Join Russell Brand, Jake Smith, and Dave Dayfield as they discuss the Epstein scandal, and why Bitcoin should be the new gold? Recorded in Los Angeles, CA! Subscribe to Stay Free with Russell Brand on Apple Podcasts!
00:03:24.000In San Salvador, where I've recently been, smoking a cigar that might be contraband in that nation is my beloved friend Joe McCann, our UK reporter.
00:04:29.000This is first of all, MSNBC referencing the releases.
00:04:33.000the lane to stop and then the Democrats go back to the top of that clips Excuse me.
00:04:38.000The House Oversight Committee released never-before-seen emails from Jeffrey Epstein's estate, which include correspondence between Epstein and his longtime co-conspirator, Ghelaine Maxwell, currently incarcerated on sex trafficking charges.
00:04:52.000The Epstein estate has released some 23,000 emails, and House Democrats have been pouring over them.
00:04:58.000And they found some correspondence directly mentioning Donald Trump by name.
00:05:02.000They've released three of these emails, and they're quite interesting.
00:05:06.000The first one was between Ghelaine Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein back in 2011, where Epstein wrote that Donald Trump spent hours at my house with an unnamed victim of sex trafficking whose name is redacted in the email.
00:05:20.000And Epstein referred to Trump as the dog that hasn't barked.
00:05:28.000Maybe because it hasn't got vocal cords, maybe it's got nothing to bark about.
00:05:31.000Some people have said that the redacted name refers to, I think she was called Victoria Gouffray, God rest her eternal soul, who ended her own life, presumably because of the incredible pressure of this terrible case and whatever abuse she endured during this terrible sex trafficking drama.
00:05:48.000Over the course of the last weekend, while we've been away, while I've been putting out pre-recorded content, I appeared at a Maha event.
00:06:14.000At that Maha event, I had the opportunity to speak to a room full of people that are very powerful, like a lot of people from the HHS, a lot of people from big business and big corporations.
00:06:24.000I wanted to address the ideas that I consider to be fundamental to the Make America Healthy Again movement.
00:06:30.000The reason I like it is because sometimes, you know, you feel MAGA is a bit intense for people.
00:07:16.000My comments will get brought to me over the course of the show by beloved Jake there and by Massey, who's watching.
00:07:22.000So get in there, especially if you're on Rumble Premium.
00:07:25.000And we'll be doing additional content today, so you'll be able to stay with us for that.
00:07:28.000Here's a little bit of stand-up that I did in front of those people where I talked about junk food and a few other things that are relevant today.
00:07:36.000Let me know what you think in the comments and chats, guys.
00:07:38.000I suppose hidden even in the language are the ideas that there's a sickness.
00:07:42.000There are clues and codes all around us.
00:07:45.000Even the casual and easy phrase, junk food, is an indication that maybe things have gone awry.
00:07:53.000That that's an easy idiom for us to say.
00:07:56.000Junk and food don't belong in the same place.
00:08:00.000You don't put junk where you put food.
00:09:23.000Well, you am in a lot of fucking trouble then, mate.
00:09:28.000If you want to see us do some stand-up, I'm doing a lot more stand-up these days.
00:09:31.000Your next opportunity might be at this turning point event.
00:09:34.000Let me know what you think about that turning point in a general way.
00:09:38.000Because I know that the right and online independent media spaces in particular are pretty divided right now.
00:09:44.000Candice Owens is coming on the show pretty soon and I'll be talking to her, obviously, about her extraordinary content around Charlie Koch.
00:09:53.000But I also, I suppose, because of love and my deep belief in Christ Jesus, I'm continuing to participate in turning point-oriented events because I believe that if we don't bring Jesus to the forefront of American politics, we're going to be in some very serious trouble.
00:10:11.000I also talked about that at the live event.
00:10:14.000Hey, Paul Saladino's coming on the show next week.
00:10:18.000I think that's when you'll be seeing it.
00:10:19.000Paul Saladino, do you know about that dude?
00:10:21.000He's one of the people that convinced me to stop being a vegan and start being whatever it is I am right now.
00:10:27.000Let me know in the comments and chat where I'm right now.
00:10:44.000Let me know in the comments and chat where you stand on this, on the sort of carnivore diet and that.
00:10:48.000And let me know where you stand on supplements more generally and where you stand on making this vehicle, this spaceship granted to us by the Lord, optimally fit in order to fight for his favor and to prepare for his kingdom and return.
