THE BIG MIG SHOW
APRIL 22, 2025
EPISODE 534- 11AM
Baste Records is a Nashville-based label that’s redefining the music industry by championing conservative artists often overlooked by mainstream companies.
The CEO of Baste Records, a music label he founded. He is also the founder of The Post Millennial, a Canadian news and media outlet
Please be sure to click the THUMBs UP button when you check in!
HELP SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS,
Genesis Gold Group, Empowering Faith-Driven Stewardship https://thebigmiggold.com https://prepperbar.com
Unveiling the Hidden Cause: The Facts About Detoxifying & Alleviating Inflammation
Use Code Big Mig: https://www.mineralking.life
Original Glory Beer https://wefunder.com/originalbrands https://www.drinkoriginalbrands.com
FOLLOW US:
LINKTREE: https://linktr.ee/GeorgeBalloutine
LINKTREE: https://linktr.ee/LanceMigliaccio
RUMBLE: https://rumble.com/c/TheBigMig
X: https://x.com/TheBigMigShow
TRUTH SOCIAL: https://truthsocial.com/@TheBigMigShow
GETTR: https://gettr.com/user/TheBigMigShow
WEBSITE: http://thebigmig.com/
_______________________________________________
SUPPORT US:
LOCALS: https://TheBigMig.locals.com/support
00:00:00
All men are created equal that they are endowed by their
00:00:04
Creator with certain unalienable rights by.
00:00:09
Liberty, if liberty means anything at all, it means right
00:00:17
to tell people what they do not want to hear.
00:00:54
Hey, welcome back to the big big Show.
00:00:55
Of course, I'm your host, Lance Miliaccio with my Co host George
00:00:58
Ballantine. It's rise and grind doing what
00:01:00
we do. You know, it's always tip of the
00:01:02
spear on this show. If you're joining us for the
00:01:04
first time or if you're a regular, you know what we do
00:01:07
here? It's better to be hurt by the
00:01:08
truth than comforted with a lie. We always try to bring you all
00:01:11
the facts, you know, because we've done the homework, the
00:01:13
facts, the sauce, the evidence, the receipts.
00:01:16
I don't really care what you call it.
00:01:17
At the end of the day, this isn't mainstream media.
00:01:20
We're going after both sides of the aisle on this show.
00:01:23
All we care about is getting the country back on track.
00:01:26
Make America great again. So that's always the plan.
00:01:29
George B. Yes, Sir.
00:01:30
Fresh haircut in the house? You're ready to roll.
00:01:33
I just got it this morning. I was running late too man.
00:01:36
That's why you were stressed, because you went for the haircut
00:01:38
this morning. He was all stressed out when I
00:01:39
got him on the horn first time. What are you?
00:01:41
Freaking stressed about the show's ready to roll.
00:01:43
We've got a great guest. What's going on?
00:01:44
Why are you stressed? So I just walked in.
00:01:46
I got a hair, of course. Did you see?
00:01:48
I play fresh Polish on my head so well.
00:01:51
Listen bro, it's up with George. It's like Vidal Sassoon once
00:01:55
said, if I don't look good, we don't look good, You know what I
00:01:58
mean? So.
00:01:59
All right, I'll keep that in mind.
00:02:01
I'll do what I can. I'll keep the glare down off the
00:02:03
head today. You know, let me start off by
00:02:06
thanking our sponsors like we usually do.
00:02:08
Of course, Original Glory Beer, Mike Sadler and the team,
00:02:11
they're going national American Pilsner, their American Light,
00:02:14
and of course their new flavored products here.
00:02:16
Great company, great people, veteran owned.
00:02:19
Mike knows what's going on. He pays attention to the country
00:02:21
and he wants to do nothing but of course, make his brand great
00:02:24
and of course get the country back on track.
00:02:26
As a veteran, he's always concerned about what's going on,
00:02:28
but Pete Hegseth appears to be doing a good job.
00:02:31
I like the way that he's going at things.
00:02:33
I appreciate him. I think he's a great cabinet
00:02:35
pick. A lot of people doubted him.
00:02:37
I don't doubt him. It's kind of like Tom Holman.
00:02:39
That's like money in the bank with Tom Holman.
00:02:42
All right, Of course, also Genesis Gold Group.
00:02:44
You know what we're talking about.
00:02:45
Gold and silver. Gold, new time highs.
00:02:48
You know, we've been pushing gold and silver for about a year
00:02:50
and a half with the audience. Hopefully you guys listen to us.
00:02:53
Great opportunity. Silver is still way undervalued.
00:02:57
The guys at Genesis Gold think a 7030 stack is the way to go.
00:03:00
I agree you can join us for the upside and insight on the
00:03:05
bullion, of course on the Global Finance Forum on Fridays, 1:00
00:03:09
PM, the number one finance show on Rumble based on views you
00:03:13
come over. We talk about bricks, bullion
00:03:14
and the rest, but this is the 62.2g prepper bar easily broken
00:03:19
down, perforated into your choice of three different
00:03:22
denominations to fit a multitude of needs, whether it be for
00:03:24
asset protection, for inflation, economic turmoil, or of course,
00:03:28
it's unique utility for barter and trade.
00:03:29
If you guys can't see it that well, it's always hard on, but
00:03:32
you can break off small pieces of this.
00:03:34
It's a way to make payment if you can't get to your credit
00:03:36
cards or if you can't, your cash is a problem.
00:03:38
You can fit fits right in your wallet.
00:03:40
They've got them in gold and silver in stock.
00:03:42
They sold out of gold a couple of days ago and they just got
00:03:45
restocked, mined and minted in the US.
00:03:48
You can use that QR code. George makes it.
00:03:50
Easy Why they sold out of gold. Why did you buy some more gold?
00:03:54
All them gold records can. You buy some more gold.
00:03:56
Next bro. All them gold records at Face
00:03:59
records bro. That's it.
00:04:01
They keep minting those gold records over at the record
00:04:03
label. That's the problem.
00:04:05
Of course he's got. He's got those stacked up on his
00:04:07
walls at the house, you know? You know how Matthew does it at
00:04:11
the end of the day, of course, prepper, you go to
00:04:13
thebigmigbar.com. That's right, thebigmigbar.com.
00:04:17
Use all caps prepper, PREPPERPREPPER, and that'll get
00:04:22
you 10% off on the silver and 5% off on the gold.
00:04:25
George has stepped out there and he says gold's going to be 3800
00:04:29
in the next maybe 90 days. George, is that right?
00:04:32
Am I hitting the right window or soon?
00:04:33
I mean, I said by the end of the year, so you know what?
00:04:36
It's coming. We're at what?
00:04:38
35 hundreds right around the corner.
00:04:40
We're creeping up on that quickly and that was a
00:04:42
prediction we made on the show. So get over there and check it
00:04:44
out. Definitely buy a few.
00:04:46
OK, so let's let's roll right? Into this oh, we got the.
00:04:50
CEO stepped out. I know I do my Jingle, bro, but
00:04:52
are you trying to do the Jingle because you're trying to get a
00:04:54
record deal? Is that what you're trying to do
00:04:56
today? No, I ain't got the voice for
00:04:57
that. Break me off a piece of that
00:05:00
prepper ball. Nice.
00:05:05
Nice, I do feel like I heard like you were trying to crack an
00:05:09
audition there bro, Hopefully. Not.
00:05:11
I know. I know my limitations.
00:05:13
I know where I'm at. Yeah.
00:05:14
Yeah. Singing is not one of them.
00:05:16
Yeah. Well, listen, we got a great guy
00:05:18
on today. He's a really interesting guy.
00:05:20
You know, I just recently got to know him.
00:05:22
I already knew Bass Records. You know, we've had a lot of
00:05:24
their talent on the show. We've been dealing with Steve
00:05:26
and Rachel out there. Great guy and been a huge help.
00:05:29
Of course, the Let's Talk Music episode, you know, it's all
00:05:32
about the music. Of course, politics come in news
00:05:35
and and Matthew's one of those guys, Hazrielli.
00:05:38
Hopefully I got that right. As an Italian, I should get it
00:05:40
right at the end. Of the day.
00:05:44
Yeah, he's not very easy. The CEO of base Records, he used
00:05:47
to be the CEO and also founder of one of the top news sites,
00:05:52
especially in Canada, but it's really grown here, the post
00:05:56
Millennial so we're going to be talking about that today I.
00:05:58
Heard I heard from Bird, I heard that there's going to be a huge
00:06:03
nice piece, big article on the Big Meg show in there.
00:06:07
George Shum in the waters. I love what he does.
00:06:09
But yeah, I've heard that. I've heard that too.
00:06:12
You heard it too, right? Yeah, so, you know, Matthew is
00:06:15
and it's interesting if he wants to be a.
00:06:16
Friend of if he wants to be a friend of ours and part of the
00:06:19
Big Meg Mafia, which we'll explain to him.
00:06:21
Explain how that works because you can't leave.
00:06:26
He's Montreal born, which is great.
00:06:27
I love Montreal. I used to have a condo up there
00:06:30
at the Q2 Empire project that I sold.
00:06:32
He's a singer-songwriter known for his introspective lyrics and
00:06:35
distinctive vocal style. Influenced by Elliot Smith, Nick
00:06:38
Drake taught himself guitar through songwriting, developing
00:06:41
a unique indie folks sound. We're going to have some of that
00:06:44
today. We're going to actually play.
00:06:45
I don't know if this has been released yet.
00:06:47
They sent us over a music video. His first release was a 2015
00:06:51
single, Chloe, earning critical praise throughout the United
00:06:54
States and Canada. He's the founder and the first
00:06:57
CEO of the Post Millennial, one of the largest conservative news
00:06:59
websites in the world. The home of the journalist such
00:07:02
as Andy Nagot and Libby Emmons sold the business in 20/20/22 to
00:07:08
the Human Events Media Group, home of the Jack Pasoviak and
00:07:11
others say Matthew runs based records, which released in 2024
00:07:15
alone #1 Billboard called fighter that was endorsed by the
00:07:20
Trump campaign, which is huge as well as the highest two.
00:07:24
I was going to be by Rachel Holt.
00:07:26
Rachel's going to be coming on our show.
00:07:28
She's got some new stuff coming up.
00:07:29
We're going to have her schedule soon.
00:07:31
And that's the highest ever chart pro-life song on
00:07:35
Billboard, which is kind of going.
00:07:36
I mean, that's big for the Bill history of Billboard.
00:07:40
And of course, we had him on the show.
00:07:41
Hunter Got High by Afroman. That was a great song, great
00:07:46
interview. If you guys didn't check it out,
00:07:47
it's on Rumble. You can.
