The Glenn Beck Program - March 06, 2020


Coronavirus May Change Our Lives More Than We Think | 3⧸6⧸20


Episode Stats

Length

2 hours

Words per Minute

167.96964

Word Count

20,311

Sentence Count

2,041

Misogynist Sentences

29

Hate Speech Sentences

27


Summary

Glenn Beck is back with a coronavirus update and the latest numbers from the latest poll on Bernie Sanders and the Democratic presidential candidates. Also, Bill O'Reilly talks about why he thinks there's a reason why Bernie Sanders is doing so poorly in the latest polls in Florida. And, of course, there's still time to get your free copy of the new book, Pandemic: How to Survive a Global Pandemic.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 Hello, America. It's Friday. Great show for you. A little COVID, you know, 19. I don't know if you
00:00:07.940 didn't have COVID 18, 17, and 16. I don't know if you'll understand COVID-19, but we'll give you our
00:00:14.140 coronavirus update. And I want to kind of bring you and set the mood and bring you into what it
00:00:19.840 must be like in Seattle now. They're saying this is the capital of America for COVID-19.
00:00:26.820 What a surprise. I actually am surprised. I thought if you were looking for a capital of
00:00:32.520 disease, wouldn't you have thought it was San Francisco with all the poop on the streets?
00:00:37.000 But it's Seattle who has his own share of poop on the streets. So congratulations on that. We
00:00:42.680 begin with COVID-19. Also the latest numbers. I think there's a reason why Bernie Sanders did so
00:00:52.160 poorly in the latest poll in Florida. We'll give you that and so much more, including Bill O'Reilly.
00:00:57.860 And it all begins in one minute. This is the Glenn Beck Program.
00:01:04.480 So I'm a small businessman and I talk to small businessmen all the time. And the one thing that
00:01:10.320 I know to be true, if you are starting your business or you're running a business, if you
00:01:15.240 can't keep track of all of your numbers because of the high pace of today's business, if you don't
00:01:21.480 know what's coming in, what's going out, what the customers are saying, what is HR saying,
00:01:27.420 if you can't look at how we're pacing year over year, et cetera, et cetera, you cannot make decisions.
00:01:32.660 You're bluffing every second. This was one of the biggest problems I had with the Blaze was I
00:01:38.200 couldn't track all the numbers. Well, you can now. NetSuite has done it. Oracle has done it. If you
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00:01:58.580 you will get the full absolute picture of your business, finance, inventory, HR, customers,
00:02:04.240 everything, one place right from your phone or your computer. It's a dashboard. And with NetSuite,
00:02:10.900 the customers of NetSuite grow faster than the S&P 500. NetSuite, the world's number one cloud
00:02:18.000 business system for a reason. Have them just schedule an appointment, have them come out and do what they
00:02:22.520 did with me and have them go through all of the dashboard with you. It's customized to your business
00:02:33.020 business in your industry. And you see and you're like, oh, that's what I want to. Yeah. And you do this
00:02:38.580 too. That really is fantastic. When you know your numbers, you can succeed. Call them now. Get your free
00:02:47.780 product tour right now. Schedule it and get the free guide, seven key strategies to grow your profits
00:02:53.780 at NetSuite.com slash Beck. That's NetSuite.com slash Beck. So if you draw two dots over parentheses,
00:03:05.960 face appears all of a sudden. We know that because it's a sideways smiley face. If you're doing it
00:03:11.280 online, you'll see the smiley face in the lines in the circles. It's amazing. We, when we see scribbles on
00:03:19.300 paper, we can easily assign that meaning and give life to an abstract symbol, an icon lacking any
00:03:27.060 detail or realism. And we infuse that with universality. And the less detail that an image
00:03:35.800 or a drawing or a painting has, the more we complete it ourselves, the more personal it becomes. Our eyes
00:03:43.160 blend colors, but our, our brain also fills in all of the missing details. And we see ourselves
00:03:53.000 somehow or another, we see a smiley face with a colon and a parentheses. It's an oddity of the human mind.
00:04:03.240 And for now, this anomaly is keeping me hopeful, as hopeful as you can be approaching a coming storm
00:04:11.260 and that cloud of COVID-19 on the horizon. This is the coronavirus. It already is a global pandemic.
00:04:20.880 I don't think anybody wants to call it that because then there are legal responsibilities with a pandemic.
00:04:27.600 But that's what this is. And most of the victims of COVID-19 have remained unknown. They're just
00:04:34.380 statistics. We see these numbers every day. They're forebodings. Their identities have been
00:04:41.220 redacted for obvious reasons. And we're only given slivers of detail. So we are filling in the rest
00:04:47.880 of the picture. Next Wednesday night, I'm doing a special on coronavirus. We've delayed some of the
00:04:55.940 other specials that we were going to do. And I'm going to do another special on coronavirus and fear
00:05:00.420 and why we fear this so much. And it is because while we say we've never seen these things before,
00:05:07.900 we have, actually. We've seen them in apocalyptic TV shows and apocalyptic movies.
00:05:17.280 And so that's helping us fill in these blanks.
00:05:24.360 I want to tell you the stories of those who are afflicted with the virus, the doctors and the nurses
00:05:29.660 on the front line. But today, I want to tell you about the unknown man, because the unknown man
00:05:34.260 is all of us. Because the unknown man really goes through his whole life, never thinking about
00:05:41.160 particles or the invisible life forms that are all over him all the time, floating in the air.
00:05:48.260 Perhaps he never had a chance, in part because he showed no symptoms, no fever, no telltale dry,
00:05:55.480 windless cough. And either way, he likely assumed it would be fine. It's a scary thing,
00:06:02.000 but it doesn't happen to me. It doesn't happen to him. Same as all of us would. This 21st century
00:06:11.440 America, land of luxury and good doctors, and we're not having bat soup. Can't happen to us.
00:06:21.820 It's kind of like what it must feel like in California. You build these incredible houses,
00:06:27.100 and then they burn to the ground. It's not going to happen. Well, the rest of us go to California.
00:06:33.500 We see these houses on these sticks on the side of the mountain, and then we see mudslides and we're
00:06:38.320 like, hello. But those who build those little houses on popsicle sticks, they're like, it's not me.
00:06:45.080 The unknown man has two lines, parentheses. He is us. He knows that you can find crab cakes and
00:06:57.720 great beer at most of the 48 concession stands, the restaurants and the lounges at CenturyLink Field,
00:07:04.660 the noisy 70,000 seat stadium just a mile south of downtown Seattle. CenturyLink is home to the
00:07:12.460 Seattle Seahawks as well as the Sounders. On Saturday, February 22nd, it hosted a football
00:07:18.740 game between the Seattle Dragons and the Dallas Renegades. Week three of the inaugural season of
00:07:25.440 the XFL. Professional football league founded by WWE owner Vince McMahon. That day, Dallas was in
00:07:34.700 Seattle and it was brisk. It was 48 degrees. 22,060 people gathered for the game. Nobody was thinking
00:07:41.580 about the virus that was right there. No one noticed the invisible particle that nobody thinks
00:07:49.420 about that was eager to pounce, eager to feast. At the same time, there was no doubt that the virus
00:07:58.180 was on their mind, at least some. Something that we're all well aware of, the coronavirus disease,
00:08:04.560 the outbreak clawed its way into our collective psyche. Even kids know about it. Everybody knows
00:08:11.380 about it now. But back February 22nd, nobody was really paying attention. Our unknown man works
00:08:19.240 part-time at one of the 48 concession stands at CenturyLink Field. And on that day, he contracted
00:08:25.660 the virus, but he didn't realize it. A week later, he tested positive for COVID-19.
00:08:33.480 In response, King County officials released a statement advising that no extra precautions
00:08:39.040 are required for those who attended that game February 22nd, or anybody who is attending upcoming
00:08:46.280 events, but remain on watch. Meanwhile, the Dallas team came back to Dallas.
00:08:54.600 To a whole new stadium of unknown men and women. An op-ed in the New York Times yesterday described
00:09:04.420 Seattle as America's coronavirus capital. Of the approximate 220 cases of coronavirus in the U.S.,
00:09:12.680 Washington has 75 of them. 10 people in Seattle have died. California has had 60 cases, New York 22,
00:09:22.780 Texas 14. As of yesterday, 56 new cases emerged. Coast to coast. The first signs of the virus appeared
00:09:33.820 in Seattle sometime in mid-January, where a man returned from Wuhan, China. He was diagnosed.
00:09:41.300 It was the first case of the disease in the U.S. Now, globally, the number has climbed to over 100,000.
00:09:49.020 But 100,000 is not the real number. We don't know what the real number is. We don't know what the real
00:09:56.200 fatality rate of this is. It's at 3.4% now, but it is probably much, much lower. Because
00:10:04.900 that invisible particle has been floating around in all of our cities. And there is no test that you can
00:10:14.540 get from your doctor. Right now, you have to go to a university hospital, or you have to go to one of
00:10:18.980 the big regional hospitals. And it's getting better. But we still have tested less than, what, a thousand
00:10:25.240 people? They say the fatality rate is less than 2%. That's when all the numbers come in. It's deadly.
00:10:38.640 But not for everybody. For reference, Ebola has a fatality rate of about 25, anywhere between 25 and
00:10:48.260 90%. So you have, at best case scenario, you have a 25% chance of dying if you got Ebola. And it's a
00:10:58.820 wicked, wicked death. The thing with Ebola is it's not easy to spread. If you remember, we did a little
00:11:05.560 we did a little cartoon when Ebola came to Dallas and came to America. And it was, don't touch
00:11:14.460 somebody's pee, poop, or vomit. That's pretty much you have to, if somebody is bleeding from the eyes,
00:11:20.440 don't touch them. That's pretty much what you need to know about Ebola. And you don't get it.
00:11:27.300 On Tuesday, the CDC announced the virus is contagious enough that a global impact is inevitable. It's too
00:11:34.740 late to stop it now. But what we're doing now is stopping it from infecting all of our first
00:11:42.880 responders. We need our doctors. We need our hospitals. That's why they're asking 2.2 million
00:11:50.160 people in Seattle to stay home. The director for the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory
00:11:57.000 Diseases yesterday said people should begin to practice social distancing measures. What is that?
00:12:03.700 Social distancing measures. That's stand three to five feet away from each other. And also cancel
00:12:12.020 school, postpone conferences, avoid large gatherings. That's what we should begin practicing now.
00:12:20.340 If we don't have this burnout during the summer and we don't find a vaccine for it in the next six
00:12:28.840 to 12 months, that is actually in practice. This could change relationships forever.
00:12:36.060 Things change. It's like a war. When you're fighting a war, you never really go back to the country that
00:12:42.540 you were because you just wanted to stop. And things change. We would have never accepted any of the
00:12:52.120 things. FISA, the FISA courts, secret courts. We would never have accepted that. But after we were
00:12:58.800 bombed, we did. In fact, we all dutifully take off our stupid shoes every time. We're giving the TSA
00:13:07.860 a retina scan. That's the dumbest thing ever. But September 11th changed us.
00:13:15.360 How this will change us in the world, I don't know.
00:13:21.420 Now, in King County, it's too advanced for mere precautions.
00:13:25.880 Not only did they ask yesterday, King County, that's the Seattle County.
00:13:32.980 Officials announced plans to convert a local motel into a quarantine site. It's actually pretty smart,
00:13:39.760 but nobody wants that in their neighborhood. Not in my backyard. You're going to put those people
00:13:44.600 where? This Saturday, Sounders, Seattle's major league soccer team, they're scheduled to play
00:13:55.360 the Columbus Crew. When news broke out about the concession stand worker, representatives of King
00:14:01.420 County were quick to remain calm. They said, quote, as of now, Seattle's professional sports
00:14:07.140 organizations, Dragons, first and goal, Seahawks, Mariners, Sounders, they're going to continue
00:14:14.380 with their scheduled events. But how many of the unknown man are going to attend? How many of the
00:14:24.380 unknown man are going to do the things they used to do as we all navigate our life the best that we can?
00:14:32.340 Maybe a dark glow enshrines him as he looks out to the world, a world that doesn't realize
00:14:42.920 that he, the unknown man, what he's become. In moments of lingering catastrophe, it's important
00:14:56.660 to remember the collective self as well as the individual self. The unknown man, while blank and
00:15:05.840 simple and abstract to us, he's a member of our tribe. He, like a growing number of people, became
00:15:14.740 infected, got trapped in lingering shadows that keep him now unknown. But while we may not know the
00:15:23.040 names and the places and the people themselves, they are not so different than you and me.
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00:17:04.820 All right. Brian Williams was on television. New York Times editorial board member Mara Gay
00:17:28.360 was on with him. Both Williams and Gay marveled on air at the reaction to a Twitter user's post
00:17:37.640 about Michael Bloomberg's campaign spending. Here's the thing. The Super Tuesday evening post
00:17:44.380 now deleted said Bloomberg spent $500 million on ad. Do you know the story yet, Stu? Yes,
00:17:51.360 this is incredible. This is incredible. I was hoping you didn't because I wanted to see if you'd just
00:17:54.920 catch it immediately. Bloomberg, which you would have. Bloomberg spent $500 million on ad.
00:18:00.640 That means with the U.S. population at 327 million, he could have given each American a million dollars
00:18:07.100 and still had money left over. I feel like a million dollar check would be life-changing for people,
00:18:12.900 and he wasted it all on ads and still lost. Incredible. This actually made it to television.
00:18:20.180 Right. And then Williams said, wow, that is an incredible way of putting it. I think we have
00:18:24.820 the... Do we have the audio of this? Yeah, the audio. I'll play this audio. Bloomberg spent $500 million
