BBS Radio TVSociety & Culture

BBS Radio TV is engaged in the production and distribution of original live talk radio. We engineer and produce over 120 hours of talk show programming every week since 2004. A network of powerful personalities providing illuminating information!


BBS Radio TV Station Streams

LEO Round Table, May 20, 2026

Wed, 20 May 2026
S11E098, White House Moves For End Of Cashless Bail And Threats Against Officers

White house moves for end of cashless bail and threats against officers. Sheriff calls for calm in Key West as leaked intel warns of Cuban drone plots. FBI puts $200K bounty on defector who fled to Iran. Sergeant and Sheriff stabbed during attempted arrest. Cop stabbed multiple times in ambush attack by suspect.

Title: Police Week Honors, Law Enforcement Support, and Officer Survival Lessons from Knife Attacks

Six-Paragraph Summary

Police Week and National Recognition
The episode opens with host Chip DeBlock introducing Leo Roundtable and retired police chief Dr. Joel Shults before turning to Police Week. The discussion focuses on the National Peace Officers Memorial Service, the candlelight vigil, and the addition of names to the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial. The speakers describe the ceremonies as meaningful to law enforcement families and emphasize the importance of honoring officers who died in the line of duty.

J.D. Vance and Federal Support for Police
The speakers discuss Vice President J.D. Vance’s keynote appearance at the 45th Peace Officers Memorial Service and present his remarks as supportive of law enforcement families. They also discuss federal directives that, according to the host, were timed around Police Week. These include seeking the death penalty in federal prosecutions involving the intentional murder of law enforcement officers, funding consequences tied to cashless bail policies, and the reinstatement of the 1033 military surplus program.

Injured Officers and the 1033 Program
Dr. Shults broadens the Police Week discussion by emphasizing that injured and disabled officers should also be remembered, not only those who died in the line of duty. He notes that officers may lose mobility, careers, or long-term health because of line-of-duty injuries. The discussion then moves into the 1033 program, where Shults argues that access to armored vehicles and protective gear can be essential for smaller agencies, while also acknowledging broader public concerns about the appearance of militarized policing.

Cuban Drone Concerns and Local Homeland Security
The program briefly addresses a report about alleged Cuban drone plots involving Key West, Guantanamo Bay, and American military vessels. The host states that local officials, including the Monroe County sheriff, had not confirmed the threat at the time of the discussion. Shults uses the topic to explain why local law enforcement can have an important role in homeland security, especially when potential threats involve infrastructure, ports, waterways, or areas close to hostile actors.

Air Force Defector Accused of Aiding Iran
The episode then turns to the case of former U.S. Air Force intelligence specialist Monica Witt, who is discussed as a defector accused of providing classified information to Iran. The host says federal authorities renewed attention on the case with a $200,000 reward. Shults comments that sensitive information can be accessed by enlisted personnel and contractors as well as senior officials, and he frames such access as both necessary and vulnerable. The speakers speculate about why the renewed reward effort may have been announced, while acknowledging that some details are not known.

Officer Safety Lessons from Knife Attacks
The final major portion of the episode reviews two body-camera incidents involving officers stabbed during confrontations. One involved Wayne County, Ohio officers, including a sheriff and sergeant, and the other involved a Marion County, Florida deputy who was ambushed and stabbed in the chest. Shults emphasizes the danger of close-range blitz attacks, the value of distance and verbal commands, the importance of tourniquets and bleeding-control training, and the risks of pursuing armed suspects into wooded areas. The episode closes with sponsor acknowledgments and a mention of The Wounded Blue.

