Share

cover art for Nightly News Roundup for May 5, 2026

Nightly News Roundup

Nightly News Roundup for May 5, 2026

Season 3, Ep. 74

Marco Rubio's stated strategic objective in the Strait of Hormuz is to recreate conditions that existed before America destroyed them — full stop — while Big Oil banks billions monthly, Iran hits the UAE twice in 48 hours, 20,000 sailors remain stranded, and Pete Hegseth insists the ceasefire holds; gas prices reached $4.48 nationally, up 41% since February, and Rubio told Americans they're "very fortunate," supporting the claim with an unsourced $8-per-gallon hypothetical he produced without evidence; Trump accused Pope Leo XIV of endorsing Iranian nuclear weapons because the Pope called for peace, Rubio flew to the Vatican to repair the relationship, then told reporters en route he essentially agrees with Trump; Senate Republicans buried $1 billion for "security enhancements" tied to Trump's $400 million White House ballroom inside an immigration enforcement bill, the same ballroom Trump swore would cost taxpayers "not one dime"; Pete Hegseth confirmed at a Pentagon briefing that Iran lacks kamikaze dolphins while declining to confirm whether the U.S. possesses them, General Dan Caine cited Austin Powers, all during an active shooting war with 20,000 stranded sailors; the Trump administration shuttered the legally required independent office investigating civil rights abuses in immigration detention as use of force against detainees hit unprecedented levels, took the complaint website offline, and blamed Congress for a closure Congress didn't mandate; and Kash Patel, possibly days from dismissal as FBI Director, spent two hours with Sean Hannity on UFO files, AI crime-stopping, and a secret burn bag in a room absent from FBI headquarters blueprints. The dolphins denied. The diplomats departed. The dollars danced. Tape rolls.

More episodes

View all episodes

  • 93. Nightly News Roundup for June 17, 2026

    04:28||Season 3, Ep. 93
    Trump swatted a fly and it was the smartest thing on stage. Vance took the blame before the ink dried. Electric bills hit survival territory and nobody's coming to help. The Fed chair tanked the Dow on day one. A baby died over diapers and the cop went on paid leave. Some nights the news writes the eulogy. Other nights it just writes the bill. Tape rolls.
  • 92. Nightly News Roundup for June 16, 2026

    05:35||Season 3, Ep. 92
    Kash Patel blew an active terror investigation for an X post. The Trump administration's answer to medical debt is more debt. Congress gave veterans a raise by cutting their benefits and named it accordingly. The DOJ's civil rights division sued a city for compensating victims of racism. The Reflecting Pool is a chemical hazard. Special education got shuffled to agencies that are also gutted. DOGE cut $15 million, broke a six-decade eradication program, and now it costs $1 billion to fix. Some days the satire writes itself. Other days it eats livestock alive. Tape rolls.
  • 91. Nightly News Roundup for June 15, 2026

    04:44||Season 3, Ep. 91
    Trump closed an Iran deal worth $324 billion for a shipping lane Iran already owned. The Reflecting Pool turned green four days after a $14.2 million fix. RFK Jr. broke the vaccine committee and now needs it back before flu season. Rural voters are figuring out the math. A B-52 went down at Edwards. Eight crew members are believed dead. Some days the satire writes itself. Other days it crashes into the Mojave Desert. Tape rolls.
  • 90. Nightly News Roundup for June 12, 2026

    04:39||Season 3, Ep. 90
    The Situation Room got a new agenda: how do you spin a birthday card where the President signed his name across a cartoon woman's crotch as a gift to a child rapist. The Justice Department memo was supposed to close the Epstein file. Instead it blew the lid off a septic tank. JD Vance believes in a secret cabal of elite predators — his colleagues confirmed it — his colleagues are also the ones running the country. Someone floated pardoning Ghislaine Maxwell and multiple people had to explain out loud why that would be bad. They had to explain this. To each other. In the White House. Tape rolls.
  • 89. Nightly News Roundup for June 11, 2026

