THE BIG MIG SHOW
DECEMBER 13, 2024
EPISODE 439– 7PM
Jillian Michaels is Committed to helping people be the best versions of themselves and live their happiest and healthiest lives, Jillian Michaels has dominated the health and wellness space globally across every realm of media—apps, podcasting, streaming, television, print, publishing, and social media—amassing a collective community of over 100 million strong.
The word "unapologetic" is also a fitting theme for Jillian Michaels. She is known for her candid, straightforward approach to health, fitness, and personal development
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SUPPORT US:
00:00:00
All men are. Created equal that they are
00:00:02
endowed by their Creator. With certain unalienable rights
00:00:08
by. Liberty.
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If liberty means anything at all, it means right to tell
00:00:17
people what they do not want to hear.
00:00:32
Make America great again. Welcome back to the big big
00:00:56
show. I'm your host Lance Miliaccio
00:00:58
with my Co host George Ballantine.
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Rise and grind doing what we do because you know on this show
00:01:02
it's tip of the spirit of liberty means anything at all.
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It means the right to tell people what they do not want to
00:01:07
hear. And let's face it, you need the
00:01:09
facts, the evidence to sauce on this show.
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We always try to do the research for you so you don't have to.
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This isn't mainstream media. So if you don't like the truth,
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you need to head out right now because this is the wrong place
00:01:19
to be. The guests we bring on always,
00:01:22
in my opinion, are experts in their field.
00:01:24
They're always the kind of people that, you know, you can
00:01:26
trust what they have to say because they've lived their life
00:01:28
that way, because they're trying to make a difference.
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You know, we're always trying to educate and unify the country
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one episode at a time. George Ballantine, my brother
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from another mother. What's going on there?
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Nothing. I'm excited to have this guest
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on because she's a no nonsense woman.
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She tells it straight how it is. That's the way I like it because
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I, I don't like the sugarcoat stuff either.
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And you know, if you can't handle it, it's all out.
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That's the way we work, you know.
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Yeah, you know, we always try to be unapologetic and people have
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described her that way. But before we fire that up,
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let's just give a shout out to our sponsor really quick,
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They were out of the gold ones again.
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I know George keeps working the audience for a gold one for
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Christmas. I don't know if he's going to
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get one or not. We'll have to see if he's been
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good or not. I don't think he's been good
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for the holidays for your loved ones.
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Yep, so. Break me off a piece of that
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prepper bar. You know, man, I'm just telling
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you what he he breaks out that Jingle and I get uneasy each
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time. All I can think is copyright
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infringement. I told you, stop saying that,
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all right? What's wrong with you?
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But you just said, I don't know if I'm a good, what'd you say, a
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good guy bad or something? I didn't know if you were good
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in that. I don't know if you really.
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Honestly if knowing what I know about you, I'm not sure.
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You just shouldn't get coal in your stocking buddy.
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Listen, I'm one of those good, bad boys.
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Is that is that? Is that self-proclaimed or is
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that what the? Is that what the public thinks?
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What the public thinks, but it's.
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All right, listen, I don't want to leave her backstage because
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she is so crazy busy. I can't even tell you what.
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The dialogue we had going to text message chats, We kept
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trying to figure it out. I don't know if it was my
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mistake. Hers, I kept getting times and
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dates. We juggled them.
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Jillian Michaels, unapologetic motivational life influencer.
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I've actually paid attention to her for a long time.
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My wife's a big fan because, you know, she's in the fitness
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industry. Also, I love the way she does
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things. So let's bring her in.
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And I'm going to run her bio while she's on here simply
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because I don't want to leave her backstage.
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She's much more attractive than either George or I are.
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So yeah, we'd rather have you look at her than us.
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She's up for yourself. Bro, talk about attractive for
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yourself. All right, I'm up there in the
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fields. Hold on.
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Welcome to the big, big show, Julian Michaels.
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Hey guys. How are you?
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I think I'm pretty good looking. Like you, I fall in that
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category. Lance, not so much.
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Much. Better looking.
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You got beautiful hair chilling. Beautiful.
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Well, you guys both beautiful hair.
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We know that I am follicularly challenged at this point.
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Listen, so let me just Jillian, I just want to do your bio here
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real quick. I'm not going to do the whole
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thing because it goes on and on because you are so accomplished.
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But you're committed to helping people to the best versions of
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themselves and live their happiest and healthiest lives.
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You've dominated the health and Wellness space for forever, I
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feel like, and that's globally across every realm of media,
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apps, podcasting, streaming, television, print, publishing,
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social media. You've amassed a collective
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community of 100 million strong. You've got a podcast that's
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already won awards, keeping it Real Conversations with Jillian
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Michaels. It's produced by Bill Maher and
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Club Random Studios. You've earned critical acclaim
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as an You've Got 1 Apple Award, I think some others.
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With over 5 monthly 1 views on YouTube, you reach a
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massive audience. You've authored 9 books, which
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I'm blown away with. I didn't even know that about
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you. Eight of which have become New
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York Times bestsellers. You've wrote op ads for all
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kinds of publications including Newsweek, Health, Shape, and I
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think he did some for Shape. I kind of remember my wife
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showing me an article you did, I think a while ago, unapologetic.
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I think it's a fitting theme for you.
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You're known for being candid, straightforward.
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You're always really direct when it comes to your approach on
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health, fitness and personal development.
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And you and I love that you embrace tough love and
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unfiltered honesty because you're in the right place.
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Because that's what our show is all about.
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We just lay it in the line. There's no bullshit here.
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We'd rather hear it exactly the way it is.
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And a lot of times we do get feedback, you know, whether it's
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a a, a death threat or something else, because we're over the
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target. Well, we do a lot of stuff where
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we expose the truth. You know, I asked and I told you
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this backstage. I asked Chad GBT to describe you
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in three words. No, and here's the three.
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This is. Well, listen, I gotta tell you,
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I'm not sure what. I never have asked it about
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myself 'cause I'm afraid what the three words would be for me.
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But empowering because you motivate individuals to take
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change of their lives, health and fitness with confidence and
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termination. Unapologetic because you're
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bold, no nonsense approach to Wellness and life.
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Reflects your authenticity and fearless honesty and
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transformational because your work is rooted in driving
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meaningful change, whether it's physical, mental, or emotional,
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inspiring people to achieve lasting improvements.
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Now I gotta ask, how do you feel the term?
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You feel like bad GBT got it right?
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Bad ass woman is another way of saying it.
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I like I like bad ass woman. I I mean, I wouldn't have minded
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like genius supermodel, you know, but but I'll take it.
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These are these are all definitely good adjectives to to
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would be described as so I will I will take all of these
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cheerful contributions. Definitely yes to my bio, my
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whatever. Well, you're slammed.
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And I got to give this to the audience because here's
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something you know, a lot of people know you from your
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fitness and your shows and all your time on TV and all the
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interviews you've done, of course, are The Biggest Loser
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and so many others. And I don't know, let me ask you
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this first before I even say the next thing I'm going to say.
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What got you did. Were you always a health and
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fitness person? Were you always when you were
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young? Were you always into fitness?
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Or did this come in a later time in your life?
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Or how did it start? Give them kind.
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Of a break, I'll try to put it. I'll try to make this quick
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because it's a bit a bit redundant so forgive me but I
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was an overweight kid and I got into martial arts around 12
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years old. It took me probably about five
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years to actually lose the weight and redefine myself image
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with the help of my martial arts instructor.
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I was training for my black belt at 17 and people at the gym
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would see me and think I was a personal trainer.
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And at that time I was delivering pizzas for like 5
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bucks an hour, which with inflation I guess is probably
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$15.00 an hour today. And the Long story short is I
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fell into fitness training at that point because I had
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graduated high school early. Not because I was a genius, just
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because my birthday fell on one of those weird dates.
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And I did that quite happily for a really long time till I was
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about 25. And at 25, I started dating
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somebody in the entertainment industry and I got convinced and
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I lived in Los Angeles. So I got convinced to get into
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the entertainment industry. I had never made less money and
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never been more unhappy. And to make a very Long story
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short, I ended up leaving the entertainment industry at 28.
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But I took with me a lot of connections and a lot of the
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lessons I learned about business and branding.
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I ended up opening my own sports medicine facility by the time I
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was 30 and then ended up on The Biggest Loser by the time I was
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31. You know, hold on, Lance, I just
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want, you know, you talked about being genius.
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Most most most aquariums are very intellectual and smart
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people that it's the best. Do you buy that?
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I want to buy that, but I buy. It because I'm Aquarius.
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Oh Gee. Come on.
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I I did not know that till he just threw that out.
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I was unaware of it. I'm an Aries and I actually do
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feel like sometimes it's accurate because I'm.
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Probably an Aries. Oh shit.
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See, I'll probably click with her because Aries.
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I do not want to make. You mad Aries don't butt heads.
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Aries usually get along. You know, it's funny when you
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meet an Aries. Years ago I met Mariah Carey and
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she's an Aries. A lot of people don't know that
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and she's got kind of a real streety, kind of like aggressive
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vibe. She and I got along really well,
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but but it's just interesting that Aries but it isn't like
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other zodiacs. I don't get along with a lot of
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other zodiacs. Really passive zodiacs I don't
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get along with. We never butt heads though.
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But I mean, I'll tell you my wife is an Italian Aries and
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Jesus. Dude, yeah.
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Do not cross that woman. I'm like, you are lucky you are
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so good looking because I swear to God just.
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You know, Italian women are definitely, they're definitely
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strong opinionated, but they're great family people.
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I mean, I obviously grew up in Fordham Rd. in the Bronx, so
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pretty much the majority of my friends were, you know, Italian,
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Jewish or Puerto Rican, because that's what the neighborhoods
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were like when I was a young person.
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But yeah, they're, well, all Italians.
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I mean, it's funny because, you know, Roger Stone's Italian and
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we're friends with Roger. We're always chopping each
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other. Is she smart?
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Alecky. Oh my God, dude, she's oh, I
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love her already. Listen from Jersey.
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From Jersey, where? And she's in Aries and my
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business partner, Puerto Rican and Italian and from New Jersey,
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I'm serving. I'm from New Jersey, North New
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Jersey. Where they from where in?
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Jersey, OK, She's from Saddle River.
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That's like 10 minutes from my house.
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Go ahead. OK.
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And my business partner is from Englewood.
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That's another like 10 minutes the other direction going east,
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yeah. They're both.
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Nuts. Yeah, I live in Bergen County,
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so. Yeah, but you know, it's, it's
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great when you find somebody that you know, I think, I think
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they're, they're, I think Italians are always passionate
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about what they do. They really believe in it.
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They also, I saw she was a fashion designer.
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That doesn't really surprise me because there's so many great
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fashion designers when it comes to the Italians.
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If you spend, I'm sure you've spent time in Italy and you know
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what it's like there and how incredible.
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It's probably 1 for me. It's not because of MyHeritage,
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because I'm Sicilian, but it's not because of MyHeritage.
