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Will Cain's FULL Interview with President Donald Trump from Iowa

Will Cain Country June 5, 2026 54m 10,833 words
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About this transcript: This is a full AI-generated transcript of Will Cain's FULL Interview with President Donald Trump from Iowa from Will Cain Country, published June 5, 2026. The transcript contains 10,833 words with timestamps and was generated using Whisper AI.

"Welcome in to Will Kane country. This is not a test. This is not a drill. This is two days Dan and Tinfoil Pat on the mic to start the show for you because our wonderful host Will is still in transit coming back from Iowa. Tinfoil Pat, I don't know if we've got permission to do this, but we are..."

[0:11] Welcome in to Will Kane country. This is not a test. This is not a drill. This is two days Dan and Tinfoil Pat on the mic to start the show for you because our wonderful host Will is still in transit coming back from Iowa. Tinfoil Pat, I don't know if we've got permission to do this, but we are hosting the show here. And how do you feel about it? [0:36] You're right. We do not have permission to do this. This is completely spontaneous. [0:42] Unsupervised. [0:43] Yes. And so, you know, we want you guys to get crazy in the comments section, but we do have a treat for you. We got a very special interview that Will, this is the reason why Will's not even here right now. He got stuck. It's really cold out there, sweeping the country, and he got stuck in the Midwest somewhere. We don't even know where he is. [1:02] I feel bad for him. He's stuck somewhere in the country. His flights were delayed, delayed, delayed. I feel really bad. The guy has to travel. The guy does a lot. So, you know. [1:11] Well, last night, he said around 8 o'clock, he's like, I think I'll be home tonight. I'm very, very confident I'll be home tonight. I'll be able to do both shows. And then I got a text this morning. Well, throughout the night, throughout the evening, he's like, flight got pushed back. [1:27] Ugh. And then this morning, I wake up, 4.45. He's like, I don't even know if I'll make it for the TV show. [1:36] Well, it's brutal. I don't know if our bosses know this is happening. So we could get, you know, shut down. Maybe the show gets shut off. We'll see. [1:44] We'll do our best to fill in for Will here. But we do have the interview. Before we get to the interview, do you think Will makes it back in time for the end of this interview when we play it to be here for the audience to talk after the interview? [2:02] He was 100% confident last night. After everything that's transpired, I give it 20%. [2:10] We have a little flight tracker on the screen, if you could see, if you're watching on YouTube or on Facebook or foxnews.com. [2:18] Will came coming into Dallas. So hopefully he'll get here in time. [2:22] But I think without some further ado, we should just play. Yesterday, Will spoke with President Donald Trump in Iowa, live on The Will Cain Show. And we're going to play that for you here. [2:34] You get in those comments section. [2:35] Yep. Get in the comments section. [2:39] Welcome back to The Will Cain Show, live from Iowa. And now we're here. We're here with President Donald J. Trump. Mr. President, great to see you. [2:45] Thank you. Thank you very much, Will. [2:46] Thank you for doing this. [2:48] Well, you know, you do have great ratings. [2:49] Well, thank you. [2:50] We check the ratings. But even if you had lousy ratings, I would do your show. You are terrific. [2:54] You've been a terrific guy. [2:56] I anticipate they should do very well today with this type of guest today here on The Will Cain Show. [3:00] Welcome back to the campaign trail. Welcome back to Iowa. How does it feel? [3:03] Well, I love Iowa. We've won it three times conclusively. There wasn't like any late night voting or anything. [3:09] We just won it right at the beginning. The doors closed and they said Trump won. [3:14] And I love the people, you know. I just get along with the people. [3:17] I was watching the other room. You look back in your element. You're back with the people. What do you like better? [3:21] Do you like this standing on the stage at a rally? Or do you like making a deal? [3:24] Maybe for Greenland. [3:25] I think I like maybe the rallies better. Deals are fun. But we're making a lot of good deals. [3:30] We've made record-setting deals. We have $18 trillion coming into the country. [3:34] That's why they're building auto plants, AI. They're building everything with thousands of businesses [3:39] that are being built all over the country. And you're going to have a beautiful, very positive explosion [3:44] sometime during the year when these things start opening up. [3:47] But there's never been any country has... No country has done what we've done. [3:52] That explosion, that anticipated economic explosion, that's going to be important because you also [3:57] need to do something that someone has done very rarely. You acknowledged this a couple of days ago [4:02] with Maria Bartiromo. And that is for the president in power to win the midterms. [4:06] I think it's been only twice since 1938 that the sitting president, the president in power, [4:12] has won the midterms. Are you concerned? [4:15] Well, nobody can explain why. You know, even when... [4:18] We've had an amazing year. There's been a record-setting year in every way. [4:21] And nobody can explain. Even presidents, whether it's Republican or Democrat, [4:26] when they win, it doesn't make any difference. They seem to lose the midterms. [4:30] So that's the only thing I worry about. I said, why? There's some psychological factor out there. [4:35] What do you think that is? [4:35] But I think it's like two in more than 50 years. [4:38] Well, I don't know. Maybe they want to put up a guard fence. Maybe... You just don't know. [4:43] It doesn't make sense. Even if a president did well, they seem to lose the midterms. [4:48] But hopefully we're going to change that around. We're doing great. We have the best polling numbers [4:52] we've ever had. We have the best numbers in the country, lowest crime numbers in the history of our [4:56] country. You know, Minnesota's in the news a lot. But they don't... What they don't say is that [5:02] Minnesota has low numbers because of the fact that we took thousands of hardened criminals out of [5:07] Minnesota. So they had good crime numbers, believe it or not. And that's all working out. You know, [5:13] we have Tom Holman there now. We put him in there. He's great. And they met with the governor, [5:17] the mayor, everybody else. And we're going to de-escalate a little bit. But I will tell you, [5:21] you look at the numbers, they're doing better than they've done in many years, because we took [5:27] thousands of criminals out of Minnesota. You look at Washington, D.C. It was a very dangerous place [5:34] a year and a half ago. Now it's as safe as you can get. You can walk your family down the middle [5:39] of the street. Nothing's going to happen. You know, it's... We got rid of over 2,000 hardened [5:43] criminals. Many of them let in through the open border policy of sleepy Joe Biden. It was not a good... [5:50] That was not a good policy, Will. [5:52] I want to come back to Minnesota in just one moment. But let's go to those guardrails. [5:55] I would imagine you do not feel like you need guardrails in this moment. You talk about the [5:59] investment in this country. [6:00] No, I don't need guardrails. [6:01] I don't want guardrails. Guardrails would hurt us, because, you know, we're free enterprise [6:04] people. The people in this room, the people of Iowa, are free enterprise. That's why we [6:08] want it so big three times in a row. [6:10] I would have to imagine that guardrails would be an