Real Coffee with Scott Adams - May 28, 2026


The Scott Adams School - 05⧸28⧸26 The CHICKS Today!


Episode Stats


Length

1 hour and 6 minutes

Words per minute

163.35976

Word count

10,942

Sentence count

466

Harmful content

Misogyny

22

sentences flagged

Toxicity

31

sentences flagged

Hate speech

15

sentences flagged


Summary

Summaries generated with gmurro/bart-large-finetuned-filtered-spotify-podcast-summ .

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Toxicity classifications generated with s-nlp/roberta_toxicity_classifier .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:00.880 Now streaming on Paramount+.
00:00:03.060 Beth and Rip are back in Dutton Ranch.
00:00:06.840 This life here is going to work, isn't it?
00:00:09.520 We'll make it work.
00:00:11.440 Starring Kelly Riley.
00:00:12.880 The legacy is a beautiful thing, but only if it survives.
00:00:16.080 Cole Hauser.
00:00:16.940 What's going to work?
00:00:17.840 Ed Harris.
00:00:18.660 Family is the only thing we're fighting for.
00:00:20.760 And Annette Bening.
00:00:21.640 I can make this a lot harder for all y'all.
00:00:23.960 And peace will have to wait.
00:00:25.600 Dutton Ranch.
00:00:26.440 New series now streaming on Paramount+.
00:00:30.000 When you travel well, your KLM Royal Dutch Airlines ticket
00:00:33.500 takes you to more than just your destination.
00:00:36.340 It takes you to winding streets, spontaneous detours
00:00:40.000 and the realisation that neither of you is actually good with directions.
00:00:45.720 And when the final shortcut taken isn't exactly short,
00:00:50.460 our crew is here to give you a trip home that goes just as planned.
00:00:56.280 KLM Royal Dutch Airlines.
00:00:58.180 When you travel, travel well.
00:01:00.000 Good morning, everybody.
00:01:03.120 We tied up Owen.
00:01:04.580 He's in the trunk of our car.
00:01:06.460 We have a car, a joint car.
00:01:08.120 It's tied to a chair.
00:01:09.840 Oh, wait, Marcella, we're joined.
00:01:11.160 I have to unjoin us.
00:01:12.020 Hang on.
00:01:13.040 There we go.
00:01:14.800 Good morning.
00:01:15.960 Good morning.
00:01:16.940 It's May 28th.
00:01:19.580 Let me turn on my locals so I can see you guys.
00:01:23.040 Are you so excited to see Marcella and I?
00:01:26.740 This could be trouble.
00:01:28.100 Mm-hmm. 0.78
00:01:30.960 somebody said kinky yeah of course of course already
00:01:37.120 beverly good morning we're just waiting for a couple of people to come in and we i think we
00:01:41.760 have a really good show for you guys today i mean that's the goal every day nikki i take like three
00:01:46.960 hours but yes i have i always want to do your content i know marcella's like um how many hours
00:01:52.720 will this show be it's gonna be jam-packed so tied to a chair yes owen is tied to a chair good
00:02:02.400 callback so all right you guys um i'm holding my cup and i'm waiting to have a sip and i'm sure
00:02:08.700 you are too oh cute pictures all right you guys let's do it shall we begin on a good note a
00:02:17.700 positive note the best note there ever was yes it's called the simultaneous sip and all you need
00:02:21.900 All you need
00:02:24.160 Is a cup or a mug or a glass
00:02:26.060 A tank or chalice or stein
00:02:27.080 A canteen jug or flask or a vessel of any kind
00:02:29.100 Fill it with your favorite liquid
00:02:30.780 I like coffee
00:02:32.940 And join me now for the unparalleled pleasure
00:02:35.360 The dopamine hit of the day
00:02:36.680 The thing that makes absolutely everything better
00:02:39.240 It's called the simultaneous sip
00:02:41.160 Go
00:02:42.420 Ah
00:02:47.240 Prospects are rising
00:02:49.480 Stock market is getting stronger
00:02:51.520 coronavirus is getting handled. Yes, that was a good sip. Turkey seems to be getting rid of bad
00:03:02.840 people. Yeah, pretty good sip. Let's talk about the news. All right. I like the little references
00:03:13.960 to the current events at the time, so we get an idea of when that was. So happy Sip-tastic day
00:03:20.920 to you guys um we have some fun things in store for you you're gonna see more of scott in a little
00:03:27.680 bit and first i just i don't i can't remember if somebody sent this to me or if i stumbled upon it
00:03:34.500 i think someone sent this to me and i'm so sorry i don't know who it was but for anyone who knows
00:03:39.760 me knows me. Uh-oh. Where is it? Where is it? You guys? The FBI took it away. Where is it? Oh,
00:03:55.120 I'm bummed. Okay. I'm going to come back to it because I'm going to try to load it during a
00:03:59.220 different segment. So hold that thought. It's going to be great. But did you guys see RFKJ,
00:04:05.220 bobby kennedy jr with the snakes over the weekend this man and animals is like next level it's like
00:04:14.740 wherever he goes there's something happening so this is him and by the way shout out dr oz amazing
00:04:23.540 view at your house so you're gonna see rfkj you're gonna hear cheryl hines the wife in the
00:04:30.260 the background going, Bobby, stop. And you're going to see RFKJ wrangling some snakes. Here we go.
00:04:46.020 He's picking them up. They're biting him. He's like, what are they?
00:04:52.640 They're having sex, so what were they? 0.97
00:04:58.540 Moccasins. 0.99
00:04:59.940 Moccasins?
00:05:00.720 No, they're not moccasins.
00:05:02.280 No.
00:05:03.420 Oh, he would die.
00:05:04.600 Okay.
00:05:05.060 They're not moccasins.
00:05:05.680 What were they doing there?
00:05:07.680 Someone said they were mating.
00:05:10.000 Are they biting?
00:05:10.820 Oh, maybe.
00:05:11.960 All right, check out Dr. Oz's view.
00:05:13.860 Ready?
00:05:14.240 He's just there.
00:05:15.980 The mouths are huge. 1.00
00:05:18.320 Isn't it Cheryl? 1.00
00:05:22.640 he's crazy check out the view i don't think he would care what kind of snake it was because
00:05:32.100 watch this do you hear that sound that's a rattler it's a rattler 0.99
00:05:40.680 okay daniel song you caught the snake i mean what the heck with this guy he's a maniac 0.54
00:05:56.760 he's ready for the circuit myself grabbing snakes because i've done that before while running
00:06:02.740 because they... Why don't you just run by? No, sometimes I like grabbing them. I like
00:06:08.040 insects and snakes and tarantulas, of course. Yeah. It makes total sense.
00:06:13.960 It makes sense. You should hear me scream if there's like a spider or a bug. I'm sure you
00:06:20.840 guys are finding this shocking, but the only way I can kill a bug is I think that I have to save
00:06:27.760 Stella and George's lives, my two cats. So I'm like, what if this spider bit one of them?
00:06:33.120 And so I get myself all psyched up. I have to get like five paper towels and I kind of pre-clump
00:06:39.240 them so it's not like flat because I don't want to feel anything. And then I start to scream,
00:06:44.200 right? So I pre-scream, I go, ah, and I start to scream and then I grab it while I'm screaming.
00:06:50.880 And then I hold it so tight. I'm pressing so hard, so hard, so hard. And then I like either,
00:06:55.640 if it's not a paper towel and it's toilet paper, I flush it. If it's a paper towel,
00:06:59.420 it goes into the garbage and the garbage goes outside. And I'm sorry, no, I can't save it
00:07:03.420 and then let it go. Some things I can, but when there's a scream involved, it is,
00:07:09.060 I can't get the vacuum cleaner out there. Then they're going to go in the vacuum and lay eggs 1.00
00:07:14.260 and I'm going to have like a spider infestation. Oh, yes. Yes. Beverly, amazing. 100%, especially
00:07:22.560 if i'm upstairs i take a paper towel i saturate it with hairspray and that way i know when i grab
00:07:28.960 the bug he's like and he just dies i'm a believer in not killing insects if i don't have to so i'll
00:07:35.440 just take them outside uh in my office they always be like marcella there's a bug in my office like
00:07:41.520 they already know i just go hold them with my hand i literally run through the house screaming like
00:07:48.320 screaming i've gotten my neighbor over before i'm like oh my god yeah i don't know why yeah windex
