• Meta & Microsoft Layoffs, Trump Gold Card Flop, CBS Ratings Collapse
    Apr 24 2026

    TJ Walker breaks down three revealing stories about work, politics, and media. Microsoft is offering early retirement buyouts to about 7% of its U.S. workforce, while Meta cuts roughly 10% of staff, raising urgent questions about AI and the future of tech jobs. Then, Howard Lutnick admits under oath that only one Trump “Gold Card” visa buyer was approved, despite previously claiming 1,000 sales. Finally, CBS Evening News slips below 4 million viewers as ABC and NBC pull far ahead. TJ filters the spin and explains what these headlines say about power, truth, and declining institutions today.

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    19 mins
  • Zuckerberg Shock at Meta, Anthropic Alarm, and the FBI Reporter Story
    Apr 23 2026

    TJ Walker examines three unsettling stories shaping the moment. He starts with Anthropic’s new AI model and why officials fear it could expose dangerous vulnerabilities in banks, power grids, and other critical systems. He then turns to Meta, where reports suggest employee activity may be used to train AI systems that could automate human jobs. Finally, TJ analyzes claims that the FBI considered action against a New York Times reporter after coverage involving Kash Patel’s girlfriend, raising deeper concerns about press freedom and government intimidation. The episode also features a special guest appearance from TJ’s daughter, Rasa Walker.

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    24 mins
  • Why CEOs Hide, Virginia Fights Dirty, and AI Trains Your Body
    Apr 22 2026

    TJ Walker examines three revealing shifts in American life. First, he argues that CEOs who avoid the spotlight in moments of crisis are failing at the core duty of leadership. Next, he looks at Virginia Democrats using aggressive redistricting to counter Republican power plays tied to Trump-era politics. Finally, he explores how AI tools like ChatGPT and Claude are becoming low-cost fitness coaches for ordinary people. The throughline is accountability: who shows up, who manipulates the rules, and when technology becomes good enough to replace expensive human guidance in business, politics, and personal improvement.

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    18 mins
  • Tim Cook’s Apple Empire, Kash Patel’s Lawsuit, and Tucker’s Trump Break
    Apr 21 2026

    In this episode of Filtered with TJ Walker, TJ examines how Tim Cook transformed Apple into a nearly $4 trillion company and what that says about leadership beyond the founder myth. He then breaks down Kash Patel’s $250 million lawsuit against The Atlantic over allegations of excessive drinking and missed meetings, arguing the case is really about credibility and power. Finally, TJ looks at Tucker Carlson’s extraordinary public break with Donald Trump, including criticism over Iran, religion, and Epstein. Three stories, one theme: power depends on trust, and once that trust starts cracking, everything changes.

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    25 mins
  • Gas Prices Shock Voters, Wealth Tax Spreads, Nicotine Scam Exposed
    Apr 20 2026

    On this episode of Filtered with TJ Walker, TJ examines three stories shaping politics, economics, and public health. First, he argues that high gas prices may be the most powerful real-world reminder of political consequences. Next, he looks at why wealth taxes are spreading to states like Maine, while questioning whether taxing high earners actually raises lasting revenue. Finally, he takes on influencers and wellness personalities promoting nicotine as a focus and health tool, despite addiction risks and expert skepticism. The result is a sharp, provocative breakdown of how spin, policy, and media narratives collide in everyday life.

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    33 mins
  • Xanax Recall, Yale’s College Crisis, NBA Players’ Podcast Boom
    Apr 20 2026

    This episode of Filtered with TJ Walker examines three revealing stories about trust, institutions, and personal leverage. First, a nationwide Xanax recall raises questions about drug safety and America’s dependence on pharmaceutical quick fixes. Next, a Yale report argues that colleges themselves helped destroy public trust in higher education through high costs, opaque admissions, and prestige-driven behavior. Finally, TJ explores why NBA players are launching podcasts in huge numbers and how athlete-controlled media may outlast athletic careers themselves. It’s a sharp look at health, higher education, and sports through the lens of communication, incentives, and long-term influence.

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    21 mins
  • AI Jobs, JD Vance Threat Fallout, and Saudi Arabia’s LIV Golf Retreat
    Apr 16 2026

    In this episode of Filtered with TJ Walker, TJ examines three stories about power, persuasion, and public pressure. First, he argues that workplace meetings may be more important than ever in the A.I. era because real-time communication, influence, and decision-making remain deeply human skills. Next, he looks at Erika Kirk’s withdrawal from a major event with J.D. Vance after serious threats and contrasts real-world intimidation with the political outrage machine’s obsession with speech controversies. Finally, he breaks down reports that Saudi Arabia may be rethinking its support for LIV Golf, raising larger questions about sportswashing, global influence, and whether engagement through sports is better than isolation. The episode blends news analysis with communication strategy and personal development, staying true to the show’s core idea: understand the headlines, then filter them through the skills that actually shape careers, politics, and public life.

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    24 mins
  • Trump’s Global Backlash, Vance vs Pope Leo, and the Success Habit That Matters
    Apr 15 2026

    In this episode of Filtered with TJ Walker, TJ examines three very different stories that all come down to power, credibility, and focus. First, he looks at how Donald Trump is facing a more defiant world, with allies increasingly uncertain about America’s reliability amid mixed messaging on tariffs, NATO, and support for democratic partners. Next, TJ turns to J.D. Vance’s swipe at Pope Leo, arguing that the clash is really about who gets to claim moral authority in politics and religion. Finally, the show shifts to performance and self-discipline, as TJ discusses Tim Ferriss’ view that highly successful people tend to share two habits: regular meditation and the ability to say no to distractions. It’s a fast, opinionated episode connecting geopolitics, theology, leadership, communication, and the daily habits that shape success. Based on the attached transcript of the full live show.

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    21 mins