Podcast Summary: The MOST MORAL Blackmail In The World | Candace EP 231
Date: August 20, 2025
Host: Candace Owens
Theme: An unfiltered solo episode where Candace dives deeply into corruption, blackmail culture, sexual impropriety in media and politics (particularly in France), the intertwining of vice industries and alleged organized control, the Israel debate, and reflections on media complicity and censorship.
Episode Overview
Candace Owens presents a monologue dissecting various forms of blackmail and moral corruption in both Western political power structures and the media. She focuses on recent allegations and scandals involving French President Emmanuel Macron and the Swiss journalist Darius Rochebin, before turning her critical eye towards Israel, the influence of political lobbies, and the role of vice industries in controlling public discourse and access to power. Throughout, she weaves in audience questions, cultural critiques, and a call to push back against censorship and moral decay.
Key Discussion Points & Insights
1. Sexual Impropriety and Blackmail in Media and Politics
[00:00–21:00]
-
The Sex Industry as Blackmail:
Candace asserts that industries like pornography and legal prostitution are little more than “one big blackmail operation,” suggesting they breed opportunities for societal and political control through moral compromise and secret-keeping.- Quote: “The entire sex industry, from pornography to legal prostitution, it is just so obvious and clear...That's one big blackmail operation.” [00:03]
-
The Darius Rochebin Scandal:
Candace details French President Macron’s recent interview with Darius Rochebin, a Swiss journalist with a controversial sexual misconduct history. She relays allegations of Rochebin posing as a female online persona (“Letitia”) to manipulate and humiliate teenage boys.- Recounts the bizarre narrative of Rochebin orchestrating simultaneous conversations with teenagers as both himself and as "Letitia," trying to coax teens into spreading humiliating rumors about him and attempting to obtain sexual information.
- Reveals the institutional reaction: Rochebin left his TV position and sued for defamation, only to quietly drop the suit, with the publication standing by its reporting.
- Quote: “He created fake accounts pretending to be young women...He was Leticia, and also Leah...He was more active as Leticia.” [02:40]
- Quote (re: Rochebin telling a teen about his own 'small penis'): “Darius Rochman is pretending to be Leticia...and he just starts talking about Darius Rochman’s small penis.” [06:30]
- Institutional Reaction: “Not only did France not object, but put him on a jet with the president to America… How is this possible?” [17:55]
-
Broader Implications:
Candace connects the Rochebin episode to a wider theme of systemic sexual impropriety and blackmail as levers of control within elite circles—alleging complicity or indifference among powerful institutions.
2. Media Collusion and Propaganda
[17:00–21:00]
-
Candace criticizes media outlets for not investigating or covering these scandals honestly, arguing they act more like censors than journalists.
- Quote: “I'm disgusted by the press that is not doing their due diligence and realizing what is happening here...the press could continue to collude to cover up these tracks.” [19:50]
-
Announcement: She previews the return of her investigative “Becoming Brigitte” series, promising more revelations about French political scandals.
- “We are now ready to begin Becoming Brigitte Season 2. I think it's now the right time.” [20:53]
3. The Israel Debate and ‘Asking Questions’ Taboo
[21:00–32:00]
-
Megyn Kelly’s ‘Crime’:
Candace discusses the heightened risk that public figures (like Megyn Kelly) face if they merely ‘ask questions’ regarding Israel or its lobbyists.- Quote: “Megyn Kelly is committing the crime that you are not allowed to commit. It’s unsayable...She is just asking questions.” [21:24]
-
Clip of Megyn Kelly: [23:18–24:46]
- Megyn Kelly describes feeling increasing pressure from various groups to remain loyal to Israel, referencing repeated invitations and attempts to curry favor among influencers and politicians.
- Kelly Quote: “I have had multiple, multiple reach outs to me...begging me to go to Israel with them...I can feel the pressure being slightly ratcheted up...” [23:24, 24:20]
- Kelly on the effect of critique: “I can see people like you, like Tucker...I see the beatdowns coming. You’re not allowed...” [24:38]
-
Candace’s Take:
Candace underscores that any deviation from unconditional support for Israel results in coordinated attacks and professional threats, referencing her own experience of being warned by friends.- Quote: “I remember the conversation...They quite literally wrote in the text, like, you don't want to go down this route, or I can't protect you.” [25:45]
-
Vice Industries as Social Control:
She ties the promotion of gambling and pornography in the US to figures and networks aligned with Israel, questioning why these are exported but restricted in Israel itself.- Quote: “What they are giving to other countries as gifts, we are, they don't want in their own country. Why is that? If it's so fun...why not fight to get that passed [in Israel]?” [28:45]
- References Al Goldstein: “We Jews love pornography because...it allows us to crush the church.” [29:40]
4. Intelligence, Espionage, and Mall Kiosks
[34:30–36:47]
- Mall Kiosks as Intelligence Fronts:
Candace features a segment from TikToker Wally Rashid (and archived Fox News reporting) exploring how mall toy kiosks in early 2000s America allegedly served as Israeli intelligence operations, uncovered after 9/11.- Rashid describes FBI findings that operatives with Israeli military intelligence backgrounds ran mall stands to penetrate sensitive sites.
