About the Episode
I had a killer conversation with Christa Hilton, the conservative single mom and entrepreneur behind Drunk Republic. We didn’t get political. We got real. Christa started reading the entire CARES Act during COVID when her business consulting for small businesses had to shut down. What she discovered sent her down a rabbit hole of government waste, hidden spending, and ridiculous programs that American taxpayers unknowingly fund. We dove into the insanity of public school systems, why parents need to take back their power, and how Christa’s approach to showing her son real life in Portland—drugs, homelessness and all—is creating a kid who thinks critically about everything. Christa shared how her 12-year-old son can already see through political BS on both sides. School choice, government spending, entrepreneurship, parenting—this conversation covers it all. Christa’s podcast Drunk Politics is cutting through the noise and exposing what our government is really doing with our money. Go check her out on Instagram @thechristahilton and at drunkrepublic.co.
About Krista:
Conservative single mom & entrepreneur still living in Portland, OR. Started a brand called Drunk Republic and a podcast called Drunk Politics (it’s a play on words calling out how drunk on power our politicians are) out of a burning need to get fellow Americans to wake up to the madness that is perpetuating in our country and then do something about it. She’s been invited onto Newsmax multiple times talking about HOW conservatives can get involved in starting to take back their cities, especially the very liberal ones, as well as how she is raising her son with conservative values having pulled him out of the public school system to homeschool him while going on a cross country roadtrip before putting him in a small Christian private school.
Listen to the podcast here
Watch the episode here
Episode Topics:
- Discover how the government is secretly spending your money on ridiculous programs like “pigeon gambling.”
- Learn why pulling your kids from public school might be the only way to force real education reform.
- Hear how showing kids reality instead of sheltering them creates stronger, smarter human beings.
- Get insider perspective on how the political industry works and why most politicians need to go.
- Find out how a single mom entrepreneur is building multiple businesses while exposing government BS.
Rick Jordan
What’s shakin Hey, I’m Rick Jordan. Today we’re going all in Christa Hilton is the is a conservative single mom and entrepreneur in Portland, Oregon, and the owner of the brand drunk Republic. You need to go check this stuff out, because it’s amazing on Instagram at the Krista Hilton, Krista, what’s shakin? Hi. Thanks for having me here. I’m excited. I’m pumped up. I mean, even beforehand we were talking, and my energy level is like spiked through the roof right now, because we’re going to have some amazing, real conversations. And I wouldn’t even say that they’re like political conversations. They’re just real human conversations about people that happen to own or hold political offices, right? It’s not these types of Convos are typically, I hate when like, oh, you know, you’re right, you’re left, whatever you know. How about we just be human and just have a real talk? Okay, awesome. How are you?
Krista Hilton
I’m good. I’m great. I’m just hanging out in rainy Portland. Super fun.
Rick Jordan
That’s interesting. I love it. How did you come to start the show drunk politics.
Krista Hilton
I had a business, and it centered around helping small business owners gain control their lives again, like helping them with inventory and kind of finding the holes on where they were losing money. And when Coronavirus hit, I just kind of had to shut down because all of my clients couldn’t pay me because they had to shut their doors. So everybody had, like a physical space. But in order to try to help them, I read the whole Cares Act, and then I started watching all the press conferences, and I was like, what the actual F is our government actually up to? So it just kind of kicked off from there.
Rick Jordan
So after you read the entire Cares Act, which was ended long, AF, yeah, yeah, I look through most of it. I can’t, I can’t put myself up there with you. Or I read all of it, but I skimmed through so much of it, and there was so many things that were just kind of hidden in there too. Yeah, what were some of the things that stuck out with you? They were like, what that
Krista Hilton
Like, how much money we give to different foundations that feels like they don’t really need it, and the amount of money that just goes to places with no accountability. And some of the studies that are done, those always get me like, yeah, like, made up data, or there’s one actually we funded. It wasn’t through the Cares Act or something else, but it was pigeons gambling. And that was actually here in Portland, like $500,000 went to that. Why?
Rick Jordan
Wait? You’re talking like the bird, like gambling on pigeons. What’s a pigeon gamble? You don’t know. That’s a good question. Somebody on the team here Google this. Put it up on my screen please, because we need to find this out and solve this mystery of pigeon gambling.
Krista Hilton
Like it was at like, Lewis and Clark College. I think maybe it was one of the colleges here in Oregon. Yeah, it was really bad. Rand Paul does a Festivus report every year, and he puts in, like, the most obscene things the government spends money on. And it was actually in his report.
