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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LEO Round Table, June 17, 2026

Wed, 17 Jun 2026
S11E118, President Trump Announces End To War And Peace Deal With Iran

President Trump announces end to war and peace deal with Iran. Polling data shows sharp decline in pride for America. Officer fired over horseplay incident caught on video. Suspect who pulled shotgun on officer fatally shot.

Six-Paragraph Summary

A Law Enforcement Panel Opens With Sponsors and the Day’s Topics

The episode begins with Chip DeBlock welcoming listeners to the law enforcement talk show and introducing guest Dr. Joel Schultz, a retired police chief joining from Colorado. The host gives sponsor acknowledgments and explains where viewers can find the live and produced versions of the show. He then previews the episode’s topics, including claims about a reported Iran peace agreement, a poll showing declining American pride, a Pasadena police horseplay shooting, and several officer-involved shooting videos.

A Skeptical Conversation About Iran and a Claimed Peace Deal

The first major discussion centers on a Tampa Free Press article reporting that President Donald Trump announced a completed peace agreement with Iran and the lifting of a naval blockade. Chip expresses distrust toward Iranian officials and uncertainty about whether any agreement will hold. Dr. Schultz adds that market reactions may show optimism, but he remains skeptical because of Iran’s internal factions, regional tensions, and the possibility that separate actors could still provoke a renewed conflict.

Declining National Pride and Concern Over American Institutions

The conversation shifts to polling data suggesting that only about one-third of Americans say they are extremely proud to be American, a sharp decline from earlier decades. Chip highlights partisan differences in the poll and connects the trend to Americans’ trust in institutions and media sources. Dr. Schultz reflects on patriotism, the bicentennial, institutional loyalty, Juneteenth, and the need to recognize both America’s flaws and its progress. Both speakers describe the decline in national pride as disappointing and alarming.

Pasadena Police Horseplay Shooting Sparks Accountability Debate

Chip revisits a Pasadena Police Department incident in which one officer shot another during what was described as horseplay involving firearms. He explains the video sequence, including one officer allegedly pointing his weapon before another officer returned the gesture and discharged his gun through a windshield, striking the first officer in the shoulder. Dr. Schultz strongly criticizes the framing of the incident as horseplay, arguing that the behavior should be treated as criminal negligence and that the department should review its safety culture.

Practical Jokes, Professionalism, and Police Culture

The Pasadena discussion leads both men into stories about practical jokes in police work. Chip recalls a cap-gun prank from his early days as a rookie officer and says his squad eventually stopped the behavior. Dr. Schultz shares a story about being sent to a supposed man-with-a-gun call that turned out to involve a wooden statue, using the example to reinforce his dislike of police pranks. The discussion ties those stories back to professionalism, officer safety, and the seriousness required when firearms are involved.

Sacramento Shotgun Call Raises Tactical and Psychological Concerns

The final major segment focuses on a Sacramento-area incident in which a deputy responded to a woman-in-distress call and eventually faced a suspect who pulled out a shotgun. Chip criticizes the deputy for allowing the suspect access to the weapon, losing visual control, and letting the suspect use the patrol vehicle for cover. Dr. Schultz analyzes the deputy’s response through the lens of police mindset, cognitive dissonance, and training, arguing that the deputy appeared more comfortable following procedure than taking command of a lethal threat. The episode closes with mentions of The Wounded Blue, LEOAffairs.ch, and the show’s sponsors.

SEO Keywords / Key Phrases

law enforcement accountability, police use of force, officer safety, police training, firearms safety, national pride, Iran peace deal, tactical response, police bodycam analysis, law enforcement culture

The Sports Doctor, June 17, 2026

Wed, 17 Jun 2026
Guests, Sue Williams and Dr Kiran Dintyala

It Starts Now, June 17, 2026

Wed, 17 Jun 2026
This week on It  Starts Now I dive into a candid and empowering conversation about menopause, intimacy, hormone changes, and why women are finally refusing to suffer in silence. Joining the show are Kate Wells of Parlour Games, the women’s wellness brand boldly “saving the world one vagina at a time.” We discuss the realities many women experience during menopause, including painful intimacy, dryness, hormone shifts, confidence changes, and the lack of honest conversations surrounding women’s health.

With humor, science, and unapologetic honesty, this episode explores solutions, self-care, aging confidently, and why women over 50 deserve pleasure, wellness, and real answers.

Juanita
The Media Groomer 💋

Tony Alamo, June 17, 2026

Wed, 17 Jun 2026
Ep197, How To Have Gods Life Living In You, Part 95, Faith, Rest, and Entering God’s Promise

Six-Paragraph Summary

Faith as the Entrance Into Rest

The episode continues the speaker’s series on having God’s life living within a believer, with the central theme drawn from Hebrews. The speaker argues that entering God’s rest requires faith in the full Word of God and obedience to what he presents as biblical instruction. He frames unbelief as the reason Israel failed to enter the promised rest and warns listeners not to repeat that pattern.

