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!


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At The Wire, June 5, 2026

Sat, 06 Jun 2026
At The Wire with Scott Miller

Belmont Week, the Road Ahead, and the Business of Building a Racehorse

Belmont Week Takes Center Stage

The episode centers on the racing calendar surrounding Belmont, with the host emphasizing the excitement of Belmont week and the attention surrounding the race. He discusses the field size, the build-up from earlier Triple Crown events, and the challenge of getting horses prepared through the spring season. The host also notes that viewers can watch the race through Fox and through the program’s website, while framing Belmont as a major test for horses, owners, and trainers.

The Difference Between Distances

A major theme of the episode is the difference between training for a mile-and-a-quarter race and a mile-and-a-half race. The host explains that the distance change affects preparation, strategy, and how owners decide whether to continue forward with a horse. He suggests that this year’s distance makes the Belmont more manageable for some connections, while still leaving important questions about pace, stamina, and how individual horses will respond under pressure.

Owners, Breeders, and Long-Term Decisions

The host spends significant time discussing how owners and breeders think beyond a single race. He describes how some horses may be evaluated as future stallions, broodmares, or prospects for later races, and how the choice to continue racing often depends on bloodlines, money, pride, and long-term value. He also notes that owners must decide whether to aim for major races, seek easier spots, or preserve a horse’s future potential.

The Road to Bigger Racing Goals

The episode also looks ahead to the broader racing schedule after Belmont. The host refers to major races such as the Haskell, the Travers, and the Breeders’ Cup path, describing them as part of the larger strategic road for horses that continue beyond the Triple Crown season. He explains that trainers must study condition books, choose appropriate distances, and decide whether a horse should stay in the three-year-old division, face older horses, or shift to a different racing path.

Tracks, Trainers, and the Business of Racing

The host reflects on the role of trainers, jockeys, grooms, owners, and racetracks in keeping the industry moving. He emphasizes that trainers have difficult jobs because they must keep horses healthy, ready, and placed in the correct races. He also discusses modernized tracks, regional racing attractions, and the importance of making race venues appealing not just to bettors, but also to families and local communities.

Horse Racing as a Family and Community Experience

Toward the end of the episode, the host presents horse racing as more than a sport. He describes it as a family-centered experience tied to travel, local attractions, farms, beaches, parks, and community life. While some of the closing remarks are heavily garbled, the recoverable message is that racing requires planning, investment, and community connection, and that successful racing operations depend on more than simply sending a horse to the track.

All Learning Reimagined, June 5, 2026

Sat, 06 Jun 2026
All Learning Reimagined with Teresa Songbird

Episode 1 of new series on Embodied Intelligence
We are more than a physical body

Embodied Intelligence and the Living Body of Learning

Introducing Embodied Intelligence

Teresa opens the episode by welcoming listeners back to All Learning Reimagined and announcing a new nine-part podcast series on embodied intelligence. She explains that the series grew naturally out of her previous work and was inspired by the teachings and questions of Catherine Russell. The episode begins with the idea that learning is not limited to the brain, but is connected to the body, energy, emotion, and lived experience.

A Classroom Story About Safety and Focus

Teresa shares a story from her teaching life about a young student who could not focus during an otherwise engaging outdoor lesson. Later, Teresa discovered that the child had experienced a serious family argument earlier that morning. The story became a turning point for Teresa because it showed her that a child’s nervous system can continue carrying emotional stress long after the original event, directly affecting readiness to learn.

The Body as a Living Communicator

The episode explores fascia, the nervous system, and the idea that the body stores and communicates emotional experience. Teresa describes the body as more than a machine, saying it is electrical, chemical, biological, emotional, and relational. She suggests that posture, energy, movement, and emotional history all influence how people show up in learning environments.

Learning Beyond the Brain

Teresa challenges the common assumption that learning happens only in the head. She discusses the gut, heart, brain, bioelectricity, and the importance of coherence between different parts of the body. She also connects this view to ancient wisdom traditions and Indigenous understandings of land, body, community, and spirit, framing embodied learning as something both newly explored by science and long understood by older wisdom traditions.