00:11:03.000Before we get deeper and further into the show, I want to just sort of round out this Epstein stuff with, you know, I don't know if it's fair to say that Trump refused to speak to reporters because I think he'd previously just made a joke saying like, no one's got any questions, I don't suppose.
00:11:20.000Here he is, though, in the White House, you know, with this thing.
00:11:32.000Mr. President, can you respond to these Epstein emails that were released today?
00:11:45.000I reckon where most people land on this is that if Trump was in the Epstein files in a way that was meaningfully damning, the Democrats would have released it.
00:11:57.000And that's what I've seen Tim Burchett say.
00:11:59.000Let me know in the comments and chat if you have anything significant or important to add to that.
00:12:03.000Let me know if you go as far as people like David Icke who believe that whoever you are, if you're in a position of power in American politics, you are compromised.
00:12:11.000Let me know if you agree with me that Donald Trump, broadly speaking, is a bulwark against imperialist globalist power.
00:12:16.000And whilst he's not a perfect person, he is an obstacle to the kind of demonic imperialism that was in the ascent prior to the last election.
00:12:32.000Obviously, we can see from the way that institutional media around the world behaved that whatever else is true, they did not want Trump in power.
00:12:41.000That's what the BBC scandal was all about.
00:12:43.000And that's what we'll be talking about a little later in the show.
00:12:48.000Before we get into that, before we get into the way that the BBC edited Trump's Capitol speech and the other things that the BBC have done and the British legacy media at large, which obviously I'm interested in myself because of my own relationship both historically and contemporarily with the British media, I've got a lot to bring you on that subject.
00:13:08.000But first, let's have a look at this verse, which I suppose, and I'd love to hear what you guys will think about this.
00:13:13.000Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, the new creation has come.
00:13:20.000All this is from God who reconciled us to himself through Christ and gave us the ministry of reconciliation.
00:13:28.000That God was reconciling the world to himself in Christ, not counting people's sins against them.
00:13:34.000And he has committed us to the message of reconciliation.
00:13:37.000Now, I personally wouldn't use that as a kind of antidote against sin.
00:13:42.000If you've done something wrong 10 years ago, 20 years ago, 26 years ago, then you should pay the price.
00:13:49.000But what I think we're dealing with is a kind of culture of guilt and shame.
00:13:54.000At the upper echelons of this culture of guilt and shame are Epstein, Ireland, and the compromises that are likely inculcated and induced by Mossad, CIA, deep state agencies that want powerful people to be shamed and sexually compromised.
00:14:11.000One tier down, I would say, the Diddy parties, powerful people in Hollywood, compromised so that they remain in their little paddock of compliance.
00:14:21.000Down from that, people like me who slept around a bunch, promiscuous, high access to lots and lots of sex.
00:14:28.000Then you carry the shame of it because it's wrong.
00:14:30.000You're eternally bound to someone when you have sex with them.
00:14:34.000Then, the next tier, I suppose, is everyone but those that are in Christ.
00:14:39.000Because let me know in the comments of the chat, do you look at pornography?
00:14:42.000Do you feel great about it afterwards?
00:14:44.000Do you feel great after you've glazed your little belly?
00:14:47.000Or do you feel like that's not my highest self?
00:14:50.000After you've danced in the past with pixelated ghosts, do you think that was a good thing for me to have done?
00:14:56.000So what I'm explaining to you is a kind of pyramid, a hierarchy of shame that at the top of it has maximal shame for people that have maximal power.
00:15:05.000Then down the tiers, more and more shame till ultimately we live in a culture immersed in, steeped in total shame.
00:15:23.000That doesn't mean that if you've done something wrong, you shouldn't pay the penalty.
00:15:26.000By God you should and by God you must.
00:15:30.000But that also doesn't mean that people can metastasize, manipulate and change the ordinary shame of promiscuity into, for example, sexual crime.
00:15:39.000Let me know what you think about that in the comments and chat.
00:15:41.000Let me know where you think Trump is in that hierarchy.
00:15:44.000And let me know if you are open and awake enough to acknowledge your own place in systems of shame and your own compromise.
00:15:52.000Jake, you selected this verse from Corinthians, so the great writing of the great St. Paul.
00:15:57.000What is it that you liked about it in relation to this story?
00:16:42.000But what a secularist, materialist, rationalist would say is, oh, you're trying to use Christianity to say you don't have to pay the penalties of the past.
