Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to Season to seventy one,
Episode three of the Dailies Guys production of I Heart Radio.
I never really know, like I got a little bit
of a cold thing going on. I never really know
what my voice is going, like what's going on with me?
Until I do that der daily as igeist and like
here sounds come out of me, like coming out of
(00:25):
different parts of my voice box that weren't meant to
be used anyways. This is a podcast where we take
a deep dive into America's share consciousness. And it's Thursday,
January nineteen three. He mightus one day to my mom's birthday,
but also it's get to know your Customer's Day, World
work Day, and National pop carn Day. If you celebrate that,
(00:50):
shout out to that the popcorn got that cork c
O R K or q U A R W work. Yeah,
your pronunciation was good. Yeah, to make sure, I didn't
even know what I didn't even know what that was
until I think fan of subatomic particles, basically magical. Nobody
knows what the fun is going on down there's very strange,
(01:12):
very strange nobody knows going down to it. You sound
like my urologist. But yeah it is. It looks really good.
But this is like what they say, delicious, high protein,
low fed alternative to soft cheese and yogat that could
be used for baking, cooking, and blending. Okay, I'll stick
to cheese though, thank you or thank you very much. Wait,
that's what quirk is? Yeah? Oh, I thought it was
the subatomic particle. I guess I'm not looking at the spelling.
(01:34):
I thought it's q So that's what I mean. It's
a European super food staking its claim on supermarket shelves worldwide.
According this thing, I'm look, our guests probably can put
it onto what the fund is about. But as far
as you and I are concertain, Jack, we're like, what
is this fake cheese? Yeah? Yeah, I was thinking qu
A r K It is spelled like that though, what Yes, Jack,
(01:56):
coming straight for your dome right now? It is dome
is in danger. It's in the crosshairs. Anyways. My name's
Jack O'Brien, a K potatoes, O'Brien a K potatoes, obing bang,
and I'm thrilled to be joined as always buy my
co host Mr Miles Grass Miles Gray, and I gotta
keep the potato theme going because someone rightly pointed out,
(02:18):
if your potatoes O'Brien, then call me Miles, oh grotten,
thank you so much. That's Mikey Alexander on the twit
Mikey actually, yeah, yeah, yeah, that was That was one
of those pop culture references that people would always use
and I just like internalized it. But I didn't know
what the funk it was in reference too, because it
(02:40):
was like a little bit before my time, I think,
And I did want to just stop the podcast and
let people know there are pop culture references before my time,
So I don't feel old as fun. Were you were
you old enough to know where's the beef? Were you
alive for? There's your your prewars the beef too? I
think time time to miss the doughnuts or time to
make the doughnuts. I think I also missed Holy sh it,
(03:03):
I knew. I knew a lot of the like pop
culture references from DAWs effects they want effects like that's
you know right, that's like yeah exactly. Anyways, Miles, we're thrilled, fortunate,
blessed to be joined by a wonderful guest. The host
of the smart Mouth podcast used to run the food
(03:24):
section of L a weekly, and now runs the website
how to Eat l Just an all around brilliant travel
and food writer. It's Catherine Spires. You inspire us. Hello, Hello,
Happy cork Day to you both. Thank you. We did
have you on this special day because of your expertise
(03:46):
and food and sub atomic particles. We didn't know which
one it was, so we just figured, yeah, perfect, what
that planning? What's court have you had? Quirk? I know
you've had cork? Yeah? Actually quirk woonder quark. It used
to advertise on smart Mouth, like the I bet you
it's the same brand that send out that press release
that you were reading from. They're wanting everyone to get
(04:08):
into cork. For sure, it's good. It's kind of like
half yogurt half sour cream. Oh perfect, That is what
I think you're like for more sour creaminess in my
yogurt and more yogurt nous in my sour cream. I
wish this yogurt was slightly off a bit. You would
(04:31):
make it perfect. I'm sure it's good. I'm just being
wa So how have you had it? Rather than accurately
describing it, like what's how have you had it? We're like, man,
that's that's how good cork dish would would be. Yeah,
I mean, you just eat it like yogurt. Really, so
I said fruit to it? Yeah, I mean, and it's
some sometimes it comes with fruit. I think people make
cheesecake with it a lot. You just add a bunch
(04:53):
of sugar to it. I bet it tastes bomb Okay,
I'm with that. Yeah, I feel like that's true of
a lot of things. Mmmmm yeah. Yes, Catherine, there's this
little prank that myself from two years ago likes to
play on myself from the present. Whenever you're on where
I looked back, my brain always wants to pronounce your
last name Spears. And I had your name written in
(05:16):
my notes from the last time as Catherine Spears like
Brittney bitch. I wrote to myself like a just a
fucking jerk, like yeah, kin keeping yourself on your toes. Yeah,
I think that's what it is. Yeah, I don't know,
keeping it I am mean, And I always have the
(05:37):
habit is to always ask you, even though I'm slight,
I'm all if I put money, I'd always say spires
around was like, and it's all as usual. Spears or
spires yeah, you entered, Miles, says Spears Spris. I said,
ha ha ha, Miles. Actually you don't have to worry
about it because I wrote down a note from last
time and Spears like Brittney bitch, and the call got
(05:58):
so quiet, say and You're like, yeah, dickhead. And I'm like,
all right, Katherine, We're gonna get to know you a
little bit better in a moment. First, we're gonna tell
our listeners a couple of things that we are talking
about today. We're gonna talk about George Santos de Volder,
(06:20):
Anthony Makato, whatever his name is. You know all the
names that this man goes by. But how how long
can he keep this one lie going? These many lies
that are just like kind of a web. He's spending
a vast web. I don't think he's going anywhere, which
is so fucked up. Inspiration for the next generation of dickheads. Yeah,
(06:45):
there's a famous Tesla autopilot demo video that Elon Much
tweeted out six seven years ago. But I think a
lot of people's self driving car enthusiasm was started or
at least built on the back of this video. Is
very popular. Video turns out it was misleading. Yeah, it's
(07:11):
not what they said it was. So we're gonna talk
about that. We the New York Times, I reported this
last year or the year before, but we now have
a confirmation from an internal TESTLA source. So we'll talk
about what what they lied about. Dolly Parton is really
making that rock album like oh fuck yeah, Okay, yeah,
(07:32):
I mean it's it's like a lot of covers of
songs that are like the first rock songs that you
find out about when you first find out about rock music.
But like, I'm sure she's gonna pull it off, because
she pulls everything off. But it does suggest a narrative
to me where she like just found out about rock
(07:54):
and roll when she was inducted into the Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame, and then like this, she's like,
oh okay, alright, let me do a little listening. Ah Freebird.
This free Bird one is pretty good because she is
covering Freebird on her album. We'll talking about what's that
she gonna hit that guitar solo too? Yeah, probably that
(08:16):
would be wild. I mean if she shredded that guitar solo,
then I'd be like, just you know, we are Yeah,
you were the uh, And then we're gonna talk about
how mountees are trash. A cab does include mountees in
a major way. All of that plenty more. But first, Catherine,
we do like to ask our guest, what is something
from your search history? Oh, I've been searching all the
(08:39):
synthetic fabrics like lio cell and tent cell and stuff.
