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June 11, 2025 • 33 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Jesse Kelly Show. Another hour of The Jesse Kelly Show
and a fantastic Wednesday. We have all kinds of stuff.
This hour, we're gonna talk about how did we get here?
Meaning divided, our elites all mixed up, leading the people
in the wrong direction. We'll discuss that CCPs using Harvard

(00:23):
as a human capital recruiting ground, all that emails, so
much more coming up tonight on the world famous Jesse
Kelly Show. Now, I want to begin here because we discussed,
I know it was heavy at the end of last hour,
how divided we are. And it's just crazy to me
that the states are standing against deportation and just as

(00:47):
divided as we are. And did you see what Chrissy
Walton did, Christy Walton. I know you don't know who
that is. She's an heiress to the wall fortune Walmart.
That the Walton family, they have so many billionaires. I
forget what the number is, but they're all billionaires. It's

(01:08):
just legions of them. There's they're printing money, the whole family,
billions and billions and billions. And here you have this woman,
filthy rich. She took out a full page ad in
The New York Times calling for people to rise up
against Trump, I forget the exact language, essentially calling for

(01:29):
more demonstrations, protests, riots. How did we get here as
a country? Well, it can be very tempting to turn
on the news, to turn on social media and to
blame the animals you see on TV throwing molotov cocktails
and all things like that, And they are most definitely

(01:50):
to blame someone. I'm not telling you they're innocent by
any stretch. But leadership matters, and I think we should
discuss exactly how and why we lost our I'm gonna
call them elites. I hate using that, so no better
than you or me. But how do we lose that?
How did that happen? Well, there's a long explanation for it.

(02:14):
Let's go with, first of all the basics. Communist leaders historically,
did you know they're almost all rich kids, almost without exception,
the Communist leaders were rich kids, children of wealthy parents.

(02:35):
Now that's not widely known because all your teachers in
school were Communists, and so they do the best they
can to cover up all the evils of communism and
all the lies communists tell. But you know, Chay, that
stupid T shirt you wore when you were in college.
Here's a rich kid, you know Lenin rich kid, maw

(02:56):
even oh the Chinese peasant, the farmer. No, rich kid.
Dad was a wealthy farmer, employees and everything wealthy. Pole Pot,
the guy who executed well, executed and starved to death
twenty five percent of his country. He killed a quarter
of his own country. Paul Pot, rich kid, so rich,

(03:20):
his family was in good with the king. They had
a king at the time. So rich. You want to
hear what rich is? This was only the rich kids?
Who ever got to do this? When I was a kid,
he studied abroad. He went to Paris to learn about communism.
You didn't think Pole Pot learned about communism in Cambodia,
did you? He went to Paris and learned about communism,

(03:43):
brought it back to his country and killed twenty five
percent of his own country. Rich kids, Why does that happen?
How does that happen? Now, let's be clear, it's not
bad to be a rich kid. If your folks are wealthy,
you're no better or worse than any anyone Else's part
of life. You don't have to feel bad about it.

(04:04):
You shouldn't feel prideful about it. It's just tell you
were born, It's life. Why does it happen to some
rich kids? What happens there will all of us. We
are all born, and we all want a mission, and
we all people don't realize this. We all want a challenge,

(04:29):
need a challenge. It's human nature. If I could, if
I could give you everything you wanted, if you gave
me a list of everything you ever wanted, whether it
be money and houses and boats, or maybe it's a
personal maybe you want a husband or a wife, or kids,
or with whatever you wanted, if I had the power

(04:51):
to give it to you, and I could hand it
all to you right now, it wouldn't be long until
you were stressed about something, striving for something, wanting something,
Because that's how human beings are built. You have to
have it. If you're a rich kid, oftentimes depending on
it depends on how you were raised and depends on you. Again,

(05:13):
I'm not indicting you. If you're a wealthy child, that's fine.
You haven't done anything wrong, but you don't always have
the challenges that other kids do. And if you're uber,
uber wealthy, if you're a Walton, you're part of the
Walmart fortune. Picture this flying your entire life and you've

(05:36):
never been to a commercial airport. You've never been on
a commercial plane. Imagine flying around the world. You're in
your sixties and you've never been on Southwest, Delta, Spirit,
United American Airlines never one time. You don't even know
what a commercial airliner smells like. That's how some people