understatement of what would happen [6:14] should you lose the House or the Senate. There has been talk of impeachment. You have been [6:18] through this before. You have been through it multiple times. [6:20] I'm a professional. [6:21] What will happen? What will happen if Democrats take the House or the Senate? [6:24] They will probably try and impeach me. They will say, he went to Iowa and he spoke unfairly [6:28] to people and he's not supposed to do that. Let's impeach him, OK? [6:33] And the people in Iowa will say, how did he get impeached? He just did an interview with [6:37] Will, who has very good ratings, OK? [6:40] But they just did an interview with Will. Now, they will find something. There will be something. [6:44] I made the wrong turn at an exit, and let's impeach him. They did that before. They impeached [6:49] me on a perfect phone call, turned out. They impeached me twice. And, by the way, I won [6:53] the impeachments very easily and quickly. But they impeached. They're very nasty people. [7:00] You know, they have bad policy, really bad. But they do two things. They stick together. [7:04] Not stupid. Some are, because, you know, that's true with everything, right? But they stick [7:10] together. But they have really bad policy, men and women's sports, transgender for everybody. [7:17] So many things are so bad. They're horrible to the farmers. And, by the way, I just gave [7:21] the farmers $12 billion because they were treated unfairly. We're taking in a fortune with tariffs. [7:27] And I wrote them a little check about two weeks ago for $12 billion. Anybody in this room get [7:33] any of it yet? [7:34] Yes. [7:35] Yes. [7:36] A lot of people. [7:37] It's a lot of money. And, you know what? You deserved it. But we're taking in so much [7:41] money from the tariffs that we can do that. [7:42] I want to talk about the point of view from some of these farmers, some of these [7:46] people in this room a little bit later. But now I want to take you up on your invitation [7:49] to talk about Minnesota. Listen, the entire country is talking about what happened this past [7:54] weekend in Minnesota. [7:55] Yes. [7:56] I want to talk about it. Everyone watching has seen the video. Everyone has an opinion. [8:00] I'm curious what you thought when you first saw that video. [8:02] Well, I think the whole thing is terrible. I don't like the fact that he was carrying [8:06] a gun that was fully loaded, and he had two magazines with him. And it's pretty unusual. [8:12] But nobody knows when they saw the gun, how they saw the gun, everything else. The bottom [8:16] line, it was terrible. Both of them were terrible. The other was terrible, too. And I'm not sure [8:22] about his parents, but I know her parents were big Trump fans. Makes me feel bad [8:26] anyway. But, I mean, I guess you could say even worse, they were tremendous Trump people, [8:32] Trump fans. And, you know, the daughter was, she was, I don't know if you could say radicalized, [8:38] maybe radicalized, maybe not. I don't know. But I hate to see it. I hate to see that. [8:42] You bring up the term radicalized. What do you think is happening? [8:46] You see these people in these videos. They feel very emboldened to step in and interfere [8:52] with law enforcement. I'm not talking about protests holding signs. I'm talking about [8:55] people physically interfering with immigration enforcement. Why? Why do they feel so emboldened? [9:00] You have to go throughout the whole country. You know, we have done so much work throughout [9:03] the whole country. We don't have any problem. The only one we have is Minnesota. [9:06] We're in a lot of different places. New Orleans, where the governor of Louisiana called to have [9:12] a big problem in New Orleans. And we went there. We have cut the crime by 67 percent in four weeks. [9:18] It will be down to practically nothing soon. Washington, D.C., we don't have problems. [9:23] Like, you know, we have cut it down from a lot. It was very bad. It was terrible. People go to [9:28] Washington to look at the Lincoln Monument, and they end up getting whacked or whatever, killed, [9:34] in some cases. Numerous killings. We... We... That's a safe... That's a beautiful, safe place now. [9:40] Memphis, Tennessee, one of the worst in the whole country. And now it's got very little crime. [9:44] But it's gone very differently in Minneapolis. [9:46] Well, it has. It's the only place. [9:47] And now the message is out that Tom Homan is in. [9:50] Yeah. [9:51] Uh, Commander Bovino is supposedly leaving Minneapolis, along with some CBP agency. [9:56] Is this a pullback? [9:57] I don't think it's a pullback. It's a little bit of a change. Everybody in this room that has a [10:01] business. You know, you make little changes. You know, Bovino is very good, but he's a [10:06] pretty out-there kind of a guy. And in some cases, that's good. Maybe it wasn't good here. [10:10] But you have to understand, when I watch some of the people that I've been watching over the last [10:14] few weeks, these are paid insurrectionists. These are paid agitators. These people aren't [10:19] normal, like, OG, that, you know, they're incensed about anything. [10:23] How do you get incensed when you go into a state and you're taking criminals out? You're taking [10:27] monsters out, murderers. You know, we had 11,888 murderers led into our country [10:35] by other countries, by Biden with his open border stupid policy. It's the dumbest thing I've ever [10:41] heard. You talk about bad policy. Open borders where people were coming. So the whole world, the [10:46] Congo, Venezuela, all over the world, they're letting people in from their prisons and they're [10:51] feeding them into the United States. And they're murderers and they're drug dealers and everything [10:56] else you can think of, every bad name you can think of. And they let them in by the millions. [11:01] We closed the border. You know, we have nobody coming into our country anymore, literally. [11:04] It just shows how hard it is to clean up, even after you close it. [11:08] It shows the price that we paid under Joe Biden. [11:10] It's the hardest thing when you think of it. You know, inflation we've solved. It's done. [11:14] We have it good where prices are coming way down. They were just saying in Iowa, the fuel is 195. [11:21] Did you hear that? Somebody said 185, but it was 350, 450, just a year ago, year and a half ago. [11:28] You look at eggs, you look at groceries. It's all down. Everything's come down. Do you notice [11:31] they don't mention affordability anymore? That's like an old fashioned word. They brought up [11:36] affordability, but they were the ones that caused it. I didn't cause it. I came in. [11:40] Prices were way too high. We had the highest inflation in the history of our country. 