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Kato Kaelin still wonders if one small decision changed the O.J. Simpson timeline forever. On the night of June 12, 1994, before the Bronco chase, before the trial of the century, before the world knew his name, Kato Kaelin was living in O.J. Simpson's Rockingham guest house. He heard the infamous thumps. He saw the limo arrive. He remembers the missing bag. And he still replays the McDonald's run — the moment he says may have disrupted the timeline of that night. In this explosive TZ Scandal episode, Tom Zenner sits down with Kato Kaelin for a raw, first-person walk through the O.J. Simpson saga from the one man who was not watching history on television — he was living inside it.Kato revisits the McDonald's drive-thru trip in O.J.'s Bentley, the strange pause before O.J. let him come along, the moment O.J. later tried to place them eating together in the kitchen, the missing bag he was told not to touch, the Allan Park limo timeline, the Bronco chase that swallowed the NBA Finals, the witness who got benched, Diane Dimond's shocking account of the unguarded Bundy crime scene, and the surreal fact that Nicole Brown Simpson's dog was named Kato. This is not another generic O.J. recap.This is Kato Kaelin walking back through the details only he can explain — the strange, haunting, unforgettable moments from the case that still grips America more than three decades later. O.J. Simpson was acquitted in his criminal trial. This episode discusses witness accounts, public reporting, trial history, personal memories, and the cultural impact of the case.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/one-degree-of-scandalous-with-tom-zenner-and-kato-kaelin--6258576/support.
Thirty-two years ago, the LAPD abandoned the most infamous crime scene in American history. Veteran investigative reporter Diane Dimond slipped under the police tape at the O.J. Simpson Bundy Drive crime scene, and what she saw inside changes everything.In this explosive 32-year anniversary special of TZ Scandal, Tom Zenner and Kato Kaelin are joined by Diane Dimond (star of Netflix's Michael Jackson: The Verdict) to expose the darkest, unguarded secrets of the trial of the century.Dimond reveals her unauthorized access to Nicole Brown Simpson's condo on the morning of June 13, 1994, uncovering chilling details the LAPD left completely unattended.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/one-degree-of-scandalous-with-tom-zenner-and-kato-kaelin--6258576/support.
Crime Defined is a series where we break down the law, one crime at a time. Each episode, we start by explaining exactly what a specific crime is — what makes it illegal, how it's defined under the law, and the consequences for those who commit it. Then, we dive into a real-life case, exploring someone who actually committed that crime, the investigation, and the impact of their actions. Our goal is to make the law understandable and the true crime unforgettable.First-Degree Murder: The Murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman — Part 2What happens when a homicide investigation becomes the most watched criminal case in America?In June 1994, the murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman shocked the nation. What began as a double homicide investigation quickly became a media phenomenon, leading to one of the most controversial criminal trials in modern history.In Part 2 of our First-Degree Murder episode, we move from the legal definition of the crime into the investigation itself.We begin by remembering the lives of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman — two people whose stories deserve to be known beyond the headlines. We discuss Nicole's background, her relationship with O.J. Simpson, Ron's life and aspirations, and the events that led to the discovery of their murders.Then, we follow the investigation as detectives piece together the evidence, examine O.J. Simpson's timeline on the night of the killings, and explore the events that led to his arrest.Finally, we cover the moment that transformed the case into a national spectacle: the infamous white Bronco chase.Before the courtroom became the center of attention, there was a crime scene, an investigation, and a question that investigators had to answer:Who killed Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman?Join us for Part 2 of our First-Degree Murder episode as we examine the case that captured the attention of the world.Part 3: The Trial of O.J. Simpson coming soon.Follow us on all social media!Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/bucketmurdTwitter - https://twitter.com/TheMurderBucketInstagram - https://www.instagram.com/murdbucket/TikTok -https://www.tiktok.com/@murderbucketpodhttps://murderbucketpod.wordpress.com/
Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman were murdered on this date in 1994. That brings Chad to open the hour with talk about the biggest falls from grace we've seen from celebrities as happened with OJ Simpson. Later, intrepid reporter Tom Delmonico joins from Los Angeles to preview a weekend of covering both the World Cup and the White House UFC fights before we jump into Am I Wrong? to wrap up the show.
Philosopher Stefan Molyneux lays out the truth about Karmelo Anthony in this 10 June 2026 livestream, showing how the 17-year-old stabbed Austin Metcalf in the chest after repeated demands to leave the track tent and how the jury rejected self-defense to hand down 35 years. He pushes weighing real consequences and walking away from conflict instead of escalating.Note: when mentioning the OJ Simpson case, I said "Jessica Simpson" on stream, but it was Nicole Brown Simpson that was murdered.GET FREEDOMAIN MERCH! https://shop.freedomain.com/SUBSCRIBE TO ME ON X! https://x.com/StefanMolyneuxFollow me on Youtube! https://www.youtube.com/@freedomain1GET MY NEW BOOK 'PEACEFUL PARENTING', THE INTERACTIVE PEACEFUL PARENTING AI, AND THE FULL AUDIOBOOK!https://peacefulparenting.com/Join the PREMIUM philosophy community on the web for free!Subscribers get 12 HOURS on the "Truth About the French Revolution," multiple interactive multi-lingual philosophy AIs trained on thousands of hours of my material - as well as AIs for Real-Time Relationships, Bitcoin, Peaceful Parenting, and Call-In Shows!You also receive private livestreams, HUNDREDS of exclusive premium shows, early release podcasts, the 22 Part History of Philosophers series and much more!See you soon!https://freedomain.locals.com/support/promo/FREEDOMAIN2026
This week on In A Pickle, we start with a major update on Terry Rozier. Last week we talked about the bribery allegations surrounding the former Hornets guard, and now an arbitrator has ruled that Rozier violated his NBA contract with the Miami Heat and must forfeit a significant portion of his $26.6 million salary from the 2025-26 season. While the exact amount remains unknown, the ruling found he breached his contract. Miami was required to continue paying him during the process, but it appears much of that money will be heading right back. We also discuss the changing court restrictions involving Heat and Hornets personnel.Then we revisit Floyd Mayweather's lawsuit drama. Former manager Jona Rechnitz is calling the lawsuit "fraud" and "nonsense," claiming he has text messages, photos, and videos proving Mayweather knew about the jewelry being pawned and where the money went. Rechnitz also addresses the mysterious jet allegations, saying the funds were used to pay off a multi-million-dollar loan attached to the aircraft. His biggest claim? That Mayweather is facing serious financial problems and is lashing out at those closest to him.We also discuss NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell declining to testify before the House Judiciary Committee regarding media rights deals and what that decision could mean.News: Former NBA player and longtime Bulls broadcaster Stacey King has passed away at age 59 following a reported fall at his home. A private jet scheduled to transport Yadier Molina and his family crashed in the Dominican Republic after declaring an emergency shortly after takeoff. Both pilots were killed. Nicole Brown Simpson's sister is calling on the NFL to retire O.J. Simpson's number 32, saying the number remains triggering nearly 32 years after the murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman. Brandon Aiyuk reportedly has an arrest warrant stemming from a misdemeanor speeding case tied to a video allegedly showing him speeding near Levi's Stadium. This Week's Biggest Pickle: Jonathan CooperDenver Broncos linebacker Jonathan Cooper earns this week's honor after a domestic dispute led to his arrest on two counts of domestic violence and one count of criminal mischief. According to reports, both Cooper and his longtime girlfriend, Jade Fiegen, were arrested following the incident. The allegations range from grabbing a phone and physical confrontation claims to accusations that Cooper threw Fiegen to the ground multiple times. Cooper has entered a not guilty plea, and both sides now face charges. The case heads to a motions hearing on July 6th, with a jury trial expected later in July. As always, we'll be keeping a close eye on the developments.
