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Clay and Buck

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CNN+ Spent $300M for Less Than 10,000 Viewers

12 Apr 2022

CLAY: Buck, I don’t know if you saw this. This news just came down. It’s not serious news, but I think it is pretty wild. CNN+ launched two weeks ago. I would be surprised if very many people out there are watching it in our audience. But this is staggering.

CNBC reported that they spent $300 million so far on the launch, that is, CNN did. How many people do you think are watching on an average day, CNN+?

BUCK: Oh. It’s in the thousands and not hundreds of thousands.

CLAY: Fewer than 10,000 people a day are watching CNN+ — $300 million they spent on this programming, and this is according to CNBC, fewer than 10,000 people are watching.

That means obviously not very many people have actually signed up. And, I mean, that is a staggering failure. And it just reflects — the CNN brand — to me this is an interesting test of the CNN brand, right? Do people like CNN? Do they want to spend more time with the personalities that are involved there?

Was it Quibi that came out with — it was supposed to be short video that ended up being a disaster, they lost billions of dollars? CNN+ feels like from a business perspective it is yet another failure of CNN to expand. People want real time news. They don’t like the personalities otherwise.

BUCK: Let’s also remember Current TV with your buddy, your close friend Keith Olbermann over there, Mr. Travis, they paid him after they flipped a channel that Al Gore convinced a bunch of not-so-bright investors, right, to buy the channel.

CLAY: Oh, yeah, he made a ton of money after that.

BUCK: They flipped the channel, they spent hundreds of millions of dollars, they spent 10 million just on Keith Olbermann alone a year, you know, and they never got, from what I understood, about 10,000 in concurrent watching for that channel at any point in time. Think about that.

CLAY: Wow.

BUCK: Yeah.

CLAY: That is pretty staggering. I mean, when you consider the amount of money that they poured in, $300 million, and they haven’t been able to come close to 10,000 concurrent viewers like in an average day.

I mean, that’s unheard of, Buck. I mean, this is an unheard of failure.

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November 8th Must Be a Reckoning

12 Apr 2022

CLAY: I wanted to play this for you guys too as we continue to roll out the failure of 8.5% inflation. Steve Forbes had a pretty good idea back in the day, Buck, that both you and I like. Especially, as we get closer to the IRS deadline here Monday where everybody has to pay their taxes.

How about we just actually have a simplified tax code? Well, he was right on that. He’s also here saying when you have incompetence plus incompetence, you get a troubled economy, which is a pretty good summation of what we’ve got right now. Here he was earlier.

STUART VARNEY: Do you see a recession coming this year or next year?

STEVE FORBES: The answer is, yes. Now, whether it’s an official recession where we have two quarters in a row, who knows? But the economy is gonna decline for two principal reasons. One is the Biden administration is still continuing bad policies on regulation and the like and the Federal Reserve does not know how to fight inflation. They’re rapidly raising interest rates. That’s gonna hit the mortgage market and other things. So, when you have incompetence plus incompetence you get a troubled economy, unnecessarily.

BUCK: Yeah.

CLAY: I mean, this is a disaster.

BUCK: Correct. Yeah.

CLAY: And I don’t know how it’s going to get resolved.

I know we’re gonna keep beating the drum but it’s so significant. November 8th has to be a reckoning. The midterm election has to be an absolute reckoning.

And, by the way, Buck and I, I have to tell you, are talking about having our own viewing party for the midterms. The details are not yet — this probably not gonna shock anybody — not yet firmly ironed out. But we are gonna have a fun night.

BUCK: A party. We’re not gonna do the thing — other people can handle the, like, oh, we got the returns coming in from here, returns coming in from there. We’ll be bringing and listening to live music while eating barbecue and pointing at the screens and saying, “Oh, look that state just went for us or that election just went for us. Yay.” And then we go back to mechanical bull riding, which is not only for ladies, Clay.

CLAY: It is. You can’t ride a mechanical bull. No one wants to see a man on a mechanical bull. They certainly don’t want to see you with your scarf flowing in the breeze as you try to ride a mechanical bill.