00:18:29.540 on ads. U.S. population, 327 million. Don't tell us if you're ahead of us on the math. He could have
00:18:35.520 given each American $1 million and have had lunch money left over. It's an incredible way of putting
00:18:42.860 it. It's an incredible way of putting it. It's true. It's disturbing. It does suggest what we're
00:18:50.020 talking about here, which is there's too much money in politics. Could we? There's too much money in
00:18:54.080 politics. There's too much money in politics. Really, just a week ago, you all were saying,
00:19:01.580 hey, Bloomberg's money could be really important in shutting down Sanders. It didn't. It didn't. Now,
00:19:08.340 did it? You can't buy an election. Tom Steyer tried to buy an election. Couldn't do it. Bloomberg
00:19:14.900 spent more money than Hillary Clinton did, not just in the nomination race, but the entire race total.
00:19:26.680 Bloomberg could not buy the election. What do you mean there's too much money in the election?
00:19:30.960 It's so ridiculous. And, you know, one easy way to do the math here is you're giving a million
00:19:35.900 dollars to each person and the number is $500 million. The word before million is 500. So he
00:19:45.040 could have given 500 people a million dollars each. It's very difficult math.
00:19:50.280 It's not 500 million people.
00:19:52.020 The total, I believe, is the number I keep seeing. I haven't done the math myself.
00:19:55.340 53. I've heard 327 trillion to actually do a million to everybody. Yeah. So the actual math
00:20:03.100 is, you know, when the when the New York Times comes out and says, oh, it is an incredible and
00:20:07.320 it's true. Yeah. No, it's not. He could have given everybody a dollar fifty three. That's what
00:20:11.820 he would have given everybody in America. A dollar fifty three. I don't know about you, but that's not
00:20:15.560 life changing. I don't know about you, but that doesn't change my vote. Somebody comes up to me and
00:20:19.700 goes, look, I tell you what, you vote for me, I'll give you a dollar fifty three.
00:20:24.220 Do you even stop? No. Do you even stop? You're like, OK, crazy man. OK.
00:20:31.180 It's such a ridiculous thing. Like, how could you just not inherently catch that immediately?
00:20:36.800 A million dollars to each person. Five hundred million. Like the five hundred million. Like
00:20:42.680 it's five hundred millions. There's five hundred piles of a million dollars. You could give five
00:20:47.860 hundred people one million dollars. No, no, Stu. No. If he would have done that to every
00:20:54.220 single superdelegate, maybe he would have had something. Yeah. I'm going to give a million
00:21:00.800 dollars to every superdelegate and I'll still have money left over where I can give everybody
00:21:06.200 less than a dollar fifty three or less than which is slightly less than a million dollars
00:21:13.100 for every American. Thank you. New York Times and NBC.
00:21:16.340 This is the Glenn Beck Program. I want you to picture in your mind's eye the perfect real
00:21:22.160 estate experience. You have it. Does the person who's helping you sell your home or buy a home
00:21:27.520 or both walk into the house, shake your hand and then get a confused deer in the headlights
00:21:32.800 look? Maybe pause in the middle of the conversation, take a call from his other job or does he walk
00:21:38.940 in the door, shake your hand, immediately take charge of the situation, get down to business
00:21:43.000 of helping you in the best way possible because he clearly knows what he's doing when an agent is
00:21:49.300 coming through real estate agents. I trust that's the second experience. That's the one we want to
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00:22:12.080 Real estate agents. I trust dot com. The name kind of says it all. Real estate agents. I trust dot com.
00:22:18.160 You're buying or selling a home. We're going to find the right person, the right agent with the
00:22:22.560 best track record in the area that that fits all of our parameters and connect them with you.
00:22:29.100 Real estate agents. I trust dot com. Free service.
00:22:31.680 If you're a Blaze TV subscriber, you get Friday's big story on the coronavirus with Glenn Beck tonight.
00:22:37.120 Use the promo code GB20. Get 20 bucks off your subscription.
00:22:48.120 This is the Glenn Beck program. Welcome to it. Pat Gray is joining us now.
00:22:53.080 Hello, Pat. Hi, Glenn. Hi. Welcome to Friday. Glad you're here.
00:22:57.440 Yeah, me too. Bill O'Reilly is coming up. I don't think he is, actually.
00:23:00.760 Oh, he's not? No. I didn't plan anything for the second hour. I was just going to let him blab.
00:23:06.120 I was going to go for breakfast. Oh, we have breakfast now, though. We do?
00:23:09.900 Yes. Actually, the only reason I came in today was because of this.
00:23:14.000 Well, I'm pretty sure I have COVID-19. So I was thinking, should I stay home?
00:23:18.780 And then I thought, no, today's the day we're testing all the Wendy's breakfast food.
00:23:23.200 Ah, OK. So that's the only reason I showed up. By the way, I'm also confirmed.
00:23:26.840 You are confirmed? I'm confirmed COVID-19.
00:23:29.220 Mentally? Stop it. Yes. Stop it. Both of you. Both of you. Stop it.
00:23:33.300 Why? First of all, tell the truth. Pat has COVID-10. I have COVID-9.
00:23:37.600 Together, we have COVID-19. Oh, that's adorable.
00:23:40.460 You haven't been tested yet. So don't claim your badge of the crown
00:23:45.540 until you actually are awarded that, OK?
00:23:49.860 Yes, sir. Some of us have worked hard for our COVID status.
00:23:52.880 That's true.
00:23:53.140 So Wendy's is making breakfast now?
00:23:57.140 This is a big deal.
00:23:58.060 It's a big deal.
00:23:58.920 Yes. Wendy's is making breakfast first. Well, I think it's the third time they've tried it.
00:24:03.520 Is it really?
00:24:04.180 Yeah, they tried it. They had a couple test runs that did not go well, apparently, a few years ago.
00:24:08.080 But they're trying it now.
00:24:09.360 And if you notice, every other commercial on TV is for either Burger King or McDonald's breakfast.
00:24:16.300 Because they're all just trying to like...
00:24:18.120 Isn't McDonald's giving breakfast...
00:24:21.520 Holy cow, this is the carb-free option.
00:24:23.740 And that does not look good.
00:24:27.480 Wow.
00:24:29.880 Breakfast is harder than you think.
00:24:32.420 I mean, this makes me always think McDonald's does such a good job with breakfast.
00:24:35.760 Because I remember when Taco Bell launched breakfast, I was so excited about it.
00:24:39.640 Really not good.
00:24:41.800 Oh, really?
00:24:42.400 I mean, no.
00:24:43.240 Are they still doing it?
00:24:44.380 I think they are.
00:24:45.920 I can't imagine anything at Taco Bell not being good.
00:24:48.220 I mean, everything.
00:24:48.840 I love Taco Bell.
00:24:49.800 I love it.
00:24:50.220 I love it.
00:24:50.860 I love the people.
00:24:51.840 I love hanging out there.
00:24:53.000 I am not eating this.
00:24:54.200 I am not eating this.
00:24:54.880 No, yes, you are.
00:24:55.400 It was a taste test.
00:24:56.240 OK, so what do we have here?
00:24:57.140 No, I'm...
00:24:57.560 Oh, you got sausage, you got some egg, and you got bacon.
00:25:00.580 Yeah, no thanks.
00:25:01.280 What are you complaining about?
00:25:02.460 I don't like it.
00:25:03.220 It looks delicious.
00:25:03.920 No, it does not.
00:25:04.640 It looks delicious.
00:25:05.600 It's not exactly the right color.
00:25:06.560 I'm not eating it.
00:25:07.280 You're not even going to try it?
00:25:08.360 I'm not going to try that.
00:25:09.360 Seriously?
00:25:10.000 Nope.
00:25:10.580 Nope.
00:25:11.240 Wow.
00:25:11.620 I would not.
00:25:12.500 Based on their carb-free option here of just a square egg, a square piece of sausage
00:25:20.740 and some bacon.
00:25:22.280 What is the deal with the square thing at Wendy's?
00:25:25.220 It's strange.
00:25:26.800 All right.
00:25:27.060 Yeah, but this is a chicken and bacon croissant.
00:25:32.700 Chicken and bacon is just lunch or dinner.
00:25:36.520 Yes.
00:25:36.960 They're French fries.
00:25:37.760 I'm sorry.
00:25:38.500 They're hash browns.
00:25:39.460 They're French fries.
00:25:40.300 Yes.
00:25:41.160 They're just French fries.
00:25:42.020 They're just French fries.
00:25:42.900 I guess they're home fries.
00:25:46.480 They're pretty good.
00:25:47.180 They're pretty good.
00:25:47.760 Mm-hmm.
00:25:48.780 The fries are like the seasoned fries that are a little bit thicker than the normal fry.
00:25:57.040 Pretty good.
00:25:57.840 I would say the fries are pretty good, actually.
00:25:59.560 They should have these on the normal menu.
00:26:01.560 The chicken bacon croissant-ish type of sandwich is not bad.
00:26:07.020 It's pretty good.
00:26:07.480 The chicken.
00:26:08.220 I have the chicken.
00:26:09.080 Have you had the chicken biscuit thing?
00:26:12.460 I have it, but I haven't tried it yet.
00:26:13.800 That is really good.
00:26:15.480 Oh, good.
00:26:15.780 The biscuit is, there's a honey butter chicken biscuit, I believe is what you're talking about.
00:26:19.460 That's what I just had?
00:26:20.200 Yeah.
00:26:20.680 That's delicious.
00:26:22.700 You know, I want to make sure I understand.
00:26:24.720 You're on a low-carb diet.
00:26:26.620 Yeah.
00:26:27.140 No.
00:26:27.460 And you got a low-carb option, and you're currently eating a honey butter chicken biscuit?
00:26:31.960 Yeah.
00:26:32.900 Yeah.
00:26:33.080 No, this is science, man.
00:26:34.340 This is science.
00:26:35.260 Okay.
00:26:36.040 This just looks so disgusting, I won't try.
00:26:39.080 Hmm.
00:26:40.040 But I don't think you're going to win these for that.
00:26:41.960 It's the same thing that's on the sandwich.
00:26:43.500 I know.
00:26:43.940 It's not, it's hidden by the bread.
00:26:47.820 This, but the biscuit is actually a little like, there's nobody that makes a biscuit
00:26:51.880 like Popeye's.
00:26:55.120 Hmm.
00:26:56.000 Popeye's makes a much better biscuit, but this is not bad.
00:26:59.700 Yeah, the, so they went with this, um.
00:27:01.360 And the chicken is good.
00:27:02.780 If you want to know the unique things here, I would say, first of all, the honey butter
00:27:06.140 chicken biscuit is something that is just, it's just blatantly not a breakfast sandwich.
00:27:09.620 They just made a lunch sandwich into breakfast.
00:27:11.400 Right?
00:27:12.180 That is just not a sandwich that's for breakfast.
00:27:15.460 They've just decided to give you a chicken sandwich for breakfast, which is not, which
00:27:19.220 is fine.
00:27:19.940 You can have a chicken sandwich for breakfast, but don't call it breakfast.
00:27:21.760 That's almost like chicken and waffles.
00:27:23.340 That's really good.
00:27:24.420 Okay.
00:27:25.200 Does this look appetizing to anybody?
00:27:26.940 Yeah.
00:27:27.060 This is the unique, I would say this is one of their unique plays, which is, it looks kind
00:27:31.340 of like a hamburger roll.
00:27:32.280 If you looked at it from the side, it's sort of croissant-ish.
00:27:36.520 Yeah.
00:27:36.540 I would say it's, it's, it's calling it a croissant, but it's not, I would call it a,
00:27:39.740 I would call it a croissant.
00:27:41.220 It's in between a croissant and a bun.
00:27:43.220 All right.
00:27:43.400 Let me, let me just say this right here is the look of a failed breakfast attempt that
00:27:52.380 will close the doors of Wendy's in the morning.
00:27:55.600 Now, why is that?
00:27:56.460 That is a failed, look at that.
00:27:58.440 I don't know.
00:27:59.080 I think the, I think the croissant thing's not bad.
00:28:00.960 I took a bite.
00:28:02.000 No.
00:28:02.500 Look at the cheese.
00:28:03.340 McDonald's at least, you know, I don't know how they do it, but they mold their logo into
00:28:07.840 everything.
00:28:09.200 You know, at least the meat is shaped like it has bones in it and it's got a nice logo
00:28:13.880 on the, on the McGrill, McGrill.
00:28:18.580 This just looks like crap.
00:28:20.060 This looks like, yeah, hey kids, I made you some breakfasts downstairs.
00:28:27.420 That's not good.
00:28:28.040 You don't even want to try it?
00:28:29.040 No.
00:28:30.140 No.
00:28:30.360 Did you try the croissant thing, Pat?
00:28:32.420 I did.
00:28:33.000 It's not bad.
00:28:33.700 It's not bad.
00:28:34.360 It's, it's, it's okay.
00:28:35.500 It has some sort of a sauce on it.
00:28:37.220 Yes.
00:28:37.740 It's like a sweet sauce that I guess screams breakfast.
00:28:42.320 I don't know.
00:28:42.760 Yeah.
00:28:43.160 I don't know.
00:28:43.860 I don't think they understand what breakfast foods are.
00:28:45.700 I don't think they were, I don't think this is going to work.
00:28:47.780 The biscuit with chicken is really good.
00:28:48.880 The biscuit.
00:28:49.140 All right.
00:28:49.280 Let me try the biscuit.
00:28:49.860 I haven't tried the biscuit yet.
00:28:50.800 Biscuit with chicken is really good.
00:28:54.160 Hmm.
00:28:55.060 I mean, it's, it's okay.
00:28:56.640 That's, that's as good as if you like McGriddles, which I do.
00:29:00.640 That's as good as a McGriddle.
00:29:01.940 Yeah.
00:29:02.160 And it might be syrup that they put on it.
00:29:04.080 I think that's why you like it.
00:29:05.360 Did they put syrup on it?
00:29:05.700 I think so.
00:29:06.300 I think so.
00:29:07.380 The, and you really love the McGriddle and that's what they do with the McGriddle.
00:29:10.740 Yeah.
00:29:10.960 I don't, I don't know how they do that.
00:29:13.600 I don't want to know McDonald's.
00:29:15.640 Don't ever tell us because it'll make me stop wanting.
00:29:19.260 Probably.
00:29:19.780 It's like witchcraft.
00:29:21.080 Yeah.
00:29:21.400 You know, if Dow chemical was full of witches, that's what they'd be making.
00:29:27.460 I think Dow chemical is full of witches.
00:29:30.520 I'm pretty sure that's true.
00:29:32.120 That's how they're so effective.
00:29:33.140 Yeah.
00:29:33.500 I will say this about the biscuit.
00:29:35.180 Usually like a buttery biscuit.
00:29:36.600 That is like every bite has two sticks of butter in it.
00:29:41.000 That's how buttery that biscuit is.
00:29:43.080 It's pretty good.
00:29:44.360 It's a pretty good biscuit.
00:29:46.060 It's good.
00:29:46.940 I would say that I like, I don't think any of these are bad.
00:29:49.800 The croissant thing isn't, is more on the level of the Burger King croissant, croissant
00:29:55.320 which I believe they call it, which is just okay.
00:29:58.860 Mm-hmm.
00:29:59.240 Um, yeah, this is, if you're going to launch breakfast, this was like, this is, I'm the
00:30:06.700 CEO of Wendy's and you come in with this.
00:30:09.580 I'm like, try again.
00:30:11.200 You know, I'm not, I'm like, yeah, I'm not opening up.
00:30:14.620 I'm not opening up and putting a whole bunch of money for breakfast for this.
00:30:17.760 No.
00:30:18.020 Where's the pancakes?
00:30:19.660 Where's the waffle?
00:30:20.780 Where's, where's anything besides, I would say to them, okay, you have the, the biscuit
00:30:26.140 chicken biscuit thing.
00:30:27.660 You got it.
00:30:28.540 Mm-hmm.
00:30:29.920 That's not enough to open us up for breakfast.
00:30:32.940 No.
00:30:33.560 Yeah.
