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May 28, 2021 69 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season one, eight six,
episode five of Daly's Like Guys to production of I
Heart Radio. This is a podcast where we take a
new dive into America's share consciously. It's Friday one. My
name is Jack O'Brien. Akay you get you gay? Oh no,

(00:23):
we jacko br yea yeah yeah yeah ah. That is
courtesy of Chris Carrera, and I am thrilled to be
joined as always by my co host, Mr Miles grad
sad alone in my podcast room, bleary eyed, I stare

(00:45):
at the zoom pour some pure blue carbonation. Drink it
down for brain electrification? Is do is do? It's BaHaB blast? Okay,
see you know where you know how the presidents last time? Yeah,
you didn't know about that, so I don't know about
the peaches one, but will Skipio brought it back on

(01:06):
the discord and did it in the tune that you
did know lump or gump. I was really doing it
more like the weird Al Yankovic style in my head,
but anyway, shout out to you. Thanks for that ak
weird Al style. Well, Miles, we are thrilled, blessed, fortunate
to be joined in our third seat by the body

(01:26):
horror artist and comedian who's disgusting and hilarious film The
Sara Vaccine you can see on Means TV. She is
the hilarious and brilliant Sarah squirm. Did I do one
of these to be okay? Just came up with it.

(01:48):
I'm Sarah. We die. If I wasn't Sarah, I would die.
We die? Um? Is that gen Z? Is that like
attract gen zs into yet? Oh? Yeah, theause gen Z
is all that. Everyone in gen Z looks like crazy frog. Now, Actually,

(02:09):
what's new? Man? What's where are you? What's I mean?
It's it's not much new. This is the first time
I'm meeting you, but not the first time I've seen
you work. But yeah, what's I'm in my hat, I'm
in my weird house and you guys can hear strange
sounds outside my apartment and that's all that's new. What's
what part of town you in? Um? For anyone who

(02:29):
wants to come and kill me. I live in holly Weird,
Camera Sarah, and I'm a genius. I moved to Holly
Weird from the Midwest six months before the global pandemic,
where yew Chicago ever heard? Yeah? No, is that near

(02:53):
Date in Ohio? Yeah, it's near It's kind of near Date.
And it's also near Oh you probably know the bigger
city that's near at Fort in Indiana. Yeah, yeahs of
Fort Wayne. Is that Is that as big as Alton, Illinois? Um,
it's probably smaller and yeah, yeah you might know it is.

(03:16):
I think people call Chicago the city of angels, city dreams?
Is that? What's it like been, you know, being the
transplant out here coming from Chicago? So, I mean it's
a path many you know, comedians make, But what's it
been like for you? You You you hate it? It's amazing.
I don't have to. I'm a lactose in tolerant Jews.

(03:37):
So living in the Midwest, I was just eating cheese
because and being sick all day. So it's all they'll
feed you out there. Yeah, that's all they'll feed you
out there. And then I moved out here where the
Jews are again, so it's nice. Nice. I'm eating less cheese,
I guess. I hate to say it, but I'm eating

(03:58):
vegetables in Ally Oh, how unusual you eat vegetables? Now,
It's hey, listen, you move out here vegetables are good.
It's blowing my damn mine. Okay, they are better out
in California. And also I've maintained that the fast food

(04:18):
hamburgers are better beef in California. But I know I'm
saying the most cliche and anything anyone's ever said. But
when you eat the in and out fries and you're like,
this is potato, you know what I mean? Potato? Yeah,
I do, I do know what you mean. It's like

(04:39):
when in your life have you eaten a fry and
thought this is a potato? Yeah? Very rarely, very rarely.
All Right, Sarah, We're going to get to know you
a little bit better in a moment. First, we're gonna
tell our listeners a couple of the things we're talking about.
Amy Cooper is back. Amy Cooper, who you might remember
from Central Park calling the cops on Christian Cooper for

