499 - Iran Forever, Belfast Riots, & College Commencement

499 - Iran Forever, Belfast Riots, & College Commencement

Tim Dillon argues the U.S. should secretly flee the Iran War and hold a press conference claiming total victory — because Americans are too delusional to notice the difference.

Jun 13, 2026 1:19:30 Difficulty: Beginner Played

TL;DR

Tim Dillon riffs on JD Vance's claim that the Iran War will be "history in a year," arguing the U.S. should declare fake victory and retreat. He reacts to Knicks fans assaulting Spurs fans, Belfast riots sparked by a migrant knife attack, Noah Baumbach's self-indulgent Vassar commencement speech, Bari Weiss reportedly running CBS News from a security-locked suite while being lined up to take over CNN, and a body-positivity cult with a suspected predatory founder. The single most useful takeaway: governments that ignore democratic sentiment on immigration will eventually face uncontrollable street-level violence.

#Iran War exit strategy #Strait of Hormuz oil trade #Belfast immigration riots #Bari Weiss CBS CNN takeover #Noah Baumbach commencement #community college graduation #Elon Musk trillionaire #LGBTQ overreach backlash #EU supranational governance #sports fan violence #American delusion #democratic deficit immigration #Iran War #JD Vance #Belfast riots #immigration #Bari Weiss #CBS News #CNN #Noah Baumbach #Vassar #commencement speech #Knicks #NBA Finals #Strait of Hormuz #Elon Musk #community college #EU sovereignty #LGBTQ backlash #sports violence #Belfast #satire

Tim Dillon covers JD Vance's claim the Iran War ends in a year, NBA Finals fan violence, Belfast anti-immigration riots after a migrant knife attack, Noah Baumbach's Vassar commencement speech, and Bari Weiss's expanding media empire.

Chapter list
  • The episode opens with a Mint Mobile pre-roll advertisement voiced as Ryan Reynolds, pitching every plan at $15 per month including unlimited, with the hook that your current big wireless bill is a 'mystery thriller with a shocking twist.' Standard upfront payment terms and data throttling disclosures follow. This is the only content before Tim Dillon's voice enters.

  • The episode's real content opens with Tim firing directly at JD Vance's optimistic prediction that the Iran War will be finished within a year. Rather than sharing the Vice President's confidence, Tim frames it as a confession: one more year of a war that's already a mess, fought without a coherent endgame. He catalogues the strategic dead-ends — repeated threats followed by nothing, the Strait of Hormuz staying closed, and the Iranians openly telling the U.S. to go to hell. He draws a broader lesson from Ukraine, Afghanistan, and Vietnam: wars don't work anymore. You can't defeat a motivated population through force alone, and even if you 'win,' you're stuck governing a hostile territory. The real power in 2024, Tim argues, is China's model — TikTok, Belt and Road, soft economic infiltration — not missiles. The episode's comedic thesis crystallises here: America must secretly withdraw its forces in the dead of night, then hold a triumphant press conference claiming Iran has been 'destroyed.' It's shameless, delusional, and probably the most American thing Tim can imagine — which is precisely why he's confident it could work.

  • Tim pivots to a lengthy sponsor read for Ultra Pouches, a nootropic energy product positioned as a nicotine-free, caffeine-free alternative using ingredients like L-theanine, Alpha GPC, and vitamins B6 and B12. He leans into the personal testimonial format, describing keeping them by his computer and promising 1–2 hours of smooth focus. The code TIMDILLON gets new customers 15% off at takeultra.com. A brief scripted 1-800-Contacts ad follows, playing out through a yoga class scenario before returning to the main show.

  • The Iran War discussion segues naturally when Tim imagines the war being launched to protect New York from a nuclear attack — right before the Knicks are in the Finals. This launches a riff on fan violence: cops in riot gear on horses, people being stomped for wearing a Spurs jersey, men having their ribs broken by a mob after a basketball game. Tim's angle is unusual — rather than outrage, he expresses a form of wistful envy. He can't emotionally access the tribal devotion that would lead someone to say 'remember after Game 6, we killed that guy' with genuine fondness. He's morally against it, he insists, but he finds it fascinating. The bit lands on an almost philosophical note: what does it say about a country's public discourse if the people who can't explain the Iran War are simultaneously willing to commit attempted murder over a basketball game?