48 years, [11:45] they say, I say the history. But we had the highest, let's say in 48 years, the highest inflation. [11:51] Prices were way high. Now I've got the prices down and they're going down still further. [11:55] But think of it. We brought fuel from $4, 350, 375 down to $1.99, $1.80. I was just told in Iowa, $1.85. [12:06] Yeah. No doubt. No doubt. But that leaves that problem, like you said, the hardest one to solve. [12:11] People say they want our immigration laws enforced. The hardest one to solve is to. [12:14] You know, I remember a conversation that you and I had a year and a half ago with your secretary of [12:18] war, our friend, Rachel Campos Duffy. And you said to me, you looked at me and said, [12:22] it's going to be difficult when the New York Times runs a picture of a [12:25] little kid being taken away from their mother. It's going to be difficult. And by the way, [12:29] that basically happened to you a week ago. It was propaganda and it was false about a five-year-old. [12:33] By the way, it was a totally false story about the five-year-old. Totally fake story. [12:35] But you're now dealing with the difficulty of the propaganda in the face of enforcing illegal immigration. [12:40] And I knew that. I mean, it's always tough. [12:42] Are you still committed? [12:43] We take out 25 murderers. We take out drug dealers. We take out a whole group of people [12:50] by the thousands. And if we get one person a little bit wrong, headlines. But they don't talk [12:56] about all the tremendous... You know, the reason that we have Minnesota crime down, I talk about that [13:01] because it's only down for one reason. We took out so many criminals. But other states are way down. [13:08] So the report came out, though. Think of it. In the history of this country, [13:11] we have the lowest number of murders. We have the lowest crime, the best crime numbers. [13:15] That's despite the fact that millions, I say 25 million people, [13:20] millions of people were let in through the border by Biden. And many of those people [13:25] were not people you want to have in the country. [13:27] So what's going to change? You put in Tom Homan. Have you spoken today to Tom Homan? [13:31] Well, yes, I have. Tom is fantastic. Tom is a tough guy. But I have watched [13:36] over the years. And he's gotten along with governors. And he gets along with mayors. [13:41] Some people don't. Some people just want to do their job and leave me alone. [13:44] And that's sort of OK, too. That's generally been OK. Most of them are happy. [13:48] Memphis, Tennessee, very tough, very straightforward. We're taking the criminal out. We're getting them [13:53] out, either putting them in jail, because some are so bad that you don't want to send them to [13:57] another to where they came from, because you're afraid they're going to come back. They're murderers. [14:02] So some are very down and straight. And others, Tom, I've noticed, as tough as he is, [14:08] he gets along very good with governors and mayors. Now, I spoke to the mayor and to the governor yesterday. [14:13] I know. And they want to see it cleared up. [14:15] I'm so fascinated by your conversation with Governor Tim Walts. This man has suggested that [14:20] this is a modern-day Gettysburg. He has likened his situation to Anne Frank in the Holocaust. [14:26] He has said that ICE is your Gestapo army. And then you guys speak on the phone. [14:30] I'm fascinated by that conversation. [14:31] It couldn't have been a nicer conversation. And, in fact, I said to my people, I said, [14:36] it's hard to believe that's the same guy I watch on television or I watch in a debate [14:40] not doing so well or... Because we had a very reasonable conversation, very good conversation. [14:46] If you believe the conversation, he'd like to get this thing over with. But think of it. [14:51] In the whole country, we've done this so much, we have to climb down to a level that nobody ever... [14:55] You know, I campaigned a little bit on crime, a lot on the border. [14:59] The problem is, I gave you the best border in the history of our country. Nobody wants to talk [15:02] about it anymore. You know, I did it a long time ago. I was able to do it. [15:06] Within three months of taking office, I had that border locked and closed. And, [15:11] you know, nobody even tries to come up anymore. It's easy now. Nobody even tries to come up, [15:15] before they would come up by the millions. But nobody wants to talk about that. They only want to [15:20] talk about whatever the last thing is. But we're taking out thousands and thousands of criminals. [15:26] And the worst thing that Biden did to this country, because, again, inflation I can solve, [15:31] all the stuff I... The hardest thing to solve is when you have people brought into the country [15:36] and you have to take those people. We have a very unfriendly court system, frankly, [15:40] especially at the lower levels. Take those people and you have to say, [15:44] I'm sorry, but you're going out. And, in many cases, they're murderers. And, you know, they shoot [15:48] you. They kill you. You have seen that, where they kill you. You're after a murder. Sir, [15:52] you're going to have to come with me. And they end up shooting you. [15:55] It's a very tough job that they have. [15:57] JEFFREY BROWN, Jr.: I know you addressed this this morning. You talked about the incredible success. [16:00] And it is an incredible success at the southern border. But you were asked, [16:03] with the shift in Minneapolis and Tom Homan going to Minnesota, [16:07] do you still have confidence in DHS Secretary Kristi Noem? You brought up the success at the border. [16:12] JEFFREY BROWN, Jr.: Look, she was there with the border. Who closed up the border? She did, [16:16] with Tom Homan, with the whole group. I mean, they closed up the border. [16:20] The border is a tremendous success, one of the most secure borders in the entire world. [16:25] We were a laughingstock one-and-a-half years ago for the whole world. The whole world laughed at us. [16:30] I had friends that said, is that real? You know, they would look at a picture. You have been down to [16:33] the border. They would look at a picture of the border with hundreds of thousands of people pouring in [16:39] like it was water. And they said, is that really taking it? They can't believe it. They think it's [16:44] one of these crazy movies that they make. The border was horrible. It was horrible. [16:49] You know, I did the border twice. First time I won, 2016, I won on the border. But that border was [16:55] nothing. And I fixed it immediately. It was great. We had great years. And we had a great economy. [17:00] We had the best economy in history in 2016, my first term. And we rebuilt the military. And we [17:06] get the largest regulation cuts. We had the best job number. We had a great first term. This term [17:11] seems to be blowing it away. I mean, the only thing we have is a Minnesota situation. And that is, [17:17] I believe, easily resolved. Okay. You're about to take the stage here in Iowa. I imagine you're [17:23] going to talk about the economy. I'm curious what your plan is if the Supreme Court rules negatively [17:29] on your tariffs. You talk about the tariffs a lot. Is there a plan B? Yeah, the tariffs have been [17:33] indispensable towards success. We have taken in $600 billion in tariffs. I gave the farmers $12 [17:41] billion last week. I took them out of tariff money. It's kept the unfair competition out of our [17:49] country. Now, they can build their auto plant here, but they can't build a plant in some place with, [17:54] you know, labor costs for a penny and then sell it into this country and then charge people a lot of [17:58] money for a car. So the only way they can do that, they have to build the plants here. So the big auto [18:03] companies from Germany, from Mexico, from Canada, Mexico and Canada are literally their plants are [18:09] closing down. They're moving into this country. So we have more activity than we've ever had. [18:15] We have thousands of businesses all over the country being built. We have hundreds of big, [18:20] major factors between AI, autos and many other things being built. We've never had anything like this. [18:25] And you use them as a tool for world peace. [18:27] For world peace. Yeah. We have to use it for world peace. [18:29] But what happens if the Supreme Court strikes down the tariffs? [18:32] We will find something, some other way of doing a similar thing. [18:35] You know, but it will be more inconvenient. It won't be as easy. [18:38] I was just speaking to some of the diners here today. [18:40] Right. [18:40] David Oldman, he's lived in Iowa for a long time. He's in agriculture. [18:44] He does, he does express concern about the tariffs and the effect it's had on farmers in Iowa. [18:49] Well, it's going to be very, just