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Home » Transcript: Conrad Flynn’s Interview on The Tucker Carlson Show

Transcript: Conrad Flynn’s Interview on The Tucker Carlson Show

Read the full transcript of writer and producer Conrad Flynn’s interview on The Tucker Carlson Show on “The Occult, Kabbalah, the Antichrist’s Newest Manifestation, and How to Avoid the Mark of the Beast”, premiered on October 3, 2025.

The Rise of Spiritual Language in Modern Discourse

TUCKER CARLSON: I remember the first time somebody said to me during an interview that something or other was demonic. Use the word “demonic.” I cannot have been more than six years ago. And I was completely shocked that someone used that term because it’s not a political term. It doesn’t even describe any human social interaction. It’s a spiritual term.

And I just was not used to people using spiritual terms to describe social movements or political developments or whatever. But I think in that time, in the last six years, things have really changed. And I hear it all the time. “It’s demonic. They’re demons.”

There is this sense that there’s a spiritual underpinning, that there’s something going on beneath the surface in American society and in the world that’s affecting outcomes and affecting populations. There’s a spiritual war in progress.

You and I hope you’ll explain this and I’ll get out of the way in a second, but you kind of stumbled into an extended research project on this topic. Are there actual occult connections to Hollywood, to political figures, to technological advances, to the leaders of our society? Are some of them actually practicing occult religion?

CONRAD FLYNN: Yeah, Tucker, it’s about as weird as you said. Some would say, I think we’re going to find out, even weirder.

A Hollywood Family Background

TUCKER CARLSON: So how did you—I mean, you’re not a theologian that I’m aware of.

CONRAD FLYNN: No, and if I was, as a very amateur theologian. No, I’m not a scholar, as many will find out about.

TUCKER CARLSON: But how did you wind up coming to the conclusion that some of the people who help shape our culture or build our technology are practicing a cult, literally practicing occult religion?

CONRAD FLYNN: I’ll tell you. Well, you know, I was working on a television show, trying to build out this show. I should back up. I come from a Hollywood family, Tucker. My grandfather was the actor Robert Conrad. If some of your listeners remember “Wild Wild West,” “Black Sheep Squadron,” you go way back, “Hawaiian Eye.”

My other grandfather, Harry Flynn, was a publicist for decades. “The Monkeys,” “Bewitched,” “I Dream of Jeannie”—two occult shows, “Bewitched” and “I Dream of Jeannie.” Maybe it starts there.

So, I mean, not unlike your own father working in journalism as a boy, one of the first things you learn when you have parents who work in media or entertainment, you learn that things—the “People” magazine version of reality is not the truth, that there is a difference.

TUCKER CARLSON: That is accurate. Yes.

CONRAD FLYNN: So, I mean, we’re not getting into occultism yet, but we’re getting into the fact that as a boy, you learn that the way things are presented, not always conspiratorial, but you’re always being shown a facade, usually from the mainstream. I can’t believe I’m saying “mainstream media” already a minute into this. But, you know, things are not what they seem.

So as a boy, I was always told and shown that. So years later, through taking to Hollywood these various show concepts, and one of them, Tucker, I was working on, was about when actors first break into the business. You know, where do they live? How do their lives go? It was a very wholesome show about the origins of actors and show business.

TUCKER CARLSON: But it was getting you come to LA from Nebraska. What happens next? How does this work?

CONRAD FLYNN: But that gets into a basic thing. You probably had this as a boy yourself, wanting to know, how do things work? You’ve seen the facade, so what’s the truth? How does any show work? How are stars made?

So I was working on this show and, you know, COVID happened. Hollywood kept lighting itself on fire. I sold it to Buzzfeed and then while they’re drawing up the contract, Buzzfeed went out of business. So it was a cursed show.

TUCKER CARLSON: Such a volatile moment.

CONRAD FLYNN: Yeah, it was a cursed show. The wholesome one was cursed.

So at some point in 2022, I’d always had a dream project of mine, just a casual interest of doing a show about rock and the occult, about the secret history of all these things that people are generally interested in. But there’s never been a kind of scholarly, in-depth hearing from everybody, not too biased take on, you know, Jimmy Page being obsessed with Aleister Crowley, Aleister Crowley being on the Beatles albums, things that, you know, maybe we can dispel some myths, but also there’s always interesting, actual weird stuff going on.

TUCKER CARLSON: Yeah.

Researching “Running with the Devil”

CONRAD FLYNN: So I wanted to take that show out and it became kind of—

TUCKER CARLSON: Not all of this is a figment of your imagination.

CONRAD FLYNN: Oh, no, no, no, it was not, as I learned. I don’t want to say the hard way, but no.

So that was the basis of it, of me wanting to do research for this show, which was tentatively titled “Running with the Devil.” And I brought in legendary rock critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine from AllMusic, his colleague Ned Raggett, and then the creators of “The Osbournes,” the recently departed Ozzy Osbourne, Sue Kalinsky and Greg. I brought in legit people. I brought in some of the best critics we have in rock to do a show that would, you know, we’d have Christians and pastors, we’d have occultists.

One of my experts on the show was this guy, Mitch Horowitz, who I think you knew. I forget if it was at Salon or—

TUCKER CARLSON: Former editor of mine. Yep. Yeah, yeah, he’s a very nice guy.

CONRAD FLYNN: Well, he became an expert on the occult. I talked to him.