  • Tim turns to Belfast, where a Sudanese migrant was filmed attacking and trying to behead a man on a residential street. He plays the video on the show, offering a darkly comedic running commentary — including a digression about the excellent pizza at Flout Belfast — before pivoting to the riots that followed: water cannons, bus burnings, blocked roads, migrants being evicted from homes. He draws a careful distinction: the violence against innocent people is wrong, full stop, just as BLM riot violence was wrong. But the underlying cause is democratic desperation — polling consistently shows populations across Europe don't want current immigration levels, yet supranational EU governance overrides national sovereignty. He argues this is how societies reach boiling points. Tim's sharpest observation is the EU-as-problem framing: Brussels setting immigration levels, monetary policy, and emissions standards for sovereign nations like Ireland, without meaningful consent from the people who live there. People who have no democratic recourse will find non-democratic ones. The analysis is blunt and politically unorthodox, refusing to fully align with either a progressive or right-wing framing.

  • Two back-to-back sponsor reads fill this segment. Morgan & Morgan is given an extended pitch: America's largest personal injury law firm, 100+ offices, 1,000+ lawyers, over $30 billion recovered for 500,000-plus clients, including a headline $644 million Florida verdict. Tim ties it to Belfast with a joke about the man being attacked not having access to Morgan Morgan in Northern Ireland. Hims ED follows with a more subdued personal-empowerment read about accessible online ED treatment, directing listeners to hims.com/TIM.

  • Tim introduces the Noah Baumbach segment after mentioning Elon Musk's trillion-dollar net worth, lamenting that Baumbach got a Vassar standing ovation while Tim can't even get a community college booking. The episode plays clips of the actual speech, in which Baumbach recounts receiving a stinging rejection letter for a college play he wrote at age 20, then re-reading it at age 45, still wounded. Tim is baffled by the crowd's rapturous reaction. The speech's most remarkable moment — Baumbach revealing he'd looked the critic up and discovered he'd died, 'putting to rest hopes of inviting him to the Oscars' — sends Tim into genuine disgust. Petulant, childish, and gross, he declares. He's careful to say Baumbach is genuinely talented, but he's furious that this is what passes for wisdom at elite institutions: a famous director settling a score with a corpse in front of a crowd of 22-year-olds. The commencement speech genre itself comes under fire — it's either masturbatory clichés like Baumbach's, Tim argues, or someone menacing you into AI adoption. He prefers the latter for its honesty.

  • Having demolished Baumbach, Tim constructs his own speech — the one he'd give if booked at Fresno Community College. He arrives underdressed (suits are for funerals now), greets the graduates, and immediately opens with the economic reality: Elon Musk is worth $1 trillion, $100 million is 'a joke,' a smoothie costs $45, and an Uber to a hypothetical suicide pod runs $89. Their generation has been dispossessed. The economy that was once a ladder is now a series of walls. Many of them will snap, he says — not over years, but quickly, in traffic on a Tuesday after the 15th job rejection. The speech spirals into a call to action that he refuses to explicitly complete, implying that their elders have left them no peaceful options. Then the show locates the actual Fresno City College commencement video featuring Paul Calvo, a Stanford electrical engineering grad who began at Fresno. Calvo's speech is devastating in its own way: he tells the crowd some of them came from prison cells, from homes where no one went to college, and are still trying to outrun past versions of themselves. Tim is stunned. The real speech, he declares, is more haunting than his joke.

  • Two consumer product sponsor reads occupy this chapter. HexClad cookware is pitched as combining stainless steel performance with non-stick convenience, citing 1 million customers and over 550,000 five-star reviews. Tim claims to own and use them, riffing about cooking for friends on Skid Row. The exclusive listener discount is 10% off at hexclad.com/tim. Helix Sleep follows with Tim endorsing his Midnight Deluxe mattress, highlighting a 120-night sleep trial, limited lifetime warranty, and a Fourth of July sale running June 12–July 6 at up to 30% off Elite mattresses. Both reads are personalised and comedically extended.

  • Scott Pelley's departure from 60 Minutes launches Tim into the Bari Weiss segment. He reports that Weiss, as CBS News editor-in-chief, has sequestered herself in a locked, security-guarded suite on the 6th floor of the CBS Broadcast Center, refusing to interact with general newsroom staff. Tim draws the parallel to Dick Cheney operating from an undisclosed location after 9/11. The absurdity deepens: rather than this arrangement indicating failure, Weiss is reportedly being rewarded with CNN. Tim cites The Hill's reporting that she'll extend her editorial oversight to CNN once the Warner Bros.-Paramount deal finalises. His satirical breakdown — comparing her to a prison inmate in 'solitary confinement' for 'starting too many wars with the gangs on the yard' — lands as one of the episode's sharpest comedic runs. His underlying argument is serious: a figure who has proven unable to work alongside a newsroom staff is being handed increasing power over major journalistic institutions, and no one seems to think this is a problem.