don't forget, they just kicked in. [18:53] And it's going to, and we have taken in hundreds of billions of dollars. [18:58] And we have kept a lot of people out that want to come in and rip off our, for years, [19:02] it was the reverse. China, which are just tariffs, other countries, which are just tariffs. [19:07] I have totally reversed it. Japan gave us $550 billion. [19:12] South Korea is supposed to give us $350 billion. [19:15] But what happens is they're coming in, they're building plants, they don't have to pay tariffs. [19:21] If they don't do that, so what's happening is we're getting a tremendous amount of business [19:25] coming to this country, and they're coming in fast and sharp. [19:28] I think the farmers are going to be the biggest beneficiary, because when you used to have people [19:33] coming in and dumping their crops into the United States, and you guys were hurt, [19:37] they're not allowed to do that, because we're tariffing those crops. [19:39] Just a couple more questions. [19:41] I think the farmers, in a way, and it's going to take a little while to kick in, [19:45] and the farmers stuck with me the first time, and I was right, with China, when China did a little [19:49] bit of a number. We gave you $28 billion then, because it was a help, because they were taken [19:55] advantage of for years. We gave them $28 billion. Now we gave them $12 billion, sort of a minimal [20:01] payment, $12 billion for the farmers. Nobody else would be able to do that. Nobody else would [20:06] even think of doing that. But the tariffs are going to be phenomenal for the farmers, [20:10] but they just kicked in. [20:11] I just see some nods here as you're talking. [20:13] A lot of nodding. Thank you. [20:14] A couple of quick more questions, Mr. President, one serious one. [20:20] This whole Minnesota thing, it started because of a focus on fraud. [20:25] It started because of illegal immigration and welfare fraud. [20:29] The question is, will there be accountability in Minnesota and beyond? [20:33] There's got to be. [20:33] Other states, California. [20:34] Minnesota is one state. If you look at California, [20:38] so in Minnesota, they think it's $19 billion. If they think it's $19 billion, [20:43] triple it or quadruple it. And if we catch a lot of this fraud, and I felt it for a long time, [20:48] but now we know what's happening. And the answer is, yeah, there will be accountability. [20:53] It's one of the little problems. You know, I happen to think, and I've said it from the beginning, [20:57] that a lot of what's going on with respect to Minneapolis, you know, with the what's happening [21:03] with all the hoopla is so people don't talk about the fraud. [21:06] You think it's a distraction? [21:07] I've said it from day one. It's a distraction, because what you don't see is that we have [21:12] hundreds of accountants from Todd and from all of the different people. We have hundreds of [21:19] accountants going over everything that's happening. And we're finding fraud on top of fraud on top of [21:24] fraud. And I think that they don't want that to happen. You're talking about $19 billion. [21:30] $19 billion. Probably that's a minimal number. Now, you take that and you go to California. [21:36] You think California is better? I would say California is worse. It's totally out of control. [21:40] They don't know what they're doing out there. The governor is, I actually thought he was a pretty [21:44] nice guy, but he has no clue what he's doing. Look at a railroad. He builds a railroad. It's like [21:50] 20 times more expensive than it was supposed to be. And what they did to get down to cost, [21:56] and made it shorter, so it doesn't go to San Francisco. It doesn't go... [21:58] You saw what he said, right? He's claiming victory in Minnesota, by the way. [22:01] He has posted that you have retreated in Minnesota, Governor Gavin Newsom, [22:05] and he is encouraging people to keep the pressure up. [22:08] See, I haven't heard that at all, because it's just the opposite. [22:11] I was called by the governor yesterday. I was called by the mayor yesterday. [22:14] How do we do something? Please, how do we do something? I think it's bad for them. [22:17] I don't think it's bad for us. I think it's bad for them. [22:19] Yeah, you'll have to see what Governor Newsom posted. [22:21] But it's not a question of retreat. We want safe cities, whether it's... [22:25] If we... You know, we took a lot of the bad... the crime out of there. [22:29] We want safe cities and states. We want a safe country. [22:33] And, again, we just got a report done by Democrats that the country is the safest [22:39] ever recorded right now. Right. Along with a secure border. [22:43] I'm just looking around. You know, who's here today? There's a lot of people. [22:46] But one guy who is not here is your secretary of state, and I'm afraid he made a very big mistake. [22:51] He gave an interview where he said that one of his tricks with you [22:54] is on Air Force One, Marco Rubio goes into a room and covers himself up with blankets [22:59] so that you won't see him sleeping, that you'll think it's a staffer. [23:02] And so I think there's only one of two ways you go with this. [23:05] You give him yet another job, or you pull the blankets back. [23:09] That's what he wants. Let me tell you, he's doing a fantastic job. [23:13] He's a tough cookie. I can tell you that. He's a tough cookie. [23:16] He's going to go down as the best secretary of state we've ever had. You see what we're doing. [23:21] Just today, we solved a tremendous problem in conjunction with Syria. Saved many lives. [23:28] I mean, we're saving a lot of lives all over the world. Ended eight wars. I'm very proud of that, [23:33] because it's not tough for me. We're trying to end one more, by the way, Russia, Ukraine. [23:38] And I think we're going to get that done, too. But we ended eight wars and saved tens of millions of [23:42] lives. And I'm happy about that. You should be proud. Thank you. I know you're a big sports fan, [23:46] so we'll end here. We now have the Super Bowl set. New England Patriots, Seattle Seahawks. Now, [23:51] usually when someone asks you these questions, you answer with, which of these two teams have a [23:55] greater affiliation and fandom of President Donald Trump? That's true. [23:59] So I'm curious. Have you already done the analysis? And who's going to win the Super Bowl? [24:03] Yeah, Bob Craft is in front of mine. And I've watched that team. You know, you got to hand it to him. [24:07] He had the great team, and now he's got the great team again. [24:10] And they made a fantastic draft pick. The quarterback is great. [24:14] But it's going to be a very... I think it's going to be a tremendous game. [24:17] I hope it's going to be a tremendous game. [24:18] Yeah. Mr. President, I know you got to take the stage. [24:21] I really appreciate all the time you've given us and joining us live. [24:24] We called a lot of audibles right here at the last moment. We really appreciate you joining us. [24:27] Well, you've done a tremendous job, and you've really been very fair to me. [24:30] I don't even say nice. I just want to be fair. And you've been fair. And you've also been nice. [24:34] And so it was an honor to do it. When I heard it was you, I said, let's do it. [24:37] All right. My goal is to tell the truth, Mr. President. [24:39] Thank you very much. Thank you so much. Thank you, Will. Very much. Thank you. [24:42] Thank you to the presidents of the United States. [24:46] A lot of folks here very pleased with the president of the United States, [24:48] as you can hear right there. We're going to take a quick break. [24:50] We'll be right back with more from the Will Kane Show live from Iowa. [24:53] Well, that was pretty great there, Patrick. A great interview. [24:57] I agree. He