BUCK: The scarf adds a little bit of aerodynamic flair, Clay.

CLAY: By the way, should mention this we had Adam Laxalt from the great state of Nevada where we are right now number one in Las Vegas. Poll came out today — we’re talking about Senate races, the six states that are gonna matter the most — he is up on Cortez Masto, who is the existing incumbent.

By the way, Buck, according to this, this is the Reno Gazette, she has only 40% support right now, which is pretty wild to think about that you could be the incumbent Senator and be in that much of a difficult situation right there. I mean, that is wild to think about. Gonna be a huge battleground.

We appreciate everybody listening right now in Las Vegas, where we are number one.

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The Lockdowners Aren’t Done with Us

12 Apr 2022

DR. MARTY MAKARY: Look at China. They’re reporting 26,000 cases. They probably have thousands per day. They reported one severe illness. Well, we know from the Wall Street Journal that’s inconsistent, there had been outbreaks in nursing homes there. They had a significant scientific miscalculation.

They’re trying to use covid zero against a highly more contagious variant than the Wuhan strain. BA.2 cannot be squashed through lockdowns. They failed to use the time they bought to vaccinate their population adequately and they have a less effective vaccine. So they’re looking at Hong Kong realizing that’s gonna happen in their country soon, and I believe it will. It is seeded all over China, and their strategies are not just cruel, they’re not gonna be effective.

BUCK: Not just cruel but ineffective. Look. The lockdowns in Shanghai right now or the overall lockdowns, the lockdowns that China has been through — welcome back to the Clay and Buck show, by the way — are cruel and ineffective.

They are monstrous and useless, another way of saying this, and really, really catastrophic for your economy over the long term because what you end up doing is a version of what we’ve done here, too, which is you dramatically cut back your actual productivity and you start just writing the equivalent of IOUs, right?

You start debase your own currency by sending people checks in the mail or by using monetary policy to try to pretend that everything is as productive as it was beforehand within your economy. I think what we’re seeing in Shanghai is a reminder to everybody right now of just how extreme people are willing to go in the fight against covid, and we’re not done in this country, either.

We’re not quite at China levels of authoritarianism here. A lot of people, I mean even this morning, Clay, a bunch of people in the elevator with me, everybody had a mask on, all of a sudden. It’s starting to come back here.

And just yesterday we had the announcement here that the city of Philadelphia has said that, you know, masking is coming back. Here you go. Play 14. Their mask mandate’s going back into effect. It’s not a particularly sensible one, but then again it’s never sensible ’cause doesn’t work.

DR. CHERYL BETTIGOLE: This is our chance to get ahead of the pandemic. We do not believe that there’s any reason to panic or to avoid activities we enjoy and that are important to us. By wearing masks consistently, we can continue to go about our daily lives and continue to take part in the life of our city without contributing to increasing transmission of covid-19.

BUCK: I mean, that’s the Philadelphia health commissioner, Dr. Bettigole. And I would like to sit down and have a really in-depth, heart to heart conversation with her about whether or not so that he has to be a total moron. I actually would like to have that conversation with her.

CLAY: I think she probably is. Also, Buck, they’re not starting this until April 18th. So they announced a full week before they mandate the return of masks that masks are going to come back. Well, hopefully by April 18th they’re already going to be on the backside of whatever BA.2 surge we’re going to get.

And my concern is as soon as we get one city like Philadelphia, as we were telling you yesterday, deciding to bring back masks, New York City, Washington, D.C.; San Francisco, L.A., so many other places immediately typical get in line because there’s a rush to that consensus of “we have to be masked up” because there is that fear which is not going to go away.

I don’t know how this ends for the 10 or 15 or 20 percent of people who are broken by covid. And, Buck, there are a lot of people broken by covid, but what we are going to see unfortunately is this idea that nothing else in the world existed but covid which is what they’re still trying to do in China.

