The Tucker Carlson Show: Leaked Police Interrogation Footage of Netanyahu Review
If you've ever wondered what Benjamin Netanyahu looks like when he's squirming under police questioning — not the statesman, not the grand orator, just a guy desperately trying to talk his way out of a corruption charge — this episode of The Tucker Carlson Show is your answer. Tucker sits down with filmmaker Alex Gibdi to walk through a documentary built around over a thousand hours of leaked Israeli police interrogation tapes. The Leaked Police Interrogation Footage of Netanyahu episode is one of the more substantive conversations Tucker has aired in a while, and it's worth your time — with one significant caveat we'll get to.
What's Good
The guest is the real draw here. Alex Gibdi received a mysterious Signal message in 2023 from someone claiming to have the full trove of police interrogation videos from Netanyahu's corruption investigation — an investigation that had been running since 2016. What followed was a documentary built on more than a thousand hours of footage that had never been seen publicly, even though some of the written evidence had circulated in Israel.
The charges Gibdi outlines are genuinely eye-opening for an American audience that mostly knows Netanyahu as a wartime leader and a fixture of U.S. political debate. The allegations range from the relatively small — expensive Cuban cigars and jewelry for his wife Sarah from movie producer Arnon Milchan — to something far larger: a reported $250 million financial arrangement in exchange for favorable coverage on the Israeli news site Walla. That's not a gray area. That's textbook quid pro quo corruption.
What makes the tapes compelling, according to Gibdi, isn't just the allegations — it's the person revealed on camera. Netanyahu spent decades cultivating an image as Israel's indispensable grand statesman. On these tapes, Gibdi says, you see something else entirely: a man lying to save himself, while his wife Sarah essentially argues that they deserved the gifts given everything they'd done for the country. His son Yair apparently screamed at police during his own interrogation. It's a portrait of a political family that believed the rules simply didn't apply to them.
Tucker mostly stays out of the way here, which is the right call. He lets Gibdi lay out the case methodically — what the charges are, where the evidence came from (Gibdi won't say, and fair enough), who the key figures are (Sheldon Adelson, now represented by his widow Miriam, also appears in the tapes). For listeners who follow Middle East politics or the ongoing legal drama around Netanyahu, this is genuinely fresh material presented with unusual depth for a podcast format.
The broader theme — that Netanyahu has political incentives to keep Israel at war in order to delay or derail his own trial — is provocative and not a new theory, but having a documentary filmmaker with actual access to the interrogation footage making the argument gives it more weight than the usual punditry.
The Ad Load
Here's the caveat: 8 ads, 6.5 minutes, 23.5% of a 34-minute episode. You're essentially paying a six-and-a-half-minute toll to hear a 28-minute conversation. The sponsor lineup includes Mint Mobile, Cowboy Colostrum, Xfinity, Jackson Hewitt, Good Ranchers, the American Psychiatric Association, Mosa chips, and Charity Mobile — a eclectic mix that will hit you in rapid rotation throughout the episode. If you're listening on PodSkip, the free app's on-device AI listens ahead and skips all of them automatically, so you won't feel it.
Verdict
7.2 / 10 — A genuinely informative conversation with real documentary evidence behind it, weighed down by an ad load that makes nearly a quarter of the episode feel like a hostage situation.
Is this episode just anti-Netanyahu propaganda?
That's a fair question to ask going in. Gibdi is clearly not a Netanyahu sympathizer, but the core of the episode rests on actual police interrogation footage and documented legal charges — not punditry. The Israeli court system brought these cases, not Tucker Carlson. Draw your own conclusions, but the evidentiary basis is real.
Do I need to know a lot about Israeli politics to follow this?
Not really. Tucker asks Gibdi to start from scratch, which he does. The key players — Netanyahu, his wife Sarah, Arnon Milchan, Sheldon Adelson — are introduced with enough context that a casual listener can follow along without a background in Knesset politics.
Is the full documentary available to watch somewhere?
Gibdi mentions the documentary in the episode but doesn't give a streaming location. Your best bet is to search the director Lexis Bloom's name along with Netflix or documentary distributors — that's the trail most likely to lead you to the full film.
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