
Trump SLAMS Ukraine President In TENSE WH Meeting, Epstein Story EXPOSED w/ Mike Cernovich & Rob Smith
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Tim Pool
Well, today was absolutely crazy. I don't know if y'all saw that White House meeting where Zelinsky, Trump, Vance were discussing the war, actively having a negotiation, as it were. And there are many minds about it. Of course, many liberal leaning personalities say this is an embarrassing moment for the United States. Vladimir Putin was the only winner. However, many on the right are saying Zelensky, the president of Ukraine, was arrogant and dismissive of the concerns that J.D. vance and Donald Trump had, which is an insane strategy in a negotiation. Still, it's remarkable to see this degree of conversation happening in public. Trump even saying the American people should see this. This, you know, I'm going to give my opinion right away. I mean, Zelensky, it was shocking how he needed to be deferential to the country that was providing him hundreds of billions of dollars to save, to save itself. And he wasn't. He was argumentative. This, this could theoretically end the war. Well, not in their favor if the US Just basically abandons them. So we're going to talk about that. But we are at a special party and we are hanging out with a, with a bunch of really great people. We're going to be discussing what exactly is going on with the Epstein files because as you know, yesterday there's this big hubbub around influencers who are given this binder. In fact, it's actually sitting right here. I'm not going to hold it up because that is a, that is a taboo. All the influencers holding it up. Everybody was like, you're taking selfies instead of breaking this news. But we have Mike Cernovich here who's going to break down for us exactly what went down, how it all happened. And we also joined by Rob Smith who's going to be hanging out and talk to us before we get started. Head over to cast brew.com. buy Cast Brew coffee. It's delicious. Ian's graphene dream is sold out. Too bad, Ian. But you can go and check out Appalachian Nights rise with Roberto Jr. A big favorite. A light roast and and as always, go to. Oh, it's not working. All right, real quick. The, the monitor dropped out. There you go. Well, it's still not so good. Go to rumble.com timcast irl. Check out our playlist. The green room show has been popping off 30, 40,000 prepisode behind the scenes at the Tim cast IRL studios off the cuff conversations. We had one the world is ending with Mike Crispy. That was fun. I was ranting and then a couple, a couple days ago I Talked about the birth of my child. If you want to hear that story that is available in the green room@rumble.com, use promo code TIM10. Sign up Join Rumble Premium. Joining us tonight's already mentioned we got Rob Smith hanging out.
Rob Smith
Yeah, man.
Tim Pool
Who are you? What do you do?
Rob Smith
Who are, who am I? What do I do, man? Rob Smith at Rob Smith Online got a podcast called can't cancel Rob Smith to drop the new episode actually right now. So go get that on Apple podcast. I heart wherever you get your podcast, man. I just run my mouth on social media. I am a Iraq war veteran, served in 4th ID, a couple tours in the Middle East. I've been out here on social media in these social media streets for years. Have been at a couple of these White House influencer summits. But not the one that happened yesterday. Unfortunately, I did not make that one. So I know that that was, that was quite the, the controversy.
Tim Pool
Right on. Well, we're also hanging out with Mike Cernovich.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Who was there.
Mike Cernovich
Yeah, I was there. Here to handle all the drama.
Tim Pool
Break it down and tell us the details about what really happened.
Mike Cernovich
The details and the real news. What, what frustrated me about yesterday is we had, and I posted my notes online. We had all these notes. There was a whole media strategy. There were all these things to talk about. And, but I was under embargo for three hours and I'm just watching people, including people that I've done nothing but retweet and help saying the terrible things about me. And for three. And then I made four videos actually in response. I kept getting, I was with a friend of mine, Eric. I was like, you know what? I'm not even going to respond to anything. I'm going to let the hyenas reveal themselves. I want to let everybody tell on themselves because I want to know who is on the blacklist now. And a lot of people were. And I was like, wow, that's interesting. I checked my DMs. It's like, oh, wow, I have 15 DMs.
Rob Smith
Me.
Mike Cernovich
You asking me to retweet your stuff? Especially when your career, you had an Asian career. You didn't have anything. Oh, but you forgot how to use a DM now when you could try to bash me.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Mike Cernovich
Good job.
Rob Smith
So look, Mike, we were talking about this last night. And, and first of all, there's nobody.
Tim Pool
Wait, sorry. Let's, let's, let's jump into this conversation after we get through everybody. So, Ian, I mean, I'm happy.
Ian Crossland
Ian Crossland in the House, bro. What's the role?
Phil Labonte
My name is Phil Bonte. I'm the lead singer the heavy metal band all that Remains. An anti communist and counter revolutionary.
Mike Cernovich
Let's go.
Tim Pool
So should we hold up the. The binder?
Mike Cernovich
They'll screen cap you and then you'll be in the drama.
Phil Labonte
Oh, God.
Tim Pool
They're gonna screen cap me.
Mike Cernovich
Okay, this is what the binder would look like. Don't smile because smile. That means you obviously don't care about.
Tim Pool
Can we. Can we open the binder?
Mike Cernovich
Yeah, yeah.
Tim Pool
Everybody. What the first page is.
Rob Smith
Okay.
Tim Pool
It's blank.
Mike Cernovich
Okay. No, no, you're fine. There's nothing. Yeah, you can show them everything.
Tim Pool
Okay. The first page is just blank.
Mike Cernovich
Here's a table of content.
Ian Crossland
I think this is the third page. Can I just start leaping through it?
Mike Cernovich
Yeah, yeah. There's nothing.
Ian Crossland
Here's page. Okay, now we're getting into the juicy grits of the binder. I don't know what all these words and names are. Maybe you can explain it, Michael.
Mike Cernovich
Well, yeah, that's our table of contents.
Tim Pool
Let's start from the beginning.
Rob Smith
This is it.
Mike Cernovich
Yeah. So we'll start from the beginning. The. The number one lie that was told. Well, there were so many lies. How can you keep track? Was. And it was funny because I ran into a friend randomly. We won't say who. And we were hanging out and then I texted Rob to come hang out. We wound up meeting person finally. And it was so funny because the Internet was like doing. Doing whatever, and we're just. We're just hanging out. And the. The timeline of it was interesting because there were. A couple weeks ago, there was a. A summit to discuss new media strategies. And the press pool is going to change. They want people like you and doing interviews in the White House. They wanted to take over. They wanted waca, the White House Correspondents association, which is a cartel that would exclude people like you and us. They were ending the cartel. So everything was about, here's a new media strategy. And there were people from the federalists that were covering other things.
Rob Smith
And.
Mike Cernovich
And then there were a few of us who were. Who were in one room because you could only have so many people. And so we go there to take our phones. They claim it's a secure room, whatever, no phones. We get briefings from everybody. I can't say who, but from everybody. It was on background, which a lot of people who don't have any journalistic ethics, like, well, wait, why didn't you. Why did you wait three hours? Because it was an embargo. It's called an embargo. There's a reason people talk to me and not the people that are going after me because I was an embargo. And embargo means you can smear me for three hours and there is nothing that I can do to defend myself. But. But that's the honor. That's honor. Honor system. So no phones. Great day. Trump ends up. We got the challenge coins. Trump. We weren't really supposed to meet Trump. You know how it is in the White House. Trump rule. Chaotic, right? And they're. They're just like, oh, here's Trump. Oh, here's these guys. And the whole point of the meeting was that we want Tim Cast, we want the Federalists, we want Breitbart, we want Rob Smith, we want people covering the media alongside the New York Times, because they're all the New York Times. Iwaka is spreading a hoax that only pro Trump people are going to be allowed. That's just an abject lie. As you can see if you're there. They're just saying that, no, these other people that you excluded with your cartel, like, behavior can't be excluded anymore, right? And so we get all these. I'm taking. I have all these notes. You know, I feel like I'm back in law school and I'm taking notes. Super hyped. And then the. I can't say who, but you could guess who, because again, it's on background, which means I can't say who the person was. But we get the big box of stuff, comes in binders, Epstein files, right? Like, oh, that's interesting. They brief us and they go, hey, don't over hype this. Here's what's going on. We thought we had all the files we needed, but we found out that there's been stonewalling and destruction of evidence. And Anna Paulina has said this publicly, but. And this was a different person who told us. So here's a letter to Cash Patel. The story is the letter the files were giving you because we want to show like, hey, we're doing what we can do. We're doing what we can do. Don't over hype them. Downplay expectations. But the letter was mainly. Was a big story. Embargoes till three. Okay, great. So we have our meetings. They go into the Oval Office. Everybody's like, super hyped up now because Trump's in there. You know, if anybody wants any of that information, I can, you know, I can talk about all that. But everybody's super, like, Wound up. And we leave the Oval Office after taking our pictures and getting our coins and our markers and everything. And then here's. Here's marker. I'll show you the pretty cool. The ASMR executive pin marker for signing.
Rob Smith
I've got one of Those from Trump 1.0.
Mike Cernovich
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Tim Pool
They're thinking, right?
Mike Cernovich
The Margaret. Yeah, yeah. So everybody's, like, wound up. And then the. The UK people needed the room that we were in in the West Wing, so they're like, sorry, guys, we gotta leave. We're gonna go up to the other room in the Eisenhower Building. It's actually the Interview. Interview. Rumor. J.D. vance had his I don't really care Margaret moment. So we go. So we're walking down from the West Wing. And then I felt like I was walking into a firing squad. Because I don't like people to know that what I do. Because then all people do is blood suck. Oh, Cerno. Oh, how do I meet Trump?
Phil Labonte
Oh.
Mike Cernovich
And then they get jealousy. Like, well, why are you there? And not all it does is causes me problems. So everybody who actually knows me knows that I'm always like, look, I'm irrelevant. I'm a loser. Don't text me, lose my number. I can't do anything because I don't want people to know. Because. Because it's just manipulative. And I'm like, oh, my gosh. You know? And then some people made a. You know, turned over because they go, what are you holding? So everybody's just kind of like, well, here's what. It's like a natural reaction. And if you see the one picture, I was like, trying to hide my face. My eyes are like, like, where's wall, though? And then I put it down and I. Then they're like, oh, you smirked. You don't understand the serious of the moment. Like, no, I tried to hide my face. The smirk was. I was like, I'm. Now I'm caught. I got caught. It felt like you were leaving a brothel. And then it was like your girlfriend was out there, right? You're like, oh, man. But you're like, you're leaving a frat party or something. You're like, man, I'm totally caught. And then we had to go up to the room, and we still don't have phones. We don't have our phones.
Tim Pool
They took your phones from you. Yeah.
Mike Cernovich
So we didn't have our phones. And then all the people are posting pictures of us.
Tim Pool
Wow.
Mike Cernovich
So I was like, oh, man. Then I get my phone back at like 1245, 12, 50. And then I'm tagged in all these pictures, and then they're like, oh, they got the Epstein Falls. And I'm like, dude, I'm under embargo. I can't say that they're nothing. Even though I'd been briefed, they were nothing, but that they were trying to get what they had. And the real story was the. The letter from the AG to Cash. That was the real story. I'm like, man. So I started DMing people, you know, you. You guys called, and I was like, guys, it's nothing. Here's the letter. It's under embargo till 3. Trying to manage expectations. Back scene, and then on the. Back in the back of the scene, right? And then that all becomes, oh, you're. You're covering up. And why did you guys only get these things? And why didn't we. So for three hours, I just had to let people, like, give me a lick in, right? And it was a lot of people. I was surprised. I was like, man, man, all. All these years, and you can't send me a DM before you. Before you put me on blast.
Ian Crossland
Why do you think that they released it to. To five people and not to the public?
Tim Pool
Let. Let me. Let me. I'm sorry.
Ian Crossland
I'll follow up with that.
Tim Pool
What I wanted to point out to a lot of people who don't know is that the only reason we have these files, whatever they may be, Even if it's 10 years old, is because you filed legal paperwork which broke open the Epstein story. That. That is. That is you. When I saw people coming out of the. The White House and you're in the background kind of, like, looking away and, like, trying to get away from the cameras, there was. There was no moment in my mind where I was like, how come Mike is there? I was like, of course Mike is there. He.
Ian Crossland
He broke this story, like, literally. Literally. You were the guy, like, the guy that started the.
Phil Labonte
The.
Ian Crossland
How did it start? When you.
Mike Cernovich
It started, there was a defamation action brought against Ghislaine Maxwell and everything. My lawyer, Mark Randazzo, who's a First Amendment lawyer, and he sent me this case file, and everything was just redacted. And he goes, hey, aren't you always, like, talking about Epstein? And I go, yeah. And he said, well, here's a backdoor way for you to get Epstein information, because it was a defamation case. There were depositions. It wasn't against Epstein, but it involved him because it was a civil lawsuit against Ghislaine Maxwell. So we filed what was called the motion to intervene on behalf of Cerno Media, my media company. And a motion to unseal.
Tim Pool
Wow.
Mike Cernovich
And so we filed that and we lost at the trial court level. And then we went up on appeal to the Second Circuit. And in the meantime, the Miami Herald then filed. They, they joined mine. So they joined my motion to intervene, a motion to unseal. They also lost. And then it all went up to the second Circuit Court of Appeals. And then an oral argument. It became so obvious that the files would be unsealed, that Epstein was arrested the weekend after oral arguments indicated. And Tim can confirm this.
Tim Pool
I want to, I want to stress this.
Mike Cernovich
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Epstein was a free man.
Mike Cernovich
Yes.
Tim Pool
Mike filed these paper. These papers. Miami Herald joins.
Mike Cernovich
Yep.
Tim Pool
Epstein gets arrested.
Ian Crossland
What did he get arrested for?
Mike Cernovich
Well, the, if you. The indictment thing is a whole other story we've talked about before where it was a containment operation. So if you read the indictment against Epstein, they charged the minimal amount of conduct that you could charge that would allow you to create a media firestorm around it and make it look like you were doing something. But they didn't contemporaneously raid the New Mexico property, the island, because I remember Luke Grudkowski was going down the island. The FBI hadn't even gone there.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Mike Cernovich
So the, the criminal case against Epstein was actually a containment operation, which is a different discussion which we've had before because I explained that there's man act violations that weren't charged. It really was, it was like we got to charge him with something. We'll charge him. Well, he got a massage in his apartment, therefore we could only search his apartment. We can't search Santa Fe because all this is about is him getting a massage from a 16 year old containment operation. It was a mop up operation, clearly. And, but, but that's what they charged him with. But they didn't charge him until the second Circuit of oral argument. The oral argument was actually pretty funny. They go, well, why can't you unseal these records? You can't be in federal court and have confidentiality. You can be an arbitration and have confidentiality. You can have an NDA, which unfortunately a lot of media outlets use to silence people. Is you can put people under NDA and mandate arbitration, but once you're in federal court, that's all public other than your Social Security number, your address, financial like revenue records. You can redact confidential information, but you can't just say the whole legal theory and allegations and everything can't be redacted. So the second circuit oral argument where Randazz was there, the Miami Herald was there, they go, what are you talking about? Of course, and it was obvious. So if you read the contemporaneous media coverage, which a lot of people didn't read at the time and they don't know how to look up, you can say oral argument says Miami Herald and Cernovich are going to get this. Then they arrest Epstein a couple days later when he's flying back. So if there isn't me and there isn't the Miami Herald 100, he doesn't. Indicted 100. This is not, this is not up for like rational debate. So the people go ahead.
Tim Pool
It was a crazy chain of events when I was going down and I remember Luke being like, they arrested him. Like what happened? And now here we are. I mean, how many years ago is that? Like eight years?
Mike Cernovich
2019, I think.
Tim Pool
2019. So six or so years. And now we have this moment at the White House where the files are coming out.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. So follow up question from earlier. So they, they give these files to five people or so?
