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January 18, 2023 63 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season two seventy one,
Episode two of Dirt at Least Like Guys Stay production
of by Heart Radio. This is a podcast where we
take a deep dive into America share consciousness. And it
is Wednesday, January eighteen three. You know what time it is?
National Michigan Day. Okay, Michigan. Yeah, if you're in the glove,

(00:23):
you don't shout out to you over there the hand
or hand or the mitten or whatever y'all like in
your state to a hand? Uh. National Winnie the Pudai,
National Pecking Duck Day, National Fi Sourist Day, Everyone's favorite dinosaur.
You are nailing those pronunciations. Yea, there's always it's always
in an interesting place. Did you see that tweet that

(00:45):
was like, hey, kids who like learned vocabulary through reading books, like,
what's the word you epically mispronounced because you'd only interacted
it in books? I'm curious if you have a word
like that, because I don't, you know, accrid? I would
say a crid yeah, And then I was in a
writer r and yeah, and somebody was like, what did

(01:06):
you just say? I'm like, you know that a crid
taste in your mouth, They're like, acrid. I'm like, hey,
hold on, holds, could you just could you just repeat
that real quick what you just said that quietly in
the back of the room to me, that a crid
taste in your mouth from the smoke in the I'm
sure our listeners can tell me all the ship that

(01:26):
I've mispronounced. Our guest has one. Just go ahead, comfort table.
Oh no, it was a comfort table. Comfort comfort table
table for the seat right there. Okay, I like that.
Um anyway, my bad right back, just a comfort table. Yeah.
It also suggests a childhood where you were so rarely

(01:49):
comfortable that you just didn't didn't have any use to
say that word out loud. You just read about it
in books, never seen that word. Also, when you when
your parents don't know how to say a word, you
don't learned what that word is. Much later. I thought
it was bullshit. A bowl of ship. Yeah, you're like, okay, yeah, bowl,

(02:12):
that's a bowl of ship. Miles you said something very
funny over text. You you instructed an entity to drink
your ship. Yeah, it made me laugh very don Yeah. Yeah,
I'm just how to do the Laker game. No, it
had to do the Laker game. So it's nothing high stakes.
But Jack and I had a face off over the

(02:33):
weekend the sixer Nackers. But anyway, it's yeah, nothing import
will nick John Travolta style. I mean, it sounds like
you want to talk about it. I want to take
my face off. We'll get to it on maybe another podcast. Anyways,
my name's Jack O'Brien. A kit. Their plump, their plump,
their plump. Look at my legs, They're plump, They're plump,

(02:55):
They're plump like pony kegs. That is courtesy of the
On the Only Christie Almagucci. Man, just talking about these
little pony keg legs that I walk around on. And
I'm thrilled to be joined as always by my co host,
Mr Miles. Grab this bullshit. All the grift is get
a load of this ship. A few times have been

(03:16):
around that track, so it's probably just gonna happen like that.
But I ain't no Russia hacked, George. I ain't no
Russian hacked George. Okay, shout out to Locarni for that
holiday back girl. George Santos mashh Yeah, I saw an
article that was like wow, the like cries of appropriation
ring out in the US, Japan merely shrugs its shoulders,

(03:38):
probably think of what was going on with that. I'm like, yeah,
the Japanese people are not easily offended about cultural appropriation.
Let me just say, that's just kind of that's just
kind of the stance I think most Asian people have
when they're like, oh, y'all talking about us, okay, because
over here we do it really wrong. That's right. We
are to be joined in our third seat by a
hilarious comedian, writer, director, vir real Sensation, the Brilliant, the Townsend. Sorry, sorry,

(04:06):
do you don't tell me to do it? So I
always forget about it? But you know what, my name
is a song in itself. It is indeed beautiful song.
Any thoughts written about me named after me? Yeah? Wait,
so come for a table? Bulls bullshit, bullsh bullshit bush
I just bullshit. How long did you start saying it? Like?

(04:32):
When was the moment you had to have that reckoning
with the real world And you're like, I'm sorry, what
did you just say with with bullshit? Yeah? It was
after I don't know. I I think I read it
and then I heard somebody else say it. I heard
a different adult say it, and I was like, step
away from the two options and then come back to
them with fresh eyes. I don't know why bullshit makes

(04:55):
more sense because it's just specifying a and I'm like
an animals type of ship. Yeah, a bowl of shit
at least specifies a quantity. Yeah. And it's like you're
trying to serve me this ship. Yeah, like you want
me to eat it from a bowl. Yeah. I called
bullshit called Yeah, I called asshole. I called bullshit. Oh wow.

(05:20):
They said it comes from a French word bullshit, bull
which means like liar or lie, you know, old French,
from the old French bull meaning fraud or deceit. I
don't know whatever. It's like one of those things, will
never know. I just prefer someone be like, no, man,
that's bullshit. That's not food that the guy just served you.

(05:41):
That was bullshit from bullshit. That's all right. We're going
to get to know you a little bit better in
a moment. First, we're gonna tell her listeners a couple
of things we're talking about. We're gonna talk about a
fight that might may or may not have happened in
the capital back It happened. Reports are it happened between

(06:03):
Lauren go Gert and MTG. So the MTG is that
the Marvel tinematic universe. That's exactly one. I knew it.
I knew it. Yeah, we're big fans here. You always
got to keep up with the latest installment. The Bloody,
Bloody Murdogs, Murdochs, the the South Carolina corrupt legal family.

(06:27):
Decades generations of having power in a small South Carolina
town and then there's a bunch of murders and deaths
and that that implicated them, and the trial is starting
next week. The New Yorker sent a reporter down, which
meant that I read a New Yorker article, which means

(06:49):
that I have to share it with everybody. So but
it's a it's a doozy. So we'll check in with
with that story. We're gonna talk about there's a new
Gerard Butler movie over the week end that did kind
of good, made like fourteen million dollars, even though I
was not aware of its existence, And we're going to
talk about just sort of a a long standing trend

(07:12):
we've seen of like sort of conservatism in the politics
of his action movies and yeah, all of that plenty more.
But first, sorry, we do like to ask our guests,
what is something from your search history? Oh well, it's
funny you mentioned reading a single New Yorker article and
then having to tell everyone about it, because I did

(07:33):
the same thing. But it was a different New Yorker
article than the one you read, which meant I couldn't
read the one that you linked me to because I'm
not allowed were three articles. Yeah, I was locked out
of the most private browser window. That doesn't work. You
have to do some of you can't even reader mode
or whatever. Oh maybe a reader mode would work. Try that? Yeah, yeah, yeah,