The joke the Chinese share with each other is you can die of anything so long as it isn’t covid. What’s going to happen for our young children, what’s going to happen for other people’s health for issues outside of covid, and what’s gonna happen with this economic situation, for all the talk about the recovery, Buck, we’re still around two million people who were working in March of 2020 when we hit the lowest unemployment rate and we hit the rising wages, when everything was rolling with Trump, we’re still at basically under two million people. We still haven’t even caught back up to where we were then.

BUCK: You brought up the people who have been broken by this, which is clear, and I see it. And it is sad all over New York City. I mean, I get angry at the airline attendant who is masking us up between bites ’cause that’s just tyrannical and stupid, don’t have to do that. But I do feel sad for the people who are choosing on their own to walk ordinance outside on a relatively nice day here in New York City, you know, talking about earlier in the week when the weather was a little bit better or last week. And they’ve got an N95 mask on.

CLAY: Yeah.

BUCK: You know, you walk around, you say, well, hold on a second, why are they doing this? But not only has covid broken them emotionally, the government’s response to covid — and this brings us into the accountability that needs to happen here, people need to be very honest with what has gone on as a result of these government policies. Yes, people are broken emotionally because of covid. Some of them are gonna go broke down because of the response to covid, essentially.

CLAY: Yeah.

BUCK: This is right now, what we’re seeing with inflation, yes, it was worse under Biden. Yes, Biden bears a lot of the responsibility. But I’m just gonna say it. It was not a good idea to have lockdowns period, ever, including in 2020.

CLAY: You and I were arguing this when nobody else would talk about about it back in March and April. I was doing a frigging sports show and I was saying, what are we doing? How are we shutting down sports leagues? We gotta find a way to play. And it was so infuriating. You could see what the natural result was gonna be.

BUCK: Here’s what I tweeted out almost two years ago, May 12th, Clay, 2020. I wrote “We’re moving toward eventual herd immunity as a society. We’re just doing it more slowly and at the price of 30-plus million jobs and existential risk to our economy and way of life. People are figuring this out. Just not nearly fast enough.”

A hundred percent true, by the way. That was two years ago.

CLAY: And a lot of people still haven’t figured it out. That’s what’s frustrating.

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C&B 24/7: Clay & Buck’s Show Prep

12 Apr 2022

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Buck Covers the NYC Subway Shooting on Fox

12 Apr 2022

Buck called into The Faulkner Focus to discuss breaking news on the subway shooting in Brooklyn.

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Clay Destroys Dems’ Deflate Tires Scheme and Jussie Smollett

12 Apr 2022

Clay visited Hannity — alongside Leo Terrell 2.0 — to talk about the latest Jussie Smollett craziness and the Dems’ plan to invade suburban neighborhoods and deflate SUV tires to save the environment.

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Study: Florida, Red States Did Best on Covid

11 Apr 2022

CLAY: I want to give credit ’cause I went and read this study after I saw it linked in the Wall Street Journal. You can also go read about it at OutKick. Three guys, University of Chicago economist Casey Mulligan and Stephen Moore as well as Phil Kerpen of the Committee to Unleash Prosperity, they decided, Buck, you know, for so much of this covid discussion over the past two years it’s been only focused on cases and deaths.

And the impact of anything other than cases and deaths has been completely ignored. When the reality is, any sort of intelligent analysis would have understood — and I think that that is becoming more paramount now — but when you shut down schools, that is going to have long-lasting impacts. And when you shut down economies that is going to have long-lasting impacts, in health as well.

In other words, covid doesn’t exist in a vacuum. And so they said, let’s analyze how the individual states responded — we’re fortunate thanks to federalism we have 50 different state laboratories to effectively analyze. And they said, okay. Let’s look at it. They completely evened out the metrics on age because some states are older and we know that covid disproportionately impacted the elderly so even looking at the number of deaths is not always fair because of age analysis and everything else.

So they analyzed everything, evened it all out, and gave all 50 states a score based on how they did for health, based on how they did for their economy, and how they did on keeping schools open. And, Buck, I thought this was intriguing. The best state, the best state in the nation by their metric, Utah. Utah did a better job of balancing out all three of those things than any state in the country. The worst state, New Jersey.