Mike Cernovich
No, everybody in the room got it. 15.
Ian Crossland
Okay, but why, why 15? Why small slick group and not the public?
Mike Cernovich
Why shouldn't they?
Ian Crossland
What was your take on that?
Mike Cernovich
No, I mean, I hate, I hate that question. Because everybody online is like, well, why is pretty, is pretty normal for people, for some people to get releases of information that they can go through and like, why just release it online? And then every random person can post some random thing out of context in.
Ian Crossland
Case a gatekeepers get a hold of it.
Mike Cernovich
And I mean, 20 people, you can't gatekeep 20 people. Right. So for example, the, the files were pretty much nothing and one of them was a black book. But if they just use some general release, some lunatic is going to say, oh look, Trump, Trump was in it. And you're like, it was a black book. Walter Isaacson was in it. Ivana Trump was in it. It was just a list of phone numbers. It's like if somebody goes into your email, they're like, oh wow, you had his email. Therefore there's this. So a lot of people handle things irresponsibly. So if, if it's one person or two people or three people, then the whole like, well, maybe it's being gatekept. Could, could be possible. But with 20 people, there's just no way to gatekeep it.
Tim Pool
Do you think this was a stunt, a PR stunt that the debate is.
Mike Cernovich
And this is how some people who are there yesterday feel? I Don't feel this way. There's three theories. The theory I have the theory that we were set up and then the theory that it was 4D chess. So the 40 chess theory is that the reaction of everybody yesterday was so intense that that's really going to pressure SDNY and the FBI to know people are really mad. You got to give something real. Right. So it was all 40 chess. The setup thing was like, well, just we got set up to look bad. That doesn't really. That wasn't the vibe of the meeting. Hey, everybody, come in. You're going to get briefed by everybody. Trump's going to give everybody a coin. Trump's whole thing is you guys are the media now. You know, there's people now on Air Force One who are with the daily wires on Air Force One. If you guys want to get on Air Force One, you're going to be able to. So, oh, hey, you guys can be on Air Force One if you want apply. We'll get you on. Oh, you want to go to an international meeting? Pasobic went to, I think the Ukraine stuff. You can go, oh, but we're going to set you up. Like what? Please set me up more. You know, it's just not congruent as a theory. And then the 40 chessman is. I don't think it is. What I think happened was Pam Bondi was on the media hyping things and then she found out that there was a big cover up. She wanted to hand people what they had because Anna Paulina and other people in Congress were hassling her. She's 60. She doesn't look 60. She's 60. She doesn'T understand the OODA loop of New media and how it's just chaos. So once everybody went out and once there was a picture, no embargo. There just should have been no embargo. I should have just been able to say, hey, guys, there's nothing in here. Just so you know.
Tim Pool
Well, I got leaked almost instantly, Right.
Mike Cernovich
And then you got to end the embargo. So the OODA loop, which is my theory, is that they, if you're more old school, you don't understand. It's chaos. And once one little thing happens, you have to respond in the information battlefield immediately. You can't go, well, the embargo's till three. Who cares that your pictures are there? Now Elon's wondering what's in these spots, everybody. So I'm dming people, guys, it's actually the letter. It's under embargo. I'm Messaging you. Viva Frey.
Tim Pool
I'm.
Mike Cernovich
I'm Mex. Everybody who DMs me. I'm being like, guys, no, no, no, don't say anything till 3 o'clock though. And that's just how it went down.
Ian Crossland
Did I heard that Pam Bonnie initiated a raid on the New York. What was it? The AG up there, the people that were apparently holding files. Do you know much about.
Tim Pool
You heard that?
Rob Smith
Yeah, I had heard something like that too. And I think I saw on Alina Haba's Instagram that she just has boxes of files that are on their way back or something like that.
Mike Cernovich
Yeah, I, I heard that.
Rob Smith
I think that this is moving.
Mike Cernovich
Yeah. And, and that, that's, that's the news. That's the 40 chess argument. The.
Rob Smith
I agree with that argument. I do. Because they knew who they were having in the room. Right, Right. And they know that these are people with lots of followers, lots of influence, etc. In, in team Trump and the White House press team and all these people, they understand this new media moment that we're in. They understand how the conversation flies on Twitter, etcetera, etcetera. So I think that they knew something like this would happen. Right, Right. So I think that they knew they were going to generate conversation.
Tim Pool
Alina Hubba said, I just personally loaded the infamous boxes onto Air Force One to head home where they belong. Justice has been and will continue to be restored in this country under President Trump. Truth and justice always win. Always win in the end. God bless America. She didn't say the Epstein stuff, just infinite infamous boxes. But I think the implication is clear, right?
Rob Smith
Yes. That's what it seemed like to me when I read it.
Phil Labonte
I mean there is, there is, I guess there's at least an argument to say, hold on. Considering the situation with the Epstein files and stuff so far, I wouldn't get super excited about this being the stuff coming out just because of the way that it's been kind of, you know, leaked out so far. The.
Rob Smith
I'll.
Phil Labonte
I'll believe it when I see it. I guess skepticism is the. Is the. Is the.
Ian Crossland
I think I kind of go with your take on what's going on because they called this binder the Epstein files Phase one. Knowing that there's going to be more releases coming, they obviously didn't intend for this to be the final binder and.
Mike Cernovich
And we were specifically told. So I don't want to, you know, cuz I don't want to create drama like who did what and should they not have done things and Should. You know, I don't want to get into that whole conversation. I'll just say that I personally did not hype anything as if it was coming out. And I. I specifically was telling people back channel that, hey, because. Because in my own mind, I knew what was going to happen. Everybody's waiting for them, and then we're going to look like Luna. You know, we're going to look back.
Rob Smith
So what happens is if you're one of the influencers that gets invited to something like this, Right. Obviously I wasn't there yesterday, but I've been to kind of similar things within the White House, and I know the press team and some of the influencer people, etc. You know, there's an excitement from being there. Right. There's an excitement to try to be first, to try to do this, to try to take the photo, all of that stuff. And I think that some people get caught up in that. It's a very natural and very easy thing to get caught up in. Like, I've been in similar rooms with some of the people that. In that room. I mean, I get it. I think that a lot of the conversation that was happening online, that was attacking, like, Cerno, and that was attacking all these other people. And we talked about this. Sometimes when you are dragged by other media personalities or pseudo influencers or whatever on the Internet, it sometimes just is jealousy. It sometimes just is the fact that people think that they were supposed to be in this room. And why him and why not me? Why turn on why not me? Why Rob Smith and why not me? Why. I don't know who Isabel Bryan or Liz Wheeler?
Ian Crossland
Why Laura Loomer, not me?
Tim Pool
Exactly. I'll be honest. The conversation around why wasn't I invited is for your personal team and not for the public.
Rob Smith
Yes.
Tim Pool
So when I called my. My PR book, Communications was walking up the White House, I was like, how did we miss this?
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
She's like, I don't know. And I'm like, all right, well, let's figure out how we get it next time.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Mike Cernovich
And what. What did I do today? What did I do today?
Tim Pool
I texted you the person and he. And he handed me the mindset.
Mike Cernovich
That's the whole thing. Like, everybody. The people who went out, that's the whole weird thing is the. Anybody who knows what I do knows that I don't live in scarcity, I live in abundance. So when I'm there, I was like, oh, where's the federalist at? Oh, no, actually, Shaun Davis is next door. Right. Oh, the Daily Wire. They're going to be on Air Force One. Right. So I'm, I'm getting all this, like, jealousy from people. Like, why would you be jealous of me? All you got to do is DM me and I'll give you the number.
Rob Smith
And there's no way that elevates people. Like, did, like, sort of has been elevating me and retweeting me, and we'd be DMing for years before we were able to meet. I don't understand why people. Like, my whole thing is I don't understand why people attack other. The influential news people online, like, you know, save your smoke for the Democrats or criticize our actual political figures. Yeah. But anytime, like, oh, well, Cerno did this, or Tim Pools this or whatever, it just reeks of jealousy and like, scarcity.
Tim Pool
You just got to work every single day. Do your best.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And I understand the fomo, but my thing is like, you know, if I saw Mike cernovich on a 200 foot yacht smoking cigars, you know, having a party with. With all the finest champagnes, I wouldn't get angry and pound the table. I'd be like, yo, I got to ask Mike to. I mean, that's.
Phil Labonte
That's kind of a right wing.
Rob Smith
What do I need to do to get there?
Mike Cernovich
That's kind of.
Phil Labonte
That's kind of a right wing thing, though. The left is the. Is the kind of the group that. That are angry and upset when they see people that are successful. The jealousy kind of thing. You see that on the left all the time. And on the right, you kind of have people that are more like, yeah, man, I want to be in that position. Or I'm excited for them. I'm happy because I know he worked hard. That's just kind of something that is. Is normal on the, on the right.
Tim Pool
So real quick, we have a correction. People are saying that Elena Haba is talking about the Mar a Lago raid boxes, not Epstein. Oh, really?
Rob Smith
Well, there you go. The corre.
Ian Crossland
She should correct.
Tim Pool
Right.
Rob Smith
Clear that up there.
Tim Pool
There's literally a response from someone saying, where are the Epstein files, though? And why in the world did you and Pam Bondi go on tv?
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Say you saw them and that it was sick, but then we've seen nothing already.
Rob Smith
Yeah. That's where my mind went when I saw the answer. So correction.
Mike Cernovich
And that's why I did. Yeah. And that's why I was cautious. But like, like Rob and I were talking about last night, one of the. The way. The way the, the media World kind of went. As I remember 2015, 2016, Tim was still with another outlet. He was the innovator of technology. He was the early adopter to drones and 360 and that me and Pasovic would embed with the rioters before we, before anybody knew who we were. And we would like take over their microphones and be like, hey, hey, ho, ho, Bill Clinton is a. You know what. And people who weren't around then don't get it. But we had other stuff going on. And now with the people who are during their 20s and they're like, oh, I want to be an influencer. It's. It became a career. So they're more motivated by covetousness and jealousy, whereas the people who are OGs, everybody was like, dude, we just stumbled into this world. You know, I just picked up a phone. Yeah, thou shalt not covet.
Rob Smith
Yes.
Tim Pool
I just want to give a PR bit of advice to everybody out there. I saw a handful of people tweeting things like, I can't believe these were the people that were chosen. You know, the hard work that I did and blah, blah. And I'm like, oh, no, no, that's going to get you banned from all future events. He doesn't know.
Mike Cernovich
And I got legal bills. I can show them and they're welcome to all this work. They, that's great. I, I'll be glad to show my legal bills and I'll be glad to get reimbursement for everything that all these people did. I would, I would love that. When I had 150k in legal fees for this stuff, at least I quit looking at one point.
Tim Pool
So what do you think the, the next move is going to be in the Epstein files? You think Pambanti is actually going to release anything? Friday's coming gone and we haven't seen anything.
Mike Cernovich
I, I think that the public reaction was so strong that they have to. That's where the 40 chest comes in. That maybe we were. And I don't want to say set up because I don't feel like it was set up, but maybe they, the people knew that this would end the stonewalling it SDNY and at the FBI and the people are really want this stuff. Right. So we're going to have to get something. My personal opinion is that. And this is where another criticism is like, oh, you're, you know, you're covering up for Israel, whatever. Because there was old clip where they were like, oh, it was a Mossad operation. And I go, guys, whatever it was was above whatever Mossad is. Because if it's Mossad, you couldn't talk about it. Right? That's how dumb these people are. If you're allowed to talk about something, then that thing you're talking about is not really the thing that they're afraid of you talking about. Right? And if you look at what gets people censored, nobody will get censored for claiming it was evolved. With Mossad, nobody would. But if you talked about certain health issues a year or two ago, boom, you got banned. So people think, oh, I'm so edgy. And I go, no, whatever it is, it's the thing above five eyes. It's the thing above all these other entities. And. And somehow that means it's covering up. It's like. No, it's actually the opposite. I. You know, I think we're dealing at the level of, like, sovereign wealth, trillionaires. Not just the. Because there's things above them. I'm. We're talking about the royal wealth. We're talking about the trillion. The trillionaires. Right. And who's the trillionaires? We don't know. And if you didn't know, they're a trillionaire. So all these people think they're so edgy. Oh, you're so edgy. Massage, dude. It's something bigger, some superstructure.
Rob Smith
And this is what I think about it with the 4D chess, you know, idea, right? You have to understand when you're doing this and you're kind of like, in this game and you're being, you know, invited to do this or do that, whatever, it's like, think about the level to which you are useful, right? So you are being used in a certain way. What am I being used for? Am I being used for the good of the country? I'm being used for the good of whatever. And I think that that's something that you have to think about when you decide to do these things. I think it just kind of is the name of the game and part of the industry we're in.
Mike Cernovich
There. There. Yeah, there's. Because there's two different categories. So one is. I don't think anybody who knows, who's really familiar with me would be like, well, he's an influencer. I'm an influencer who got John Conyers to resign from Congress because I uncovered sexual harassment documents that nobody knew about. Oh, what? That's not what influencer says. Hey, look at me. Here's my hot take on, like, the issues of the day. Is it? But I was. But I'm a hybrid because I still always interlate a lot of personality to it, too. So people who are new to this world or new to me, they're like, oh, Cerno is a influencer. But not. Nobody actually thinks of me in that way. It's more of a hybrid thing. But to your point about, you know, like, being. Being useful, that that's where, like, Arnold Schwarzenegger actually, they. They stole this quote from me for his book. Years ago, I wrote an article like this, and before I saw anywhere else, but it was, stay busy, be useful. That's how I live my life. What'd you do today? What'd you do today? Who'd you help? What'd you do? Oh, you weren't. A lot of these people who are mad are useless, and that's why nobody wants to deal with them.
Rob Smith
If you cannot be used, you are useless.
Mike Cernovich
Yeah.
Tim Pool
The big story here is that the White House brought in prominent personalities in media who have bigger followings than a lot of corporate press to break a story.
Rob Smith
Yes.
Tim Pool
And the reaction online throughout the day was outrage over this.
Ian Crossland
That was the weird part. I would imagine that we or humans would be supporting just independent media getting an uplift. That was what I wanted to see. I kind of tried to almost ignore the anger, the outrage, but it was. It was there.
Tim Pool
Some of it was my. My reaction seeing these photos was to reach out immediately. First thing I did is I tweet. Any of you want to come on the show?
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And then I talked with Mike. I talked to the handful of other people, and I was like, what happened? Tell me everything. I could not do that. If it was the New York Times walking out with these binders, we would have been sitting there being like, once again, the legacy media controlling the narrative. This time around, I was like, holy crap. My friend is telling me the inside scoop on. On this release.
Rob Smith
All right, so let me ask a question, because I missed all this stuff. I was doing some other stuff yesterday when this happened. So everybody that was outraged. Right. Were these real, like, the regular people that consume our. Our content and follow ups? Right. Like, were those people outraged, or was it just people that are influencers or news people or whatever?
Ian Crossland
I saw Laura Loomer get pissed off. And I mean, she's known for doing that.
Tim Pool
With all. With all due respect, Laura was angry that nobody was publishing anything from it.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And then she said she reached out to High Raicheck saying, give us the.
Ian Crossland
File about the embargo. She didn't know there was an embargo.
Tim Pool
It was after the. No, no. To be fair, after the embargo, largely, there was still limited stuff coming out. And then Laura was working as well as Nick's order to publish a full scan of the documents. There were a lot of people that were. Prominent media personalities were very angry. Yeah, regular people were angry. The documents was enough. It was another person. Yes.