00:07:48
There's no reason to leave Matthew backstage.
00:07:50
It's like an old friend. Let's get him in here.
00:07:53
All right, welcome to the big, big show, Matthew.
00:07:56
Matthew Arizelli What's up, bro? Hey guys, how's it going?
00:08:01
I've been I can't believe you told everybody about the fact
00:08:05
that I'm shorting the price of gold.
00:08:08
What? No, no, we didn't say you're
00:08:09
shorting. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, we
00:08:12
didn't say you're shorting the price of gold.
00:08:14
We're saying that gold pepper bars, they ran out because
00:08:17
you're getting a lot of gold records.
00:08:19
That's props to you man. Definitely.
00:08:21
But it's all a ruse, you see, I'm shorting gold.
00:08:24
But all these bold records? So we just we just outed you.
00:08:30
I'm sorry about that. But that's what happens here on
00:08:32
the show because this is the big Meg.
00:08:34
So you got to be ready for everything.
00:08:36
It's not really blind side journalism.
00:08:38
It's truthful journalism on this show.
00:08:40
But you know, you're you're a really interesting guy.
00:08:43
First of all, what I thought is interesting is to be ACEO of a
00:08:46
record label and an artist. I think that's unusual, that
00:08:50
combination and your background, you know, clearly you're a
00:08:55
business guy and that combination makes you really
00:08:58
dangerous in the record world because a lot of guys that get
00:09:00
into the record industry aren't necessarily grounded in
00:09:03
business. I don't know where to start with
00:09:05
you, but maybe we start. I don't.
00:09:07
Did the post? Did the artist come first?
00:09:09
Was that, is that how you really got your first interest?
00:09:12
Was it you always being interested in being an artist in
00:09:14
the music world? Well, that's the exact way it
00:09:17
started. And thanks so much for having me
00:09:19
on, guys. Look, when you study music in
00:09:22
college like I did, the only thing to do that's economically
00:09:26
viable is to start a right wing blog.
00:09:29
OK, so that's why. So that's why I started the post
00:09:33
Millennial. You know, I really had no other
00:09:35
options. Yeah.
00:09:37
You know, it's interesting. We we were talking about
00:09:39
yesterday on how and and you did it successfully.
00:09:43
How complicated, honest journalism and it's, I don't
00:09:47
even like to call it right wing. You know, we are on the right
00:09:50
because we, you know, we believe in God, country, family.
00:09:52
Of course you were grounded in Canada first.
00:09:54
I love Montreal, beautiful women, beautiful locations and
00:09:58
amazing restaurants and just the nightlife up there.
00:10:01
You know, first of when I first started going to Montreal, I was
00:10:04
unaware of the underground walking and I couldn't figure
00:10:08
out. I was going into different
00:10:10
stores and play locations, freezing my ass off.
00:10:13
It was in winter and I couldn't figure out where all the people
00:10:16
were coming from because when I was walking on the street I
00:10:18
didn't see anybody. Not realizing that the smart
00:10:21
people, unlike myself, the dummy, were walking underground
00:10:24
and getting to their different locations.
00:10:26
Interesting stuff, but a beautiful city.
00:10:28
I actually like I said, I owned a condo up in the Q2M and then I
00:10:31
sold it because somebody wanted I was on the ground floor right
00:10:34
at the water level there, if you know that project.
00:10:36
Oh yeah, I do. Well, good for you.
00:10:38
Listen, we always ask ourselves who's getting involved in these
00:10:42
random condo developments in Montreal.
00:10:47
We all assumed that it's Hong Kong expatriates, but apparently
00:10:51
it's also podcast hosts. I guess, you know, I just saw
00:10:55
the location and it was when they were, I think they were,
00:10:57
they were struggling. I and I think at one point they
00:10:59
were actually in bad shape. And then it all turned around
00:11:01
and then somebody made me an offer because I'd gotten one on
00:11:03
the corner where it was right on the water.
00:11:05
And it was, it was a good opportunity.
00:11:07
And I just, I thought it was a good opportunity.
00:11:09
Of course, I bought real estate in other locations around the
00:11:12
world. I bought some global real estate
00:11:13
and always thought that playing the currency exchange was always
00:11:16
strong when it came to the US dollar.
00:11:19
Especially now, right? The Canadian dollar is extremely
00:11:22
weak. Yeah.
00:11:23
Trump. Listen, we love Trump here, but
00:11:25
in Canada not. So much we, we would love, I
00:11:29
would love, you know, they always talk about the 52nd
00:11:31
state, but I wouldn't care how we unified.
00:11:33
First of all, I love the Canadian people.
00:11:34
Let me say that. And for George, he's single.
00:11:37
I'm married, but for he's single, I I need to throw him up
00:11:39
into Montreal. The women up there are just
00:11:41
gorgeous and the people are so friendly.
00:11:44
You know, with Trudeau out of the way, although his politics
00:11:47
aren't out of the way, I would love to see a unification with
00:11:51
Canada. You guys have the largest
00:11:53
freshwater, freshwater supply, natural supply in the world.
00:11:57
You're, you're the, the amount of resources, natural resources
00:12:00
and the people, it's a perfect fit as far as I'm concerned.
00:12:04
Having you guys unify with the country in some manner.
00:12:06
I don't know how we would do that.
00:12:07
I don't know politically what's acceptable.
00:12:10
I know Trump wants to make Greenland, of course, a state,
00:12:13
and I believe that's likely to happen because the Greenland
00:12:15
people want it. Of course, Denmark doesn't want
00:12:17
it. I don't know how the Canadian.
00:12:20
Let's talk about that for a minute.
00:12:21
How? How would the Canadian people,
00:12:23
do you think they would get behind unifying with the United
00:12:25
States in some manner, one way or another?
00:12:30
Listen, I think that you have to be very careful about what you
00:12:33
wish for. Canada has an aging population.
00:12:36
We're barely able to sustain ourselves.
00:12:40
And that's why you have this horrific thing in Quebec.
00:12:43
And I love Montreal and I love Quebec, but what we're doing
00:12:47
with made medical assistance in dying in Quebec is very, very
00:12:51
dark. You're talking about a
00:12:54
euthanasia program that we began that basically anybody can opt
00:12:58
into. We started it after Belgium and
00:13:01
the Netherlands and states like Oregon and the United States
00:13:05
started it, and we're already setting a new pace.
00:13:09
You're talking about 5% of deaths I think in 2022.
00:13:13
That's horrible. It's pretty crazy, you.
00:13:16
Know it's horrible so yeah, our our way of giving back to
00:13:20
Canada. The big men show we were the
00:13:22
first to have you know Maxine Bernier we had him on the show
00:13:25
March 18th and then from there he kind of took off people
00:13:28
started getting them on shows. Hope you voted for him.
00:13:33
You know, wait, wait. I like Maxine.
00:13:34
Huh. I like Maxine.
00:13:37
Oh, did you vote for him? I like, listen, I, there are
00:13:40
parts of Maxine that I like a lot aspects of his platform that
00:13:44
I like. Listen, I'm a dyed in the wool
00:13:47
Canadian conservative guy, all right?
00:13:50
That's my, that's my bias. So Pierre Polyev, I think he's
00:13:54
got the most viable electoral path.
00:13:57
He's not the perfect candidate, it's not the perfect platform,
00:14:00
but you know what? It's better than the
00:14:03
alternative. I tried Max, I tried bro.
00:14:06
Yeah, well, you know, politics isn't a perfect sport when you
00:14:10
look at it. It's always complicated.
00:14:12
You know, there's a lot of things I love about Trump.
00:14:14
I don't love every single thing. And, you know, I was very
00:14:18
hopeful about the administration.
00:14:20
George has given them till June 1st.
00:14:23
I would like to see more arrests when it comes to government, you
00:14:26
know, crimes, you know, the, the truth of the matter is our, our
00:14:30
country's been, you know, really manipulated by you can call the
00:14:33
deep state. I don't care what you call it.
00:14:36
You can call it the elites. At the end of the day, there's
00:14:38
been too much of that with lobbying and book deals and dark
00:14:41
money and foreign money and foundations and super PAC's.
00:14:45
The lobby groups here are just ridiculously powerful and they
00:14:49
influence too much. But at the end of the day, I
00:14:52
think that the, the, the, the, the potential fit.
00:14:55
And I'll say this just for the audience, because the Canadian
00:14:58
people in, in my opinion, the majority of them I've, I've
00:15:01
always had great interactions with Canadian.
00:15:03
I've always liked their personalities and they're very
00:15:06
friendly. The French Canadians have always
00:15:08
treated me with a lot of hospitality when I, when I was
00:15:10
in Canada. I'd, I'd love to see a
00:15:13
unification would be a way for us to protect our borders
00:15:16
further. Maybe we can make Canada healthy
00:15:18
again. Maybe, maybe Kennedy can make
00:15:20
some influence and we can stop the euthanasia and maybe get the
00:15:23
health system. Even our health system is
00:15:25
flawed. I'd love to see that, you know,
00:15:28
maybe we can all work together to try to make something happen.
00:15:30
I know that the media wants to act as if, you know, the
00:15:34
Canadians don't want it, but every Canadian I've spoken to,
00:15:37
not just conservatives, you know, we bring everybody on the
00:15:39
show. Think about the, the big migas.
00:15:41
I believe that the the what our plan is to always educate and
00:15:45
unify the country one episode at a time.
00:15:48
To do that, we have to expose the truth.
00:15:50
You did that at the post Millennial, probably better than
00:15:52
anybody. I don't know of a platform.
00:15:55
I don't you know when when people compare you, you know,
00:15:58
you've been compared to all the top sites here, Gateway Pundit,
00:16:00
Breitbart, the list goes on and on and on.
00:16:04
You're, you're and you've always been viewed as a reliable, bold
00:16:08
alternative. The legacy media you, you, you
00:16:11
were praised for your willingness to publish stories
00:16:13
that mainstream outlets ignored, downplayed or wouldn't touch at
00:16:17
all. Now I know in in that you got
00:16:20
attacked many times. They they love to use in our
00:16:22
line, fringe propaganda conspiracy theorist.
00:16:27
You know, the CIA coined that term, but they even use it up
00:16:29
there in Canada, it seems like. You know, tell me about, let's
00:16:33
talk about, we're going to talk, go back to music.
00:16:35
But tell me about that a little bit because you said you started
00:16:37
this blog and and you figured out a way to monetize it, which
00:16:41
in our world, monetizing the conservative or the truthful
00:16:44
news. If George and I wanted to be
00:16:46
liars, we could probably have a 30 forty, $50 endorsement
00:16:51
very easily because we've got enough views at this point
00:16:53
between this and our nationally syndicated radio show.
