
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Episode 1,112 of The Clay Edwards Show (Friday, December 5, 2025) – Episode Summary
Clay opens the show reacting to the breaking news that Netflix has won the bidding war to acquire Warner Brothers Discovery’s studio assets (including HBO and the Max streaming service) in a roughly $72 billion deal. He calls it one of the worst possible outcomes for fans of quality entertainment, predicting that Netflix’s track record of low-effort originals, abrupt endings, and heavy ideological slant will now infect iconic Warner franchises. He laments the loss of Taylor Sheridan (creator of Yellowstone, Tulsa King, Landman, etc.) from Paramount and worries that further media consolidation will kill competition in both film and professional wrestling (pointing to WWE’s existing Netflix deal and the risk that AEW loses its TV home).The bulk of the first hour is spent on hard-hitting cultural and local-crime commentary:Strong criticism of rap/hip-hop culture and its decades-long negative impact on segments of the black community, arguing that stereotypes are earned, not given, and that “race reality is not racism.”
Second hour shifts to national stories: Celebration of the Trump administration’s aggressive military action against fentanyl-laden narco terrorist speedboats, calling it “the war on drugs done right” and mocking Democrats who are defending the traffickers.
Other quick hits: David L. Archie caught on video throwing punches at a St. Andrews private-school basketball game (the same security guard who went viral getting punched at last year’s Mistletoe Marketplace brawl took the hits again).
Throughout the episode Clay maintains his signature unfiltered, no-sugar-coating style: blunt on crime, culture, media consolidation, the drug war, and political grifters, while repeatedly telling listeners he speaks this way “because I love you and have to live around you.” The show closes with Clay promising to “land the plane” strong and return Monday.
By Clay Edwards4.5
105105 ratings
Episode 1,112 of The Clay Edwards Show (Friday, December 5, 2025) – Episode Summary
Clay opens the show reacting to the breaking news that Netflix has won the bidding war to acquire Warner Brothers Discovery’s studio assets (including HBO and the Max streaming service) in a roughly $72 billion deal. He calls it one of the worst possible outcomes for fans of quality entertainment, predicting that Netflix’s track record of low-effort originals, abrupt endings, and heavy ideological slant will now infect iconic Warner franchises. He laments the loss of Taylor Sheridan (creator of Yellowstone, Tulsa King, Landman, etc.) from Paramount and worries that further media consolidation will kill competition in both film and professional wrestling (pointing to WWE’s existing Netflix deal and the risk that AEW loses its TV home).The bulk of the first hour is spent on hard-hitting cultural and local-crime commentary:Strong criticism of rap/hip-hop culture and its decades-long negative impact on segments of the black community, arguing that stereotypes are earned, not given, and that “race reality is not racism.”
Second hour shifts to national stories: Celebration of the Trump administration’s aggressive military action against fentanyl-laden narco terrorist speedboats, calling it “the war on drugs done right” and mocking Democrats who are defending the traffickers.
Other quick hits: David L. Archie caught on video throwing punches at a St. Andrews private-school basketball game (the same security guard who went viral getting punched at last year’s Mistletoe Marketplace brawl took the hits again).
Throughout the episode Clay maintains his signature unfiltered, no-sugar-coating style: blunt on crime, culture, media consolidation, the drug war, and political grifters, while repeatedly telling listeners he speaks this way “because I love you and have to live around you.” The show closes with Clay promising to “land the plane” strong and return Monday.

26,022 Listeners

62,628 Listeners

528 Listeners

2,571 Listeners

1,206 Listeners

66,979 Listeners

5,886 Listeners

327 Listeners

40,385 Listeners

8,963 Listeners

16,898 Listeners

11,339 Listeners

455 Listeners

341 Listeners

164 Listeners