Topic: 60 Minutes

9 chapters across the catalog

92: White Lies
17:09 - 23:36

92: White Lies

Marjorie Taylor Greene, 60 Minutes and Media Framing

The hosts analyze a 60 Minutes interview with Marjorie Taylor Greene, noting how the media frames her as "thuggish" or a "Q clown." They compare the serious setup of the 60 Minutes segment with a satirical list of insults from The Daily Show, including "Nazi Barbie" and "meth Barbie." Mo Facts suggests these attacks are rooted in an elitist view of the "orange" crowd's intelligence.

88: Business Decision
3:41:09 - 3:49:44

88: Business Decision

Messiah Expectations, Final Sign-Off

The episode concludes with a discussion of the 50-50 split in public opinion regarding Deion Sanders' move. While some see it as a betrayal of HBCUs, others view it as a standard career advancement. The hosts reflect on the "Messiah" trap and the need for collective action rather than waiting for a single leader. They wish listeners a Happy New Year and look forward to Episode 89 in 2023.

73: Justice 4 Juicy
1:17:37 - 1:20:49

73: Justice 4 Juicy

National Memorial for Peace and Justice, Lynching History

Oprah Winfrey tours the National Memorial for Peace and Justice in Montgomery, Alabama, which commemorates over 4,000 victims of lynching. The segment explores the scale of racial terrorism in the U.S. and how the imagery of the memorial is designed to evoke a visceral emotional response.

72: Duke Power
2:53:57 - 2:58:26

72: Duke Power

Media Exploitation and the New York Times

The hosts critique the *New York Times* for its "relentless and one-sided" coverage of the Duke case, which set the stage for a national media frenzy. They argue that the media, academia, and the prosecution all used Crystal Mangum—a mentally ill woman—as a "pawn" to advance their respective ideological and political agendas.

72: Duke Power
3:06:00 - 3:10:16

72: Duke Power

Ed Bradley and the 60 Minutes Exoneration

A clip from *60 Minutes* features the late Ed Bradley interviewing the accused players and the other dancer, Kim Roberts. Roberts' testimony directly contradicted Mangum's claims of rape. The hosts note that CBS won a Peabody for this reporting, which was instrumental in debunking the false narrative and protecting the "prestige" of the power structure.

67: Q-Hopium
1:39:16 - 1:44:02

67: Q-Hopium

60 Minutes on the Corrosive Impact of QAnon

A 60 Minutes report describes QAnon as an extremist ideology involving beliefs in a global cabal of pedophiles and a coming "Storm" led by Donald Trump. The hosts criticize the report for framing "doing your own research" as a dangerous activity associated with radicalization. They argue that the pandemic and the shutdown of Hollywood broke the "spell" of mainstream entertainment, leading people to seek out alternative media and question the deep state.

67: Q-Hopium
1:48:14 - 1:52:46

67: Q-Hopium

QAnon and the Destruction of Family Relationships

60 Minutes profiles a 28-year-old Army veteran whose parents, influenced by QAnon, began to doubt his account of being present during the 2014 Fort Hood shooting. The hosts discuss how political polarization and "Orange Man Bad" rhetoric have "ripped open amygdalas," causing deep rifts in families. They argue that the QAnon label is now used as a catch-all synonym for any conspiracy theory, including legitimate questions about Jeffrey Epstein's death.

67: Q-Hopium
2:37:37 - 2:39:46

67: Q-Hopium

60 Minutes on Ashli Babbitt and the Shift to Violence

60 Minutes reports that QAnon became a violent threat only after Donald Trump lost the 2020 election. The segment features footage of Officer Eugene Goodman confronting rioters and mentions Ashli Babbitt, who was killed while wearing a QAnon-themed tank top. The hosts prepare to discuss Babbitt's death as a "counterbalance" to the George Floyd narrative, acknowledging the high emotional triggers involved in the comparison.

53: 2020 Vision
34:18 - 37:47

53: 2020 Vision

Modern Communication, Globalist Media vs. Social Media

A comparison of the "old guard" communication methods used by Barack Obama and the Democratic elite versus the direct, audience-focused style of Donald Trump. The hosts suggest that the globalist communication system is failing because it cannot control the self-activating nature of modern protests and social media information flow.