(07:57):
I'm behind on the hacks. I used to used twelve
foot but that that doesn't work anymore. But I did
as a result of reading a single New york article.
Um my last Google search is Kendall Getty website. There
was an article in The New Yorker about the Getty family,
which is a super supermassive, very very rich family, very

(08:17):
big California family, a lot of foundations and places and
philanthropy things named after them, particularly in the state. And
the article is about how their money manager had been
fired and then had filed I think like an improper
termination lawsuit, and so as a result of the lawsuit,
all of their tax avoidance strategies are being discussed as
part of the court record, which is really fun. And

(08:40):
Kendall Getty is one of the Getty heiress is uh.
She is a multimedia artist, and I really urge you
guys to google her and go to her website so
you can look at her art. Sometimes I think that
I don't know anything about art, and I don't know
if it's good or bad, But it turns out I
do know. You have some sense. Yeah, Sometimes you go

(09:02):
to a museum and you go, I don't know, I
like this one, I don't like this one. I don't
really know why. I don't know what already is good
and bad. I just know what I like. But then
you see some art and you're like, that's bad art.
You know, I didn't have to go to art school
to to know this art is bad? Was it? Was
this the same Getty that like had that inexplicable like
spread like cover story done about him in a magazine

(09:24):
like in the last year, and people are like, what
the fun is going on there? Like they're a Getty
And there was like, oh, that Yeah, yeah, yeah, the
Getty family has like a lot of airs because J.
Paul Getty, who was the one that made most of
the money, had like a ton of children by a
ton of different mothers and so cut a couple of
them out of his will. Like, it's very dramatic. The

(09:46):
article gets into it. It's it's very good. So she's
like shitty billionaire Bob Marley kind of like You're like, yeah, man,
of course you Getty's grants. Every everybody's fucking related to J.
Paul Getty. Man. Yeah, So like, for example, Kendall Getty's
Instagram bio includes the phrase bastard princess because she isn't
a legitimate Getty Air this Game with Thrones or something. Yeah.

(10:09):
Also it's she's just she's in the Democratic Socialists of America.
It's a great artifer, It's good. It's all about how
how money managers helped their millennial clients invest in more
ethically responsible portfolios. Right start one, really good. All the

(10:30):
millennials have portfolios they're trying to diversify. It's the most
exciting article about tax evasion that I've ever read. I'll
say that. Right, there's there's a lot of that that
that actually ends up being not not really tax evasion,
but like complicated financial crimes that are just by design
so complicated that your eyes glaze over two sentences into

(10:51):
the paragraph where they're describing it. It seems to be
at the heart of this Murdoch empire. Yeah, it turns
out that the whole money making money thing is like legal,
but all of the lawyers that know about it are like,
we got to do this as much as we can
before it becomes illegal because once people, once people's eyes
stopped blazing over and they realize what we're doing, they're

(11:12):
gonna make it illegal. Yeah. The overall shape of it
is them stealing money from poor people like that, that
is what is happening, but also just avoiding taxes, like
avoiding taxes for generations and generations by passing things down
in these trusts and pretending that they don't live in
California so they don't have to pay California property taxes
even though they do live in California, Like you know,

(11:35):
it's it's succession ship for sure, right, Yeah. I mean
they even have a funk up named Kendall. That's who Aspirations,
that's that rules. They made their money though in like
a really smart way where they just had this brilliant
idea that nobody thought, oh no, wait, they just found
a bunch of oil. Yeah, yeah, became you used their
influence from finding some oil to find all the oil.

(11:58):
It's called entrepreneurship Jack, Thank you, dude. This one piece
of art, it's like a deer with like a human
face on it. I think it is the one that's
a video called Happy Birthday, Mr. President, which I'll just
spoil it for you guys, is a shadow play where
you see the silhouette of a girl sucking a man's
penis and then he kills her. Wow. Oh, this website

(12:26):
is a wild What do you think that's implying? Like
that's deep? Well, it says that it wants to be
a disruption of visual literacy, and I think that's what
it is. This is Have you seen that show, um
Nathan Barley. It was a British comedy that came out
in the early odds. I've heard of it, but I
have never watched it. It's like presages all this kind

(12:47):
of ship where it's like, dude, check out the newest
art and like this one picture she did is literally
she clipped out a scene where like Jean Claude van
Dam is holding something but she like collaged it in
with like a porno where like and honestly they're not
the worst. Like this one was just a wild to
look at. I'm like, why is Jehan Claude van Dam

(13:08):
doing this to this woman? But it's just the juxtaposition
of like the things like yep, and this one's my
two and my two D medium. But anyway, it feels
like this very like provocative for provocation sake kind of art,
but it's really like a fourteen year old. It's really
speaks to me. It speaks to me, you're in our
fourteen year old yeah, oh yeah, yeah yeah, because like this,

(13:30):
I mean I remember when I was younger, like it
did not. I cannot understand art, cannot understand poetry because
I just hadn't lived enough and wasn't in touch enough
with like meaning of life. So this I'm like, yeah,
this ship where van Dam has like a sword to
this naked lady. Yeah, I get that ship's wild. That's
the point. Speaks to me, what is uh something you

(13:51):
think is overrated? I mean I'm just looking at this
website now again. Um, when I searched Kendall Getty, I
get a lot of Getty image results for Kendall Kendall
with an E. It's kah Ken Dolly. Who is Ken

(14:12):
dot dot com? Yeah? I love It's like like, like,
what is the matrix dot com? When that fucking trailer
came out? Who is found it? What? What is something
you think is? Says sorry, she's on her own Instagram
posting at n why times. Somebody please report on iran.