(Intro) Running Out of Gas (5TYNTK) Teens Charged Shooting, Platner Lead Shrinks, Women's Soccer Advances, Maine Loves Disc Golf, Dunkin Goes Barbie (Dirty) Cassie Says She's Left The U.S., Chris Brown Facing New Security Scare, Nicole Brown Simpson's Sister Wants O.J.'s Number Retired (Topic) What's a workplace no-no that instantly annoys everyone? (Outro) Euphoria Astrological Sign
Nicole Brown Simpson's sister, Tanya Brown, is urging the NFL to retire O.J. Simpson's iconic No. 32 jersey or dedicate it to Nicole and Ron Goldman, saying the number remains a painful reminder of their murders. Lena the Plug has filed for divorce from Adam22 after about three years of marriage. A fan briefly halted Game 1 of the NBA Finals after rushing onto the court in an attempt to take a selfie with Victor Wembanyama . Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The New York Times‘ obituary (5/18/26) for former LAPD detective Mark Fuhrman quotes him saying that “policemen never get the benefit of the doubt.” The racism of Mark Fuhrman, the Los Angeles police detective whose involvement in the O.J. Simpson murder investigation helped sink the prosecution's case, was so well-known comedian Dana Carvey once mocked him with a Nazi salute, calling him “Mark the Fuhrer-man.” Fuhrman's death this month (New York Times, 5/18/26) took middle-aged and older Americans back to 1995, when the televised trial of Simpson, accused of murdering his ex-wife and her friend, dominated media for much of the year. During the trial, audio recordings and witness testimony revealed Fuhrman's use of the n-word and other racist views, sinking his credibility as the cop responsible for recovering the “bloody glove,” the key piece of evidence tying Simpson to the killings. Because he had previously testified that he never used the word, it opened an opportunity for the defense to suggest he wasn't honest about other things—and had a motivation to frame a Black celebrity. Unrelenting racism In July 2017, CNN‘s Kyra Phillips played new excerpts from the Fuhrman tapes. The tapes portrayed hours of unrelenting racism. “All these n*****s in L.A. city government…all of them should be lined up against a wall and fucking shot,” he said. And often sexism as well: “What if I’ve just been raped by two buck n*****s, and a female shows up?” During the trial, witness Kathleen Bell testified that Fuhrman had said, “If I had my way, all the n*****s would be gathered together and burned.” Bell told the court, “When he sees a Black man with a white woman driving in a car, he pulls them over,” with no traffic violation needed (Washington Post, 9/5/95). Fuhrman became the national representation of the American racist cop. He invoked the Fifth Amendment when questioned about his handling of evidence (LA Times, 9/7/95), offering the shadow of a doubt the jury needed to acquit the former football and movie star. In his fiery closing argument, defense attorney Johnnie Cochran characterized Fuhrman as “this perjurer, this racist, this genocidal racist.” Fuhrman pleaded no contest to a perjury charge a year later (CNN, 10/2/96). But there was something bigger about Fuhrman, and it's something we can deeply feel in the media environment today. ‘Unwitting catalyst’ Mark Fuhrman interviewed in ESPN‘s OJ: Made in America (2016). The legal “dream team” Simpson assembled certainly focused on pushing the jury for an acquittal—that's a defense lawyer's job. But as outlined in both the dramatized The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story on FX and ESPN's OJ: Made in America, defense lead Cochran also built a larger case for a larger audience. (Side note: FAIR's Janine Jackson briefly appears in the ESPN documentary in a segment about media coverage of the trial.) Nicole Brown Simpson was killed at her Los Angeles home, along with Ron Goldman, on June 12, 1994, just two years after the city was engulfed in racial rioting as a result of an acquittal of police officers who had been videotaped brutally beating a Black man, Rodney King. For much of America, the rioting was a dividing moment. Civil rights activists saw it as the explosion of a powder keg under pressure of decades of tension between LA's Black community and the cops. A great deal of white America saw the rioting as an inexplicable overreaction. Press voices had their doubts too. Newsweek (5/10/92) called the looting “a manic fiesta, a TV game show with every looter a winner.” Cochran set out to change the narrative, to demonstrate to the white public that Black Los Angeles has systemically suffered from racist policing. Ben Ehrenreich (Guardian, 4/22/20): “The thousands of African Americans who migrated to Los Angeles from the Jim Crow south had found similar cruel realities awaiting them.” In Set the Night on Fire, Mike Davis and Jon Weiner outline the ongoing war against the Black community by LA cops in the 1960s, erupting in the 1965 Watts riots. From the Guardian‘s review (4/22/20): LA's police make dramatic appearances in almost every chapter, clubbing peaceful protesters, brutalizing activists and killing so many Black men, and with such absolute impunity, that Davis and Wiener's claim that “the Manson gang were bit players compared to the forces of law and order” ends up feeling more than fair. In the authors' telling, the wanton violence of the police acted as a consistent if unwitting catalyst to historical change: It was the chaos that followed a ferocious LAPD assault on anti-war protesters that added to Lyndon Johnson's decision not to run for re-election in 1968, and the LAPD's murder of a Black Muslim named Ronald Stokes—seven other Muslims were shot in the same incident—that pushed Malcolm X towards a broader vision of Black liberation. The shared experience of LAPD violence, Davis and Wiener write, forged a “common culture of resistance” among Black and Chicano youth, white hipsters and anti-war activists, and the city's gay community. This situation hardly improved with the economic turmoil of the 1970s, or the reactionary retreat of the 1980s. For many Black Angelenos, the 1992 riots weren't about one videotape, but about this entire history. Cochran had an opportunity to reveal the situation in the early ’90s to America. And with Fuhrman, who was called by the prosecution to bring the bloody glove into evidence, Cochran was able to show a feverishly racist man at the center of this investigation. ‘Kill somebody and go have some chicken’ Sean Hannity (Hannity, 1/10/23) interviewing Pam Bondi (then a former Florida attorney general) and Mark Fuhrman. In the end, Simpson was acquitted, and Fuhrman became a symbol of a divided America. It’s quite telling that the disgraced cop later found a landing place on Fox News. The Murdoch media empire created the news network the year after the Simpson trial as the antithesis to what it claimed was a liberal slant in corporate television news. Bringing on Fuhrman as a recurring guest—and, later, giving him his own show on Fox Nation—didn’t just promote his own public rehabilitation, it foretold a shift in “acceptable” discourse on right-wing TV. Fox‘s Greta van Susteren (5/19/05) defended having him on as a frequent guest: Mark happens to be a very, very, very smart detective—one of the best I have ever worked with and I have worked with many. He really thinks about the investigations we book him on the show to discuss. But Fox was attracted to Fuhrman not by his smarts, but by his hate. The racism that spilled out in the Simpson trial—Fuhrman's animosity toward the people who he was sworn to protect and serve—catered directly to the Fox audience. Another Fox star that routinely showcased Fuhrman was Sean Hannity (Extra!, 9/13). On Hannity & Colmes (11/16/06; cited by Media Matters, 11/20/06), Fuhrman asserted that the the type of “people” he “dealt with … for 20 years” will kill somebody and go have some chicken at KFC. You will catch them eating chicken and drinking a beer after they just murdered three people. He added that “these people are out there. They’re all over the place.” In another appearance, Hannity (Hannity, 7/16/13) brought the ex-cop on to speculate on whether Black people would riot if George Zimmerman were found not guilty of murdering an unarmed Trayvon Martin in Florida. “Mark, it seems to me like it's going to be a dangerous scenario for the cities where this is going to occur,” said