they could just drag this along. But the US decided not to take debate and continue to paralyze the regime. And they don't know what to do right
now. If the US military had abandoned the mission, if the US military and the US government had abandoned the Iranian people, for example, obviously... The regime right now will be strengthened massively. But right now, they can't. because the US military is not stopping what they are doing and President Trump is also not giving up. And he also, he had many opportunities to sign a deal, give a deal to the Islamic Republic and just get out of it. He said, no, I'm not getting out of this.
And he's rejected every single deal sent from Tehran. Ah, July 4th is just around the corner. You're going to have to get it together. Premium was down 20 cents here in Texas. I thought that was quite a drop, actually. It should be down to nothing. Texas. This is an oil producing state. Okay. Got it. You know, the oil baron, he's reopening wells they previously capped. He says there's so much demand right now. They have 1,500 wells that they capped and they're opening them up again. He
says that right now... It used to cost, let me see his number. It used to cost $28,000 a day to operate a well. Now it's $38,000. He says, because it's hard to get anybody. Let me get anybody. To work. People to work. You can't get anybody to work? They rift all these people. you know, reduction in force. And now these people who were riffed, they're like, I don't know, man, pay me some more. I'll come back. That's how the oil business works. Well, that's the way
it should work. Yeah. You keep your employees or you screw up with them and they're going to screw with you. Come on. So then NPR had. I had this woman on who wrote a book. Let's see. What's her name? Yagane Torbati. She... who wrote the book Stolen Revolution. And she kind of says the same thing, that things are kind of groovy in Iran right now. I married Louise Kelly. That country. I was just describing, it's Iran, or at least Iran at the time of the 1979
revolution. The path from 1979 with the toppling of a monarch through the decades of oppression and economic turmoil that followed to this current moment is mapped out in the book Stolen Revolution. trail and hope in modern Iran. Co-author and journalist Yeganeh Torbati is here to talk to us about it in this special episode of the podcast. We've spent so much time here these last few months talking
about the current war in Iran. It felt worthwhile to dig deep on Yeganeh's reporting on some of the forces and people who brought Iran to this moment. Yeganeh Torbadi, welcome. Thank you so much for having me. All right, now listen to her report. You, in that same story, though, write about a rock concert in Tehran that has just sold out. Rock concert? Bruce Springsteen is playing Tehran? Hipsters, young hipsters. Hipsters in Tehran who are still hanging
out at cafes and having fun. Hipsters, check the calendar. Joy continues. Hope does continue even amidst a wider sense of hopelessness. Life goes on, you know. I think even in people in war zones, figure out ways to have those moments of joy because you sort of have to, to keep going. And I do think, you know, my job as a book author and my job as a newspaper reporter can sometimes be a little bit intention because reviewing all this history, I sort of got a sense
of like, nothing is permanent. Like things change. and movements can arise out of nowhere and people learn to kind of deal with things and maybe come up with solutions and they manage to find ways to keep contesting power and to keep asserting themselves over time. And so, you know, for a news story, you kind of have to like have an angle and a conclusion, but it's just
not. snapshot in time and in a year or in five years we may look back and you know see all of this as a prelude to something or kind of be able to identify the threads that then led to something bigger and we sort of have to be patient and also keep keep watching I think so the hipsters are doing rock concerts in Tehran how much of a war is this This woman, something's phony about her. She does a laugh tell before she uses the word
book author. I'm a book. That's a fair point. Then she uses a laugh tell in front of the word. I should have written it down, but another key word. Yeah, fair. Halfway through. Fair. That's fair. So I guess she's a spook. This is a bullcrap book. There's no rock concerts going on. I mean, maybe there are. Yeah, I think the rock concerts. There might be, but I don't think, I think this is going to be. It's just not presented correctly. They're making it sound like, oh,
don't worry about it. That's how I took it. Don't worry about it. Don't worry about it. Don't worry about it, it's all good. So we are on the eve
¶ Tech IPOs, AI Crash, Token Maxing
of something pretty big. these big IPOs. the tech IPOs. You mean after the crash on Friday? The AI crash on Friday? Yeah. You think these IPOs are going to come off? Yeah, I think they will. They got to go. But here's the thing. Let me see if I can find this. The thing that is rather concerning... Is this. For the general public. If you think about your average investor, a lot of them are passive investors. You look at your 401k, your retirement accounts, you're probably plugged
into some sort of an index fund. So you don't have to go and be a stock picker. You can just sit back and collect money that's growing within these major indexes. So the rules have changed a little bit. for these listing places like the NASDAQ for the New York Stock Exchange. Before, when these companies debuted, there was a waiting period around three months before they were included
in these index funds. Now, as little as two weeks later, these massive companies with unproven financial models can now be added to the index. funds. And typically when you see a company debut, the first day of trading is very volatile. The first few weeks of trading are very volatile because people are trying to price what the value is of this particular company. So now that these companies like your open AIs, your SpaceXs, that they can be
included. Your open AIs, your space. X's? Is there more than one space X? Your space X's? This is bad reporting. Particular company. I can give you some other examples of why it's bad reporting when you're done. Okay. The way she presents it is bullcrap. What do you mean? It's not like, oh, now you can. Now the indexes can pick them up after two weeks. They have to pick them up after two weeks if they're in the index. If it's allowed, this is a scam. We talked
about this on DH. Okay, good. What did you conclude? To conclude this was another beautiful ploy. by Elon. To change the moment where the index fund has to bring this, you know, instead of letting the stock settle out, you know, it comes out, goes up and down and up and down. Who knows what it's going to do? You don't know. You really don't know. Instead of waiting for it to go through the normal process. and then
putting it in the index fund. And it's a big part of the index fund, which means you've got to bring a lot of, you've got to buy a bunch of stock because the index funds have to own the stock. So they have to buy a bunch of stock instead of having to let it go through its rigmarole. It artificially crops it up because it has to buy
it right away. a scam and it should be pointed out as not a scam illegally it's just another elon musk beautiful the guy's a genius well they're all gonna get in i mean if they all have this level all of them will have to be, will be, not have to be, all of them will be pulled into the index. They have to be. It's by the rules of the fund. So, okay. So you're going to have a bunch. In other words, this could be the beginning of the end. This could bring down the whole thing.
You don't know. There's more and more crazy stuff going on asking for a major correction. So there's something else I learned. from a friend of mine who works at an accounting company. Not the anonymous gay guy, but he'll probably weigh in. He still listens. I know he does. I always hope so. Oh, no, he texts me all the time. No, he never texts me. Well, the anonymous gay accountant, of course, texted me about testosterone. Hello, I mean. He was the first one to text me. What
did he say? It's great, and you got to get on these peptides. I'm ripped. That's what he said. Peptide. I'm ripped. You should have put him. I'll bet he is. Of course he is. My son found one. The Wolverine. Everyone's talking about the Wolverine package, baby. Is that the one that brings your muscles up and they can get as big as pot? You can turn into literally a monster by working out once a month. Yes, it's the Wolverine. It's like two peptides. And please don't email
me. I have everything I need to know. And you know what I'm going to do? Absolutely nothing. I would avoid it like the plague. I got some feedback from
¶ Jevons Paradox and AI Costs
a PhD as well. Anyway. So a lot of these, what they call the hyperscalers. which includes Google. They have switched from stock options to RSI. use. Are you familiar with this? It's like revenue service units. No, I'm not familiar with them. So as an accounting thing, they switched everybody to RSUs. So it's all about accounting. Yeah, everything's about accounting. Every single time an RSU employee cashes out. The company has to sell stock to cover it, which
pushes the stock price down. So then, of course, they have to do stock buybacks to keep the price up. It's like a treadmill. And Google is raising $80 billion. For their AI. Well. If you look at the... In fact, Reuters wrote about it. 40 million of that is going towards compensation of employees who are cashing in their RSUs. 40 billion of it. So. The theory is... that these big tech companies so I mean, they so need AI to succeed. because their wealth at this point is
really on paper. They got to spend all this CapEx on AI. And these employees, you know, they they cash out, boom, legally. Every time an RSU employee cashes out, they have to withhold 22% upfront. That's a lot of money. So there's something going on that is not well in Silicon Valley with Google of all companies. They were printing money. And somehow now this whole AI thing has. is screwing everybody's numbers up. So yeah, you better believe it has to be successful. A note from a dude
named Ben who works at Microsoft. We've been told to use AI for everything that has resulted in a lot of token maxing. This is the big term in Silicon Valley. Token maxing, here's your tokens, you gotta use them all. I work in C++ and I've had to review code that was complete slop. Amongst my co-workers, we keep talking about how much this is actually costing us, and no one knows. We're told, hey, now is the golden age, so use as much as you can before it
ends. I think everyone knows there's going to be a limit on it eventually. but we don't know how much. The other thing to note is that AI use is just tracked and factored into promotions and bonuses. This is what leads to token maxing. So you have to show that you're really productive by using a lot of tokens. um this is crazy that's a good one um I don't think AI coding is going anywhere. The models have gotten a lot better. However, it can be really frustrating
to work with them. Sometimes they can implement features really well. It's fantastic. It's like a slot machine. Yes, is what I've noticed too. I hope they get better, but I hope they get better for things I really need to understand. For now, I'm writing all my code myself. So now enter the big problem that we've been talking about, which is the data center to the desktop. And CNBC had, what's this guy's name? Patel, of course, Indian
dude. He is the... President of Cisco. Cisco and of course Cisco wants to sell routers and and switches and stuff for traffic So the guys were kind of full of crap, but what he's saying here. I think is very relevant. Hey, just imagine that Employees in the company use about $200 worth of tokens every week. 50 weeks
a year, that's 10,000 bucks. um in tokens uh you have 40 000 employees that's 400 million dollars you have 90 000 employees that's 900 million dollars that wasn't really starting price can you say that again slowly 200 dollars per week okay that doesn't seem like it doesn't seem like it's crazy right trying to think of my my open claw bell you probably use more than that deidre you'd be a very expensive i guess it gets shut off and i'm like i gotta re-up it okay so
200 a week and then you multiply that at how many 50 weeks yeah let's say you take two weeks off right a year you maybe take four weeks it's 48 weeks roughly it's 10 000 bucks a year and right per employee per employee and so that we have 90 000 employees so now we have the problem for these ai frontier model companies like open ai anthropic and to a degree uh spacex ai element op model routing what about model routing i feel like this week everyone's
talking about that and it makes a lot of sense like you can just see the numbers it costs you 25 for an output on cloud opus under a dollar for the same output on DeepSeq. Are you guys utilizing that? Absolutely. We actually have three models ourselves. We have a deep network model. We have a foundation security model that we've open sourced. And we've got a time series
model. We just also got another model for observability. And we demoed that on stage that, you know, if it takes 12 cents for token costs that you would have for a certain task, you could take out 95% of the costs if you actually go with the local model. Local? That's a small model. But what you have to do is you have to have an intelligent routing layer that says for these prompts and these tasks, I'm going
to go over here. And for these other tasks, I'm probably going to be able to go to something cheaper. So I'll get back to that in one second, only two more clips, because this term. came up. Two weeks ago, I'd never heard it before, and it's back, Jevons... paradox. What does that mean for premium price AI? I mean, there's always going to be a place for them, right? But is it going to be growing as quickly
as we've seen over the last few years? I think there's Jevons paradox that's going to be like constantly on supercharge right now. The lower the price goes, like the biggest risk we have as an industry. is if this gets too expensive where the cost of tokens is disproportionately higher than the value it generates, then people pull back.