00:16:57
But tell Me about This went from a blog to a major news platform.
00:17:03
Well, that's right. A lot of it was timing because I
00:17:06
started this outlet in 20/17/2017 was a very different
00:17:10
time. They thought they could
00:17:12
marginalized Trump and let's say conservative populism simply by
00:17:18
sort of wagging their fingers and engaging in journalistic
00:17:21
malfeasance where they and over and over again, oh, Trump is
00:17:28
that's right. Is it accessibility shortcut or
00:17:34
or he's? Well, well put.
00:17:37
That was good timing, George. Or he's a or he's a fascist or,
00:17:40
or, who knows. And of course, you know, in
00:17:44
2017, as a fairly marginal Canadian news outlet, we weren't
00:17:49
on anybody's radar. And that was to our advantage.
00:17:53
And when you're playing to win in any business, you have to
00:17:57
niche, right? So Varnish was Canadian
00:18:01
conservatives. Beyond that, we realized a
00:18:04
couple of years ago, at this point it might be 4 years ago
00:18:07
that Canada was going to institute an Australia style ban
00:18:12
on news. And what that means is that they
00:18:15
were to force Facebook to pay every single publisher that
00:18:22
posted articles on the platform. And Facebook essentially said,
00:18:26
OK, if you're going to do that, nobody can post any articles.
00:18:30
All right, So that destroyed Canadian publishers.
00:18:33
In our case, we were very lucky because of course, there are far
00:18:37
more conservatives in the United States than there are in Canada.
00:18:41
And Post Millennial to this day still covers Canadian news.
00:18:44
But at the end of the day, it was a no brainer to go into the
00:18:48
United States, to go into the American market and to basically
00:18:52
say, all right, guys, until you figure this out, we have to, we
00:18:56
have to shift gears. And that's how we became an
00:18:58
American news provider. And ultimately, it's one of the
00:19:02
reasons the site became so large.
00:19:05
You know, you think it was because of your, your, your kind
00:19:08
of your openly ideological stance.
00:19:11
You know, of course, the traditional sites in Canada, the
00:19:14
popular ones, I think still quote me if I'm wrong.
00:19:16
I think CBCCTV and maybe Global News, I think maybe those are
00:19:20
the, some of the top ones, But you guys were able to transcend
00:19:23
that. I know a lot of people when I
00:19:24
look at the US equivalents, the Daily Wire, Rebel News, I'm
00:19:27
thinking Breitbart and the Blaze are probably comparisons that,
00:19:31
that are fair. But you, you seem to grow
00:19:35
rapidly. And of course, everybody knows
00:19:37
that when it comes to, you know, even monetizing our show, it's,
00:19:40
it's, you know, it's sponsors, subscriptions, views that, you
00:19:44
know, those are the revenue deals that are available.
00:19:46
Because when you try to get the big brands to sponsor or to
00:19:49
support, you know, it's, you know, you've got to hold up the,
00:19:53
the Antichrist cross and you know, they're like, oh, stay
00:19:56
back, you heathen. You know, they don't really,
00:19:59
they, you don't see them jumping.
00:20:00
Although we are becoming, I think we get more, you know,
00:20:04
offers now than previously. Of course, it's always based on
00:20:08
views and impressions, you know, do you feel like many times you
00:20:12
were there should have been deals that were, should have
00:20:15
been available based on where they were putting their money
00:20:17
otherwise? Because we always talk about the
00:20:19
weaponization of media here in the United States, especially on
00:20:22
this show, and how fomented and organized their plan and their
00:20:26
plot is. And it sounds really nefarious
00:20:29
when I put it in those terms. But people have to recognize
00:20:31
when it starts, whatever that media cycle is.
00:20:34
If we're talking about the Hunter Biden laptop or the
00:20:37
Russian collusion hoax, that narrative gets created at the
00:20:40
upper levels. And I don't care whether we call
00:20:42
it, you know, New World Order crap.
00:20:44
And then it gets funneled down. If you don't mind, sorry to
00:20:47
interrupt you, but in our case it was very straightforward.
00:20:51
For example, we had a very large car company that wanted to do an
00:20:55
advertising campaign with us, say mid 5 figures for a month.
00:21:00
So that would have been very nice.
00:21:03
But you know what happened? The ad agency representing this
00:21:06
car company was also the ad agency that worked with CBC.
00:21:14
And CBC, of course, is the Canadian broadcasting company.
00:21:19
They are the largest broadcaster in Canada, OK.
00:21:25
And CBC effectively told one of their agencies, the same agency
00:21:31
that was representing this car company, that we had plagiarized
00:21:35
an article of theirs 3 to 4 years previous.
00:21:39
Fake. News.
00:21:39
Fake news. Fake news.
00:21:40
Getting deployed and and and no and we haven't and we looked at
00:21:44
the article and we haven't. But that was immaterial that now
00:21:48
just imagine how interesting this whole thing is or how
00:21:51
devious it is because you're talking about an agency that
00:21:56
theoretically should not be beholden to CBC.
00:22:02
OK. And it was even worse than that
00:22:04
because the same, because that also applied to a Government of
00:22:07
Ontario deal. We were doing all right, during
00:22:10
COVID, they were advertising with everybody, right?
00:22:14
Listen, whether or not I agree with what they're advertising,
00:22:17
the point is it was a media subsidy, right?
00:22:19
They're supporting Canadian media.
00:22:21
You know, nobody actually is looking.
00:22:23
So come on, you want to spend ad dollars, you want it to be
00:22:26
effective. You're going to advertise on
00:22:27
Google or on Facebook or whatever.
00:22:30
You're not necessarily going to get it to CTV or CVC.
00:22:33
Meanwhile, we had an an audience.
00:22:37
I was fairly skeptical of the government.
00:22:39
You would think theoretically it would make sense to reach out to
00:22:43
our audience, but no, because again, the CBC essentially
00:22:49
collaborated with an agency and said because of their
00:22:53
journalistic practices, don't advertise with them, which is a
00:22:57
very, very, very bizarre thing to do.
00:23:02
But if you don't need a conspiracy, they're literally
00:23:04
just they're just doing. It and, and George and I have
00:23:08
talked about that a lot and, and what's interesting to us when,
00:23:12
when we have these discussions, we talk about behind the scenes
00:23:15
because there's lots of, you know, there's lots of, you know,
00:23:17
planning when you run shows, you run media sources and there's
00:23:20
lots of organization that needs to happen with that, whether
00:23:22
it's just you and the research. What happened to you is, in my
00:23:27
opinion, very specific as the plagiarism claim is used over
00:23:31
and over and again here in the United States as a weapon.
00:23:33
They did it to Gateway Pundit not that long ago.
00:23:35
Oh, they're plagiarizing, they're plagiarizing.
00:23:37
And yet, let's face it, especially with AI now, nobody
00:23:40
needs to plagiarize. You can take any story from
00:23:41
anywhere and do a rewrite and give it a directive of no
00:23:45
plagiarism. And literally it's going to be a
00:23:47
brand new article. Now you can always cite sources
00:23:50
to give people credit, but that's a technique because of
00:23:52
course, that's the instant attack saying that you're not an
00:23:54
original news source, that you're plagiarizing other
00:23:57
people's materials, scraping other material.
00:23:59
You don't do any original news match, so why should anybody
00:24:02
support you? But this is the interesting
00:24:04
thing, because they don't do any intern.
00:24:06
They do basically no original news.
00:24:08
It's all news wires. Right.
00:24:10
So it's. In Canada, it's The Canadian
00:24:12
Press. In America, it's The Associated
00:24:15
Press or Reuters. Of course, here's.
00:24:17
The issue, all of these newspapers fired their Staffs
00:24:21
and they essentially said, let's purchase these over bloated news
00:24:25
wires. Now these news wires are going
00:24:27
to go the way of taxi companies and they're completely screwed.
00:24:31
So conservative news sites that never actually had access to
00:24:35
these wires and that had always to engage in this kind of, you
00:24:41
know, very scruffy sort of journalism.
00:24:46
I think that we're in a better position now because we were
00:24:49
never reliant on these things. Yeah, and I think it's an
00:24:52
amazing place to be because I agree with you.
00:24:55
We saw it, of course, the recent disclosures by DOGE and USAID,
00:25:01
you know, everybody constantly. One of the things here, we have
00:25:04
laws in the United States, the FTC and FCC laws that they're
00:25:06
not enforcing at all, that they're supposed to when it
00:25:08
comes to sponsor to paid post. Of course, you saw how we talked
00:25:12
about our sponsors. We make it very clear if
00:25:14
somebody sponsored us, you know, if we're going to talk about
00:25:16
gold and silver, we always tell people there's some financial
00:25:18
advice, but, you know, we're presenting the information you
00:25:21
have to make your own decisions. But what's interesting is what
00:25:24
was disclosed in USAID, how no money was getting put over, you
00:25:28
know, because you would think neutrally if you had $10 million
00:25:31
to give out, when you looked at it as a percentage scale, you
00:25:34
would think 40% would go to conservatives, 40% might go to
00:25:37
the the the liberals, and then maybe 20% would go to non
00:25:40
partisans if you were equally funding news organizations.
00:25:44
But that's not what happened at all.
00:25:46
The money from USAID went to like Reuters and Politico, which
00:25:49
are very controlled institutions here in the United States.
00:25:52
You didn't see any money going to like, oh, we're going to give
00:25:54
Newsmax some money and we're going to give Owens some money.
00:25:56
No money from USAID and any of the other money that's getting
00:26:00
funneled down and a lot of times.
00:26:01
The big Make some money, can we get something?
00:26:03
Yeah, yeah, we, we, you know, Matt, we just want one of the 14
00:26:06
Magic Money computers. I promise you if they give me
00:26:08
that thing for an hour, I'm going to put Matt's name in
00:26:11
there. I'm going to have George.
00:26:12
We're going to have the Big MIG. I mean, can we have a Magic
00:26:14
Money computer here over on the Big MIG show?
00:26:16
Or maybe one of these black budgets that seem to be so
00:26:20
deeply entrenched if we want. It done for an hour.
00:26:22
You have to give it to me. Let me handle it, because you're
00:26:24
not fast. Yeah, I'm not a fast typist.
00:26:26
We'll have George do it. He's faster than I am.
00:26:27
I'm I'm still high speed Hunt and Peck.
00:26:30
But my point is that you see how the the system is completely the
00:26:35
deck is stacked against those media sources, but yet you are
00:26:39
still highly successful in what you did and still doing.
