Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season seventy three, Episode
three of J Daly's Night Guys, the podcast where we
take a deep dive into American share consciousness. It's Wednesday,
March two thousand nineteen. My name is Jack O'Brien. Okay,
Eve on floor on the road like Jack O'Brien, whoa
(00:22):
he don't know well work. That is courtesy at Hannah Saltish,
complete with the mumble mumble lyrics. Thank you Hannah for
looking into what the lyrics for that? Actually, uh and
I'm sure joined as always buy my co host Mr
(00:44):
Miles Grass, Mr take Mouse breath of great, don't doom?
Do I think that's Berlin right? Yeah, anyway, thank you
to Hannah Sultis for that one. Also, wow double I
got it once you started doing the since boom boom boom.
Yeah that's the only part I remember. But yeah that
song man. When I was a kid, I really didn't
(01:05):
even know the words of that, but I loved you.
Now I'm glad I got to talk about it, So
thank you. And assaultist assaultis Hannah you did the double today.
I feel like that was like one of the early
days of v H one. So the v it takes
me back. Well, we're wait, you mean v H one,
Like when we were old enough and we were like,
that's where the lame ship is at MTV V right,
(01:27):
and they those were the videos that my parents watched
right right in the head. Yeah, like that's where you
watched you where you got to see what John looked
like for the first year, and I'm like, what the
fucking zz top? Right? Yo? Top was on MTV too. Yeah. Yeah,
but then like after but you know what I mean,
like when you stopped playing music videos. Yeah, I'm talking
(01:48):
to those. I'm talking way back he Lumberjack. Well, we're
thrilled to be joined in our third teeth by the
very funny comedian joining us all the way from New
York and Laws Angeles. Please welcome to Sydney, Washington. Hey guys,
what's up? I love that VH one drag. Yeah, I mean,
(02:10):
but the funny thing is now now you usually watch
exclusively VA reality garbage. Yeah, make that become their late.
See how quickly I'm talking about Cartel Crew. Yeah. It's
kind of like when you're the nerd in high school, right,
and you get older, You're like, I'm going to do
the complete, that's what. Yeah, they're over compensating, right, like
(02:34):
we're gonna make pulling wigs off and throwing Martini's exactly. Yeah,
they're basically trashier MTV if that's possible. Yeah, I mean
MTV has like its shows, but I like, you know,
they're holding it down for people who want to get messy.
You know what's going on in the Atlanta hip hop world?
Hip hop world, the scene of basketball spouses black ink,
(02:55):
you know, if you want to know about probability, very chaotic,
dramatic tattoo studios and also the offspring of drug traffickers,
just cartel crew. That show is straight up a range exactly,
Bret Michaels see, but that actually was peak VH one.
(03:17):
That was when there was Flavor of Love. That was
Rock of Love for a very brief moment, they knew
exactly what they were. Yeah, there'll never be another show
like Flavor of Never That's why I go back on Hulu.
Why am I rewatching that ship like it's the office?
It was real content, Yeah, it really was. It was art.
Yeah it was. I would say it's better than the
real world. It out there and you gotta read for people.
(03:41):
I was like, you know what, I think Peach is
a good person deep down. The real world like the
real world is like oatmeal now, Like trying to watch
the real world is just like what's on Facebook now? Yeah,
and I don't even watch Facebook. Yeah. Alright, Sydney, we're
going to get to know you a little bit better
in a moment. First, we're gonna tell our listeners a
(04:02):
couple of the things we're talking about today. Uh, it's
a big newsday yesterday, a lot of a lot of
wild stories going down. We're gonna talk about the fact
that Europe cares about their citizens more than us. We're
gonna talk about Bibles for millennials, they're super lit. We're
gonna talk about how Trump gets down on the golf course.
(04:25):
We're gonna talk about the admission scam to end all
admission scams. This is so delicious for me. I love it. Uh.
We're gonna talk about Biden. We're gonna talk about all
sorts of ship today. But first, Sydney, we like task
our guests, what is something from your search history that's
revealing about who you are? My search history earns. I'm
(04:48):
searching for Earns right now. Oh yeah, I'm just that's
where I want to see how much they cause if
a lot. If I get one like on sale, I'm
like Amazon, what's good? If I could get a group
on earn, that's what I'm looking at round now, I
(05:08):
don't see you as a group on urn type person.
Actually that is really yeah yeah, I would want an
urn that looks nice, but it's really cheap. I'm actually
just trying to get a cocktail shaker and make it
as earned. But if you could be dazzle a cocktail shaker,
that's that's my brand. Your remains should be uh in
turned into a earn that is a cocktail shaker. I
(05:32):
used to be a waitress for ten years, so honestly,
it's very on brand. Now do you do the shake
above the shoulder? Actually that is the corniest bartender ever,
So no, I'm more about the like mixologists that like,
you know stirs okay, yeah, yeah, yeah, you know, yeah,
exactly what's your cocktail of choice drink? I'm sober, okay,
(05:53):
that's why that's why I should ask the first part. First,
do you drink when you used to? And I used to?
My favorite cocktail well was free whatever for it? Alright,
I like the cocktail shakers, Like I kind of with
cocktail shakers now, even though I'm also sober, because they
you put ice in there and you shake that shut up,
(06:13):
and it like gets your drink cold in like five seconds.
Wait are you drinking other things with the cocktail shaker? Yeah,
we still got cocktail. Wait, but what do you if
I have to get like a drink cold, Like it
doesn't matter like any anything. Soda obviously can't y no,
not so I guess water usually just get get the
ice water really cold. It's usually for my sun. My
sun wants water like cold really quick. I just like
(06:37):
and I go over the shoulder. So I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
So when they look through the window, you look like
your four your kid on Martini. You're like, there you
go drinking out of a Martini glass, which is the
like literally I couldn't even handle the Martin glass without spilling.
Try and give it to a two year old that
she wouldn't even make it to us. Now, the more
(06:58):
you know, yeah, exactly. Tips. What is something you think
is underrated? Underrated? Humidifiers? Yeah? Yeah, you need him. You
need them. It's first of all, in the wintertime, I
don't know how you'll do in l A. But it
gets really really dry in New York and they got
the project heat from the radiators and it just sucks
(07:18):
out all the moisture and after a certain age, you
your skin don't bounce back, don't have the elasticity that
you need. So I just want all my base people
out there to have humidifiers so they don't age like
Steve bullshit me. That's what I'm trying to I'm just
trying to help everybody out right, right, man, I should
I should use a humidifier more. Yeah, you should. I'm
(07:39):
relying on that now, even l A. You need it. Yeah,
well it's a desert here. Yeah. Recently though, because of
the like all the moisture that's been raining a lot,
I haven't felt as dried out. But yeah, there are
times when don't skip it. Man. I know you guys
are all healthy here and you walk everywhere, your juices anywhere.
