Podcasts about Escobar

Spanish surname

  • 2,353PODCASTS
  • 5,069EPISODES
  • 43mAVG DURATION
  • 1DAILY NEW EPISODE
  • Jan 19, 2026LATEST

POPULARITY

20192020202120222023202420252026

Categories



Best podcasts about Escobar

Show all podcasts related to escobar

Latest podcast episodes about Escobar

Gangland Wire
Marijuana Mercenary – Ken Behr

Gangland Wire

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2026 Transcription Available


In this powerful and wide-ranging episode of Gangland Wire, host Gary Jenkins sits down with Ken Behr, author of One Step Over the Line: Confessions of a Marijuana Mercenary. Behr tells his astonishing life story—from teenage marijuana dealer in South Florida, to high-level drug runner and smuggler, to DEA cooperating source working major international cases. Along the way, he offers rare, first-hand insight into how large-scale drug operations actually worked during the height of the War on Drugs—and why that war, in his view, has largely failed. From Smuggler to Source Behr describes growing up during the explosion of the drug trade in South Florida during the 1970s and 1980s, where smuggling marijuana and cocaine became almost commonplace. He explains how he moved from street-level dealing into large-scale logistics—off-loading planes, running covert runways in the Everglades, moving thousands of pounds of marijuana, and participating in international smuggling operations involving Canada, Jamaica, Colombia, and the Bahamas. After multiple arrests—including a serious RICO case that threatened him with decades in prison—Behr made the life-altering decision to cooperate with the DEA. What followed was a tense and dangerous double life as an undercover operative, helping law enforcement dismantle major trafficking networks while living under constant pressure and fear of exposure. Inside the Mechanics of the Drug Trade This episode goes deep into the nuts and bolts of organized drug trafficking, including: How clandestine runways were built and dismantled in minutes How aircraft were guided into unlit landing zones How smuggling crews were paid and organized Why most drug operations ultimately collapse from inside The role of asset seizures in federal drug enforcement Hit me up on Venmo for a cup of coffee or a shot and a beer @ganglandwire Click here to “buy me a cup of coffee” Subscribe to the website for weekly notifications about updates and other Mob information. To go to the store or make a donation or rent Ballot Theft: Burglary, Murder, Coverup, click here To rent ‘Brothers against Brothers’ or ‘Gangland Wire,’ the documentaries click here.  To purchase one of my books, click here. Transcript [00:00:00] well, hey, all your wire taps. It’s good to be back here in studio of Gangland Wire. I have a special guest today. He has a book called, uh, title is One Step Over the Line and, and he went several steps over the line, I think in his life. Ken Bearer, welcome Ken. Thanks for having me. Thanks for having me. Now, Ken, Ken is a, was a marijuana smuggler at one time and, and ended up working with the DEA, so he went from one side over to my side and, and I always like to talk to you guys that that helped us in law enforcement and I, there’s a lot of guys that don’t like that out there, but I like you guys you were a huge help to us in law enforcement and ended up doing the right thing after you made a lot of money. So tell us about the money. We were just starting to talk about the money. Tell us about the money, all those millions and millions of dollars that you drug smuggler makes. What happens? Well, I, you know, like I said, um, Jimmy Buffett’s song a pirate looks at 40, basically, he says, I made enough money to to buy Miami and pissed it away all so fast, never meant to last. And, and that’s what happens. I do know a few people that have [00:01:00] put away money. One of my friends that we did a lot of money together, a lot of drug dealing and a lot of moving some product, and he’s put the money away. Got in bed with some other guy that was, you know, legal, bought a bunch of warehouses, and now he lives a great life, living off the money he put away. Yeah. If the rents and stuff, he, he got into real estate. Other guys have got into real estate and they got out and they ended up doing okay. ’cause now they’re drawing all those rents. That’s a good way to money. Exactly what he did. Uh, my favorite, I was telling you a favorite story of mine was the guy that was a small time dealer used to hang out at the beach. And, uh, we en he ended up saving $80,000, which was a lot of money back then. Yeah. And then put it all, went to school to be a culinary chef and then got a job at the Marriott as a culinary chef and a chef. So he, you know, he really took the money, made a little bit of money, didn’t make a lot Yeah. But made enough to go to school and do something with his life. That’s so, um, that’s a great one. That’s a good one [00:02:00] there. That’s real. Yeah. But he wasn’t a big time guy. Yeah. You know what, what happens is you might make a big lick. You know, I, I never made million dollar moves. I have lots of friends that did. I always said I didn’t want to be a smuggler. ’cause I was making a steady living, being a drug runner. If you brought in 40, 50,000 pounds of weed, you would come to me and then I would move it across the country and sell it in different, along with other guys like me. Having said that, so I say I’m a guy that never wanted to do a smuggling trip. I’ve done 12 of them. Yeah. Even though, you know, and you know, if you’ve been in the DEA side twelve’s a lot for somebody usually. Yeah. That’s a lot. They don’t make, there’s no longevity. Two or three trips. No. You know, I did it for 20 years. Yeah. And then finally I got busted one time in Massachusetts in 1988. We had 40,000 pounds stuck up in Canada. So a friend of mine comes to me, another friend had the 40,000 pounds up there. He couldn’t sell it. He goes, Hey, you wanna help me smuggle [00:03:00] this back into America? Which, you know, is going the wrong direction. The farther north it goes, the more money it’s worth. I would’ve taken it to Greenland for Christ’s sakes. Yeah. But, we smuggled it back in. What we did this time was obviously they, they brought a freighter or a big ship to bring the 40,000 pounds into Canada. Mm-hmm. He added, stuffed in a fish a fish packing plant in a freezer somewhere up there. And so we used the sea plane and we flew from a lake in Canada to a lake in Maine where the plane would pull up, I’d unload. Then stash it. And we really did like to get 1400 pounds. We had to go through like six or seven trips. ’cause the plane would only hold 200 and something pounds. Yeah. And a sea plane can’t land at night. It has to land during the day. Yeah. You can’t land a plane in the middle of a lake in the night, I guess yourself. Yeah. I see. Uh, and so we got, I got busted moving that load to another market and that cost, uh, [00:04:00] cost me about $80,000 in two years of fighting in court to get out of that. Yeah. Uh, but I did beat the case for illegal search and seizure. So one for the good guys. It wasn’t for the good guys. Well the constitution, he pulled me over looking for fireworks and, ’cause it was 4th of July and, yeah. The name of that chapter in the book is why I never work on a holiday. So you don’t wanna spend your holiday in jail ’cause there’s no, you can’t on your birthday. So another, the second time I got busted was in 92. So just a couple years later after, basically I was in the system for two years with the loss, you know, fighting it and that, that was for Rico. I was looking at 25 years. But, uh, but like a normal smuggling trip. I’ll tell you one, we did, I brought, I actually did my first smuggling trip. I was on the run in Jamaica from a, a case that I got named in and I was like 19 living down in Jamaica to cool out. And then my buddies came down. So we ended up bringing out 600 pounds. So that was my first tr I was about 19 or [00:05:00] 20 years old when I did my first trip. I brought out 600 pounds outta Jamaica. A friend of mine had a little Navajo and we flew it out with that, but. I’ll give you an example of a smuggling trip. So a friend of mine came to me and he wanted to load 300 kilos of Coke in Columbia and bring it into America. And he wanted to know if I knew anybody that could load him 300 kilos. So I did. I introduced him to a friend of mine that Ronnie Vest. He’s the only person you’ll appreciate this. Remember how he kept wanting to extradite all the, the guys from Columbia when we got busted, indict him? Yes. And of course, Escobar’s living in his own jail with his own exit. Yeah. You know, and yeah. So the Columbian government says, well, we want somebody, why don’t you extradite somebody to America, to Columbia? So Ronnie Vest had gotten caught bringing a load of weed outta Columbia. You know, they sent ’em back to America. So that colo, the Americans go, I’ll tell you what you want. Somebody. And Ronnie Vests got the first good friend of mine, first American to be [00:06:00] extradited to Columbia to serve time. So he did a couple years in the Columbian prison. And so he’s the one that had the cocaine connection now. ’cause he spent time in Columbia. Yeah. And you know, so we brought in 300 kilos of Coke. He actually, I didn’t load it. He got another load from somebody else. But, so in the middle of the night, you set up on a road to nowhere in the Everglades, there’s so many Floridas flat, you’ve got all these desolate areas. We go out there with four or five guys. We take, I have some of ’em here somewhere. Callum glow sticks. You know the, the, the glow sticks you break, uh, yeah. And some flashing lights throw ’em out there. Yeah. And we set up a, yeah, the pilot came in and we all laid in the woods waiting for the plane to come in. And as soon as the pilot clicks. The mic four times. It’s, we all click our mics four times and then we run out. He said to his copilot, he says, look, I mean, we lit up this road from the sky. He goes, it looks like MIA [00:07:00] behind the international airport. But it happens like that within a couple, like a minute, we’ll light that whole thing up. Me and one other guy run down the runway. It’s a lot, it’s a long run, believe me. We put out the lights, we gotta put out the center lights and then the marker lights, because you gotta have the center of the runway where the plane’s gonna land and the edge is where it can’t, right? Yeah. He pulls up, bring up a couple cars, I’m driving one of them, load the kilos in. And then we have to refuel the plane because you don’t, you know, you want to have enough fuel to get back to an FBO to your landing airport or real airport. Yeah. Not the one we made in the Everglades. Yeah. And then the trick is the car’s gotta get out of there. Yeah, before the plane takes off. ’cause when that plane takes off, you know you got a twin engine plane landing is quiet, taking off at full throttle’s gonna wake up the whole neighborhood. So once we got out of there, then they went ahead and got the plane off. And then the remaining guys, they gotta clean up the mess. We want to use this again. So we [00:08:00] wanna clean up all the wires, the radios. Mm-hmm. Pick up the fuel tanks, pick up the runway lights, and their job is to clean that off and all that’s gonna take place before the police even get down the main road. Right? Mm-hmm. That’s gonna all take place in less than 10 minutes. Wow. I mean, the offload takes, the offload takes, you can offload about a thousand pounds, which I’ve done in three minutes. Wow. But, and then refueling the plane, getting everything else cleaned up. Takes longer. Yeah. Interesting. So how many guys would, would be on that operation and how do you pay that? How do you decide who gets paid what? How much? Okay. So get it up front or, I always curious about the details, how that stuff, I don’t think I got paid enough. And I’ll be honest, it was a hell of a chance. I got 20 grand looking at 15 years if you get caught. Yeah. But I did it for the excitement. 