I'm trying to figure out how to least blow up
the planet with my choices. So all these all these
new fabrics, you know, they say they're recycled or whatever.
Do you know, like the process of recycling waste so
much water, it might be worse than using cotton. It's
(08:59):
just I don't like it. I like it. I don't
know why I keep doing this to myself, trying to
be a conscientious consumer, and it's just killing me inside
because it cannot be done. Yeah, I mean unless you
go like full homespun. Yeah, but she has the time
because you also live in capitalism, so you have to
make money from outside the home. So yeah, right, Yeah.
(09:20):
The one recycling i've heard is good is the aluminum.
That's the one that, like you, you always need to
make sure you're recycling all aluminum. Everything else that's like,
do they actually recycle it? Do they just send it
to a pole? But I don't know that it's not
paper anymore? Is you know it? What are you worried about?
I'm not burning it. It's kind of like the energy,
(09:41):
but it's too like so many things are like this
thing can actually turn this other thing into a usable item,
and we can produce our waste. It's like, but it
needs coal to operate, and you're like what, or like
it uses untold amounts of water and like yeah, exactly.
And then I had this theory that online shopping has
like precipitated, precipitated the rise in these fake fabrics because
(10:01):
we can't feel them, and we've forgotten what clothes are
supposed to feel like too, So I think we're just
in a mess with with our fashions at the moment.
I've noticed some websites now they take such close ups
of the garment so you can get an understanding of
what the fabric looks like. That's a good idea. It
feels like something where people been like, hey, I thought
(10:21):
this one was blah blah bla, and they're like, no, look,
it's clearly woven. This is like cotton I don't. It
looks shiny, but that's the deal. But yeah, I remember,
like that was like one of the first things that
like a habit I picked up from my mom when
you drag me to like go to a department stores,
Like she's like, yeah, this is well made. She's like, yeah,
this is this is well oh, this is good good fabric.
We're like words I would hear all the time. She
(10:42):
tastes it a little bit. Oh yeah, she bite it,
and they're like, hey, what do we tell you about this?
She's like, let's go. But yeah, like I I realized
now to your point that it's not just like yeah,
it looks good and then you get it and you're
like it disintegrated the second I sweated in it. It
happens so often it's horrible. Yeah, I'm not the best
online shopper. I keep buying dolls clothes because you keep
(11:07):
insisting how cheap they are, and yeah, you get I'm like,
I'm getting a great deal on this jacket. It's my hand. Yea,
what is something you think is overrated? Deep dish pizza?
Which kind did you just ask? What is that? You know?
(11:27):
Which kind? Like? Are you coming for somebody in l A.
Are you coming? Are you coming for a pizza rear
right now? Are you just saying I don't do that
coming right now? I am not. I am not. I
don't know. It just seemed like something that I've never enjoyed. Ergo,
it is overrated. Some people like it right. First of all,
why do they call it pizza? That things like a casserole,
(11:49):
maybe a pie. Stop calling it pizza. I don't like
that with top Yeah yeah, I think, well, I think
if you called it a casserole, that doesn't sound more appealing,
but I think it would be. We're honest, it should be. Man,
you ain't eating more than two of these slices? Yeah,
that's what. Really, I've eaten half a Domino's Deep Dish.
(12:10):
How much Massa can you eat? At one go? That's
a good point because Massa that are like that's the
you know, Echo Park Deep Dish pizza in l A.
That ship is like a fucking brick. And when I
eat it, I'm like, oh my god. Like I'd like
to eat a lot of pizza is my thing with pizza,
Like I want to have numerous slices and I end
(12:30):
up just gorging myself it's it's all about the fun
ways you can toss it into your mouth. Yes, yeah,
Miles is a real showman when it comes to eating pizza. Said,
I chipped my teeth. I chipped my teeth because it's
pizza so fucking dense it broke my mouth. But do
you now, do you hold this for Sicilian too? Like
there there's a certain type of Sicilian that I like,
(12:53):
like Prime has a good I think they call it
like a Grandma piece. There's this place Bleaker Street in
New York that has a really good one too that
it's I think the crust is like facascio e Like, yeah,
it's more like that's more like like a real thick
crust with a little bit of toppings, right, as opposed
to just like stuff on stuff on stuff on stuff. Yeah. Yeah, yeah,
(13:14):
I mean yeah, it's it's definitely it's not a little
bit of toppings, but it's definitely no normal Yeah, the
cheese is not, you know, going to affect my digestion
for the next three weeks, maybe just like a week
and a half. I've noticed, though, a lot of Chicagoans
now are trying to basically be like stop thinking this
(13:36):
is our pizza. You really been crust tavern style pizza,
that's what the funk our pizzas. I learned this from
jackies Nels Chicago, and then I started seeing it more
and more, like on Twitter and like comedians who are
from there who are like like, yes that we have
Deep Dish, but like you want this tavern pizza and
I'm like, okay, the thin crust see. But then de
(13:57):
traders would say that the tavern style is their pizza.
The pizza fight is so funny to me because I
think everyone's working with different terms and definitions to begin with.
We're all like, we don't know what we're talking about
when we're talking Detroit, like in that old oil pan
style pizza though too Yeah, and that's tavern pizza, is it?
Or what other people say that I have it all?
Just get all Mike right now. So producer Justin is
(14:20):
over here, and the Chicago pizza it's more like a
birthday cake where you only do the deep dish once
twice a year. Yeah, deep dishes a celebratory thing. It's
like when you have a bunch of people Chicagoans, like
true Chicagoans don't really funk with deep We're not ordering
it weekly or whatever. Um, I don't ever remember using
(14:41):
the term tavern style when I was younger. We always
just used to call it thin crust pizza. But it's
something you order at like it's kind of like finger
food where you're at a bar and the slices are
really small and they're super greasy and they're kind of thin,
and there's like a hundred of them and you just
him amongst a group of people. And that's what I'm
(15:02):
used to more often. So yeah, that's mostly what we
were doing ordered, thank you. It was actually started by
Dominoes with their thin crust pizza. That style that you
were describing, it's pretty good. What is something you think
is underrated? Katherine? Lab grown diamonds. I just started learning
(15:26):
about these, and I don't understand why everyone isn't just
buying thousands of dollars worth of lab grown Oh no, okay,
because that's what that's what the fucking diamond and she's doing.
We are, we are ops for the diamond industry. Uh
so we're gonna actually have to remove all this. What
else do you think is that? Now? I'm just trying Wait,
(15:47):
I'm sorry, I think you got it mixed up. You
said overrated his lab grown diamonds, right, because they don't
even they pale in comparison to the rich history of
a child mind diamond. Yeah, yeah, it's true. We love
a history, don't wait, we love a story. Worry with
our diamonds. Have you seen the propaganda against it. That's
the kind of ship that they're trying to say, yes,
bloody history of Yes, it is incredible. And then I
(16:11):
also heard, and I haven't verified it, but I heard that.