(14:34):
Thank you so much Kendall for your support. Okay, what
is something I think is overrated? Preventative botox? I think
it's just stop. It should stop. I know you guys
are on that tip hard. Yeah, the whole getting botox
at twenty three so that your face never has a
chance to form wrinkles. Oh like saying like I'm not
even gonna let y'all see some wrinkles on this fucking

(14:56):
face kind of ship. Oh okay, Yeah, it's it's really weird.
And there's a lot of like teens. I mean literally
they're like nineteen on TikTok and they're like, you know,
it's like one of those memes where they're like everybody's saying,
I'm crazy me getting preventative botox at nineteen, and like,
you know, it's it looks weird. It looks weird. Everyone

(15:19):
can tell it's good. Getting wrinkles is fine, aging is okay,
you know, yeah, don't worry. So what your foreheads you know,
look like Kylo Ren's mask In a few years, I'm
trying to get my four to look like that Geory
division covered in four D like Kendall, like Kendall Getty's art.
Did you see under the four D sc art? I'm sorry,

(15:42):
just videos, I know, I'm like that ain't the fourth dimension?
Ken art? Whatever? Anyway, smells some oranges while you're looking
at it? Yeah, yeah, yeah, I love that's smelling while
looking at art. Yeah. This the you know, it's true,
like the whole thing with your face being frozen, like

(16:03):
it affects your ability to emote, Like yeah, the person
I was like, yo, like Aubrey Plaza is really playing
this whole character dead pan and white lotos and I
was like, oh nah, it's frozen. Get ready, get ready,
everybody's about to be that dead pan. I recognize it
as dead pan anymore. People are always talking about like

(16:25):
the dead eye look, and it's like it's because your
face is frozen right to like the person who just
doesn't do the Like the way they were emoting, I've
never seen anything like this in my life. They were
trying to express emotion, but everything around them made it.
It was so restrained. You know, that's gonna be the
word you hear a lot when it comes to performances. Restrained,

(16:46):
so very, very subtle. The subtlety anger, very the subtlety
of their anger was very clear. But studies have found
and I don't like a lot of studies that came
out in the two thousands that you know, we're like whoa,
and you know I I wrote about them in correct,
and then you know, I probably need to do some

(17:07):
re research on that. But like there were studies that
found that people who do botox report feeling less emotions
because they can't move their face, and like, you know,
you don't want to go down the slippery slope to
like just smile and you'll feel better. But it does
seem like there is a two way street that happens

(17:29):
between the face and the brain. And so like if
you get botox, you just like feel dead. If your
face is not able to make the same expressions that
it normally would via emotion. That's depressing. There was even
the thing that they can't tell that I'm feeling depressed
but it's depressed. Yeah that really hits sorrow. Yeah, but
you played it really subtle, So shout out to you.

(17:51):
I remember, like I think we even talked about on
the show about how like some like doctors are saying
like if you go too hard on that, like you're
like like parent infant come nication skills also begin Like
that also looked like babies are like, oh yeah, this
motherfunction is not impressed at all. Facial expressions are like
pretty important to our communication as a species, like extremely,

(18:11):
extremely important. And you know, it's kind of a it's
kind of a hack joke of like somebody getting too
much botox and can't make a facial expression, but honestly,
it's fucking terrifying because yeah, babies learn to make facial
expressions because they see you make facial expressions. And that's
why it's important to smile at babies so that they
can smile, and why like them, smiling is a really

(18:32):
important developmental milestone, and like if babies don't make facial expressions.
It's like a potential sign that they might be autistic.
You know. It's like it's a it's an important thing
to be able to do, and like autistic children are
taught facial expressions and how to read facial expresions. Like
that's how important it is. It's like if you don't
instinctively understand it, it's important enough that you have to

(18:54):
learn it. I don't know why I have to explain
that facial expressions are important. Is something that it's just
not even like factored into the equation of whether or
not to get botox as opposed to like wrinkles that
only somebody who is staring at themselves in the mirror
for minutes straight. Well, now that's why they got levels
to it, you know what I mean, Like they dilute it,

(19:15):
you know, they get the watercolor. I heard my homebreaths
talking about that one. It's like, yeah, just a little
bit all over, so you still got a little control.
I'm like, all right, what they call it? Like I
think they I think they water it down, like it's
fucking bass, like they're cutting a crack or some ship.
They're like, yeah, it's just watered down. A little bit
and then it gives a little more of a natural look.

(19:35):
But anyway, you know, to each their own, because I know,
I mean I remember my dad, Well, he's like he
had headaches or some ship and got it, but that
it didn't work. Yeah, it's an actual medical treatment that
works for some things. But then you know the it's
really useful. Yeah yeah, I still got time. All right,

(19:56):
what if something you think is underrated? I have so
many more underrated than overrated overall. I'm just a big appreciator.
I okay, So before December thirty one, all three rush
hours around Netflix, Um, I watched them in a row,
and I do think they're underrated. I would love to
talk about them. I think Samin no Strat is underrated,
even though she's extremely she's she's gotten a lot of

(20:18):
praise you in the James Spirit a word, but I
still think she's underrated. I think people don't appreciate her enough.
This woman is the Juliet Child of the twenties. And
then the last thing that I think is underrated is
rain catchment. We got rain barrels where I live, and
they filled up really quickly. And now I'm obsessed with
how much rain catchment we could be doing on a
municipal scale. And you know, I live in Los Angeles.

(20:40):
It's a very dry place. We have a very low
level of rainfall, and we have a lot of water problems.
And now I'm like water rich, and I'm going mad
with power with all the water I have. You're like,
look at this, sister, and I bill just slapping my barrels,
Like look at nest feel that listen to that ball

(21:00):
And when I turn on this pigot and it sprays out,
it just laughed maniacally. Yeah, it's amazing. It's it's really
mind blowing when you've lived in a place like you know,
Southern California for a long time and you're used to
thinking of water is an extremely precious resource, which it is.
You know, if I lived in a rainier place, perhaps
I wouldn't worry so much. But you know, you're like water,

(21:23):
it's all it's so expensive, and I gotta get it
from the water company and then it's just falling out
of the sky and you're like, I could put it
in this barrel. Yeah, So how does the catchment system work?
Like you is it just a barrel that sits out
and the rain that happens to fall in it, or
is there like some collecting mechanism. It's the downspout, you
know how like your roof has gutters, and the gutters

(21:43):
feed into down spouts and then water just goes out there.
You just connect the down spout to a barrel to
the top, and like there's different ways of doing it.
You can have, Like if you have an open top barrel,
then of course once the rain's over, you gotta seal
it so that bugs don't breed inside. But the kind
that we got it was like a closed system. So
it just goes from the barrel I'm sorry, from the
downspout into the barrel and it's all sealed and then

(22:03):
you just turn on this bigot when you want it.
It's it's it's so cool. And now wherever I go,
I'm just thinking about the catchment possibilities and large buildings
and paved areas and I'm like looking at the gutters
and all of the all of the runoff that we
get in l A just go straight to the ocean,
which you know, and it seems like something they should address.