20 grand wasn’t that much. I had my own gig making more money than that Uhhuh, you know, but I was also racing cars. I was, there’s a [00:09:00] picture of one of my race cars. Oh cool. So that costs about six, 7,000 a weekend. Yeah. And remember I’m talking about 1980s dollars. Yeah. That’s 20,000 a weekend. A weekend, yes. Yeah. And that 20,000 for a night’s work in today’s world would be 60. Yeah. Three. And I’m talking about 1985 versus, that was 40 years ago. Yeah. Um. But it’s a lot of fun and, uh, and, but it, you kind of say to yourself, what was that one step over the line? That’s why I wrote the book. I remember as a kid thinking in my twenties, man, I’ve taken one step over the line. So the full name of the book is One Step Over the Line Con Confessions of a Marijuana Mercenary. That’s me actually working for the DEA. That picture was at the time when I was working for the DEA, so the second time I got busted in 1992 was actually for the smallest amount of weed that I ever got, ever really had. It was like 80, a hundred pounds. But unfortunately it was for Rico. I didn’t know at the [00:10:00] time, but when they arrested me, I thought, oh, they only caught me with a hundred pounds. But I got charged with Rico. So I was looking at 25 years. What, how, what? Did they have some other, it must have had some other offenses that they could tie to and maybe guns and stuff or something that get that gun. No, we never used guns ever. Just other, other smuggling operations. Yeah, yeah. Me, me and my high school friend, he had moved to Ohio in 77 or 78, so he had called me one time, he was working at the Ford plant and he goes, Hey, I think I could sell some weed up here. All right. I said, come on down, I’ll give you a couple pounds. So he drives down from Ohio on his weekend off, all the way from Ohio. I gave him two pounds. He drove home, calls me back. He goes, I sold it. So I go, all right. He goes, I’m gonna get some more. So at that time, I was working for one of the largest marijuana smugglers in US History. His name was Donny Steinberg. I was just a kid, you know, like my job, part of my [00:11:00] job was to, they would gimme a Learjet. About a million or two and I jump on a Learjet and fly to the Cayman Islands. I was like 19 years old. Same time, you know, kid. Yeah, just a kid. 19 or 20 and yeah. 18, I think. And so I ended up doing that a few times. That was a lot of fun. And that’s nice to be a kid in the Learjet and they give me a million or two and they gimme a thousand dollars for the day’s work. I thought I was rich, I was, but people gotta understand that’s in that 78 money, not that’s, yeah. That was more like $10,000 for day, I guess. Yeah. You know? Yeah. It was a lot of money for an 18, 19-year-old kid. Yeah. Donnie gives me a bail. So Terry comes back from Ohio, we shoved the bale into his car. Barely would fit ’cause he had no big trunk on this Firebird. He had, he had a Firebird trans Am with the thunder black with a thunder, thunder chicken on the hood. It was on the hood. Oh cool. That was, that was a catch meow back then. Yeah. Yeah. It got it with that [00:12:00] Ford plant money. And uh, by the way, that was after that 50 pounds got up. ’cause every bail’s about 50 pounds. That’s the last he quit forward the next day. I bet. And me and him had built a 12 year, we were moving. Probably 50 tons up there over the 12 year period. You know, probably, I don’t know, anywhere from 50 to a hundred thousand pounds we would have, he must have been setting up other dealers. So among his friends, he must have been running around. He had the distribution, I was setting up the distribution network and you had the supply. I see. Yeah. I was the Florida connection. It’s every time you get busted, the cops always wanna grab that Florida connection. Oh yeah. Oh yeah. You gotta go down there. I there, lemme tell you, you know, I got into this. We were living in, I was born on a farm in New Jersey, like in know Norman Rockwell, 1950s, cow pies and hay bales. And then we moved to New Orleans in 1969 and then where my dad had business and right after, not sure after that, he died when I was 13. As I say in the book, I [00:13:00] probably wouldn’t have been writing the book if my father was alive. Yeah. ’cause I probably wouldn’t have went down that road, you know? But so my mother decides in 1973 to move us to, uh, south Florida, to get away from the drugs in the CD underside of New Orleans. Yeah. I guess she didn’t read the papers. No. So I moved from New Orleans to the star, the war on where the war on drugs would start. I always say if she’d have moved me to Palo Alto, I’d be Bill Gates, but No. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I was so, uh, and everybody I knew was running drugs, smuggling drugs, trying to be a drug deal. I mean, I was, I had my own operation. I was upper middle level, but there were guys like me everywhere. Mm-hmm. There were guys like me everywhere, moving a thou, I mean, moving a thousand, 2000 pounds at the time was a big thing, you know? That’s, yeah. So, so about what year was that? I started in 19. 70. Okay. Three. I was [00:14:00] 16. Started selling drugs outta my mom’s house, me and my brother. We had a very good business going. And by the time I was got busted, it was 19 92. So, so you watched, especially in South Florida, you watched like where that plane could go down and go back up that at eventually the feds will come up with radar and they have blimps and they have big Bertha stuff down there to then catch those kinds of things. Yeah. Right, right. Big Bertha was the blimp. Uhhuh, uh, they put up, yeah. In the beginning you could just fly right in. We did one trip one time. This is this, my, my buddy picked up, I don’t know, 40 or 50 kilos in The Bahamas. So you fly into Fort Lauderdale and you call in like you’re gonna do a normal landing. Mm-hmm. And the BLI there. This is all 1980s, five. You know, they already know. They’re doing this, but you just call in, like you’re coming to land in Fort Lauderdale, and what you do is right before you land, you hit the tower up and you tell ’em you wanna do a [00:15:00] go around, meaning you’re not comfortable with the landing. Mm-hmm. Well, they’ll always leave you a go around because they don’t want you to crash. Yeah. And right west of the airport was a golf course, and right next to the golf course, oh, about a mile down the road was my townhouse. So we’re in the townhouse. My buddies all put on, two of the guys, put on black, get big knives, gear, and I drive to one road on the golf course and my other friend grows Dr. We drop the guys off in the golf course as the plane’s gonna do the touchdown at the airport. He says, I gotta go around. As he’s pulling up now, he’s 200 feet below the radar, just opens up the side of the plane. Mm-hmm. The kickers, we call ’em, they’re called kickers. He kicks the baskets, the ba and the guys on, on the golf court. They’re hugging trees. Yeah. You don’t wanna be under that thing. Right. You got a 200, you got maybe a 40 pound package coming in at 120 miles an hour from 200 feet up. It’ll break the bra. It’ll yeah. The [00:16:00] branches will kill you. Yeah. So they pull up, they get out, I pull back up in the pickup truck, he runs out, jumps in the back of the truck, yells, hit it. We drive the mile through the back roads to my townhouse. Get the coke in the house. My buddy rips it open with a knife. It’s and pulls out some blow. And he looks at me, he goes, Hey, let’s get outta here. And I go, where are we going? Cops come and he goes, ah, I got two tickets. No, four tickets to the Eddie Murphy concert. So we left the blow in this trunk of his car. Oh. Oh, oh man. I know. We went to Eddie Murphy about a million dollars worth of product in the trunk. Oh. And, uh, saw a great show and came back and off they went. That’s what I’m trying to point out is that’s how fast it goes down, man. It’s to do. Yeah. Right in, in 30 minutes. We got it out. Now the thing about drug deals is we always call ’em dds delayed dope deals because the smuggling [00:17:00] trip could take six months to plan. Yeah. You know, they never go, there’s no organized crime in organized crime. Yeah. No organization did it. Yeah. And then, then of course, in 1992 when I got busted and was looking at Rico, a friend of mine came up to me. He was a yacht broker. He had gotten in trouble selling a boat, and he said, Hey, I’d you like to work for the DEA. I’d done three months in jail. I knew I was looking at time, I knew I had nothing. My lawyers told me, Kenny, you either figure something out or you’re going to jail for a mm-hmm. And I just had a newborn baby. I just got married three weeks earlier and we had a newborn baby. I said, what are you crazy? I mean, I’m waiting for my wife to hear me. You know, he’s calling me on the phone. He goes, meet me for lunch. I go meet him for lunch. And he explains to me that he’s gonna, he’s got a guy in the, uh, central district in Jacksonville, and he’s a DEA agent, and I should go talk to him. And so the DEA made a deal with the Ohio police that anything that I [00:18:00] confiscated, anything that I did, any assets I got, they would get a share in as long as they released me. Yeah. To them. And, you know, it’s all about the, I hate to say this, I’m not saying that you don’t want to take drugs off the street, but if you’re the police department and you’re an agent, it’s about asset seizures. Yeah. Yeah. That’s how you fund the dr. The war on drugs. Yeah. The war begets war. You know, I mean, oh, I know, been Florida was, I understand here’s a deal. You’re like suing shit against the tide, right? Fighting that drug thing. Okay? It just keeps coming in. It keeps getting cheaper. It keeps getting more and more. You make a little lick now and then make a little lick now and then, but then you start seeing these fancy cars and all this money out there that you can get to. If you make the right score, you, you, you hit the right people, you can get a bunch of money, maybe two or three really cool cars for your unit. So then you’ll start focusing on, go after the money. I know it’s not right, but you’re already losing your shoveling shit against the tide anyhow, so just go after the goal. [00:19:00] One time I set up this hash deal for the DEA from Amsterdam. The guy brought the hash in, and I had my agent, you know, I, I didn’t set up the deal. The guy came to me and said, we have 200 kilos of hash. Can you help us sell it? He didn’t know that I was working for the DEA, he was from Europe. And I said, sure. The, the thing was, I, so in the boat ready to close the deal, now my guy is from Central. I’m in I’m in Fort Lauderdale, which is Southern District. So he goes, Hey, can you get that man to bring that sailboat up to Jacksonville? I go, buddy, he just sailed across the Atlantic. He ain’t going to Jacksonville. So the central district has to come down, or is a northern district? I can’t remember if it’s northern or central. Has to come down to the Southern district. So, you know, they gotta make phone calls. Everybody’s gotta be in Yep. Bump heads. So I’m on the boat and he calls me, he goes, Hey, we gotta act now. Yeah. And I’m looking at the mark, I go, why? He [00:20:00] goes, customs is on the dock. We don’t want them involved. So you got the two? Yeah. So I bring him up, I go, where’s the hash? He goes, it’s in the car. So we go up to the car and he opens the trunk, and I, I pull back one of the duffle bags I see. I can tell immediately it’s product. So I go like this, and all hell breaks loose, right? Yeah. I could see the two customs agents and they’re all dressed like hillbillies. They, you know. So I said to my, my handler, the next day I called them up to debrief. You know, I have to debrief after every year, everything. I goes, so what happened when customs I go, what’d they want to do? He goes, yep. They wanted to chop the boat in threes. So they’re gonna sell the boat and the 2D EA offices are gonna trade it. Yeah. Are gonna shop the money. Yeah. I remember when I registered with the DEA in, in, in the Southern district, I had to tell ’em who I was. They go, why are you working for him? Why aren’t you working for us? I’m like, buddy, I’m not in charge here. This is, you know? Yeah. I heard that many [00:21:00] times through different cases we did, where the, the local cop would say to me, why don’t you come work for us? Oh yeah. Try to steal your informant. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. So how about that? So, can you get a piece of the action if they had a big case seizure? Yeah. Did they have some deal where you’d get a piece of that action there? Yep. That’s a pretty good deal. Yeah. So I would get, I, I’d get, like, if we brought down, he would always tell everybody that he needed money to buy electronics and then he would come to me and go, here’s 2000. And to the other cis, he had three guys. I saw a friend of mine, the guy that got me into the deal. Them a million dollar house or a couple million dollar house. And I saw the DEA hand him a suitcase with a million dollars cash in it. Wow. I mean, I’m sorry, with a hundred thousand cash. A hundred thousand. Okay. I was gonna say, I was thinking a million. Well, a hundred thousand. Yeah, a hundred thousand. I’ve heard that. I just didn’t have any experience with it myself. But I heard that. I saw, saw Open it up, saw money. I saw the money. It was one of those aluminum halla, Halliburton reef cases and Yeah, yeah. A [00:22:00] hundred thousand cash. But, uh, but you know, um, it’s funny, somebody once asked me out of, as a kid I wanted to be a cowboy, a race car driver, and a secret agent. Me too. Yes. Yeah. I didn’t want, I wanted to be a, I grew up on a farm, so I kind of rode a horse. I had that watched Rowdy, you got saved background as me, man. Yeah. You know, we watched, we watched, we grew up on westerns. We watched Gun Smoke, rowdy. Oh yeah. You know, uh, bananas, uh, you know, so, um. So anyway, uh, I got to raise cars with my drug money, and I guess I’m not sure if I was more of a secret agent working as a drug dealer or as the DEA, but it’s a lot of I, you know, I make jokes about it now, but it’s a lot of stress working undercover. Oh, yeah. Oh, I can’t even imagine that. I never worked undercover. I, that was not my thing. I like surveillance and putting pieces together and running sources, but man, that actual working undercover that’s gotta be nerve wracking. It’s, you know, and, and my handler was good at it, but [00:23:00] he would step out and let, here’s, I’ll tell you this. One day he calls me up and he goes, Hey, I’m down here in Fort Lauderdale. You need to come down here right now. And I’m having dinner at my house about 15 minutes away. Now he lives in Jacksonville. I go, what’s he doing in Fort Lauderdale? So I drive down to the hotel and he’s got a legal pad and a pen. He goes, my, uh, my, my seniors want to, uh, want you to proffer. You need to tell me everything you ever did. And they want me to do a proffer. And I go, I looked at him. I go, John, I can’t do that. He start, we start writing. I start telling him stuff. I stop. I go, I grew up in this town. Everybody I know I did a drug deal with from high school, I go, I would be giving you every single kid, every family, man, I grew up here. My, I’m gonna be in jail, and my wife and my one and a half year old daughter are gonna be the only people left in this town, and they’re not gonna have any support. And I just can’t do this to all my friends. Yeah. So he says, all right, puts the pen down. I knew [00:24:00] he hated paperwork, so I had a good shot. He wasn’t gonna, he goes, yeah, you hungry? I go, yeah. He goes, let’s go get a steak. And right across the street was a place called Chuck Steakhouse, which great little steak restaurant. All right. So we go over there, he goes, and he is a big guy. He goes, sit right here. I go, all right. So I sit down. I, I’m getting a free steak. I’m gonna sit about through the steak dinner, it goes. Look over my shoulder. So I do this. He goes, see the guy at the bar in the black leather jacket. I go, yeah. He goes, when I get up and walk outta here, when I clear the door, I want you to go up to him and find a talk drug deal. See what you can get out of him. I go, you want me to walk up to a complete stranger and say, he goes, I’m gonna walk out the door. When I get out the door. You’re gonna go up and say, cap Captain Bobby. That was his, he was a ca a boat captain and his nickname, his handle was Captain Bobby. And he was theoretically the next Vietnam vet that now is a smuggler, you know?[00:25:00] Yeah. And so he walks out the door and I walked out and sat with the guy at the bar and we started, I said, hi, captain Bobby sent me, I’m his right hand man, you know, to talk about. And we talked and I looked around the bar trying to see if anybody was with him. And I’m figuring, now I’m looking at the guy going, why is he so open with me? And I’m thinking, you know what? He’s wearing a leather jacket. He’s in Florida. I bet you he’s got a wire on and he’s working for customs and I’m working for the DEA, so nothing ever came of it. But you know, that was, you know, you’re sitting there eating dinner and all of a sudden, you know, look over my shoulder. Yeah. And, you know, and I’m trying to balance all that with having a newborn that’s about a year old and my wife and Yeah. Looking at 25 years. So a little bit of pressure. But, you know, hey and I understand these federal agencies, everybody’s got, everybody is, uh, uh, aggressive. Everybody is ambitious. And you just are this guy in the middle and right. And they’ll throw you to the [00:26:00] wolves in a second. Second, what have you done for a second? Right? It’s what have you done for me lately? He’s calling me up and said, Hey, I don’t got any product from you in a minute. I go, well, I’m working on it. He goes, well, you know, they’ll kick you outta the program. Yeah. But one of the things he did he was one of, he was the GS 13. So he had some, you know, he had level, you know, level 15 or whatever, you know, he was, yeah. Almost at the head of near retirement too. And he said, look, he had me, he had another guy that was a superstar, another guy. And we would work as a team and he would feed us all the leads. In other words, if David had a case, I’d be on that case. So when I went to go to go to trial or go to my final, he had 14 or 15 different things that he had penciled me in to be involved with. The biggest deal we did at the end of my two years with the DEA was we brought down the Canadian mob. They got him for 10,000 kilos of cocaine, import 10,000 kilos. It was the Hell’s Angels, the Rock something, motorcycle [00:27:00] gang, the Italian Mafia and the, and the Irish mob. Mm-hmm. And the guy, I mean, this is some badass guys. I was just a player, but. The state of Ohio, they got to fly up there and you know, I mean, no words, the dog and pony show was always on to give everybody, you know. Yes. A bite at the apple. Oh yeah. But I’ll tell you this, it’s been 33 years and the two people that I’m close to is my arresting officer in Ohio and my DEA handler in Jacksonville. The arresting officer, when he retired, he called to gimme his new cell phone. And every year or so I call him up around Christmas and say, Dennis, thank you for the opportunity to turn my life around, because I’ve got four great kids. I’ve started businesses, you know, he knows what I’ve done with my life. And the DEA handler, that’s, he’s a friend of mine. I mean, you know, we talk all the time and check on each other. And, you know, I mean, he’s, [00:28:00] they’re my friends. A lot of, not too many of the guys are left from those days that will talk to me. Yeah, probably not. And most of them are dead or in jail anyhow. For, well, a lot of ’em are, maybe not even because of you, I mean, because that’s their life. No, but a lot of them, a number of ’em turned their lives around, went into legal businesses and have done well. Yeah. So, you know, there really have, so not all of ’em, but a good share of ’em have turned, because we weren’t middle class kids. We were, my one friend was, dad was the lieutenant of the police department. The other one was the post guy. We weren’t inner city kids. Yeah. We weren’t meeting we, the drug war landed on us and we just, we were recruited into it. As young as I talk about in my book. But I mean, let’s talk about what’s going on now. Now. Yeah. And listen, I’m gonna put some statistics out there. Last year, 250,000 people were charged with cannabis. 92% for simple possession. There’s [00:29:00] people still in jail for marijuana doing life sentences. I’ve had friends do 27 years only for marijuana. No nonviolent crimes, first time offender. 22 years, 10 years. And the government is, I’ve been involved with things where the government was smuggling the drugs. I mean, go with the Iran Contra scandal that happened. We were trading guns for cocaine with the Nicaraguans in the Sandon Easterns. Yeah. Those same pilots. Gene Hassen Fus flew for Air America and Vietnam moving drugs and gun and, and guns out of Cambodia. Same guy. Air America. Yeah. The American government gave their soldiers opium in Civil War to keep ’em marching. You know, I mean, we did a deal with Lucky Luciano, where we let ’em out of prison for doing heroin exchange for Intel from, from Europe on during World War II and his, and the mob watching the docks for the, uh, cargo ships. So the government’s been intertwined in the war on drugs on two [00:30:00] sides of it. Yeah. You know, and not that it makes it right. Look, I’ve lost several friends to fentanyl that thought they were doing coke and did fentanyl or didn’t even know there was any. They just accidentally did fentanyl and it’s a horrible drug. But those boats coming out of Venezuela don’t have fentanyl on ’em. No. Get cocaine maybe. If that, and they might be, they’re probably going to Europe. Europe and they’re going to Europe. Yeah, they’re going, yeah. They’re doubt they’re going to Europe. Yeah. Yeah. And so let’s put it this way. I got busted for running a 12 year ongoing criminal enterprise. We moved probably 50 tons of marijuana. You know what? Cut me down? One guy got busted with one pound and he turned in one other guy that went all the way up to us. So if you blew up those boats, you know, you’re, you need the leads. You, you can’t kill your clients. Yeah. You know, how are you gonna get, not gonna get any leads outta that. Well, that’s, uh, well, I’m just saying [00:31:00] you right. The, if they followed the boat to the mothership Yeah. They’d have the whole crew and all the cargo. Yeah. You know, it’s, those boats maybe have 200 kilos on ’em. A piece. Yeah. The mothership has six tons. Yeah. That’s it. It’s all about the, uh, the, um, uh, optics. Optics, yeah. That’s the word. It’s all about the optics and, and the politic, you know, in, in some way it may deter some people, but I don’t, I I, I’ve never seen anything, any consequence. In that drug business, there’s too much money. There is no consequence that is really ever gonna deter people from smuggling drugs. Let me put it this way, except for a few people like yourself, there’s a few like yourself that get to a certain age and the consequence of going to prison for a long time may, you know, may bring you around or the, all the risk you’re taking just, you know, you can’t take it anymore, but you gotta do something. But no, well, I got busted twice. Consequence just don’t matter. There is no consequence that’s gonna do anything. Here’s why. And you’re right. [00:32:00] One is how do you get in a race car and not think you’re gonna die? Because you always think it’s gonna happen to somebody else. Exactly. And the drug business is the same. It’s, I’m not, it’s not gonna happen to me tonight. And those guys in Venezuela, they have no electricity. They have no water. Yeah. They got nothing. They have a chance to go out and make a couple thousand dollars and change their family’s lives. Yeah. Or they’re being, they’re got family members in the gar, in the gangs that are forcing them to do it. Yeah. It’s the war on drugs has kind of been a political war and an optics war from the seventies. I mean, it’s nobody, listen, I always say, I say in my book, nobody loved it more than the cops, the lawyers and the politicians. No shit. In Fort Lauderdale, they had nothing, and all of a sudden the drug wars brought night scopes and cigarette boats and fancy cars and new offices. Yes. And new courthouses, and new jails and Yep. I don’t have an answer. Yeah. The problem is, [00:33:00] you know what I’m gonna say, America, Mexico doesn’t have a drug problem. Columbia doesn’t have a drug problem. No. America has a drug problem. Those are just way stations to get the product in. In the cover of my book, it says, you don’t sell drugs, you supply them like ammunition in