Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season seventy seven episode
for Days Guys, the podcast where we take a deep
dive into America's share consciousness and say, officially off the top,
fuck coke Industries. Fuck um uh it's Thursday, April let
him two thousand nine team and names Jack O'Brien a
K bride Mr o'bride, Mr Jack O'Brien the host inside Guys.
(00:28):
That is courtesy if Saltiss Hannah hashtag star Wars, and
I'm thrilled to be joined as always by my co host,
Mr Miles boom boom boom boom boom boom. Don't show
for eating spiders? Yeah you right know us to the
(00:48):
Juno of low Rider and they get at snarky. They
sod for that a K. Do not show them to them?
I mean I like the fuck out I liked. I
actually like the bird eating spiders videos. They're just so
fucking whacky to be that are I can only help
with scream as I look in horror. Oh my gosh.
Well yeah, we're throwed to be joined in our third
seat by the hilarious comedian performer and the multitalented host
(01:11):
of my favorite podcast, Lunch Up the Jam, mil Bradeau,
Thank you. I didn't know I supposed to make a
song for my name. It's okay, you make enough songs already.
Thank you for seeing you have done your your duty
on the songmaking. Yeah, and then we we eat away
at that with you. You are the yang to our yang.
(01:33):
Yeah yeah, yeah, I've always said that. Yes, we are
the you know, eaters of light. And you were the
creators of Punch Up the Jam. Can you tell people
real quick who aren't regular listeners of the dailies? I guys,
what punch Up the Jams? Yeah? Yeah, yeah, it's um
a podcast for me and Demi. Did you wee bay
unpack a popular song you probably know and have opinions about,
(01:54):
and we talked about it and try to understand it,
and then at the end we debut our new and
improved version and you got every week. Yeah, every week.
You guys write really great songs or great like takes
on the songs, but you also like make me re
fall in love with a lot of songs that I
already liked, but like take on Me is now like
next level, like my top five favorite songs of all time.
(02:17):
It's like beautiful after yeah, because you like hear the layers,
the layers isolated and ship and it's really except for
that one space spiders parts, which that's bird eating spiders
for me, man, I don't have you seen that video
of a spider eating a bird? I have you've been
on the internet before, I would say, I surf the web.
(02:41):
All right, we're gonna get to know you a little
bit better in a moment. First, we're gonna tell our
listeners just a few of the things we're going to
talk about. Of course, we're gonna talk about the photograph
of a black hole that was devouring the internet yesterday.
Uh like a black hole almost. We're gonna talk about
why it's time to stop making yogurts guys start making
new yogurts. I've been saying it for years. I'm glad
(03:05):
somebody's finally backing Andy Rooney. We're gonna talk about Bernie's
Medicare for All bill, which has been unbailed. We're gonna
talk about Rhonda Santis actually not being as terrible as
we would have expected on the environment in particular, and
only we're gonna talk about the new anti abortion movie Unplanned,
(03:27):
that is taking box offices by storm. I guess more
of a light rain. It's number four at the box office,
but it's still big movie that nobody should have seen.
We're gonna talk about Trump's campaign video that he retweeted
that was just a immediately taken down because it violated copyrights.
(03:50):
Game of Thrones is a common and we're going to
talk about that and a number of other things. But first, Mia,
what is something from your search history? It's revealing about
who you are, that throat. Yeah, utility kilt just like
slammed with Google images of utility kilts. Okay, Now I
(04:10):
associate kilt with not utility. I associate them with, you know,
an occasions, fancy occasions, and tradition utility. There was like
a brief window I want to say it maybe still
continues if you're a utility kilter let me know. But
I remember it being like specifically two thousand three to
(04:31):
two thousand six, in which it became like a big
thing for like the most macho of men to where
utility kilts. It's like a kilt, but for someone that
like builds bikes, you know what I mean? Yeah, And
I just kept thinking that was pretty tight, like we
(04:51):
were able to get big dudes and skirts and they
liked it and we're proud of it, and I just
kind of craved another moment like that in fashion. Wouldn't
that be sick if we could get like some big
dudes and tube tops. Yeah, I'm kind of I think
we're ready. I'm ready. I think the dudes I saw
a rockingness were aggressively l A like aggressively from l A. Yeah. Yeah,
(05:12):
they had like a shop on Abbot Kenny or something
that I saw it on Abbot Kenny. I've seen this, uh,
and probably somebody who worked at a bike store, right,
So you guys have both completely nailed it. But yeah,
that that is pretty dope. Did did people wear them
without anything underneath? Like? What are the question jeans underneath?
(05:34):
I mean underwear? Probably? If I had to guess, maybe not,
can't speak to it, never checked. Maybe those like athletic
tights that maybe that would be okay. It's funny because
I knew people like who had Scottish heritage, like that
was their entry point in to wearing squirkies. Are like,
well it's I'm Scottish, you know, so it's not weird.
(05:55):
What if I told you it's just not weird. Maybe
we should all be dressing. Say, would that be cool?
Isn't that the future liberals want? It looks super comfortable,
That's what I'm saying. That is definitely the future that
people who aren't liberal think liberals want. Oh yeah, just
the cooked dudes or wearing skirts skirts around. Also, my
problem is my fucking thighs. I burn holes in my jeans.
(06:21):
Would be so if I were if I'm killed, baby,
I don't have to worry about it'd be better. Right,
That's what I'm saying. We should be allowed to dress
for comfort. I personally want to wear x x x
x L hoodies, no pants. That's my legs ship. That's
what I'm moving. Dress like a vet amont One, like
the o D bagginess. There was a pull off, a
very very cursory Google search. I just feel like, hey,
(06:43):
what are you wearing? Or killed? Uh? And the response
it is Scottish adults of Warren killed people they pulled
pent We're underwear were nothing wow, brave or others? Yeah,
short to wear others. So some people are wearing shorts
that would look weird though if you could see it, yeah,
I would be like yeah, that just cargo shorts underneath
(07:06):
it killed. He's just not there yet. Yeah, you stepping stone.
You would have to be doing like gymnastics to see that.