00:26:43
What do you, what you know, what do you, what can you attribute
00:26:46
that to? What, what exactly allowed you
00:26:47
to transcend past this fomented plot, you know, organized team
00:26:53
that we're trying to stop you from being successful?
00:26:55
What do you what do you attribute your success to?
00:27:00
Yeah, I I think that all success is attributable to consistency.
00:27:05
You have to keep doing whatever you're doing.
00:27:09
You can never stop, right? So consistency is the number one
00:27:14
source of anybody's success. I don't care who you are, you
00:27:17
have to be consistent. But beyond that, you also have
00:27:20
to be very mission driven and you have to actually focus on
00:27:25
what you're trying to do. With Post Millennial, we were
00:27:28
always focused on breaking news, doing it fast and doing it
00:27:32
accurately, and that's what the team is still doing today.
00:27:35
I'm very proud, even though I'm not with the company anymore.
00:27:38
I'm very proud of the company. And then with Based Records, we
00:27:42
have an incredible songwriter from Nashville, a guy named
00:27:48
Chris Wallin, and Chris is a tremendously talented producer,
00:27:52
songwriter, everything else. And you have to respect
00:27:56
competence. An issue on the right is
00:27:58
sometimes we don't respect people who are good at what they
00:28:01
do often enough. But there are people on our side
00:28:05
who know what they're doing. And I would say that you have to
00:28:09
give them the room, give them the authority.
00:28:13
You can't be a micromanager and run a business successfully.
00:28:17
And beyond that, you have to just do the thing that you set
00:28:20
out to do. Everybody says, oh, I want to
00:28:22
start a right wing this, a right wing that.
00:28:24
And then it becomes just a series of random, you know,
00:28:28
operations that are a distraction from the underlying
00:28:32
business, right? Like they're, I'm sure you guys
00:28:35
are given opportunities all the time, but they're not
00:28:39
necessarily the podcast itself. Maybe they would enhance the
00:28:43
revenue side of the podcast, but they're not the actual podcast
00:28:46
itself, right? You so you have to be focused.
00:28:48
You can't get distracted. Yeah, you, you, you are
00:28:52
absolutely 100% over the target. They say the number one failure
00:28:56
in media and podcasts, radio shows, you know, online blogs is
00:29:02
consistency and authenticity. The fact that you start out in
00:29:07
one way and then if you're you're maybe money redirects
00:29:12
what your fan base was expecting from you.
00:29:15
Well, you know, George and I were offered a deal.
00:29:18
One of the, I won't name the name, but one of the firms out
00:29:20
of Chicago that's well known for manipulating and paying
00:29:24
influencers online to disseminate what I would
00:29:27
consider false narratives and repetitive attacks on whatever
00:29:31
the soup du jour is right of the day.
00:29:34
And they, it was a during that time period.
00:29:35
It was about a year and a half ago now, but they offered US 25
00:29:39
grand back then. Our views and our popularity,
00:29:41
we've grown a lot. They moved us to the Dan Bongino
00:29:44
spot and our show's been growing rapidly.
00:29:47
Of course, I said that we have a show called the Crypto Power
00:29:49
Hour. That's the number one crypto
00:29:50
show on Rumble. Our nationally syndicated radio
00:29:53
show is growing. There's some talks about some
00:29:55
big, big new syndication deals going on behind the scenes, but
00:29:58
we have 3 to 9 million listeners now on our radio show and we'd
00:30:01
love to have you on that show. I think you'd be a great guest
00:30:03
for that also. But you know, they offered US 25
00:30:08
grand with an increase within 90 days if we kept to their
00:30:11
narrative. And that's what I was telling
00:30:12
you in that phone call we had. If we kept to the narrative,
00:30:15
there was a 30% increase, which was sizeable money at that time
00:30:18
period for our show. It really was, you know, a a
00:30:20
good offer. But of course, it would have
00:30:23
made us compromise our ethics, our morality, our integrity.
00:30:27
It didn't flow with what we promised the viewers and
00:30:29
listeners we were going to provide on this show.
00:30:32
We've had a lot of the Bongino army convert to our show that
00:30:34
are following us now and they're in the they're in the audience
00:30:37
in the chat right now. And I think it's because our
00:30:39
product is very similar to what Dan would do.
00:30:42
You know, he would really call a spade a spade and we try to do
00:30:44
that. But you've done that.
00:30:46
What you did is you went from the the post millennial success.
00:30:50
And I think you've, in my opinion, based on knowing the
00:30:52
talent roster over it, you know, based records, you did it there
00:30:58
again, you, you know, you basically cookie cutter, right.
00:31:00
And the, and the for anybody that doesn't understand the
00:31:03
music industry, I've been around it for a long time.
00:31:04
I've known a lot of talent. I've been, I was in the
00:31:07
nightclub and bar business for years and I got to know lots of
00:31:10
guys personally in the music industry and we talk about what
00:31:13
they dealt with. You know, it's, it's that is a
00:31:15
that, you know, that's a complicated playing field, but
00:31:17
you got a successful roster. And I just want to give the
00:31:19
audience just so they know, let me pull that up here.
00:31:22
I've got your roster, your current roster.
00:31:24
I don't know how current it is, but you've got Afroman, Chad
00:31:26
Prather five times, August High Res, you know, high res has been
00:31:31
on our show and Rachel Holt, who's going to be on our show
00:31:33
soon. We have Chad.
00:31:34
Prather on. Yeah, we should have Chad in
00:31:36
five times. We need to set that up.
00:31:38
Yeah, but. You know, well, listen, Chad
00:31:40
Prather, he's a very handsome guy.
00:31:42
He's a very talented guy, absolutely.
00:31:44
I'm not listening. We get Chad Prather.
00:31:46
I'm putting my cowboy hat on. Yeah, whoa, yeah.
00:31:49
You know the problem? If I wear a cowboy hat, I'm
00:31:51
gonna look like. Anything about you, Lance?
00:31:53
I'm. Gonna look like Hoss from
00:31:54
Bonanza because I have such a giant freaking head.
00:31:58
It would look, I look awkward in a cowboy hat.
00:32:01
My head's almost a size 8. So it's it's it's ugly.
00:32:04
It's an ugly visit. But George, actually you look
00:32:06
like you're a natural in a cowboy hat, which is, I don't
00:32:09
even understand why that is. A guy from New Jersey looks
00:32:11
good. In a cowboy hat.
00:32:13
Spaghetti westerns. It's spaghetti westerns.
00:32:16
What? What do you talk about?
00:32:19
What? Well, we got to take a short
00:32:21
break, as much as I hate to do that.
00:32:22
Of course we're going to be right back.
00:32:24
We'll be here with Matthew Azzarelli, of course, George
00:32:27
Valentin, myself, Lance Emiliocho, big Mcmafi and
00:32:29
subscribers, if you like the show, don't forget the thumbs up
00:32:32
comment, share, let your friends and family know, and of course,
00:32:34
Bongino Army converse. Thank you for coming to the
00:32:37
show. Let's bring those other Bongino
00:32:39
Army members over. Let's grow.
00:32:41
We're one of the fastest growing shows on Rumble.
00:32:43
We'll be right back be talking about music.
00:32:45
Stay tuned. Lance, they said you probably
00:32:47
look good in Sombrero. All right, we'll be right back.
00:32:50
Oh, that's ugly. That's cheap shot.
00:32:51
George. If we lose freedom here, there
00:32:55
is no place to escape to. This is the last stand on Earth.
00:33:02
As an American who keeps up with the real news, you know by now
00:33:06
the severity of the economic issues that are plaguing our
00:33:09
great nation. My name is Jonathan Rose and I'm
00:33:11
the CEO of Genesis Gold Group, the only major faith driven
00:33:15
company in the industry. 2024 is a year full of uncertainties.
00:33:20
With trillions of dollars in national debt, inflation
00:33:24
impacting your savings, and the pivotal election year, your
00:33:28
Peace of Mind is more valuable than ever.
00:33:31
Now is the time to use physical gold and silver to preserve your
00:33:34
hard earned retirement savings with a gold IRA.
00:33:38
Call Genesis Gold Group today. Our team has decades of
00:33:41
experience helping folks just like you take their first step
00:33:44
on the path to true financial freedom with a gold and silver
00:33:47
IRA. Call Genesis Gold Group today at
00:33:50
1-8 Hundred 200 Gold for a known commitment and formative
00:33:53
consultation with one of our experts to find out if we can be
00:33:56
a fit for you. Call now at 1-800-200-4653 or
00:34:00
visit genesisgoldgroup.com. In a world of uncertainty, be
00:34:04
prepared with silver pepper bars, your ultimate hedge
00:34:08
against political instability and economic turmoil.
00:34:11
Introducing the Silver Pepper Bar crafted from pure
00:34:15
silver and proudly made in the USA, this tangible, divisible
00:34:19
asset can come in handy even in the toughest of times.
00:34:22
Portable, perforated and easily tradable, the silver Pepper Bar
00:34:26
is your lifeline in times of crisis when facing inflation,
00:34:30
currency devaluation and financial.
00:34:33
Meltdown Silver Pepper Bars provide Peace of Mind.
00:34:36
Don't wait for disaster to strike.
00:34:38
Secure your future today with the exclusive Silver Pepper Bar,
00:34:42
the only silver bar on the market, divisible into three
00:34:45
different size pieces for maximum utility, all while
00:34:48
fitting in your wallet. The smart choice for savvy
00:34:50
investors and preppers alike. With Silver Pepper Bars, you're
00:34:55
ready for whatever tomorrow brings.
00:34:57
They would run up to the bamboo fence and they would be shooting
00:35:00
between the bamboo at the buildings, you know, and
00:35:03
shooting inside. The Wanted man is Joseph Kony,
00:35:07
charged with abducting huge numbers of children, forcing
00:35:10
them to kill and mutilate innocent victims.
00:35:14
Somebody had to pay the price. Sam did that.
00:35:17
Sam Childers never stopped because.
00:35:19
The. Bad things never stop.
00:35:20
There is only one Sam, children. There is no one else like him in
00:35:24
the world. Then I said to him, I said,
00:35:26
would you go now to get Kony in the Congo?
00:35:30
He says without a doubt in a second.
00:35:31
Now it's the DRC. Tell us what's happening to
00:35:34
children in the DRC. Do you have ISIS there?
00:35:37
You have Islamic State and you have ADF?
00:35:40
Hey, Sandy. Joseph Kony's still alive.