a war. It’s a, people, we, how do we fix this? How do we get the American people? Oh, by the way, here’s a perfect example. Marijuana is legal in a majority of states. You don’t see anybody smuggling marijuana in, I actually heard two stories of people that are smuggling marijuana out of the country. I’ve heard that. I’ve heard that. Yeah. They’re growing so much marijuana in America that it’s worth shipping to other places, either legally or illegally. Yeah. And, and, and you know, the biggest problem is like, what they’ll do is they’ll set up dispensaries, with the green marijuana leaf on it, like it’s some health [00:34:00] dispensary. But they, they just won’t it’ll be off the books. It just won’t have the licensing and all that. And, you know, you run that for a while and then maybe you get caught, maybe you don’t. And so it’s, you know, it’s, well, the other thing is with that dispensary license. It’s highly regulated, but you can get a lot of stuff in the gray. So there’s three markets now. There’s the white market, which is the legal Yeah. Business that, you know, you can buy stocks in the companies and whatnot. Yeah. There’s the black market, which is the guy on the street that Kenny Bear used to be. And then there’s the gray market where people are taking black market product and funneling it through the white markets without intact, you know, the taxes and the licensing and the, the, uh, testing for, you know, you have to test marijuana for pesticides. Metals, yeah. And, and the oils and the derivatives. You know, there’s oil and there’s all these derivatives. They have to be tested. Well, you could slide it through the gray market into the white market. So I know it’s a addiction, you know, whether it’s gambling or sex or Right. Or [00:35:00] there’s always gonna be people who are gonna take advantage and make money off of addiction. The mafia, you know, they refined it during the prohibition. All these people that drink, you know, and a lot, admittedly, a lot of ’em are social drinkers, but awful lot of ’em work. They had to have it. And so, you know, then gambling addiction. And that’s, uh, well here’s what I say. If it wasn’t for Prohibition Vegas, the mob never would’ve had the power and the money to build Vegas. No, they wouldn’t have anything. So when you outlaw something that people want, you’re creating a, a business. If, if somebody, somebody said the other day, if you made all the drugs legal in America, would that put out, put the drug cartels in Mexico and Columbia and out of business? Yeah, maybe. How about this statistic? About 20 to 30,000 people a year die from cocaine overdose. Most have a medical condition. Unknown unbe, besides, they’re not ODing on cocaine. Yeah. Alright. 300,000 people a year die from obesity. Yeah. And [00:36:00] another, almost four, I think 700, I don’t know, I might be about to say a half a million die from alcohol and tobacco. Mm-hmm. I could be low on that figure. So you’re, you probably are low. Yeah. I could be way more than that. But on my point is we’re regulating alcohol, tobacco, and certainly don’t care how much food you eat, and why don’t we have a medical system that takes care of these people. I don’t know that the answer if I did, but I’m just saying it, making this stuff more valuable and making bigger crime syndicates doesn’t make sense. Yeah. See a addiction is such a psychological, spiritual. Physical maldy that people can’t really separate the three and they don’t, people that, that aren’t involved and then getting some kind of recovery, they can’t understand why somebody would go back and do it again after they maybe were clean for a while. You know, that’s a big common problem with putting money into the treatment center [00:37:00] business. Yep. Because people do go to treatment two and three times and, and maybe they never get, some people never, they’ll chase it to death. No, and I can’t explain it. And you know, I, I’ll tell you what, I have my own little podcast. It’s called One Step Over the Line. Mm-hmm. And I released a show last night about a friend of mine, his name is Ron Black. You can watch it or any of your listeners can watch it, and Ron was, went down to the depths of addiction, but he did it a long time ago when they really spent a lot of time and energy to get, you know, they really put him through his system. 18 months, Ron got out clean and he came from a good family. He was raised right. He didn’t, you know, he had some trauma in his life. He had some severe trauma as a child, but he built one of the largest addiction. He has a company that he’s, he ran drug counseling services. He’s been in the space 20 or 30 years, giving back. He has a company that trains counselors to be addiction specialists. He has classes for addiction counseling. He become certified [00:38:00] members. He’s run drug rehabs. He donates to the, you know, you gotta wa if you get a chance to go to my podcast, one step over the line and, and watch this episode we did last night. Probably not the most exciting, you know, like my stories. Yeah. But Ronnie really did go through the entire addiction process from losing everything. Yeah. And pulling himself out. But he was also had a lot of family. You know, he had the right steps. A lot of these kids I was in jail with. Black and brown, inter or inner city youth, whatever, you know, their national, you know, race or nationality, they don’t have a chance. Yeah. They’re in jail with their fathers, their cousins, their brothers. Mm-hmm. The law, the war on drugs, and the laws on drugs specifically affect them. And are they, I remember thinking, is this kid safer in this jail with a cement roof over his head? A, a hot three hot meals and a bed than being back on the [00:39:00] streets? Yeah. He was, I mean. Need to, I used to do a program working with, uh, relatives of addicts. And so this mother was really worried about her son gonna go to jail next time he went to court. And he, she had told me enough about him by then. I said, you know, ma’am, I just wanna tell you something he’s safer doing about a year or so in jail than he is doing a year or so on the streets. Yeah. And she said, she just looked at me and she said, you know, you’re right. You’re right. So she quit worried about and trying to get money and trying to help him out because she was just, she was killing him, getting him out and putting him back on the streets. This kid was gonna die one way or the other, either shot or overdosed or whatever. But I’ll tell you another story. My best friend growing up in New Orleans was Frankie Monteleone. They owned the Monte Hotel. They own the family was worth, the ho half a billion dollars at the time, maybe. And Frankie was a, a diabetic. And he was a, a junk. He was a a because of the diabetic needles. [00:40:00] He kind of became a cocaine junkie, you know, shooting up coke. You know, I guess the needle that kept him alive was, you know, I, you know, again the addict mentality. Right, right. You can’t explain it. So he got, so he got busted trying to sell a couple grams. They made it into a bigger case by mentioning more product conspiracy. His father said, got a, the, the father made a deal to give him a year and a half in club Fed. Yeah. He could, you know, get a tan, practice his tennis, learn chess come out and be the heir to one of the richest families in the world, all right. He got a year and a half. Frankie did 10 years in prison. ’cause every time he got out, he got violated. Oh yeah. I remember going to his federal probation officer to get my bicycle. He was riding when he got violated. Mm-hmm. And I said, I said, sir, he was in a big building in Fort Lauderdale or you know, courthouse office building above the courthouse. I go, there’s so many cops, lawyers, [00:41:00] judges, that are doing blow on a Saturday night that are smoking pot, that are drinking more than they should all around us. You’ve got a kid that comes from one of the wealthiest families in America that’s never gonna hurt another citizen. He’s just, he’s an addict, not a criminal. He needs a doctor, not a jail. And you know what the guy said to me? He goes but those people aren’t on probation. I, I know. He did. 10 years in and out of prison. Finally got out, finally got off of paper, didn’t stop doing drugs. Ended up dying in a dentist chair of an overdose. Yeah. So you, you never fixed them, you just imprisoned somebody that would’ve never heard another American. Yeah, but we spent, it cost us a lot of money. You know, I, I, I dunno what the answer is. The war on drugs is, we spent over, we spent 80, let’s say since 1973. The, the DEA got started in 73, let’s say. Since that time we’ve, what’s that? 70 something years? Yeah. We’ve done [00:42:00] no, uh, 50, 60. Yeah. 50 something. Yeah. Been 50. We spent a trillion dollars. We spent a trillion dollars. The longest and most expensive war in American history is against its own people. Yeah. Trying to save ’em. I know it’s cra it’s crazy. Yeah, I know. And it, over the years, it just took on this life of its own. Yeah. And believe me, there was a, there’s a whole lot of young guys like you only, didn’t go down the drug path, but you like that action and you like getting those cool cars and doing that cool stuff and, and there’s TV shows about it as part of the culture. And so you’re like, you got this part of this big action thing that’s going on that I, you know, it ain’t right. I, I bigger than all of us. I don’t know. I know. All I like to say I had long hair and some New Orleans old man said to me when I was a kid, he goes, you know why you got that long hair boy? And this is 1969. Yeah, 70. I go, why is that [00:43:00] sir? He goes, ’cause the girls like it. The girls didn’t like it. You wouldn’t have it. I thought about it. I’m trying to be a hippie. I was all this, you know, rebel. I thought about it. I go, boy, he’s probably right. Comes down to sex. Especially a young boy. Well, I mean, I’m 15 years old. I may not even how you look. Yeah. I’m not, listen, at 15, I probably was only getting a second base on a whim, you know? Yeah. But, but they paid attention to you. Yeah. Back in those days you, you know, second base was a lot. Yeah. Really. I remember. Sure. Not as, not as advanced as they are today. I don’t think so. But anyway, that’s my story. Um, all right, Ken b this has been fun. It’s been great. I I really had a lot of fun talking to you. And the book is 1, 1, 1 took over the line. No one, no, no. That’s a Friday slip. One step over that. But that was what I came up with the name. I, I believe you, I heard that song. Yeah. I go, I know, I’m, I’ve just taken one step over the line. So that’s where the book actually one step over the line confessions of a marijuana mercenary. [00:44:00] And I’ll tell you, if your listeners go to my website, one step over the line.com, go to the tile that says MP three or the tile that says digital on that website. Put in the code one, the number one step, and then the number 100. So one step 100, they can get a free, they can download a free copy. Yeah, I got you. Okay. Okay. I appreciate it. That’d be good. Yeah, they’ll enjoy it. Yeah. And on the website there’s pictures of the boats, the planes. Yeah. The runways the weed the, all the pictures are there, family pictures, whatever. Well, you had a, uh, a magical, quite a life, the kinda life that they, people make movies about and everybody watches them and says, oh, wow, that’s really cool. But they didn’t have to do it. They didn’t have to pay that price. No. Most of the people think, the funny thing is a lot of people think I’m, I’m, I’m lying or I’m exaggerating. Yeah. I’m 68 years old. Yeah. There’s no reason for me to lie. And you know, the DEA is, I’m telling that. I’m just telling it the way it [00:45:00] happened. I have no reason to tell Phish stories at this point in my life. No, I believe it. No, no, no. It’s all true. All I’ve been, I’ve been around to a little bit. I, I could just talk to you and know that you’re telling the truth here I am. So, it’s, it’s a great story and Ken, I really appreciate you coming on the show. Thank you for having me. It’s been a very much a, it is been a real pleasure. It’s, it’s nice to talk to someone that knows both sides of the coin. Okay. Take care. Uh, thanks again. Thank you, sir. Thank you very much. Appreciate it.