Hannity. Fuhrman replied, “I think you're right, Sean,” and proceeded to fantasize about protesters “assaulting people, assaulting officers, so when you cross that line, it's pretty obvious, and, you know, this is completely drawn on racial lines now.” ‘They just take more and more’ “You can always find something that doesn’t look like justice was served one way or another,” Mark Fuhrman tells Megyn Kelly (and right-wing novelist Brad Thor) on Fox‘s Kelly File (7/8/16). Fuhrman had nothing but contempt for the Black Lives Matter movement erupting in Ferguson, Missouri. He told Fox News' Megyn Kelly (8/10/15): Stopping traffic is not a lawful demonstration. Stopping pedestrians is not a lawful demonstration. Stopping regular traffic on sidewalks in front of buildings. That is not lawful demonstrations. And they should enforce it. And you know, when you allow some kind of, you know, leeway, they just take more and more. And now we have people that are not on the city council and they’re not on the police department, no matter how represented the Black community is. They are not there. You’re dealing with gang members and street drug dealers that are just hanging out. They’re armed and they’re taking advantage of a hesitant police department. How did Fuhrman respond to a video of “a white school police officer in a Columbia [South Carolina] classroom grabbing an African-American student by the neck, flipping her backward as she sat at her desk, then dragging and throwing her across the floor” (New York Times, 10/26/15)? He made the officer a saint on Fox. Media Matters (10/27/15) quoted Fuhrman: He requested her. He verbally did that. The next level is he put a hand on her. She escalated it from there. He used soft control. He threw her on the ground, he handcuffed her. He didn’t use mace. He didn’t use a Taser. He didn’t use a stick. He didn’t kick her. He didn’t hit her. He didn’t choke her. He used a minimal amount of force necessary to effect an arrest. In 2019, he attacked Democratic presidential hopefuls for their police reform rhetoric on the Ingraham Angle (8/2/19), saying those politicians were looking to win “that 18-to-25-year-old base that is involved in all these movements—these anti-government, anti-establishment, anti-republic, anti-Trump” movements. He eventually was given his own show on Fox News spinoff Fox Nation, the Fuhrman Diaries, which ran from 2018 to 2022. (Fox promoted him as “America's most controversial detective”—LA Times, 11/29/18.) ‘Total reputational annihilation’ Just because someone lied under oath about using racial slurs dozens of times doesn’t mean they should be canceled (Wall Street Journal, 5/20/26)—and by “canceled,” we mean given their own TV show. People can and do change over time. Fuhrman gave a somewhat nuanced view on Fox News (Ingraham Angle, 5/29/20) about the police killing of George Floyd, which resulted in widespread political unrest. He called Floyd's killing “a slow-motion homicide,” and said the video footage was “a slow and really painful thing to watch of somebody grinding somebody’s face into the pavement until they’re dead.” At the Murdoch-owned Wall Street Journal, columnist Matthew Hennessey (5/20/26) christened Fuhrman a victim of cancel culture, admitting that he was a “bad cop,” but that he was among the first to suffer the total reputational annihilation that has become a hallmark of life in the digital era, where everything you say—or have ever said—will one day be used against you in the court of public opinion. It’s a strange sort of “reputational annihilation” that gets you regularly showcased on a national cable TV network, and then gives you your own show. Fuhrman’s afterlife as a commentator foretold a media conservatism that flips the narrative about racist policing on its head, where prejudice becomes a sign of expertise. It’s a legacy we live with today in MAGA America, even with Fuhrman having departed this world. Research assistance: Priyanka Bansal
Episode Notes S7E8 -- Join us as we dive into the mind of Author Kieth Zlomsowitch.He'll be in the house telling is tales of dating Nicole Brown Simpson and his new book "Stalked" Keith Zlomsowitch is a former restaurant owner and general manager. He spent over 30 years in the hospitality industry and worked with some of the most famous restaurateurs in the world. His investors, partners, and clientele were known around the world, ranging from top-flight entrepreneurs and industry visionaries, to politicians, actors, athletes and performers. It would be hard to find a celebrity that Keith did not work with, work for, or service. He ran and managed some of the most exclusive restaurants and bars in the world; Monkey Bar, Mezzaluna, and Dorrian's Red Hand. His success was not always measured monetarily, rather it was by the relationships and interactions he had with so many special and amazing people over the decades. Keith knows how much these people meant to his life, and he takes pride knowing that he gave them special memories and moments that they will forever remember. As distinguished and reputable as Keith's career was, he will primarily be remembered for his involvement and love affair with Nicole Brown Simpson, whom he always referred to affectionately as, ‘Nic'. His journey with Nic was magical, yet daunting, and his story and point of view will live forever as part of the greatest American murder saga of our time. HELPFUL LINKS: VETERANS: https://www.va.gov/.../mental-health/suicide-prevention/ ADDICTION: https://lp.recoverycentersofamerica.com/.../continuum-of.../ Due you know someone that has lost their lives due to addiction? Or even someone that has made a full recovery? Reach out to Johnny Whitaker so they can help to celebrate the lives lost/ lives recovered at overdoseawareness0831@gmail.com ___________________________________________ Follow our guest https://ojstalkedme.com/stalked-by-oj/ https://www.instagram.com/keithzlomsowitch/?hl=en https://www.amazon.com/STALKED-KEITH-ZLOMSOWITCH/dp/B0G4GTYJRY ______________________________ Toking with the Dead: https://www.stilltoking.com/ ————————————— Follow Still Toking With and their friends! https://smartpa.ge/5zv1 ————————————— Produced by Leo Pond and The Dorkening Podcast Network MORE ABOUT THE GUEST: In this long-awaited publication, Keith recounts the harrowing ordeal and many previously undisclosed details that he experienced with Nicole Brown Simpson and how it forever changed his life. From his fateful meeting of Nicole, to their deep love affair and eventual friendship, to her brutal murder and the media frenzy that ensued. No one has such a unique perspective as Keith does. He and Nicole were stalked by O.J. Simpson on multiple occasions, and like the book tagline indicates, it truly could have been him that was killed, whether alongside Nicole, or by himself. On one night in particular, while at Nicole's Gretna Green residence, Keith tells of a haunting encounter that will for sure leave readers horrified and dismayed. Keith's journey with Nicole, O.J., friends and associates, has been and will be chronicled forever. The entire case and saga, from the events of June 12th all the way up until the devastating acquittal on October 3rd, is considered by most to be the greatest American murder mystery of all time. To see the entire saga played out through Keith's eyes is truly a once-in-a-lifetime event and perspective. It took great courage, resilience, and stamina, for Keith to not only live through this tragedy and misadventure, but for him to write about it and to bring it forward to the public, might be his most courageous act yet. This podcast is powered by Pinecast.
O.J. Simpson didn't "win" the Trial of the Century. He was shielded by a forensic architecture of enablers. In this TZ Scandal investigation, host Tom Zenner and O.J. Simpson's Rockingham houseguest Kato Kaelin expose the 5 Cowards who paved the way for a double-murderer to walk free.We are stripping away 30 years of legal fiction to identify the structural enablers who prioritized corporate profit and personal legacy over the blood of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman.This is a forensic audit of professional privilege transformed into an impenetrable shield for a predator.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/one-degree-of-scandalous-with-tom-zenner-and-kato-kaelin--6258576/support.