Like I'm guessing you're not seeing Oh no, cargo shorts. Sorry,
I was picturing like biker shorts. Oh yes, yea, yea, yeah,
yea yeah, yeah, I would probably rocko just a beautiful thong. Well. Hey,
while we're on the subject, though, Myles has been talking
about how he wants to bring cargo shorts back. Jack Bee,
(07:30):
don't be disingenuous. Jargosgo short. He's with me, He's not
see you sign an NDA. When I came with you
with with that investment opportunity to get on the ground
floor of my jargo company, I was not expecting you
to just drag out all the business on the podcast
like this. Somebody was talking about ose on last podcast
(07:52):
on the Left. They were talking about gene bikinis or
gene brief. Yeah. I don't want Oh yeah, what does
that happen? No, that's to be a joke that there's
a wave for everything. I remember when the ram Pian
was the thing for a second. But we need to
be moving towards comfort that's my point or its comfort
not away. So on your spectrum of not uncomfortable and comfort,
(08:14):
what are the two extremes? Like what is extreme comfort
and what is extreme discomfort? Extreme discomfort is an underwire
bra and tight jeans, non stretch like wolf why is
that so popular? Heard? And then extreme comfort is like
a full on sweatsuit, right, yeah, like a move MoU
(08:36):
made out of Like like what do you call that?
Like terry fleece? You know what I mean? Like, like
I had this wave that I was on for a while,
I would just I sleep underwear. Like in the winter months,
I still don't wear clothing. I just like to sleep underwear.
And then if I'm up early, I have like a
(08:58):
throw blanket on my couch. I've learned to, like happened
this really dope fleece blanket poncho, So you swaddle yourself. Yeah,
and to me, that is my extreme of like the
most comfortable thing you could wear that out put a
belt on it. Some cool sneakers that love. Right? What
(09:19):
is something you think is overrated? Okay, I think shaving
your legs is overrated. I'm over it. It makes you
like so dry, you have to moisturize so much it
takes you to do it every day. I'm just bored.
I'm done, okay, But um, what I finably underrated definitely
conflicts with that and that I think it's underrated to
shave your whole face, your whole face. I recently started
shaving my whole face and it feels so good. It's
(09:42):
so smooth. I have to use half as much lotion
because it's not getting stuck on the hair. It's so
gratifying to just wash the peach fuzz fall off. I
love it. I'm a big fan. Are there, like is
it an urban myth? Like you're not supposed to shave
your peach fuzz or it comes back longer than ever whiskers.
I think what the truth in that is that cutting
it gives it a blunt edge, but once you've ever
(10:03):
cut it, I think that's true. I'm sure who knows,
I'm sure some peach fuzz person and you're like a
stripping your hair your face of protective lager. It's probably bad,
but it feels good. You're like a light complexed person though,
so you don't have to worry about that peach fuzz
coming back as thick black hairs coming out from under eyelids,
(10:24):
or I will say getting older, the mustache is darkening.
It is, it's getting thicker. So another reason why shaving
my whole face is kind of a fun thing for
me now, especially how many times I shave, I still
get this like weird, patchy Johnny Depp hair. Yeah. I
blame my Japanese side for that, but hey, because on
my dad's side, motherfucker's are rocking beards. Yeah. Maybe as
you get older they'll go thicker. I don't know. I'm
(10:45):
like thirty four and I have like the I have
a preteen like beard face, you know what I mean,
like Ny Reeves, I know, but you know what, fine,
you know, I look young forever. Yeah, that's that's definitely
not a bad thing, trust me. Yeah, but you know what,
you have beard privilege. I look and I look all
the time. Like there's a certain point if you have
if it grows in evenly, you can rock it and
(11:06):
still kind of like, oh that's rugged. There have been
times people have literally asked me if I was okay,
but not even like in a shitty way, like it
makes it worse. And college you're like they're like everything okay,
because they think that you had a full beard and
like pieces of it are falling out. I don't know,
just radiation. Because you know, there was a time, Oh
my god, I did November like a few years ago,
(11:28):
and that was such a fucking nightmare. People just laughed.
When I worked at Power one on six, people were
growing like real beards and should I came in, people
like you could just do a Karamo did in the
first season, a queer eye and painted on. Oh damn
you that I know, Yeah, yeah, I know, I like them.
So just to make it clear to everyone, you are
(11:49):
not saying shave your whole face, including eyebrows. I leave
my eyebrows, but you don't have to. Fun it is
an aggressive look. Go nuts. Yeah, oh to go eyebrow
list been rocking that. I know that guy from fucking
Nohoe hank On Barry. You guys watching that, he makes
it look good. Yeah, I don't want to shave them.
Oh wow, we'll see. Yeah, okay, there next time, I'm
(12:09):
on that's just some megap some photoshop exactly. Test d
What is a myth? What's something people think is true?
You know? To befall? Okay, so everyone says, bees die
when they sting you. But that's only honey bees. Oh okay,
that's a lesson that you learned the hard way. Oh no,
that's a shitty lesson. Oh so wait, so is it
(12:30):
the idea that a honeybee, like once the stinger is removed,
then like the countdown to death begins for Yeah. So
like honey bees, when they sting you, the stinger stays
in you and as they leave, their whole guts stay
there too, so they just like on you and like
it's the ultimate sacrifice to protect the honey But like
wasps and other types of they can just go fucking nuts.
(12:53):
Gotten stung like eight times by the same wasp. See
that's what I'm saying. Anything awareness about this? Yeah, he's
you know, he's been by the same one. It's always
just chilling on his doorstep and being like, oh, you're
back early from work. Look who's home. I got a
band aid on the last thing? Would it hurt? I
(13:15):
have not been stung. I I realized I still don't
like walking in grass without shoes on because I stepped
on a wasp or something. It was like three when
I'm still just like up from it. Yeah, yeah, it's weird.
Every guys, every time I've been stung by a b
it's been like I've stepped on a dying b or
(13:36):
batted my hand or put my hand on the surface
where there was like a beat in the prices of
dying that just stung me. The last time, the one
I got was on the bottom of my foot. Is
the Yeah, no in my backyard because I don't like you.
I don't like shoes, you know, so I run the
risky stock X would beg to differ. I mean, I
(13:58):
like shoes when I'm out, but I'm saying when I'm
at home to them up an Asian house. You know,
where shoes, So I never wear shoes in the house. Yeah,
it's gross where shoes inside. I hard agree with only
where shoes because society says I have to and the
manager mcdonald' who won't serve me, so i'll rock the
heat on my feet. Do you have slippers at like
every doorstep? I have some, you know, rocking some kurgy's
(14:19):
right now, you know, getting to the kirgis wool, you know.
