📄 Extracted Text (7,541 words)
[00:00:00] All right, you guys. Happy Monday. I
[00:00:01] hope you all had a great weekend. We
[00:00:03] have a lot to get into. I think we
[00:00:04] should definitely start, by the way,
[00:00:06] with Russell Brand. Did you guys see the
[00:00:08] news over the weekend? He's been charged
[00:00:10] with rape and sexual assault in the UK
[00:00:13] for incidents that are stemming back to
[00:00:16] 1999. And I'm dying to hear what you
[00:00:18] guys think about that. It really comes
[00:00:20] down to, I think, an interesting debate
[00:00:22] that needs to be had about the statute
[00:00:23] of limitations, which do not exist in
[00:00:26] the UK, hence the charges. Also, Joe
[00:00:28] Rogan has paid us a massive podcast
[00:00:31] compliment. Sort of. He called me a
[00:00:33] monster, but in a good way, I promise
[00:00:35] you. And there is also evidence,
[00:00:38] circumstantial evidence, that Ryan
[00:00:40] Reynolds authored the infamous dragon
[00:00:43] text message. Remember Taylor, one of
[00:00:46] our dragons? I think Ryan Reynolds was
[00:00:48] the one who wrote that. And I'll tell
[00:00:49] you why. Let's get right into it.
[00:00:51] Welcome back to Candace.
[00:00:56] [Applause]
[00:01:01] [Music]
[00:01:06] All right. So, where should we begin?
[00:01:08] Let me take you guys back on a trip to
[00:01:11] 1999. Okay, let's just all get into the
[00:01:13] time machine. I I was 10 years old. The
[00:01:16] number one song in the United States was
[00:01:19] TLC's No Scrub. Take a listen.
[00:01:24] No, no.
[00:01:29] Yep. I know that that is now going to be
[00:01:31] stuck in your head for the rest of the
[00:01:33] day. I'm sorry. I'm not sorry. Actually,
[00:01:34] that was this was a great time. Great
[00:01:36] song. Also, Britney Spears, let's not
[00:01:39] forget she was just beginning to top the
[00:01:42] charts. She came out with her first
[00:01:45] song, her debut song, Baby One More
[00:01:48] Time. Remember this?
[00:01:50] [Music]
[00:01:54] Man, that actually makes me sad. She
[00:01:55] looks so young, so innocent. So much has
[00:01:57] changed. Gosh, in just 25 years, Britney
[00:02:01] Spears, you had to be team Christina or
[00:02:03] team Britney. Christina also came out
[00:02:05] that year with her debut song, Genie in
[00:02:07] the Bottle. Also, the number one movie
[00:02:10] or movie that had just come out rather,
[00:02:12] it wasn't number one just yet, was The
[00:02:13] Matrix, which I feel like we're maybe
[00:02:15] living in right now, but remember this.
[00:02:18] You take the blue pill, the story ends.
[00:02:21] You wake up in your bed and believe
[00:02:23] whatever you want to believe. You take
[00:02:25] the red pill, you stay in
[00:02:28] Wonderland, and I show you how deep the
[00:02:30] rabbit hole goes. Sometimes I really
[00:02:33] wish that I had just taken the blue
[00:02:34] pill, my life would be so simple. If I
[00:02:36] had just taken the blue pill, but I kind
[00:02:37] of snorted the red pill. And here we all
[00:02:40] are. When it comes to technology, the
[00:02:42] internet was relatively new. Definitely
[00:02:44] a new phenomenon. We were using
[00:02:46] broadband and high-speed dialup via
[00:02:50] cable modems. We all remember the
[00:02:52] sound. That was maybe not the best sound
[00:02:55] effect there, but you know what I'm
[00:02:56] saying when you were trying to dial up
[00:02:58] and connect. And that was really just
[00:02:59] the beginning of the internet becoming
[00:03:01] widely available to everyone. And let's
[00:03:04] also not forget in 1999 that we were
[00:03:06] planning for Y2K, the apocalypse.
[00:03:08] Everybody was terrified. I was 10 and I
[00:03:11] remember hearing so much chatter about
[00:03:13] whether or not the world was going to
[00:03:14] end. And for a 10-year-old, that's quite
[00:03:16] frightening. So, I was terrified. I just
[00:03:18] remember being terrified. Whatever
[00:03:21] reason, we thought we were like
[00:03:22] Cinderella at the stroke of midnight uh
[00:03:24] on New Year's Day. We were all just
[00:03:26] going to go poof. In terms of politics,
[00:03:29] Bill Clinton had just been acquitted in
[00:03:32] his impeachment trials for his affair
[00:03:34] with Monica Lewinsky. And the very first
[00:03:38] camera phone, not to be confused with a
[00:03:40] flip phone or an iPhone, but the very
[00:03:42] first camera phone was introduced in
[00:03:44] Japan. And here is what it looked like.
[00:03:46] It was called a mobile video phone. And
[00:03:49] in terms of, if you're wondering, what
[00:03:51] about cell phones? Nope, we weren't
[00:03:52] there yet. The company Research in
[00:03:54] Motion, also known as RIM, which would
[00:03:57] later on become BlackBerry, released a
[00:03:59] pager that could receive emails in 1999.
[00:04:02] So that was like, whoa, your pager can
[00:04:04] receive an email. Another thing that's
[00:04:08] kind of kind of weird to think about is
[00:04:09] you were allowed to just get on the
[00:04:11] airplane. Yeah. 911 hadn't happened. So,
[00:04:14] you could just meet your friends at the
[00:04:16] airport gate like the old school movies.
[00:04:19] Hold up a sign. This was the land before
[00:04:22] security checks. Now, we're effectively
[00:04:24] strip search. It just feels like it
[00:04:26] really was just a different time. It's
[00:04:28] hard to imagine a world with beeper
[00:04:30] pagers. And I have to be honest, if you
[00:04:32] know, if you watch the show, I'm totally
[00:04:33] nostalgic for that. I'm being completely
[00:04:36] honest. It seems like things were much
[00:04:38] simpler. Now, to be very clear, that was
[00:04:40] 26 years ago. It really does feel like a
[00:04:44] lifetime ago. Whoever you are today, you
[00:04:46] likely don't even recognize or remember
[00:04:48] who you were then. Your brain, like
[00:04:50] mine, may not have even been developed.