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I like Italy because I love the people, the history and you
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know, the food's incredible. The, you know, the design is
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incredible. There's just so many things that
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are positive about it. I'm going, I've travelled a lot.
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It's probably regardless of MyHeritage.
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It's one of my favorite spots to go.
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We're buying a house over there for a dollar, Lance, you know
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that, right? Remember.
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Yeah, he's George has been analyzing these houses that you
00:12:10
have to go remodel where you can buy them for a dollar in a
00:12:12
smaller village over. That.
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Area you buy to buy them for a dollar right, but you have to
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give it like a 5000 surety bond and you have and you have to at
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least put 20 to 25 upgrades within 2.
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Months you have to promise to remodel the home.
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Within two months of buying, you have to put like 2025 thousand,
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yes, yeah. Get out.
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You swear to God. It's.
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Interesting. You know, dude, it's, it's like
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there's got to be something like maybe the construction company
00:12:43
is actually mafia, No. No.
00:12:46
Because their populations have dropped and they want people to,
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you know, move there, have residences there, have a life
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there off and on. They'll they'll take somebody,
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they'll travel, they'll take a digital traveller or somebody
00:12:58
like that. But they want, they want their
00:12:59
towns to come back. And the problem is that the
00:13:01
populations have decreased and the population in Italy that
00:13:05
have increased, we know is the same as here.
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It's the illegal immigration that they don't really want
00:13:10
because it's destroying the heritage of Italy.
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There's quite a few towns where you can buy a house for a dollar
00:13:16
$100 but you have to guarantee to remodel it.
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Just don't buy everything up, Julian, All right?
00:13:20
Leave something for me. You.
00:13:24
Can you can check it? Well, you know, with your wife's
00:13:27
heritage, depending on her history, you can get, you can
00:13:28
get a, you know, you can get a residency passport, you get to
00:13:31
her citizenship. We've been trying her, her
00:13:34
actual, so her mom's side of the family is Calabrian and her dad
00:13:39
said Maria Sicilian. And she's been trying to figure
00:13:43
out like, I guess if they gave up citizenship when they came
00:13:45
into the country and it's a whole thing saying that she's,
00:13:49
she's been looking into you, I told.
00:13:51
Her I'm going to e-mail you the link where you buy the if you
00:13:53
buy the house and she probably get citizenship, don't.
00:13:56
Forget to send. That to me, yeah, it's
00:13:58
interesting stuff. That's all right.
00:14:01
So let me dig in here a little bit for the audience.
00:14:02
I just want to share that with we all.
00:14:04
You got a couple of people there.
00:14:06
You start talking about Italians on this show.
00:14:08
We sometimes go down a deep vein, total rabbit hole in the
00:14:11
wrong direction. I don't know if it's the wrong
00:14:13
direction. I enjoy doing it, but you, you
00:14:15
really surprised me with this when I was reading your bio.
00:14:18
I had never realized you had any history in martial arts.
00:14:21
You know, there's a lot of discipline in that.
00:14:23
Do you believe that that upbringing in martial arts at
00:14:26
such an early ages, it kind of gave you the discipline you
00:14:29
needed for Hollywood and beyond? Oh, without question.
00:14:33
I would just say success in general for two key reasons.
00:14:38
The 1st is that it redefines yourself image.
00:14:42
You know, you go from, or I went from the fat kid, the loser kid,
00:14:47
the kid that was never picked kid, the kid that had no friends
00:14:50
kid. And you have a story you create
00:14:55
about who you are and what you're capable of.
00:14:58
And it really shatters that. And it opens up an Infinity of
00:15:01
possibility with regard to who you really are and what you're
00:15:05
really capable of because you're forced to achieve things.
00:15:08
It's impossible to believe in a reality you haven't experienced.
00:15:12
But when you're forced to achieve different things, well,
00:15:14
now you've experienced a reality where you ran a mile, you did a
00:15:20
three hour red valve test or whatever it might be.
00:15:22
But nevertheless, it rebuilds your belief in your ability and
00:15:26
yourself image. And then the second part is that
00:15:30
it, it helps with resilience. And I can simply tell you a
00:15:35
story and I'll try to be quick about it, but I was probably 13
00:15:41
1/2 blue belt and we only it went white, yellow, 3 Blues, 3
00:15:46
greens, 3 Reds and a black, no brown no.
00:15:48
So I think I was like a first degree blue belt and it was
00:15:52
Fight Night on Wednesdays and my karate teacher happened to be
00:15:56
beating the shit out of me that night and he kicked.
00:15:59
So he had a studio that he made out of his garage.
00:16:02
So it was like wood paneling. It wasn't like he kicked me
00:16:04
through steel. But he kicks me in the stomach
00:16:06
so hard I fly through the wall. And I'm sitting inside the wall
00:16:12
in the corner of the studio and I'm crying because I'm like, you
00:16:16
can't kick me like I'm a kid. He can't kick me this hard.
00:16:19
I can't breathe, Knock the wind out of me.
00:16:21
And he kicks me again as I'm inside the wall.
00:16:25
And he goes, I swear to God, get up and get out of that corner or
00:16:30
I will break every rib in your body.
00:16:34
And I got the fuck out of that corner, man like this.
00:16:41
And you know, he sent me into his house and another student
00:16:45
came in. He was older than me and calmed
00:16:47
me down. I was hysterical.
00:16:48
But the long and the short of it that I took away was life is not
00:16:52
going to stop kicking you. So you can sit there and you can
00:16:55
be a victim and it's not fair and you can cry about it, but
00:16:59
all that's going to happen is things are going to get worse.
00:17:02
So you can either either deal with the reality of what life is
00:17:07
and then react accordingly or not it.
00:17:11
It's a choice that he really didn't give me.
00:17:14
You know, it's like, well, you can move or you could get hurt.
00:17:18
Nevertheless, I've been fighting my way out of that corner ever
00:17:22
since. And that's what I when I say it,
00:17:25
it builds resilience and belief in your abilities.
00:17:30
And that is, yeah, I, that's a lesson that I, I carry with me
00:17:34
everyday. You know, it's funny, I, I, and
00:17:37
I agree with that lesson. I was a fat little kid before I
00:17:40
got into boxing. I was a fat, you know, too, too
00:17:42
much Italian food, too much bread, too many carbohydrates.
00:17:45
But then I got a book, which was crazy.
00:17:47
It was Arnold Schwarzenegger, the education of a bodybuilder.
00:17:51
And I started exercising. And then I was fortunate enough
00:17:54
that I grew, I had my godfather was a copo for the Gambino crime
00:17:58
family. And he, I got to grow up around
00:18:01
those guys, which really I think it, it made me the person I am.
00:18:06
He had a great sense of humor, unbelievably funny guy.
00:18:08
It's not the the stuff that you see in the movies.
00:18:10
I'm not saying that things weren't going on, but I probably
00:18:13
didn't see that because I was young.
00:18:14
I hung around. They had some money laundering
00:18:16
operations. So I was in and out of those
00:18:18
businesses just because he was my godfather.
00:18:19
Of course I was intrigued by the whole thing.
00:18:21
But what was interesting is I started boxing and that's
00:18:24
between that and the working out.
00:18:25
I did silver gloves, took a second at silver Gloves and I
00:18:28
took a, a first in a golden Gloves in New York when I was so
00:18:32
the 11 and 12 year olds. And then I started doing AKA.
00:18:34
But what's interesting that I agree with you is that some of
00:18:37
the, the most brutal, toughest punches or kicks I ever took
00:18:40
were from my instructors or throws.
00:18:43
I remember getting thrown by one of the guys that won the
00:18:46
Olympic. He was the Olympic heavyweight
00:18:47
at the time and he threw me across that tatami Matt, a judo
00:18:51
throw that it took me about. I think it took me about four
00:18:54
months of Pilates and other adjustments to recover because I
00:18:58
bounced across that tatami Matt and I always swore that I'd
00:19:01
never had it happen again. His name was Leo.
00:19:04
Really what really big, really powerful guy, shorter, only
00:19:07
about 5 foot 10, but he was like, he was like this wide.
00:19:09
So he just had a lot of leverage.
00:19:11
You can get underneath you and really toss you very easily.
00:19:13
And of course, being taller was a disadvantage when you're
00:19:16
sweating a guy at the same weight because I was
00:19:17
heavyweight. But the point is, I agree with
00:19:20
you. I think that some of, and we
00:19:22
don't see that now with our kids.
00:19:23
They're so, they're so babied and they're so.
00:19:27
So true. Yeah, yeah.
00:19:30
It's all about safe spaces and, you know, pronouns and a bunch
00:19:33
of other garbage that I don't agree with.
00:19:35
And I think it's really frightening what that's doing to
00:19:38
our, you know, population across the country.
00:19:41
I think these kids, what their expectations are and what they
00:19:45
think they can do and get away with and the way they can
00:19:47
behave. Honestly, you probably got as
00:19:50
hit as hard as maybe you've ever been hit in your life by your
00:19:52
instructor. And it seems like that's how it
00:19:54
is. But I think it prepares you so
00:19:56
much for everything else. Because when I've never been
00:19:59
afraid of anything, maybe to my own fault, even when I was in
00:20:02
live combat situations, I never had that fear thing.
00:20:05
Maybe, maybe it was stupid that I didn't have any fear.
00:20:08
It isn't that my adrenaline wasn't going, but I never really
00:20:10
was afraid of any situation because I think I trained so
00:20:13
much in the beginning and even now I don't find myself afraid
00:20:15
when it comes to dealing with any situation.
00:20:17
But I I can't imagine. If you didn't have that, what
00:20:21
your life might have been, especially dealing with
00:20:22
Hollywood because we are seeing some horrendous things come out
00:20:25
of Hollywood now. P Diddy and others you know.
00:20:31
The story about P Diddy. Yeah, throw that down, would
00:20:34
you? Because we're we're all about
00:20:35
Diddy's stories right now. Because now Jay-Z.
00:20:38
Did you see Jay-Z is just a puzzle 13 year old civil suit.
00:20:42
I mean, I know it's an allegation, but what the?
00:20:45
I don't know man. I, I really hope not with these
00:20:49
things. I like to reserve judgement
00:20:53
obviously until more comes out and it it, it ultimately will
00:20:58
reveal itself. But I find that when there's
00:21:00
numerous reports, that's when I I think there's usually
00:21:05
something. To where there's smoke, there's
00:21:06
fire. Kind of, you know, Kobe Bryant,
00:21:09
it's like you had sex with a girl in a hotel room.
00:21:11
He raped me. Nobody else ever came out about
00:21:15
Kobe Bryant. Nobody.
00:21:17
And it's like. Money grab.
00:21:19
I mean, I met Kobe Bryant. He couldn't have been AI don't
00:21:22
know. No, I yeah, I'm just, I'm with
00:21:25
you. I'm not saying I don't believe
00:21:26
women, but I tend to find that when there are numerous reports
00:21:30
then you're like OK but. As far as Jay-Z, you remember
00:21:33
when Jaguar Wright came out and dropped the bromshell about.