(22:24):
We're talking about that last week that we are a
place that is like chronically out of water, and then
we have this one huge downpour every six months and
we were just like, oh man, that water in a month.
Yeah well yeah, well I think that's the other part.
Two is like even locally right like in my yard,

(22:45):
like I dug a swale to like basically have more
ways for the water to re enter the like the
ground because grass that ship ain't doing it, So I
put a swale in. I'm like, because I think that's
one way I've been dealing with a lot of my
anxiety of climate and ship is like fun. Like part
of me is like, man, why the fund do I
gotta do this ship? Because all these motherfucker's that they

(23:06):
fucking Exxon who knew this ship for decades. But I'm like, God,
damn it, I guess I gotta do this ship because
they won't. But it feels good because in a way,
that's a really beneficial like they're really trying to encourage
that more in l A, especially because too maybe have
grass lawns and you could actually be doing ship to
like when we have rain like that, you could feed
that water back into the ground and also like native

(23:28):
like rewilding ship because you look at all the last
of like like I'm sorry, the loss of like biomass
and the insects and things like that. It's as easy
as like taking your like people's vanity plants that they
put in their yards and just putting back local fucking
just ship that grows, that grows here. Yeah, And it's
so that's the thing. It's so much easier to take

(23:50):
care of it so much. You throw seeds on the
ground before it rains, and then boom, like a month later,
you got flowers. All right, let's take a quick break.
We'll be right back to talk Lauren, Marjorie and all
sorts of ship. And we're back. And so yeah, that's

(24:24):
the tone, Chrismael McCarthy. Lauren and Marjorie are fighting in
the bathroom. That's what happened a couple of weeks ago, apparently.
And like for all the ship talking we do about
our elected officials in Washington, it's nice to get the
occasional reminder that we aren't wrong and that a bunch
of malformed eagle ego freaks do in fact make up

(24:46):
the majority of Congress. But the latest gusts is it's
quite literally out of the capital bathrooms where reports are
emerging of a friendship ending fight, although it's debatable the
whether or not these two people were friends. But between Lowen,
I said, loan, hold on, hold on, let me get
into my sleepover position where I hold into my ear

(25:07):
and I kicked my feet behind me. Yeah, exactly, Hold one,
you're some mothers boards that rhyme with Corey story allegory anyway,
shout up Simpson's reference. Um, but this latest gossip right
there in the bathroom, it's Lauren Goldgert versus major league
tainted fiend and they had to face off. And look

(25:30):
the way this even works. Again, I'm not even sure
these people even have a functional understanding of what a
friendship is. But at the very least they will not
be sharing clan robes after this bust up. I will,
I can say this. So the showdown happened as the
speakership vote kicked off and McCarthy was taken more else
than a drug dealer who's plug is in Canari boom,

(25:51):
please please bomb drop that Did I do that? Right?
In New York hip hop? Thank you so much? You
know what I mean? Take the elder canars anyway. Uh So,
Margie Taylor Green Confrontedlauren in the bathroom, and the exchange
goes as follows, based on quotes from the people that
reported this in the Daily Beast. First, Margie Taylor Green
comes up, apparently blows out of a bathroom stall like
a fucking villain, and it's like, so, quote, you were

(26:14):
okay taking millions of dollars from McCarthy, but you refused
to vote for him for Speaker Lauren. Lauren turns around,
don't be ugly, and then allegedly, according to the witnesses
that were there, quote ran out like a schoolgirl. Wait,
there are other people in the bathroom. Yes, one was
represented with Debbie Dingle from Massachusetts, Shadow Michigan, from Michigan.

(26:37):
She's a Democrat. But she when they asked her, like, yo,
were you in there, And she's like, look, what happens
in the bathroom stays in the bathroom. She kept the
G code. She said, that's where we go to handle
ship in the bathroom like a public high school. Like
now asked me off the record, as off the record,
she ran out like a little girl. She may have
been the source for this story, but yeah, this is

(26:59):
like apparently this has been brewing for years which makes
sense because they're both like the same version of like
a guano brained racist whose like reality is formed by
Facebook ship posts. But I think what the the problem
was there could only be one, you know, like just
completely out there right wing ethno nationalists spokesperson. Well, you

(27:20):
always hate the person who's most like you, you know,
right right, Yeah, And on one side you had tough
Marge and then you had cute gun gun in the
form of Loran Lauren go Gert And and I guess
it makes sense that it came to a head there.
But a lot of people are still trying to figure
out what the millions of dollars comment was because they're like,
hold on, like, was Kevin McCarthy's pack sending Lauren Bobert money?

(27:44):
They couldn't quite, it doesn't matter, But it's just wild
because the GOP is now entering like the kids being
banished from the cafeteria so they have to eat their
lunch in the library now phase yeah, which if we
remember that is the first cancel culture when when too
much drama you get banished, when you lose your social

(28:04):
cash like in high school, and they're like, you're like, yo,
they don't eat with them. Now they eat with them.
Now you're like canceled. I think the first cancel culture
is the time out. Yeah truly, Yeah, I guess. Yeah,
when you're little, you don't share, you get canceled. Yeahs
line reads like it was scripted ahead of time and

(28:26):
practice like just the way taking millions of dollars, So
right exactly, door flies open to like, come on, this
is true, and yet this is true the thing that
people say all the time, and it's very gossip girl.
Yeah exactly. I love it, but ran out like a

(28:49):
little school girl. So it's getting it's getting ugly over there.
But I would love to hear more reports of what
goes on in the congressional bathrooms. Males included, Yeah, we
Donald just did an absolute paint job in the national bathroom.
They're like, dude, have you ever piste? Next to Lindsey
Graham at the urinal Dude, it's like he like he's

(29:12):
given himself pep talks like his flows all week. Dude.
It's so awkward, and then I feel bad that I'm
being all normal and then he gets all just down
and out next to me. See, this is what people
used to do before Twitter is just be mean to
each other in the bathroom. Yeah, and then right about
it literally on the bathroom wall. Yeah, and then everybody
would be like, did you hear what happened in the bathroom? Yeah?
Did you hear? He has a weak stream? That is

(29:35):
one of the worst. It's like when you're peeing next
to a usually an older person and it's just evidently
very painful. That's like the that's like one of the
first moments you have about your mortality, I think as
a man entering the workforce, because like I remember one
of my first like big office jobs were like you

(29:57):
interacted with like one of the higher ups who's like
seventy five, and then you both are in the bathroom
and like I'm over here and be like and then
my man's over here, like fucking the Green mile like
Tom Hanks. Yeah, Like it's comflict. Sounds like a trap song.