[00:04:53] And that was my exact thought when I saw
[00:04:54] this headline pop up. Russell Brand has
[00:04:57] been charged with multiple accounts of
[00:04:59] rape and sexual assault in the United
[00:05:02] Kingdom, stemming from incidents which
[00:05:04] took place in 1999.
[00:05:08] Okay, starting in 1999, ending in 2003.
[00:05:12] A couple of things that I'm just going
[00:05:13] to say right off the bat. I'm always
[00:05:15] honest and upfront with you guys about
[00:05:16] any biases I may have. Obviously, I've
[00:05:19] had the pleasure of getting to know this
[00:05:21] current iteration of Russell Brand, the
[00:05:23] Russell Brand that is today 50 years
[00:05:25] old. He's now a baptized Christian. Uh
[00:05:28] you guys know he's a part of the story,
[00:05:30] a crazy part of the Cupid story of how I
[00:05:32] met my husband. I was doing a podcast
[00:05:35] with Russ O'brand for 3 hours. I was
[00:05:37] late to meet my husband, late to re meet
[00:05:39] the rest of my life, so to speak. And um
[00:05:42] he was fantastic. I had a great time
[00:05:44] with him. And I have seen him
[00:05:47] thereafter. Watched him grow
[00:05:48] spiritually, watched him grow from a a
[00:05:52] communist really to the person that he
[00:05:53] is today that's praying the rosary every
[00:05:55] day. But we all know that Russell Brand
[00:05:59] was not always the person that he is
[00:06:01] today. How do we know? because Russell
[00:06:02] Brand wrote all about it. He told us all
[00:06:04] about it. He had a uh autobiography that
[00:06:07] was published back in 2007 entitled My
[00:06:10] Bookie Wookie. And in the book, he
[00:06:12] detailed his troubled childhood, his
[00:06:14] past drug addictions. We learned from
[00:06:16] Russell that he struggled with bulimia,
[00:06:19] that he ran away from home when he was
[00:06:20] 14 years old, and that by the age of 16,
[00:06:23] he started experimenting with drugs like
[00:06:25] cannabis, LSD, ecstasy, you name it,
[00:06:28] amphetamines. We also know from Russell
[00:06:30] Brand that he struggled with sex
[00:06:31] addiction. That was a big part of the
[00:06:33] picture for him. And like I said, all of
[00:06:35] these descriptions are a very far cry
[00:06:38] from the Russell Brand that I know
[00:06:39] today. And despite him having published
[00:06:43] this book in 2007, admitting to all of
[00:06:46] his prior faults and addictions and
[00:06:48] despite Russell Brand then taking
[00:06:51] Hollywood by storm. And when I say
[00:06:52] taking Hollywood by storm, I mean not
[00:06:54] just in the movies that we grew to love,
[00:06:56] forgetting Sarah Marshall, you name it.
[00:06:58] He also married Katy Perry, a pop star.
[00:07:00] He has been in the public eye, the point
[00:07:03] I am making here, for decades, in
[00:07:05] movies, as a television anchor. And yet,
[00:07:08] no allegations regarding his past
[00:07:09] behavior had ever surfaced. Not until
[00:07:12] September of
[00:07:14] 2023. And here's what happened. In case
[00:07:16] you don't remember, in September of
[00:07:18] 2023, Channel 4 of the UK and the Sunday
[00:07:21] Times in the UK dropped a devastating
[00:07:24] investigative piece with claims from
[00:07:27] four different women. And they were
[00:07:29] alleging that they had been sexually
[00:07:31] assaulted or raped by Russell Bran
[00:07:33] between 2006 and
[00:07:35] 2013. I just want to be very clear here
[00:07:38] because that might be confusing to you.
[00:07:39] the current case that just happened in
[00:07:41] the UK. Um, that is not featuring these
[00:07:44] women that spoke with Channel 4 and the
[00:07:47] Sunday Times back in 2023, but it is the
[00:07:50] reason that this current case exists. It
[00:07:53] was because of this piece, this this
[00:07:55] investigative piece that other women
[00:07:58] were allegedly inspired to reach out to
[00:08:01] the London Metro Police with their own
[00:08:03] claims, their own memories stemming from
[00:08:05] incidents that occurred between 1999 and
[00:08:07] 2004. And the London Metropolitan Police
[00:08:11] announced that they are now acting on
[00:08:13] those claims, moving to charge Russell
[00:08:15] Brand with one count of rape, oral rape,
[00:08:18] and indecent assault and two other
[00:08:20] counts of sexual
[00:08:22] assault. What are your thoughts? I
[00:08:25] actually genuinely need to hear your
[00:08:28] thoughts on that in the comments. What
[00:08:30] are you thinking when you hear something
[00:08:31] like that? And I know that they're going
[00:08:33] to be all over the spectrum. Now, let's
[00:08:35] at first listen to what Russell Bran had
[00:08:37] to say for himself when the news broke.
[00:08:39] Here he is. I've always told you guys
[00:08:42] that when I was young and single before
[00:08:44] I had my wife and family who were just
[00:08:46] out of shot over there, my beautiful
[00:08:48] children, I was a fool, man. I was a
[00:08:51] fool before I lived in the light of the
[00:08:53] Lord. I was a drug addict, a sex addict,
[00:08:56] and an imbecile. But what I never was
[00:08:58] was a rapist. I've never engaged in
[00:09:01] non-consensual activity. I pray that you
[00:09:03] can see that by looking in my eyes. I
[00:09:05] want to thank all of you for your
[00:09:07] continuing support. I want to let you
[00:09:08] know that our show will be on Rumble on
[00:09:10] Monday. Thanks for your support there.
