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Donald Trump Talks Shooting In Leaked RFK Jr. Phone Call

On this episode of TMZ Live: Trump talks rally shooting in leaked RFK Jr. call, singer Ingrid Andress says she's going to rehab after Home Run Derby flub, King Charles retreats to hotel following security scare, and Jack Black cancels tour after insensitive Trump joke. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Duration:
41m
Broadcast on:
17 Jul 2024
Audio Format:
mp3

On this episode of TMZ Live:

Trump talks rally shooting in leaked RFK Jr. call, singer Ingrid Andress says she's going to rehab after Home Run Derby flub, King Charles retreats to hotel following security scare, and Jack Black cancels tour after insensitive Trump joke.

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

(upbeat music) - Welcome to TMZ Live, Harvey Levin here. - Hello, sir. - There is something really bizarre that happened yesterday between, well, really, between RFK Jr., Donald Trump, and indirectly Joe Biden. And I think I know what happened. I think I saw this, I didn't tell you this, but I think I just cracked it. - Oh, you solved the Rubik's Cube of this phone call. - I think I did. - All right. - Donald Trump called RFK Jr., and at the time Donald Trump called him, RFK Jr. was being videotaped. He had a videographer wherever he was. They were chronicling the campaign. And so he had the phone on speaker, and he recorded part of the call. The beginning of the call wasn't recorded, and I think I know what this is about. But let's start with what RFK Jr. is telling Donald Trump about his phone call. - What Donald Trump is telling RFK Jr. about his phone call with President Biden. - Correct. - Right. - And, you know, you see, Trump is very nice, actually. He called him, and he said, "How do you choose to move to the right?" And so I guess people said, "You know, if I was looking straight, right?" He said, "I said, "I was just showing a chart." I didn't have to tell him the chart, because I don't know all the people pouring into our timesheet, right? But Donald Trump just turned my head to show the chart, and Trump wrapped me. It felt like a giant, like the world's largest mosquito. And it was a bullet going around. You know, what did they call that, an AR-15 or something, that was a big guy, that was a pretty tough guy to try. - So first of all, when he said, "How did you decide to move to the right?" That couldn't be taken two ways. Things like they moved to the right or when you decide when you were actually a Democrat, right? You moved to the right. - That was actually what I heard in my head when he said it, but I understand he was referring to the fact that he had looked to the right to look at the chart right before the bullet was fired. - I just found it odd that Biden asked him that question. I mean, it's an innocent enough question, and it's one that I suppose has curiosity to it, but it's just odd when you call somebody up who's just been the victim of an assassination attempt. It just seemed a little weird to me. - No, no, it doesn't seem weird. 'Cause he's acknowledging. That means President Biden is acknowledging that, but for the fact that you would look to the right, you might have been killed. - No, I mean, I get it. - You might have been killed. - You might have been killed. - What a stroke of luck. But Biden, why did you do that? - Why did you do that? - Because Biden would have seen the video where he's clearly looking at the chart. Hold on, but in the video of the actual shooting, you don't see the chart, so maybe what Biden saw didn't show the chart. See what I'm saying? - That's fair. - So if that's all he saw, he didn't know that there was a chart. - Okay, so we're gonna get into in a minute how this video got released. But before we do, let me give you my theory. 'Cause I think I know what your theory is. - I couldn't figure out why would Donald Trump call RFK Jr. I think it had to do with Secret Service Protection. - That's why I think there was a conversation about that and that was a big thing yesterday. - Which is why-- - And my phone call was made on Monday. - And remember, Donald Trump before Joe Biden said that RFK Jr. would receive Secret Service Protection, Donald Trump had said he should get it. So I think that's why he called him and they were talking about that and it migrated into that. - It migrated into other things. - Right. - And the reason it got leaked is because one of the things that they, for some reason we're talking about were vaccines and it was actually RFK Jr. son, Bobby Kennedy III, who actually posted this on X and then deleted it because, well, there's a chance that he had actually violated some law. - I can't read that. - Yeah, he says, I'm a firm believer. This is Bobby Kennedy III. I'm a firm believer that these sorts of conversations should be had in public. Here's Trump giving his real opinion to my dad about vaccinating kids. This was the day after the assassination attempt. If I violated some kind of law and posting this, my only wish is to have Dr. Anthony Fauci as my cellmate. This is not a cheap fake or somebody doing a Trump voice. This is the real deal. He could have picked a unity ticket and steady picked JD, fire all the unvaccinated nurses' vans. Two parties indivisible under Pfizer with