got to the truth. [24:59] He got to the truth. As the viewers can see on Will Kane Country, we are back [25:04] in the studios in New York and Jacksonville. And we can have a live look in on the studio in Dallas, [25:11] which as you can see right now, there is no Will Kane just yet. We have word that he might be back. [25:17] Oh, who is this? Who is this? Incredible. What is up? [25:22] Who is this? Wow. Look at this. [25:26] This has to have been riveting. Will Kane. [25:31] Wow. What were you boys talking about? [25:33] Who was leading the discussion? They were about to take us off air, buddy. [25:37] Oh my God. I can't believe. Did you run any of that by bosses? No. [25:45] At all? We just did it. We just did it. If Will's not there, you didn't. [25:50] I know you didn't, because they would have said no for sure. They would have said no. [25:56] There is no way. They'd be like, yeah, you guys should host it. Yeah, just do it. [26:01] It'll be fun. Nothing could go wrong. I said, we're calling the interview, [26:04] and they said, okay, that's fine. They didn't know that somebody had to intro it. [26:11] Nothing could go wrong. I swear. We held down the fort for you. Welcome back. [26:16] Patrick is going to host this. First of all, you got Dan, Quasi-Lib, and Patrick, [26:22] totally irresponsible conspiratorial theorists. It's the nightmare for Fox. [26:27] It's like getting Tarlov and a long-fired employee and giving them the microphone. [26:32] I almost brought the Brooklyn brunch crew on as guests, but they couldn't make it. [26:36] I bet you did. I bet they had some things to say, too, about my interview with President Trump. [26:41] I saw. I saw. Here, let me guess. Let me guess what they said. The Brooklyn brunch crew said that, [26:49] well, here's the negative feedback that I saw, okay? One of them I can't repeat on air, [26:55] because it had to do with a sexual act, and suggested that I was there to please President [27:02] Trump. Wow. And they were going to say that. I got that one from the brunch crew. [27:07] Was it about the knee pads? Like something about the knee pads? [27:10] Energy drink. In that vein. Yeah, a knee pad in that vein. Thank you. Thank you, Ed. [27:18] It's time for an energy drink. A little Black Rifle coffee. There you go. [27:22] Oh, you weren't here yesterday. We're a Celsius show now. Just FYI. [27:28] Yeah. Celsius sponsorship. It's like liquid meth, [27:32] I heard. Do we have a sponsorship? No, we're trying to. So what was the other thing you heard [27:39] about the Trump interview? That he said that the people involved in Minnesota were paid agitators, [27:46] and that I didn't challenge him on that. Well, it's true that I did not challenge him on that [27:50] statement, because I agree. I think that this is one of those things. First of all, [27:57] President Trump does this thing. He says something, and everybody freaks out. And you know what they [28:03] seem to forget in the entire calculation? That he is President of the United States. [28:07] Yeah. And that he has access to information, [28:11] like, say, the FBI, or foreign intelligence, on any host of issues. You know, your random CNN [28:20] commentator seems to think he has access to the same amount of information as the President of the [28:25] United States. So he says something, and they're like, oh my God, that's insane. How could he say [28:29] that? And then a little time passes, and you realize, oh, he actually knew what he was talking [28:34] about. He wasn't just spitballing. He wasn't just being hyperbolic. And the facts end up backing him up, [28:41] because he has said something that he learns much earlier than the rest of the public. [28:46] The FBI is currently investigating many of the groups involved in the protests in Minneapolis. [28:53] There are now images coming out of signs, pre-printed signs being unloaded from a U-Haul truck, [29:00] you know, honoring Alex Preddy. Where are those coming from? Who's paying for those signs? Who's [29:07] organizing the signal chat groups? Who's organizing the ice watch that tells everyone where to go? [29:13] Is it a totally community-driven, organic, passionate protest? Or is there something [29:19] more behind this that we've seen in almost every other left-wing protest slash riot? And that almost [29:26] always goes back, at some level, to funding from George Soros. Almost always. Not exclusively, [29:33] maybe not even in every occasion primarily, but always present. And so when the president says [29:38] they're paid agitators, and you scream, where's the evidence? I give you A, history, and B, [29:44] the acknowledgement that he's, no, B, that there's a current investigation ongoing, and C, [29:49] that he's president of the United States and might have some information that you don't have. [29:52] So, those are the two things that I got. I was left out of those chats, by the way. I got other nice [29:55] stuff though, Dan, too. I don't get that signal chat. And how do you know about them? What? [30:02] You're not on the New York City ice watch? No, no, definitely not. Signal chat? No, no, no. [30:08] I'm really relieved to hear that. I also got really nice feedback. And not just, I got feedback that [30:16] people thought I was fair and direct. I don't know that anybody said I was super tough, but that I gave him [30:20] direct questions that he needed to answer and that they were fair questions. Such as, [30:28] is this a pullback in Minneapolis? I mean, I think that is the question. That is the question. [30:33] And if it is a pullback, he described it as a de-escalation, the removal of Greg Bovino, [30:38] the, and several CBP officers. And I think we're going to be reporting that on that today on the [30:43] Will Kane show. Like, is it truly a pullback? Is it truly a de-escalation? Or are they doing the same [30:49] thing while doing a PR move that they're pulling back? I don't know. We're going to be reporting on that [30:53] throughout the day. Um, is that if it is a de-escalation, I think that there is going to [31:00] be, this is going to be seen as a great amount of vindication for the people who in my mind have [31:06] behaved in not just some condemnable, but illegal ways. [31:10] It'll de- I don't know when we got here. I don't know if it's a generational thing. I don't know [31:14] it's an acceptance of the rhetoric of left-wing politicians. But the idea that you can interfere [31:19] with law enforcement, with your car, with your body, is an insane Rubicon to cross. And yet we're [31:25] here. We're here. But anyway, um, there, there was one thing we saw the comment about this interview [31:34] that you did with Trump that was just, you know, blown out of the completely so many of them coming [31:40] in. Why were you guys standing so far apart? Oh, I asked the same question right before the show. [31:47] Okay. Do you want some behind the scenes? Yeah, this is good. These guys, uh, Ed and Scott King, [31:53] they can all appreciate this. In fact, one of the guys told me this is called the Vietnam moment. [31:59] Intrigued? Okay. So in the middle of this interview, or right before this interview, [32:03] we had a Vietnam moment. Okay. Here's what happened. So, um, this was originally scheduled [32:11] to be a pre-taped interview, but accommodating the president's schedule, that was scheduled to take [32:18] place at 2.30 central time, 3.30 Eastern time. That meant, and we had about 20 minutes allotted with [32:24] the president. And that meant we had 10 minutes to turn in TV, you know, it's called turn. So they [32:30] ingest it. They feed it back onto live TV to turn that before my show started at three central four [32:36] Eastern. Okay. Well, I knew immediately I knew, cause I've been on this. This is not my first [32:41] rodeo. I'm like, there is no way that this goes off at two 30. There's