00:07:55.760 hairspray whatever it is i can't spray raid chunks because i've got the kitties i don't want to 1.00
00:08:04.240 oh oh beverly's making a torch my bad she is using an aerosol can and a bic lighter and 0.99
00:08:10.640 creating a flamethrower i do not recommend that that's just beverly she's wild like that
00:08:15.360 okay i'm glad we got that out of the way um one other thing i did want to show the other day i'm
00:08:21.640 just catching up on a couple little clips oh by the way you guys dr drew yesterday were you
00:08:26.660 so happy with that i mean we love him um he's such a genuine guy and then later in the day
00:08:33.140 he was spotted in la right marcella at the hollywood walk of fame congratulations to adam
00:08:39.980 carolla for getting a star of the walk of fame and having a great relationship with jimmy kimmel
00:08:47.020 regardless of their differences they're both uh dr drew was there as well as jimmy kimmel
00:08:53.460 and they spoke very wonderful things of adam and it was wonderful to see at the same day i was like
00:09:02.300 yeah it was nice to see uh adam flanked by jimmy kimmel and dr drew very sweet um okay so this was 1.00
00:09:14.300 another clip you guys this chick is a badass and i don't even mean to be like this chick 1.00
00:09:19.000 but so i've never seen her before and you know i am like a dog with a bone with this january 6th 0.99
00:09:24.900 stuff you guys will remember this this is the um capital police guy oh i wish i had my notes from 0.93
00:09:30.860 that day but he's like he thinks he's like a total freaking stud and he's a complete lying
00:09:36.180 sellout trader marcella's gonna shrink under the chair um i think he's oh i don't like this uh 0.92
00:09:43.680 short little box i have okay so everybody on the podcast she's uh she has her signs
00:09:48.900 so this woman ah you guys where are my notes she works for lindell tv lindell tv so mike lindell
00:09:59.460 has um a news show and he's i heard doing really well in minnesota he's running in in minnesota
00:10:06.980 for office there so anyway just watch this woman this is a fearless reporter i love her and oh my
00:10:13.240 god i'll give you the notes at the end officer finone how are you today i'm great what happened
00:10:20.100 in there what are you talking about that confrontation jack smith testified about how
00:10:25.120 he had proof beyond reasonable doubt that Donald Trump incited, orchestrated, and funded the
00:10:32.580 insurrection at the Capitol on January 6th, 2021. It seemed like there was a fight in there? No,
00:10:38.480 there was no fight. Is it true, officer, for knowing that you turned off your own body camera
00:10:42.520 on January 6th? No. I saw your body cam. You turned it off yourself. You were playing dead.
00:10:48.140 i saw your body cam footage you're a fucking uh what am i right wing conspiracy theorist i saw 1.00
00:10:55.860 you turn off your body cam footage sir but thank you for disrespecting me psychopath 0.99
00:11:00.840 is she from new jersey her name yes her name is kara castra nuova and she's from lindell tv 0.99
00:11:11.960 you guys she's a two-time golden glove boxing champ um and she was uh ranked number two uh
00:11:20.340 nationally in boxing so i i saw the clip and i was like who is this woman i like yes go get them you 0.73
00:11:27.640 know don't back off and i love that she's wearing pink and she's just like hey buddy i saw it um
00:11:32.660 wasn't she great you guys we need more of that like that's that's what we want so shout out to
00:11:38.280 her i don't know if she's from new jersey but i'm obsessed um so i was dying to show you guys that
00:11:43.820 and that guy is such a prick marcella you know this guy right you've seen him yeah i've seen
00:11:49.480 yeah he's he's uh on someone's payroll yeah we should follow her like it allegedly if anyone 0.98
00:11:58.340 wants to look her up and drop it in the chat on um on all the plat on uh you can even tell she was 1.00
00:12:04.300 a boxer you didn't have to tell because of the gloves and the her manner of standing and talking 1.00
00:12:09.660 i don't know she was like i don't care very confident she was unafraid to make a good lawyer 1.00
00:12:15.100 if she wanted to be nice so you guys can you guys on um youtube rumble spotify x look her up her 0.97
00:12:22.220 name is kara castro nuova and she works for lindell tv and kara is c-a-r-a okay love her and she's 1.00
00:12:31.260 hot. Yes, she is hot. Okay. So you guys, we have a Scott treat for you today. Where are our Dilbert 0.77
00:12:40.120 fans? We need you in here immediately. So it's so funny how many things aren't loading on my thing.
00:12:46.900 I'm going to try to find them later. Oh, tell me this isn't there now. Yes, it is. Okay. All right,
00:12:54.160 you guys something wacky is happening of course um so listen we are going to do uh so remember
00:13:01.260 when scott was putting together his dilbert museum and you know it didn't it feel a lot like
00:13:08.120 someone who was like preparing to you know get his affairs and orders which which you do when
00:13:14.700 you know you're in your life and you're getting up in years i mean i think i i think about it now
00:13:20.260 where I'm like, oh, I want to clear out things and get things in order. So it was very important
00:13:25.960 for Scott to get that museum together and to talk about it and show it to us. And a lot of people
00:13:32.000 only found Scott after that, and they may never have seen it. And for the rest of us, we can't
00:13:38.040 get enough Scott. So let's take a 10-minute tour through the Dilbert Museum. Marcella and I were
00:13:44.400 lucky enough to tour the museum. And it's very impressive just to see how, how long and his span
00:13:53.520 of reach with like all the, all the different achievements. And Dilbert was like massive. I
00:13:59.980 mean, Dilbert still is massive, but it's just incredible. Um, we're not going to answer or
00:14:05.460 answer personal questions, alien. It, it doesn't matter. It's all perfect. Everything is perfect.
00:14:10.440 I promise you in Scott's estate. Okay. So let's sit back, kick back. We've got 10 minutes of
00:14:17.100 looking at Scott and his career. Okay, guys, enjoy it. Hey, everybody. My name is Scott Adams. I'm
00:14:25.440 the creator of the Dilbert comic strip. You might recognize Dilbert. And if you want to see what a
00:14:31.940 comic strip looks like, here's what they used to look like. This is when we did it on paper.
00:14:38.700 I'll show you more about that in a moment.
00:14:41.540 But what I have here behind me are all the items that remind me of how it all started.
00:14:47.260 And I thought I'd give you a little tour of the early days of cartooning, how it's done, how I got started, and a little bit about me.
00:14:56.480 The first thing you need to know is that cartooning might be a little bit genetic.
00:15:01.100 And what I mean by that is my mother was a landscape artist.
00:15:06.000 You can see some of her work on the wall here.
00:15:09.260 These are the paintings that she didn't sell.
00:15:12.020 Everything else she sold at galleries,
00:15:14.720 but the ones she thought were not quite good enough,
00:15:18.060 they became family heirlooms.
00:15:20.220 So I have the ones that are her least favorite works,
00:15:23.240 but still quite good.
00:15:24.980 She sold everything she put in a gallery.
00:15:27.580 Father did a little bit of art too.
00:15:29.680 He wasn't really skilled, but he liked to work with wood.
00:15:32.400 And here he made a little Dilbert and Dogbert and lots of other little things.
00:15:36.540 They used to draw little cartoons and write funny letters to me.
00:15:40.420 So I got the wry sense of humor mostly from my dad and from my town.
00:15:45.260 Got my art skills mostly from my mom.
00:15:48.820 My siblings got some too.
00:15:51.920 I've got a sister who's majored in art and did a lot of art, a brother who liked photography.
00:15:57.320 And so some of it's genetic.
00:16:00.180 But how did I get started?
00:16:02.080 I've got most of my history conveniently in this corner.