[00:09:13] And of course, I'm now going to have the
[00:09:14] opportunity to defend these charges in
[00:09:16] court and I'm incredibly grateful for
[00:09:18] that. In the meantime, you lot stay free
[00:09:22] and we will be continuing to discuss
[00:09:24] this matter. Praise the Lord. So, he
[00:09:27] seems calm and he seems collected and I
[00:09:28] think he's asking some very meaningful
[00:09:30] questions that we have been asking a lot
[00:09:32] on this show as well. Like, have we just
[00:09:34] begun weaponizing the government? It is
[00:09:36] kind of incredible when you weigh it
[00:09:37] against the cases that aren't pursued.
[00:09:39] We think about Jeffrey Epstein. We think
[00:09:40] about the fact that we still can't get
[00:09:42] the client list that we have politicians
[00:09:44] who are roaming free. When we think
[00:09:46] about the fact that um Emanuel Mcronone
[00:09:48] and Breijit are in charge of France,
[00:09:50] it's just something really sadistic and
[00:09:53] wrong is going on there. And then you do
[00:09:56] start to see more and more that you have
[00:10:00] individuals who seem to have upset the
[00:10:02] government one way or another and all of
[00:10:04] a sudden allegations come out. That's
[00:10:06] that's how it seems to me at least. And
[00:10:08] I'll tell you some more of my thoughts
[00:10:10] here. I think I think the statute of
[00:10:12] limitations for crimes has always been
[00:10:15] controversial and I do see both sides of
[00:10:17] the argument to be clear. First and
[00:10:19] foremost, how do you defend yourself
[00:10:22] when you are being accused of something
[00:10:24] that you did 26 years ago? I mean,
[00:10:27] really think about that. How on earth
[00:10:29] are you supposed to defend yourself? You
[00:10:30] could where I live doesn't even exist
[00:10:32] anymore. Buildings are taken down. This
[00:10:35] is really the time before you could have
[00:10:37] all of this evidence that you could
[00:10:39] maybe pull and say, "Actually, no, I
[00:10:41] wasn't there. You can check my cell
[00:10:43] phone data." or uh here I am actually
[00:10:46] proving to you that I was somewhere else
[00:10:47] when she says that I was there because
[00:10:48] you don't remember where you were 26
[00:10:51] years ago. That's really difficult for
[00:10:53] the defense to try to come up with
[00:10:55] something when they don't even know that
[00:10:56] they're being accused of something until
[00:10:57] 26 years on. Now, on the flip side of
[00:11:00] that, you might say, "Well, no one would
[00:11:02] say, well, so what? We know it happened,
[00:11:05] but he got away with it. Who cares? No
[00:11:08] one cares that you were raped or
[00:11:10] sexually assaulted because it's been
[00:11:12] more than 2 years. It's it's weird,
[00:11:15] right? It's like a push and a pull here
[00:11:17] where you just don't know which side is
[00:11:18] more rational. But I do think it is
[00:11:20] reasonable to expect someone to at the
[00:11:23] very least report a crime before 25
[00:11:27] years. I think that's a reasonable
[00:11:29] expectation to say at least report the
[00:11:31] crime before 25 years because if and by
[00:11:33] the way, this may be the circumstance.
[00:11:35] If someone does report it and the police
[00:11:38] fail to act on it or if maybe technology
[00:11:41] advances, you see a lot of these in
[00:11:43] criminal scenarios where they'll be
[00:11:44] like, "Well, we didn't have the
[00:11:45] technology. Now we have a DNA technology
[00:11:47] and we can arrest this guy 20 years
[00:11:48] later and that feels good and you
[00:11:50] applaud, but if the crime wasn't even
[00:11:53] reported, I don't know. I really don't
[00:11:55] know." And I also want to say that I I
[00:11:57] think about how unfathomable it must be
[00:12:00] for Russell Brand's wife. Could even
[00:12:02] imagine, right? I'm I'm about to birth
[00:12:05] to my fourth child and I can't imagine
[00:12:07] that 20 years from now, George and I get
[00:12:11] a phone call from the police in London
[00:12:13] and they're like, "You know what? We've
[00:12:15] got George in for a crime that he
[00:12:16] committed 26 years ago." I mean, that
[00:12:19] would just completely rip a hole through
[00:12:21] your life that you have to fight this.
[00:12:22] And knowing that your children, what are
[00:12:25] your children going to think about this?
[00:12:26] What are the What is the children
[00:12:27] children going to think about their
[00:12:28] father? You got to just go to court and
[00:12:31] do your best to try to prove your
[00:12:33] innocence if you are in fact
[00:12:35] innocent. Right now, I want to be clear,
[00:12:37] we do not know the details of these
[00:12:39] specific cases in the UK. We should find
[00:12:42] them out in a little bit of time. The
[00:12:43] women very well, like I said, may have
[00:12:45] reported it back in 199. The current
[00:12:47] articles that I'm reading doesn't make
[00:12:49] it seem like it. It seems more like um
[00:12:52] they got inspired by something that was
[00:12:54] in the press and then they decided to
[00:12:55] come forward. But they may have like I
[00:12:57] let's keep it keep it open. They may
[00:12:59] have concrete evidence. They may have
[00:13:01] been keeping concrete evidence
[00:13:03] throughout this entire time. Maybe they
[00:13:05] had a beeper email or a regular email
[00:13:07] between themselves and Russell. Who
[00:13:09] knows? We can't really judge the
[00:13:10] situation until we have more
[00:13:12] information. But I do think it's worth
[00:13:14] us just discussing as a society why it
[00:13:16] seems to be the picture that when people
[00:13:20] are drug addicts and they are uh you
[00:13:24] know dealing with mental psychosis and
[00:13:27] things of that nature, Hollywood loves
[00:13:29] them. They love them. They celebrate
[00:13:32] them. They celebrate them stumbling out
[00:13:34] of the club drunk, making it seem like
[00:13:36] it's all cool. And then it routinely
[00:13:38] feels like when those individuals start
[00:13:40] to clean up their lives, Hollywood comes
[00:13:43] knocking, you know, suddenly people are
[00:13:45] going, "Oh, that person that they seem
[00:13:47] like they've gone straight line. Let me
[00:13:48] tell you about who this person really
[00:13:50] is. Let me tell you about who this
[00:13:51] person was when they were an addict." I
[00:13:53] find that to be something that doesn't
[00:13:56] feel authentic. And again, zero judgment
[00:13:59] yet. We don't know the details of this
[00:14:00] case. We are obviously going to be
[00:14:01] watching this case, but I wanted to let
[00:14:03] you know that it's happening. and
[00:14:05] Russell Brand. I consider him to be a
[00:14:06] friend of mine and so I will be covering
[00:14:09] this case extensively when we know more.