So you know how in natural gemstones they'll be like
errors in them. They call them inclusions. It's like where
it's not like perfect. So I guess in lab diamonds
you can supersede that because they're grown in a lab,
so they can be perfect if you want them to
be perfect. So now I guess the natural gem jewelers
are being like, oh, only natural ones have occlusions and
then marking them up for having inclusions, which used to
(16:33):
be like a mistake diamonds, right, they used to be
the thing that they would mark them down for exactly.
So it's all just like a conversation that the diamond
industry is having with like a bunch of guys with
like jeweler loots, Jewelers loop loops Yeah, jewelers loops Yeah,
(16:54):
just being like, okay, so I say this is bad. Yeah,
they're just they're tripping all over themselves. It's it's kind
of funny, but they aren't like the lab ground ones
are a lot cheaper. They're not cheap, but you could
get like a big old ring or something and stunt
on everybody and that somebody's looking to loop and be like,
I can't believe it. Obviously, nobody wants VVS one or
(17:17):
F level diamonds, which are flawless. Everyone now wants I three,
the bottom run of them. I mean, you're joking, but
you're a month, But that's what you're saying, basically, VVS
fuck vs fuck funk all that we want eye level
diamonds now, and that this yellow streak that suggests that
(17:40):
it was left in maybe animal urine or something. And
I believe there's a little bit of newsprint that's rubbed
off onto this diamond. So that's that's great, that's good. Actually,
we actually like very yellow diamonds that are not canary diamonds.
That's what we like. That's the right thing. They need
to look like an old book you opened after seventy years. Yeah. Yeah, advertising.
(18:06):
I mean, it's so funny because even like recently when
I was getting engaged and stuff, and like I'm starting
to familiarize myself and everything, Like, why the funk wouldn't
you just what I'm sorry, what is the difference? They're like, well,
it's not mine. Yeah, that's I'm trying to get away
from that. Actually, so again, what is that good? Right? Yeah? Yeah?
(18:27):
We actually so these are lab made, but we hold
the laboratory scientists. First of all, we recruit very young
laboratory scientists and then we hold them against their will
at gunpoint while they're making them. So it's extra valuable. Yeah,
that's an extra five thousand dollars if there's fear involved. Yes,
oh wow, you want to see? Man, this there's a
(18:47):
hack post I just found that said seven reasons and
not to buy a lab GROOPI Number one. Lab run
diamonds are worthless. Okay, great, wait, but they're worthless. So
that's that sounds like cheap to me. They're like, it's
once it's made, it's about less than the price of
(19:09):
a natural mind diamond. And yeah, and also they just
contradicted themselves because that's not worthless less. It's still a
chunk of change, right, and then they're worthless. Just feel
yeah that that feels like it's some diamond shop owner
like worthless. Bring over here. All the arguments are so
(19:29):
bad that another one's like they're bad for the environment
because you've got to use electricity. Okay, but then people
are like people are using renewable energy to like whatever.
Also ton of water three whatever, no number three. Lab
diamonds ain't real diamonds. Who gives a fuck asshole? They're
(19:51):
they're fucking they're like down to the cellular level, the
exact same fucking thing. The process is just different. Like
what isn't the process the exact same just sped up? Yeah,
they're like massive amounts of pressures. They know, they know
they we got the recipe to make them. They're just
doing it outside of you know, the middle of Africa
where they don't have to brutalize people to be like
(20:13):
the Jabers family needs more rivers. And another one, you
can't get lab grown diamonds appraised. A diamond is a
diamond is a diamond? No? Come on, this is you
can't get them appraised? Why because like all the appraisers
have just been like, nope, we're not we won't even
look at that piece. You can only buy small. You
(20:35):
can only buy small lab grown diamonds. Okay, there, then
they're expensive, right, I mean, but they're also worthless. All
of these haven't implied. Probably after them, you can't probably
get like a big one either. Probably. Yeah, this is
(20:57):
truly Mom's going to find out what? Find out? What?
When I tell her, She's not gonna be very happy. Okay,
who is this a down and out diamond dealer? And
and the next thing to fall so diamond industry first,
and then sneakers, Yeah, yeah, I mean lab grown sneakers,
(21:22):
anything more, finding them in the wild. Anything that takes
the fucking teeth out of luxury goods, I'm all for it.
Like anything that anything that upsets somebody who defines their
lifestyle or level of well being based on the amount
of goods they can afford or the type of goods
they can afford, take that away. We don't need that.
(21:46):
Like that's it's so funny when you see, especially like
with like replica of fashion, people like now like they
can buy knockoffs in China real easy on the Internet
and they pull up with like almost you know, nearly
one to one looking garments every Yeah, but that's fake,
and it's like, yeah, I guess what, asshole, you're mad
because you don't like because it's all built on this
idea of like, well, some people shouldn't have access to
(22:08):
some things, and that's how I feel good about myself up, Like, yeah,
it's I do know there's like a lot ethnically wrong
with fast fashion, but I think, yeah, I think the
fact that like the ethical problems with that get called
out and not like any ethical problems with high fashion
probably has to do with the fact that they're what
(22:29):
they're better fund there is an established order in place
that is trying to protect its Yeah, because you see
you see advertisements are like you wouldn't bio fake, Rolex,
would you like yes, yes, yeah, I'm sorry you want
to spend on a wrist metal? Yeah? All right, let's
(22:51):
take a quick break and then we'll talk about the
new spiritual leader of this movement of you know what nothing, Yeah,
raudulent is cool now thanks to our new king, George Santos.
We'll be right back and we're back, and i'd say
(23:18):
this story is back in the headlines, but it's just
kind of staying there. George Santos, the GOP politician representative
in the House who got successfully elected and then just
like turned out like might not even be his real name,
or yeah, so we we have more details. He lied
(23:40):
about the colleges he went to. He lied about the
investment firms he worked for. He lied that his company
had like some investment firm that was like managing like
a billion dollar portfolio. Lies, he had a nonprofit lies
there couldn't find a sink, They couldn't like his fucking
name wasn't even real. Like he goes by Anthony Devolder.
He was going by Anthony de Volder before he became
(24:02):
George Santos, and prior to that he has all these
like he's wanted in Brazil for like swindling an old
man's check book and writing himself checks. It's a whole thing.
But anyway, now George Santos or Anthony Devolder or Captain
Marvel or whatever he's going by, or I guess in
this case, he's Anthony Zabrovsky. And when I tell you, wait,
(24:23):
why why is he Anthony Zabrovski. Well, allow his former
roommate to just enlighten you onto why he had, you know,
this specific name. How long did you actually live together?
We were only were mats for a few months. And
I also knew him as Anthony Zebrovski, so you knew
him he was. Why did say he had two names? Then?
(24:47):
Well he he used the Browski for his Friends of
Pats United, Um let's go fund me and he would say, oh, well,
you know that the Jews will give more if you're
a Jew, and so that's the name of us. So
that's where that's where we're lead. That's where we're starting
off today with the George Santos saga. Again, Remember he
(25:10):
also said he was Jewish and and then that was
also a lie when he was like, yeah, my family
they were fleeing like the pogroms, you know, and like
you're like, I can't, we can't find anything that's even
close to that. So look, he's a shape shifter and
in this case, he's you know, uh, using using this
like go fund me scam that he likes to go with.