00:35:42
He's in the Congo, and now God has me in the Congo, you know,
00:35:46
So hopefully we'll meet up one day, but maybe I can lead him to
00:35:51
the Lord or send him there. One or the other, huh all?
00:36:08
Right. Welcome back to The Big, Big
00:36:09
Show here where you host Lance Migliacho, George Bounty, and
00:36:13
the CEO of Bass Records, Matthew Ariselli.
00:36:17
But you know what time it is. Got to give a shout out to the
00:36:19
sponsor, and we're going to do it.
00:36:20
Here we go. Their new innovation block,
00:36:23
trustira.com. They are your partner in your
00:36:26
Bitcoin journey that's powered by Animus Technologies.
00:36:29
They're empowering all Americans to take control of their
00:36:31
financial future by providing secure, intelligent, accessible
00:36:36
cryptocurrency investment within the familiar structure of an
00:36:39
IRA. So in a world where traditional
00:36:41
retirement strategies are struggling to keep pace with
00:36:44
inflation and economic uncertainty, Block Trust IRA
00:36:47
offers a clear alternative gear to work with individual
00:36:51
investors to cure their future financial wealth.
00:36:54
So if you have a four O 1K or an IRA and you want to transfer it
00:36:57
over, you could do that. You want to start a new ones,
00:37:00
you can do that. If you don't want to do that,
00:37:01
just simply invest, you could do that too.
00:37:02
Why? Because they have the AI
00:37:04
revolution in your IRA that outperforms the market.
00:37:08
They're market leading management with no hidden fees.
00:37:10
They trade over 60 different crypto currencies in a rapidly
00:37:15
accelerating American retirement wealth.
00:37:17
All you got to do go to blocktrustira.com.
00:37:21
Now, Lance, before I get to you guys, people were asking about a
00:37:24
picture, so I'm going to show it up.
00:37:27
Here it is in the cowboy hat guy.
00:37:28
Oh. Nice.
00:37:30
Wait, we put up no audio. There you go.
00:37:34
There it is in the cowboy hat. What's?
00:37:35
Up. You look good.
00:37:36
You look good. Yeah, he can.
00:37:37
He can pull off a cowboy hat, you know.
00:37:40
Oh, thank you. Oh, you do.
00:37:42
Actually, I was shocked when you threw it up for the first time.
00:37:44
I, I, I was actually surprised, you know, probably because I
00:37:47
look so awkward in a cowboy hat. We're.
00:37:49
Going to get you Sombrero Lance. That's what they said.
00:37:51
Yeah, I don't think I'm going to wear a sombrero.
00:37:54
Let me let me put it there. Wearing a sombrero bro.
00:37:55
The majority of hats on my head just frame the fact that I have
00:38:00
a giant head and it's already visible that I have a giant
00:38:02
head. So, you know, hopefully because
00:38:04
it's packed with brains, but I'm not so sure all.
00:38:06
Right. But like so I got you know,
00:38:09
we've been talking. I want to showcase Matthew is a
00:38:12
release video. I don't know what song it is, be
00:38:14
honest with you, but I know we got a video here of yours.
00:38:17
What song is it? What's the name of it?
00:38:19
So it's a song called Expectations.
00:38:21
It's going to be the first song released as part of an ET and
00:38:26
it's gonna be released May 1st and this is the debut of the
00:38:30
video. Expectations.
00:38:32
Oh, that's right. So this is the first time
00:38:34
nobody's seen this yet. I appreciate you sharing.
00:38:36
You got a real funky indie style.
00:38:37
Kind of when I when I was listening to it, I was kind of
00:38:40
like, wow, that's really cool. All right, let's rock'n'roll,
00:38:43
let's show it. It's the first time I hear it's
00:38:46
an exclusive on the Big Mig Show.
00:38:48
First time. You know, I hear the word
00:38:51
expectations, so I'm putting high expectations on you,
00:38:54
Matthew, that our article would be out there.
00:38:56
Just let. You know.
00:38:57
You don't want to disappear. Listen.
00:38:59
You don't want to disappoint the big, big mafia in the chat and
00:39:02
the damn I'm. From Montreal.
00:39:04
Believe me, I I know all about you.
00:39:06
Got to make people happy. Listen, I'm just going to tell
00:39:08
you, let you know right now. I got friends and I got family
00:39:12
in Canada, Montreal, QC, they're all over.
00:39:14
Just letting you know my reach is everywhere, all right?
00:39:19
Let's rock. And roll.
00:39:36
Standing on the corner, got no expectations.
00:39:41
You're going to be the driver to my destination.
00:39:44
Another open drawer, another empty promise.
00:39:48
I want to be the one who gets to take you for the right guy.
00:39:56
Some I shine so right, But all I want to do is try and take you
00:40:10
off a coffee dressed up like your father.
00:40:13
I wonder if you'll be embarrassed if we're seen with
00:40:16
one another. What if we could go far away to
00:40:20
a little castle town, cobblestone alleyways where
00:40:23
nobody could bring us down? All I want to do is try
00:40:59
standing on the corner. You've got no expectations.
00:41:03
You're going to be the driver to my destination.
00:41:07
Another open drawer, another empty promised side.
00:41:12
Want to be the one that gets to take you for a ride?
00:41:15
I've got SO. The little love letter to
00:42:00
Montreal. Was that shot in Old Quebec?
00:42:04
In the old port in Montreal. Yeah, that's what it looked like
00:42:08
it I was looking at the cobblestones and some of the
00:42:11
building. There's some great architecture
00:42:13
down there that's just a great, it's one of the pieces of real
00:42:15
estate. I kind of wish I'd never sold,
00:42:17
to be honest with you. I kind of wish I'd kept it, you
00:42:20
know, interesting. You know, it's it's funny to see
00:42:23
somebody that's talented. And of course, when I said CEO,
00:42:26
you bring over something from the post millennial, I think to
00:42:30
the music world that that's why you're successful.
00:42:33
That authenticity, the consistency.
00:42:36
I've watched you guys on social media, you do a great job as far
00:42:41
as promoting when something's coming out.
00:42:43
You guys did an amazing job for Afroman.
00:42:45
When you promoted that, that thing blew up just everywhere.
00:42:50
I think that's how I first got to know you.
00:42:51
And of course, Hi Res is a friend of ours.
00:42:53
We connected with him also and he had nothing but great things
00:42:55
to say about you guys. Let's talk about that.
00:42:59
Let's talk about the music industry.
00:43:00
Let's talk about you as an artist and maybe talk about
00:43:04
what, what you, you see the future and maybe the current
00:43:06
projects you guys are working on.
00:43:07
Let's give the the audience kind of a a bird's eye view of
00:43:10
everything that you're doing. Absolutely.
00:43:13
So in terms of my personal project, I've got that EP that's
00:43:16
going to be released and promoted to college radio in
00:43:20
July. So July 1st is when the E PS
00:43:23
coming out. May 1st is when sort of the
00:43:25
first single, which is what we just heard.
00:43:28
And thank you guys so much for, for having me on and for playing
00:43:31
that. I really appreciate that in
00:43:33
terms of what we're doing for our other artists.
00:43:36
So, you know, let's just talk about kind of our previous
00:43:38
releases very quickly. Obviously we have Chad Prather,
00:43:42
an extremely talented, kind of a Will Rogers style comedian,
00:43:48
political satirist, very talented guy.
00:43:53
And then of course we have Brad from Five Times August.
00:43:57
We love Brad. Hi Res.
00:43:59
Nothing but good things to say about Hi Res.
00:44:02
In fact, I think we just surpassed 4 million streams on
00:44:06
Spotify alone for his release. So that went very, very well,
00:44:13
thank God. And then of course, Afro man.
00:44:16
And with Afro Man, it was kind of a what off.
00:44:18
But listen, I'd always love to do more with Afro Man.
00:44:21
What can I tell you? You know?
00:44:23
He's such an interesting character in he.
00:44:25
He's got a bite of the apple. I mean, it's very hard to to
00:44:28
stop. You know, we, we tried to do a
00:44:30
whole Colt 45 style thing related to Trump 45, right?
00:44:36
4540 said something like that. But there are so many lyrics in
00:44:42
that song in Colt 45, right? It's like a book essentially.
00:44:46
So you have to write the entire thing.
00:44:48
You probably could, you probably could do that.
00:44:51
And maybe when it comes time for midterms or something like that,
00:44:54
we, we will. And then with Rachel Holt, you
00:44:58
know, there's something very fascinating happening.
00:45:00
They call it the vibe shift. And if you look at American
00:45:03
Idol, for example, it's all Christian music.
00:45:06
It's basically. Crazy, right?
00:45:07
I mean, that was a big step out, really.
00:45:10
It's listen, you know, this is sort of the path I've seen for a
00:45:13
very long time, right? For about 10-11 years right now.
00:45:17
You know, look, Elon Musk talks about this all the time.
00:45:20
There's a growing movement on the right called the natalist
00:45:23
movement. And they kind of have a point,
00:45:25
which is that the only people having kids, especially lots of
00:45:28
kids, are religious people and right wing people.
00:45:31
Correct. So after a certain point,
00:45:34
there's no, that's what we cater to the tastes of the majority,
00:45:38
right? When you run a record company,
00:45:40
that's what you have to do. The personal stuff.
00:45:42
I do, you know, the artistry in that, if you want to call it
00:45:45
that. I'm, I have my personal
00:45:48
aesthetic taste. I know it's not for everybody,
00:45:51
you know, I know orchestral music with like the Orcheste
00:45:54
Classic de Montreal and that whole thing, the little booze,
00:45:58
booze, and I totally get that. But with regards to mainstream
00:46:03
stuff, I'm very excited for what we're doing with Rachel Holt.
00:46:06
We actually haven't released any music yet in 2025, and that's by
00:46:12
design. We're very, very, very much
00:46:15
looking forward to our next release with Rachel Holt, which
00:46:18
is planned for May 30th. It's a song called How Dare Me,
00:46:24
and it's a song written by Dan Kaminsky.
00:46:27
Dan Taminsky, Sorry, who actually appeared in that Avicii
00:46:31
song? Hey, brother.
00:46:33
Oh, yeah, hey. Yeah, so that's so he wrote the
00:46:38
song, really fantastic song. Of course, Chris Wallin produced
00:46:42
it and that's going to be late May.
00:46:45
And I'm very excited for Rachel, frankly, because, you know, I
00:46:50
think something that occurs has occurred to me.
00:46:52
And George, maybe you've noticed this too, living in New Jersey.
00:46:55
You go to a diner in New Jersey or in New York City.