Practical Ways to Reconnect With the Body

The episode offers a simple micro-practice designed to help listeners return attention to the body. Teresa invites listeners to place their feet on the floor, breathe, notice sensations, feel the heartbeat, observe tension or ease, and ask what the body is communicating. She emphasizes that the goal is not to fix anything, but to develop awareness and reconnect with the body’s signals.

Living Learning as a Whole-Being Experience

Teresa closes by explaining that lasting learning involves the whole being: mind, body, emotions, relationships, environment, and lived experience. She previews future topics in the series, including the nervous system, fascia, emotion, and how the body shapes reality. Her final message invites listeners to explore, experience, express, and live learning rather than simply consume information.

Sons of Liberty Radio, June 5, 2026

Sat, 06 Jun 2026
SONS of LIBERTY Radio with Bradlee Dean

Foaming Out Their Shame

Bradley Dean on Pride, Public Morality, and the Epstein Files

Kinsey, Sexual Morality, and the Opening Framework

The episode begins with a prerecorded segment sharply criticizing Alfred Kinsey, the Kinsey Reports, and the influence the segment claims Kinsey had on American sex education, law, and morality. The segment presents Kinsey’s work as fraudulent and harmful, especially regarding claims about children and sexuality. It also introduces Dr. Judith Reisman as a researcher who challenged Kinsey’s conclusions and argues that American law shifted away from biblical and common-law foundations after Kinsey’s work became influential.

Sons of Liberty’s Christian and Constitutional Framing

The program then moves into recurring Sons of Liberty framing, presenting the show as grounded in a Christian biblical worldview and American founding principles. Prerecorded quotations from Noah Webster, Thomas Jefferson, John Dickinson, Theodore Roosevelt, and others are used to support the show’s emphasis on scripture, morality, civil liberty, and resistance to unlawful power. Promotional segments also ask listeners to support the organization, schedule events, attend Sunday services, and follow the show through Sons of Liberty platforms.

Bradley Dean’s Attack on Pride and LGBT Advocacy

Bradley Dean’s live commentary focuses heavily on opposition to homosexuality, Pride events, and what he describes as a “homosexual manifesto” entered into the Congressional Record in 1987. He quotes and discusses that alleged manifesto, arguing that it represents a threat to children, churches, and traditional society. His comments repeatedly frame homosexuality as an “abomination” under his interpretation of biblical law and argue that American citizens and churches have tolerated what he says should be condemned and prosecuted.

Biblical Law, Love, Judgment, and Church Authority

Dean spends a major portion of the broadcast arguing that God’s law and God’s love cannot be separated. He rejects the idea that Christian love means withholding rebuke or legal enforcement, citing scriptures from Matthew, Romans, Corinthians, Timothy, Peter, and other biblical passages. He also criticizes women preaching from pulpits, rejects the idea of “gay Christians,” challenges pastor-led churches, and argues that apostles, prophets, and teachers are the biblical model for church leadership.

Callers, Statistics, Boy Scouts, and Public Institutions

The broadcast includes calls from Margie from Minnesota and Craig. Margie presents statistics and claims about homosexuality, disease, suicide, abuse, and public health, which Dean affirms and connects to his broader argument about children and institutional failure. Dean also discusses the Boy Scouts of America, claiming a connection between the acceptance of openly gay members and abuse-related bankruptcy settlement costs. Craig’s call links LGBT-affirming churches and support for modern Israel, which Dean uses to expand his criticism of what he views as conflicting church teachings.

Epstein Files, Public Figures, and Closing Appeals

In the final portion, Dean turns to the Epstein files, naming many public figures, politicians, business leaders, entertainers, and academics whom he claims appear in those records. He argues that powerful people are being protected, extorted, or elevated through hidden wrongdoing, and he accuses political figures and media personalities of failing to fully expose the list. The episode closes with Dean calling for justice, warning against tolerating crimes against children, promoting Sons of Liberty Media, inviting support, and reminding listeners about Sunday church services.