(06:00):
live their lives. It's maids and servants and private jets
and and when you wake up one day, when you
have a when it's your graduation party. Do you ever
have a graduation party. We had a graduation party. It
was in my backyard. There were fifteen people there. Imagine
your graduation party in Paris, where that's where people like

(06:23):
that have their graduation party. We're gonna rent an island
in Italy and have it on a yacht and we're
bringing in the red hot Chili peppers to play for that.
That's how these people live. It sounds like heaven right,
sounds perfect. Wow. They want for nothing, but they need
a challenge. You need something, I need something, I need
I need it. So you're looking around at the poor

(06:48):
maybe whoever they may be, and you think to yourself, well,
I'm an elite I even feel a touch of guilt
for that I should go be their leader, aid to
be their leader. So you dirty up your clothes like
Jay did, you learn how to speak the language of
the poor, and you go murder a whole bunch of people.

(07:11):
That's what communist leaders have always done. So there's always
that inclination. And then there's your institutions that train your leaders.
Our institutions, our main one that trains our leaders is
our elite university system. Our rich kids, smart kids, our

(07:37):
future CEOs and senators, all these people. They don't go
to Pema Community College. I know, Chris, it's hard to believe,
even though it was fully accredited. They don't go to
Pema Community College like I did. They go to Harvard.
Headline CCP uses Harvard as fertile human capital recruiting ground

(08:00):
to further military goals. Reports says, that's a report from Freebeacon.
You see our university system. It wasn't just foreign domestic
communists too. They captured the elite university systems where our
future leaders filter through. And after they captured these systems,

(08:25):
after they captured these institutions, they began to churn out
COMMI reporters commedy CEOs, commedy senators. Now, now these people
are leading the communist revolution from positions of power in
this country. Our communist leaders are United States senators, they

(08:46):
are CEOs, they are mayors, they are governors, and they
are not out there dissuading the revolutionaries in the streets.
They'll kind of halfway do that. Hey, don't be violent,
but you have every right to protest Trump's tyranny. They'll
do a whole lot of that stuff. They are cheering
for it. I want you to listen to this. This

(09:08):
is Abel Maldonado. He's the former lieutenant governor of California.

Speaker 2 (09:13):
In California, we had a situation where stores were being
looted by people.

Speaker 3 (09:17):
There was no ramifications.

Speaker 2 (09:19):
The people of California put Proposition thirty six on the
ballot that in essence made it stiffer penalties and stop
people from stealing.

Speaker 3 (09:26):
Gavin Newsom opposed it. This is just a couple of
months ago.

Speaker 2 (09:29):
Gavin Newsom opposed it, and the people of California voted
almost seventy percent.

Speaker 3 (09:33):
So those are important facts.

Speaker 1 (09:36):
The people wanted the looting to stop, they wanted everything
to stop. Their governor, their leader said no opposed it.
This is what has happened. We think it's a street
animal problem, and yes they are part of the problem. Again,
I want to acknowledge that it's not as much of

(09:57):
a street problem as it is an elite problem from
the top down. The Democrat Party wants this happening in
the country. That's why they're all on television. We got
to take it to the streets. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Chris, I can't believe we never played that
song when we were talking about Kamala Harris. That would

(10:18):
have been hilarious. What what Chris? Anyway, you can email
the show Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. Let's do
some of those emails, Jesse, I listen every day, Fyi,
she said. The subject of this one's Operation paper Clip.
At the end of World War II, our corrupt government
brought over sixteen hundred German scientists and engineers on the

(10:41):
pretense of getting us to the moon. These Germans were
communists who infiltrated our education system, our government, our military.
There's no depth our government wants, so on and so forth.
All right, first, let's discuss briefly Operation paper Clip, and
let's talk about Nazis first is Communists versus all this

(11:01):
other stuff. Because here in America, everything gets dumb down
for a lot a variety of reasons. Some of it's
because people were dumb. Most of it's because your teacher
was a communist who only is interested in propaganda. Remember,
Remember these people we've been talking about all the lies
have been telling all week long.

Speaker 3 (11:19):
Four or five blocks.