So actually, the cost per token going down is better for the model providers because when the cost goes down, people use it more, but your value is actually commensurate to what you're paying per token. Let me push back on that. point. We actually don't know if the value is commensurate. And that's what... No, I'm saying it's not right now. Right. Yeah. So if it's not, and if the price goes down, that's actually better because then people actually use it more. Is that a problem though? I
mean, do you think that that will hit demand? Some of these questions over return on investment and value. I mean, Scott was just here basically... saying that if you don't get enough value from our product, we're going to pay $10 million for your usage. It feels like everyone is scrambling to show that they're providing value, but this is a question too that is not new. That hit the AI trade, the public AI trade before. It's kind of been off to the races recently, but there's some
of that skepticism creeping back in. I think there's a... is this, this is one of those bull crap, Silicon Valley things. We've seen this come and go a hundred times. Jevons paradox, which, and this, I don't know if you remember it two weeks ago or something like that. Someone said, Oh, it's Jevons paradox. So this is, and that was on the all in pod. So this is a, a bull crap term they're using in Silicon Valley. Jevons Paradox is an economic principle discovered by British economist
William Stanley Jevons in, wait for it, 1865. Can you just see some VC coming up with this? Oh, absolutely. Well, you know, according to Jevons Paradox, it states that... technological improvements that increase the efficiency of resource use. can paradoxically lead to an increase in the total consumption of that resource rather than the expected decrease. The paradox occurs because the efficiency improvements make a resource cheaper to use.
The cost savings often lead to increased demand that more than offsets the efficiency gains. For example, Where's the paradox? Well, I'm waiting for it. More fuel-efficient cars might lead to more driving, or energy-efficient appliances might encourage people to use them more frequently. This is Silicon Valley speak. for. We're screwed. The model doesn't work. Jevons paradox, man. Don't worry. When Jevons kicks in, it's all going to be great. I can just feel it. It's one of those
things. Can't you see John Doerr running around? This got
¶ Local AI Models and Hollywood
me to just change this little present. presentation here. change the tip of the day. To what? You'll hear it when you get to the tip of the day. It'll be at the end of the show. People have to listen. But this will be very relevant to what you're saying. Oh, good. And then the final clip, this is truly what I think is already happening and where all this is heading and why your 401k will suffer. or when these IPOs and these companies get added to the
index. Companies are eventually, and this is what you were talking about earlier on desk side computing, is that right? He says companies are eventually going to shift to running local models. Prices are getting too high for Fortune 500 companies to swallow. We are already starting to see the leaders shift to this idea. It makes a lot of sense, doesn't it? Explain, though. Break this down for me. Okay. I have agents. I want to use these agents. I'm going to actually have a Mac Mini right next
to me. That's my desk-side computer. My laptop computer is where I'm working. My desk-side computer is where the Mac Mini is where my agents are working. That means I now am doing a lot of processing locally i might have models that actually sit on that mac mini that that agent is using because they're getting smaller and smaller smaller and smaller so my if i can get a substantial percentage of the workload on those Boy, that's a great thing. What that does, though, is it's going to
require a lot more network bandwidth. because those agents are going to generate, you know... Listen to this bull crap. Oh, here we go. Oh, yeah, a lot more bandwidth because the agent's going to want to talk to the traffic. Use our routers. That'll have to go back and forth between the data center. Oh, back and forth between the data center. Oh, no. These agents aren't just talking
amongst themselves. They're going to talk amongst themselves. on the Mac Mini, but they'll also talk to someone in the cloud. Oh, you need two gigabits now. And so I think you're going to have a, at this point, an agent workflow is a routing challenge. It is a trust decision and it's a telemetry event. Telemetry event? And the telemetry event being I need to make sure that I'm showing the traceability of where that agent is going, what
it's doing. All those things together make this a coordination of intelligence. It's not just a... It's not just that you're going to have one large model and one large data center and it's going to answer all your questions. So here we go, John. We're pitching now. So taking in mind what you all know, course, Jevons Paradox. When we have these telemetry events, we're going to be rich. Just watch. It's going to be great. Invest now. Here's
my PowerPoint. Well, can you determine the telemetry threshold? For the ROI. Yes, I can do that with the locally managed network operating protocol. call with the advanced network analysis language. Ah, my new set. I heard you could do that. My favorite. My favorite. My favorite one, advanced network
¶ YouTubers Invade Hollywood Film
analysis language. Now, there is good news. There's good news because finally we have something that AI is useful for. I fully support this. I think it's great. Call Dana Brunetti because we're going to kill Hollywood once and for all. It's interesting that this is a YouTuber that is making the leap because you were pretty early investing in the creator space with full screen. What did you learn
out of that and did you think? that in the year 2026, we would see this run of digital native filmmaking talent making the leap not just to getting Hollywood-style movies made, but getting big audiences. You know, Obsession just opened big and keeps growing, and now we've got this other... YouTube first movie that is going to be big. It's called Back Room. Have you heard of these movies? Well, the only one I've heard of is the one that's actually playing in a theater. Yes, that's Back Rooms.
At the Tribeca Film Festival. I think it's Back Rooms is the one that's playing. No, no, it's something violets. I'll get the title. There's a couple of them. Absolutely. The only one playing in the theaters is the Vilas film. Let's listen to this. This is... Who is this guy? I'll figure it out in a minute. He believed that. You did? Yes. You know, we have been huge believers in the creator economy and going back. I think
we invested in full screen 14 years ago. Look, it's also, to be fair, it's no accident, we are the only media company based in Silicon Beach. Our offices are in Playa Vista. We are off the streets. Where is Silicon Beach? Down south is Calabasas or someplace down in Southern California. Calabasas? Yeah, it's bull crap. This is great. YouTube is right over there. I'm in Silicon Hills. Facebook is right over there. You know, as a company, I'm
deeply interested in technology. blah blah blah blah what's happened is the movie's dreams of violence dreams and it's from an iranian filmmaker and it's about iran riots or killings or something like that and it was very controversial it's the first one accepted into film festival and there's a bunch of news stories on all the networks about it Well, now Hollywood is just like Silicon Valley, except instead of the... What is it, the Jervin? I forgot the
name already. The Jarvan Principle. What was that guy's name? The Jarbo Principle. The Jambo Principle. Jambo. There you go. Poor Jambo guy. Jambo Principle. Our poor Jambo guy. Now it's, yeah, man, we want YouTubers. Get us YouTubers. We need more YouTubers. You can't just live on sequels. You can't just live on existing IP. It's a terrible thing to do to the audience. I hope that there is a lesson to those big studios in both Obsession and
Backrooms. they should be taking risks like that. You know, and if you go back to the big franchises, which they are making infinite sequels of. are generally 15 to 30, 40 years old at this point. Half the audience wasn't born when they started. What do you think the model is going to be? Do you think that it's possible that... these YouTube first movies that they could reinvigorate. People going to theaters to see it? Like vinyl, you know? Like everyone's all, oh, vinyl, vinyl. Oh, no, you
got to see this thing in the theater. You think that's possible? Could they do that? possible, but not for a while. Well, there's a couple of these movies happening. I mean, surely we can't just have people putting them out on YouTube and not making YouTube pennies. That's not going to last. Well, the movie Dreams of Violets, they had protests out in front and everyone's moaning about it. Really? Yeah, because, oh, it's going to ruin Hollywood and
we're all going to die. Brunetti should be all over this. No, Brunetti probably is all over it. I haven't talked to him about it. But I'm sure he's all, he's not all over. He should be producing this stuff. He should be producing. He should be a, hey, kid. Hey kid, I'm gonna make you famous. You want to get rich? You want to leave your wife rich? Yeah, stick with me. I'm Dana Brunetti, babe. I'm Dana Brunetti. You want to get a job? You want to be a star? You want to be a star? A star?
