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Carol Markowitz
This is an iHeart podcast.
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Jill Savage
Hi, and welcome back to the Carol Markowitz show on iheartradio. My guest today is Jill Savage. Jill is host of the Mandate on Blaze tv, and she's working on a series of stories on Corey Mills on blaze.com. hi, Jill. So nice to have you on.
Carol Markowitz
Hi, Carol. Thanks so much for reaching out to do this. I'm really excited to be here.
Jill Savage
I'm really excited to learn more about you. I feel like you are a wonderful reporter, and I don't feel like I know a lot about your history through your writing. I've read a lot of your stuff. So how did you get your start?
Carol Markowitz
So I went. I grew up in Iowa, right. So it was the first in the nation, Caucus state, but also, like, Iowa basketball was, like, the first thing that I ever loved in life. So I grew up, I always say, like, sitting next to my dad, whatever he likes, I like. So that was, like, the sports history.
Jill Savage
I love that. Yeah.
Carol Markowitz
So I knew that from an early age. I would say things on watching games before the announcers would say them on tv.
Jill Savage
Wow.
Carol Markowitz
I'm like, oh, this is so easy. This is totally what I'm gonna do. Right? In junior high, I was like, this is it. And then, like, as I got through and got a little bit older in high school, I was like, well, I still want to do the political stuff, too. So I just kind of, like, meshed together the best of both worlds and spent about 13 years as a sports reporter. And I got to go, like, I was on, like, the sidelines for college football and, like, Final Fours and national playoff games and. And got to work, like, a world junior hockey tournament for NHL Network all around, like, Sweden, Finland, the Czech Republic. So it was. It was such a good experience to just go out there and just, like, see the world and honestly not have to pay for sports tickets. They were paying me to be there.
Jill Savage
Yeah, that's fantastic.
Carol Markowitz
And then at some point, you know, I was like, okay, well, I do actually want to do the political stuff. I actually care about the country. So made the switch on over because I felt like I had so much talent inside me, so much more to give. Yeah, there's just like five minutes of television on the sports broadcast. So that's ultimately what led to the change.
Jill Savage
I feel like there's finally on the right more sports conversations. Like, you know, Clay Travis, my co host of my other show, Mary Kathryn Ham, they do a lot of crossover sports and politics. Do you find yourself doing that or you just kind of limit to politics right now?
Carol Markowitz
Yeah, I think that because of the focus of our show is Trump and the administration right now, we do try and sneak in sports, though, like wherever it's possible. It's funny because I just saw Clay this weekend out in Washington, D.C. and I've worked with him back in the day as well. So I'm a huge fan of what he's doing. And just the fact that there is some pushback, because I will tell you that growing up, just knowing that I love sports and everything that was going on, it was worse on the sports side. For journalism, if you think that news reporters are biased, well, the journalists that are over on their sports side, they have no filters. They don't think that they need to be impartial. Like there's nothing that's stopping them. So it's actually. If you think it's like, you know, 90% of, like news journalists. Well, it's like 99% of. Yeah, it's a bad news situation over there. And that's why people like Clay have had so much success, because it was literally a wide open lane.
Jill Savage
Right. Will Kane also is another one who I think does a lot of sports politics crossover. Yeah. It's funny because I know so many, like normal who, you know, they're right of center, but they don't spend their time focused on politics, who used to just have ESPN on all the time in the background, but it just got so political that they don't anymore. I walk into like any house that I used to walk into and see ESPN on, it just isn't on in the same way anymore. I think that they've really lost a chunk of their audience because of that stupid politics.
Carol Markowitz
Yeah. And it wasn't something that had to happen. It's because they went so, so woke. Right. I think there is A shift over to digital. But I think that ESPN had such a presence about them, such an ability to capture an audience and keep it right. Like, you just keep your TV on ESPN all day. And that's what I would do, like growing up, or, you know, like in high school, whatever, like just trying, trying to get caught up on all the games, all the scores, everything that was going on. It would just be a lot of espn. And now I'm like, I don't know the last time, unless I'm watching an actual game that I turned on and I turn it right off, I don't stick around for anything. There's not any, like, must watch TV anymore on espn. They've made it so bad.
Jill Savage
It's really too bad. I feel like there's so much room for it to be the place that all Americans go to, to kind of watch the same thing, which we don't really have that much anymore. But. So what do you consider your beat at the Blaze?