And overwhelmingly — we’ll run through some of this data — the red states handled covid better than the blue states did. Here were the top 10, Buck. Utah, Nebraska, Vermont, Montana, South Dakota — this one is gonna get tongues wagging — Florida, which is a big state that did really well — New Hampshire, Maine, Arkansas, and Idaho. All right. Those were, according to these metrics, the ten best states at handling covid. Anything surprise you in those 10, Buck?

BUCK: Nothing surprises although they’re going to say just based on who’s involved in these studies. It’s partisan and we shouldn’t put a dollar value on lives, you know, just get ready for it. The left will —

CLAY: — save just one life. Remember all those tweets we got when everybody was shutting down?

BUCK: That theory, by the way, is being put to the test in Shanghai, which we will be talking about as well.

CLAY: Yes.

BUCK: True Fauciism. “If it saves but one life we can make you all miserable.” That is on display right now in Shanghai where they have a lockdown of over 20 million people that is causing essentially a mass mental and emotional breakdown, an understandable one, by the way. We’ll talk about that in a few moments, just to give you a vision of why this fight is so important in this country.

I would say this about the states that did really well. They are, with the exception of Florida, small population and low density. So, it’s much easier to deal with a respiratory virus in the context of, let’s say, Vermont or South Dakota than it is in New York, California, Washington, D.C. To be fair, right?

CLAY: Yeah.

BUCK: But the big outlier here is Florida, which is a big state with a lot of cities and a major population — major population centers and the fact that it did well when you look at these variables is, of course, a bigger repudiation because remember a lot of these other states didn’t open as early — I’m sorry even one that did well, didn’t open as early as Florida, were not as clear on their policies meant to defend individual rights.

Remember, Florida didn’t say the state won’t mandate vaccines. Florida said that businesses can’t mandate vaccination, either. Some states were a little wimpy on that one, even some very, very red states decided that it’s “a private company, they can do what they want,” which I absolutely hate as an answer. People said yeah, try that sometime, set up a private company, only hire women — actually that would probably work — only hire men — that would not work — and then say, “It’s a private company, I can do what I want. ”

So the reality here, Clay, is when you look at multivariable analysis, fancy way of saying —

CLAY: Which is what intelligent people should do.

BUCK: Should have done all along.

CLAY: Yes.

BUCK: Then the Florida approach for major population states was the right approach. The data proves it, shows it. It was also right approach on schools and school masking policy. They opened, it was fine, they didn’t have all this death and despair in the school system.

And, you know, now — now we’re getting this phase, Clay, where we’re now two years — I want to go back. I want to even find the first time I ever had you on my radio show, maybe we can play a fun throwback clip from it, ’cause it was about two years ago this month. I forget what exactly the date was. Because for two years it has been clear: Old people, older people and those with comorbidities are at risk. Everybody else, this is basically a really contagious flu and you should just deal with it. For two years that’s been the case, for now.

CLAY: And here are the 10 states. I gave you the 10 states that did the best. Here are the 10 states that did the worst, Buck. And what’s interesting here as I run through some of these states are not dense, meaning they don’t have the same population density as other locations. Some just had really bad Democrat governors and mayors who were dominating.

New Jersey. Murphy almost lost over this. And there’s a fascinating article we talked and shared over the weekend in the Wall Street Journal talking about New Jersey parents and how many of them are running as fast as they can from the Democratic Party over covid because they’re so furious at the way that their kids have been treated. But New Jersey, worst in the nation. Washington, D.C., second worst in the nation, New York, third worst, followed by New Mexico — and, by the way, I believe we got a lot of listeners out in New Mexico. They have completely been under the radar.

I got a good buddy who’s in Albuquerque who’s a doctor out there that I was in college with. They have locked down oftentimes in New Mexico on a crazy level. Most people haven’t paid attention because the population, by and large, of New Mexico is not that large, Buck. But for everybody out there listening to us in New Mexico, I think the insanity that you guys have dealt with has been wildly underrated.