Lipps Service with Scott Lipps
New artist Spotlight: Izzy Escobar

Lipps Service with Scott Lipps

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2026 69:03


Lipps Service launches a new series spotlighting the next generation of artists breaking through — and the first guest sets the tone.On this episode, Scott Lipps sits down with Izzy Escobar, a rising singer-songwriter whose music blends cinematic pop, jazz-trained precision, and raw emotional storytelling. Originally from Longmeadow, Massachusetts, Izzy spent six years in Los Angeles before returning to New York to fully commit to her sound and vision.The conversation traces her early musical training, the impact of leaving and returning home, and the journey behind her breakout single “Vendetta,” which has surpassed 2 million streams. Izzy also breaks down the making of her debut EP Sunny in London, a deeply personal project that maps her growth as both an artist and a person.This episode marks the first installment of Lipps Service's New Artist Spotlight — focused on artists on the edge of something big, before the moment fully arrives.Follow, subscribe, and stay locked in as Lipps Service continues to spotlight what's next.00:01:14 on her current rise to fame 00:01:56 on growing up 00:03:18 first musical memory00:09:17 on the discipline violin taught her 00:10:11 on still teaching on her current rise to fame 00:12:08. On moving to LA00:13:58 on moving to LA without a plan for music to 00:19:29 on coachella 00:23:34 on hitting rock bottom00:27:36 Izzy Escobar on vendetta and calling her Dad about getting spammed! 00:31:18 on being a independent artist00:34:10 on London 00:36:15 on how DM'ing musicians in London lead to her BBC performance00:39:25 on Vendetta 00:42:00 on three more glasses 00:43:56 on Jackie O00:47:17 on festivals 00:47:36 on AI and the music industry00:53:45 top 5 films 00:57:00 top 5 new singers 00:59:08. Top venues in nyc

Nayo Escobar Podcast
429. La Verdad que Nos Ocultan: El Origen del Ser Humano - Adriana Pleyades con Nayo Escobar

Nayo Escobar Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2026 92:16


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

Historia de Aragón
TRIBUNEROS T03X99 || La SD Huesca ficha a Jordi Escobar

Historia de Aragón

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2026 59:50


Escuchamos al entrenador de la SD Huesca, Jon Pérez 'Bolo', y analizamos el fichaje del delantero Jordi Escobar con uno de sus compañeros en el AVS portugués, el exzaragocista Jaume Grau. Repasamos la actualidad de Real Zaragoza y SD Huesca en nuestra tertulia con Javier Laínez y la jornada en Primera y Segunda RFEF con Paco Rúa. Además, hablamos con el presidente del CD Belchite 97, Alberto Toha.

Human Capital Innovations (HCI) Podcast
LEAD TO BEAT: The Leadership Rhythm That Shapes Tomorrow, with Jonathan Escobar Marin

Human Capital Innovations (HCI) Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2026 23:32


In this podcast episode, Dr. Jonathan H. Westover talks with Jonathan Escobar Marin about his recent book, " LEAD TO BEAT: The Leadership Rhythm That Shapes Tomorrow." Jonathan Escobar Marin has been bridging the nuanced gap between strategy and execution – and between executives and their associates – for the world's leading corporations for over two decades. His distinguished efforts have resulted in an exceptional track record, marked by over 320 successful transformations across more than thirty-two countries. After leaving school at sixteen, he later transformed adversity into advantage, ultimately guiding global boards and C-suites across FMCG, retail, pharmaceutical, and tech sectors, where he has consistently empowered firms to outperform markets and dismantle organizational complacency.  Check out all of the podcasts in the HCI Podcast Network!