00:16:07.760 This is the very first desk and chair in which Dilbert was created.
00:16:12.980 The desk, if you can call it that, was left in an apartment that I rented in San Francisco in the Haight District.
00:16:20.880 And it was not this color. 0.76
00:16:22.720 It was just left over by the prior resident who didn't want it because it was basically garbage.
00:16:28.700 But I said to myself, I could refinish this.
00:16:31.580 I'm really bad at refinishing, it turns out, but I did use it as my original Gilbert drawing table.
00:16:38.420 What's on it is something called a light table.
00:16:41.740 And what this does is it helps an artist who wants to recreate a scene similar to the scene before.
00:16:47.960 If you've got one scene that you like, let's say this one, but you want to draw it on another comic,
00:16:53.580 you can put one over the other, put it on top of the light, and the one on the bottom shines through,
00:16:58.440 and you can effectively just trace it on the version that you want.
00:17:03.820 So this is something we don't use anymore.
00:17:06.120 It's all done on computer with a stylus and a tablet you can draw on.
00:17:11.060 But for the first, I don't know, 20, 25 years, it was done the old way on paper.
00:17:16.700 And eventually it became a hybrid situation where some of it was drawn by hand
00:17:24.460 and then i would scan this in and put the boxes there and add some other dialogue etc because i'd
00:17:30.620 created a font on the computer of my own handwriting so i could just type in words
00:17:36.700 after a while the chair was actually made by my mother and me it was a project when i was about
00:17:43.740 12 and it was made from two separate chairs the bottom and the top were different chairs
00:17:49.740 and refinished it, and my mother did the backing, et cetera.
00:17:55.540 So this has a lot of meaning to me.
00:17:57.100 It's one of the few things I took with me from my home to California when I moved.
00:18:03.840 Now, your question might be, Scott, how did you get started?
00:18:06.900 And it turns out that the story is right here.
00:18:11.460 It started this way.
00:18:12.940 I saw a TV show about how to become a cartoonist,
00:18:16.740 And I wrote to the host of the TV show, and he sent me back a whole bunch of good tips, which I used.
00:18:24.040 His name is Jack Cassidy.
00:18:26.440 He was a cartoonist himself, a professional cartoonist.
00:18:29.680 And he wrote back, and among his advice, he told me what kind of paper to buy,
00:18:37.520 a special kind of paper that you can erase often without ruining the paper.
00:18:42.020 You do a lot of erasing when you're a cartoonist, when you're using pencil and paper.
00:18:46.740 He told me what pens to buy, where to send things, and he told me to get this book.
00:18:55.280 Now, it comes out in different years.
00:18:57.600 This was an 86 version.
00:18:59.700 I think by the time I talked to him, I may have already known about this.
00:19:03.720 But he said, look in the 1988 version, because that's when it happened.
00:19:09.220 And here you can find, depending on what kind of artist you wanted to be, including a cartoonist,
00:19:15.380 You need to find out how to send your samples and where to send them to.
00:19:20.340 And this is all I needed.
00:19:22.060 I made some cartoons, I sent out my samples to the addresses in this book.
00:19:27.540 Most of them came back with the rejections, but United Media said yes.
00:19:33.600 Here is the actual original submission of Dilbert.
00:19:41.380 So what I did was I took 50 of my best comics that I was just drawing at home at my little desk.
00:19:48.900 And you can see that they're very crude.
00:19:53.260 You can see that the panels around it were just squares in this case.
00:19:57.840 I didn't know how to do that yet.
00:20:00.020 And I was just writing the lettering with uppercase and lowercase, which as it turns out is not the style of cartoons.
00:20:07.900 I found out later that they're usually all uppercase, just by tradition.
00:20:14.260 So once I had submitted that and it got accepted, I found out that it turns out the name Dilbert had already been taken.
00:20:25.140 And there was a comic named Dilbert.
00:20:27.220 It was something that Navy flyers, people in the military, were using.
00:20:33.600 It was a comic strip involving a guy named Dilbert who was always doing all the wrong
00:20:38.600 stuff.
00:20:39.800 And it turns out that I got the name from somebody who had seen this but forgotten he'd
00:20:44.780 seen it in some documents from his father who had been in the military.
00:20:49.000 And he just thought the name Dilbert was a perfect name for the little character I was
00:20:53.200 drawing on my whiteboard at work in my cubicle.
00:20:56.000 And so I adopted the name and I got published before I found out that there was already
00:21:02.060 a Dilbert comic.
00:21:03.600 And I worried for decades that they would come after me until I realized it's made by the military, which means probably it belongs to the public.
00:21:14.000 But I never heard from the original Dilbert cartoonist.
00:21:17.180 I assume he heard of me.
00:21:18.660 Now, in the early days, I developed some techniques of my own.
00:21:23.960 So when I wanted to put the little handles around the cartoons, this would be a Sunday-sized comic,
00:21:29.520 I went to tap plastics and said, make me a frame like this.
00:21:34.980 And then I could just use my pencil to draw on the squares on a piece of paper and I'd be ready to go.
00:21:41.300 When I did the lettering by hand, I would use this little guide.
00:21:46.000 I believe I was using this one.
00:21:48.720 And you just do your lettering so it goes to the bottom and top of one of these holes.
00:21:54.080 And there will be straight lines and all the same height.
00:21:56.880 You saw on the comic that I showed you that there was something that looks like a dot pattern of shading, like the chair and Dilbert's bathrobe here.
00:22:10.640 So this is actually a decal that you place on here, and then you use an X-Acto knife to cut around it so that you leave the parts that you want, and the rest just peels off.
00:22:21.500 Obviously, shading and everything is done on the computer these days, so none of that
00:22:27.240 is necessary.
00:22:29.240 Now, at one point, when I was still working, I would be writing down all my ideas for the
00:22:36.740 day in voluminous little notes.
00:22:40.260 You can see I've got a bunch of these.
00:22:43.480 These were very lightly drawn pencil ideas that later turned into real art.
00:22:49.840 It's very light.
00:22:50.900 This is the way it originally was, so it hasn't faded.
00:22:53.840 It's just that I kept it light because it was easier to erase the light pencil lines.
00:22:59.140 Now originally you would put it in a pencil, but if you do a light pencil, it doesn't show
00:23:04.220 up on photocopies.
00:23:05.220 It's too light.
00:23:06.720 Then you can use an ink pen to ink over the pencil and only the ink parts will reproduce
00:23:12.820 because they're darker.
00:23:15.120 This is the original Garfield comic.
00:23:19.140 it's his sign by Jim Davis and early in my career after I'd been published
00:23:24.420 um I'd be in a comic that referenced Garfield and so there's a tradition in the industry in which
00:23:30.980 for the cartoonist you reference will often say hey do you want to trade comics so I traded
00:23:36.460 comics with Jim Davis I got one that's valuable he got my crappy one because it was worth nothing
00:23:42.080 then and i took it to a took it to a frame shop i couldn't wait to show it to the frame shop in my
00:23:50.480 local town because i thought he would be so impressed that i had an original garfield cartoon
00:23:56.000 except there were only two of us customers in the frame shop and the man in front of me that i was
00:24:01.840 waiting behind was getting a framed garfield there were two of us at the same time in the
00:24:10.320 same shop in my little town who were framing an original garfield he got his because he had just