Speaker 4 (11:21):
That's it, and kaddy k the tale of two Cities
is being told by the media.

Speaker 3 (11:25):
It's we know this, we're in this business.

Speaker 4 (11:28):
But the impact of pictures that people see on their
TV tell a story that's not really accurate.

Speaker 1 (11:35):
Oh, they've been telling you there isn't that many fires.
That just the brazen lies. Think about the brazen lies
you've heard about the riots the past few days. Now,
think about the lies your history teacher taught you. We
dumb down history because communists believe in lying about everything.

(11:56):
They do this with Nazis and communists all the time.
America's communists have spent years trying to frame Republicans as Nazis.
They want you to believe that the communists and the
Nazis back in the day were completely separate entities. They
were not Communists and the Nazi Party. They were fighting

(12:20):
for control of Germany. This is post World War One.
They were fighting hard, they were physically fighting in the streets,
but they aligned on an unbelievable number of things. When
the Nazis finally won that little internal squabble, do you
know what most of the communists did. Most of the

(12:42):
Communists didn't die under Hitler's hand, although some did. They
just switched and became Nazis. There were so many of them.
If you read the Anti Communist Manifesto available at Jesse
kellybook dot com. If you read the Anti Communist Manifesto,
you would have already known this. There were so many
of Germany's Communists who became Nazis. They actually had a

(13:04):
term for them. They called them beefsteak Nazis. Brown on
the outside, red on the inside. That's a fact. Nazism
and Communism they're virtually identical. Where the Nazis really differed
from that. It wasn't necessarily ideological, It was more racial.

(13:27):
It was really purely a hatred of the Jews type thing.
It was essentially, if I'm a Nazi and you're a Communist,
we'll get along. Just fine, unless your name Steinberg. That's
really where the diversion was. They're the same people, Okay,
so let's fast forward past that. Operation paper clip. Operation

(13:48):
paper Clip is one of those things that is widely
discussed and people love to argue about it and talk
about what was and what wasn't. If I can defend
our government on this, allow me to the Germans. Germany
in general. Germans in general are good engineers. What is

(14:08):
that Karkub? Is it Audi Mercedes? But one of those
German cars. German engineering they're always talking about German. German
engineering is famous for a reason. Those dagone Germans are
good at it, right, Germans are good at it, So
that's one. They were good. They had excellent scientists. The
Nazi war machine was extremely impressive, and the things they

(14:31):
would have done had they not purged all the Jews. Again,
it was kind of the racial stuff that really screwed them.
They had even more capable people, but they wouldn't let them.
They wouldn't let them do anything because they were Jewish.
But even still they were really accomplishing some amazing things.
Now we're coming to the end of World War two America.

(14:55):
We may have fought alongside the Soviet Union. But we
were not under the impression the Soviet Union was friendly,
and we weren't under the impression that we were going
to be friends. It didn't take a genius to figure out,
we're going to compete with these people economically, militarily. They

(15:16):
are going to be our enemy for quite some time.
And you know what Stalin was doing. Stalin was grabbing
every smart Nazi he could find, and he was bringing
them into the fold. When Germany was getting peace mailed
after the war, America was looking at what Stalin was

(15:37):
doing and was saying, well, we can't let all the
Nazi inteligence go over to Stalin. These are the people
who were landing rockets in London from Germany. That was
a big deal. The V two rocket and all that.
That was a big deal. We wanted some of that knowledge,
and so we lied. We made up a bunch of

(16:01):
stuff names, things like that, and we grabbed those not
see doctors, not sea scientists, and we brought them over
to the United States of America. There were some name
changes and things like that, but hey, I heard NASA's
hiring and that's kind of how the cookie crumbles. Did

(16:24):
we pay a price for that. Of course we did.
No question was it worth it in the end? Well,
we can debate that all day long, but that's what
actually happened. It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful,
fantastic Wednesday. Remember if you miss any part of the show,
you can download the whole thing on Iheartspotify, iTunes. Soros

(16:47):
funded group that helps unemployed adults obtain food stamps leads
the charge against work requirements in Trump's Big Beautiful Bill.
I just want to once again and say something that
I have backed up time and time again on the show.
How is it that the wealthiest, most powerful country in

(17:11):
the history of.

