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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, July 3, 2026

Sat, 04 Jul 2026
All Learning Reimagined with Teresa Songbird

Episode 5 of series on Embodied Intelligence
Presence

The Signal We Carry: Presence, Resonance, and the Body's Language of Learning

Summary

Presence Begins Before Words

Teresa Songbird opens this fifth episode in the Embodied Intelligence Series by asking a central question: what are we communicating beyond words? She frames the episode around signal, coherence, and resonance, inviting listeners to consider how much of learning and human connection happens through the body before language ever enters the room.

The Body Knows What the Mind Has Not Yet Named

Teresa explores the common experience of walking into a space and immediately sensing tension, joy, sadness, or celebration. She connects that intuitive awareness to classrooms, relationships, animals, and personal presence, emphasizing that children and adults often read emotional and nervous system states long before anyone speaks.

Static, Signal, and the Search for Home Base

Drawing inspiration from Catherine Mussell's work, Teresa reflects on the idea that the body and mind speak different languages. She describes the importance of discerning one's own inner signal from external static, expectations, fear, emotional noise, technology, and what she calls energetic weather.

Coherence as Alignment in Learning and Life

The episode defines coherence as a state in which thoughts, emotions, actions, words, heart, mind, and body work together instead of competing. Teresa uses the image of an orchestra to describe how inner alignment creates clarity, while conflicting internal rhythms can create tension and confusion.

Resonance, Tuning Forks, and the Living Field

Teresa introduces resonance through the analogy of tuning forks and the way living beings influence one another. She discusses how people, animals, environments, forests, oceans, conversations, and learning spaces can calm, elevate, energize, or unsettle us through their presence and field of influence.

Learning as Relationship, Safety, and Atmosphere

The episode argues that learners do not absorb content in isolation. They respond to relationships, emotional atmosphere, nervous system cues, safety, curiosity, and the energetic state of the adults around them. Teresa emphasizes that the teacher's, parent's, and learner's state all matter because learning is relational.

A Micro Practice for Alignment

Teresa closes by offering a simple practice: pause, breathe, come into presence, and ask, what am I thinking, what am I feeling, what am I doing, and are they aligned? She encourages listeners to intentionally embody qualities such as calm, curiosity, presence, respect, and connection, reminding them that coherence is not perfection but a conscious way of living and learning.

LEO Round Table, July 3, 2026

Fri, 03 Jul 2026
LEO Round Table with Chip DeBlock

S11E130, Muslim Police Boasts Transforming Department Into Arab Americans

Muslim police boasts transforming department into Arab Americans. Parents charged with murder over extremely obese child's death. Armed man fatally shot by officer at gas station. Man arrested after firing BB gun at nude cyclists.

Policing, Public Trust, and Split-Second Decisions

Episode Details

Public Safety, Identity, and Department Culture

The episode opens with Chip DeBlock introducing Leo Round Table and the panelists before previewing several law-enforcement stories. The first major topic centers on an article about Dearborn, Michigan, and concerns raised over a Muslim police chief's public statements, department demographics, and the broader debate over religion, assimilation, and constitutional policing. The panel discusses the need for police leaders to maintain professional neutrality while serving diverse communities.

Assimilation, Extremism, and Police Neutrality

Scott Stierd frames the issue around assimilation, arguing that people who come to the United States should respect the Constitution and the country's legal framework. Chief Ralph Ornelis responds from the perspective of a former police chief, emphasizing that officers and chiefs should avoid religious or ethnic signaling while acting in an official capacity. The discussion distinguishes between criticism of extremism and criticism of ordinary Muslims, while still expressing concern over religious influence inside government institutions.

A Tragic Child-Neglect Case in Michigan

The panel then turns to a deeply troubling case from Flint Township, Michigan, involving the death of seven-year-old Casper O'Brien, who reportedly weighed 255 pounds at the time of his death. Chip summarizes allegations against the child's parents, including severe neglect, poor living conditions, failure to follow up with medical care, and the child's absence from school. The panel reacts strongly to the case, describing it as a failure not only by the parents but potentially by schools, child-protection agencies, and other systems that should have intervened.