Yeah, I'm Dana Brunetti. That's not at all how he sounds, by the way. What? That's not how he sounds. No. Yeah, he sounds just like that. That's not at all how Brunetti sounds. Yeah, he talks like this. And he doesn't look at all like he sounds either. You know, he looks like this. He looks like a frat boy with a beard. He's got a big cigar, usually smoking it. Yeah. Hey, kid. Hey, kid. So I have
¶ AI in Hiring and Peptide Dangers
an AI story that needs to be. All right. Played. Okay. This is a, this is a, an ode to Linda Lou Patkin. Oh, all right. Linda. It's about AI job searches. And what a little tidbit here is quite interesting. Stanford just released the biggest study ever done on AI hiring tools. And it's uncovering this massive web that's answering the question all of us are asking. Why does my resume keep getting rejected for jobs that I am
completely qualified for? And I'm going to be honest, this study has changed the way I think about every application I've ever sent. 90% of companies are using AI to screen applicants before a human ever sees them. And the interesting thing is that most of these companies are using the same few vendors to do that work. Meaning it's the exact same tool, just used in different companies. And it's probably everywhere that you have been applying. Here's how
it actually works. You apply to a job. And then the company sends your resume to a third-party AI tool. And that AI platform gives you a score. And then it sends that score back to the employer. But that score doesn't disappear or get regenerated with every application you send. sometimes it holds onto that score for 330 days. So when you apply to another company that uses that same platform, you're not getting a fresh start. You're just getting that same score again. And the research is real.
They tracked over 4 million applications across 156 employers. And when they found that the people who had applied to multiple companies who were using the same AI tool to screen, the rejection rate was a little too high to be coincidental. So they're calling it systemic rejection. The study is called Algorithmic Monocultures in Hiring, if you want to check it out. But just know that if you've been sending applications out and hearing nothing back, it's probably not
your resume. And this is just another reminder that we're not living in some glitch. It's effectively one score for 330 days. every company that you're applying to. And this is why laws like the ones Colorado is passing right now are going to be imperative to the future of job applications and hiring. I'm going to continue to report on this, so follow, like, comment if you want to know more about the systems that are actively working against
you in your job search. And feel free to share this with anyone else who's being actively gaslit by AI on a daily basis. That's Image Makers Inc. with a K. Now, I would say a couple. First of all, I did not edit that. I'm better than that. This is typical high-tech. Uh... way of saving money. Instead of having, you know, you get an application in and you scan it for some score and you send the score back to the first company. Another thing comes in from
the same person from a different company. Why bother scanning it? Same score. You already have the guy's score. Just send the same score on, so that's what they're doing. This is classic. Why burn tokens on it? No, they're not going to do that. Yeah, why burn tokens when you can just, hey, he's in the database, send out that same score. Yeah, it's good to go. It's a completely different resume, but so what? Keep him there for a year. It's good. That's a year, and by the
way, I doubt it. I'm sure this... permanent it's like a credit score yes you're done you're toast you're not ever gonna work again I gotta do these two peptide emails since we made such a big deal about it and we had so many lovely people writing in. About what? Peptides. Oh, peptides. Peptides, yes. About 95% were telling me it's great. It's phenomenal. I inject myself twice a week. I'm on the Wolverine. This is the best thing ever. It's fixed my back. I don't doubt it at
all. Yeah, I'm sure it helps a lot of people. Yeah, but there's two emails I wanted to highlight. one from our senior medical student he's written in before. He's in Australia. He says, basically, you buy this stuff online, but these peptides can be between 50% to 300% purity of the stated dose. This makes no difference for the fancy water peptides that people get a placebo from injecting them. I'm sure there's a lot of that going on. But for harmful drugs like this new R-E-T-A, as everyone
calls it, RETA, this can kill people. I've seen otherwise healthy young patients coming in with symptoms of pancreatitis, of unknown cause. Hey, Slim. Until you ask about the peptide use. I had a young lady taking four times the recommended dose of... Retrotrudide daily. This is the stuff we talked about. This is not even mentioning the fact that her vials could have been 200% purity, so it could
have been 8 times the dose. Based on talking to patients, I would say around 10-20% of young Australians, 14-30, are taking peptides with up to half considering it. This is a lot. Yeah. I think this is a bigger thing than we suspect. Yes. Fact is, most of these peptides are, I know people who get their peptides from their hair person. Just saying. Fact is, most of these peptides are showing promise in studies on rats and muscle
cells in petri dishes. With minimal human safety trials other than Reddit and TikTok forums, these companies can get away with making millions selling these as it's not illegal here in Australia to sell research-for-research purposes only peptides with no recourse. Um... Here's a, some people take. uh msh to be more tan and it works well for this but when you stimulate the melanokites on your skin you stimulate the moles that are normally hanging out there Most people
have moles that could turn into melanoma. Okay, so there's all kinds of horrible things that can happen. And then we have... Um... Boots on the ground from Patrick. Before you're done with that letter, I should mention I sent that letter to JC. Yes, that very one. I'm sorry? The one from Australia? Yeah. Yeah, okay. And he says he thinks it's wrong. Wrong. What he says about the... A melanoma generator because it turns out that it might actually be just the opposite. Might be. It might be.
Sure. Might be just the opposite. It might be. And he cited some rationale that it would, anyway, he says it's dubious. The argument. Okay. It might be. I don't know. It might be. We don't know. And the fact is, the thing that bothers me about all this, of course, is people that are all, you know, concerned about eating whole foods and being careful about what they eat and ingest. We'll just take these things out. from a
drug dealer. It's just... Crazy. So now we have Patrick, who is pursuing his doctorate in chemistry, right up your alley. He was listening to Thursday's show. He said, I heard you were interested in peptides. Well, since I'm pursuing this, I thought I could weigh in and tell you what I know. From a scientific perspective, the discovery and creation of peptides of GLP-1 drugs is interesting and they
have gotten pretty good from what they began as. When it comes to peptides as a drug, the hardest part is making sure they are not digested in the body. For the large majority, you cannot just eat peptides because your body will digest them like any protein you would get and from eating food and not enter the bloodstream. This is why they are injected into the bloodstream, and even then your body will break them down, although at
a much slower rate. When it comes to peptides, which many people are using to biohack, yeah, that's it, outside of GLP-1s, most of them come from Chinese companies, which have little to no studies, especially not in human trials. The rationale of using them to improve... bodily function mainly comes from computational modeling, like climate change. The biggest issue for these is the actual production of the peptides themselves. That kind of goes along with what our previous boots
on the ground said. Companies utilize E. coli to produce the peptide. What? Whoa. Whoa. process known as recombinant protein expression. I do this on a regular basis in the lab and it's actually a very efficient way of producing peptides and proteins. Insulin is produced using this method. The biggest issue with using this to create drugs for human use is the contamination of polysaccharides, sugar, which can create
severe allergic reactions if injected. into the bloodstream. Pharmaceutical companies are great at removing this and have testing to ensure that batches are not contaminated. The equipment used is very expensive and I would bet that the Chinese companies that are producing peptides are not doing this. Yeah, best price. I have friends that have had adverse reaction to these
peptides and gotten sick from them. This is the biggest issue I see with peptides outside of the general ignorance on how they will interact with the body as the biochemical pathways within the body are very complex and small changes can create big effects. So, yeah, I mean, biohacking is what people are doing. And you don't need to
email me and tell me these guys are. full of crap and I don't know what I'm talking about because guess what I don't but no we don't we we're we're rank amateurs when it comes all we're doing is presenting what we know yeah but what we're told what our producers tell us yeah what our producers tell us yeah what do people yeah and we're going to continue to do that for a while yes Because, I mean...
It's a big deal. This is going on. Yeah, so when people get all bent out of shape that now Eli Lilly is taking what they've basically been getting for 50 bucks from their hairdresser, they're now, you know, now they have to pay a thousand bucks a month. They're all bent out of shape, blah, blah, blah. Production matters. Quality matters. Except when it comes to vaccines where there's no liability issues. Well, no, please. Well, since you inject
this, can't they just call it a vaccine? And how would the pill, how would this pill work better than injecting it, mainlining that crap, baby? Come on, mainline it right into me. Actually, it doesn't make sense what the chemist said. It doesn't make sense about the pill. Because they're just getting, you know, digested like any other protein. I mean, I'm, here's what I'm worried about. You get this stuff, particularly if it gets approved by the FDA.
And before you know it, you're voting Democrat. I'm telling you, you got to be careful about these things. I think you might be on to something. You got to be careful with these things. But yes, the Wolverine combo is what everyone seems to like a lot. If you're working out a lot and you get ripped. Crazy ripped. Ripped. Yeah. I'm not a exerciser. I'm a walker. So I'm not going to get ripped anytime soon. I'm a podcaster. I got no time to exercise. Podcasters shouldn't be
ripped. There's nothing sick about a ripped podcaster. Well, tell
¶ Ebola, MPox and Biosecurity Issues
that to Joe Rogan. Yeah, but Rogan was always, yeah, but Rogan's also a UFC fighter. And by the way, which brings me to the... I finally got one more. It took forever to get a Sharpton clip. Oh, a Sharpton clip? Where he screws up. Of why they're having these fights on the White House lawn, the UFO and all, whatever they call it. The UFO. Excellent! Yeah! Finally, a new Sharpton jingle to use. Very good. Very good. I'm very happy. Thank you. Thank you. Excellent job. Excellent
job. Very happy with that. Oh, man. Ebola update. Wait. I need to do my Ebola jingle. I need to. I need to. Oops. Ebola. Yes, here we go. Ebola, Ebola, it has been with us two times in our lives. you I was the third It's time to speak about Ebola. Security has been stepped up at Ebola treatment centers in eastern Congo with extra UN peacekeepers and local police deployed. Medical staff have faced growing hostility with reports
of attacks on facilities. Richard Kogoy reports. against health workers in a region where distrust and misinformation about Ebola remain widespread. Security has been reinforced in Rwampara and Mugumbwalo in Ituri province after incidents targeting treatment centers and medical staff. Troops will also guard smaller clinics receiving patients and supervise
imperial teams. Alongside the security push, the government and aid... partners are running outreach campaigns to counter false information and build public trust in communities where cultural beliefs have shaped views on illness and death. The WHO says nearly 500 cases are confirmed, including 82 deaths in the outbreak across Central Africa. I have a follow-on clip from CBS regarding
a little mystery. misunderstanding. After this outrage in Kenya in which two people were killed protesting a Trump administration plan to set up an Ebola facility only for Americans at a military airbase, Secretary of State Marco Rubio now says that there has been a misunderstanding. And that's about whether
Americans would only be observed. for symptoms if they've been potentially exposed in the region or if positive whether they would be quarantined and then treated for the longer term we're not actually actually in kenya to set up treatment for americans i think the one that's been very controversial is a misunderstanding there is a facility that the kenyans are allowing us to open if there are any americans that are Yes. What? No! about 125 miles north of
Nairobi. This was before a Kenya High Court judge blocked the facility, at least temporarily, but also after that judge blocked the facility. After those protests broke out on June 1st, Kenya's Prime Minister, William Ruto, said that it was a would be good for the country's own Ebola preparedness and said that the U.S. and Kenya have had a friendship for the past 30 to 40 years. But many Kenyans feel that this is the Trump administration outsourcing American
health risks to their own home country. And a high-level medical contact of mine in Nairobi told me that the expectation is that this U.S. facility will go ahead regardless of what any high court says. I mean, don't you think it's time for a repeat of the Ebola flight coming in and everyone's all... Got their hazmat suits on. The dude hops out like... I got Ebola. Hello, hello, hello. and takes off. Yeah. Bye-bye. We didn't play this clip the other day, but it's relevant, I guess, now.