liberty and justice for some. - Wow, that is hardcore. - Wow, so would you Bobby Kennedy think that Trump should have been calling his father to make him the VP? - I don't ask me to deconstruct that. I don't know. But that would have been the unity ticket that he's talking about, right? - RFK Jr rejected, well, he said he really regretted that the videographer was recording this. He said he shouldn't have done it. - Yeah, when President Trump called me, I was taping with an in-house videographer. I should have ordered the videographer to stop recording immediately. I am mortified this was posted. I apologize to the president. - This is his son. This is his son posting it. - Yeah. - Who is more hardcore than RFK Jr, clearly. - Hold on a second, why did RFK Jr. apologize to the president? - Well, because the president's conversation ended up coming out. - It ended up coming out. So it kind of makes sense, but man, this is crazy. - Hey, I'm Stephanie Jane. I'm out of Philadelphia. And I think that using this platform and opportunity to push an anti-vaccine thing was in really poor taste. Not sure about the apology. But I think that we need to be talking about security and why this happened. - Well, you asked and you received. You said that we should be talking about security. We're going to do that right now. - Exactly. - All the buzz about the Secret Service response and the Secret Service preparation before the assassination. - It's interesting on social media. There had been criticism of the Secret Service agent, the woman, two women who were on stage. - Two women. - But one of them was kind of fumbling with her gun. - Fumbling with her gun. And then there was another one as they were getting off the stage who was yelling, "Where are we going? What are we doing? What are we doing?" And some people felt that that was a sign of this not being prepared for the moment that they always trained for. It's more than that. There are people in social media that are saying women weren't prepared. And that we should rethink who we're hiring for the Secret Service. That's what some people are saying on social media. - Right. - I mean, I think that's really unfair. But that's a thing right now on social media. - And the other part of the Secret Service conversation is how in the world that Thomas Matthew Crooks was allowed to get on top of a building when he was in the line of sight of snipers. - Well, and that's absolutely incontrovertibly a fair thing to ask because this is a horrible security lapse. - Right. - So joining us right now is someone who is a former Secret Service agent. She also trained Secret Service agents, Cheryl Tyler, the first female black Secret Service agent. And she is joining us right now. Cheryl, welcome to TMZ Live. - Hey, Cheryl. - Thank you. Nice to meet both of you. - Nice to meet you too. - Nice to meet you. What do you think of... There are people on social media that are saying, well, this just shows that you can't really have women protecting the president because they're looking at two people who they say were not necessarily up for the task. - So when people make comments like that, you can't change it. They're gonna believe what they wanna believe. They're gonna think and know what they want to think that they know not only was I on the president's detail, I was the first African American female to be on the president's detail. I taught in the training academy and I taught protection. I taught over 500 agents to become agents who some of them are serving on those details, both men and women. - The head of the Secret Service is a woman. And there are some people who found it curious that last night at the RNC convention that the detail was all male. And just optically, especially with all the crap on social media, maybe a better move to have women in that detail, what say you? - I don't play into the optics of political preference. And I will say this, when I was on the detail, there was a female on each shift maybe by coincidence because you all don't come on at the same time. You're rotated in and different throughout your career. There were times that I may not have been on the working shift and I was doing something else, probably in advance. And the detail happened to be all male. So you can read into it whatever you want. I can't speak for the Secret Service in what changes they are making or have made. But to say that, oh, they took the women off the detail, I wouldn't agree with that statement. - Cheryl, I actually wanted to ask you, there was something that I believe Meghan McCain had posted something in her criticism. And there were others who said this, but that what they saw on Saturday, the concern was that the female agents weren't tall enough. And I guess you could make that same criticism for any male agents in any particular situation weren't tall enough to cover the president. - To shield the president. - To shield the president. Is that a fair criticism for a detail on any particular president or vice president? - No, no. I've worked on presidents' details, foreign heads of countries' details, former presidents. They're taller than me and our society now, men are shorter than they used to be, but men were tall. I've worked on details where men were 6-3-6-4. Didn't mean I didn't know how to do my job and I couldn't have gotten