(25:31):
And we've talked about this Friends of Pets United charity
that he has. But this is what's this is what's
sort of going on right now. The biggest thing that's
come out now is we found out that through that charity,
this guy is screwed over a sick dog in a
disabled veteran. So there was a disabled Navy vet named
Richard austav who was living like he was unhoused, living
in a tent, and he had his service dog, Sapphire,
(25:52):
who had like you know, he received from a charity
organization because he needed a service animal, but that dog
had a life threatening tumor that needed to be removed.
He had no idea what to do because the situation
was so dire, and another another person he knows, said,
I think I can connect you with somebody who could
get you to a pet charity to get you know,
the operation or procedure the dog needs. This is where
(26:13):
Santos comes in. His like Friends of Pets United, which
again is not an actual five oh one c three
nonprofit organization, claimed that they could raise the funds to
get Sapphire the procedures she desperately needed. So he put
up a go fund me with that you know, spurious name,
and they successfully raised the three thousand dollars that was
needed to help the dog. Oh wait, but he's a
(26:35):
stinking pile of ship. So he absconded with the money
and ghosted the funk out of this man and ast
off this The veteran said he was in such despair
he didn't know if he could live any longer. He
was had some really dark ideation and then he realized
he did not want to abandon the dog, and that
was the only thing keeping him going. Eventually, the dog
(26:55):
had to be euthanized. And this was the quote that
this guy said, we talked about much. He loved the
dog quote. I love that dog so much. I inhaled
her last breaths when I had her euthanized. So that's
this is the kind of you know, this is This
is like low hanging fruit to this con man who's like,
oh yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm gonna I'll use this guy
(27:17):
in this situation to take my three thousand dollars. And
when Santos Devolder, Hermianee or whatever was reached for comment,
he said it was all it's all fake that you
can't prove anything, but they have text messages that clearly
show Devolder, Santos Ficario or whatever his name is, telling
austuff that the dog was not a candidate for the surgery,
(27:38):
so the money would go to the next animal, a
k A. His bills. Oh not to be like such
a white person, but can we just kill him for that?
I was actually gonna put a joke in there about him, like,
and I know this is gonna resonate with white people
because dogs human beings is one thing. But man, you
hear about a puppy meal mill or some ship y'all organized, Yeah,
(28:01):
I'm done with him. That's it. Last. That's that's why
I included that sentence about inhaling the last breaths, because
that's like, I mean, anybody who's had to euthanize an animal,
that is fucking harrowing, especially when it's up an animal
you've like, you know, you have grown to love over
many many years. But anyway, the GOP is seems like
they are absolutely have no intention of doing anything right now.
(28:23):
Like McCarthy just gave Santos a bunch of committee assignments.
He's going to be on the Small Business Committee and
the House Science, Space and Technology Committee what so there's that,
But it is interesting to just see like what this
is going to the momentum that carries on from having
somebody who's this you know, fucking foul on on his
(28:43):
on the surface, and many other people are just as
bad as he is, but like on the surface, like
this transparently, you know, insincere, but you know it's weird
to me because I'm I'm not a rich person, but
even I know that three thousand dollars is a pathetic
amount of money to steal, Like what, what's the what
is that? That's a month maybe two. That's always something
(29:04):
that pops up in my head whenever you're reading about
this ship, Like we were talking about the Murdoch the
Murdoch Murdoch murders, like the guy who like killed his
might allegedly killed his son and wife and is going
on trial, and like was had this like long history
of siphoning money from payouts to people who needed the money.
(29:27):
And there there are some points in there where it's
like small amounts of money and this person is a
multi multimillionaire, but like that never seems to factor in.
It's like, well, yeah, I got to be a multi
multi millionaire because of how much I like money, and
that is not changing the more money I get. It
turns out, did any of you grow up with friends
(29:47):
that loved to steal ship? Yeah, yeah, you know, like
I've I grew up with people like that, and some
of them they don't give a fuck what it is.
It's just the fact that they can come up, which
is the thrill, Like anything's that come up. They're like, yo,
I just got this. I got this butterfly earrings from Claire's.
(30:09):
I'm like, the funk are you gonna do with that?
It's like they didn't see me take that ship. I'm like,
this doesn't even make sense, Like I think on some level,
some people like it's a compulsion where it doesn't matter.
They're like, oh, this is easy. That's three that's three
grand right there. Oh this person, that's that, that's this,
that's this, And it's probably like a video game. Sometimes
you fight the big boss level characters and that's a
big payday. But sometimes just jump on the little mushroom,
(30:30):
look at motherfucker's and keep it moving. That's interesting. I
don't know, I'm just just some I don't know that's
something I stopped from my experience, or to your point,
you're like, why that doesn't even make sense to even
take like you have money and you don't need this thing.
But it's like, no, that's the fact that I could. Yeah, yeah,
I suppose. So this guy, this Santos, he seems like
really old timey to me. There's something old timy about
(30:53):
his stands, like he's a little confused, like giving people
the wrong name worked a hundred and thirty years ago,
giving people the wrong name, and then like becoming a
public figure, like is this modern world is just so brazen?
And yes, it does suggest an out of controlledness, like
a an inability to even like look one step down
(31:15):
the road, let alone like two three at the consequences
of your actions. There was a really interesting clip of
like I think it was Anthony, Like he was at
some like Republican meeting and the guy introducing him he's
like George Santos. He's like, I mean I know him
as Anthony Devolder, but all right, uh George, and like
and then brought him up still and even like I
(31:36):
was like, bro, I thought you were Anthony, Okay, this
George Santos, And they kept it moving because at the
end of the day, it's all about powers. Why McCarthy
is not gonna do anything he needs asses in the
seats on these committees and who cares if some guy
who you quite literally don't even know like who or
what he's about, is representing you. But yeah, this is
(31:58):
all I can like again, can you imagine the people
that see this and like I'm a better liar than
this asshole? Yeah, it must be so demoralizing for them
or they're like, shit, I could be a senator? What
the fund is this? Like, I do have to say,
I think it's interesting that it's okay for the veteran
to say he inhaled his dog's last breath. But when
(32:18):
I tell you, Miles that if you go before me,
I want to inhale your last breath into my lungs,
that it's like weird and has to be removed from
the show. Well, it's that because you're probably going to
force her majesty out of the room where it was
happening to be like, I'm gonna inhale his last breaths,
not the wife. I just think it's a beautiful metaphor
I know. And that ship, Honestly, that ship sucked me up.
(32:40):
When I read that. That chilled me to my core
because I remember, man, I had to put my Dalmatian
down when I was like sixteen, and it's a dog.
There's like the first dog I ever had, Like I was,
it was like that dog when you're kid like I
want to pup, you want to pup, you want a puppy,
and then you get your puppy and then that ship
only went about like ten years, eleven years, and putting
euthanizing was like I'm still like, it's like the worst
(33:03):
one of it was just so harrowing to watch your
dog like quite just watch the like life go out.