  • The Bonnie Blue segment opens with Tim's genuinely puzzled question: is this person real? She's pregnant, publicly inviting the public to celebrate her baby by urinating on her, and reportedly drinking at nightclubs while pregnant. Tim is not interested in standard moral condemnation; he's asking a structural question. He connects the spectacle to a broader cultural dynamic: the LGBTQ movement has pushed so far so fast — on childhood gender transitions, on replacing 'mother' with 'gestating person' in New York legislation — that it's exhausting ordinary people and actively eroding the gains the movement spent decades building. He notes that polling shows approval of gay marriage is falling, and attributes it not to resurgent homophobia but to overreach. His prescription is unusual for a gay comic: you have to give people peace. You have to allow for disagreement, for religious dissent, for people who don't want to affirm every position to not feel they're being coerced. If you don't, he argues, you'll create the exact backlash you're trying to prevent — and you can already see it happening.

  • The episode closes with a story about a 'Paradise' body-positivity community for plus-size women whose founder — apparently inspired by seeing an overweight woman at Disney World as a child — is now accused of predatory behavior toward members. Tim plays video clips from the community and, uncharacteristically, says he doesn't want to know the bad news. He'd rather believe it was wholesome. The admission is touching and strange in context. He then pulls the episode's threads together in a closing monologue: Belfast burning, the haunting community college speech about prison graduates, a man building a cult for fat women, and Bari Weiss getting a second network. He gives society ten years, roughly. He ends on a note about Northern Ireland specifically — he loves Ireland, he doesn't feel a mystical connection to it the way Bill Maher claims, but he hates seeing it burn. His final argument: if democratic systems keep failing to reflect popular will on immigration, everyone will need to build their own isolation bunker. The episode closes without a formal outro.

Strait of Hormuz
A narrow waterway between Iran and Oman connecting the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman; roughly 20–25% of global maritime oil trade passes through it, making it a critical geopolitical chokepoint.
Belt and Road Initiative
China's global infrastructure investment strategy, building ports, roads, railways, and institutions across Asia, Africa, and beyond to extend Beijing's economic and political influence.
Supranational
Describing an authority that sits above individual nation-states and can override national policy; Tim Dillon uses it to describe the EU's power over member states like Ireland.
PEOC
Presidential Emergency Operations Center — a secure underground bunker beneath the White House used during national security crises; invoked by Tim Dillon as a comparison to Bari Weiss's secured suite.
Nootropics
Compounds — natural or synthetic — claimed to enhance cognitive function such as focus, memory, and mental clarity; referenced in the Ultra Pouches sponsor segment.
Adaptogens
Natural substances (often herbal) believed to help the body adapt to stress and restore physiological balance; featured in Ultra Pouches alongside nootropics.
Cotton Mather Protestantism
A reference to the extreme Puritan moral severity of 17th-century Massachusetts minister Cotton Mather; Tim Dillon uses it to describe a potential cultural backlash toward strict religious conservatism.
Petulant
Childishly sulky or bad-tempered; Tim Dillon applies it to Noah Baumbach for using a commencement speech to relitigate a 30-year-old rejection.
Balaclava
A full-face knit mask leaving only the eyes exposed; commonly associated with rioters or paramilitaries in Northern Ireland — used here in a darkly comic aside.
Gamesmanship
The use of dubious or manipulative tactics to gain advantage, short of outright rule-breaking; Tim Dillon uses it to describe how the Pentagon manages press conferences and casualty information during wars.
Polymarket
A decentralized prediction market platform where users bet on real-world events using cryptocurrency; Tim Dillon mentions it as a potential financial lifeline for struggling graduates.
DEI
Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion — institutional policies aimed at broadening representation; Tim Dillon uses the acronym sardonically in relation to the community college commencement speaker's background.
Commencement speech
A formal graduation address delivered to a class of graduates; the episode contrasts elite university commencements (e.g. Vassar) with community college ones as a lens on class and aspiration.
Ensconced
Settled or established securely in a position or place, often with a sense of comfortable entrenchment; used to describe Bari Weiss's fortified position within CBS.
Sensory deprivation tank
A lightproof, soundproof tank filled with body-temperature salt water used for flotation therapy; Tim Dillon uses it sarcastically to describe Bari Weiss's isolated office arrangement.