(05:02):
black man who asked her to put her dog on
a leash Central Park. She's back, so she last last
we checked in with her previously in Amy Cooper, she
was apologizing, being like I have learned my lesson, and
now she she's back. We're gonna see what the final
form of Amy Cooper is, we're gonna talk about the

(05:25):
GOP's main mid term issue. We're gonna talk about big
oil taking some els. Um, we're gonna talk about that
Friends Reunion guys only insofar as I don't I don't
know why, Like people are treating this like a like
a movie, like it's a big event, and it seems

(05:46):
like a TV special to me at best. Yeah, it's
a it's a jerk job. And you hear Friends Reunion,
You're like, oh, ship, they're gonna be a central perk
and doing all the hits. And then I remember when
I was like, it's a fucking like a like a
Annenberg like roundtable discussion. Yeah, it's like a DVD extra,
and people are acting like it's fucking the biggest news. Um,

(06:09):
So I'm just gonna say that again. I guess later
on in the show, we're gonna talk about some new
stemless air pods. They're coming at you, and we know
this because Lebron James already has them big air pods.
We're a big air Pods podcast here, Sarah, And we're
gonna talk about kids being into weird ship. I I

(06:31):
asked people to tell me what weird ship they were
into when they were kids and got some some weird answers,
some weird trends that I was picking up on. So
we're gonna talk about that all of that plenty more.
But first, Sarah, we like to ask our guest, what
is something from your search history? Oh? Yeah, yeah, busted,

(06:53):
what's something from your search history that's revealing about who
you are? Oh? God? Do I look it up right
now in front of me, right here, in front of
godden everyone. Oh not bad. The last thing I searched
was alien face hugger. Oh hell yeah, I mean that's
so on brands too. I know. Can you believe body horror?

(07:14):
And even the last thing you searched was number one
body horror like moment in American culture? It's so despicable.
How I'm just truly a parody of my myself. So
are you? Yeah? What's with the what's with the search? Um?
I think I just wanted to look at it because

(07:39):
the image that's open is a hyper realistic rendering of
what like the uh inside parts would look like? Can
I say a vagina on air? Yeah? Time? Okay, So
what the what the pussy beat would look like of
the face songer. Right, it's interesting. I've never seen something

(08:00):
so it's we're not used to that angle for the right,
We're only used to seeing the on the face whole cover.
Now this is full hole? Is this and then is
this like Geiger cannon or this is someone else decided to,
you know, put some organs on this face hugger. Okay,

(08:21):
this says it's an unused alien face hugger. But this
must be like fan art prototype or something. Got it?
Got it? Got it? Are you? Are you into hr Geiger? Yeah?
I like that vibe. Was just because I imagine someone
who goes I wanted to look at It was also
kind of like I like looking at hr Geigers, sort

(08:41):
of freaky illustration. I was thinking about him, and it
was I think, well, was it recently the alien like
anniversary or something like that. I probably that's so I
wanted to give pay specks yea to my face hugging
old What are they zeen him? What are they know? Morphs? Xenomorphs? Right,

(09:02):
that's what they are called. Yeah, sure, you could say anything,
I'd say, yeah, sure that that's kind of like the
most iconic moment of body hort. Do you identify as
like a body horror artist or is that just something
Vice wrote and about you in their article about they

(09:22):
wrote it and I loved it? Yeah, sure, cool and everything.
Okay when you get your like, uh, your horrorscope bread
and someone's like you're a Pisces, you're creative, and you're like, sure,
oh my god, you nailed me. I will see. Are

(09:44):
you like, is there a movie that you feel like
is underrated in that in that respect of like the
body horror genre. Are you a Cronenberg? Yeah, if you're
gonna go Cronoberg, go to Cronoberg style on me right now.
I think it underrated cronable. Well, I don't know if

(10:06):
it's underrated. I feel like people don't love existence. I
think they think it's like corny. It's the one where
they go into the video game. But I'm watching it
being like, this is the best one. Yeah, this is
the best one. Oh, I don't think I've even seen it.
Yeah I knew. I knew of it, but I never
watched it. If I'm not okay, if I'm not mistaken,

(10:27):
it's him being like, damn, these video games look like
they're gonna be a freaking problems. Got the kids doing
all kinds of weird dances. Now, video games are a problem,
and I don't know anything about video games, but I
did find out about She's recently. You know about this?

