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Speaker 0 asserts that 'They suck don't like leeches.' He continues, 'They suck tired of they start out the most popular person in the world, make a lot of money, dig house, cars, everything, end up with penniless.' He also states, 'It is conspiracy that that you do it on purpose.' In summary, the statements describe a cycle where people rise to peak popularity, accumulate wealth and possessions such as houses and cars, and then end up penniless, with a claim that this outcome is part of a conspiracy carried out on purpose. The perspective highlights cynicism toward social dynamics.

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I've encountered people like Trump before, and so have you. These are guys who avoid paying their taxes by claiming they're smart and know how to manipulate the system. But I'm fed up with these so-called smart guys. We truly believe in our son. He is incredibly intelligent.

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The speaker criticizes Tucker Carlson for calling him a "weird gay kid in the basement" from Chicago, arguing Carlson is an out-of-touch elite pretending to represent disaffected white people. The speaker claims to be a genuine "disaffected white young white man" who was "red pilled by Trump" and punished for questioning Israel, unlike Carlson and Candace Owens, who only addressed Israel recently. The speaker contrasts his background with Carlson's privileged upbringing and his father's alleged CIA connections. He also contrasts himself with Owens' marriage to British royalty. He accuses Carlson of hypocrisy for mocking people in basements while supposedly caring about issues like credit card debt and home ownership. He highlights his own working-class background and struggles, contrasting it with Carlson's elite connections and Peter Thiel's alleged involvement with the CIA. He states that he had to fight for everything he has, unlike Owens and Carlson who received contracts and jobs through connections.

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Speaker 0 claims his life is awesome, while Speaker 1 is going to work. Speaker 0 mocks Speaker 1 for going to community college and working with his hands. Speaker 1 accuses Speaker 0 of shitting on blue-collar workers while trying to appeal to them. Speaker 0 clarifies he is trying to appeal to rich people and identifies as an elitist, "kind of" like Richard Spencer. Speaker 1 says Speaker 0 has never worked with his hands and lives a terrible life. Speaker 0 says he likes being poor and that it's manly. Speaker 1 says he's not poor, it's just cheaper to live the way he does. Speaker 1 asserts that every functional member of society works, except Speaker 0. Speaker 1 says he'd rather be a functional member of society than be unique. Speaker 0 says Speaker 1 wants to be a cog.

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The speakers discuss the pressures that come with being in the public eye and having wealth. Speaker 1 notes that revealing personal material isn’t hard, but revealing it and then being told you’re a spoiled white rich kid makes it difficult, implying judgments from others based on background. Speaker 0 responds by asking if this is something Speaker 1 has faced personally, to which Speaker 2 confirms the world’s judgment and acknowledges the challenge of being the son of a public figure who faces assumptions about him. Speaker 2 explains that he understands what it’s like to be the son of a prominent figure and to have people make assumptions, describing it as very difficult. Speaker 0 asks how he handled it, and Speaker 2 recalls the 1960s atmosphere with plenty of drugs but emphasizes the need to block out extraneous noise. He says this is the first time the young man is receiving a lot of attention, with both his father and grandfather in the picture, and people will say whatever they want. They note that others don’t understand what he has experienced or why he has acted as he has. The conversation highlights that simply being born into wealth does not shield anyone from issues, and suggests that people often misunderstand human complexity. Speaker 1 adds a contrast, pointing out that tabloids or social circles criticize wealthy individuals (citing the Kardashians as an example of shopping yet complaining about air conditioning) while not harshly judging them for similar behavior. The group discusses the reaction to a film about drug use and personal struggle, noting that people have said things about it despite its topic. Speaker 2 emphasizes staying focused on their goals and what they do. Speaker 0 reflects on their project’s purpose and reiterates focus. Speaker 2 recounts telling his son during the movie’s production that he doesn’t care about external validation or whether anyone sees the film; he says, “We’re winning,” because they are dedicating themselves to their work and positive outcomes are emerging. Finally, Speaker 2 mentions an NPR appearance where listeners called in to express gratitude for sharing their story and describing how it helped them with their own struggles, underscoring the potential positive impact of their efforts.