00:16:57.000When you think about your own relationship with Christ and your own relationship with sin and even crime and brokenness, how does that verse from Corinthians hit you, mate?
00:17:31.000I think as you grow closer to Christ, you think more on your sins of the past and realize the sort of debt that you owe and the penance that comes with it.
00:17:42.000And it can sometimes be painful to look back.
00:17:45.000I think when you're living in a life of sin, you don't care, do you?
00:17:49.000You're doing what you think feels good without a thought for it.
00:17:52.000And then later when you become a little bit more awakened through him, you feel the pain of it, you know?
00:18:00.000I don't think that the culture has any means for offering absolution.
00:18:04.000Although Massey made a brilliant point about the death of Dick Cheney and how the same culture that condemned Dick Cheney as a war criminal when he was willing to come out and bat against Trump reframed him as a kind of elder statesman of American politics, a kind of avuncular arm around your figure.
00:18:23.000They've done the same thing with George W. Bush.
00:18:25.000Massey, you're not a believer yourself, you unrepentant, filthy sinner.
00:18:29.000How do you look at the culture's role in providing absolution and forgiveness without a divine entity that can offer such transformation?
00:18:42.000Does that mean that we're damned forever?
00:18:45.000How do you cope with the idea of sin and the fallenness?
00:18:49.000In particular, around, I don't know, me, Trump, people that have done things wrong, certainly not the things I've been accused of, but they've done things wrong.
00:18:56.000How do you as a person that don't believe in our Lord deal with that?
00:19:04.000I don't like the government stepping in and offering absolution on this stuff.
00:19:07.000I mean, there's a, like, I think it was Sam Harris or somebody who said there's like a religion-shaped hole in humans and we're filling it with wokeism and all this other stuff.
00:19:16.000Why would there be a religion-shaped hole in humans?
00:19:19.000Almost like there's a divine creator that if you don't connect with that divine creator, there's a vortex and an abyss within you that you try to fill with pleasure.
00:19:26.000So, like, it's weird, isn't it, that you've...
00:19:28.000Obviously, we all know Sam Harris's position.
00:19:31.000And some of us really yet respect Sam Harris.
00:21:46.000Let's have a look at the resignation of BBC CEO Deborah Turness, as well as unpacking this story.
00:21:53.000I've got a deep past with the BBC, a deep history with the BBC, and I'm invested in this story because the very memo that revealed the depths of this deception showed that at the time that I was falsely accused of sexual misconduct, the BBC were pushing that story.
00:22:08.000Let me know in the comments and chat why that would be.
00:22:11.000At a time when most people were interested in a migration crisis, when most people were interested in the despair across the UK, this story was being pushed at four times the rate of migration stories.
00:22:36.000So let me know in the comments and chat what you think about that.
00:22:39.000And let's have a look at BBC CEO Deborah Turnas, who, even though nothing bad has happened, has resigned, saying that the BBC do not have institutional bias.
00:22:49.000I would like to say it has been the privilege of my career to serve as the CEO of BBC News and to work with our brilliant team of journalists.
00:22:59.000I stepped down over the weekend because the buck stops with me.
00:23:03.000But I'd like to make one thing very clear.
00:23:06.000BBC News is not institutionally biased.
00:23:10.000That's why it's the world's most trusted news provider.
00:23:26.000And some might say that colloquial idioms are less significant than institutional biases.
00:23:32.000Indeed, isn't that what wokeness continually does?
00:23:34.000It divides us on matters of identity and colloquialisms and vulgarity, all the while maneuvering us into fields of conflict that they may control us.
00:23:44.000This is a brilliant little bit of deposition and breakdown from the Telegraph, but note how what I thought was extraordinary as a person that works in independent media is how they have to take you by the hand and tell you, now when they cut away to this crowd, that means that they're changing it.
00:24:01.000They've spliced together two bits of footage.
00:24:04.000That's spliced like they're in a sort of a room with negatives and stuff like that.
00:24:08.000What this whole story is about, and indeed the primary struggle of our time is, is independent media technology means that they can no longer propagandize globally to the degree that they could and their institutions and systems of centralized power are cracking apart.
00:24:26.000Let's have a look at this piece from The Telegraph where they explain how the Capitol speech of Donald Trump was edited to make it look like he was saying, I want you to go down there and riot.
00:24:36.000When in fact he was saying, let's go down there and he was being sort of sarcastic, but hey, sarcasm ain't a crime.