It's it's it's very difficult. Yeah, no, it doesn't. Yeah
I did. I was at work with you guys, Miles
in the office when her dog Finn like had to
be euthanized unexpectedly, and like I was on FaceTime. I
came out. I was just like I was like bawling,
(33:25):
you know, I know, and and I think we're all like, dude,
don't come in bro, you know, well I didn't know
that that's what was that like it he had been
to the vet, like, oh, you know what I think
times I think what I'm revealing is something I was
telling Anna on the side, I'm like he should he
should go man, he going through it right now, and
(33:46):
I was like, all right, she al must go on.
Then I just wept through that episode. Yeaheah. People don't
even know. I mean, try and look back maybe'll. I mean,
to be fair, we sound like we're weeping or something
going on emotionally in most episode. Yeah, alright, let's talk
about autopilot. Tesla's autopilot demo that I think gave the
(34:06):
world a lot of faith in self driving cars, that
they're just around the corner was actually faked, so a
couple of things were happening. I'll just play this in
the background so people, yeah, well, we'll, we'll, we'll be
playing it. But it's the video where the car is
navigating a real road, nobody's touching anything. That just pulls
(34:28):
up somewhere parallel parks, which we do know that cars
have been able to do. But Elon Musk was like,
the person is only there for legal reasons, Like this
car was completely driving itself. But they had made a detailed,
three D mapped model of the route that the car
had taken and pre programmed it too, you know, follow
(34:49):
this path and you know it make sure that nothing
unexpected was going to happen, and somebody was that the
car did not have the ability to deal with traffic lights,
so somebody was having to do the acceleration and deceleration
around traffic lights, which they didn't mention. And that's kind
(35:10):
of a that's kind of a big one since they
still haven't really figured that one out. Yeah, like just
satisfactory degree or that video we saw of like the
one like stopping and like I think that like one
of the Bay Bridge or something in San Francisco caused
a pile up and you're like, yeah, that should works. Huh. Yeah,
So what they did was this a video that they
made for consumers or investors or both. It was the
(35:33):
the Tesla website. Yeah, so anybody, I must tweeted it
out and said this is this is real. This is
a car driving by itself. The person is only there
for legal reasons. But so they faked the results of
what their products can do. So that's what the haters
are saying. But in reality, what they were doing was
(35:53):
showing what was possible to build the system. So even
that like best case, brightest book scenario is still exactly
what Sarino has got in trouble for doing this. It
is like my ultimate point all the time. If Elizabeth
Holmes has to go to jail, they all got to
go to jail. They all do the exact same stuff.
She just was a woman doing it. That's so wild
(36:14):
that like with white supremacy, like misogyny still is a factor.
Is that like white won't always protect you exactly. Men
are good. Look at Elizabeth Holmes is ass but this
guy out here being like, I'm just trying to show
you what I think this ship could too, and I'm
dreaming it. Yeah, she was in the medical industry, so
people worry about the deaths caused by her product, which
(36:36):
didn't ever happen. This guy like Tesla's have caused actual deaths.
Like he's doing more danger. Why isn't he and jail?
I know why he's not in jail. But I just
I've got to think about Elizabeth Holmes. I think she
did almost nothing wrong and she's not good to jail, right, Hey,
she's confident, you know what I mean, He's confident like that. Yeah,
I mean to your point, he should be all or not. Katherine, Like,
(36:56):
if we're throwing her that every other Holmes I and motherfucker,
it's we gotta follow the by the letter, thank you,
thank you. This quote that they were you know, they
weren't cheating on the math tests, they were doing something
to represent their mathematical potential actually actually came from a
Tesla employee, like somebody who you know, was working on
(37:20):
the project had information about what was going on. They
couldn't remember, gosh my damn memory, couldn't remember if the
person in the driver's seat was the one who actually
controlled any acceleration or breaking or if the car did it.
But that's a pretty important component of driving. Yeah, it's
(37:41):
up there. Yeah, but yeah, yeah, I think it is
wild because this is like, this is someone from Tesla
versus everybody from the outside who was being like this
is They're like, this thing is rife with problems there
probably bullshit, but it was always able to be like, well,
you're not in there, so what do you know? And
they're backing away from this world of the Iron Man
(38:02):
Elon Musk is Tony Stark world where technology, through technology
all is possible, into into a world where it's like
the self driving technology that everyone thinks is just around
the corner turns out is much further off and a
lot of people think they should actually abandon it because
the road is a crazy, unpredictable place at all times.
(38:24):
And like these motherfuckers still don't seem to be good
with traffic lights, Like that is a light that is
always in the same place. It's one of three colors. Yeah,
they had to create a fake video to pretend otherwise,
So I don't know. Someday a driver list Tesla is
going to crash into a driver Tesla and kill the
(38:45):
driver and then the Tesla fans won't know what to
do with themselves. Yeah, they'll just hold water for Tesla.
I think whatever they'll find, they won't know until Tesla
issues a statement and then they'll be like, Ah, that's
that's actually do that. That's the other thing that you
always here for the fans Like, dude the board force
his hand on that one man, so how he really thinks?
(39:08):
You know? This is a This is a true story.
A Friday night, I had just gone to bed. I
woke up because I heard what sounded like a car
crashing into a bunch of car garbage cans and went
outside to see if anyone needed an ambulance. It was
actually a car that had driven into my neighbor's house
and yeah, and it was a Tesla and a lot
of horrible things happened like at that moment, and then
he like backed out and ran over a person. It
(39:29):
was chaos. But through this all I was like, of
course it's a tesla. My friend saw this on the news,
didn't know I was there, and I texted her about
it and she's like, oh my god, of course it
was a tesla. They have like there's something going on
with tesla drivers. Over all, there's like a problem here.
I know what confirmation biases, but like even within that,
like you're right, that's right, that's right. Yeah, that's science.
(39:52):
I believe. I think we can say that. I mean,
I know there's so many people that I like, like
kids I went to high school with the like I
follow like loosely on social media or something where there's
one guy I know as a tesla and he's like
the biggest fucking nerd about it, and he's like like
eating and it's on auto like just always wants it
(40:13):
to be on autopilot. And I'm like, you know, your
obituary may show up eventually, but like they're there's such
a culture of people just stutting on the autopilot that
I'm like, well, I wonder what the real numbers look
like with horrific accidents. Seriously, Yeah, and it is just
I don't know. Another another thing, like I think the
(40:34):
future is not all these things that we think are
gonna have, like self driving technology and stuff like I
think what I realized the longer, like we try stuff
like this is that like the human mind is incredible
and vast, and like we only have a small inkling
of understanding of like how powerful it is. Like these
(40:57):
articles are always like, yeah, you don't want to trust
the computer, but you want to trust humans. They're idiots,
they mess up all the time, and that that's true,
but it's like you you haven't like even come close
to approaching like just all the ship that is happening
driving is crazy, Like it's crazy that we're able to
(41:17):
just drive and not really think about it that much.
Like no, no, it makes no sense. It's too much
power from one person. Also, I thought that all the
type of guys who would be obsessed with Tesla would
have also seen the movie two thousand one in Space
Odyssey where the computer turns evil. So don't they know
that the computers hate us. No, no, no, what's that?