(30:18):
It's like that a lot of breath happening. They've like
discovered Kundalini yoga, like just having to piss all the time,
and it became I remember this one job I had
where Sidney Stones. You're like, whoa kidney Stones? But yeah,

(30:42):
I just look, it's it's the passage of time and
it comes from us all. But anyway, yeah, hey, good
for you. Anyway, guys, get your prostates checked. Yeah, alright,
let's talk about the Murdocks. We we checked into this,
like I thought it was murder all. Murd All is
what it looks like, should be pretty for this is
an example of this. I was saying it wrong the

(31:03):
New Yorker. I don't know what paragraph said Murdoch. And
this will be the first time I've been pronouncing their
names correctly, and I apologize. I should have put more
respect on your name, the Murdochs. So this is a
story that's been kind of had our attention and drips
and drabs, going back to old people pissing as the

(31:24):
as the details kind of leaked out. But the so
so the New Yorker went down because the trial of
Alex Murdoch, the sort of patriarch and main criminal defendant
in this thing, is about to start. So basically, they
they were just like running this town. They like they

(31:47):
were the most powerful attorneys, they were connected to all
of the most powerful judges, all of the law enforcement
kind of answered to them. The thing that kicked it
all off, their son got really runk, which was kind
of what he was known for, just always being hammered,
got really drunk and crashed a boat into a bridge

(32:07):
with a bunch of people on it, and it resulted
in the death of a young girl. Sounds like a
Labor day crime. I I don't remember. It was like
a few years back. It was impossible to say, sorry,
what day was? No, it's it's in the article. I
just didn't write it down. So they hire an attorney
for him by the name of Dick harput Leon. And

(32:31):
it turns out Dick harput Leon is a powerful state senator,
a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee in South Carolina.
And I can't emphasize this enough. His named Dick harput Leon.
And so he comes in it's looking like he's gonna
shoot holes in the case and like, get this dude off.

(32:51):
And then suddenly that that young man, the chronically drunk
son of this huge, powerful family and his mom are
murdered in on the night of June seven. They're they're
found dead outside the kennels on their seventeen acre hunting estate.

(33:14):
And then sorry, d d seventeen hundred acre. Sorry, sorry,
I was not in my Murdoch mindset Jack exactly. The
people will be able to hear them scream, Oh you
only to have a fifteen second head start. No come,

(33:35):
that's just that's just poor form, that's non sporting. Three
months later, Alex so Alex was the one who found
his son and wife and called nine on one. Three
months later, he calls nine one one again, telling the
dispatcher he'd been shot in the head by a stranger
while changing a flat tire on his car. And then
people quickly realized, like an eyewitnesses like, a looked really

(34:00):
weird when I drove by, Like it looked like a
set up. Quick quickly it becomes evident that he had
someone like shoot him, but nobody can even like find
the wound, so he like it might have just been that.
He like asked the local law enforcement to like say
he got shot. Oh so he said he got Wait
I remember this right, because then he was like, I'm

(34:22):
on opioids, man, that's what's going on. But he didn't
actually even get shot in the head. He showed up
in court two weeks later and he there was no
evident wound. There are a lot of other body parts
you could pretend to be shot in right, or just
take a real one and be like, I'll just just

(34:43):
get in the muscle, come on, let's go. But instead
he did a fake hedge, come on, Alex, let's go.
And and so the his like ne'er do well cousin Eddie,
who was supposedly the person who shot him, according to Alex,
like because he paid him too. So Alex basically went

(35:03):
with the like, hey man, I'm on a lot of opioids,
Like I need I needed the money for opioids. When
the reporter asked harput le In about the fact that
Alex showed up for a bond hearing with no sign
of injury to his head two weeks after the incident,
harput Leon said, good hair. That was his explanation. So

(35:23):
these people just like don't give a fuck. What is
that so fucking I think a head of hair that
you couldn't see a bullet wound in his head? God, yeah,
there's something wrong with Herputleian. Yeah, well you were drunk.
Incredibly powerful, the most powerful harput lean in the galaxy.

(35:47):
He's the most like people say, he's the most powerful
person in South Carolina. How do you get away with
like becoming that powerful and having the name harput Lean.
I don't know it rings maybe it helps, maybe like
in that likes from the planet Harputley. Which is so
wild though that the most powerful Armenian American in this
country isn't a Kardashian, it's this motherfucker Harputlean. He was like, yeah, man,

(36:13):
I said, my client got shot in the head. He
fucking did it fully, and I'm still banging out here,
Like why so the two new cases crop up, like
now that people are like looking at this, they start
to assume that Alex was involved in the murder of
his son and his wife, and in fact, now he
is accused of being the sole gunman in the murder

(36:33):
of his son and wife. And also two new cases
have cropped up that were people who died on their property.
That it's sucks, it's really suspicious. Like there's this guy,
Steven Smith, who had been found dead in the middle
of a road near their seventeen acre hunting a state
with a serious head injury. Superficial appearances suggested he'd run

(36:58):
out of gas, begun walking home the accidentally hit by
a vehicle, except there was no evidence of a hit
and run or like any vehicle. There was no vehicle debris,
kid marks, and then people are like, the rumor starts
to spread that he was murdered by Paul and Buster
the the oldest of the scions of this Paul. Paul

(37:20):
is the younger one who would eventually be murdered. And
but that is like the official state corner comes back
and is like or or no, wait, it's the official,
it's what. So some official comes back and he's like,
he was hit by a car. Not nothing to see here,
there's a normal collar, leave it alone. And so no,
no murdac, No murdocks were ever questioned in that one.

(37:42):
But there's like some rumor that Smith was gay and
his name was linked to Busters and the gossip mill
or former high school classmates, and so it was like
done to cover up any homosexual activity by Buster. I
can't believe there's a real Buster in this tale of
familial financial I know, it's it's wild. Uh. Then there

(38:03):
was a housekeeper who died in the house and they
used they basically he then reached out to her sons
and was like, hey, you could sue me for five
thousand dollars and then I will get collect the payment
for you and pay you back. And the sons were like, okay,
we're you know, we don't have any money and we

(38:25):
are about to be evicted from our our mobile home.
So they agreed to that. I never saw a penny.
And like, as the local reporters were kind of going
through all this ship, they discovered that he had in
fact collected the five hundred thousand dollars Alex Murdoch and
just like took it and didn't pay the children of

(38:47):
the housekeeper who died on their property. And so that
then leads to them being like and in fact, that
is really the only way this guy ever made money,
Like that's all he did. Was his law firm basically
was like really good at suing people for like that
was kind of the main industry and that part of

(39:09):
town because like all the factories that closed and you know,
just capitalism, capitalism, capitalism all over the place, Like they
had there was a bunch of farming that happened that
just had no long term respect for the land and
it like lead shout of all its minerals, and like
so the place is just the only the only industry