00:24:41.000And if sarcasm is a crime, lock me up and throw away the key, baby.
00:24:46.000But I don't believe as yet sarcasm is a crime.
00:24:49.000Although stay tuned in the United Kingdom, they'll probably make it one soon.
00:25:44.000Note that the information is being presented to you in a very particular way.
00:25:48.000Note the role of the music, the graphics, the edit.
00:25:52.000Obviously, this stuff is pertinent and germane to me because I've been attacked by legacy media organisations in the UK over what appears to be a long coordinated period of time with various media organisations cooperating.
00:26:05.000I'm not suggesting for a single second that the people involved in the investigation thought that's what they were doing.
00:26:12.000I'm suggesting that media biases are so entrenched, deep and saturated that the people involved don't even know they're doing it.
00:26:20.000In fact, have a look at this clip of Noam Chomsky, hero of the left, but also visitor of Epstein Ireland, saying to the BBC's Andrew Maher, who at that point was considered a viable journalist, that the fact is you don't know what your biases are.
00:26:36.000And if you didn't have those biases, Chomsky says to Ma, you wouldn't be sitting in that chair.
00:26:43.000You won't be seeing that unless you're watching this on Russell Brand Unpacked.
00:26:47.000That's when we put together beautiful shows, beautifully cut, beautifully tailored for you.
00:27:33.000That they want us to become as little children and become utterly dependent upon them, kind of like how we're told to depend on God.
00:27:40.000Let me know in the comments and chat if you've noticed that what the state by which I mean a set of governmental bureaucratic commercial, corporate and media interests all bundled together, as Mussolini said want you completely dependent on them.
00:28:20.000You sometimes can't trust independent media because people are fallible and broken and make mistakes and err continually.
00:28:26.000But what you can do is you can aggregate what you're being told by a variety of sources and you yourself, using your divine intelligence, that portion granted to you by the limitless, you yourself can decide what's right.
00:28:39.000Let me know what you think in the comments and chat in a minute.
00:28:43.000We're going to delve a little deeper into this story, looking at the memos that were leaked that revealed the degree to which the BBC lie.
00:28:50.000Let me ask you if you're watching this in the Uk, is this the time to get rid of the taxation that funds the BBC?
00:28:55.000Is this the moment where the BBC has to be disbanded or at least go commercial?
00:29:01.000Let me know what you think about that.
00:29:02.000Before we uh, continue with this story, let's have a little look at a message from one of our partners because hey, we're explicit about our message.
00:30:07.000I do have addiction issues, but I would eat more of it.
00:30:10.000Snacking on massa chips is nothing like eating regular chips.
00:30:13.000With masa, you feel satisfied, light and energetic, with no crash, bloat or gross sluggish feeling afterwards.
00:30:20.000And because chips are made with real food, they're more satiating, so you won't find yourself uncontrollably binging and still feeling hungry afterwards.
00:30:27.000Personally, my favourite flavor is this one.
00:30:29.000I ain't tried the others yet, but I like that one.
00:30:31.000If you love massa, you'll love Vandy crisps.
00:30:44.000They taste like uh, actual potato, so it doesn't taste like junk, tastes good, all right.
00:30:49.000So the VASI ones are good and almost Jake's endorsed that.
00:30:52.000If you use our code, stay free, get 25 off at Massachips.com and Vanderchrist.com, or click the link in the description or go and buy it down the shops like a normal person, like in the old days when things were best.
00:31:13.000If you're watching us on YouTube, click the link in the description and join us over on Rumble.
00:31:18.000We're going to be doing a fantastic long show today, taking deep dives into a number of fantastic and exciting issues.
00:31:25.000But first of all, I want to talk to you about my long history with the BBC.
00:31:30.000A story that involves a plucky boy with dreams, a boy that hadn't yet married Katy Perry, a boy that hadn't yet risen to the giddy heights of A-list stardom, nor tumbled to the depths of conspiracy theory.
00:31:42.000If you want to hear that story, click the link in the description.
00:31:44.000Get over to Rumble Premium and join us right now.
00:31:48.000Here's the rest of the leaked memo that led to the revelations that Trump's capital speech had been misleadingly edited, presumably to make you hate Trump.
00:31:58.000Ask yourself this question, and I mean this.
00:32:00.000I'm asking you this question, so don't ask yourself it.
00:33:26.000The review concluded it was significant that of 219 notifications, just four were about the issues of illegal migrants and asylum seekers, which is obviously an issue that's affecting a lot of people and they care about.