no way central time. And so [32:49] we start putting plans in place and those plans have to have multiple options depending on what time [32:55] the president shows up and I'm telling you, these plans were being put into place in five minute [33:01] increments until the show started for me live in Iowa. And I'm working with the president's team [33:06] who was very accommodating fluid, right? But the president came into the restaurant. He went into [33:12] a separate part of the restaurant where there was a ton of tables. I knew he was going to love it. [33:16] And he did, and he stayed longer than he, than he scheduled. He's talking to people, [33:20] he's hanging out. And so now the plan is okay, we will pre tape half and we'll start the show live [33:27] with him. So we'll start our conversation at two 50 and then the first half will be live. And then [33:34] we'll run the second half pre tape, which is a little awkward because I'm actually the first part [33:39] of my conversation. The audience is seeing second, right? Right. That's a little awkward. Well, [33:44] and then I asked, uh, the president's team, if he comes in here five minutes before my show, [33:50] will he wait the five minutes for us to just do this entire thing live? And they said, yeah, [33:55] yeah, he will. Thank you. Okay. So the camera dudes all showed up early that morning and they've got [34:02] four cameras. There's cables going everywhere. Two seats. We all know where the president is going [34:08] to stand. We know he has his favorite side. So by the way, I like the same side as him. That's the side [34:13] of the couch that I sat on on Fox and friends, but that's the president's side. Okay. So I'm going to [34:17] send the other side. And so it's also, and you guys have been to one of these productions before. [34:21] I mean, there's lights and I love the camera guys. I do. I love them. They're all perfectionists. [34:28] Okay. They're like, is he got the halo light in the backlight? And it's just so much going on. [34:33] Okay. And I'm like, I don't care, you know, and then the makeup, but I do want to look good. [34:37] And that's what they always can come back to me with. Well, you want to look good, right? Yeah. I want to look [34:41] good. Okay. So they put all this work in, right? Lights, chairs, mics, IFB for me. That's this thing [34:49] I can hear the boys out of right here. Oh, dude, I'm talking about eight hours, six hours. Okay. [34:55] Ed's saying six hours of work, right? All right. Well, the one, there's two contingencies that happen [35:00] now. And one of them is the Vietnam moment. The president didn't show up five minutes before my show. [35:06] He showed up 15 minutes into my show. That's the one thing we didn't plan for, like that he was [35:13] going to be late. It was a matter of how early he would be to the show. So now we're like, okay, [35:18] well, it's going to be live. The interview's live and he's good with that. And we're good with that. [35:22] But now I'm like, what do I do to stop top of the show? And luckily in television, [35:26] you plan contingencies and Guy Benson's with me and David Marcus is with me. And I don't know, [35:32] the president could walk in at any minute. That's the plan. He could walk into the room at any minute. [35:36] And I'm like, I love it. I love it. I want that raw. I want that stuff. I just want him to walk in. [35:41] Right. And, uh, there's a crowd of people in there, so it'll be cool. And, and at some point, [35:47] I guess, and I said, I see I'm sitting there and, and by the way, I got to see the team. There's a [35:53] team that's traveling with him on air force one. And that was really cool. I got to meet, uh, [35:59] treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, who I had never met. And we talked for a little bit and it was [36:03] awesome. Awesome guy on the show. Really love to have you on the show. [36:08] He said, I would love to do the show and say, great. Thank you. Uh, Kelly Loeffler was there. [36:12] And I know Kelly, uh, small business, uh, administration and then Steven Miller was there. [36:18] And you know, I'm friendly with Steven. We text, we've been on TV together a lot, [36:22] but I had never met Steven in person. And so I walk up and I'm like, I don't think we've ever met [36:27] in person. How tall is he? Let me tell you something. Yeah. How tall is he? [36:31] Not that tall. Not that tall. All right. Not that tall. Um, he's way different in person. Um, [36:39] and I don't know how to describe that. Like he's just so severe on TV. Everybody knows that that's [36:44] a good word for him, right? Severe. Yes. He's severe on TV. Um, stern, sharp cutting. Don't [36:53] want to debate him. He's super nice guy in person, like almost bashful, you know? And, um, and right [37:00] now the world is calling Steven, like, uh, Heinrich Himmler. Like I've seen some of these people [37:06] saying that is this an elected official said this or is it, uh, who is it? Oh, it's Rick Wilson of [37:14] the Lincoln project said he needs to be the first one at the Nuremberg trials, the Nuremberg trials [37:21] of immigration enforcement. Um, but anyway, I love talking to Steven and I said, Hey man, [37:27] I actually would love a 45 minutes sit down with you because you have become [37:32] the villain of the world. And you're, I'm just sitting there talking to him and he's such a, [37:37] he's a human being and he's a different human being than he comes across on TV. I just think [37:41] he'd be a fascinating interview. Fascinating. If he would be that guy, he might turn, he might turn [37:46] it back on the minute there's a camera. I don't know, but I texted with him and Steven, we want you [37:50] 45 minutes, the real Steven Miller. Let's do it. So anyway, president has gotten them. So the room [37:55] starts filling up. Yeah. Doing all this in the middle of a snowstorm is like taking everything, [38:02] all this logistics and just adding 10 degrees of difficulty on top of all of this. [38:08] Did you sleep? I mean, you think it's more than 10? Well, I hope the audience is following along. [38:14] I'm going to tell you about the Vietnam moment. Um, and answer Dan's major question. Why are we [38:18] standing so far apart? My flight to Iowa was its own rodeo delay, delay, delay, switch, all these [38:27] different things. I landed in Omaha, audible, not Des Moines fly into Omaha. I landed in Omaha at 3am [38:37] got a hotel, got into bed at 4am, woke up the next morning at about eight. I think it was and hit the [38:45] road to Des Moines, which is about two hour drive. So then last night was supposed to fly back from [38:50] Des Moines to Dallas. No cancel, cancel delay, delay, delay, cancel. Um, got a five, eight, [38:57] got a hotel in Des Moines, had a 5am flight today to be back here in time, woke up at three, [39:05] because you got to get the airport for all that stuff. And Ellie has a text flight cancel. I'm like, [39:09] oh my gosh, I got an Ellie story for you too. Um, and, and still there. And so she's somewhere around [39:19] here. I'm sure sitting in the lap of luxury. I'll tell you about that. Um, so by the way, [39:27] halfway into this, I remembered, I have like the highest status you can get on American, [39:31] which I never really use. Apparently I can call this number and they'll put me on any flight, [39:37] whatever's next. Wow. And I didn't know that all this time I'm sitting here struggling with flash in [39:42] they're like, you don't need to do this. Like we will put you on the next flight going out. [39:45] And I'm like, really didn't work this morning. I got a Southwest flight to St. Louis, [39:52] then got on a flight in St. Louis to Dallas and literally landed. You saw, saw me walk in. [39:56] Uh, oh, she heard her name called like Tinkerbell. Somebody's running ring something