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Speaker 0 delivers a rapid-fire set of bragging lines about wealth, fashion, and success: “Go see my eyes red on my demons,” “My postie racks up just to motivate my niggas,” “Rappers need a stylist bad, but I ain't use a stylist yet,” “I signed a million dollar contracts in my box to steal a text,” “Wake up, check my bank account, phone numbers in there, bitch. I'm blessed,” and references to private jets, being fresh off the press, sipping drinks with lines, a tinted eye, a moving piece, and owning a new bulletproof Cadillac. He notes money, private flights, and the ability to charge for Instagram content, while cutting off a girl who didn’t pick up. The tone centers on opulent lifestyle, independence, and status. Speaker 1 shifts to a hostile, accusatory monologue: “All over the place, guys. Jack Kosoviak, Gabe Hoffman, Mike Cernovich, Laura Loomer.” He claims Gabe Hoffman “is running humps on people” and calls him a “bad guy.” He says he looks like he’s seen a ghost and that someone close to him was there to infiltrate him, describing these people as “really fucking bad” and stating they are “evil,” including claims of them being “unregistered foreign agents.” He asserts he will be watching everything they do and declares ongoing surveillance and vigilance: “I will be watching. Everything you do, I’m gonna be watching.” Speaker 2 notes a logistical detail: “Hell yeah. On my way back to the site to get my burner phone so I can use my ghost accounts…” indicating plans to obtain a burner phone for anonymous or modified online activity. Speaker 3 adds a blunt, explicit line about using “ghost accounts” for actions, saying, “can use my ghost accounts to fuck,” reinforcing the theme of covert or deceptive online activity. Overall, the transcript juxtaposes an ostentatious wealth/aspirational rap persona (Speaker 0) with a conspiratorial, accusatory stance toward specific public figures (Speaker 1), and mentions of circumventing scrutiny or anonymity online (Speaker 2 and Speaker 3). The named individuals identified by Speaker 1 are Jack Kosoviak, Gabe Hoffman, Mike Cernovich, and Laura Loomer.

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"I am America first. You are not." "Elon Musk, you weren't born here." "Milo, you're a Jew and you weren't born here." "Kanisawans, your husband wasn't born here." "Ask the show. Who is the fed? Will the real federal agent please stand up? Who's the real federal agent?" "Elon, Peter Thiel, JD Vance Tucker, and George Farmer, the son of the head of the alliance of Christians and Jews in The UK?" "Patrick Bet David said, why do you say the n word? It's to show people I'm real." "Why do you roll out of bed at 3AM and do a show? Why do you say you're gonna have hate sex with can of so ands? Why do you say nigger? It's to show you I'm the real nigga on the show." "All these people that have been taking checks from Fox News, Turning Point USA, Dennis Prager, they're just not ready for this. They're not ready that we're in the groiper generation." "Eight years lied about, censored, attacked, persecuted while you were at parties getting millions of dollars for doing bullshit." "Your show is ass and you're full of shit and you're retarded." "I'm coming for all of it." "They came to my house. They tried to kill me." "You might kill me in the process, but you're fucking done." "Signed America. That's my body. And that's me. And that's my body."

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The speaker claims that "Ma'am Donnie's" Robin Hood persona is fake and that he is a manufactured communist candidate. Campaign records allegedly show that $1,600,000 of the $1,700,000 donated to his campaign was funneled through a single bundler. Only 77 individual contributions, totaling $0, had no bundler attribution. His campaign then received $7,000,000 in matching funds, and Super PACs added another $1,900,000, bringing the total to $10,600,000. The speaker asserts that "this guy" wants socialism, which is communism in disguise, despite growing up in a wealthy Manhattan neighborhood with a filmmaker mother and a professor father, attending private schools, and living in a $2,000,000 apartment. "Ma'am Donnie" is quoted as critiquing capitalism and advocating for a better distribution of wealth, echoing Dr. King. Despite being a "nepo baby" who got his first job at 29, he stated that he doesn't think billionaires should exist.

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Speaker argues that "If you're rich, it doesn't matter" and that "I'm doing this for the country" while discussing presidents who ran businesses, notably George Washington who "ran his business" and was "a rich man" with "two desks." He claims it cost him "anywhere from 2 to $5,000,000,000 to be president," but says "if you can afford it" it's worth it because he's making a difference for the country. He notes Doral "was setting records" before announcing his candidacy and that politics reduced his market to "50%." He proclaims the country is stronger "now... maybe ever," with "the best unemployment numbers" and soldiers "being brought back home from the endless wars." He attacks Pelosi, Schiff, and Schumer, warns North Korea could lead to war, and says "North Korea's I like him. He likes me."