- Quote (Wally Rashid): “Mossad uses mall kiosks in the US as front companies while on intelligence operations...” [34:30]
- “Every time there’s some blackmail operation, Israel is somehow involved.” [36:47]
5. Reflections on American Judicial and Political Responses
[36:47–41:00]
- Discusses the recent Vegas scandal involving an Israeli national accused of a sex crime who returned to Israel after making bail, and the suspiciously performative outrage of officials supposedly tasked with prosecuting such cases.
- Points to the disconnect between public outrage and real accountability, alleging a persistent culture of governmental cover-ups related to sexual abuse and blackmail in elite circles.
- Quote: “There's always this element of theater where I'm like, I don't trust this...pretending to be outraged at the Epstein files are not being...but you guys are still interested in Epstein.” [39:05]
6. Audience Interaction: Book Recommendations, Homeschooling, and Learning History
[41:00–End]
-
On Distrust of Establishment History:
Candace is asked about writing a history book, suggesting instead compiling a “biggest lies” pocketbook and reiterates distrust of standard educational sources.- Advocates for homeschooling: “As soon as you hand [your kids] over to the school and the state, their minds are going to be just as warped as all of our minds have been. Nothing they told us is real.” [46:00]
-
Recommended Reading:
- Libido Dominandi by E. Michael Jones (history of pornography as political control)
- Quote: “You guys should watch that [interview],” [47:00]
- Libido Dominandi by E. Michael Jones (history of pornography as political control)
-
On Current Affairs:
Updates on her ongoing lawsuit in Australia and reactions to Brigitte Macron lawsuits in France. -
Personal Notes and Humor:
Exchanges banter about pronunciation of “Nevada” and “Lebanon”, contrasting regional dialects.
Notable Quotes & Memorable Moments
| Time | Speaker | Quote | |----------|--------------|------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 00:03 | Candace | “If you're paying attention, that's one big blackmail operation.” | | 06:30 | Candace | “Darius Rochman is pretending to be Leticia...and he just starts talking about Darius Rochman’s small penis.” | | 17:55 | Candace | “Not only did France not object, but put him on a jet with the president… How is this possible?” | | 21:24 | Candace | “Megyn Kelly is committing the crime that you are not allowed to commit. It’s unsayable...She is just asking questions.”| | 23:24 | Megyn Kelly | “I have had multiple, multiple reach outs to me...begging me to go to Israel with them.” | | 24:38 | Megyn Kelly | “I see the beatdowns coming. You’re not allowed, like, you have to stay right on this lily pad.” | | 25:45 | Candace | “They quite literally wrote in the text, like, you don't want to go down this route, or I can't protect you.” | | 28:45 | Candace | “What they are giving to other countries as gifts, we are, they don't want in their own country. Why is that?” | | 34:30 | Wally Rashid | “Mossad uses mall kiosks in the US as front companies while on intelligence operations.” | | 36:47 | Candace | "Every time there’s some blackmail operation, Israel is somehow involved." | | 46:00 | Candace | “Nothing they told us is real.” |
Timestamps for Important Segments
- Sex Industry and Blackmail: 00:00–03:00
- Darius Rochebin Allegations: 03:00–17:00
- Media Collusion & “Becoming Brigitte” Return: 17:00–21:00
- Israel, Censorship, ‘Just Asking Questions’: 21:00–32:00
- Mall Kiosks as Israeli Espionage: 34:30–36:47
- Vegas/Israel Sex Crime Scandal & Judicial System: 36:47–41:00
- Audience Q&A (History, Homeschooling, Book recs): 41:00–End
Tone & Style
- Tone: Unfiltered, polemical, at times satirical and humorous, laced with frustration and urgency.
- Style: Storytelling interlaced with investigative detail, skepticism, and audience engagement.
- Key Mood: Surprised indignation (“I promise you it gets even more weird”), sarcasm in sections on Israel lobbying (“Don’t do it, Megyn Kelly!”), and righteous fervor (“Truth wins. Christ is king.”).
Conclusion
In this explosive solo episode, Candace Owens weaves together themes of blackmail, vice as control, media complicity, and institutional indifference, centering on the Rochebin scandal in France and the fraught politics of criticizing Israel. She voices distrust of establishment narratives, demands vigilance, and calls for grassroots investigation and cultural change, underscoring these issues with sharp anecdotes, guest clips, and audience dialogue—leaving listeners both unsettled and mobilized.