and she appears. [40:01] Beetlejuice. Oh, here she comes. Did you, so today I, I have no status on Southwest. How about this? [40:09] Okay. The flight from St. Louis to Southwest is booked full, right? Southwest to Dallas, [40:15] St. Louis to Dallas. And, um, they get on the thing and they're like, if you're boarding group [40:19] five, you need to check your bag. And I turned to Ellie. I'm like, what group are we? We looked [40:24] at our phones and she's group five and I'm group four. Wow. I'm like, Ooh, I go, why don't you go [40:29] pay? Cause you know, in Southwest you can pay to board first, whatever they call it. I go, why don't [40:34] you go pay? Make sure we board right away so that when we get to Dallas and try to make the show, [40:39] our bags are here. We're ready to go. She goes, yeah, good idea. She goes, okay. And she goes to [40:44] Southwest and she comes back. I'm like, what boarding group are we? And she's like, I'm priority. [40:51] Me too. And she's like, no, I didn't do you. I'm like, you bought yourself priority [40:57] and you left me boarding group four way to go. And, and, and I'm banging out this monologue on my [41:04] phone that I want to do today on the show. I mean, I tell the staff, Ellie's doing the monologue [41:10] today at three central. Cause I I'll be fishing my bag out of baggage claim at love field. But [41:17] she meanwhile boards the plane first. She boarded the plane first. You know how Southwest is. They [41:24] board 50 people in wheelchairs and pre-boarding. She's before all that. It's like that key and peel [41:30] skit. Yeah. You remember the key and peel skit guys boarding group one and he's literally the last [41:35] guy that boards the plane. That's how it feels on Southwest. You're boarding group one, but that [41:40] didn't mean anything. That means you're the 75th person to board the plane. But Ellie was right up [41:46] there, buddy. I mean, um, okay. So back to this before I got distracted by the travel thing. [41:53] All right. So I see the room starting to fill up with the Stephen Miller's and the Scott Besson's and [41:58] the handlers. And I'm like, Ooh, it's getting close. The president's coming in. And they're like, [42:02] take a break. The president's coming in. I'm like, okay. Okay. I'm gonna take a quick break. We'll be right [42:06] back with the president of the United States commercial break five minutes, right? They run [42:10] in all the cameramen and everybody and they go, he wants to stand like what? He doesn't want to sit [42:16] for the interview. He wants to stand. And this is the Vietnam moment. I learned later. It's not the [42:22] first time that it's happened. Apparently he did it in Vietnam with Sean Hannity. They set up a whole [42:27] set. They had it beautifully lit. They had the camera set up the chairs and he comes in. He goes, [42:31] let's stand. And they're all like, yeah, yeah, let's stand. And so that's what happened. [42:40] So we were blocked and lit for a sit down interview. And then we decide to stand. So [42:47] they come in, they just raise everything. They raise the cameras, they raise the lights, [42:52] you know, and he's, he, he waltzes in like we good. And these guys are like, yeah, yeah, we're good. [42:55] They're just shoving stuff up. So it looks, it looks better. That's why we're further apart [43:00] on chairs. You mean, I think so. I think so. Yeah. Yeah. He and I joked about it. Why are [43:06] we so far apart? He's like, what is this COVID again? That, that I know that video that, uh, [43:11] I think Ellie probably took it and posted on Instagram. It was a behind the scenes of you [43:15] two. And you can see the X is marked on the floor and it just looks even further away when [43:20] you get the cameras further away from you. It looks like you're 15 feet apart from each other. [43:26] It works. I will tell you that honestly, I think about that stuff because you in an interview, [43:32] you want to connect, right? And my goal in an interview, even if I'm challenging somebody [43:38] is to actually get to the real person, get past the talking point, get back, get to the real person. [43:43] And a lot of that is really nonverbal. And that, that makes, you know, remote interviews very, [43:47] very difficult, but like nonverbal communication is 80% of what we do. Eye contact, you know, um, [43:54] body language, even proximity, how you're talking to it, it all reads. [43:57] We all, we're all reading it constantly. That's why you need to look people in the eye, Patrick. [44:02] And, um, you know, I worried about that. Like, how's it going to feel this far apart? [44:08] And, and the truth is, I, I feel like the president was so relaxed and comfortable in [44:15] that conversation. I mean, I'm not trying to pat myself on my back, but I've never seen him smile [44:20] so much. I've never, this is my third time to interview him. And this is the most laughing [44:27] and smiling he's, he's ever done. We have great ratings and, uh, you know, you're a really nice [44:32] guy. You're really nice to him. He amended that. Not nice. You're really nice to me. Not nice. You [44:39] just, you know, you're good. You know, I, I could, I could tell, I'll just say this one thing. [44:45] When the show started yesterday, the TV show, I could tell there was a look on your face because [44:49] I look at your face a lot for editing for this show. I could tell there's a look of unsure [44:54] on your face when the show started. So now I know it is just me, like just a little nuance. [45:00] Oh, the show, not the interview. No, no, no. When the show started, the live show without [45:04] Trump there yet. And you all, your plan wasn't going according to plan. I could tell that you [45:10] were a little like, what do we do? What are we going to do in your, in your eyes? Oh no, [45:15] that's not good. No, no, no. What were my eye with the blacks in my eyes real small and the rest [45:19] of it real big because we know, and I was giving you the thousand yard stare and I wasn't fully [45:24] present. You're when somebody is super nervous and you, and you feel like they're looking right [45:27] through you, you don't know what's going on. Because I could tell you, it's like doing that. [45:31] Yeah. And you were kind of like trying to see if, if Trump was there yet or something, [45:35] probably now knowing the story. I feel like that was it. So, but it was great. [45:39] He did. As I got more comfortable. I tried to just, I tried to just own it, Dan. Like I tried [45:43] to just like tell the audience, here's what's going on. This is, this is on the fly television. [45:46] Don't know how it's going. Speaking of, um, speaking of audience, [45:51] people thought Rand Paul was behind you. Did you see that? The guy behind the president? [45:56] He looked just like Rand Paul. I thought it was. That was a hell of a surprise. Mr. President, [46:04] joining us here today is Thomas Massey. He's sitting in one of the booths. How do you feel [46:07] about the Congressman? Where is Rand Paul? I don't know. Right there. Right there to the, [46:18] right in the middle to next to the guy with the red on. Oh, that is the former governor of Iowa, [46:25] Tom Branstad's son. Oh, he looks like for you. Yeah. Um, yeah. Anyway, we're back. I think all [46:37] the America's problems when it comes to air travel are originating right here in Dallas. I think that's [46:42] the issue. Didn't matter if we went to Chicago, Omaha, Des Moines, St. Louis, it was getting into [46:47] Dallas. So we apologize to the rest of the nation here on behalf of Dallas. Um, did you guys, [46:52] hey, well, Alicia, how did the guys do without me? Seriously? I, I, I've never been more fascinated [46:58] by an episode of Wilkane country. Never. I want to know what they talked about. I want to know who [47:03] led the discussion. Did