California, Illinois, Maryland, Nevada, Connecticut, and Pennsylvania are the 10 worst. Overwhelmingly Democratic governors, overwhelmingly locked down, kept kids out, their economies have tanked. Again, four of the five worst — New Jersey, D.C., New York, and California — toss in Illinois there as well — these are also, Buck, not surprisingly the places that have lost the most population.

We talk about this all the time and I think it’s a significant factor. If a place like Florida was truly putting people in more danger, then people wouldn’t be moving there overwhelmingly. They’d be flooding into California and New York with their families because they’d be saying, “Oh, my goodness. We have to go here, to protect the safety of our families.” Instead the opposite is occurring.

BUCK: Clay, I was just in Florida for the weekend and was at Mar-a-Lago with our good friend —

CLAY: You saw our buddy Trump.

BUCK: I was with 45. We had a nice chat. He loves the show, says we’re gonna be critical going forward. And it’s fun to see the big guy, man, he’s so entertaining and he’s great.

I was there, Michael Berry, our good friend from Houston —

CLAY: Guest host.

BUCK: — our wonderful Houston affiliate. He was — and guest host on our show — he put together an event at Mar-a-Lago.

But I just bring up the Florida situation because I took a tour of some areas with a local near West Palm because West Palm is too expensive, basically, and what this guy who lives in Florida for 60 years told me is that everyone is so excited about how great things are in the state. The only problem is that now it’s like a Florida real estate arms race all across the state. You’ve got a house on the Panhandle. It’s not in one place. It’s all over the state. People are moving in such big numbers that the real estate prices, if you already live there, it’s great for the home that you could sell, but if you want to stay there you gotta buy into a super hot real estate —

CLAY: You’re gonna roll it right back in. Same thing’s happening all over Tennessee, all over Nashville in particular. There were no homes for sale, and it’s great if you’re moving from California or New York ’cause they’re locking in also a ton of people moving from the Chicago areas. They’re locking in really high rates and then cashing in and buying better places in other locations — Tennessee, Texas, Florida, places like that.

But, man, it gets more challenging in you’re a renter in some of these communities you didn’t buy and now you’re like, well, I — I maybe could have but now the prices have skyrocketed.

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Philly Brings Back Mask Mandate, Kamala Caught Maskless

11 Apr 2022

CLAY: I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but we told you this was going to happen. Some of you out there say, “I don’t know why you guys keep fighting battles over covid masking and everything else. Move on to other issues.” And what I’m here to say is, they’re not going to let go of covid. They aren’t.

We are going to have to kick their ass so bad in November that they don’t have any other options because they are going to hold on to covid with every fiber of their being. And covid restrictions are not going away. Even if they temporarily disappear, they’re always there looming in the background. Dr. Fauci is the villain that is hiding underneath your bed. He’s the bogeyman. He’s not ever going away. He’s gonna pop up, smurf-like, with the mask on yelling at you no matter what.

And I hate to say it — but if you’re listening in the Philadelphia area, they just announced in the last 15 minutes that they are bringing back your mask mandate. And now the question is going to be, Buck, will Washington follow, will New York City follow, L.A., San Francisco, Seattle, where we have a new affiliate — sorry, Seattle people, to bring you this news.

When left-wing cities start to make a move like this, what has been the pattern is other left-wing cities follow right along. Washington, D.C., just a little bit south of Philly, New York City just a little bit north. The mayors of those places, Bowser in D.C. and Adams in New York City — Buck, you know — they get jealous of their — of their restrictive counterpart in Philly.

BUCK: Let’s also they know that by comparison, right, if you’re London Breed, if you’re Eric Adams, if you’re Lori Lightfoot or — what’s the —

CLAY: Garcetti in —

BUCK: Thank you.

CLAY: — still in L.A. We got a lot of mayors now.

BUCK: Yeah. Garcetti if you’re any of these mayors and after the Philly mayor shuts down — or I shouldn’t say shuts down but implements masking again, it’s like, “Hey, do you not take the virus seriously?” You know, that then becomes the logic of the position, which is why the dominoes for the Democrats for this lunacy keep falling.

CLAY: That’s right.

BUCK: Because by comparison, you don’t — if you’ve been a lockdowner all along, why take the heat now when others are already taking more restrictive measures?