Keywords

Police Week, Leo Roundtable, J.D. Vance, law enforcement memorial, 1033 program, cashless bail, officer safety, police body cam, Wayne County stabbing, Marion County deputy, Monica Witt, The Wounded Blue

SOS Coming Home, May 20, 2026

Wed, 20 May 2026
Falling in love with someone’s potential while secretly hoping they will eventually change

Loving Potential Instead of Reality: How Women Lose Themselves in Relationships

The Central Relationship Mistake

In this episode, Jennifer Elizabeth Masters focuses on what she describes as one of the biggest mistakes women make in relationships: falling in love with someone’s potential instead of their reality. She explains that people often believe their love, patience, or emotional effort can heal, rescue, or transform a partner into someone different. While the episode is framed primarily around women’s experiences, she makes clear that the pattern can affect men and people in same-sex relationships as well.

Chemistry, Fantasy, and Emotional Projection

Jennifer discusses how chemistry can feel powerful and convincing, especially when people mistake attraction for compatibility. She warns that chemistry may lead someone to ignore patterns, red flags, or clear statements from a partner. She contrasts fantasy-based attachment with the importance of observing a person’s consistent behavior, actions, accountability, communication style, and respect for boundaries.

Childhood Patterns and Overgiving

The episode connects adult relationship choices to early emotional conditioning. Jennifer says many people learned that love meant sacrifice, caretaking, waiting, or earning approval. She describes how childhood instability, emotional intensity, or conditional love can lead adults to over-function, rescue others, or become drawn to emotionally unavailable partners. In her view, this can cause someone to feel lonely even while in a relationship.

Marriage, Babies, and the Hope of Change

Jennifer challenges the belief that marriage, children, or time will automatically fix an unhealthy relationship. She says that external milestones do not create emotional maturity, integrity, accountability, or commitment if those qualities are not already present. She stresses that when someone clearly says what they want or do not want, especially regarding marriage or children, they should be believed rather than reinterpreted through fantasy.

Healthy Love and Mutual Responsibility

A major theme of the episode is the difference between healthy support and over-functioning. Jennifer defines healthy love as mutual, reciprocal, emotionally responsible, honest, stable, and grounded. She says healthy love is not about fixing, parenting, managing, or rehabilitating another adult. She also emphasizes the importance of appreciation, emotional safety, communication, shared values, sexual compatibility, and maintaining friendships and personal growth outside the romantic relationship.

Self-Trust and Choosing Reality

The episode closes with an invitation to build self-trust and stop ignoring intuition. Jennifer encourages listeners to examine where they may be loving potential instead of reality, waiting for someone to change, or carrying relationships that are not equally supported. She frames healing as the process of no longer abandoning oneself in the hope of being chosen, loved, or needed, and she presents emotional clarity and self-trust as essential to healthier relationships.

Tony Alamo, May 20, 2026

Wed, 20 May 2026
Ep177, How To Have Gods Life Living In You, Part 75

Title: How to Have God’s Life Living in You, Part 75: Zion’s Testimony, Church Hypocrisy, and Abiding in Christ

Six-Paragraph Summary

A Program Framed Around Testimony and Correction
This episode begins with Pastor Tony Alamo introducing part 75 of How to Have God’s Life Living in You, identified as program 177. He explains that the program will include listener letters and a testimony from his son, Zion, which some church members reportedly criticized. Alamo presents the testimony as honest and spiritually important, while arguing that churches often contain hypocrites and insincere believers. His opening remarks establish the episode’s central focus: distinguishing what he views as genuine Christian faith from outward religious pretense.

Zion’s Childhood and Crisis of Belief
A large portion of the episode centers on Zion’s testimony, which is read aloud and then interpreted by Alamo. Zion describes growing up around church people whom he perceived as insincere, saying this led him to doubt God and look down on others. Alamo repeatedly explains Zion’s doubts by saying that he himself was imprisoned during part of Zion’s childhood and that other church members failed to properly teach him the Bible, ministry literature, and Christian discipline. The testimony is presented as a turning point in which Zion begins to question his earlier disbelief.

Los Angeles as a Turning Point
Zion’s testimony describes a major change after he went to the Los Angeles church and encountered newer believers praying openly and intensely. He says that seeing people who appeared sincere convicted him and led him to begin reading the Bible in the morning and before sleep. Alamo emphasizes this part of the testimony as proof that Zion encountered genuine Christian zeal there, unlike what he says Zion had seen earlier. The episode portrays this experience as the beginning of Zion’s decision to make a firm spiritual stand.