Patrick talk, Dan, or did you have to do all the talking? I started off, [47:08] I started off talking. We didn't get into any topics I wanted to. Patrick said, no, [47:13] I wanted to talk about, you know, liberal things. No, I'm kidding. Um, but we stayed, [47:19] we stayed on topic. I wanted to talk about, you know, Chris Murphy and James Tallarico and all [47:24] these guys, but he wouldn't love me. Oh, your boy, James. That's the new thing. No, [47:28] I'm kidding. Dan's boy, James Tallarico. He is a, you know, he's a massive fan, Patrick. [47:36] No, I'm a Wilkane fan. Et tu, Brute? No, no. Um, well, I think we, we stayed on topic. We did [47:41] pretty well. We didn't go too long. I think we, uh, I think people said we were all right. [47:45] All right. Bosses. I don't know. All right. Good. I'm proud of you. [47:51] I'm fired up though. Well, maybe you can just do this when I'm out. Yeah. Oh yeah. [47:56] Do you hear about Bill Belichick? I'm very angry. Not getting into the hall of fame. [48:01] Yeah. Are you deflategate? Yes. Terrible. [48:06] You know, I mean, it's so absurd, Patrick, that I'm willing to consider that the, [48:10] the explanations could be real. I saw Mike Sando who used to write for ESPN. Now with the athletic, [48:16] um, I saw him try to explain it, not excuse it, explain it. Like he said, it's absurd, [48:22] but he tried to explain it. And he said, there's a couple of things that could have happened here. [48:26] You got to get 40 out of 50 voters to vote into the hall of fame. So Bill Belichick is not going [48:31] to be a hall of famer as a first ballot hall of famer. And, um, the, the, the explanations are, [48:39] there are potentially some voters who are holding Spygate against him. That's, [48:42] that's obviously potentially true, right? The other is that a lot of voters just presumed everyone else [48:48] would be voting for Belichick. They just presumed. And so they had their pet candidates, [48:52] which is often some of the older guys that they're trying to get into the hall of fame. [48:55] And so they're like, well, everybody else is going to vote for Belichick. So I'm going to use my vote [48:59] because you only get, I think, is it five votes or three to five votes each voter gets. So they have [49:04] three. Okay. You get three. Yeah. So they use their votes on guys that they were trying to get [49:09] over the finish line, assuming it was obvious that Belichick would get over the finish line. [49:14] And I pro I think there could be something to that because it's just so absurd that Belichick [49:20] would not be a first ballot hall of famer. They said there's also some guys that might not like the [49:27] new rule. There's a new rule that coaches don't have to wait. The players have to wait. Is it three [49:32] years, five, three years to get into the hall of fame after retirement? It's five years and coaches [49:37] don't have to. Rivers almost hit, hit, hit five years and then he came back. So now it's like, [49:44] he's going to get reset. So is that reset for rivers? Does he get to count the first couple [49:49] of years of retirement? Oh no. Um, so if the league really is [49:58] butthurt about getting their ass kicked by Belichick for all those years and they deprived [50:03] the hall of fame, then eternal shame on everyone that participates in the NFL. [50:09] But I do think that those explanations that I gave you seem somewhat rational, like meaning [50:15] I could see logistically how that might've happened. [50:20] That last one is the best one I've heard. Hey, but yeah, the rules, the rules thing. [50:26] No, no, no, no. The, the one about, um, uh, you know, people voting in pet, their pet projects [50:32] into instead of him thinking that he's going to get in anyway. That's the best one I've heard. [50:38] Right. I think, I think all the other arguments like the deflate gate thing or [50:42] Spygate, you know, just him cheating and, or, or Brady leading, uh, being the one carrying him, [50:50] I think just fall on deaf ears, essentially. Like he's won six Super Bowls as a head coach, [50:56] two as a defensive coordinator. I think, I think his resume speaks for itself. [51:03] Hey, um, I want to tell you guys about something. 20 days, one historic movement. [51:09] It's an unbelievable journey. It's Melania from Amazon MGM studios, and it captures the one of a [51:16] kind transition into the white house, showcasing the planning, the pressure and personal moments [51:21] that come with stepping into the role of first lady for a second time from logistical complexities [51:28] to decisions made behind closed doors. The film brings you closer to Mrs. Trump and her family [51:35] as they return to the nation's capital. See what history looks like before the doors [51:41] officially open. Melania arrives exclusively in theaters, January 30th, 2026. Make sure you check [51:49] out Melania. Um, before we go today, um, what do you got, Dan? Oh, okay. She told me to check my texts. [51:58] Yeah. Uh, I've got 5% battery, Dan. So we'll see if this works here. I want to do the whole shebang. [52:04] I flew in for this. We're going to make the show the way we always do. Yeah. Boom. Put them up in [52:09] studio. That looks really great. That's not, that doesn't look the way I want it to. Yeah. Just relax, [52:14] Dan. Relax. I'm going to get this. There we go. Uh, bud Morgan, best show ever today's show, bud. [52:23] Yeah. Oh, cause I wasn't here. Uh, army mom boys did great. And Suzanne Nico, you all did great. [52:33] There you go, fellas. What are you doing, Ed? Why are you creeping all around my, my desk? [52:37] He's giving you a charger charger. I got the old charger. Yeah. He's giving me something to charge [52:42] my phone, but it's the wrong one. I got an old iPhone. Wait, wait, what? Sarah Jordan. [52:48] Go ahead. Tinfoil. Enjoy your moment. What, uh, what brand, what, uh, what's the word? What, [52:56] what, uh, generation of iPhone do you have? Like if you have a lightning charger, like, [53:01] do you have an old ass iPhone like I do? I don't know. You want me to look? [53:06] Well, I have an XR. I never know how to do that. Ridiculously old. [53:12] Everybody always asks me that. They say my phone is old and I'm like, my phone is fine. I'm not a tech [53:16] guy. I don't care about things like this at all. I do not have to have the newest phone. Do you go [53:21] to general? Where do you go to find that out? About? I think so. Yeah. About. About your iPhone. [53:26] I have iPhone 14. That's what I have. Oh, wow. What are we on? That's not old. I think we're on 17. [53:34] That's not old. No, I got it two years ago. 17. Yeah. It was new. I got a, I got a iPhone 14, [53:41] which is the old charger still. I just got an email from the bosses. So they pulled me into a [53:46] meeting after the show. So we'll see. Um, I hope not. I hope you don't get in trouble. Hey, [53:52] well, Alicia, like Sarah Jordan, this has been my favorite Wilkane country episode. Pat and Dan [53:59] carried the beginning clapping emoji, muscle emoji. So you guys got to be there for the boys. [54:06] It was nice knowing you. I'm telling you, there is a chance. There is a chance they will be in [54:10] trouble. I'm telling you, there is a chance. It was good working with you guys. So you got to rally [54:14] for them. I will rally for them. So if you're listening, and I know you are, you want me to use [54:20] your name? I won't use your name. But if you're listening on the 15th floor, this is what I wanted. [54:26] It's in the tax exchanges. Everybody's going to be super safe. Everybody's good. Don't get mad at the [54:32] boys. Rally, Alicia, for Pat and Dan. That's going to do it for us today. Make sure you follow us on [54:37] Spotify or Apple. We'll see you again next time.

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