CLAY: And they continue with all the ridiculous lies. We just played you Psaki trying to blame Vladimir Putin for inflation in the United States. Well, the Putin price hike as she said.

Also Kamala Harris wasn’t wearing her mask indoors, and as with other Democrats who are caught violating their own rules, there’s always an excuse in this case, it was a really historic moment, guys. Remember the photos get taken, oh, well, it was just for a photo. All of the lies continue to build, the covid hypocrisy doesn’t die. Here’s Psaki defending Kamala.

REPORTER: You said the vice president with masks indoors all day but the White House tweeted a video showing her standing over the president without a mask on. Can you explain what happened there?

PSAKI: Well, I would say that the vice president and the president and all of us abide by what the CDC protocols are. It was an emotional day, it was a historic day and there were moments when she was not wearing a mask inside, including in a photo, that she wearing at 99.99% of the time.

BUCK: (impression) Clay, excuse me the virus knows that, like, when really important people are taking, like, really important photos, the virus is, like, hold on a second, like, I don’t want to mess that up.

CLAY: That is her answer, by the way. Every moment in that public availability, there is going to be footage to reflect whether you had a mask on or not. So when Psaki lied and said, oh, Kamala Harris had a mask on the entire time and then all you have to do is just go, well, actually look at this photo, look at this video.

It’s the willfulness of the lies, they are not afraid of covid, right? They aren’t afraid — even Biden who probably should be afraid ’cause he’s 79 years old — I will give Biden credit here, if they’re being honest, how is it, Buck, that every other White House official but Biden has gotten covid?

Does Biden have the greatest immune system on the planet? It is kind of ridiculous. Psaki’s tested positive twice. It feels like every other White House official has tested positive, not even once, multiple times, and somehow Biden still has not tested positive. But if anybody in the White House were going to be nervous about covid, it should be Joe Biden, who’s 79 years old and statistically would be at a far higher rate of danger than almost anyone else in politics other than Nancy Pelosi, by the way, who already has recovered from covid and had no issues whatsoever.

BUCK: I just think that there’s also in the background of all this, Clay, what I said before I really mean — the Democrats are not gonna go down without the dirtiest fight possible in this midterm. This is why we keep saying, it’s looking good, folks, it’s looking good ’cause they want you to be motivated. But they’re gonna do everything they can to pull out at least enough key races that they can say that it was not a repudiation, it wasn’t that big — remember, as Clay has been saying, we need a reckoning, a red wetting, an absolute butt kicking — can I say the A-word?

CLAY: We can say “ass kicking.”

BUCK: Oh. Oh, well, hello. Okay. An ass kicking. Ooh. That felt good. We need that this fall — I do Bill Maher show. I know I can curse like an even F-bomb and I’m like, not with the people listening. And then of course off air I’m like, you know, bleepety-bleep-bleep.

Anyway, we need that. But, Clay, we also need to understand how covid plays into the strategy. And I think that as long as they keep some of the covid rituals ’cause that’s what they are in place, you’re gonna see pushes for mail-in balloting, you’re gonna see pushes for expanding voter times, all the different games they played the last time to give them an edge, they’re gonna do the exact same stuff. They’re trying to pass, what is it, H.R. 1, they’re trying to codify it all into law. But they’ll use emergency measures where they have a Democrat governor in a purple state, et cetera, to basic try to tilt the playing field to them again to cheat but within — to cheat but within the rules or within plausible rules, you know what I mean —

CLAY: The gray area. The gray area of the law is what they’re gonna try to take advantage of. And there’s a great piece, by the way, out today saying — and I know we got a lot of listeners in each of these six states. I’m gonna try to get it right. We’ll talk about it maybe a little bit tomorrow ’cause we had so many stories to hit today, we — I mean, I got a list here. We barely got through half of them, we got so much going on right now.

The 2022 election, Buck, and the 2024 election’s gonna come down to six states. That’s it, right? There are basically six states that are going to determine whether or not we have a Democratic or Republican Senate, what happens in the south and who wins the presidential election in 2024.