Chapter 2 · 00:30

JD Vance Says the Iran War Will Be 'History in a Year'

The episode's real content opens with Tim firing directly at JD Vance's optimistic prediction that the Iran War will be finished within a year. Rather than sharing the Vice President's confidence, Tim frames it as a confession: one more year of a war that's already a mess, fought without a coherent endgame. He catalogues the strategic dead-ends — repeated threats followed by nothing, the Strait of Hormuz staying closed, and the Iranians openly telling the U.S. to go to hell. He draws a broader lesson from Ukraine, Afghanistan, and Vietnam: wars don't work anymore. You can't defeat a motivated population through force alone, and even if you 'win,' you're stuck governing a hostile territory. The real power in 2024, Tim argues, is China's model — TikTok, Belt and Road, soft economic infiltration — not missiles. The episode's comedic thesis crystallises here: America must secretly withdraw its forces in the dead of night, then hold a triumphant press conference claiming Iran has been 'destroyed.' It's shameless, delusional, and probably the most American thing Tim can imagine — which is precisely why he's confident it could work.

Claims made here

Between 20% and 27% of the world's petroleum and crude oil passes through the Strait of Hormuz.

Tim Dillon no source cited

Approximately 20 million barrels of oil per day — about 25% of all global maritime oil trade — flows through the Strait of Hormuz.

Tim Dillon no source cited

News
Data point 25%

499 - Iran Forever, Belfast Riots, & College Commencement · Jun 13, 2026 News

Twenty million barrels of oil per day — about 25% of all global maritime oil trade — flows through the Strait of Hormuz. Closing it hurts the world economy far more than any missile can, which is exactly why conventional military thinking is obsolete.

Chapter 3 · 10:40

Ultra Pouches & 1-800-Contacts Ad Reads

Tim pivots to a lengthy sponsor read for Ultra Pouches, a nootropic energy product positioned as a nicotine-free, caffeine-free alternative using ingredients like L-theanine, Alpha GPC, and vitamins B6 and B12. He leans into the personal testimonial format, describing keeping them by his computer and promising 1–2 hours of smooth focus. The code TIMDILLON gets new customers 15% off at takeultra.com. A brief scripted 1-800-Contacts ad follows, playing out through a yoga class scenario before returning to the main show.

Claims made here

The UK closes train lines between rival towns on football match days to prevent fan-on-fan violence.

Tim Dillon no source cited

Chapter 4 · 21:20

Knicks Fans Assault Spurs Fans — And Tim Dillon Is Almost Jealous

The Iran War discussion segues naturally when Tim imagines the war being launched to protect New York from a nuclear attack — right before the Knicks are in the Finals. This launches a riff on fan violence: cops in riot gear on horses, people being stomped for wearing a Spurs jersey, men having their ribs broken by a mob after a basketball game. Tim's angle is unusual — rather than outrage, he expresses a form of wistful envy. He can't emotionally access the tribal devotion that would lead someone to say 'remember after Game 6, we killed that guy' with genuine fondness. He's morally against it, he insists, but he finds it fascinating. The bit lands on an almost philosophical note: what does it say about a country's public discourse if the people who can't explain the Iran War are simultaneously willing to commit attempted murder over a basketball game?

Chapter 5 · 23:00

Belfast Riots: A Sudanese Migrant Knife Attack Ignites Northern Ireland

Tim turns to Belfast, where a Sudanese migrant was filmed attacking and trying to behead a man on a residential street. He plays the video on the show, offering a darkly comedic running commentary — including a digression about the excellent pizza at Flout Belfast — before pivoting to the riots that followed: water cannons, bus burnings, blocked roads, migrants being evicted from homes. He draws a careful distinction: the violence against innocent people is wrong, full stop, just as BLM riot violence was wrong. But the underlying cause is democratic desperation — polling consistently shows populations across Europe don't want current immigration levels, yet supranational EU governance overrides national sovereignty. He argues this is how societies reach boiling points. Tim's sharpest observation is the EU-as-problem framing: Brussels setting immigration levels, monetary policy, and emissions standards for sovereign nations like Ireland, without meaningful consent from the people who live there. People who have no democratic recourse will find non-democratic ones. The analysis is blunt and politically unorthodox, refusing to fully align with either a progressive or right-wing framing.