Two research scientists have been arrested and charged with smuggling mpox into the United States. Vincent Munster and Claude Quay work at the National Institutes of Health Biosafety Lab in Montana. According to prosecutors, the pair traveled back to the U.S. from the Republic of Congo, where there was an outbreak of mpox. When they went through customs, CBP officers questioned them about a large plastic case they had. They allegedly lied to the officers about what was inside. After
investigating and testing... The FBI found vials of deactivated mpox virus, chickenpox virus, and human DNA. The men face up to five years in prison. You know, the scandal isn't so much. that they did this. Five years? Can you imagine Adam Curry and John C. Dvorak show up at the airport? What you got there? Nothing. Well, let's take a look. Oh, you got like mpocs. You got human DNA. We would be locked. This would be, we would be locked away forever. But, oh, they're NIH. Oh, that's
okay. One of them's a Dutch guy. I find this scandalous. Yeah, I think you're right. Maybe five years. Who knows? I mean, okay, it's... inactive or deactivated whatever she said that's what they said yes exactly Like, no, I don't like this. Lock those guys up. Can't be doing that. Okay, let's see. Oh, this was kind of funny.
¶ George Santos and Political Scandals
This is about our prop... favorite prop bet We have two. Koushi being one. Federal investigators are examining the prediction market trades of former New York Republican Congressman George Santos. NPR's Bobby Allen reports it's the latest case raising questions about insider trading on the betting sites. Four months after George Santos had a seven-year wire fraud prison sentence commuted by President Trump, he took to social media. I'm going to be there for the State of the Union in
the gallery, guys. Just chill, trolls. Chill, trolls. What he didn't say publicly is that he was betting tens of thousands of dollars on the prediction market site Kaoshi that he would not attend. Before it was revealed he did not go, he cashed out. That's according to three sources with direct knowledge of Santos' trades. The Justice Department and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission are investigating. When reached by
NPR, Santos said the investigations were news to him. He said, I'm not saying yes, I'm not saying no, when asked if he has an account on Kaoshi. Oh man, how low IQ are you if you do that? Well, this is, I can make money quick. Was it illegal? Well, isn't it insider trading by definition? It's not the SEC. There's no SEC involved in this. Not yet. And with insider training, you're the guy people are betting on. Well, he bet on himself. You don't think the basketball
guys do this constantly. Yeah. Oh, I sprained my ankle. I can't play. Right. They get in trouble for it. Do they? But from the league. Yeah, true. Oh, Wall Street Journal. Trump urges Pulte to Fire Intel employees. Here we go. Here's the, here's the, you're right. Here we go. The bull in the China shop, the chainsaw weed whacker. Yeah. Oh, this is going to be so much fun. It's going to be great. It'll be good for the show. It should be. Yeah. You're going to find
all kinds of stuff. I'm sorry. I was going to say the World Cup, we got a clip on Iran. They gave them visas. I have a bunch of, I have a couple of screwy clips here. Um... Did you? I'm going to ask you. This could be an Ask Adam. Mm-hmm. What is the gayest city in the United States? the gayest city in the United States. It's gay pride month. I got a gay pride clip. Well, I mean, instinctively, you want to say... San Francisco, but somehow I don't think it's the gayest. I don't think there
is one. I think New York would be it, personally. Or Atlanta. Atlanta's very gay. Which clip is it? Which clip? This is the mayor, Mayor Bowser, the mayor of Washington, D.C. Oh. She claims that Washington, D.C., the capital of the United States of America, will play the clip. one year's In the future of 51st. The same bull deserves to be We're celebrating Pride Month in the... gayest sin Well, let's be fair. We do have some a-gays.
uh in dc you know so you bring in a besant there's going to be a whole bunch of other people who follow around I can see. Do you think Besant will be out there at Pride? With his chaps. With his chaps. No. He did not do a good job, man, the other day. Let me see, where is it? He was being grilled. Let me see. Here we go. You think with all the experience. experience he's had. It's no good. He'd be better. Oh, he's no good. Listen to this. Why are you allowing President Trump and
his family to have complete immunity from being audited? Again, since you're a lawyer, you will understand that the US Treasury and the IRS are represented by the justice. Department and the acting Attorney General. Yes, but I just mentioned a Supreme Court case that doesn't bar you from testifying. It's pretty clear to me, though, however, that you're not interested in answering questions. You're interested in arguing. Let me ask you this question. If President Biden amended a prior
tax return and claimed that... He was owed $1 billion. Do you think that that would be audited or should it be audited? I'm not going to. the talk about any, any, the... Because you're not really here to answer questions. I don't understand why you wouldn't audit that, and I don't understand why you wouldn't do the same for President Trump. So the ruling by the Justice Department, excuse me. Do you have specific knowledge of an audit of President Trump? Excuse me. It's my time. You're not here
to ask me questions. I'm here to ask you questions. And hopefully you're here to try to answer some of them. Oh, man. It got even worse. Where he's like he's he's he literally clutches well he didn't he was if he had pearls he'd be clutching him Like, this is an outrage! Can't Rubio take him aside? Rubio's the guy that's good at this. Yeah, and Rubio is good at this, but Besson has to answer, and he's just no good at it. I don't know. I don't. understand
me He just, he chokes, choke, choke. He listens to this. I'm curious to know who counts as Trump's family for the purposes of this immunity. Is it his children, his in-laws, his grandchildren, his second or third cousin, his great-great-grandchildren? Do you know the answer to that question, Mr. Secretary? Again, I imagine you have the Justice Department phone
number. I would suggest you call them. I'm not the one that runs the Department of the Treasury or that oversees what is happening with this immunity that has been granted. I'm not the one either. We follow the instructions of our lawyers. We obey the law, Representative. I hope that you're proud of your performance today, Mr. Secretary, because I think it's pretty safe to say that this is probably the most corrupt Treasury Department in our nation's history.
I am going to have to take exception with that. I'm going to have to take exception with that. I'm going to write a stern letter to the Times. And I'm going to write an op-ed about you. You will be in deep, deep kimchi later. I'm going to have to take exception with that. While you dance around questions to protect Trump, Americans are suffering in Trump's fire. I know what's going on with him. You know what it is? Low T. That's what's happening here. Maybe peptides are
needed. Anything. Anything. Oh my goodness. I'm a Besant fan. But this is bad. It's just bad. No good. I hope you get some good social media clips out of this. Yeah, very lame. Extremely lame. And he's got that nervous... sound to his voice is no good hey i
¶ NASA's X-59 Quiet Supersonic Jet
want to play this clip i've been holding it but i just want to play this because i just think this is a technology that needs to be discussed more okay the x59 i don't know if you've seen pictures of this thing this is a new jet no i haven't i'll have to look It's a jet that can go... Mach 1 point something. It goes past the speed of sound with no sonic boom. How does it even work? Well, that's what I like to know. But if you look at the design of the thing, it's loopy
looking. Oh, it looks like a Concorde. Except with the lore, it's just cool. It's cool looking, let's put it that way. But at the same time, it doesn't, I guess, stir up enough. I don't know. I have no idea. The explanation is not in this report or anyplace else. NASA's X-59 research aircraft is designed to fly at supersonic speeds without... producing a loud sonic boom. This month, the X-59 will fly supersonic in test flights at around 43,000 feet in altitude. That will be followed by a
mission conditions. That's a flight at Mach 1.4 speed and an altitude of roughly 55,000 feet. NASA's goals here... are to have the aircraft fly over U.S. communities to gather data from the public about its quiet supersonic operation. All right, I have to ask the book of knowledge. Why does the X-59 aircraft not produce a sonic boom? I mean, we can sit here and we can just be yapping at each other, but let's ask the book of knowledge who knows. all things in the universe. And so
here we go. According to the book of knowledge, the X-59 reduces sonic booms by shaping acoustic pressure waves, preventing shock waves from merging into a single boom and creating instead a gentle sonic thump. Its 38-foot extended nose carefully shaped fuselage and top mounted engine use the aircraft body as a shield to direct and dissipate shock waves. DOS It is being written. A son- okay, well that's- A
sonic thump. That's right, a sonic thump. Now that means I would love to have them fly this thing over the Bay Area, let us know. Yeah. And I want to see so we can hear the sonic thump. Because when I was a kid, when I was a kid living in Centerville. There used to be, this was pre, at some point or other, you'd hear sonic booms because there was no big deal. It's like, yeah, so what?