And those six states not surprisingly a lot of you can spend time, you’ve thought about it, you’ve analyzed it, but these six states, everybody who’s listening to out there, everybody needs to make a reckoning in 2022. But if you live in these six states — Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Nevada — if you live in those six states right now, you are going to decide the trajectory of our country in 2022 and 2024.

Now, everybody else in the other 44 states, you guys are going to have a substantial impact as well, and it’s important for you to go out and vote. But those are the six states that are going to decide Congress in November and the presidential election in 2024 at the upper — at the most important level. Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Nevada — we love all of you, but we particularly love you if you live in those six states ’cause you are gonna be deciding a lot.

BUCK: Clay is picking favorites right now.

CLAY: I’m picking favorites right now. I don’t like to pick my favorites. But if you live in those six states, you matter a little bit more. And, by the way, we’re number one in Phoenix, we’re number one in Milwaukee, and we’re number one in Las Vegas. Those are three big markets that are gonna have a massive impact. Georgia, huge audience. Michigan and Pennsylvania as well. But those three big markets, you guys listening right now, get ready to matter on a different level. We gotta get people out to the polls.

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Psaki Tries to Blame Putin for Inflation

11 Apr 2022

BUCK: (impression) Let’s say, like, maybe inflation, like, is not that bad ’cause, like, maybe you should inflate things, like, we need a raft in the pool, Clay, what do you do? You inflate it.

Jen Psaki is here telling us that inflation’s like not gonna be good tomorrow, guys, but it’s Putin’s fault.

PSAKI: So, because of the actions we’ve taken to address Putin — the Putin price hike we are in a better place than we were last month. But we expect March CPA — CPI — headline information to be extraordinarily elevated due to Putin’s price hike.

BUCK: Putin’s price hike, Clay!

CLAY: This is such a lie. I mean, first of all, inflation was 7.9% essentially before anything happened in Ukraine, right?

I mean, the numbers were baked in, only a few days in the last CPI number had anything at all to do with Ukraine and Russia. They tried to argue the 7.9% was somehow created and connected to Putin.

This is even more duplicitous of an answer here because there’s going to be no basis in fact for why we are at another 40-year high, that it’s because of Putin. It’s because of United States issues.

And, by the way, global issues, but certainly our inflation issues are not suddenly arising because of what happened in Ukraine and Russia. Could it be a bit worse because of that? Yes, but not a bit worse to take us to a 40-year high, right?

BUCK: I think you’re forgetting now, what do you do when you have a flat tire? You inflate it. Psaki wants to have a word with you.

CLAY: Oh, my God. She’s going to MSNBC and gonna get paid tens of millions of dollars, probably, based on performances like that.

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NYT Covid Whisperer Tells Libs to Live in Reality

11 Apr 2022

BUCK: Here’s the New York Times David Leonhardt, who started to be one of these — he’s kind of a lib covid whisperer in the sense that he’s like, “Hey, guys, maybe you should start to live in reality a little bit instead of this other Fauci crazy place?”

Here’s what he said.

LEONHARDT: There are all kinds of things that liberal America is doing at a very good instinct that make very little difference. And that the vaccines really work and save lives and by not taking them conservatives are damaging themselves and damaging the country. And the word you use “balance” I think is perfect. I think conservatives haven’t taken covid nearly seriously enough. And I think liberals, if we’re being honest about this, have some performative aspects of the covid response.

Wearing masks because it feels like a badge of “I’m a progressive,” even though a lot of those masks, particularly with Omicron which was so contagious, are doing very little to protect people. I’m not anti-mask. Wear one if you go into a nursing home, if you go into a hospital. Wear a KN95 or an N95. But don’t think that these mask mandates where you wear some cloth mask into a restaurant and then you take it off so you can eat is doing anything.

BUCK: So can I just say that — I mean, obviously some of our audience is sitting here saying, actually, there’s a lot that I would critici. And I would too. But this is the only — he’s a New York Times — he’s from the high temple of leftism, folks, and he’s saying cloth masks are stupid and do he says very little. It’s actually nothing. The answer is actually zero. It’s not 20% or 10%. It’s zero reduction, that they can actually show statistically. But that’s about as strong as you’re gonna get from the New York Times to admit, yeah, it was silly.