Speaker 3 (17:12):
The world.

Speaker 1 (17:15):
Has allowed a foreign born, rich guy to invest in
the destruction of its streets and its country for decades decades.
I just it blows me away that this has been
allowed to go on for decades. I can't believe it's

(17:39):
a thing that exists here. Think about any other country
and the history of the world at any point in
time if they found out some neighboring country had a
rich guy in it who was unloading millions of dollars
to cause civil unrest in its streets, how would they
respect on to that what Chris, what Chris said, isn't

(18:05):
that espionage of any Yes, yes, and it would be.
It's an active war, to be honest with you, it
is an active war. If if we, the United States
of America, not that we would ever do such a thing,
use our intelligence service to unload millions of dollars in uh,
the country of Chad, and that millions of dollars goes

(18:28):
to street groups who will cause a rebellion in Chad.
That's an active war by America. Of course, it is
and will be treated as an active war here in
the United States of America. Everyone even knows his name,
but they do it openly. He brags about it, and
it's just allowed. I just can't even believe it. How

(18:49):
do J train? A lot of guys love World War
two Roman Empire guns crusaders. I often dwell on a
different aspect, though sometimes I wonder how many wars I
could have won, if if I could go back to Rome, Sparta,
North Africa, or any where else major wars were fought
with a two forty and an sixteen. Am I the

(19:10):
only one who thinks about that kind of thing that
says his name is Rob no I think about that
stuff all the time. You think about that stuff all
the time. I mean and military technology. Trump signed, speaking
of news from today, Trump signed an executive order about
domestic drone production and drones and things like that. And

(19:32):
I'm sure you've heard BK and I discussed drones here
on the air. We've discussed it. When it comes to
Russia Ukraine. Russia Ukraine has been a big drone war,
and these drones possibly have really phased out armor. When
I say armor, I just think tanks, but it's more
than tanks, but they may have phased out armor. How

(19:54):
much money are you going to sink into armor? When
I can fly an itty bitty drone underneath it or
on top it and blow it up and everyone in it,
it becomes not worth it. If it's easy to take
out and take out cheaply, it becomes not worth it.
The game of warfare is always a technological game, and

(20:15):
it's a game that countries don't want to invest in
in peacetime because there's no sense of urgency. And then
when a war breaks out, if you're the one that's behind,
it's catastrophic. World War one is a great example of this.
World War One when I get to do a big

(20:35):
World War One thing. But World War One, Germany they
invade Belgium. They're just passing through, but that's a long story,
but they're invade Belgium. Belgium has forts, not the kind
of forces you're picturing when you and I. When I
picture a fort, I picture the exact same thing you're picturing,
maybe a bunch of wood or stones stacked up these walls.

(21:00):
They go above the ground, and it's a fort. It's
a fort. It's what I pictured. It's a fort. We
get it. It's a fort. Not these these were underground,
mostly underground. There were parts of the fort that were
on top of the ground where it would be a
gun or something, a gun turret that would sit that
was up, but most of the fort was under the ground,

(21:22):
encased in concrete and rebar and stuff like that. So
it's not like the Belgians were idiots. They understood that
that technology had advanced to the point your fort really
couldn't be above ground. It would just get massacred if
it was even if it was stone, it wouldn't matter,
it would just go down. Okay, we got to put
it under the ground. So Germany starts to sweep through Belgium.

(21:45):
They start running into these forts, and at first they
do actually running through a little bit of a problem.
Oh man, we're setting our troops after the fort. We
can't seem to hurt the fort. Our guys are getting
mowed down. But Germany had been investing in weapons, bigger
batter artillery pieces. Eventually Germany simply brought up their bigger

(22:08):
batter artillery pieces and they just destroyed the forts like
there were nothing, like there were nothing. Just boom boom,
boom gone, fort gone. All that money, all that time,
all those men destroyed just like that because you were
behind technologically. Alexander the Great, which we're going to do soon,

(22:30):
I almost did it tonight. I might even do it
tomorrow night. But Alexander the Great, which we're going to
do soon. We've had this discussion before about their military technology.
How did they conquer all of Greece? How'd they bring
all of Greece together before they went and got Persia.
They conquered all the Greeks. One of the main ways
a longer spear. Isn't that the most simple thing in

(22:53):
the world, a longer spear. It was a spear that
was roughly twice as long as the other spears the
Greeks were using. So the Macedonians would show up and
they're stabbing you before you can stab them, and they win.
You lose technology. Trump signed this drone thing today, drone warfare.