And, you know, this. finally put some laws against it after the I guess it broke a few windows here and there around the country but It would be a loud, I know exactly what a sonic boom sounds like because I was, well, kind of, I can remember that. It rattles the windows. It's a loud boom. It's BOOM! Yeah. And it's like... Like, okay, well, that was a jet. So I want to hear the sonic thump. Now,
here's the thing. I have been in the Concord twice, which does create... booms yeah that's why i wasn't allowed to fly over much of the country inside the aircraft nothing What would there be? I'm just, well, you'd think that if it was boom outside, you'd hear it on the inside. But you don't hear it. It's a big letdown. It's like a good bass note, you know, you can't really hear it near the speakers. Yeah, but these things are loud! But I'm in the plane. I mean,
I'm in the plane. I thought I would hear it. I remember the pilot. I was in a plane that got hit by lightning, you could hear that. Well, ladies and gentlemen, welcome aboard British Airways Concorde. We'll be doing Mach 2. Unfortunately, there will be no spectacular booms. This is a very comfortable travel. Enjoy yourself. However, the plane will elongate by 11... Cheers and flights. Enjoy. That thing
would get longer. while it was flying. Yeah, the SR-71 used to, uh... change its size and shape during high-speed flight, which is why it leaked gas. Jet fuel leaked all over the... runway because the thing only sealed up at speed. So Logan 5 says, no, Adam. This is
¶ Podcast Milestones and Future Plans
a troll. You fly faster than the sonic wave that the plane creates. Oh, that makes sense. Ah, that does make sense. Yes, it does. You know what else makes
sense? The fact that I want to thank you for your courage and say in the morning to you, the man who put the sea in the chainsaw weed whacker, say hello to my friend on the other end, everybody, Mr. John C. Good morning, here's the Slam, Crady Marsh, this is your host, the World Elite Ground Feeder, and here's to the world of the Dames and Knights out there. It is good to have the Noisemaker! - Come on! Noiseback. I've been missing that for months. So nice.
Very nice. 1658. Listening live at the peak trollage here at the No Agenda Show at No Agenda. noagendastream.com that means a lot of people are listening Thank you. The legacy apps will take 15, 30 minutes, sometimes an hour. So it can be even worse. But with the Podping technology, oh no. No, no, no. Pod ping technology. You'll get immediate notification within 90 seconds, immediate. And, of course, you can't stream anything live in these legacy apps. You
need a modern podcast app for that. So when we go live, the bat signal fires. You see the notification. You tap it. You're listening live. You can never forget us. We're always here for you. This podcast, soon to celebrate its 19th anniversary in October. Is it October 8th? Somehow I have the feeling it's October 8th. 26th. 26th, at the end of October. Our 19th year. Now we should make it an even 20 and quit. What do you say? *laughs* Well, you're going to get all the
lady folk upset. Don't say these things. But, I mean, why don't we go out on top? I think we should just go until we drop on the show. That's what I'm saying. I don't mean to. *Screams* I don't... All right. I want to go out on top, Ben. You know, like... I want people to go. In the saddle? Yeah. Instead of people going, oh, well, they died. I'm like, oh, man, I miss them. We need them right now. You know, we could sit there. We could do bonus shows for extra money. No, you want us
back? Emergency pods. Emergency pods. We could just do emergency pods. There you go. Yeah. Yeah. We just do emergency pause like 20 minutes. Emergency pod. Trump said something. Emergency pod. Anyway, I don't want to get any... Do your female folk actually listen? Mine doesn't listen anymore. Yes. Mine doesn't listen. Mimi listens. She's the only one left. Jay will listen if she knows something about her is going to be discussed. Yeah. She sent me a selfie. Oh,
yeah, well... I said, send me a selfie, Jay. Tina wants to see what you look like. Yeah. She's so cute. I'm glad she looks like her mom. Woo. Um...
¶ Value For Value and Show Art
Value for value. That's where I was. That's right. It's the new international lifestyle that we have pioneered and been living for these almost 19 years. Living the mac and cheese life. And that means that we don't force ads in your face. We don't. to make you subscribe to get the bonus content. We also don't have, you know, like tote bags or anything like that. We had them, but they were toxic, so we got rid of them. They were from China. No one ever got a tote
bag. Instead, we just say, hey, what do you think? Did you get any value out of the show? If you did, send some value back to us. We love time, we love talent, and we love treasure. And the time and talent part works in many ways. You can do it like we had to medical folk right in. This is very valuable to the show. We appreciate stuff like that. In this case, when it comes to the artwork, not only did we get a fun piece of art. We also got a cool movie out of it.
See, this is what we have to remember. Whenever we choose Scaramanga's art... He always makes a cool movie. Did you see the little video he did? I missed it. It's on the tweeters. Check it out. So we titled the episode The Kennel Index. How is the kennel, by the way? Is the kennel full? Is it draining? I didn't ask. Well, you got to ask. I know. It's how indexes work. Yes. We have to know. Can we put some AI into our index? The kennel index. We got to put a camera at the kennel. Yes. Yes.
There you go. Like the old coffee pot cam. Remember back in the day? Oh, we could see what the coffee pots were. Bird cams. Bird cams. Bird cams, yes. I had the Empire State cam for a while. This was done by Francisco Scaramanga. He is an expert in usually babes. And it was just too funny what he did. He had this goofy looking dude. Like a 50s, like... Madman type dude all jacked on peptides. A big
no agenda testosterone pot next to him. And he's rubbing the cream on his balls, which is a football, a basketball, and a soccer ball, accentuated by the text, just rub it on your balls. I mean, everybody laughed. Everybody thought this was great. I think the fact that he's wearing short white shorts with his leg spread kind of helped. Made a little extra gay. Um... And there were a couple other people who did similar things. Let's see.
Looking at noagendaartgenerator.com. We had, uh... Oh, wow, I've got a lot of screw worm stuff for today. um where was it wow i had to scroll away oh yeah we had darren o'neill Yeah, Darren had a couple of good pieces. Blue Acorn had the teabag. We liked that. It was a close runner-up. Yeah, the teabag was second, I would say. Close runner-up. That would be second. And then there was a lot of women made to smile. And they were pretty good too, but just nothing quite
as good as a Scaramanga's piece. I thought that was, we loved it. We really did. It was, we laughed. Did we laugh out loud or did we laugh out loud? I think we laughed out loud. I think we lulled, for sure. It was silly. It's silly. And that's what we love about it. We love silly. It's great.
¶ Producer Donations and Mission Statement
Now in the treasure department... This is where you can go to noagendadonations.com, and we really appreciate it when people do that. And you can send us whatever you think the show is worth. People love numerology. And of course, we don't really know what's valuable to you. You know, $5 may be a lot of money to you. Well, we appreciate that just as much as someone who sends $5, $500. Because that may be different for them. It's value for value. Somehow it all kind of evens out.
It's a bit of a roller coaster, this international... lifestyle, but it evens out and we feel good about it. I love the... The spammer we have on our No Agenda Insta. Who is telling us, I never understand this. Donations will go up if you tell everybody that Tucker should be president. He's the true representative MAGA. And the far left and the far right have to get on board with everything anti-Israel. I mean, do people really think that that works? Can you imagine thinking that Tucker? I
mean... Tucker Carlson doesn't want to be president. I'm being a meaghe, baby. We talked into running, but it's a farce. And they're associating him with like Spencer Pratt and Trump. Because you have, oh, you got these guys that they didn't have any experience. Trump has been running for president since the 1980s. He's talked about it. Yeah, new book, new book, I'm running for president. For at least 16 years before he actually ran. Yeah. And so then...
And it was predicted by the Simpsons. I mean, it wasn't like some surprise. And he's always been somewhat political. The other guys that are high profile is people like Ronald Reagan, who is high profile. He was the governor of California. Okay, let's discount that. He was the head of the Screen Actors Guild, I believe. And he was a left-winger turned right-winger, which a lot of these guys do that. And Spencer Pratt has got a bone to pick. He's very dedicated to trying to... fix Los Angeles
is just a mayoral thing. It's not a big deal in terms of like national spotlight, like Tucker being president. It's stupid. Let me read this guy's post, his comment verbatim. It's pretty funny. The Israel issue is going to drastically reduce donations. I've been listening to no agenda since Obama. And it's hard to hear them sound so out of touch. Ancient boomers every time the... Ancient? Ancient boomers every time the... What? Every time the Israel issue comes
up. Israel is the most important issue of times. John and Adam seem to like the idea of Rubio for president instead of Tucker. which is insane. The next president must be actively anti-Israel, not anti-Jewish people, just anti-Israel. That's great. Yeah, and this guy's writing constantly. Oh yeah. He's a troll. Well, can't you block him? Maybe I- Jay would know. Not that you should. I mean, I think it's hilarious. I'm not going to block him. He's okay.
Yeah, I think it's hilarious. I mean, he's adding some demand. I told him the same. I told Jay is our social media person. Well, Jay is more than our social media person. No, but that's one of her jobs. Yeah. And so she's doing the whole thing. The instant. told her when you get these things she what did i say about this guy she says this guy's annoying and so uh I said, and I said... And I wrote a little ditty up for her to just keep posting, which is a reference to the no agenda mission.