[00:14:12] All right, guys. Before I tell you a
[00:14:14] little update about Ryan Reynolds, who
[00:14:16] may have been the author of the Dragon
[00:14:18] text, I want to remind you about Good
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[00:16:21] tnusa.com/candis. Oh, I wanted to show
[00:16:22] you guys this. This is really exciting.
[00:16:24] This made my weekend. Um, very I I
[00:16:27] obviously I love Joe Rogan. He's the
[00:16:28] biggest podcaster in the world. And he
[00:16:30] recently had on Dave Smith, who's a
[00:16:32] buddy of mine who I absolutely adore as
[00:16:34] well. And Joe Rogan has definitely been
[00:16:36] watching the show and getting into our
[00:16:37] content. And him and Dave Smith were
[00:16:41] speaking about how much my content has
[00:16:43] changed over the last year and how much
[00:16:45] they enjoy it. and Joe Rogan said this.
[00:16:47] So, this is I think this is a humble
[00:16:48] brag a little bit, but I was very
[00:16:50] excited and I wanted to share it with
[00:16:51] you guys because obviously this show is
[00:16:54] only successful because you guys watch
[00:16:55] it all the time. So, take a listen to
[00:16:57] what he had to say. Candace Owens show
[00:16:59] that's on YouTube. Yeah, that's right.
[00:17:01] And it's doing better numbers than any
[00:17:03] of the shows on cable news. It's It's
[00:17:05] phenomenal. It's It's like they created
[00:17:08] a monster with her when they when they
[00:17:09] fired her from the Daily Wire. They
[00:17:11] created a monster. Yeah, they sure did.
[00:17:13] She can't be stopped. Yeah. Oh, no. No,
[00:17:15] no. There's no stopping Canon because
[00:17:16] she's hitting all the third rails that
[00:17:19] no one wants to touch. She's got a
[00:17:21] six-hour presentation on how Bridget
[00:17:23] Mcronone is a man. It's 6 hours plus
[00:17:27] long. I like I don't know. I don't know
[00:17:29] if she's even kind of right about that.
[00:17:31] I think she's right, but she's got a lot
[00:17:32] of to say on it, bro. She would be
[00:17:35] getting sued right now. Instead of
[00:17:37] trying they're trying to bribe her
[00:17:39] instead of trying to give her money to
[00:17:40] shut the up. Yeah, they would sue her.
[00:17:42] Yeah. No, you're probably right about
[00:17:44] that. I don't know if they are suing
[00:17:45] her. Have they Have they tried to file
[00:17:47] anything? They probably have. They
[00:17:49] probably filed some I'm sure
[00:17:51] I'm sure she's dealing with several. I'm
[00:17:53] pretty sure she's right. I don't know. I
[00:17:56] might be wrong. I think she's right. The
[00:17:58] whole thing stinks. And what stinks way
[00:18:00] worse than that giant distraction is
[00:18:02] that the number one opponent for
[00:18:05] Mcronone just got sentenced to four
[00:18:08] years in jail and barred from political
[00:18:10] life for 5 years. and the front runner,
[00:18:12] not just the number one opponent, the
[00:18:13] one who's winning. Yeah, it's crazy.
[00:18:17] It's what they try to do to Trump. Plus,
[00:18:22] by the way, he is not lying. There is so
[00:18:24] much that is happening in France right
[00:18:25] now that I actually said to my team, we
[00:18:27] are going to have to do a becoming Breit
[00:18:29] season 2. the updates that we have in
[00:18:31] that case, what has come out since, and
[00:18:33] once again, the things that the
[00:18:35] mainstream media are completely
[00:18:36] neglecting to cover. Uh, someone else in
[00:18:38] the Trognau family has now been caught
[00:18:42] with huge pedal criminal network and
[00:18:46] charges are being brought against him. I
[00:18:47] mean, it's just completely insane. And
[00:18:50] what's happening running alongside this
[00:18:52] is Emanuel Mronone has apparently lost
[00:18:53] his mind and he's just threatening and
[00:18:55] going crazy because it's all coming down
[00:18:56] and people are recognizing that he's not
[00:18:59] a serious leader. And so he's trying to
[00:19:01] exert his power in really weird ways and
[00:19:04] I have some stories to tell you that I
[00:19:06] have had to keep my mouth shut about
[00:19:08] that I really want to tell you guys and
[00:19:10] I really am going to tell you eventually
[00:19:12] but um I'm thinking we're going to have
[00:19:14] to do a season two of becoming Brit.
[00:19:17] Anyways, that's not all that they had to
[00:19:18] say. Here is what else they shared in
[00:19:21] their conversation.
[00:19:23] We talked about Candace Owens before.
