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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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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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Purchase ID/Date: 7365245 / 9-29-2023
Website: https://arkofgrace.org
Prayer Requests: https://arkofgrace.org/prayer-requests
Donate: https://arkofgrace.org/donate
Partners: https://arkofgrace.org/ministry-partners

Hollywood and Horsepower Show, June 4, 2026

Thu, 04 Jun 2026
Hollywood And Horsepower Show with Mark Otto

Guest: Michael Behrens, founder of My Racehorse the largest fractional racehorse ownership group.

Biography: Credit for bio and photo - from https://www.ownerview.com/panelist/michael-behrens

Michael Behrens is the founder of MyRacehorse.com the first ever fully securities compliant micro-share racehorse ownership platform. Micro-shares allow racing fans to buy equity stakes in top thoroughbreds via a hyper fractional interest. A former marketing and advertising executive with Casper, one of the fastest growing direct to consumer brands ever, Michael turned his attention to thoroughbred ownership in 2017. As CEO of MyRacehorse his responsibilities include securities compliance, owner relations, track and industry partnerships and product development.

Title: Founder and CEO
Phone: 909-740-9175
Email: michael@myracehorse.com

Opening the Gates to Racehorse Ownership with Michael Behrens

Host Mark welcomes listeners to Hollywood and Horsepower and introduces guest Michael Behrens, an executive with MyRacehorse, a platform built around fractional racehorse ownership. The episode begins with a reminder of the show’s sponsor, Tony’s Steak and Seafood, and the charities the program supports, including No Fallen Heroes and Old Friends Equine. Mark frames the conversation around accessibility, explaining that MyRacehorse gives people at many income levels a way to experience ownership in Thoroughbred racing. Michael explains that MyRacehorse is more accurately described as a platform than a club, because it gives fans a structured way to buy small equity shares in racehorses.

From Racing Fan to Founder of a Platform

Michael shares that he grew up near San Diego and developed an early love for horse racing through trips to Del Mar. After life, family, and business took him away from the track for a time, he later had the opportunity to explore racehorse ownership after selling his digital marketing agency. He quickly discovered how expensive traditional ownership could be and began looking for a better way. Inspired by fractional ownership models in Japan and Australia, Michael helped create a system that would let fans buy into racehorses at a much lower cost. He explains that MyRacehorse now has about 100,000 owners across the globe, primarily in the United States and Australia.

How the MyRacehorse Model Works

Michael explains that fractional racehorse ownership requires real regulatory structure because dividing a horse into equity shares creates a security. MyRacehorse therefore operates under SEC and FINRA-related requirements while trying to keep the customer experience simple through its website and app. Users can browse available horses, review trainers, pedigrees, financial information, training costs, insurance details, workout videos, and offering documents before buying shares. Once someone purchases a share, the horse appears in that person’s ownership stable, and the owner begins receiving updates, videos, trainer insights, jockey content, and possible perks such as farm tours, paddock access, box seating, or winner’s circle opportunities.

Experiences Beyond the Racetrack

A major theme of the episode is that racehorse ownership is not just about watching a race. Michael describes the owner perks available through MyRacehorse, including farm visits, organized tours, training events, and large partner gatherings such as the Ocala event hosted with OBS. He also describes MyRacehorse lounges at tracks like Gulfstream, Santa Anita, and Del Mar, as well as international experiences tied to horses racing at places like Royal Ascot, Riyadh, and Dubai. Mark emphasizes that these experiences often include restaurants, local culture, travel, camaraderie, and traditions, making racehorse ownership part of a larger lifestyle and travel experience.

Community, Education, and the Racing Lifestyle

Michael explains that many MyRacehorse owners are not from racing families and are not industry insiders. They may have grown up watching the Kentucky Derby or visiting a track occasionally, but they did not know how to participate more deeply. MyRacehorse helps fill that gap through educational updates, owner content, trainer communication, analyst insights, and owner groups. Michael says the community itself often becomes one of the most educational parts of ownership, as people meet each other at tracks, share experiences, and sometimes go on to buy horses together, start stables, or even purchase farms. Mark connects this to the broader accessibility of horse racing, noting that racetracks often allow fans to interact with trainers, jockeys, owners, and horses in ways that are uncommon in other major sports.