Así las cosas
La Universidad Iberoamericana, campus Puebla, realizó un llamado a las autoridades correspondientes a efectuar las investigaciones pertinentes para la localización de Leonardo Ariel Escobar Barrios

Así las cosas

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2026 10:46


La Hora de la Verdad
Omar Bula Escobar enero 13 de 2025

La Hora de la Verdad

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2026 37:23 Transcription Available


 Omar Bula Escobar - Analista internacionalTema: El proceso de transición en Venezuela

Nayo Escobar Podcast
428. El Secreto de Trabajar Inteligente y Que el Dinero Fluya - Alejandro Cardona con Nayo Escobar

Nayo Escobar Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2026 68:09


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

Just Wanted to Ask
Valentina Escobar-Gonzalez - Navigating Social Media

Just Wanted to Ask

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2026 32:34


Valentina is an International Speaker and Co-Author of “The Most Amazing Marketing Book Ever”.  She is an Award-Winning Social Media Strategist.  Has been featured on Podcasts.  Valentina Speaks, Consults, and Offers Workshops on Empowering You to Market Your Business. Valentina Escobar-GonzalezWebsite -- https://beyond-engagement.comLinkedIn -- https://www.linkedin.com/in/equinevalentinaInstagram -- https://www.instagram.com/valentinaeg/Twitter -- https://twitter.com/equinevalentinaFacebook -- https://www.facebook.com/BeyondEngagementLinkedIn -- https://www.linkedin.com/company/beyond-engagement-social-media-solutions/   Youtube -- https://www.youtube.com/@Beyond-engagementAnne Zuckerman! Website -- https://annezuckerman.com/ Website -- https://justwantedtoask.com/Facebook -- https://www.facebook.com/AnneInPinkInstagram -- https://www.instagram.com/annezuckerman/LinkedIn -- https://www.linkedin.com/in/annezuckerman/Bezi Woman -- https://beziwoman.com/ | https://www.beziwoman.shop/two-step-order1591558404525Bezi Bra Discs - Facebook -- https://www.facebook.com/bezibradiscs

Nayo Escobar Podcast
427. La Metodología del El Hombre que vendió 1 millón de dólares en 6 meses -Josue Peña con Nayo Escobar

Nayo Escobar Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2026 63:13


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

Un Mensaje a la Conciencia
«Un rancho y un lucero»

Un Mensaje a la Conciencia

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2026 4:01


(Natalicio de Alfredo Espino) «Alfredo Edgardo Espino Najarro nació... el ocho de enero de 1900... en Ahuachapán, ciudad del occidente salvadoreño, [donde] pasó su niñez e hizo sus estudios primarios en escuelas de la localidad.... [Su] obra poética..., [Jícaras tristes, publicada] por primera vez en 1936, ocho años después de [su] muerte [prematura... llegaría a ser] lectura necesaria para los escolares urbanos y rurales»,1 afirma el prologuista Francisco Andrés Escobar. «No hay escuelita en El Salvador donde no se declamen sus poemas con halagadora complacencia»,2 dijo el poeta José Luis Silva. He aquí uno de esos bellos poemas de Espino acerca del campo salvadoreño que tanto amaba: Un día —¡primero Dios!— Has de quererme un poquito. Yo levantaré el ranchito en que vivamos los dos. ¿Qué más pedir? Con tu amor, mi rancho, un árbol, un perro, y enfrente el cielo y el cerro y el cafetalito en flor... Y entre aroma de saúcos, un zenzontle que cantara y una poza que copiara pajaritos y bejucos. Lo que los pobres queremos, lo que los pobres amamos, eso que tanto adoramos porque es lo que no tenemos... Con sólo eso, vida mía; con sólo eso: con mi verso, con tu beso, lo demás nos sobraría... Porque no hay nada mejor que un monte, un rancho, un lucero, cuando se tiene un «te quiero» y huele a sendas en flor...3 «Cuando al final de [su] vida... [Alfredo Espino] quiso afirmarse con independencia en el plano del amor... perdió la partida. Se enamoró de Blanca Vanegas... una muchacha de condición humilde. La madre del poeta... se opuso resueltamente al noviazgo y al matrimonio... por razones de orden social —diferencia de clases— o de orden emocional —[estaba] dispuesta a organizar los máximos y los mínimos detalles en la vida del hijo—.... Esto golpeó con fuerza al poeta»,4 comenta Escobar. No es de extrañar que Alfredo haya sufrido una gran desilusión debido a eso: admiraba la sencillez de la vida del campo, y en poemas como este, titulado «Un rancho y un lucero», lograba de manera envidiable ponerse en el lugar del modesto campesino que no concibe nada mejor en esta vida que la felicidad que produce el amor sin pretensiones. Menos mal que, a diferencia de la madre de Espino, el Padre celestial no se opuso a que su Hijo Jesucristo viniera al mundo para establecer una relación estrecha con todo el que quisiera ser hijo de Dios, cualquiera que fuera su condición social. Más bien, Dios envió a su único Hijo al mundo precisamente con ese fin. Y lo hizo por la misma razón que movió a Alfredo Espino: un «te quiero». Fue un amor tan profundo que lo llevó hasta la cruz a morir por nuestros pecados, a resucitar al tercer día, y a ascender al cielo, donde nos ha preparado una vivienda como ninguna otra, con un jardín como el del Edén que «huele a sendas en flor», en el que algún día podamos participar en la cena de las bodas del Cordero y vivir eternamente con ese Cordero de Dios, Jesucristo mismo, que es el brillante lucero de la mañana.5 Carlos ReyUn Mensaje a la Concienciawww.conciencia.net 1 Francisco Andrés Escobar, «Con el alma descalza»: Introducción a Jícaras tristes (Santa Tecla, El Salvador: Clásicos Roxsil, 2001), pp. 8,9,13,41. 2 José Luis Silva, Jícaras tristes (Santa Tecla, El Salvador: Clásicos Roxsil, 2001), contraportada. 3 Alfredo Espino, Jícaras tristes (Santa Tecla, El Salvador: Clásicos Roxsil, 2001), p. 75. 4 Escobar, pp. 19,20. 5 Jn 1:12; 3:16; 14:2-3; 1Co 15:3-4; 2Co 11:2; Ap 19:7,9; 22:16

Nayo Escobar Podcast
426. El Migrante que Aprendió a Hacer una Fortuna Desde Casa - Alejandro Pérez con Nayo Escobar

Nayo Escobar Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2026 68:06


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

CriminalMente
ENTREVISTA CON LAURA ESCOBAR: LA SOBRINA DEL CAPO MÁS BUSCADO DEL MUNDO

CriminalMente

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2026 87:23


¿Se puede tener una infancia normal cuando tu tío es el hombre más buscado del mundo?En este episodio exclusivo de #Criminalmente, nos visita Laura Escobar para contar, por primera vez, cómo fue crecer dentro del círculo íntimo de Pablo Escobar. Laura comparte lo que significó descubrir que el hombre que la cuidaba era el líder de los grupos delictivos en Medellín.En este relato basado en hechos reales, exploramos cómo se vivió desde adentro la caída del imperio, las mudanzas repentinas, el miedo constante, los vehículos sospechosos que los seguían y los pactos obligados que la familia tuvo que hacer para intentar sobrevivir. Hablamos de la vida en la legendaria Hacienda Nápoles, de los secretos que nadie se atrevía a mencionar y de la cruda realidad del reparto de bienes tras la muerte de Pablo, detallando la presión que sufrieron por parte de otros grupos criminales y el momento exacto en que la familia entendió que la protección se había terminado para siempre.Hoy, décadas después, ella confiesa que sigue vigilando rutas, relojes y retrovisores, porque el apellido Escobar es una carga que todavía pesa en su día a día.Suscríbete, activa la campanita

Nayo Escobar Podcast
425. Ser Papá a los 65 años I Oscar Burgos Entrevista con Nayo Escobar

Nayo Escobar Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2026 66:09


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

Página 13 - Podcast
Escobar y Gumucio por las tendencias para 2026 y optimismo versus pesimismo de este año

Página 13 - Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2025 48:04


En una nueva edición de Página 13, Iván Valenzuela y Kike Mujica conversaron con los columnistas Paula Escobar y Rafael Gumucio sobre las tendencias para 2026 de la futurista Amy Webb. Además, comentaron el optimismo versus pesimismo en torno a este año en Chile.

Radio Segovia
Adrián Escobar, MeteoSegovia

Radio Segovia

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2025 5:13


Nos da la previsión del tiempo para los próximos días.

The Slowdown
1420: Losing the Band by Ashley D. Escobar

The Slowdown

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2025 5:52


Today's poem is Losing the Band by Ashley D. Escobar.The Slowdown is your daily poetry ritual. In this episode, Maggie writes… “It's Christmas, and though I'll see a lot of people I love today, I won't see everyone I love. That's the thing about traditions. They put us in certain places with certain people, and we're lucky for that, but only so many people can fit into a living room or around a dining table. Only so many of our loved ones live close by or can travel to us for the holidays. There are some people we just…miss.” Celebrate the power of poems with a gift to The Slowdown today. Every donation makes a difference: https://tinyurl.com/rjm4synp

Página 13 - Podcast
Escobar y Valdivieso por la primera Navidad del Papa León XIV y qué es el “ragebait”

Página 13 - Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2025 43:18


En una nueva edición de Página 13, Iván Valenzuela y Kike Mujica conversaron con los columnistas Paula Escobar y Cristián Valdivieso sobre la primera Navidad del Papa León XIV. Además, se preguntaron qué es el “ragebait”, la palabra del año según el diccionario de Oxford.