00:33:38.000Remember, our own beloved Joe McCann attended the Patriot and Nationalistic, I suppose, march in London quite recently that centered around Tommy Robinson.
00:33:49.000Among the significant stories that September that were not covered by the BBC's PN system, oh, where's the one?
00:34:07.000I'm not talking about the mascara-wearing, prancing, popping J of a comedian of yesteryear or the bad boy comedian appearing in movies.
00:34:16.000Who's Russell Brand circa 2019, 2020, 2021?
00:34:21.000Russell Brand is a person that took his audience from mainstream entertainment and went online saying among other things, well, be very careful about Moderna and Pfizer and Merck and their vaccine products.
00:34:35.000That mRNA research is unreliable, that the lockdown measures are likely arbitrary.
00:34:43.000We were reporting on information coming from much more reliable sources, among them Robert Malone and Peter McCulloch and excellent people online like Brett Weinstein and people that got out ahead of it and said this COVID crisis, this pandemic is being handled very badly and very deceptively.
00:35:00.000Let me know in the comments and chat if you think there's a connection between what I was reporting on in independent media and the attacks that subsequently occurred and what appeared to be coordinated efforts within media to ensure that I was regarded in a particular way.
00:35:13.000I don't want to make this all about me, but actually it is my shoe.
00:35:18.000I'm going to make this all about me because what's difficult about this is I love the BBC.
00:35:24.000You don't understand what it's like to love the BBC because you're American in the main.
00:35:29.000Imagine if you had one media organisation funded by the government that had given you NFL, the best ever Super Bowls you'd ever seen, commentated on by certain commentators and pundits that you'd grown to love over time.
00:35:42.000Imagine if the American Office or Sanford and Son or all your best sitcoms, the Golden Girls, I don't know what you guys like, had all been made sort of by a government-funded organisation.
00:35:53.000You would have a deep affinity with what we the British call Auntie in the case of the BBC.
00:35:59.000Well, it seems that it's a bit more complicated than that.
00:36:03.000It seems that the BBC is deeply institutionally biased.
00:36:07.000It seems that the BBC has a strong agenda.
00:36:10.000Let me know in the comments and chat what you think about that, particularly if you are a British person.
00:36:14.000I'd be fascinated to know because I myself have a long and complicated history with them.
00:36:19.000I got in a lot of trouble and it began, my trouble with the BBC began when I had a BBC radio show.
00:36:46.000It was like, it was a Willy Wonka wonderland and I was Augustus Gloop, and you know what he did in that chocolate fountain and, believe me, I went in a few chocolate fountains myself.
00:36:56.000Baby, here I am getting into some serious trouble and here's how the trouble began.
00:37:01.000It was an episode of my radio show, the Russell Brand show.
00:37:03.000That was on BBC2, government funded radio show.
00:37:06.000At that point I didn't know it, but I was playing the part of a hedonist that helps you to get lost in your own individualism and to see your sensuality as a kind of pagan deity.
00:37:17.000Here I am on my own show with Jonathan Ross, who's like the UK's letterman.
00:37:22.000If you wanted to understand what Jonathan Ross represents, have a look.
00:37:25.000Andrew Sachs's right, oh no, but this Andrew Sachs's answer phone right, Jonathan?
00:37:30.000Well, this is unconventional popular something out.
00:37:33.000Andrew Sachs played the character of Manuel in the BBC's hit sitcom 40 Towers.
00:37:38.000He was due to come on the show as a guest.
00:37:40.000He was my one of my favorite characters in the sitcom 40 Towers.
00:37:44.000Here's a still of him here in the hero video.
00:37:46.000I absolutely loved Manuel and I love 40 Towers.
00:37:50.000Not long before that, the the broadcast of that radio show.
00:37:54.000I Fool that I was, headedness that I become, was engaged in a freesome with a dance troupe called the Satanic Sluts.
00:38:03.000Now, I'm not proud of it, and I should have known from the name of the Satanic Sluts that there could have been problems, but I had other priorities in those days.
00:38:11.000So, I, you know, got involved, and it was all fantastic fun.
00:38:13.000Then I found out that one of the people in this, you know, let's call it an orgy, was a young lady, a human being, and I don't want to name her because I don't embarrass her anymore than I've already embarrassed her, but her grandfather was Andrew Sachs, and who plays Man World 42.