    04:47||Season 3, Ep. 89
    Trump called off an airstrike he announced that morning and declared victory anyway. SpaceX went public at $1.77 trillion and Elon Musk may be a trillionaire by Friday. A housing official briefly ran national intelligence before Congress intervened. The Post Office wants your voter rolls or it's keeping your ballot. Someone wrote a slogan in the White House lawn grass and now the feds are doing forensics on turf. A political assassin pleaded guilty in Minnesota. A UFC octagon on the White House lawn may or may not survive a federal judge. Tape rolls.
  • 88. Nightly News Roundup for June 10, 2026

    05:06||Season 3, Ep. 88
    A millennial landlord got handed America's intelligence apparatus with orders to gut it before anyone qualified shows up. The Strategic Petroleum Reserve is nearly the emptiest it's been since Reagan, because the war that's draining it also closed the oil corridor it was built to protect. Trump told reporters he loves 4.2 percent inflation, then accidentally declassified a covert operation in the same sentence. Measles is back and accelerating, the public health funding to fight it is gone, and the guy who killed the funding vaccine-shamed the country for 20 years. Three Epstein file Republicans are politically dead. A Russian military officer's car exploded in the same Moscow suburb where Ukraine already killed a general. And a squirrel in Utah started a wildfire. Kevin O'Leary was unavailable for comment. Tape rolls.
  • 87. Nightly News Roundup for June 9, 2026

    06:25||Season 3, Ep. 87
    Donald Trump bombed Iran over a helicopter he called "not a big deal," which puts the word "proportional" in serious need of a lawyer. The Trump family rang the Nasdaq bell, pocketed $500 million, and watched the stock crater to 68 cents — the White House says there's no conflict of interest, which is the most confident thing anyone has said about a bell and a drain in American history. Madison Square Garden booed the president so loud it ate the national anthem alive, and he responded at 2 a.m. on Truth Social like a man who definitely doesn't need this. Kash Patel fired analysts for a memo their own bureau killed three years ago, because the purge doesn't need a reason, just a list. Jared Kushner's Albanian yacht marina is already destroying a nature reserve that hasn't been assessed yet. Russia threatened nuclear war over a NATO training exercise in Finland, which tracks. And a World Cup special report. Tape rolls.
  • 86. Nightly News Roundup for June 8, 2026

    05:58||Season 3, Ep. 86
    The Middle East paused its war because Donald Trump asked nicely, which is either diplomacy or a hostage situation depending on your timezone. The Pentagon flagged its closest ally as a critical spy threat while simultaneously handing a convicted Capitol rioter the keys to classified counter-terrorism operations — both in the same week, both without apparent irony. Elon Musk's rocket company, which has never turned a profit, will land in your 401(k) Thursday whether you want it or not. Todd Blanche became attorney general by doing crimes for his boss and calling it public service. The Arctic went unsold. The World Cup ref went home. Mitchell Robinson said "cool, I guess," and that's the most coherent thing anyone in power said all week. Tape rolls.
  • 85. Nightly News Roundup for May 29, 2026

    07:12||Season 3, Ep. 85
    A federal judge told Donald Trump that Congress named the Kennedy Center after an assassinated president, not a real estate developer, and it intends to keep it that way. Trump declared victory over Iran; Iran called it fiction; the Strait of Hormuz remains the world’s most expensive group chat. America’s 250th birthday concert collapsed in 48 hours as real artists fled and fictional ones followed — Cap’n Geech, the Hex Girls, Duke Silver, and Rex Manning all drew lines that Vanilla Ice could not. Pam Bondi spent a closed-door congressional deposition pointing at Todd Blanche, walked out, and lied about it on X. A North Carolina Republican filed a bill permitting citizens to shoot women seeking abortions, which means a rapist could legally kill his victim for seeking one. The post-9/11 surveillance apparatus is now monitoring people who attend Tesla protests and take photographs near server farms. Tape rolls.