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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!


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All Learning Reimagined, June 12, 2026

Sat, 13 Jun 2026
All Learning Reimagined with Teresa Songbird

Episode 2 of series on Embodied Intelligence
Safety Creates Space

Safety Creates the Space Where Real Learning Can Begin

Safety as the Gateway to Learning
Teresa Songbird opens the episode by introducing the second part of the Embodied Intelligence series, focusing on how safety creates the internal space needed for learning. She explains that while education often emphasizes intelligence, attention, effort, and brain-based learning, the nervous system plays a central role in determining whether a learner can remain curious, engaged, and open to growth. The episode frames safety not only as physical security, but also as calm, ease, trust, and psychological readiness.

A Classroom Fight That Changed the Teaching Lens
Teresa shares a story from her teaching career about two grade-seven boys who returned to class after a serious lunchtime fight. Although the conflict had been treated as resolved by the playground teacher, the boys’ bodies were still carrying the energy of the incident. During a science activity, they struggled to focus, withdrew, and could not engage normally. Teresa later realized that their nervous systems were still in protection mode, and this experience changed how she approached post-lunch transitions, class discussions, circle time, breathing, yoga, and emotional repair.

The Nervous System Is Always Scanning
The episode explains that the nervous system constantly scans for danger, often without conscious thought. Teresa says that in modern classrooms, children may not be scanning for physical dangers like saber-toothed tigers, but they are often scanning for psychological safety. Criticism, rejection, embarrassment, conflict, uncertainty, and untrusted feedback can all trigger a threat response. When learners do not feel safe, attention narrows, thinking becomes rigid, and the body prioritizes protection overgrowth.

Relationship, Belonging, and Ancient Wisdom
Teresa connects modern nervous system awareness with ancient wisdom and Indigenous understandings of learning through relationship. She emphasizes that learning is built through relationship with self, family, community, nature, land, and the surrounding environment. She says belonging helps regulate the nervous system and that story, observation, participation, and connection have long been central to meaningful learning. She also links the nervous system to the universal law of rhythm, describing cycles of activation, recovery, expansion, and contraction.

Compassion for Learners in Different States
Teresa contrasts two learners receiving the same lesson under the same conditions, with one feeling safe and the other anxious. She argues that their outcomes may differ not because of intelligence, but because their nervous systems are operating from different states of being. She encourages educators and parents to shift their interpretation of resistance, laziness, or lack of motivation, because those behaviors may actually signal overwhelm or a nervous system asking for safety. She also stresses that adults’ own groundedness affects the learning environment.

Practical Examples and a Safety Scan
The episode closes with real-life examples of students freezing during exams, Teresa’s childhood encounter with a growling dog, and her experience teaching children in difficult living conditions in London. She explains that learners need practice feeling safe under pressure and that basic needs must be acknowledged before academic expectations can be realistic. Teresa offers a simple safety scan involving breath, posture, grounding, sensory noticing, and appreciation. She ends by noting that a child’s own voice can feel safe to the body, making self-talk a useful tool for regulation.

LEO Round Table, June 12, 2026

Fri, 12 Jun 2026
LEO Round Table with Chip DeBlock

S11E115, House Finally Passes Border Security Package And Now Heads To Trump’s Desk

House finally passes border security package and now heads to Trump’s desk. Judge dismisses murder indictment against cop who killed unarmed man in 2015. Stalking suspect shot by police after he charged at officers with gun. Suspect fires shots into officer's car during PIT maneuver.

Border Security Funding, LAPD Legal Fallout, and High-Risk Police Shootings

Border Security Funding Finally Advances

Chip DeBlock opens the episode by introducing Chief Ralph Ornelas and previewing several law enforcement stories, then begins with the House passage of a border security funding package. The discussion focuses on funding for ICE, Border Patrol, airport-related services, and TSA, with Chip arguing that delays harmed public safety and created unnecessary strain. Chief Ornelas agrees that border enforcement funding is needed and says he is proud of the Republican support for the measure. Both speakers frame the issue as one of national security, law enforcement support, and political accountability.

Media Influence and Public Perception of ICE

The conversation expands into the role of the media in shaping public attitudes toward ICE, border enforcement, and national security. Chief Ornelas says the media has made ICE appear to be an enemy and encourages people to read multiple sources and make independent decisions. Chip argues that a person’s news source often strongly predicts their views and criticizes commentators who, in his view, allow false narratives to go unchallenged. The segment keeps the discussion within the speakers’ perspectives and presents their political claims as commentary from the episode.