We're like on some wally sh it like recliners, scutters
(08:04):
were invented for Los Angeles. Oh you just lazy, phone.
But like people in l A do, where athletes are
gear everywhere and like they are about that lifestyle but
we we don't walk. And you dabbled, right. I saw
on your Twitter you you came out to l A
did the l A thing, went to running Canyon? That
is overrated. I did it for the photo, but like,
(08:27):
honestly it's unnecessary. Who took you? Um, two friends that
live here? Again, I had two friends who live in
New York who did it, and it really just pushed
me to the edge. I was like, I am not
an athletic person. This is not for me. I don't
want to die on the rock. This is too much, right,
But I love the photo. Oh, the photo was perfect.
(08:50):
Besides running came what is something you think is overrated?
Dragging the Kardashians. It's getting played out now, Okay, Like
I get it, they're not construed bidding to society. But
the people who are contributing to society. Do we want
to talk about them either? No, Like everything is just
it's just oversaturated and it's just it's just drawn out now. Yeah,
(09:12):
And I've noticed that a lot of people, and this
includes us. We're dragging Kylie for you know, claiming to
be a self made billionaire, but like, no billionaires are
self made, Like none of none of them. Are we're okay?
Oprah is self made and a billionaire one of the few. Yeah,
that's you really don't get a lot of them, but
(09:33):
a lot of people are celebrated, and there's a lot
of white dudes in the self help section. Business section
are all about, you know, telling their life story and
just deleting the fact that they got a billion dollars
on there. It always starts after they graduated, exact right,
We're gonna talk about how they got into Prince's a
(09:55):
little later. And also, just because you're you're going into
well wealth doesn't mean you'll invest in do what you
need to do. She could have been at the Kardashians
and then just be robbed. So let's keep around now. Yeah,
Rob is in the same family. What he doing? Where's
Brody Jenner? Where Brody Jenner? That's right, wasn't he on
the hills? Our first introduction to that family? You know,
(10:21):
Brodie's like, I don't need all that. What are you saying?
Rob suck company didn't make a billion dollars? He had
a sock company. Yeah, that's what. That was the first
like thing that I remember one of the Kardashian kids
launching something but yeah, is he a DJ? Now? No,
feel like that's the next thing. Yeah, unless going on
(10:44):
live and being like eating on live as a DJ,
then yeah. But you know, I get what you mean,
Like there's no value in pointing out how valueless the
Kardashians are. For sure. I think it's because like for
the reason you say, like the people who are worthwhile,
they're sort of not the fodder like the Kardashians are.
People are meant to be, Like, what are they up to?
(11:04):
What's that? I can't stand him? And then however, when
you look at Kim Kardashian, however you want to judge her,
she's actually kind of trying to do some ship. But
because of her past and anything, it's just honestly, she
has the right team around her that's building things for
her to push forward and be this multimillionaire slash billionaire.
(11:27):
It's hard. Don't give me money because I already know
what I'm about to do with it. Oh, I'm going
to go in the helicopter from like building the building.
I'm just gonna I'm gonna rent out places for our
friends just to eat. The whole thing is just like, hey,
y'all want to have lunch boom, Let's get this whole mall.
Let's get them all. People already have a spending list,
(11:49):
like ignorant spending the list that's in the back of
their head waiting for that day like when it comes
and like just guess who's ready out the whole plane
and we're gonna watch soccer game and then come back
into our I have work the next day, but I
have it like that. The helicopter thing, like that's I
almost wanna learn to fly a helicopter because I heard
Bill Burr on his Monday Morning podcast talk about how
(12:12):
like he's getting his helicopter license and he was just like, yeah,
you just because you can land them anywhere, So like
you just like take off from somebody's yard and like
go down to San Diego and like forty minutes. I
definitely want to do that. You hear about accidents, Yeah, no, no,
and then you die. Did JFK's he was in a plane,
but it was also where he was like it was
(12:35):
a small plane where he was trying to fly above
his pay grade, like he didn't he had like like
too few hours behind in the cockpit to fly in
the conditions he was trying to fly? What is a myth? Finally,
what something people think is true you know to be false?
I think, uh, l A people are happy, Okay, they
(12:57):
are not. I've been going to shows and I'm like, oh,
this feels like Williamsburg. What's going on? What do you mean?
What do you just elaborate for us? Being in New York.
There's this perception that's like l A is so happy,
go lucky. Everyone is just having backyards and the air
is great and everyone's Yeah, it's just y'all be high
(13:21):
and that that's it. Yeah, that's all it is. But
y'all are sad as well. Yeah, because you're living in
your cars and y'all still have roommates. You live in
a whole home with roommates and not like an apartment.
But y'all y'all tugging it out, slugging it out, slumming
it out like the New Yorkers too. Yeah, y'all just
don't have rats as big as horses. That's it, right, Yeah,
(13:43):
there is something I think I mean, in some senses,
l A is probably the saddest city because this is
where dreams die. That's a lot of dreams die. Yeah,
that's coming of those people you saw running who are
actually working in the industry, right and are still up there, like, oh,
I gotta go to running because you never know you
(14:04):
might see somebody like and what do you do, Like
I'm late for my PF chain shift right, Oh my god.
But it's like, you know, no shape, it's it's just
it's just an industry, you know, like everyone the media
has conditioned people to be like, you get to a
certain point l A, you come out here, boom, snap
the finger, your dreams come true or whatever, and there's
there's not People don't realize that's sort of especially with comedy, right,
(14:26):
Like I don't understand how how much of an time
investment that is and how much of a real grind
that is, rather than sort of like, oh yeah, I'll
get a couple of viral videos and they saying, you know,
my series getting ordered. That happens. But a lot of
people put in work, but a lot of people have
to put in real, real work. Yes, I feel like
(14:46):
I wouldn't moved to l A unless I booked something.
I'm not coming here to just wing it. Yeah, dude,
New York, you can't make it there. It's a great
place to get strung along and without like having anything
actually happened. Yeah, Like I know some really talented comedians
who just like got development deals here or there and
(15:07):
like never had any ship come out. Yeah yeah, and
then you then oh man, yeah, way to bring the
mood down. Guys, this is my ninth day here. But
you're funny and you get it. You. I don't think
you're I don't think you have a misconception of the
work it puts into succeed. I think a lot of
people come here and not a lot of people, but
(15:29):
many people do have this idea that it's much easier
than it actually is to Absolutely nothing is easy. Everything
is very complicated. And if you're making it in New York,
trust me, you're You're a part of fraud. You're people over,
you probably killed somebody. Like it's not that simple. Uh yeah,
(15:53):
and you are making it in New York. So that's
good to know. We we just learned something about you.
What are you doing? A scam phone car? Just podcasting?