Carol Markowitz
So we have the mandate, which is all about Trump and the administration and everything that is going on. We had a general news show before that we were doing, but we understood that this is the time that really matters right now to figure out what's going on with this administration. And even like the rejuvenation, like when Elon Musk came on the scene, young men started paying attention in ways that they never did before. And we're like, okay, there's something here. People want more than just what they're given. And so that's why we went and changed and just went directly into Trump and the mandate. And how are we going to make sure that, that we are able to implement what needs to happen at this place in time? Because this is. It's the best chance that we have. And I don't want to see us all screw this up. I want to make sure that this is something that is lasting. Even, like during the confirmations for Trump's cabinet. Right. I would jokingly refer to it, like, as a sports thing. And I was like, oh, it's confirmation season. People were paying attention to that. Like, people were talking about it in an in depth way on just, you know, like, if you hear these conversations that are going around, and I thought, man, even like 10 years ago, people wouldn't even know who was getting confirmed, let alone like following the confirmation process as it was going on. Like, so in depthly. So I think that's when we were like, okay, there's definitely something here.
Jill Savage
And how did you get into writing your series on Corey Mills, he's a Republican in Florida. And it's not typical for a right leaning outlet to, to write. I wouldn't call it an expose. Or would you call it that? It is exposing some things about his life and history that were previously unknown. And it is unusual for an outlet like the Blaze to cover a Republican like this, right?
Carol Markowitz
Yeah, absolutely. And I think that's one of the things. So I'll answer your first question. How did we get to this point? Right. Well, I was out on a helicopter with him during Hurricane Helene out in western North Carolina. And you know, Glenn Beck came with us. There were a bunch of people that were out there just volunteering. We got to. To spend the entire day with Corey Mills. Now at the end of that day, we were riding the helicopter back to the airport and Corey was just saying a lot of things that, you know, I didn't ask him. Nobody asked him about his personal life the very first day that we met him. But it came to be that we figured out that he was lying to us. And like several, like there were a couple different lies. And I thought, okay, well that was really interesting because nobody pushed you on that. You weren't answering a direct question. This is just something that you offered up to us. Right. And I thought that was so strange. So I'd gone through, and I've probably seen him about five times at five different events, the last one being inauguration night. And so then it comes out in February, there was a domestic violence allegations where his girlfriend at the time had called the cops and said, you know, here this is happening now, they've both since taken us back since this all happened. But nonetheless she called the cops and she said, oh, my significant other for over a year. Well, he had lied to us and said that he was completely single, there was absolutely no one in his life, and he was very lonely. And I went, wait a minute, your girl's living with you for a year? Like, what? What's going on here? So I thought, okay, if you're lying to us about that, what, what else is there? And so I just go through. And honestly, as soon as I start looking, I find a whole plethora of things where he was married by a radical mufti, he was an unindicted co conspirator for the 1993 World Trade center bombings.
Jill Savage
And I was like, the Mufti, not Cory. Just to clarify.
Carol Markowitz
And then there were stolen valor allegations and you know, he claimed to be an Army Ranger and J. Stock and a sniper, and none of those were true. And the cornerstone of him running for Congress was, I'm a veteran, I was blown up twice in Iraq, and I'm a great businessman, and you should vote for me. Well, in a 15 minute phone call with our reporter Peter Giedel, Corey actually admitted to him that he wasn't blown up twice in Iraq. He got a concussion on the first one. We're like, oh, okay, sure. And then the second one. Yeah, I wasn't a part of that one. No, because he knew, I think you could tell, that we had already talked to the guys that were there at that point in time. But, yeah, there were just so many things. And then we go and jump into, we can bring in the FBI. This is where the real fun gets started, is there's a potential rogue FBI agent out there that was questioning our sources. And this FBI agent reached out to our first source back in November, on November 26, and she was just saying, hey, I've been referred to your case. And our sources have been trying to, like, put this news out there and like, oh, finally somebody's listening to us. Okay. So they turn over all the information that they have and then eventually it switches from where? Okay, well, we're not actually going to look into the stolen valor allegations anymore. There's no there there. Like, it's fine enough. Plausible deniability. What do you know about his business dealings? Corey is an international arms dealer, and him and his wife had started their company right after they got married. They got married in June of 2014. And within the first year of starting their international arms company, they get a $228 million contract with Iraq that was so big that even Iraq was like, hold on, we're going to audit this. And they didn't actually get it paid out in full. But, like, I don't know, Carol, I want that kind of luck in my life. I want to start a business. Yeah, hit the jackpot right away and all that. So then with my investigation, looking in through all these sources, right, One of the sources says, hey, you know a ton about him. You met him several times. I think that your information that you have would be very valuable to this FBI agent. And I said, sure, if you want to put me in touch, no problem, I'm here to help. Right? And so 12 days later, after she received my contact information, she reaches back out to the only other female source that we have. And she hadn't talked to her since December, and This is now April 11th. And she says, hey, are you willing to become a confidential human source? And we'll pay you. And she's like, yeah, like literally anything to take this guy down. And then she goes, okay, well, are you willing to go undercover? Because there's another lady that we need you to look into. Carol. I'm the only other lady that has entered the story. Now. There have been like, other ladies since then, but on April 11, I was the only other female in the entire story. So we know that this is not an FBI investigation. We know because we asked them and.
