→ WHAT IT COVERS Constitutional scholar Jonathan Turley examines parallels between the French Revolution's descent into terror and current American political rage. He analyzes Thomas Paine's role in both revolutions, explains why the American system survived while France collapsed into bloodshed, and warns how modern movements to dismantle constitutional protections mirror Jacobin rhetoric that preceded mass violence.
Recent Episode Summaries
20 AI-powered summaries available
→ WHAT IT COVERS Glenn Beck examines newly released DOJ documents revealing an unidentified orange figure on surveillance footage near Jeffrey Epstein's cell at 10:39 PM on August 9, 2019. The investigation exposes missing nooses, contradictory official reports, and guards with no memory of key events, raising fundamental questions about government credibility and the official suicide ruling.
→ WHAT IT COVERS Glenn Beck examines newly released Jeffrey Epstein death investigation documents revealing an unidentified orange figure near his cell at 10:39PM, missing noose evidence, and contradictory official reports. The episode also features AI researcher Harlan Stewart discussing autonomous AI agents, consciousness risks, and introduces GeorgeAI, Beck's educational tool for teaching civics and critical thinking to children.
→ WHAT IT COVERS Glenn Beck examines the SAVE Act requiring photo ID for voting, arguing that 71% of Democrats support voter ID despite Chuck Schumer's opposition. He proposes mandatory body cameras for all politicians, discusses Trump's softer diplomatic approach, analyzes Chinese biolab discoveries near military bases, and critiques the Super Bowl halftime show selection of Bad Bunny.
→ WHAT IT COVERS Glenn Beck analyzes Trump's evolving communication style, arguing the president demonstrates increased empathy and strategic softening while maintaining strength. Beck advocates for mandatory body cameras on politicians to ensure transparency and accountability, comparing elected officials to law enforcement officers who already wear cameras during their duties.
→ WHAT IT COVERS Glenn Beck announces a major Ellis Island event for May 2nd celebrating legal immigration, discusses the medical establishment's reversal on youth gender transition procedures following a $2 million jury verdict, examines Chris Hansen's findings on predators in ICE raids and gaming platforms like Roblox, and features Justin Haskins revealing how Americans don't actually own their stocks due to 1970s financial system restructuring.
→ WHAT IT COVERS Glenn Beck announces a May 2 Ellis Island event celebrating legal immigration, interviews Chris Hansen about ICE raids targeting criminal illegal immigrants and online predator operations, and discusses with Justin Haskins how the Depository Trust Company centralized control of $80 trillion in securities through connections to Rockefellers and CIA operations during the 1970s.
→ WHAT IT COVERS Glenn Beck examines threats to constitutional governance, focusing on Utah's Supreme Court expansion, federal judicial overreach in immigration cases, and systemic financial vulnerabilities. Justin Haskins reveals how property rights in securities investments were eliminated through the Depository Trust Company system, creating $1 quadrillion in derivatives exposure that could trigger economic collapse during the next crisis.
→ WHAT IT COVERS Glenn Beck examines three critical threats: Allie Beth Stuckey discusses Hillary Clinton's attack on her book Toxic Empathy, Justin Haskins reveals how Wall Street eliminated investor property rights through the Depository Trust Company system, and Beck warns Utah Republicans against court-packing that mirrors tactics they previously condemned at the federal level.
→ WHAT IT COVERS Glenn Beck examines America's economic transformation under Trump, explaining why traditional recovery metrics don't capture current reality. He reveals his appearance in Epstein files as someone Epstein's associates disliked, discusses UN financial collapse, introduces AI agents as the next major technological shift, and announces the launch of his Torch subscription platform focused on education and preserving American principles.
→ WHAT IT COVERS Glenn Beck examines AI agents and the Moltbook experiment, explaining how these autonomous AI systems differ from standard AI. He analyzes Trump's economic strategy as distinct from FDR's New Deal or Reagan's approach, focusing on challenging institutional systems rather than building or trimming them. Beck also reveals an experiment comparing human-written content versus AI-generated content using his proprietary Glenn AI system.