Building a Stable and Choosing Horses

The final part of the conversation focuses on how MyRacehorse selects horses and trainers. Michael explains that bloodstock agents evaluate pedigrees, conformation, workouts, and auction value before horses are purchased. Depending on the situation, MyRacehorse may work with a trainer before buying a horse, or it may buy a horse and then match it to a trainer whose program fits that horse’s profile. Michael also explains that owners can diversify by purchasing shares in multiple horses instead of putting all their money into one horse. This allows members to experience different tracks, trainers, circuits, horse ages, and racing journeys. He closes by encouraging new owners to decide what matters most to them, involve family and friends, join the owner community, attend events, and give horse racing enough attention to fall in love with it.

Keywords: My Race Horse, My RaceHorse, MyRaceHorse

LEO Round Table, June 4, 2026

Thu, 04 Jun 2026
LEO Round Table with Chip DeBlock

S11E109, Viral Video Shows Cop Believing Woman Had Phone Out With Missing Hand

Trump signs the Medal Of Sacrifice Act inspired by fallen Florida officers. Family tree leads decades long cold case to arrest. Cop sentenced to 12 years for shooting unarmed man in the back. Suspect shot after stabbing officer during attack. Bad guy fatally shot after striking officer with a machete. Officers not charged for fatal shooting of armed man at gas station.

Federal Honors, Cold Case DNA, and Officer-Survival Lessons in High-Risk Encounters

Federal Recognition for Fallen First Responders

The episode opens with host Chip DeBlock introducing Leo Roundtable as a law-enforcement-focused news discussion show and welcoming attorney Ken, a former police officer and attorney who represents law enforcement officers. Chip highlights the episode’s upcoming topics, beginning with the Medal of Sacrifice Act of 2025, a federal measure signed by President Donald Trump to create a posthumous presidential honor for law enforcement officers and first responders killed in the line of duty. Chip explains that the law was inspired by the deaths of three Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office deputies and says he views the presidential recognition as meaningful, while Ken adds that the honor is overdue and worthwhile, even though he would have liked to see additional benefits attached.

Cold Case DNA and Genetic Genealogy

The show then turns to a 28-year-old Florida cold case involving a woman who was brutally attacked after a late-night ride home from Ybor City in 1998. Chip explains that DNA evidence collected in the case was later connected to a suspect through modern genetic genealogy work involving FDLE and law enforcement task-force support. He uses the case as a reminder to smaller and medium-sized police agencies that cold-case evidence should not sit unused on a shelf when state agencies and larger partners may have access to new DNA tools. Ken agrees, noting that genetic genealogy and consumer DNA databases have become powerful investigative resources for agencies revisiting old cases.

Deputy Sentenced for Shooting a Fleeing Man

Chip and Ken next discuss the federal sentencing of former San Diego County Sheriff’s Deputy Aaron Richard Russell, who received 12 years in prison for fatally shooting an unarmed man who was running away from custody in 2020. Chip describes the court’s ruling, the consecutive sentences, the surveillance footage, and witness testimony that the man was shot from behind. Ken analyzes the incident from a legal and tactical standpoint, explaining that modern standards after Tennessee v. Garner limit the use of deadly force against fleeing felons unless they pose an immediate threat of death or great bodily harm to officers or innocent civilians. The discussion emphasizes how law enforcement standards have evolved over time.

Buffalo Officer Stabbing and Tactical Criticism

The episode then focuses on a Buffalo police video in which officers confronted a suspect armed with a box cutter and scissors. Chip describes how one officer went hands-on with the suspect while holding a firearm and flashlight, was stabbed in the back, and then another officer initially approached with a Taser rather than lethal cover. Both Chip and Ken strongly criticize the tactics, saying the officers exposed themselves, the public, and each other to unnecessary danger. Ken argues that the suspect’s weapons made the encounter a deadly-force situation, not a Taser situation, and says the video should be used as a training example of what not to do.