Chapter 6 · 36:10

Morgan & Morgan, Hims ED Ad Reads

Two back-to-back sponsor reads fill this segment. Morgan & Morgan is given an extended pitch: America's largest personal injury law firm, 100+ offices, 1,000+ lawyers, over $30 billion recovered for 500,000-plus clients, including a headline $644 million Florida verdict. Tim ties it to Belfast with a joke about the man being attacked not having access to Morgan Morgan in Northern Ireland. Hims ED follows with a more subdued personal-empowerment read about accessible online ED treatment, directing listeners to hims.com/TIM.

Claims made here

Morgan & Morgan is America's largest personal injury law firm, with over 100 offices and more than 1,000 lawyers.

Tim Dillon no source cited

Morgan & Morgan has recovered over $30 billion for more than 500,000 clients.

Tim Dillon no source cited

Morgan & Morgan won a $644 million verdict in Florida after the defense argued the victim and his wife deserved nothing.

Tim Dillon no source cited

Elon Musk has reached a net worth of $1 trillion, making him a trillionaire.

Tim Dillon no source cited

Chapter 7 · 39:40

Noah Baumbach's Vassar Commencement Speech Is Petulant Slop

Tim introduces the Noah Baumbach segment after mentioning Elon Musk's trillion-dollar net worth, lamenting that Baumbach got a Vassar standing ovation while Tim can't even get a community college booking. The episode plays clips of the actual speech, in which Baumbach recounts receiving a stinging rejection letter for a college play he wrote at age 20, then re-reading it at age 45, still wounded. Tim is baffled by the crowd's rapturous reaction. The speech's most remarkable moment — Baumbach revealing he'd looked the critic up and discovered he'd died, 'putting to rest hopes of inviting him to the Oscars' — sends Tim into genuine disgust. Petulant, childish, and gross, he declares. He's careful to say Baumbach is genuinely talented, but he's furious that this is what passes for wisdom at elite institutions: a famous director settling a score with a corpse in front of a crowd of 22-year-olds. The commencement speech genre itself comes under fire — it's either masturbatory clichés like Baumbach's, Tim argues, or someone menacing you into AI adoption. He prefers the latter for its honesty.

Business
Data point $1T

499 - Iran Forever, Belfast Riots, & College Commencement · Jun 13, 2026

Elon Musk has reportedly crossed the trillion-dollar net worth threshold, which Tim Dillon used as a comedic touchstone for his mock commencement speech about economic inequality.

Chapter 8 · 47:20

Tim's Mock Fresno Community College Commencement Address

Having demolished Baumbach, Tim constructs his own speech — the one he'd give if booked at Fresno Community College. He arrives underdressed (suits are for funerals now), greets the graduates, and immediately opens with the economic reality: Elon Musk is worth $1 trillion, $100 million is 'a joke,' a smoothie costs $45, and an Uber to a hypothetical suicide pod runs $89. Their generation has been dispossessed. The economy that was once a ladder is now a series of walls. Many of them will snap, he says — not over years, but quickly, in traffic on a Tuesday after the 15th job rejection. The speech spirals into a call to action that he refuses to explicitly complete, implying that their elders have left them no peaceful options. Then the show locates the actual Fresno City College commencement video featuring Paul Calvo, a Stanford electrical engineering grad who began at Fresno. Calvo's speech is devastating in its own way: he tells the crowd some of them came from prison cells, from homes where no one went to college, and are still trying to outrun past versions of themselves. Tim is stunned. The real speech, he declares, is more haunting than his joke.

Chapter 9 · 54:00

HexClad & Helix Sleep Ad Reads

Two consumer product sponsor reads occupy this chapter. HexClad cookware is pitched as combining stainless steel performance with non-stick convenience, citing 1 million customers and over 550,000 five-star reviews. Tim claims to own and use them, riffing about cooking for friends on Skid Row. The exclusive listener discount is 10% off at hexclad.com/tim. Helix Sleep follows with Tim endorsing his Midnight Deluxe mattress, highlighting a 120-night sleep trial, limited lifetime warranty, and a Fourth of July sale running June 12–July 6 at up to 30% off Elite mattresses. Both reads are personalised and comedically extended.