(23:19):
Because I'm not in Ukraine and you're not in Ukraine.
Drone warfare can be hard to even imagine. What does
it even look like. We've seen videos of drones flying
out of the beds of semi trucks. It's not hard
to imagine a big Chinese ship, God forbid, showing up
with ten thousand drones in the port of Houston, flying

(23:41):
them all over the place, causing who knows how much destruction.
But this is the kind of thing, the kind of
future thing we're talking about. But here I am talking
to you about it. Let me ask you, how much
money are you interested in investing and stopping that? Even
if I could get you afraid? How much money is
it with whether they're not here now, we're not even
at war with China. I don't know what's the big deal.

(24:04):
And I'm with you, I'm right there with you. How
much money do you invest in that stuff? You don't
invest what you should, and then when war finally does come,
and it always comes, the one with the technological advantage wins.
You want to know what real A variety of things did,
but you want to know what really, really really hurt

(24:26):
the Japanese in our war against them in the Pacific War.
Wasn't just the size of our navy and all that
radar radar we had it they didn't. And it doesn't
sound like the end of the world radar, Okay. I
know you can see how it'd be an advantage, and

(24:48):
I can see how it would be an advantage. But
when you are having an aircraft carrier fight and I'm
going to launch my ships from my carrier and you
don't know it, and you're going to launch your ships
from your you and I don't know it. If I
have something that tells me your planes are coming and

(25:10):
I know where they're coming from, that's not a small thing.
That's the difference between four of your carriers going to
the bottom and four of my carriers going to the bottom.
Technological advances. Speaking of Russia, Ukraine, Mitch McConnell, our favorite Senator,

(25:32):
Mitch McConnell, got a chance to interrogate Pete Hegseith had
some interesting things to say. We'll talk to him. Well,
we're not going to talk to him. I have no
desire to do that. We'll talk about him and play
his comments in a moment. It is that Jesse Kelly Show.
Don't worry, we still have more than an hour left
of the Jesse Kelly Show. So let's discuss Mitch McConnell

(25:55):
for a moment, shall we. And really, it saddens me.
It saddens me because we've been talking about the country
and the state of the country a lot tonight on
the show. It saddens me the state of our leaders
and the level of disloyalty or just the general lack
of love of country. Someone had emailed something in the

(26:18):
other day, and it was funny that they emailed in
about Teddy Roosevelt Junior. Yes, President Roosevelt's son, Teddy Roosevelt Junior,
a general, Brigadier general I believe at the time, landing
on the beaches of Normandy D Day. It's funny they
emailed that in because I didn't inform everybody, but I

(26:40):
went to the World War Two Museum in New Orleans
last week and I read about Teddy Roosevelt Junior landing
on the beaches of Normandy. And if you go look
at all of America's history, from the Revolutionary War to
the Civil War, all the way through it, senators, their sons,

(27:03):
and themselves fought for this country while they were in office.
Senators fighting for the country, presidents fighting for the country.
There are sons, family members. I'm gonna forget the name.
I'm gonna screw up the name, so forgive me for that.
And I'm gonna screw up the location. I believe it

(27:26):
was Okinawa, but it was one of the Pacific islands.
I was watching a documentary a few weeks ago. That's
why I'm fuzzy on the details. But a young man
died in combat and his father, I believe he was
a general on the island, went over to visit his

(27:50):
son and pay respects over his son's grave. Now, I
don't celebrate, I don't celebrate a lot when it comes
to the horrible things about war, because war is a
terrible thing. But what love of country. That's love of
country to rise to an incredibly high station in the

(28:14):
country and yet still put yourself at risk of dying
for it and put your children at risk of dying
for it. But these politicians today, so many of them,
not all of them, but so many of them, they
talk about other countries that way. They never talk about
ours that way. Listen to Mitch McConnell's Listen to this.

Speaker 5 (28:38):
Man, miss shuk. He probably won't surprise you.