A controversial meme, reposted by Republican Senator Mike Lee, shows a picture of O.J. Simpson labeled “Elizabeth Warren” and O.J.’s former wife, Nicole Brown Simpson labeled “Spirit Airlines.” Lee added the caption “nailed it” in his since deleted post which has drawn significant backlash. Meantime, a crowdsourcing site says they’ve raised $130 million dollars so far, hoping to buy and build back the low cost carrier.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A controversial meme, reposted by Republican Senator Mike Lee, shows a picture of O.J. Simpson labeled “Elizabeth Warren” and O.J.’s former wife, Nicole Brown Simpson labeled “Spirit Airlines.” Lee added the caption “nailed it” in his since deleted post which has drawn significant backlash. Meantime, a crowdsourcing site says they’ve raised $130 million dollars so far, hoping to buy and build back the low cost carrier.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A controversial meme, reposted by Republican Senator Mike Lee, shows a picture of O.J. Simpson labeled “Elizabeth Warren” and O.J.’s former wife, Nicole Brown Simpson labeled “Spirit Airlines.” Lee added the caption “nailed it” in his since deleted post which has drawn significant backlash. Meantime, a crowdsourcing site says they’ve raised $130 million dollars so far, hoping to buy and build back the low cost carrier.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A controversial meme, reposted by Republican Senator Mike Lee, shows a picture of O.J. Simpson labeled “Elizabeth Warren” and O.J.’s former wife, Nicole Brown Simpson labeled “Spirit Airlines.” Lee added the caption “nailed it” in his since deleted post which has drawn significant backlash. Meantime, a crowdsourcing site says they’ve raised $130 million dollars so far, hoping to buy and build back the low cost carrier.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Kato Kaelin and LAPD Officer Spencer Marks reveal the chilling "prophecy" of Nicole Brown Simpson from October 1993—eight months before the Bundy Drive murders.In this exclusive One Degree of Scandalous investigation, Tom Zenner is joined by Kato Kaelin and the responding officer who witnessed the aftermath of O.J. Simpson kicking in the French doors at Nicole's Gretna Green residence. For the first time, Officer Marks reveals the exact words Nicole used to describe her fate and the shocking admission O.J. made about stalking her.INSIDE THE GRETNA GREEN INVESTIGATION:THE 911 TRUTH: Why Nicole refused to press charges and the "misdemeanor" loophole that kept O.J. on the streets.THE STALKING: Officer Marks recounts O.J. standing over Kato Kaelin, describing his obsession with Keith ZlomsowtichTHE ADMISSION: The moment O.J. told LAPD, "I always pay for the back doors," revealing a years-long pattern of terror.THE BUNDY LINK: How the events of October 1993 provided the blueprint for the June 12, 1994, double homicide of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman.Spencer Marks is a veteran LAPD officer, entrepreneur, and author of the gritty police fiction "Black Knights" and "Living History." His first-hand account of the O.J. Simpson saga provides a perspective the jury never heard. Subscribe to Tom Zenner Scandal for elite investigative media, outspoken commentary, and the most authentic forensic reconstruction of the world's biggest scandals. #OJSimpson #NicoleBrownSimpson #KatoKaelin #LAPD #TrueCrime #BundyDrive #GretnaGreen #911Call #Investigation #TomZenner #Scandal #Forensics Purchase Spencer's Book! (Blue Knights, Black Knights) https://shorturl.at/ObPXBBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/one-degree-of-scandalous-with-tom-zenner-and-kato-kaelin--6258576/support.
“I'm just so spooked... I'm going to go.” 32 years later, I am taking Kato Kaelin back to the exact alley where O.J. Simpson parked the White Bronco on the night of the murders.June 12, 1994, wasn't just a date; it was a 15-hour high-speed free fall into a dumpster of ego and rejection. In this elite investigative special, I reconstruct the "Perfect Storm" that led to the double homicide of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/one-degree-of-scandalous-with-tom-zenner-and-kato-kaelin--6258576/support.
Kato Kaelin recounts the night of Nicole Brown Simpson’s murder—from a strange McDonald’s run with O.J. to an unexplained noise behind the guest house that would later lead police to a chilling discovery. Decades later, he still questions whether his presence that night unknowingly helped shape the timeline. And just when it seems like the story is complete, Kato reveals one detail that changes everything.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
One bag. One witness. One moment the jury never truly heard. On the night Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman were murdered… A man says he watched OJ Simpson step out at LAX… Walk to a trash can… And quietly dump items from a bag that was never recovered.That missing bag may be one of the most overlooked pieces of the entire OJ timeline. In this special TZ Scandal Headquarters episode, Tom Zenner brings together the most important firsthand voices in the case: *Skip Junis — the witness who saw OJ discard evidence at the airport *Allan Park — the limo driver waiting outside Rockingham *Jill Shively — the woman who says she nearly collided with OJ near Bundy *Detective Tom Lange — first on scene, still haunted by what was missed *Kato Kaelin — inside the property during the final moments before everything changed This isn't recycled documentary footage.This is the closest thing to an OJ headquarters anywhere on YouTube. Because when you connect these witnesses… The official story starts to fall apart. What vanished at LAX… and why was it never found? Welcome to Tom Zenner Scandal. This is where the OJ story lives.
Keith Zlomsowitch, Nicole Brown Simpson’s former boyfriend, recounts the days after her murder, when the danger didn’t feel over. From holding Nicole’s casket at her funeral to being warned to stay away from her condo after O.J. said he was “coming to finish what he started.” Keith lays out why he went to the police, why his testimony wasn’t used in the trial and how he felt watching the drama play out on the screen. He also explains why he stayed silent for decades before sharing his story.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This isn’t the O.J. story you already know. Keith Zlomsowitch, Nicole Brown Simpson’s former boyfriend, takes us back to the months before the murders when he says stalking, intimidation, and fear were part of his daily life. Keith talks about dating Nicole, O.J. watching them have sex, the warning signs that went unheeded, and why these moments never made it into The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
====================================================SUSCRIBETEhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNpffyr-7_zP1x1lS89ByaQ?sub_confirmation=1==================================================== DEVOCIÓN MATUTINA PARA MENORES 2026“HEROES Y VILLANOS”Narrado por: Tatania DanielaDesde: Juliaca, PerúUna cortesía de DR'Ministries y Canaan Seventh-Day Adventist Church29 DE ENEROHÉROE POR FUERA, VILLANO POR DENTRO«Nada hay tan engañoso y perverso como el corazón humano. ¿Quién es capaz de comprenderlo?» (Jeremías 17: 9).O. J. Simpson es un exjugador de fútbol americano que alcanzó la fama tanto en el campo de juego como fuera de él. Nacido el 9 de julio de 1947 en San Francisco, California, Simpson destacó como corredor estrella en la NFL. También se involucró en la actuación y se desempeñó como empresario y comentarista deportivo.En su carrera en la NFL, Simpson jugó para los Bilis de Buffalo y los 49ers de San Francisco. Es recordado por su velocidad, agilidad y habilidades como corredor de balón. En 1973, Simpson hizo historia al convertirse en el primer jugador en correr más de 2000 yardas en una temporada de la NFL. Su talento en el campo lo llevó a múltiples premios y reconocimientos, incluyendo ser incluido en el Salón de la Fama del Fútbol Americano Profesional.Fuera de la cancha, Simpson incursionó en la actuación, apareciendo en películas y series de televisión. Sin embargo, su vida personal estuvo marcada por la controversia, incluyendo su tumultuoso matrimonio con Nicole Brown Simpson, que terminó trágicamente en 1994 con el asesinato de Nicole y su amigo Ronald Goldman.El juicio penal de O. J. Simpson por el asesinato de su exesposa y Goldman fue uno de los más mediáticos en la historia de Estados Unidos. A pesar de las pruebas contundentes en su contra, Simpson fue absuelto en un veredicto altamente controvertido en 1995. Este caso tuvo un impacto duradero en la opinión pública y generó debates sobre la justicia, la raza y la celebridad en el sistema legal.En años posteriores, Simpson estuvo involucrado en otros problemas legales. En 2008, fue condenado por robo a mano armada y secuestro en Las Vegas, lo que resultó en una sentencia a prisión de 33 años. En 2017, después de cumplir nueve años de su condena, fue liberado bajo libertad condicional.La vida de O. J. Simpson es un relato complejo que abarca logros deportivos, tragedia personal y controversia legal. ¿Cómo puede un individuo tener rasgos para sobresalir en un deporte tan competitivo como el fútbol americano o incursionar en el cine y la televisión y, al mismo tiempo, manifestar un espíritu violento y homicida? Esto es así porque el propio corazón humano es un choque de fuerzas que tiran hacia el bien y hacia el mal. Nuestro corazón es malo, y no lo podemos cambiar. Pero eso es justamente lo que Jesús ofrece hacer por nosotros: una nueva persona (2 Corintios 5: 17).