All right, let's talk about the fact that the other
governments of the advanced world care more about their citizens
than Aarris do. And how do what do you mean
(16:13):
by this? Okay. So there were two plane crashes over
the past I think six months maybe past year, where
a very specific Boeing seven thirty seven Max eight I
think it's called took off, got about eight minutes into
the climb into the skies, the plane started shuddering, smoking,
and then just plummeted earth, killing everybody on board. It
(16:35):
happened in Ethiopia very recently, and then it happened about
a year ago in Indonesia. So horrifying as all plane
crashes are, but it seems like there might be something
going on with this model of plane. And so China
was immediately like, okay, well we're not working with this plane.
We're grounding this plane until we figure out what happened.
(16:58):
The European Union yesterday or the day before came out
and said we're going to do the same, and the
f a A and the United States said it's too
soon to ground them because they don't have evidence yet.
So it's not too soon to fly again until they
know what happened. It's too soon to to to jump
(17:20):
to conclusions about this plane that makes people a lot
of money. And this is this is kind of a pattern.
You know, there are a lot of foods that are
illegal in Europe and that I put in my body
on a very regular basis because they are perfectly legal
here in the United States. Mountain dew is one of
them that I know is going to kill me at
one point. It's illegal out there, Yeah, it's illegal or
(17:43):
yellow Die number five. Come on, man, you know you
you really like mountain dew? Yeah, who didn't hug you
as a child? I lived in Kentucky for three years.
Have it by taps that kind of the beverage there. Actually,
there's probably a lot of people and cant talking like
(18:03):
we don't like it either, man. Just but like a
lot of just food additives and are processed like cookies
and crackers and ship are carcinogens known carcinogens that are
banned in Europe. And yeah, so I mean this is
just something like I've known about this ever since I studied,
like the f d A, and like the fact that
(18:25):
the f d A is just the most overmatched like
fraud of an organization because there's a huge, multi multibillion dollar,
probably trillion dollar food industry out there that just you know,
it's in their interests to make sure that they don't
get anything past that's gonna sunk with their money. Yeah, fine, great, Yeah,
(18:45):
I feel great. My arm goes down a little bit
after I eat chips ahoy, but it is what it is,
like three whole packages a day. Um. But the one
thing about that plane is the argument from Boeing is like, well,
you know, like an Ethiopian into Asia, I don't know
what the pilot training is like. None, None of the
pilots in the US based airlines have had problems. I
(19:06):
think a lot of how to do with this like
auto trim feature where they were saying like they were
the pilots may have been fighting this like auto trim feature.
But then even a lot of the US pilots are like, dude,
if I'm if my plane starts doing that ship that
early on, I might not have the frame of mind
to actually begin to diagnose what could be happening. And
I could have just as easily found myself in the
same position. But you know, I think even the Flight
(19:30):
Attendants Union has been complaining saying they don't like if
these planes are going down, they definitely don't want to
be on them. So we'll see what happens in surprise
around and hosting. It brought to our attention that there
is a app or a website where you can go
to find out if you are booked on one of
these planes. Yeah, that's yeah, just made for that. Yeah,
(19:51):
just to be like, are you on the death plane?
Oh it's called death plane? Yeah, death plane, I think
is what Boeing named it. Uh no, but it's called
you can't using Frequent Flyer miles in hell. Yeah, it's
on seat Guru, which which is a app I think
we've talked about, or a website we've talked about before
where you can get in deep on like what kind
of seats you have on this particular flight, and they
(20:13):
will also let you know ahead of time if you
are if you're going to die. It's the ones you
can know, like what you're working with, the like the interior, right,
so you know exactly got you got you? Well, I
just want to let y'all know that's my biggest nightmare,
being on a plane and then it crashes. And it's
not because you know, I don't want to die, but
I just don't want to die with that many people
(20:34):
because then it's not special, right, I'm on a list die.
I want just me exactly. You want to be the
reason for the party, Yes, exactly. That's why acalypse coms
me out is because nobody's there to mourn you. Yeah,
we all just die, no, thank you. Sometimes I walk
on a plane and I look around and I go,
(20:56):
if this was a movie, this looks like a tragic
grouping of people that we would all die. And then
I feed my own ship. While I sit in the plane,
I'm like, oh, man, and no one would care. Yeah,
and it's weird. And then I'm like, give me my
zan X. Right. Do you want to go to a purgat,
a desert island purgatory like lost? Whatever? I'm done. I
live in the valley. Man, It's already like purgatory, all right.
(21:18):
So the superproducer, Nick stump He directed our attention to
some tweets from our dear President, who tweeted airplanes are
becoming far too complex to fly, Pilots are no longer needed,
but rather computer scientists from m I t I see
it all the time in many products, always seeking to
go one unnecessary step further when often old and simpler
(21:39):
is far better, Like the wall. I just added that
um split second decisions are needed and the complexity creates danger.
All of this for great cost yet very little gain.
I don't know about you, but I don't want Albert
Einstein to be my pilot. I want great flying professionals
that are allowed to easily and quickly take control of
a plane. Albert Einstein, what the fund is he talking about?
(22:00):
Because he's basically saying, like, M I T guy, planes
are too fucking geeky man, right, I want to due
to the huge barrel chest, fucking push broom World War
two aviators on. Yes, I'm gonna cigar in the cockpit, right,
you know, like every other flight that took off from
World War Two just crashed. But that's super producer around
(22:22):
a Hosny. We're going to have a super producer fest
Y because she is flying this Friday and was up
all night worrying about this. Yeah. So I went deep
last night because I was like, oh damn, I have
to fly this weekend and I'm I'm flying abroad in April.
So I was like, okay, I am not about to
be on no Max whatever eight seven Max hates anytime soon.
(22:46):
So I got in deep and when I was reading
about it, so I learned the same thing happened in Indonesia,
which they actually had a very experienced pilot in Indonesia
and everyone was really losing their mind as to why
he didn't, um like read the maintenance things because apparently
Lion Air also very shady and they don't really it's
(23:07):
a whole thing. But um, basically what happens with this
UH seven thirty seven Boeing Max eight is it has
this like automated feature. Because all planes are like completely automated.
Now you really have to take control the plane if
it's starting to lose its mind. They're so complex, you know.
And so what happens is when you're flying in a plane,
if you're the nose of the plane is going up
(23:28):
too high, like it's pointed up at an angle that's
just too high, and it's wind will hit the sensors
which are on the side of the plane. And if
the wind is hitting this plane and the nose is
too high, that can cause the plane to stall, which
is very bad. You don't want that happening here. Um
and terrifying planes that like go up to steep on
the takeoff and then just fall backwards. That it's usually
(23:51):
cargo planes that have something too heavy in the back. Yeah,
was all the weight shifts in back. So basically the
sensors on the side of the front of the plane
if they feel this air hitting it and that it's
going to stall it automatically, the engine in the back
starts working too basically tip the nose to go down.