Mike Cernovich
There were two dimensions. There was the dimension of what he said. The people, the people who were mad kind of scapegoated us because there were. There were a number of things. So one thing, the only criticism I thought was kind of legitimate, even though it was a lie, as relates to me, they were like, oh, you were smiling and it was like. No, they were like you were flaunting the binder. No. Somebody. If you walk outside and there's a camera, what are you like supposed to cry? What, like what, what is your reaction?
Phil Labonte
Candid picture. You're walking by.
Tim Pool
To be, to be fair. Higher. Right. Did do a little dance and like shop.
Mike Cernovich
Okay, so this, I'm not saying anything about you.
Rob Smith
So this is the thing when, this is the thing when you're invited to these things. And I remember like during the DeSantis days in Florida, there are a bunch of Florida influencers and I had went to, you know, some dinner with the governor after this whole thing had happened. And we didn't post pictures of whatever, but there were a lot of the prominent Florida based conservatives. I think it was like Ruben and Lisa Booth and, and all these people are people that I know. Right. But they took this, this smiling photo behind Governor DeSantis at his desk. And then I remember seeing all of these people who I knew personally just get totally dragged. And then in my mind it was like, okay, you have to watch those kinds of photo ops. Like, you have to watch it because number one, not only are you going to inspire hatred from people that were not invited into the room, people are going to start question everything that you're putting up.
Ian Crossland
So you mean don't gloat?
Rob Smith
I wouldn't call it gloating. I would just call it being cautious. I've been into a couple of meetings like this literally since what is it about to be March. Like, I've been to about two or three things of this this year and there were opportunities to be photographed with certain people. And I declined because I just. It's not personally right for me.
Mike Cernovich
I don't take that Trump thing.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Mike Cernovich
I just got so mad at everybody. No, but I wouldn't even done it if it wasn't for yesterday because I want to just put fuel on the fire, be like, you guys are mad, but I'm the same way as you. There's no pick of me with Don Jr.
Rob Smith
Anywhere. You got to watch that stuff.
Mike Cernovich
And I don't cloud chase anyway. I don't. I don't think we have a picture together.
Tim Pool
I don't think so. And I kind of been thinking about this for a while. I think we should, to a certain degree, not cloud chase necessarily, but I was thinking about how I never even say my own name introducing this show.
Mike Cernovich
Right.
Tim Pool
And I'm like, I get it's called Tim Cast, but everyone else says, I'm so and so. Here's what I do here. You can find me. I don't.
Rob Smith
Right.
Tim Pool
And I'm like, maybe the show be more successful. I actually tried to get photos with private individuals or something, but that's just not what I care about.
Rob Smith
Right. I show such a huge flop. Yeah, but I mean, no influence at all.
Tim Pool
No, but what I'm saying, I guess is any PR person would say Tim doesn't do the right thing when it comes to marketing his show. I don't get photos with my guests. Yeah. Like, I like, me and Mike have never smiled for a photo to post on Instagram.
Mike Cernovich
And I'll give you an example. The only reason he wasn't at that thing yesterday was the. The guy. That's why I made a text intro. The guy was like, oh, I didn't even know Tim left West Virginia anymore. So in a way, it's a marketing failure because they're like, oh, Tim's got his. And he. He doesn't travel anymore. He's got a kid. So in a way, you can write yourself out of the mix.
Rob Smith
Yes.
Mike Cernovich
Because you're like, oh, Cerno doesn't. Cerno hangs out with his kids. A mountain bike. He's not going to be out.
Rob Smith
I'm telling you. I literally, I texted some of the people that were behind yesterday. And like, with me personally, like, nobody knows where I am in the world all the time because, like, I'm in Miami kind of like doing myself beach thing, like playing my tennis or whatever. I'm in D.C. more often. But what I've noticed about spending more time in D.C. is that, like, putting yourself in the mix is a part of all of this stuff. And I like, I've seen success in the stuff that I'm doing.
Mike Cernovich
You got to remind people what you do. I mean, I. Yeah, I ran into a thing where I needed to hire a CFO for a company. And a good friend of mine had left his investment banking thing, and I didn't even know he did it because he didn't think to be like, hey, bro, I'm a free agent now. So I was like, commiserating with him. I'm like, dude, the books are a mess. And Block, he's like, oh, I'll do it for you. I was like, how can you do it for me? You're with whatever firm. He goes, no, I left six months ago. So the. The marketing lesson for people is there. There's a point where you could be too aggressive and ask for too much, and that gets great. You know, don't be asking me how to get to the White House, but it's good to remind people, oh, actually, I left this. I left the Daily car, and I'm at the Daily Wire now, and I'm on a new beat. So, like, Luke, you know, Luke is hanging out at the event. He does great work for the Day of Wire. Rosenay. I've always. I'm bad with names. Yeah, he breaks a lot of great news. He's here. And it's good to just let people kind of know what you're up to, whether you're trying to be in this world or if you're an accountant. Hey, I'm an accountant. I'm taking on new clients. You know, blah, blah, blah.
Tim Pool
Yeah, Tim Pool is available for all appearances in the D.C. metropolitan area and tri state.
Mike Cernovich
And Tim. Tim Pool wants to be on Air Force One.
Ian Crossland
Indeed, Tim Pool will be.
Rob Smith
You know, I haven't put it out into the universe right now, like, I would love to go on Air Force Two and do. Yeah, I think it was like a Raheem, because I'm about this, you know, covering JD's trip to Munich in live, tweeting that stuff and doing that stuff. That's a really, for me, like, particularly on Twitter, a really effective use of Twitter. And I came up to D.C. and I was doing the hexa confirmation. I'd like live tweeted it, and there's all these protesters on stuff, and I got that stuff in real time on Twitter. That was awesome.
Tim Pool
Well, let's actually talk about the. The White House today. I mean, you were mentioning this earlier that you would have rather been at the White House today than yesterday.
Mike Cernovich
Yeah. So yesterday, during our briefing, we were told, Because I was like, the influencer thing, you know, I want to be in the room. You know, I want to be where the drama is. And they go, oh, no, they're just signing the mineral Deal. This is actually going to be dumb. You know, enjoy your time, because I could have got credential for the thing today. Right. And so I'm in an Uber on my way to the gym. I did my intervals today to my hard. My hard cardio. My intervals today, and all of a sudden I see these clips and I didn't feel jealousy for people who were there, but I had massive fomo.
Rob Smith
Yes.
Mike Cernovich
I was like, I could have been there. I flew all the way out. And so I left my kids and I'm not even here.
Tim Pool
This moment was incredible.
Mike Cernovich
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Donald Trump and J.D. vance. I think Phil was talking about this, that the first, like, 40 minutes of the meeting were actually rather fine. I saw a great breakdown that said Zelensky is talking with Trump. Trump is actually being a bit deferential, saying, we're going to help you out. We want to help Ukraine. And then Zelensky, the president of Ukraine, decides to start arguing with. With them being combative.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And now they leave without a deal. And if the US Says no, the war is over.
Phil Labonte
Zelensky landed in the United States, aware of what the president's position was like. He knew what the administration thought. This was basically just supposed to be a photo op. It was just so that they could get some FaceTime. They were. The intent was to kind of, like, mend the. The bad blood they had. And Zelensky made the issue when he start when they had a disagreement about what kind of security guarantees they were going to be. Zelensky wants. Wants Ukraine to be in NATO, and Zelinsky wants American troops to be in Ukraine to guarantee the success or to guarantee the safety and to guarantee that Putin won't be an aggressor. The United States, essentially, their position is we want to have rights to the minerals and stuff, and so we want to have economic deterrence, basically, because if the United States has businesses in Ukraine, that will deter Putin from taking any more territory, it'll deter a war because the likelihood of having some kind of incident with Americans dying raises. And so that will be the deterrent that wasn't good enough for Zelensky. Normally, these kind of. This kind of negotiation will happen behind closed doors so they can swear at each other, call each other's names, be aggressive, be angry. And then when you go ahead and talk to the actual press, everybody's kind of common chimp, common chill. But Zelensky made the issue in front of the press, and that was a terrible move because Trump had already had a sour taste. Zelensky came to Pennsylvania and was. Was campaigning for Joe Biden. So then to come to the new administration. I think this is the first time that Zelinsky's met with President Trump. And to do that in front of the press and make an issue that's bad. It's a. It's a terrible way to try and try and force a change in policy. They. When he knew that the United States had. Had already made a decision on what. What they were looking for.
Tim Pool
I do have a clip here. This is a very long one, so I don't know if it's the. Do we have. Do we have audio working on this? Not sure if we have the audio on this one now.
Ian Crossland
This is such a good video. This is like. I highly, highly recommend this video, dude.
Rob Smith
I mean, yeah, I don't think we have audiences. Great. Seeing that begging, grubby little welfare queen Zelinsky basically get dressed down and have his butt handed to him by Trump and J.D. vance. It was the moment that Americans have been waiting for for the past three years. Hundreds of billions of dollars.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Tim Pool
I was shocked. You know, on our way here, we saw some canvassers for the aclu.
Mike Cernovich
Yeah, they were.
Tim Pool
They're waving to people. And we talked a little bit before the show about, you know, I used to do fundraising. You're pitching, you're selling, you are begging, someone, please help me. Give me your money.
Rob Smith
Yes.
Tim Pool
I was flabbergasted at Zelensky sitting down with the most powerful military, the utmost wealth, where he is in a position that if the US Says, I'm sorry, we're done, the war ends overnight. And he had the nerve to argue, you don't know what you're talking about. What reports have you seen? To JD Vance, instead of saying, I understand, I'm sorry, but please, please, we really do need your help. Let me know what you need, because we will do anything. This is a man who doesn't understand the position he's in. The arrogance was shocking.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Rob Smith
That moment where he said. And this was right before Trump went off, when he said, well, you know, you have a beautiful. Well, perhaps one day you'll see. Perhaps one day you'll see. My. My mind was blown at that. The. The audacity, the arrogance to sit there next to Trump and, man, Trump said what everybody has been wanting to say to that little welfare queen for years. It was an incredible, incredible moment. It really was.
Ian Crossland
I know it was.
Tim Pool
I'm glad the cameras were on.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. When JD Started talking is when Zelinsky snapped, like he could handle I didn't watch the first 20, 30 minutes. I popped in for the last 15 of salaciousness. And JD just goes at him, and Zelensky's probably like, who is this guy now? This is vp.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
Staging authority over. I'm the president. I'm the leader.
Tim Pool
I think one of the big moments was in JD Vance mentioned the previous. The Biden administration.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And then Zelensky got all angry. Instead of recognizing the power structure, the sentiment of the American people and the position he was in, he had the nerve to talk and snap back.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
He interrupted JD and then that's when Trump really dropped the hammer, when he interrupted JD Trump doesn't have time. I mean, he doesn't seem to have time for disrespect for his people.
Rob Smith
The thing with JD Is that the JD Shade is classy. The JD Shade is very classy. It's very. It's very thoughtful when JD Dresses you down, but then when Trump just drops the hammer and he dresses you down like, you know, your body. Like, you know, I worked at KFC when I was, like, 19 years old in the military. Like, when your boss is, like, screaming at you because, like, you really effed up. Right.
Mike Cernovich
Well, did Zelensky say something? Like. I read it as a veiled threat. I don't. The clip. Trump said something like, you're in trouble and you don't know it or something. And Zelensky said something like, well, you're going to be in trouble.
Rob Smith
Yes.
Mike Cernovich
That's when Trump snapped.
Rob Smith
He.
Mike Cernovich
Trump's like, don't tell us how we're gonna. It was a threat. It was when I watched that, I was like, you worm.
Rob Smith
You worm.
Mike Cernovich
And in my full again, because I was in the Uber. Even the Uber driver's like, turn that up. And I go, I don't know what's going on. I'm just listening to it, too, because I can't believe he did that. You know, And I was like, I don't. You could.
Rob Smith
You could.
Phil Labonte
If you looked at the body. The body language of other people in the room. The. I believe it's the Ukraine.
Mike Cernovich
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
She's like, Ambassador was literally bombing. And if you look at Marco Rubio, he was. He was staring ice knives at. At Zelinsky. I mean, and. And look, the. The Secretary of State was. He was confirmed with a unanimous vote. He's. He's essentially kind of the most, I guess, swamp creature that was in the room.
Mike Cernovich
The.
Phil Labonte
The most establishment guy in the room. And he still. Right after Zelensky left, he was tweeting his support for what President Trump said. Most of the people that are upset with President Trump are either one ideologically possessed already and no matter what happened, they were going to hate Trump or they only saw the two minute video and they're basing their judgment based on only that. You have to see the whole context. You have to see that they were actually perfectly fine getting along until Zelinsky really made a bad decorum move. It was, it was outside of the bounds of, of normal negotiations and he really blew it.
Mike Cernovich
He, he vindicated every. I was thinking about that when I was walking over here. I was like, man, imagine you're some swampy Republican like Lindsey Graham, who's, oh, we got to worship this hero. I'm, I'm like, dude, this video was a gift. And I even posted something like trolley because I went onto the alternative universe of CNN and they're all going, well, today was a big victory for Putin. So then I posted something like, I was Zelensky under compromat from Putin because today clearly gave Putin a win, you know, using their language against them, because that's how dumb these people in CNN are. And I want to just thank Zelensky because all he did was vindicated everything that we said. This is a welfare project. This guy is like, when Trump said, you're not a tough guy, we all wanted to say that, bro. Zelinsky, you're a cross dressing comedian. No offense to those who are. I'm actually pretty tolerant. But you put on your little. Remember you'd watch GI Joe as a kid where that, that camel. Yeah, yeah. Fatigue. You're. I know what you're doing. You're a little GI Joe figure.
Rob Smith
He's an actor.
Mike Cernovich
Yeah, yeah.
Rob Smith
This guy was an actor, right? This guy was an actor and a dancer and he was on like, what, the Dancing with the Stars of the Ukraine?
Mike Cernovich
Yeah.
Rob Smith
So he's playing a role and he's been playing this role. And I think that the reason that he was so emboldened to act the way that he did today is because he's been propped up by all of the crooks that we just kicked out of D.C. yes, he has been propped up by these Democrats. He's been propped up by Hollywood. He's been propped up by the mainstream media that he was performing for. And so it was, it was so kismet. And so of the moment that we're in right now that this is what happened to him and he crawled out of there with this tail between his legs.
Tim Pool
Think about what Trump is asking, I want a mineral rights. We're going to give you weapons. We're going to support you in this war. You're going to win the war. What are we going to exchange? It's a very simple negotiation. Why should the United States fund and basically run their war for them for nothing? And so let's get the nerve to say you should.
Mike Cernovich
That's why.
Phil Labonte
And not only that, it's, it's. He's making demands about entry into NATO. And that's the thing that Putin says he doesn't want. I'm not, I mean, I'm not in any way like pro Putin. I know I'm the guy that's like, going to say that Putin started the war, you know, he invaded. But at the same time, you have to understand that from Putin's perspective, Ukraine cannot join NATO. That's been a sticking point. And the United States and the rest of NATO should say, no, Ukraine can't join NATO. We'll come up with other creative ways to ensure your, your security, but you can't join NATO. And that's the sticking point that, that, that Zelensky wants.
Tim Pool
They demand that Donald Trump disparage Vladimir Putin mid negotiations.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, it's done.
Tim Pool
And that's psychotic.
Ian Crossland
Yeah.
Tim Pool
I have no problem. I'm not a politician. I'm not in government. So I got nothing. I got, I got, I got no dog in this race. Vladimir Putin is a scumbag. I, I think he's, he's a terrible, terrible guy. That's fine. If I was going to negotiate with the man in a peace deal, I'd be saying he's very smart. He's a clever guy. Don't underestimate and don't disrespect him, because I'm trying to win favor.
Phil Labonte
Yes.
