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Is The Mic Still On

Pam Bondi’s Testimony, Epstein School Photo Ties, and Hip-Hop Hall of Fame Debate

Is The Mic Still On

Dead End Media Group

Entertainment News, Comedy, News, Society & Culture

4.81K Ratings

🗓️ 19 February 2026

⏱️ 90 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This week, the crew breaks down Pam Bondi’s tense House testimony, a surprising connection between Lifetouch school photos and the Epstein files, and Stephen A. Smith continuing to flirt with a presidential run.

The episode also dives into Gene Simmons’ claim that hip-hop doesn’t belong in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, GloRilla’s public family drama, and an R. Kelly survivor speaking out about how Dave Chappelle’s sketch impacted her.

Timestamps

00:11 – Intro
00:55 – Black History Month Fun Facts
14:30 – Best Thing Seen
26:15 – Pam Bondi’s Controversial Testimony
40:26 – Lifetouch School Photo Scandal
49:57 – Stephen A. Smith’s Potential Presidential Run
1:03:18 – Gene Simmons and Racism in Rock Music
1:07:29 – GloRilla’s Family Drama and Public Perception
1:17:33 – Pass the Mic
1:30:10 – Closing

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to you're tuned in to your favorite pod because the people want to know is the Mike still on.

0:18.2

Welcome everybody to a new episode of this, Mike Still On podcast. My name is Kenneth B. Inge. Joining me on the show, I have Spike, Mike, Rod, and she is back. Hey. By popular demand, Q. Welcome back. Thank you. They love you. They love you in the Reddict Streets. Oh, I love to love. Maybe some. So, glad to have everyone on board this week.

0:39.5

Make sure you guys check out Patreon.

0:42.5

You get about 30, 40 extra minutes as we kind of stretch a little bit before we get into the episode.

0:50.1

So check that out.

0:51.8

Patreon.com slash is the mite salon.

0:55.5

So as we do every week, we open with our fun facts.

1:00.4

Happy Black History Month.

1:02.7

Continue with Black History Facts.

1:05.2

First one, the kitchen table, Women of Color Press,

1:08.2

was the first black activist feminist publishing house.

1:12.0

As one of the first black, excuse me, one of the first and few black women ran activist,

1:17.5

feminist publishing houses, the kitchen table, women of color press, was a pioneer in providing

1:23.0

spotlighting on the work of women, color writers who had little opportunities provided by other publishing houses.

1:29.3

Birth from a conversation between Kambahee River Collective co-founder Barbara Smith and her friend, Audrey Lord,

1:38.2

Kitchen Table was dedicated to reclaiming the narrative around women of color and being able to call the shots about its direction. From

1:45.3

1981 to 1982, the collective distributed more than 100 titles from women of color

1:52.8

writers. The contributions submitted the feminist authors we load today and deserve to be

1:59.2

recognized nationally.

2:04.1

Second, Langston Hughes.

2:08.8

He was once called before Senate for his far-left influences on his writing.

2:10.7

Had no idea he was called in front of Senate.

...

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