Rick Jordan
The pigeon gambling, that’s so crazy. All right, we’re gonna figure out what that is. But this was in the Cares Act. Like it was dollars that were earmarked.
Krista Hilton
I don’t think this was in the Cares Act, but just are out of control government spending in general. But that was for that was in this year’s, like Festivus report. So I think it was in the last two years that we gave money to that.
Rick Jordan
That’s crazy. That’s just crazy. $500,000 to your saying, that’s insane. There’s a lot of things that are that I know that are just embedded in some of these bills, like even in the $1.5 trillion bill that was just passed a little while ago, that are just sort of there, and nobody really reads through but they’re things that not necessarily hold up different sides or a bill from getting passed in in the House or the Senate. It’s just, it’s almost like personal pet projects, it seems, of some members of the House of the Senate.
Krista Hilton
Yeah, they’re just ushered right on in. It’s crazy. It’s crazy. And I think a lot of it has to do with special interest and lobbyists and who’s going to scratch who’s back. And I mean, the amount of money we spend doing that is crazy.
Rick Jordan
No doubt, no doubt that with some of the things that are going on right now, with different overseas wars, obviously, with Ukraine and all that, I mean, at the time we’re recording this, they just passed some more aid, you know. And it was interesting, because the. This was funny because I was on your Instagram page. And we’re just on the heels of when President Zelensky addressed the US Congress, you know. And I think this was from that. But can I, I’m gonna play this here real quick, you know, completely low tech way. This was hilarious, right? The the articulate Speaker of the House this, this was funny and also just WTF at the same time.
Speaker 1
They know that we can’t go there. Putin is trying to bake the trap so that we go in. And that’s the beginning. Could be the beginning of World War Three. Putin totally irresponsible, using weapons that are not allowed under the Geneva Convention. Putin, who threatens chemical use of chemical weapons, nuclear and the rest. So they know that we deo idcan’t, but it’s the ask. Now he was this morning. More let’s if we can’t have an if we can’t have a no fly zone, let us have our own. And we need the airplanes to come in.
Rick Jordan
That was just a portion of it. What is she saying? What is she even saying?
Krista Hilton
She doesn’t know what she’s saying half the time. I know. How are we allowing this? I don’t understand how, how do all of the people in Congress let her speak and think this lady’s fine? Yeah,
Rick Jordan
I know. And I was, did you watch the State of the Union? I watch it every year. I did, yeah. And it was at the beginning of it, you know. And I’ll say this out loud, it’s okay out to the world. It’s okay the first 20 minutes of it, when, and I completely respect the office of the presidents, you know. And even so, you know, with things that are going on, let’s be real, even with Ukraine, Russia, these are really, really tough decisions, you know, because they are decisions that could affect American lives. And the weight of that on anybody, whether you agree with the the the current president’s politics or views on anything or not that’s still just, again, it’s human. Like I was saying the weight of those decisions is just insane. And when he got up there and he started talking about some things, you know, at first, the first 20 minutes of it, I was, I was like, Who is this guy? Because it was actually articulate and energetic and on point in almost things that you couldn’t even argue with because they just made sense that he was saying. But then it was after about 20 minutes. I don’t know if his teleprompter broke, or maybe there was an injection that were off the extent of his stamina. I know, yeah, exactly, but it dropped off so fast, and that wasn’t the weight of anything in that moment. And I’m curious. It’s a, you know, what is going on and how do we fix it? You know, this is what caused you to start your podcast to begin with. Was drunk politics, you know? And is there something that you can see that’s like a clear path? Is a big question. A clear path to get back to how government should work for us as the American people.
Krista Hilton
Basically all of the people in office right now just need to go like we need a new batch of people that are on the same page, that actually care about getting things done for the American people, because I think there’s very few left that haven’t bought into the whole political career. I mean, because I didn’t really realize until I started doing this that it’s a whole industry. I mean running for office, and the all of the campaign managers and, like all of the things that back that is a whole industry, and it’s a, like, a multi billion dollar industry. It’s not going away anytime soon, unless we stop it.
Rick Jordan
Yeah, I’m with you. I hear you on that. There’s different things you know, that have been proposed. You know, the President has a term limit, but term limits don’t necessarily exist in in Congress. You know, there’s representatives that have been serving for, you know, 30 years, something like that, same with senators. So it shouldn’t happen. Yeah, it’s a you start to lose touch with what’s actually going on. But I understand the the experience factor, because you’ve been in that role now for a while, but still, how do you inject the fresh perspectives when that’s the case?