it done. - Well, I gotta tell you, number one, we really appreciate having you on. And as I listen to you, I want to do a documentary on you. You are fascinating. You are fascinating. - No, no, Rose, she's about that business, right? She knows exactly what we wanted to do. Just fascinating. - Fascinating. - Yeah, we really appreciate you taking the time, Cheryl. And we should mention you have written a book about your time in the Secret Service, called Trail Blazer, the story of the first black female Secret Service agent to protect the president and her fight for justice, Cheryl Tyler. Thank you so much for being with us. We really appreciate it. - Thank you, Cheryl. - Thank you, have a nice day. - You too. She is really interesting. - I know you can tell that someone knows a lot more and they're just not gonna tell you everything because they don't care what you think. - That's right. - She is awesome. (upbeat music) - Jack Black has pulled the plug on his tour. His band, Tenacious Devs, in the middle of a tour. And this all has to do with the attempted assassination of Donald Trump and really the reaction of Jack's bandmate, Kyle Gas. So, if you didn't see this, we showed you, they were on tour in Australia. - In Sydney. - This was a day of the assassination of Dr. Trump. - By the way, when we're playing this, don't just listen to what Kyle says. Listen to the crowd reaction. (dramatic music) (audience cheering) (audience laughing) (audience cheering) - So, this was Kyle's birthday. They brought out this cake and that was-- - Make a wish and the wish was don't miss next time. - And as we told you, Jack Black disavowed that statement very quickly, but went even further now. He said, "I was blindsided by what was said "at the show on Sunday. "I would never condone hate speech "or encourage political violence in any form. "After much reflection, I no longer feel it is appropriate "to continue the tenacious detour "and all future creative plans are on hold." Wow, I am grateful to the fans for their support and understanding. - I gotta say, I'm shocked by this because Kyle and Jack have been bandmates and very good friends for literally decades and for Jack Black to outright cancel their entire tour. And I would say sort of maybe even throw Kyle under the bus a little bit is astounding to me because again, he's his good friend. You would figure he would maybe say something to the effect of, "Look, I know Kyle's heart. "I know he didn't mean what he said. "Yes, it was wrong. "I disavow it. "We're gonna move forward and try to put this behind us." But rather than do that, Jack Black is like doubling down, tripling down and sort of leaning into the notion that what you said was so vile and so bad, we have to nix this entire thing. It's almost as if I can't even associate with you right now. And by the way, Kyle himself has apologized too. - Yeah, no, I agree with you. I mean, I was really stunned. They've been friends for 40 years. - Yeah. - And I think you're right. You keyed in on the ultimate damage control. - Well, no, no, no. But when you said, when you were reading it, it's not just canceling the concert. It's all creative endeavors on hold. - Right. - So he's making it sound like this. - I mean, this might be the end of the band after decades. Kyle's apology went like this. He said the line I improvised on stage Sunday night in Sydney was highly inappropriate, dangerous, and a terrible mistake. What happened was a tragedy, and I'm incredibly sorry for my severe lack of judgment. I profoundly apologize to those I've let down and truly regret any pain I've caused. - I gotta say, it's a full and complete apology. - It is, and I get it. It's like, look, and I'm not justifying it because when he said it's terrible, but you could just see in the moment, sometimes you just say dumb ass things. - He's, he's-- - We've all gone stage. - He's alive on stage. - He did something to get a reaction. Look, I don't know what's in Kyle Guess's. I don't know if he really believes it or not, but I think if he had it to do over, he would realize that this isn't a joke that's gonna land. - It's a full stop apology. - Yeah. - It's a Harvey's point. Yes, it was a little bit of a quip. Maybe it was a little lighthearted. The crowd obviously took it lighthearted 'cause a lot of them chuckled and laughed, but the fact that Jack Black is, I would say, overcorrecting. He's going so far beyond to condemn this, and Kyle's echoing that you gotta figure they spoke about this that it just speaks to the seriousness of the nature and how serious they actually take it, which in retrospect, I would say is appropriate because it was very serious. - Hey, I'm Brendan from Boston, and this message from Kyle Guess is, you don't always have to hate on Trump so hard. Sometimes, in fact, that's not right to do. Sometimes you gotta give him some love. Look, even President Biden did too. And sometimes you have to realize you have a public platform and you should really not say anything, and sometimes you have to realize that Donald Trump united all of us to realize that 99.9% of Americans don't actually know Kyle Guess is. - No, not knowing who Kyle Guess is is not the point. - And not the point, yeah. Okay, we are gonna move on. - Yes, staying in the music world. - Indeed, Miranda Lambert, and we're gonna