Tim Pool
Lenski doesn't seem to understand that you can hate Donald Trump. You can think he's the dumbest guy in the world, and you're about to ask him for $100 billion, you kiss his ass, the whole.
Rob Smith
With honey than you do with vinegar. Right?
Phil Labonte
Yeah. The whole of the left wants to see, you know, wants to see someone that actually threatens Putin but then doesn't actually do anything. They want the United States to talk the big talk as opposed to, you know, speak softly and carry a big stick. They want to speak loudly and then not actually do anything to back it up. It was this, that was the way with Barack Obama. That's, that was the way with Joe Biden, and they want Donald Trump to behave that way. And that's not how you enter these negotiations.
Mike Cernovich
And real quick, before I have to go in here in a few, do you guys want to talk about, like a download of what we actually. What was talked about and buried in all the lunacy and everything?
Tim Pool
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Mike Cernovich
So the, the foreign policy thing. There's a couple of things especially of interest to all of us, but Darren Beatty is dismantling the whole censorship complex within the State Department. Department, which is amazing. But yeah, that was what was frustrating about yesterday is I had all these notes and I was ready, you know, ready to do this. And Putin, Putin did come up in the, in the briefing. And the briefing was just very like, repol. Real politic, which is, hey, do you. Do you guys not know that Russia has more tactical nukes than any other country? And second to us has more strategic nukes than anyone else? And do you know that Russians actually very close to China and that the closer that they get together, that means Russia has to intervene for China. So if China invades Taiwan, then Russia kind of has to get involved because China can call the tune to that. So maybe dealing with Putin as a rational actor, because this is a problem people have. It's easy for us to say, Putin, Putin is like a bad guy. Okay, great, there's a lot of bad people in the world, whatever. Right. But you still have to deal with them. That's where this like childishness comes in with a lot of people in left wing media. And unfortunately. And the right wing media is great. You can vent your spleen. Oh, these. Because, you know, there was a lot of controversy about some people visiting the US Yesterday. And you know, so I was like, thank God I missed that whole conversation because of this other nonsense. But there's, there's like a. People just act like they can just pretend somebody doesn't exist and then you can vanish them, which can't do. And then they act like a world leader is someone you can just ignore and they don't think about. Okay, so what if Russia gets closer to China, then China moves on Taiwan, Russia, China's calling the tune. So maybe it would be better for us to deal with Russia in a more responsible way, because in that could we have a stronger interest in Taiwan than we do Ukraine. So if you look at a rational foreign policy with say, okay, we'll get the minerals from Ukraine, we'll tell Putin, hey, you can have these Eastern places. Anyway, they all spoke Russian. They never even wanted to be part of Ukraine. That's why I hate the whole Putin invaded. Putin invaded Places that were being bombed by the Azov Battalion, the Tornado battalion, the militias were killing people who were ethnic Russian. This was all documented. But then we got to pretend like history started in 2020, too. So as a foreign policy thing, the Trump world is very adult. The adult is, is it going to make us safer, stronger, more prosperous? That was like. And people can give us a talking point, you know, whatever. Here's the talking points. The foreign policy is, will it make us. Make us safer, stronger and more prosperous? So is beefing with Putin going to make us safer? How is it going to make us more prosperous? How is it going to make us stronger?
Tim Pool
How?
Mike Cernovich
We're depleting our weapon stockpiles. So there. There is a logic to the foreign policy where with the moralism. Moralism is very nice. We can all be moral purists all the time because we're also holy, and everybody else are the centers. You know, we're so holy, we're priests. But they're Rubio and them, they're. They're kind of just, we're gonna be adults here. And if this isn't going to make us safer, stronger, more prosperous, then we have to. We have to do something different.
Ian Crossland
You could argue that challenging another world power, if. If they become weaker, you de facto become more powerful just relative to the power structure. But if you have to weaken yourself in order for them to become weakened, then you've got an opportunity cost. You need to measure.
Mike Cernovich
It makes stronger China. It makes China stronger, though. So if you diminish Russia, then Russia becomes more under the thumb of China. So then China becomes stronger. Because it isn't like, this is me and you in a boxing match. We both kind of beat each other up. It's more like me and you're in a boxing match, and Rob is waiting, and he's like, okay, whoever's weaker now, I'm gonna go clean up. I'm gonna clean up, right? It's a different. It's a whole. It's a whole different.
Ian Crossland
As far as I can tell, 1989, Soviet Union falls. The oligarchs that split it up decided Sevastopol, Crimea is too dangerous to give to the Russian Federation because we got to nullify their power. We can't let them be the hegemon. So we'll get to the Ukraine. So Russia doesn't have Mediterranean seaport access, but there's still a bunch of Russian, Soviet Russian people living there. 20 years go by, 15 years go by, and apparently they're getting bombed by the Azov like, is it like ethnic cleansing? I don't know a lot about what led up to.
Mike Cernovich
You can look all that up before. Before it got scrubbed. Pretty horrific stuff.
Rob Smith
Well, the Ukraine stuff.
Mike Cernovich
Yeah.
Rob Smith
Well, it's very interesting because before, you know, we started waving the, the yellow and blue flags for Ukraine a couple of years ago when we had to launder hundreds of billions of dollars. There was even articles of mainstream news outlets like the New York Times, etc, about how corrupt Ukraine was, about how it was a hotbed of corruption in all kinds of ways. And then, like you said, that stuff gets scrubbed. And so now, hey, let's all send hundreds of billions of dollars of our taxpayer money that is still there. Like, before we started talking about this today, like, I would say in the past four to six months, you would just wake up sometimes, you'd be like, oh, my God, we're still sending money there. You just read some. You just read some news article about another $100 billion going there. Like this. This thing is still going to hear.
Tim Pool
The switch up 350 billion.
Ian Crossland
They cut off economics funding to rebuild their electrical grid. Apparently every month they ought to spend 100 billion to fix their grid or three weeks or two weeks or something.
Tim Pool
How many Ukrainians have already fled the country? So 20 million or some large number.
Mike Cernovich
They. So the, the, the real story that you won't hear on all these pro war podcasts, which is so funny because it's funny to watch all these podcasters be like, slava, Ukraine, and they're not even American. I'm like, why don't you join the Ukrainian Legion? Oh, you don't want to do that. So what happened is over because Dan Crenshaw, who I don't want to bash, because I feel like everybody does. And I. Dan has done good work on psychedelic research with veteran suicide. So for me, call me a sellout, but I handle the Dan situation with more delicacy than I would someone else.
Rob Smith
I think he deserves a little bit more grace than a lot of people.
Mike Cernovich
Yeah, yeah. So. So I don't want to come off as bashing Dan because he really has done some good work and issues that really do matter. But however, when he went out with Glenn Grenwald on Piers Morgan and Dan was saying, oh, the fighting men and the war of attrition, and it's like, no, no, 650,000 people fled Ukraine. They had to kidnap people and force them to the front lines. The people of Ukraine don't actually want to fight this war. The men of Ukraine, they left and they Left because Ukraine was a corrupt dump with no real economy. So if you had any kind of vision or athletic desperation or enough money, you left. So the. The tragedy of Ukraine. And I've said this so many times, but for whatever reason, people aren't smart enough to realize it. The people who died in the war in Ukraine, spiritually, I'm closer to them than I am to Zielinski. Spiritually, they are closer to me than they are to Zelensky, because those are people like me who would like Rob and other people who would be like, I care about my country. I'm going to rush to serve. And that nationalistic fervor took over when.
Rob Smith
When.
Mike Cernovich
If you knew the real game, the real game was ethnically cleanse our own good people, the rich people can all leave. And then when it's time to rebuild, we'll become oligarchs again.
Rob Smith
And that was the real game.
Tim Pool
So I have a quick correction. I said, how many have fled? 20 million. Let me correct those numbers. The numbers I confused was, since the end of the Soviet Union, the population has declined. 20 million. That is the hard number since the war started. It's 7 million.
Mike Cernovich
Right.
Tim Pool
7 million people fled the country.
Ian Crossland
Out of how many? Do you know what the total population was?
Tim Pool
So the numbers are, at the end of the Soviet union, there was 52 million people. As of. As of this month, it's 32 million.
Ian Crossland
Rough.
Tim Pool
So they declined a total of 20 million since the. Since the fall. But since the war started, they estimate 6.8 million Ukrainian refugees have fled the country.
Rob Smith
And so let's think back to how controlled Twitter was, like, how controlled social media was in the censorship world when this war first started. Because I remember, you know, you would. You would see all the cnn, the New York Times, and all the mainstream media, just this story about what was happening over there that just wasn't true. And I would just remember seeing sometimes videos of older men, like, literally getting yanked off the street, shoved in the vans, being forced to fight when they obviously didn't want to fight. So there was a story that was being sold to America about what was happening over there that was completely false. Now we know this.
Mike Cernovich
Yeah. Oh, they all wanted to go. And you looked. And the guys look like me.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Mike Cernovich
You know, no, that guy didn't want to go. And then if the draft laws in Ukraine were being changed, where you couldn't draft people under 25, and they kept wanting to, it's like, well, wait a minute, hold on a second. If you're telling me the propaganda line that I hear from all these neocons and former leftists and all these people who I think are saboteurs actually working for intelligence agencies. If you tell me that the Ukrainian people want to fight the war, then they wouldn't have left the country and you wouldn't need a draft.
Tim Pool
Right.
Mike Cernovich
Because I can tell you right now that if we were invaded by China, I wouldn't leave. I'm dying. I'm dying in my. I'm dying. Right.
Tim Pool
Well, so, so let's, let's break down culturally why that is. I know who our founding fathers are. I know why we have reverence for them. I know about the great leaders during the, the civil strife, bleeding Kansas and civil war period that we have great reverence for. I know why we have a constitution and, and the ethos that was born of this nation and, and born this nation. I will fight for that. If China landed a bunch of boats on the beaches of California, I'd say, what can I do? Ukraine means borderlands. And I mean no disrespect, because I know I have friends that are Ukraine, and they fled the country already. It was during the Soviet Union. They were for 69 years occupied, suppressed, oppressed. Their thought leaders, their intellectuals were wiped out. When a war breaks out and Russia invades, I do know they have a history. I do know many of them are proud of that history, but it is dramatically different from the way we perceive the history of our country. So when someone storms into your nation and your history is, for nearly a hundred years, we were beaten down by a large oppressive force that starved our people, kidnapped our people, disregarded our people, and called our home the borderland. You don't have a tie to that. You have a, we just need to get out and take care of ourselves.
Phil Labonte
Look, the United States can keep supplying money longer than the Ukrainian people can supply. Fighting people like you can literally kill, or the United States can literally fund more people than the Ukrainian has to go into the. Into the meat grinder. Well, they have to do something to end this war.
Tim Pool
The question is, is Vladimir Putin who is more likely to impose what we refer to as the Zap Brannigan military strategy of sending wave after wave of your own men to die until the enemy gets over, gives up.
Mike Cernovich
That's Russian tactics 101.
Tim Pool
Right, right.
Mike Cernovich
That's Russia that they. You know, the big myth we have in America is that America won World War II as Russian bodies won World War II. Yeah, right. It was American steel and Russian blood that. That won.
Tim Pool
I. I love the Story of World War II is that the Russians mass prod, mass produced garbage weapons, but a lot of them.
Mike Cernovich
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And so their weapons notoriously are, are they. They break. They notoriously. They're notoriously. Their guns are painful to use, they bite. They, they don't. They're not particularly good. They're cheap. AKs are particularly effective. And you had with, with Germany and the Axis powers, we want powerful, well made, strong, sturdy weapons. And Russia was like, don't care. Give me a steel box with guns.
Mike Cernovich
Freeze.
Ian Crossland
Anyway, right? Bring it. Oh yeah, but the thing about that was like Soviet tactics was meat grinder, meat grinder. I don't know if Russia's like that. I don't know. I don't think of them as Soviet at all.
Phil Labonte
Well, well, I mean isn't that how they defeated Napoleon too? They just.
Mike Cernovich
The, the eastern. Russia is still an eastern country country. And the eastern mindset is the way they see an individual life is different than Americans do. I, I noticed that in all my travels and it's less of a We, we take it for granted. Individualism is actually a very weird thing. It isn't the norm. The, the norm, especially in the east, which Russia is Asiatic, is that we're the high, we're the collective. It's mother Russia and you're dying for Mother Russia is a whole different thing. But the, the you, the, the only way that I can, even though analogies have a lot of fears, the only way that I can try to ever explain Ukraine to normie Americans is I go, there's parts in El Paso, Texas that are almost all Mexican. Right. No problem. Okay, imagine we just allowed the KKK to start killing Mexicans. And I hope I don't get flagged, but it's a hypothetical. But imagine we allow that. And then Mexico said, well, we're actually going to invade El Paso, Texas. Well, who do you think the, the Mexican ancestry people are going to side with? Yeah, they're going to be like, oh wow. I mean the cake. You're let. So Zelinsky, if you go back and read. And this is where the, the Steelman case for Zelinsky is actually. And this is what I truly believe. The Nazi militias were going to kill him. So he had to play ball in it because if you look at what he ran under, he ran under peace with Russia. He really did try to bring Azov to justice. They put a lot of these Tornado Battalion people's imprisoned. They let them out once the war broke out, which was another thing that was suppressed in Western media. And if you read the files, it was real horrific stuff that they were in for. And people go, well, that's war. And I was like, well, sure, but why don't we talk about that? So it would. I. My personal belief is that the oligarchs in Ukraine said, look, we can get rid of all the patriotic Ukrainians, send them off to die on a lie, and once it's time to rebuild, we get all this Western money, will have all the money to rebuild, and then all the people who left that are on podcasts and talking stuff, they'll all be project managers, a little construction hats on, and they'll become little miniature oligarchs. And then mean. But then we're the ones who are attacked for saying that. Even though if you lay out that logic like that, nobody can refute it, literally nobody can refute that logic.
Tim Pool
I think one of the things with the Soviet Union and war was that they had bodies like Ukrainians, where they could just dump wave after wave of their own men. So I guess the question now is, although it does appear to be the Russian strategy of we'll just throw as many men as possible until we win, Ukraine might actually have the edge on that, considering the people who, like the people who wanted to live and didn't want to fight, fled, and the country is literally just capturing elderly men and women to force onto the front lines. Zelensky is completely willing to sacrifice elderly men and women to force on the front lines in a way that I don't know that Putin actually could maintain. And Putin's had to call in allies. He's working with China, he's working with North Korea to bring in more troops. I think without, first of all, it's obvious, without the US Support, if Trump says, you know, we're done, the war is over instantly.
Rob Smith
Instantly.
Tim Pool
But if we want to keep this fight up, the important point made is not my opinion, other people deserve credit for this is these people cheering on the war, these pro war podcasts. They're basically saying, thank God we can sacrifice the Ukrainian lives so that they'll fight Putin and hurt him a little bit.
Phil Labonte
I mean, just so, just for, just for information, Ukraine's population is estimated at 38, 938,980,000. Russia's million, you mean? Yeah, 38, 38 million. Russia's 143,997,000. So, I mean, the, the, the, the number of Russians versus the number of Ukrainians is just. I mean, the numbers just don't work for Ukraine.
Tim Pool
I Guess. I guess my point is I don't know that Putin would take 18, like a 20 year old woman to go force him to fight.
Mike Cernovich
No, he wouldn't. But he's using the working class conscripts. I mean, right.
Tim Pool
If you.
Mike Cernovich
The way to criticize Putin is that he, he hasn't tapped into the, the rich kids of Moscow yet or even the middle class. And that's what he's trying to avoid. So if you're Dan Crenshaw and you wanted to actually make a better, more coherent point instead of Glenn Grinwald, you would just say, look, Putin, if he has to tap in to the middle class kids and not the people who are in the caucus region and just poor farm kids, then he would face a lot of political pressure and maybe assassination pressure and Moscow. And that's the case to be made. But they don't even make that because I can think about these issues better than they can, which is unfortunate.