So if you're going up too high, Automa could be like, oh,
let's try and straighten that out, but then I'll straighten
(24:13):
too hard and you'll start nose diving. And so you
basically have about ten seconds to correct this because you're
going like four miles per hour. So unfortunately, the Ethiopien
pilots they didn't feel were in that moment, in that
panicked moment able to do the four step process, which
is you click a bunch of buttons I don't know
exactly details, and then it turns off those back engines.
(24:33):
So then you just like narrow out and not you know,
hit the ground. It does sound like it should just
be more automated like that. They shouldn't have to do that,
should well, it just needs to be updated and and
Boeing has come out and saying we're updating that and
coming out and releasing and then I'll fix everything. But
you know these are They're giant fucking machines that you
(24:55):
should figure out before you sell. I'm losing my I
don't know I'm on that. I'm on bow inside. Honestly,
anything wrong bind me. I've gotten everywhere I need to go.
This sounds that airline or that air type of airplane
is so popular because the cabin is quieter, you get
a little bit more room in your seat. So it's
probably one of the best selling airlines in Southwest. For
(25:16):
the most part, flies that airline, So be careful when
you go on south Southwest. Please give me free Airline
has like two of them. Delta doesn't fly it at all.
Air Canada flies a lot of them, So be careful,
y'all look out for these airlines southwest out here putting
your life at risk. But you knew that when you
were flying Southwest. Just Also, what's funny is when Trump
(25:37):
was in Vietnam, he was caping for these these planes
despite this last tweet, because Nick just showed me a
link from Fortune magazine that just says Boeing secures fifteen
point seven billion dollar Vietnam orders during Trump's Annoi visit
for these seven thirty seven mas planes. Oh really, so
good timing on that, like a hundred of them. It's
(25:59):
a good And if they just figure out this weird malfunction,
no no, no, no no, then it's not a good plane.
But anybody who's like, these planes are getting too smart,
we need to go back to the way it used
to be. There hasn't been a fatal commercial plane crash
in the US and ten years, but because US does
(26:19):
the checks a lot of these other foreign countries. It's
because it's kind of like you're really strapped for resources,
Like that lion Air one that crashed in Indonesia. Every
airport it stopped at, engineers had to work on it.
So lion Air was responsible. They needed to pull that
plane off the goddamn but they were like, sorry, tickets
are so because as soon as you pull that plane off,
you have to reimburse all those tickets. So I'd rather
(26:42):
live though, Yeah, it's okay. All the airlines, Hey, let's
I don't need to take that l just ground me baby.
But it's it's not the airlines making the responsible decision
in these other countries. It is the government stepping in
and saying, hey, corporation funk off. We're gonna make sure
everything's okay before you take people's lives into your hands.
(27:04):
But that's just not how the United States works. Out
of the United States is too worried about the almighty dollars.
One last thing, the thing that you're supposed to you know,
the like the wheel thing that holds a plane. That's
another way to stop a plane from nose diving. Just
yank it back, that's what they said. No, it's called
a yank or something like that. It makes no sense,
but you just literally yank that back. But in your
(27:27):
absolute panic, you're like, m that's like what they just
be like the yoke. There you go, the yok stupid
young Beau. The better yanket. You're supposed to just pull
that back and the plane goes, oh yeah. So alright,
if any pilots are listening, if you need to gear
me up, you can't tweet at me out. There's somebody
(27:48):
in the Zeke Gang who I think is like an
aeronautics or aviation expert, because they were my mentions when
I missed said that the A wing was a bomber
in Star Wars, and there was a whole aeronautics argument
in my mentions, So sir you can explain this better,
or madam whoever that was, please chime in, because I'm sure.
I mean, I don't know if you know as much
as Anna does. But now I'm just reading New York
Times articles at two am and hyperventilation. The thing that
(28:12):
made me feel so much better about plane crashes, because
I it is one of my biggest fears is that
if the engines cut out when you're like in the
middle of a flight. Your plane is designed so that
it can just glide to the earth and like that
happens all the time, not all the time, but glide
to the earth and like no, no, and just like
(28:32):
glide down like a hang gladder. Like your plane is
a hang glidder essentially, right, It's built to just be
able to glide even without engine propelling it. Right, But
what about what brings the tires out? Yeah? Yeah, the
landing gear, Like you can they can manually do that.
You have plenty of time, Like it can glide for
like hundreds of miles. Yeah, I remember, like in a
(28:54):
motherfucking h Dunkirk, you know what I mean? Right, when
Tom Hard He's like, I'm gliding it. Yeah. Yeah, that's
where I learned most of my informents. Yeah, that he
did some wild chip. He did cocaine to bring All right,
we're gonna take a quick break and we're back, and
(29:26):
let's talk about Donald Trump's golf game. You guys just
quickly famous cheater. Yeah, we don't have to get two
into that. But I just saw a headline. I just
said Donald Trump won a golf tournament he didn't even
play in. And I was like, of course he fucking did.
And what happened was if you go to mar A Lago,
apparently under like the Donald Trump's like winning tournaments like
it has all the years, it said that he won
(29:48):
the eighteen men's golf tournament at mar Lago, was president, Yes,
did he play in that? No? Then what the funk happened? Well,
originally a member name Ted Virtue, great name, won the tournament,
but then Trump found him at the country club and
basically said this is according to multiple sources, Trump pulled
(30:10):
up and just said something to the effect of the
only reason you won is because I couldn't play, and
then said, here's the deal, Let's do a nine hole challenge.
Winner takes all and Ted Virtue is like, I wouldn't
want to say no no to the president. Yeah, and
he's already like, you know, he's a Maga world if
he's a member there, so he's probably fucking so excited.
(30:32):
Played the nine holes lost and so now Trump is
the co champion of the tournament. And these are nine
holes that Trump plays all the time, all the time. Yeah,
it's that's on Ted Virtue. Man, you had a lot
riding on you. Your name is Ted Virtue, Like you
should be defeating Donald true virtuous. But yeah, at the
end of the day, you know he lost. He should
(30:53):
have just said, look, what's mine is mine. You should
have been here and you would have won. All right.
Donald Donald is has the gift of gas, like he
talks bok shit. And yeah, people are always like, well,
I'm gonna beat Donald Trump at the thing that he
is great at. There's no way. Side note though, This guy,
of course, was part of the production team for the
(31:15):
movie green Book, and there's a photo of him on
stage at the Academy Awards. That's him. He was on
stage at the Academy Awards when Green Book the Best Picture.