(10:53):
Don't kids do it on Fortnite? Yeah? I mean, look,
you can be busting, busting and respectfully anywhere. You know. Honestly,
I don't know what you guys are talking about, and
neither did I until I talked to a sixteen year old.
He told me some stuff and not nowhere. Yeah, and
then I was chased out of the high schools. Bullshit

(11:14):
doing research anyway. I live in Hollywood, um, but twenty
miles away from any school districts, so that's good. Yeah,
what is what is she's? She's whatever? You guys are
staying there. I think it's like kids say when they
play Fortnite. No, okay, am I wrong? Yeah? I mean
it's just fuddy this like where we're at now. Yeah,

(11:38):
I honestly don't care. I'm being polite too, you know,
I mean, you know, it's just it's like, yeah, you
shouldn't care because it's just, you know, it's it's something
you're gonna see on TikTok and go Okay, you know
what I say to that, what is something that you
think is overrated? Oh? God, do you want to get

(12:00):
in trouble? Yeah, you want to get in trouble for
the gout and everyone everyone all right. I'm going online
the other day and I'm seeing I'm on Twitter. I
just woke up. Everyone's going Olivia Roderigo, this, Olivia Rodrigo that,
and I'm going who. And then I watched and then

(12:23):
I listened and I watched, and I go, excuse me,
she's this is an eighteen year old yet care very child. Yeah,
it was a phenomenon. It's a I listened to it
because we talked about it on the episode Tuesday, and
I was like, I mean, I get the angst of it, Like,

(12:46):
but for me personally, I'm I've I have my own
ways of feeling anxious with music, and it wasn't quite
hitting the notes for me. But I don't know. I
think it's just been a lot of the momentum for
a lot of people that have been swept away. It's like,
I just love that it's tapping into this like feeling
of like youthful chaos, and I'm like, that's a that's
a part of my life. I don't want to revisit, like, honey,

(13:08):
have you ever heard a Kurt Probane? Oh my god,
what are we talking about here? That's what That's what's
kind of funny is that it kicked off this sort
of like, oh you mean there was no emo music
when we were growing up, and people just like listening
to these albums of like her music. Em no, no, no,
not like that. But it's just like the content is
just about like this, you know, love lost and being
confused and hating your ex and there with somebody else

(13:31):
person now. So yeah, yeah, what's your album for getting there? Sir? Okay,
I'm gonna say something controversial again. Yeah, I just found
out about the band type O negative and over here. Okay.
I don't know how this has escaped me, but I'm

(13:51):
addicted to the album October Rust and it's all um
like dark gothic metal, a sad vampire gothic song about
I've lost. So if I'm feeling angsty and emo, I'm
not gonna listen to a child talk about growing up
in Calabasas or whatever and being sad that her boyfriend
doctor strawberry ice cream spoons for two or whatever. The

(14:18):
lyric is I'm like the best though, if you should
listen back to the episode, because we had Chris crofton
on it was like an older indie artist and he
just like couldn't understand what was going on. He's like,
but I just saying, I think it's just I think
it's one of those things too where my first concern was, like,
I remember when Vanessa Carlton was out and I was

(14:39):
not fucking with Vanessa. I was all in on g
unit and ship at the time, but still that ship
got me. And I don't know if it was because
of like at the time that was like the music
that just was so pervasive, you're like you can't escape it,
and that's why I liked it. But this, I don't
know that. My relationship to pop, like capital P pop
music is I'm not listening to radio anymore, so I'm

(15:01):
not really hearing it. So I was like, it's not catching.
I get why it's catching other people, but I don't
doesn't do the right like, am I getting older or
is the like Swedish mafia that's writing all of the
same pop songs getting like more like alienated from reality
and disconnected. This is a worthwhile exploration for sure. The

