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Spencer Pratt Reveals Media Double Standard in Los Angeles Mayor Race

Dave Rubin Report · New Polls Show How Much Worse It Just Got for Dems as Spencer Pratt Surges · May 11, 2026
Spencer Pratt Reveals Media Double Standard in Los Angeles Mayor Race
Dave Rubin Report
Dave Rubin Report
New Polls Show How Much Worse It Just Got for Dems as Spencer Pratt Surges
"When these, you know, Mayor Bass or Councilwoman Raman talk to the media, they can just lie, and then the media people go, 'Oh, thank you. Thank you, Mayor Bass. Thank you, Councilman.' If I say anything, I gotta have who was there, what they were wearing, what they had for breakfast. I have to have my information so fact-based and be bulletproof to beat this machine."
Reality TV star Spencer Pratt, now running for Los Angeles mayor after his home burned in the Palisades fire, exposed stark media bias favoring incumbent Democrat Karen Bass on the All In podcast. Pratt detailed how Democratic officials face no fact-checking while he must provide exhaustive evidence for every claim, illustrating the asymmetry conservatives face in blue city politics.

About this episode

Host Dave Rubin opened with extensive coverage of the Los Angeles mayoral race, where former reality TV star Spencer Pratt has emerged as a serious Republican challenger to incumbent Mayor Karen Bass following the Palisades fire that destroyed his home. Pratt appeared on multiple shows including the All In podcast, where he exposed the stark media double standard favoring Democratic officials who can lie without fact-checking while he faces intense scrutiny for every claim. An attack ad against Pratt backfired spectacularly by highlighting his popular positions: opposing taxpayer-funded homeless housing, supporting more police over social workers, and challenging union power. Rubin pivoted to national Democratic dysfunction, featuring clips of Senator John Fetterman and Bill Maher lamenting their party's embrace of socialism, with Fetterman calling Seattle's mayor 'absolutely a socialist' and noting the term is no longer a smear. On foreign policy, Rubin covered Trump's rejection of Iran's latest ceasefire counteroffer and showed Netanyahu proposing to completely phase out U.S. military aid to Israel over the next decade, calling the current $3.8 billion annual deal an effective American defense subsidy. The redistricting fight dominated the second half, with the Virginia Supreme Court striking down a Democratic gerrymander that would have given them 10 of 11 seats in a 50-50 state, part of a broader Supreme Court trend against race-based districting that Republicans calculate will net them 8-10 House seats. Democrats responded by proposing to lower Virginia's judicial retirement age to force out justices who ruled against them, while Senator Cory Booker repeatedly called the Supreme Court 'corrupt' and refused to rule out court-packing. Rubin closed by mocking AOC's claim that the American Revolution was 'against the billionaires of their time,' juxtaposing clips of Democratic fear-mongering about fascism with Scott Jennings predicting AOC will eventually run for president because 'that's where all the energy on the left is right now.'

Key takeaways

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