Claims made here

HexClad cookware has more than 1 million customers and over 550,000 five-star reviews.

Tim Dillon no source cited

The Helix Sleep mattress comes with a 120-night sleep trial and a limited lifetime warranty.

Tim Dillon no source cited

Chapter 10 · 1:01:30

Bari Weiss Runs CBS News from a Bunker — and Is Getting CNN Too

Scott Pelley's departure from 60 Minutes launches Tim into the Bari Weiss segment. He reports that Weiss, as CBS News editor-in-chief, has sequestered herself in a locked, security-guarded suite on the 6th floor of the CBS Broadcast Center, refusing to interact with general newsroom staff. Tim draws the parallel to Dick Cheney operating from an undisclosed location after 9/11. The absurdity deepens: rather than this arrangement indicating failure, Weiss is reportedly being rewarded with CNN. Tim cites The Hill's reporting that she'll extend her editorial oversight to CNN once the Warner Bros.-Paramount deal finalises. His satirical breakdown — comparing her to a prison inmate in 'solitary confinement' for 'starting too many wars with the gangs on the yard' — lands as one of the episode's sharpest comedic runs. His underlying argument is serious: a figure who has proven unable to work alongside a newsroom staff is being handed increasing power over major journalistic institutions, and no one seems to think this is a problem.

Claims made here

Bari Weiss has been working out of a secured, locked suite on the 6th floor of the CBS Broadcast Center in Manhattan.

Tim Dillon Reports cited by Tim Dillon on-air; attributed to general media coverage

Bari Weiss is expected to extend her editorial oversight to CNN once the Warner Bros.-Paramount deal is finalized.

Tim Dillon The Hill

Chapter 11 · 1:09:40

Bonnie Blue, LGBTQ Overreach, and the Pendulum Swinging Back

The Bonnie Blue segment opens with Tim's genuinely puzzled question: is this person real? She's pregnant, publicly inviting the public to celebrate her baby by urinating on her, and reportedly drinking at nightclubs while pregnant. Tim is not interested in standard moral condemnation; he's asking a structural question. He connects the spectacle to a broader cultural dynamic: the LGBTQ movement has pushed so far so fast — on childhood gender transitions, on replacing 'mother' with 'gestating person' in New York legislation — that it's exhausting ordinary people and actively eroding the gains the movement spent decades building. He notes that polling shows approval of gay marriage is falling, and attributes it not to resurgent homophobia but to overreach. His prescription is unusual for a gay comic: you have to give people peace. You have to allow for disagreement, for religious dissent, for people who don't want to affirm every position to not feel they're being coerced. If you don't, he argues, you'll create the exact backlash you're trying to prevent — and you can already see it happening.

Claims made here

Public approval of gay marriage and of gay people generally is declining in recent polling.

Tim Dillon no source cited

No indexed bits in this chapter.

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2 / 12 cited (17%)

Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.

Approximately 20 million barrels of oil per day — about 25% of all global maritime oil trade — flows through the Strait of Hormuz.

Tim Dillon no source cited

Between 20% and 27% of the world's petroleum and crude oil passes through the Strait of Hormuz.

Tim Dillon no source cited

The UK closes train lines between rival towns on football match days to prevent fan-on-fan violence.

Tim Dillon no source cited

Morgan & Morgan is America's largest personal injury law firm, with over 100 offices and more than 1,000 lawyers.

Tim Dillon no source cited

Morgan & Morgan has recovered over $30 billion for more than 500,000 clients.

Tim Dillon no source cited

Morgan & Morgan won a $644 million verdict in Florida after the defense argued the victim and his wife deserved nothing.

Tim Dillon no source cited

Bari Weiss has been working out of a secured, locked suite on the 6th floor of the CBS Broadcast Center in Manhattan.

Tim Dillon Reports cited by Tim Dillon on-air; attributed to general media coverage

Bari Weiss is expected to extend her editorial oversight to CNN once the Warner Bros.-Paramount deal is finalized.

Tim Dillon The Hill

Public approval of gay marriage and of gay people generally is declining in recent polling.

Tim Dillon no source cited

HexClad cookware has more than 1 million customers and over 550,000 five-star reviews.

Tim Dillon no source cited

The Helix Sleep mattress comes with a 120-night sleep trial and a limited lifetime warranty.

Tim Dillon no source cited

Elon Musk has reached a net worth of $1 trillion, making him a trillionaire.

Tim Dillon no source cited