00:30:33.960 That's just, you know, McDonald's did so well with the breakfast all day thing.
00:30:37.060 Now everyone's trying to get on the bandwagon.
00:30:38.940 Um, I, I was on a plane and I watched a super size me too.
00:30:43.260 Oh, remember super size me, the documentary, uh, Morgan Spurlock.
00:30:47.340 I didn't watch it though.
00:30:48.340 So I wouldn't understand too.
00:30:49.800 I don't think super size me too.
00:30:51.320 I think you might be able to pick it up.
00:30:52.700 I got it.
00:30:53.440 It's like COVID-19.
00:30:55.280 I haven't seen it yet.
00:30:56.480 I haven't seen the first 18.
00:30:57.760 Right.
00:30:58.060 But I think you'll get it.
00:30:59.920 Um, so it was Spurlock, the guy we had on that first episode at Fox.
00:31:04.120 No, that was fast.
00:31:05.160 The fast food nation guy, the guy who wrote the fast food nation.
00:31:08.520 And he hated us.
00:31:09.600 He did.
00:31:10.240 And that was such a good interview.
00:31:11.360 And the, the, the, the, it was the first show Glenn did on CNN headline news.
00:31:15.100 And it was the guy who wrote fast food nation, which was basically a book bashing fast food.
00:31:18.620 Really get Glenn, I think was the biggest problem.
00:31:20.980 Yeah.
00:31:21.440 And he did, it was a really actually an interesting interview.
00:31:23.600 And you guys had, and our thing was like, we should do something funny while the interview.
00:31:27.420 So it's not just a boring interview about food.
00:31:29.080 Mm-hmm.
00:31:29.580 So Glenn would see like, ah, man, I'm really, that's a really good point about fast food
00:31:33.640 being bad for you.
00:31:34.420 And then as he was talking, Glenn would dip his head out of the camera shot and take a
00:31:38.840 giant bite of like a Big Mac.
00:31:40.360 And he was like doing the minimum, like chewing and doing the, the guy couldn't see me.
00:31:45.920 He was, so he was very serious, but I had like, I had like secret sauce all over my face
00:31:50.760 and things.
00:31:51.320 And I'll never forget CNN went, we cannot have an anchor do anything like this.
00:31:56.560 And we're like, yeah, I'm not really a CNN anchor.
00:31:59.100 So were you, and they edited the crap out of that.
00:32:01.640 I mean, that one, they were like, they were pissed.
00:32:03.720 Well, and we thought he could see you.
00:32:06.200 We were not trying to play a trick on the guy.
00:32:08.260 That might be a little revisionist.
00:32:09.600 No, I don't think it is.
00:32:10.820 I think we, we thought he was going to play along with it and think it was funny.
00:32:14.380 And then we realized he couldn't even see us.
00:32:16.460 And then he thought we were just like screwing him over by messing up his segment.
00:32:20.520 Yeah.
00:32:20.960 Which was unfortunate.
00:32:22.080 Yeah.
00:32:22.440 But on this, not for the audience.
00:32:24.380 No, it was actually a funny thing.
00:32:26.120 He did not like you afterwards though, which is something that's been repeated by many other
00:32:30.760 guests since.
00:32:32.480 But I think almost every other guest.
00:32:34.540 I think so.
00:32:35.060 Yeah.
00:32:35.240 So in this documentary, which I believe was made in 2017, but I don't know if you remember,
00:32:39.600 Morgan Spurlock had a little bit of a me too, uh, situation.
00:32:43.120 So I think he made this and then didn't come out.
00:32:45.660 So they've just released it to, I think, Amazon prime.
00:32:47.720 Huh?
00:32:48.240 Anyway, I, I, I like, I like, I like the movie, uh, the first one, the second one, he decides
00:32:53.840 to open up his own restaurant and a good chunk of the money is him getting all of these BS
00:32:59.840 labels on his food.
00:33:01.360 He's opening a chicken restaurant and he gets like, it's like free range, um, uh, organic,
00:33:07.200 like all the terms you hear, a natural, um, no antibiotics.
00:33:13.420 He goes through all of them and he's able to secure all of these labels, even though it's
00:33:19.820 not, he doesn't know.
00:33:20.880 They all, he, he legitimately qualifies them.
00:33:23.240 They just don't mean anything.
00:33:24.640 Oh, a lot of them literally don't mean anything.
00:33:27.020 They have, there's no standards.
00:33:28.140 You could say it no matter what.
00:33:29.360 Yeah.
00:33:29.740 The no antibiotics one was my restaurant friend always says.
00:33:32.200 Yeah.
00:33:32.460 It doesn't mean anything.
00:33:33.620 It doesn't mean anything.
00:33:34.380 It doesn't.
00:33:34.800 Yeah.
00:33:34.980 And the no antibiotics one was really funny.
00:33:36.600 Cause I've heard that a million times, but literally none of the food that you eat has
00:33:42.520 antibiotics.
00:33:43.260 It's, it's illegal.
00:33:44.500 No, no one can use, there's no food, no matter what level it's at in this genre.
00:33:50.580 I think this was chicken.
00:33:51.620 I raise cattle and we eat them and they're yummy.
00:33:55.980 Uh, and I tell the kids don't name them other than dinner, lunch, or barbecue.
00:34:03.640 Uh, and we don't put antibiotics in, you, you can put antibiotics, you shoot them, you
00:34:10.980 know, inject them so they don't get sick.
00:34:13.080 Right.
00:34:13.580 So that's when they say antibiotic free, it means you've raised that animal and never given
00:34:19.100 it any antibiotics to keep it from getting sick with the label, whatever he went through
00:34:23.340 the details of it with the expert from that, you know, that like qualifies people.
00:34:27.820 And basically, and I can't remember the exact category, maybe it's different with cows.
00:34:33.060 He was doing with chickens, but the whole point was none of the food at any level has
00:34:38.100 this thing in it.
00:34:39.080 Yeah.
00:34:39.480 Cause everyone could say it's antibiotic free, but only the people who do, who want to charge
00:34:43.680 you twice as much.
00:34:45.220 Um, because here's the, here's the thing.
00:34:47.360 It would be like, if you guys were going to eat me, okay, you couldn't know, I'd be told
00:34:53.320 you imagine how marbled I am.
00:34:55.400 Okay.
00:34:55.880 So, and I've barely, I'm like veal.
00:34:59.420 I've barely ever worked out or walked upstairs or anything.
00:35:03.800 I am.
00:35:04.720 You would be tender.
00:35:05.660 I would be delicious.
00:35:07.320 Okay.
00:35:07.820 There's so much maple syrup already in me.
00:35:10.420 Uh, anyway, uh, so I should probably, since we're going into a pandemic, probably say none
00:35:17.420 of that is true about me.
00:35:18.660 I'm very tough and you're just grisly, grisly.
00:35:22.640 It's nasty.
00:35:23.560 Anyway, uh, uh, you know, you could, it would be like labeling me, uh, or Pat cocaine free.
00:35:33.520 Never no cocaine in Pat.
00:35:35.760 Well, okay.
00:35:37.380 Back in the eighties, I had cocaine, but if you would eat me, there would be no residue.
00:35:42.740 No, there would be no cocaine in my meat.
00:35:45.940 Yeah.
00:35:46.440 Okay.
00:35:46.680 Okay.
00:35:47.260 Yeah.
00:35:47.460 And so what they're saying is it's antibiotic free, meaning he's like more like the cow is
00:35:53.520 more like Pat being cocaine free.
00:35:56.360 You can eat him.
00:35:57.640 And that has never been, never been in houses or me.
00:36:01.980 Has this analogy helping you at all?
00:36:04.660 Let me give you another one.
00:36:05.660 They did free range.
00:36:06.760 So he goes to the, the, the, you know, whatever government thing that it says, you can say
00:36:12.340 it's free range.
00:36:13.540 And the, the, the text of it is something like the chickens need to have access to the outside
00:36:22.260 outside area with a minimum of this amount of space.
00:36:26.740 And it's a very small amount of space.
00:36:28.660 So all the chickens are in held inside and there's one door at the end and it has this
00:36:34.980 little tiny fence that goes out like four feet outside the door and it's the chicken
00:36:40.240 in theory could walk out there.
00:36:42.040 They never do because they have no interest in going out there, but that's considered free
00:36:45.780 range.
00:36:46.440 They can see the sky and they're outside in this little time.
00:36:49.240 Wow.
00:36:49.660 At times he tries to pick them up and put them out there and they just run back inside.
00:36:52.760 Wow.
00:36:53.340 Wow.
00:36:53.720 That's amazing.
00:36:54.960 It's pretty, it's interesting to watch.
00:36:56.920 I'm sure it's very slanted, but it also was, there's a lot of interesting stuff in there.
00:37:01.040 All right, Pat Gray.
00:37:01.820 Thank you so much from Pat Gray Unleashed.
00:37:03.280 You can get it wherever you find your podcast.
00:37:04.960 I have this, an idea of a much, much shorter version of the movie Home Alone.
00:37:09.400 Okay.
00:37:09.720 Listen to this.
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00:37:12.260 In the film, Macaulay Culkin's dad installs SimpliSafe before they leave.
00:37:18.500 And so the criminals either see that they have it and it's on and so they don't break in
00:37:23.080 or when they do, the alarm goes off and that's the end of the movie.
00:37:27.740 Better for Macaulay.
00:37:29.100 Worst movie though.
00:37:30.500 I don't know.
00:37:31.120 Sitting through Macaulay Culkin, you know, imagine now Macaulay Culkin, how old is he?
00:37:36.120 50 playing a kid?
00:37:37.520 Bad.
00:37:38.180 Bad story.
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00:38:28.080 You're listening to Glenn Beck.
00:38:39.840 I want to tell you about this guy named Rick.
00:38:42.620 He found himself dating a girl he found on Tinder.
00:38:48.420 And they work at the same company.
00:38:51.040 It's a land surveying company.
00:38:53.180 And Rick was the chief financial officer.
00:38:56.260 And they found each other on Tinder.
00:38:58.640 And they went out.
00:39:01.040 And they're like, oh, crap.
00:39:02.020 We work in the same company.
00:39:04.240 But that's not the only problem.
00:39:06.580 They have a 36-year difference in age.
00:39:10.260 He is 58.
00:39:12.360 She is 22.
00:39:13.040 So they're going to go out for lunch and say, we can't date because this is really bad.
00:39:20.980 They decided not to date.
00:39:22.960 And so they set up a platonic lunch to clear the air.
00:39:27.680 Four hours pass.
00:39:29.180 And they realize, no, they're really in love.
00:39:31.260 So he quits his job and goes to work for another company so they can date.
00:39:39.200 She says, I'm in love with Rick.
00:39:41.240 I'm just waiting for the ring at this point, even if it means changing diapers.
00:39:45.580 And the first time I thought, oh, they're talking about babies?
00:39:47.860 No.
00:39:48.320 She's talking about her changing his diapers.
00:39:51.100 All right, New Year deserves a new pair of Decovis boots.
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00:41:00.340 Hello, America.
00:41:05.120 Welcome to the—I'm sorry.
00:41:06.380 I'm just—I'm very frustrated.
00:41:08.200 I don't know how one of my apps was signed out, but now I've got to sign back in.
00:41:15.120 And I apologize to everybody who has the Blaze app.
00:41:19.420 We just upgraded the app significantly.
00:41:21.800 But it required you to reset your password.
00:41:25.180 And I know what it's like.
00:41:26.580 I know what it's like.
00:41:28.020 Password?
00:41:28.480 I don't even remember my password.
00:41:29.980 What password?
00:41:30.780 What do I have to do?
00:41:31.540 It's to the point to where it's like, hey, I've got some life-saving blood here because I know you need a transfusion.
00:41:38.380 Just enter your password and your username.
00:41:43.780 And you're like, what?
00:41:45.080 And you eventually give up.
00:41:46.160 You know what?
00:41:46.500 I'll just die.
00:41:47.360 I don't need blood, okay?
00:41:49.520 I don't need it.
00:41:50.900 I don't know how to sign into the blood bank.
00:41:53.360 And you just give up.
00:41:55.640 Sorry, it's not what we planned on talking about.
00:41:58.400 But I think you feel my wrath and hatred for username and passwords.
00:42:04.700 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
00:42:07.600 All right.
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00:42:33.180 How is it missing it?
00:42:34.380 And you shave over and over and over again.
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00:43:41.980 So since we're all going to be spending a lot of time at home, I think we should just I think we should spend a few minutes and talk about what you can watch and you can binge watch now.
00:44:01.760 You know, Seattle yesterday suggested that 2.2 million people, the Seattle area, King County, start working from home.
00:44:10.000 We are putting in guidelines now for when we know we're all going to start working from from home, because I think this is going to this is going to happen in in many of our communities, if not all of our big cities.
00:44:26.000 They're going to start asking you to start working from home if you can.
00:44:30.620 And the reason why they're doing this is to save the health personnel, quite honestly, the less the fewer people that get this right now, the easier it's going to be.
00:44:41.300 We're going to stress out the health system and our doctors and our nurses.
00:44:44.820 And if they start getting sick, if the ambulance drivers, the firefighter, the police all start getting sick, it's it's a it's a bigger nightmare than it already is.
00:44:55.580 So they're asking us to stay home, at least in the Seattle area.
00:44:59.940 And it will start to come. CDC yesterday said we are we are on the verge of this thing really exploding in in America.
00:45:08.960 So what are you going to do? What are you going to do? I mean, binge watch.
00:45:13.540 And I've been I've been watching Harlan Corbin.
00:45:19.100 He's got three shows now on Netflix called The Five, The Stranger.
00:45:26.500 And I remember the other, but they're like 13 episodes in each.
00:45:31.460 They are the best.
00:45:34.060 They're the best mysteries or murder mystery kind of things I've ever seen.
00:45:40.240 I've never seen storylines where Tanya, we just don't have time to watch series anymore because we have teenagers who never thank us for picking us, picking them up and dropping them off all the time.
00:45:56.040 Anyway, yeah, the other one is safe.
00:45:59.300 And there's three of them.
00:46:00.780 Tanya and I in the last three or four weeks have watched every episode of all three.
00:46:04.720 They are they're remarkably good and they all it's this each one of them revolve like I think it's what are the names of them again?
00:46:18.960 It's safe.
00:46:19.600 The five and and the stranger.
00:46:22.020 I started with the stranger.
00:46:23.960 It's this woman who comes up to this guy at his son's soccer game and says, you know, you didn't have to stay with your wife when she said she was pregnant.
00:46:32.400 And he's like, excuse me, do I know you?
00:46:35.040 And she's like, no, but, you know, she faked her pregnancy and you can find you can find all the information.
00:46:44.420 Just go into your credit card, go into your credit card file and and find this.
00:46:52.840 So it freaks him out so much and he dismisses it and it freaks him out so much.
00:46:58.520 His wife is out someplace at a conference and it's just driving him nuts.