00:21:38
Yeah, the Jaguar writes. She's had a lot of Intel on old
00:21:41
Jay-Z, and she's dropped a lot of it on her interview.
00:21:43
She's now whether or not it's true, it's an allegation.
00:21:44
She claimed there's hundreds of Jay-Z victims that are ready to
00:21:47
speak. Speak against them and Beyoncé
00:21:50
where? Have they been?
00:21:52
You know, don't you? But when you hold on when you're
00:21:56
going through that much power, though, Jillian, if those you
00:21:59
know they they wield a lot of power than that couple and them.
00:22:02
So you know they're already threatening his lawyer and other
00:22:06
people. So when one person comes.
00:22:08
Down to victimize the victim. I just also have been the target
00:22:13
of things that aren't true. And so I find it's really
00:22:17
important because listen, I don't know, I have no idea.
00:22:20
I hope to God it's not true, but I just, I have experienced
00:22:26
things that are legitimate blackmail.
00:22:30
Like I dated some girl when I was 30, I don't know, three, and
00:22:35
she legitimately stole a horse that I had bought.
00:22:40
And Long story short, I was like return this horse, it's Grand
00:22:46
Theft. It was a $25 horse.
00:22:48
And I get a letter from a lawyer saying you know, she wants
00:22:51
$100, she wants the horse. And I beat her and did all kinds
00:22:56
of crazy shit to her. And my business partner at the
00:22:58
time was like, Jill, you have morality clauses, like you're a
00:23:02
brand new talent, Just give it. And I was like, I will not do
00:23:06
it. And I ended up calling her
00:23:09
father. I had met her father over a
00:23:11
holiday. And I basically said, like, I'll
00:23:13
give your daughter the horse. But I swear to God, if she
00:23:15
doesn't go away, I'm going to take this one on the chin and
00:23:17
put her in jail. I'm not giving her a penny.
00:23:19
But if that's the point is you kind of just position, you tend
00:23:24
to think like, OK, I want to wait this one out because I've
00:23:28
had that stuff happen with like frivolous lawsuits and all kinds
00:23:33
of shit in the blackmail attempts.
00:23:35
And I'm going to say you did this if you don't give me money.
00:23:38
And that's where, you know, I just want to I wait this stuff
00:23:41
out. I think because whenever they
00:23:42
can leverage your reputation, it's a pain point.
00:23:46
And that's where I did. I just want to I just want to
00:23:49
see. I hope to God it's not true.
00:23:51
But the ditty story is years ago, Mark Wahlberg reached out
00:23:59
because he had invested in a company called Aqua Hydrate.
00:24:02
So it was this electrolyte alkaline water.
00:24:05
And he was in the company with Ron Burkle and Diddy, right?
00:24:11
And my bit, I was like, you know, I do strategically invest
00:24:14
in things all the time. But I was like, you know, I mean
00:24:18
water, like there's a lot of water.
00:24:20
I don't think this is, I don't like alkaline water gives a
00:24:23
shit. So my business partner was like,
00:24:26
it's a small investment. And it was, it was like 100
00:24:29
grand or something we put into the company and they made me
00:24:32
like chief Wellness officer or something.
00:24:34
And he said it's a small investment.
00:24:37
But to have you on a billboard with Mark and Sean will be
00:24:42
really great for. The right.
00:24:44
Yeah, of course. Day, dude, there are still
00:24:49
posters and like, truck stops in Arkansas, like me, Mark and
00:24:55
Sean. I'm like, God damn it, get that
00:24:58
poster down. It's just, I mean, yeah, the
00:25:03
irony. And now my business partner's
00:25:04
name is Giancarlo, and I call him Gee.
00:25:06
I'm like, hey, Gee, how great is it for the brand?
00:25:13
I love it. Yeah.
00:25:15
Great brand choice you did for us there.
00:25:16
That's really working out Well, Yeah, boy, it didn't.
00:25:19
Work out. I never got invited to those
00:25:21
parties either. I don't know if I should be like
00:25:23
thrilled or insulted. I I don't know.
00:25:27
Well, you probably got off light because the, the stories that
00:25:30
are coming out are pretty ugly and I, you know, the story goes
00:25:33
that those 1000 bottles of baby oil were laced with GHB.
00:25:37
And if and if that turns out to be true, my guess is that in
00:25:42
that in itself would be a racketeering Rico, concurrent
00:25:45
criminal enterprise, you know, life sentence.
00:25:48
So I don't know if it's true. We talked to a lot of, you know,
00:25:52
current FBI, ex FBI because so we have George and I are lucky.
00:25:55
We have a lot of connections and intelligence and otherwise we
00:25:58
get a pretty good circle of information.
00:26:00
The stories coming out of that are not good.
00:26:02
There's lots of people, lots of tapes, lots of videos, lots of
00:26:05
photos, lots of. Where are they?
00:26:10
Like I, I was having a conversation with Brett
00:26:12
Weinstein like pre election and it's they they they they, they,
00:26:16
right. So then you're like, OK, well,
00:26:18
who's they? And the FBI and the whoever has
00:26:24
the Epstein tapes. FBI.
00:26:27
FBI. But guys, well then release
00:26:30
them. I I don't understand.
00:26:31
Well, here's the situation you're you're talking.
00:26:33
I, I really don't get it. Like you, no.
00:26:36
I, I and then nobody gets the tapes for.
00:26:38
For people that don't know, but we for example, we're friends
00:26:40
with like Steve friend, Garrett O'boyle, Kyle Seraphin, Steve
00:26:44
Gray, all ex FBI agents. And I can tell you that.
00:26:48
And, and, and you should have, you know, you know, a guy you
00:26:51
would get along with also that you should have on your show
00:26:53
just because he's an amazing interview.
00:26:55
And I call him the Jackie Collins of Washington, DC is
00:26:58
Roger Stone, Rodger Stone. He's Italian, he's a crazy guy
00:27:03
and he's hyper, you know, intelligent.
00:27:05
But let me tell you when it comes to the details.
00:27:07
So I agree with what you're saying.
00:27:09
And and that's how the charter in the organization should work.
00:27:12
But these systems are weaponized.
00:27:14
They've been back pocketing information on political
00:27:17
candidates, government leaders, corporate people for a very long
00:27:21
time that those agencies are not operating as they are supposed
00:27:24
to operate. They're sitting on the Seth Rich
00:27:26
laptop information about Hillary Clinton, Epstein, because I know
00:27:31
for for a for a fact, I know an agent that was on the task force
00:27:34
that for a fact told me that they walked out of the
00:27:37
brownstone in New York. First of all, the the
00:27:42
surveillance equipment and the surveillance software that was
00:27:44
used in all his houses. It was all Israeli built.
00:27:48
The Mossad had supplied it. Yeah.
00:27:52
Yeah. Epstein, this is Epstein we're
00:27:54
talking about. And you asked me where's the
00:27:56
Epstein information? Show Wow.
00:28:00
They're all sitting on that and I I don't think it's any
00:28:02
different. P Diddy was a, was a So let me
00:28:04
finish with Epstein. Epstein, the brownstone, New
00:28:06
York, they walked out of there with hard drives, zip drives,
00:28:09
hard copies, you name it, all kinds of information about all
00:28:13
the people. Because everybody that ever went
00:28:15
to an Epstein residence, whether it was the New Mexico property,
00:28:18
the wall, the Palm Beach property, Lolita Island or the
00:28:22
New York property, they were being taped full time in their
00:28:25
house, the bathroom, in their room, everywhere.
00:28:28
He had he had unlimited amounts of surveillance equipment in all
00:28:30
those places and he used it. He walked out of the Palm Beach
00:28:34
with the same kind of information, out of New Mexico
00:28:36
with the same kind of information.
00:28:38
I'm talking about reams of information that's never come
00:28:40
out to the public. So when they say, you know, why
00:28:43
is Jesslyne Maxwell the only trafficker that's never been
00:28:45
released and why are there no customers or a client list?
00:28:49
It does exist. The FBI has.
00:28:51
Is it? There's no doubt about it.
00:28:52
When it comes to Diddy, it sounds like a lot of that was
00:28:55
triggered by Jamie Foxx. So the reason why they didn't
00:28:59
release the Epstein files and all the information, because you
00:29:01
have so many high-ranking politicians on both sides of the
00:29:05
aisle, musicians and actors that are in those files, one. 100%.
00:29:10
But then guys, why go? Here's my only question, right?
00:29:13
Money and influence blackmail. OK, and that makes sense to me.
00:29:18
However, when I try to get to the bottom of all these kind of
00:29:21
crazy, I don't want to say conspiracy theories because I
00:29:24
realize there's a lot there. But they all, they all came true
00:29:27
to conspiracy theories. And I and I don't disagree with
00:29:31
you, but. But hold on for a second.
00:29:33
You come out and you're like, yeah, there's like craft in the
00:29:36
sky. And we don't know what it is,
00:29:38
but we don't, you know, now we're done.
00:29:40
That's it. Now this is all you can know.
00:29:42
And there's no bodies and there's no proof and there's no
00:29:44
nothing. And yeah, but then what?
00:29:48
I don't get it. Like, why are you leaking out
00:29:50
much information? Like, why are you telling us?
00:29:52
There's tapes And it's scandalous and tons of people
00:29:55
are on it. OK, No tapes, nothing to see
00:29:58
here. Go away.
00:29:58
Like, why not just keep the whole thing quiet?
00:30:01
It's like a very bizarre SIOP. I think the difficult, I'm going
00:30:06
to tell you, I think what happens, Jillian, I think what's
00:30:08
happened is they underestimated alt media, they underestimated
00:30:12
social media, they underestimated that.
00:30:17
And straight up there are FBI agents and police officers that
00:30:21
will sell stuff to the press, certain pieces of information
00:30:25
because they can act like they didn't get it from them.
00:30:27
And so they hide their sources. So that kind of thing does
00:30:29
happen. But I will tell you this having
00:30:32
having been a guy that signed the 16 page non disclosure
00:30:35
agreement for governments, There are lots of things our
00:30:39
governments are doing that the that whether it's that the
00:30:41
American people or other countries don't have any idea.
00:30:44
And it's much more nefarious than anybody realizes.
00:30:46
So when you talk about the FBI, I think, I think we're
00:30:51
underestimating how politicized it is at this time that really
00:30:54
it's an operation. And they really are an operation
00:30:57
of, you know, blackmail and, you know, compromising individuals
00:31:03
because I think when you talk to people that really know, if you
00:31:07
talk to people that have been like, you know, Roger Stone
00:31:09
worked on four different presidential campaigns.
00:31:11
He was, you know, he worked on he was in the White House.