00:24:16.320 met the creator himself total coincidence the frame shop guy had the best joke of all when we
00:24:22.560 told him my goodness we're both here to get a framed garfield original and the proprietor without
00:24:28.720 a touch of humor just said third one today which is always a great line all right this is how it
00:24:36.720 all started and if you're wondering how it went pretty well you can see over here a sampling some
00:24:44.720 of the licensed dilber products there's another wall behind you it has much more but the 2025
00:24:52.960 dilber calendar is going to be available this christmas you can already buy it pre-sale
00:25:00.000 if you go to dilber.com you'll see the link go to buy this you can only get it through that link
00:25:05.840 It's not on Amazon.
00:25:07.100 It's not in bookstores.
00:25:08.380 In order to make it in America, I had to do a special process that isn't the normal process.
00:25:15.440 And it's completely made in America. 0.90
00:25:17.960 Available only at the link you can see at Dilbert.com.
00:25:22.220 A safer Ontario means more police and prosecutors making sure my car doesn't get stolen.
00:25:27.320 It means building new jails to keep criminals behind bars.
00:25:30.760 And it means there's no need to worry when I play at the park.
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00:26:02.660 oh i love that we were lucky enough to be in there and he's right those those shelves go
00:26:16.000 all the way around the room and they are packed packed we even saw the dill burrito did you see
00:26:21.640 it marcella yeah i did i was like are they in there
00:26:26.580 wait first of all i forgot that part about the garfield comic and he goes into the store and
00:26:35.580 the guy in front of him is also getting one frame that is so bizarro so how many people saw that for
00:26:42.380 the first time i'm just curious to know because you know it's like we take for great like we've
00:26:48.620 seen everything probably twice right so you know we're just like wait there's things people haven't
00:26:52.920 seen. And by the way, it's like Seinfeld. I could watch Scott's anything over and over and over
00:26:58.980 again. Let me see. So Holsey's asking, where will the museum end up? That's a great question.
00:27:06.460 So the answer is, I don't know, but they definitely want a destination for it. So
00:27:13.940 it's just unknown right now. There's just so much going on right now, as you can imagine.
00:27:18.300 but um oh idol you have a framed dilbert cartoon i love that yeah some of us saw it live oh first
00:27:25.940 time first time for oh i love that i'm so glad we we played that today for you guys um so it's
00:27:32.860 very impressive and when we were in there you know scott also has uh his photo albums from his
00:27:39.640 younger days that we were flipping through and they're just like everybody else's photo albums
00:27:45.420 from years ago and you're just like look at scott like with his long hair and he's all like
00:27:49.900 lanky looking and we we got a kick out of that um the only picture i pulled that came through
00:27:57.180 and you guys here is uh marcella and i was shelly and with savannah and that was in the museum um
00:28:04.940 over here by savannah is where he just pulled that calendar off the shelf so all the way around the
00:28:11.340 back wall and then to the side and then there was even a closet full of things that weren't
00:28:18.540 even on display so quite the arc marcella what were you thinking watching and remembering
00:28:26.780 you know i was just um remembering how he felt about his mother and how he um you know took
00:28:35.980 after her art you know she was an artist as well and seeing him talk about the chair and how the
00:28:42.780 mom his mom virginia helped him build the chair and all that it just seems like uh he like an
00:28:50.060 homage to her and at the same time um doing cartooning back in the 80s and 90s was really
00:28:59.980 difficult compared to now yeah yeah like he had to have a stucco knife and all of that he uh it's
00:29:07.460 definitely um different now with ai as well and so but i mean he he was the real deal oh so the thing
00:29:16.800 about about scott is that when we went there there were so many magazine covers so many t-shirts so
00:29:24.360 many different memorabilia that he had for Dilbert. But he was
00:29:29.220 always very authentic. He he never he knew who he was,
00:29:34.960 that's for sure. But he was he he was also open to talking to
00:29:39.960 me to talking to people, everyday people like he wasn't
00:29:44.460 something somebody that's like, Oh, you, you must come through
00:29:48.780 the other door, you know? No, no down to earth. He was down to earth. Um, I, I love, and we got
00:29:57.500 to see his mom's pictures. Um, they're beautiful. She was very talented. I do love how Scott said
00:30:04.800 that he got his sense of humor, you know, from his mom and, you know, this and that, and he goes,
00:30:09.800 my town, my dry sense of humor from my town. And I'm just like, oh my God, I love that he credits
00:30:14.380 his town for part of his dry sense of humor which is so funny um yeah and and then there was just
00:30:20.700 like frame after frame after frame on the wall like marcella said of magazine covers with you
00:30:26.940 know uh interviews with scott and dilbert and all of this stuff and i mean comic strips were
00:30:35.260 i mean they still are for some people but they were like they were like the 0.95
00:30:39.820 shit back then because you didn't have all this other nonsense noise. You had like six channels 0.98
00:30:44.700 of TV. And when the newspaper came, you look for the comics for some like light entertainment and
00:30:50.360 to see if you got the joke and was it funny. And then you, you know, people would actually talk
00:30:54.600 about it and kids. So we had silly putty. Does everyone remember silly putty? And it was like 0.96
00:31:00.180 this little like shiny clay thing. And then we used to press it over the colorful comic strips
00:31:06.360 in the paper. And when you'd lift up the silly putty, the comic would transfer onto your silly 0.98
00:31:11.040 putty and you could like stretch out Dilbert's face and all that stuff. So, um, comic strips 0.93
00:31:17.240 were a huge thing. So to be like the top guy, to be a Dilbert, a Garfield, a Snoopy, that is like
00:31:26.520 an achievement that you really just can't comprehend. Because I really feel like if you
00:31:32.040 think about like just think about the 80s and 90s you can probably really an average person can
00:31:38.000 probably only name like three or four famous comic strips far side I think that's the only ones I know
00:31:43.680 are the ones I just said so you know kudos to Scott man he just and how tedious it was and he
00:31:51.200 never gives up he'll give up something he'll give up you know he would give up uh businesses and
00:31:57.920 ideas if he kind of ran its course with it. But he never gave up on inventing and creating a bigger
00:32:07.160 talent stack and talents and learning and then adding his skills into his everyday life. And
00:32:14.480 he was never like, oh, that didn't work. I gave up and that now it's over. He was always just like,
00:32:19.480 no, let's keep going. And even when he had Dilbert, how many businesses was he attempting
00:32:26.820 to do and and actually everything he did was to be useful so you know he he was living the mantra
00:32:33.900 i remember i know we have to talk about news but i remember him talking about his mom virginia and
00:32:41.360 how she showed he showed her uh magazine cover and she was like not impressed as much and he was
00:32:51.460 like oh my gosh because she said well that's not a people magazine and he was like oh boy I don't
00:32:59.280 know what he told her but that was just like oh man that was crushing you know to us man's soul
00:33:05.680 so eventually he did make it down to people magazine but I believe he had an issue with
00:33:11.180 the people magazine cover because it was just Dilbert uh and not him on the cover and so he
00:33:17.920 did finally make it onto people magazine and he showed his mom but it wasn't just it was not him