In this exclusive episode of Tom Zenner Scandal, Keith Zlomsowitch — Nicole Brown Simpson's ex-boyfriend and the man referenced in her 911 calls — returns for only his second long-form interview ever, once again choosing TZ Scandal as the platform he trusts. Keith opens up about his true love relationship with Nicole, the stalking and intimidation he says he witnessed firsthand, and the chilling moments that made him believe “it could have been me.”He describes seeing O.J. Simpson's violent nature up close, the week everything collapsed — the funeral, the Bronco chase, the grand jury — and the lifelong impact that followed. For the first time, Keith also explains why he waited nearly 30 years to write his book, STALKED: It Could Have Been Me, why he chose to self-publish, and what he hopes the world finally understands about Nicole Brown Simpson beyond the headlines.This is not a rehash. This is first-hand testimony from inside one of the most infamous true-crime stories in American history. Watch. Listen. Decide for yourself
The three mustaches are joined by three-time best-selling author, podcast legend, and father of Jessie's children, ROSS PATTERSON! In order to not overshadow our esteemed guest, we decided to cover an obscure case from the early '90s known as the OJ Simpson Murder Trial. When the bodies of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman are discovered outside of her Brentwood condo, all eyes were on her famous ex-husband, Orenthal James Simpson. But did the Juice really do it, or was he a poor minority being targeted by corrupt cops at the LAPD? Somebody call Police Squad and get Frank Drebin on the line because this is gonna be a tough case to crack. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The three mustaches are joined by three-time best-selling author, podcast legend, and father of Jessie's children, ROSS PATTERSON! In order to not overshadow our esteemed guest, we decided to cover an obscure case from the early '90s known as the OJ Simpson Murder Trial. When the bodies of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman are discovered outside of her Brentwood condo, all eyes were on her famous ex-husband, Orenthal James Simpson. But did the Juice really do it, or was he a poor minority being targeted by corrupt cops at the LAPD? Somebody call Police Squad and get Frank Drebin on the line because this is gonna be a tough case to crack.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/crime-corner-with-jessie-wiseman/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
In this episode of Absolute Trust Talk, Kirsten Howe returns with the latest development in the ongoing O.J. Simpson probate saga. Over 18 months after his April 2024 death, headlines announced that the executor of O.J.'s estate had "agreed to pay" the Goldman family close to $58 million—but what does that actually mean? Kirsten breaks down the reality behind the sensational headlines, explaining what happens when an executor accepts a creditor's claim versus actually paying it. With O.J.'s estate valued at just $1-2 million against a $58 million accepted claim, she reveals who really gets paid first in probate and why the Goldmans may see almost nothing despite "winning." Tune in for a real-world lesson on why probate takes so long and how creditor claims actually work. Time-stamped Show Notes: 0:00 Introduction 0:45 Key lesson #1: O.J. died in April 2024, and over 18 months later, his probate is still ongoing—proof that probate takes a long time 1:30 The headline that grabbed attention: "Executor agrees to pay $58 million to the Goldman family" 2:00 Listen in as Kirsten provides some background on the Goldman family's 1997 civil judgment of $33 million against O.J. for the deaths of Ron Goldman and Nicole Brown Simpson 2:45 Next, let's discuss how the judgment grew to $117 million with nearly 30 years of accumulated interest, and the creditor's claim was filed in July 2024 3:30 What really happened: The executor accepted the claim at $58 million (disputing the interest calculation), but this doesn't mean writing a check 4:15 The reality check: O.J.'s estate is worth only $1-2 million—nowhere near the $58 million claim 4:45 Key lesson #2: Who gets paid first in probate—executors, attorneys, court fees, and expenses come before any creditor claims 5:30 Why the headline was misleading and what this case teaches us about probate and creditor claims Take the Next Step in Your Estate Planning Journey If this episode resonated with you, we'd love to help you with your own estate planning needs in California. Schedule a complimentary discovery call with our team at Absolute Trust Counsel. During this no-obligation conversation, we'll: Learn about your unique situation and goals Answer questions about our services Determine if we're the right fit to work together Visit https://absolutetrustcounsel.com/scheduling/ or call 925-943-2740 to schedule your free discovery call today. Follow and Review: We'd love for you to follow us if you haven't yet. Click that purple '+' in the top right corner of your Apple Podcasts app. We'd love it even more if you could drop a review or 5-star rating over on Apple Podcasts. Simply select "Ratings and Reviews" and "Write a Review" then a quick line with your favorite part of the episode. It only takes a couple second and it helps spread the word about the podcast. Episode Credits: The Absolute Trust Talk podcast is brought to you with the help of Q2Mark, led by Chief Marketing Officer Susie Hays. Since 2016, Q2Mark has partnered with Absolute Trust Counsel on all marketing communications—from brand development and website design to this podcast series with over 192 episodes, social media management, video production, and more. If you're business owner looking for comprehensive marketing support, visit Q2Mark.com.
This week on The Spooky Sleepover, Cheryl debriefs on her Wicked: For Good Cinema experience, Nikki vents on her thoughts on tourists on the streets of London & asks the question… When is the right time to put the Christmas decorations up?