show you why she stopped her show. She was performing in Montana at the Under Big Sky Festival, and she stopped her show because she saw some violence going on in the audience. Remember, Miranda Lambert doesn't like to be interrupted. We saw the show a few months ago, last year, when those girls in the front were taking selfies, and they had lights and everything, and she stopped it. - It doesn't want the distraction. - That's right. - Well, something she saw going on in the crowd decided to stop the whole show. This is what happened. - Why this dark up here? I can see your head is not turning the rock way, which is this way. (crowd cheering) So, if you came to visit, you can do it somewhere else. (crowd cheering) If you came to sing and hear some country music and drink some beer, and drink some hell, then we're gonna do it now tonight. (crowd cheering) Are we clear? Are we done with our drama yet? I thought it was not okay. (crowd cheering) And as always, the girls, we get crazy. - I mean, I'm not a real fan that she called out the girls, but I do understand it. We do get crazy. And I mean, it's just what happens sometimes. But people are really upset that she did this because I paid for my concert ticket. I'm gonna act, but I wanna act. I'm gonna listen to what I wanna listen to. But she can't really win here, because if someone would've got hurt, she would've got reamed online for not like stopping them if she saw what happened. - What do you mean, I'm gonna do what I wanna do. You can't, yes, you can, Charles. If you, it's a festival, it's not just my land. - If you're ruining the show for the people around, you know, you can't do what you wanna do. - Have you always just paid attention to the stage when you were at a festival? - But it's one thing not to pay attention, it's another thing to fight. - I know, but I wanted to see the video of the fight of like how like intense it like actually was. If it was just like a little bit like of she said, she said, then like, let it go. - Well, no, but here's why, here's why I really think what Miranda did is write that, you know, I go back to Astro World and what Travis Scott is being criticized for, aside from allegedly inciting some of it, is not stopping it. And you don't know how it escalates. And I think artists are in a high alert for this. - Travis Scott, he's being sued for like a billion dollars total. - You might think of it as just, oh, it's just some people fighting, people die. - People die. - People die. - And now someone dies now. - I mean, people died at Astro World and that can happen here. - They did, but how you said Travis was inciting it. Miranda doesn't incite her fans to jump around and like do much. - No, but if she's saying, but if she's seeing it, Courtney, and she's seeing it, and isn't stopping it, and somebody dies, they hit their head, she's gonna be skewered for that. - Honestly, I just think that she wanted to take a drink 'cause that's what she paused for. She goes, as you guys think of this out, I'm just gonna sit here and drink. And I think that was her actual reason for stopping it. - The only thing we're gonna hold on to Courtney is that you did say, look, we do get crazy. She did say that. - Hi, Amanda from Michigan here. So who is surprised that Miranda spoke her mind? - Not me. Miranda stopping the show about girls having a tiff in the audience and not having all eyes on her is pretty unbrand. And let's face it, Miranda Lambert has always spoken her mind and it seems like nothing will keep her from doing so. - I hardly heard what you said. I love the architecture of that place. I love the-- - Thank you. - It's almost like an A-frame. That is so cool. - Maybe it is. - That is so cool. - No, it's not, it's definitely an A-frame. - No, it's definitely not an A-frame. Look, you can see it's an A-frame. It's really, really cool. I love it. - Thank you. (upbeat music) - Major League Baseball getting ready for the all-star game. Last night they had the Home Run Derby. And the Home Run Derby, you gotta have the National Anthem performed. And country singer Ingrid Andrus was invited to do so. - Now, what could go wrong? - As we have seen far too often in the past, a lot can go wrong. First, we will let you hear some of this. If you haven't heard it yet, and then we will tell you what Ingrid's explanation is for what you're about to hear. ♪ The ramparts we watched ♪ ♪ Were so gallantly streaming ♪ ♪ And the rockets red glare ♪ ♪ The bombs bursting air ♪ ♪ Gave proof through the night ♪ ♪ That our flag was still alive ♪ - Next time you criticize my version of my way. - You are actually better than her. - Wow. - And she's a four-time Grammy nominee. - I gotta tell you, I will say, and well, go ahead and I'll tell you what I think, especially now, we know what happened here. - Yeah, so Ingrid just released a statement a short time ago and she said that she was drunk last night. Those were her words, that she was drunk last night. That's the reason for the bad performance. And it doesn't sound like it was one of those things like, oh, I just had too much to drink. It actually sounds like she unfortunately has a problem here with drinking because she has also announced that she is checking herself into rehab. And it appears that she's being serious and not taking this lightly, but this