(39:33):
is this law firm suing people essentially, And then taking
their settlement money and then he would find ways to
siphon off settlement money. It's a tail as old as time.
Jack Tom Girardi was the Real Housewives taught us all
about this reasonably with another guy who was like the
He's like, oh man, these people blew up in a
gas explosion the Bay Area. I'm also going to keep

(39:54):
the money. Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's like down and like
they talked about how it is still like a big
industry in South Carolina. Like that's how the laws are
set up, is that they will basically treat these settlement
payments like you know, cash payday loans, and they basically

(40:16):
take advantage of the fact that the people who are
getting these settlements need the money, and they're like, here,
we'll pay you thirty percent of that now and then
we get the rest like as it comes out later
on down the road. And that's on the books. That's
not even like against the law and what this guy
he can do whatever he wants because the Republicans are
protecting them. No, no, no no. So we also get

(40:39):
this interesting detail. Alex's attorney, still harput Lean as he's
facing murder trial, is super well connected. Harput le In,
a former chair of the State Democratic Party, has talked
of playing golf with President Joe Biden and his wife,
was recently made US Ambassador to Slovenia. Has a great

(40:59):
golf that O Biden Jack Right, I'm serious. We've all
played golf with Joe. Yeah, he doesn't remember it, but
I do. Yeah, but you can say it, and he
doesn't want to admit that he doesn't remember, so he'll
always say yes. He's like, oh, yeah, yeah, how you
been see I told you Wow, So Joe Byron. I mean, look,
it's just it's wild again. No matter where you can,

(41:21):
you get powerful like this, It's the game is the same.
It's like, yeah, man, there's rules for us, but if
you know enough, people really can do whatever funk you want.
I said Alex got shot in the head, bro he didn't. Anyway,
I'm still cooking out here, Like is this guy in
trouble at all? Or is he actually still the attorney
in this guy's because you said Alex Murdoch's trial is

(41:43):
starting now or like he's starting in the twenty three
of January and harpud Leian is his attorney And that's
just the way it is, Like the thing that I
was talking about, like that there's something called factoring. That's
that's the practice of like basically lending people money or
like taking people's settlement payments, are siphoning it off, and

(42:05):
it's all just it's all just you know, the most
immoral use of money to make money, as you said earlier, sorry,
Like that's just they use the fact that they have
a ton of money to take advantage of people who
aren't capable, don't have like the massive staff to understand
all the legalities and like business complexities that they're using

(42:31):
to take away their money. And it's that that is
the US economy, Like it's it's not isolated. Is we
have way too many fucking fancy words for stealing from
board people. This part is really amazing. Factoring companies can
offer cash upfront to victims in exchange for part or

(42:52):
all of their settlements at an average rates on the dollar. Yeah.
In one case, judge, have a lot of company is
to buy a young woman's entire settlement in a series
of deals culminating in the purchase of her remaining trench
for about ten cents on the dollar. The woman had
suffered brain damage and a train collision at the age
of twelve, and the settlement was intended to support her

(43:13):
for the rest of her life. A retired judge dryly
underscored the state's tolerance of such practices by saying, we're
all entitled to make stupid mistakes. Oh okay, so there's
no such thing. There's no such thing as predators. Only stupid,
stupid idiots that make mistakes, all right, thank you. Yeah,
stupid idiots with their injuries settlements in their home. And

(43:37):
there was a t V I when you were twelve
years old. Come on, who makes a deal like that?
Like what where is the MP? Like, I mean there is? Yeah,
I mean it's like, why would you take out this
home one when you knew you couldn't afford it? Because
I need a home, right, you idiot? Who would give
that to you? You? You encouraged me, You said this
was the one to take. This is the way I
was going to realize my dreams. You fucking targeted me.

(44:00):
It's just a bunch of like people, privileged people like
golfing together and you know, let letting each other do
this ship. And when Alex Murdoc like, well, we'll update
you guys. As the case unfolds. But when he appeared
for like the before the trial, like there's a painting

(44:21):
of his grandfather in the back of the courthouse, Like
I love the South. Yeah, well, I don't even think
it's just the South, Like I think this it's not
just the sound, but I think I think the South
is one is one place in America where a lot
of the generational like dynastic generations have stayed in one place.
You know. Also this also really makes me think of

(44:43):
you know that the no one wants to work anymore thing,
And it's like, yeah, because we found out that the
work that you were doing was just stealing from poor people,
So yeah, no, I don't really want to do that.
So you got all of this from just stealing? Yeah yeah, yeah,
I'm not. I'm not. Yeah. Yeah. It's like you become

(45:04):
I mean, who becomes a lawyer, and then it's like, well,
can't wait to spend the rest of my life sucking
the blood out of everybody around me. But the reporter
is like still, They're like I just can't get my
mind around this person like killing their son. It just
seems so far fetched because like he everything up to

(45:25):
that point would have suggested that he was, you know,
doing everything, like using the machinations of his power to
protect this kid, and like it just seems it, but
I feel like they're not taking into account, like what
addiction can do to your brain and the fact that
like on a broad scale, you know, you you have

(45:45):
these people who are making all this money and you
know just completely immorally have no like no any social currency,
are like friends to to speak of, there nothing, yeah,
produce nothing. And then they are at the top and
they're like and then you can buy all the drugs

(46:06):
that give you the brain chemical that is produced by
the human interaction that we're that we've replaced with these
capitalist machinations, and so like it actually makes perfect sense
to me that this person who had replaced who would
like become drug addicted as at this point where they

(46:27):
were just like nihilistically stealing from everyone and knew they
couldn't be caught, that they would get to that point,
because that's that's kind of what happens, is just completely
alter your brain chemicals to the point that you're kind
of inhuman. And that's like kind of the whole complete
system that we've found is like you you have a
system that completely siphons the humanity out of everything, and

(46:53):
then your reward for that is like drugs that give
you the brain chemicals that that you used to get
from interacting with people like going. It sounds like a
perfect system to me. Yeah, perfectly self contained system. Sign
us up. Yeah, it's regenerative. Anyways, it's a it's worth

(47:14):
of read. We'll link off to it in the footnotes,
and we will keep you guys updated as the trial unfolds.
He's gonna walk Jack's see over under on. It's funny
the reporters, like I was expecting, everyone was like, Oh,
he's this good old boy. You dropped him in any
southern town, he'd just like come off as just one
of the guys. He'd be fine. And then like he

(47:35):
walks in and he's just like tall guy who looks
like he just like stepped off of a yacht, and
it's just like that that's who it is. He's and
he's in a courtroom again with a painting of his
grandfather in the back of it. You think he walks
in and kisses his hand and then goes and then
touches it to the painting, goes, that's my Grandpa, my grandpa,

(47:56):
love you grand grand love you. Game game. All right,
let's say you a quick break. We'll be right back
and we're back, and so is Gerard Butler. Jerry. Yeah.