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The speaker stated that they think it's ridiculous to suggest President Trump is acting for his own benefit. They claim he left a life of luxury and a successful real estate empire for public service, not just once, but twice, and the American public reelected him because they trust he acts in the country's best interest. The speaker asserted that Trump has lost money being president. They don't recall similar questions being asked of the previous president, a career politician who was allegedly profiting off the office. The speaker maintains that President Trump does not do this, and the White House holds itself to the highest ethical standards.

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The speaker reflects on tough times and the loyalty of people. They mention that rich people don't like them, but regular people do. They discuss the dishonesty of the press and the speaker's fabulous house, Mar-a-Lago. It costs $3 million a year to maintain, but the speaker wants to ensure its preservation. They also mention the possibility of running for politics and the need for dishonesty in politics. The speaker believes that taking a firmer stand with foreign countries would make the United States more respected.

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The speaker believes they are being targeted due to their increasing popularity and claims Candace Owens and Tucker Carlson are colluding in a "hit job" against them. They assert that such attacks will only make them a martyr. The speaker criticizes Tucker Carlson for being out of touch and derisive towards working-class Americans, particularly those who disagree with him. They question Carlson's authenticity as a champion of white males and accuse him of hypocrisy. The speaker contrasts their own background with Carlson's, emphasizing their "real American stock" and involvement in domestic issues. They reject inclusive populism and accuse Carlson of being a "modern Bill Buckley" but less intelligent. The speaker challenges Carlson to have them on his show instead of gossiping. They express disgust for those in politics with privileged backgrounds and accuse Carlson of being "filth." They describe a scenario where J.D. Vance corrals "loser anti-Semites and racists" into a "CIA plantation" to fight a war with China while Israel benefits.

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The speaker is being accused of being a CIA operative by Tucker Carlson and Peter Thiel's associates. Tucker Carlson called the speaker a "weird gay kid in the basement" from Chicago with trust funds, while Carlson attended a private high school and Ivy League school, and his father was a Reagan appointee. The speaker identifies as a "disaffected young white man" who was "red pilled" by Trump and punished for questioning Israel, years before Carlson addressed the topic. The speaker accuses Carlson and Candace Owens of gatekeeping and personality attacks, forgetting they pander to the same demographic. The speaker contrasts his background with Carlson's elite upbringing and Owens' marriage to British royalty. The speaker questions who is inauthentic, highlighting his own struggles and contrasting them with Carlson's CIA-linked father and connections to Peter Thiel. The speaker claims Carlson's and Owens' success came from contracts and connections, while he fought for everything.

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The speaker asserts that others "didn't know what they were talking about." They claim a distinction, stating "we're different from the presidential." They describe themselves as "very discreet, reptilian, cold blooded." The speaker concludes by stating, "These are the races we have to win. Others are winning the whole country."

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The speaker acknowledges the strong influence of donors, special interests, and lobbyists over politicians. They claim to have turned down significant amounts of money from these sources, stating that they are not accepting any money from anyone except the people of the country. Speaker 1 brings up the speaker's past relationship with Hillary Clinton, suggesting that it worked for her. The speaker responds by saying that as a businessman, it was their job to get along with people, including politicians. They emphasize that they did a good job in doing so.

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The new press secretary is described as being very prepared. It is asserted that it's ridiculous to suggest President Trump is doing anything for his own benefit. He supposedly left a life of luxury and a successful real estate empire for public service, not just once but twice, and the American public reelected him because they trust he acts in the best interest of the country and puts the American public first. It is claimed that this president has actually lost money for being president. The speaker doesn't remember these types of questions being asked of the previous president, described as a career politician who was clearly profiting.

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The speaker claims to be the reason college and high school athletes are getting paid. He calls himself "Mister influencer to influencers." He states he fights to eradicate childhood malnutrition. He accuses the mainstream media and Hollywood of being pedophiles until flight logs are released. He asks if he is canceled yet.

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The speaker asserts that sometimes you have to be the villain and embrace a villain arc. They state, “Epstein's my boy, dude,” and loudly declare, “Jeffrey Epstein was cool as fuck,” adding, “There I said it. What are you gonna do? Go ahead. Cancel me.” They reiterate their willingness to be unpopular, noting they’ve been unpopular before, and conclude, “I like it better.”

