Candace SNAPPED: Blake Neff Names A Killer. Pam Bondi Gets Fired. — Episode 321 Review
If you've been following Candace Owen's ongoing investigation into the Charlie Kirk shooting case, Candace Episode 321 is the kind of episode that rewards loyal listeners. This week's Candace SNAPPED: Blake Neff Names A Killer. Pam Bondi Gets Fired. review comes with a verdict upfront: dense, conspiracy-adjacent, occasionally chaotic — but genuinely compelling if you're already in the rabbit hole with her. Candace kicks things off with a breezy "Happy Thursday" and then immediately drops two political grenades: Pam Bondi is out, and Blake Neff is still somehow employed at Turning Point USA. From there it's 62 minutes of Candace doing what Candace does — connecting dots, questioning narratives, and never once slowing down to let you catch your breath.
What's Good
The strongest section of this episode is Candace's investigation into the figures surrounding the Charlie Kirk shooting. She walks through a genuinely interesting thread involving Zachariah Koreishi — detained, then released after Kash Patel reportedly shut down the investigation for an hour and a half — and then pivots to the Koreishi family military connections. The detail about Tor Koreishi's LinkedIn, showing training with reconnaissance drones at Fort Wattequpay, is the kind of specific, checkable claim that gives the broader narrative some actual weight. Love her or not, Candace does her homework, and she presents it in a way that feels like a friend who spent the week going down a rabbit hole so you don't have to.
The Blake Neff segment is also a highlight, and Candace's framing is pitch-perfect: "It's like watching reruns of Tom and Jerry — we know how it ends. But Tom's got a Tom. Blake's got a Blake." That's genuinely funny. She has a sharp comic instinct when she's not trying too hard, and this episode catches her in that zone more than once.
The Pam Bondi firing gets a refreshingly unsentimental treatment too. No performative outrage, no victory lap — just a dry "probably we'll be replaced with somebody worse." For a show that can veer into heavy partisanship, that kind of cynical pragmatism is oddly refreshing.
Her discussion of the app allegedly used for mission prep — the 3D walkthrough tool co-founded by one of the figures she's investigating — is speculative, but she flags it as such. "Can't say that's what it was used for" is the caveat, and she says it clearly. That kind of small transparency goes a long way.
The Ad Load
Four ads, 3.9 minutes, and 7.4% of your listening time — on a 62-minute episode, that's actually on the lighter side of the podcast world. The sponsors this episode are PDS Debt Relief, Just Thrive Probiotics, Patriot Talk Wireless, and American Financing — a pretty standard lineup for the conservative podcast space. None are particularly intrusive in placement, but if you'd rather just skip straight to Candace naming names, PodSkip is a free app that uses on-device AI to listen ahead and skip all of them automatically.
Verdict
7.5 / 10 — Episode 321 is a tight, fast-moving entry in Candace's Charlie Kirk investigation arc that earns its runtime with specific sourced details and a few genuinely sharp moments of commentary, even if you'll want to verify the bigger claims yourself before forwarding it to your group chat.
FAQ
Who is Blake Neff and why does Candace keep talking about him?
Blake Neff is a figure at Turning Point USA whom Candace describes as "my favorite of the shady bunch" — her characterization is that he's emotionally reactive and prone to making things worse for his own side. She's been covering his behavior as part of her broader TPUSA criticism, and in this episode she revisits him as context for the larger investigative story she's building.
Do I need to have listened to previous episodes to follow this one?
It helps — a lot. Candace references prior episodes heavily, including the "decoy boy" series and details about Fort Wattequpay, the Koreishi family, and the circumstances around Charlie's shooting. If this is your first Candace episode, you'll follow the big picture but miss a lot of the connective tissue. Start a few episodes back if you want the full picture.
How bad are the Candace podcast ads, and can I skip them?
The Candace podcast ads in this episode total about 3.9 minutes across four breaks — PDS Debt Relief, Just Thrive Probiotics, Patriot Talk Wireless, and American Financing. It's not an overwhelming ad load, but if you want to skip Candace ads entirely without fiddling with a fast-forward button, PodSkip handles it automatically and for free.
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