BUCK: I want you to keep in mind that Florida, Clay — am I right about this? — still lowest caseload or maybe within the top two or three states, but probably lowest.
CLAY: I think Hawaii might now be lower, but the lowest continental United States entire country.
BUCK: Lowest case for covid in the country is Florida, and here’s the kind of stuff you hear on late-night TV.
KIMMEL: Florida yesterday reported their first case of Omicron, and Omicron reported its first case of Florida.
AUDIENCE: (laughter and applause)
KIMMEL: So rest assured, Governor Omicron DeSantis will do everything he can to make sure as many Floridians get infected as possible.
AUDIENCE: (wild cheers, laughter and applause)
BUCK: I don’t mean to be mean, but are his audience…? Are they all morons?
CLAY: Yes.
CLAY: I think it is a big lesson for everybody out there, and I want to keep hammering this home ’cause one thing that I have learned, conservatives are far more aware of what liberals say and do than liberals are of what conservatives say and do. That’s because the country is so sated by liberal political thought — sports, culture, politics, everywhere — you can’t escape it if you’re a conservative.
But there are lots of liberal silos out there, Buck, where people think, “Oh, Florida, it’s the worst state out there for covid.” They believe things that are fundamentally untrue. We’ve talked about this, Buck. The fact that people believe who are liberal, if you get covid, it’s like a 50% chance that you’re gonna get hospitalized when the reality is — I’m one, you’re one — most people who get covid get over it. Many people get over it and they never even knew they had it. It’s less significant than a cold. They somehow — even two years in — don’t understand basic facts and reality.
Clay & Buck take a look at what comes next in Minnesota.
Karoline, as always, comes loaded with facts for the twisted media, including that Tom Homan…
Law and order is essential. But it's not pretty.
Clay and Buck opened up the phones to callers, many of which have law enforcement…
The FCC chair reveals his takes on the changing media landscape.