is an actual problem for her. - Honestly, it was so bad. I got to a point, it actually wasn't. Normally you laugh at those things. I could hear her struggling. Like, this was painful for her. How am I gonna get through this? - There's a silver lining here. And there's a huge silver lining. - A lot of people know her name. - Well, not just, no, no. That's what we said in the morning meeting before we knew what happened. The silver lining is that when people need to get help, they need to hit bottom, which is different for different people. She did. And she's getting help. And that's a good thing. And I think people understand it. So I think it went from what we thought was just kind of a ridiculous moment. - Yeah, but I will say to the point of, and you're right, that hitting right bottom and getting help is the first most important thing. But the next thing is that America loves a comeback, right? And so everyone has now seen her on this huge stage, have a horrible moment. She gets the help that she says she needs. - That's two points. - I had never even heard of her, Charles. I don't know if you guys have. - She's had a couple of hits on the country chart, but the big thing right now is she's getting help. And it turned out from something that everybody was laughing at in the morning to this. And it's very different. - My name is Destiny from the Leite County of Pennsylvania. And how I feel about this situation is I generally do feel bad for her because of all the backlash she received in the morning props to her for actually admitting that she doesn't need to go to rehab. And I wish nothing but the best for her. - Absolutely, absolutely. And now that you look at her, she seems-- - Did you see it in her face? - Yeah, you see it in her face. - I might have to get through this. - You see it in her face. (upbeat music) - Well, tomorrow marks a very somber anniversary in New York City. It is the 10th anniversary of the death of Eric Garner, who you know, of course, was choked by police officers in the middle of an arrest, died as the result of this fixation. And really-- - Not the only one. - Yeah, and not the only one. Obviously, we've seen other instances of this, probably most famously, George Floyd, where certain holds, be it a chokehold or being on someone's back, have led to deaths. - Well, New York City is trying to do something about this. NYPD paired up with really a legend of Jiu Jitsu and MMA, member of the Gracie family. Henry Gracie has been training NYPD officers in something called the safe rap system. And it is a way of restraining someone that doesn't involve a chokehold in any way or laying them prone where you could lead to asphyxiation. This is some video of the training that Henry's been doing with NYPD, and he's joining us now to discuss that training and how this all works. Henry Gracie, welcome to TMZ Live. - Thank you, Harvey, thank you, Charles. Thanks for having me. What an honor to be here. - We so appreciate it. And again, I'm a big fan of your families and the history of what they've done in martial arts. Is this as effective as these chokeholds which can be lethal? - Yeah, it's really interesting because the safe rap was originally designed for healthcare applications. Hospitals came to us and said, "Hey, we struggle to hold a patient in a way that is safe for the patient and safe for the healthcare professionals." So they asked us, "Can you guys help devise a technique?" Well, the safe rap was born for healthcare applications. And then quickly thereafter, we said, "Wow, it's so effective at restraining someone for extended periods of time in a way that is very effective and very safe for both the restrained individual and also the subjects using the restraint." And it was so effective in fact that I said, "Wow, this might have law enforcement applications equally if not more important than in the healthcare institutions and low and behold, it does. And we're very honored now to be working with the New York Police Department. We've trained all their trainers and they have the task of now rolling this out to the rest of the agency of 30,000 plus officers. At the end of the day, an untrained officer in a situation panics. And when officers panic, they use excessive force. And that's a lot of what we've been seeing in the media lately. And that's what we're trying to avoid with the safe rap system. - Heder, was this something that you contacted the NYPD or did they reach out to you? Because I know that the chokehold having been outlawed, were they looking for something else or did you come to them and say, "I've got this for you guys. Here's how it works." - And not just the chokehold. To be clear, at the NYPD, they also ban diaphragmatic compression. So during an arrest, if an officer sits, kneels or stands on a subject's diaphragm and in a way that inhibits their breathing, they could be personally criminally liable. So for several years now, since George Floyd, there's been this period of what officers can't do without really giving them a solution for what they can do. So they contacted us for Gracie Survival Tactics, our law enforcement training, and we're delighted to find out that we had literally months ago invented this proprietary safe rap system that would enable officers to control a subject without any diaphragmatic compression