Krista Hilton
Yeah, I think there needs to be term limits. And I think that if you have never worked in the private sector, you have no business being in office, because you don’t really have a good, clear touch with reality, like there’s no reason that someone should major in politics and then have a career in politics. Why? Like You? You? You don’t even know how the real world works at that point. You’re not talking about Bernie Sanders, are you? I? I mean, his ideas are cute. You know, they’re, like, really cute. It’s so cute that you think that you understand human nature. Like, that’s cute. Like, it’s never gonna work.
Rick Jordan
He produces some good wings, right?
Krista Hilton
Oh God, the glove. Fate was just the
Rick Jordan
best. What’s the best? It totally was. There’s a there’s something that I know that you you talk about too, which is parents and school choice. You know, I love talking about anything both sides, I mean, on the show, just to hear people out, because I think that’s similar to like Joe Rogan too. Is I just like to hear what people think, yeah. So what are your thoughts around that? Because I know that you’ve got some pretty good ones.
Krista Hilton
My son is almost 12, and we pulled him out of public school and put him in private. And I really think that the public school system has just absolutely lost their marbles and throwing a fit at school board meetings has worked for some districts when there’s parents that care, but like in our district here in Portland, no one attends the board meetings or shows up to watch even like on YouTube or the zoom calls or anything, because they’re still not meeting in person, or at least they weren’t. But I really feel like if everybody just pulled their kids out of school and talked to each other, and we’re like, Okay, well, if we can’t afford to go to private school, then we’ll create like home school pods, and we can share the responsibility, but if we all pull out at once like it would crash the entire public school system, because they have, they can’t survive without our money, and they get money for each child.
Rick Jordan
Yeah, they sure do. I don’t know how it works in Oregon, but in the state of Illinois, which is where I’m from, which is, you know, very it leans left. We’ll just put it that way. Yeah, there’s a the public school system is funded by property taxes. And I don’t know if that’s the same in the state of Oregon, is it? Yeah, yeah, it is. So our our kids are in an online private school, you know, and it’s done with a lot of self paced videos. And then there’s also some live classes they’ve been in it even before the Coronavirus pandemic, you know, about a year and a half prior to that, it was the best decision that, I think, is parents that has ever been made, and it was fantastic. Now, I also recognize that that’s not necessarily the case or availability for everybody, because even though it’s not it’s not home school, it’s really like online private school, and the costs associated with it can be prohibitive to some, but it’s not as much as like in person private school. And my kids are involved in theater and sports and a lot of other things. So there’s never issues with socialization. That was like the, one of the biggest things that people start to judge on immediately. It’s like, listen, yeah, they can go to Starbucks and invite their friends or go to a movie, you know, they say it’s Yeah, and still see people. This is freaking 2021, 2022 okay, yeah, what I didn’t quite grasp until everything hits, because you’re right, because it but still taking our kids out, we still have to pay the same amount of property tax whether our kids are using the public school system or not. There is no credit we get back. It’s just an additional expense,
Krista Hilton
Right? The we don’t benefit at all. But the way that it works is they don’t get that money from your property taxes like they get money per student. So okay, if they’re like, let’s say each student is worth like, 15 or 20 grand a year. So that’s, I mean, a lot if, like everyone that’s pissed off, which is a lot of people pulls their kids out at the same time. I mean, enrollment goes down and they’re hurting for money. The only reason they haven’t hurt for money yet with all the kids that have come out of the school is because they were under, like, an emergency situation where they were using, like, 2018 or 19 numbers. But once they have to start using the real numbers, it’ll be really interesting to see, like, what kind of a deficit, deficit the schools are actually in, because so many people have just said effort, and I think that school choice is a great idea, because then you’re taking that money and you’re able to get, like, a tax credit or whatever for the cost of that public, private school. I mean that you want to put your kid in.
Rick Jordan
Yeah, so if the schools don’t get the money. You’re still being billed the same amount of property tax. Where does that money go? I don’t know. That’s a good question, huh? That’s a that’s so interesting. But getting that money back to, yeah, school choice, I can understand that I’ve exercised my choice, because we do have a choice as parents, of course, to do what we feel is best for our kids. That’s just freaking America, hello.
Krista Hilton
Yeah. I think the the illusion and, like, the delusion that people have that, like, the school system is put there to teach our kids like, life. No, it’s not. It’s there to teach them math and reading and stupid like that. It work. You don’t need to teach my kids values really, like, that’s, that’s my job.
