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I found this ...

Shia LaBeouf demands 'free me' after battery arrest in Mardi Gras meltdow
www.foxnews.com

... Shia LaBeouf broke his silence Wednesday, nearly 24 hours after he was arrested on simple battery charges in New Orleans.

"Free me," LaBeouf wrote on social media just after 2 a.m. Earlier in the day, the "Transformers" actor was spotted celebrating Mardi Gras and dancing on Bourbon Street with his release papers in his mouth, WGNO reported.

Prior to his arrest, LaBeouf showed off an arsenal of colorful Mardi Gras-themed baubles in a selfie shared on X.

LaBeouf's whirlwind day began with an early-morning bar fight in the Faubourg Marigny district of the city. Authorities responded to a simple battery on the 1400 block of Royal Street at approximately 12:45 a.m. Tuesday where two male victims reported being assaulted, according to the New Orleans Police Department (NOPD). ...



@#154

OK, grateful to my TiVo, on which I recorded the show, starting at 11:35PM on Feb 16 and 17. After I watched the shows, I deleted them, but TiVo keeps a ~trash can~ of all the shows I've recorded, watched and deleted going back over the past month or so ...

OK, I just "undeleted" the 2/16 and the 2/17 shows.

I offer the following unofficial transcript of what I hear in the Feb 16 show ...

... But we were told in no uncertain terms by our network's lawyers, who called us directly, that we could not have him on the broadcast. The, then I was told in some uncertain terms that not only could I have not him on, but I could not mention me not having him on. And, because, my network clearly does not want us to talk about this, let's talk about this ...

I offer the following unofficial transcript of what I hear in the Feb 17 show ...

... Carr issued a letter saying he was thinking of getting rid of that talk-show exception [from the equal-time rule]. He had not gotten rid of it yet.

But, CBS generously did it for him. And told me, unilaterally that I had to abide by the equal time rules.

Something that I have never been asked to do in the interviews for the 21 years of this job

Now, that decision, I want to be clear, is their right.

Just like I have to talk about their decision on air.

...

Anyway, I said my peace last night, I said my peace, I mmade some jokes, that's what they pay me for. I was ready to let the whole thing go.

Until a few hours ago, when my group chat blew up ...

Without ever talking to me, the corporation put out this press release [shown on the air]

Now, this is a surprisingly small piece of paper considering how many butts it is trying to cover ...


The other 98%
@other98

CBS tried to spin this as a misunderstanding and it blew up in their face.

After Colbert told viewers that CBS lawyers had said in "no uncertain terms" that James Talarico could not appear on The Late Show or even be mentioned, the network rushed out a legalistic statement insisting the show had never been
"prohibited" from airing the interview.

It read like classic corporate damage control from a company that folded fast under a Trump packed FCC and only found its courage once the backlash hit.

Colbert was not buying it.

On Tuesday he walked back on stage with receipts literally in hand, holding up the CBS statement and mocking it as "crap" and "a surprisingly small piece of paper considering how many butts it is trying to cover," while reading out how he had been told he could not have Talarico on or even talk about not having him on. He also said the warning his team got about possible consequences from the Trump FCC "sounded like a threat of physical violence," turning what CBS framed as neutral regulatory advice into something that felt like raw intimidation.

In true late night truth to power fashion, Colbert turned the whole thing back on the suits and the administration they are scared of.

He blasted the Trump FCC and commissioner Brendan Carr as politically "motivated by partisan purposes" and framed the pulled interview as censorship from the top, not some neutral civics rulebook being enforced.

For viewers on the left, the episode landed like a case study in how corporate media and a vengeful White House work together to police which Democrats get to speak on national TV and which ones are quietly disappeared.


Ex-Bondi Aide Says MAGA Prosecutor Pitch Got About 1,000 Resumes
www.bloomberg.com

... A former top Justice Department official said his social media call encouraging lawyers who "support President Trump" to apply for federal prosecutor jobs drew a big response.

Chad Mizelle, who was US Attorney General Pam Bondi's chief of staff until late 2025, told Bloomberg News through a spokesperson that he received nearly a thousand resumes for assistant US attorney jobs via the post. He said the applications were forwarded to the Justice Department, which will be conducting interviews "soon." ...


Bannon also talked to Epstein about taking down the Pope:

there's already a thread up about that:

drudge.com

SO but, wait... who WAS Epstein that he was powerful enough to talk to about taking down Presidents and Popes?

Trump's Russian Handler? Trump's Israeli Handler? Both?

Related ...

The Affordability Crisis Can Now Add Wages To The Mix
www.fa-mag.com

... No matter the economic survey or poll, the message is the same thing: Americans are deeply concerned about what they call an affordability crisis. Yet to former hedge fund manager and current Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, it's a joke"literally.

Asked what could be done to get Americans feeling better about the economy during recent testimony in the Senate, Bessent quipped that consumers could "turn off MSNBC," the left-leaning cable news network now called MS NOW. The response drew several loud laughs from those in attendance.

Perhaps Bessent wouldn't have been so flippant if the testimony had come after the flood of data last week, which laid bare the challenges facing ordinary Americans, especially the rapidly diminishing leverage of workers.

A measure of wages for employees in the private sector rose 3.3% in the fourth quarter from a year earlier, the Labor Department's quarterly Employment Cost Index report showed last Tuesday.

It was the smallest increase since early 2021, when the unemployment rate was still well above 6% as the fallout from the Covid-19 pandemic lingered. ...


House Panel: Wexner gave Epstein 'about a billion dollars'
komonews.com

... Garcia pointed to what he described as a billion dollars in value moving to Epstein. "To be very clear, we know that approximately over a billion dollars, it looks like -- it's about a billion dollars -- that was either transferred, provided in stocks, or given directly to Mr. Epstein by Wexner," he said.

Garcia said Wexner claimed he was unaware of how much money moved between them and was trying to minimize how close the two men were over roughly two decades.

"We should be very clear that there would be no Epstein island, there would be no Epstein plane, there would be no money to traffic women and girls, Mr. Epstein would not be the wealthy man he was without the support of Les Wexner," Garcia said. ...



@#132 ... Bari Weiss is a center left moderate. ...

So was Pres Trump.

en.wikipedia.org

... In a 2004 interview, Trump told CNN's Wolf Blitzer: "In many cases, I probably identify more as Democrat", explaining: "It just seems that the economy does better under the Democrats than the Republicans.

Now, it shouldn't be that way. But if you go back, I mean it just seems that the economy does better under the Democrats...

But certainly we had some very good economies under Democrats, as well as Republicans. But we've had some pretty bad disaster under the Republicans."[21] ...


Related ...

Americans believe Epstein files show the powerful get a pass, Reuters/Ipsos poll finds
www.reuters.com

... Americans believe that wealthy and powerful people are rarely held accountable, a new Reuters/Ipsos poll found after the release of millions of records on the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein's connections in elite U.S. business and political circles.

Some 69% of respondents in the four-day poll, which concluded on Monday, said their views were captured "very well" or "extremely well" by a statement that the Epstein files "show that powerful people in the U.S. are rarely held accountable for their actions."

Another 17% said the statement described their views "somewhat well," while 11% said it didn't reflect their thinking.

Among both Republicans and Democrats, more than 80% said the statement described their thinking at least somewhat well. ...


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