[00:19:25] That's part of what her freaking, you
[00:19:26] know, boot camp before pissing off all
[00:19:29] the Israeli supporters was is that she's
[00:19:31] already been through the fire. She's
[00:19:33] been an outspoken black female
[00:19:35] conservative. And that's like they
[00:19:38] really hate that because they do kind of
[00:19:40] view you as like which is up in a way
[00:19:42] but it really is kind of like you're
[00:19:45] they decided that they're the champion
[00:19:47] of women and black people and therefore
[00:19:49] if you're a black woman it's your
[00:19:52] responsibility to support these liberal
[00:19:55] white women you know and she used to
[00:19:57] that's the thing right she went from she
[00:19:59] went from being she was very young she
[00:20:01] was liberal and and she was also a
[00:20:03] hardcore Zionist uh at one point like
[00:20:05] very big supporter of Israel and then
[00:20:07] changed her mind on that. Um, but it is,
[00:20:10] you know, there there is a a viciousness
[00:20:12] which with which those people get
[00:20:14] attacked. I totally agree. I think I was
[00:20:17] very much forgian fire because I felt
[00:20:19] like I wasn't allowed to critique BLM
[00:20:21] and now I do feel like we fast forwarded
[00:20:23] to a time where you're not really
[00:20:24] allowed to critique Israel and it puts
[00:20:26] me in a weird spot and sometimes it
[00:20:28] makes people on the left or and the
[00:20:30] right not like what I'm saying. But um
[00:20:32] I've definitely I think formed my own
[00:20:35] opinions and am sticking to them and I
[00:20:37] try to just always do the right thing
[00:20:38] and I'm open to changing my mind. I am
[00:20:40] open to changing my mind with new
[00:20:42] information but I think that people are
[00:20:44] definitely responding to the honesty and
[00:20:46] the freedom and this is the reason why
[00:20:48] the independent media has really taken
[00:20:50] over the corporate media space. Anyways
[00:20:52] you guys I want to move on from that. I
[00:20:54] just was very excited about that because
[00:20:55] it's Joe Rogan and that's a very big
[00:20:56] deal and I think it's really cool that
[00:20:58] you guys have found the show and we're
[00:21:00] going to get into some of your comments
[00:21:01] later about me and Ian having that
[00:21:03] conversation which could have never ever
[00:21:04] ever happened on any corporate media
[00:21:07] show. In fact, they hate that. They hate
[00:21:10] people asking questions. Uh but before
[00:21:12] we get to those comments, I have to show
[00:21:15] you. This is super interesting. You guys
[00:21:16] know that I have my tips box. I was
[00:21:20] going through our tips email box. You
[00:21:22] guys send me stuff at
[00:21:24] [email protected]. The best stuff, by
[00:21:26] the way. That's the reason why I get
[00:21:27] inspired to do the show. And one of you
[00:21:29] guys sent me something really
[00:21:30] interesting about Ryan and Blake. I got
[00:21:32] to present it to you guys real quickly.
[00:21:34] So, as you know, long ago when we were
[00:21:36] just getting into the lawsuit and
[00:21:37] understanding all the players, I had
[00:21:39] theorized that a large portion of the
[00:21:43] emails that were written and some of the
[00:21:44] text message that we have seen
[00:21:46] throughout the lawsuit were actually
[00:21:47] being authored by Ryan Reynolds. There
[00:21:50] was just a certain decorum in some of
[00:21:52] the messages uh that he I think he's
[00:21:55] authoring which deviate from the style
[00:21:56] of messages that Blake writes. I've said
[00:21:58] this many times. I'm not trying to be
[00:22:00] insulting, just being realistic. Ryan is
[00:22:02] clever. Blake not so much. And she's
[00:22:05] much more flirty and she just comes
[00:22:06] across as less focused. I I think she
[00:22:09] kind of thinks, you know, being cute is
[00:22:12] enough and somebody else should take
[00:22:13] care of things for her and she's a bit
[00:22:15] bratty. And Ryan is always kind of
[00:22:17] trying to manipulate and he has this
[00:22:20] personality trait where he always sees
[00:22:23] himself as a character. He's always
[00:22:25] always thinks he's a character. But
[00:22:27] something that I had never imagined as I
[00:22:30] was theorizing all of these things was
[00:22:31] the possibility that Ryan Reynolds and
[00:22:34] not Blake Lively was the one that
[00:22:36] offered the now infamous Game of Thrones
[00:22:40] text message. The one where these are my
[00:22:42] dragons and Ryan and Taylor are my
[00:22:44] dragons. Never in a million years did I
[00:22:46] think that it was possible that Ryan
[00:22:48] Brown authored it, not Blake. Now we are
[00:22:50] at one in a million years because I
[00:22:52] fully think that it's plausible that he
[00:22:54] was the one that authored it. And I'll
[00:22:55] tell you why. So way back when when
[00:22:59] Blake Lively was promoting her movie,
[00:23:01] The Age of Adeline, um she was starring
[00:23:04] alongside in that flick with a guy who
[00:23:07] was in Game of Thrones. His name was
[00:23:09] Mikuel Houseman. And so while while they
[00:23:13] were doing press for this movie, they
[00:23:16] were asking her questions about whether
[00:23:17] or not she had ever seen Game of
[00:23:19] Thrones. And just to be clear, they were
[00:23:21] Game of Thrones was just about to start
[00:23:23] its fifth season. So it's its fifth
[00:23:25] season. And Blake Lively admitted that
[00:23:27] she had never seen it. She she basically
[00:23:30] told them, quote, "My husband, I'm
[00:23:33] outing him and I shouldn't, but he
[00:23:35] became obsessed with Game of Thrones."
[00:23:37] She joked, "He did everything that he
[00:23:38] could to pirate episodes that hadn't
[00:23:41] even been shot yet." So, that was a
[00:23:42] little tough point in our marriage. Now,
[00:23:44] we're through it because there's a new
[00:23:45] season coming out. And then, right after
[00:23:48] she chatted with that E! News reporter,
[00:23:50] uh, season 5 premiered. So, she had
[00:23:52] never seen it. And then I had my um,
[00:23:55] producers go through her Twitter feed
[00:23:57] because, you know, her and Ryan had back
[00:23:59] forth cute tweets to each other for a
[00:24:00] very long time that people were
[00:24:01] following. They were both very active on
[00:24:03] Twitter, as it was called then. And
[00:24:05] there's no mention of Game of Thrones.