Yes. Go to noagendashow.com and read the mission statement. You'll find a link to it. And that's the answer. We don't promote anybody for president. We think Rubio's going to be the president. We're not taking part in his campaign. No. No. Let me read the mission statement. Where is our mission statement? You sure it's on there? And of course it is. Where's the mission statement? It's down, go to the bottom. It has all those links at the bottom. You see the mission statement. You know, you say
that. It's on the left pile of links. I'm looking at the left. At the bottom. I'm looking at the... Oh, no agenda mission statement. Here we go. Oh my goodness. Who wrote this? You've seen this before. I had you put it there. The No Agenda is a podcasting LLC whose goal... is to deconstruct the news media to reveal slanted stories and the reasoning for slanted or misleading
reporting. The purpose is not to critique or discredit news reports, but through media deconstruction to find the actual underlying story to give the audience a realistic understanding of current affairs and events and provide a normalized, objective understanding of them. Now, unfortunately, people don't like what we conclude. some people. No agenda has no political motivations and does no original reporting, but does do original research on stories as
needed. On occasion, the show will read and disseminate what it calls boots on the ground reporting, which replaces letters to the editor, dear Abby, and is used as background information. In some cases, outsiders will be contacted to clarify a fact to improve analysis. These boots on the ground reports are provided by the audience of producers who voluntarily contribute these messages to the show. There's a lot more here. That's right. We have adopted an open source approach
to its content and trademark name. Notice. allowing third parties to leverage the show to produce related products such as branded t-shirts and mugs. This also means that anyone can post the final produced show on their own sites. Yes, that's right. That's right. Correct. I'm all in. It's very good. That's our mission statement. Go read the whole thing, people. It's worth it. So that is the time and
¶ Listener Support and Peerage Updates
talent. Now, we love the treasure, obviously, so it keeps the fires burning here at HQ. And we always thank everybody who sends us $50 or more. Of course, we see the spreadsheet. We see everybody under $50, but there's a lot of people who don't want to be mentioned. So for anonymity and brevity's sake, we don't do all of those. But we do thank people, specifically those who are able to send us $200 or more, between $200
and $300. Not only are we guaranteed to read your note, but we'll also give you the title of Associate Executive Producer. And $300 or more gets you an executive. producership, which you can see thousands of people have done by going to imdb.com. But you can also search for it on LinkedIn, Twitter. You see people all over the place. And we have a peerage ladder, $1,000 in aggregate over. It doesn't matter how many years or decades, in this case, you can become a knight or dame of
the NO Agenda Roundtable. But we start off today in Allentown, New Jersey, with Sir Dr. Vasant Lord of Cotland. And he sends us $1,030.26. So that is likely $1,000. He added the fees. We're very thankful for that. He says, ITM, health karma for all. Sir Dr. Vasant. Lord of Cotland, future Red Knight. Well, sir, you, in fact, will be a Red Knight today. And here is that health karma for all. He's a doctor, after all. You've got karma. Onward with Richard Gerhart. in Macomb. McComb. Michigan.
same thing, 103026. Uh, ITM? I've been a $4 a week contributor. Very popular, by the way. Wow. But enjoy the show so much, I could not resist becoming a Red Knight. Please call me Sir Richard. The open-hearted. Ooh. Ooh, that is good. Thanks for your courage, perspective, and insights, Richard Gerhardt, Rich Gerhardt in Macomb, Michigan. On to Sir Anonymous, the Viscount of the ADFC and Arapahoe County in Aurora, Colorado, $369.99. in a note. which is very
nice. It is very colorful. Did it on Mac paint, I think. This note from Synonymous, the Vicon of ADFC in Arapahoe County, for the show. Thank you for your courage and your continued deconstruction. It has been far too long since my last tithing. Please de-douche me. Happy to do that. You've been dedouched. No jingles, no karma. Sir Anonymous, Vicon of the ADFC in the Arapahoe County. He does say below here about this donation, the amount of $369.99 is something I like to call the triple intel
threat. That's... Oh, treat. I'm sorry. Triple Intel treat. He even says that's treat, not threat. Triple Intel treat. As I've donated this amount before, a brief explanation may suffice. It's related to Executive Order 12333. Ah, EO12333. Some of the no agenda spooks may know what that is, but the number 12333 also has... special meaning to the numerologists amongst us. Here you have the power of three in
many forms. 1, 2, 3.33 times 3 is 369.99. Wow, perhaps you noticed that 369.99 is 3 followed by 6, which is 3 plus 3, and the Jews did it. I'm sorry. That's usually what comes out of those things. Followed by 9, which is 3 plus 3 plus 3, or 3 times 3, ending with 99, which is 33 times 3. Wow. The guy is really into his numbers, John. Did you mute yourself? It looks like we won't make it. to 20 years. You're back. Yeah. What happened? That took a long time. Yeah, well, you know why?
No, I'm curious. I moved the chair, unplugged the router, which was tangled up in the chair, the wire on the floor, pulled the thing down and then jerked it around so much. I couldn't get it back on. So I had. So I'm thinking I could get it going, but no. And so... Wow. Something got bent. So I ended up having to switch networks to a Wi-Fi third backup that I have downstairs, which is an AT&T connection. That is a boomer move if I've ever heard one.
Awesome. Awesome. I'm going to leave some of that in the show. That was pretty good. It was ludicrous. Anyway. Thank you very much, Sir Anonymous, the Viscount of the ADFC in Arapahoe County, for your many, many number threes. Yeah, um... Now we go to Sir Carl of Cary, which he calls himself such because he's in Cary, North Carolina. 340-375. He says, my wife saw the sad puppy, which was the last newsletter, and I explained what it was about. She actually told me I should send in
a donation. And it's been too long since the last one. Good woman you married to. Yes, you did. Also, I want to make sure you guys don't run out of... What? A ball? Oh, ball cream. Yes, ball cream. That's a joke for you. That's a reference to the... Yeah. Thank you for your courage. I'm sorry I said that. Sir Kerry, Carla Kerry. Yes, ball creep. There's Dennis Cato, Tampa, Florida. 333.33. And Dennis says, we have been on such a journey over the six weeks since we
decided to start supporting the podcast. And Adam gave us a shout out. for the pain relief gel. Seems like pain is the one thing everyone has in common nowadays. Oh, this is Manuka Gold, people. We began Manuka Gold with the idea that everyone should have the freedom to handle and manage their own pain when however they want without having to be at the mercy of a never-ending gatekeepers of medical system that often rejects natural solutions. even
if they work. If you've heard about Manuka Gold and our products in a previous show but haven't pulled the trigger... We want to give you that extra nudge ahead of Father's Day to put pain relief into your hands rather than, rather that be for migraines, muscle pain, back pain, or really any other type of topical pain. No, it doesn't yet work on... Pain's in the ass, but we're working on it. Go to manukagold.com. Enter the exclusive code ADAM20 at checkout to receive 20% off. Take control
of your own pain. As of right now, all orders are $49. Get a free travel size. Yes, thank you for sending it to me. I realize you do have them. Relief gel. See? We're listening. We are doing product development now, John. I'm so proud of us. Thank you as always, John and Adam. Thank you. Dennis, for your product and your support. Onward with Sir Arak-Rak. Ciroc Rock. in Brigantine, New Jersey. And he sent a note. In. I will jump you. This actually comes from a Caneel
Bay letterhead. John, enclosed assortment of eclectic stuff. Yes. He sent in a... An assortment of eclectic stuff. Yeah, yeah. Like what? So he's got like a, like a... The mold is... Some old stamps, some... Uh... Looks like some sort of shit from 1928 Germany. or ration slip or something. A book. called The Vineyards of Hitler's Vineyards. And it's all good stuff. Please apply a check for producer
credit, $3.33. No jingles, no karma. By the way, if you are a collector, check out the live auction website, whatnot.com. Maybe a good show tip of the day or a way for Adam or you to offload unwanted stuff. Smiley face. Sir. A rock rock. A Eric. A K a. All right. Wonderful. Uh, now we have our first associate executive producer with $250, Sir Woody the Phantom. from Madison, New Jersey. A lot of New Jerseyites. Hello, New Jersey. And sends a nice note. which I have here.
ITM John Adam, thank you for your hard work. I'm glad John is back and better than ever. Jury's out. Mimi, actually, you are better than ever. I've never, like you are today and the last show. Fantastic. And now that you got your noisemakers back, I can just sense the joy. Are you sleeping at the house as well or just doing the show there? Well, my bedroom's a mess, so I'm sleeping up at the other house. So I'm going to this... Cardiac rehab is special for you
know, people that had. Issues. issues. My legs are like rubber. Rubber? Yeah, I got on one of these machines for an hour. Oh, no. Do they have that mask on your face too? You gotta... No, luckily nobody's masked up. Not me. One of those that measures your lung pressure. No, but no, you have an EKG hookup and then they keep checking your blood pressure so you don't drop dead on one of the machines. Yeah, that would suck. I mean, I guess it's happened. If you're going
to die, do it on the show. Don't do it on the treadmill at the hospital. That's no good. You know, so there's a bunch of, yeah. I know, I realize I have enough. I have enough background in the biz to know to do this. To know what to do. You know how show business works. Exactly. This is dark, people. Onward with Sir Woody the Phantom's Note. Mimi did a great job covering in John's. absence. I enjoy the tips of the day. They are very useful. What is the name of the song that plays on the
outro? It's quite lovely. Yes, that is... Oh, goodness. I keep forgetting, it's this, I think it's this... Starland Vocal Trio. Let me see. That was the olden days. Those were all public domain songs that you had somehow created a website for. So you could use the... Right? I don't remember. I do. Um... Let me see if I can find it. I should, I should, I'll find it for next show. like the pod free or something called oh oh you mean the um the uh Oh, goodness.