→ WHAT IT COVERS Annie Jacobsen, military intelligence historian and Jack Ryan consultant, examines the Venezuela Maduro capture operation, revealing unprecedented military capabilities and presidential authority. The conversation explores kill-capture missions, nuclear defense systems, the Insurrection Act, intelligence agency power, and how current events mirror historical patterns from Eisenhower through present day operations.
→ WHAT IT COVERS Stu Burguiere's final broadcast after 28 years with Glenn Beck marks his departure to launch Predictable, a prediction markets analysis show. The episode covers South Korean pastor Soon's release from prison, Trump administration economic policy under Bessent, Monroe Doctrine developments in Panama and Venezuela, Tim Walz's controversial Fort Sumter remarks, and new Fed chair nominee Kevin Warsh's appointment.
→ WHAT IT COVERS Stu Burguiere departs The Glenn Beck Program after 28 years, announcing his new venture Predictable, a show analyzing prediction markets and elections. The episode features retrospective clips, personal reflections on their partnership since 1997, and mutual expressions of gratitude between Beck, Burguiere, and the audience for nearly three decades together. → KEY INSIGHTS - **Prediction Markets as Truth Engine:** Burguiere launches Predictable at predictableshow.
→ WHAT IT COVERS Glenn Beck analyzes the Alex Preddy shooting case, examining newly released BBC footage showing Preddy's confrontational behavior with ICE agents eleven days before his death. Beck frames this as a media credibility crisis, arguing outlets omitted crucial context while portraying Preddy as a peaceful observer, demonstrating how incomplete reporting shapes public perception and undermines institutional trust.
→ WHAT IT COVERS Glenn Beck frames current American political tensions through historical warning indicators, categorizing societal risks as red, yellow, and green lights. He analyzes nine deaths attributed to ICE operations, revealing most resulted from medical conditions or suicide rather than enforcement actions, while defending his editorial independence against accusations of political bias.
→ WHAT IT COVERS Glenn Beck examines the Minnesota insurrection crisis, revealing extensive fraud networks uncovered by citizen investigators Cam Higbee and Data Republican. The episode features Congressman Chip Roy discussing federal enforcement challenges, potential Insurrection Act invocation, and the political implications of sanctuary city resistance.
→ WHAT IT COVERS Glenn Beck and Rep. Chip Roy examine Minnesota's resistance to federal immigration enforcement following recent unrest. The episode covers citizen investigators uncovering fraud networks, NSA surveillance capabilities, potential insurrection act invocation, and state sovereignty conflicts. Beck also reflects on his 27-year partnership with departing co-host Stu Burguiere.
→ WHAT IT COVERS Glenn Beck analyzes Trump's tactical shift in Minnesota ICE operations, exposing organized insurgency networks including MIRAC (Minnesota Immigrant Rights Action Committee) and their connections to foreign actors. Beck proposes a controversial nonviolent intervention strategy inspired by Martin Luther King Jr. and Gandhi, while Data Republican reveals signal chat surveillance operations tracking federal agents through license plate data.
→ WHAT IT COVERS Glenn Beck analyzes the Minneapolis unrest as an organized insurgency rather than protest, exposing the Minnesota Immigrant Rights Action Committee's revolutionary ideology. He proposes a radical nonviolent response modeled on Martin Luther King Jr. and Gandhi, calling for spiritual leaders to stand as human shields between conflicting parties.
Monday morning, inbox, done.
Pick your shows, and start the week knowing what happened in your world.
Pick the Podcasts You Care About
Choose from 200+ curated shows or add any public RSS feed.
AI Reads Every New Episode
Key arguments, surprising data points, and frameworks worth stealing — pulled automatically.
One Email, Every Monday
A curated brief for each episode, with links to listen if something grabs you.
Similar Podcasts You'll Love
Get a free sample digest
See what your Monday email looks like — real AI summaries, no account needed.
One free sample — no spam, no commitment.