00:46:59
We got diners in Jersey bro. No, but what music are they
00:47:02
playing? Right, They're playing maybe, at
00:47:05
least in my experience, they're playing like Bon Jovi or they're
00:47:09
playing Springsteen. They're playing music from the
00:47:12
70s and 80s and maybe early 90s, but there's an entire cultural
00:47:17
period where hip hop and grunge and this sort of nihilistic
00:47:22
stuff took over, and it's not representative of what the
00:47:26
average American actually wants to hear in their music.
00:47:29
And there has to come a time where, again, the common
00:47:32
American, the majority of Americans are going to be
00:47:35
represented by the media they consume, right?
00:47:39
People can only be, you know, I like to make an analogy, you
00:47:43
know, why does, why does based work?
00:47:45
Why does post millennial work? Why does big, big work?
00:47:48
Ultimately, it's because every other media format spits on
00:47:53
their consumer, right? They spit on their consumer and
00:47:56
they insult their consumer. There's only so much that you
00:48:00
can be insulted by an MSNBC or ACNN or I hate to say it, even a
00:48:05
Fox News. There's only so much that you
00:48:08
can be spit on by these outlets, and for them to expect you to be
00:48:14
a continually loyal customer, at a certain point, enough is
00:48:17
enough. You know, and, and I, you're so
00:48:20
spot on with that. You know, we always talk about,
00:48:23
you know, we do the show, we do these things called set the mood
00:48:26
that sometimes are funny, educational, just might be a
00:48:28
meme somebody created. We had one yesterday from the
00:48:31
daily meme team. We played because it was just
00:48:33
funny. Had all a bunch of congressional
00:48:35
members all tattooed out like they were MS13 with some music
00:48:38
running with it, you know, just because of course AIS take it
00:48:41
off. But the doom and gloom angry
00:48:44
narrative, right? That, that, that, that back
00:48:46
story that seems to be perpetuated constantly.
00:48:50
Even myself, like, you know, you know, I thought to George,
00:48:53
sometimes we're in the news cycles and we're looking at
00:48:55
what's out there and you're just like, God, could this be any
00:48:57
more fucking depressing at the end of the day?
00:49:00
Angry music, you know, that that seems to just promote, you know,
00:49:05
people being promiscuous or violence.
00:49:08
I, you know, I think people are over that.
00:49:09
You know, I remember the music I grew up with, you know, I, you
00:49:11
know, I'm dating myself, but you know, it started in disco, then
00:49:15
it went to the punk rock, you know, period that got really
00:49:18
popular, you know, the Sex Pistols, the Ramones, the rest
00:49:21
of it, like the Mud Club and the Ritz in New York.
00:49:23
Those were the top spots then. And then of course it went from
00:49:27
there. And I, you know, I liked early
00:49:29
hip hop. I liked early hip hop.
00:49:31
I like that. But what's happened now that
00:49:33
some of the some of the talent that.
00:49:35
You like the gangsta rap bro? I you know, I did in the
00:49:38
beginning, but but what we've got now for the talent, I don't
00:49:41
really like it. I don't like the promotion.
00:49:44
I don't like what they're trying to do to our kids.
00:49:46
So the feel good, you know, songs that come out, you see how
00:49:49
successful are, even if you look at even somebody like Tom
00:49:52
McDonald, he's really blown up because he's he's he recognizes
00:49:55
what the audience was or even Forgiato blow coming out with
00:49:59
songs that are exposing things like Balenciaga for what they're
00:50:02
really doing. And and I think we see it.
00:50:05
I mean, at the end of the day, I, you know, and it's weird
00:50:09
that, you know, people always ask me, do you really think
00:50:11
there's some kind of a, you know, an organized plot behind
00:50:15
the scenes that this, you know, this, this, this Satanism and
00:50:18
the rest of it? But then I look at the shows, I
00:50:19
look at, I look at what's going on in these concerts around the
00:50:23
country. You know, you look at Lady Gaga
00:50:25
as an example and some of these other talent.
00:50:28
There seems to be this big signal.
00:50:29
Let's, you know, let's, let's give a shout out to Satan across
00:50:32
the board. So I, I see what you're doing
00:50:35
and I appreciate it #1 because I think it's important.
00:50:38
You're a father, you know it as a father myself, although my
00:50:41
daughter is much older, she's, you know, she's, she's 30 now.
00:50:45
So I had her early on in my life.
00:50:47
But it's interesting. I, you know, I get concerned for
00:50:49
the other parents out there when I look at the brainwashing that
00:50:51
happens on TikTok or in music or in media.
00:50:54
And I see you, you know, you're, you're, you're like a salmon
00:50:57
swimming upstream. You're going the other direction
00:50:59
and you're, and, and everything's working, which
00:51:02
means to me, you have identified the right target.
00:51:04
You know, on this show, we always talk about the UNI party
00:51:07
because I don't want to support either side because I see in our
00:51:10
politics on one side of the aisle, George, and I want you to
00:51:13
comment on this. We talk about how the the
00:51:16
Republicans, they get over there they go.
00:51:18
We're going to have a committee, we're going to have a hearing.
00:51:19
We're going to subpoena somebody and and yeah, and another
00:51:22
committee, another hearing. And it's nothing.
00:51:24
No, no action, right? There's no bite in the does.
00:51:26
Action. There's action.
00:51:28
There's a lot of talking. That's action for them.
00:51:30
That's all you're going to get. And we have and the other side,
00:51:33
George, what's the other side do?
00:51:34
Active destruction. They're actively trying to
00:51:36
destroy the country from when they're trying to destroy our
00:51:38
morality, trying to take God out of the school system completely.
00:51:42
They don't want to talk about the Constitution because my God,
00:51:44
it's just we can't have that. Go ahead, George, you take well.
00:51:48
We talk about this all the time. So I mean, here, I'm gonna bring
00:51:51
some up. We got 4 Congress, Democratic
00:51:53
Congress, people that are in El Salvador, you know, trying to
00:51:57
get rid of, trying to get that. Ms. Illegal.
00:51:59
Trying to get the Ms. Gang 13 guy out, I think one of them
00:52:02
said today. At least one said today that
00:52:04
she's not leaving until he's released.
00:52:06
Fucking great stay there. Mike Johnson.
00:52:09
Maybe put some put some things on to get voted on cuz they're
00:52:14
they're they're down for right now.
00:52:16
We have an advantage you got. Yeah, let's have a vote right
00:52:18
now on some report. Think.
00:52:19
But you think they would do that, right?
00:52:21
No. No, I agree strategically.
00:52:23
We'd rather have more clown show hearings, right?
00:52:26
So they can all grandstand, talk about this, how you did this
00:52:30
illegal, yadda yadda yadda. But yet there's no nothing, no
00:52:34
charges, no arrests. Steve Bannon gets charged for,
00:52:38
you know, for subpoena. Roger Stone.
00:52:41
They all do. But on our side, they got no
00:52:43
balls. They got no guts.
00:52:44
Some of the women got do, but nobody follows through.
00:52:47
It's crazy. And and that's exactly what I'm
00:52:50
saying to you, Matthew. It takes balls and guts to take
00:52:53
the route you're taking because you're taking the higher Rd.
00:52:56
I'm sure that we know that gangster rap, you know, if we
00:53:00
talk about Sexy Red and some of these other ridiculously trashy
00:53:03
songs that are out there that they get tons of downloads, but
00:53:07
you're not doing that. I mean, hi Res, he's a new
00:53:09
father. I'm excited for him and I and I
00:53:12
look at the way he exposes and I think that's the thing that you
00:53:15
guys are able to do, which we we don't.
00:53:17
We've been suspended. We got suspended on YouTube
00:53:19
permanently our last round because we put up some CDCS and
00:53:22
Vares information, which of course that was supposed to be
00:53:24
OK, but I can't even get anybody to respond back.
00:53:27
We're just tired of it. We're not going back.
00:53:30
The the point is you're, do you find yourself, you know, you're,
00:53:34
you're, you're going in the other direction and you and I
00:53:36
think you have hit what I call, you know, kind of a tipping
00:53:38
point. Is it perfect timing?
00:53:41
Do you also find that they're continuing to try to, you know,
00:53:44
hold you back and attack you? So timing is really one of the
00:53:48
most important elements of business.
00:53:51
Now, the issue with timing is that if you're a little bit too
00:53:53
early, you need additional capital or you need to be super
00:53:56
cheap, right? You need to keep costs low long
00:54:00
enough for you to survive, right?
00:54:02
Because otherwise you're, you're burning cash waiting for the for
00:54:06
everything to be correct. You know what I'll say is this,
00:54:12
the George Bush was able to take American citizens to black sites
00:54:18
in Cuba, Guantanamo Bay, and nobody cared.
00:54:23
Nobody had a problem. Why?
00:54:26
Because a judge said, yeah, you could take this guy and and you
00:54:29
could torture him, right? So there has to be a little bit
00:54:33
of a respect for process, right? In business as in politics,
00:54:38
right? The issue that we have right now
00:54:41
with our current administration, even though I agree with the
00:54:44
with what we're trying to do is we have to have a judge
00:54:48
essentially say, OK, here's your due process, here's the warrant.
00:54:52
Even if the warrant is issued in the middle of the night or at
00:54:55
some point, you still need that warrant, right?
00:54:58
You still need that kind of juridical oversight.
00:55:01
And it's the same thing in in business.
00:55:04
You know, I mean, you guys are in crypto all the time, right?
00:55:07
And if you look at why Bitcoin is a great product in the same
00:55:10
way that gold is a great commodity, it's because nobody
00:55:14
can rug pull gold and nobody can rug pull Bitcoin.
00:55:18
Right. And decentralized finance.
00:55:20
Exactly. Well, that's also, yeah, it's
00:55:23
centralized and it's decentralized, right?
00:55:25
You can only mine it finitely from certain places.
00:55:28
But then at the same time, nobody has enough of the supply
00:55:31
to screw over every other participant, Correct.
00:55:34
The way I would think about it is, is that process is very
00:55:38
important, even though it feels like you're participating in a
00:55:41
silly little dance sometimes. And that's how the that's how, I
00:55:47
don't know, legal proceedings can be.
00:55:49
I guess in the context of immigration, you still have to
00:55:52
kind of do that because think about everything that Bush got
00:55:55
away with torturing American citizens, waterboarding American
00:56:01
citizens and everybody said, ah, but somebody but a judge gave a
00:56:06
rubber spam. So therefore, here you go.
00:56:08
So I don't know as somebody who is deeply concerned with
00:56:13
ensuring that Salvadoran gangsters are actually deported
00:56:18
back to El Salvador and with with Venezuela, I mean, it's a
00:56:23
great political thing for the Trump campaign because we're
00:56:26
going to be able to run all of these campaigns advertisements.