Jill Savage
They said, fake FBI investigation.
Carol Markowitz
We are completely unaware of this situation. As always, we will, you know, address this swiftly and appropriately. And then they came back the next day and actually added to the statement and said, we have made the general counsel aware of this situation. So if the FBI knew, if there was an open case number, if there were three or two files on our sources, they could have gotten to the bottom of that immediately. And it's been over a month since.
Jill Savage
Nothing yet. Wow.
Carol Markowitz
We'll see.
Jill Savage
Have you gotten pushback for going, I don't want to say going after Republican because I feel like this was dropped in your lap. Like, you know, you investigated something that was handed to you.
Carol Markowitz
But exactly to that point, we weren't setting out to do it. Right. I just went, okay, and I turned over a rock and I said, oh, oh, there's a lot there right now. Yeah, we need to look into this. Right. You know, just the he, he claims that he's still a Christian. I and other sources at Blaze News have talked to spies, people that Corey Mills had personally told them that he converted to Islam back around 2014. Right. So like there are just so many things that I'm like, okay, but that doesn't add up. That doesn't add up.
Jill Savage
Right.
Carol Markowitz
And then when we get to the 50 minute phone call that Corey had with our reporter and all we all we did, we asked him two questions when we reached out for comment. What is the congressman's religion? And did this guy marry him? Right. The radical movie, did he marry him? Everything just, oh, what are you doing? You can't do this. This is, this is absurd. You know, like his reaction, no straight answer. Well, so he did. He, the radical mufti married him. His mother in law wanted an Iraqi to marry them. And I said, so we start with the mufti. Like there were no, like low level of mine right around Washington D.C. like we couldn't figure this out. Like there's no one else. So that just. That to me was, there are more red flags and we're still doing More investigative work on it. The story is, I would say, far from over at this point. So, yeah, stay tuned. But have you gotten.
Jill Savage
Have you gotten pushback? Like, as in why, you know, why do this?
Carol Markowitz
So some people are upset because they're like, well, he's. He's great, right? He's. He's the one who.
Jill Savage
I had nothing but positive. I had nothing but positive kind of opinions on him before reading your series.
Carol Markowitz
I will say, from what I found, my personal observation. If you listen to what he says, it's great, right? If you look at what is actually happening, it tells a different story. I have literally put up a whiteboard before to try and organize this for some coworkers of mine. And I said, the event, Corey's version, the truth, because you can't. There are so many different lies on top of other lies that it really is. This story is so in depth. There are so many moving pieces to this. It honestly takes forever to just get through a base layer understanding of this.
Jill Savage
Did you always.
Carol Markowitz
That's how he's gotten away with it so far? Yeah.
Jill Savage
Did you always want to do investigative work?
Carol Markowitz
So I think this is the best, highest use of my brain. This is exactly what I love. And I can tell you that I will continue to do this from this point on because I absolutely love this. Matthew Peterson is our editor in chief here at Blaze News, and he's, like, joking that I'm the editor of all of the investigative team right now, because I had just kind of de facto fell into. I'm the leader of this team keeping everybody up to speed on what's happening and any of the new stories that are going to be coming out and keeping everybody. All the pieces moving that need to be moving and still hosting the show and doing all the other stuff.
Jill Savage
But I can tell you, this does seem like you're calling, like, you lit up talking about this.
Carol Markowitz
Yes. And so, because my brain, Carol, my brain loves puzzles. It always has. Like, I would, like, play, like, Tetris as a kid. I finished puzzles, like, before everybody else. And I love, like, I'm here at the Blaze with Glenn Beck, right. I love the chalkboards. I love learning. And that, like, that has spoken to me since back at his Fox days. And I would just eat all of that stuff up. And so I'm like, okay, how do I. I love learning the information. I love sharing the information and just trying to put together a very complex puzzle. And this story has given me all of this and so much more. And so it's. It's definitely enjoyable. Unfortunately for the Congressman, we are having a I'm enjoying my time right now.