00:31:13
I mean, he was the youngest guy to ever get called in for
00:31:17
Watergate. He was 19 or 20, I think, when
00:31:19
he got called in to be have to testify in Congress of
00:31:22
Watergate. He was working for Richard Nixon
00:31:24
at that time. And he was really a very close
00:31:27
confidant that Richard Nixon. When you start to get the
00:31:29
insiders, the true insiders, the Michael Flynn's and the Rodger
00:31:32
Stones and the Cindy Pals and the Rudy Giuliani's, the people
00:31:36
that really know you, you, you, you, the American public
00:31:39
wouldn't even be prepared for the things that are actually
00:31:41
true. I can tell you that there's no
00:31:44
doubt in my mind based on the source that gave us the
00:31:46
information, George and I, about the FBI, that the information
00:31:49
about Epstein is 100% accurate. Because this isn't a guy.
00:31:53
He's very stoic. The person I'm talking about,
00:31:55
he's a very stoic. He's the kind of guy you would
00:31:58
want to be an FBI agent, but he's not a very, you know,
00:32:02
jovial. He's just really direct.
00:32:04
What I would tell you is I wouldn't be surprised that part
00:32:07
of what our government has always done is they've worked
00:32:09
with these organizations. So I believe that Epstein was
00:32:11
supplying an Intel to both the Mossad and our own government.
00:32:15
He was compromising individuals intentionally.
00:32:18
His whole operation, if you look at it, he never had really
00:32:21
anything that I would consider a successful business.
00:32:24
His model was based on insider information, just like what he
00:32:27
did to the Victoria's Secret, you know, ownership.
00:32:30
He went in there, he drained the company, he didn't add any
00:32:33
value. He really ruined that company
00:32:34
from the inside out. Let's face it, the Victoria's
00:32:37
Secret runway shows went from being amazing.
00:32:39
He comes in and the whole thing starts to fall apart because
00:32:41
they don't have enough money for this, enough money for that.
00:32:43
My point is, I believe that what he did was compromise and, and,
00:32:49
and work that information for both the Israeli government and
00:32:52
for the US government. So I think what we're looking at
00:32:55
is that and apologize for that. That's my 5 little rescue doors.
00:32:58
My wife just got home and they heard her come in.
00:33:01
I'm here and I've I. Yeah, there's a little barking
00:33:03
in the background. We, we collect them like the
00:33:05
Franklin Mint. Every time I turn around,
00:33:06
there's another dog and my wife needs the whole fucking set.
00:33:10
That's how it is. So.
00:33:12
So here's the deal. They, they all those operations
00:33:16
operate. So listen, let's do this.
00:33:17
Let's take a break. When we come back, we'll come
00:33:19
right back into this conversation.
00:33:20
Jillian Michaels, Unapologetic and of course, The Big Mig Show,
00:33:24
Lance Maniacho and George Fountain.
00:33:25
We'll be right back. Big MIG Mafia subscribers do not
00:33:28
go anywhere. You know George will come and
00:33:29
look for you. You don't want that.
00:33:31
Dude, I'm going to send her. She's the one with the black
00:33:33
belt and all the karate, you know.
00:33:34
Exactly. Jillian Michaels will come look
00:33:36
for you. That's even worse.
00:33:37
It's my new. Bounty right there she can take.
00:33:39
A punch. She can take a punch.
00:33:41
She's ready. That's aquarium stick together.
00:33:44
All right. We'll be right back.
00:33:46
If. We lose freedom here.
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00:35:51
They would run up to the bamboo fence and they would be shooting
00:35:54
between the bamboo at the buildings, you know, just
00:35:57
shooting inside. The Wanted man is Joseph Kony,
00:36:01
charged with abducting huge numbers of children, forcing
00:36:04
them to kill and mutilate innocent victims.
00:36:08
Somebody had to pay the price. Sam did that.
00:36:11
Sam Childers never stopped because the bad things never
00:36:14
stop. There is only.
00:36:15
One Sam Childer. There is no one else like him in
00:36:19
the world. Then I said to him, I said,
00:36:21
would you go now to get Kony in the Congo?
00:36:24
He says without a doubt in a second.
00:36:26
Now it's the DRC. Tell us what's happening to
00:36:28
children in the DRC. Do you have ISIS there?
00:36:31
You have Islamic State and you have ADF?
00:36:34
Hey, Sandy, Joseph Kony is still alive.
00:36:36
He's in the Congo. And now God has me in the Congo,
00:36:39
you know, So hopefully we'll meet up one day.
00:36:43
But maybe I can lead him to the Lord or send him there.
00:36:47
One or the other, huh all? Right.
00:37:06
Welcome back to the Big, Big Show here with your host George
00:37:09
Bounty, Lance Migliacho and our guest, nutritionalist bad ass
00:37:14
woman, Julian Michaels. 1st, I'm going to take a shout out to our
00:37:18
sponsor, Genesis Gold Group. All right, you all seen the
00:37:21
beginning of this year has come with so many uncertainties.
00:37:23
Will red hot inflation continue? The feds, they keep printing
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accounts. All right, now we're going back.
00:38:47
All right, so we left off. We were talking about Epstein,
00:38:49
you know, the dirtbag that he is.
00:38:52
We got a little off track, but let's just make a statement so
00:38:54
everybody knows reason why this stuff doesn't come out is
00:38:57
because there's too many politicians on both sides,
00:39:01
musicians, actors, actresses that are involved probably on
00:39:04
those tapes. I went to Lolita Island and
00:39:06
that's why this information is still being hid from us.
00:39:09
But there you it is what it is, and let's hope our man Cash
00:39:13
Patel released the info like he said he would, you know, and
00:39:17
expose him. Yeah, it's frightening, he said.
00:39:20
He's going to release about some.
00:39:21
Yeah. The look on Jillian's face as we
00:39:23
were talking about some stuff backstage that you guys have
00:39:25
heard some of it on the show. You know, anybody that thinks
00:39:30
our government is, what is the narrative that's promoted?
00:39:33
It is not. It's much more complicated than
00:39:36
that. I think we're dealing with the
00:39:37
UNI party in DC. My hope is that things are going
00:39:40
to change, and I'm sure that is yours also.
00:39:43
Jillian, I've seen you. Post yeah I just can't believe
00:39:47
that the things that. Well.
00:39:50
You mean I I mean you're just it's kind of, but I'm
00:39:53
experiencing it. The difference is not only do I
00:39:56
hear it, consequently I experience it.
00:40:00
I was I was saying that I had done an episode on the role that
00:40:03
the West played in the Russia Ukraine war and YouTube and
00:40:08
Mehta were like, Nope, no, didn't deliver notifications for
00:40:12
the show. Like completely algorithm.
00:40:15
No way. I saw Dave Smith but at a
00:40:17
similar show he's got pulled off of YouTube.
00:40:19
Tube completely delisted and censored and you're just
00:40:24
thinking who in the world are these people to decide what we
00:40:29
are allowed to know and what we're not?
00:40:33
It's crazy. It's informational warfare.
00:40:36
But if you look at like you're talking about like why the
00:40:38
government hides like the Epstein files or Diddy tapes and
00:40:42
all that stuff is equated to why do they allow all these harmful
00:40:47
chemicals in our food that is hurting us?
00:40:48
We're in other countries, you know.
00:40:50
That I can answer pretty easily so.
00:40:52
That's what we're going to bring it to because you.
00:40:53
Know, yeah, you have to answer that one that that's that's very
00:40:56
easy to answer. Because actually I want to bring
00:40:59
something up because in the the dyes that they have in food but
00:41:03
California recently they banned 6 dyes in September this year,
00:41:07
but they only banned them Lance in the schools.
00:41:12
Yeah. Red it's red dye 4 to yellow dye
00:41:14
5, yellow dye 6, blue dye 1, blue dye 2 and green dye 3.
00:41:19
Why only in the? School, Let me get the audience
00:41:21
on point here for a minute. So let me just give you an
00:41:23
example. If you get a bottle of ketchup
00:41:25
here in the United States and you look at what's in that
00:41:28
bottle of ketchup as far as the, what the ingredients are, and
00:41:31
then we go get that same company's ketchup in France or
00:41:34
in Italy, and we compare those labels side by side for
00:41:39
ingredients. What you're going to see is
00:41:41
Italy and France, it's going to be like ketchup, sugar, salt,
00:41:44
garlic. It's going to have maybe 5678
00:41:47
ingredients. And the bottle over here from
00:41:49
the United States is going to have, I don't know, 30 or 40
00:41:52
ingredients, half the chemicals. I don't even know them.
00:41:54
And I maybe I would, I'm sure my wife would know them, but I'm
00:41:56
sure Jillian knows them. So can you explain to the
00:41:58
audience, Jillian, why there's such disparity?
00:42:00
Why are we getting the chemical loaded ketchup here in the
00:42:03
United States versus the what would appear to be just natural
00:42:07
ketchup in other countries? OK, I'm trying to decide how
00:42:10
much of A download do you want here?
00:42:13
So the long and the shortage is the reason they're doing it is
00:42:16
simply because it's more profitable.
00:42:18
So what's going to be in there? I mean, things for satiety,
00:42:21
things for preservation, right? Things for addiction.
00:42:25
So adding all of these things, food companies have a multi
00:42:29
disciplinary team of scientists that manipulate the food, which
00:42:34
it's already garbage. If you know that's a big
00:42:37
agriculture conversation, but it's already pure poison, void
00:42:41
of nutrients covered in a host of herbicides, pesticides,
00:42:44
fungicides, chemical fertilizers that are historically connected
00:42:49
to warfare, like Agent Orange for example.
00:42:52
Now food gets it. Why do they do it?
00:42:54
Money. Because it makes it more
00:42:55
addictive, more palatable, more attractive, and it lasts on the
00:43:00
shelf longer. OK.
00:43:01
How are they doing? So they're doing it via
00:43:05
something called the grass rule, which is generally recognized as
00:43:10
safe rule. It's a loophole and our FDA that
00:43:14
permits roughly 93 or 400 chemicals in our food that are
00:43:22
illegal or banned in every other part of the developing world.
00:43:27
So the manufacturer who is utilizing the chemical is the
00:43:33
one that has to vouch for its safety.
00:43:38
And the FDA goes, yeah, thumbs up, good to know.
00:43:43
We trust you and that's how we get here.
00:43:47
And, you know, there was AI invested in a supplement company
00:43:52
and great company. I invested in it because I loved
00:43:54
it. Everything's all organic,
00:43:56
privately owned, everything's amazing.
00:43:57
I get 1 formula that for a product that was being developed
00:44:01
and it had silicone dioxide in it.
00:44:04
And nothing from this company has anything like that in it.
00:44:07
And I was like, guys, why does this one have silicone dioxide?
00:44:11
And they're like, oh, because of the, you know, whatever is a
00:44:14
probiotic. So we needed like a special
00:44:16
preservative and I was like, no, no, no, no, you, you can't have
00:44:20
this in here, you know, have them reformulated and they're
00:44:23
like, but it's safe. Everything online says it's
00:44:25
safe. And I was like, that shit is not
00:44:26
only not safe, it's it's illegal in other parts of the world.
00:44:32
But. What's interesting, some of the
00:44:33
chemicals and these ingredients, they're listed as poisons.
00:44:36
In other countries, they're actually on their poison
00:44:38
schedules. Toxic.