Rob Smith
And let's not forget that, you know, one of the things that Zelensky wanted, that he wants American troops to get involved. That's what he really wants.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Rob Smith
And he's been pushing for that. And I was actually shocked that he didn't get it from Biden, as weak as that administration was. But that's what he wants. Which would basically, you know, end up in World War iii, which nobody wants. Right.
Ian Crossland
They, this withdrawing funding to their electric grid is a big deal. It's the second. So we fund their military and then the next to that, the next most we spend on that country is rebuilding. Catholic says every two weeks.
Mike Cernovich
Their electric grid, we fund, we fund their pensions, we fund their teachers. No, no, we, if you look at, if you look at the numbers, we fund the whole entire country.
Ian Crossland
I've been reading a lot of propaganda today about it, but some people are saying Zelensky's out, he's done. He's got two weeks left. I don't know what you guys, if you've even thought that far.
Rob Smith
Rick Grenell retweeted something from, from somebody and they said something to effect that they wanted Zielinski to stand down. They wanted him to stand down. I think that they wanted Zelensky impeach. They're, they're done with it.
Ian Crossland
Oh yeah, one of his political opponents from jail made a video like, can we please impeach this guy? You guys see now the emperor has no clothes.
Mike Cernovich
All right, guys, I gotta go to the party. Any questions about yesterday news or anything?
Ian Crossland
Favorite color?
Mike Cernovich
We've shown the coins, right? The challenge Michael Cernov.
Tim Pool
Hey, man, thanks for hanging out.
Mike Cernovich
Thanks, it was our pleasure. And I look forward to seeing you guys there on Air Force One. And I will not be jealous at all. I'll be really happy.
Tim Pool
Tim cast Ira live from Air Force One. Or two, whichever. Either is good.
Mike Cernovich
It's gonna happen. All right, thank you, everybody.
Ian Crossland
Michael.
Rob Smith
Hey, thanks.
Phil Labonte
Cheers, guys.
Tim Pool
Well, we've solved all the world's problems as we often do.
Ian Crossland
Hunger no longer.
Tim Pool
There's cigars, there's a party, there's loud noises.
Ian Crossland
So what happens? White peace in Russia. This is inevitably. What I see it coming down to is them just establishing like, you know what, war's over. Whoever has what, you keep it. We're taking the minerals and Zelensky can do nothing except for stage a rebellion and then become the enemy of all, which would get him killed off immediately, I would think.
Rob Smith
I think it's, it's getting very obvious right now that everybody is tired of this, except for maybe Zelensky. Trump wants it over. Vance wants it over. We are tired of this. I don't even feel the fervor and the excitement for all of this stuff, even from the usual left wing hacks or even some of the Republican hacks, you know, that are, you know, saying we have to stand with Ukraine. It just that their heart doesn't them in it anymore.
Tim Pool
Let's, let's jump to the story from the Post. Millennial Washington Post staffers quits. You can't actually see it in the screen, but it's okay. Rebel against Bezos. New mission for opinion section. For those that didn't hear the story, it's amazing. Bezos said the Opinion section is now going to be about personal liberties and free markets. And the communists who work for the Washington Post threw a tantrum and stormed out. This is amazing. We were just hanging out with Mike Cernovich who was basically saying what we saw yesterday. By all means, everybody's mad at these influencers for whatever reason. Not everybody, but a lot of people. The White House decided to bring in prominent personalities inside of the corporate press to break a major story. Whatever you think, this is a major change in how the government has handled media in the past. And with this administration, we are going to see more transparency and independent voices getting access to government. This is amazing. Now the Washington Post under Bezos is being told personal liberties and free market. The communist woke stuff is out when these people rebel and quit. I can only say thank you. Thank you for leaving.
Rob Smith
No, please, please. So thank you for quitting. And honestly okay, so look, my degree is in journalism from Columbia. Right. My. I got my master's in Columbia. And I think that people have no idea. We think that. We know that these people are whiny libs and leftists or whatever. There is this entire pipeline in mainstream media of these people, even to when I was at Columbia and I was. I was not even conservative at that point. I was kind of like independent, asking questions because, surprise, surprise, I thought that that's what you were supposed to do in J school. In a J school master's program. Right. And the looks that I would get when you would just ask basic questions about immigration, etc. Things that you weren't supposed to ask. And people do not understand that these people are literally taken from, you know, your Columbia is, your Northwesterns, wherever. And they are in all of these newsrooms across the country. They are not curious. They don't see their job as journalists as to ask questions. Their job is to promote the liberal propaganda that they were born and raised with. And so, yes, they're doing us all a favor to quit. Because I believe in. I believe in journalism. I believe in legacy media pieces. They need to be saved. And I think that Bezos is trying to save the Washington Post. But, yeah, those people are doing us all a favor when they reveal themselves and they exit stage. Right.
Ian Crossland
I think so, too. I'm glad to see it. I mean, I don't know the. The technically, you know, the insides, but it sounds like I'm trying to change the diet of the system. A bunch of the parasites flee the system.
Rob Smith
If I'm not mistaken, Tim, you started out in the mainstream world, right?
Tim Pool
Not necessarily. The first media started doing was just activists on the ground, live streaming.
Rob Smith
Okay.
Tim Pool
So I was doing live mobile streaming. And it's really crazy how nobody does this anymore. Very few people do that on the ground reporting. And then for about a year and a half.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And actually, I would say it's almost two years. And then I went to Vice. Vice was independent at the time. And then like a month after I joined them, Fox had bought a big investment. So I was kind of like, I rolled my eyes. And then from there I did join an ABC News joint venture and actually worked out of the ABC News building in New York.
Rob Smith
Yeah, yeah.
Tim Pool
And, oh, boy, all the stories are true.
Rob Smith
Yeah, they're all true.
Tim Pool
How the mainstream media operates, the. The instruction, golden handcuffs. If. So, one example I like to give is how they had a presidential debate forum. They told me I was too white to. To be involved, despite the fact that I'm in, I'm mixed race, as everybody knows, it's a trope, it's a meme. And I was denied that for the way I looked. And that's, that's, that was the woken. The corporate presses. It's all true.
Rob Smith
And they're all like that. And the weird thing about me, even as, you know, somebody being, you know, the black guy that was out here doing all this, but I wasn't the black guy that thought the way that you were supposed to think. So they will talk about how diverse the press corps that, like their little White House beat reporters or the press corps or whatever, they're all diverse and they're white and they're black and they're Asian and Latino and the virus and all these different things, but they are just all liberals and they all basically toe that line. That's why, you know, independent media is ascending. Mainstream media is kind of dying. I mean, it's dying a slow death. I believe that at this point right now, it is the undead we are. It is the undead. It's walking dead.
Tim Pool
Well, I mean, look, it's a MSNBC making money off zombie carriage fees and they're realizing it's not going to last. But I do warn people, these, these liberal podcasters are gaining tremendous traction.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
In fact, there was a period where I think over the past week, the number one podcast in the world actually was a liberal anti Trump podcast that surpassed Rogan before.
Rob Smith
Yeah. You know, it was touch. What I will say about that is that now that they know that independent media is ascending, they will put corporate dollars. Oh, yeah, dim dollars and all of that stuff. They will fund these people to the level that if you are a conservative or Republican independent journalist or whatever, like, you couldn't dream of getting the kind of support that they're going to be giving to these guys.
Tim Pool
I love this when I'm talking to like the Majority Report people and they keep running this narrative that we get behind the scenes corporate money and things like this. And I told this to Jenk Uygur. I said, we've sold ads and everybody listening. Okay, this is it. We're a big podcast. I think we. Yesterday we were the seventh biggest live show in the world and simultaneously the 26 biggest, because we're on two. We're on Rumble and YouTube for if you combine them both, we were number two. We've been able to sell ads for $50,000 for one read. That's not typical. It's not common. It's not really but sometimes you can make that money. What do we do with it? We do field events like this, which are expensive and difficult. We try and invest in community building. It's not about getting wealthy off this. But we are not getting secret corporate billionaire dollars from, you know, industrialists behind the scenes. It's a lie they have to maintain to discredit us. And so when they say, why aren't we doing well? Well, it's actually quite simple. They are bad at business.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And I said that to Jake Uygur when he was like, oh, you got to be getting. We don't get these ad dollars. And I was like, then you're better business. No, we're not. And I'm like, clearly you are. We do standard sales through corporations that have ad offices in New York City. We don't. We're not doing anything special. There's no secret meeting at TPC where Charlie Kirk brings in the head of ExxonMobil to fund any of this stuff. That's not true. So what we're going to see now. Well, I, and I bring this up to say in defense of many of these liberals, they are not, you know, as much as David Pakman liked to run this segment where he claimed I, along with Milo, were accusing me of getting USAID money, I never said that. No, I think they're making money off of clickbait political content that the people want and are looking for new venues to find it. And they're making a lot of money off programmatic ads and default sales. But they don't know how to run a media business the way meritocratically developed individuals do. So on the right, which includes liberals at this point, post liberals and dissected liberals, you have people who built from the ground up and largely on the left, you have a Democrat nonprofit bought ads, a, you know, I'm not going to get specific, but you have a lot of political funding. And I'm not trying to accuse them of doing anything untoward. But a lot of the activist media. Take a look at Media Matters.
Rob Smith
Yeah, yeah.
Tim Pool
This is, this is not organically grown meritocratic individuals. This is political power.
Rob Smith
And it's all propped up. It's all propped up. And they're doing this thing now, and they're doing this thing now where they will, they will find these dim influencers that are trying to prop a lot of money into, but then they connect them to mainstream media stuff. Like, what is CBS this Morning doing? You know, a segment on some dim influencers on Tik Tok. Right. It's not organic. It's not real.
Tim Pool
I got you. Kaitlan Collins reportedly makes $3 million a year.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
Ridiculous.
Tim Pool
And Daily Caller.
Rob Smith
Daily Caller does.
Tim Pool
Does anybody who works in this space. Oh, actually, you know what? I'm not going to rag on the lady. Don Lemon's a good example.
Ian Crossland
Okay, just going to bring him up, please.
Tim Pool
He's got half a million subscribers on YouTube. More power to him. He gets maybe like 10 to 30,000 per video. That's not bad for a small entry level podcaster who's been in the space for a few years. Don Lemon was an anchor primetime on CNN for what, a decade plus.
Rob Smith
Decade plus.
Tim Pool
He did not have the talent nor the merit to be as a position. He was placed there and his notoriety was gifted to him from a pedestal.
Rob Smith
Yep.
Tim Pool
Whereas in the independent media space, most of the personalities you see built it from the ground up slowly over time. It is no. It is no mystery why Cat Turd, of all people on Twitter, on X. Yeah. Built a big following. It's not because someone came to him and said, we have a plan. We're gonna give you a million dollars to make a profile called Cat Turd. No, it's a guy with opinions who every day watched the news, voiced his opinions, built up a following, and became prominent through merit.
Phil Labonte
It's worth noting that a lot of the people that are on the left, that the left seems to be trying to lift up. People like Hassan Piker, who just again today was calling for the death of a public figure.
Tim Pool
Whoa. What?
Phil Labonte
Yeah, he straight. He said he. He straight up said it. Said that. Said I made a remark about Rick Scott and. And, you know, said someone should. Should kill him. Wow. There was. There's also people like. Like there's. There's.
Tim Pool
In a video game, I'm sure.
Phil Labonte
No, he did.
Tim Pool
Well, he didn't caveat it. He didn't.
Phil Labonte
There was no caveat. He straight.
Tim Pool
He was.
Phil Labonte
It was a straight up, you know, calling for, well, something. And that's not. That's not odd on the. The left anymore.
Tim Pool
Well, it's not just that. It's. Numerous corporate press outlets have advocated for and directed their audiences to follow these people.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Tim Pool
There. There are some individuals on the left that I don't want to drag because they're not abject evil.
Phil Labonte
I will.
Tim Pool
They're just liberals. But the New York Times.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Has run stories saying the new Joe Rogan and things like this.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And then these people from these stories get a million subs overnight.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And instantly become millionaires through the Institutions.
Rob Smith
Empowering them, and then it's not real.
Tim Pool
And to be fair, I'm not saying that every liberal ever has no merit and did not build up their channel. I'm saying the tendency for the establishment left has been powerful voices were propped up by a corporate institution. And on this side, in spite of censorship, we have clawed our way to our position.
Rob Smith
And you brought up Don Lemon earlier, and I want to get back to that, because he is the most pure example of somebody who literally does not know who he is when there's not a team of producers and a team of executives propping him up. He had the biggest platform, you know, for a decade plus. He's flailing on digital media. You know, he's. He's attacking Megan Kelly. He's running up to people on. I saw some video of him running up to people on a subway train. Yeah, that's doctored photos of himself. And so this person has no idea who he is outside of a news set, outside of people writing the script. I was talking to a producer. I will not name the network. I will not name the show, but this producer was talking about a particular person that is talking about, well, I don't like how this script is. You know, well, bro, write it yourself, right? And so a lot of these people are so propped up, they are struggling in this space because they have not figured out who they are, fundamentally not figured out who they are. And I had to do the hard work to figure that.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, you got to become a producer.
Rob Smith
I want to hear what you're a producer.
Tim Pool
Megyn Kelly.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Leaves network television. She leaves Fox. She tries to go to NBC. They fire her for the stupidest reason imaginable.
Rob Smith
It was ridiculous.
Tim Pool
She starts her own podcast, her own channel. She has three and a half million subscribers on YouTube. She has one of the top ten podcasts in the world. She routinely gets hundreds of thousands of views. That looks like somebody with wit and merit who deserve to be in a talent position, who proved it on their own after the fact.
Rob Smith
And the thing that I love about Megyn Kelly is, in her show is that it's journalism. You know what Megyn Kelly thinks about things when she decides that she wants to go for that, you know what she feels about men and women's sports, Right? Like biological men, like that whole thing. You know what she feels about that? You know that she felt strongly enough about Trump to go to that rally. But 90% of the show is actual legitimate journalism. It's actual questions about what's going on. It's Bringing people on that are actual experts. And there is news value in that. There's value in that to the listener. I'm not, you know, look, my podcast is a lot of, you know, kind of like off the cuff stuff about what I think, but I'm even transitioning that to do a little bit more news because that is what is of value to the viewer. I think that Megyn Kelly probably wouldn't be as extremely successful as she is if it was just, hey, I'm Megan and this is what I think every single day, right? So she works hard at it.
Ian Crossland
I used to think that was who she was in like 2008, 9. I was like, oh, she's a warmonger. Get her out here. She's just another Hannity.
Mike Cernovich
But.
Ian Crossland
But then, you know, people evolve drastically.
Rob Smith
Yeah, yeah.
Ian Crossland
What did you, like. Do you still find yourself watching this, like, the. Whatever you call the mass media, the msnbc? Do you watch it? Watch the ship go down? Are you, like, watching it?
Rob Smith
You know, I try not to. I definitely delighted when, you know, Joy Reid got canned earlier this week. That was wonderful because that was like, literally one of the most hateful people on cable news. And seeing her downfall has been quite delightful. And, you know, I made a tweet a couple of weeks ago that I was in some hotel room, I was somewhere traveling to go do something. The MSNBC was on. I think the guy at 8pm Chris, had the Chris Hayes, and he was freaking out about whatever was going on in D.C. that day. And I was like, I'm watching this show and everything that Chris Hayes is freaking out about are things that I think are just incredible, are things that I'm like, this is a highlight reel of every awesome, incredible thing that happened today. So I do watch some of the stuff because I. I do want to know where the conversation is, because you have to know where their minds are at. And I hope that they just do not get the memo about this stuff until at least after the next election.
