Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season episode five of
Like Guys, the production of I Heart Radio. This is
a podcast where we take a deep dive into America's
shared consciousness. It is Friday, June eight, Happy birthday to
(00:20):
my wife, the love of my life. My name is
Jack O'Brien a ka. I read the news today, oh boy,
about shark dicks and Blippi's diarrhea, and because the news
was rather read well, I just had to laugh on
(00:41):
my second rate podcast that is courtesy of the Official Dickhead,
and I'm thrilled to be joined as always by my
co host, Mr Miles Grag. Here we go. Well, now,
now you know I am mild, I'm well knowing for
my cannabis stout. My list of interest goes oh wow,
(01:04):
maybe because I'm so versta tile style shoot fout. I
said soon was always take me back when I hear
Chucky miles from the l A River out to Vanna.
I'm on all the spot to the very last mile. Okay,
Now that I can just keep going, I mean I
can't keep going because the lyrics stopped, but I will
stop going because bo you did it beast boys. Fun fact,
(01:25):
I saw them shoot that video in Japan when I
was when I was a kid, I was there when
they were shooting around Shinju and she BULLI you and
stuff uh, And I was like these people doing and
then I realized, Oh, that was the beast Buss the
Beasty Boy. Yeah, that that was dope. You gotta give
me the lyrics next time so I can do the
hype man thing. Uh. We are thrilled. Miles fortunate blessed
(01:48):
to be joined by one of the funniest stand up
comics in the world, Comedy Central presents of the classic Uh.
She was voted Portland's Funniest comic ultiple times. You know
her from laft comes standing her own podcast Who's Your Gut?
And you can see her live again check her website
for Daith. Please welcome Amy Miller's wife. And it's my birthday.
(02:16):
Here's what I wanted. Hey, guys, what do you want
for your birthday? You have a good what's your birthday?
December thirty one, New Year's Eve? Baby? So this one?
Did you have a kind of birthday this time or
you think this is this next year? This is no?
Well I had it was my fortie birthday, this last
(02:36):
one and my friends made me accounting Crows video. I
mean a bunch of my friends sang long December and
cut it together and I watched. I was alone in
a hotel room, but I had a zoom party. It
was weird but fun. You know, It's something I'm never
going to forget for sure. Did anybody have Adam Derwitz
(02:59):
dreads in the you? Okay? Yes, one person did, and
I think it was probably not okay because it was
a white man. He did like he like, he didn't
wear them, you know, he did it with a computer.
But then they were you're imitating of the problematic Adam Derwitz,
you're runing the source material. Unless he was like, no,
(03:19):
I mean, I've been growing these act. They tried to
contact him many times because for a birthday message or
to be in the video, because you know, we're all
from the East Bay, so like they did have connections
they could call in. And then he didn't respond. And
then someone was like, oh, he's on cameo, so we
can just pay him. And so he made a cameo
(03:40):
for my fort and he said, please stop having your
friends contact my dad. I didn't know about any of it.
That's amazing. Yeah, it was a weird birthday. But is
it just because you guys are kind of area of
(04:02):
origin or are you a big can of crows? Yes?
I am a pretty big crow head. Um. Also, it
was just it was just funny because yeah, we're all
from like we all met in Berkeley where he's from,
and you know, I don't know, it's long December. It's
a classic about December and how things are going to
(04:22):
be better next year. Like it was, it was just amazing.
I'll send you the video. You're gonna blown away by
the effort. I mean I felt very loved, that's for sure.
So you are the opposite of the baby like those
first baby born, like you are the last baby born. Yeah. Yeah,
(04:43):
I was born at like six am, So I don't
think my mom could have waited until the new year. Right,
where are your headlines? You know where the headlines for
the six am on December thirty one babies? I know,
I think the headline should be that my mom lived
in the Spay and got a doctor in San Francisco,
so I was officially born in San Francisco. Why would
(05:04):
you do Why would you plan to cross the bridge
when you're in labor? That's what I don't understand. What
if there's traffic, My god, what if there's a I
won't even say it. Yeah, if I had been born
two hours later, you know, I would have been born
on the bridge. That would be very tight. And then
they'd be singing a different song for you. I think
Water another East Bay band. Yeah, all right, Amy, We're
(05:34):
going to get to know you a little bit better
in a moment. Christ We're gonna tell our listeners a
couple of things we're talking about today. Joe Manchin is
possibly coming to the table a little bit, possibly maybe
scooting his chair. He's bringing some bullshit to the table
with him, but he's coming. He's coming to the table.
He's scotching in. Oh, look who decided to come out
(05:55):
of their bedroom. We're gonna talk about some of these
concerned parents that you see on Fox. They will often
be introduced as just a concerned parent who decided to
get involved in politics because they were so outraged and
maybe not the truth, which is shocking, I know for
a Fox News. We'll talk about the Victoria's Secret Angels
(06:16):
and twins. Uh. On top of that, we will talk
about those twins. You can actually get an Airbnb at
the Dungeon where at Aliens and Quim and I were recorded,
So we'll talk about that. I finally found some compelling
UFO debunking material that I will talk about. Yeah, this
(06:37):
is a podcast that a few people had sent us
over the last couple of weeks. I realized, and I'm like, wait,
I've seen this, make right. This is the one thing
everyone was like, listen to this one, try this one. Yeah,
this one. Somebody finally gave me the time code, or
at least I found the time code. So appreciate y'all.
We're gonna get to all of that plenty more. But
(06:58):
first Amy, we like to ask our guests, what is
thing from your search history? Oh, you know, I've been
in Denver too long, as I told you, guys, And um,
I did look up green. They're so crazy about their
green chili and it's like your state, you have one food,
You guys got one food. And so I was looking
at recipes for green chili and it seems pretty easy
to make. I don't know. Every time I've had it here,
(07:20):
it's been kind of bland. So I really don't know
what all the buzzes about. But I'm gonna try to
make it. It's like they put it on ship like
like no, it's made with yeah, but i'mo they like
(07:42):
lay claim to it, which is really weird because you
know of Mexico, um, and they put it on everything
fries and sandwiches and pasta's like yeah, it's their food.
So I just looked it up and it was really underwhelming.
The rest to beee itself. So I don't know, it's fine.
(08:02):
I'm saying it's fine. Yeah, is that gang? If you know?
Is is there a difference between Colorado green chili and
like what I know? It was just like I think
that in Colorado is bland, right. They had to like
it a little bit. They don't use any salt or spice.
Green catchup. It's like a good food but without salt.