Ex-LAPD Officer’s Murder Indictment Dismissed

The next major segment examines a dismissed murder indictment against former LAPD officer Clifford Proctor in the 2015 shooting death of Brendon Glenn. Chip highlights the long delay between the 2015 incident and the 2024 indictment, the earlier refusal by former District Attorney Jackie Lacey to prosecute, and the later decision under George Gascon to pursue a murder charge after the statute of limitations for manslaughter had expired. Chief Ornelas discusses the political and prosecutorial history of the case, comparing its complexity to L.A. Confidential and commending the judge for repeatedly reviewing the video evidence before dismissing the indictment.

Body Cameras, Prosecutorial Politics, and Force Review

Chip and Chief Ornelas use the LAPD case to discuss body-camera evidence, video quality in 2015, and the changing expectations placed on officers in court. Chip notes that when body cameras first rolled out, many officers resisted them, but later saw them as useful in defending against accusations. Chief Ornelas explains that he had experience researching Axon body-worn cameras and reviewing force cases as a commander and chief. Both speakers emphasize the importance of careful video review, political context, and fair treatment of officers, deputies, agencies, and communities.

Orange County Stalking Suspect Shot by Deputies

The episode then turns to an Orange County case in which deputies shot an armed stalking suspect after he allegedly approached a residence connected to a woman he was obsessed with. Chip describes Ring doorbell footage showing the suspect with a gun, the boyfriend’s confrontation at the door, the 911 call, and the later traffic stop that turned into a short pursuit. Chief Ornelas analyzes the tactics, criticizing the lead deputy for not exiting the patrol car quickly enough and stressing the importance of getting out of the vehicle, creating distance, and preparing for a suspect to bail out. He also praises the deputies’ calm response, crossfire awareness, and post-shooting control.

Missouri PIT Maneuver Turns Into a Gunfight

The final major story involves a homicide suspect in Missouri who fired shots at a State Trooper during a PIT maneuver. Chip describes the original shooting call, the pursuit by multiple agencies, and Corporal Brandon Harris moving to the front to conduct the PIT. During the maneuver, the suspect fired through the trooper’s vehicle, with one round passing dangerously close to the trooper’s head. Chief Ornelas praises Corporal Harris for his performance and questions why other agencies did not conduct the PIT themselves. The episode closes with Chip thanking Chief Ornelas, promoting The Wounded Blue, naming the sponsors, and inviting viewers back for the next live show.

Sons of Liberty Radio, June 11, 2026

Fri, 12 Jun 2026
SONS of LIBERTY Radio with Bradlee Dean

The Most Censored Radio Show In The Country

False Peace, Public Corruption, Censorship, and the Call to Constitutional Accountability

False Peace and Biblical Accountability

The episode opens with Bradley Dean arguing that many Americans, especially professed Christians, are living in what he calls a false peace. He frames the country’s moral and political problems through scripture, repeatedly contrasting biblical truth with what he sees as public silence, compromised churches, and a representative government that has moved against God’s commandments.

Christian Foundations and Public Duty

Dean draws on figures such as Noah Webster, Thomas Jefferson, John Dickinson, Theodore Roosevelt, and Reverend Peter Thacher to support his argument that America’s civil order was meant to rest on biblical and constitutional principles. The program emphasizes the idea that lawful resistance, public accountability, and criticism of corrupt leaders are not optional but necessary duties for citizens.

Censorship, Platform Removal, and Media Reach

A major theme of the broadcast is censorship. Dean says a previous live feed was removed after he criticized conduct he believes harms children, and he presents that removal as evidence of big-tech suppression. He also highlights past listenership statistics from Genesis Communications Network and argues that every attempt to silence the program should be answered by expanding outreach through newspapers, billboards, radio, and other platforms.

Government, Gun Ownership, and Public Distrust

Dean discusses falling public confidence in government and links that distrust to rising gun ownership and Second Amendment concerns. He argues that politicians who attack constitutional rights should be held personally accountable rather than shielded by public office. He also says lawsuits funded by taxpayer money allow officials to advance restrictive policies without personal consequences.