Ian Crossland
I was kind of glad to hear that. That in a. In a way that. That podcast, what was it called? The biggest podcast on earth last week? Eclipse Rogan for a moment.
Tim Pool
What was it called?
Ian Crossland
That.
Tim Pool
It's a.
Ian Crossland
It's a pressure valve. We used to talk about this show as, like, it's a pressure valve for the people that are being suppressed by the media. So now we're in. It's like the whole situation has been flipped around. You see MSNBC going down. Joy Reid's canned. There needs to still be a pressure Valve for those people. I'll go on Facebook and the rage and just. Just complete.
Tim Pool
Oh, man.
Ian Crossland
Utter insanity that people are going through right now.
Tim Pool
Is Facebook just liberal? No.
Rob Smith
Oh, no, no. Okay, so here's the thing about Meta and Facebook. So I got a Facebook page with, like, that and $600,000 or something like that, and I put a steady stream of content every single day. And what I. This is what I say about Facebook. Facebook is like the Fox News of the Internet for me, because all of those people. I used to do a lot of Fox. I still love Fox. Used to do a lot of hits back in the day. Don't. I'm focusing energy on doing more things right now, but I do a lot of content on Facebook Meta. And I'm like, all those people that are those kind of, like, you know, older. We'll say 45 to 50 plus older. Like. Like conservative people. A lot of those people find me on Facebook and. And they love the. The reaction videos to, like, the Trump Zinsky stuff today. The Joy Reed stuff. They love that stuff. But I do get a lot of libs that find that page, and a lot of libs find me on Instagram. So I don't even read the comments on Instagram anymore because, I mean, they just. They are so impotent right now. These people have literally zero power. They have no power in D.C. the power even in the mainstream media is waning. So all they can do is just scream.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, that's what concerns me. If people feel completely powerless, they become desperate, and desperate people can become violent. So I want people to still feel like they're influential, that they have some impact, that their voices are still being heard.
Tim Pool
There are. There will be, as I think you were pointing at just a moment ago, Rob, the corporate media dumping as much money as possible into these personalities because cable is done. Donald Trump just won, and they're not going to quite go quietly into that good night. The DNC has no frontline talent. They're not just going to give up. So we have routed the Marxists and the WOKE and the neoliberal establishment, but they're not gone. Donald Trump's actions in the government and Elon Musk's efforts with Doge largely is to gut their resource centers. Mm. But we're still going to see it takes only a few million dollars. This is what I warned last year when we were talking about these podcasters. You've got Rachel Maddow getting $25 million a year on a show that gets, like, what, a hundred thousand in the key demo, if she's lucky. Yeah. And so I can tell you how much money she's going to get off that. She's going to sell a hundred thousand. I think you can muster up a couple grand in an ad sale for that one. So based on podcast, podcast sales, if it's a cup, if it's an hour long show, she might be able to do five, six thousand dollars maybe. Maybe on the high end, if you do a premium CPM, maybe 10,000. But is that going to cover 25 million dollar salary? Ain't no way.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
There is some money still in the fact that she gets a couple million from the elderly population. And I mean no disrespect to say that, but those ads only go so far. We're talking about reverse mortgages. Again, not being disrespectful. This is largely what's being advertised to the elderly is things like reverse mortgages. There's going to come a point, point where they say, hey, look, we've got a hundred million dollars left over. And Rachel, Matt's reaching no one. They're going to open up YouTube and be like, hey, hey, this guy's getting 30 million views per month. What if we put his face on a billboard in every major city for $10 million and paid him 5 million cash to say what we want him to say? Yeah, that podcast is going to say, yes, sir, tell me how high to jump. They're going to put their face on every major city. They are going to start telling all of the young people, if you want. One of the issues that I've been talking about quite a bit with everybody in the industry is ask yourself the question of why people listen to Bill Maher. Is it particularly relevant? No. Is he having conversations with people that are insightful? I'm not trying to be a dick, but no, he's. I think he recently said he wasn't doing stand up anymore. He's largely out of the conversation. He's still in it, but he was three years behind Dennis Prager, which was shockingly embarrassing. And so I know that if I have a conversation with him, I'm going to be saying, bill, that happened five years ago. You missed this story. But you ask yourself why it is the corporate press is still so interested in his name, his narrative. And it's the, it's the, it's celebrity and ubiquity. The way they've been able to accomplish this is using what we would call a premium brand. Vice was very good at this. I'm not Going to get into the whole ad rights distribution. But let's just say when you have a premium brand, it means people recognize it whether it's actually on their TV or not. So you say Bill Maher. People say, I've heard of him. They probably never watch him. Most people don't. I think his ratings are about 800,000 in total per week. But people know the name. That means the corporate press, advertisers are going to say, well, at least they know this name. We'll buy it because it's what we can think of, our side of things. The independent media does not recognize this yet and they need to. There's a reason why CNN was buying billboards all over the country for as long as they did with Anderson's Cooper Cooper's face on it.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
So that the average person would just say, yeah, I know him, he's the news guy. Yes. And they would say the most trusted name in news over and over and over again so that people would believe it because they're passive. What's going to happen? I'll tell you what we're doing. We're working on billboard campaigns. We did this two years ago because we want to steal that from the institutions. That's what we bought in Times Square. If we do not, and I honestly don't know why people aren't doing it, Democratic power structures are going to say, give us A list of 10 prominent liberal podcasters of any size and we're going to spend $20 million. That's a pittance compared to what these powerful creepos have. Some billionaires people I talk about, George Soros, they're going to say, let's spend $20 million and see what our return is. If we make these people ubiquitous, the goal will be a 16 year old kid who's entering the political space, who is is. He reads a lot and he's charismatic and he says, I want to be a personality. In his mind he will say, clearly the path to victory is a liberal podcast because they're everywhere. They're on tv, they're on the billboards, they're in the skywriting campaigns. How do I get to that level where everyone knows my name too? It's going to be fabricated through infrastructure designed to win politics. Meanwhile, the independent element is largely just playing this game of share my show and I hope people hear about my name.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
And so that's where we're at. So what I can tell you is the cost of outdoor ads has dropped dramatically because manufacturers and product companies like to do Direct sales. This means that the typical marketing spaces of ubiquity billboards along highways or in cities have become ridiculously cheap to the point where you can buy a couple dozen major 100 foot tall to 30 foot tall billboards for about 80 grand for six months.
Ian Crossland
Oh, that's awesome.
Tim Pool
So obviously 80 grand is a lot of money, right? Yeah. But if you're a media company on the right and you're thinking about, okay, so how much, how much for one month then for like 10 grand you can have 20 billboards across a major city. Let's say, look, let's do. I would said the major.
Ian Crossland
The New York would be a good one.
Tim Pool
New York is way too expensive. Boston, so. So Time Square is actually not as expensive as people think. We bought the the entire north tower on New Year's for it was two weeks in December until New Year's Eve. So On New Year's 2023, the entire North Tower except for two billboards which is owned by Eminem and Coke, said Tim cast all synchronized at once with all of our shows and it was $200,000.
Rob Smith
Wow.
Tim Pool
And so what we wanted, we bought a handful of ads that year. One was a 40, 45 foot tall static billboard. Means it's physical material above the Today show so that every single journalist, every day as they walk into that building, they see my face above them. We want to, we need to make sure everybody sees and everybody knows. And the response was invaluable. Can we directly track whether or not more people watch the show because of it? I honestly don't know. What I can tell you is I was inundated with people post sharing links with me from liberal podcasters and social media where they were freaking out at the fact that Tim cast IRL was on a 100 foot tall billboard in downtown Chicago on the side of a skyscraper that in Times Square. The entire North Tower said Tim Cast. It was a statement for all of these people to recognize we are taking the space over. It was for advertisers. You do it in Times Square because you want the big advertisers to see your brand and say that looks big. So that when, as I mentioned the premium brand value of say Bill Maher, which he does have, we need to associate with our side of things. If we do not, the DNC's power structures are going to take people like, well, I'm not going to name anybody, but I want to, I want to give anybody the airtime. But some of these big shows, they're going to prop them up and they're going to start putting out metrics saying Joe Rogan's not the biggest anymore. Midas touch is.
Ian Crossland
You might have already answered my question, because I'm like, what's the next phase of war? And I mean, what I mean by in this instance of war is like the war being put the. The co op of the American republic by the business, this establishment, by this swamp. What's the next phase of the swamp monster? Because you're right, there's, there's. We've. There's a route there. People are currently scattering in every direction with no moment, no idea what's coming next. They just want to get. Survive. Then they're gonna regroup and then there's. So we're in a fortification stage right now.
Phil Labonte
No, they're not fortifying.
Ian Crossland
No, no, no, no.
Tim Pool
We're.
Ian Crossland
I say we, the people that have taken the hill are now in the fortification stage. Like, so what's the fortification process? So you're saying, buy billboards, get the ground.
Tim Pool
So I believe the next major move of the establishment, deep state bureaucrats. They know that they're losing the culture war. They know that Bud Light was a disaster. They know that Target was a disaster. Disney lost a billion dollars, a disaster. Culturally, they've been crushed, and they need to exert cultural dominance on the institutions. Losing this battle through independent media, through merit, is shocking, but it's largely because the structures they tried to maintain for, for the narrative are failing. Television and newspapers are no longer the principal way people consume information. They neglected this. When you see people like David Pakman and Kyle Kalinsky and Brian Tyler Cohen, big liberal podcasters, complaining that they're not getting the big advertisers and the Democrats aren't supporting them. They are not wrong. They've. These people have built big channels, they have big following is they make millions of dollars, but they're not getting political institutional support. They're angry about it. The institutional support was still going to msnbc, where the intel officers were routine guests going to the newspapers. The, the intel people weren't going to liberal podcasters and saying, we're going to let you break this story so you can reach 3 million subscribers. They were like, we're to go to the Washington Post. So guess what? Nobody read it. So as people were migrating to independent platforms, Joe Rogan took over. Whether on purpose or otherwise. It was easy to access, it was authentic and it was available. It was right there in front of you, right when you open your podcast thing. And Joe is an honest guy. So when he had a real conversation, he didn't entertain the lies from the intelligence agencies or the establishment. The next move they have to make is recognizing how they lost that battle and buying it back. And they can buy us over 10 times.
Rob Smith
They can.
Tim Pool
Absolutely. And that's why I've been warning for the past year, we need absolute control of the media infrastructure. It's great that Bezos is saying opinion section is going to change. That's. He's, he's, he's recognizing that the, the messaging failure in that regard, probably the threat to himself, too, as a wealthy individual being chased after by Marxists. But my point is. And then you guys, you know, I'd love to hear what you guys think. Other moves they'll make is. I would not be surprised if this summer you see a liberal podcaster in every major city, on 30 billboards in every city, a $20 million campaign. Not because. So I'll break it down. How do the power structures do it? First, a powerful billionaire of liberal persuasion is going to reach out to a liberal podcaster and say, I'd like to buy a portion of your company. I'll buy 30% for $50 million. Some ridiculous number. A report will come out saying new. A new media deal between some corporation with investment backed by this powerful billionaire recently purchased a minority stake in so and so, you know, Speech Networks, which is owned by Insert liberal podcaster. They will then say, now that we're a minority owner, we want to invest $20 million in an ad campaign. You're going to see this person's face on the side of billboards. You're going to see it across highways. They're going to hire the best and biggest pr. They're going to write a book. They're going to buy a hundred thousand copies of their own book. And the New York Times is going to claim it's the number one bestseller. They're then going to put this person in movies. You'll see this in Iron man When Bill O'Reilly in Iron Man 2 is on the TV talking about Virginia pepper pots. They are going to try and inject culture, cultural ubiquity culture through these, these individuals to create the perception among the general public they are Joe Rogan. They are what he is to us today. It will not be real, but you will not be able to tell the difference. That's going to. I believe that's their next big play.
Ian Crossland
You said that we should establish that we need. I'm not, I don't. Exact words. You use absolute control of the Media. The way you said it, I was like, well, that could be taken interpreted in a dangerous direction.
Tim Pool
Like we need to exert cultural dominance over media institutions.
Ian Crossland
Institutions, yeah, that I agree with. Because you still need a free media. And if they want to corrupt your, your people, I mean, well, then that's a discussion like, where's. Is it a monopoly at that point?
Rob Smith
Well, it is, but you know, and even as much as we talk about how, you know, the MSNBC and the CNN etc is over and over and over and it is kind of. But you gotta understand, every gym, every airport, every public space all across the country, what do you see? Cnn, msnbc. It is ubiquitous.
Tim Pool
Not anymore. CNN a few years ago lost their airport contract.
Rob Smith
I'm just thinking, like, I see it in the gym all the time.
Tim Pool
But I, I recently had a conversation with some guys in the industry when they were talking about, you know, how do we. Like it's a general conversation of how do we expand, how do we reach more people? And I said airports and hotel lobbies. And they were like, yeah, but is that real? And I'm like, did it matter for CNN for 20 years when everybody recognized Anderson Koop Cooper? Doesn't matter.
Rob Smith
Doesn't matter.
Tim Pool
You want people to see, look, if this stiff stuff didn't work, Coca Cola would not buy billboards.
Rob Smith
And to take it even one step further, what's going to happen with. And I just always use MSNBC an example because it's just the most far left of them. They're going to start gobbling up some of these people as well. Just the cape. The cable news structure is something that is very out of date even when you watch it. It's why the clips will play on Twitter. But if you. When's the last time you sat down and actually watched one of these shows? It just doesn't work.
Tim Pool
I watch the Five every day.
Rob Smith
You watch the Five every day?
Tim Pool
Yeah. Greg Gutfeld's fantastic. Well, I can't.
Rob Smith
Great.
Tim Pool
And I can't watch his show at night because we're wrapping up our show.
Rob Smith
Yeah, but Gutfeld is great and that show is fun and that show is anomaly. And it's also super fun for me, 2015 or 16.
Ian Crossland
And I'm like not an aficionado in politics, so 2016, I just stopped. I do the Internet now and.
Rob Smith
And I think that there is a value to it sometimes. Right. But I think the point that I'm making is even with msnbc, look, they know that these shows don't work and they know that they will work. Less and less. So they're going to start gobbling some of these people up and then the corporate structure that props up MSNBC and all that money, like that stuff is going to go to some of these people as well.
Tim Pool
It's an honest question. And I'm not, I'm not the biggest fan of Fox News as a whole. Yeah, they're okay.
Rob Smith
Yeah, yeah.
Tim Pool
Why isn't the five just also live streamed on their YouTube channel and uploaded to Apple and Spotify?
Phil Labonte
I don't know why that.
Rob Smith
I don't know.
Tim Pool
I think it is on.
Rob Smith
Yeah, I don't know. I think that, you know, not to speak out of school too much about, you know, how Fox does business. But I, I know that it's a very traditional TV model and I know that with a lot of their shows because I know that they, you know, being Fox talent is great because, you know, they'll, they'll wrap the podcast up in it and the book up in it and all that stuff. But I think that the 5 is just not set up that way and I think that it has something to do with maybe carriage and, and all of that stuff. But there, but it, it's just very, it's, it's kind of, you know, it's.
Ian Crossland
Such an established business model in LA. I was an actor in LA in 2005. 6, 7, 856-7-8, 9, 10. And they wouldn't take head shots through email. It got to the point where I was like, why do I need to go spend 30 bucks to mail out things to people that take a day or a courier to get there when I can email it? And they're like, no, we don't take emails. And why? There was zero answers because just we've always done it this way. It's too expensive to change. No one really needs to change over here. So you do it the old model and it just died off as a result. It wasn't agile. You couldn't. Took forever to get a part. You had to wait and you're lucky. And maybe. And so all these people on Instagram start blowing up and getting super famous and rich without having to wait for this extended old school process.