Susanville Machete Incident and Children in Danger

The show continues with a Susanville, California, officer-involved shooting involving a suspect armed with a machete and three children inside an apartment. Chip explains that the suspect allegedly held a two-year-old child near a second-floor window and then appeared to swing or stab with the machete near where the child had been placed. Officers fired shots from outside, entered the apartment, and one officer was struck in the shoulder by the machete. Chip and Ken again criticize the use of less-lethal tools during what they describe as an obvious deadly-force situation, especially with children and an injured officer inside the apartment. Ken stresses that officers must recognize when a machete threat requires immediate lethal-force readiness.

Gastonia Convenience Store Shooting and Closing Remarks

For the final case, Chip describes a Gastonia, North Carolina, convenience-store shooting that occurred while plainclothes officers were conducting an unrelated alcohol-sales operation. The officers observed a dispute between two men, and one man appeared to threaten another with what looked like a firearm. When the armed man moved toward the door, an undercover detective shot him, and another officer also fired as the man ran outside. Chip notes that the weapon was later determined to be an imitation firearm, but the district attorney found the shooting justified. Ken says the suspect chose the wrong store at the wrong time. Chip closes by thanking viewers, commenters, sponsors, and The Wounded Blue, while encouraging listeners to support the show’s sponsors and return for the next episode.

Sons of Liberty Radio, June 3, 2026

Thu, 04 Jun 2026
SONS of LIBERTY Radio with Bradlee Dean

No Means No, Americans!

When Government Says Gun-Free, Bradlee Dean Says Americans Must Say No

A Warning Against Gun-Free Zones

The episode opens with a prepared commentary arguing that government agencies, private businesses, and policymakers should be held accountable when people are injured or killed in shootings inside gun-free zones. The commentary claims that most mass public shootings since 1950 have taken place in gun-free zones and compares blaming gun manufacturers for criminal acts to blaming car companies, knife makers, or utensil makers for misuse of their products. The speaker uses biblical references, including Cain and Abel, to argue that moral responsibility belongs to the person who commits the act rather than the tool used. The opening also frames arbitrary government and activist courts as threats to constitutional liberty.

Bradlee Dean’s Central Message of No

Bradlee Dean begins the live portion of the program by telling listeners that the episode’s theme is “no means no.” He argues that many political figures are not truly voted in by the people but are installed through money, media coverage, and promises that are later broken. He focuses especially on Virginia Governor Abigail Spanberger, whom he says is acting against the rights of the people after presenting herself differently during her rise to office. Dean also discusses Ken Paxton and Texas politics, warning listeners to follow the money behind replacement candidates and to question whether the same powers that controlled one official may control the next.

Second Amendment, the Bill of Rights, and State Resistance

A major focus of the episode is Dean’s argument that elected officials have no delegated authority to restrict what he describes as God-given rights protected by the Second Amendment. He cites the preamble to the Bill of Rights and presents the Bill of Rights as a set of restrictions on government, not permissions granted by government. Dean points to examples from Illinois and Virginia, saying that counties, sheriffs, commonwealth’s attorneys, and other officials can refuse to enforce unconstitutional gun restrictions. He repeatedly urges Americans to understand their constitutional position, reject unlawful decrees, and say no when officials attempt to exceed their authority.

Federal Agencies, Armed Government Power, and Public Accountability

Dean spends a substantial portion of the episode discussing federal law enforcement and the number of armed personnel in agencies such as Customs and Border Protection, the Federal Bureau of Prisons, the FBI, ICE, the Bureau of Land Management, the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, the U.S. Capitol Police, and others. He questions why so many agencies have armed personnel and arrest powers and argues that many of these agencies are unconstitutional or aimed against the American people. He also discusses the drug problem, claiming that government agencies help create crises and then present themselves as problem solvers. This section reinforces his broader argument that citizens must understand the limits of government power.