System Failures and Child Protection

Scott and Chief Ralph discuss how warning signs should have triggered intervention. Scott compares visible abuse injuries to the visible warning signs of extreme childhood obesity and asks why authorities were not alerted sooner. Chief Ralph explains how child-protection personnel and law enforcement can work together during welfare checks, home inspections, and removals when a child's safety is at risk. The group stresses that the surviving sibling will now have to recover from both neglect and the loss of her brother.

Body-Camera Analysis of a Deadly Traffic Stop

The next segment analyzes body-camera and dash-camera footage from Oak Park, Illinois, where an officer stopped a driver, found a concealed handgun during a pat-down, and became involved in a violent struggle. Chip describes how the body camera became dislodged, leaving the dash camera to capture much of the struggle and eventual shooting. The panel discusses the officer's composure, the difficulty of firing accurately at a moving suspect, and the importance of articulating fear of great bodily harm or death when evaluating the use of deadly force.

Tactics, Verbal Commands, and Scene Control

Chief Ralph offers a tactical critique of the stop, focusing on command presence, hand control, vehicle positioning, backup, and the importance of creating safer conditions before approaching a potentially dangerous subject. Scott agrees that scene control is a powerful psychological and tactical tool, while also noting the challenge officers face in balancing authority with de-escalation. The segment becomes a practical law-enforcement training discussion about how quickly routine stops can become deadly.

The BB Gun Incident at a Naked Bike Ride

The episode closes with a lighter but still serious discussion of a Los Angeles incident in which a suspect was arrested after allegedly firing a BB gun at participants in a naked bike ride. Chip notes that the suspect was reportedly charged with assault with a deadly weapon and explains why even a BB gun can create risk of serious bodily injury. The panel jokes about the odd circumstances while still acknowledging the danger, particularly the possibility of eye injuries or other harm.

Tony Alamo, July 3, 2026

Fri, 03 Jul 2026
Tony Alamo with Tony Alamo World Wide Ministries

The Mind of Christ, the Failure of Human Freedom, and the Society That Endures
Ep210 How To Have Gods Life Living In You Part 108

Continuing the Call to God’s Society

In this episode, World Pastor Tony Alamo continues part 108 of How to Have God’s Life Living in You, program 210. He opens by asking listeners to have pencil and paper ready so they can request a free tape or CD at the end of the program. He prays that listeners will leave their own ideas “buried at the cross,” become born-of-the-Spirit Christians, and allow God’s ideas rather than human thoughts to direct their lives. The central theme continues from the previous program: human societies fail because they are built on human concepts, while God’s society endures because it is built on His Word.

Letters From India and Nigeria

The program begins with letters from West Bengal, India, and Edo State, Nigeria. The West Bengal writer says Tony Alamo’s messages, including Earthquake and Pearl Harbor, have inspired him and that he is translating ministry books into Hindi, including The Messiah. Alamo interrupts to clarify that the work should not be called “my ministry,” but the Lord’s ministry carried out corporately by believers. The Nigeria letter describes how the writer was once a sinner, read Alamo’s literature, became a born-again Christian, and now wants to help establish an extension of the ministry in Nigeria with literature, Bibles, and T-shirts.

Precepts, Concepts, and the Unseen World

Alamo then resumes the prepared message on ideas, precepts, concepts, and reality. He teaches that everything visible first existed as an idea or concept, but that God’s Word also reveals the unseen world of angels, Satanic attack, and spiritual warfare. He says believers must have faith in what God says, rather than confidence in their own preconceived ideas. Alamo emphasizes that he no longer lives by his own motives or thoughts, but by the Spirit of Christ, and that any good done through him is the work of the Lord rather than his own.

Christ as God and the Command to Obey

A major portion of the sermon focuses on Christ as the fullness of the Godhead in human form. Alamo says Jesus came into the world to show human beings how God’s society works and what must be obeyed in order to remain in it eternally. He repeatedly warns that people who reject the words he says God is speaking through him are not fighting him, but fighting God. He also stresses that God, not church members, placed him in charge, and that those who resist his authority are rejecting the Word and commands of the Lord.