[00:24:07] And typically, if you were someone that
[00:24:08] got into it, I got into it. Everybody
[00:24:10] had something to say about the season
[00:24:12] finale. Uh, everybody had something to
[00:24:14] say about, you know, Cersei Lannister,
[00:24:16] this or that. Nothing from Blake Lively.
[00:24:18] Nowhere else does she mention Game of
[00:24:20] Thrones or being a fan of Game of
[00:24:21] Thrones. So, we know that for the first
[00:24:23] five seasons, she didn't watch it. But
[00:24:24] her husband got obsessed. So obsessed as
[00:24:27] he did get the same kind of obsession
[00:24:29] that he had with Field of Dreams.
[00:24:31] Remember, he talks about his obsession
[00:24:33] with Field of Dreams a lot. and he
[00:24:34] speaks about it in interviews how much
[00:24:36] he loves it. Well, Game of Thrones was
[00:24:38] this same experience for him where it it
[00:24:40] became a piece of his character and he
[00:24:43] wanted to use it as he was promoting his
[00:24:48] Rexom UK football team back in December
[00:24:52] of 2023. Take a listen.
[00:25:04] I mean, this is so Ryan Reynolds. He has
[00:25:09] this quality. I'm thinking back, I'm
[00:25:11] like, obviously, it was
[00:25:13] Ryan. He gets obsessed. Like, he just
[00:25:15] gets totally obsessed and he likes to
[00:25:17] envision himself as these characters.
[00:25:19] Like we said, Deadpool, he's not playing
[00:25:22] Deadpool, he is Deadpool. And for her to
[00:25:24] admit that he become obsessed with this.
[00:25:26] We know he's controlling and obsessive
[00:25:27] and he likes to fancy himself as this
[00:25:30] big character. Like he's constantly
[00:25:32] trying to escape who he actually is via
[00:25:35] these characters. And I I'm sure there
[00:25:38] is some psychological assessment or
[00:25:39] diagnosis here that we're missing that
[00:25:41] somebody can tell us, but that cuz I've
[00:25:42] seen another person who's like this as
[00:25:44] well where like they watch a movie and
[00:25:45] they think that's me. This is actually
[00:25:47] who I am. And they want to embody those
[00:25:51] individuals. And so now you look back at
[00:25:53] this message and you remember something
[00:25:55] else. The first time that Ryan Reynolds
[00:25:58] ever messaged Justin Baldoni, he was the
[00:26:01] one that name dropped Taylor Swift, not
[00:26:03] Blake Lively. The very first message
[00:26:06] that he ever authored Justin Baldoni, he
[00:26:09] said this. Now, they blanked out her
[00:26:11] name, but Taylor would say the same.
[00:26:14] Some of the greatest creative decisions
[00:26:16] that I've made are in fact Blake. The
[00:26:18] same goes for Taylor. the acting as a
[00:26:21] small piece of a pretty astounding
[00:26:24] patchwork quilt of creativity. He's
[00:26:27] describing himself and uh and Taylor
[00:26:30] Swift and saying that Blake has helped
[00:26:34] them make some of their greatest
[00:26:35] decisions. And that's actually what they
[00:26:38] reintroduce. That's the same concept
[00:26:40] that's reintroduced in the now infamous
[00:26:42] Game of Thrones tweet that Blake writes
[00:26:45] back to Justin Baldoni when he's like,
[00:26:47] "Hey, look, like, you know, you didn't
[00:26:48] have to get you didn't have to get
[00:26:51] Taylor Swift and your husband to gang up
[00:26:53] on me. I liked your feedback on some of
[00:26:55] these edits and we could have worked
[00:26:57] together without, you know, A-list
[00:26:59] bullying." Essentially, that's what he
[00:27:00] was saying. And what does he say? Well,
[00:27:03] he he says, I'm saying he now because I
[00:27:05] think it's Ryan. Both Taylor and Ryan
[00:27:08] have established themselves as absolute
[00:27:11] titans, as writers and storytellers
[00:27:13] outside of their primary gig, just
[00:27:16] singing or just acting or just or Taylor
[00:27:19] just directing. Maybe it says Ryan just
[00:27:21] directing. I'm not sure who's blacked
[00:27:22] out there. I'm so lucky to have them as
[00:27:24] creative barometers. That's effectively
[00:27:26] the exact same sentence. That's almost
[00:27:28] the exact same sentence rewritten that
[00:27:31] he first wrote to Justin Baldoni. Three
[00:27:33] of us work together. the the creative
[00:27:35] barometers. That's not Blake Lively
[00:27:37] speaking. Do you really think Blake
[00:27:38] Lively would talk about creative
[00:27:40] barometers that she would call them
[00:27:41] absolute titans? I just don't feel like
[00:27:43] this is her vocabulary now that I'm
[00:27:45] revisiting these messages. And then of
[00:27:47] course that message ends with her
[00:27:48] saying, "If you ever get around to
[00:27:49] watching Game of Thrones, you'll
[00:27:51] appreciate that I'm Kesian like her. I
[00:27:53] happen to have a few dragons." And of
[00:27:55] course,
[00:27:56] Ryan probably fancies himself as Khesi.
[00:27:59] I think that's probably the character
[00:28:02] that he felt the closest to. I really
[00:28:05] do. I think that that deep inside he
[00:28:08] wants to be a queen. I think he is a
[00:28:10] queen. I think I think Ryan is Queen
[00:28:12] Khesi and that he authored this message
[00:28:15] because I don't think Blake Lively has
[00:28:18] this extensive of a vocabulary on the
[00:28:20] basis of everything that I've ever seen
[00:28:21] of her. So, I'm putting that theory out
[00:28:23] there. I think we got that wrong and
[00:28:25] that what likely happened was Justin
[00:28:27] messaged her that and she's a bit lazy.