CLAY: And, by the way, I would say that we have been, first of all, pointing out all of the absurdities of left-wing but also recognizing — I want to continue to emphasize this, Buck, you and I told our dads and our moms and our elderly relatives that they should get the covid shot, right? Because if you’re over the age of 70, if you’re a senior citizen, the data reflects that you are under particular danger from covid. My kids are not going to get the covid shot. Right? They’re just not.

BUCK: We are in the balance that they were talking about is the point. We are —

CLAY: Exactly right. That’s exactly right. And I think our audience recognizes that. And we treat them intelligently enough to say, hey, if you’re a healthy 22-year-old listening to us right now, or you’ve got a 6-year-old, you don’t treat that 6-year-old the same way that you would grandpa, who’s 79 years old or 86 or whatever your mom and dad and grandma and grandpa might be.

Everybody has different health care needs. And what we totally mussed throughout this entire process is that fact. And it’s the essence of the way that we treat medicine for virtually everything else, right? Six-year-olds don’t take blood pressure medication ’cause they don’t need it. But your 85-year-old may well need it. Everybody’s biochemistry and body is different, and that’s why I think you have to look at the data and make rational decisions based on your own health choices. And we totally missed that for the past two years.

BUCK: And I will say my biggest — ’cause I think it’s so important that we’re always honest every. My biggest fail during covid in terms of believing something that was turned out to not be true was in March, April a year ago when they were saying the vaccine is 97% effective.

I largely believed that against that strain it would be 97% effective and durable. Now, the entire medical establishment seemed to go along with that, whatever. That turned out not to be true, as we well know, and it wasn’t preventative against infection. It lowered your risk of severe disease.

But I did — I thought that it was gonna be, you know, super protective in the initial phases, then we started to have Alex on June and July together on this show and said, hold on a second. What’s really going on here? I changed. I won’t speak for you. I changed the data in terms of how protective it is to me.

But I have psycholibs coming after me online, you know, why do you tell everybody not to get the vaccine? I’m like — they have no idea what they’re talking about. They don’t know what I think, what I say, they obviously don’t listen to this show. My dad was freezing his butt off in the cold, in the middle of Staten Island to be online to get the shot in March of 2020. And I remember I called him, I looked him my show at the time, and I said, “I think you’re doing the right thing, I think this is worth it for you to get.” Not anti-vaccine.

CLAY: I said the same thing. I said the same thing to my parents, Buck. In fact, when Florida was distributing the first days of the vaccine, remember when Ron DeSantis was getting criticized because he said, no, no, we’re distributing the vaccine to the elderly first. And you had to be over 65 or whatever it was —

BUCK: Hundred percent correct.

CLAY: A hundred percent right.

BUCK: This is really important, folks. There was a big fight — and I knew about this — in the White House in the very end of the Trump presidency. There was a fight going on because Fauci and the bureaucrats wanted to go to front-line health care workers first actually.

And what we found out is it’s not effective against transmission preventing. Front line health care workers are overwhelmingly not in their late sixties, seventies, and eighties; so they did the wrong thing even with who should get the vaccine first. And, by the way, front line health care workers have almost all been exposed to covid already.

CLAY: That’s a hundred percent right.

So what I said was they were giving it out to anybody. It turned into kind of an issue where people were traveling to Florida who were over 65 to get this thing, we’ve got a place in Florida; and so I was like, well, I don’t know how long it’s gonna take you to get the shot in Tennessee, ended up not taking very long but I was like if you guys want to use our place down in Florida, stay there for a couple of months, you can go over to Publix and they’re giving the shot out to anybody over the age of  65 and that was a hundred percent the right thing to do and, by the way, it’s the right thing to do if you’re over 65 and certainly you have health related concerns, you should be concerned about covid. Anybody under 65, the data doesn’t reflect that that’s very true.

BUCK: Yup. Just looking at the reality, folks.

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