00:33:25.520 himself you know so right so it was always funny that's what made me laugh about you know he would
00:33:31.680 always tell us these things but he would always uh make fun of himself and oh yeah and what was
00:33:38.640 happening and never like took himself too seriously but was very serious about always
00:33:46.080 moving forward and challenging himself like i mean right till the very last second you guys
00:33:52.080 working doing thinking creating i mean he hated sleeping he felt like it was a waste of time
00:34:00.800 he's just like oh like it's just something i have to do but like i need to get up because
00:34:04.880 time's ticking you know and i'm just like oh my god it's like insane but you know that's that
00:34:09.200 kind of mind like maybe it's a gemini thing too you know him and trump trump doesn't really care
00:34:13.920 to sleep either. You know, so it's just, it's just, he's a special, special man. We all are
00:34:21.840 so lucky. You know, think about the people in this world that people, I don't want to say the
00:34:26.960 word idolize. Like, it's not like an, like, you know, you just, you have such a love and
00:34:32.100 appreciation for Scott, right? So imagine how unlucky a lot of other people are that have a
00:34:38.360 love and appreciation for someone and they never had access like this where you could go behind
00:34:43.880 the scenes and he would tell you about Dilbert and he'd answer your questions in the chat and you
00:34:48.680 were like in his home every morning while he's in his pajamas sipping coffee and taking if you were
00:34:54.000 a locals you know you saw him in the kitchen making the coffee before the show and his little
00:34:58.720 putting green in the house and you know you'd walk through the house and he had a little elevator
00:35:03.160 and he'd go up the elevator sometimes sometimes he'd take the stairs but you know it's like
00:35:07.360 that's an incredible level of access to somebody that this is why this community is so amazing
00:35:15.000 because he talked to all of us we all bonded with each other of course we were bonded to him
00:35:21.200 and that's why this can go on just like scott wanted it to because it's just a you know it's a
00:35:28.020 our commonality was scott it is scott it will always be scott and i just think that it this
00:35:36.240 a very special group of people um i know i don't want to talk about news either you guys but we do
00:35:42.560 a little bit of everything it's a variety if you will um and we do have to catch up on some stuff
00:35:48.960 but listen there'll be way more about scott coming up so i promise you that so i'm glad you guys
00:35:54.320 enjoyed this so i'm going to um toss the first story over to marcella and oh and you guys listen
00:36:02.480 if you are enjoying the show it will help us to keep it going if you could share the show hit the
00:36:10.000 like button the bell the little heart it just it really helps keep our show alive and going so more
00:36:15.680 people might find it and um you know that's the goal okay so marcella i'm gonna toss over to you
00:36:21.520 for the first news item so a lot of you might be tired of winning i'm not tired of winning at all
00:36:28.320 um i know yesterday you may have talked about ken paxton winning the primary for republican
00:36:37.080 primary now he's going against uh talafrico oh talarico yes and there's a good chance that he
00:36:46.180 will win of course it's texas uh but there is uh it's very competitive but the other thing was
00:36:53.600 the funny part was that Trump had posted untruth about it. And I will pick out only the funny stuff
00:37:05.120 because it's a long post. And he congratulates Ken Paxton and talks about Cornyn and having a
00:37:14.960 strong race. This is a senator that's been there 24 years, I believe. And, you know, it's a big
00:37:22.680 deal. One of the main reasons he did not back Cornyn was because he was not pro the Save America
00:37:30.220 Act. And one of the things that he says in there, and I'll go quickly into it because I want to go
00:37:36.620 to the next story, is Jasmine Crockett, a very low IQ individual who has no relations to the 0.88
00:37:42.200 legendary frontiersman David Crockett, would have been a far better choice for the Democrats
00:37:48.340 um in regards to in regards to uh the opposing party uh talarico he calls talarico alfred e
00:37:58.060 newman if you know that you'd have to see a picture of newman but that's the mad comic mad
00:38:05.860 mad magazine okay okay so loser loser track al green if you guys remember al green he's the
00:38:14.900 protester that had signs in the state of the union and he's waving his pain oh he yeah several times
00:38:24.420 so um so trump posted about that and he congratulated the the democrat democrat party 0.76
00:38:31.880 um al green one of the most mentally deficient congressmen in the history of our country has 0.98
00:38:36.880 lost in a landslide his seat in congress but i will miss that lunatic not screaming and 0.96
00:38:43.280 finally waving his cane at me during my next state of the union speech.
00:38:47.960 So one of the things that happened with Texas is that it got redistricting, happened there,
00:38:55.620 and it forced Al Green to go against another Democrat.
00:39:00.300 The area where they're at is just pure Democratic power in Texas, but he lost against that Democrat,
00:39:09.360 at the 18th congressional district he lost 69 to 30 percent so menifee the person he lost to
00:39:17.100 is most likely going to win the final race but um because i guess that that district the 18th
00:39:24.520 congressional district is known to be a democratic stronghold um but who knows so and i mean who
00:39:31.320 knows if this guy has any kind of reasonable bone in his body but we can only hope so but i doubt so
00:39:36.920 he's out of there. So the other loser, well, that's just my opinion. Where's my sign? Is 0.95
00:39:45.120 E. Jean Carroll. She's being investigated by the DOJ. And I don't know if you have 0.93
00:39:49.520 a clip of that. Oh, this makes me just giddy. Okay, here we go.
00:39:56.060 Exclusive and breaking news right now. The Justice Department, CNN is learning,
00:40:00.140 has launched a new criminal investigation into one of Trump's enemies, E. Jean Carroll.
00:40:06.400 Now, E. Jean Carroll was the former magazine columnist who accused President Donald Trump of sexual assault.
00:40:11.560 Ended up being that he was liable for sexual abuse.
00:40:14.240 The source is telling CNN that the investigation now is focused on whether Carroll committed perjury during her two civil lawsuits against the president.
00:40:22.120 Paula Reid is breaking the story, and she's out front.
00:40:24.280 And, Paula, what else are you learning about this?
00:40:27.400 I mean, there was obviously a verdict here.
00:40:29.480 That's right. And here, Erin, this is the latest move by the Justice Department to take action against one of President Trump's longstanding foes.
00:40:38.120 Our sources tell us this investigation is focused on a 2022 deposition that Carol gave where she said that she had not received any outside funding.
00:40:46.980 Now, her later her lawyers later told the judge that she had, in fact, received funding for legal fees and expenses from billionaire Reid Hoffman.
00:40:54.680 And the judge overseeing this case ultimately said there were no issues with her credibility
00:40:59.060 and blocked Trump lawyers from asking about this at trial.
00:41:02.840 Now, Carol currently has multiple legal battles with Trump currently pending,
00:41:09.320 including one before the Supreme Court.
00:41:11.900 And notably, Erin, the Supreme Court has deferred 12 times on a decision
00:41:16.740 whether they want to take up that case.
00:41:20.240 Now, over at the Justice Department, Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, I am told,
00:41:24.100 has recused from this case because he worked on one of the appeals related to the Carroll case.
00:41:30.960 Now, I'm told he has not attended any meetings or been in any discussions about this investigation.
