Latest Episode
From Trump Tallies to Gemini Freebies: Antifa-Label Warnings, Free-Speech Fog, Facebook Phish, Dolphins–Bills Odds, Blind Items, and Americans Split on Gaza
Status of Donald Trump’s Campaign Promises
Status of Donald Trump’s Campaign Promises: As of 9/17/25 at 11:27pm ET, AllSides is running a live scoreboard of Trump’s 2024 pledges—what’s been delivered, what’s still vaporware—and logging related legislation. It also tracks how closely those actions line up with the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025, effectively a promises report card with Heritage as the grading curve.
FileFix Campaign Lures Users with Fake Facebook Suspension Notices
FileFix Campaign Lures Users with Fake Facebook Suspension Notices: a newly surfaced social engineering ploy that riffs on ClickFix attacks by urging targets to “report a wrongful suspension” to Facebook—only the report is a malware download. Victims are funneled in via phishing emails, then coaxed into running the payload under the guise of appeasing Meta. Because nothing says “appeals process” like a mystery executable, and scammers know Facebook’s moderation fog makes that pitch sound just plausible enough.
Pam Bondi says hate speech isn’t protected by the First Amendment — is that correct?
Pam Bondi says hate speech isn’t protected by the First Amendment — is that correct? No. In the United States there’s no “hate speech” exception; speech is protected unless it falls into narrow, well-defined categories like incitement to imminent lawless action, true threats, targeted harassment, or defamation. FIRE staff unpack that civics 101 refresher, then field audience questions on President Trump’s lawsuit against the New York Times, cancel culture, and other headline-chasing controversies—because nothing says public discourse like mistaking outrage for law.
No. 7: Blind Items Revealed
No. 7: Blind Items Revealed — A gossip blind item claims a major streaming giant torched a pile of cash on an alliterative celebrity partnership and won’t recoup the spend—a pricey reminder that hype is not a business model.
Thursday Night Football: Dolphins vs. Bills Odds and Betting Trends
Thursday Night Football: Dolphins vs. Bills Odds and Betting Trends — Buffalo is a hefty 11.5-point home favorite on ESPN Bet, but divisional weirdness means there’s still room for points. Last year’s meetings landed 41 and 57, Buffalo is 2-0 ATS to Miami’s 1-1, and both are 1-1 to the total. The sharpest prop angle: De’Von Achane over 5.5 receptions (-115). He caught all 15 of his targets in two games vs. Buffalo last season and sits third among RBs in 2025 receptions, with Tua likely living on checkdowns under Bills pressure. Dolphins props beyond that are a trust fall without a spotter—Tyreek will be bracketed, Waddle’s dinged, depth is thin. On the Bills side, value’s spread around: Khalil Shakir (O/U ~43.5) torched Miami last year with 11 grabs and 50+ yards in each meeting; Keon Coleman sits at a similar number, and Dalton Kincaid’s O/U 34.5 is modest for a TE1. Build a four-leg SGP around Achane 5+ receptions, Shakir 40+ yards, James Cook 50+ rushing, and Kincaid 30+ receiving at roughly +414 pre-boost—then let ESPN Bet’s 30% Week 3 SGP boost do the polite inflation.
Axelrod: Labeling Antifa a terrorist group could be used to target political opponents
Labeling Antifa a terrorist group could be used to target political opponents, David Axelrod warned Wednesday, calling President Trump’s plan an “inflection point.” He argued the administration would “go after everyone and everything” swept under that umbrella—because if you can’t win the argument, you can always expand the definition of the enemy.
Google makes Gemini AI chatbot available for free to all U.S. users
Google makes Gemini AI chatbot available for free to all U.S. users, announcing Thursday that anyone on Mac or Windows desktops can access it without a subscription—because in techland, “free” usually means your data quietly picks up the check.
Nearly half of Americans say Israel has gone too far in Gaza, survey finds
Nearly half of Americans say Israel has gone too far in Gaza, according to a new AP-NORC survey, with 49% of U.S. adults saying Israel’s military campaign has exceeded appropriate bounds. The poll, released this week, underscores significant public concern over the war in the Gaza Strip.
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This podcast is a fully automated experiment in AI-generated content. Generative AI handles the entire process, including code, content selection, summarization, and audio production. The podcast processes material from various sources, condenses it into concise text, and converts it into speech. No human intervention is involved in the production process.
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