00:44:39
Unbelievable, right? And here they're telling us, Oh
00:44:42
no, it's great, you should eat this because it's in the ketchup
00:44:44
and it's in this cereal and the rest of it.
00:44:46
But go ahead. Well, that's, that's the Long
00:44:48
story short is that's why they do it.
00:44:51
That's how they do it. And then if you wonder, well,
00:44:54
why does the FDA allow this? We could go a step further and
00:44:58
that's I think my cat may walk in and try to try to one up your
00:45:02
dogs. Here.
00:45:03
That's right. That's great.
00:45:06
We're we're a animal pet friendly shell.
00:45:09
Let's go to that because I have numerous, including my children
00:45:11
who fortunately are at the school that's dead.
00:45:16
You have. Depending on the age, they are
00:45:18
kind of like pets in the. Beginning.
00:45:20
Oh my God, man. But boy they will pull they are
00:45:23
time sucks they will just take your time.
00:45:26
My daughter, I remember that I raised her by myself and the
00:45:30
truth is she was. It was a time.
00:45:32
Great time sucked, but boy, she could just burn up the clock.
00:45:38
No comments. I love you guys.
00:45:42
In case you ever say mommy loves you.
00:45:43
You're the light of momma's life.
00:45:45
Never an inconvenience. Never.
00:45:48
Okay, so anyway, that occurs through what is being referred
00:45:54
to as regulatory capture. And we've all now heard about
00:45:58
the revolving door at the FDA. And that simply means that 11 of
00:46:04
the last 12 people who ran the FDA have subsequently gone to
00:46:08
work for Big Food or Big pharma companies.
00:46:11
And the crazier part, here's the part that's really nuts is
00:46:15
sometimes they just keep looping.
00:46:17
And the reason they do it is because it's like, OK, I go to
00:46:19
the drug company, I develop a drug, I go to the FDAI approve
00:46:22
the drug. I go back to private industry, I
00:46:23
profit off the drug, make a new drug, I go back to the FDA.
00:46:26
It is so dirty and so dark, kind of like my version of the things
00:46:31
you were telling me backstage. And it's just, it's all
00:46:35
intertwined and connected. And the reality is that in my
00:46:40
line of work, you really have 4 monsters.
00:46:43
I call them the Catastrophic Quartet and the, you know,
00:46:47
there's also, you may have also heard of it as the toxic triad.
00:46:49
So the 4th 1, the quartet would be big insurance.
00:46:52
So it starts with big AG and they game the system to the tune
00:46:56
of 1/2 a trillion dollars from 1995 to 2022 in our tax dollars,
00:47:04
our subsidy dollars that goes to big industrial farms to grow
00:47:09
genetically engineered seeds, corn, wheat, soy, the the usual
00:47:16
suspects. And this is where you get the
00:47:18
high fructose corn syrup, the seed oils, the processed grains.
00:47:22
And those seeds are dependent upon their chemicals, which is
00:47:27
herbicides, fungicides, pesticides, fertilizers, and
00:47:30
then Monsanto, Cargill, Con Agra, right?
00:47:33
They control all of those things, the seeds, the
00:47:37
chemicals. So you've got the subsidy
00:47:40
component, which then flows right back to Monsanto, Cargill,
00:47:44
all those guys, because they're the ones supplying all those
00:47:47
goods. So the subsidy dollars buy those
00:47:49
goods. Now, big food, they pick it up.
00:47:52
So they fund the research on it. They shape the policy on it.
00:47:57
So, for example, the USDA is tasked with selling more of this
00:48:00
food. They're also responsible for
00:48:03
telling Americans what to eat. And this is how you got the food
00:48:06
pyramid, where breakfast cereal was healthier than eggs.
00:48:11
Yeah. It's so fucked you guys.
00:48:13
So we bought the research, they shaped the policy and the way
00:48:18
they do that is by lobbying our politicians, contributing to
00:48:21
their campaigns, revolving door with government agencies and
00:48:25
industries. Yeah.
00:48:27
And I'm writing a book actually right now called Rigged, and it
00:48:31
looks at how they manipulated every single law to create the
00:48:36
system we have now. And each and everyone starts
00:48:38
with great intentions. It's like, oh, we're going to,
00:48:42
we're going to make ethanol for cars, which is going to run off
00:48:44
corn because we want to protect the environment.
00:48:46
But really it was just another way to shuttle hundreds of
00:48:49
millions into corn subsidies. Genetically injured corn.
00:48:53
It's freaking. Bananas, I think they do an
00:48:55
amazing job of packaging up. We had a, we had a, a gentleman
00:49:00
on the other day that was an expert about fluoride and a lot
00:49:05
of people are unaware that fluoride is an industrial runoff
00:49:08
product. And we were, he was talking
00:49:10
about the packaging of the way they marketed fluoride so that
00:49:14
the, you know, obviously the dental, the dental Commission
00:49:18
would jump on board and promote it and make sure that it was
00:49:22
mandatory that we all had at Elvis fluoride.
00:49:24
And they never talked about the, the, the calcification of the
00:49:26
pineal gland or all the other bad effects that fluoride's
00:49:29
actually listed as a poison. And nobody's ever done the
00:49:32
research to understand what the correct dosage.
00:49:34
There's no research. I said, what is the dosage?
00:49:36
He goes, that's a really good question.
00:49:38
And he said nobody knows because they've never done the research
00:49:41
of what's an acceptable dosage of fluoride.
00:49:43
So you've got these independence.
00:49:45
That's why you can't figure it out because the the issue is
00:49:49
over time you really can't monitor all the other cofactors.
00:49:54
That's the issue. Is that you right?
00:49:57
So the game is is dose dependent.
00:49:59
Yeah, you don't know the intake because it's in your fruits and
00:50:01
vegetables, it's in your tea, it's in, it's in the in the
00:50:04
groundwater, it's in how much do you absorb anything through your
00:50:07
skin in the body when you're in your shower.
00:50:09
So I think our government does an incredible job in marketing
00:50:14
and advertising. It doesn't matter whether it's
00:50:17
the FDA or the FBI. They package up a way.
00:50:20
They want the American people to perceive something and then they
00:50:23
shove it down our throats with non-stop, you know, control of
00:50:28
our media sources after. The third piece, they shape the
00:50:31
policy, they craft the narrative because they buy off with
00:50:35
advertising dollars and they own the controlling share of the
00:50:37
companies themselves. The fourth piece is they
00:50:40
engineer the environment via contracts like school lunches,
00:50:45
snaps, which is another reason that marginalized communities
00:50:49
are so much more at risk, right? They even buy off Cali talks
00:50:53
about this. They even buy off the civil
00:50:54
rights groups so that if you try to remove soda from snaps, which
00:50:58
is worth hundreds of millions of dollars to soda companies in our
00:51:01
tax dollars, you're then labeled as an ableist or a racist.
00:51:06
It's fascinating stuff. And then the fifth piece is that
00:51:11
they manipulate consumer behavior with the way that the
00:51:15
food manipulates your psychology, it exploits your
00:51:19
psychology and it hijacks your biology.
00:51:21
So it's a five step plan and it works beautifully.
00:51:25
Everyone is fat, sick and nearly dead.
00:51:27
You know, you're leading me to have that this, I was going to
00:51:30
ask you this late in the show, but I'm going to jump in here
00:51:32
now. You're we're, we are also we're
00:51:34
big supporters of RFK Junior. Do you think that in its current
00:51:38
form, the FDA is even fixable or savable or as just another one
00:51:43
of the agencies right now? You know, the the Department of
00:51:45
Government Efficiency, Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswami have
00:51:49
determined that we have, I don't know, I think it's 465 or 435
00:51:54
government agencies. They want to drop it down to 99,
00:51:58
which I think is really important and I think it needs
00:52:00
to happen. Do you think the FDA is one of
00:52:02
those ones we kick to the curb or is it fixable?
00:52:06
I'm very torn on the regulation piece because to 1 extent they
00:52:11
don't want regulation because it ties everything up and it begets
00:52:14
monopolies. And so I'll give you another
00:52:16
example. Food has become a cartel, right?
00:52:20
There's a handful of companies in pharma and in food and in
00:52:24
banking and the whole game. You know, Merck, Andreessen was
00:52:27
just talking about this from a banking perspective on Rogan,
00:52:30
but it's the exact same when it comes to to my industry like
00:52:32
food and pharma and so. Yeah, 100.
00:52:34
Percent. You've got this handful of
00:52:35
companies and they make the barrier to entry so high that
00:52:40
regular people can't get in the game because they don't have
00:52:43
10 compliance officers and lawyers and this and that to
00:52:47
play ball. So on one hand it's like, oh,
00:52:49
this regulation thing is a scam. But on the other hand, you know,
00:52:53
you then have companies that are allowed to 1 rampant and
00:52:56
unchecked because there's no oversight and there's no
00:52:58
regulation. So without question, you know,
00:53:02
one more example. I interviewed a guy, wrote an
00:53:05
article called Gone and a Snap and it had to do.
00:53:08
It was on, it was in Rolling Stone.
00:53:10
He's won like Pulitzer Prizes and it haven't put it up yet.
00:53:14
It has to do with the fact that kids are able to buy fentanyl or
00:53:18
whatever they want on Snapchat and it just vanishes.
00:53:21
And Snapchat is completely complicit, says nothing about
00:53:26
it, won't help the police, and there's no price to pay because
00:53:29
of Section 2:30. And it's like, well, Section
00:53:31
2:30, if we allow Section 2:30 to be amended and we start to
00:53:36
hold these companies accountable, we'll effectively
00:53:38
censor them because now they're responsible for everything
00:53:40
everybody says. But you can see kind of the
00:53:43
nuance. So back to the FDAI think
00:53:46
something has to be done. You need that regulatory body,
00:53:50
but its job is to regulate the agencies that are the the
00:53:53
industries that are funding it. 50% of the FDA's funding is
00:53:59
coming from Big pharma. It has to do with the food tax
00:54:03
and a drug tax. Nevertheless, it's a fucking
00:54:06
problem. So it needs to happen.
00:54:09
It needs to happen. They need to be regulated, but
00:54:11
properly. And do I think RFK can do it,
00:54:16
guys? I mean, if we have a continuum
00:54:21
of we removed five of the 10 chemicals like food dye, I will
00:54:27
absolutely take it. It's a win.
00:54:30
Why not? Do I think he can completely
00:54:33
invert this system and turn it on its head and then he can do
00:54:37
what it's supposed to do? I think the push back is going
00:54:41
to be insane. And at the end of the day, Bob
00:54:43
is a deal maker. He's already sitting down with
00:54:45
the pharmaceutical companies and he's a deal maker.
00:54:48
So I think he's going to be like, OK, listen, we'll do
00:54:50
McDonald's on our plane. You calm down, but remove, you
00:54:54
know, cook the fries and beef, beef tallow or whatever the
00:54:57
fuck. That's the that's the president
00:54:59
that I've seen him be. He's like, I'll give you this,
00:55:01
you give me that, you know, I listen to and then I'll shut the
00:55:04
fuck up. I listen to some oh, it was Bill
00:55:07
O'Reilly was talking to me about cartels in Mexico and why Trump
00:55:14
didn't label them a terror organization so that he could
00:55:17
effectively go after him. And Trump was like, well, you
00:55:19
know, I traded the Mexican president for this and that, and
00:55:21
he asked me not to do that. So I gave that up.