(08:26):
I didn't even realize they had like a thing that
they were yeah oh yeah, oh yeah yeah, because like green,
I think of like New Mexico, right right right, that's
where like I think of it being like a thing.
But yeah, okay, Colorado, Okay, they needed something before they
were America's Amsterdam, you know, so they this was something
that they could put put on their resume. Green stuff
(08:51):
for green things. Yeah. What else have you been doing
while you while you're in Denver? Anything? Anything? Just a
lot of comedy pretty much like A hundred and four
degrees so there too, huh Yeah. Typically I would be out,
you know, I'll go to the zoo or something, make
the most of my time on the road. But no,
(09:11):
I'm staying in hot I did go to a Rockies
game that was really fun. Yeah. I went to a
Dodger game recently. Getting a baseball game's nice. Uh, Like
it just feels like good, safe and easy fun. Yeah,
are super cheap there, I mean, even post pandemic. They're
like seven dollars to go see the Rockies, so it
(09:35):
was super fun. I had a hot dog Rocky dog. No,
but I bet you they would do it. I bet you.
Do you see any dangers? Yeah? I did, we saw too. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Well they're playing the Padres so I can't remember who
it wasn't Machado, but yeah, I would know. It was
a really great game. It's nice to be back out. Yeah,
(09:58):
that's the first interesting act I've ever heard about golf.
My friends were texting each other about how much they
like Mountain golf, and I assumed that was just like
something boring, but apparently you can hit it like twice
as far like golfing in the mountains because the air
being thin. Yeah, that's why I went Hitdeo Nomo threw
a no hitter against the Rockies. It was really impressive
(10:19):
because that stadium really favors, uh the offensive play. Yeah, yeah,
the balls carry for sure. Yeah, that's pretty cool and
I remember that. Just to bring it back to the normal,
I made my mom let me miss school the next
day to celebrate the historical moment the Japanese got through
the no hitter. So yeah, I would just find ways
(10:40):
to be like, yo, I can't we can't go to
school today, like not after that, Mom, Like I can't
like what you want me to do, like we got
to honor this. She's like fine, fool, Like just oh
she really let you stay. Yeah yeah, she's just say
you're sick. But I told my friends like full because
no More threw that no hitter. Mom, Yeah, sick, sick
with it. Yeah, my dad used to let me stay
(11:02):
home from school for the first two days of the
n C Double A Tournament. Oh we all got a
little weird ways that we Uh, you know, disenfranchised our
children from getting I didn't really ask, I just nobody
seemed to care. What what's something you think is overrated?
Roasts comedy, roasts tired of him? I did a show
(11:25):
the other nine in Colorado that was like had a
roast element, but like I had headphones on and then
people said mean things about me. I don't know what
they said. I'm just tired of roasting. So it was
just like, hey, don't face your tormentors and you don't
know everyone's laughing at you. Pretty much. Yeah, I offered
someone in the crowd twenty bucks cash to tell me
(11:47):
the meanest things that they said. But I'm just like listen,
Like it's a good it's a good vehicle for writing jokes,
and I do like that. But I'm just tired, tired
of roast culture. I want to get down with night comedy,
sweet sweet sweetheart comedy. I think it's harder. I think
it's because I think so much of our comedy was
(12:07):
just about being like cleverly mean early on, which is
why I think a lot of like mean, what's happening now?
This used to kill And it's like, well, that's because
you were just like the cleverest bullet like verbal bully,
and you canna a lot of things like that, but
on top of it all, it's very toxic. Yeah. I
feel like Kylaire's show that the compliment ross those are
(12:29):
always really fun. She's still right jokes and uh it's
competitive and do you feel so nice after? Yeah? I
think it's a good exercise, right to think of how
can I make being so kind actually just as funny
as like the traditional thing of like let me point
out what's different about this asshole? Absolutely, I feel like that.
(12:52):
So you were sitting on stage with headphones on, blindfold
and a blind Oh wow, the blindfold adds an extra
element of I guess that's less firing squad or something.
H Yeah, and they were playing the band static X.
In my ears, it was really horrific. You couldn't even
choose your own that's terrible. I was going to ask, like,
(13:12):
what were they playing to try and blast out the sounds,
and it's it's static X. Good to know. Yeah, it
was weird. I feel like that is like a night
like an actual nightmare that somebody had and was like,
I have to make this reel for a comedian. Yeah,
the nightmare is I flew to Colorado to have my
(13:34):
good friends say mean things about me. Doesn't make any sense. Yeah,
they're still going strong though. You know, Comedy Central is
still heavily committed to roast culture. Yeah, overleveraged. I'd say,
I think they're a little overlaved there. They're upside down
on the roast culture. It's funny too, like when you
see like I've seen reality shows or like like on
(13:55):
a you know, the format of shows, there's like a
bunch of people in the house like without TV, so
they resort to doing their own like entertainment. I'll see
them be like, we're gonna do a roast tonight, and
then you see the amateur version of it and you're like,
oh my god, like this is actually you guys are
just just like very hostily insulting each other. And then
(14:17):
some people are laughing like oh they don't get what
it is, and I'm like, that's why. Yeah, maybe roast culture. Yeah,
they roast on. They try to roast on drag Race
sometimes and it's always really funny. That's some some unfunny
queen like couldn't write jokes, and then she just calls
RuPaul old and irrelevant, and then RuPaul is like sash away, Yeah,
(14:37):
you're like, hey, you fucking fracker, motherfucker. No one mentions
the fracking. Yeah, that's pracking off the table. They'll get
to edit it out. You say the F word on
the show, we'll get canceled. What the fuck, no fracking, fracking.
You can say funk all you want. What is something
(14:57):
you think is underrated? Amy pot roasts? Delicious keeping I mean, yeah, roast.
I feel like there's all these sort of classic foods
that we put in this category of like oh this
is like a sixties housewife food or whatever, but like
a pot roast is so good. Put veggies in there,
(15:18):
slow cook it. I mean you're eating for a week.
It's delicious. Heavily support pot roast culture. Yeah, don't throw
that in there with like dry meat loaf and fucking
jello molds with Yeah those pot roast a delicious Yeah,
yeah good. And the thing is that the people who
(15:38):
don't realize too A lot of times you might go
in the term like that big gas hunk of meats
probably like man, chuck, roast is cheap, and when it's
not special, I buy the funk out of it for
the same reason to just slow cook it because yeah,
so that's a tougher cut. But there's a lot of
connective tissue in it too that when you cook it
down over time, it like makes whatever you're making have
(15:59):
a little more of this like meat quality to it. Yeah,
so I get I get behind that one. It's the tendons.