Criticism of Church Members and Failed Instruction
Alamo uses Zion’s testimony to criticize specific church members and broader patterns he sees in the church, including hypocrisy, gossip, negligence, lack of Bible teaching, and failure to discipline children. He states that many children in the church were not properly taught the Bible, did not hear his messages, and were not trained in the way he believes they should have gone. These claims are presented as Alamo’s interpretation of the church’s internal problems, and his tone is forceful and accusatory. He also discusses people being removed from the church when, according to him, the Lord directed it.

Letters from Listeners Seeking Literature and Guidance
The program also includes letters from listeners in Omaha, Nebraska, and Brickeys, Arkansas. The Omaha letter praises Alamo’s Mass Suicide article and requests many copies for distribution. Alamo uses the letter to emphasize evangelism, saying that a true believer desires to spread the message after being saved. The Arkansas letter comes from an imprisoned former Missionary Baptist preacher who says he is seeking truth, asks for Christian materials, and requests an autographed ministry letterhead. Alamo agrees to send the requested material.

Abiding in Christ and Closing Prayer
Near the end, the episode returns to the series theme of abiding in Christ. The reader states that believers begin to abide in Christ in a practical way through fellowship, enjoyment, and experience of Jesus. Alamo says that if the Lord is truly abiding in someone, God will teach others through that person rather than leave them consumed by worldly distractions. He closes with a salvation prayer, inviting listeners to ask Jesus into their hearts, receive forgiveness, and thank the Lord for saving their souls. The program ends with ordering information for tape or CD copies and a preview of the next installment.

Transcription Quirks and Corrections That Matter

“Tony Alonzo” was corrected to Tony Alamo. “Part on messages” was corrected to part in the messages. “Ponies” was corrected to phonies. “One year’s zone” was corrected to one or two years old, with the later transcript reference supporting two years old. “Brian Broadbrake” is uncertain but was retained as the likely name from the transcript. “Debbie Andresak” was corrected to Debbie Andrassac, though the spelling remains somewhat uncertain. “Sally Jamillin / Denlin / Demelan” appears to refer to Sally Jamellin, but the exact spelling is unclear. “Chieni Orlando” appears likely to be a person’s name, but the transcript is unclear. “Bobby Chameison” was corrected to Bobby Jameson, based on the likely intended name in context. “Oh, Mohan Nebraska” was corrected to Omaha, Nebraska. “Brickies, Arkansas” was corrected to Brickeys, Arkansas. “Morleton, Arkansas” was corrected to Morrilton, Arkansas. “Friday will get you nowhere” was corrected to flattery will get you nowhere. “Texas, Texas” was corrected to Texarkana, Texas.

Keywords

Tony Alamo, How to Have God’s Life Living in You, Zion testimony, abiding in Christ, church hypocrisy, Christian testimony, salvation prayer, Bible teaching, Omaha Nebraska letter, Brickeys Arkansas letter, Christian radio program, spiritual consecration

Chuck And Julie Show, May 20, 2026

Wed, 20 May 2026
Grasroot warrior and GOP gubernatorial candidate Scott Bottoms joins the show.

Beverage Chronicles, May 20, 2026

Wed, 20 May 2026
Guinness Cocktails, Gin Trends, and the Rise of Finland’s Long Drink

Guinness is finding new life as a cocktail ingredient in drinks like the Espresso Stout Martini, Black Velvet, and Top Hat.
We highlight gin cocktails, including the lighter and refreshing Gin Sonic.
Beverage Chronicles visits Atlantic City to explore Finland’s famous Long Drink and its growing popularity in the United States.

Send Message to BBS Radio TV

Verified Podcast

BBS Radio TV Twitter Feed

BBS Radio TV Facebook Timeline

Reviews for BBS Radio TV