(41:39):
They were like, we're a team. How Actually it was
actually shipping how and the alien species, but they were
tuning and a little disappointed. I thought that was the
inherent tragedy of that movie. My biggest sci fi bays
How and skye At love them together. That's right, all right,
(42:04):
let's take a quick break. We'll be right back. And
we're back, And Dolly Parton is trending as per usual,
but this time a couple of reasons. She's expanding her
(42:27):
partnership with Duncan Hines. So in addition to the Dolly
Parton cake mixes, now there's cornbread, biscuit and to brownie mixes. Nice. Nice, nice.
I don't I don't know. I guess I'm not familiar
with the culinary aspects of Dolly Parton's legend. Are are you, Catherine?
What what does that? What does Dolly Parton connote like
(42:48):
southern southern cooking? Yeah, I mean that's got to be
why they have Did you say to cornbreads to brownies? Actually?
And did I hear that correctly? Was that too and bread? Indeed?
It was? Anyway? Yeah, I don't think her her legacy
really has much to do with food, but putting her
name on box mixes sounds like a smart idea for
(43:11):
both parties because everyone loves Dolly. Oh my god. They
look at the box. That's like Barbie branding. I know,
it looks they've animated her. The script is very barbiesque.
It's a little infantilizing. She looks like JM and the
Holy Jam in the hologram. Yeah yeah, oh sorry, not
to cornbread, cornbread and a biscuit. Yeah, bad bread, a
(43:34):
biscuit and two brownies. That's in addition to the cake
mixes that were already there. I'm picturing everything being pink,
and indeed the boxes are pink, but the brownies they've
decided to keep a colored How different is this from
other Duncan Hinds mixes? Oh please, you known to be
the exact same thing, just with new packaging on it.
Just But the reason why it's good for her too,
(43:54):
it's because there's no downside because box mixes are very
very good. Yeah, they they're unfunk up bowl if you
if you go by the letter of the lawn, it
is what capitalism has produced. Like we you know, the
none of the you know, transportation and all those things
like great towns that we were promised. They fucked all
that up. We now live siloed off in our homes,
(44:17):
like talking to each other through computer screens. But the
lab food, the food that they came up with in labs,
nacho cheese, doritos, the box mixes like that is that
is the height of capitalism. That's why I still stand
by you know, one of the things that is going
to be in the America like Peak American Capitalism section
(44:39):
of the museum, like four thousand years from now, if
the Earth still exists, is the Cheesecake Factory menu, because
that was like, like, we did that, We did that.
It really did not funk around when it came to
appropriating and turning sweet at any anything that humanity headed.
(45:03):
But we digress, We digress album. Yeah, but it is
true that our best scientific minds are in food labs. Yeah,
they're they're doing the best work there because those are
the places that can afford to pay the best and yeah,
and that's the most those are the most pressing issues
of our time obviously. So in addition to this exciting
new collaboration with Duncan Hinds Dolly announced more details about
(45:26):
her upcoming rock record, so we talked about the story
that she was inducted to the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame withdrew her name from the nominations because she
didn't consider herself a rock act. They were eventually just like, yeah, sorry,
we're doing this one way or another. You can show
up or not. And she said at the time she
was inspired to one day put out a hopefully great
(45:48):
rock and roll album, and the details are starting to emerge.
She got right right to work on it, and it's
like all it's her. She's treating it like a greatest
hits album of rock music. She's going to be covering
Purple Rain, Stairway to Heaven, and Freebird, among others. Yeah,
(46:09):
She's like, those are good, but I have notes like
the big swing, that's a big yeah. You sure you
want to go for a Purple Rain, Dolly? I mean,
I fun with you. Let's not like, you know, we
can all we can all be great in our own ways,
but I am interested. I mean part of me when
I heard that, I'm like, what, like, what's the most
rock Dolly parton could sound? You know? And I feel
(46:32):
like heart kind of vibes like like I would love
to hear something like crazy on you or something like that.
That would be fucking wild. But again, but part of
me is like, fuck it, let's let's see fucking free
bird do Dolly Parton's free Bird. Yeah, there's also gonna
be guests such as Stevie Nicks, johnp Forward, Steven Tyler,
and Paul McCartney. Oh that's it, that's all she could get.
(46:55):
She's just having a nice time. This is just for
her to, you know, funk around a little in the
studio with some pals, right, or is this her like
also being like ship man, I'm I'm probably making the
most money I ever had now, like somehow now because
all of these like deals and like collaborations she's doing.
I wonder if because she seems so charitable, she's like,
funck it, man, let me let me ring out the
(47:18):
fucking sponge that is my brand for every cent, so
I can go on and do some ship with it
on the way out and be more philanthropic. Maybe that's
I love that. I love that idea. Let's go with
that because it's so nice, Or she's like, no, motherfucker's
I have a rocket and I'm the funk out of here.
I'm sorry, y'all. Yeah, it is like that. I did
(47:39):
have that question when we're talking about George Sanson, was
like the just the the willingness to change your name,
like just use a different name with different people, just
not just completely create your life, like if used for good,
that could be interesting, and like, I guess there are
there are people who are you know, equally in INTIV
(48:00):
who who do use it for good Allah Dolly Parton,
but it is. She's also going to do a duet
cover of I Can't Get No Satisfaction in case the
previous three songs were not clear enough that it's just
the most played songs on classic rock radio. So I
do I have to wonder, like I want to hear
(48:21):
the behind the scenes of her process for making this
album and was she just here like she just like
doesn't really funk with rock music. She's like, all right,
bring me, bring me the best ones, right, I guess,
And then it's just going through and she's like, Okay,
get the lots Stacks, but get the Stacks band from
that record. I'm like, they're all dead man. They could
(48:43):
play though, who else? Who else? Do I remember? Jimmy Hendrix,
what's he up to? More bad news? Yeah, I don't know,
more bad news, more bad news. Dolly's sorry about that? Well,
speaking of sorry sorry cruise. So we have some bad
news for Jeopardy because so there there's a little controversy
(49:04):
around Celebrity Jeopardy, which our writer Jam called the t
ball of the game show World fair. It's still so
like the the wolf Blitzer Andy Richter episode. Have you
guys seen that one? Or like seeing the highlights of
that Andy Richter is brilliant or you know, just like
(49:27):
Nat mowing the questions down one after another is like,
you know, four times ahead of the next closest, and
wolf Blitzer is revealed to be a full fledged dummy,
like oh, prompt reader, no facts in that brain, no facts,
(49:48):
not the first fact in the brain, and missing like
the easy ones with comically bad answers. It's really key
and Mr not Mr Incredible that's from the Pixar movie.
But what's what's the guy from Shark Tank, which one
Mr Wonderful or Mr you know what I mean, the
(50:10):
guy who got scammed but wonderful he was also like
just comically bad. And that's that's what I look for
in Celebrity Jeopardy is like just these exposures of of
people who you know, through marketing have elevated this this
image of themselves and then go up there and just
(50:31):
can't can't get anything. But some of these questions, I'm
like this episode like upset, even like the Massholes because
mass Live was like there were Massachusetts related questions and
no one could even answer those. This is the one
the Patton Oswald park the episode that pissed people off.