Once I got those slippers. But yeah, no, I have
like one pair of house shoes. Okay, you know, and
that's how I lived my life. Guys. And before we
get to uh, the amazing discovery of a black hole
finally an important step for humankind, we have some breaking
(14:40):
news to producer Nick stumped. Stop stopped us in our
forward motion in this podcast to let us know that
there was a woman who went to the hospital with
I pain and it was discovered that she had four
live bees feeding on her tears in her eyelid. In
her eyelid, that just seems like a random, like dream
(15:04):
logic nightmare that you would have. Also doesn't seem possible
the most patient fucking person. How did they get in
when she was sleeping? I don't know. That's where I'm like,
you know, if you have bees living in your eye,
you might be like, yo, hold on, I'm gonna pull
up my eyelider and be like, okay, motherfucker. Rents do
how do they get them out? I don't know, flushed
(15:27):
them out or something? Oh my god? Oh uh, we're
getting word in that the doctors slowly pulled him out
with a microscope, one by what Also they were microscopic
because like the little ones that zip around you, it's
a tear beat. Yeah, the sweatiest part of your body
(15:49):
your eyeball. Oh, I hate it. That's true. Wow, thank
you for just upsetting me for no reason. I'm kind
of done this podcast. That's why I tell people I'm
just sweating through my eyes every time. I just burst
into tears. Yeah, that's why I when I talk about
how sweaty I am, that's what I'm referring together. I
just don't get I'm still kind of upset at somebody
(16:11):
who didn't know they have four bees living in their
I'm like kind of proud of the bees. Yeah, to
the bees. They should have a screenplay written about them
on media, Like, yeah, I got it. But that is
some definite Like in America, if there is a fly
anywhere within three ft of your face, like we like
(16:32):
swat at it. We freak out. But like in other
countries that have a lot more insects, like they're just like, well, yeah,
they're the you're sort of you're more used to insects
flying a right, so it's less of it than enough
to the point that three four bees can take take
up It sounds like an A. O. LL Chain letter
from like yeah, it's like, yeah, but this lady had
four bees living in her eye. I can't wait to
(16:54):
debunk this and over for we were talking talking about
a black hole? Nick, don't you understand human wonder? Honestly,
I'm not. I don't really care about this black hole.
I want to talk about all right, So I do
want to talk about the black hole because I think
there's something dead inside me. Guys, I it looks like
(17:16):
did it change you? A really terrible photograph I took
of the eclipse back when that happened, or like when
I would be like, whoa, the moon looks so cool
when I was drunk, and then like I would look
at the picture in the next day that I took
of the moon and it's just like a blurry, little
tiny thing, like no part of He's impressed that we
have the first ever photo of a black hole. Why
(17:37):
am I not say in the same way. And I
looked at it and I went whatever so quickly, And
I feel terrible because I understand intellectually that the black
hole is one of the greatest mysteries in space, and
we have found we have come to a moment where
we have collaboratively aimed all of our telescopes at the
(17:59):
ship and its gotten our first image of this thing, right,
and my first reaction is like, yeah, that looks like
out of focused picture of Sauron's eye. Yeah, I'm sure
that's exactly So, Yeah, you would know you guys are
both clearly on the dark side here like me. That's
why you looked at You're like, yeah, what's up? That's
my homie. I know this. This doesn't visit you in
your dreams. So Robert Evans, host of Behind the Bastards,
(18:23):
was in the office this morning and he said it
filled him with wonder. Super producer nixt Stump agreed, Uh,
I wouldn't it fills me with wonder. I just was
like moved on with my life. Pretty I'm honestly already
annoyed because of the meme treatment, Like I feel like
we can't have any cool news without me just seeing
it too many times and hating it. So the first
place Robert saw it was apparently within thirty one minutes
(18:46):
of it was discovered, it was on go on the
butt hole part of really creative meme work. Yeah, and
just dogged mean work, mean work. They're just like ready
now science temp. Yeah, they just like drop any circular
(19:06):
for the Meme Makers Union Um, but I like people
have said that we've been ruined by movies because we're
not impressed by it. But I feel like we've actually
been ruined by science because they've been showing us like
amazing images of what black holes might look like. I
guess so illustrators. Yeah, like illustrators are too good. They're
fucking it up for us. Uh, they're too imaginative. Um.
(19:31):
But so the thing that kind of made me come
around on it, the glory part, is basically the place
where all the uh they're using radio, radio, telescopes, whatever.
So how did they take the picture, Because my understanding
(19:51):
is a black hole sucks everything in, right and not
suck in their camera was so at least nothing up
about this. I just saw a Shrek's eye and I
was like, yeah, I know you're talking about. So the
story of how they did it is actually cooler than
the image. To me, it was a woman, right, it was.
They said a hundred and twenty different scientists working in
(20:11):
a concert, So definitely a woman involved there to get
all those people to work together. And I'm sure but
that I'm sure that was sexist in some way. I apologize,
But the the like using radio telescopes from all over
the world. They basically and they sinked all the telescopes
with an atomic clock so that they were like communicating
(20:34):
in real time essentially, and that enabled them to create
a telescope that was essentially as big as our planet,
which is what you need to be able to see this,
because they said it is the equivalent of looking at
something like a line drawn with a mechanical pencil in
(20:56):
Los Angeles from New York. Is like, how hard it
was to find this thing? Now, I like it. I
needed the context to understand the impressiveness of it. Yeah,
so that this black hole is different. Most black holes
are the size of the city of Chicago at most.
This black hole is the size of the Earth's orbit
(21:18):
and it's the center of a galaxy. So that's why
they're able to even like think about seeing it. But
like the nearest black hole to Earth would be like
being able to see a molecule through a telescope in
Los Angeles from New York. So it's we're not there yet,
but the we are able to see the fucking mechanical
pencil line. All right, my bad science. Yeah you did it.
(21:40):
I get it. Scared of it I don't know if
this is how quickly we're able to break uncharted terrain, Like,
what am I going to see before I die? And
do I want to see it? In a way, I
kind of feel like ignorance is bliss when it comes
to space stuff. Very scary. Yeah, Hey, if we're lucky,
we might see the world and oh god, telescope from
New York. Oh ship. Yeah, but right, isn't that a
(22:04):
thing where you can like see I guess you see
the past of other galaxies? Not Yeah, I saw Interstellar.
So like, if you think about it though, like love
is the one thing that that transcends both time end space.