Jill Savage
Yeah, I love it for you. I think that that really suits you. We're going to take a quick break and be right back on the Carol Markowitz Show.
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Carol Markowitz
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Jill Savage
What did you worry about?
Carol Markowitz
I would go back to to it always. For me it always goes back to Ronald Reagan and a time for choosing in 1964. And that's how much of a nerd I am that I actually have this burned on an actual CD that is in my car at all times just in case I want to pull it out. I believe that we are the last best hope on earth and if if you don't have us to turn to, where else do you go? Right? It's the sentencing. Our children take the first step into a thousand years of darkness. I understand Donald Trump won. We are all very excited about that. But we can't let it stop there. This is the first step right? And I just got back from Washington, D.C. late last night and talking to people out there, right? You hear about the deep state. Oh, what, what is this? And how, how bad is this actually? Well, it's still really bad, you guys. Like, it doesn't matter if our people are in the top positions. And we, we filled the cabinet with great people. That's excellent. That's the first step. But, you know, some of These agencies have 80% bad people in them. Right. And it takes so long to figure out who's on your team, who's telling you lies, who's going to be real with you, who's actually going to change this stuff. And I feel like that, to me, is still the absolute biggest worry of mine, because I don't want people to get complacent. I want to make sure that we have the best resources that are at our disposal. And that's what we try and do on the mandate is just say, hey, these guys are good and playing ball. And sometimes if you need to go after a fellow Republican, okay, guys, if they're not the ones doing what we think that they should be doing, what we know they should be doing, and let's call them out on it, right? The Democrats aren't ever going to go through and say, oh, you know, AOC is a problem. Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, they're problems. Oh, the leftist problem is they're not leftist enough. They're not crazy enough for us. We have a country that we have to manage and take care of and make sure that we can hand off a great and decent country to the next generation. And that is, honestly, that's why I left sports, is to go through and make sure that we can actually have something that looks a little bit like freedom to give to the next generation.
Jill Savage
Do you feel hopeful about that?
Carol Markowitz
It ebbs and flows depending on the day, depending on some of the stories that I hear. And sometimes it's like, oh, man, that's an incredible win. Right? Who knew that RFK Jr. Was going to be the guy that would come in and have a huge win?
Jill Savage
Not me for sure.
Carol Markowitz
Exactly. Who thought that that was where it was going to come from? Okay, well, you what? I know it was incredible to go through and spend a day with him back on a Covid jab session in Nashville with Jason Whitlock and Steve Dase and a bunch of different people from Blaze and Senator Ron Johnson was there and just going through and hearing his conviction on autism, on the jabs, on everything that he has put his life towards. Leave all the crazy leftist stuff. Aside. But when you look at the help stuff, he means it. And I think that he knows the deep state better than anyone. Look at what has happened to his own family. So you're not going to scare somebody like an RFK Jr out of doing what is necessary in the amount of time that he has, because he understands what needs to be done. And I think that is a very good first step for everybody else that's out there and saying, okay, you know what, we can follow his lead. Like let, let him take some of the arrows for doing like a major thing right off that. But now people have to start getting wins in every department because we know this isn't a four year project, Carol. Like we didn't go through 100 years of them taking this over to dismantle it. We have to go through and make sure that we have lasting impact. And I think that the RFA junior just coming in and like kind of, you know, blazing through right away. That's, that's a really good start for us.
Jill Savage
Advice would you give your 16 year old self if you had to do it again?
Carol Markowitz
Well, when I was in high school, a lot of people, I was in a small high school back in Iowa and a lot of people said, oh, you want to do what you think that you're going to be like a sports reporter, political reporter? Well, like nobody gets those jobs. There's like five jobs out there.
Jill Savage
Yeah. I told my parents I want to be a writer. And they were like, that's not a thing. So, yeah.
Carol Markowitz
But I thought, you know, okay, well if it, if there are five jobs, well, five people have to do them. I'll figure it out. Like there was like no nepotism here. I had no helping me. I figured it out as I go. And I think that one of the, one of the greatest compliments that I have from some of my people that were back in the sports world is like, if there is one thing about Jill Savage, she will figure it out. And I think that is the way that I look at the world. I've lived in six different states. I don't have like ties like that I, that I make myself like, oh, I, I have to do this, I have to live here. I have to do it. I think that I have given myself the flexibility. So the, the advice that I would have would just be to trust myself, trust my instincts and network like crazy. This is all about who you know this is. No one's ever asked me when college, like, no, you can't, but you can do the job. Or you can't, right?