00:55:24
But I got this and I got that and I got this.
00:55:25
He's a deal maker. I don't actually think it's
00:55:29
realistic to expect more. Hope for the best and expect the
00:55:36
worst, but. Yeah, he's given.
00:55:38
He said he's given RFK like full reign with the FDA and all that,
00:55:43
those agencies what he's got to do.
00:55:44
So Lance, like, I mean, he can clean it up.
00:55:47
It all depends how much they put forward.
00:55:50
Just like Congress, we, we, we have the Senate, we have the
00:55:53
House. They can they have less than two
00:55:56
years to get a lot of stuff passed.
00:55:57
Whether they do it or not is, well, time will tell.
00:55:59
It's. Going to be pushed back though
00:56:01
from their own side guys. Like even yesterday I was
00:56:04
telling you that I had to move our show because I was
00:56:07
interviewing Senator Ron Johnson.
00:56:09
And the guy has the highest subpoena power in the country.
00:56:14
Like he sits on this committee that is the most powerful
00:56:17
investigatory body in the country, right?
00:56:20
And I'm like, well, where are Fauci's emails?
00:56:22
He's like, I don't know. I've been asking for three
00:56:25
years. Like what do you mean you don't
00:56:26
know? You're what do you mean?
00:56:29
Like you're the guy. You're the guy that should be
00:56:31
able to get them. You're not only can I not get
00:56:34
them, I don't know if anybody ever actually delivered my
00:56:37
subpoenas. And we've got people, and I
00:56:39
don't fully understand how this works, but in their own
00:56:41
committee from both sides of the party that will just veto those
00:56:45
requests and just bury it because both sides have to take
00:56:50
money from private industry in order to win elections.
00:56:57
So there's going to be a lot of pushback from both sides, you
00:57:01
know? 2 words that I use on our show a
00:57:03
lot are accountability and consequences.
00:57:05
And what we don't have in our government is accountability and
00:57:08
consequences and there's a reason for it.
00:57:10
We when we interviewed Senator Ron Johnson, he's a great guy.
00:57:14
Love what he stands for, love the work he's doing.
00:57:16
I love what his attitude is. When you deal with Congress, you
00:57:20
know, and their authority, there really isn't, there isn't a bite
00:57:24
in the dog. Unless, unless you're a
00:57:27
Democrat, because they they, if you defy a subpoena, they'll
00:57:30
throw you in jail. We've seen it.
00:57:31
Yeah, you. Said that though, it's like,
00:57:33
well, if you're a Democrat then you'll you'll, or you're a
00:57:36
Republican you'll but. It's tough because they don't
00:57:39
really have an enforcement arm. So they subpoena somebody and
00:57:42
then that person refused to come for the subpoena.
00:57:45
And George is right, we saw them go after Peter Navarro.
00:57:47
We saw him go after Steve Bannon.
00:57:49
We saw him go on. But when it's the other side
00:57:51
doing it, when we've had members of the FBI or the DOJ that got
00:57:55
subpoenaed, they just said no, I'm not going to comply.
00:57:57
So I always think it's what we have is the Fox's guarding the
00:58:01
hen house. When you take the DOJ as an
00:58:02
example, you have you have basically four different
00:58:06
oversight groups. You have the Office of
00:58:07
Professional Responsibility, you have the Public Integrity
00:58:10
division, you have the OIG Office of Inspector General, and
00:58:13
you have the Civil Rights division.
00:58:15
But the problem is those are all DOJ departments.
00:58:19
So you've got DOJ departments supervising the DOJ and I don't
00:58:24
think you can ever have the same agency exactly in the face
00:58:29
you're making. I agree with because how do you
00:58:31
have that's like, you know, I'm doing your accounting and you
00:58:34
we're going to get audited and the person auditing the
00:58:36
accounting is George, you know what I mean?
00:58:39
It's not going to work out for you.
00:58:40
The accounting's not going to go well, you're going to wonder why
00:58:43
they're why I'm driving a Rolls Royce.
00:58:44
The point is, yeah, yeah, you have to look at this.
00:58:48
And that's the same situation when you have people that are
00:58:51
not, you know, because let's listen, the rule law is broken.
00:58:54
It's flat out broken. We talked to Cash Patel.
00:58:57
He was very clear about. He goes.
00:58:58
You're right, Lance, I don't even know how to respond to the
00:59:00
certain things you're saying because it's supposed to be
00:59:02
equal application of law, equal protection of the law.
00:59:04
And that goes all the way through our government.
00:59:06
But they've created a government that isn't really government for
00:59:10
the people, by the people. And they really truly believe
00:59:12
they're above the law. You know, the supremacy Clause
00:59:15
says that the Constitution is the highest law land.
00:59:17
It's the supreme law of the land, the supremacy clause.
00:59:20
But yet they don't operate like that.
00:59:22
Many of those people in Congress, there's some people
00:59:24
doing some great investigative work and Vandersteel and others,
00:59:27
and they've been foiling all the supposedly signed oaths of
00:59:32
office. Well, many of them, including
00:59:35
Kamala Harris, do not have a signed oath of office on file.
00:59:38
They took the oath in in public, but without the signed oath of
00:59:41
office. And there's an affidavit that's
00:59:43
supposed to go with it. And you can look at the federal
00:59:45
statutes for this. Those are supposed to be filed
00:59:47
within and signed within 30 days of you taking the office.
00:59:51
Well, a lot of people, attorneys and otherwise, believe the
00:59:54
reason they've never signed that is because a lot of the things
00:59:57
they did, for example, Kamala Harris being the borders czar.
01:00:01
All enemies, foreign and domestic.
01:00:03
She would be guilty of not protecting our borders from
01:00:05
foreign invaders because when we look what happened with our
01:00:07
borders, we know they wanted to create a 20 or 30 million deep
01:00:11
ghost voter pool. That was their plan, no?
01:00:13
Nobody will tell me that officially you're.
01:00:16
No, it's 100%. Nobody.
01:00:18
Have you ever There's some great people that have seen the
01:00:21
operation on the border like Oscar L Blue, Ben Berkwyn,
01:00:25
Michael Yan, ex Special Forces? About it had Brandon Judd come
01:00:30
on and talk about it. And then I had Doctor Phil come
01:00:32
on and talk about it because he's interviewed all these guys
01:00:35
and Doctor Phil, he goes, Jillian, you know, there's no
01:00:38
evidence of that. And I so I cut it from the show
01:00:42
because there was just nothing there.
01:00:43
I asked him about it and he goes.
01:00:45
We don't have any evidence of that.
01:00:47
Well, he may not have any paperwork.
01:00:50
When you look at what's funded that border invasion, there's
01:00:52
all sorts of NGO's and the UN and many other groups that have
01:00:56
been connected at the Darien Gap because you can see their
01:00:58
advertising and you can chase down the foundations that have
01:01:01
been paying. And that foundational support is
01:01:04
coming out of our own U.S. government.
01:01:06
It's money being filtered through foundations.
01:01:08
So there's no doubt that the Darien Gap in what was built
01:01:11
down there, the temporary housing, the bridges, it
01:01:13
couldn't have just happened randomly even and, and the, and
01:01:16
the windfall to the cartels, we're talking about billions and
01:01:19
billions of dollars because they were providing straight up
01:01:23
services. Even if you were trying to come
01:01:24
to the Darien Gap without paying, you couldn't.
01:01:26
The cartels are going to take a certain amount of money from
01:01:28
you, depending where you came from.
01:01:29
Chinese, you know, people from Costa Rica or, or Panama were
01:01:33
paying one price and, and for example, the Chinese were paying
01:01:36
$45 a person. And then if you wanted VIP
01:01:39
service as an example, and this comes from sources that have
01:01:42
been all over the border, they've talked to all kinds of
01:01:44
people. If you wanted VIP service to
01:01:47
come through the tunnels where you wouldn't be identified,
01:01:49
let's say you were on Interpol watch list, that was $100
01:01:53
plus service. It was AVIP service.
01:01:55
They would guarantee you entrance into the United States.
01:01:58
So that's how the cartels were operating.
01:02:00
The point is that this is so much worse than anybody
01:02:04
realizes, and it's so much more corrupt.
01:02:06
So when I see our own Congress that we got one side of the
01:02:10
aisle actively trying to look what appears to be the
01:02:13
destruction of the country, and you got the other side of the
01:02:15
aisle stomping their feet and getting angry, right?
01:02:18
What's the name of your cat? Gotto that we found my wife
01:02:22
found him on the freeway in Miami and determined that he was
01:02:25
Cuban. And now it's just.
01:02:27
And now he has a better and look at the life he's got now.
01:02:30
He went from the freeway and now he's here, probably an illegal
01:02:33
immigrant. We might even be talking about
01:02:34
the fact that he came in illegally, but he just, you
01:02:37
know, he's just saying. Keep me away from Ohio, that's
01:02:39
all. You can't.
01:02:40
Have. You can't have our own
01:02:43
government, you know, supervising the FDA and
01:02:46
supervising the DOJ with their own internal government agencies
01:02:51
because there's just too much graft and corruption.
01:02:54
And I don't think it's possible. And I agree with you.
01:02:57
We have a very short window to fix the country and it's ugly
01:03:00
and I'm not sure they can get all the work done because when
01:03:02
you look at the money that has gone through or $36 trillion in
01:03:07
debt and the waste of that money, a lot of people got very
01:03:11
rich and those people are not going to give up easily.
01:03:12
You know, I'm going to take us away from this, all this other,
01:03:16
so I'm going to pull up your website with us in it.
01:03:18
But I have a while I do that. If RFK asked you to come work
01:03:23
with him in my heart in administration, would you do it?
01:03:27
I would do it, but I don't know what I would do.
01:03:29
Everybody asks me that way. I'm like, but I don't.
01:03:33
I'm not a doctor and I'm not a PHDI know.
01:03:36
What you can. Do I'm an advocate, I'm an
01:03:38
activist, but I'm a trainer and a nutritional.
01:03:42
Mandatory training, Jillian style.
01:03:45
I, I really don't know what I would do.
01:03:47
I mean, Callie had suggested, like, what if we brought back
01:03:49
the President's Council on Fitness?
01:03:50
And I was like, I would definitely participate.
01:03:52
And Tulsi had asked me to work with a colleague of hers with
01:03:58
Special Forces. So I was going to go do that
01:04:00
after the inauguration and meet some of the Green Berets.
01:04:04
And I was like, guys. So like, I'd love to go out.
01:04:06
And, and the gentleman, I think his name is Lee Strong.
01:04:10
And he was telling me that they're having such a difficult
01:04:13
time recruiting. And it's not just like it's no
01:04:17
longer sexy to fight these wars, but the the fact that Americans
01:04:23
are simply not fit enough to join the military.