00:47:04.740 So he's like, you know what?
00:47:05.520 I'm just going to put this to bed.
00:47:06.760 He goes in his credit card and he finds that she charged money to this one place, calls the credit card company and says, hey, what was this?
00:47:14.220 It was a couple of years ago.
00:47:15.340 What was this for?
00:47:17.060 Said we'll have to call you back.
00:47:19.300 We have to do some research.
00:47:20.380 That's a bogus name.
00:47:21.580 And the name was for three companies.
00:47:25.920 One of them was a company that gives you.
00:47:29.480 You know, the the the what do you call it?
00:47:35.020 The pregnancy strip test.
00:47:36.460 And it shows positive.
00:47:38.360 They give you a ultrasound picture of the baby with your name on top of it.
00:47:45.040 So it looks like you had an ultrasound.
00:47:46.260 They give you a baby bump belly that you can you can start to wear.
00:47:50.740 And and so he freaks out.
00:47:53.600 Well, as this goes on, she disappears in the first.
00:47:57.260 This is the first episode.
00:47:58.060 And he says, you have to tell me, did you fake the pregnant or my children?
00:48:01.960 My children even what is going on?
00:48:03.800 She said, you don't understand.
00:48:05.140 This is about so much more.
00:48:07.040 She disappears unanswered.
00:48:10.060 And so he starts to look for, well, this story starts to involve all of their friends and everybody is having a different problem kind of based on this stranger telling them different things.
00:48:25.920 You have no idea really what the story really is until the last episode and you're you're following it and it's all logical.
00:48:35.100 But you you're like, where is this going the same thing with the five, which we just finished last night?
00:48:41.380 The the five is five friends that grew up.
00:48:45.380 One of them was kidnapped and killed while they were all out in the woods.
00:48:50.460 The little one who was younger, they said, go home.
00:48:54.260 And he ran through the woods to go home.
00:48:56.480 And then he was never seen again.
00:48:58.260 Well, now they're all grown up.
00:49:00.020 And in the first episode, one of them is a police officer.
00:49:03.440 They go to this murder scene and the DNA of that little kid, 25 years later, is found at the crime scene at this murder scene.
00:49:13.580 And so you're like, wait, I thought he was dead.
00:49:16.300 He apparently is not dead.
00:49:18.160 And now he's killing this woman.
00:49:21.220 What is happening?
00:49:22.900 And it takes you through all of the people and what was happening and how they're all involved.
00:49:28.140 It's incredible.
00:49:28.980 I mean, they're the best stories for murder mysteries I've seen.
00:49:36.340 Are they did they fall into my new favorite thing they're doing with television, which is the limited series?
00:49:41.580 Yeah, they're only one season.
00:49:42.740 So one season you watch it.
00:49:44.220 You watch the beginning.
00:49:45.280 You watch all of them and it's over.
00:49:46.660 Yes, it ends.
00:49:47.760 Yes.
00:49:48.480 And you don't have to worry about them canceling it before the story wraps up.
00:49:51.820 And that's really frustrating, except when you realize because I watched that first season
00:49:57.780 and we started with The Stranger and watch the first season.
00:50:02.320 I'm like, oh, my gosh, I would watch this all the time.
00:50:05.720 You know, it's over and it's wrapped up.
00:50:07.800 And you're like, OK, you can't go back to those people.
00:50:10.380 But I would watch something like this.
00:50:12.160 Well, he's done three of them, three different stories.
00:50:14.860 And they are fantastic.
00:50:17.820 Absolutely fantastic.
00:50:19.400 That's great.
00:50:20.740 Have you been watching McMillions on HBO?
00:50:23.540 Everybody's telling me to watch it.
00:50:24.740 It's so good.
00:50:25.900 It's so good.
00:50:26.640 It's a story I did not.
00:50:28.000 I don't even remember.
00:50:29.460 I remember playing the Monopoly game at McDonald's all the time when it was out.
00:50:33.980 And, you know, the story basically is about how no one really won all those years legitimately.
00:50:42.060 It was basically, you know, an inside guy stealing the winning tickets and, like, organizing
00:50:48.760 a giant web of contestants that would go into McDonald's and say, I won the million dollars.
00:50:53.540 And they were just keeping all the money.
00:50:55.720 And they go through all of it from beginning to end, how it unravels.
00:50:59.760 And, I mean, it is, you know, there's organized crime ties.
00:51:03.180 And there's, like, Mormon mafia.
00:51:04.700 There is a Mormon mafia kind of in there.
00:51:06.640 It is wild.
00:51:08.060 Oh, they're really a mafia.
00:51:09.320 Yeah.
00:51:09.680 But it's the worst thing I've ever seen a Mormon do.
00:51:13.380 Previously, it was too much milk at dinner.
00:51:17.740 So it was...
00:51:18.380 That gets ugly.
00:51:19.000 It cleared it pretty easily.
00:51:20.000 Really?
00:51:20.700 Yeah.
00:51:21.920 So that one is really good.
00:51:24.600 There's a new season of Ozark coming out, which is...
00:51:27.140 I haven't watched that.
00:51:28.160 Super dark.
00:51:29.960 Super dark.
00:51:30.720 But so good.
00:51:32.460 So good.
00:51:34.540 And Better Call Saul is on as well, too, which is fantastic.
00:51:37.800 If you don't...
00:51:38.120 I mean, it's the same type of profile.
00:51:39.700 A little dark.
00:51:41.240 I mean, you know, you got to understand, coming in here and working with Glenn every day is
00:51:43.680 so much rays of sunshine.
00:51:45.080 You have to go home and watch something dark just to even yourself out.
00:51:47.220 You're like, oh, man, I'm too happy.
00:51:49.520 I'm too happy.
00:51:51.160 It's funny.
00:51:51.660 I've heard that Contagion and Outbreak, the two movies about pandemics that have come
00:51:58.880 out the last, what, 15 or 20 years, both of them have been, like, trending on Netflix
00:52:03.120 and Amazon Prime and everything.
00:52:04.760 Like, you're in the middle of that movie.
00:52:06.620 Why are you watching it?
00:52:08.320 You don't need to watch it.
00:52:09.340 It's happening to you.
00:52:10.580 I know.
00:52:11.200 So I'm watching also The Outlander.
00:52:13.660 Have you seen that?
00:52:15.040 No.
00:52:16.140 So, boy, you want to appreciate America and you want to appreciate, you know, the time
00:52:20.340 that you live in.
00:52:21.220 This is a story that starts in the 1940s and this woman is in Scotland with her husband.
00:52:31.620 The war is just over.
00:52:32.940 They're kind of having a second honeymoon.
00:52:35.200 He's kind of this, you know, quasi historian and they go and he's looking for his roots,
00:52:41.140 his English roots in Scotland because, you know, he was, he had English warriors in his
00:52:47.460 blood in Scotland.
00:52:48.360 And so they're there and long story short, she passes through this.
00:52:54.260 I know this sounds really bad, but she passes through this, this time portal.
00:53:01.200 Okay.
00:53:01.720 And she goes back into the time when the English and the Scottish were, and she's trying to
00:53:06.260 find her way back to present day.
00:53:08.400 Is this quantum leap?
00:53:09.780 No, it's kind of, that's the only time thing that has happened.
00:53:13.720 I've only watched a few episodes, but it's the only time thing that happens.
00:53:16.880 It's just getting her there and her trying to find her way back.
00:53:20.360 But it's, it's amazing to watch it because of the history of it.
00:53:26.060 And you realize, well, we've come a long way.
00:53:29.420 Yeah.
00:53:29.860 We've come a long way.
00:53:32.960 She happened to be in the war.
00:53:34.640 She was a nurse where she did a lot of stuff.
00:53:36.960 So they're like in the first scene where she's coming back, one of the guys has a shoulder
00:53:41.900 that's dislocated and all these guys are going to like, we're going to put it back in here,
00:53:46.040 bite down on this.
00:53:46.940 And she's like, stop, stop.
00:53:50.020 He'll break his arm.
00:53:51.240 And she does it.
00:53:52.300 And they all look at her like, how did you just do that?
00:53:54.900 And there's questions on whether or not she's a witch or what she is because she just knows
00:53:59.800 basic modern medicine.
00:54:02.340 It's, it's really, it's really kind of an interesting thing.
00:54:05.680 I was, I had Jonah Goldberg on, uh, Stu Does America a couple of days ago, or I guess a
00:54:10.800 week or two ago.
00:54:11.360 And we were talking about his book, Suicide of the West, which is great, great book.
00:54:15.940 And he made the point, which was if you kind of had a, uh, a wish, right?
00:54:22.760 You're, you're coming into the world and you get to pick where you live and when you live
00:54:27.160 anytime is, is possible.
00:54:30.280 Any place is possible.
00:54:33.520 You'd be insane not to pick the United States in 2020.
00:54:37.120 Oh yeah.
00:54:37.440 Insane.
00:54:37.840 Which is like incredible when you think about how miserable we are.
00:54:40.780 Like it really, we complain about everything, but where else would you go?
00:54:45.140 Maybe you'd pick another country in 2020, but like, you're not going back to 1940.
00:54:50.300 What other country?
00:54:51.180 And I will certainly have no other on that, but maybe, I don't know, maybe, I don't know,
00:54:55.080 maybe you love Europe or something, but you want to go there?
00:54:58.460 I don't know.
00:54:59.060 I want to stay here.
00:55:00.200 It's really fascinating.
00:55:01.220 By the way, you don't need to, you don't need to use up one of your wishes to go live in
00:55:05.200 Germany.
00:55:05.640 Get on a plane.
00:55:06.480 Yeah.
00:55:06.820 You can actually do that.
00:55:07.660 It's easy.
00:55:08.460 Yeah.
00:55:08.600 But you can't go back in time unless you have a flux capacitor.
00:55:11.680 Right.
00:55:12.320 And I don't.
00:55:13.740 But if you could, would you?
00:55:16.000 No.
00:55:16.820 You know, Doc Brown's an idiot for going back to the old West.
00:55:19.160 It sucked.
00:55:20.200 He should have stayed in 1985.
00:55:21.900 That was the best option he had with the exception of the future, which probably would
00:55:25.340 have been better too.
00:55:26.740 You know?
00:55:27.280 Yeah.
00:55:27.640 If you could go, if you had a time machine, I would only go to the future.
00:55:31.100 I mean, maybe you go back to watch a historic event for a half an hour.
00:55:34.300 Yeah.
00:55:34.320 I'm in the time machine.
00:55:35.120 I don't get out of the time machine at any point.
00:55:37.520 Do I leave the time machine under bushes?
00:55:40.400 You're doing a drive-thru?
00:55:41.800 Yeah.
00:55:42.160 You're doing a drive-thru time visit.
00:55:43.340 Oh, yeah.
00:55:43.540 I'm not getting out.
00:55:44.420 Are you getting out?
00:55:45.480 That never works out well.
00:55:46.780 You put the time machine under a, you know, a big tarp or you throw some bushes on it.
00:55:51.680 That never works out for you.
00:55:53.620 Don't leave the time machine.
00:55:56.100 And I've had cars, and I actually have one now, that you get nervous when you turn it off.
00:56:01.260 The car does not turn back on most of the time.
00:56:03.640 You have an MG.
00:56:04.320 That's what you're talking about, isn't it?
00:56:05.700 I love that car.
00:56:07.360 And most of the time, I get a cabal up to a light.
00:56:09.640 I'm like, I might not go.
00:56:11.440 I know.
00:56:11.540 It may just stop you.
00:56:12.700 So if you've got the DeLorean on the time machine, you need to get it to 88 miles an
00:56:15.740 hour.
00:56:15.940 You leave the car running.
00:56:17.120 It's a DeLorean.
00:56:18.520 No, you don't, because it will overheat.
00:56:20.540 I had one.
00:56:22.080 That's right.
00:56:22.380 You get into that thing, and you're going to any other place than your driveway, you're
00:56:30.200 not sure it'll ever get up to 88 miles an hour again.
00:56:34.080 Don't build a time machine in a DeLorean.
00:56:37.040 And if you do build a time machine, never leave it alone.
00:56:41.980 Never get out of it until you're safely back in your time.
00:56:47.200 How many movies do we need to teach us this?
00:56:52.380 All right, if you like saving money, I'm also guessing you dislike it when, in order
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00:58:24.400 all of them.
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00:58:33.960 One hundred and fifty one thousand.
00:58:35.720 I was just there.
00:58:36.720 Really?
00:58:37.040 I'm in the middle.
00:58:37.560 I've used Honey before.
00:58:39.360 It's awesome.
00:58:39.940 And I, for some reason, don't have it on here.
00:58:41.200 I'm just adding the extension at this moment.
00:58:42.880 Yeah.
00:58:43.120 But yeah, one hundred and fifty one thousand reviews now.
00:58:45.080 Wow.
00:58:45.740 That would be over a hundred thousand, wouldn't it, Nell, Stu?
00:58:47.960 Yeah, well, way over a hundred thousand.
00:58:49.040 It's like a hundred thousand.
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00:59:03.580 Ten seconds.
00:59:04.260 Station ID.
00:59:09.500 Do you ever watch?
00:59:14.180 Do you ever.
00:59:14.840 Can you watch subtitled shows?
00:59:17.340 Yeah.
00:59:17.980 Yeah.
00:59:18.340 Did you see what was the movie that just won the Oscar?
00:59:21.240 So.
00:59:21.640 Oh, Parasite.
00:59:22.900 Yeah.
00:59:23.120 Parasite.
00:59:23.560 I did not see Parasite.
00:59:24.600 You need to see Parasite.
00:59:26.120 Really, really, really, really good.
00:59:28.280 Really?
00:59:28.640 Yeah.
00:59:28.860 You know, this is not.
00:59:30.660 This had no subtitles, but I did see The Invisible Man.
00:59:33.440 This, this past weekend.
00:59:34.540 It was really.
00:59:35.060 It was really good.
00:59:35.580 It's a Blumhouse movie.
00:59:36.600 Yeah, it was really good.
00:59:37.500 It was really good.
00:59:38.200 Yeah.
00:59:38.340 They did a good job.
00:59:38.820 Did you take the family or is it, is it?
00:59:40.040 Oh, no.
00:59:40.600 Well, I mean, I don't know.
00:59:41.400 I guess you could.
00:59:41.840 Did you see.
00:59:42.340 If you don't like your family.
00:59:43.160 Did you see.
00:59:43.540 No, it was a little.
00:59:44.760 It was certainly much older than my kids.
00:59:47.080 Did you see the cameo with Kevin Bacon?
00:59:50.540 Small little part, Kevin Bacon.
00:59:52.320 You know, he played The Invisible Man.
00:59:53.540 You didn't.
00:59:54.020 Yeah, but I remember that from back in the day.
00:59:55.600 Did you see the cameo?
00:59:56.460 No.
00:59:56.760 You've got to go back and watch it.
00:59:58.400 Oh, it's in theaters.
00:59:59.300 I'm not going to go buy another ticket to watch.
01:00:00.480 I can't.
01:00:00.980 Kevin Bacon.
01:00:01.360 If you haven't gone, go look and the cameo, it's like an Easter egg.
01:00:07.060 When you find the cameo of Kevin Bacon, it makes it a lot cooler.
01:00:10.740 I haven't seen the movie, but how do you know it's a lot cooler then?
01:00:14.180 What if it ruins it for me?
01:00:15.280 What if I'm like, I mean, I think I'm in the real world and all of a sudden Kevin Bacon
01:00:18.140 ruined it.
01:00:19.020 Hate you.