Defending Controversial Doctrinal Claims

A major portion of the opening focuses on the speaker’s defense of his view that the Bible does not condemn polygamy. He cites biblical figures such as Moses, Abraham, David, Solomon, and Gideon as examples he believes support this interpretation. He also contrasts this view with what he calls the Antichrist government and wider world system, while making controversial claims about marriage, sexuality, religious authority, and public criticism.

Letters From International Listeners

The program includes several listener letters read by Sharon from Mexico, Togo, and India. These letters thank the ministry for tapes, literature, Bibles, and other materials, and they report that people are responding to the ministry’s publications. The speaker responds by blessing the writers, promising materials where requested, and describing the worldwide spread of the ministry’s literature and missionary efforts.

Warnings Against Worldliness and Disobedience

While teaching from Hebrews 3, the speaker emphasizes the danger of hardening one’s heart, departing from God, and failing to obey those he says God has placed in authority. He criticizes television, worldly music, video games, popular entertainment, and religious teachers he believes promote a worldly gospel. His message repeatedly urges listeners to separate from what he calls the world system and to remain steadfast in obedience.

Hebrews 11 and Faith in Action

The speaker turns to Hebrews 11 to discuss faith as the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen. He highlights Abel, Enoch, Noah, Abraham, Sarah, Isaac, and Jacob as examples of faith, using them to argue that true faith must be demonstrated through obedience. He interprets Abel’s sacrifice, Noah’s ark, and Abraham’s journey as signs of belief in God’s Word rather than trust in the world.

Closing Prayer and Salvation Appeal

The episode closes with an invitation for listeners to say a sinner’s prayer and accept Jesus Christ as the Son of God. The speaker emphasizes that salvation requires faith, repentance, and cleansing through the blood of Jesus, while rejecting the idea that believers may continue willfully sinning. Sharon then provides the ministry’s website, mailing address, telephone number, and fax number for listeners who want a copy of the program or ministry materials.

SEO Keywords / Key Phrases

Faith and obedience, Hebrews Bible teaching, entering God’s rest, Christian salvation prayer, Word of God, gospel literature, biblical faith, repentance and salvation, spiritual obedience, Christian ministry outreach

SOS Coming Home, June 17, 2026

Wed, 17 Jun 2026
Reclaiming the Hidden Self Through Shadow Work and Unbecoming

Six-Paragraph Summary

Shadow Work as a Return to Wholeness
The episode opens with Jennifer Elizabeth Masters welcoming listeners to a discussion about shadow work, explaining that it is not about becoming darker, more serious, or endlessly dissecting childhood. Instead, she frames shadow work as a path toward wholeness, honesty, and “unbecoming,” meaning the process of releasing identities, beliefs, and emotional burdens that were never truly part of the self.

Making the Unconscious Conscious
The host uses Carl Jung’s idea of making the unconscious conscious to explain why people often repeat painful patterns in relationships, self-sabotage, emotional reactions, and personal choices. She describes the unconscious mind as constantly active and suggests that hidden beliefs and unprocessed emotions can quietly shape a person’s life until they are brought into awareness.

Unbecoming the Roles We Learned to Survive
A major theme of the episode is that people often adopt roles in childhood to stay safe or gain acceptance, becoming the peacekeeper, the strong one, the invisible one, or the responsible one. The host explains that these roles can become masks, and shadow work helps uncover the original self underneath inherited shame, family expectations, cultural messages, and survival strategies.

The Body, Anger, and Emotional Suppression
Jennifer shares personal experiences of childhood trauma, emotional invalidation, depression, illness, and anger that she was not allowed to express. She explains that emotions do not disappear when suppressed; they often move into the body or show up as anxiety, depression, physical symptoms, resentment, or recurring relational patterns. She presents anger not as a flaw, but as a boundary and a signal that self-respect is trying to emerge.

The Golden Shadow and the Gifts We Hide
The episode expands shadow work beyond painful or shameful material by discussing the golden shadow: the buried gifts, sensitivity, intelligence, creativity, emotional depth, compassion, voice, and power that may have been shamed or discouraged by others. Jennifer encourages listeners to consider whether what they were told was “too much” may actually be one of their greatest strengths.

Letting Go of Fantasy and Choosing Authenticity
In the final portion, the host reflects on family wounds, her relationship with her mother, the fantasy of finally receiving the love or apology she wanted, and the freedom that comes from accepting reality. She connects healing with authenticity, explaining that being fully oneself may unsettle people who preferred a smaller, edited version. The episode closes with a call to end cycles of criticism, stop abandoning the self, and come home to one’s own truth.

SEO Keywords / Key Phrases

shadow work, inner healing, emotional suppression, unconscious mind, childhood trauma, self-abandonment, authenticity, golden shadow, emotional boundaries, personal transformation

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