00:41:36.240 The case is currently being handled out of the U.S. Attorney's Office in Chicago.
00:41:41.620 Now, tonight, the Justice Department issued a statement saying, quote,
00:41:44.500 We can confirm that no U.S. Attorney's Office has declined to investigate any case relating to the subject matter of CNN's inquiry.
00:41:52.940 We will not comment beyond that. Now, Carol's team tonight declined to comment. Erin?
00:41:59.660 All right. Okay, Marcella, let's take it away. 0.50
00:42:05.260 So, I mean, the main issue is that when you are deposed, even if it's a private civil matter
00:42:12.280 or it's not a civil matter, you're under the penalty of perjury. And just as if you were
00:42:19.540 in the courtroom. And basically Alina Haba, his then attorney asked clearly Carol, whether she
00:42:28.520 was being, whether her legal fees were being covered by someone else. And she refused, she
00:42:35.920 said no. And then basically then her own team had indicated that there was someone else that had,
00:42:43.820 you know um funded her legal costs so you can always um do the clinton move where what is is
00:42:55.980 what is funding funding you know so they could always sidestep it but basically there was
00:43:03.820 somebody and i think having the disclosure by her lawyers that billionaire reed hoffman was behind
00:43:11.040 that um i mean i love the whole thing because it shows the crookedness and i think there was
00:43:18.120 other things that we can talk about of how president trump was treated before becoming
00:43:24.880 president one of them was the florida mar-a-lago issue i have that too which you have but this one
00:43:33.660 was another issue of having people sue him. Now, the Second Circuit recently delayed the
00:43:41.920 $83 million that President Trump was supposed to pay for the defamation payment for what
00:43:50.400 was found in that case. And the Supreme Court, I think they talked about it in the newscast
00:43:56.620 that they were deferring hearing the appeal. So we'll see how it turns out. But the structure
00:44:03.400 of everything is that there was as as scott was trying to put it is that there could be a rico
00:44:12.600 action of conspiracy um between all of these players to in order to um affect the election
00:44:23.000 and in order to derail trump as they do other candidates he's not the sole person you know
00:44:30.120 know they always come out in their October surprise with some lady saying that she was
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00:45:04.100 details. Well, Reid Hoffman, correct me if I'm wrong, wasn't he also behind Christine Blasey
00:45:11.080 Ford with the Kavanaugh? He was behind that too. So this guy's a real piece of work.
00:45:16.720 He's also alleged to be in the Epstein files. But I know that there is people that are innocent.
00:45:27.200 so you know all right well that's interesting so she's just you know a gem for headlines but you
00:45:36.600 know the thing is the the wonderful thing is is that they're actually going forward and doing it
00:45:42.460 and seeing what results because sometimes when you start an investigation you find out more
00:45:47.480 once you um uncover you know you you find out all the venomous snakes under the under the under the
00:45:57.640 rock but because there was a time where i would be talking to people about these kind of things back
00:46:05.560 in you know 2020 or even before that or even after that and they looked at me like i was alex jones
00:46:13.720 Like, what are you talking about?
00:46:15.500 What is this conspiracy?
00:46:16.680 Who is paying who?
00:46:18.320 The, this is not, this is organized.
00:46:20.840 These are protests that are, you know, all these things.
00:46:23.380 And so now it comes to fruition that we weren't so crazy after all.
00:46:28.700 That's right.
00:46:29.700 Okay.
00:46:29.980 So I want to, there's just two stories I want to make sure we get in.
00:46:33.360 One is this one. 0.98
00:46:35.160 This one we're going to file under no shit Sherlock. 0.98
00:46:38.780 Okay. 0.98
00:46:39.020 Let's just take a listen to this.
00:46:40.960 Say here.
00:46:42.440 well she says that she's never seen him act that way before since but in the interviews that over
00:46:48.380 200 of which that Jake and I did other people did see him act like that in the months before
00:46:54.440 and in the months after that and those moments became increasingly hard to predict
00:47:00.300 and the White House was increasingly trying to manage them to keep those moments out of public
00:47:06.160 view and eventually you know during the debate um they could no longer hide those moments from
00:47:13.200 the public um i'd also say that what she just said there is very much at odds with what many of
00:47:19.280 biden's top aides have said at the time and have said you know since the 2024 election which is
00:47:25.680 they didn't think the debate was that bad and they think they thought the democratic party way
00:47:30.160 overreacted they certainly didn't think that he was having a stroke at the time and they thought
00:47:35.120 it was you know he was clearly trying to say big pharma and um instead of uh beat medicare and that
00:47:42.320 the that this was a whole you know tempest in a teapot overreaction but jill biden is now saying
00:47:47.680 that at the time when she was watching she thought her husband the president united states
00:47:52.160 was having a stroke and then also later that night spoke at a rally in which she praised
00:47:58.480 his performance then also did an event right afterward at a restaurant and then also let
00:48:03.680 let him go and do a rally the next day in North Carolina that seemed okay so what happened was
00:48:11.120 Jill Jilly was interviewed and she was questioned you know what did you think about that debate
00:48:17.980 performance to which she said you know I've never seen him like that ever and I've never seen him
00:48:24.960 like that since and I was you know I was scared I thought maybe he was having a stroke in which
00:48:31.680 she then takes said maybe stroke victim out on stage and parades them around and goes to a
00:48:39.040 diner and takes them to an event it's like stop it and also the aids that saw this behavior
00:48:46.720 everybody who saw this which was all of you because we all saw it i mean i never say this phrase
00:48:52.400 but shame on you you know everything's a big effing joke to these people we're talking about
00:48:59.360 running our country and the world. And you're like, yeah, like, you know, we knew he couldn't
00:49:04.920 talk, walk, maybe he had a stroke. There was a one brain cell left, but if we could just push
00:49:11.060 him through and it wasn't until that debate that was just so mind numbingly ridiculous that people
00:49:18.040 were like, oh, we can't co-sign anymore. Like it's just, it just went too far. And I'm like,
00:49:22.420 you know what, George Clooney, you're so full of it too. Don't let me go on a rant, but you're so
00:49:27.180 full of it too. Everybody knew what was up. So I hope that our DOJ follows the money all the way
00:49:34.620 to all these people being put in jail. There was a great cabinet meeting the other day and the DOJ
00:49:40.240 is stepping up and doing stuff. But Marcella, what do you want to say about this Jill Biden
00:49:44.580 bullshit? Sorry. The sad part is I see this all the time in my practice. Elder abuse is rampant. 0.99
00:49:53.340 And I mean, to be honest, what was happening to Joe Biden not to make him a victim was it could be discerned as elder abuse for not having, you know, not having someone step in and say, hey, maybe he is lacking capacity now or he needs more time or, you know, he has disabilities or whatever it was.
00:50:15.700 It just seemed like they were just doing the weekend at Bernie's and just dragging him along.
00:50:22.180 I remember there was a funny video that we talked about of this lady in Brazil taking her deceased uncle or someone that she knew to the bank and she was actually dead.