01:04:26
And there's a statistic that RFK has been putting out there that
01:04:30
77% of the population not fit enough in the military.
01:04:33
How about yeah, how about that's correct.
01:04:35
I was going to suggest if if it came to it, how about your you
01:04:39
working with getting education back to the schools and and?
01:04:43
Nutrition. Back to the schools in this
01:04:44
country. I think you'd be a great fit for
01:04:46
that because you were there. I would love to do it.
01:04:50
Nobody's asked me so. I might get that, so just you
01:04:54
never know. We've been trying to float you
01:04:56
out with RFK. We reached out to.
01:04:58
No, really, not only did we try to get him to come on and
01:05:01
surprise you, we've tried to float your name out there.
01:05:04
I don't know where it'll go, but we've talked to a couple people
01:05:07
that have influence in that arena.
01:05:08
We're going to try to a few times I've I've, I've worked
01:05:12
with him a few times and I met with him and Brigham Buehler and
01:05:15
we went for the hike in The Dirty, wore the jeans.
01:05:18
Oh. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
01:05:19
Brigham and I were in like full fitness clothes and he's wearing
01:05:21
jeans and put some campaigns out there for him and have been
01:05:25
advocating for his message and have worked with his team to get
01:05:27
his message out there. But you know, honestly, like I
01:05:32
don't care. I'm I'm happy to help in
01:05:34
whatever capacity I could help. You know, there's no, it's not
01:05:38
like there's money in it. There's no money in the job and
01:05:41
I'm already doing the work I can do to get the message out there.
01:05:44
So whether it's like, do you want to work with RFKI mean I'm
01:05:48
already doing my part to educate people and have been forever.
01:05:52
So if there's an intersection to work directly with him, of
01:05:56
course I would take it. I I but.
01:05:57
If you can get it working with him where it's mandatory in
01:06:00
schools and you can. Develop help, I hear.
01:06:03
Ya, if you could help develop programs like you know, food
01:06:06
wise and also like fitness wise for the kids to do.
01:06:10
On it. So I mean, we'll see.
01:06:12
Let's see. Because he really does need to
01:06:14
be honest. He needs a very qualified PhD in
01:06:17
nutrition and then he has to break the contracts that the
01:06:20
food companies have with the public schools.
01:06:22
So it's it's so much more complicated, unfortunately, than
01:06:27
we could create a school lunch program.
01:06:29
Like Michelle Obama couldn't do it.
01:06:32
And it's, it has to do with she made a few changes in the school
01:06:35
lunches and there was a massive revolt because I worked on that
01:06:38
with her. Whether you like her, whether
01:06:40
you don't like her, I, I worked on that.
01:06:42
Let's move. I did all that.
01:06:44
I worked with the Clinton administration Don't die on
01:06:48
health matters and fighting childhood obesity.
01:06:52
So this is where like I am so hopeful that RFK gets it done,
01:06:56
but it's not my first rodeo here guys.
01:06:59
And. It's, you know, so I continue to
01:07:01
do my part and fight the good fight and put the information
01:07:05
into the world. And I would, I would love an
01:07:08
opportunity to work with him in any capacity, but it's, it ain't
01:07:11
simple, let me tell you. No, it's a complicated playing
01:07:14
field. George.
01:07:15
Throw up the cover from her podcast so we can see that for
01:07:17
our audience. We want you guys to know that
01:07:19
she's got a very successful website.
01:07:22
Oh yeah, you can walk us through that first here.
01:07:24
Yeah, yeah. Good for the wives.
01:07:26
Good for the wives. Here's the podcast so everybody
01:07:28
knows, right? Guys, it's on that YouTube
01:07:31
anywhere you get podcasts. Yeah.
01:07:34
And I and I talked about that award that was 5 million
01:07:37
downloads a month. Is that what the award was for?
01:07:39
Well, on YouTube, no. We got the award years ago.
01:07:42
I've actually been podcasting only audio on Apple and Spotify
01:07:47
for a decade, and it's all health stuff.
01:07:50
So then I sat with Bill Maher earlier this year on his
01:07:55
podcast, and Bill was like, why don't you do video?
01:08:00
And I was like, I just don't have the time.
01:08:01
I don't have the resources to pull all of it together.
01:08:03
It's just like, I got like a million things.
01:08:05
I don't have the bandwidth for it.
01:08:07
And then his next question was, well, why don't you branch out?
01:08:10
And I was like, well, no one wants to hear it.
01:08:13
Nobody cares. And he said, respectfully, I
01:08:16
disagree. So he had me come on real time
01:08:17
on HBO. So I did that.
01:08:19
And we said, listen, we're branching out my podcast into a
01:08:22
studio and we're bringing on a few big names like Shane Smith
01:08:27
and Sage Steel and what have you.
01:08:30
Why don't you come onto my platform and I'll shoot
01:08:34
everything. You shoot it in my studio.
01:08:35
We'll handle everything. And I'm willing for you to take
01:08:39
a chance to explore things that aren't in your wheelhouse and
01:08:43
essentially weaponize you to say whatever you want to say.
01:08:46
And if it gets choked or cancelled, we'll do a sub stack
01:08:49
and we'll put it on X. And that's what now we've been
01:08:51
doing because you are, I am starting to see it's
01:08:54
fascinating. Like when the algorithm does not
01:08:57
want information to go out there, man, they will flag show
01:09:00
for music. They will not deliver
01:09:02
notifications. It's wild.
01:09:06
It is wild. So anyway, that's the Long story
01:09:09
short. So I've been covering
01:09:11
everything, everything from health to honestly, the things I
01:09:15
don't really understand. Like you would actually be a
01:09:16
great guest on my show to talk to me about all this.
01:09:19
Do you know John Cardio? He's supposed to come on.
01:09:23
He worked in special forces, so he was going to come on.
01:09:27
Like, I don't understand the stuff you're telling me.
01:09:29
So the reality is this actually would have been a great podcast
01:09:33
for me because I don't understand it.
01:09:36
And my hope is that my audience also is wanting someone to speak
01:09:43
to them on that level where it's like, all right, bring it down
01:09:46
to one O 1 and walk me through what the fuck is going on.
01:09:52
Yeah, I'd be happy to do that if you ever want to have us.
01:09:54
I I. Would love it.
01:09:55
We talked to a lot of people, so we'd be happy to come on your
01:09:58
show. You could just pick the topics
01:10:00
and, and, and just let us know in advance because we probably
01:10:03
have sound bites and quite a few things we could bring in because
01:10:06
we're constantly researching and we're really tied into both
01:10:09
domestic and international sources.
01:10:12
So we hear a lot of stuff, but I think it's difficult because
01:10:15
you're right about what you're saying when you try to present
01:10:18
this information to the American public.
01:10:19
There's because it's been, it's been, they've done such an
01:10:22
amazing job of the brainwashing. It's hard for them to comprehend
01:10:27
that the government that they think they have isn't the
01:10:30
government they have currently have because we, we've seen so
01:10:33
much of it. Look, let's face it, Dianne
01:10:34
Feinstein, $96 million net worth flying around in a $63 million
01:10:42
private plane and she couldn't even handle her own estate and
01:10:45
she's still voting in Congress and and her entire career income
01:10:49
was $6 million. So how do you amass that kind of
01:10:52
wealth without corruption? So the insider trading, the rest
01:10:56
of it and of course the lobbyists and big pharma and all
01:10:58
the big different groups and they hear about it.
01:11:01
So they get access to a lot of information and they benefit
01:11:03
from it because they go in there.
01:11:05
A lot of them maybe go in there bright eyed and bushy tailed
01:11:08
with the right consequences. But it's the same thing with the
01:11:10
military. What's happened to our military
01:11:12
is incredible. How much destruction in a very
01:11:15
short period of time. And you, you can talk to the
01:11:18
hardliners. You can talk to the people.
01:11:20
Like, have you ever, have you ever had Brigadier General
01:11:24
Anthony Tata on your show? You.
01:11:26
Know that name, guys, like if you talk to me about stuff in my
01:11:29
real house, look out. I know everything inside and
01:11:33
out. I've been doing it for three
01:11:34
decades. Like I wrote that book.
01:11:36
I'm sure I did that podcast. I interviewed that expert.
01:11:39
You're like, you know, so and so I ever heard of this guy.
01:11:41
Know that I know none of it. That is 0 the stuff you're
01:11:45
talking about. Just like my brain hurts, my eye
01:11:50
starts to twitch. I know.
01:11:53
Yeah, for sure. You're definitely, there's quite
01:11:55
a few people that are really knowledgeable, but you'll pick
01:11:57
up bits and pieces and as you start to put all that together,
01:12:00
it doesn't become conspiracy anymore.
01:12:01
You start to realize that the operation is so sophisticated
01:12:05
because you're so knowledgeable, the same sophistication you're
01:12:08
applying to nutrition, health and fitness, the FDA, you know,
01:12:13
pharma, you know, the agriculture, that same thing
01:12:16
that you, the pieces you put together, it's identical to
01:12:20
every other agency in the government.
01:12:22
So each one of them has multiple layers of what's really being
01:12:25
done versus what we think it just like you talked about their
01:12:29
difficulty in recruiting for the military.
01:12:31
Well, that probably leads back to if the reason that these,
01:12:35
these kids, let's face it, if you go over to tick tock, if you
01:12:38
look at TikTok from China, they're doing, you know,
01:12:41
scholastic testing, physical fitness testing, they're doing
01:12:44
military training. They're tick tock.
01:12:46
If you compare it to, to our TikTok here where the top
01:12:50
challenge is licking a toilet seat or you walk around public
01:12:53
bathrooms and then you're supposed to lick the sole of
01:12:55
your shoe. You know, I mean, if you compare
01:12:58
those two and then you wonder why our kids, let's face it, you
01:13:02
probably do this. I'm I'm I'm blown away when I
01:13:05
look at ishow speed or some of these other ridiculous college
01:13:09
fuckery shows that are on social media and on YouTube.
01:13:13
Otherwise and. They get millions of views and
01:13:16
you're looking at it and all the Oh my God, she almost flashed
01:13:19
and shut down. You know, you know, I show
01:13:23
speeds podcast. I mean the stupidity, like, I
01:13:26
don't remember acting. I, I don't remember
01:13:28
participating in that much jackassery in college.
01:13:31
And believe me, we had our share of jackassery in college, but
01:13:34
it's nothing like this stuff. But yet that'll get 12 million
01:13:37
views. But if Jillian does a show
01:13:39
about, you know, the exposure to, you know, the, the, the, the
01:13:44
poisons in our food, and maybe these are the top 10 foods you
01:13:47
should remove from your diet immediately in comparison,
01:13:50
because some girl booty shaked on one of those feeds, You know,
01:13:54
it, it won't be comparable, which is just the nature of
01:13:56
what's happening. And they do a great job of
01:13:58
marketing it. And George, then I'll let you go
01:14:00
on TikTok. George, go for it.