All right, but let's get to the really important news,
which is the Wall Street Journal has put their foot
down fuck off with all your new yogurt brands that
(22:29):
they say the article is called yogurt Sales sour as
Options proliferate. Um. Now, this is just something to chew
on oka. Yet the average US supermarket carries three hundred
six different yogurt varieties. That's up four percent since two
thousand fifteen. Now, meanwhile, overall yogurt sales have fallen six
(22:51):
percent by volume in the year through February Cording to
Nielsen data, and sales of Greek yogurt, which kick started
the categories explosive growth, fell eleven per scent. So we're
kind of in a world where people are we're still
unveiling new kinds of fucking yogurt despite the lack of
enthusiasm for yogurt, because I used to just eat like
yo play as a kid, and uh, the Tahitian vanilla
(23:15):
one or vanilla or whatever it was, Yeah, vanilla, and
then all the banana cream one. I used to that
one too, um, and that used to be it was fine.
I was into that, and then there were so so
many more yogurts. I've hit the scene, and I just
don't know what the funk is up. I'm actually burnt
out from the amount of options that I have personally. Yeah,
but I love you, yeah, gert burn exactly. I want
(23:35):
to know more about what the differences are in the
new types of yogurts, because to me, as a vegan person,
I'm like burning them on. I'm still looking for a
good non dairy yogurt. So the influx is benefiting me greatly.
Have you tried the coconut yoga? Yeah, I just tried
this one. I think it's called Colina, and it's crazy accurate,
but it's basically just a can of coconut milk some
kind of like like one is a hundred and tent
(23:56):
of your daily saturate if fat, And I'm like investment, right,
maybe too much? How much sugar in barely any But
she's also something I'm looking for because they have so
much sugar in so many of them, right right, It's like,
what's the point of the probiotics. You're gonna give me candina?
Get off me? Right? Yeah, you'll play the stuff that
I thought I was eating. That was like health food
growing up, that you'll play the little you'll play things
(24:18):
and we're just like melted ice cream basically. Yeah, exact
same with go gurt. Yeah, was apparently not a healthy
creamy otter pop Get out of here. I love it.
I remember, like I think one of the aids walks
in l A. It was like the debut of gogurt.
They were eating it out there. Yeah. I was like
in fourth grade or something, and I was like, yo, Dad,
give me some more of those. No, they had him
(24:38):
out of cooler. Yeah, I was like, could you imagine
I'm like burn my mouth. That's like the thing that
they get wrong. They're like hot, they're like, oh, apparently
people wanted it cold. Just to give you a little
you know, Primer's Greek style yogurt is strained, right, they
strained the cultured and milk through like a cloth and
(25:00):
get rid of all the way asking us you have
the laptop. Yeah, that's what I'm saying, because you're asking
all the differences Greek right still but still it's like
a centrifuge, right, like they spin it around really fast
and water like I'm pretty sure that's right. And a
weird thing about that is I interviewed a dude who
like worked with the runoff from that yogurt. Apparently, like
(25:25):
the runoff from Greek yogurt is like the worst thing.
It's like incredibly radio active. Yeah, it's like really toxic
and like the like slid this guy was doing for
the environment, was taking that and brewing beer with it.
But like that ship because like otherwise it just like
gets dumped somewhere and it's like kill everything about yogurt water.
(25:47):
I don't know if confused. I was confused too, Okay,
but yeah, shout out that guy. You know about Icelandic
skier is that like sheep milk. I think this one
also uses non fat milk. I think probably cow milk also.
I mean, look, if you're if you're Icelandic and I'm
sucking this up, just holler man, like I'm sorry, but
(26:09):
skier has I think the thing that's different about that
one is that it's like there's so much protein in
it that like the kind of mythology is like, yeah, man,
you know that's help the vikings things are they're using that.
And then there's like Australian yogurt like Noosa too, like
what is that? And again and they had an h
(26:29):
down there straya sorry um, and that one is big
because it's made with full fat milk for a reach
of more indulgent taste sorry strapping. And then there's French yogurt,
which is kind of like yo play and that's just
I guess their method is just called cup settling. I wonder, yeah, yeah,
that makes sense. They put the products in the cup
steel and then let do things. I wonder what the
(26:52):
call of the yogurt is to like manufacturers, they're just
like yogurt that you haven't heard it? Yeah, you don't
say visiting. You're hearing the call of the yogurt protics
to start your own yogurt exactly. All right, we're gonna
take a quick break. We'll be right back. And we're back,
(27:23):
and Bernie has unfailed unfailed, also unveiled Medicare for All bill. Yeah,
I got the latest version out, and everyone's like, okay,
what's what's he got? What's different than the last time,
because two seventeen he had a bill that was sort
of the same thing, very similar. You know, this is
again wants to move everything to a single payer system
(27:43):
that essentially just does away with the private insurance companies
who were giving us like sort of a band aid
patchwork of coverage and just put it all into a
single payer system that is ran by the government, but
has added even more benefits to this. Uh. Most notably,
we would cover long term care like nursing homes and
fund home and community based care also, which is actually
(28:06):
kind of like even in Canada that there's no like
consistent funding for that kind of thing. You know, he's
taking it up a notch. The one thing though, around
it is that in the bill there is no section
about funding and how that's gonna work. And we've always
talked about how this is Medicare for all is. We
know we have the will to do it, but it's
(28:26):
a very complicated thing because we're trying to dismantle decades old,
fucked up predatory systems and figuring out how to do
people who may lose their jobs, who work for private
insurance providers, what happens to them. There's so many moving pieces.
But he did have a separate proposal that was just
sort of talking about different finance options, which would include
raising marginal income tax rates, uh, making the estate tax
(28:49):
more progressive, and just savings from general health tax expenditures. Um.
But the thing that it's really stressing is that we're
now shifting all of the cost really I'm just the
consumers to the government. Now. It's like sort of being like,
that's all it is in my opinion. Tight, Yeah, that
sounds good. Oh well, you know, I think everyone look
(29:10):
Kamala Harris, Corey Booker, Elizabeth Warren, Kirsten gillibrand they're all
backing it. Um. But we'll see. I mean, it's the
execution part that I think is going to be the
real hard part, because that's going to require a lot
of you know, nuanced problem solving and figuring out how
to like maneuver it politically too. Yeah, and even with
the best case scenario they can get this through and whatever, Like,
(29:32):
no matter what the outcome, restructuring is gonna suck for
a while, yeah, Like it would be shitty in the
short term, great in the long term. But there's been
like a rough couple of years of like trying to
make that happen. Even if we could get that to happen, Yeah,
And I think that's why we're I think it's like
one of those things we all we all know we
like the sentiment, but how do we actually now let's
we have to begin thinking of like how do we
(29:53):
really get this done in a way that it's like
when your friends like we should hang later, and you're like, yeah, yeah,
should hang later, and then we just never do because
making it happen it's hard. Like when you're in college
and you go you're like, yo, let's go like, yeah,
we're gonna get some chicks. They're like, first, let's get right,
then we'll we'll we'll game plan there, I will figure
(30:15):
it out then and then you cut to us coming
home being like, yeah, dude, I don't know. We shouldn't
go we should play grand theft auto. Um. They do
mention though, doing away with private insurance and like the
healthcare provided by employers and all that ship bill. That's
the vision that is it's trying to give us is
a true government operated system wherever, like you know, the
(30:38):
coverage is all the same, the costs are all the same.