The tendons make it all soft and moist. I make
my guinness stew with a chuck ross. Oh that sounds good. Yeah. Yeah,
a little uh pressure cooker right now, just old school
baby for people who are bad at cooking like me. Yeah,
(16:23):
the pressure cooker is like it's like a magic trick.
It's like holy ship. Yeah. I still don't have one,
but for the amount of like canned beans I eat,
I feel like I owe it to myself to just
get a like a pressure cooker so I can just
make my own black beans. You're a big bean Boy,
Oh you know him, a B B B Big Bean Boy,
Big Baller brand. Oh yeah, I love being you gotta
(16:46):
make your own beans. I always buy dry beans, put
them in the insta pot. See see that's what a
How long does it take? I mean a couple of hours?
People should know that you could do it intues right
Amy and I can see it. But for the listeners,
Miles is recording this over a trash can fire with
a can of baked that he's eating just out of
(17:08):
the can. And I got these cuts on the corner
of my mouth because I don't take the lid off
on the side, because I just sip them out to can.
It was nice to hear trash can fire. And it's
a literal meeting, you know. It's like I'm tired of
dumpster fire, like trash fire in general. Yeah, you know
on Twitter or whatever. It's nice. Hated a picture, also
(17:32):
get a bad name, A little nice little trash camp
fire down by the tracks. Another Creedence clear Water song
that I enjoy. It's trash can Alright, let's take a
(17:52):
quick break and we'll be back to talk about Joe
Mansion more. Yea, and we're back, And Joe Mansion is
(18:13):
a senator, Democratic senator apparently, what is the democratic in name? Only?
Would that be a dino? Dino just fitting? I think
for most Democrats in general, dinnosaurs who are all millionaires'
I think, like, what is it of congresses millionaires? Think
about that anyway? Joe Mansion. Yes, he's been one of
(18:35):
the people, along with Christian Cinema from Arizona, to really
drag his feet and hold up a ton of legislation
that could occur. And I'm sure it's that you know,
it must be nice for Joe Biden to use that
as an excuse to it to be like, why I
can't do anything because a Joe Mansion. But now he's
beginning to change his stance a little bit on voting
rights and the Filipbuster, not in a way that I
(18:57):
would say hooray, Joe Mansion has them to the table,
more like, oh, this dude is trying to okay jumpings
in what is this exactly? He introduced a compromise bill
that he said he could vote for because a lot
of people like, why would you vote for the for
the people actually like the thing that you know would
help keep our votes safe and you know, a dual
(19:19):
or at least protect us from all the funk re
we see in a lot of Republican controlled states where
their sense he's trying to be like, dude, votes don't
count unless you're like white and you're voting for Republican
and even if you guys do vote and when we'll
find a way to just overturn it, so he doesn't.
He wasn't supporting that version because there weren't enough Republicans supporting.
Now he has his new bill, which has things like
(19:40):
mandates for early voting, like automatic voter registration when people
turn eighteen, and I think most importantly a ban on
partisan jerrymandering, because a lot of ship is born out
of like just like this really crude jerrymandering that is
going on in many states, actually all states. So the
other thing is he he opposed as though, things like
(20:00):
the ability to have like a no excuse absentee vote,
like just to be like, no, I don't need next years.
I just want to vote absentee. And he's also just
watering down other a ton of other things. And while
Stacy Abrams supports it, a lot of people are like,
there's this is fucking bullshit, dude. It's like you suck,
(20:21):
Isn't that Like he's like still trying to push for voting.
I d difference being it would be slightly less draconian
in the types of idea that would now be accepted,
so but still obviously, like I mean, in general, you
have to prove who you are when you vote. But
rather than making like it has to be this kind
of idea blah blah blah, you can't take this. That's
(20:41):
loosening somewhat. But at the end of the day, if
you're not you know, philosophically, if you can't offer the
people the ideas that they need and it's not free
or like a very easy process, then we're getting into
a poll tax territory because you'resensely saying like, oh, you
gotta pay to do this or whatever. So yeah, it's uh,
is far from perfect. And and Abrams supports the compromise
(21:04):
because it's what she wants or because she thinks it
has a better chance of passing. I don't know. That's
the other hard part is that what are the chances
of passing? Because even with this, it's gonna need ten
Republicans to get over the line. And unless because the
fucking filibuster, that's it's only making things more complicated. Which
(21:26):
brings us to this other thing is that he said
he's open to changing some of the rules around the
filibuster or not doing away with it completely. But even then,
I don't know, You know what who's in his head.
Clearly he's he's getting pressure from like every fucking dimension
and angle possible, So it's hard to know like what
where he's actually at with this. But yeah, I think
Stacy Abrams is saying. I think looking at things like
(21:49):
the jerrymandering being gone, like well, that's a pretty significant
thing to be taken out. But then the voter I
D ship is just kind of like the like, let's
get there's not a voter fraud problem. There's no, there's
just not like there. We we have the evidence that
that's not a problem. This only serves to disenfranchise like
(22:09):
young people, poor people, and in my case, the disorganized
and lazy who like will not go out and get
real specific idea. Yeah that I'm like, funk it, I'll
take my passport everyone. I know. I was so glad
when it got extended, great pandemic we had because it
(22:31):
was supposed to be I think this October and now
it's next year, so we had some more time to
get those real I D s folks think three months.
I guess. Fuck. That actually just made me anxious. But
maybe that's what I like to do here. I mean,
maybe if like he gets this gets enough support, and
(22:55):
then like, I have no hope that this is going
to actually get Republican support, but maybe us well help jerrymandering.
The Republican is gonna fucking side there, like that's the
only that's their lifeblood. But if he's showing his hand
of like, Okay, this is what I'm for, and he
sees that the Republicans are just straight up like block obstructionists,
(23:18):
then maybe he'll kind of come come around a little bit.