(15:25):
hell I'm done with teenagers. I don't I don't care
about Billie Eilishka. The other thing that was played at
chriss Craft, it was like, it's all written by one guy.
It's the one guy getting the song credits to along
with her. He's like, we don't need this older white
guy helping her tell the story. It's like, what what
she really want to say? Is that what she wants
to say? And I'm like, okay, Chris, I don't know, man,

(15:46):
I don't know. No, baby, that's what the kids like though, right,
I agree? And if she's like a child, starts like,
did you have time to freaking go develop a relationship
driving around in a car with the roof down or whatever?
Or are you freaking an hauled around to auditions and stuff?
You're right, that's right? Yeah, Like isn't the So Driver's

(16:07):
License is a song about a relationship she had with
somebody on a TV show that she was in with them,
and it's like, yeah, it has like a whole, like
weird backstory that is like partial, partially like part of
a scripted universe. So it's it's kind of yeah, it

(16:29):
all seems very curated. Um, but I think maybe that's why.
Though it has this other effect though too. It's like
there's layers of real life dropped, like if you're fans
of these people, I mean, I don't know what who
it would have been about, like when we were I
guess like Atlantis Morrissett being like, oh my god, that's
about Dave Coulier. It's like, right, number one pop idol,

(16:51):
Dave Coulier in a theater down on you know he
was using that puppet voice. Oh no, the Chips Rangers
whatever or not. Well, I also think Driver's License is

(17:13):
a fine song. My kids love it, so I I
think it's fine, and that was important for me to say.
Jack defended the song. Uh, Sarah, what is something you
think is underrated? Well, I already said the existence in

(17:34):
the Kronoberg University rated. But what is underrated in general? God?
Damn you know what? You know? Who's underrated? Gary Newman? Gary?
Yeah he did here in my car No no, no, no, no, yeah,

(17:59):
and everyone only know his car. I'm sitting here going
lockdown in a pandemic. Okay, and be it this ga.
I watched every single live performance on YouTube available to
me of Gary Newman. He's a fucking synthesizer electronic music legend,

(18:20):
and he deserves some goddamn motherfucking respect. So what are we?
What are the other tracks? Like? Is there are there
other ones? Were just not attributing to him that we
realized we do know his work or it truly didn't
sort of break past that car for people who didn't
know his body of work. I mean, I think he's like,
I mean, he's famous right like and nine inch Trent

(18:43):
Resner loves him, similar vibes. Yes, David Bowie hated him.
I think I could I help. Don't call me on this.
I'm pretty sure like thought he was like copying his
stick of being like weird guy looking like an alien
on stage, being strange. I don't know which one I'm

(19:03):
more impressed by the Trent Resider liked him, or the
David Bowie hates him. Attention and have him feel any
sort of way strongly about you. That's pretty cool, exactly right, Like,
I I love Pixies because I watched a YouTube video

(19:23):
about David Bowie being like you guys heard this man,
Pixies They're fret cool And I got nervous in the
pandemic because I saw Gary Newman made a Patreon and like, oh,
that can't be good. What's what's legendary musician Gary Newman
doing starting a Patreon? But then I googled his house

(19:44):
and he hasn't. He has a mansion in Beverly Hills
with a large sculpture of a dragon outside, and he's
got a hot blond wife with big boobs. I'm like, hey,
it's fine, right, oh, big big Margaret Thatcher fan too real.
He said he was an outspoken supporter of the Conservative
Party and Margaret Thatcher after her election as Prime Minister,

(20:06):
although he later expressed regret for giving his public support,
calling it quote a noose around my neck. He's previously
considered himself neither left nor right wing um and didn't
support Blair Cameron. He also said quote, I'm not a socialist.
I know that I don't believe in sharing my money.
I mean, that's that's very strong. Like guy who was

(20:26):
famous in the eighties vibes like yeah, nobody who was
making a ton of money high on cocaine, like came
out the other side and being like yeah, man, I
just feel like I don't need this stuff. I can
just give it away high on cocaine, supporting Thatcher and
Austa Ready is violence. Yeah, it's like, don't look into

(20:52):
the album. He didn't inspired by Middle Eastern music. And
I'm not going to tell you the name of the
album because I get in trouble for saying, you know, yeah,
he's a weird old guy stuff. You know. Yeah. By
the way, I'm just looking here at my notes, And
when I asked about underrated body Horror, I want I
meant to ask you guys if you've ever seen Superman three.

