The Flo Show, No Filter
Episode: We Follow The Money And Ask Why The Children Disappeared From The Story
Host: Flo
Date: December 23, 2025
Overview
In this powerful episode of The Flo Show, No Filter, Flo tackles two main themes: the recent developments in legal cases involving major celebrities (notably Diddy) and the conspicuous disappearance of discussion surrounding missing children originally linked to these scandals. The episode probes how legal battles and media coverage often lose sight of vulnerable victims, especially children, and questions why those narratives are seemingly scrubbed from public discourse. Flo calls for accountability, truth, and ongoing vigilance, especially from independent media—and, as always, does it with raw energy, humor, and real talk.
Key Discussion Points & Insights
1. Technical Difficulties and Community Connection (00:00–11:00)
- Flo begins with characteristic candor, explaining late start due to tech issues ("I cannot plug my phone into my laptop... and it wouldn't allow me to get on the Internet") [01:10].
- Holiday spirit abounds: Flo wears a Santa hat, dubs himself "Santa Flo," and gets the community sharing Christmas wishes in the chat [02:30].
- Community shout-outs: Co-host C. Tuck gets a nod, as do listeners asking for prayers for ill family members.
Quote:
"Peace and love is what I'm asking for for Christmas. Peace and love makes me happy." —Flo [05:59]
2. The Diddy/Maui Police Chief Case: Details, Dismissal & Suspicions (11:00–30:00)
- Discussion deep-dives into the dismissal of a headline-making lawsuit alleging that Maui Police Chief John Pelletier helped Diddy cover up criminal activity.
- Flo emphasizes: A lawsuit’s dismissal on technicalities (not being able to prosecute, plaintiff missing deadlines) doesn’t inherently clear individuals of wrongdoing [15:30].
- Noted: Multiple sources, including AllHipHop News and Hawaii News, referenced.
- Context given about the broader pattern: Pelletier has also been rumored to aid other high-profile individuals (including Oprah).
Quote:
"There has been more people than just... this lawsuit that has alleged that this police chief has not only helped Diddy, but also helped Oprah. He has kind of been the liaison to the celebrities and the elite and the people with money." —Flo [15:49]
- Flo skeptical about the "vindication" police chief claims after lawsuit is dismissed:
Quote:
"I hate when they do get a lawsuit that gets dismissed and they try to use this one lawsuit to, to, to, to, to confirm that they are totally innocent of all kind of stuff. And I don't like that." —Flo [29:45]
3. What Happened to the Children? (30:00–56:00)
- Central concern raised: The conspicuous silence around the children who were initially at the heart of these celebrity cases.
- Flo points out how early in the Diddy scandal, tunnels, underage parties, and missing children were all over media, but now have “literally been wiped from the Internet.”
- Parallels drawn to institutional cover-ups, with emphasis on how power and money dictate narratives.
Quote:
"Am I the only one that's noticed that, like, it's literally been wiped from the Internet? The payroll for this cover up must be insane. And now this police chief who's been caught up in all type of shit is talking about... he wants an apology." —Flo [32:10]
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Community weighs in via chat:
- Fire Glory: Media hooks interest with talk of harmed children, then “bait-and-switch” to other angles once public attention is secured [41:30].
- Desi: If the kids are brought in, it could expose “others that are too protected to be exposed. Just like they hid names on the Epstein list, some are too protected to expose.” [48:00]
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Flo underscores a media pattern: initial focus on children for engagement, sudden blackout when the story turns to powerful interests.
4. Broader Institutional Failures & The Epstein Parallel (56:00–01:15:00)
- Flo expands the analysis by comparing Diddy’s case to the Epstein scandal—both involving alleged systemic abuse of minors, both ending in legal dead-ends for everyone but the (now-dead) principal.
- Critique of the Department of Justice’s lack of prosecutions beyond Epstein, despite overwhelming evidence [1:03:00].
Quote:
"A case that we all know this ain’t alleged. Epstein island involved kids being violated... yet we have one person, Epstein, who is not here, which we don’t even know. What’s that all about? But literally no co defendant, no co conspirator, nothing. How does that make sense?" —Flo [1:05:24]
- Community exasperation echoed (“It's a big club and we ain't in it.” —Denise [1:07:05])
- Suggestions from chat on crowd-sourcing unredacted files and keeping pressure on the system.
5. Community Moments & Lighter Notes (01:15:00–end)
- Celebrations: Listener Fire Glory becomes a grandmother; group offers congratulations [1:20:15].
- Community encouraged to wish Flo’s brother, Boss Lucci, a happy birthday on Instagram—a display of the program's close-knit, mutual support ethos [1:21:30].
- Multiple shoutouts and thanks to regulars, listeners, and supporters via chat (e.g., Allison from Philly, The Chocolate One, Leslie Riley).
Notable Quotes & Memorable Moments
-
On Censorship & Truth-Telling:
"When you’re a truth teller... they gonna f--- with your signal, gonna make your buffer. They gonna make your [feed] go in and out. This is what we deal with." —Flo [09:55] -
On Lost Focus on Victims:
"If we as independent media, even if, if we stop talking about it, shoot every, Nobody's gonna talk about it... I want to continue to bring them up. I don't want to, I don't want to lose sight of what, what, where we started at..." —Flo [37:30] -
On Elite Protection:
"Not one underage victim has made it to the courtroom in any of these cases. Can somebody explain that?" —Flo [48:00] -
On Justice System Hypocrisy:
"We do a petty crime, they gonna find out and prosecute everybody involved, no questions asked. But we have one of the biggest, most horrific, nasty, trifling... Epstein case is that. And we literally have no co conspirators who have been charged." —Flo [1:06:12]
Timestamps for Important Segments
- 00:00–05:00: Technical struggles, holiday cheer, community energy
- 11:00–30:00: Diddy and Maui police chief lawsuit: background, media coverage, and suspicions
- 32:00–50:00: Where did the narrative about missing children go? Audience discussion, media dynamics, censorship concerns
- 56:00–01:15:00: Connections to Epstein case, systemic failures, elite immunity, legal roadblocks
- 01:17:00–end: Listener celebrations (Fire Glory becomes a grandma), community engagement (Boss Lucci birthday), closing positive vibes
Tone and Takeaways
Flo maintains an urgent, no-nonsense, streetwise style—cutting through official narratives, keeping the focus on the marginalized (especially children), and holding the system to account. The episode is both a holiday community check-in and a righteous rant against media and institutional failures, spiced up with wit, listener shout-outs, and moments of warmth.
Final Quote:
"We can't let these bastards get away with this. We can't let these bastards just do whatever they want." —Flo [1:11:44]
Listener Advice
If you missed the episode:
- Get up to speed on the Maui/Diddy case, but remember—dismissed lawsuits ≠ exoneration.
- Stay vigilant about narratives dropped by mainstream media, especially when it concerns children and systemic abuse.
- If you're part of an independent media community, keep raising these questions.
Flo will return with a Christmas Eve special and encourages everyone to stay engaged, look after each other, and keep seeking truth.