Rob Smith
And I think that even with some of the mainstream media outlets, I think that what I see in this, in this industry, in this business is that everything's going to start coming together. Right. And we see it even in the conservative sort of influencer commentator space. Like, right. Like we see some people that maybe talk crap about CPAC in the past and now they're at CPAC now speaking on the stage. So everything is kind of coming together, Right. And so what I see happening with a lot of these networks and just think about Fox, right? You know, at a certain point the numbers are going down across, across the board for all of these networks. And at a certain point they're going to start looking and bringing in people from new media, from independent, like whatever you want to call it. And eventually what I hope happens with a behemoth like Fox, because man, the. You ever been in a Fox is the best lighting you're ever going to get in your life.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Rob Smith
All right. The best light. I, I wish that I could just travel all the time in that lighting. It's the best lighting you ever going to get in your life. Resources are empty, are limitless. And when you get some of these people that, that have been kind of ubiquitous in this space and you give them that corporate backing, that's what I think is going to start happening. But I don't think we're going to see that for another seven to ten years.
Tim Pool
Sorry. When I went on Jesse Waters recently, it's really amazing to watch how they do these shows live.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Because they, they're like, okay, commercial break. You've got a minute, Mr. Pool. They, they walk me into the studio. Jesse's sitting there, he shakes my hand, he's small, talking and I'm thinking like, are we going live in like 10 seconds? And he's acting like we're just in a room hanging out. And then he's talking to me and he asked me a question, I answer and then he goes, so we're here. And I was like, how did he do that? It's amazing.
Rob Smith
A well oiled machine. You know that 6th Avenue, New York City, that is a well oiled machine. But it's like, you know, they're there and they do it, you know, every single day. And it's just like, you know, you guys with this podcast, right? When you do something every single day, you become an expert at it.
Ian Crossland
Yeah. My experience with corporations like Fox, big multi million, billion dollar corporations hiring super famous enter like influencers I guess you call them. Is that the influencers event? They take the contract and then like, what am I doing here? I can make the same money on my own. Why am I now stuck working for someone else and not able to speak my mind on Twitter? So I don't know if that model is going to work. It might, it might play out.
Rob Smith
It may work with some people because I had to tell you for some, look, look for some people you get to a certain point and I will say this is as like an independent media personality and I do my thing and I make my money and I make my rounds. Right. Not as, not as big as anything that's going on here. Right. But there's going to be some people, you can live a nice life and you can make a decent amount of money and you can do your work and you can speak your mind at a certain level. And then at a certain point when your platform becomes big enough and somebody's gonna like scoop you up for, you know, you know, one, $2 million a year, you'll be like, help. You know, why not? You know, I'm, I'm in my mid-50s, you know, maybe I'm, you know, maybe I got a couple kids that, you know, at that point in time, maybe I want to spend a little bit more time with them. I just think about sort of the cycle in this business, in this industry as you're somebody like me, because I don't personally have the desire to like run an operation.
Tim Pool
We, we watch. I like to watch as Steve and advised opposition media.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
I like to go to their forums, I like to read what their users are saying, what they're believing. And I can tell you there are liberal podcasts that have no problem lying, as we all can already imagine. Let me just say that an individual who is willing to publish a statement like Trump has the lowest all time approval at a time when in aggregate and in each individual poll he has the best polling of his career. An individual who would literally report the inversion of reality will take a couple million dollars to report lies for, for a politician they'll do anything. And that's what we're going to see happen. And there are people who believe them for whatever reason they do there. So Ian, you made a really good point last year when you said you try to vaccinate your parents with information.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
Get it to them before the media.
Rob Smith
Your parents are lips rough.
Ian Crossland
They're like middle of the road because I'm able to get, communicate ideas with them. I'm like, get ready for this USAID thing. It, they're going to call it aid. Get ready for the vaccine. You're get, get immune for this one. And my mom was like, oh snap. My dad was.
Phil Labonte
My mom's already based.
Tim Pool
Basically what Ian, Ian's point was, and it was very good, is the media is about to lie. You need to show them the truth before the lie so they can immediately be like that's. Not true, and I know it. You've got to get them their information before the manipulators, because what we end up seeing is shout out to Daniel Negreano, I'm a big fan. He was on the show. He said he believed the Very Fine People hoax for the longest time, but he saw the video. He said, I saw the video. Trump said it. What happened is he saw the corporate press, he saw the liberal pundits. A video of Trump saying they were very fine people on both sides. End of story. Finally, one day, he was arguing with his friend, and his friend was like, trump never said. He goes, yes, he did. I saw the video. And he goes, no, you didn't. And he's like, in his mind, he's thinking, I literally watched the View on my phone.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
So they'd put his phone down, slid it to him and said, watch. And he goes, fine. And then he saw the extended video when Trump said, and I'm not talking about the neo Nazi. The white nationalists, they should be condemned. Totally. And he went, holy crap. The reason you need to provide the vaccine information is because if I go to someone and say, here's a video of Trump saying, I'm not talking about the neo Nazis. He now says, I saw the video. Trump said, I'm not talking about them. And so he rejects the lie. What they're hoping for is the first time a person is exposed to the information will be the lie.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
So they'll be convinced they've already seen.
Rob Smith
The information, and then they repeat the lie over and over and over. The Very Fine People smear is one of, like, I think, like, one of the biggest hoaxes about Trump. But, you know, in recent memory, and I remember when that went out, and I. That was a part of my awakening because I started doing all this stuff around, around 2018, and a part of how I built my brand, you know, in the earlier days, was just literally as a journalist, and it wasn't even like, super, super, rah rah pro Trump. It was just like, wait a minute, these people are lying. And then they keep on lying.
Tim Pool
Yeah, we're gonna go to your super chat. So if you haven't already, would you kindly smash that, like, button? Share the show with everyone you know, if you got the opportunity. You say to your friends, tim, cast IRL is the greatest show. Everyone agrees. At least that's what I've been told, because that's how podcasts grow big.
Ian Crossland
And if you.
Tim Pool
That's basically what we're talking about is, oh, growing Big.
Ian Crossland
And if you own an airport and you want to run, Tim cast IRL at the airport.
Mike Cernovich
Hit me up.
Tim Pool
You have my permission.
Mike Cernovich
Oh, awesome.
Tim Pool
Well, right, because we've been operating in the space for so long of. Please make sure you're sharing the shows you like, because organic virality will help us reach more people. The corporate machine has been like, that's so cute, guys.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Hey, television network, run our political ad full of lies everywhere for 500 million people.
Ian Crossland
When. I'm sorry to interrupt. I was trying to catch the tail on what you're saying. That's how I feel when I make 20% on crypto or 5% on crypto. I'm like, the dudes that are controlling the levers are like, oh, enjoy your crumbs, little one.
Tim Pool
Crumbs. Well, we're changing the game. We're changing it. Rumble.com/timcast IRL. Go to timcast premium.com and sign up via Rumble Premium. Member. We got big plans. We've been working hard behind the scenes. We're going to do some really awesome stuff. And we are going to push back and make sure to the best of our abilities that in the coming year or two, we will not let these institutions try and take over the space that we have hard fought and won through our talent and merit, that they're going to try and invade. We'll grab your super chats. In the meantime, though, smash that, like, button. We got quantum strange cork. Who says? Regarding the Epstein files, has anyone checked, see if the services that the FBI used to pick up the shredded classified material for final destruction are seeing an increase in business?
Ian Crossland
I haven't looked into it.
Tim Pool
You know, I wonder, but I think it's fair to say, as a lot of people have already pointed out, the Epstein files probably got destroyed a long time ago.
Ian Crossland
I mean, they would have not done their job if they hadn't. I'm saying the nefarious ones that are supposed to be covering up these horrible crimes, of course, you would think that'd be the first thing they would do is eradicate the evidence. Why would there ever be evidence? Except you're gonna use it on blackmail. And someone will be like, hey, I have your flight log. Your name's still on it.
Tim Pool
Alpha Turkey says the devil first lied to man by saying he can be like God by eating the. The fruit to gain knowledge. Now he will lie again by saying that we can be like God by gaining immortality through neuralink. Yes. Let me just make sure you understand. There is no reality where you can download Your brain into a computer. You can only copy your brain. And my. One of my favorite memes was a picture of a person smiling. And it says, me. What was it like? Me looking up from hell at the Android? I downloaded my consciousness into living my life for me. Y. Yeah, that was a good one. The.
Phil Labonte
The idea, like, there are people that talk about, oh, you know, when they'll be able to do teleportation. When they can disassemble your body into individual atoms, transmit them at the speed of light, and then reassemble them. I'm like, there is no way that you're gonna actually be alive after that process.
Tim Pool
And that is actually canon in Star Trek. Yeah, in Star Trek, it is canon that whenever you beam up, they destroy your body and create a new version of you and you're dead.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
I don't buy it.
Tim Pool
There was actually an episode of Start to the Next Generation where they were attempting to beam up at the time, Lt. Riker, who eventually became Commander Riker, from a planet with a static disturbance, ionic disturbance in the atmosphere. And so the signal that intended to copy his biological structure was fragmented. Part of the signal bounced back, reforming him on the planet. The other half went to the planet, and the. The program, they had restructured him with available data on the ship.
Ian Crossland
To the ship.
Tim Pool
On the ship, creating two of them at the same time. Eventually, they responded to a distress signal, and Commander Riker discovers another version of himself. So sci fi has long said. Yeah. Transportation kills you.
Phil Labonte
Yep.
Tim Pool
It. It does not transport you. You die. And a new. For that matter, the idea of transporting each individual atom makes no sense.
Mike Cernovich
No.
Tim Pool
If they've mapped out every atom of your body, they would just use whatever atoms they had available to reconstruct you. Different ones. And it's not you.
Phil Labonte
Yeah. It's a different person.
Tim Pool
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
I'm not buying that there will ever be teleportation.
Tim Pool
Ever.
Rob Smith
Yeah. Volunteer.
Tim Pool
Unless they actually discover the soul and they're like, look at that.
Rob Smith
The soul.
Tim Pool
And we can pick it up and move it.
Mike Cernovich
Yeah.
Ian Crossland
I mean, Internet video is kind of like teleportation. You're teleporting. You're teleporting your sight and your. Your hearing to another place. No, in real time, it's not.
Tim Pool
Let's read this. We have Gerald Armstrong, who says, does Cernovich regret his wear a mask tweet? It makes you look like a clown. In hindsight, I completely disagree. So many prominent conservatives early on in Covid were telling everyone to wear a mask. In fact, I got sent probably 30 masks from prominent conservatives being like, hey, Tim, get ready. They're not telling you what's going on in the media. I got sent N95s. I got sent some of those, like paint masks. And then as soon as the narrative switched, conservatives all abandoned masks. So I don't think. I'm not going to drag anybody for taking actions at a time of uncertainty. You know what I mean? So long as the action. If the action was, I'm stealing your freedom from you, then I've got issues. If you said, hey man, why don't you wear a mask? I'd be like, it's my choice. I've decided not to. Fine. If you said, do it or else, now I got a problem with you. So the people who advocated for things that were your choice to do, I don't care. Somebody if, if, if, if Ben Shapiro said get a vaccine, people are all mad at him about it. I'm like, who cares? He didn't force you to do it. In fact, the Daily Wire fought against the government to stop the mandates. I respect that and won and won. I know. Trendous. All right, what do we got? We got William Jones as public affairs officer here in dod. Guidance from Hegseth has all historically released information media regarding DEI to be deleted over the past 20 years. Seems like erasing history. Thoughts? That's an interesting point. Maybe we want to preserve the records and archive them.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
But remove them from our structures.
Ian Crossland
Same with usaid. That website came down the day they defunded it or started looking into it. And Mike Benz was like, dude, I need that website for, for research.
Phil Labonte
It's still on the, on the, the Wayback Machine.
Tim Pool
Well, actually, when they took it down, I don't know if it still is today, you had to directly go to the link. The. If you went to the actual website, it was dead. But if you had an old link, you could still get through to certain pages.
Rob Smith
You know, I think that, you know, sometimes people want to memory whole things.
Tim Pool
Yep.
Rob Smith
And I think that's very easy to memory hole and what this makes me think of. And obviously, like, my mind is going back to the early days of COVID And I remember like watching Tucker every night back in the Fox Tucker days and, you know, just breaking stuff that nobody was breaking. Same things that nobody was saying. And I remember he is documenting this so that this moment in history and these things are documented. Right. So I think that that's important.
Tim Pool
Let's grab this rumble rant from Trent Lamelino. He says, if there is anyone I Trust out of the bunch. It's Cerno. Sorry, Fed Poso. Lol. Ah, Jackie's calling you out. Corpus says as a fellow half breed here, I'm sorry, I can't read what you wrote entirely. He says fellow half breed here. Tim, I've been a member since the beginning and wanted to con congratulate you on starting your family, sir. Thank you very much. I. You know, I love the term mud blood. You guys know mud blood from Harry Potter? Yeah. So Mud bloods were like wizards who didn't have pure parrot. You know, like basically Harry Potter is magic Nazis. I'm not kidding.
Rob Smith
I did not know you were biracial.
Tim Pool
Yeah, part Korean, Japanese.
Rob Smith
Ah, interesting.
Tim Pool
So, you know, you know, I. I'm not a big fan of the term biracial either.
Rob Smith
No?
Tim Pool
No, because it's like, who's really bi? Like that means two. Like I'm.
Rob Smith
I'm multiracial.
Tim Pool
Well, I'm German, French, British, Korean, Japanese. So it's like, I guess if you're saying part East Southeast Asian, part white, but you know, like there are people who are like, you know, you've got Haitian, you've got. You've got, you know, like Central American, Native American and white, like tri racial, you know, whatever. Yeah, but I wish I could read what he said in the. But I do love mud blood because I'm a Harry Potter fan. That means I'm a nerd. Millennial. You get it? Is that geek? Yeah, it's a geek. Sorry. All right, let's go. We'll grab. What do we have here? We got Patriot American says, Tim, I've shot both the Mohsen Nagant and the AK47. They're not that bad. Though I do Prefer. Prefer the AR15. Yeah, no, let me clarify that. I'm not saying like, actually the Soviets produce pretty dang. Pretty dang good. Reliable. But the point was, during the Soviet era, their wars, they made really, really cheap weapons. Turns out the AK is pretty effective. And let's just say I don't know what the right word is. It's.
Phil Labonte
It's resilient.
Tim Pool
Resilience. Yikes. There you go. That's the right. Right word. It's not so complicated. It can be used very easily, drop.
Ian Crossland
It in the mud and still work.
Tim Pool
Exactly.
Phil Labonte
Not only that, like if they're. They're. Part of the reason is because the tolerances are very loose. So you don't. With A. An AR15, the tolerances are very tight. Things have to be exactly the right size to fit together with an AK47. It's a stamped receiver. It's basically sheet metal bent into the right shape. And then all the pieces they fit together. But they don't have to fit together very tight so there's room for dirt and stuff to kind of fall, you know.
Tim Pool
You know it's really interesting. There's a story, I believe it goes back to the French and English wars. I'm not entirely sure where one side reduced the size the, the, the, the thickness of their bow strings and reduced the size of the notches in their arrows. The point was when the enemy fired arrows at them, the notches were large enough to fit in their bow strings and be fired back so they could reload. But the arrows they fired could not be notched in the thick bowstrings so they could not use them. Y the Soviets for this reason. And I, I could be wrong about this. I just read some blogs on the Internet created the Makarov 9mm intentionally for that reason. It is. What is it? 9 by 18. Am I getting that wrong?