You don't even keep up with all the stuff you're doing. Yeah, well, you know, it's... Hey, low T. What can I tell you? You know, hey, there was a show. There was an operation called Pod Show. Yes. You ran it. Do you know that? Yes, I do. It was Podsafe Music Network. Thank you. The Podsafe Music Network. You said thank you to somebody in the chat room who came up with it? No, I said myself. I wasn't even looking at the chat room. Oh, okay. You
thanked yourself. I'm still looking for the music and I can't find it. I mean, I have the music, obviously, but the... It just says, "NA closer, tune easy," but that's not the fun. I'll find it for you. I'll find it. Okay? Promise I'll find it. Uhhhhhhh... And so I'll find it. I'd like some house search karma doggy style please. Well yes, we got that. . our minds. Where was that? Huh? Which one did you read? Oh, the note, the third note. Oh, so I'm on La
Jolla Salt Corp. Yeah, correct. Yeah, he's in La Jolla, California. Yes. La Jolla to you, outsiders. $210.60. Normally, we would interrupt this regularly scheduled... Broadcast. Broadcast. to recommend The superlative. Small batch, handcrafted sea salt scrubs from LaJoyaSalt.com. But not today. No. People, as of this writing, we are less halfway to seeing John's Dvorak studio. If you have an Instagram account, please follow No Agenda Podcast on Instagram
right now. It costs nothing! See the mic that takes the bumps? Yep. Yeah. I'm quite aware. The chair that makes the squeaks? Yep. You're back home. You're back home. Yep. The Bakelite phone that brings the rings and the jar of lozenges Well, that lozenge. We're on the brink of history. It's the season of reveal, people, and all it takes is a follow. Go podcasting! Go podcasting! Yeah, I found it. Yeah, I actually yeah, I asked the robot And the robot is now looking for what the
name of the track is. Go Robot Go. Go Robot Go. Eli the Coffee Guy, 206 and 7 cents. He's always giving us $200 along with the date, 6-7. That's it. 6-7, I said it. Gentlemen, your compliments puts an ear-to-ear grin on my face. When you said I not only make great Great coffee, but I write great copy, too. Coming up with something fun and original isn't easy, but you do it every single show twice a week for 18 years, and you make it look effortless. The least I can do is bring my A game when
I return some value. The other value I return is great coffee for fellow producers. Visit gigawattcoffeeroasters.com and use code ITM20 for 20% off your order. Stay caffeinated, says Leelai the coffee guy. Leelai. Eli the coffee guy. Leelai. Leelai. He's Leelai. Yes. Onward with... Are we at Linda LuPak? Back in the Castle Rock, Colorado. expert 200 bucks. Jobs Karma, your resume is about 10 seconds to make an impression. And most don't. Farewell. Hold on a second. You
okay? You okay, man? You hanging in there? I'm getting parched. Parched. Yes. Oh wow, okay. Go take it. What? Take what? I thought you were gonna do it. Read Linda's thing off so I don't cough to death. Oh,
okay. I was doing something else. Yes, Linda's thing. Jobs Karma, your resume has about 10 seconds to make... an impression and most don't we heard that earlier we heard what happens you get stacked in some AI for a year so instead you want a resume that gets results for that go to image makers Inc comm Linda helps professionals and executives Position their experience so employees see their value. That's Image Makers Inc. with a K and Linda Liu. Yes, she did. Duchess of Jobs and writer of
winning resumes. Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs. Good job! You've got... Okay, I'll wrap it up with Sir William of Bainbridge Island. in Bainbridge, Washington. ITM. Oh, man. I don't know. I just got... You're a mess. All of a sudden dried out. That's okay. We're with you. We understand. We were on the treadmill. It was bad. It was real bad. Sir William of Bainbridge Island here. I've been traveling. A lot for work. the last couple of weeks, but as always, the No Agenda Show keeps me up
to date. Thanks for all you do. No jingles, no karma. And now we continue. Oh, first I want to thank these people properly. Thank you very much to all of our execs. executive and associate executive producers. These titles are real titles. Anywhere Hollywood recognizes these types of titles, which can also be on your LinkedIn, your social media profile, but especially imdb.com. Go do it. You're legit. formula is this. We go out. We hit people in the
mouth. Very cognizant of the sounds you hear on today's podcast. I'm clearing my throat. John's hawking up. belong i mean people call us boomers ancient boomers and you know all we're doing is helping them We need to be careful. We can't be careful with this. Now we would like to thank the rest of our supporters in the Time Talent Treasure for $50 and above. Dame Danny, Weed, California. 12345, $123.45. And I will say she laughed so hard during the HRT conversation. Thank you. Okay. Sir H
of SF. No longer the gayest city in America. $100. What HRT conversation? Well, it was about the testosterone. What's HRT? Human hormone replacement. Yes. Sir H of SF, $100. We're trying to move California from California to Japan in August. Previous attempt failed because of health issues. I could use John's hot pocket karma to make sure it's a successful move. Well, I will give you a hot- A backup and a ba- Oops. Hot pockets. That's what I give you. All right, so you got to... That'll do
it. You got to hot... That'll help for sure. Hey! The boob donation, $80.08, 8-0-0-8, Calculator Kids, you know what that's about. Kevin McLaughlin, he is the Archduke of Luna, lover of America and boobs. Concord, North Carolina supports us every single episode and always says, God bless America and melons. Marius. Marius Uvnagel! who was in Lederström, I think, in Norway. And also a boob donation. And he says, my last donation in my 30s. No jingles, no karma.
Just want to be on the birthday list for starting the 40s on Monday. Keep on keeping on. All right, Marius. Ashley Larson, Ham Lake in Minnesota, 6777. Switcheroo for my brother, Chad. Chad Larson, a commemoration of his 49th trip around the sun. Scott Nuzzo, DaBoys. Uh, Wyoming. I presume it's Du Bois. It could be Dubois. Yeah, please. It's Wyoming. $66.89. Double. I would request a happy birthday shout out to my brother Craig who turned 37 on the 6th. Thank you both for all you do. Wow,
birthday, birthday, birthday. Jeroen Snelders. He's Dutch, but he's in Ennis, Texas. 66. Thank you. Albright Managed Networks. Carlsberg, Washington, 6526. In honor of my human resources, AJ, adding a grand human resource to the family, we want to welcome Adam to the family in the morning on 6526 by adding a 6526 donation. The Adam donation. Well, yes. Finally, someone listened. Yeah. Got a kid named Adam. Very good. His middle name is Charles. David Cox is in Austin,
Texas, 63 and a quarter. David Deloria, Santa Clarita, California. Small boobs, 6-0-0-6. Karma for Adams, tender small boobs. due to rubbing testosterone on his testes. Dumb shit. Yes, thank you. That's a good one. Another small boo donation from Les Tarkowski in Kingman, Arizona. Dame Rita, Sparks, Nevada. She's always there for us. $55.33. Double nickels on the dime from Cameron Ling. North Branch, Minnesota. That's $55.10. Stefan Trockels
in Soest in Deutschland, 54. Brittany Miller, Trinidad, Colorado. I see Brittany's name there a lot as well. 5272. Dame Nancy of the Confused in San Bruno, California. 5244. And she says, donate. It's good for your soul and good for the show. Josiah Thomas Ankeny, Iowa, 51, and here are the 50s. Jorge Hernandez, Lake Stevens, Washington, David Selby in Jaxie, Mississippi. You've been de-douched. I'm sorry, is that Missouri? MS, is that Missouri? No, no, Jackson, Mississippi, very
famous town. I got it right. Yay. You got it right. And then you stopped yourself. And I screwed myself up. Andrew Grasso. In Mineola, New York, 50, thank you. Edward Muzarek in Memphis, Tennessee. Stephen Ray, could be Stephan, but I think it's Stephen Ray in Spokane, Washington. Michael Shambo in Topeka, Kansas. Garbage Man Dave in El... Elmhurst, Illinois. And... uh gretchen angel or angel gretchen gretchen monrovia monrovia california then i have no name With 50, there's
just no name. Two apostrophes. Somebody with no name. Carrie Jackson, Watertown, Tennessee, and Walker Phillips rounds us out from San Rafael, California with $50. Thank you so much, everybody, for supporting the best podcast in the universe. You can take that to your grave. You helped us out, and you can do that anytime you want. It is value for value, after all. All you have to do is go to noagendedonations.com. determine what kind of value you got out of the show and then send it back to
us. No agenda donations.com. Thank you all for your undying support. ♪ Happy Birthday to Adam, born on June 5th. Happy Birthday. Welcome to the universe, Human Resources. Scott Nuzzo, happy birthday to his brother who turned 37 yesterday. Marius Uvnagel turning 40 tomorrow, your last day in the 30s. And Ashley Larson wishes her brother Chad Larson a very happy birthday. He turns 49 years old. And we say happy birthday from everybody here at the best podcast in
the universe. We do not have title changes, but we are blessed with... Behold. BISBRO- These are the Order of the Hearts knights, red knights. In fact, one of them shall be knighted momentarily. Our two Order of the Hearts today go to Sir Dr. Vasant, Lord of Cotland, and Richard Gerhardt, very soon to be Sir Richard of the Open-Hearted. Congratulations. Ladies and gentlemen, behold the *BOOM* And limited supply. Those are running out. closing doors. We have a
layaway night coming up. So I'm going to read his note. It is Bobby Bow from Bluegrass, Iowa. And Bobby says, I'd like to dedicate my layaway nighthood posthumously to my dad, Hank. My dad became a no-agenda listener after I punched him in the mouth in the summer of 2024. Sadly, my dad passed away unexpectedly in March of 2025. There's never a good time, never an expected time. My dad was a conspiracy therapist and follower of Christ.
It would mean the world to me to bestow this honor on him and have him recognized as Sir Hot Rod Hank of the Raccoon River Valley. absolutely please make sure there's plenty of tang and shanghai spring rolls at the round table tang i haven't heard tang in a long time well if possible i know he'd love to hear the jingles i got ants and the backup to the backup to the backup backup and a backup to that backup and a backup to the backup to the backup yeah no problem Follow it with some karma. I
got hands. ♪ ♪ You've got karma. Alright, so now
¶ Knighthoods and Product Placements
grab the blade, Mr. Dvorak. We have some knights to take care of here. Very nice. Sir Richard Gerhardt, step on up and possumately in spirit, hang on. We are here to honor you. Thank you both very much for your support of the NO Agenda show, directly or indirectly. I am very proud to pronounce the KD as... Sir Hot Rod Hank of the Raccoon River Valley and Sir Richard the Open-Hearted. For you gentlemen, we have Hookers & Blow, Rent Boys, and Chardonnay. We got Tang and Shanghai...