Subsidizing pharmaceutical our prescription drugs and things like that. That
does seem to be the one like sort of wedge
that the that the Republicans are able to kind of
get at is that when you ask people would you
be willing to give up your current insurance to support
(31:00):
Medicare for all? Uh, it becomes not a majority to
support it. But at the same time, it's is it,
how can you know that you pull the whole country.
You're saying, are more people that have good employer insurance
than not? That feels wrong for me. Yeah, I think so.
I do think that's true that there's like a wording issue,
(31:20):
because if you're like give up your insurance, that's like
inherently people like pay out of pocket. I would love
to not do that anymore. Yeah, And even people who
are like have shitty insurance through their employer, like they
it's vision dental, right. The question starts from the premise
of give up your insurance. It's like, well, I rely
(31:41):
on that for the livelihood of my family, So no,
I don't want to do anything that involves giving up.
But if you're like, would you rather get better insurance
from the government, right, then I feel like they maybe
that might be a way to change that. So you're
saying it's framing. I do think it's framing, But there
(32:01):
that does seem to be like the people who are
in the know, like the realist Democrats who come back
and they're like, this is never gonna happen, like, stop
even pretending it. They would also check who they're getting
their campaign finance, their donators. Yeah, but even like people
who are like more centrist Democrats, like not not politicians,
but like yeah, pundits, yeah, just people. They all point
(32:25):
to this, uh, this poll, and I feel like, I think, sure,
you can point to that poll, But if the legislators
are actually doing the work of problem solving how we
logistically do this, right, then I think that becomes moot.
Because if there was an idea that people can look
at and go, oh, that's clear, that makes sense. This
is how we handle the issue that could surround what
(32:45):
happens to the secondary fallout of destroying the private insurance
industry and like all the the economy of that and
all these other things. Then it might be a little
bit easier to wrap your head around. But all we
have is Obamacare, and people started going, oh, well, you know,
that didn't happen the way it needed to. It's weird
how much we're just like, I mean, as a country,
like hypothesizing, you know what I mean, Like we don't
(33:06):
really have anything set in stone yet. So like it's
cool that they're starting to have those conversations, but I
would love to just pause the conversation until we have
more information, you know. Yeah, well I think that's why again,
people are slowly trying to figure out, you know, wrap
their heads around how to do it in the way
that actually, you know, creates the benefits that they're advocating for. Right,
and that shitty Obamacare that everybody hates so much, people
(33:27):
still don't want to do away with it, Like people
are still reliant on it. So I mean, like you
just never get sick, never love anyone that ever gets sick,
you'll be fine and don't age and also be able
to afford to live. It's that simple. Come on, guys,
I'm so glad we broke it down. So with Obamacare,
he was trying to have uh, like a single payer model,
(33:50):
but the problem was there was so much resistance from
the right to do anything like that. He just had
to cave to the demands and we just got this
watered down version. Well, I also don't think that it
helped that the people who were actually drawing up Obamacare,
like doing the technical work of writing the plan, where
like people veterans of the insurance industry, so like they
(34:11):
weren't letting anything that was going to put a lot
of people out of work uh come to pass. So like,
I I understand the concern, right UH. Super producer Nick
was pointing out that when people picture government provided healthcare,
they're probably picturing the d m V or the post
office or you know, other government run institutions. This would
(34:32):
require a sea change where you know, a lot of
the really talented people who work in the insurance industry
fucking people over uh, suddenly moved to the public sphere
and start like building up a system that actually helps people.
This has been a thing that like I've I've talked
about like a lot of the smartest people that I
(34:52):
knew in like high school and college all went into
just like ways to make money that weren't constru active
in any way whatsoever to people. And it's like that
needs to be a shift. We need our talent going
towards like building things constructively and like working in some
sort of public service and like, you know, the capitalism
(35:13):
in general. But it's like there are forms of capitalism
that like at least aren't like so hostile towards like
society that across. Right, I'm saying we have to come
back across that rubicon. Uh, and like it would be
a total sea change, like it just pointing to the
(35:33):
d m V is like yeah, well that's like you
also got a point to cops and firefighters too, Yeah,
exactly like they. I wouldn't find a firefighter style doctor
that'd be sick. They're holy unqualified to deal with your is. Yeah, hey,
what's going on here? I don't know it could be
(35:54):
candied there or something. Do you want to play with
the hose? Yeah? Right? I feel how heavy this jacket
is believe in Hu, guys. I want to talk about
unplanned as it called, Yes, unplanned opening to audiences of
right wing Christians. Unplanned shocked everybody by coming in forth
at the box office a couple of weeks ago. Uh,
(36:16):
still out here filling up theaters. Are not necessarily filling
it up, filling up entire rows of theaters with right
wing people who don't necessarily have that many movies made
that get them going politically. Well, Luckily they have pure
flicks of the production company behind this movie. They made
(36:38):
the God's Not Dead series and also other Christian films
like Holy Man Undercover. You know the story of a missionary,
one of my favorites, who's corrupted by Hollywood into becoming
an actor and playing Satan. So you know, they know
the market. Yeah, someone goes to Hollywood. The concept is
so on the nose of like what concerned like an
(36:59):
ultra conservative Christian with things like you go to Hollywood
as a missionary. Next thing, you know, you're Satan, right
because of because Hollywood. Man, That's just how it works.
That's what happened to me. Uh So the this production
company is funded by the dude behind that My pillow Company,
isn't it. Oh, well, this film. I don't know if
(37:21):
he is involved with Pure Flicks exactly, but yes, he's
definitely Mike Lindell. Uh, the my pillow guy. What's my pillow?