So of course some marrow lago golf tournament winning dude
was behind the screen book. Also, all right, let's talk
about people who are worse at cheating, who managed to
(31:36):
get caught cheating in a way that people I assumed
everybody was cheating based on my experience getting college of
the people that I went to college with. So there
is an emission scam that has been exposed featuring a
gentleman by the name of Rick Singer. Scam. God man,
this this guy was really was really doing it. He
(31:58):
set it up, he said the whole thing. He had
a nonprofit, phony nonprofit. And you go around to the
wealthy and be like, look, I can get your kid
in a fucking any school basically for a price. Now
what you do. You pay my nonprofit, you know, whatever
the fee is, and then I use that money to
then go bribe school officials or proctors of the s
(32:18):
A T or a c T test to get your
kid into the college of their dreams. And you get
to write it off at the end of the year
because it's a charitable donation. And how long has we
been doing it? For years? It's been a few years now,
I mean, but the latest batch that the I R
S and FBI uncovered is dealing with mostly kids that
are still in the schools right now. Can you imagine
(32:43):
there are kids going to class today who have this
ship on the front page of all the newspapers and
they're just being exposed. They said they arrested like thirty
three parents from some school officials, some coaches, uh and
Becky and Becky at Lori law Flynn from full House
and her husband Massimo, the guy who started Massimo Clothes.
(33:05):
Their daughter went to USC fucking bought her way in.
Felicity Huffman and William h. Macy's daughter bought their way in.
But my thing is is like, you bribe the school, right,
but if your school is but if your child is
not that good at school, how can they maintain we're
gonna okay? So it worked two ways, right. One was
(33:26):
the academic scam. So they would be like, look, my
kids grades aren't gonna I don't know how they're gonna
get into you. And they said, what you do idiots?
Have you seen these I have a plan on reck Singer, baby,
pull your kid out of high school and roll them
in an online school and I'll have someone else take
all the course for him. So the kid has straight
a's going into the application, or if they're if they
(33:47):
have regular grades but they're A C T R S
A T scores are sucked up. He says, Okay, what
you need to do is get your child in a
d h D diagnosis so they can then take the
test sort of isolated and for a lot longer time.
They can take their I'm on it in which I
already have proctors paid off who do those specific tests,
who after the kid has done with the test, they
were just corrected. So they had a T A C
(34:10):
T proctors on the payroll, on the payroll, and they
would just correct, would erase the answers dumb rich kid
put in and put in the right answers, and then
that kid would get a good score on whateverything. But
and it was almost like to order. They're like, okay,
do you want to like near perfect because you don't
want to get too much scrutiny. Do you want to
just underneath? So it sounds super smart and they could
(34:33):
basically pick the score they wanted. Yeah, I just want
to say shout out to Rick, Okay, because I wouldn't
even have thought of anything like that. They have to
be he's low key Billy McFarland. Yo, shout out to
these dudes just just scamming their way through exactly blue
collar crimes. Collar right. And And the thing is, it's
(34:53):
just like school is a scam to let's let's get
into it. Like college is a sham o wham. It's
well in the sense that they've made it so hard
for anyone to get in that it's just become this
unattainable thing. I think education is a good thing, but yeah,
in the in the way that they sort of frame
it as like you need to go into crippling debt
to achieve this degree. It's the college a good thing
(35:15):
because yeah, you get all this information. Nine times out
of ten, you're not gonna whatever your major is when
you get out of college, you're not going to do that.
I think it all depends on I think it's not
for everyone, right right. I think they're very specifically there
are I I certainly benefited from going to college. I
wanted to go look at you, but I also know
I'm I have a degree in history. I'm not using
(35:37):
that ship aside from dropping weird references on the show.
In the end, is it worth being in debt your
whole life. I don't know. I can't argue that this
is basically a more like bald faced, like fraudulent version
of the thing that happens all the time. Like people
get into these schools based on legacy, like based on
the fact that their parents went there. That doesn't make
(35:57):
it their grandparents built a building there. Yeah, it's just
my grandparents put a building in the school. I'm going
to the mother don't. And that's what it used to be.
So that's what a lot of these people are saying.
There's a there's a difference, right a lot of people.
It used to be like just make an outrageous donation
to the school and there's a little more quid pro quo.
(36:19):
It's still like, yeah, of course this is outright fraud
and bribery. So another way was the athletic track. So
coaches they have their allotment of people they can recruit
to bring in this school, and so other times they
can be like, look, I might be able to get
your kid on the Yale soccer team as a way
in because the Grays aren't that good. And then we're like, wait,
(36:40):
but my kid has never even played soccer. Yeah, that's
all good because this is what I'm gonna do. I'm
gonna stage before soccer. So he would stage photo shoots
to make it look like this kid was a real
legit recruit, or if the kid was uncoordinated, they would
just straight photoshop to face on the ship and then
submit that so and it looked like it looked like
(37:01):
a legitimate recruit. They're like, look at these accolades and
committing like that fraud. Then it turns out you can
bribe the Yale soccer coach with like a payment of
five dollars, gonna be like, yeah, welcome to Yale. But
it's but it's Yale, though, Like I feel like half
of it is our fault in terms of thinking like, oh,
these prestigious universities is the way to go. You are
(37:24):
the creme de la creme of When you graduate, you
should be able to get whatever job you want. And
it's just like that's not how life is set up, right.
I think it's just because the culture of these specific
parent groups are like, well, our kid has to go
to Yale, you know what I mean, because they live
in that world where if you don't go to Yale,
you're not shipped, but that okay, yes we do it
on the parents, but also society too. Yeah, and we
(37:47):
get mad at the whole system, but it's just like,
y'all made the Kardashians hot, So don't be mad when
the scams get scams. Don't don't be mad. It's it's
all us, right. Yeah, we've built it up to the
point where now preparents are like, by any means necessary,
I have to get this child in right. And Aunt
Becky's daughter once she got into USC like got on
(38:08):
her she's she's an influencer, you guys, And she got
on her thing and on her social media thing and
was like having a conversation. I don't know what outlet
it was, but I think it was YouTube and was like,
you know, I don't like school, guys, but I think
it's gonna be like fun that I get to go
to games, but I don't really plan on attending classes.
(38:30):
So yeah, she's just like, is that a character or
that she's dead as serious and she's like, I just
want to be able to Yeah, so of someone who
went to college, she wants to do the version of
cause they see on TV. But this is such a
like I'd say one of the biggest wasted resources in
all of America. Like we're supposed to have this meritocracy
(38:53):
and the such. There's so much time and energy being
spent on rich people trying to get their kids to
like have good lives, you know, just be like it's
like your kid just doesn't want to do ship. Like
there you wasted, You're you're ruined. You're trying to push
this kid in the direction. It's not gonna it's just
not gonna happen. Well, I will say this, especially with
(39:15):
like the S A T. S and just like the
test and then going to college, like it's not a
system based on like intelligence at all. Right, it's all
based on like if you're a good test taker, also
who your parents are. The system is flawed as it is,
Like I don't know, I went to college and I'm
(39:35):
really hard at like memorizing things and just understanding stuff.