Jill Savage
I agree with you about networking, but don't undersell yourself. You are a huge talent. I mean, there is a reason why you were like, if there are five jobs, one of those jobs is going to be mine, you know, and good for you. You know, I love that it's a.
Carol Markowitz
Very competitive industry and I will not shy away from telling people that. When I go and speak at colleges or whatever, I say, hey, my sister's the vice president of a bank. She has a safe space, secure job. She has great health care. She knows, like, every paycheck that she's ever going to have. I live on, like, a two to three year contract world. And I'm like, maybe I'm paying for my own health care. Who knows? Like, well, we'll figure it out, right? So you have to be a certain kind of person that is willing to take risks to make it in this, in this job. That. That is for sure. And I think that one of the fun stories that I have when I was just learning along the way was, so I was working for the PAC12 network. I worked there for about eight years. And my boss there at the time text me over Thanksgiving and he says, hey, what do you know about hockey? And I was like, yeah, sure, I got you. What do you need? Right? You never turn down a job in this industry. And so he said, oh, well, this is where the World Junior Hockey Tournament comes in for NHL Network. And he's like, yeah, my guy in New York, he's looking for somebody. It's over Christmas and New Year's, it's going to be in Sweden. Are you willing to go? And I was like, yeah, sure, count me in. Like, whatever that needs to happen. Carol. I knew nothing about hockey. I bought hockey for Dylan.
Jill Savage
I'll learn about hockey on the flight, right?
Carol Markowitz
On the flight home, as we do. And so then I knew I had a month. It was Thanksgiving. I didn't have to leave until, like, Christmas.
Jill Savage
A month for you. You're going to become a pro in hockey, please.
Carol Markowitz
So I take every single hockey game between Thanksgiving and Christmas. I wrote out on a yellow legal pad all the questions that the reporters asked. I said, these are legitimate hockey questions. I know sports. I can make it go from here. And then my producer at the time was a huge hockey fan. So I would buy him lunch and I would say, tell me what you're watching at this point in time. And so I worked that job for seven years, and it was some of the most fun memories that I have now. In there. So that's like, go ahead, take risks. It's okay. You don't have to be tied down to one thing. And I think that's something different. That, like, my dad has had, like, the same company for, like, 35 years that he has worked for. I mean, if I make it, like, 10 years with the company, I'm like, oh, my gosh, look at this. Right? I don't even know that I have. I think PAC12 network was at eight years. I think that's the longest that it's been. But it's just. It's okay to make things up as you go along. No one actually knows what they're doing. We're all figuring this out, so have fun with it.
Jill Savage
I love that. I've loved this conversation. I've always wanted to know more about you. End us here with your best tip for my listeners on how they can improve their lives.
Carol Markowitz
So my best tip is I always look at my life as chapters of my life, and if something isn't going well, flip the page and start a new chapter. I think it's easy for me to look at this because it's like, oh, here's, like, childhood, here's sports, here's politics. But you can go through and figure out if something's not going well. Well, make the changes that are necessary in your life. You don't have to have everything completely figured out. I have learned throughout my time that if I jump and take that risk, that I will figure it out. Right. And I think that you have to identify what lights you up. As you said, like, this investigation, it lights me up. Figure out what does that for you and. And do more of it. And I can tell you that the best chapter of my life is the one that I'm currently in. I have had more fun than what I am doing right now. And I think that a lot of people, like, just from the outside looking in, they would say, oh, but, like, the football games are probably more fun, right? If you're a football fan. And I. And I still am a football fan, I love, like Carol, I can sit on the couch all day on Saturdays and watch college football from start to end. I love that. But I know that the best use for my talents is what I'm doing right now with the show, with the investigative stuff. And I can't wait to keep going on that journey because I think this is actually just the starting point for the rest of my career.
Jill Savage
It's where you belong. I love it. She is Jill Savage. Watch her on the mandate on BlazeTV. Read her I on blaze.com thank you so much for coming on.
Carol Markowitz
Jill thank you Carol.
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Carol Markowitz
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This is an iHeart podcast.