Patton Oswald Kansas Parker w n B, a star, great
(50:54):
NBA commentator, just basketball commentator in general. And then Tory
de Vito funked up in the question about Field of Dreams.
I guess it's easy, Like I think I knew it,
like I guessed the right answer, but I wasn't like
confident in my guests here, I'll do it for you guys.
In Field of Dreams, a question is asked, is this Heaven? No,
(51:14):
it's this Midwestern state also known as the corn State. Yeah,
what what is? Iowa? Got it? Now? That that is?
That is both correct and also the level of confidence
I was taking into my answer, like and the fact
that people are treating this as news like the It
spawned multiple articles, each comprised of hundreds of words purely
(51:37):
about how three celebrities like missed one question is right?
Just the world we live in set off a thousand ships?
Oh can I just speaking of how easy these are?
You know what the other the Massachusetts when they couldn't
get answer me this brainiacs know that m I T
stands for this Boston area school. That was the question. Wait,
(52:02):
what does m I T Boston Area school? Yeah? Wait,
but that's the the wording is weird, Like so it's
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, right, yeah, yeah, yeah, but that's
just what they're just saying. I don't know this is
that's not good patent. Okay, how about this Jack uh
incepted in September about fifty migrants from Venezuela. We're surprised
(52:25):
to find themselves on this Massachusetts resort island. Oh, it's
either a n antuget or Martha's. It's Martha's finger there,
it is? What is Martha's fingered? People were like they
can't get these at all, But I mean those seem
pretty easy. How our normal jeopardy questions are for someone
like me constant like I said, the point of Celebrity
(52:48):
Jeopardy is for us to be able to see in
broad daylight that celebrities are dumb. You know that we're
at least they don't exist in the same reality as
the rest of us anyways. So there's also another thing
that should have gotten more controversy than that in the
(53:09):
same So apparently it was like a Kevin Costner category,
I guess, and so Indigenous Canadian actress and writer Deveri
Jacobs called out the show on Twitter for a question
that had absolutely nothing to do with Kevin Costner, although
I do think it was a reference to the Untouchables.
So the clue was about the Royal Canadian Mounted Police,
(53:29):
the Mounties, which the show asserted were created to clean
up whiskey traders from the United States, But, as Jacob
pointed out, the RCMP was actually created to quote control
and assert sovereignty over indigenous people, like that's a quote
from the first Prime Minister of Canada was like, we
need a force on horseback that is there too control
(53:55):
an assert sovereignty over like the Brits are doing to
the Irish. We want at except for literally Yeah, so
they were created by Canadian Canada's first Prime Minister, John A.
McDonald as a colonial army to assert sovereignty over indigenous
people and their lands, and he says that he got
the idea from the Royal Irish Constable Constabulary with the
(54:21):
which the British created to keep the Irish people under control.
But the Mounties are just you know, they have a
long history in the U n u s Pop culture
of being sort of adorable and like like not cops.
You know, the horrible armed dufas Is who aren't. Yeah,
they're they're always given sort of a a pass as
(54:43):
like innocent. Yeah, that's how we think of everything Canadian.
Yeah right, they're like there's no way they're like wait
what they're also a colonizer nation that displaced millions of
Indigenous people. WHOA, I have it in them. We got
a lot in common, it turns out. But I mean,
like in my mind right, like they've had such great
(55:06):
pr to the point that I'm like they're not even
a real thing. They just dress up and they like
they it's Dudley do right stuff. But then you're like,
what was their initial job again? What were they doing us?
The force of their initial job was to display some
forceably relocate Indigenous people and eventually to tear children from
their homes to put in residential schools, which is euphemism
(55:28):
for like you know, re education, child prison basically. Yeah,
and then the reservations were basically prisons where you needed
a pass to leave, were policed by mountees, and the
Mounties were just like a tool for systemic oppression that
continues to this day. Mounties routinely target Indigenous communities with
(55:49):
violence and harassment. And yeah, I mean this myth has
been perpetuated by pop culture, like Hollywood made movies about
heroic mounties in the Canadian wilderness, which I was not
familiar with. That was like early twentieth century saving damsels
in distress from villains with foreign sounding names. But yeah,
(56:10):
I think by the time I was ingesting popular culture,
it was like their funny red outfit. They're simple mindedness,
but like always in a completely non threatening way, right right.
They were also part Pinkerton. They were there to disrupt
labor strikes, accused immigrants of being Bolshevik radicals. So just
(56:31):
chef's kiss. Yeah, it's so you always know his trouble
when like there's some euphemistic origin story for any kind
of law enforcement. It's like, yes, it get those whiskey bandits,
you know what I mean. And you're like, no, it wasn't.
I'm like, y'all were slave catchers. Shut the funk up,
and it turned on this other thing. It's like no, no, no, no, no,
(56:53):
servant protect and brutalize the funk out of you. Yeah,
but the Mounties have like those silly pant pants and
like the gloves that see overly fancies. So if you
just dressed it up in goofy nous, no one's going
to notice. Exactly. Can you imagine like this fucking l
A p D starts going out like cool locks or
like weird writing pants or something. We're not killing people
(57:16):
at a disturbing tick. Yeah. Yeah. In the cop movies now,
like they like I think it was One Jump Street
or like one of the Jumps Street, they start out
as like bike cops because you have to make them
seem right, isn't it isn't that right? Like they started
out as bike cops because they've been like busted down
(57:39):
to that level or something. But yeah, you have to
make the cops seem silly that that is going to
be a wild new like direction for propaganda to take
where they're just mean, like made non threatening and goofy.
Well that's why with the rise of you know, smartphones,
that's always a steady dream of like, yo, that cop
(58:01):
can pop and lock right a purpose limbs out of
their sockets right, and you're like, oh, but I also
can get down there. Uhould be a b boy check
out those moves or like, and I hate that copaganda
ship because it's always like it's it's so funny because
even when I watch, I'm like, oh, ship, look at
oh wow, you can see walk And then I'm like, wait,
(58:22):
shut the funk up. This person put on that uniform
to brutalize poor people and protect private property. This is
not somebody who gives a funk about anybody, but it is.
It just does goes goes like it goes to show
you like that image whenever it's doing something a little
bit goofier than like violence, then you're like, I love
(58:42):
it that cop can juggle and make cotton candy. Yeah,
and roller blade cop. That's can be like all cops
are rolling around on roller blades. Oh well look we'll
wait and see. Because I mean, these ideas may sound
absurd right now, but yeah, we've seen anything. Look at
(59:06):
they probably sounded absurd and are still absurd all these
years later. Katherine as always such a pleasure having you
on the day, Like I, where can people find you
and follow you? Um? Well, my new website, how to
Eat l A is Los Angeles restaurant reviews, So if
you live here or if you're planning on visiting, you
(59:28):
should go check that out. And I also do video
versions of the weekend restaurant recommendations on TikTok. So I'm
just at Katherine Spires on TikTok okay, and y'all, Katherine
knows what the fun she's talking about with thank you.