00:38:26.000And I'm like, oh my god, that's so exciting.
00:38:28.000So, I'd privately, on privately and also probably on air, told Jonathan Ross that story.
00:38:32.000I told him, hey, I had the freesom the other day with a dance shoe called the Satanic Sluts.
00:38:36.000We used to say that sort of stuff on the radio all the time.
00:38:38.000In fact, people used to celebrate my promiscuity and hedonism.
00:38:41.000Let me know what you think about that in the comments and the chat.
00:38:43.000Anyway, so when Andrew Sachs was due to come on the show, I was like, oh my god, this is embarrassing.
00:38:48.000I used to, just like a week ago, I had a freesome and, you know, with these satanic sluts.
00:38:53.000And, you know, it was pretty extraordinary.
00:38:55.000Anyway, during the, then, when Andrew Sachs was due to come on a phone now, you know, when you have guests on the radio and they're just on the phone, he didn't pick up.
00:39:02.000So I was like, well, let's just leave a message on his answer phone.
00:39:06.000Now, this led to, I can't even explain to you what my scandals have been like in the UK.
00:39:12.000But I'm beginning to understand now the way that media works, that you can concoct these scandals.
00:39:16.000Because even though it's bad to have a freesome and then tell the granddad of someone in that freesome that you had a freesome, I recognise that's bad.
00:39:24.000It's not as bad as probably some of the other things that were going on in the UK at that time, was it?
00:39:28.000There'd have been massive corruption and probably wars and crazy funding and assassination.
00:39:33.000Well, this was the biggest story of the time, much like events in 2023, all the way up to the events of October the 7th at the Hamas and Israel conflict.
00:39:44.000The 2023 events, my most recent scandal, were all over the airwaves.
00:39:51.000And you can see now that the BBC was pushing it to millions of people online.
00:39:55.000Let me know in the comments and chat why that might have been.
00:39:58.000Well, way, way back in the early 2000s when I was being a giddy little dickhead and promiscuous and having orgies with the satanic sluts and stuff, I was causing a different type of trouble.
00:40:10.000The kind of stuff that happens if you have a bunch of consensual sex the whole time because you're an idiot and worshiping false gods, really.
00:40:16.000Anyway, here's the rest of what led to an enormous scandal.
00:40:52.000John, I mean, Andrew Sachs, you will be appearing in the documentary, The Bill Made Me Famous with Martin Kemp, Roger Daltry, Paul Ogrady, Paul and Clerk.
00:42:32.000Two of the BBC's biggest stars are off the air tonight.
00:42:35.000Russell Brand has resigned and Jonathan Ross has been suspended as the corporation finally bows to growing public anger about their offensive broadcast on Radio 2.
00:42:45.000Brand said he took complete responsibility for the crude phone calls to the veteran actor Andrew Sachs.
00:42:50.000Jonathan Ross has also publicly apologised, but is that enough to save his job?
00:42:55.000The BBC's Director General said today both the stars were guilty of a gross lapse of taste.
00:43:01.000The number of complaints has now passed 27,000.
00:43:24.000And when I look back at it, I think, gosh, it was really rude and abysmal in its own way.
00:43:29.000But look at the way that it sort of played out.
00:43:32.000Primarily, it seemed to me that it was used by commercial and corporate media as a cudgel to attack the BBC that I then felt very affectionate towards and about.
00:43:46.000I've got a good, I've got a good, I've got Stockholm syndrome about the BBC because I kind of still love my captor because my captor gave me so much good content when I was a kid.
00:43:55.000Faulty Towers, Fools and Horses, Black Adder, all these amazing artifacts, as well as Match of the Day.
00:44:03.000Every time you watch football, it's there.
00:44:05.000It's with those kind of content creators.
00:44:07.000Middlely now, the host of Match of the Day has been kicked off for speaking publicly about the Israel-Hamas conflict.
00:45:48.000Here's a little bit of stand-up that I also did at that Maha event where I alluded to the BBC's editorial scandal, editing scandal and editorial scandal.
00:46:00.000Secretary Robert Kennedy had spoken at the same event earlier and that gave me the opportunity for this joke.
00:46:07.000Secretary Kennedy's speech was amazing.
00:50:02.000This is us talking about the Trump BBC scandal earlier.
00:50:09.000To the Capitol, and I'll be there with you.
00:50:12.000Now, see there, between Capitol and and that's a cut.