Podcast Summary: The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show
Episode: The Karol Markowicz Show: The Secret Life of Congressman Cory Mills
Release Date: July 16, 2025
In this compelling episode of The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show, hosts Clay Travis and Buck Sexton delve into an exclusive interview between Carol Markowitz and Jill Savage. Jill Savage, renowned for her investigative prowess on Blaze TV's The Mandate, discusses her groundbreaking series on Congressman Cory Mills. The conversation uncovers startling revelations about Mills' personal and professional life, highlighting the intricate web of deceit that has allowed him to maintain his political stature.
[03:34] Jill Savage: "Hi, and welcome back to the Carol Markowitz show on iheartradio. My guest today is Jill Savage."
Jill Savage introduces herself and her role as the host of The Mandate on Blaze TV. She emphasizes her dedication to uncovering truths within the political landscape, setting the stage for an in-depth discussion about her investigative series on Congressman Cory Mills.
[04:07] Carol Markowitz: "I spent about 13 years as a sports reporter... But that's ultimately what led to the change."
Carol recounts her journey from a successful sports journalism career to political reporting. Her firsthand experience in covering major sporting events provided her with a unique perspective and skill set that she now leverages in her political investigations.
[10:04] Carol Markowitz: "I went through, and I've probably seen him about five times at five different events... he was lying to us."
Jill details her initial encounter with Congressman Mills during a helicopter ride amidst Hurricane Helene relief efforts. Observing discrepancies in Mills' personal narratives, she began to suspect deeper layers of deceit. This skepticism intensified after domestic violence allegations surfaced, revealing Mills' fabricated claims about his personal life.
Notable Quote: [12:02] Carol Markowitz: "There were stolen valor allegations... the cornerstone of him running for Congress was, 'I'm a veteran, I was blown up twice in Iraq,' and I'm a great businessman... None of those were true."
Jill explains how Mills embellished his military service and business accomplishments, prompting her to dig deeper into his background and uncover a series of misleading and false statements.
[15:05] Jill Savage: "This is where the real fun gets started, is there's a potential rogue FBI agent out there that was questioning our sources."
During her investigation, Jill encountered a situation suggesting possible interference or manipulation by an FBI agent, casting doubt on the legitimacy of the inquiries into Mills' activities. This revelation adds another layer of complexity to her investigation, indicating potential obstructions at higher levels.
[16:26] Carol Markowitz: "He claimed to be completely single... What else is there?"
The investigation reveals that Mills was not as single as he portrayed, with evidence pointing to a marriage orchestrated by a radical mufti and involvement in questionable business dealings, including an international arms company that secured a lucrative, yet scrutinized, contract with Iraq.
Notable Quote: [18:20] Carol Markowitz: "If you listen to what he says, it's great... but if you look at what is actually happening, it tells a different story."
This pivotal moment underscores the disparity between Mills' public persona and his true actions, validating Jill's pursuit of the truth.
[17:27] Carol Markowitz: "Some people are upset because they're like, well, he's great... he's the one who..."
Jill acknowledges the backlash from supporters of Mills who view her investigation as biased or unwarranted. Despite the opposition, she remains steadfast in her commitment to uncovering the truth, emphasizing the importance of accountability in politics.
[19:12] Jill Savage: "I absolutely love this. Matthew Peterson is our editor in chief here at Blaze News..."
Jill expresses her passion for investigative work, describing it as the highest use of her skills and intellect. Her enthusiasm is evident as she discusses leading the investigative team and the rigorous process of piecing together Mills' deceptive practices.
[28:35] Carol Markowitz: "Trust yourself, trust your instincts, and network like crazy."
Reflecting on her career, Jill shares invaluable advice for aspiring journalists. She underscores the importance of self-trust, intuition, and relentless networking as key factors in overcoming challenges and achieving success in the competitive field of journalism.
[32:49] Carol Markowitz: "Identify what lights you up... I can't wait to keep going on that journey because I think this is actually just the starting point for the rest of my career."
Jill concludes by encouraging listeners to pursue their passions and embrace change. She conveys optimism about the ongoing investigation into Mills and hints at future projects that will continue to shed light on critical political issues.
This episode offers a riveting glimpse into the world of investigative journalism, highlighting Jill Savage's relentless pursuit of the truth behind Congressman Cory Mills' facade. Through meticulous research and unwavering determination, Jill exposes significant inconsistencies and potential misconduct, emphasizing the vital role of journalism in maintaining political integrity. Listeners are left with a deeper understanding of the complexities involved in political investigations and the personal dedication required to uncover concealed truths.
Note: This summary excludes all advertisement segments, intros, outros, and non-content sections to focus solely on the substantive discussion between Carol Markowitz and Jill Savage.