Engage Church Podcast
Not Safe, But Good by JT Escobar

Engage Church Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2025 37:12


Welcome to Engage Online!  Engage Online exists to connect people to God, one another, and their meaningful work in the earth. We are so excited to connect with you this morning! Introduce yourself in the chat and let us know where you're watching from. CONNECT WITH US  First or Second time? Please click the title above or link below to fill out a digital connect card. www.engagetallahassee.com/connect THE NEHEMIAH INSTITUTE  If you're interested in learning more about what it takes to become an Innovative Reconciler, please the link below so our team can follow up with you. www.engagetallahassee.com/nehemiah  GIVE If you'd like to give this morning, please click the button "GIVE" on the top right of your screen or the link below to give directly. www.engagetallahassee.com/giving SERVE TEAMS Do you want to offer up your time and talent to be used to further the Kingdom? If that desire has been placed on your heart, sign up to serve on a Team here at Engage Online. www.engagetallahassee.com/teams  Follow along with us throughout the week on Instagram and Facebook at @Engagetlh

Nayo Escobar Podcast
422. La Jaula de Oro: La Mentira de Vivir Atrapado en "El Éxito" - Jorge Rosas con Nayo Escobar

Nayo Escobar Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2025 71:08


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

Página 13 - Podcast
Escobar y Valdivieso por el camino de Kast a La Moneda y la nueva tendencias de los multimillonarios tecnológicos

Página 13 - Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2025 49:44


En una nueva edición de Página 13, Iván Valenzuela conversó con los columnistas Paula Escobar y Cristián Valdivieso sobre cómo el Presidente electo, José Antonio Kast, pavimentó su camino a La Moneda y la nueva tendencia de los multimillonarios tecnológicos de crear sus propias ciudades.

Nayo Escobar Podcast
521. Aprender a Crear Libertad Financiera Como Mujer - Maria Prieto con Nayo Escobar

Nayo Escobar Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2025 94:30


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

Gangland Wire
Gianni Russo: The Hollywood Godfather, Mafia Secrets

Gangland Wire

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2025 Transcription Available


In this explosive episode of Gangland Wire, host Gary Jenkins sits down with actor, entrepreneur, and mob insider Gianni “Johnny” Russo, best known for his unforgettable role as Carlo Rizzi in The Godfather. Russo pulls back the curtain on a lifetime of stories that stretch from Frank Costello and Joe Colombo to Las Vegas skimming, the Vatican Bank, Marilyn Monroe, Jimmy Hoffa, and even Pablo Escobar. Russo discusses his new book, Mafia Secrets: Untold Tales from the Hollywood Godfather, co-written with Michael Benson—an unfiltered account of power, violence, politics, and survival inside the criminal underworld and Hollywood royalty. This is not recycled mythology—this is Gianni Russo's personal version of history from the inside. Whether you believe every word or not, the stories are raw, violent, and utterly fascinating. This episode discusses: The Godfather, The Kennedy assassinations, Vegas skimming, Marilyn Monroe, Jimmy Hoffa, the Chicago Outfit, Pablo Escobar

The Promise Church
Prayer and Fasting | Pastor Nathaniel Escobar

The Promise Church

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2025 64:04


Woodland Campus | Pastor Nathaniel shares a message on the importance of prayer and fasting as we begin to prepare for our church-wide fast in the beginning of January.

The Bonfire with Big Jay Oakerson and Dan Soder

Hungerthon is an annual radio tradition that raises awareness about hunger and poverty. SiriusXM has teamed up with Hungerthon to auction off experiences for donations. The top bidder can sit in studio with their favorite radio show and The Bonfire is failing embarrassingly. | Jay reveals how he got the gout and what it was like. | Celebrity podcasts are now getting Grammys and Bobby is not thrilled about it. | A strange man invades the studio saying that Escobar sent him. | Guns N Roses are going back on tour and only one person is not worried about Axl's weak voice. *To hear the full show to go www.siriusxm.com/bonfire to learn more! FOLLOW THE CREW ON SOCIAL MEDIA: @thebonfiresxm @louisjohnson @christinemevans @bigjayoakerson @robertkellylive @louwitzkee @jjbwolf Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes of The Bonfire ad-free and a whole week early.  Start a free trial now on Apple Podcasts or by visiting siriusxm.com/podcastsplus. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Nayo Escobar Podcast
520. Un Cambio de Mentalidad que va a Cambiar tu vida - Sra. Hilda con Alejandro Cardona y Nayo Escobar

Nayo Escobar Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2025 64:38


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

Michigan's Big Show
* Loews Miami Beach Hotel with MPS and Emilio Escobar

Michigan's Big Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2025 2:51 Transcription Available


Página 13 - Podcast
Escobar y Valdivieso por lo que dejó el último debate presidencial

Página 13 - Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2025 49:15


En una nueva edición de Página 13, Iván Valenzuela y Kike Mujica conversaron con los columnistas Paula Escobar y Cristián Valdivieso sobre lo que dejó el último debate presidencial entre Jeannette Jara y José Antonio Kast, de cara a la segunda vuelta.

Nayo Escobar Podcast
519. El Arte de Envejecer Correctamente con Salud y Bienestar - Dr. Patricio Ochoa con Nayo Escobar

Nayo Escobar Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2025 62:36


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

Las 3 R's
El DÍA que DEJÉ de FINGIR con Nayo Escobar y Nathaly Marcus en Las 3 R´s

Las 3 R's

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2025 30:19


Fenzi Dog Sports Podcast
E437: Ashley Escobar - "Impulse Control, Body Awareness, and Precision... Through Conditioning"

Fenzi Dog Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2025 32:54


In this episode Ashley walks us through why she's turned to conditioning to help her young dogs develop impulse control, body awareness, and precision — and how she's adapted it to help any dog that would benefit from strengthening those three skills. 

Trascendencia Financiera con César Tánchez
TF#366 - Refresh: "El poder de la generosidad"

Trascendencia Financiera con César Tánchez

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2025 80:09


En este episodio César Tánchez junto a su esposa Verónica Escobar de Tánchez exploran que es la generosidad, la importancia que tiene para nuestras vidas y su relación con las Finanzas Personales. Para más recursos visita www.CesarTanchez.com

Catalunya migdia
Catalunya migdia, de 15 a 16 h - 05/12/2025

Catalunya migdia

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2025 60:00


L'actualitat del dia, al "Catalunya migdia". Avui amb Isabel Garcia Pagan, sotsdirectora de La Vanguardia; Miquel

Maintenant, vous savez
Que sont les narcocorridos, ces chansons qui célèbrent les barons de la drogue ?

Maintenant, vous savez

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2025 4:53


Maintenant Vous Savez, c'est aussi ⁠Maintenant Vous Savez - Santé⁠ et ⁠Maintenant Vous Savez - Culture⁠. Un air d'accordéon proche de la polka, une rythmique latine, une mélodie enjouée, vous êtes peut-être déjà tombés sur une de ces chansons en pensant que ça parlait du déhanché d'une jolie senorita. Mais la réalité en est tout autre... Ils s'appellent Alta Consigna, El Puma de Sinaloa, Gerardo Ortiz ou Lenin Ramirez, portent des santiags, des chemises cloutées et des chapeaux de cow-boys, et chantent à la gloire des seigneurs des cartels de drogue, El Chapo ou Escobar pour citer les plus célèbres. Leurs chansons, ce sont les narcocorridos, en français : les ballades de la drogue. Quelles en sont les origines ? Pourquoi ces chansons sont-elles autant appréciées ? Sont-elles interdites ? Écoutez la suite dans cet épisode de "Maintenant vous savez - Culture". Un podcast Bababam Originals, écrit et réalisé par Jonathan Aupart. Première diffusion : mai 2023 A écouter aussi : La légalisation du cannabis pourrait-elle vraiment mettre fin au narcotrafic ? Qu'est-ce que le buddha blue, la nouvelle drogue qui fait ravage chez les jeunes ? Pourquoi certaines musiques nous donnent-elles la chair de poule ? Retrouvez tous les épisodes de "Maintenant vous savez". Suivez Bababam sur Instagram. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Página 13 - Podcast
Escobar y Valdivieso por lo que dejó el debate Archi de cara a la segunda vuelta

Página 13 - Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2025 46:24


En una nueva edición de Página 13, Iván Valenzuela y Kike Mujica conversaron con los columnistas Paula Escobar y Cristián Valdivieso sobre lo que dejó el debate Archi entre los candidatos presidenciales Jeannette Jara y José Antonio Kast.