in a way that is as effective as anything that ever came before it. When it comes to prone restraint that we're so commonly used to in law enforcement. - You know what I find really interesting about this is just the receptivity of all of this, that had you gone to them five years ago before they banned the chokehold and the other hold, they might not have been as receptive because they would have to have given up a tool. That tool has been given up. So in a way, you're giving them something new that they really needed and it would seem they're more receptive to it as a result. Not only that, you guys, they're giving up of a neck restraint, right? Vascular neck restraints, which are common martial arts techniques, but our problematic in law enforcement, particularly because the officers get so little training at NYPD at best, they're getting one arrest and control training day per year. So the challenge isn't just the tool that they gave up. The challenge is replacing it with a system of two on one restraint that is effective in as little as four to eight hours of hands on training per year. And safe rap is that solution, which is why they're just over the moon with this new idea and this new system entering the agency. - So you're going to show us a demonstration here and how this works in just a moment. I just wanted to know are there other police agencies that have reached out to you at having heard what's going on with NYPD? Is this something that is going to expand beyond NYPD? - Yeah, not just police agencies, right? We're talking to Ohio, Department of Public Safety. We're talking to the US Border Patrol. We're talking to Los Angeles Police Department. It literally is only two months old, so it's a very exciting new prospect when it comes to law enforcement restraint. And the reason why there's so much excitement around it is because it essentially solves a problem that law enforcement had for the last 100 plus years, but didn't really realize they had, which is prone restraint. The conventional method of two on one restraint is not only unreliable, it's actually dangerous in many ways. It has four fatal flaws, which I'm happy to point out here. If my brother, he don't is here and one of your own conners here to help us today as well, he don't, if you could land your stomach. - Oh, that's what's on here, okay. - Conner's gonna help. So he don't sound, let's say he's in prone and Conner, our job is to get his hands out and arrest him. So do me a favor, rip his hand out and put it behind his back, for real. Everything you got, Conner, put his hand behind his back. Come on, Conner, get it out. Get his hand out, Conner. Get his hand out, get his hand out, get his hand out, get his hand out, keep him down, Conner, keep him down, keep him down. And the problem is now, not only is it hard to get his hand out, but it's hard to keep him from getting up. Let's move back, he don't go back one more time. So what ends up happening, you guys, is that because it's hard to hold someone down, lay on top of him, don't let him get up, lay your whole body weight on him. Lay on him, lay on him, lay on him, lay on him. I'm gonna lay on him and now I'm gonna lay. The problem is now we're holding him down, but he's gonna struggle to breathe, because there's so much compression of his lungs, right? Not to mention the fact that because his hands are hidden, we don't know, he has a knife and now he's stabbing us. So prone restraint is not the answer, you guys. - Are you okay? - Yeah. - Prone restraint is not the answer, prone is the problem. It is stomach. They're yelling and they're shoving this person to prone, where it's difficult for all these reasons we've identified. So the safe rap is a completely new approach, even from standing up. So oftentimes when officers want to arrest someone standing up, they'll each grab a lamb or they're trying to pull the person and get him to the ground and Connor stays strong in your stance. Don't go, don't fall down. It's hard to get him to the ground, because there's no plan. The officers are ripping and tugging, and he's not gonna fall down. A strong guy like this is not gonna go down. But if you turn facing me, Connor, and I just grab his neck and his arm, Connor stay standing up. Do not fall no matter what. Do not fall, Connor. Connor do not fall, Connor, Connor. Look how easily I've taken him down, and now I'm gonna establish my grips here. We're gonna turn him on his side, and now check this out. He's gonna lace his legs up in a unique configuration. Look, over, under, and look. And this right here is called the safe rap. Cool, put that thing right there for us, right up there. So that's a thousand dollars US cash right there. He don't throw that other thing right out front here. And that's a knife. Connor, if you can get either one of those, if you touch the cash, it's yours. If you get the knife, stab us, and then get away and get the cash. Go. Connor, Connor, we'd advise you get the money. They said get the money, forget the knife. Connor, get the money. Connor, the thousand dollars US cash right there. Come on, Connor. Connor, they're yelling to get the money. Connor, it's a thousand dollars. Now, Connor, the most important question, can you breathe on your own? Easily. Are we strangling you at all? Is there anywhere on your body