01:14:01
Tik Tok's unbelievable. I would shut that thing down.
01:14:03
Myself. Oh my God, don't get me started
01:14:06
on you. Probably.
01:14:06
Can hopefully relate to this. So even as a mother or anybody
01:14:11
as great as the Internet is, the information and technology
01:14:14
created is actually hurting our kids.
01:14:16
Why? Because giving them the phones
01:14:18
at an early age, computers, what are you doing?
01:14:23
They're sitting at home instead of being outside playing and
01:14:26
then talking earlier. When we're talking about what
01:14:29
people you have to apply. You have to use critical
01:14:32
thinking and apply common sense, even though common sense is not
01:14:35
so common, but critical thinking and do your own research.
01:14:38
Yeah. That hunt and gather for your
01:14:42
information. That's that's something that
01:14:45
that a guy who actually worked for RFK said to me.
01:14:49
And I was like, that's so great. I'm going to steal that hunt and
01:14:51
gather for your information. Like you got to go look.
01:14:54
There's certain schools, especially where your wife grew
01:14:57
up in that area too, they're banning cell phones during, in,
01:15:00
during school. School, you can't have your
01:15:02
phones out or wait, you got to put it away, whatever the reason
01:15:05
is. But this is a reason how how
01:15:07
many kids are not participating in sports and that's why they're
01:15:10
just just sitting there sitting around getting overweight,
01:15:14
unhealthy. Take that away if parents stop
01:15:18
being their kids best friend and actually be their parent.
01:15:21
Yeah, it's a it's, it's a deep problem.
01:15:25
Listen, Jillian, we've helped you long enough.
01:15:26
I know you've got a bunch of stuff to do.
01:15:28
Oh man, I. Had the best time man, there's
01:15:30
so much. Yeah, we, we, we loved having
01:15:33
you on. We'll probably have to do it
01:15:34
again in the future sometime. We're happy to come on your show
01:15:36
and let's work on the scenes. I'm sure we have some people you
01:15:40
that we can connect you with, you might like to have on your
01:15:42
show and I'm sure. You have.
01:15:43
A wave of people I'd love to get on our show.
01:15:45
George, go ahead. You want Callie and Brigham.
01:15:48
I'm I'm just I got her her website up in the fitness app.
01:15:52
I'm looking at the before and after picture.
01:15:54
Is that from the 80s with the perm?
01:15:55
Yeah, that picture. Yeah, remember those days?
01:15:58
Great days, right? I was about 14, so I lost a
01:16:01
little bit of weight. That's probably 150 there was
01:16:05
capped out at about 175. Tell tell him about your app
01:16:09
real quick so so if anybody's. There is actually a guy trainer
01:16:14
in there named Ryan Clarenbach who fantastic, but prior to the
01:16:18
last couple of years, my audience used to be
01:16:20
predominantly female, like your your wife, for example.
01:16:24
So the long, the short of it is it's a fitness app and it's a
01:16:27
one stop shop for custom meal plans, personalized workout
01:16:31
programs. There's an AI generated in the
01:16:35
gym, personal trainer, there's meditations, there's sleep
01:16:38
support. And if you download it, we have
01:16:42
a meal planner totally free. So you don't even need to like
01:16:44
pay for anything. If you download it.
01:16:47
And you say, I'm vegan, I'm keto, I'm omnivore, whatever it
01:16:52
might be, pescetarian, you name it.
01:16:54
I am trying to lose weight, build muscle, gain weight, I
01:16:59
don't like peanuts, blah, blah, blah, whatever.
01:17:01
It'll make a complete meal plan for you and you can even batch
01:17:05
cook. So you can say I'm cooking for
01:17:07
four people tonight or I'm cooking for one and it will
01:17:10
modify the recipe in real time. It'll spit out a grocery list.
01:17:13
So all that's free. Actually, if you download it, we
01:17:15
put that all like in front of the paywall so people can use it
01:17:18
as a tool no matter what if they don't have resources.
01:17:22
That's awesome. Now this is Is there a physical
01:17:24
app in the App Store too or? The whole thing, there's an app
01:17:28
on the App Store and it's called the fitness app and it has also
01:17:31
it has my entire DVD library as well.
01:17:33
So that's all in there. It streams to the TV, your
01:17:36
tablet, your phone, just like any other app and you can pull
01:17:39
your music into it and the whole thing.
01:17:41
So it tracks everything with your other fitness apps.
01:17:44
All the typical shit these things do just in SO.
01:17:47
An app. So this.
01:17:48
Is. For men or women, Correct,
01:17:49
Correct now. It is for men or women, but men
01:17:53
tend to like, you know, they prefer a male trainer.
01:17:56
There is a guy in there named Ryan Clarenbach and he has a
01:18:01
host of programs. You could try it for free and
01:18:04
see if you like it or you don't like it and pay nothing if you
01:18:07
don't like it. But I tend to men tend to like
01:18:10
to train with other men, like to lift heavy.
01:18:13
And this is really even though it's not necessary per SE, it's
01:18:17
more about time under tension. The Long story short is I would
01:18:21
say download the meal planner. It's the app for the meal
01:18:23
planner. It's invaluable and it's great
01:18:25
if you're so inclined. As a man I would love it.
01:18:28
Download it and play around with it.
01:18:30
If you don't like it, cancel it. You have a free week to F around
01:18:34
with it, but your wife will probably love it.
01:18:38
Yeah, it's great. George.
01:18:40
George is single. He does not have a wife.
01:18:42
We're. Gonna have to do it, man.
01:18:43
You're gonna be like me and you. You're gonna have to do it,
01:18:46
babe. We're gonna do yoga together and
01:18:49
kick. That's it.
01:18:49
Come on, George, get in there. You can get you can get sewer
01:18:52
fit. I don't know if he's ready for
01:18:54
that yet. The knee I got.
01:18:56
A bad knee right now. I'm going through this freaking.
01:18:58
You can. You can ban exercises in the
01:19:01
app, so you could turn around and you can say, Jillian, I
01:19:03
don't want to do these moves, so you could preview everything and
01:19:05
you could ban them. There you go.
01:19:08
What's the best place to buy your books?
01:19:09
Is that Amazon or come to your own website?
01:19:12
Amazon, I would say the best one, they're all different
01:19:16
obviously, and one's about longevity and one is for women
01:19:19
on pregnancy. And but the, but the one that I
01:19:23
think is the best general book is Master Your Metabolism
01:19:27
actually. And that one really ironically
01:19:31
covers a lot of the stuff that's coming up now, despite the fact
01:19:34
that it's 15 years old. And it did the longevity book
01:19:39
that I wrote and I read all my books with doctors and medical
01:19:43
experts and like Master Metabolism was written with a
01:19:45
board certified endocrinologist. Got you.
01:19:49
All right, listen, social media, give it a quick plug.
01:19:52
Let's give it to the audience and then we'll get you out of
01:19:53
here. At Julian Michaels and the
01:19:56
podcast is on YouTube at Julian Michaels and I have guests kind
01:20:02
of like yourself that. Educate everybody about this
01:20:06
kind of cool stuff. But I really do live in the
01:20:09
wheelhouse of health and Wellness, largely.
01:20:12
But I've been branching out because, as mentioned, a lot of
01:20:17
the corruption that exists in my line of work is happening in
01:20:21
other areas of our culture and our government.
01:20:24
And so I've been trying to expose that and show the
01:20:27
parallels with guests like yourself so.
01:20:29
No. And I think it's great and I
01:20:30
think you're doing an amazing job and the interview was great.
01:20:33
I really appreciate how candid you were about everything
01:20:35
because I think our audience resonates with that.
01:20:38
And that's it. Get her, find her, follow her.
01:20:43
It's only one thing missing the books, missing Jillian.
01:20:45
Change your life if you've been thinking about trying to change
01:20:48
things, be empowered because unapologetic is Jillian Michaels
01:20:52
for sure. Jillian, really appreciate.
01:20:54
Thanks for the time, George. What's missing?
01:20:57
What's missing? Doesn't say you follow me.
01:21:00
Terrible. I'm done.
01:21:04
I'm heartbroken. She wants me.
01:21:06
Yeah. She wants me to get in the
01:21:07
studio, do yoga with her. George, what the hell?
01:21:11
OK, what's the handle? G Ballantine.
01:21:14
G Ballantine. And you can follow the you've
01:21:18
got the show account, but you can follow my personal account,
01:21:20
Gillian, it's. Lance BALANTIN.
01:21:23
EBALLOUTINE. Ron, you're married to an
01:21:29
Italian. You're supposed to know how to
01:21:30
spell these names now, and I'm Lance Miliacho on X you can
01:21:35
find. That.
01:21:36
Followed our show. Yeah, I followed you.
01:21:39
Lance Miliacho. I feel like G.
01:21:42
She left me out. I feel abandoned.
01:21:44
That's it. George has a George has a
01:21:46
problem with abandonment. My feelings are valid too,
01:21:48
Gillian, just so you know their. Feelings are valid.
01:21:54
All right. They absolutely are guys.
01:21:56
Thank you. So.
01:21:57
Thank you SO. Much.
01:21:58
I'm gonna connect you with Brigham and Cali right away.
01:22:01
I mean. Awesome, pimping off the
01:22:03
subscribers. We are out of here.
01:22:04
Don't forget. Take the short form, the long
01:22:06
form. We're never going to come after
01:22:07
you help promote the show. If you're not following Jillian
01:22:09
Michaels, you're making a mistake.
01:22:11
You should know that by now. Through this episode, of course,
01:22:13
follow G Ballantine, The Big Big Show and Lance Miliacho.
01:22:17
And our home base is Rumble and locals.
01:22:18
You know where to find us. Don't forget to subscribe.
01:22:21
We're out of here. God, Country, family.
01:22:23
God bless everybody. One talk to you soon.
01:22:27
Ciao. Ciao.
01:22:30
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They would run up to the bamboo fence and they would be shooting
01:24:38
between the bamboo at the buildings, you know, just
01:24:40
shooting inside. The Wanted man is Joseph Kony,
01:24:44
charged with abducting huge numbers of children, forcing
01:24:48
them to kill and mutilate innocent victims.
01:24:51
Somebody had to pay the price. Sam did that.
01:24:54
Sam Childers never stopped because the bad things never
01:24:58
stop. There is only.
01:24:59
One Sam Childer. There is no one else like him in
01:25:02
the world. And I said to him, I said.
01:25:04
Would you go? Now.
01:25:06
To get Kony in the Congo, he says.
01:25:08
Without a doubt in a second. Now it's the DRC.
01:25:11
Tell us what's happening to children in the DRC.
01:25:13
Do you have ISIS there? You have Islamic State and you
01:25:16
have ADF? Hey, Sandy.
01:25:18
Joseph Kony's still alive. He's in the Congo, and now God
01:25:21
has me in the Congo, you know, So hopefully we'll meet up one
01:25:25
day, but maybe I can lead him to the Lord or send him there.
01:25:30
One or the other, huh?