And I didn't do well and it was frustrating because
I would try to apply myself and then I became
depressed because it's like am I stupid? Am I not
worthy of being here? And you know look where I
am now? A comedian. Yeah, Well, I think it helps
(39:58):
you sort of realize things too in the process. I
guess for you even right, you sort of realize you like,
this whole academia thing I've been sold like for what. Yeah,
and there's a whole cottage industry that I think Robert
Evans is going to do a story on. But we
interviewed a bunch of kids. Uh when when I was
back at Cracked, there was like a bunch of these
kids who, uh, we're basically writers for hire. They would
(40:22):
write your college paper for you, and like, you know,
like that's that's what these kids do once they get in,
Like they just pay kids to like do the and
then and then they become politicians and then have all
existed in a world where they don't need to do anything,
they can buy their way out of anything. They're in
a consequence free world, and then they start robbing the
working people and then look at where we are. I
(40:42):
could keep going, yeah, this is the conspiracy. But there
are there are those moments when you see a politician
and you're like, wait, this person can't be that dumb.
They just looked they just they just they just looked
dumb in that moment. No, No, there there are ways, Yeah,
and I get also too, so like when you look
at it, people were paying from anywhere from two hundred
(41:03):
thousand to six point five million dollars to get these
kids in and they were they were saying at the
press conference today, there were some parents who didn't want
the kids to know that they were sucking, pulling the
strings behind their back, and they said that they have
other instances where the kids very much knew what was
going on and what they had to do to get in.
Could you imagine if you like found you thought you
got that score on the S T S thought and
(41:28):
today there's no way you know, you know, if you're
good at cast taking. But also I know there are
people who have been encouraged their whole life to a
point where they think they are much more capable than
they are. And I'm sure there's a sliver of people
who are like, yeah, let's talk about it, white men.
Let's come on now, wait a second tier. You got
(41:50):
a bad rap. I have studied really hard on this, right,
and yeah, all my family went to the same college
and you and lacrosse is a real sport, right, My god,
where I went is also tied up in this, and
you know, and lacrosse is the like cool sport there. Stop.
(42:12):
I'm glad I went to one of these schools that
was good enough for people to scam their way into.
But yeah, it's the USC part doesn't surprise me at
all because like for rich people in Los Angeles, like
that's sort of like the of course you just go
to USC, like if you're not really serious about anything.
But yeah, of course I'm go to USC. Dude looking sick.
We're all the other conservative kids in l A. Yeah,
(42:34):
it's all about titles, it's all about status, and we
we we drag it. But it's a thing and everybody
can say what they want because they're in one level.
But imagine when you get money. Imagine if you're at
that part in your life where you're like, I could
pay for my kids to get into the school the
wrong way, right right. If you're that type of parent,
(42:57):
you're gonna do it. Yeah, you know, like you never
your kid never had to sell Girl Scout cookies and
it was pretty low and you're like, I I'm just
gonna buy all these boxes of cookie right. Yeah it
starts there, but it starts there. Yeah, wow, just let
your kids, Let your kids take the l Yeah, I
(43:18):
think that's true. Man, Hell yeah, if my parents have
to doing no fucking wait. My mom wouldn't even turn
the air conditioning on me and I was sweating in
the house. I'm like, what anyway, But the thing that
we still don't know is what the schools are going
to do with these kids that are still involved. What
they're gonna do. And then that's where I'm like, you know,
they're gonna return the money. Hello, that's what I want
(43:39):
to know. But it's not many of the schools. Even
the FBI they tried to find make sure that there
were no administrators involved, and it seemed like it was
purely just these coaches and these proctors and only at
one case USC where an administrator was also caught up,
and those they're still they're still investigating, so we don't
know the full stanton yet, but there from what they
(44:01):
have so far in the charges they made, they could
only find these people culpable. But I am curious though,
Like I mean, it sucks for the kids, especially if
they didn't know. But at the same time, it seems
like you have plenty of resources that this won't funk
up your your life trajected, Yeah, it's fucking embarrassing and
(44:21):
at that age, stuff like that is like, it feels
like the end of the world. How am I gonna
move forward on this? Because then it's all on social media,
your name is all up and through the blogs. It's
rough at least. And Becky's daughter was like that, I
don't do school, like so she she's owning it already
(44:42):
even before this happens. I'm going I feel bad for
William H. Macy's kid, who like, who knows, Maybe they're like, yeah,
I'm smart, and then I'm going on her. I g
just just have any what's your stories right now? Nope,
it's probably no no what private her? Olivia Jade's Instagram
(45:03):
is wide open, but she hasn't posted since the end
of February. How many father, she's got one point three
million and you two can cheat your way through an education?
Oh my god. Alright, guys, let's take another quick break.
We'll be right back. And we're back, and they've updated
(45:34):
the Bible for millennials. Thank god. This is the dumbest
thing I've ever I think, the dumbest story. Really it
makes it's it's just in line with everything I see. Right,
It's just like we gotta update this thing. But for millennials,
it was only a matter of time that it's like
the Bible, it's not it's not tight enough for the
(45:56):
ute them, and we need them to turn up in
the name of ovation. But these two there's a guy
named Brian Chung. He teamed up with another guy named
Brian Chung. He met in college True Stories doing that
someone is exact same name, um, and they were saying,
like you know, they they were they were involved in
like campus ministry, and they saw like when the Bible
(46:17):
came out, people just kind of like flipped through it
and it's like the same old tire texts and just
lay out and they're like, this is not this isn't
the same it. So Brian Chunk says, we want these
books to be true and relevant to millennials. We're all
on our iPhones, but we also resprawned really well to
visual imagery, and so it has it has to really
grasp our attention. If it does, it can change the
way we think. So he applied that to the Good Book,
(46:40):
and I mean he's not wrong in the sense that
because the you know, young people's interest in religion is
just increasingly becoming it's diminishing rapidly. Uh, they said, between
like there's a few Research Center Religious Landscape study from
that said young adults born between eighty one and ninety
six are much less likely than older Americans to attend
religious services or prey. They also found that last year
(47:03):
or of Americans consider themselves nuns or eight like nothing,
n O n s or atheists or an agnostics, and
almost half of that millennials. So this was in in
EIGHTI six, there was only ten percent of young adults
who said they don't affiliate with any religion. So it's
gonna you know, it's on a rise, and it's all religions,
(47:24):
it's not just Christianity. But this apparently this book though
is selling well. You can't get I mean Psalms, you
can't get that ship right, also the Gospel of John either.