LEO Round Table, June 5, 2026

Fri, 05 Jun 2026
LEO Round Table with Chip DeBlock

S11E110, Housing Boss William Pulte Made Acting Director Of National Intelligence

Housing boss William Pulte made acting Director of National Intelligence. AG Todd Blanche releases details on DOJ hunt for Donald Trump. Trump announces new date for White House Correspondent's Dinner. Chicago officer mistakenly kills his partner during pursuit of suspect. Acting police chief in Minneapolis replaced after on week.

Intelligence Shakeups, White House Security, and Police Leadership Under Fire

Intelligence Appointment Raises Questions

The episode opens with host Chip DeBlock introducing former Secret Service guests Frank Loveridge and Rich Staropoli before moving into the lead story about William Pulte being tapped as acting director of national intelligence following Tulsi Gabbard’s departure. Chip expresses surprise at Pulte’s housing and finance background, questioning whether someone without intelligence-community experience is suited for such a powerful role. Rich explains the importance of the intelligence briefing process, including the president’s daily briefings, while Frank argues that loyalty and trust may be central to the appointment.

Trust, Loyalty, and the Intelligence Community

The panel discusses whether President Trump may distrust people already inside the intelligence apparatus and therefore prefer someone outside that world. Rich and Frank both suggest that Trump may have reason to appoint someone he personally trusts, citing prior conflicts involving intelligence and law-enforcement agencies. Chip acknowledges that he initially had difficulty accepting the appointment but says the trust-factor argument helped him understand why the president might avoid selecting someone from the traditional intelligence chain.

DOJ Files and the Todd Blanche Interview

The next segment turns to Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and his discussion with Sean Hannity about missing DOJ files, special-counsel material, burn bags, and documents connected to investigations involving President Trump. Chip summarizes Blanche’s claim that Trump likely would have faced prison time if the election had gone differently. Frank focuses on the importance of finding and reviewing documents related to the Trump-Russia probe, Crossfire Hurricane, the Durham report, and alleged weaponization of the Department of Justice, while emphasizing that the claims still need to be confirmed through the material.

White House Correspondents’ Dinner Security

The panel then discusses a new date and possible venue for the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, focusing heavily on security concerns. Rich notes that a publicly announced date and venue can become a challenge to adversaries, while Frank explains the difficulty of securing an operational hotel filled with ordinary guests, event attendees, high-ranking officials, and multiple access points. The guests stress concerns about access control, room sweeps, paper tickets, guest lists, explosives, weapons, and architectural vulnerabilities, arguing that a secure White House ballroom would be a better long-term solution.

Chicago Officer Shooting Case

The broadcast moves into a body-camera story from Chicago involving Officer Crystal Rivera, who was fatally shot by her partner, Officer Carlos Baker, during a foot pursuit inside an apartment building. Chip summarizes the footage and lawsuit allegations, including the claim that Baker fired behind himself, struck Rivera in the back, failed to promptly render aid, and had a prior romantic relationship with her. Frank cautions that investigators need to complete a full review before reaching conclusions, while Rich says the video raises serious questions because it appears, from his perspective, as though the officer turns and shoots his partner rather than continuing into the apartment.

Minneapolis Police Leadership Turmoil

The final major topic concerns Minneapolis police leadership after former chief Brian O’Hara’s resignation and the brief appointment of Katie Blackwell before Bill Peterson was named interim chief. Chip discusses Alpha News reporting, Liz Collin, Bob Kroll, The Fall of Minneapolis, and sworn statements by officers related to Blackwell’s testimony in the Derek Chauvin trial. Rich and Frank criticize Minneapolis leadership, Mayor Jacob Frey, and the politicization of policing, particularly in relation to ICE and crowd-control issues. Chip closes by promoting LEO Affairs, The Wounded Blue, the show’s sponsors, and the next broadcast.

Ark Of Grace, June 4, 2026

Fri, 05 Jun 2026
Ark Of Grace with Amanda Grace

The Outsider Is Rising: Why Political Goliaths Are Falling Now

Amanda Grace examines current political events through a biblical and prophetic lens.

As political landscapes continue to shift, outsider candidates who are not part of the establishment are gaining momentum while long-standing political "Goliaths" are beginning to fall. What does this mean for the nation? What prophetic patterns are emerging? And what insight is the Lord revealing for this season?

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