Rick Jordan
Yep, oh my god yes. You’re gonna get me started on this right on, you know? And that’s where the dinner conversations come into play. And that’s, you know, because I’ve even done appearances on TV, on ABC, NBC, CBS and Fox around bullying, you know, when? When that I mean, it’s still a big thing in schools, but it’s like parents can sometimes abdicate their responsibility to parent their kids. And this is where I actually feel bad for the public school system, because parents are not stepping up into their natural roles as parents, and then could just pass that on and expect the administration of the public schools and the teachers to fill that role for them, you know, and that’s allowing somebody else’s views and ethics rather than what yours are as parents, somebody’s gonna give your kids their views, their perspective. 100% you want it to be you, or do you want it to be somebody else? That’s the choice as parents, and that has nothing to do with what school system they’re in, either if they’re in public or private school. Exactly.
Krista Hilton
Yeah. Well, you know, it’s 2022 and I think that, like a lot of parents, need to just wake up and realize our kids are getting information from so many different places. And if you’re not actively talking to your kids about hard stuff, they’re not going to know how to decipher that F depth information if they get it from school, or they get it from social media or whatever. So the more that we are open with our kids, the better off they are.
Rick Jordan
Yeah, yeah. How do you how do you maintain that? Because you have a 12 year old, you know, how do you maintain that communication with your with your dude. So, dude, right?
Krista Hilton
Yeah. Well, we live in Portland, and we live to downtown, and so we he started seeing people doing drugs, like, on the street really early. And some people judge me for, like, allowing that to happen, and my dad’s a drug addict.
Rick Jordan
They were judging you for allowing it.
Krista Hilton
Yeah, like being around, like, an environment where that, like homelessness and the and the drugs and all of that was taking place. And my rebuttal to that as well, he’s never going to end up underneath a bridge and he’s never going to stick a needle in his arm, because from an early age, we’ve just talked about, these are people’s life choices. This is why you don’t have a grandpa that you see like, this is real life stuff, and it doesn’t have to be heavy. What we as parents put our own shit on our kids. So if we’re coming at it with like, this heavy attitude and, oh, this is a really big deal, then that’s what our kids are going to get from us. But if we’re like, Well, this is life, these are facts, and this is how we’re going to move on from it, and maybe you don’t want to do that, then they handle it a lot better. And so since we’ve had that open line of communication his whole life, he’s come to me when he here would hear something in his public school, like one time, his teacher told him that Trump was holding kids at the border and taking them away from their parents. And I was like, Okay, well, since you want to talk about this, let’s talk about the other side, and then you can decide what you think, right? And at the end of it all, he was like, so basically, no one knows what’s going on, like second grade or something. I was like, yes, yes, that is what I’m saying. Very good.
Rick Jordan
Kids are freaking intelligent, aren’t they?
Krista Hilton
Yeah, they really are. We don’t give them enough credit.
Rick Jordan
Right on, and that’s just because you, you, I commend you, because you just laid out all the information in front of your son and said, Here you pick, here’s what everything here’s what everybody says is going on. And of course, you can go out and find everything else you’d like to research it yourself. You can you’ve got access to Google. What do you think? Yeah. And his response is that that’s brilliant. So basically, nobody knows what’s going on, yep. And that’s why I started my podcast, son, yeah? So, oh, man, that’s incredible. I love it. Yeah. So let’s get into the entrepreneurship real quick. You know, you’re an entrepreneur. What is it that you do as an entrepreneur?
Krista Hilton
Well, I started this business, and then I also do property management stuff with I’m a partner in a property management company, and we just started a maintenance. Company. So I’m really ADHD, and I like to have my hands in 17 different things at one time, or else I don’t feel like a whole person. So that’s been my entrepreneurial journey. But I did own a salon for 10 years from like 19 to 29 and then I did real estate, and I have done like, like securities and life insurance and all of that, lots of sales. But this is a journey that I like the best so far, this whole like social movement that I have going on with drunk Republic.