So each book of the Bible is made to look
like a like hipster zine. It looks like like hype
beasts mixed with trying to think of the magazine I've
(47:47):
seen that looks exactly like this. It's like a lot
of you know, art magazines are sort of laid out
very minimally, like really just simple layout it's I mean,
it looks it's very slick. Look, yeah, I know they
did a good job. They probably have a future in
zene design. But yeah, they're good for you. The sales
they're growing and demand is also growing. They said last
(48:08):
year they sold ten thousand bibles, made three thousand in sales,
and they believe they're going to triple their sales in
We've always said here on the Daily's like, it's the
Christ is lit. Dude. Yeah, this is so blasphemous. I can't.
I'm like, I'm not even a religious person, but they
just it shouldn't be that accessible. It seems weird because
like to profit off of it to come I mean, yeah,
(48:31):
that's not God's plan. No, that's He was not handing
out slick verses of the Bible. No, it was not.
But you know, I guess if it can help, but
then you know great. I mean I have, you know,
religious people in my life who who lived the right way.
But you know what, they saw the Bible for what
it was. They didn't need flashy pictures. No they don't.
And I just feel like, if you want to be religious,
(48:56):
you have to put in the work. It shouldn't be
that easy, right, it shouldn't be all glamorous. Yeah, And
I think their their whole point is that they just
feel like if as long as the first step is
to make something that will even get somebody to bother
to read the scripture itself and then go from there.
Some of the reviews on Amazon, some guy was like,
if you like photography, and Jesus, this book is for
(49:18):
you because it's the photographs are nice. But yeah, you know,
I think, yeah, that's true. Like to actually have faith
is a little bit more than just sort of being
drawn in by you know, a good marketing materials. Yeah,
but I will say the word is by word of mouth.
You know, who's really reading the Bible. You hear one
person says some ship on the scripture, You're like, oh,
(49:40):
that's what it is. And then you pass it on
and it's all water down. Yeah, like that's how it is. Yeah, well,
you know, we'll see what happens. But they do say
right now their largest customer demographics are in Singapore, Australia, Canada,
and England International. Yeah, and they say people are just
kind of buying a coffee table. But so people might
(50:00):
just actually be like being like right, an ironic, really
slick version like any leeb of its shot version of
That's awful by one for the office. Well, from the
good book to the really good book. Uh, let's talk
about the Muller Report, you guys, because they're taking pre
(50:22):
orders on Amazon. We've talked about this that they have
pages up on Amazon. For one is sky Horse Publishing
has a page up that looks exactly like the nine
eleven Report and the Kent Star Report, Like they have
the design done exactly the same, and it's a best
seller on Amazon already. Washington Post has their version. So
(50:43):
the sky Horse Publishing one is Alan Derschwitz is going
to write the introduction and then they're planning to publish
the Muller Report. Keeping in mind that we don't even
know if they're going to be able to publish the
Muller Report. And what we thought it was a scam
because they're like what the funk? How is like, there's
no way the Washington Post is already doing this. But
(51:04):
I guess the thirst for Trump related books is so
intense that it like everyone's trying to profit and this
is like the one way to get a Trump adjacent
book that's going to be just something that's like publicly distributed,
so they don't they don't need somebody who like defects
from like being in the administration to write like a
you know, teth the t Report. But this is like now,
(51:27):
so yeah, so it's legitimately the Washington Post just basically
saying once it comes out, we're putting in a book
for him, and you're gonna need a copy. But again,
we don't know when this investigation is ending. We don't
know when the report is actually gonna be submitted to
d o J or if it's even gonna be made public. Yeah,
the mainstream media is continuing to just kind of right
(51:48):
and report as though it's about to drop like any
day now, but it's not. I don't know, I I
guess there have been a couple of little like pieces
of evidence, like people who work on mother's team saying
they're going to go back to work. But it's still
an incredibly short investigation compared to pass Special Council investigations.
(52:10):
The average length for a Special Council investigation is nine
four days. White Water, the Clinton Lewinsky uh that became
the Lewinsky scandal took two thousand, nine hundred and seventy
eight days, which is eight over eight years. Uh Iran
Contra took over two thousand days. Uh and we're currently
(52:32):
at six hundred and sixty three days were under the
average length of a Special Council investigation, and this would
There's been way more indictments coming out of this one.
It's a stupid or scam, Like look at everybody who's involved,
Like they weren't even slick about like anything they're doing.
(52:52):
Like Eric Prince got pressed on Al Jazeera by Mehdi
Hassan and it was like he was so bumbling. He
was like, my man, I'm looking at the transcript right now.
You actually lied to Congress and said you had no
contact with these people. He's like, yet, we know you
were in the same shows. You just told me you
were there meeting with the amadis Like, oh, you even
got the transcript wrong. Yeah. There was like audible groans
(53:14):
from everywhere in the audience. That happened a little Kim,
didn't it when like when she went to jail for
one of her people's they said that she didn't know them,
but then she was caught on camera with them and
it was like, oh, come on, a little Kim. This
is like, this is so long ago, but I remembered.
I'm like, oh, is that why? Because she went in
for a little bit. Yeah she I think she went
(53:36):
in for little cs or something like that. Oh man,
TBT guys TBT the radio. Um, But I mean, yeah,
good for you, good for them holding each other down.
But yeah, I think it's just in New York Times.
Even like Michael Barbarrow on whatever that podcast is called,
(53:57):
was talking. He's talking about don't like it's an especially
long one. He's like, and this investigation has gone on
for years now, Like what's technically right? It's like, yeah,
but that's how long these go, man, Like, and you're
making it seem like that is completely a conservative talking point,
Like they've been saying this since like month ten, that like, well,
(54:21):
we gotta wrap this up, we gotta wrap this up.
And like I just feel like they, like the conservative
side of the media got everybody like got the tempo
pick like sped up enough that people are like, yeah,
when's this report coming, And it's just like it doesn't
really make sense. Man, There's there's a lot of ship
to uncover, and we're not even close to the fucking
(54:41):
average length of a Special Council's investige and and people's
expectations around it. It's like Q and On for liberals,
you know what I mean, Like they they're hoping this
book is just gonna blow Trump's scalp off. You know
what I mean. I mean, I think there's a little
bit more to go on than Q and On. Probably, Yeah,
but I mean no in the sense that this is
like a singular moment that could you know, that change
(55:03):
everything and we'll remove Trump from office and then the
nightmare will be slightly over. Yes, you know what I mean,
And I don't, and I think that's not gonna happen.
A lot of this enthusiasm around it, I think it's
it's based in that. That's why even for us when
we talk about it or like, I'm not really expecting
this thing to be the be all end all. I'm
sure it's gonna put things out there that we're gonna
(55:24):
have to have here explanations about. But I'm not personally
putting all my eggs in this basket to be like,
please come through with the Muther Report, Yeah, solve all
our problems. Both pages have the report at nine and
sixty pages, and they both have it dropping on March,
(55:45):
so I think they're just copying off of each other.