It's that stupid, that's an infomercial to do talking about
sucking pillow whatever. Um and and people just know him
as the my pillow guy. Got it? Um? And he's
like a you know, huge rabid Trump supporter. Um and
(37:42):
he yeah, he put a little cash down uh to
fund this weird hit job on plane. And people's ability
to choose, you know, how they want to yeah, how
they want to deal with their own body. Um. And
you just a side note, the my pillow guy, he
was suited for lying about the pillows. So they are not,
(38:05):
in fact his pillows. They're not his, and that's your honor.
I don't think these are his pillows actually. So the
movie is based on the memoir of Abby Johnson, former
Planned Parenthood employee who left the company and became a
pro life advocate. Uh. And there are all sorts of
you know, journalistic questions that have been raised about her memoir. UH.
(38:28):
For instance, the big like turning point for her is
she like at the abortion clinic of doctors like, hey,
we need an extra hand for this abortion in here.
Why don't you come in? And she comes in and
like the fetus is like running away from the needle,
like and like squirming in pain and like things that
doctors are Like, No, at that stage, the fetus would
(38:49):
not be able to feel like process pain, but or
that a doctor would say, hey, we need an extra
set of hands in here. That's something I hear. Doctor says, hey,
new kid, yeggs a greenhorn. And there were apparently like
things going wrong behind the scenes between her and management.
And so maybe if anything, because it's criminally underfunded, I
(39:11):
don't think it has anything to do with abortion, but okay, yeah,
I mean the whole trailer is so manipulative. Yeah, so
we watched the trailer. We watched the trailer. It is amazing.
It's a tour day, sob we saw I counted thirteen
contorted crying faces of women like when the word abortion
was like even mentioned, and it was make sort of
(39:32):
like meant to just look like this horror film. But
like there were like women who were like in the
Planned parenthood who were like just in like hospital gowns
and like drugged up like zombies walking around and like
it looks did they shooting a Planned Parenthood? Well, it
was just a set of like a medical office. Oh
it's not. Yeah, it is definitely not a documentary. It is. Okay.
(39:53):
It is the most sensational, overly dramatic guard propaganda. Yeah. Um,
but this is even talk about it then because it's
just one of these things that like it was slowly
becoming this thing that people were like, yeah, this is
this is the film people need. You can't identify truth, then,
I don't know what we could say that would change
your mind. If you ignore science to perpetuate your own
(40:16):
ideas based on nothing, that's I don't know what can
you say to that person. Okay, I mean, look, if
you're not moved. There is a scene and I just
want to just tell me if this moves you. Uh,
the my pillow guy he's actually also in the film,
and there is a climax of the film features the
my Pillow guy wearing an American flag hard hat and
bulldozing a Planned Parenthood people in it. No no no no,
(40:43):
it's like a terrorist attack. No no, no no. But again,
it's just and I think he said in the seed
he says, I've been waiting for this my whole life.
Blaine disregard of women's health. Yes, tight, you know, plant
parenthood does other stuff predominantly, right, No, exactly, And I
think that's what this whole thing is about. It's really
just to I think, you know, get their base real
(41:04):
riled up about it. Because there was a state legislator
in Texas we just reintroduced a bill that would give
the death penalty to women. Yeah, right, because you care
about the babies more than the women. Way to make
it as clear as possible for us, thank you. Yeah. Yeah.
And there's a scene where like the head of Planned
Parenthood is yelling at her for She's like, you need
to get your abortions up. We need more abortions. It's
(41:26):
like it's it is exactly. Um. Yeah. So also another thing,
there's like a lot of gore in it because they're
trying to be like just affect the viewer. Got an
R rating and then they're like, oh, this is a
conspiracy against us. It's like no, it's because it's fucking
so gory. What the fund do you think this is? Yeah,
(41:48):
it's fucked up and we we have to talk about
it because it's in I can't believed it was fourth
at the box office? But who was box office? America's
America's wow? Man? People, can you read books written by
a like third party people? Can you just do me
that favorite? No, but you don't know they're they're liberal bias.
(42:09):
You know they they're trying to push the liberal agenda
and that that is the thinking of them. So everyone too,
even on the left, people get everything is so split.
Like I can only listen to people who are going
to say the thing I need exactly. I respect the
difference in opinion when your opinion is based on facts
are based on propaganda bullshit. We can't even have a conversation,
(42:32):
So what's the point. I don't understand. Whatever. It's fine,
it's fine. It's not fun. I'm mad, it's fine. Uh.
And speaking of right wing propaganda, the President tweeted a
campaign videos posted he got it from our the Donald,
and it was immediately taken down because it took its
(42:55):
soundtrack from the Dark Knight franchise from Hans Zimmer's score.
And this once again proves that the President thinks he
is Batman. Batman is a real person. Someone probably just
was playing the others like what was that? Yeahs like,
is that the Batman theme? That's a video for me?
(43:16):
We're posting that. I'm starting to get the sense that
there's not a lot of like um, upper level creatives
on the right wing. Between that movie and then this music,
I'm like, do you not have people that can make
original content for you? I think that's the inherently the thing, right,
Like you needed a bit of empathy to actually be
a good artist, right, It is really like how do
they look at that? How are they like we're still
(43:39):
the good don't Why can't we make a good movie
or right? And even we've talked about the alt right
songs that like are just garbage fires the arts we
can talk, right? I mean, have you heard It's Okay
to Be White? That was a track from like this
Dude in England, the English. Actually it was a little
more cynthy, a little I haven't done a parody version
(44:01):
of Kendrick Lamar We're gonna be all white? Yeah, that's
right there, You're gonna be all right right wing? Take it?
It's right there? Can you hear me? Do you feel me?
Do they think that their art is as good and
we just ignore it because of our I don't think
like Hollywood bias or did they do they think that.
(44:23):
I don't think they look at it as art. They're
just like Salvos in the culture war, right, And it's
like it doesn't matter if it's good or bad objectively.
It's like, are people talking about it? And that because
I feel like, you know, their favorite album is probably
just something like sixty Minutes of White Noise. It's the Eagles, right,
It feels like the Eagles. That's what the showdown between
(44:45):
Thriller and Greatest Hits of the Eagles. Is that what
it really is about. Yeah, it's always back and forth
between those two, and it's yeah, and it's a it
follows who wins the election. Man that hell freezes over
tour though, brother, that does. Man. It's funny because I
don't listen to the Eagles because of the big Lebowski. Yeah.