I mean, this is like all thinking twenty steps down
the line, and who the funk knows what's gonna I mean,
And to what Stacy Aver specifically said, she said, what
Senator Mansion, this is a direct quote quote what Senator
Mansion is putting forward, or some basic building blocks that
we need to ensure that democracy is accessible no matter
your geography. And then that the tenants of the proposal
(23:42):
were quote strong ones that will create a level playing field,
will create standards that do not vary from state to state,
and I think we'll ensure that every American has improved
access to the right to vote. I think, you know,
activists and other people who are looking at the original
legislation would be like can't we get this version? But
I don't know. I mean, like we may very well
(24:02):
be in a place where there's not much else can
be done, right, But yeah, I guess that's my question
is like this bill would it make things better from
where we are right now? Like in some instances it
would make it better, and then some it would be
like stricter voting ID laws where like the things in
this bill are are definitely going to be a difference
(24:23):
in what the laws that we have on the books
now for sure. So like, yes, I think on some level,
if you're like a Democrat who's counting votes, your your
mentality is don't let the perfect be the enemy of
the good, etcetera. But you know, I think when you
look at just sort of how severe and how intense
the campaign is on the right to disenfranchise voters, it's
(24:43):
almost like I feel like we should be firing back
harder than this. But that's why I'm a podcaster who
left politics. Don't let the perfect be the enemy of
the not completely disastrous. We're dying come. It's just like
a buttering up of mansion, right, Like it probably won't pass,
(25:04):
but if it did, it's like, oh, I mean, he's
clearly power hungry, like he loves to be in this
pivotal position, and uh, you know this is something that
if it got if it passed, it would be like
sea buddy, Yeah, your little thing at me? Okay, it's okay?
Is it wasn't there something where he was making noise
(25:28):
about like possibly getting this to get people to come
around on the January six like looking into what actually happened.
And then I haven't actually even read about that because
every time I read it so depressing when it's like
Capital Police being like that coward Republican wouldn't shake my
hand and I protected him on January six, and you're like,
(25:50):
this is a whole big yeah. Look man, if it's
an omni crisis constantly in this country. M hmm, alright,
let's talk about the concerned parents and teach is on
Fox News. Yeah, this probably shouldn't surprise people, but given
the rights new obsession with critical race theory, it's it
(26:12):
turns out that some of the quote parents and teachers
who are most alarmed about the possibility of critical race
theory are just actually like act right wing activist straight
up out of the fucking goblin swamp. Putting on a
disguise that's not even a disguise, it's just a different
lower third to be like I am concerned parent. There's
(26:33):
like we talked about how critical race theory has been
just completely all over the place on right wing media
mentioned since March. There's this one guest who appears a lot.
His names Ian Pryor, and whenever they have him on
as like a guest like this is a Loudon County
parent who has gone from concerned parents like many of you,
to legal activist and they're like and he's like, oh
(26:55):
my god, you know, like I'm just a parent. And
then you know, I saw how bad this critical race
theory stuff was and I how to get involved. Here's
the thing. The Daily Beasts just sort of kind of
did a very basic analysis of just like googling these people,
and Ian Prior first of all, has been on Fox
like dozens of times just before like the before the uh,
(27:18):
critical race theory hysteria. He just does an unconcerned parent
or what was doing. Well, here's the deal, parent, Ian,
he did launch a pack opposing critical race theory, but
he's also an ex spokesperson at the Department of Justice
and has also worked for very many high profile Republican groups.
(27:39):
So this is a guy who's straight out of this like, yeah,
he's an operative, this is he's yeah, we know we
see him. Yeah. And one more is this concerned teacher
where they're just like, oh, look at this teacher says
quote one of the teachers who was at that school
board meeting, Like that's how they introduced this one guest,
because you know all their footages of people being like
(28:01):
this is this is crazy. My kid is gonna learn
bad stuff and it will make it will harm him.
That person is liltt Venetsian, who is actually affiliated with
a pro Trump political group as we all know, or
Charlie kirkste Turning Point USA also runs a Teachers for
Trump social media group and has worked as a reporter
(28:22):
for an outlet, right Side Broadcasting Network, who you've probably
seen on YouTube where they do like non news. That's
another person who goes on to kick and scream about
person is still teaching. Like this all sounds like the
biggest conflict of interest I've ever heard. I can't imagine
they are right. It's like it's almost like once you teach,
then you can go parading around on TV saying you're
(28:43):
a teacher. You know, like where people in their mind
it's like irrelevant if they're actually teaching, and the like
this person is a teacher, they're like, yeah, I've I've
been ousted from many districts about five years ago. But
now I just sort of used this title to help
bolster right wing talking points. So she was not a
teacher her in Loudon County schools. I don't know specifically
(29:04):
if she was, but that's just that's that's why it's
so insidious because the description one of the teachers who
was at that school board meeting. You could be a
teacher from fucking any town, USA, but you were at
that meeting. And then I guess that still holds and
you're saying that's one of the teachers at that meeting. Yeah,
And I mean both sides are very guilty of like
(29:26):
being selective when it comes to they're like the talking
heads they bring on. We talked about how we had
sort of a warped view of how likely it was
that Mueller was gonna like lead Trump out of the
White House and handcuffs because they had all prosecutors on
and no defense attorneys who are like, actually, this isn't
(29:46):
like the stuff that everybody's freaking out about is not
as damning as y'all think it is. But to actually
like fully just like fabric ate talking heads is pretty
pretty whack and bad faith. It's interesting that it's so
much more effective, Like what I don't I mean, I
don't have kids, but I don't feel like just because
(30:08):
someone else also has children that they're now an expert
on whatever. I think keeping my kids safe means, in
this case, teaching them the truth American history. And then
on top of that critical race theory. I think that's
the other thing that the whole conversation is hijacked, is
that it's not even taught in the elementary schools, this
(30:28):
concept of critical race theory again graduate level, at the
university level. That's where this kind of actual academic discipline
is where someone in you know, in school is going
to intersect with this, not because you can. They're not
teaching it to to like kindergarteners, although in Texas I
think yeah, and in Texas so I think they're they've
(30:49):
just Abbot is now signing a bill that will ban
like discussion about race or something like teachers can't talk
about it. So, I mean, I went to Christian school,
so I was like earning the Bible in kindergarten, which
is a way crazier thing to teach a little kid.
But Jack, like, you have kids, do you just are you? Like, Well,
that guy's a parent too, so I'm gonna listen to him.
(31:12):
I don't only trust people who have kids. Everybody else
totally childless demons. I'm fully aware, and I went into
parenting fully aware that parenting gives you a form of
temporary like insanity. That that's why we all That's why
I like AD executives like they target eighteen to thirty
(31:34):
four because thirty five is the average age of Americans
that have kids. It's like they're like, after that, You're
just like that, we can't. I can't really respect anything
that you have to say. So I actually trust people
who have kids less because I think they're just we're
inherently by by like whatever happens to be going on
(31:54):
with our kids. So but I think I'm somewhat unique.