where there's a joint locker or pressure point that is hurting you? Nothing. What are the chances that you get that cash right now? Almost impossible. Well, if you think there's still hope, I need you to try more. Connor, give up. Yeah, give up, Connor. And this can be learned in as little as four to eight hours of training per year. Once the officer learns it, it's like CPR, right? What CPR is to emergency first aid, safe rap is to emergency restraint. Once any two people speak the language, they can work together to restrain someone in a way that's safe for them and safe for the users. And then also, of course, wait for backup. And my vision is like law enforcement, firefighters who often deal with mental health patients, because not every person that gets restrained is necessarily a suspected criminal. It might be someone who needs help themselves. So the ability to restrain them is critical. It is fascinating. I hope you get contracts all over the country. Really? This is really great. It's important, Hannah. Thank you so much for being here on. Thank you for being with us. Really fascinating. The only, the only question I have is-- Why did you take the cuff? A thousand dollars. And why did you take the cuffs off of them? You can go ahead and put them back on. That'd be great. Cuff 'em up. Thank you so much, guys, for being here. And best of luck with the safe rap system. It's awesome. What a revolution. It's awesome. Thank you, guys. Well, a lot of people several weeks ago, when they saw Amber Rose cozying up to Donald Trump. There was a photo she had posed for with a former president and former First Lady. And everyone thought that this was just her making a publicity stunt, right? That she was just trying to get a lot of attention. Fast forward to last night when she was the star of the first night of the Republican National Convention. Yeah, on stage delivering a speech that I think for the Republicans, they would find very, very effective. Because she understanding that a lot of people thought that this was just a publicity stunt. She used her time on stage to explain exactly how she came to be a supporter of Donald Trump and had to do with her father, who said was sitting in the front row, actually not front row, but in the audience there. And this is her explanation. The first person I knew who supported Donald Trump was my father. I was shocked. My entire family is racially diverse. And I believe the left-wing propaganda that Donald Trump was a racist. My father said, no, he's not Amber. What are you talking about? And when I insisted, he said, prove it. So to prove my father wrong, I did my research and looked into all things Donald Trump. I realized Donald Trump and his supporters don't care if you're black, white, gay, or straight. It's all love. I mean, that is her explanation. I think a lot of people who are black or gay might not agree. I mean, there are things said along the way, you know, about Mexicans the first day, about, you know, both sides being good people and other things that, you know, become more problematic and you have to wonder, she didn't really address that. I don't know. I can't speak to what her research was. And I'm not making a judgment on her or him even. I just think that it warrants a discussion. Absolutely. It does. I mean, the thing to keep in mind is Donald Trump has, I think pretty effectively left to his surrogates, the more hardcore, I think some would say racist comments. And he has never really signed on to them in a full-throated way. Obviously, we can look to his comments about both good people on both sides. He called, you know, countries that these people come from. Yeah. But if you look at like somebody like Ann Coulter, what she said about Vivek Rama Swami, right, where she said, "I would never vote for you as president because you're just not your dark skin." And I would never, that's a clearly racist comment. Right, right. And, you know, she is a full-throated supporter of Donald Trump. So it's hard to reconcile the two entirely, but I guess as far as it goes, he's never said anything as on point as that. Right. He said things that certainly make you go, "Come on." Like, I mean, I just know for myself, at times where he's pointed out, "Where am I African-Americans in the crowd?" That feels wrong. Does that mean he's-- He said blacks in the crowd. Did he say blacks? Yeah, he said blacks. May I try to soften it for him. But look, I accept that that's her story. But I think what Jason just said is-- It was effective and the crowd at the end of it was loving her. I think at the beginning, they were a little like, "Who is this person?" Right. But they heard her story and it was effective. And the question, how does that affect the voters? What do you think? I don't know that, I mean, look, it was an effective speech and a good night for her. Is it going to turn a lot of, you know, is it going to translate into a lot of votes for him? I don't think so. Well, there aren't that many votes to change. There aren't that many, right? And I don't know that many votes is an effective enough deliver of the message that it's going to draw those people who are undecided. It's so interesting that people are so entrenched on both sides. It is a small, small group relative to the population of the US that will decide who the next president is going to be. If you're either candidate or any of the three candidates, those are the people you want. You know, you don't have to get all of them. You just need most of them. 40,000 votes. 