It’s a headline three decades in the making. The executor of the O.J. Simpson estate has publicly acknowledged it owes $58 million dollars to the family of Ron Goldman, but the most the family might ever see would be between $500,000 and $1,000,000, and even that might be a long shot. The Goldman’s have to essentially “get in line” with other creditors, including the IRS, following the death of Simpson last year. This all stems from the civil case where Simpson was found liable for the deaths of Ron Goldman and Nicole Brown Simpson, the jury awarding the families $33.5 million dollars at the time. Right now, Simpson’s estate is auctioning off Simpson’s remaining memorabilia to try and raise enough cash to pay down its debts, but turned down a very high profile offer from Kim Kardashian, who was looking to purchase a very sentimental item for her family.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
It’s a headline three decades in the making. The executor of the O.J. Simpson estate has publicly acknowledged it owes $58 million dollars to the family of Ron Goldman, but the most the family might ever see would be between $500,000 and $1,000,000, and even that might be a long shot. The Goldman’s have to essentially “get in line” with other creditors, including the IRS, following the death of Simpson last year. This all stems from the civil case where Simpson was found liable for the deaths of Ron Goldman and Nicole Brown Simpson, the jury awarding the families $33.5 million dollars at the time. Right now, Simpson’s estate is auctioning off Simpson’s remaining memorabilia to try and raise enough cash to pay down its debts, but turned down a very high profile offer from Kim Kardashian, who was looking to purchase a very sentimental item for her family.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
It’s a headline three decades in the making. The executor of the O.J. Simpson estate has publicly acknowledged it owes $58 million dollars to the family of Ron Goldman, but the most the family might ever see would be between $500,000 and $1,000,000, and even that might be a long shot. The Goldman’s have to essentially “get in line” with other creditors, including the IRS, following the death of Simpson last year. This all stems from the civil case where Simpson was found liable for the deaths of Ron Goldman and Nicole Brown Simpson, the jury awarding the families $33.5 million dollars at the time. Right now, Simpson’s estate is auctioning off Simpson’s remaining memorabilia to try and raise enough cash to pay down its debts, but turned down a very high profile offer from Kim Kardashian, who was looking to purchase a very sentimental item for her family.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
OJ Simpson’s estate has agreed to pay nearly $58 million to the family of Ron Goldman, who was killed along with Nicole Brown Simpson in 1994. Although Simpson was acquitted in criminal court, he was later found liable in a civil trial and ordered to pay more than $33 million; interest and penalties have pushed the total dramatically higher. A flood advisory is in effect, and the show will be broadcasting live from Smart & Final in Yorba Linda this Friday, where Tim jokes about auctioning everything in his garage while begging the clouds to stop the rain. Attorneys representing survivors of the Eaton Fire in Altadena have filed a lawsuit against Southern California Edison and Genasys Inc., alleging the utility sparked the blaze and Genasys failed to send critical evacuation warnings, contributing to the death of a woman in the fire zone. Construction crews in both Topanga Canyon and Altadena are dealing with the latest round of storm damage and heavy rain impacts. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
It’s a headline three decades in the making. The executor of the O.J. Simpson estate has publicly acknowledged it owes $58 million dollars to the family of Ron Goldman, but the most the family might ever see would be between $500,000 and $1,000,000, and even that might be a long shot. The Goldman’s have to essentially “get in line” with other creditors, including the IRS, following the death of Simpson last year. This all stems from the civil case where Simpson was found liable for the deaths of Ron Goldman and Nicole Brown Simpson, the jury awarding the families $33.5 million dollars at the time. Right now, Simpson’s estate is auctioning off Simpson’s remaining memorabilia to try and raise enough cash to pay down its debts, but turned down a very high profile offer from Kim Kardashian, who was looking to purchase a very sentimental item for her family.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Nearly three decades after the civil judgment against O.J. Simpson, his estate is finally taking steps to pay Fred Goldman—father of Ron Goldman, who was killed alongside Nicole Brown Simpson in 1994.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Nearly three decades after the civil judgment against O.J. Simpson, his estate is finally taking steps to pay Fred Goldman—father of Ron Goldman, who was killed alongside Nicole Brown Simpson in 1994.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In Episode 437, Andrew Parker sits down with Iroc Avelli — a man who knew O.J. Simpson for years — and who claims he has recorded admissions by Simpson himself tied to the 1994 murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman.In this extraordinary interview, Avelli walks through his history with Simpson, the world surrounding O.J.'s celebrity, and the chain of alleged evidence that he says has been seized and withheld. Andrew asks direct legal questions, challenges the timeline, and explores what is fact, what is allegation, and why this case continues to sit at the intersection of law, crime, public perception — and history.A fascinating conversation that revisits one of the most infamous criminal cases of our lifetime — through the eyes of someone who says he was on the inside.Support the showThe Andrew Parker Show - Politics, Israel & The Law. Follow us on Facebook, LinkedIn, YouTube and X. Subscribe to our email list at www.theandrewparkershow.com Copyright © 2025 The Andrew Parker Show - All Rights Reserved.
What REALLY Happened in the OJ Simpson Case with Kato Kaelin? #Join us as we delve into one of the most infamous cases in American history, the OJ Simpson trial, with a unique perspective from Kato Kaelin, a key witness who lived on the premises of OJ Simpson's estate at the time of the murders. Kato shares his firsthand account of the events leading up to and following the tragic deaths of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman, providing insight into the mindset and actions of OJ Simpson during that tumultuous period. From the initial police investigation to the dramatic trial, Kato's testimony offers a fascinating behind-the-scenes look at the people and circumstances surrounding the case. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
No Business Like....Pop culture isn't just showing up in the workplace—it's shaping it. On October 3, thousands of Swifties will be out-of-office.Bad BusinessJudge Arun Subramanian sentenced Combs to 50 months – or just over four years – for his conviction on two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution. A jury convicted Combs of the lesser charge in July after his two-month, headline-making trial, though the 12 jurors ultimately acquitted the embattled music moguls on the top charges of racketeering and sex trafficking.OJ 30It's been 30 years since O.J. Simpson was found not guilty of murder in the deaths of ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ron Goldman following a trial that changed media culture forever. Nukes in SpaceIn a plan ripped straight from the script of the 1998 movie "Armageddon," scientists have suggested a simple, if violent, method of dealing with a troublesome asteroid.