And now I also want to see the papers on
that on that guy's kids. I want to or I
want to see the like three years of planning that
they got for like they're like, we need somebody to
procreate with this activist. Oh god right, the network Network
(32:16):
finds like some person willing to carry their child, and
you will procreate with this person that will give you
the cover for our fifteen year critical race theory campaign.
All right, let's talk about what we're all really thinking about,
and that is when are we going to get to
see the Victoria's Secret Angels again? Baby? Never? Never they
(32:40):
look Victoria's Secret. I think they got the message because
their business has been like declining for years that you
know they're they've they've altered their marketing and they've ditched
the Angels and they're replacing them with the VS Collective.
And this collective isn't a group of you know, sis
women with impossible proportions. This is a you know, a
(33:02):
diverse group including soccer star Megan Rapino, actress Prianka Chopra,
South Sudanese Australian runway model, A dude, I catch a
part of me if I've mispronounced the name Amanda de
Catanet of The Conversation, skier Eileen Google, plus size model
Paloma Elcessor and transmodel Valentinus empio and yeah this they're
(33:25):
just trying to get away from this other thing. They
can't call them, you guys probably don't. I don't know this,
but I think their business also has been declining because
their underwear falls apart, Like everything is useless once you
put it wear at one time on your body, Like
(33:46):
it's not a good product, and it's it feels very dated,
you know, like Victoria's Secret is such a like nineties situation.
I mean, I don't think I'm alone in that. I
think so their main demograph if it just grew up
like it's me, you know, it's like forty year old
women who are like, remember the nineties when you're hyper sexualized?
(34:08):
Where will you go now? It's like, I don't know,
I fucking woke up out of that case and realize
what the world was, just soaking myself and they're like
pair lotion and wearing braws that didn't hold up literally anything, yeah,
and didn't fit and they're over Christ. Yeah, that pair
of lotion just gave me such a sense memory. Oh
(34:33):
I mean yeah, slather himself in it. Yeah, well it
was from when I was twelve thirteen, so that what
was it? Garden not fruit herbal Lessences shampoo, I mean
scent kit going. You're like, that's Lessences with warm vanilla
sugar from Bath and body Works. Yeah, our hair is
(34:54):
not clean if you're not having an orgasm in the shower.
Which is what makes this sort of like aside from
this departure from the you know, the impossible angels model
that they had going, you know, it's it's the outrage
that this is obviously caused from where else conservative media
(35:14):
about what this all means to have to to leave
the over sexualized waters of nineties and eighties marketing for
something that is a little more inclusive. And there's this
guy at the Federalist who it just shows you again
it reinforces this conservative worldview of like what this sort
of very gender normative, heteronormative like male female dynamic is. Quote.
(35:37):
It was less than twenty years ago that a series
of beer commercials featured two busty blonde sisters, Diane and
Elane Klimazowski. The two were branded as the Coors Light
Twins and became controversial in the two thousand four Colorado
Senate Republican campaign of Pete Kore's, then the chairman of
the brewing company goes on to say, at the time
(35:58):
it was a scandal for a conserva of politician to
endorse the ads and what used to be a red state.
Now it's conservatives mocking Victoria's secrets, abandonment of the busty
blonde stereotype as a perfectly legitimate source of sexual attraction
as the progressive movement seeks to eliminate gender differences altogether.
Uh huh, yeah, that's clearly what they're doing. Do you
(36:20):
know what Victoria's secret is? Like? First of all, like,
because it's not a strip club, you know what I mean,
it's they sell underwear for people, it's not a But again,
I think this shows like the the brainwashing of marketing
that occurs to where even this man is like, what
the hecks going on? This? What? What's what happened to
(36:42):
just be getting off to busty blonde women. I don't
get where the fucking earth has gone? He goes on
to say, quote the rules now appear reversed. It's liberals
who seem to be repulsed by the unapologetic sex appeal
of twin blondes at a football game sponsored by a
patriotic American beer company. Uh. Then he goes on to
say like Washington football team and then says, formerly the
(37:03):
Washington Redskins talked about how they got rid of their
cheerleading squad um and they would probably prefer like the
new squad be transgender, minority and overweight. Quote as a
righteous rejection of basic beauty standards, demanding viewers reject their
primal inhibitions. What the fuck is going on? He's been
turned down a lot, I think for sex, and he's
(37:26):
what if we I would love if the company came
out and was like, okay, so we've never actually told
you what Victoria's secret is, and the secret is she's trans,
she's mixed race. God, I knew something was wrong. I
knew with this whole time. But like this whole thing too,
(37:46):
this idea of like that there, like the rejection of
quote basic beauty standards. First of all, what the fuck
does that mean? The Corps Light Twins couldn't be more basic? Like,
m where's my aryan? Fat material? That's what I'm looking for.
But this is also the thing. It's like back to
(38:07):
this sort of strip club comparison, because it's it is
this notion that women are the playthings of men that
is fueling this outrage where he's realizing he's like, well,
what gets me off isn't what society is like even
trying to market anymore. So now he's like, what's going on?
What does that mean about my power to say? No,
(38:28):
it's got to be big breast blonde women. Yeah. They
I mean, this is the whole conservative thing is they
have to create straw men and then act like it's
a thing they have to defend, Like they have to
defend traditionally attractive blonde women like that they're being attacked
(38:49):
because God forbid. People have other ideas of how to
feel good about themselves. Yeah, I mean, you're gonna make
me look at her? Come on, what who are you?
It's uh, it's interesting too for conservatives that are like
evangelical Christians, because there's not I mean, it's very anti
(39:12):
gets a sin too over sexualized women. I mean, yes,
like keep them from power. Of course, the Bible is
very misogynistic, but like, yeah, you're not supposed to just
see women as sexual beings. So it's interesting. Yeah, I
mean shockingly hypocritical for conservatives. I can't believe it, right,
(39:33):
And I think that's where you see, especially with evangelicals,
how quickly they're willing to pivot away from things that
you thought were like foundational to their religion in service
of this more like ethno nationalistic, paternalistic agenda, which is
like white men were number one. We tell the ladies
how to dress, they listen, and we're good forever. Let's
(39:54):
not do this. I'm sorry I was using God has
covered to make it seem like I wasn't just a
toxic ship pile. But yeah, I guess now that my
backs against the wall, I will say, you know what,
Jesus would have liked the twins too. You would have
jerked off to that commercial like this was a blonde
with big tits everybody. Can you imagine wearing a T
(40:18):
shirt with a new version of the Crucifixion, with that
version of Jesus, that would that would sell some. He's
just stacked, it's got a huge dong just dangling blow
his sash. I guess it's not that underwear whatever. I
guess it's not a loincloth either. And my now, you
(40:38):
guys know what kind of church I went to. Jesus
was just very Yeah, Jesus he wore he had like
Jewelry on two and Ship. He's like, yeah, he was,
all right, let's take a quick break and we'll be
right back. And we're back, and there's a possibility, let's say,
(41:15):
if you're really quick on the trigger, that you could
stay in the Dungeon where Outcasts recorded like two of
the great rap albums of all time according to geriatric millennials.