So this is some persons like I wanted to make
a website. No, she's coming in fucking heavy. Okay, it's true,
(59:51):
it's true. I I you know, you can give yourself
whatever job you want, So I decided restaurant critic. But
I have been writing about food for almost twenty years,
so exactly this is your lane. And I think I
mean just already, like looking at your that this site,
I'm like, oh, I've never heard of these fucking places,
and I'm from here. Yeah, yeah, that's what I want
to do. I want to talk about places that aren't
(01:00:11):
getting covered like in the biblications. Dude, there's like a
whole like complex of like lack of like lack of
imagination to what a good restaurant is in l A
because of these websites. Like, yeah, I haven't thought about
it that way, but yeah, well so many people just
they and I get it because like infatuation either those
(01:00:33):
websites they aggregate, like like people just default to that.
But a lot of the times it's like, well, these
people know the publicists that are like working the pr
for restaurants and things like that, Whereas you're like, y'all
got it. I went to Monterey Park and they fucked
it up over there, exactly. Yeah, that's what I'm more
interested in. I think it's more reflective of Los Angeles culture.
(01:00:55):
And I'm making a point to not um cover restaurants
that have like puble city teams because those places have money,
they're set, they're fine. We don't need to talk about them.
Um you'll find out about them anyway. So just trying
to you know, there's so many amazing restaurants in Los
Angeles that hardly anyone knows about and they like deserve
a little a little come up, you know, yeah, my god,
(01:01:15):
oh yeah, omar sol Yeah, shout out to right. So yeah,
Andrew te put me unto that place, of course he did.
And is there a tweet or some of the work
of media or social media that you've been enjoying. There
is a woman named reb Masl and she's mostly on
TikTok where she reads court documents in the valley girl accent.
(01:01:36):
And that sounds so dumb, but god, it's the funniest
ship I've ever heard in my life. She finds the
most amazing cases. But also she recently tweeted that she
likes the hippos are the most dangerous animal on earth
because they're vegetarian. They don't want to eat you, they
just hate you. And I also love when animals are
like that. Moose are the same way. There's people are
always like trying to make friends with moose and national
(01:01:59):
parks and moose just want to murder so much. They
just want to stump your ribs in, And I really
admire that about them. It's for fun. It's for fun.
And the way they whipped their ship around with their
tails a thing yeah, they're they're vicious and then like
a galaxy brained and I'm like, oh my god, that's
why hippos and moose can't live in the same climates
(01:02:20):
because if they came together, just like killer vegans, they
take over immediately. You gotta separate. How come some like
maniacal maga like Donor hasn't been like you know what
I do? I pit animals against each other in these
kind of bespoke animal fights that you can only be
invited to. Next month, we got a moose versus hippo.
You don't know that that's not going on. I know right,
(01:02:42):
they probably is. Yeah, but then they can't do that.
You know what. It happened once and then the moose
and the hippo looked at each other and we're like,
who do we really want to kill? And then they
sucked the people up. That's a movie about coming together
and know who your real oppressors are. Yes, that too, kids, book,
Can we write that the hippo and the moose that
(01:03:02):
were forced to fight and then they killed the humans
that brought them to this situation. I think that's such
a nice story. Yeah, but it does involve the hippo
biting someone in half. That's yeah, yeah, yeah, kids. It's
a pop up book. The kids will love that part.
You can look the guts come out. Miles. Where can
(01:03:24):
people find you? What is the tweet or work of
social or otherwise media that you've been enjoying. It's a
spelling book. He is for evisceration. You can find me
on Twitter and Instagram at Miles of Gray, find Jack
and I an are Wonderful basketball podcast and Miles and
Jack Got mad these and uh my fiance podcast with
Sophia Alexandro which is called Fiance and again I will say,
(01:03:48):
go to how to Eat l A because I'm not
I'm Catherine. I'm done. I'm done with these. These websites
are like this is the newest BOBA campaign in town,
Like no, stop that stop that, um so check that
website out and for all I know a lot of
people's that gang. You hit me up on d MS
like I'm coming to l A. Where should I eat?
(01:04:08):
I'm saying this now go to how to Eat l
A dot com. That's all. That's all you need to know.
Tweets that like first one is from past guests Demi
Didee Bay at electro Lemon tweeted, calendar reminder went off,
happy anniversary, and it says Wednesday, Wednesday, January eighth, and
it says all day. Mark Wahlberg said he could have
stopped nine eleven. This was the day that he uttered
(01:04:33):
that famous phrase. So yeah, for those that celebrate, take
it in amazing. I just found the image of the
wolf Blitzer Celebrity Jeopardy, by the way, and the score
final score Andy Richter thirty nine thousand dollars wolf Blitzer
negative four thousand, six hundred and Andy Richter said, you know,
(01:04:56):
people always wanna like high five me about that, but
in the end, I just felt kind of bad for
the guy. He just seemed really lost. Uh it's I'll
see if I can find the video of that and
liake off to that foot notes or well we'll do
(01:05:16):
it on future episode. Well yeah, we got some you know,
we might be doing some video stuff coming up in
a few months. And then tweet I've been enjoying. Paul
Jackson tweeted, so this is how I learned by work.
Calendar wasn't private and it's just a screen cap of
an image that says Paul, I want to do the
product intro to blank on Friday and on the Only
(01:05:37):
Good Spot for most people? You have a blocker called
get a Chicken? Is that something you could move to
join us? Um? Work is hell? Work is hell? A chicken? Though?
Like that that would have almost sounds like a live chicken, right, Yeah,
it sounds like it, or maybe it's just Costco Costco wrong.
(01:06:00):
But then I would say, we say, like, you'll get chicken. Yeah,
I don't know anyway, And then uh at profit husband
like profit p r O p h e T. We
did text to Homie nicknamed Big Gulp. You make every
day of my life better than the next. I feel
like I have known you for a thousand lifetimes. Text
to what make sure the bathroom door is open when
(01:06:21):
I got home, I'm gonna come in sprinting. Uh. You
can find us on Twitter at Daily Zeitgeist. We're at
the Daily Zeitgeist on Instagram. We have a Facebook fan
page and a website Daily zey guys dot com, where
we post our episodes and our footnotes where we link
off to the information that we talked about in today's episode,
(01:06:44):
as well as a song that we think you might enjoy. Hey, Miles,
what's the song that we think people might enjoy. Oh,
you know we're talking about rock and people doing takes
on rock songs. Well, there's an album that's all Doors covers,
but jazz covers, or like Jazz and Jason covers of
the Doors and the light Fire cover by Lloyd Price
is what I'm gonna recommend because it's it's got a
(01:07:04):
little more a little more soul, a little more flate
or a little more season, you know. And that's not
to shade Robbie and Ray and John and uh James,
James Morrison. But you know, sometimes people can suck it
up to with their own verses. So this is like
My Fire by Lloyd Price. All right, well, the daily
is like, guys, the production of by Heart Radio. For
(01:07:25):
more podcast my Heart Radio, visit the I Heart Radio app,
Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
That's gonna do it for us this morning, back this
afternoon to tell you what's trending, and we'll talk to
you all then Bye bye,