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He is being criticized in the media, but he thinks he's helping. However, he's making everyone look bad, including the speaker. The speaker claims he is not even a burden. He is from South Africa and is cosplaying as a great American leader in a room with portraits of some of the greatest men in the country. The speaker says he has the audacity to act like an elected official, but he is not. The speaker asserts that he is the important elected official in this situation. The speaker concludes that if he wants to tank the economy and his cars, maybe that's what he deserves.

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Speaker condemns the notion of privilege, stating, "Privilege isn't being white, bonehead. Privilege is living in government housing and calling people oppressors while they pay your fucking bills." Real privilege is "wearing $200 sneakers when you haven't worked a day in your life" and "walking around with $300 Beats headphones... on food stamps," paid for by "people who wake up and grind every day." Privilege also means "being able to protest every little thing that offends you" without worrying about calling in sick to work, and "being able to cheat, lie, fail over and over again... and still get bailed out" while others who "play by the rules" get punished. This isn't about race. This is about accountability. The speaker decries a culture that rewards victimhood and taxes the people who keep society running, arguing for a return to a "society of strong men."

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The speaker asserts that others "didn't know what they were talking about." They claim a distinction, stating "we're different from the presidential." The speaker identifies as "very discreet, reptilian, cold blooded." They conclude by stating, "These are the races we have to win. Others are winning the whole country."

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Speaker proclaims, "I'm the realest nigga on the Internet" and "This is America first," stating, "I was born in America." He declares, "Elon Musk, Milo, Canna Soehans, your husband wasn't born here. Go the fuck home. This is America first." He questions authority with, "Who is the fed? Will the real federal agent please stand up?" and names, "Elon, Peter Thiel, J. D. Vance Tucker, and George Farmer, the son of the head of the Alliance of Christians and Jews in The UK, are the realest fucking nigga you know." He asks, "Why do you say the n word? It's to show people I'm real." He asserts, "I'm coming for all of it," and, "They came to my house, they tried to kill me, I'm still here!" He lists, "Elon Musk, Tucker Carlson, Candace Owens, Charlie Kirk" and concludes, "you might kill me in the process, but you're fucking done." "That's my body. And that's me. And that's my body."

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Candace Owens is described as a former friend of Charlie and at one time an employee of Turning Point, accused of peddling conspiracies and “building her business off of these lies,” with the assertion that she is making “a huge amount of money” from them. The speaker’s response to Candace Owens and others spreading these lies is simply: “Stop.” The conversation then shifts to a revelation that the interview was prerecorded, with sources from CBS News and audience members who say they had to do multiple takes because Barry wanted to read a prompter and questions were pre-submitted. In addressing the question, the speaker asserts that the podcaster Candace Owens and others are “lying,” and that “All of the money. Millions upon millions of dollars” have been earned by some people, while others did not benefit as claimed. The speaker argues that Candace Owens implies that building a business from podcasting results in immediate wealth, but claims the speaker “already had this business” and was “already at top of the chart.” Eric responds, and the speaker’s response to what to say to Candace Owens who is lying is “stop,” with a request for Erica to be explicit about what was lied about. The speaker claims to have reviewed lists and cannot find the lie, asserting that “The lies that I find are coming out of Turning Point USA.” Examples cited as lies from Turning Point USA include Mikey’s blood on him, Mikey’s dad being confused, and Rob McCoy’s statements about his father, which the speaker says Rob McCoy was confused about. The speaker also says Mikey’s departure as a hero does not feel honest, and alleges Charlie’s claim that he stopped a 30-06 bullet due to healthy eating and strong bones was a modern-day Christian miracle and a lie. The speaker asserts Charlie never wavered in his support for Israel, calling that a “nasty lie,” and accuses Turning Point USA of lying about Charlie’s life in the last weeks. The speaker also mentions claims that Barry won something, and questions whether Charlie’s evangelical commitment and preference for Catholic architecture were misrepresented as lies. The speaker notes further that Turning Point USA lied about various other points, including a supposed “blood bad blood” between Ben Chifferro and others, and Terrell Farnsworth being told to remove an SD card by police, stating that Terrell Farnsworth personally told the speaker that was not true. The speaker claims Terrell removed the SD cards because hats were being stolen, not because of other thefts, and questions the logic of taking the cameras instead of just the SD card, especially the camera behind Terrell’s head. Additional alleged lies include Charlie establishing a Doge, which is claimed not to have existed, and prior to Elon Musk’s government-accountability remark, that Charlie Christine flew drones—described as a major lie by Brian Harpold, who also allegedly stated that security had communicated with UB police to secure rooftops, which the speaker calls a lie. The speaker asks what they lied about, acknowledging mistakes but insisting they have not found a lie, and asks why there isn’t the same energy about lies from the feds, who allegedly told lies as well. The speaker references missing footage of Tyler Robinson turning himself in, unresolved questions about Egyptian planes, and years of tracking Charlie and Erika, with others laughing at these points. The speaker asks explicitly what they lied about and requests clarity, noting possible time-zone mistakes and a timeline discrepancy, and asking where the speaker is lying.