Rick Jordan
For sure, and that’s an entrepreneurial journey as well. You know, you said that you’re ADHD, and I think, as you said that, I think I need to have, there’s so many entrepreneurs that say that they are, you know, and I’ve never actually labeled myself that way. There’s people that told me it’s like, yeah, you could be. And I think I need to have an expert on the show about that, because I don’t know, because it if we weren’t the way that we are, maybe ADHD is actually a superpower for an entrepreneur, if that’s a real thing right to where we’re able to see so many different possibilities at the same time, and we can actually go after 17 different things just to see which one, which, like one of those 17, is actually going to work, and let the other 16 fail, so that we can actually be successful and just crush it, you know, way beyond anybody else, just because that one thing worked when we had the balls to go after to even think up 17 things and go after all 17 at the same time,
Krista Hilton
yep, yep, yep,
Rick Jordan
Bring it on.
Krista Hilton
I didn’t know that I was until I was 20. I think I was 30, and it all made sense. After that, I was like, oh, so normal, and most people don’t forget these things. And I, you know, my brain developed ways to make up for certain things I had, you know, different routines and patterns that I had made up, and then I and then I figured out, like, oh, well, wait, my brain is actually processing things different than other people’s the guy that created the Amen Clinics, he’s rad, and you should probably get him on your podcast if you can. He does brain scans, and he doesn’t diagnose anyone without doing a brain scan, which I think is brilliant, because so many people nowadays are misdiagnosed. And I think the big pharma, yeah, the Big Pharma, medicine grab is, oh, well, psychotherapy and medical stuff like just shouldn’t mix. No, it should if you’re going to shove a pill down somebody’s throat. So he’s really into pinpointing, like, exactly what’s causing your ADHD or your bipolar or whatever.
Rick Jordan
So closer to functional medicine, it’s not attacking the symptoms or the surface level stuff. It’s actually looking for the root cause. Yeah.
Krista Hilton
Yeah. So brain scans, yeah.
Rick Jordan
Brain scans. I love it. This show is ADHD. Today. We’re jumping all around. It’s so cool. So what’s on your mind right now? Right now? What’s next on your mind?
Krista Hilton
No, that’s too much pressure.
Rick Jordan
Oh, man, you know what’s in my mind was actually like, I don’t know, a cinnamon roll. It just kind of popped into my head.
Krista Hilton
Just, you should go get a brain scan.
Rick Jordan
Maybe I should get a brain scan. That’s it. It’s interesting, though, because, I mean, we could go off of that, but even with, you know, and this relates back to politics, to see this is coming full circle, because a lot of it comes full circle. It does. A lot of political agendas are very much surface level and special interests, rather than actually looking at the root cause of something. Now, I’m still taking everything into account when I say these things, because there’s a lot of weight on these decisions, and there’s a lot of complex issues. Some things are just not as simple as they seem. You know, even coming back to school over the course of the pandemic, it was there are some, well, a lot, really, of parents that could depend on the public school system to actually be a caretaker for their kids. And I had never really looked at it in this perspective, until all of a sudden those kids were just home, and like double income houses, where you had to have two incomes to survive, all of a sudden, had to figure out some kind of child care for their kid, or figure out, is one, just one parent going to work now, are we going to suffer, or should the one parent go get a different job, or work two jobs or three jobs, because now our kid or kids are home because the Schools are shut down. You know, there’s complexity to a lot of these things.
Krista Hilton
There really is. I mean, I think, you know, but we’re humans, and we adapt. So we were thrown a problem, and we just had to figure out a way to deal with it like I was lucky, because I worked from home anyways, but, but allowing your child to like play video games all day because you have to work isn’t really to. Sustainable either. So there was a lot of like, okay, oh, you know, are you doing your homework? All of a sudden we’re teachers, and we’re trying to work. Like, yeah,
Rick Jordan
here it is two years later, and I’m forgetting because there was so much remote school that took place, you know, over the past couple years for the public school system, but there was that two to three month period where there was, like, literally nothing. Some of the schools just straight up shut down, not teaching any classes whatsoever, because they were not ready for something like this.
Krista Hilton
No, they weren’t at all. I remember sitting and listening to my son’s teacher. They were just, I mean, God love them. They really tried. But trying to get a bunch of, like, third and fourth graders to, like, pay attention is really something.
Rick Jordan
Yeah, no kidding. So how is your son done in the past couple years? Because he’s 12 right now, right? What are some new concept, concepts that he’s become aware of during everything that’s shakin down?
Krista Hilton
I would say that he’s just become really aware of, like self responsibility, and I love that. And I mean, I’m his mom, so he clearly hears what I talk about all the time. So he just kind of thinks, like the world is a little bit fucked, but not in a bad way, like in a, like in all right, well, we should probably pay attention to these things. And he kind of sees both sides to everything, and reads between the lines really well. So I’m pretty proud of him. He’s really Brainiac smart in like, a on the spectrum sort of way, though. So he’s always kind of analyzed everything, like that.