01:00:19.680 Don't you like little Easter eggs and things?
01:00:21.340 Yes, I do.
01:00:21.860 Yeah.
01:00:22.000 Okay.
01:00:22.220 So then it makes it better, doesn't it?
01:00:24.280 Thank you.
01:00:25.060 Except Kevin Bacon related Easter eggs.
01:00:28.060 What's better than eggs and bacon?
01:00:31.040 Oh, I got those all day long.
01:00:33.460 Yeah, I'm a dad.
01:00:34.640 Anyway, have you seen Sharit on Netflix?
01:00:39.040 I have not seen Sharit.
01:00:40.220 Okay.
01:00:40.560 There's too many shows on Netflix.
01:00:43.000 No, there's not.
01:00:43.740 I could cycle through for six months and probably not even come across Sharit.
01:00:48.000 What is it?
01:00:48.720 Sharit is the name of the hospital in Germany that is the one that was the progressive hospital,
01:00:58.240 and there's two seasons of it.
01:01:00.200 The first season in America is actually about World War II because they know Americans are
01:01:06.220 fascinated by Nazis, I think.
01:01:07.640 But the first episode that you should watch them in reverse starts in the 1880s, and it's
01:01:15.820 during the progressive era when they're trying to cure tuberculosis and everything else.
01:01:20.300 And it takes place in this hospital, and it is the turning point of medicine.
01:01:27.940 And they're just starting to say, hey, maybe we should wash our hands and these invisible
01:01:32.860 germs and everything else.
01:01:34.040 And so the first season is in the 1880s, and it shows, and it's all based in reality and true stories of what they did back then to discover the cures for tuberculosis and smallpox and everything else.
01:01:50.240 It's terrifying when you see what medicine was like back then, and you see the beginnings of progressivism and collectivism in that hospital.
01:02:01.140 Then the next season is World War II with the experiments in this hospital.
01:02:05.800 Oh, my gosh.
01:02:07.720 It is so eye-opening and a total different look at the progressive era and national socialism.
01:02:15.660 Sharit on Netflix.
01:02:17.980 You're listening to Glenn Beck.
01:02:20.640 American Financing NMLS 1-82334 www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org
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01:03:36.900 Check out Friday's big story on the coronavirus tonight at Blaze TV.
01:03:40.600 Subscribers only, BlazeTV.com.
01:03:42.640 The promo code is GB20.
01:03:44.920 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
01:03:51.980 Hello, America.
01:03:52.700 It is Friday.
01:03:53.460 Bill O'Reilly has the week off, so he's not going to be joining us today.
01:03:57.560 Normally, he's here with us this hour.
01:03:59.700 Bernie Sanders says he's going to drop out if Joe Biden has more delegates by the convention, even if he doesn't have the majority.
01:04:06.960 He said he doesn't want superdelegates deciding.
01:04:10.800 You find that weird?
01:04:12.120 A little bit.
01:04:12.960 It's one of those things, I think, when that happens, there's a good chance he forgets he said that.
01:04:18.220 But right now, it's the right thing to say.
01:04:19.660 Right.
01:04:19.940 Because he just was on record when he thought he was leading, saying a plurality should get the nomination.
01:04:26.240 It looks like Bernie Sanders is getting his head handed to him in Florida.
01:04:36.800 Joe Biden is, what was it, 65%?
01:04:39.080 It was 61 to 12.
01:04:40.300 To 12.
01:04:40.900 And that includes Michael Bloomberg still in the poll.
01:04:44.020 And Bloomberg was actually in second with 14%.
01:04:46.360 So 61, 14 to 12.
01:04:48.460 They think that maybe because of the Cuban nationals that moved out of Cuba, got out of Cuba and Castro, that that has played such a huge role in Florida that that word kind of spread because of the Cuban community going, no, Castro's not cool.
01:05:06.220 Yeah.
01:05:06.440 That it really tipped things against Sanders.
01:05:10.160 It's so interesting how the media works because if Bernie Sanders were the nominee and would have said that thing about Cuba, they would have been like, look, Barack Obama did the same thing.
01:05:21.600 Obama visited there.
01:05:23.300 But they want him out.
01:05:24.520 Yep.
01:05:24.720 And so they treat it that way until he's a nominee.
01:05:28.840 If he were the nominee, they treat it a totally different way.
01:05:30.900 What's crazy is this.
01:05:32.760 We all know that as conservatives, we all know this.
01:05:35.840 But liberals generally don't notice it because it doesn't happen to them, generally speaking.
01:05:41.960 Yes.
01:05:42.320 You know what I mean?
01:05:42.980 And when you're living under that kind of stuff all the time, you notice it and you it's gotten to a point to where it's so bad you dismiss it.
01:05:52.800 That's why I really don't think that any of this coronavirus stuff is going to touch Donald Trump.
01:05:59.760 I don't think it's going to hurt Donald Trump at all because I think people know the media and they know this is just they will say anything about Donald Trump to kill him.
01:06:11.360 They will say anything.
01:06:12.000 Did you see this thing with him?
01:06:13.400 Donald Trump said he had a hunch, a hunch that the coronavirus mortality rate wasn't going to wind up at three point four percent.
01:06:21.440 You believe this irresponsible guy out there saying he's got hunches on diseases.
01:06:25.160 What about some experts?
01:06:26.460 Yeah.
01:06:26.700 Get some experts around you.
01:06:27.660 Maybe talk to them about it.
01:06:28.840 Instead of just guessing, he's just taking blatant guesses.
01:06:32.420 Now, here's this is the actual clip.
01:06:34.180 It was Trump on with Hannity on Fox News Channel.
01:06:38.280 Well, I think the three point four percent is really a false number.
01:06:41.680 Now, this is just my hunch.
01:06:44.100 And but based on a lot of conversations with a lot of people that do this, because a lot of people will have this and it's very mild.
01:06:52.080 They'll get better very rapidly.
01:06:53.740 They don't even see a doctor.
01:06:54.940 They don't even call a doctor.
01:06:56.580 You never hear about those people.
01:06:58.720 So this is what the media came up with off of that clip.
01:07:02.780 Vox called it astoundingly irresponsible.
01:07:06.440 Your favorite, Glenn, Brian Stelter over at CNN.
01:07:09.720 Please don't walk out in the middle of this quote.
01:07:11.540 But he said, I hate that guy.
01:07:15.120 I mean, he is almost Woodrow Wilson to me.
01:07:18.560 He really never walked out of an interview.
01:07:20.780 No, I didn't.
01:07:21.520 I didn't.
01:07:22.120 Brian said, I hesitate to even print the United States president's words here because they're so at odds with what health experts are saying.
01:07:30.480 This is that is bright.
01:07:31.860 That's why he's Woodrow Wilson.
01:07:33.560 He is such a propaganda, disinformation, misinformation machine.
01:07:39.040 He doesn't have any.
01:07:40.900 I mean, how bad does something have to be that you hesitate to even type it?
01:07:45.080 Like, I don't know what the N word.
01:07:46.980 Right.
01:07:47.100 Like we don't type the N word.
01:07:48.600 Right.
01:07:48.680 We would write the N word or we'd say the N word instead of saying the actual word.
01:07:52.320 We actually put books together where we've had to use.
01:07:56.900 We've had to quote somebody, you know, David Duke using the N word.
01:08:00.520 And we'll look at each other and go, it is an exact quote, but I don't think we should put that in as, you know, other than the N word or let's use the N and the R and then just asterisk in between.
01:08:11.900 You know, he's comparing it to that.
01:08:15.340 That's how bad that quote was.
01:08:17.300 MSNBC said the sitting president of the United States told a national television audience not to believe the research of the World Health Organization's experts.
01:08:27.060 Is that what you got out of that?
01:08:28.320 Well, I Philip Bump from The Washington Post said that Trump, quote, twice admits that he's simply making up the percentage he's talking about, calling it a hunch and saying that it is his personal assessment.
01:08:40.140 Now, he said, no, most of that is not in quotes.
01:08:43.920 The word hunch is in quotes and the word personal is in quotes.
01:08:47.980 Because why?
01:08:49.420 Because right after he says it's a hunch, he says it's based on a lot of conversations with a lot of people who do this.
01:08:59.940 In other words, he's getting brief from experts and he's trying to communicate that to the American people.
01:09:05.020 And I have to not as bad.
01:09:06.060 I have to tell you, I read the experts every day.
01:09:09.680 We do a coronavirus update every day.
01:09:12.340 That is exactly what all of the experts are saying.
01:09:15.640 Right.
01:09:15.820 And all of them.
01:09:16.780 Part of this is, I think, you know, the way that they that the way he speaks, you know, like Donald Trump kind of says stuff and it doesn't sound.
01:09:28.080 It doesn't sound all of that.
01:09:30.640 All that here.
01:09:31.980 Let me give you.
01:09:33.220 Let me give you an example.
01:09:34.140 Play that clip again that you just played.
01:09:35.700 Listen to this.
01:09:36.280 Well, I think the three point four percent is really a false number.
01:09:40.200 Now, this is just my hunch.
01:09:42.700 Stop.
01:09:43.180 I think that number is just a false number.
01:09:45.700 People.
01:09:46.280 If you're on the left, they will hear, oh, fake news.
01:09:48.720 He's saying this is fake news.
01:09:50.200 They're lying.
01:09:50.780 OK, that's not what he's saying.
01:09:52.000 But that's what they're hearing.
01:09:53.020 Next.
01:09:53.460 Play it again.
01:09:53.780 It's just my hunch and but based on a lot of conversations, a lot of people that it's just my hunch based on a lot of conversations.
01:10:02.600 That's Donald Trump.
01:10:03.780 You hear if you don't like Donald Trump, you hear, you know, I got all the best people around me.
01:10:08.540 I get all the best advice.
01:10:09.960 I get all that.
01:10:11.000 And at times he doesn't.
01:10:13.560 At times he doesn't.
01:10:15.700 Michael Cohen was not the best lawyer.
01:10:17.240 Right.
01:10:17.680 And he's got he just uses hyperbole all the time.
01:10:20.980 Yeah.
01:10:21.180 So you what they've done is they've taken their brain and just put it into neutral.
01:10:26.560 They're just listening and they're like, oh, that's him going off again, talking to the best people.
01:10:31.360 No.
01:10:32.040 In this particular case, he is talking to the best people.
01:10:36.080 In this particular case, he does know what he's talking about.
01:10:40.820 He is getting advice.
01:10:42.940 It's not hyperbole.
01:10:44.800 He is talking about actual stats.
01:10:47.240 And when he says it's his hunch, that's really what all of the professionals are saying, too.
01:10:52.860 Yeah.
01:10:53.040 I did a translation of Trump to doctor, because if it's a doctor saying you totally would believe it.
01:10:58.380 But Trump is, you know, he talks like the every every man.
01:11:01.180 Here's the translation.
01:11:02.180 If one assumes that the number of asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic cases is several times as high as the number of the reported cases, the case fatality rate may be considerably less than one percent.
01:11:14.100 That's exactly what Donald Trump said, except fancy.
01:11:17.660 It's also an exact quote from the New England Journal of Medicine.
01:11:21.500 That's it.
01:11:22.080 This this is and I got new for you.
01:11:25.200 I hesitate to type these words.
01:11:27.860 It's like legitimately a paraphrase of the New England Journal of Medicine.
01:11:31.580 There was also a study from I know you subscribe to this, but just so other people don't know.
01:11:39.160 I'm a doctor.
01:11:39.620 The MRC Center for Global Infectious Disease Analysis at Imperial College London.
01:11:43.600 Right.
01:11:43.920 They said, quote, their study said estimates of the overall case fatality ratio of all infections is approximately one percent.
01:11:51.380 You go on and say South Korea, who's done a good job handling this so far, and they have a very advanced health system, blah, blah, blah, blah.
01:11:59.920 So far, they're reporting a death mortality rate of zero point six percent.
01:12:06.140 The the princess, the diamond princess or the floating petri dish of the sea.
01:12:11.520 Yes, it was with the memory of the ship that was docked off the sea.
01:12:15.420 They had 707 people who got covid-19.
01:12:17.760 OK, but with this one, we know is isolated.
01:12:19.840 Right.
01:12:20.140 We know everyone on there.
01:12:21.540 We know what happened there.
01:12:23.660 707 people, six people died.
01:12:26.340 So the mortality rate there was zero point eight percent.
01:12:29.340 Now, of course, when you're talking about a cruise ship audience, you're not talking the spectrum of all people.
01:12:35.340 You're talking generally an older, an older audience with likely a higher death rate than what would normally be done.
01:12:41.760 And remember, a lot of people mentioned the zero point one percent mortality rate from the flu, which is true.
01:12:47.560 However, it's true in an environment where 50 percent of the population vaccinates against it.
01:12:53.800 And we have four approved treatments for the flu.
01:12:57.380 We have no and a lot of people get the flu and just don't do anything about it.
01:13:01.700 It's the flu.
01:13:02.680 Yeah. So the bottom line with that is over time, we're going to have the test in a year or two.
01:13:08.340 We'll have the vaccine.
01:13:09.720 It really is a now thing.
01:13:11.720 If we can get through the next year, we're going to do a lot better.
01:13:14.180 Here's the thing.
01:13:14.600 Here's the thing you have to remember.
01:13:15.940 The media is going to whip up frenzy that this is worse and worse and worse and worse and worse and worse because we're now going to start testing everybody and not even everybody.
01:13:27.100 But we're going to be doing, you know, a million tests probably in the next I don't even know four weeks.
01:13:35.000 Yeah, we're getting a million tests are supposed to be done by next week.
01:13:37.560 OK, so a million tests.
01:13:39.320 We had four hundred and forty people that had been tested total two weeks ago.
01:13:44.240 So now we're going to start testing everybody in the general population that comes in and not everybody is even going to get a test.
01:13:50.660 You come in.
01:13:51.640 They really think you have it.
01:13:52.800 You'll get a test.
01:13:54.700 So you're going to start seeing these numbers increase.
01:13:57.660 Well, that's a good thing, because as the numbers increase, because we're testing people, we're now verifying that.
01:14:05.800 Yep, you have it.
01:14:06.920 You have it.
01:14:07.480 You have it.
01:14:07.940 Those numbers are going to explode.
01:14:10.360 But it will bring the overall death rate down exactly what the president is talking about.
01:14:17.300 It'll feel really scary, but it actually will be a good thing.
01:14:19.740 It'll be a good thing because we'll be discovering these cases as we go.
01:14:23.120 And nobody in the press is going to do this because of for two reasons.