D is for Dyslexia and Defying all ODDS
The Jose Escobar Interview

D is for Dyslexia and Defying all ODDS

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2025 8:57


The Jose Escobar Interview

Nayo Escobar Podcast
516. Jo Jo Jorge Falcón I El Ser Humano Detrás de las Caras y las Sonrisas - con Nayo Escobar

Nayo Escobar Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2025 88:31


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

FM Mundo
#ElGranMusical | Karina Escobar. Expo Multisectorial 2025: Un encuentro de la Industria ecuatoriana

FM Mundo

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2025 6:31


#ElGranMusical | Karina Escobar. Expo Multisectorial 2025: Un encuentro de la Industria ecuatoriana by FM Mundo 98.1

Hablemos Escritoras
Episodio 675: Acercándonos a escritoras - María Adelaida Escobar

Hablemos Escritoras

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2025 33:58


Un libro entre prosa poética

Nayo Escobar Podcast
515. Marimar Vega I Las Claves para una Buena Comunicación con tu Pareja con Nayo Escobar

Nayo Escobar Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2025 67:34


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

Nayo Escobar Podcast
514. Victor García I ¿Dónde se metió 10 años el "Rey sin Corona" de La Academia? - Con Nayo Escobar

Nayo Escobar Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2025 81:09


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

A vivir que son dos días
A vista de Lobo | Juan Pablo Escobar, hijo de Pablo Escobar: "Siempre he elegido alejarme lo máximo posible de la glorificación de personajes como mi padre"

A vivir que son dos días

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2025 26:15


El hijo del narcotraficante colombiano publica 'Escobar, una educación criminal', un cómic autobiográfico en el que narra su infancia junto al fundador del Cártel de Medellín

Scam Goddess
From Cartels to Escobar Phone Fails w/ La'Ron Hines

Scam Goddess

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2025 77:32


Laci welcomes back her great friend, actor and influencer La'Ron Hines (from the Snapchat Original Series: La'Ron In A Million) to the show! Together, Laci and La'Ron dive into the Escobar Phone, one of Roberto Escobar, the late Pablo Escobar's brother's, many serial entrepreneurial ventures. They also unpack Delta AI pricing tools, flamethrowers, Roberto's feud with Elon Musk, and much more. Stay schemin'!CON-gregation, catch Laci's TV Show Scam Goddess, now on Freeform and Hulu! Did you miss out on a custom-signed Scam Goddess book? Look no more, nab your copy on PODSWAGKeep the scams coming and snitch on your friends by emailing us at ScamGoddessPod@gmail.com. Follow on Instagram:Scam Goddess Pod: @scamgoddesspodLaci Mosley: @divalaciLa'Ron Hines: @laronhinesofficial Research by Kathryn Doyle  SOURCEShttps://9to5google.com/2025/07/22/escobar-gold-plated-foldable-prison-plea-deal/https://fortune.com/2016/07/07/drug-kingpin-netflix/https://www.theverge.com/2019/9/5/20850693/samsung-galaxy-fold-hands-on-ifa-2019-fixed-display-hingehttps://thenextweb.com/news/pablo-escobars-brother-escalates-flamethrower-feud-with-elon-musk-threatens-tesla-takeoverhttps://www.businessinsider.com/pablo-escobars-brother-roberto-escobar-selling-foldable-smartphone-2019-12https://www.t3.com/tech/phones/the-foldable-phone-maker-that-beat-samsung-to-market-has-gone-busthttps://www.cnet.com/tech/mobile/escobar-fold-2-is-a-399-galaxy-fold-clone/https://www.techspot.com/news/108761-escobar-phone-creator-pleads-guilty-scamming-buyers-never.htmlhttps://www.courthousenews.com/seller-of-pablo-escobar-branded-flamethrowers-pleads-guilty-to-fraud/https://www.news18.com/explainers/mkbhds-escobar-fold-scam-episode-comes-to-a-poetic-end-a-complete-timeline-9459042.html#google_vignette Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes of Scam Goddess ad-free and a whole week early. Start a free trial now on Apple Podcasts or by visiting siriusxm.com/podcastsplus. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Locked In with Ian Bick
I Was A DEA Agent Who Took Down The Cali Cartel | Chris Feistl

Locked In with Ian Bick

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2025 110:14


Chris Feistl spent 26 years working for the DEA, including three years in Colombia during the 1990s, helping take down one of the most powerful drug empires in history — the Cali Cartel. His real-life work was portrayed in Narcos: Season 3, but the truth behind the show is even wilder. From undercover operations to high-stakes cartel takedowns, he witnessed firsthand the danger, corruption, and chaos of the war on drugs. Over his career, he earned the DEA Award of Honor, Award for Exceptional Service, and multiple Performance Awards for his role in international investigations. In this exclusive interview, he opens up about what really happened in Colombia, how Narcos got it right (and wrong), and what it was like to spend decades hunting some of the world's most dangerous traffickers. #LockedInWithIanBick #DEAAgent #Narcos #CaliCartel #TrueCrime #DrugCartel #NarcosNetflix #realstories Thank you to BLUECHEW for sponsoring this episode: Visit https://bluechew.com/ and use promo code LOCKEDIN at checkout to get your first month of BlueChew & pay five bucks for shipping. Connect with Chris Feistl: Website: www.After.Escobar.com. After Escobar is available on Amazon (http://a.co/d/4U3kWXB), Barnes and Noble (https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/1146855946), www.AfterEscobar.com, and in select bookstores worldwide! Signed copies of After Escobar available only at www.AfterEscobar.com. Hosted, Executive Produced & Edited By Ian Bick: https://www.instagram.com/ian_bick/?hl=en https://ianbick.com/ Shop Locked In Merch: http://www.ianbick.com/shop Timestamps: 00:00 Becoming a DEA Agent & Taking Down Cartels 04:44 Early Life, Law Enforcement Dreams & First Arrests 13:11 From Small-Town Cop to Federal Agent 20:01 Joining the DEA: Training, Requirements & Reality 27:47 First Assignment in Miami — Cocaine Capital of the '80s 38:41 Inside the Miami Drug Wars: Chaos, Cartels & Corruption 45:42 Cartel Smuggling Tactics & DEA Challenges on the Ground 53:03 Dirty Cops, Corruption & How the DEA Adapted 01:01:12 Hunting the Cali Cartel Bosses in Colombia 01:12:40 Deep Undercover: The DEA's Dangerous Life in Colombia 01:20:01 Surviving the Cartel Wars — Second & Third DEA Tours 01:31:00 Coming Home: DEA Retirement & Life After the Mission 01:36:02 How Netflix's Narcos Got It Right (and Wrong) 01:40:02 Hard Lessons, Close Calls & Reflections from a DEA Agent Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Engage Church Podcast
A House Divided by JT Escobar

Engage Church Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2025 39:35


CONNECT WITH US  First or Second time? Please click the title above or link below to fill out a digital connect card. www.engagetallahassee.com/connect THE NEHEMIAH INSTITUTE  If you're interested in learning more about what it takes to become an Innovative Reconciler, please the link below so our team can follow up with you. www.engagetallahassee.com/nehemiah  GIVE If you'd like to give this morning, please click the button "GIVE" on the top right of your screen or the link below to give directly. www.engagetallahassee.com/giving SERVE TEAMS Do you want to offer up your time and talent to be used to further the Kingdom? If that desire has been placed on your heart, sign up to serve on a Team here at Engage Online. www.engagetallahassee.com/teams  Follow along with us throughout the week on Instagram and Facebook at @Engagetlh

Nayo Escobar Podcast
512. A Cualquier Edad Puedes Cambiar Tu Vida - Sra. Hilda con Alejandro Cardona y Nayo Escobar

Nayo Escobar Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2025 68:12


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

The Promise Church
Sacred Practices Pt. 2 | Pastor Nathaniel Escobar

The Promise Church

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2025 35:56


Woodland Campus | Pastor Nathaniel continues our series by teaching on the practice of confession.

Fenzi Dog Sports Podcast
E433: Ashley Escobar, Erin Lynes, and Irith Bloom on Puppyhood & Adolescence

Fenzi Dog Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2025 54:40


The life stages our young sports dogs go through can come with dramatic changes and significant transitions - so what's normal? How do we decide what to prioritize? What are the current best practices when it comes to socialization? Join us for a conversation on all things puppy and adolescent! 

Así las cosas con Carlos Loret de Mola
#Entrevista con Alejandra Escobar

Así las cosas con Carlos Loret de Mola

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2025 8:13


Por protestas de agricultores, lleva casi 24 horas varada en una carretera, rumbo a Morelia, sin ningún tipo de información por parte de las autoridades

Keepin It 100 with Konnan
484! Ibushi injury talk, Mark Madden on NHL & bands, Harry Ruiz on Escobar & Andrade, mail & more!

Keepin It 100 with Konnan

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2025 137:55


K100 w/ Konnan & Disco is presented to you by FanDuel Sportsbook! Quickest deposits & withdrawals, plus betting available on all sports in the US & worldwide! Support K100 & check out the best in the game, FanDuel! Check out our Patreon site at Konnan.me and Patreon.com/Konnan for extra audio, exclusive video, listener roundtable discussion shows, watch-a-longs, call in shows with Konnan and DI, plus so much more! Get Interactive on Twitter @Konnan5150 @TheRealDisco  @TheCCNetwork1 @K100Konnan @TheHughezy @HarryRuiz @HugoSavinovich @RoyLucier Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@KeepinIt100OFFICIAL @K100Konnan on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram! Rugiet's 3-in-1 formula gets you ready in just 15 mins on avg & effects can last up to 36 hrs. Stay confident, present, & in control in the bedroom! Connect at rugiet.com/k100 to see if Rugiet Ready's right for you. You can use code K100 to get 15% off! To get the best discount off your NordVPN plan - go to http://nordvpn.com/k100 ! get 4 extra months on the 2-year plan. There's no risk with Nord's 30-day money-back guarantee! Check out LegacySupps.com and use the code K100 for 10% off of their fat burner, pre workout, testosterone supplement, and sleep aid! Brought to you by friend of the show, Nick Aldis! Plus they now carry Women's supplements, brought to you by Mickie James! Get 15% off the exciting & innovative products at Manscaped.com by using our code K100! Smell good, stay groomed, & support Konnan, Disco, & Joe! That's a win for everyone! TheAeonMan.com brings you high quality Superfood Protein, world class New Zealand Deer Antler Velvet extract for natural testosterone, & supplements to eradicate joint pain & more for all of your health & needs! Use code WELCOME15 for 15% off! Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.