44,000 votes separated the two men in the last-- So you try everybody. You try anything to get that number. I'm Brianna, I'm from Kansas City. I think Ambrose, I think she did a phenomenal speech. I don't really agree with the message. I know a lot of the millennials, and what I've been saying from the shayroom, they're not really agreeing with Ambrose, but I think she did great. You know, I got to say, they delivered the speech very well. And there are a lot of millennials who are on Trump's side in this election. I mean, the polling is, again, take the polling for what it's worth, but he has made a lot of inroads with young voters. Well, a scary moment for King Charles and Queen Camilla as they were out on their royal duties, touring the Channel Islands. Why doesn't he have an umbrella? He's the King. No rain falls on the King he's talking about. But yes, they were doing a tour of the Channel Islands when suddenly their security came over and really whisked them away from the crowd. And this was all over a drone, an unauthorized, an identified drone that their security felt was suspicious. And you got to one time to err on the side of caution. Everything was okay, but you got a one or two. I mean, they were thinking about it. They had to be thinking about what happened Saturday. Because, you know, if you are not hyper-vigilant, it's this, a drone is something that actually, there's a lot of criticism. The Secret Service should have had drones up there, so they would have seen better what was going on. But everybody's in a heightened state of alert right now. What's interesting, though, is that one of the people who was at the event said that King Charles did not seem panicked at all. He seemed pretty stern, but went out very calmly. I think you got to give him some credit. I mean, when you have someone rushing to you saying, "Hey, you got to get out of here coming on the heels of Trump, almost assassinated, I'd be pretty panicked." But I guess he kept this cool. Dr. Rose Schmidt from Austin, Texas, anytime a public figure or any individual faces danger, I believe that's very scary, and my prayer is that they remain safe and protected wherever they go. By the way, I learned something because of this story about, you know where the Channel Islands are? Well, I know where the Channel Islands are. Don't say the English Channel. No, I was actually going to say the Channel Islands are about 100. We weren't off Santa Barbara, that's what I was talking about. No, it's actually Old Jersey. There are only two islands, and one of them is called Jersey. So that's how they got New Jersey. Well, duh, that's what I'm telling you. What else do you guys want to talk about? This is Cassandra Carson from Springfield, Missouri, talking about Tenacious D. I think it's probably the right move for them to pull the plug on the tour at this time. Like, just let the dust settle. I mean, in my opinion, when you go to a Tenacious D show, you can expect a fair amount of dark humor, and when you watch the video, you know, people are laughing. They don't seem to take it too seriously, but if we're being real, there's a time and play. Yeah, they're actually kind of cheering, actually. One more. Get the fuck out in Nashville, Tennessee. The RFK story was unbelievable. I mean, hours after Trump has this amazing survival, he's calling and talking to RFK about what's going to go on in the next administration. It's mind-blowing. I didn't know they were such good friends, but whatever happens, whoever wins, we all got to come together. Republicans, Democrats, independents, man, it's time for us all to unite. No matter what happens. That's the test. Whoever wins, the question is, will people do that? I have my doubts. And whoever wins, will they call for that? Just one little criticism here. About Jersey? Yeah. It's like, if they were the first, why would they call it Old Jersey? They just call it Jersey. No, they just call it Jersey, isn't it? Why'd you call it Old Jersey? No, I'm saying, as in Old Jersey. I would've gotten it. I would've gotten it. I had to, you know, spell it out for you. I'd gotten it. We're taking the Isle of Jersey. You have asked this question, actually. You asked this question on Monday, I believe, about an outfit that Bianca Sinceori Kanye-- Oh, wife. Where the line is? Where's the line? And when, at what point does she get ticketed for public indecency? Right. Well, maybe an answer to your question. She answered the question. She stepped out on Monday afternoon. She was wearing this. You can see everything. And I don't know how that's not public indecency. I have two questions. One, why that didn't happen, assuming a cop saw it. Second question. I would've probably didn't see it. Go back to that video where she's getting in the car. You want to see what kind of car is? No, it's not what kind of car. It's leather seats when you're that way. You don't know that they're leather seats. So uncomfortably-- You don't know that they're leather seats. Even plather. Even plather. Yeah, there's air conditioning also. We will see you tomorrow. We'll be all right. [MUSIC PLAYING]