00:50:34.520 And he was trying to get money out of the people actually do this.
00:50:38.320 You guys, this is what I litigate for a living.
00:50:40.960 Some of these things are people doing this to their own relatives because that particular relative or that particular person is the one that's generating the golden eggs.
00:50:51.160 You know, they're the ones generating the money. I'm not I'm not saying that Jill was aware of that, but you have to because who knows, maybe she's also being abused herself. I don't know. You know, so the issue is that somebody had to come in and say something. But when you're president of the United States, it's hard to, you know, step on and say, you know, you need to stop, you know.
00:51:18.680 I know because he was the president, but let's get real. He didn't have one brain cell bouncing
00:51:23.860 around in there. So it seemed like that. Yeah. Yeah. So it's like, how could it even be hard?
00:51:28.620 It was so disgusting to watch. And, and it was like, I, I don't think Joe Biden's a good person.
00:51:33.940 I just don't, but it was sad to watch that for him as an elderly person who obviously was 1.00
00:51:40.760 handicapped. It was sad to watch that. Um, I, I would hope nobody would ever do something like
00:51:47.040 that to somebody they love, you know, obviously the greed and the power and the power were more
00:51:52.360 important to the Biden. You know, and sometimes individuals like a wife or a daughter or anything
00:51:58.760 like that, sometimes you're too close to the situation where you are not able to discern the
00:52:05.400 changes that are coming to that loved one. And you need a doctor, somebody else. And there was
00:52:11.740 a doctor involved that would see President Joe Biden, and would have been able to tell them,
00:52:17.440 hey, you know, something's going on with him, there is tests that you do for dementia, and so
00:52:22.260 on and so forth. So, you know, when you're a relative, you kind of just like, oh, yeah,
00:52:27.500 he's forgetful. You know, that happens, you know, I mean, he forgot, he forgot where the exit is.
00:52:35.240 And sometimes you kind of just keep it going, because you'd want to believe that your relative
00:52:41.360 where your loved one is, is good. Marcella, you are so much nicer than me. Honestly,
00:52:47.060 it just happens in the cases that I deal with. I deal with conservatorships and I deal with that
00:52:53.480 a lot. And a lot of it is like, no, there's this doctor saying that your loved one does not have
00:53:01.460 capacity to do X, Y, and Z. Well, we got that report from the her report when he interviewed
00:53:06.920 him and he said, I can't release the report because he he's brain dead, basically. That's
00:53:13.100 just me talking. But anyway, I want to move on. We all know that this and, you know, and by the
00:53:17.540 way, people are like, oh, you know, it was nice to see Hunter Biden talking about his addiction
00:53:21.260 to Candace Owens. Bullshit. That just listen to me, you guys. The Bidens are professional liars. 1.00
00:53:28.600 Okay. Hunter Biden, whatever his addictions, that's brutal. Like I understand addiction. 0.99
00:53:35.000 Like I get it. Yes. Terrible. But these people are so full of shit when they talk, everything
00:53:41.260 they say is just a calculated lie. So I don't want to hear about them. I don't, I'm not giving 1.00
00:53:46.600 them the benefit of the doubt. They destroyed this country. They let people flood in here. I'm
00:53:50.940 over them. Um, Jill, you're a horrible wife. And I've said that since the, before you even got 1.00
00:53:56.860 into the white house, you're disgusting. Thank you. Good night. Okay. So I just want to move on. 1.00
00:54:02.100 And so this was this is also interesting.
00:54:05.620 We only have a few minutes.
00:54:06.680 So this is about the raid at Mar-a-Lago.
00:54:10.060 And let's go because, I mean, again, any normal minded person that isn't infected with TDS knew this was terrible.
00:54:18.300 So let's take a listen to John Solomon.
00:54:21.820 Meanwhile, a lot of reaction to the story that we broke in the last 24 hours.
00:54:25.600 President Trump himself reacted to it, socialized the story.
00:54:29.040 story, but we now have a second piece of evidence that the Justice Department under Joe Biden
00:54:33.480 knew that its raid on Mar-a-Lago was bad, remember, bad, excuse me, a couple months ago, we told
00:54:39.160 you that the FBI had memos saying that they did not believe they had probable cause to
00:54:43.420 raid Mar-a-Lago, but they did it anyways, they went into the president's home looking
00:54:47.140 for allegedly classified documents.
00:54:49.420 Well, a couple days after that raid, one of Merrick Garland's top advisors, someone
00:54:55.620 He personally brought in to make sure that they stayed ethical in their investigations
00:54:59.860 of President Trump, wrote an email saying, I don't believe we have the right to go raid
00:55:05.180 Mar-a-Lago.
00:55:06.180 In fact, I've been worrying about it ever since I found out about it.
00:55:08.860 Why?
00:55:09.860 As she noted, and as we reported at the time back in 2022, she believed President Trump
00:55:14.200 may have declassified the documents before he left office and therefore had every right
00:55:19.820 to possess those documents at Mar-a-Lago.
00:55:22.620 That is a smoking gun.
00:55:23.740 Those two documents together could potentially create an overt act in a conspiracy case alleging
00:55:28.980 that President Trump's civil liberties were violated.
00:55:32.600 That is exactly what Joe DiGenova and the team in Miami and Fort Pierce are looking
00:55:38.420 at.
00:55:39.420 Today, that team was in Washington meeting briefly with the Attorney General Todd Blanche.
00:55:43.400 We'll have a lot more on that as the next few days unfold.
00:55:48.320 Joe DiGenova is a badass, you guys.
00:55:50.920 Like, I love that he's on this and Todd Blanche, same thing.
00:55:55.780 So, OK, Marcella, tell us what.
00:55:57.480 Oh, and by the way, Star Painter made a good point that they had approved to use deadly force in that illegal raid.
00:56:05.740 Yeah, that just was, you know, his civil liberties were violated.
00:56:12.360 Hopefully a court will come up with that decision.
00:56:16.480 but i mean it's blatant uh violation as a president you're able to declassify those
00:56:23.240 documents down to whatever you want it to be um and this allegation that they couldn't speak to
00:56:30.520 his own attorneys try to see you know visit the property they didn't need to raid the property
00:56:36.000 um as if he was some dangerous uh hooligan or something like that but to me um it's just
00:56:44.800 another sign of this conspiracy that he talks about john solomon was talking about and i want
00:56:52.640 to put it together because scott somewhere out there will be so happy because this is what he's
00:56:58.960 always wanted that to be shown for everybody to see what horrible uh corrupt government we have
00:57:08.160 you know and to think like the what one family has been put through is outrageous oh my god i i
00:57:16.000 know i could not i can't even imagine being able to handle it but like what like that is such a
00:57:21.120 solid family like they are so united and for all the little different divisions of the trump family
00:57:27.920 like you know different baby mamas and this and that they are so solid i love them as a family
00:57:34.160 Like you couldn't have a better family. Um, and I think that's how they get through all of this
00:57:38.420 because it's, it's just impossible to imagine handling even just one faction of what's happened
00:57:43.600 to him. Um, so I can't wait to see where that goes. And I have complete confidence in DeGeneva
00:57:49.360 and Blanche and, and knowing what we know. So I'm in, I'm in, um, what time is it? Okay.
00:57:57.740 Let's do, all right, let's just do this quick, Marcella. This was from the cabinet meeting.
00:58:03.100 um let's just let's just there was so much that came out of that cabinet meeting but
00:58:07.080 we are winning like marcella said saving money not even saving it finding the fraud okay here