01:14:27.040 One, they need fear to get you to watch.
01:14:30.420 OK, scandal doesn't work anymore.
01:14:33.600 Anti-Trump stuff doesn't work anymore.
01:14:35.880 They're tired.
01:14:36.400 Everybody's tired of the press.
01:14:38.200 So they need something to scare you with.
01:14:41.780 Look, there are reasons to be worried about the coronavirus.
01:14:45.260 There are real problems, most of them economic.
01:14:48.980 And all of us could lose somebody that we love in our circle of friends with this,
01:14:55.040 just like we lose people that we love with the flu.
01:14:59.380 It just is going to double that number of the flu eventually.
01:15:03.820 So if we lose 65,000 Americans every year with the flu, we're going to lose 130 Americans,
01:15:10.060 130,000 Americans eventually between the flu and this.
01:15:15.640 That's probably where this is going to end up.
01:15:18.400 That's a lot of people.
01:15:19.860 And we're going to be affected by that.
01:15:21.740 The real thing that they're not covering and they're not covering because they need to make this about Donald Trump.
01:15:28.980 So they're not covering what is going to happen with our economy and how do we brace for that?
01:15:34.880 If you're listening to anyone who's just telling you the problems and not telling you how to brace for impact,
01:15:41.360 they are of no good.
01:15:43.300 They are of no good.
01:15:45.060 They are part of the problem.
01:15:46.680 And Brian Stelter, you are a worthless worm.
01:15:51.640 Don't know.
01:15:52.720 Worthless worm.
01:15:54.380 By the way, StuDoesAmerica.com has all the links.
01:15:59.280 We have all the background information, the documents and all of that on the way the media is lying about this.
01:16:05.800 You can subscribe to YouTube for free.
01:16:07.760 And if you're on your podcast app, click on over and subscribe.
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01:17:41.940 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
01:17:57.620 Welcome to the program.
01:17:59.260 We have some new information from 538 about what is shaping up.
01:18:06.640 Listen to these stats.
01:18:07.960 Yeah, so 538.com, they do these election predictions.
01:18:10.940 And they turn off their model on a big election day, like Super Tuesday.
01:18:16.320 In the morning, they turn it off, and then they don't turn it back on until after the election's over.
01:18:22.660 Things have settled down.
01:18:23.300 So they're not trying to implement things on an ongoing basis.
01:18:25.960 They're trying to make a projection beforehand.
01:18:28.340 Anyway, their current projection before this, it was, I think, a 60% chance there was going to be a contested convention.
01:18:34.060 Correct.
01:18:34.240 And then behind that was, I think Biden and Sanders, I think Biden had pulled ahead of Sanders slightly, but it was still pretty close for the secondary possibilities.
01:18:44.320 Their new update just came out.
01:18:47.440 Joe Biden has an 88% chance to get...
01:18:51.000 Hang on, hang on, hang on, hang on.
01:18:52.080 I'm just saying, we're talking about Joe Biden.
01:18:53.760 I have a new Joe Biden theme.
01:18:55.700 Can we...
01:18:56.940 Here's the new Joe Biden theme.
01:19:04.300 He's trying to make his way to the podium here, and that's not looking great.
01:19:12.080 The new Joe Biden theme for the program.
01:19:17.740 This fits Joe.
01:19:19.220 Fits Joe well.
01:19:20.280 His speaking patterns.
01:19:21.760 I'm working with a composer now for some new themes and stuff, and I said, I need you to do Happy Days are Here Again or something like that, but I want you to do it, and can you make it sound like it's done by somebody who just can't remember how it goes?
01:19:39.160 And he sent this back to me.
01:19:41.600 I'm like, that's Joe Biden's theme.
01:19:43.220 That's absolutely Joe Biden's theme.
01:19:45.440 So anyway, Joe Biden, his numbers now, he's back on top at 538 in a stunning way.
01:19:51.500 88% chance now to win a majority of delegates that leaves a contested convention at 10% and Bernie Sanders at 2%.
01:20:03.000 That's how bad...
01:20:05.360 I mean, we said this when we were on the air.
01:20:06.740 Before we went on the air, Virginia came across, and Glenn and I were the only ones standing in the studio at the time, and I said, Glenn, look at this.
01:20:13.460 Like, they just called Virginia at the close of the polls.
01:20:16.000 That is not supposed to happen.
01:20:17.660 The day was so good for Biden, he's now way out ahead.
01:20:20.700 When it comes to a plurality of delegates, 94% chance for Biden, 6% chance for Sanders, and Tulsi Gabbard's in third place.
01:20:28.160 Well, the Marine Band better brush up, because hail to the, what's this, hail to the, hail to the something, but we've got to play that coming up soon, apparently, for Joe Biden.
01:20:44.260 All right, back in a minute.
01:20:46.220 You're listening to Glenn Beck.
01:20:48.800 Hello, America.
01:21:04.260 It's Friday.
01:21:05.320 We're glad you're here.
01:21:06.040 Our coronavirus update begins in one minute.
01:21:09.320 This is the Glenn Beck program.
01:21:10.480 Somewhere in America, within the sound of my voice, there's a man standing at the open grave of a bygone era, casting his gaze, not at the death of an ideal, but at the death of a place in time.
01:21:22.380 The old days, some people call them fondly.
01:21:24.900 He thinks of them often.
01:21:26.840 They're gone now, but the ideal remains.
01:21:29.240 It burns within him and spills light into all that he touches.
01:21:32.740 It's that spirit of something that was lasting, that was true.
01:21:37.140 You know, we all like our toilets.
01:21:40.560 We like having modern conveniences and air conditioning, but there is something that has been lost in America, and it's that spirit of the cowboy, a filter of integrity, which has always been there in America and will come back in fashion again.
01:21:58.120 It's part of him.
01:21:59.420 It's in the light in his eyes all the way down to the pair of Tecovas boots that he wears on his feet.
01:22:03.380 He knows, as I know, Tecovas, when you buy a pair of Tecovas boots, you're buying a statement of integrity.
01:22:10.940 Not that you're about statements, but there is something that reminds you when you slip them on in the morning, when you're standing around a bunch of numbskulls that are talking nonsense.
01:22:21.200 There's something when you look down at your feet and you see that those people who made that cowboy boot with 200 steps handmade, and yet you paid less than half of what the other numbskulls might have paid because they've got this name boot that, oh my gosh, and I got it at the greatest store ever.
01:22:42.900 However, that's not common sense.
01:22:45.200 That's not integrity.
01:22:46.100 The integrity is the handmade portions and the best, finest leathers.
01:22:50.340 That's where the integrity of these boots come in, not in the price, because the price is half of what all the other dopes paid for on a boot that is handmade like this one.
01:23:01.220 Why?
01:23:02.420 Because they cut out the middleman.
01:23:03.920 They go right from the people who make it, right to the person who has that frontier still in their soul.
01:23:10.180 Tecovas boots.
01:23:11.520 Find your pair now.
01:23:13.320 Western goods for your frontiers are found at tecovas.com slash back.
01:23:18.300 That's T-E-C-O-V-A-S dot com slash back.
01:23:21.720 Tecovas dot com slash back.
01:23:28.260 All right, let's take a look at the daily stats.
01:23:30.280 All of these stats are as of 530 a.m. from Johns Hopkins.
01:23:35.780 Total confirmed dates were now over 100,000.
01:23:40.160 The confirmed cases, that's up about 5,000 from yesterday.
01:23:46.640 Total confirmed deaths are up about 100 from yesterday to 3,408.
01:23:52.860 Just so you know, before we did anything with the swine flu,
01:23:58.020 there were 1,000 deaths in America.
01:24:00.840 1,000 deaths in America.
01:24:03.520 There are now 55,812 patients who have recovered from COVID-19.
01:24:10.240 That's about half.
01:24:11.460 Doctors point out the recoveries are outpacing hospitalization or deaths.
01:24:15.920 94 countries have confirmed cases.
01:24:18.480 That is up from 87.
01:24:20.280 And 11 more today have suspected cases.
01:24:23.540 16% of active cases are considered serious.
01:24:26.260 Have you noticed this number is coming down?
01:24:28.520 It was just at the beginning of last week.
01:24:30.460 I think 19%.
01:24:31.680 It's now down three points.
01:24:33.640 16% are considered serious, requiring hospitalization.
01:24:38.720 That is including 5% that require ICU.
01:24:43.360 The U.S. now has 233 confirmed cases, 14 deaths.
01:24:48.140 The confirmed cases now in Washington, Oregon, find your state, California, Arizona, Texas, Wisconsin, Illinois, New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, North Carolina, Georgia, Colorado, Tennessee, Nevada.
01:25:02.600 With additional suspected cases in Montana, Nebraska, Minnesota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Virginia.
01:25:12.160 Now, some other news that you need to know about this.
01:25:17.260 We have the EPA releasing a list of disinfectants to use against the coronavirus.
01:25:25.020 So, if you're looking to disinfect, you should look to the EPA list of disinfectants that you can use.
01:25:37.980 It's Clorox multi-surface cleaner and bleach, Clorox disinfecting wipes, Clorox commercial solutions, Lysol brand, heavy-duty cleaner, disinfectant.
01:25:47.780 There's all kinds of Purell, Santa Prime, germicidal spray.
01:25:51.780 The CDC and FDA has made this now available in case you are looking for those things.
01:25:59.380 But it's all just common sense, unlike what Tito's has had to come out and say.
01:26:05.720 Tito's Vodka, based in Texas, has responded on Twitter that, no, their vodka is not a sufficient disinfectant against COVID-19.
01:26:17.360 A Twitter user wrote in and said, I made hand sanitizer out of your vodka.
01:26:21.780 Hand sanitizer doesn't taste bad either.
01:26:25.060 Cheers to Tito's.
01:26:26.560 They responded immediately.
01:26:28.740 Per the CDC, hand sanitizer contains at least 60% alcohol.
01:26:33.440 Although ours is delicious, it's only 40% alcohol.
01:26:37.740 Therefore, it doesn't meet the standards of the CDC.
01:26:41.600 Despite the company's tweet, more than a dozen Tito's Vodka sanitizer recipes are currently circulating online.
01:26:48.260 I wonder, I wonder if this isn't just a brilliant marketing campaign.
01:26:53.540 Also, there is another rush.
01:26:56.340 We've heard about toilet paper flying off the shelves and other things that now have, you know, kind of a black market feel to them.
01:27:07.680 Alongside those coronavirus prep bags being filled by shoppers, bleach, hand sanitizer, are now, add to it, Twinkies and Ding Dongs.
01:27:20.960 Hostess Brand, the CEO, said that they're seeing a bump in business as people are stocking up in case they are trapped at home during the coronavirus outbreak.
01:27:31.080 We are benefiting likely for short-term due traffic, and that's the great thing about Hostess, their comfort things.
01:27:40.860 So seeing a slight uptick in traffic too early to tell, but a lot of our sales data is lagging, but we think that this is just people storing up for a comfort food.
01:27:54.940 The average Twinkie and Ding Dong package sold today will last you, not as long as food storage, but it will go to 2024.
01:28:03.360 By the way, I opened up the vault yesterday because we saved Twinkies, you know, when they stopped making Twinkies.
01:28:08.060 When was that?
01:28:09.400 Stu, do you know?
01:28:10.180 A couple years ago, right?
01:28:11.020 But they're back now.
01:28:12.060 Yeah.
01:28:12.900 They didn't last very well.
01:28:14.700 I put them in a vault just so we had them as a joke.
01:28:18.240 And yesterday I was kind of cleaning out some of the stuff in the vault, and I found the Twinkies in the back of the vault.
01:28:22.500 Hmm, I wouldn't eat them.
01:28:26.800 So wait, because everyone used to say, I'm not going to eat those things.
01:28:29.140 They'll last for 40 years.
01:28:30.460 No.
01:28:30.800 And now they don't last for 40 years, and that's another reason why you won't eat them?
01:28:34.440 Maybe you just don't like Twinkies.
01:28:37.860 That's true.
01:28:38.560 I don't like Twinkies.
01:28:39.840 But the Ding Dongs, I love Hostess Ding Dongs.
01:28:43.560 Yeah, they didn't weather the years very well either.
01:28:47.260 Hundreds of concerts and events have gone offline now.
01:28:51.280 Trade shows, concerts, events have been canceled due to the coronavirus fears.
01:28:55.380 In the U.S., more than 41,000 people have signed an online petition calling for the cancellation of South by Southwest.
01:29:02.560 That is a 10-day tech and music concert that normally draws about 400,000 visitors to Austin, Texas.
01:29:09.100 People are saying, please don't come.
01:29:10.760 Please don't come.
01:29:11.540 The Global Health Conference, where Donald Trump was scheduled to speak, it is the first cancellation in the event's 58-year history.
01:29:22.320 The Global Health Conference, that has been canceled.
01:29:24.440 American Bar Association canceled its national conference on white-collar crime.
01:29:28.800 Natural Products Expo is canceled in Anaheim.
01:29:33.940 The 32nd annual Arnold Schwarzenegger annual sports festival in Columbus, Ohio.
01:29:39.120 No.
01:29:40.900 Could I just go back and read that again?
01:29:43.340 Sure.
01:29:43.960 The 32nd annual Arnold Schwarzenegger sports festival in Columbus.
01:29:52.060 Mm-hmm.
01:29:52.420 Did you know that he had a sports festival?
01:29:56.420 I did not.
01:29:57.200 In Columbus?
01:29:58.700 No.
01:29:58.880 And it ran for 32 years?
01:30:01.860 Ah, no idea.
01:30:04.920 In our don't be a tool category, New Zealand residents who had a fever and had symptoms attended a live tool concert on February 28th.
01:30:16.520 The packed rock concert was packed with thousands of other people, and health authorities are now using security cameras to identify who he may have come in contact with.
01:30:26.140 He was in the general emissions standing area from the left-hand quadrant, they say.
01:30:32.000 He stood in line for refreshments.
01:30:34.200 He used the restroom.
01:30:35.140 Don't worry, if you're in New Zealand, if you were there and had any refreshments, were in the stadium, or used the bathroom, you might be infected.
01:30:47.660 A man in his 40s in Slovakia confirmed now with COVID-19, no international travel.
01:30:54.440 Son doesn't live with him, who had traveled to Venice and Italy in January.
01:30:58.760 Two additional suspected cases now in Slovakia have no known exposure in the international travel.
01:31:05.320 They don't know how it got there.
01:31:07.180 China's economy is losing $20 billion every day.
01:31:12.780 Migrant workers and contractors are the worst impacted, could lose a combined $115 billion by April 2020.
01:31:20.860 Total economic loss in China mount.
01:31:23.400 They could exceed $1 trillion in lost income.
01:31:28.760 Among Chinese households.
01:31:31.000 Let me say that again.