Pride Month, Media Clips, and Policy-Sensitive Claims

The episode includes extended commentary on Pride Month, gender identity, child protection, media figures, and alleged crimes. Policy-sensitive slurs and demeaning identity-based language were omitted from the corrected transcript package at the user’s instruction to omit content that violates policy. The remaining transcript preserves the structure of Dean’s argument as a speaker claim: that he believes cultural, media, and government institutions are normalizing conduct he condemns through his biblical worldview.

Minnesota, Fraud Allegations, and Election Integrity

The final portion focuses on Minnesota, Tim Walz, Keith Ellison, Somali community statistics mentioned in inserted clips, fraud allegations, Medicaid and social-services concerns, Ohio-related claims, and election-integrity complaints. Dean presents these issues as evidence that government systems are failing and that citizens must demand justice, paper-based elections, transparency, and constitutional enforcement.

Hollywood and Horsepower Show, June 11, 2026

Thu, 11 Jun 2026
Hollywood And Horsepower Show with Mark Otto

Guest: Lawrence Hicks - He produces the social media program, Detroit Mob History

Detroit Mob History, the Purple Gang, and the Mystery of Jimmy Hoffa

The Story Behind Detroit Mob History

Marc Otto opens the episode by introducing Hollywood and Horsepower and welcoming Lawrence Hicks, creator of Detroit Mob History. Marc explains that his own interest in the subject is personal because his father served for 27 years as a Detroit vice cop and had interactions with figures connected to the era being discussed. Lawrence describes how he began exploring Detroit organized-crime history through the Purple Gang and now shares that history through Instagram, TikTok, and an upcoming website.

The Purple Gang and Detroit Bootlegging

Lawrence explains that the Purple Gang rose in the 1920s and 1930s as a dominant bootlegging force in Detroit during Prohibition. He describes figures connected to the group, including the Bernstein brothers and Fleisher brothers, and emphasizes their reputation for aggression and ruthlessness. Marc adds context for listeners by explaining bootlegging as the illegal alcohol business during Prohibition and notes that the Purple Gang was known for making people disappear if they got in the way.

The Rise of the Tocco-Zerilli Partnership

The discussion moves from the collapse of the Purple Gang to the rise of the Italian families, especially William “Black Bill” Tocco and Joseph “Joe Uno” Zerilli. Lawrence describes how the Purple Gang’s internal distrust and violence created space for the Tocco-Zerilli partnership and the Detroit Partnership family. He also explains that Detroit’s crime family became known for staying quiet, low-profile, and business-minded, even requiring education and business acumen among made members.

Unions, Teamsters, Vegas, and Jimmy Hoffa

Marc and Lawrence discuss how the Detroit family became connected to unions, the Teamsters, Las Vegas casino funding, and Jimmy Hoffa. Lawrence explains that Hoffa’s access to Teamsters pension funds allegedly helped finance Las Vegas casino investments when banks were not interested in backing the projects. They also discuss tensions involving Hoffa, Frank Fitzsimmons, Tony Provenzano, and Detroit approval, leading into the mystery of Hoffa’s disappearance in 1975.

The Hoffa Disappearance and Detroit’s Low Profile

The episode explores several theories surrounding Jimmy Hoffa’s disappearance, including Marc’s story about his father being asked to have lunch with Tony Giacalone after Hoffa vanished. Marc says his father believed Hoffa and the car may have ended up at a steel plant, while Lawrence notes that only those involved truly know what happened. Both emphasize that, despite the heat from the Hoffa case, Detroit’s organized-crime family managed to fade back into the background and return to a lower profile.

Modern Detroit Mob History and Preserving the Past

The later discussion covers the 1980s and beyond, including Tony Zerilli’s decline in power, Jack Tocco’s leadership, RICO pressure, family friction, and the continuing low-profile nature of the Detroit family. Lawrence says he wants to focus next on the Purple Gang, the 1920s and 1930s, the Detroit Partnership, and the Crosstown Mob War involving Chester “Big Chet” LaMare. The episode closes with Lawrence promoting Detroit Mob History’s social platforms and merchandise plans, while Marc thanks him and highlights Tony’s Steak and Seafood, Old Friends Equine, and No Fallen Heroes.

LEO Round Table, June 11, 2026

Thu, 11 Jun 2026
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