00:56:30
Oh. My God, imagine.
00:56:31
Imagine when they run against the people that are there.
00:56:33
The commercials, yeah. I mean, how stupid, How stupid
00:56:37
are they that they're, they're sitting there openly fighting
00:56:41
for an MS13 gang member and not fighting for their own American
00:56:46
citizens. Whether they, those American
00:56:47
citizens be Spanish, Chinese, white, black, who cares?
00:56:50
They're American citizens, but they're picking up a legal gang
00:56:54
member. Yeah.
00:56:56
Fucking and. You know, this is what I keep
00:56:58
saying to our audience and this is our continued message.
00:57:01
If we have certain messages, tip of the spear goes through
00:57:04
meaning that we always try to be on the point of what we believe
00:57:07
matters for the country and for the people, the American people.
00:57:10
And it's always about unification.
00:57:12
But one of the important things is common sense.
00:57:14
What we see from this political organization.
00:57:17
And I and I again, I'm going to tribute to both sides of the
00:57:20
aisles in a lot of ways because inaction is makes you just as
00:57:22
guilty. In my opinion, inaction makes
00:57:25
you a Co conspirator because you know, mis precision of a felony
00:57:29
means that you're aware of a felony, but you allow it to
00:57:32
happen. You become a Co conspirator when
00:57:33
that happens. And that's what we have in DC at
00:57:35
this time. But I think it's incredible that
00:57:37
so many people are brainwashed so successfully by media still.
00:57:42
I mean, they like they like to talk about Operation
00:57:44
Mockingbird, but Operation Mockingbird is kind of like the
00:57:47
Mr. Rogers as compared to what we have now, right?
00:57:50
It's Mr. Rogers neighborhood and compared to what we have, which
00:57:53
is the 800 LB gorilla of media control.
00:57:56
But I think it's interesting that they can continue to be so
00:57:58
brainwashed that they leave their common sense at the door
00:58:02
prior to the brainwashing because anybody with any common
00:58:05
sense would say, let me think kidnapping, trafficking,
00:58:08
cartels, trade debt or WAGWA Ms. 13, you know, Seatalo.
00:58:13
Yeah, those guys, I don't think those are guys we'd want to have
00:58:16
in the country. They seem like the business
00:58:18
verticals that are in trafficking, you know, a child
00:58:21
trafficking and and drugs. No, that doesn't seem to be good
00:58:24
for the country. No, we don't want those guys.
00:58:26
But instead what comes out of the media is, Oh my gosh, they
00:58:29
want to call this kid, he's got the MS13.
00:58:32
A lot of people are saying that's not what it is, but but
00:58:34
I've checked it out. Those, the tattoos on his hand
00:58:37
stand for MS13 and that's what those numbers are.
00:58:40
So clearly he's an MS13 because in the gang world, for the
00:58:43
audience, they may not know this.
00:58:45
You can't go out and say you're part of a gang and get a tattoo
00:58:49
without consequences. They will literally cut the
00:58:52
tattoo off of you. They will shave it off of you.
00:58:56
The Aryan Brotherhood was known for that and many other gangs
00:58:58
over the years were known for that, that they would go out and
00:59:00
find those individuals. It's kind of like to compare for
00:59:04
the audience. It would be like when you
00:59:06
misrepresent yourself as a military member.
00:59:09
You know when you when you take a false identity, that's well
00:59:12
known and it's my point. Yeah, I'm sorry.
00:59:16
Yeah. No, go ahead.
00:59:16
No, Matt, I want you to, I want you to comment.
00:59:19
I just want to say that what matters ultimately is due
00:59:21
process. Because while it is bad for the
00:59:24
Democrats politically, what they're doing, and they're not
00:59:27
even aware about how bad it is, it's it's worse for us because
00:59:31
we want to have comprehensive immigration reform.
00:59:35
By immigration reform, of course, we need something very
00:59:37
different from what the Democratic Party means when they
00:59:40
indicate that they're open to that.
00:59:42
But nevertheless, we want to actually have due process.
00:59:47
And if we don't have that, it's going to be very difficult to
00:59:50
get any of these changes to stick legally.
00:59:54
And that's. Executive orders aren't enough.
00:59:56
And and you're right. Except here's the problem I see
00:59:59
with our judiciary and our DOJ. Even now, I'm not even convinced
01:00:04
that Pam Bondi is up for the job.
01:00:08
The, the problem we have is that that we don't have the rule of
01:00:12
law, we don't have equal protection of the law, equal
01:00:14
application law. And that is because that our
01:00:18
leadership in DC has done an incredible job of, of installing
01:00:24
people inside the judiciary, installing people with the DOJ
01:00:27
that have forgotten that you have to leave your political
01:00:30
bias at the door. When you put on that robe as a,
01:00:33
as a judge, your political bias is supposed to be hung up at the
01:00:36
door because you're supposed to be completely neutral.
01:00:39
And we don't have that. We're seeing it right now where
01:00:41
these judges are coming out because at the end of the day,
01:00:43
an illegal immigrant, because he's not a citizen of the United
01:00:46
States, due process doesn't necessarily apply to that
01:00:48
individual because again, he entered the country illegally.
01:00:51
At that point, you're a criminal because the, the, if you go to
01:00:53
the supreme law, all enemies, foreign and domestic, the
01:00:57
weaponization of our judiciary, the weaponization of our legal
01:00:59
system. And I don't care whether it's
01:01:01
right or left, you can't have that.
01:01:03
And to be a good judge, to be a good, you know, prosecutor
01:01:07
within the DOJ, you can't have political bias.
01:01:10
But in fact, they're being rewarded for political bias, and
01:01:15
they're being installed for political bias.
01:01:18
You know, give me your comments on that.
01:01:20
I, I think that that's very important to remember, but at
01:01:23
the same time, you can't go into life realizing that that the
01:01:28
deck is stacked against you and let it disturb you
01:01:32
psychologically. You have to be able to enter the
01:01:35
arena and fight by the rules of the arena.
01:01:38
You know, I'm pretty confident and I'm very hopeful that
01:01:41
Congress will enact some laws, hopefully to sort of cement
01:01:47
Trump's legal changes. I'm, I'm very happy about a lot
01:01:51
of the changes that have been instituted by this new regime.
01:01:56
But the thing you have to remember about liberals and
01:01:59
about progressives is that they're pathologically afraid.
01:02:03
They're always very deeply afraid of the right.
01:02:07
And that's why they succeed, right?
01:02:09
Since the French Revolution, they've succeeded time and time
01:02:12
again, and it's because they are hysterically, pathologically
01:02:18
scared. And the issue with what we're
01:02:21
doing now is that we're being very scary.
01:02:25
We're instituting a lot of change.
01:02:26
We're trying to do everything we possibly can.
01:02:29
But unless the judiciary and or Congress steps in to cement what
01:02:35
the Trump administration is doing, all we're going to do is
01:02:39
feed into their fear. And if they don't respect you
01:02:43
process, what will eventually happen is.
01:02:45
And by the way, the Biden administration was already doing
01:02:48
this to a certain extent where you would have old women praying
01:02:52
outside of abortion centers. Oh yeah.
01:02:55
And, you know, listen, it's disgusting that they had to
01:02:58
arrest these people or that they did that.
01:03:00
But imagine, you know, you're an old lady praying in front of an
01:03:06
abortion center or a Planned Parenthood or whatever.
01:03:10
Planned Parenthood. Yeah, that's right.
01:03:11
And they and they put a hood on you and they throw you in a
01:03:14
black van and off you go. So we have to remember that it's
01:03:20
not their first rodeo. They know what they're doing.
01:03:24
And any tool that we use can eventually be used against us.
01:03:28
So yeah, something to remember. Well, hold on.
01:03:31
I want to. I want to bring something about
01:03:33
the attorney generals because, you know, people, I'm looking in
01:03:36
the chat. Oh, I trust Trump.
01:03:37
Well, if you look at Trump's past attorney general picks from
01:03:41
2017, they all sucked and did nothing.
01:03:45
What's you know? We'll see what happens with her.
01:03:47
I I like Trump, for the record. I do too.
01:03:50
My concern is the the the future and how do we cement this?
01:03:53
The problem, the issue that comes to hand with Trump is not
01:03:56
Trump, it's who's advising him. And I'll I'll say I don't care
01:04:01
Susan Wiles is not is I think is a bad apple for the Trump admin
01:04:05
along with few others. So.
01:04:07
Yeah, you know, it it even what they've done with the press, a
01:04:10
lot of the alt media that that, you know, just like us, we had,
01:04:13
we had a bunch of interviews lined up with Tom Holman, Tulsi
01:04:16
Gabbard. And then of course there was the
01:04:17
big they put the brakes on everything and they said, oh,
01:04:20
we've got to we're going to have to approve every single
01:04:23
interview. And of course it seems like the
01:04:25
top choice is Fox News. And you know, they're acting as
01:04:28
if Fox News has always been 100% right in all their, you know,
01:04:34
commentary, which they weren't. Well, you know that and I know
01:04:36
that I think there, I think there's controlled operations
01:04:39
within even Fox News. You know, I believe in Owen,
01:04:41
Newsmax, Gateway Pundit, The Post, Millennial, there's lots
01:04:45
of sources that deserve the optics that have been fighting,
01:04:48
but yet they're still pushed to the side.
01:04:50
Even the podcast, but groups that have been approved for
01:04:54
Washington DC, we applied for it.
01:04:56
I didn't even get so much as a confirmed.
01:04:58
We've got your application, we're reviewing and we've
01:05:00
already been vetted because you know, I've been to Mar a Lago
01:05:03
George has already been vetted for approval to Mar a Lago,
01:05:05
things like that. But it's complicated.
01:05:08
But at the end of the day, it's all bred in circuses, right?
01:05:11
You know, if you go back to what I'm stealing that from the
01:05:14
Romans, But of course, it that's what it is.
01:05:16
It's bred in circuses. That's what people buy into.
01:05:19
Just think about this here. Go ahead.
01:05:22
If Chris Popovsky's watching, imagine if you have a bunch of
01:05:28
people from Rumble shows, all from rumble up at the White
01:05:32
House press corps with their, you know, Chris could give us
01:05:35
some rumble stuff to put on, you know, on the mics or something.
01:05:38
How good would that look? How are you, like, right there?
01:05:41
Yeah. Can you guys say more?
01:05:42
Chris just gave you a great idea.