00:58:13.740 we go particularly hurt by the fraud because there's some of our biggest tax i should just
00:58:18.600 quick tell you this this is kelly loffler and she's in charge of like uh sba like small business
00:58:24.020 association so this is the fraud they found within uh the loans okay particularly hurt by
00:58:30.600 the fraud because they're some of our biggest taxpayers in the country and they show up every
00:58:36.160 day they work hard to provide for their employees to build their businesses they're working they're
00:58:40.860 doing it the honest way and they see fraudsters taking from the american people it's taxpayer
00:58:47.080 money and so you think about at the sba we found 200 billion dollars in fraudulent ppp loans that
00:58:54.040 the biden administration tried to hide and forgive and sweep under the rug we've turned the first 22
00:58:59.760 billion dollars of that over to Treasury for collections and to DOJ
00:59:04.020 for prosecution our inspector general is already announcing that people are
00:59:08.760 going to jail there are jail sentences now being served we've announced that a
00:59:13.280 hundred and forty thousand people have been barred from ever getting SBA loans
00:59:18.520 again defrauding the government for about nine billion dollars so we are
00:59:23.320 going to continue our work under the great leadership of Vice President
00:59:26.380 advance and appreciate the partnership because it's really accelerated our ability to get the
00:59:31.260 job done uh but then just back to small businesses we have record business is that disgusting 200
00:59:38.740 billion and did you see trump's face like when she was he was like he kind of like leans back
00:59:44.120 and looks over like oh oh and by the way really quick and marcella then you you tell us more
00:59:49.060 about this but yes jd vance was there people he was sitting right across from president trump
00:59:55.140 People were like, oh, notice who's not there.
00:59:57.820 Like, stop.
00:59:58.800 He was sitting right next to Bascent, who, by the way, will be playing Carolyn Levitt's role today.
01:00:03.840 The White House press briefing will be done by Bascent today.
01:00:06.960 Amazing.
01:00:07.500 Okay, Marcella, what do you think about this fraud?
01:00:11.600 The problem with this fraud is that it's as if government is designed to promote the fraud.
01:00:20.660 You know, there is no auditing structure.
01:00:23.200 There's just lots of free money, well, taxpayer money, and no auditing, no enforcement.
01:00:33.200 So this is, as Scott would say, it was designed to be this way.
01:00:39.740 The design is destiny.
01:00:41.000 The way that it is, what you have is what it's designed to do, which is fraud.
01:00:47.920 One of the things that came out recently, and I think it was Stephen Miller that said this, but Scott had said this a while back, is that we could probably solve the budget issue with finding all this fraud.
01:01:03.020 Because the deficit might be all fraud.
01:01:05.540 Trump said the same thing.
01:01:06.800 Yeah, he said the same thing with all the fraud.
01:01:08.520 say that he also said you know we could solve the social security issue without having to change
01:01:14.760 anything with social security just by the fraud that's been going on and you know we should be
01:01:20.200 really really mad because no like he trump did say during that meeting too nobody was going to do
01:01:24.600 this nobody was going to look into this it was just going to keep going on and on and on there
01:01:28.840 were so many good tidbits from that cabinet meeting maybe we'll play more tomorrow but we 0.62
01:01:32.840 have to go you guys so you'll be happy i know right it flew by how did we do how did the chicks do
01:01:40.280 today were you guys happy with us i hope so tomorrow bj is joining us owen is off again
01:01:48.360 tomorrow the um the agency needed him so he will not be here tomorrow but it will be fun friday
01:01:55.400 with marcella and myself and with bj so that'll be a lot of fun and um maybe i'm gonna show you
01:02:02.440 a little i told you guys to remind me about a little secret i was teasing out to you so
01:02:06.440 remind me tomorrow um and i'll make sure all my clips are coming in for tomorrow
01:02:11.320 but we're so glad you guys are here thank you thank you look marcella we did great we did great
01:02:17.400 good feedback keep saying that keep saying so marcella thank you so much for a great show today
01:02:25.000 it was great being with you my friend um and we thank everybody for being here today we always
01:02:31.560 thanks scott and shelly for allowing this show to go on and you guys i think i'm going to stay
01:02:36.180 with the locals for just a few minutes after since i got cut off with you yesterday um but listen
01:02:41.660 thank you so much we'll be back tomorrow and please be useful and always a closing sip to our
01:02:47.780 dilbert master creator uh beloved scott adams you guys to scott to scott
01:02:56.780 bye guys can i stay behind too yeah sister okay let me see if i can do this hang on
01:03:08.240 that'll be fun
01:03:09.980 everybody can watch us okay let's see let's see if i have figured it out with the engineer
01:03:19.760 to and i'm sorry rumble i'm sorry it's just subscriber but come over to come over to locals
01:03:25.080 rumble is watching allegedly yeah rumble's still on i'm gonna see if we can get it cut out but i'm
01:03:33.720 sorry like i feel so bad about that if it happens it happens if not it's okay i'm always happy to
01:03:38.720 talk to everybody all the secrets we can give rumble wasn't on yeah you guys thanks for the
01:03:47.180 feedback. That's so nice. I see you a court. Um, I know you had to go out and come back in it's,
01:03:57.620 but you know what rumble changed its system like weekly. So it's funny. It's like, you'll
01:04:04.440 like, I'll do the show today. Tomorrow I'll load up everything and it'll be like, Oh,
01:04:08.780 Oh, what are we doing now? So everything like moves. It's, it's just you guys, you OGs. Do
01:04:14.600 you remember when we first came from periscope over to locals the drama oh my god it was like
01:04:20.760 every day it's not there's no sound it's upside down scott would be like shut up
01:04:26.400 i can't take it anymore oh my gosh rick road winner was thinking what magician what what 0.82
01:04:34.860 do you write girls one bj tour oh oh oh you naughty naughty people it wasn't me you guys
01:04:43.700 i read the chat um dr von hardy anyone else have lips not in sync with the words that is something
01:04:51.060 marcella and i are doing on purpose and we practiced it and it's working so we have learned
01:04:56.760 how to talk and make our lips move at a different time so it was intentional um let me see yes i
01:05:04.380 sandy i remember quite uh quite a few shows where scott was like i'm done and just was like i'm out
01:05:11.600 of here he couldn't you know he's like if one more person says this it's over oh so funny poor
01:05:18.360 scott waiting for the date for erica to do that she's like i'm done with you guys goodbye would
01:05:24.080 you guys hate me it could happen what if i did that would you guys be like is she kidding like
01:05:30.460 who is she to do that or do i get a pass if that ever happens i'm curious to know i um i think i
01:05:37.940 think the beloveds would be okay they'll be like oh that's so scott youtube like youtube's been 0.99
01:05:45.600 amazing i have to say but i think they would be like what a bitch 0.99
01:05:50.180 i was kidding about the lip i should not really oh you like my rant i keep my ramp rants low-key 0.99
01:05:59.620 you guys you don't yeah i have to be like that because that's how it is when i have cases they're
01:06:05.780 like oh he can't do what and i'm like yeah and they're like but my husband used to be so blah
01:06:13.660 blah so i don't know what is marcella saying with uh with jill biden you know oh that and
01:06:23.100 being litigated against that's why i'm like i'd rather not be litigated against um
01:06:28.880 We'll be right back.