01:31:32.600 Not in the businesses, but in the households.
01:31:36.060 It could exceed $1 trillion in lost income.
01:31:41.360 This is the real threat of the coronavirus.
01:31:44.740 Bank of China has made $200 billion available for Chinese small businesses.
01:31:49.040 Bank of China also purchased $100 billion in Chinese stocks and bonds.
01:31:52.660 The Chinese stock market has gained 9% so far in March.
01:31:57.220 Much of that is printed money by the Chinese.
01:32:01.340 But I will tell you, when we finally hit the bottom on this, nobody can predict the top.
01:32:06.520 Nobody can see the bottom.
01:32:09.240 But I will tell you that once we find a vaccine, which will happen, once we find the vaccine,
01:32:15.760 and once we know that a socialist Marxist is not going to win in the election,
01:32:23.380 you should have your money in the stock market, because the stock market will boom once we get past all of this.
01:32:29.580 It's down again another 535 points at this point.
01:32:33.720 It is down to 25, that Dow is 25,595 currently.
01:32:40.740 That's down from about almost 30,000 just a few weeks ago.
01:32:44.980 So we're down 5,000 points.
01:32:47.520 But I would imagine that our stock market is going to rebound.
01:32:53.100 The great news is on this politically is we were due for a correction.
01:32:57.620 And if it wasn't for the coronavirus, when that correction happened, the press would immediately say,
01:33:03.460 Donald Trump's, Donald Trump's economy is falling apart.
01:33:08.140 Not one of them would have said, hey, by the way, it looks like Barack Obama's economy is really kind of falling apart.
01:33:13.860 Because remember, this is Barack Obama's economic policies that brought us here in the good times.
01:33:20.500 Nobody would have blamed the bad times on Barack Obama.
01:33:24.340 But if Barack Obama were in office, if the exact same thing happened, he would still be blaming it on George W. Bush.
01:33:34.060 Your coronavirus update happens every day at this time.
01:33:39.220 You can also grab the podcast at wherever you get your podcasts.
01:33:44.620 And we send this whole thing in two different versions.
01:33:47.080 We have the whole show that you can listen to at your leisure.
01:33:49.700 And on your schedule.
01:33:51.700 And then we also have a shortened version that you can listen to every day.
01:33:56.660 Just sign up for the Glenn Beck podcast.
01:33:58.980 Rate and review.
01:34:00.800 All right.
01:34:01.080 Spring is in the air.
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01:35:20.760 10 seconds.
01:35:21.480 Station ID.
01:35:29.480 Okay, so Stu, I've got something for you to listen to.
01:35:34.840 And you tell me what's going on.
01:35:38.180 Okay.
01:35:38.380 This is circling the internet right now.
01:35:41.360 And nobody is pushing back on this.
01:35:44.400 We will now have some breaking news on this.
01:35:47.620 This is a nurse.
01:35:50.160 And she says the CDC would not test her.
01:35:55.360 She is a union leader.
01:35:57.220 She released a video Thursday afternoon where she read out that she was working.
01:36:02.380 Well, let me just play it for you.
01:36:03.420 Here she is.
01:36:03.820 I'm going to read a statement from one of our quarantine nurses who works at a Northern California
01:36:10.460 Kaiser facility.
01:36:12.380 She chose to share her experience anonymously.
01:36:16.320 But she is hoping that her story can be elevated to raise public awareness about concerns for the coronavirus response.
01:36:24.960 She said, as a nurse, I'm very concerned that not enough is being done to stop the spread of the coronavirus.
01:36:34.240 I know because I am currently sick in quarantine after caring for a patient who tested positive.
01:36:42.880 I am awaiting permission from the federal government to allow for my testing even after my physician and county health professional ordered the test.
01:36:54.160 The national CDC would not initiate the test.
01:36:58.740 They said they would not test me because if I were wearing the recommended protective equipment, then I wouldn't have the coronavirus.
01:37:07.380 What kind of science-based answer is that?
01:37:12.260 What a ridiculous and uneducated response from the department that is in charge of the health of this country.
01:37:20.180 Later, they called back, and now it's an issue with something called the identifier number.
01:37:26.980 They claim they prioritize running samples by illness severity and that there are only so many to give out each day, so I have to wait in line for the results.
01:37:40.040 This is not a ticket dispenser at the deli counter.
01:37:44.520 It's a public health emergency.
01:37:47.140 I'm a registered nurse, and I need to know if I'm positive before going back to care for patients.
01:37:53.060 Right, you do.
01:37:53.840 I'm appalled at the level of bureaucracy that's preventing nurses from getting tested.
01:37:59.220 Delaying this test puts the whole community at risk.
01:38:02.820 Okay, stop.
01:38:04.280 What do you think is going on there, Stu?
01:38:06.160 What do you think is happening?
01:38:07.720 I mean, there's not enough information for me to really know, but...
01:38:12.180 Well, it's weird, isn't it?
01:38:13.120 Yeah.
01:38:13.420 Yeah, go ahead.
01:38:14.060 My guess would be that we, and this is pretty well publicized, we don't have enough tests...
01:38:20.640 Ah!
01:38:20.740 ...for people to utilize yet.
01:38:24.740 So if you go in today to a hospital and you say, I'm pretty sure I have the coronavirus, I don't feel well, what is the doctor going to do with you?
01:38:33.420 Probably isolate me or tell me to go home and self-quarantine.
01:38:36.820 Correct.
01:38:38.040 Why?
01:38:38.800 Because they don't have tests yet.
01:38:39.820 Right.
01:38:40.380 We don't have enough tests.
01:38:41.980 They've ramped up production.
01:38:42.920 They believe they'll have over a million by next week, but they're not...
01:38:45.560 Yeah, but that's a million for the entire country.
01:38:47.700 So it's best until we get that going to just isolate people and only use those tests on the people who are showing real symptoms so we can get them in.
01:38:59.600 You don't have...
01:39:00.880 At this point, we don't have the tests.
01:39:04.180 This is, by the way, socialist healthcare.
01:39:06.480 This is what it's like when you don't have enough, you have to ration.
01:39:10.520 And so not everyone gets to the deli counter to ask for their meat when they want their meat.
01:39:17.040 Okay?
01:39:17.840 Now, this is a union worker.
01:39:21.020 She said that she wants to know if she is sick and has it.
01:39:25.900 And she calls the government basically science deniers, uneducated, and why should I have to wait in line?
01:39:34.280 Well, sweetheart, if I may use that, I understand your personal concern, but if you're somebody who's in a union and had been somebody who's been supporting socialized healthcare, that's what this is all about.
01:39:50.080 A line.
01:39:51.420 And you know why there's a line?
01:39:52.800 Because right now, only the government has been making these.
01:39:57.480 Donald Trump and Mike Pence and his team are trying to get all of the capitalist companies to make more of these tests so you could buy them at CVS, just drop it in, and you'd be able to get that test done, and you'd know right away.
01:40:14.500 Until that time, the government has full control.
01:40:18.700 And yes, we don't have tests to test everybody who thinks they might have it.
01:40:24.700 By the way, we reached out to the CDC yesterday.
01:40:29.720 Here's what they said.
01:40:30.860 CDC is not aware of this individual case.
01:40:33.540 We cannot respond to its specifics.
01:40:35.900 However, the CDC would most definitely recommend a healthcare worker who had contact with a confirmed case and then become ill be tested at all times.
01:40:45.780 Clinicians have discretion to test patients based on their individual assessment of that patient's illness and risk of exposure.
01:40:54.860 Our clinical team is working with state and local health officials to assess persons under investigation and has not said no to any such request for testing.
01:41:06.300 I'm telling you right now, you be careful who you're listening to.
01:41:15.040 You have to really be careful and question everyone's motives.
01:41:19.360 And I urge you to question even mine.
01:41:21.840 I'm telling you that I'm coming with no motive other than to tell you the truth as I understand it and give you perspective.
01:41:27.840 But you shouldn't take my word or anybody else's word for true on any of this.
01:41:33.660 You must do your own homework.
01:41:36.000 You have to think these things true.
01:41:38.480 Think these things through.
01:41:40.520 Is this possible?
01:41:42.560 Yes.
01:41:43.360 But the most logical thing is there are no there are no kits.
01:41:48.080 There's not enough.
01:41:49.180 You think you have it.
01:41:50.300 I'm sorry.
01:41:51.040 I can't give it to you on.
01:41:53.080 I think you have it.
01:41:53.980 We have people waiting for the tests who could get medicine right now as soon as we get a test back confirming that they have COVID-19.
01:42:02.900 You're not the priority right now.
01:42:06.400 That's the world of socialized medicine, union leaders, union lovers.
01:42:12.480 Welcome to it.
01:42:14.020 He can't trust you either because you have big investments with big virus.
01:42:17.780 You want this to get much worse.
01:42:19.340 I have what?
01:42:20.960 You're listening to Glenn Beck.
01:42:23.980 Well, we all wish the mirror was lying to us.
01:42:25.900 I know.
01:42:26.200 I hate I hate mirrors.
01:42:27.780 I stay away from them like I'm a vampire.
01:42:29.920 But when you look at it, you see things that for sure.
01:42:31.960 Exactly what a vampire would say.
01:42:34.100 I was saying.
01:42:34.960 Well, that's true.
01:42:36.600 You see things that you don't like sometimes.
01:42:38.880 Sometimes there's things like crow's feet.
01:42:40.600 There was maybe a little turkey neck going on under the chin.
01:42:43.680 What can you do about it?
01:42:45.280 Thanks for the gobble sound effect.
01:42:46.420 That was really helpful.
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01:43:34.580 All right.
01:43:35.160 Check out Friday's big story with me tonight.
01:43:37.640 The coronavirus.
01:43:38.640 All the things you need to know.
01:43:39.820 The big story of the week.
01:43:40.980 Blaze TV subscribers only.
01:43:42.520 5 p.m. Eastern.
01:43:43.640 BlazeTV.com slash Glenn.
01:43:45.540 Welcome to the Glenn Beck Program.
01:43:50.180 It is Friday.
01:43:51.280 Now, let me just go over, let me just go over this thinking.
01:43:56.080 Stu, what are they saying, the worst thing you can do for coronavirus?
01:43:59.840 What is the worst thing you can do right now?
01:44:03.240 Eat Chinese food and have a coronavirus?
01:44:05.760 No.
01:44:06.280 No.
01:44:06.860 Okay.
01:44:07.160 I mean, you know, lick doorknobs would be bad.
01:44:09.580 Yes, that would be bad.
01:44:10.060 But what are they telling everybody you really got to do?
01:44:12.360 Keep your, don't touch your face.
01:44:13.620 Don't touch your face.
01:44:14.760 Stay away from people.
01:44:15.880 CDC yesterday said, you know, keep a distance from people.
01:44:18.540 Three to five feet.
01:44:19.600 Social distancing.
01:44:20.600 Social distancing.
01:44:22.240 That's weird.
01:44:23.000 Have you ever heard of that before?
01:44:24.320 No, but I really like it.
01:44:25.760 Yeah, do you?
01:44:26.320 Yeah, I think it's a great idea.
01:44:27.480 We should do it anyway, whether there's a virus or not.
01:44:29.520 Stay away from me.
01:44:30.200 Well, I don't know anybody.
01:44:31.500 Wait.
01:44:32.480 What?
01:44:32.980 I'm just saying, generally speaking, don't need to be near you.
01:44:35.960 You don't need to be near me either.
01:44:37.440 We don't need to be in close contact.
01:44:39.660 Let's call.
01:44:40.140 What do you, what do you, what is close contact for you?
01:44:42.980 I just want to know.
01:44:45.280 Well, I mean, I'd like a bigger table between us, if that's what you're asking.
01:44:49.000 We're about seven feet apart from each other right now.
01:44:51.300 No, I mean like, I don't like, do you like close talkers?
01:44:53.660 I'm not a big close talker.
01:44:53.980 No, I don't like close talker.
01:44:54.860 I don't like anybody who's right up in my face.
01:44:56.760 Yeah, like there's a certain amount of people that I like being in my personal space.
01:45:01.240 It's limited.
01:45:02.140 Yeah.
01:45:02.460 It's very limited.
01:45:03.260 If you're talking about five feet, that's just about where we are now.
01:45:08.940 We're about six or seven.
01:45:10.160 Six or seven.
01:45:10.820 Yeah.
01:45:11.480 I'm fine with this.
01:45:13.080 That's weird.
01:45:13.900 Do you need to be closer to me than this?
01:45:15.220 No, not on your workspace and not you.
01:45:17.240 But I mean, if we're in the hallway, we're a lot closer than this.
01:45:19.820 When we're talking, walking down the hallway, we're not seven feet apart from each other.
01:45:23.300 It's true.
01:45:23.780 We're more like two or three feet.
01:45:25.280 It would be a little weird to have a private conversation at this distance.
01:45:28.320 Hey, Stu, it just doesn't work.
01:45:32.440 So it's a new space that they want.
01:45:34.920 The worst thing you can do, right?
01:45:36.660 Go to a concert, go with a crowd, go to a movie theater.
01:45:39.520 Not supposed to do any of that.
01:45:40.780 Yeah, they're canceling sporting events, crowds, everything.
01:45:43.440 Here's the London mayor, Mayor Kahn.
01:45:49.160 He was challenged by, well, I'll tell you in a second.
01:45:52.540 He was challenged for his risk for his statement that, quote, there is no risk of catching the deadly coronavirus by packing one of the city's trains, subways or buses.
01:46:05.780 No risk, really?
01:46:07.440 I'm quoting.
01:46:08.340 It's in very it's very important.
01:46:10.540 We don't spread panic or alarm based on misinformation.
01:46:14.800 There is no risk in using the tube or buses or other forms of public transportation.
01:46:21.620 He went on to note that five million people are on the London subways every day and six million on the buses.
01:46:33.960 He said there's no risk of jamming alongside between five hundred and twenty thousand people at a concert.
01:46:43.500 What?
01:46:43.780 Excuse me?
01:46:44.760 That does not seem possible.
01:46:46.100 It's not.
01:46:47.260 What are you talking about?
01:46:49.000 Of course, there's a risk.
01:46:50.040 There's a risk.
01:46:50.840 Why is everybody shutting their companies down and having everybody work at home?
01:46:55.100 Now, certainly there might be over there might be that might be too far a step at this point.
01:47:02.320 In theory, obviously, you know, we're still coming in here.
01:47:04.980 A lot.
01:47:05.240 Most businesses are in certain areas, though.
01:47:07.900 They're not.
01:47:08.540 They're having people work from home.
01:47:09.560 You go on to.
01:47:10.400 I mean, I I mastered the ability to ride the New York subways without touching anything.
01:47:15.780 And it takes work.