It's 30 years since American football star OJ Simpson was acquitted of murdering his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman. Ron Shipp was a close friend of OJ Simpson's and also a police officer, he decided to testify against him in the criminal trial. In 2017, Ron spoke to Rebecca Kesby about why he wanted to testify.Eye-witness accounts brought to life by archive. Witness History is for those fascinated by the past. We take you to the events that have shaped our world through the eyes of the people who were there. For nine minutes every day, we take you back in time and all over the world, to examine wars, coups, scientific discoveries, cultural moments and much more. Recent episodes explore everything from the death of Adolf Hitler, the first spacewalk and the making of the movie Jaws, to celebrity tortoise Lonesome George, the Kobe earthquake and the invention of superglue. We look at the lives of some of the most famous leaders, artists, scientists and personalities in history, including: Eva Peron – Argentina's Evita; President Ronald Reagan and his famous ‘tear down this wall' speech; Thomas Keneally on why he wrote Schindler's List; and Jacques Derrida, France's ‘rock star' philosopher. You can learn all about fascinating and surprising stories, such as the civil rights swimming protest; the disastrous D-Day rehearsal; and the death of one of the world's oldest languages.(Photo: OJ Simpson at his double murder trial. Credit: VINCE BUCCI/AFP via Getty Images)
This Day in Legal History: O.J. “Not Guilty”On October 3, 1995, a Los Angeles jury returned one of the most controversial and widely watched criminal verdicts in American history: O.J. Simpson was found not guilty of the murders of his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ron Goldman. The trial, which lasted more than eight months, captivated the nation with its blend of celebrity, race, police misconduct, and media spectacle. The prosecution presented DNA evidence linking Simpson to the crime scene, while the defense, led by Johnnie Cochran, argued that Simpson was framed by a racist LAPD, particularly Detective Mark Fuhrman.Cochran's now-famous line — “If it doesn't fit, you must acquit” — referred to a moment when Simpson tried on gloves allegedly worn during the murders, and they appeared not to fit. The defense used that moment to cast further doubt on the prosecution's case. The jury deliberated for less than four hours before acquitting Simpson, prompting strong reactions across racial and social lines.The case exposed deep divisions in American society, particularly around race and policing. It also helped usher in the era of the 24-hour news cycle and reality-style courtroom coverage, with networks like CNN and Court TV devoting extensive airtime to the trial. The not-guilty verdict did not end Simpson's legal troubles: in 1997, a civil jury found him liable for wrongful death and ordered him to pay $33.5 million in damages.Apple confirmed it has removed the ICEBlock app and similar tools from its App Store following pressure from the Trump administration and Attorney General Pam Bondi. ICEBlock allowed users to report and track the locations of ICE officers through crowdsourced data. Bondi stated the app endangered law enforcement officers and crossed a line by facilitating potential violence.The Department of Justice supported the move, citing safety concerns. This action followed an exposé by right-wing influencer Laura Loomer, who outed the creator of a similar app, Red Dot, and accused the platforms of enabling violence against ICE agents. Loomer also claimed that a recent deadly shooting at a Dallas ICE facility involved the use of such tracking apps.Apple defended its decision, stating it aims to keep the App Store a “safe and trusted” space, and that ICEBlock violated policies by potentially enabling harm to law enforcement. The app's developer, Joshua Aaron, criticized the removal, comparing it to how apps like Apple Maps crowdsource speed trap locations. He argued that his app was protected by the First Amendment and that Apple's action was a concession to authoritarian demands.Tech Giant Apple Bows to MAGA Demands and Removes ICE Tracking AppsOpenAI filed a motion in federal court to dismiss a trade secret lawsuit brought by Elon Musk's AI startup, xAI. The lawsuit, filed in San Francisco, accuses OpenAI of deliberately poaching xAI employees to gain access to confidential information about Grok, xAI's chatbot, which the company claims surpasses ChatGPT in performance.OpenAI rejected the allegations, calling them baseless and part of Musk's “ongoing harassment” campaign against the company. In its filing, OpenAI argued that employees are free to leave xAI and work wherever they choose, and that it is within its rights to hire them. The company suggested xAI's legal actions are designed to cover up its internal struggles and inability to retain talent.This case is one of several legal battles unfolding between Musk and OpenAI. Musk has also filed a separate suit accusing OpenAI of abandoning its original nonprofit mission. In turn, OpenAI has countersued Musk for harassment. Meanwhile, xAI has sued Apple, claiming it colluded with OpenAI to suppress competition—an accusation both companies deny and are also seeking to dismiss.OpenAI's legal response characterized xAI's complaint as a distraction from its own failings and a tactic to slow down competitors in the heated race for dominance in the AI industry.OpenAI asks court to dismiss trade-secret lawsuit from Musk's xAI | ReutersU.S. District Judge Michael Simon recused himself from a case challenging President Donald Trump's decision to deploy Oregon's National Guard to Portland. The Trump administration had raised concerns over public comments made by Simon's wife, Representative Suzanne Bonamici, criticizing the deployment as a “gross abuse of power.” To avoid any appearance of bias, Judge Simon opted to step aside, stating the case should remain focused on its core constitutional and legal questions.The lawsuit, filed by Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield, seeks to block Trump's use of state National Guard troops, arguing it is illegal and driven by political motives. The complaint alleges Trump is exaggerating protest threats to justify federal overreach and seize control of state forces. The case has been reassigned to Judge Karin Immergut, a Trump appointee.Bonamici, whose district includes much of Portland, made her critical remarks during a press conference with Oregon Governor Tina Kotek. The Department of Justice cited her comments in its request for Simon's recusal, arguing they could undermine public confidence in judicial impartiality.A hearing is scheduled for Friday on Oregon's request for a temporary restraining order. Similar legal challenges are underway in California and Washington, D.C., where federal troop deployments have also faced pushback. A California judge previously ruled Trump's actions unlawful, but that decision is currently on hold pending appeal. The D.C. case remains unresolved.Judge recuses himself from Oregon National Guard case | ReutersThis week's closing theme is by Ludwig van Beethoven, a composer of some note.This week, we close with Franz Liszt's transcription (S. 464) of the first movement—Allegro con brio—from Beethoven's Symphony No. 1 in C major, Op. 21. Originally premiered in 1800, this symphony marked Beethoven's formal debut in the genre, and even in its first movement, we hear the young composer testing the boundaries of the Classical form inherited from Haydn and Mozart. The opening chords start in the “wrong” key—a bold harmonic gesture that signaled Beethoven's intent to shake things up, even as he worked within a familiar structure.Liszt, the great 19th-century virtuoso and composer, took on the monumental task of transcribing all nine of Beethoven's symphonies for solo piano. The transcription of the First Symphony, catalogued as S. 464, is part of that sweeping project. These arrangements were not simply meant to showcase Liszt's pianistic brilliance (though they certainly do); they were a way to bring Beethoven's orchestral works into the drawing rooms and salons of Europe—before widespread orchestral performance or recording technology.In Liszt's hands, the Allegro con brio becomes a brilliant piano showpiece, retaining the symphony's rhythmic drive, thematic clarity, and structural ingenuity. He translates orchestral texture into ten fingers with remarkable fidelity, using tremolos, arpeggios, and dramatic dynamic shifts to recreate the energy of strings, winds, and brass. The transcription is virtuosic but never flashy for its own sake—it's an homage from one revolutionary to another.Beethoven's First Symphony bridges the Classical and Romantic eras, and Liszt's solo piano version builds a new bridge, connecting orchestral grandeur to the intimacy of a single performer. It's a reminder of both composers' commitment to pushing musical expression forward. As you listen, you may forget it's just one person at a piano—Liszt makes the entire orchestra sing.We leave you this week not only with Beethoven's bold opening statement to the symphonic world, but with Liszt's brilliant act of translation—a distillation of power, wit, and elegance, all under a single keyboard.Without further ado, Ludwig van Beethoven's Symphony No. 1 in C major, Op. 21 – the first movement. Enjoy! This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.minimumcomp.com/subscribe
The white Bronco chase. The glove. And the verdict that shocked the world. In Part 2, we follow the O.J. Simpson investigation, the trial that captivated the world, and the media storm that followed the murder of Nicole Brown Simpson. With insight from forensic psychologist Dr. Tristin Engels, host of the Crime House Original podcast "Killer Minds", we examine the emotional fallout, the power of public perception—and why Nicole Brown Simpson's story still matters today. For more true crime psychoanalysis, follow Killer Minds on Apple and Spotify. Murder: True Crime Stories is a Crime House Original Podcast, powered by PAVE Studios. Listen wherever you get your podcasts. For ad-free listening and early access to episodes, subscribe to Crime House+ on Apple Podcasts. Don't miss out on all things Murder: True Crime Stories! Instagram: @murdertruecrimepod | @Crimehouse TikTok: @Crimehouse Facebook: @crimehousestudios X: @crimehousemedia YouTube: @crimehousestudios To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Tonight's rundown: Hey BillOReilly.com Premium and Concierge Members, welcome to the No Spin News for Tuesday, June 17, 2025. Stand Up for Your Country. Talking Points Memo: Bill analyzes objections from both the left and right regarding U.S. involvement in Iran. Host of PodForce One, Miranda Devine, joins the No Spin News to discuss President Trump's Iran-Israel strategy and expose the corporate media's skewed coverage. Could Donald Trump's immigration crackdown cause ICE to run out of funds soon? The Trump Organization has announced the launch of a new cellular phone service called T1 Phone by Trump Mobile. This Day in History: O.J. Simpson is formally charged with the murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman. Final Thought: Personally attacking others for media attention. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Nicole Brown Simpson's murder shocked the world—but the warning signs were there. Dr. Tristin Engels, clinical and forensic psychologist and host of the Crime House Original podcast "Killer Minds," joins us to examine the patterns of manipulation, control, and trauma that shaped Nicole Brown Simpson's relationship with O.J. Simpson, long before it ended in tragedy.For more true crime psychoanalysis, follow Killer Minds on Apple and Spotify. Murder: True Crime Stories is a Crime House Original Podcast, powered by PAVE Studios. Listen wherever you get your podcasts. For ad-free listening and early access to episodes, subscribe to Crime House+ on Apple Podcasts. Don't miss out on all things Murder: True Crime Stories! Instagram: @murdertruecrimepod | @Crimehouse TikTok: @Crimehouse Facebook: @crimehousestudios X: @crimehousemedia YouTube: @crimehousestudios To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Jeffrey Felix : Guarding the JuiceA Prison Guard Who Befriended O.j. Simpson Behind Bars Is To Write A Tell-all Book.The former football star is currently serving a prison sentence at a correctional facility in Nevada on charges of armed robbery and kidnapping relating to a sports memorabilia heist in Las Vegas in 2007.Prison employee Jeffrey Felix became a close confidante of Simpson during his time working at the Lovelock Correctional Center, and he is now detailing their friendship in a book titled Guarding the Juice.Felix, who retired from his role as a prison guard at the centre in September (15), tells the New York Post, "O.J. picked me out. He ended up trusting me... He said, 'You're like a brother to me'... He's such a nice guy, but, come on, we know he did it."The footballer-turned-actor was at the centre of a high-profile murder trial in 1995 after he was accused of fatally stabbing his wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ron Goldman.The headline-grabbing case ended in a not guilty verdict as Simpson was sensationally acquitted of the chargesBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-opperman-report--1198501/support.