(45:05):
I hate Don Henley Man and I was like, at
the time, I didn't know what have ego song was like, yeah, alright, cool,
the dude doesn't work with Eagles me either. I really
don't work with the Eagles though, I don't know a
single Eagle song is that bade? I do not, yea,
I swear to god, I've heard the version from Big
Lebowski like the Flamenco or whatever. I do not know
(45:28):
the original songs. I do not, and I refused to
at this point in my life. And that is probably
what waste like kind of groove, you know, I mean
they probably shred Honestly, I'll just take your word for
it that you got so animated. What are the hits?
What are the hits? Running down the road trying to
(45:50):
loosen my load ahead to have and women all my mind?
That's not really easy? Easy take it? That is it? Okay?
Super producer Nick Stuff has just more breaking news. There
is a statue in Winslow, Arizona that plays take It
Easy on loop twenty four hours a day. I'm getting
(46:11):
that correct. It's a statue of something. It's based on
the song. So the statue is based on the song
and has that on a loop that sounds like an
eternal healthscape. Yeah, yeah, that's probably check out any time
you'd like. But you can never leaves. But this is
for take It Easy though, right, Yeah, it's just a
reference to another eagle. But I'm just you know, I'm
respecting the source material here. Okay, bad, my bad, Glenn Fries.
(46:33):
The heat is on though, that song fucking slaps? Is
that an Eagle song? He yea, that's being my son's
sham right now. Really, yeah, what are you trying to
make him into a wall because from the eighties, because
I literally said the heat is on. He was like
asking if the heat was on, like a couple of
(46:53):
months back. I said, the heat is on, then started
singing that and then we listen to it, and now
that's the only song he wants to hear. And I've
made a huge mistake. And he's like, oh man, yeah,
it doesn't like all Eagles stuff. Right, We're gonna take
(47:14):
a quick break. We'll be right back. And we're back.
And so is Game of Thrones in a couple of days. Uh.
And they're saying that it's going to be viewed by
a billion people, that this first episode is going to
(47:41):
gain what yeah, like around the world because so apparently
this is like one of those shows that actually translates
to other countries because it's like all action and sex
and stuff like that. Dragons dragons from everyday life, yes,
stuff that slave army knows no language. You know, I've
been freed, but so yeah, and it's also got the
(48:02):
thing that happened to Breaking Bad, where like nobody was
really watching it the first couple of seasons, but then
everybody streamed and caught up on it. So the last
season was like this big event, like it's that but
times a billion, however many I mean, I guess that
makes sense, you know, because earlier we were like we've
hit peak Game of Thrones, merchant cross promotions, the Oreo
(48:23):
manufacturers are looking at some stats that impress them because yeah,
the Thrones is everywhere. What flavor is it? It's regular.
They couldn't give us a special flavor. I want to
eat a dragon. I know. Well, if you got a
shake shack in order in in Valerian in New York,
they have their own menu. Oh my god, you have
(48:45):
to order in Valerian. Why is it that when things
get this popular, I hate them even if I liked them.
And that's where we kind of got with all the
merch FM, like, yeah, I like the show and I
just wanted to be cool, but we're doing too much.
You already have shoes. I feel like it's also the
bigger the show gets, the less likely they are to
just like punch you in the gut with the ending
(49:07):
or like do something that's like really creative with the ending.
Like instead, it's got to be it goes from being
like in the early seasons it was like made for
it was made to like funk with you a little bit,
and like lately it feels like it's made more with
like a Hollywood ending in mind type. I feel like
you could you could summarize it by saying it was
made for nerds and now it's made for jocks. Right,
(49:28):
this is a different show now you watch Thrones, you
guys want to come over. But John Snow is so tall, dude,
that fucking dragon Dude, that ship's fucking ill. Yeah, exactly, dude,
there's like fucking I missed Joffrey bro those tips. Joffrey
(49:52):
was sick. Oh man, you know the guy who like, dude,
that's how I would do it, dude, Jeoffrey fucking cutthroat. Yeah,
like the dudes I knew jocks in college who were
an ironically into American psycho like would be like watching
like so one thing that just in the loads and
(50:15):
loads of Game of Thrones coverage that has been happening
for the past like three weeks. One thing I didn't
realize is that they shot the pilot for Game of
Thrones with the director Tom McCarthy I think his name
is from who made Spotlight, and they spent twenty million
dollars on it, showed it to HBO, and HBO was like,
(50:36):
this is not good because it was too dorky. The
casting was all wrong. It just didn't work. So they
recast like eight of the roles, hired a different director,
and remade nine percent of the pilot. And the original
director says, I will never forget being invited to the
(50:56):
premier the first season. I went in just thinking skeptically, well,
I guess will see how this goes. I sat there
and the show unfolds and I'm stunned, stunned, and I
very specifically remember walking out and I said to Whys
and Benny Off, that is the biggest rescue in Hollywood history.
Because it wasn't just that they had saved something bad
and turned it really good. You had saved a complete
(51:17):
piece of ship, the pilot that he had made, and
turned it into something brilliant that never happens, right, Yeah,
those so bad for those actors that were like I
could have been on Game of Thrones. Oh this makes
sense now because I see people always commenting like, wo
we want to see that fucking pilot. Yeah, yeah, I
really need to see that. You do not want to
see that? I mean, yeah, yeah, but it is it's
(51:43):
also like totally like it. They had to get it
so exactly right. Yeah, yeah, I wonder if it was
like before Yeah they said I think they said, like
some of the scenes were melodramatic, and then you couldn't
tell that Jamie and Searcy were twins where we're related,
so like that's just like a big point that you're missing.
(52:04):
Then the original person playing Sarcy was like a Puerto
Rican actress or something. It's not like Jamie. But it's
just funny because they're like, you know, such just beloved
show runners at this point, and they totally like had
arguably one of the biggest funk ups in TV show
making history. Like that's how this show polar bear. I'm kidding.
(52:30):
I hated that. Oh. Also, there's a Game of Thrones
album coming out. The final sees you Didn't need. There's
like a track that is it's the Weekend Scissa and
Travis Scott. Wait, not even like Remin what's his name?
The composer guy? Know, like they have like No, this
has motherfucking Mumford and Sons asap, Rocky, Ellie Golding, Jacob Banks,
(52:55):
James are there, Joey Badass, Lennon Stella, the loomin Ears
and Mumford and Sons. What's happening the same thing? So
I guess we'll see. I mean, they collaborate on this song.
It's amazing. Just do the Light of the Seven over
and over and over again, and that should be the
song because that song fucking rules. Their composer doesn't need
(53:19):
the help off the Loom and but again, it's just
about like, how else can we make some money off
this ship? Oh? Make an album too for people to buy.