01:47:17.620 It's like surfing.
01:47:17.880 Remember?
01:47:18.360 Yeah.
01:47:18.860 Do you remember that?
01:47:20.160 Oh, yeah.
01:47:20.820 Yeah.
01:47:21.180 I mean, I could master all of the doors, everything without touching anything, just using my elbows.
01:47:26.820 And you can do it.
01:47:28.680 It takes work, but you can do it.
01:47:32.040 But I would not get onto a subway today.
01:47:34.320 Would you with this going on?
01:47:36.640 Would I get onto a subway?
01:47:38.960 I mean, I probably would.
01:47:41.320 Really?
01:47:41.900 You know, but I'd walk if I could.
01:47:43.880 I didn't.
01:47:44.240 I wouldn't want to get into a cab or anything else.
01:47:46.360 Well, look, let's be honest about it.
01:47:47.860 The subway is always the last resort, is it not?
01:47:50.320 Yeah, no, but I mean, the only reason I would ever get into a subway anyway is because there
01:47:54.740 was some horrific traffic backup that I needed it.
01:47:58.340 You used to ride it every day.
01:47:59.580 Yeah, I know.
01:48:00.080 And then I stopped doing it.
01:48:02.420 What do you think I live in Texas for?
01:48:04.120 Yeah.
01:48:04.300 I don't have to do things like that.
01:48:05.580 But no, I mean, ideally, I'd like to.
01:48:07.680 The subway is not a pleasant experience.
01:48:09.380 No.
01:48:10.740 But I generally.
01:48:11.600 But I mean, is a cab better with different people getting in and out of it?
01:48:14.420 I got to imagine the answer is no.
01:48:15.360 But you're not in a cab with another, what, 300 people in the same?
01:48:20.680 You're all, you know, scrunched in together.
01:48:23.660 Yeah, I wouldn't get into a cab either.
01:48:25.420 Yeah.
01:48:25.700 But it's better than a subway.
01:48:27.140 How can this guy possibly say when the world is saying, stay home?
01:48:31.420 Yeah.
01:48:31.740 Don't worry.
01:48:32.500 You could get into the crowded subway.
01:48:34.340 It's all good.
01:48:35.600 I wonder what.
01:48:36.120 Because he is, if I remember correctly, a massive liberal, crazy person, basically.
01:48:42.520 Oh, yeah.
01:48:42.900 He was tweeting about Trump visiting.
01:48:44.280 Wasn't he the guy that was like, yeah.
01:48:45.920 Yeah.
01:48:46.100 And it's like, Trump gets beat up for, we went over what he said, which was, I mean, the
01:48:50.700 only thing you might be able to be critical in the slightest about Trump's statement is
01:48:54.940 that, you know, a hunch might not be the best way of phrasing uncertainty about a mortality
01:49:00.820 rate.
01:49:01.380 But he is saying.
01:49:02.560 But he is actually trying to communicate the uncertainty.
01:49:04.940 Exactly right.
01:49:05.340 He's not saying for sure it's going to be 1%, which everyone believes it will be.
01:49:09.760 He's saying the same thing that they said in the New England Journal of Medicine.
01:49:14.100 Same thing, just different words.
01:49:15.860 This guy is saying the opposite of what everybody else is saying.
01:49:19.420 What he's saying is legitimately dangerous, right?
01:49:21.820 Like, you know, that there's no risk.
01:49:23.020 Well, there is a risk.
01:49:24.300 You should do everything you can to protect yourself and to take basic steps.
01:49:28.620 You can't be perfect.
01:49:29.740 You can't see, you know, you can't spot the virus walking down the street and dodge it.
01:49:33.220 But you can wash your hands and you can do the basics.
01:49:35.640 And staying out of an area where what is enclosed that thousands of people go shuttle themselves
01:49:42.880 in and out of, or millions actually in this case, shuttle themselves in and out of, I think
01:49:46.760 it's a totally safe thing to try to avoid that if possible.
01:49:48.960 By the way, you know who the common sense person was in this conversation?
01:49:52.020 The one who's like, excuse me, Piers Morgan.
01:49:55.580 Wow.
01:49:55.940 I mean, that's how much you can, that's how much the world has changed.
01:49:59.920 Is there a portal between here and England where like Piers Morgan, when he crosses to
01:50:06.120 this side of the ocean, turns into the biggest idiot in the world and then he crosses back
01:50:10.080 and he becomes smart again?
01:50:11.440 Is that possible?
01:50:12.780 Right?
01:50:13.040 Do you remember how stupid he was when he was on CNN?
01:50:16.140 Well, it's because I think over there he's talking about his country.
01:50:19.620 Over here he's like, you know, this constitution, like, dude, you don't even understand it.
01:50:23.560 No, he had no idea what he was talking about.
01:50:24.620 He's coming from a country where they're banning knives, butter knives.
01:50:28.960 I mean, stop.
01:50:30.000 The other thing that's interesting about Piers is he seems to have a personal relationship
01:50:33.620 with Trump.
01:50:35.140 And I don't know if that, if that flavors his coverage.
01:50:37.840 Cause if I can't imagine, cause they were on a celebrity, a celebrity apprentice.
01:50:41.880 They've had a long relationship.
01:50:43.360 I can't imagine he would be as positive towards Trump if he did not have that relationship.
01:50:51.260 But he does.
01:50:52.180 He's seen a lot of things that were very positive towards Trump.
01:50:54.760 It's like, you don't hear a lot of that in the media.
01:50:56.640 And Morgan, if he was still at that, that Piers Morgan from CNN, he'd be doing everything
01:51:01.100 that Chris Cuomo is doing and Don Lemon and all the other people that are there.
01:51:05.040 I mean, he was the worst offender back in the day, by the way, a 62 year old man in Spain,
01:51:11.340 the first Corona virus patient to believe to have made a full recovery after being treated
01:51:17.460 with an HIV drug.
01:51:19.600 Oh yeah.
01:51:20.420 They're trying these different drugs.
01:51:22.160 They thought that this Corona virus had some things in common with HIV and could be beaten
01:51:26.400 by some of the HIV drugs.
01:51:27.760 This is the first guy to make a full recovery after being treated with his HIV drugs.
01:51:33.280 So that is really good news.
01:51:34.780 That just happened.
01:51:35.800 And China is also testing a version of this as well in their country.
01:51:40.180 It's called a bullet.
01:51:44.100 And they say they just inject one right into your head.
01:51:47.940 Oh, wow.
01:51:48.560 How does it work?
01:51:49.860 The bullet kills all viruses, all viruses.
01:51:54.780 Really?
01:51:55.020 Yeah.
01:51:55.340 It works, I guess, at a cellular level at some point, but it's over.
01:51:59.360 Really?
01:52:00.020 Yeah.
01:52:00.700 Is this the thing I was reading about that?
01:52:01.840 No more suffering.
01:52:02.960 The only downside is occasionally some of the virus splatters up against the wall.
01:52:06.900 Yeah.
01:52:07.200 There's some bleeding issues that they're still working on, but they'll get that down.
01:52:11.420 China will get that down.
01:52:13.340 Yes, they will.
01:52:14.080 Yes, they will.
01:52:14.960 Yeah.
01:52:15.140 It's amazing, too, that this does not get called out for what it is, which is a global pandemic
01:52:21.620 that was caused by communism, which is also, by the way, a global pandemic.
01:52:26.340 Communism kills a lot more people than the coronavirus.
01:52:29.160 That's for sure.
01:52:29.760 Yeah.
01:52:30.100 But, I mean, they seem to be completely free of blame here from unleashing this on the world.
01:52:38.220 Everyone's like, ah, you know, they made a little mistake by hiding this for a few weeks
01:52:44.420 when they knew about it and not letting their doctors actually communicate the medical information
01:52:48.340 they found.
01:52:48.920 Yeah, it's completely forgotten.
01:52:50.060 Yeah.
01:52:50.360 I mean, it is very similar to Chernobyl, except much, much, much worse than Chernobyl was.
01:52:57.260 Chernobyl wasn't that bad.
01:52:59.280 Yeah, 57 people died.
01:53:01.100 Almost all of them were working on site that day.
01:53:03.360 There will be, you know, over time, they do believe there will be an increased cancer
01:53:10.140 occurrence in the close nearby areas that could kill a decent amount of people in the future,
01:53:17.300 but not going to be anywhere near what coronavirus does just this year.
01:53:20.580 No.
01:53:21.200 Just this year.
01:53:22.000 And, you know, that's besides the fact that at that time, they were projecting that to
01:53:26.380 kill maybe 500,000 people immediately.
01:53:29.820 It did not happen at all.
01:53:32.400 And but what what was in common there was a communist government handling something because
01:53:38.840 it embarrassed them and unleashing it on their own people.
01:53:43.360 And in this case, the entire world.
01:53:45.500 So let me just give you one real quick Biden update.
01:53:48.520 Do we have the Biden theme song here?
01:53:50.500 Because he looks like he is trying to find his way to the podium now.
01:53:55.260 Well, this is just like one of his sentences.
01:54:04.820 It has the same roller coaster ride.
01:54:06.920 I just love this so much.
01:54:10.640 Because does this feel like what Joe Biden is going through right now?
01:54:13.640 Yeah.
01:54:13.920 I'm the president.
01:54:15.160 I or I'm going to be the I'm running for not Senate.
01:54:18.500 Right.
01:54:19.180 The issue with Joe Biden is his brain is always buffering.
01:54:22.220 Yeah.
01:54:23.160 It's just a constant.
01:54:24.740 Yeah.
01:54:25.080 Just this.
01:54:26.360 Anyway, the president.
01:54:29.740 The president has been mocking the campaign gaffe, saying there's something going on up
01:54:36.880 there, meaning Joe Biden.
01:54:38.660 And he said I was he was really upset.
01:54:40.900 He was, quote, mentally set for Bernie, a communist.
01:54:44.480 And then we have this crazy thing that happened on Tuesday, which he thought was on Thursday.
01:54:51.340 He introduces his wife as his as his sister and and then says that 150 million people were
01:54:58.200 killed with guns and he's running for the U.S.
01:55:00.460 Senate.
01:55:00.800 He said, I just I think there's something I think there's something damaged.
01:55:06.160 I'm wondering if there's something damaged about Biden.
01:55:11.120 You're hearing this from the left.
01:55:12.540 You're hearing this from the right.
01:55:14.200 You're you're hearing this with your ears.
01:55:16.560 You watch him and it just doesn't feel right.
01:55:19.940 It doesn't look like it's right.
01:55:22.260 And we are talking.
01:55:24.520 But forget the whole thing about how Biden can't get through sentences and he's, you know,
01:55:28.220 groping people all the time.
01:55:29.880 No, he's not groping always.
01:55:31.260 He's smelling their hair.
01:55:32.940 You see, there's some smelling going on.
01:55:34.400 Your hair smells like all that stuff that's a little goofy.
01:55:37.180 I think we all legitimately look at Biden and feel like not good about it.
01:55:42.540 Like, I don't if you feel bad for him in a way.
01:55:44.900 Yeah, because it seems like something's going wrong.
01:55:47.340 But separate from that, the Democrats basically have handed their shot at the presidency, which
01:55:55.120 at this point right now is probably a 45 percent chance to win the election to a guy who quite
01:56:02.220 clearly does not seem competent to run the United States of America.
01:56:06.140 I mean, there's one thing to say, this guy's crazy.
01:56:08.700 No, this guy is probably early in the early parts of dementia.
01:56:15.100 Obviously, we have no idea of the medical diagnosis there, but it does.
01:56:18.400 Look, we've all seen this happen.
01:56:20.280 We all have had relatives where this has happened, where things have slowed down.
01:56:23.540 We seem to be following every pattern.
01:56:25.800 What's crazy is we would not if that was our grand grandparent or our dad, we would say,
01:56:31.780 hey, dad, you got to stop.
01:56:34.240 You got to stop.
01:56:35.040 We would take the keys away from we're thinking as a country of giving him the nuclear keys.
01:56:41.000 We're telling him, hey, you're fit to drive the country.
01:56:45.800 None of us would feel comfortable if that was our family member with him driving our car,
01:56:51.840 let alone drive the country.
01:56:54.340 If he wins this nomination, his pick of the vice president is going to be the biggest one
01:56:57.980 of all time.
01:56:58.540 It's going to be the most important.
01:56:59.540 It's going to be the most important pick of all time.
01:57:01.440 Yep.
01:57:02.640 All right.
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01:58:47.360 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
01:58:59.560 This is the Glenn Beck Program.
01:59:03.800 Welcome to the show.
01:59:06.180 It is Friday, which is great.
01:59:10.040 Have you anything planned for the weekend still?
01:59:12.140 It's going to be mourning the loss of Elizabeth Warren's campaign.
01:59:15.240 Oh, my gosh.
01:59:15.760 I'm so depressed.
01:59:16.820 I had to take down my Elizabeth Warren for President Tree.
01:59:19.080 You did?
01:59:19.580 Yeah, I had it all decorated, ready to go.
01:59:21.860 Now, I know I didn't want her to be president because she's a woman, and I can't, I would
01:59:25.960 not want a woman to be president.
01:59:28.040 That's not right.
01:59:28.740 Excuse the expression, but it is 2020.
01:59:31.080 That's why I had the vagina tree.
01:59:33.280 Oh, you did?
01:59:33.840 Yeah.
01:59:34.180 Oh, wow.
01:59:34.740 Yeah.
01:59:35.240 I was amazed by how all the think pieces coming out from feminists now.
01:59:38.860 You know, that's the only reason she was a woman.
01:59:41.200 One of them entitled, America Punished Elizabeth Warren for Her Competence.
01:59:45.020 No, America didn't.
01:59:46.120 Can we stop with that?
01:59:46.960 America didn't.
01:59:47.920 Democrats did.
01:59:49.040 If you believe that, it's all Democrats and progressives.
01:59:52.420 Yeah.
01:59:52.780 All the people who are like, you are just such a misogynist.
01:59:56.920 No, I have no problem.
01:59:57.940 I'll vote for Nikki Haley in 2024.
01:59:59.960 Yeah.
02:00:00.300 I'll campaign for Nikki Haley in 2024.
02:00:03.000 No, I won't, because that always means the kiss of death, and she wouldn't win.
02:00:06.040 I will do whatever I can to help her by not endorsing her or not helping.
02:00:11.380 It wasn't us that voted in your primary and voted all the women out.
02:00:15.060 It wasn't us that voted in your primaries and got rid of all the people of color, and
02:00:18.800 it's not us who's ignoring the only female person of color left in the race, Tulsi Gabbard.
02:00:23.620 That's not us.
02:00:24.700 That's you.
02:00:25.720 You're doing that.
02:00:26.680 I love this.
02:00:27.260 Not us.
02:00:27.720 I love this.
02:00:29.140 They're the ones with the problem.
02:00:31.380 They're the ones who always notice it.
02:00:34.080 I mean, Martin Luther King was right.
02:00:35.980 Don't judge me by that.
02:00:37.480 I mean, you don't even notice it.
02:00:39.940 They do.
02:00:40.820 That's all they seem to notice.
02:00:43.640 How about we just, you know, content of character, their ideas, you know, they're not sending
02:00:48.760 their son over to make millions off of our back and in bad countries of corruption.
02:00:54.060 I mean, things like that, you know.