And yeah, just a bunch of ship where TLCS Waterfalls
was produced, organized noise there, that's where it all started.
(41:36):
They I mean you remember Jack, you were you would
be in class out in school and I would just
be in the Dungeon shooting pool. Yeah, you know, thinking
of the second album, like yes to the p N.
I mean that the Dungeon if if you are familiar
at all, like it's constantly mentioned, the Dungeon family. It's
all because of this basement studio um in the Lakewood
area of Atlanta where all of this stuff was recorded.
(41:59):
And I got so excited because to me, it's always
a thing I've heard reference or I've seen like old
pictures of when you look at like retrospectives about like
Atlanta hip hop or Outcast. And apparently Big Boy bought
the house back in and it's like been just renovated
now and done up to sort of aesthetically mirror like
(42:20):
elements of like outcast lore, Like there's like a stankonia clearly,
like a reference reference to stankonia, like painting on the
wall and like speaker box, love below room type things.
But they're gonna have three overnight stays okay at the
house in June or July for only twenty five dollars
a night because the twenty anniversary of a t aliens
shout out to geriatric millennials. Um. Yeah, once it goes live,
(42:44):
it's first come, first served, So I don't know if
bots are going to get to it, but I'm I
just love this kind of ship because more than like
a dope ass fucking luxury hotel, like, I'm also kind
of interested in like, hey, you want to go to
like pop culture like significant place us us to stay,
like you know, the fucking Walter White's House or some
ship like that. I feel like that's a new wave
(43:06):
that's slowly starting to emerge. Yeah there. I think they're
also like putting little trailers like by the Love Shack
that you can like rent out in Athens Georgia. And
then I know, actually for I planned my best friend's
special art party like eight years ago or something, and
we rented out Fat Mike's house in Vegas, which he'll
(43:26):
do for like thirty days at a time. He just
goes to stay somewhere else or something. So it's like
it's not cheap because you have to rent the whole month,
but like it's you know, it's like the Grotto. There's
like a weird you know, a hot tub Fat Mike Tyson,
Fat Mike of of No Effects. Yeah, it's in Vegas,
(43:50):
and yeah, I love I love this trend. Like it's
you know, I mean you can stay in a hotel whenever.
It's like being a part of history is really cool. Yeah,
and also like just to like quite literally you're in
the building with this energy was exchanged to create these albums,
like and in the basement, you know a lot of
people they signed, like the rafters and things, and they
(44:12):
said all those signatures like are intact, Like when you
go there, like you're gonna see like when you know,
Andre signed it like in or something, and it's ship's
still there and you're like, this is the fucking space
they did it I don't know, there's something really I
love something like that, and it's the same thing we
saw with who was trying to do, Like I forget
what other huge I p thing they're trying to to
(44:35):
rent out. I feels like the Fresh Prince House was
a thing a couple of years ago, but a lot
of times the exteriors are not the same as the interiors, right,
So yeah, maybe you would have to like carve it
up a little bit. Like this feels like the perfect
one because it's not like a thing that we've seen.
We've only imagined it in our minds. So what other
house you want to say? I want to stay at
(44:57):
the Soprano House And oh yeah that I'm surprised they
haven't opened up Paisley Park yet, like you can tour,
but they haven't rented it out to my knowledge, that
would be dope. The is the Manson House still standing?
The Murder House sharing tape Murder House? Yeah, someone just
(45:18):
bought it, I think, yeah, like that, that's what would
be the other side of that coin, like as like
a dare if you can like stay in there for
a whole night. Oh yeah, like you can say, like
the Shining Hotel, is a big one. People just rent
that entire thing out with three with your family in
the winter. Yeah, one point nine millions for the Manson house.
(45:44):
That seems cheap for l a right now, gruesome murder happening.
I got some weird vibes in there. Yeah, it said
after eight months on the market, they sold it at
a discounted price. Huh wait yeah, wait were the La Bianca's.
Is that another family that got killed? No, I think
(46:05):
that might be. No, that's that's Oh, that's not the same.
I'm not I'm not a big like murder person, so
I don't know that. I just know that there's a
headline saying that Charles Manson murder house. Finally, Oh, I
think there was another family that got killed. That okay,
so there's another terrible, gruesome murder where you can now
you your family can grow up, you too can. Yeah,
(46:27):
it's probably not a great place to raise a family,
but like you could definitely rent it out and like, yeah,
just do like fucking true crime hotel weird ship for
people who do that, and then just like go in
and funk with people in the middle of the night
and it will be legendary like that. You know that's what.
So we are developing podcast with a YouTube channel that
(46:48):
does like haunted house ship and like so when you
go like watch their videos, they go like on the
Queen Mary and like all these different they go to
these haunted locations and like the stuff that happens. You're like, oh,
so these people like have a very elaborate like business model,
like the people who run the hotels where they like
(47:09):
do weird ship that is like we'll freak you out
in the middle of the night. M hm. Oh yeah.
There's a there's a hotel in Tucson, Hotel Congress, where
they there's one room they never rent out allegedly because
it's so haunted, but they'll like let you go in
there and like here's some ship and sometimes they're like, well,
(47:32):
we're super sold out. So we had to rent the
ghost room for cheap, and according to the manager, people
never end up staying the whole night, like they'll be
like I can do it, I don't believe this ship,
and then they end up checking out like two hours later.
I'm constantly filled with regret over when I moved to Portland,
I found this house is a three bedroom house Victorian gorgeous.
(47:54):
It was right by work where I was going to work.
It was nine dollars a month in two thousand twelve,
and I was like, something's up so and there had
been a murder suicide just a couple of months before. Yeah,
they were renting it at a discount, and it was
like in the news and everything, and I'm like, oh,
(48:14):
I guess I'm too creeped out to live here by myself.