[00:28:29] This is the woman that didn't even read
[00:28:30] the script. Don't forget infamously she
[00:28:32] didn't even read the script for the
[00:28:35] movie that she was going to be in and
[00:28:36] then suddenly she wanted to make a ton
[00:28:38] of changes. And I think that was
[00:28:39] actually Ryan who read the script and
[00:28:41] wanted to make a ton of changes for her
[00:28:42] which he eventually as we found out did
[00:28:45] rewrite the entire first scene. I mean,
[00:28:47] Blake has proven time and time again
[00:28:48] she's quite lazy and she relies on
[00:28:50] others to do work for her. And it's
[00:28:53] likely that as soon as Justin messaged
[00:28:55] her that, she ran over to Ryan. She was
[00:28:57] like, "Look what he said." And he was
[00:28:58] like, "I've got this." Creative
[00:29:01] barometer. Me Tay Khesi Dragons. I am
[00:29:05] Kesi. Don't mess with me or you will get
[00:29:08] burned. Interesting theory. Anyways,
[00:29:10] wanted to share it. Want to remind you
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[00:30:54] americanfinancing.net/owens. All right,
[00:30:56] you guys. Let's get into some of your
[00:30:59] comments. You guys loved me and Ian
[00:31:02] Carol teaming up. In fact, you guys, one
[00:31:04] of you guys, which was the most liked
[00:31:06] comment that we saw, Megan wrote, "Love
[00:31:08] this duo. I vote Ian to take over Cana's
[00:31:11] show while she's on maternity leave. To
[00:31:12] have them both on a show would be
[00:31:13] amazing." I loved this idea. Instantly
[00:31:16] reached out to Ian. I said, "Ian, I
[00:31:18] would love to have you sit in for me for
[00:31:20] some time so that they have content and
[00:31:22] you'd be the perfect person. The only
[00:31:24] thing I'm not going to allow him to do
[00:31:25] is to cuss because I don't cuss on my
[00:31:27] show and he cusses sometimes." So, it's
[00:31:28] going to be the only rule that I put on
[00:31:30] there. But it would be great because
[00:31:31] then I can pop in and he and I have
[00:31:32] really the same interests in going down
[00:31:34] these rabbit holes and presenting
[00:31:35] information and learning from you guys.
[00:31:37] I think it is a great deal. I agree with
[00:31:39] you. Ian is interested. So, I wanted you
[00:31:41] guys to know. I'm always responding to
[00:31:43] your feedback and we are going to do our
[00:31:44] best to make it happen. Definitely
[00:31:46] should be able to make it happen for at
[00:31:47] least a couple of weeks while I'm on
[00:31:48] maternity leave. So, well done Megan and
[00:31:49] all of you guys that liked that comment
[00:31:51] and got it to the top. Crossfires 311
[00:31:53] wrote, "I pray that RFK Jr. watches this
[00:31:56] and his spirit is moved to stand up for
[00:31:58] his true convictions regardless of what
[00:32:00] the consequences will be. To be clear,
[00:32:02] that comment is in regards to me saying
[00:32:04] that with everything that we know
[00:32:05] surrounding the circumstances of his
[00:32:08] father's death and his uncle's death, I
[00:32:11] would never be able to cowtow to someone
[00:32:14] like Rabbi Shmuli. It wouldn't happen
[00:32:15] for me. I would rather die on my feet.
[00:32:17] And I do think that he needed to hear
[00:32:19] that. It's never too late to stand up
[00:32:21] for what's right. And I don't think that
[00:32:23] he is doing that because I think there
[00:32:24] is an underlying fear there and a lot of
[00:32:26] control. Gabriel writes, quote, "Speech
[00:32:29] is violence. Actual violence is not
[00:32:31] violence. That seems like a quote
[00:32:33] straight from 1984." Yes. And that has
[00:32:36] been my experience. I know when I was
[00:32:38] speaking to you guys about um everything
[00:32:40] with Kanye, it was just so weird to to
[00:32:42] see people that were like, "His tweet is
[00:32:43] the violence. Everyone must respond."
[00:32:45] And then like when we started responding
[00:32:46] to actual violence, when someone really
[00:32:48] went to FCON 3 over in Palestine, they
[00:32:51] were like, "How dare you have a feeling
[00:32:54] about this? You are crazy and wrong."
[00:32:57] And we're at that, we really are at that
[00:32:58] point now where they're trying to make
[00:32:59] us think that speech is violence and
[00:33:01] actual violence is not violence somehow.
[00:33:04] Uh not working with people like me.
[00:33:07] Tashimi writes, "Can Owens, Glenn
[00:33:09] Greenwald, Tucker Carlson, Ian Carroll,
[00:33:11] Dave Smith. These people are now my new
[00:33:13] heroes." They're my heroes, too. Glenn
[00:33:15] Greenwald, Tarlson, Ian Carol, Dave
[00:33:16] Smith. I really have enjoyed so much of
[00:33:19] their content. I've learned so much from
[00:33:21] those individuals. Glenn Greenwald is
[00:33:22] just such a such a professional in
[00:33:25] everything that he does and he is just a
[00:33:28] top tier reporter. Tucker Carlson is
[00:33:30] just one of the most relatable people
[00:33:31] ever. He is perpetually interested. Ian
[00:33:35] Carol up and coming obviously and uh we
[00:33:38] are seeing how much he has to offer and
[00:33:40] I have no doubt that he will be probably
[00:33:43] bigger than all of us in about a year
[00:33:45] and Dave Smith I think is really just
[00:33:48] one of the most brave people out there
[00:33:49] cuz just as Joe Rogan said when you have
[00:33:52] to stand up to your own quote unquote
[00:33:54] tribe well for me it was BLM for him
[00:33:56] it's him saying anything critical net
[00:33:58] and Yahoo you get just such vitriolic
[00:34:01] nonsense from so many people who call
[00:34:03] you like a self-hating black person or a
[00:34:05] self-hating Jew. At the end of the day,
[00:34:07] what we're saying is we're stepping
[00:34:08] aside from identity politics and we're
[00:34:10] just going to speak out plainly on
[00:34:12] issues that we believe to be moral or
[00:34:13] immoral and that's it. Uh, forget the
[00:34:15] color of my skin or my ethnic ethnicity.