(48:24):
So last weekend, so the release of Plane, which is
the newest action movie starting Gerard Butler Plane, just Plane first. Yeah,
we just want to Filly, let's sit with that. This
new movie, I think farmer, it's about let me just
look this. It's about Plaine plain good. You might have

(48:46):
bad guy Gerard Butler good. Brown Skin People Bad, I
think it is with the that's his next movie, Brown Skin,
People Bad. You can't wait to see either. But yeah,
it's a Plane came out. So the the reviews were
actually like pretty decent like that. People are like, it's
so simple and dumb that and it like seems to

(49:07):
know that it's simple and dumb um. But it does
have this kind of political bent that a lot of
his movies seem to have. We've talked before about Den
of Thieves and how that is supposed to be like
a gritty movie about that has in the background of
it like the l a Sheriff's Department, gangs. But he's

(49:28):
the like anti hero and he's like part of those gangs,
and the bad guy in it ends up being like
just a kaiser, SoSE like international criminal mastermind, Like they
have to like invent this wild criminal conspiracy too, so
so that you're rooting for the l A Sheriff's Department
gangs basically, And that's kind of what like through throughout

(49:55):
his movie. So so first there was The Three, which
was wildly racist. The war between the Spartans and the
Persians was you know, both the depicting depiction of the
Persians was like super racist. It was also a pretty
clear allegory and justification for the Iraq war. We needed
one than they had. D sub marines of the time

(50:19):
took inspiration from Butler and like talked about it in
the media to be being like, we're like the hopelessly
outnumbered Spartans fighting heroically to the death, except you know,
we're doing it from apache helicopter. Except the power dynamics
completely reverse has anything to do with anything at all,
But yeah, it's like that. Yeah. Olympus Has Fallen came

(50:41):
in twenty thirteen, a few years into Obama's presidency, and
it was one of two movies that summer about a
black president in this time. In this case, it was
played by Morgan Freeman, who allows the White House basically
to be overtaken by terrorists and like has to be
saved by a white secret serve this agent White House
down being the other one, and basically, yeah, it's just

(51:07):
like I don't know. There's a bunch of why I
never saw that movie, but people seemed to think that
it was like pretty pretty clear cut. Is like this
guy doesn't know what he's doing. And then there's also
like a subplot with Russians interfering on behalf of Morgan
Freeman to like get him elected essentially, So like four

(51:29):
D dude, that's the sick That wasn't that I didn't
even I just I just noticed everyone exploding when I
first saw the movie. I had no idea it was
about anything. But it's like even plane, right, It's like
about the description of plane. You know what the funky's
fucking character's name is Brody Torrents. Okay, yeah, that's that's

(51:52):
some porn ship. I like they said, pilot Brody Torrent
saves passengers from a lightning strike by making a risky
landing on a war torn I land only to find
that surviving the landing was just the beginning. When dangerous
rebels take most of the passengers hostage, the only person
Torrance can count on for help is Louis Gaspar, an
accused murderer who is being transported by the FBI. Oh,

(52:16):
I hate rebels except in Star Wars, right. Yeah, and
people completely missed the point of that one too. Yeah.
It takes place in the Philippines, which you know is
a place that the US intervened in, and you know
that one of the most heavily fucking colonized countries on
the fucking earth. Yeah, has like destroyed And basically the
movie just treats it as like, well, this is a hellhole,

(52:38):
but US is here and we're here to like save
the day. And also, by the way, Brodie Torrance, he
is only I'm sorry, what do you say, Brody Torrance.
I just imagine a fourteen year old, a fourteen year
old white boy who's skateboards. Yeah, or I feel like
it's a character Brody Reid would have been very upset about, because,

(53:01):
like Torrents sing in the fucking Valley, dude, Cody Torrents
fucking serious. That's that's my first thing. Yeah, it's it
sounds like a guy on the right he is only
flying this difficult shift because he was filmed attacking a
rude passenger one time went viral. So it's anti Yeah,
it's also anti cancel culture. So glad they worked that in. Yeah,

(53:25):
because I assaulted a passenger, Like what, I'm sorry? That
supposed to make you sympathetic towards to the audience. Yeah,
haven't you ever assaulted a passenger on a plane, Miles, Yeah, seriously,
London has fallen. The follow up to White House Down,
they were like, I can't say London down because they're

(53:46):
too fancy, so we have to say London has fallen.
But it is Basically it was decried immediately for its
blatant Islamophobia, ugly reactionary fearmongering. At one point, Butler's character
tells in a sailing get back to funk head of
Stan or wherever it is you're from. That happens in
the movie, in a movie that came out that was popular.

(54:10):
I remember what's that? People cheered in the theater. I remember. No,
it's just the vibes of these films just sound like
some guy who's like clearly has like he has a
writing career, but his entire perspective is just shaped by
like like cursory glances at Fox News and he's just like,

(54:31):
oh yeah, I get I know geopolitics. Man, watch this ship.
Man fucking they're dirty and he's the hero and that's it. Yeah.
So do they do the bad guys in this movie?
Are they they're from? From? Where? Do we know? Or
is it fun had to stand? I I actually don't know,
but I don't know if it's ever treated with more.

(54:52):
I love if they never say and then yeah, they're
just like, yeah, no, that's actually where they're from. He
he was correct. You know, movies do occasional invent entire nations,
so maybe maybe that's what they did. I did actually
misspeak earlier. White House Down is not the one with
the Putin Russia election hacking plot, because that came out

(55:15):
too early for that to speak to the magabase. It
was actually Angel has Fallen, the third in the series,
the sequel to the one where he says, get back
to the funk head of Stand. Angel Has Fallen was
criticized for lionizing Trump while also like making him a villain,
but the villain turns out to be Morgan Freeman's vice

(55:36):
president who wants to go to war with Russia and
make America strong again. But then it turns out that,
like Morgan Freeman, the former Obama standing was secretly elected
thanks to Russian interference. So it's like, so, really, we're
all bad man everybody. So they photoshopped Morgan Freeman in

(55:58):
to like an image with m Yeah, that was the
last scene of the movie to be like we he
he smoothed it over and everything's good. That's cool. We
also need to talk about Geo Storm, which is a
disaster movie supposedly about climate change, but the real villain
turns out to be a Democratic president's in competence and
also his secretary of State who straight up sabotaged the