Speaker 1 (28:41):
He's interrogating Pete Hee Seth. Not only did we get
a wrong one interrogating Pete say.

Speaker 5 (28:46):
Miss shuk, he probably won't surprise you. But I'm going
to start with Ukraine number one. Who's the aggressor and
who's the victim in the conflict?

Speaker 1 (28:58):
Russia's digressor?

Speaker 5 (29:00):
Which shot do you want to win?

Speaker 6 (29:03):
As we've said time and time again.

Speaker 1 (29:05):
Keep in mind, you have a limited amount of time
to interrogate people when you are a senator or member
of the House, a very limited amount of time. Even
Mitch McConnell's time is limited. It's not open ended. Could
have asked the Secretary of Defense about anything. This is
how we use this time.

Speaker 6 (29:23):
This president is committed to peace in that conflict. Ultimately,
peace serves our national interests, and we think the interest
of both parties, even if that outcome will not be
preferable to many in this room and many in our.

Speaker 5 (29:35):
Country, which shot is president, she pull and poor well.

Speaker 6 (29:40):
As we stated by both of you, we obviously understand. Unfortunately,
under this administration and the policy excuse me, under the
previous administration and the policies they pursued, it is driven
Russia and China closer together. So there's no doubt that
China would prefer that Vladimir Putin have a good outcome,

(30:01):
but it would also prefer a prolonged conflict that would
keep US and other countries tied down and incapable of
paying attention to the malign influence of China elsewhere.

Speaker 5 (30:11):
One thing I'm sure we agree on it. We don't
want a headline at the end of this conflict it
says Russia wins in America losers.

Speaker 1 (30:23):
That's how the United States Senator from Kentucky used his
time to interrogate the Secretary of Defense. Not about China,
not about the VA and the horrible conditions at the VA,
Not about the rotted state of base housing, not talked

(30:46):
about near enough in this country, the rotted state of
barracks and base housing and bases across the country. Not
talking about our drone capabilities, none of those things. The
United States senator from the state to Kentucky used his
time with the Secretary of Defense to make political points

(31:07):
about Russia Ukraine. That's where we are now, before we
get to this China deal that Trump announced today, it
would be a very good idea to get some gold
in your hands. It doesn't have to be physically in
your hands. I want to be clear about that now.

(31:28):
I believe in that, and gold code will do that
for you. I believe in having some sort of physical
precious medals somewhere where you can access it, because, let's
be honest, things really go bad, you'll need that. I'm
more talking about your retirement account. Do you have precious
medals as part of it? Not all of it? That's crazy.

(31:50):
I'm not saying that. Are precious metals part of your retirement.
When you put precious metals in your retirement, you can
consider it like a protection your retirement. It raises the
four because you can only fall so far. If it's
precious metals, everything else comes and goes. Precious medals have
stood the test of time, always have and always will.

(32:12):
They'll be around a long time after you and I
are both gone. You want to find out about it.
Gold Co will send you a free kip, a free
kid you know that, a free copy of their twenty
twenty five Golden Silver Kit eight five five eight one
seven gold or visit Jesse likes goold dot com. All right,

(32:35):
all right, now, Trump, he's been talking to China. They
were over there. They were over there in London talking
to China. Specifically, it was Howard Lutnick. And one of
the Chinese is one of the Chinese Vice Commerce ministers.
There's always ministers over there, Minister for this and minister
for that. It's very rrid, but sounds like they came

(32:59):
to an agreement. Trump announced publicly they came to an agreement.
Part of that agreement is Trump is dropping the plans
to revoke Chinese student visas. Now, I'm not going to
go into a bunch of this. I don't have a
ton of stuff to say about it, except we don't
know the details yet. That's one and two. The real

(33:23):
question is going to be with this deal, and I'm
sure Trump got us a good deal. Usually does does
this deal? Does it ease economic pain now or does
it actually bring manufacturing resure? I should say, does it
reshure manufacturing back here,
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I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

Ridiculous History

Ridiculous History

History is beautiful, brutal and, often, ridiculous. Join Ben Bowlin and Noel Brown as they dive into some of the weirdest stories from across the span of human civilization in Ridiculous History, a podcast by iHeartRadio.

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