
- The episode argues the New York Times does not expose Graham Platner so much as soften the blow, burying the ugliest abuse allegation deep in the story and helping him limp toward the primary. - Platner’s defense only deepens the damage, as he denies assault claims, offers a laughable explanation for his Nazi tattoo, and still looks like a candidate Democrats know is one revelation away from total collapse. - California’s vote count is framed as a slow-motion rig job, with Spencer Pratt’s apparent runoff spot slipping as late ballots keep arriving and the state gives Democrats weeks to change the outcome. - The show hammers elite media hypocrisy by contrasting hostile treatment of outsider reporters with the protection powerful Democrats receive, using Nancy Pelosi and legacy outlets as proof that journalism now serves the machine instead of challenging it. - The broader message is that the political and media class keeps shielding the worst actors — from scandal-ridden candid...
Loading summary