01:05:45
They may need a permanent. For me, Rumble needs a permanent
01:05:47
position there in the, I think they call Podcast Row now they
01:05:51
need a permanent slot there. But it's interesting, just even
01:05:54
that isn't relatively controlled.
01:05:56
Let's go back to music. You know what's what, what, what
01:06:00
have you got up and coming? I don't know what you've got
01:06:02
besides the music release for Rachel.
01:06:04
And we'd love to have her on either right when you're getting
01:06:06
ready to release or prior to release, whatever we can do to
01:06:08
help promote what Rachel's doing because we believe in the
01:06:11
message that she puts out in her music.
01:06:13
Those messages are so crucial because with what you're doing
01:06:16
in the music industry, it gives you the ability to say things.
01:06:21
But I believe that if we said them, I know if we said them on
01:06:23
YouTube, we'd be suspended immediately.
01:06:25
We've been suspended. You know, we, we got suspended 1
01:06:28
back when it was Dorsey, Jack Dorsey, Twitter, one point O
01:06:32
under the, the reign of terror over there, because we, we put
01:06:36
out lots of stuff about the Italy gate story.
01:06:38
We had great connections over there on the ground about the
01:06:40
satellite hack and of course, boom, suspended a minute and 46
01:06:44
seconds after Donald Trump. We got our accounts back.
01:06:46
But I think a lot of the suppression is still in place.
01:06:51
Let's talk about that for a minute.
01:06:52
What do you So what do you have up and coming?
01:06:53
What's the next? So Rachel Holtz coming out, What
01:06:55
else have you got in the fire? Have you got any new talent
01:06:58
coming on board? Let's give to the audience.
01:06:59
Let's chum the water a little. What do you got working that
01:07:01
nobody knows about yet that you can talk about to?
01:07:04
Do is a little bit, and actually I do have to run soon, but a
01:07:09
little bit. I'm running a little bit of an
01:07:11
op here. Basically I'm trying to, and
01:07:13
I'll say it right here right now because who's going to monitor?
01:07:17
Who's going to follow? It's a whole convo thing.
01:07:20
Yeah, I. Mean, what we're going to be
01:07:21
doing is we're going to be working as distributors and as a
01:07:25
label for a lot of conventional Christian and country acts.
01:07:29
Wow. Well, guess what?
01:07:32
Tell me. My mod, her daughter Angie's
01:07:36
coming out with a song, Patriot Party, country song.
01:07:40
I know they're they're going to debut it on Instagram because
01:07:43
she's got some big name people doing it.
01:07:46
Paul Borghese is producing her music video.
01:07:50
Hopefully maybe we can I can get you the song to you and see what
01:07:54
we could do. We, we'd love to talk to her,
01:07:57
we'd love to work with her. We're super open.
01:08:02
All music is good music, especially if it has the right
01:08:05
message and especially if we can, if we can change people's
01:08:09
minds, right. We're trying to run an OP in the
01:08:12
culture war. And distribution is key.
01:08:15
So tell us a little more about that.
01:08:16
How do you kind of plan how to weave that in?
01:08:19
So, yeah, so we're doing digital distribution because it's
01:08:23
exactly what you said, Lance. A lot of this stuff is
01:08:27
infrastructure and a lot of this stuff is how you actually do the
01:08:32
weave, right? You know, to invoke Trump.
01:08:37
How do you actually sorry, do you I do you guys, I.
01:08:40
Hear the baby? No, let's see the baby.
01:08:41
Come on, let's see. I heard.
01:08:42
Him some optics. What's up?
01:08:44
What's his name? What's your name?
01:08:48
David. Hi David, how you doing?
01:08:50
You're on a live stream, okay? You got to be a good boy, okay?
01:08:54
So anyway, yeah, I mean, a lot of what we need on the right is
01:08:57
infrastructure, right? That's why Rumble, what Rumble
01:09:00
is doing is so important because otherwise you wouldn't have a
01:09:02
home, right? Exactly with us.
01:09:05
What we're trying to do is ensure that the administration
01:09:09
and and everything. Thank you.
01:09:13
And that's my publishing and everything related.
01:09:15
Well, there wasn't enough. He just does that.
01:09:17
He comes in every single Oh, I'm on that's.
01:09:19
All right, you know, it's great. We, we, we've had, you know,
01:09:22
it's funny, we've had senators and congressmen on and their
01:09:24
families get involved. It's all great.
01:09:26
That's what the show is about. We.
01:09:27
Did that to Congressman of Texas.
01:09:31
Yeah, I'm like married with his wife.
01:09:32
And a kid. What's his name?
01:09:33
D'souza's son-in-law. Oh, Brandon.
01:09:36
Oh yeah, Yeah, Brandon. Gills We did that.
01:09:38
We had him on the show when he was running and then I said no,
01:09:40
get your wife and the kid, bring them on.
01:09:42
They all came on real quick. It was great.
01:09:44
Yeah, All right. So I think that's exciting
01:09:47
stuff. Listen, if you guys like the
01:09:49
show, I know. I know Matthew's out of time, so
01:09:51
I don't want to hold him any longer.
01:09:53
I know he's probably got to go. He might be.
01:09:54
He might be in charge of lunch or breakfast today.
01:09:56
I don't know where he's going. Oh, there's the other one.
01:09:58
Wow. Look how cute.
01:09:59
Oh. Look at the curls, hey?
01:10:00
Can I have some of that hair? I'd look pretty good with some
01:10:02
of that hair. Do I have some of your hair?
01:10:05
Hi, Honey. Of your hair.
01:10:06
What's your name? It's actually a boy.
01:10:09
A boy. This is just his hair.
01:10:11
If you could. Look at that girl.
01:10:12
Crazy hair bro. What's his?
01:10:14
Wow. What's your name?
01:10:16
His name is Elliot. Hi, Elliot.
01:10:18
Look at him, blonde curls. What's up, Elliot?
01:10:21
I used to have. I used to have curly hair.
01:10:24
I'd like to have some of it back.
01:10:25
All right, so listen, if you like the show, take the short
01:10:28
form, the long form, use it everywhere.
01:10:30
Put the word out. Of course, you want to support a
01:10:32
based record. George, can you throw up their
01:10:34
website quickly for a minute? Oh yeah, I could look at that.
01:10:37
I. Want to throw that up?
01:10:39
Hold on. Give us a second and.
01:10:42
Thank you guys so much. And we and I want you to just to
01:10:45
give them your social media, Matthew, give them your social
01:10:48
media, how they get involved with base, how they download
01:10:51
albums and tracks and gear from you.
01:10:54
You know something? Absolutely I.
01:10:55
Don't have a Base Records. I'm known for my T-shirts.
01:10:58
I have a collection. I don't have a base Records
01:11:00
T-shirt. What a pity.
01:11:01
Well, we even have a membership, so if you want to just support
01:11:04
us and become a member on the site, you can, you know, which
01:11:10
is, it's just one of the tabs there.
01:11:12
You know, we're very proud to be offering a, a home for
01:11:15
conservative musicians and conservative artists and we
01:11:18
really want to be professional about it.
01:11:20
We want to give the whole suite of professional services that
01:11:24
you could expect from any label. We want to give it to
01:11:27
conservative artists. That's our mission.
01:11:30
Obviously there are lots of great independent conservative
01:11:33
artists and maybe we're for them, maybe we're not.
01:11:36
We have spoken with some of them.
01:11:37
We'd love to. This is the thing about like
01:11:39
right wing people. Everybody wants to do their own
01:11:41
thing and I totally respect it. But sometimes together is better
01:11:46
and we want to be the home for right wing artists.
01:11:50
And I think that's great. And what's your social media?
01:11:52
You want to give them your social media on XI know you're
01:11:54
on true social also. So share that with.
01:11:57
Them X is the best place. I mean, basically it's AD based
01:12:00
records. So that's BASTE RECORDS.
01:12:04
That's based. Not like the term based, but
01:12:07
like basting a Turkey instead. You know what I'm saying?
01:12:11
Yeah. Well, my mom's been putting your
01:12:13
link in the chat throughout the show, so.
01:12:16
But it's like a play on words. Even with the base Turkey,
01:12:18
everyone kind of thinks it's based like based, which is
01:12:20
interesting. It was a great play on words.
01:12:22
I thought that was a great, I don't know if that was the
01:12:24
initial plan, but it sure seemed like a great marketing ploy.
01:12:28
I couldn't afford the the based records domain it was it was
01:12:31
already taken in. Yeah, those squatters will take
01:12:33
a chunk out of you. Exactly, I'm not going to get
01:12:36
screwed over like that. Even the post millennial.
01:12:39
It was the post millennial. I misspelled millennial the
01:12:43
first time I purchased it. OK, You got to keep rolling, you
01:12:47
know what I mean? You got to keep.
01:12:49
Yeah, whatever. Yeah, nobody I I don't like
01:12:51
those URL squatters. I hate that whole industry, how
01:12:54
they gouge people that are coming up with a creative idea
01:12:56
and they're squatting like evermore on crypto names.
01:13:00
We were lucky to get the crypto power hour.
01:13:01
That was just fortunate. And but when I went to go look,
01:13:05
there were so many names squatted.
01:13:07
All right, listen, if you guys like the show, don't forget
01:13:08
thumbs up, comment, share. If you can do a paid
01:13:10
subscription, great. You can always subscribe to
01:13:13
Rumble premium. We want to support them.
01:13:15
Also, no commercial, lots of other incentives.
01:13:17
Get over to base records and of course, you can subscribe over
01:13:21
there. You can buy downloads.
01:13:23
Lots of great gear. Also, support these guys.
01:13:26
They're doing the right work. They're trying to change the
01:13:28
country here. Hopefully they're going to help
01:13:30
us get unified with Canada. I'd love to see it.
01:13:33
And again, if you're not following or subscribing, hit
01:13:36
that follow button right now. Support us.
01:13:38
Get over to X, the big, big show.
01:13:40
Lance Miliacio and G Ballantine, of course, later today, George,
01:13:47
I guess what else have you got going on, George?
01:13:48
Last words I want to say on the way out of the gate.
01:13:53
I don't know, I got stuff to do. I'm having an issue right now
01:13:55
with. The computer tomorrow we've got
01:13:57
the crypto Power hour, don't forget at 3:00 PM.
01:14:00
So of course, the number one crypto show on Rumble.
01:14:03
We appreciate you guys tuning in today.
01:14:05
That's it. Big, big shows out of here.
01:14:08
Thanks so much guys. Love you guys.
01:14:11
Take care, Lance. Thanks, Matthew.
01:14:12
Appreciate it brother. Hey Garrett Lance, I got a issue
01:14:15
with something being stuck here, so I'm just going to end it.