Grooming, Witnessing, and Church Discipline

Alamo applies his teaching to practical church conduct, criticizing members who he says are poorly groomed, badly dressed, or ineffective witnesses. He contrasts true church members who must maintain a proper testimony with counterfeit churches that appear polished and attractive. He specifically discusses teeth, clothing, breath, hair, shoes, and the need to present oneself decently when witnessing on the streets. He also criticizes members who leave church areas dirty or fail to act as examples to newer believers, explaining that he used fasting as discipline until the church was cleaned.

Ideology, Utopia, and the Failure of Human Systems

The prepared message then turns to world history and the human search for an ideal society. Alamo discusses ideology as the force behind systems such as imperialism, socialism, communism, dictatorship, democracy, humanism, Satanism, one-world order, monarchy, and communal living. He argues that all human attempts to build a utopia fail because they do not submit to God’s society. He describes democracy as a facade and as part of an anti-God or anti-Christ system, while also claiming that the world’s political and military systems are ultimately being manipulated by Satan and Rome.

Freedom, Discipline, and the Salvation Appeal

Alamo contrasts worldly freedom with what he calls true freedom in the Holy Spirit. He says worldly freedom encourages people to follow feelings, desires, lusts, pride, and self-determination, while God’s freedom enables believers to deny themselves, carry the cross, walk in the Spirit, and keep the commandments. He turns to Deuteronomy and the altar at Mount Ebal to describe obedience, sacrifice, and covenant responsibility, applying it to believers offering themselves as living sacrifices. The program closes with a salvation prayer, asking Jesus to forgive sins, cleanse by His blood, and live within the believer. Alamo then gives four ways to request the free program 210 audio tape or CD and tells listeners to tune in tomorrow.

Signs of Life - The Gathering, July 2, 2026

Fri, 03 Jul 2026
Signs of Life - The Gathering With Bob Ginsberg, Marta Kane and Tom and Melissa Gould

When Signs Become Messages: Spirit, Memory, Grief, and the Open Mind

Summary

A Listener's Extraordinary Childhood Experience

The episode opens with Bob Ginsberg welcoming listeners to The Gathering on Signs of Life Radio and reminding the audience about the upcoming grief retreat in Connecticut. The first listener submission comes from Sarah, who describes being 12 years old when she felt an unexpected inner message while walking in the woods and found the body of a missing 17-year-old boy. The hosts consider whether the experience may have been a form of intuitive communication, a spiritual download, or a message that others might have dismissed.

Openness, Downloads, and the Courage to Listen

The discussion explores why some people receive signs, impressions, or information and why many people ignore them. The hosts suggest that children may be more naturally receptive and that Sarah's response was unusual not because she received the thought, but because she acted on it. The conversation also connects Sarah's experience to the idea of developing psychic or mediumistic sensitivity rather than fearing the loss of a gift.

How Loved Ones Visit and Why Communication Changes

A major theme of the episode is how people in spirit may visit the physical world. The hosts discuss the belief that loved ones remain connected, may come close when called by memory or emotion, and often reach out soon after passing to reassure those left behind. They also address why communications may seem to fade over time, suggesting that time operates differently in the spiritual realm and that spirits may be engaged in continued growth and learning.

Memory, Consciousness, and the Question of the Brain

The hosts consider how people in spirit can remember events if they no longer have a physical brain. They suggest that memory may not be stored only in the brain and discuss concepts such as the Akashic Records and the zero-point field. The conversation briefly touches on research-minded skepticism, quantum questions, and the limits of what can be explained from the physical side.

Family, Adoption, and Reunion After Death

Marta joins briefly from a doctor's office and contributes to a question about whether birth parents will be present when an adopted person crosses over. The hosts discuss biological and emotional bonds, the absence of jealousy or competition on the other side, and the idea that adoptive parents, birth parents, former spouses, and others connected by love may all be present in a spirit reunion.