Phil Labonte
9 by 18 is the macro.
Tim Pool
The. And I think what standard 9 millimeters. 919 Yep. The, the intention was they wanted to make sure that if. If their ammo fell into the enemy's hands it could not be used against them. Interesting stuff. And now you have largely useless 9 millimeter Makarov floating around all over the world. That has to be specifically you. Like. I don't know.
Ian Crossland
You're right about that battle. I've heard about that before. I'm looking at bio coding weapons. They're talking about getting them so they genetically only function with your body.
Tim Pool
No. They exist hand print guns where they want it so that your palm print has to be read by the device. Otherwise it doesn't fire.
Rob Smith
That's actually incredible. I like that idea.
Ian Crossland
Downside is you can't see it. You can't give it to your buddy in combat which is a big part of and regulation.
Tim Pool
But high rate of malfunction.
Ian Crossland
Downside.
Tim Pool
How many, how many times have you tried to use your fingerprint thing on your phone and it won't read your thumb?
Rob Smith
Yeah. Yeah.
Tim Pool
And. And because it changes a little bit as your skin wrinkles or your gain or lose weight. So imagine a cop draws the weapon and it doesn't work.
Phil Labonte
I will stick with my analog Glock 19.
Rob Smith
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Biocoded. All right. All right. Just because I'm freeze as love Ian's little jam sessions in the gaming. Need to start doing it over on Rumble. Rumble is where it's at. Ian get off YouTube, you hippie boomer.
Ian Crossland
Oh, I've been on YouTube for 20 years, man. It's tough to leave those you love. But yeah, let's do it. I just launched a song on my YouTube channel still. What is it?
Tim Pool
I don't know. I'm warning everybody right now.
Ian Crossland
Play Me is what it's called. It's about people that play one shot kill combos in Magic the Gathering.
Tim Pool
I'm warning everybody right now for smaller, newer channels. Rumble is the place. Take for instance, the Culture War podcast. It is not. It's, it's the smallest of the live shows we do. We usually get between 7,000 and sometimes 15,000 concurrent viewers, whereas Tim cast IRL routinely does 50, 50,000 plus and the Morning show does 25 to 30,000. On Rumble, though, the. When we launch the Culture war, as it's a smaller show, we have more viewers initially on Rumble than we do on YouTube with the culture War podcast. And it's, it's because the Rumble audience is different from the YouTube audience and they are looking for a hungry for content. And Rumble isn't as censorious. So newer shows pop up immediately in a less crowded space for a hungrier audience. My advice to people is if you're starting a new show, a new podcast, you will have a larger initial audience to start. If you're on Rumble, if you're on YouTube, you'll get nothing. You'll be suppressed, they'll likely ban you, and they won't monetize you in the first place. I'm not saying don't use it. That's not at all. I'm saying when you start your show, whatever you should, whatever you're doing with music or gaming or, or politics, whatever it is, you obviously want to be on every platform. I guarantee you right now, if you started a show and you were on YouTube, Rumble, Spotify, Apple and X, Rumble's gonna be your biggest audience, even if you're like looking at 100 views as for a small new channel. So we gotta, we gotta, we gotta, we gotta, we gotta pick that game up, my friends.
Ian Crossland
Oh, yeah, I love Rumble.
Tim Pool
It's, it is good. It is good.
Ian Crossland
They were testing a gaming thing. I don't know if they have like a, like they, they bought something they were going to turn into gaming at some point, but I'm not sure I would help them.
Tim Pool
A lot of big things coming.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, let's talk about it.
Tim Pool
Well, one of the big things I'm hoping for and you know, see what happens is I think a Key for Rumble is going to be promoting new shows. Making sure, like, this is so big. One of the biggest things about YouTube was something in the beginning called the suggested user list. You remember that, Ian. They called it the Sul in the early days of YouTube, people to this day who are prominent millionaires on the.
Ian Crossland
Right, but show up on the right side of the page on the left side.
Tim Pool
We were signing up many, many prominent YouTubers. Careers were made not because they were good, but because they were there.
Ian Crossland
So I can attest to that.
Tim Pool
Yes, when you signed up for YouTube, YouTube would be like, look, we want you to stay on this page, so here's what we have available for you to choose from. And they would tell new users to follow certain individuals on YouTube that was called the suggested user list. There were people who did like, nothing of merit, but they did post every day. So YouTube was like, well, this guy posts every day. At the time, YouTube was largely random videos like Charlie bit my finger. A family would upload a video to share with friends and family. Eventually, people started to emerge where they would record on a webcam and post every single day. YouTube then says, hey, this is consistent. Let's just tell people to follow these guys. Though some of those people still exist to this day, some 20 years later, millions of dollars simply for being there. So I'm just saying there's the opportunity, man. A platform built for video podcasting is available to you on Rumble. And what I'm hoping for is that there will be some kind of algorithmic growth engine for new shows which will set the standard that if you want to make it in video podcasting, your fastest path to running a business and succeeding with an audience is going to be on Rumble instead. I think that's already true, but we need a faster, stronger mechanism for it.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, like inner. Inner site commercials, where you can send people as a creator to, like, all these new upcomings and some stuff like.
Tim Pool
That directly suggested user lists and things like that, which they may already have, but, you know, it's going to require some finesse. Let's grab some more. All right, what do we have here? Patriot says followers and supporters are upset because what is new? Y'all still went with the narrative after you knew about the embargo. Check your posts. The promises made, kept mantra. Sounds like Bush Admin. Our resolve obs. I will say, you know, with. I talked to a handful of people who are there. Obviously, Mike was one of the guys. He told me right away, he's like, we're not seeing a lot. That's incriminating in this. Some of it's old, some of it's unredacted, some of it's new, but not really that big a deal. And I absolutely said that on Tim Cast irl, I said exactly what I was told on background without revealing any information. It wasn't just Mike I was talking about. I don't want to just act like he's the only one who's telling me these things, but, yeah, you know, outright, we wanted to make sure everybody understood what was going on.
Ian Crossland
And if you don't know, it's basically, there's a table of contents with a bunch of names, and it's flight logs, time, and then there's a bunch of redacted names with, like, Rothschild. Evelyn Rothschild's names on. I don't know. That means he flew on the. It flew on the plane once.
Tim Pool
No, that's a con. No, no, no, no, no, he didn't. That's just contact. That's the black book.
Mike Cernovich
Yeah.
Tim Pool
Yeah, that's like, you know, someone said, here's my number. Give me a call sometime.
Rob Smith
And it's rough because they're trying to do new things, right? In the White House press room, and they're trying to do new things with influencers. All of this stuff is very, very new, Right? So, you know, when you're trying to do new things and you're cracking eggs, you know, you're gonna. Everything's not gonna be perfect the first go around.
Ian Crossland
I want to summarize, though. Basically, if you want, this is what the Epstein Binder basically was.
Rob Smith
Big, black page.
Ian Crossland
You need a.
Phil Labonte
It's ridiculous.
Tim Pool
To be fair, that's the victim list. Okay, so they rejected that. Yeah. All right. My Doug Eats Jean says, love your new backdrop. Only here for Ian. Kidding. Not kidding.
Ian Crossland
Sup, homie?
Tim Pool
So we are in an undisclosed location at a party, and. Well, I'm gonna say the location of the place after we leave because I don't want to risk anybody's security. There's. There's. There's prominent personnel here. I will say it was honor and a privilege to interview very briefly David Sachs on AI issues. So we filmed that, and we're. We're. It's editing right now, trying to figure out how to publish it. Don't know if we want to pay wallet, because David Sachs is the White House AI guy. And I'm like, let's hear what he has to say. Very optimistic. He said most people are concerned about the risks that we can't actually predict while ignoring the tremendous Upsides, which we. We can. I agree, I agree. Because we talk about medical advancements in technology, detecting cancers before a doctor can. I mean, there's going to be some amazing stuff here, but we are pretty worried. All right, we get. We got time for one more. One more on no name. Anonymous says Epstein flew to and from Fort Knox in 1996. Picking up a Microsoft executive interest. This thing. Okay, one more.
Phil Labonte
Gates has Knox gold.
Tim Pool
Nolan Bus says, did Zelensky sabotage this peace deal on purpose? This is the first failed peace deal. Who is putting up to this? The eu? NATO? Why? No, no, this is different. Insulting Trump and Vance means the US might just be like, we're out, we're done.
Mike Cernovich
Bye.
Tim Pool
And then the war's over. So, my friends, we do have to wrap things up. We are in a. A somewhat public space, very noisy. Smash the like button. Share the show. Become a premium member of Rumble. Go to timcast premium.com. use promo code TIM10. You'll get 10 bucks off your annual membership. We've got two feature length documentaries already. We have a whole other podcast, the Green Room Show. It's blowing up. We're getting about 40,000 views and it's premium. It's a members only show. That's massive. You got to check it out. Some of these are really chill. Some of them are really off the cuff, uncensored. Good fun. And of course, Monday through Thursday, we have our uncensored call in show live. We don't have that tonight. We're gonna wrap things up though. You can follow me on X and Instagram at Timcast. Rob, do you want to shout anything out?
Rob Smith
Yeah, you can follow me at Rob Smith online. But listen, download, can't cancel Rob Smith, Apple Podcasts, iHeart Podcast, wherever you get your podcast. Got a fresh episode dropped just tonight. So if you like what you hear, if you like me, go hit up that podcast.
Ian Crossland
I'm at Ian Crossland. You can get me all over the Internet. Ian crossland. Particularly on YouTube. I uploaded a video earlier today. It's a song. I said, still play me. It's about what I would say to someone. Actually, Allison inspired me. What I would say to someone that plays that card in Magic where it's like, I just gotta get that one.
Tim Pool
Card to deck you.
Ian Crossland
Yeah, well then I was like, actually I'm thinking about Allison because Tim influenced her to play that stupid deck. So I'm like, this goes out to all the homies that play that dumbass one shot kill combo. Yeah, dude, the song's awesome. Check it out.
Tim Pool
Is not a one shot kill combo. It's got multiple functions for a path to victory.
Ian Crossland
Oh, okay. Multiple one shot kill combos. Is that what I'm hearing here? Anyway, check it out on YouTube and check out that green room episode with me and Milo. I think it was very funny. I hope the audio came out. Yeah, that was really enjoyable. Milo Yiannopoulos and I, we get along.
Tim Pool
You'll be grossed out, but okay.
Ian Crossland
Follow me to crossing. And Phil, talk me out, baby.
Phil Labonte
I am Phil. It remains on Twix. I'm Phil. It remains official on Instagram. The band is all the Remains. Our new record dropped on January 31st. It's called antifragile. You can check it out on YouTube, Apple Music, Amazon Music, Pandora, Spotify, and Deezer. Don't forget the left lane is for crime.
Tim Pool
I got to go drive home now to be with my family and my newborn daughter. And I regret nothing. Thank you for hanging out. We'll see you all on Monday.
Timcast IRL – Episode Summary: "Trump SLAMS Ukraine President In TENSE WH Meeting, Epstein Story EXPOSED w/ Mike Cernovich & Rob Smith"
Release Date: March 1, 2025
Host: Timcast Media
Guests: Mike Cernovich, Rob Smith
The episode kicks off with host Tim Pool expressing astonishment over a recent White House meeting involving Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, former Governor J.D. Vance, and former President Donald Trump discussing the ongoing Ukraine conflict. Tim highlights the polarized reactions from both liberal and conservative factions.
Notable Quote:
Tim Pool [00:08]: "Zelensky, the president of Ukraine, was arrogant and dismissive of the concerns that J.D. Vance and Donald Trump had, which is an insane strategy in a negotiation."
Tim criticizes Zelensky's approach, suggesting his argumentative demeanor could jeopardize potential peace negotiations, particularly if U.S. support wanes.
A significant portion of the discussion revolves around the controversial Epstein files. Influencers attending the summit were handed binders purportedly containing incriminating information. Mike Cernovich breaks down the events, revealing frustrations over media embargoes and perceived smear campaigns against him.
Notable Quotes:
Mike Cernovich [03:15]: "The letter from the AG to Cash. That was the real story."
Rob Smith [03:05]: "Rob Smith at Rob Smith Online got a podcast called 'Can't Cancel Rob Smith'."
The guests delve into the complexities of handling sensitive information, the impact of leaks, and the broader implications for media transparency and government overreach.
The conversation shifts to the dynamics between independent media personalities and mainstream outlets. Rob Smith and Mike Cernovich discuss the challenges faced by independent influencers in countering established media narratives. Tim Pool emphasizes the rising influence of platforms like Rumble over traditional media channels.
Notable Quotes:
Rob Smith [04:31]: "I've been in similar rooms with some of the people that are in that room. I get it."
Tim Pool [29:36]: "The big story here is that the White House brought in prominent personalities in media who have bigger followings than a lot of corporate press to break a story."
They debate the efficacy of traditional media gatekeeping versus the organic growth of independent platforms, highlighting strategies like billboard advertising to increase visibility.
Transitioning to corporate media shifts, Tim Pool discusses recent developments at The Washington Post. Under Jeff Bezos's leadership, the Opinion section is being revamped to focus on personal liberties and free markets, prompting a mass exodus of staffers who opposed the change.
Notable Quotes:
Rob Smith [66:42]: "And I think that Bezos is trying to save the Washington Post. But, yeah, those people are doing us all a favor when they reveal themselves and they exit stage."
This segment underscores the internal conflicts within major media organizations and signals a potential shift toward more ideologically driven content.
Tim Pool advocates for aggressive marketing strategies to bolster independent media presence. He shares experiences of buying prominent billboards in locations like Times Square to enhance brand recognition and compete with mainstream media figures.
Notable Quotes:
Tim Pool [73:14]: "So, you know, some people have been doing big billboard campaigns for a while..."
Rob Smith [74:38]: "Yeah, that's kind of a right wing thing, though. The left is the kind of the group that are angry and upset when they see people that are successful."
The discussion highlights the importance of visibility and branding in the digital age, suggesting that independent media can leverage cost-effective advertising to gain substantial audience traction.
As the episode wraps up, the hosts and guests reflect on the evolving media landscape, the rise of independent platforms, and the diminishing influence of traditional media gatekeepers. They encourage listeners to support independent media through platforms like Rumble and emphasize the importance of proactive information dissemination to counteract mainstream narratives.
Notable Quotes:
Tim Pool [65:35]: "We have solved all the world's problems as we often do."
Mike Cernovich [77:09]: "I'm not saying anything about you... I'll look forward to seeing you guys there on Air Force One."
The episode concludes with calls to action for listeners to engage with and support independent media initiatives, ensuring diverse perspectives remain accessible in an increasingly polarized information environment.
Negotiation Failures: Zelensky's confrontational approach in negotiations with Trump and Vance may hinder potential peace deals in Ukraine.
Media Transparency: The handling of the Epstein files by influencers at the summit raises questions about media transparency and government involvement.
Independent Media Rise: Platforms like Rumble are emerging as significant players, challenging the dominance of mainstream media through strategic advertising and organic growth.
Corporate Media Shifts: Internal changes at major outlets like The Washington Post indicate a broader realignment towards specific ideological content, leading to staff resignations.
Strategic Visibility: Independent media personalities are adopting bold strategies, such as billboard advertising, to enhance their visibility and compete with traditional media entities.
This episode of Timcast IRL provides a critical examination of current geopolitical negotiations, media influence dynamics, and the shifting strategies of independent media in the face of traditional media gatekeeping. Through insightful discussions with Mike Cernovich and Rob Smith, listeners gain a deeper understanding of the complexities shaping today's political and media landscapes.