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Speaker 0 emphasizes transparency and discusses a resentful exchange, then trails into a confession about past political positions. He says he tries to be as transparent as possible and offers to share what the text in court filings was. He explains that the text involved a producer and him, in January after the election, when Trump claimed the election was stolen. He says he told the White House he would believe that claim if there were verifiable evidence, and cites a specific example the White House gave: seven or eight dead people who voted, with death certificates and obituaries to prove it. He recounts that he publicly stated there was talk about election theft and that dead voters were on the rolls, naming individuals like Wanda Johnson of Sioux City, Iowa, and Jack Klein of Corpus Christi, Texas, and promising to show their obituaries. He notes that within about twenty-five minutes, CNN confirmed the deceased were not dead, exposing that he had made a colossal error on air. He emphasizes he hates being wrong and humiliated and acknowledges he did not verify the information independently and should have checked. He states he was enraged by the incident and his stance was that if someone claimed the election was stolen, they should prove it; he is an adult and does not take anyone’s word for anything, especially from campaign consultants whom he distrusts, though he still thought the claim could be verifiable. Speaker 1 asks why he did not say these things on Fox News, and he asserts he did the next day on Fox News. The conversation becomes tense as Speaker 1 challenges the sincerity and ownership of the views and statements. Speaker 0 contends there is a conversation about honesty and ownership, and asks what is being claimed. The dialogue shifts to questions about his influence and wealth. Speaker 1 questions the magnitude of his influence, implying a large net worth, suggesting he is worth around $50,000,000, which Speaker 0 rebuts with a defensive outburst. Speaker 0 denies the monetary figure and accuses Speaker 1 of being overly fixated on it, telling him to get off the internet and stop believing such numbers. The exchange grows heated and ends abruptly with Speaker 0 telling Speaker 1 to leave, and Speaker 1 attempting to interject one more time before Speaker 0 cuts off the conversation. Overall, the transcript covers: a claim of transparency; a January discussion about alleged dead-voter evidence and its on-air fallout; an apology and admission of not verifying the information; subsequent on-air correction; tensions over sincerity and ownership of views; and a confrontational exchange about influence and wealth.

This Past Weekend

Rise Up Lights | This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von #365
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Theo Von delivers a wandering set of stories, observations, and calls that loop through family memories, food, pop culture, and late reflections on society. He recalls Big Charlie hosting them for Turkish game hen, the pang of poverty beside meals, and childhood impressions of poultry. He riffs on misheard phrases, museum pigeons, and wartime spy birds, then riffs again on polar bears and chocolate, Halloween costumes that morph from Raggedy Ann to Raggedy Andy, and growing up bittersweet. He muses on weather turning crisp and stray animals straggling into towns as winter approaches, longing for a wilder, braver era of animal visitors. He pivots to media and celebrity news, noting Carol Baskin suing Netflix over Tiger King 2 and speculating about rehashed interviews, plus a critique of Colin Kaepernick’s recent storytelling that he finds shallow. He also covers Elon Musk’s ascent past 300 billion and the idea of a billionaire tax, joking that the rich are leaving Earth while others stay to argue with robots and vaccine talk; sponsorship reads for Blue Chew and Mint Mobile punctuate the set, delivered with trademark bluntness about sex, finance, and power. The discussion then shifts to the end of society question and to swipe society. Callers from Australia and across the U.S. weigh in on whether the era is ending or transforming, the role of machines and social media, and whether a coherent fabric can endure destabilizing forces. Personal stories follow: a father’s sudden death and a nineteen year old caller seeking advice on grieving, a Winnipeg mom Jenny being nominated by a listener with a 750 gift, and Theo’s gratitude for listeners who keep showing. He promotes upcoming tour stops, thanks fans, and closes by urging listeners to touch what they can, lean into vulnerability, and seek healing in recovery spaces, ending with a song that captures loneliness and belonging.
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