Signs, Subtlety, and Spiritual Practice

The episode returns repeatedly to the theme that signs are often subtle. The hosts discuss dream visits, corner-of-the-eye sightings, seeing loved ones in nature, EVP, meditation, gratitude, and the importance of acknowledging communications when they occur. They caution against forcing phenomena and emphasize patience, receptivity, and calm attention.

Afterlife Questions, Growth, and Closing Prayer

The final portion of the show moves through listener questions about free will after death, pain at the moment of passing, why bad things happen if loved ones protect us, whether communications stop so the living can move forward, religious teachings about the afterlife, unresolved emotions, pets and consciousness, purgatory, past-life regression, and hypnosis. The episode closes with a global peace prayer, a reminder that loved ones are only a heartbeat away, and the hope that science will eventually accept survival of consciousness.

Junk Refund Show, July 2, 2026

Fri, 03 Jul 2026
Junk Refund Show with Alan J. Cook

Junk, Generosity, and the Freedom to Clear Your Mind

Episode Summary

A Fourth of July Broadcast From the Nation's Capital
Alan J. Cook opens this July 2nd edition of The Junk Refund Show with a personal greeting, a birthday song for his sister Carolyn, and a reflection on the joy of growing up in a large, close-knit family. Broadcasting from the Washington, D.C. area during the Fourth of July season, he describes the heat, the crowds, the increased traffic, bus activity, security changes, and the special atmosphere around the nation's capital as people gather for Independence Day celebrations.

Family Traditions That Become Real Success Stories
The episode turns toward the value of family traditions, especially through Alan's story about his friend Robert, who gathers dozens of family members every Fourth of July at Deep Creek Lake in western Maryland. Alan frames this kind of yearly gathering as a genuine success story, not because of the location or activities, but because of the love, commitment, and continuity that hold a family together over time.

A 50-Year Reunion Built Around Memory, Fun, and Generosity
Alan spends a major portion of the show recounting his 50-year high school reunion in Utah. After volunteering to handle the entertainment, he created a Family Feud-style trivia program tied to the class's 1976 bicentennial graduation year. He also contacted political offices for congratulatory videos, brought in a classmate who performs as Abraham Lincoln, arranged a mini concert from musician Kurt Bestor, and helped build an evening designed to be memorable rather than routine.

The Gift Card Surprise That Became the Heart of the Night
One of the central stories involves Alan purchasing fifty $50 gift cards, paying $2,500 in cash, and secretly preparing to give them away during the reunion trivia game. He describes the comic and memorable experience of buying the cards at Safeway, watching them ring up and activate one by one, and later giving them to classmates. The gesture became a symbol of the evening's spirit, creating joy, surprise, gratitude, and shared memories.

Why Reunions Matter More Than Appearances
Alan reflects on the emotional power of seeing classmates after 50 years, including old friends, a ninth-grade best friend, and a former girlfriend he had not seen in decades. He acknowledges that people change and may avoid reunions because of age, hardship, or self-consciousness, but he encourages listeners to attend anyway. For him, the deeper value is reconnection, shared history, honoring classmates who have passed away, and creating moments that last.

Getting the Junk Out of the Mind
In the final part of the show, Alan connects the junk removal business to mental and emotional clutter. Inspired by a 7-Eleven clerk who asked how to get the junk out of one's head, Alan offers advice about seeking truth, focusing only on the next right task, not trying to control the entire future, choosing faith over doubt, and rewarding oneself after hard work. His examples range from golf and business marketing to surviving a hot day of physical labor with a Chick-fil-A peach shake as a simple reward.

Faith, Celebration, and the Spirit of America
Alan closes with reflections on Independence Day, America, soccer, the excitement of World Cup fans, and the need to look for the good even when the world feels uncertain. He encourages listeners to keep faith ahead of doubt, enjoy the Fourth of July safely, stay cool in the heat, and continue clearing junk not only from homes and garages, but from the mind, heart, and life.

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