Then they're cheating in school. I think Drink is going
to drop an album to Honestly, that would be huge
and m oh wow, that's what the Mulla report is.
Actually it's it's a Beyonce album. She has that kind
of power. Well, Sydney, it's been a pleasure having you.
(56:12):
Where can people find you and follow you on line?
You know, my my Twitter is a work in progress,
but if you you know, you want to see the
growth coming along, find me on Twitter at just said NYC.
That's j U s T s y d n y C.
I'm on the instagrams. That's popping. You know. If you
(56:36):
like photos, if you like the New Bible, right, go
to my instagram. You should put verses next to your
running first. Yea, I should start over. Yeah, okay, I
don't start over, you just start reposting right right right.
Find me on Instagram at just said b W. So
that's today U S T s y d b W.
(56:58):
And I have a podcast one Forever Dog called The
Unofficial Expert with Marie Boston. It's so fun you should listen,
very good. Yeah, it is. It's a delightful and messy
and is there a tweet you've been enjoying? Mmm, I'm
so narcissistic. So we're just gonna go with one of
my TWI to show you what I'm doing with my
(57:21):
social media's. It got a lot of heat, but I'm
gonna stick to it. It's um. Pete Davidson is a
constant reminder to just be yourself if you're a man. Good.
It was a good one and it was no, no
shade to Pete. I think he's awesome, but it just
(57:42):
shows you that like a man can basically say hey,
I want to die and like also look tired, and
he's still getting bad bitches left and right. He's courtside
thriving right now, right yeah, and then yeah if uh yeah,
with the women being honest, like oh she's hysterical and
come on, what's going on? No? No, no, no, It's
(58:02):
like when the last time you've seen a woman have
a full on meltdown like on social media and then
got get some long dick after that, it's not happening.
I mean, Amanda Bindes was asking Drake to murder they're downstairs.
Oh my gosh. Yeah, it's yeah, exactly, but no, no, no,
but that's precisely yeah, exactly. I know it's exactly what
you mean. She definitely didn't. Yeah, she looks good. Yeah,
(58:22):
well it took some time. Yeah, it wasn't right after No,
it wasn't. It was as soon as she was talking
about all she's a little gay now it just got
it got reckless with Amanda. Yeah, people were worried. Yeah,
it's a tough time for us. All Where can people
find you? You You can find me on Twitter and Instagram
(58:43):
at Miles of Gray a couple of tweets. I like,
let's see, Oh, one is this from Jamie Loftus. She goes,
why is this Don cheatles Wikipedia? Pick and I guess
this is Don Cheatles Wikipedia? The worst? Don't do don
like that? He looks so unsure. That looks his picture
for the Wikipedia page. She was like, oh, they need
(59:05):
a headshot at me. I have a question. Yes, you're
doing pretty well on Twitter, just throw it out there.
Have you deleted tweets? No, m Why is your tweets
are just so low for the amount of followers. Oh,
I don't. I don't tweet a lot. Oh so you're
just that's off the strength of this podcast. Yeah, yeah, Hey,
(59:29):
are you guys looking for another car? Upa that follow account?
Go up? Is that game? Please pull up and follow
Sydney on because she's looking at me like I'm buying
fucking It's just are you deleting tweets? I do it
on your own podcast? I like it. No, I appreciate it,
(59:53):
but no, that's just off the strength of this second
rate podcast. I love it. I'm gonna just do that
one that's out because I just could not the face
of Don Cheetle. It really looks like he doesn't even
believe he's Don Cheetle. Yeah, he's He's he's going through it.
I feel like he's going through something. But also like
men age weirdly sometimes like it's either you're like, oh
(01:00:14):
my god, you're George Clooney or you're Stu ste This
is the second time you have Dre. He's the nicest
guy ever. He's well, he you know, he's kind. Have
you have you been on the receiving end of his half?
I have not his tip never died, I say that,
but I've served him several times, and he's like one
(01:00:36):
of the best celebrities to wait on wow. But I'm
not going to say he doesn't look like he's melting.
When I see him. He was like a looking dude.
But when he was a firefighter, he was no, don't
get his teps. Okay, I will, I will, I will
(01:00:57):
check it out. Oh, I mean yeah, there's some cool.
He looks like a handsome Steve again, like a young Bush.
He was young for a little bit and then all
of a sudden, just rapid boom. Yeah. Looks when he
was like but that was his wife. Yeah, you just
fall off a cliff. It depends sometimes. Yeah, unless you
made a deal with the devil right white age badly
(01:01:20):
you said it. That is Jack Underscore O'Brien on Twitter,
lets mentioned follow me at that Jack Underscore Olbrian a
couple of tweets. I've been enjoying Man nuclear bomb. Manuclear
bomb tweeted uh screen caps of a headline that says
library cat outlast councilman that wanted him gone and then
(01:01:42):
beloved cat will keep his job at the local library
after international backlash. And he said you come with the king,
you best not miss h which is true. Don't work
with that cat. Wait, can I there's one more tweet?
That I want to it's not mine, because I was like,
that's kind of rude. Um, okay, So Cole Escola wrote,
(01:02:03):
while my peeps were in college, I was prostituting myself
on Craigslist to pay my rent. Well, I had a
show on logo why is my caps luck coin? It's funny.
I didn't I didn't say it right, but it's so
funny because it's like, Okay, we see these people in college,
but like there's some of us that we're doing just whatever. Yeah, financially,
(01:02:27):
you have certain options financial Yeah. And at the Hill
tweeted about a story we'll probably get into but a
new app Let's conservatives label restaurants as quote safe spaces
for pro Trump guests, and uh at Silky Jumbo tweeted
Green Book the sequel. I love amazing. She's so good.
(01:02:48):
You can find us on Twitter at Daily's. I guys
were at the dailys. I guys on Instagram. We have
a Facebook campage and a website Dailies like guys dot Com.
We post our episodes and our foot No One Girls,
where we only call to the information. We talked about
today's episode well as the song We've ride out On's
what's that going to be here? Uh? This is from
(01:03:11):
a songwriter singer from South London. Uh, I've this is
just the first track I've heard from her. Her name
is Ego L M A M. And it's just like Yo,
she's a great singer. It's like it's on that neo
soul vibe. And the band playing with her two is
every person, whether it's a personal electric piano based drums
(01:03:35):
like everyone is they're bringing in. So I was very
surprised when I heard this, and I was like, I
want to hear more about from this artist. Only one
song out now and it's this one from Ego L
M A and it's called table for one. All right,
we're gonna ride out on that. We will be back
tomorrow because it is a daily podcast, and we'll talk
to you guys. Then I say to the dragons found
(01:04:05):
the last to Night and my down, treat the holding
your se down like this day and I'll have a
tableful one. I have