05-19-25 - BR - MON - Nicole Brown Simpson's BDay Brings In OJ - 10 Prisoners Break Out Of New Orleans Jail Spawning Our New Character Prison Cookie BradySee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Note: "Act 1" was a separate published audio podcast.*Get a FREE 7 day trial to Patreon to "try it out."*Watch the show live, daily at 8AM EST on Twitch! Please click here to follow the page.Email the show on the Shoreliners Striping inbox: eric@ericzaneshow.comTopics:*Baseball offers a final "Fuck You" to Pete Rose.*Netflix rescues two more murderers.*Murder Lover Linda overjoyed with Menendez news.*The amazing tale of when Murder Lover Linda barged into the Nicole Brown Simpson crime scene during evidence gathering.*Eric's thoughts on parents having sex with their kids.*Eric refers to him being molested as not a molesting.*Absurd car-towing scene on a major road.*Theories about the NBA being rigged are stupid.Asshole of the DaySponsors:Adam Casari Realty, Impact Power Sports, Frank Fuss / My Policy Shop Insurance, Kings Room Barbershop, The Mario Flores Lakeshore Team of VanDyk Mortgage, Shoreliners Striping, Ervines Auto Repair Grand Rapids Hybrid & EV, TC PaintballInterested in advertising? Email eric@ericzaneshow.com and let me design a marketing plan for you.Contact: Shoreliners Striping inbox eric@ericzaneshow.comDiscord LinkEZSP TikTokSubscribe to my YouTube channelHire me on Cameo!Tshirts available herePlease subscribe, rate & write a review on Apple Podcastspatreon.com/ericzaneInstagram: ericzaneshowTwitterSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/the-eric-zane-show-podcast/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
In the season finale, a former juror and court participants recall the not guilty verdict for O.J. Simpson after nine months of testimony and only four and a half hours of jury deliberation. To catch up on the facts, CLICK HERE. (https://www.courttv.com/tag/oj-simpson/)Watch 24/7 Court TV LIVE Stream Today https://www.courttv.com/Join the Investigation Newsletter https://www.courttv.com/email/Court TV Podcast https://www.courttv.com/podcast/FOLLOW THE CASE:Facebook https://www.facebook.com/courttvTwitter/X https://twitter.com/CourtTVInstagram https://www.instagram.com/courttvnetwork/TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@courttvliveYouTube https://www.youtube.com/c/COURTTVWATCH +140 FREE TRIALS IN THE COURT TV ARCHIVEhttps://www.courttv.com/trials/HOW TO FIND COURT TVhttps://www.courttv.com/where-to-watch/
In this episode, courtroom participants recall the infamous moment when O.J. Simpson tried on the bloody gloves and how it affected the trial's outcome. It explores how the prosecution's mistakes, the media frenzy, and the "if it doesn't fit, you must acquit" argument swayed the jury. To catch up on the facts, CLICK HERE. (https://www.courttv.com/tag/oj-simpson/)Watch 24/7 Court TV LIVE Stream Today https://www.courttv.com/Join the Investigation Newsletter https://www.courttv.com/email/Court TV Podcast https://www.courttv.com/podcast/FOLLOW THE CASE:Facebook https://www.facebook.com/courttvTwitter/X https://twitter.com/CourtTVInstagram https://www.instagram.com/courttvnetwork/TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@courttvliveYouTube https://www.youtube.com/c/COURTTVWATCH +140 FREE TRIALS IN THE COURT TV ARCHIVEhttps://www.courttv.com/trials/HOW TO FIND COURT TVhttps://www.courttv.com/where-to-watch/
Floyd Russ, director of American Manhunt: OJ Simpson. The four-part docuseries investigates the shocking murder case that became a cultural phenomenon. Reality Life with Kate Casey What to Watch List: https://katecasey.substack.com Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/katecasey Twitter: https://twitter.com/katecasey Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/katecaseyca Tik Tok: http://www.tiktok.com/itskatecasey Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/113157919338245 Amazon List: https://www.amazon.com/shop/katecasey Like it to Know It: https://www.shopltk.com/explore/katecaseySee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Comedian Jeff Dunham returns to talk about his new holiday comedian special, “Scrooged Up”. They also discuss the self-driving capabilities of his Tesla Cybertruck, his Batmobile collection, the controversy surrounding the Monkeemobile, riding in a Waymo, picking up hitchhikers, and alley walkers. Next, Jason “Mayhem” Miller reads the news including stories about the UnitedHealthcare CEO being executed by a gunman in NYC, an ex-bodyguard claims that O.J. Simpson admitted to killing Nicole Brown Simpson on tape, and a lawsuit against the New York Education Department moving forward after parents say children were discriminated against. Then, Ed Elson joins the show to talk about co-hosting the Prof G Markets Podcast with Scott Galloway, why home ownership is becoming a “pipe dream” for young people, how Trump's tariff plan could make housing prices skyrocket, and the difference in leverage between the longshoremen and writers strikes. For more with Jeff Dunham: ● NEW HOLIDAY SPECIAL: Scrooged Up - available now on Amazon Prime. ● INSTAGRAM, X, & TIKTOK: @jeffdunham ● WEBSITE: jeffdunham.com ● LIVE DATES: ○ Planet Hollywood Live - Las Vegas, NV: December 8th ○ Cure Insurance Arena - Trenton, NJ: December 11th For more with Ed Elson: ● PODCASTS: Prof G Markets and First Time Founders ● INSTAGRAM: @ed_elson_ ● X: @edels0n Thank you for supporting our sponsors: ● Hims.com/ADAM ● allfamilypharma.com/adam ● HomeChef.com/ADAM ● http://ShopMando.com, use code: ADAM ● http://OReillyAuto.com/Adam