[00:34:18] Nikki writes, "What Ian said about how
[00:34:20] the times when you're alone, you're with
[00:34:22] God, and what they want to do is fill
[00:34:24] that space with filth to lead you away
[00:34:26] from him was eyeopening and powerful.
[00:34:28] Yes, I so many of you guys really
[00:34:30] appreciated our ability to talk and and
[00:34:32] tackle the pornography issue. It's
[00:34:34] something that I've been very passionate
[00:34:36] about speaking about. Actually, if you
[00:34:37] go to our website, kennison.com, I had a
[00:34:40] conversation with E. Michael Jones, who
[00:34:41] is on the ADL's list. Um, another person
[00:34:44] who is literally Hitler. Fantastic
[00:34:46] conversation about pornography, the
[00:34:47] origins of pornography, and that is it's
[00:34:50] true. It it is a weapon of mass
[00:34:52] destruction, and we are being told in
[00:34:54] school that it's not, which is really
[00:34:55] crazy, that it's healthy to watch a
[00:34:57] little bit of porn. I just actively
[00:34:59] remember learning that um in middle
[00:35:00] school. I grew up in Connecticut, so I
[00:35:02] know some people said that wasn't the
[00:35:03] way when I was in school. Um I'm a
[00:35:05] millennial. I don't know if things
[00:35:06] changed. Obviously, every decade what
[00:35:08] they're teaching transforms, but in the
[00:35:11] classroom, but without question, we
[00:35:12] learned that watching some porn could be
[00:35:15] educational and could be healthy, which
[00:35:16] is insane for me to reflect upon now
[00:35:18] because I could not disagree with that
[00:35:20] more. Uh D. Vander writes, "I don't
[00:35:23] think people understand how powerful
[00:35:25] this is to be able to talk freely. It's
[00:35:26] our only safeguard to be free and we
[00:35:28] need to protect it at all cost. Yes. Uh
[00:35:31] I certainly do understand it. It's why
[00:35:32] we even created cannons.com. It's why
[00:35:35] Tucker Tucker Carlson created Tucker
[00:35:36] Carlson.com. It's because if they do
[00:35:38] come down on our speech as as they did
[00:35:40] last year uh on YouTube or wherever it
[00:35:43] is, we we have to then all go we're
[00:35:46] going to migrate. We're going to go to a
[00:35:47] different platform and we will we will
[00:35:48] still listen to these ideas because the
[00:35:51] only people that seek to shut down
[00:35:53] speech in my viewpoint are liars. um are
[00:35:56] liars who are trying to curate the
[00:35:57] truth. And if you're curating the truth,
[00:35:59] it's because it's not the truth at all.
[00:36:02] Sanga Richardson writes, "I'd never
[00:36:04] listened to Ian Carol before. And as
[00:36:06] soon as I finish listening to this, I'm
[00:36:07] going to search his sites and follow. So
[00:36:09] grateful for you, Candace. Please know
[00:36:10] that people all over the globe watch
[00:36:12] Candace Owens, even me from South
[00:36:14] Africa. I have so many people from South
[00:36:16] Africa that watch this show. So many
[00:36:17] people from the continent of Africa in
[00:36:19] general. And I was saying to George, uh
[00:36:21] we have to get a trip out there. We've
[00:36:22] got to do like a little mini tour in
[00:36:24] Africa. I think it would be so much fun.
[00:36:25] And obviously he loves Africa because he
[00:36:28] spent a lot of time in that continent.
[00:36:29] My husband hunts. Um so in South Africa
[00:36:32] in particular, I feel like uh half of
[00:36:33] our groomsmen were from his groomsmen
[00:36:35] were from South Africa for our wedding
[00:36:37] and uh so it's it's it's a wonderful
[00:36:40] place. I've only been there once, but it
[00:36:41] was it was truly so beautiful. So I'd
[00:36:43] love to make it back. Lastly, Sapangi
[00:36:46] writes, "On another note, an interview
[00:36:47] with Justin Bodoni would crack the
[00:36:49] internet. It must happen. We're going to
[00:36:52] speak into existence. When this whole
[00:36:54] trial is over, me and my couso are going
[00:36:57] to sit across. I'm going to give him
[00:36:58] like a little nuggies and 90s nookgies,
[00:37:01] you know, just be like, "Oh, you're so
[00:37:02] crazy. Pop some kombucha. Talk about
[00:37:05] things, learn about him. He's going to
[00:37:08] learn about me. We're going to disagree
[00:37:09] on everything in the most loving way
[00:37:11] possible." Uh because we are just so
[00:37:13] different. But cousins are cousins. You
[00:37:14] know, blood is thicker than water. Blood
[00:37:16] is thicker than kombucha is what I would
[00:37:18] say. Reminding you guys, if you want to
[00:37:19] buy merch, head to canowens.com. I can't
[00:37:22] believe, guys, we don't have that many
[00:37:23] episodes left until maternity leave.
[00:37:25] We're taking this up until the 28th of
[00:37:28] April. So, I'm sad to say, you guys, but
[00:37:31] the countdown is beginning, but you can
[00:37:33] find tons of other content on
[00:37:35] kennosins.com. You can watch our vaccine
[00:37:37] series. We will continue the book club
[00:37:39] no matter what. So, if you are a member
[00:37:41] of the book club or thinking about
[00:37:42] signing up, now would be a great time to
[00:37:44] do it. We are wrapping up chaos and now
[00:37:46] getting into Hollywood Babylon. So, you
[00:37:49] won't miss me for too long. You'll blink
[00:37:51] and I'll be back and we will figure out
[00:37:53] how to get you some content with Ian
[00:37:55] Carol in the meantime. All right, guys.
[00:37:57] We'll see you tomorrow.
[00:37:58] [Music]
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