Rick Jordan
That’s so cool. That’s awesome. I was able to take a look at that. I’m there’s been talk, of course, because you see the government in the state that it’s in right now, and you see the school system in the state that it’s in right now, and there’s been a lot of concern, obviously, and probably, well, yeah, for good reason with the generation that’s growing up immediately, you know. And the way that I see it, because you’re describing your kids, and I know how my kids are, you know, the again, they’re in private online school, and I even have them involved in things that we’re doing right now. My older two, you know, like the podcast. My oldest literally edits the show, you know, he’s learned that’s awesome Adobe Premiere over the last two years, which is what movies or made them. I have made movies in Adobe Premiere that are out there right now, liberty, lockdown, cyber crime, they’re documentaries. You can find them on Amazon, Vimeo. They’re out there, right real movies. And he’s using the stuff that Hollywood uses. He’s learned that at, you know, 13 years old, and now almost 15, and my daughter is she does the blogs for this show, to the blog posts, which are transcriptions, and so she listens to the whole thing so they’re embedded doing, yeah, that’s great. It’s an amazing way to to instill my beliefs in parenting and how I see the world in my kids, just by them being in and around us. And I think that’s something that you got too. Is just proximity. You’re keeping your dude in proximity to you, yeah, rather than shoving
Krista Hilton
them off. Yeah. He’s really interested in gaming and stuff, and so he told me the other day. He’s like, Mom, I don’t know if I want to go to college. I said, well, that I’m not gonna send you to college. I don’t know if you want to go, but what do you want to do? And like, you are in a unique position Braden, because you can actually not ever have to work again if you play the next, like, six years, right? So if you’re serious, and you don’t want to go to college and you don’t want to be beholden to anyone scheduled, and let’s get going on something. So he’s thinking of different like podcast ideas right now, and he’s, he’s learned how to edit videos also. So I think that’s really inspiring and awesome. That’s your kids.
Rick Jordan
I know right on my my son, my oldest son. He is even said too. He’s like, Dad, I think I want to buy my own house when I’m 18, you know? And this was like two years ago when he was 13 or 12, yeah. Awesome. I’m like, well, first, there’s just one thing I need you to understand, I’m not kicking you out when you’re 18. I just want, I just want to make sure the idea is not coming from that, you know, he’s like, Oh no, no. That’s Oh no. That’s not what I’m thinking at all. Okay, cool. Because you wonder. It’s like, where is this coming? Is it coming from a really good place to where it’s like, you, it’s like, cool. Let’s jump on something. Let’s, let’s rock this right, rather than it’s like, what kind of bad environment Am I creating? I’m sure you’ve asked yourself as a parent here and there.
Krista Hilton
Oh! definitely, yeah. I wondered that his whole life. May his dad and I got divorced when he was two, but I was like, Okay, we either work our marriage out. We’re together forever, we love each other and all the things because we’re not getting divorced when he’s 15 or 20, right? Or we just get divorced now, and he knows no different. And so his whole life have been like, did I make the right decision? But then, like, a year ago, he’s. Like mom. I just think it would be so weird if you and dad lived together. I think I would hate it. My job as a parent.
Rick Jordan
Vindication, and we’re back to the kids. See all they they understand all for real. Yeah, they’re really on your side as parents, too. It’s not Yeah,
Krista Hilton
And he’s his dad may get along great. So it there’s no, like, Oh, I couldn’t imagine you guys fighting. I was like, No, we get along great. We got divorced, and we’re like, Oh, we’ve never have to fight again. But yeah, so he just knows both of us. And was like, No, I just, I can’t imagine it.
Rick Jordan
Yeah, for sure. We’ve jumped around a lot here. We’ve talked about a lot of things, but I want to send everybody it’s, it’s cool that you’ve been featured on news Max multiple times. I’ve been in the I’ve been on their network many a time too. And it just keep going. You know, drunk politics. How do we find Do we just search that on?
Krista Hilton
Yeah, yeah. We’re on Apple, we’re on Spotify, we’re on Google podcasts. Those are the three main ones. I heart I think we’re on I Heart Radio, radio too now, so you can search us there, and then you can go to drunk republic.co, and there’s links to everything.
Rick Jordan
Nice! That’s incredible. Krista, this was such a fun conversation, and just very real and human. Thank you!
Krista Hilton
Thank you for having me.