And then you know, three years later, I was like, damn,
I could just be written out the other rooms. I
could be air being being nine a month, Like yeah,
I grew up and like one of the houses we
lived in was like the neighbors that we lived next
to were the first family to live there after somebody
(48:36):
had killed themselves in that house and like that it
was all I could think. Like when we lived in
that house, I was just like that blew me away,
Like I could not in my mind. I thought they
destroyed houses. People even naturally died in living there. Now
like you know, there's like cleaning services. That was my
(48:57):
child brain. But it was just like it was a
house on the side with a basketball hoop and every
time I like missed a shot and it rolled over
there like that's what I was thinking about. I was like,
oh damn, I wonder if it was that room, right,
Sardine and Bretzel the I will say this, um Amy,
this might be relevant to you. Would you be down
to go drink at the New Amsterdam from Mr Jones
(49:21):
was down at the New amsterdawn staring at just yell
so apparently it's International Sports Bar. It's it was. I
was just reading this thing about this guy. Didn't realize
he was working in the bar that used to be
the New Amsterdam from Mr Jones And it's a it's
a bar in I think the Mission or no, it's
on Columbus and it used to be called the New Amsterdam.
(49:43):
It's now called the International Sports Bar. You want to
yellow that dang yellow haired girl. Yeah, it was one
of the Cores Light Twins. Actually the thing was he was,
I guess, actually in a Flamenco group. Like so that
line about the Flamenco dancing wasn't just some weird lyrical thing.
(50:06):
I was also going to say, it's been too long
in Denver earlier, it's been on my mind everything. Els Ben. Alright,
let's talk about some u a p debunking material. Uh
listener Amanda Price, I think other listeners had shared this
podcast with us. Amanda shared the time code that included
(50:29):
the relevant interview shout out to the lazy and disorganized. Yes,
thank you, I need it, uh and if you could
actually start the video for me that the second here.
But so, I think they just did a really good
job of presenting the information that skeptics are trying to
get across. So the videos that they're particularly debunking are
(50:52):
the tic tac videos, like the one where the people
are like whoa, like we locked onto it, we got it,
And the person do the debunking is a former video
game programmer who therefore has tons of experience doing three
D modeling and like so has a really good sense
of like perspective and like what something would look like.
(51:15):
And he points out that like broadly, for the same
reason that Biden Jimmy Carter picture looked so wild. Uh yeah,
just like perspective and lens distortion, that the tic TACs
only look like they're moving extremely fast. And he said
that like if you look at so, if you look
(51:36):
at all of the information that's like contained in the video,
it is actually probably way up in the sky. The
actual tic TAC is way up in the sky, looks
like it's speeding over the water. But and I think
I got this right, but I'm he I think he's
saying that the horizon of the water is actually in
(51:58):
the foreground and the tic TAC is like beyond it,
and so as it's moving slowly, it looks like it's
speeding over the water, and it's it's not. It's just moving.
So what is it's seeing? Then he's basically saying that
it's moving the speed of like when you look at
how high up it is, that's how fast the wind
(52:19):
moves at that level, like with this perspective shift. And
he also said it's because it's a black white infrared
targeting camera and this it's on a black hot setting
that the fact that it's white just means that it's
extremely cold. And so he's saying that it's probably and
(52:41):
this is like the standard answer for all U A
p S or UFOs weather balloom, but like that that
makes sense. It's big enough to like see at a
distance to like create weird perspective distortion, and it would
kind of look like a tic TAC at that distance,
and the reason that it's like kind of fucking with
(53:02):
everybody who looks at it is because the we're looking
at it through a camera that is extremely classified that
you've never seen anything through. It's like a targeting I
think it's made by Raytheon and it's like a targeting
camera that is super powerful, and we don't typically see
video from those targeting cameras, so it's just like not
(53:25):
something we're used to looking at. So I, you know,
he he definitely presents a compelling case. And so my
thing is that the tic TAC has never been the
most compelling like thing for me. It's more the eyewitness
testimony of that fighter pilot and the two fighter pilots
who are in the same plane, and for that, their
(53:46):
explanation just seems to be like there are people who
believe in UFOs who work in the military and like
are lying basically, and that's so we got all these
boring asks that we was boring as jets and propulsion systems,
and yeah, exactly. I did an episode of a podcast
(54:07):
with Jason Pargeon recently from the executive editor from back
when I was at Cracked, and he's he's both interested
in like paranormal stuff but also like fully skeptical. So
I was I've been like, oh, we gotta get you
on to like talk about the tic TACs, And first
of all, I didn't know what I was talking about,
but then when I further explained, he was like, oh,
(54:28):
that story is so annoying. Just because like someone knows
how to fly a plane doesn't mean they're not completely
full of ship, which I was like, huh, I guess
I can. Like he's basically saying like they're there are
people in the Pentagon and in the Air Force who
just are lying who wants lying? So that's the thing
(54:52):
that don't don't lie. So that's the one thing that
we can kind of point to. But yeah, I don't know.
I still I don't think this like fully debunked it.
I just think it in terms of the tic TAC videos,
I think it is a plausible explanation. Mhm. Definitely brings
my enthusiasm down a little bit. But I'm also like,
(55:14):
all always, you know, I always believe the truth is
out there, so that's just me. Yeah. So the thing
that I kind of objected to about the this podcast
called like the Skeptic Podcast or something Uh, they dismiss
the people who like think this stuff is interesting as
just being people who like want to have some inside
(55:38):
information and like seems smart and I don't. I think
that's like not giving it enough credence. Like I think
that's that's how That's what I used to say when
I was just like assuming that like we know everything
there is to know, and uh, anything else is stupid
and people need to shut up. Like I feel like
it's just too dismissive. And I'm always interest interested in
(56:03):
people who actively want aliens to exist, like what why,
Like I need it. I need it passionately. I have
the perspective of, like I'm always open to acknowledging that
there's things we just don't know just in general, is
like a human being, like that's try to have that
(56:23):
mindset to be open to like learning things and not
be so like that they're absolutes in terms of like
what we can or can't know and so yeah, so
I think in those instances, I'm like, oh, ship maybe,
but I'm definitely not like come on, like I cashed
out my proh one k and I'm going you a
B hunting or you a B hunting or whatever. You
a p hunting Alabama, Birmingham, Yeah, you a be hunting exactly.
(56:49):
I think it. I like there's a spiritual aspect to
my wanting to believe in it like the same. I
think it's akin to people wanting to believe in gods
are higher powers. Okay, so your religion is UFOs, is
what you're saying. I'm not saying that's my religion, saying
that I think there is like and it's also we
(57:11):
saw a lot of the really interest and belief in
UFOs like going up as people became i think less
religious and went to church less and less. Like it
just creates a like big vast framework for the universe.