Callers, Media Criticism, and Political Strategy

During the call-in portion, Tracy from Longmont discusses the dollar bill, biblical prophecy, and claims about hidden meanings connected to money and Revelation. Dean challenges the caller to focus less on a small number of powerful people and more on living boldly enough that those people would be concerned about the public. Jeff from Tennessee then calls to discuss Tennessee gun law, constitutional carry, and the need to support candidates who uphold their oaths rather than simply choosing between the lesser of two evils. Dean responds by emphasizing that the media suppresses legitimate contenders while promoting the candidates favored by powerful interests, and he urges listeners to hold officials accountable to their oaths.

Refusal to Comply and the Virginia News Clip

In the final segment, Dean promotes upcoming events, radio expansion in Florida, and the broader Sons of Liberty mission before returning to biblical and constitutional arguments for the right to keep and bear arms. He references 1 Samuel and Luke to argue that disarmament has historically been used to control people, and he ties that to the Second Amendment’s protection against infringement. The episode closes with a news clip about Virginia gun restrictions and commonwealth’s attorneys who say they will not enforce certain new laws. Dean praises that resistance, argues that officials are trying to scare people into compliance, and closes by declaring that he will not comply with efforts to disarm law-abiding citizens.

Reclaiming Authenticity, June 3, 2026

Wed, 03 Jun 2026
The Sun; It's Reflection and Illusion

Summary

Spirituality, Mental Health, and Reclaiming the Soul
In this episode of Reclaiming Authenticity, Dr. James Houck frames the show around the integration of spirituality and mental health. He explains that the program is meant to help listeners reclaim what has always been within them by examining the relationships they have with themselves, others, and God or the divine. He emphasizes that the ego often distorts perception and keeps people from recognizing themselves as vast, eternal souls capable of forgiveness, gratitude, bliss, and love.

The Illusion Created by Ego and Worldly Love
Dr. Houck explores the idea that illusion keeps people stuck, comfortable, and resistant to transformation. He contrasts worldly love, which he describes as conditional and tied to changing emotions, with godly or divine love, which he presents as eternal, unconditional, and purifying. Through this lens, he explains that people often search outside themselves for something they already possess, when the deeper task is to discover who they truly are and live as a soulful presence in the world.

The Sun as a Symbol of the Eternal Soul
Using the summer season as a starting point, Dr. Houck reflects on the sun’s importance in culture, poetry, music, religion, and science. He discusses the sun’s warmth, brightness, influence on mood and circadian rhythms, and its spiritual symbolism. He then introduces the central metaphor of the episode: the sun as a symbol of the eternal soul, constant and unchanging, while the sun’s reflection represents the shifting nature of the body, mind, intellect, memory, and ego.

The Soul, the Reflection, and the Illusion of Separation
Dr. Houck explains that people often mistake the reflection for their true nature, identifying themselves only with the body and mind. He argues that this creates the illusion of separation from God, others, and all things. By identifying as souls rather than temporary bodies and minds, he says people can remember their deeper connectedness, recognize their divine purpose, and walk through life with a greater awareness of unconditional love.

Fear, Shame, Guilt, and the Mind’s Interpretation
The episode then turns to fear, shame, and guilt as forces that can make illusion feel permanent. Dr. Houck clarifies that pain, suffering, and the world are not illusions in themselves; rather, illusion arises in the mind’s interpretation of those experiences. He suggests that people may cling to victimhood, hopelessness, or woundedness because those states feel familiar, even when healing would lead them into a truer and more empowered way of living.

Overcoming Inferiority and Living as an Eternal Soul
Dr. Houck uses Alfred Adler’s life and work on inferiority to illustrate how early vulnerability and limitation can become part of a larger path toward purpose. He explains that inferiority, fear, and self-doubt can either keep people trapped in illusion or become catalysts for growth when transformed. The episode concludes with the message that people are already connected to God, others, and all things, and that their greatest strength lies in transforming physical, emotional, and psychological illusions while reclaiming themselves as eternal souls.

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Alfred Adler inferiority complex
soul purpose
healing through self-awareness

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