Don't forget the beer and the blunts, the Rubinets women and rosé, the geishas and sake, the ginger ale and gerbils, the breast milk and pablum, and of course, the mutton and the mead. It's all right here. No agenda rings.com is where you can pick them up. Um, I'm sure your son will pick them up, sir. Hot rod, Hank. Uh, and sir, um, Sir Richard, the open-hearted, you can pick it up yourself going to noagentorings.com. Anybody can go to this website, take a look at it. You
will see the handsome Noagentorings, also for dames. They're signet rings. That means you can use the wax, which we include in your package, to seal your important correspondence. Very much like Zelensky sent to Putin. I'm going to send you a letter, a sternly worded letter, and I'm going to seal it with my wax. And it also is accompanied with a certificate of authenticity. I did want to thank... See, it went to the P.O. box, our P.O. box here. And I got a note from Sir Darius
Unity. He is the, he always sends, he sends me a new copy of his book. I keep giving away because I have a couple of them. It's the wartime snapshots. He's the guy who Iraq vet and he published a book of pictures of him in Iraq. Oh, yes. This is a, I wanted to thank him for giving. Yeah. He sent me one and one for Mimi. I wanted to thank him for that. And they're great. He's a good guy. Yes, his brand is War NTs. War NTs. And, oh, the book is updated. I didn't realize
that. And he helps homeless and hopeless vets. And he also sent me a... Florida Goldback. which is one two thousandth of a troy ounce did you get one of those yep that's cool so what is that one two thousandths of a troy ounce like a buck No, it was like two bucks. Yeah, how much is... No. One two thousandths is probably two bucks. Yeah, two bucks. It was nice. Thank you very much. Also... Thank you to Matt Benjamin who sent me his book, Back to the
Beginning. He said, well, you can always use this QR. He's doing value for value with this book. back to the beginning he says you can always just scan this qr code adam get the pdf and have your robot I'll tell you what the book's about. I'm actually enjoying it. That's an interesting idea. Yeah. Wisdom from Genesis for Modern Life. I like that very much. Thank you so much. Was there anything else? No? Okay. Good. That means
¶ Upcoming Meetups and Community
it's time for the meetups. No one should die. No, of course it is vacation time, so there's no meetups until this coming Saturday. That is June 13th. That's when the Treasure Valley Boise meetup will take place. Is that Juneteenth? No, that's the 14th. Juneteenth. I know it's the 18th. No, Juneteenth is... The 19th. I don't know what it is. Treasure Valley Boise meetup on the 13th, 3 o'clock at Green Acres Food Truck Park in Boise, Idaho. That should be fun. Also on the 13th, the Franklin's
Slices and Sips meetup. That'll be at Salvo's Pizza in Franklin, Tennessee. Looking forward to meetup reports. People will definitely get one from the meetup on the 14th in Indianapolis, Indiana. The 18th, Charlotte, North Carolina. The 26th, Rotterdam, the Netherlands. The 27th, Fort Wayne, Indiana. The 27th, oh, Albany, California. Oh, you're going to go to the Albany, California, 27th? I know nothing about it. This is totally new to me. It even says new, new, new, new, new.
When is this date? The 27th. The 27th of June? Yes, that's probably a sign. I shall be there. I don't see any reason why not. And the 28th, Longview, Texas, and many more ahead in the month of July, August, September. October. Do we have November? Not yet. Go to noagentameetups.com. This is where you can find all of the meetups that take place around Gitmo Nation, which is worldwide, actually. I had hoped to get the... The Ukraine meetup report, I haven't seen it yet, so hopefully that
comes in so I can play it on Thursday. Well, I hope at least one person showed up. Well, the organizer. The guy who organizes has got to be there. Well, I mean, besides the organizer. I sure hope so, too. It would be cool. Very cool. Are you kidding me? It's fantastic. noagentandmeetups.com this is where you can find people who listen to the show these are people who bring you connection which is always protection they are your first responders in any emergency. Go to noagendameetups.com. Find a
meetup near you. Go, go, go. You will never regret it. If you can't find one near you, here's an idea. Start one yourself. It's free. It's easy and guaranteed. Always a party. noagendameetups.com. *music* ♪ ♪ Remember we have
¶ AI Bubble and Critical Perspectives
John's revised tip of the day coming up. I'm very excited what this revision is. I mean, I've never really had any influence on him at all, and certainly not on the tip of the day, so this should be fun. But before we get to that and our end of show mixes, we have to select the end of show ISO, which will be played at the very end of the show. I've got three and seems like you've got some celebrity ISOs, so I will go first. Are you ready? Yeah, here comes bend over. Man, maybe these
conspiracy people are right about everything. a little on the long side, but I kind of liked it. Yeah, season number two? That about sums it up. Got cut off. What? No, it's no good. It's no good. It's no good. Here's one. We've done it for a long time. I kind of like my first... Man, maybe these conspiracy people are right about everything. All right. Yeah, I kind of like that one, too. It's good. Let's see what you have. Well, I got some celebrities. I got... You
know, I've been going to these different sites. There are just a million of them now. Yeah. I think a lot of them are basing on the same... Model. Models. It's hard to say. Some of these models are no... good. This is, for example, Morgan Freeman. The No Agenda podcast is great, so donate. Doesn't sound like him at all. I know a guy who can do Morgan Friedman. We'll have him do some jingles. I will. I will. Yes, I agree. It's not that one that I'm dumping
that one out of the player. That's no good. Here's Trump. Folks, make podcasting great again with the No Agenda podcast and donate today. Also close, but... Not, it's not really him, you know, I didn't really, let me hear it again. Folks, make podcasting great again with the No Agenda podcast. and donate today. It's like Trump and Jason Calacanis had a kid and then made an ISO. No, I have to reject it. I'm sorry. It's just not
good enough. Well, I'm not going to argue the point because the thing that bothers me about their model for Trump is he can't end a sentence. Right. And donate today. Yeah, no, it's no good. Believe me, I worked it. I spent a good 10 minutes changing the copy and I still couldn't get the ending to come out correctly. It was also almost as long as the podcast itself. So that was. It wasn't that bad. Yours is
long. Okay, what's the timing on yours? The one that you're going to pick and this one, I think yours is longer. No. Mine is three seconds. Yours is five seconds. I will play them at the same time. To prove my point. 3, 2, 1. Folks, make podcasting great again with the No Agenda Podcast and donate today. Huh? Okay. Wow. You've come up with new trickery to humiliate me. Time for tip of the day! for you Just the tip with JCB and sometimes Adam. Okay, I think
people have to, uh... The AI thing needs to be tempered. So when the whole thing collapses, you're not going to be taken. Oh, my God. What a shocker. So you want there's a sub stack out there that is the guy he is the guy who is the expert, an AI expert who is also a naysayer. His name is Gary. Ed Zitron. Sorry? Ed Zitron. No. Gary Marcus. Gary Marcus. Professor back east. Gary Marcus. Everybody knows him.
Hmm. GaryMarcus.Substack.com And just read his material and you will have a very... grounded sense of where This is going why it's no good. why it's going to fail, how it's going to fail, and all the rest of it. He is the best at this. Do you think that if AI was really good, it could avoid the bubble popping itself? That's a good one. Gary Marcus, what is his latest insight that you have read? Can you paraphrase?
The last one that I remember was he commented on the market crash of Friday, which was really AI crash. and he discusses why and how and it's actually very he writes a little long but not in a boring long way, just long. Okay. Is he a boomer? I don't know. I never, I don't even know how old he is. He's really good though. Well, I will investigate and I will report back on this tip of the day, which of course you can find at noagendafun.com or
tipoftheday.net. It's nice for you Just the tip with JCB and sometimes Adam. Now let me take a look real quick, let me see if the robot found out what this is called. Oh, no. No. No, I'll have to find some other way. Robot fails. AI is no good. Although, when you listen to this mix of end of show mixes, which includes Ian Cummings, who is new. He's got the toe tapper in the middle. We have Justin. Baker and MVP all sandwiched together for our end of show mix. It's not bad. It's a little bit in
your face here and there, but it's not bad. At least the lyrics are about the show and telling you to donate. So please consider doing that at knowagentthedonations.com and we will return. I'm Adam Curry. bones I'm John C. Dvorak. We'll be back on Thursday. Again, remember us at noagendadonations.com. Stay tuned on the stream for, what do we have? Oh, Podcasting 2.0. You'll love it. Adios, mofos, and
hooey, hooey, and such. SHUT UP! *Jumpscares* ♪ Inflation's invisible handjob ♪ ♪ Media hails resilience ♪ ♪ But the working man feel the sandbag ♪ I don't know why they sing the tone, trucker. The Immigration Army funding by the... We ♪ Zombies in drain reservoirs ♪ you you There's a signal in the static late night on the
dial. Two cats breaking headlines with a crooked smile. ♪ Adam's got the faders, John's got clips ♪ to read they deconstruct the story cut it right to the bleed the anchor cell you panic dressed in suit and tie but these two play the tape back ask the question why they shuffle all the spin line stack them side by side then swing them off the bandstand let the truth collide Kings of content. No Adman thrown, just a couple of cool cats with a mic and a tone.
No agenda In the balcony tapping in time to time, talent treasure in a three-part rhyme. ♪ Showroom chat ♪ Showing the universe floating on air. Just the truth we share Keeping the producers out of No agenda. Mofo. Dvorak.org slash N-A. Man, maybe these conspiracy people are right about everything.
