Egyptian Comedian Reveals He Left 40 Million Viewer TV Show After Government Arrests
"I got in trouble with all kinds of governments, with the Muslim Brotherhood, the military, and the Muslim Brotherhood. I was arrested. I was interrogated. I had like being interrogated for my jokes. And then the military had my shows canceled a couple of times."
About this episode
In this wide-ranging episode, host Danny Jones interviews Egyptian comedian and former cardiac surgeon Bassem Youssef, who left a 40-million-viewer TV show in Egypt after repeated arrests and government intimidation over his political satire. Youssef, who fled to the U.S. in 2014 and rebuilt his career from scratch, gained renewed prominence after a viral 2023 Piers Morgan interview on Israel-Palestine that drew 23 million views. The conversation centers on allegations of Israeli influence over American politics, with Youssef and Jones discussing AIPAC's $16 million campaign against Rep. Thomas Massie for proposing foreign-lobby registration, the Epstein files and their potential role in compromising U.S. leaders, and claims that IDF soldiers were ordered to stand down for 6-8 hours during the October 7 attacks. Jones reveals a former FBI contact confirmed Israelis arrested on 9/11 were Mossad agents who were deported, while Youssef cites Israeli media reports on the Hannibal Directive—a protocol authorizing killing hostages to avoid negotiation—being invoked on October 7. The pair critique evangelical Christian Zionism, Silicon Valley's ties to Israeli intelligence (Palantir's NHS contract, biometric surveillance), and the normalization of tech oligarch calls for military conscription and speech restrictions. Youssef rejects the 'anti-Semitism' label repeatedly used against critics, arguing Israeli policies and their American enablers—not Judaism—are the target. The episode also covers censorship, AI-driven warfare failures, Netanyahu's wife gifting a noose-decorated cake, and Youssef's view that bread-and-circus distraction in America is giving way to third-world-style repression as seen in university crackdowns. Jones and Youssef close on the Epstein files' release coinciding with the Iran war as a potential distraction, and the feeling among many Americans that visible corruption now operates with impunity.
Key takeaways
- Bassem Youssef revealed he was arrested and interrogated by Egyptian governments for jokes on his 40-million-viewer TV show before fleeing to the U.S.
- Jones disclosed a former FBI agent confirmed Israelis arrested dancing on 9/11 were Mossad operatives who were deported without charges.
- Youssef cited IDF soldier testimony that they were ordered to stand down for 6 to 8 hours during the October 7 attacks despite 15-minute response capability.
- AIPAC is spending $16 million to defeat Rep. Thomas Massie after he introduced legislation forcing AIPAC to register as a foreign lobby.
- Israeli media reported use of the Hannibal Directive on October 7, a protocol authorizing killing hostages to avoid negotiation.
- Palantir secured a $450 million NHS contract granting access to identifiable UK patient data and biometric health records.
- Ben-Gvir's wife gave him a birthday cake decorated with a noose coinciding with a new law permitting execution of Palestinians.