And like I could see a version where, you know,
(57:32):
if they are friendly aliens who are just deciding not
to kill us, which it seems like they could if
they had this technology, then we are on a progressive
path towards you want just to believe in the universe.
I want to believe in the Star Trek version of
the the universe where they're just like they're not quite
there yet, but like once they stopped killing each other,
(57:54):
then we can let them into the class. If we're
just on a germ rock. That's utter relief. Fucked. Yeah,
this is big news. I didn't know Jack was part
of the alien Church, and it's I mean, I think
it's time for you to do my podcasts. Yeah, you
just want there to be something more than this daily sludge. Like, Yeah,
(58:19):
if I'm psychoanalyzing, like why I'm open to it, I
think that's probably at least part of it, your openness
rather than your strict But you're not saying it's a
strict belief. Yeah, it's definitely not my strict belief. And
I yeah, I just think it's interesting, and I think
it's like I used to dismiss it because of a
assumption that like we knew everything there was to know,
(58:41):
and I just don't think that's true. Oh no, that
can't be true. I mean we're very dumb as a
species exactly. Yeah, And I think, yeah, but that as
the foundation. Then you're like, if that's true, then many
other things are possible if we're dumb as fucked on
this planet, right right? Well, Amy, it's been such a pleasure,
(59:02):
haven't you on the daily zeitgeist where people posures all
mine folks, where can people find you and follow you?
And also see you live. Oh yeah, go to Amy
Miller Comedy dot com. I'm going to be in San
Diego up tonight. I think Friday night. This is coming
out Yeah tonight. Um. I'm doing a tour with Johnny
(59:23):
Pemberton for most of July, so we're gonna go yeah
to SF in Portland and Seattle and Vegas and all
kinds of places. Just go to my website and check
it out and follow me on Instagram at Emay Miller
Comedy and what's and what star system is that? Okay, asshole,
(59:46):
I'm in the same boat. I just think I think
people are starting to conflate your openness with being like
Jack fucking thinks aliens are like in his yard. Did
you see that his medium post about forget the VS Collective,
We're the hot aliens I wanted to get Yo, And
(01:00:08):
aliens are invited to my shows as well. Just buy
a ticket. Okay, I was sneaking in the back door,
you sneaky. Please don't watch the sky. People think ALF
stands for alien life form. It's actually aliens. I'd like
to fuck ulf Helff. Shopped posters make so much sense, now, Yeah,
(01:00:40):
what is a tweet or some of the work of
social media you've been enjoying. Oh well, it's unfortunately a
visual one, so you will have to go to my
Twitter to find it. Yeah. So there's this picture of
a tree that got hit by lightning and so all
of it's like veins were exposed and it looks like
red noodles kind of in Kai Choice, who's one of
(01:01:00):
my favorite follows. You gotta follow Kay so so funny.
Um just says chef boyar tree and that made me
laugh because it does look exactly like spaghetti as Yeah,
k I C h O y c E. Very very funny,
very funny. Twitter miles where can people find you? What's
(01:01:20):
a tweet you've been enjoying? Twitter? Instagram miles of gray
in the Milky Way galaxy on planet Earth, northern hemisphere
around thirty three degrees in the Los Angeles area. Um.
Also my other podcast Fiance. If you want to talk
ninety day Fiance, come check that out. Not not not
that you'll talk about it. If you want to hear
me talk to you about it, that's where you go.
(01:01:41):
Some tweets I like, first one is from at man
katon k A t t A n. This is just
a little reference to the postseason of basketball. It says
Ben Ms is a free throw and the crowd goes
on like it's an episode of Full House, and that
just was I felt that it's just can't escape this game.
(01:02:03):
I cannot escape this game. It's yeah, you'll be happy
to know that I did actually watch this one did
and the off yet, Oh my god, I'm gonna just
start wearing the hat too. For new listeners and amy,
I have a hat that I stopped wearing because I
thought it cursed the seventies sixers. But they are irrevocably
(01:02:27):
thoroughly cursed. Based on some there's this proximity to like
the the perceived divine power we would have as sports
fans through like our own singular actions affecting an entire
sports team, like does feel like we don't. We're also
very open to like alien life. It's like, well, I'm omnipotent.
Also based on my hat used No, it's so stupid,
(01:02:49):
It's no, I love it. I mean, I'm the same
with the guilt that I had about yelling at the
Suns after I'm like, that's that's why we lost, because
I went to I went too hard on them after
the game. And another one is from It's making Graves tweeting,
I need someone to film and only fans bide with me.
You pretend to be a mover helping me get my
things from one apartment to the other. I were a
tiny soundress and you don't touch me, you just move
(01:03:11):
my things. This does not pay. That's a good idea,
it's solid. And so many people were like, where you located,
I'd be down to shoot this video. I'm down, Legit replies,
(01:03:31):
Let's see some tweets. Josh Dondleman tweeted, the human body
is incredible. If I were designing a person, there's no
way I would have thought to put a pancreas in there.
I would have thrown in a fish tank or something
like exhibit. Matt Leap tweeted, I'm more of a limb.
Manuel Samantha and I also liked the bend the free
(01:04:00):
throam tweet. Then Eric ray Hill tweeted, whoever invented the
violin is a legend. It sounds so good. It just
sounds good, beautiful. You can find me on Twitter at
Jack Underscore O'Brien. You can find us on Twitter at
daily Zeykgeist. Where at the Daily Zycheist on Instagram. We
have a Facebook fan page and a website Daily Zieheist
(01:04:23):
dot com where we post our episodes and our foot
notes where we link off to the information that we
talked about in today's episode, as well as the song
we think you might enjoy checking out, Miles, what songs
should they go check out? You know, going into this
Juneteenth weekend, Let's do this track from San Soucis s
(01:04:44):
A n S space s O U c I S.
She is an artist from England and this like track
is like very Bobby mcfarrenny because it's a lot of
layered vocal parts and harmony with each other, but like
with really nice production underneath, so it makes for a
very soothing, easy listening. Also, I thought at first this
(01:05:05):
person was named after a bar on Harson's Island in
Michigan's called Stan Susy, but that's a different thing completely,
so I messed that up. But anyway, check this track out.
I'm on I would love it if people went to
check it out. And it was just a really straightforward
college acapella group crack and I'm on one whoa, I'm
getting all right? Well, the Daily Zai guys is a
(01:05:30):
production of my heart Radio. For more podcasts from my
heart Radio is the heart Radio app, Apple podcast or
wherever you listening your favorite shows. That is going to
do it for us this morning. We're back this afternoon
to tell you what's trending and we'll talk to you
all then. Bye bye