00:50:17.000Oh my god, do you know what's terrifying about watching this is that this is made for an audience of I suppose boomers and Generation X's and people my age and look at the level of hand holding they need to understand this stuff.
00:50:29.000I suppose I've worked in media all of my life and been involved in content creation for a long while.
00:50:34.000I'm like, yeah, if there's a cutaway, that means that there's an edit and that means that they're using something else.
00:50:49.000These things are obvious to people that understand media.
00:50:51.000And what's watch that whole video on Rumble.
00:50:58.000If you're watching us on X, we're going to come off right now.
00:51:01.000Please join us on Rumble for the rest of our show.
00:51:04.000We're going to be with you making some great content on Rumble and Rumble Premium.
00:51:07.000Joe wants to talk to us about Anthony Joshua versus Jake Paul, a great, beautiful poser and social media influencer is going to be fighting Jake Paul.
00:51:44.000You'll get additional access to Mug Club, that's Crowder's Gig, Tim Cast, that's Tim Paul's racket, and Glenn Greenwald's additional content.
00:52:43.000We'll also be talking about Massey's always long and frankly indulgent items like an eclipse scene from Apocalypto and comparing that to Dennis Hopper's speech in Waterworld, which I'm actually probably going to be enough to make me want to watch, re-watch Apocalypto, and I've never watched Waterworld.
00:55:40.000Then probably you'll get falsely accused of rape and it's going to get bad again.
00:55:44.000But don't worry about that because then the media will collapse and people will realize that the reason they try to destroy you is because you're a great leader.
00:55:50.000Then you'll be saved by Jesus and hopefully you'll start some sort of global Christian revolution and participate in the return of Jesus.
00:56:32.000Like, people are going to really buy into this on Netflix and everything.
00:56:36.000Yeah, but also, it is annoying, but of course, people should know if they've not worked out just from looking at you that you are a boxer.
00:56:44.000You've boxed a bunch as an amateur and stuff like that.
00:56:46.000So the art of boxing is sort of serious and important to you.
00:56:49.000But when you said that thing about sports entertainment, I was thinking about politics, how politics has become politics entertainment.
00:56:54.000Before we get further insights from Joe on why Anthony Joshua and Jake Paul shouldn't be fighting and let me know what you think about that in the comments and chat because I know that people will be pay-per-viewing that like crazy.
00:57:03.000I'll probably, I mean, if I was around, I'd probably watch that.
00:57:06.000I've never watched the Mike Tyson one because when I found out that Jake Paul won, I thought, I know Mike Tyson some and I didn't want to see Mike Tyson in that position because I sort of love old Mike Tyson.
00:57:16.000Anyway, let's have a look at what people are, this package, which I guess tells us what's going on a bit.
00:57:20.000I've got a problem with this one because Anthony Joshua is a two-time world champion.
00:57:24.000Jake Paul's a YouTuber and doesn't deserve the right to be in a ring with Anthony Paul.
00:58:32.000So you don't only think it's a bad matchup, you think that necessarily stitched into it is corruption because you wouldn't be able to legitimately have two pooja lists of such disparity even in a ring.
01:00:53.000Right, we do want to see something real.
01:00:55.000That's what this whole phenomenon, this sort of P.T. Barnum-style, carnival-esque, like, you know, like, you know, in the Simpsons where you see like that guy that's meant to be evil, can evil, like, and he jumps over like a sort of tank with sharks in it and lions in it.
01:01:08.000It's all like the sort of stuff you think about, Lance, something or other.
01:01:11.000It's the sort of thing you think about when you're a kid, isn't it?
01:01:13.000Like, who would win, a lion or a crocodile?
01:01:15.000Well, I suppose it depends on the environment.
01:02:28.000Heavenly Father, Lord God, thank you very much for putting us on this show.
01:02:32.000Thanks for giving us the chance to talk to loads of people.
01:02:34.000Thank you, God, for allowing us to be free.
01:02:36.000Thank you that in our brokenness and our weakness, you love us.
01:02:39.000Thank you, Lord, that this is a time of great revelation.
01:02:43.000Probably literally revelations, I sometimes think, like them bits about us being, you know, not able to trade without the mark on our right hand or our forehead or like the return and the seven seals and the seven trumpets.
01:02:57.000We pray for your urgent return, Jesus, because sometimes I don't like it down here in exile, even though I really do love my kids and my friends and everything like that.
01:03:04.000I can't wait to be back in your arms, Lord, Heavenly Father.