(56:20):
futuristic satellites that could fix climate change in order to
attack America's enemies. So climate change isn't solved by humanity
altering its destructive behavior, but rather a magic gizmo invented
by Dr Gerard Butler. All right, that that is a
thing that like, I think in the future people will

(56:42):
look back on these movies that came out at this
time and be like, oh, they just thought that, oh
we can just tech, techno wizardry, something up and it's
gonna fix climate change, like in the world of the
movies that take place at this time, the action movies,
Like it doesn't really make sense that climate change would
be a threat because we we are able to fix

(57:04):
everything with technology, Like, there's no way Tony Stark wouldn't
fix climate change in in the Marvel Cinematic universe. You know,
I'm just reading about the guy who wrote Angel has Fallen.
He he started the karate Kid franchise. Oh wow, Yeah,

(57:26):
it was apparently that guy. It was based on his
own life because he got beat up by bullies and
at the nineteen sixty four New York's World's Fair and
then he started learning martial arts to defend himself. But anyway,
so that guy is a guy who got beat up
by bullies, uh, sought the help of a like Okinawan
karate teacher, and now produces wine on his vineyards. So

(57:51):
it's the story that all all's well, that ends well,
Oh my god, Jack, look at the guy who wrote
Look at the guy who wrote fucking London has Fallen
and white Hot like Olympus has Fallen. His name is
Creighton Rothenberger. Yeah, that looks like the face of someone
who goes like, oh God, like poor people are discussed

(58:12):
like He's just like, there's that looks like a face
incapable of understanding anything beyond like his own desires, which
is sometimes it's nice when people are wearing that transparently
on the outside of their face. Those are some shiny veneers.
Like guy has got a little face in his mouth. Yeah,
Jamie would have been. She's she's already analyzing your game
on this guy. Well. Sarah as always such a pleasure

(58:34):
having you. Where can people find you and following you?
You can find me on Instagram at Sarah to Bother
You s A r A to bother You. Um, you
can go to my website sorry June online, and both
of those you will find links to my short film
Bathroom Time, which was a Vimeo staff pick last year

(58:55):
and is playing some more festivals, so you can go
watch it on the internet for free. There you go,
You're welcome. Also, go watch is a Bird That Bird? Yeah? Yeah,
bird is so good? Oh? Thanks Jack, And is there
a tweet or some of the work of social media
you've been enjoying. Oh? Absolutely, I really enjoyed this tweet

(59:16):
from at Quarto Core. It is um at Quarto Core.
Rick and Morty creator being an awful person is like
nine eleven for smoke shops. It was my first thought.
I was like, what is Santi Ali going to do?
Like every smoke shop is every ners in my neighborhood.

(59:39):
I'm like, they're going to have to change the maryal
there's I'm pretty sure where they're not, and everyone's just
going to be like, yeah, we're We're actually good with
this now. I don't know. It seems like some Amber
Heard type stuff, which in the comments of like the
Rick and Morty fans already trying to dismiss it all.
But yeah, that was I think there's a went to

(01:00:00):
a head shop at Burbank, which I think like they
lead with Rick and Morty graphics, like on the outside
of their like they have like graphics on the windows
where it's like, yeah, dude, get your fucking Rick and
Morty grinders and dad riggs in here. Miles, Where can
people find you? What is the tweet you've been on? Man?
Some tweets I like, Well, first, you can find me

(01:00:21):
on Twitter and Instagram at Miles of Gray. Also check
me out and check out Miles and Jack got Mad
Boost These are Basketball podcast. Also find me on four
twenty Day Fiance with Sophie Alexandra, where we complain about
ninety day fiance. Some tweets out like first one is
from at Our Ali Maynard at ms m a y
N tweeted, My theory is suburban nights fucking love Disney

(01:00:44):
World because it's their chance to enjoy walkable dining and
entertainment experiences with convenient mass transit without having to see
homeless people that might that might actually be it. Uh.
Then another one at man this is just way name
at Blaze fort ninety tweeted, So apparently the numbers on

(01:01:05):
the toaster are in minutes for the last thirty three years.
I thought it was for different levels of toasting, nous
and sir, So the fund did? I wait a minute,
How the funk would I know what? Three minute? I
don't know. I'm like, yeah, I want level three, yeah three,
level three toasting. This is this is sucking me up.
It's it sucked me up so bad. I'm like, why

(01:01:26):
are they presuming I know what a minute of toasting
looks like? Why wouldn't they write minute on there? I
don't know. I don't know. I don't know, and I
don't like this. I don't know. This is all fucked up. Yeah,
I'm I'm not a fan of that information. I'm gonna

(01:01:48):
choose my brain has rejected it. You know, I'm gonna
go watch Angel has fallen. Uh Infaria tweeted, I was
just mugged in Park Slope by two beautiful parents and
their gifted children. Find me on Twitter at Jack Underscore O'Brien.
You can find us on Twitter at Daily Zeitgeist. We're

(01:02:09):
at d Daily Zeitgeist on Instagram. We have a Facebook
fan page and a website, Daily zeitgeist 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 a song that we think
you might enjoy. Miles, what song do we think people
might enjoy? Yo? I just read that. That's bullshit. The
minute thing. Yeah, numbers on these toast giles. Okay, you

(01:02:35):
know what, when an english person says it with their
chest out like that, I'm gonna believe it. Yeah, they
love toasts too. That's my own confirmation blast. Like I annoying,
I know what to funk up that bad with the
toaster thing. No, that's not right anyway. What's the song
that I like? Well, this is actually a compilation or
an album called StarPoint Tactics from this producer three d MG.

(01:02:58):
And I think this is a German producer and like label,
but they make really dope, like lo fi hip hop.
And this is just a really uh, you know, wonderful,
wonderful like remix of ghost Face Killer called My Deadly
Okay from people who really know shake that body, body

(01:03:19):
that guy anyway. And this is like again, the beats
are boom bab lovely and it feels like I don't know,
it feels like like like an old like DJ Shadow
mixtape or something if he was. I don't know, I
fuck with it. Check this out Mighty Deadly three d MG.
All right, we'll let off to that in the footnotes
to Daily Like Guys is a production of My Heart

(01:03:40):
Radio from more podcast When I Hurt Radio. Visit the
I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcaster, wherever you listen to
your favorite shows. That is going to do it for
us this morning, back this afternoon to tell you what
it is trending, and we'll talk to you all of them, Bye,
Bye

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