I'm starting to think capitalism has gone too far. I
don't know, it's just a hunch. I don't know. Sure
you don't talk that ship on this show. I'm so sorry.
All right, let's check in with the markets, guys. Uh
(53:40):
looks like uh. And then there's a story that has
been circulating ever since Avengers tickets one on sale that
I just wanted to kind of punch a hole in
This is something you see a lot, the idea that,
oh my god, people are selling Avengers tickets and buying
Avenger's tickets for like fifteen thousand dollars and like like
(54:00):
gets going for insane prices. Like so the way that
people like write these stories is they just find on
eBay like the craziest bid and print that as if
it's real, and like a lot of times it's like
not say yeah, just bullshit, just yeah. I mean, Also,
who the fuck is going to spend the fifteen thousand dollars?
(54:22):
I mean, is it because it's so sold out? It's not,
That's what I mean. Yeah, that's why. That's like how
even if you were if you had the means, you
would first be like, well, where else is playing? Like
is it playing before see tomorrow? Yeah, okay, I'll go
to a matinee. I watched this. I'll pull up somebody
in line be like, y'all give you Hunter bucks if
for your ticket you know we need is the secondary
follow up article, It's like this easy tip can save
(54:42):
you fifteen thousand dollars. Don't buy movie tickets on eBay.
Probably written by the same person. It's a whole ecosystem
of bullshit news stories. Yea, it has been such pleasure
having you. Hey, thanks for having me. I always feel
weird doing this because I'm to a person. I don't
have a laptop or know anything you're talking about, so
(55:03):
I'm surprised I was asked back thank you about the internet? Yeah?
Where can people find you? Oh? At meal or at
meal monster? On everything at Instagram? Twitter? What else is there? Facebook? Funk?
I don't know all of them. Pinterest, Yeah, I got
(55:23):
some popping boards. Yeah, what kind of boards you got?
T shirts? Have a whole board of just cool old
T shirts? Or interior design? What's your aesthetic? I had
to describe it Scandinavian influence, but a little mid century
and then overall a lot of natural earth tones. Okay,
(55:44):
so it sounds like California coastal mid century. That's exactly
what it is, California coastal, sort of like what um
gotta hit saying this, But what Jennifer Anderson's house looks like.
It's like Jennifer Anderson meets Diane Lane. So I guess
in a word, white, yes, interest, I have such a
clear picture of of that esthetic now. Yeah, but I
(56:10):
like the look that is that the whole books on it,
but it's spelled h y g hi. I don't know.
And then I've heard it's more about the expression you
make of con But it's like one of those things
when I first learned about I'm like, oh, that's that's
me as it like, I need this. If you're a
yogurt conoisseur, you're gonna love hugo. Have you been to Denmark?
(56:33):
I've been to Copenhagen, that's in Denmark. Sure it was
there last time. I'm like, yeah, i'll get it over here. Yeah.
They kept their babies outside in the carriage to sleep
while they went in and they had a restaurant exactly
what wild because there's no like they don't live with
a threat of somebody like yo, I'm taking off with
your kids. And also they left them it was winter. Yeah,
they were like they need to learn how to be cold,
(56:58):
needs to know how to fight off winter. Yeah, that's
fucking that's a real game of throwing ship. That is amazing.
I don't know any of those countries apart is that
that's actually racist and you're wrong for all the Scandinavian ones.
I don't know everyone over there is my people feel Okay, uh?
And is there a tweet you've been enjoying? Yes, I
wrote it down. It's from Hello Colin. Colin Crawford's the
(57:20):
last name writer me off my meds pitching a cartoon movie. Okay,
so you know how most toasters are cowards. I think
I've used that one before. That one. We're just same, same.
It's funny. It is great, um miles where people find you?
So you can find me on Twitter and Instagram at
(57:44):
Miles of Gray. Two tweets I like her from a
partner on Charlotta at a part Napkin when it just
goes well faith, If you're so, you will favor you
will favor yourself. Another one is who you're talking about capitalism.
Capitalism feels like someone who would cancel plans with you
six out of seven times, and then the seventh talk
about how busy they are for the entire hang. I
(58:08):
hate those people, the people whose tweets you quoted. Yes,
I mean style man, when you do hangs when I'm sorry,
I'm so pitchy right now. That's a that's literally all
of l A. Well, it's funny because I have a
lot of I grew up here, so a lot of
my friends don't have that sort of shot. But then
I have people who are even despite that, are still
kind of like just energy vampires. So you shouldn't You
(58:32):
should bleep that and make that memoir. Thanks. Yeah, energy vampires,
Energy vampires. Growing up in the valley. Uh Billy. Wayne
Davis tweeted baby boomers parents want to wear against fascist
for freedom, but the boomers think they created freedom in
the mud and a concert and Upstate New York and
Jack Lanovak tweeted, I hate the little joke when a
(58:54):
group of people at a meal start eating when the
food arrives and someone's like, we're all quiet, now he
he Now that we're reading he Heat, and people are like,
he heat. I love that is so annoying. I love
Jack Lanovac as a writer and a comedian. You can
find me on Twitter at Jack Underscore O'Brien. You can
(59:17):
find us on Twitter at Daily Zey Geys. Were at
the Daily Zie Guys on Instagram. We have a Facebook
fan page and a website, Daily sis dot com, where
we post our episodes. In our foot we link off
to the information that we talked about in today's episode.
As well as the song we ride out on that's
not gonna be Let's do a track from Kata Juma,
who is from I want to say England, Yeah, Bristol, Yes,
(59:41):
by way of Mrs Mrssago. Uh And it just kind
of got a good vibe to it. Uh. I don't
you know? It reminds us some like electronic ship, but
there's something very human about It's called Calm by Keith Juma.
Al Right, we're gonna write out on that. We will
be back tomorrow because it is a day leave podcast.
I'm gonna talk to you that see tools and an opportunity.
(01:00:07):
I beg your cruising now too. How you're gonna make
it to the league? Learning tools and if you do
find the crudest about the dream, Bob, don't calculate how
you do my cheat? Stay calm and pressure pressure They
hype bupped in emotion. Emotion do nicsive lesson. I said,
my mind is an ocean. Didn't let it get effected
like I believe in you. You you despite me, your
(01:00:30):
pressure and pressure like flight, don't catching right to bite
a poppy like flight spy who gets its kind of
mind when they see me