(21:14):
So this is gonna be uh, this episode is gonna
be a real adventure because I, uh, my brain is
not working. I didn't get a lot of sleep last night,
so I might be like, hey, I have a note
here from fifteen minutes ago, and I appreciate you guys
bearing with me. Have you guys seen Superman three? That's right, Yeah, no,
I've only seen like parts. There's a moment that is

(21:37):
like the scariest moment of body Horror where a character
like gets taken over by a like robot, but like
all these wires like crawl over skin and like her
eyes like shield over by this it's just this like
random like it's not a good movie, it's not an
interesting movie, but it has this thing that like stuck

(21:58):
with me. And then somebody like brought it up on
Twitter the other day and they were like this fucked
me up hard, and I hadn't realized how much of
my nightmares were built on that foundation. If you just
search Superman three Cyborg. Yeah, I'm guessing this is the scene.
But it looks like this woman is just turning into
Robin Williams from like, what is it Bicentennial Man. Yeah,

(22:22):
but it's like weird and violent and it yeah, I
don't know, it really fun. Oh this is violent because
it looks comedic where she's like interfaces metal. But I'm
guessing it's a little bit more well Winger four and
in the eighties when when machines were still scary, it
was not comedic. Okay, she's like, oh no, I'm turning

(22:42):
into a computer exactly. I also thought Johnny five was terrifying,
the scariest movie monster of all time. So we're Fisher
Stevens a portrayal of that. Uh oh right, Well, let's
take a quick break and we'll be back and talk

(23:04):
about some news and we're back and let's check in
with our old friend Amy Cooper. I mean she's like
maybe she her face is definitely on the like Mount

(23:26):
Karen more like of the most famous Karen's. Yeah, I
don't know. It's kind of a weird time because she
wasn't like Barbecue Becky or some of the other ones
like Lemonade Lisa, some of the other famous white women
who would just sort of you know, metal and just
called the police on people doing things like having a barbecue,
selling lemonade and ship like that. I think because this

(23:49):
ship went down the same day George Floyd was murdered,
so you know, rightfully, so the reaction they got the
reaction it deserved. And for if you don't remember, it's
Christian Cooper. He's a bird watcher. He was in the
brand of Central Park where it's posted everywhere you gotta
have your dogs on a leash and a lot of
birdwatchers like to go there, and when your dogs are
not on leash, they can chase the birds away. And
now you've got a fucking day wasted because this person

(24:11):
got the dog off the leash. So if you remember
the video, was him just being like, hey, do you
mind putting your dog on the leash, like you're not
supposed to have the dogs off leash in this section
of the park. And she's like, oh, oh, this black
man is attacking me. Yeah. And then like you know,
if you remember, she was like yanking the dog around
by the leash, and people like yo, yo yo, you're

(24:32):
not even paying attention to your dog. You're just like
flinging it around. So it led to you know, she
lost her job. I believe the dog was even taken
away because even a handle a dog on a leash um.
And you know, she and she even had a kind
of apology that she did publicly. I'll read it just
so you can, because I think this is a good
primer to understand where she's at now. So the starts

(24:53):
off really clear. I seemilian humbly apologized to everyone, especially
to that man. Oh okay, okay, keep on. I'm sorry
to that man and his family. It was unacceptable, And
I humbly and fully apologized to everyone who's seen that video,
everyone that's been offended, everyone who thinks of me in
a lower light. And understand why they do. When I

(25:13):
think about the police, I'm such a blessed person. I
just I don't even need to read anyone. She says,
I've come to realize that I'm afforded a different luxury
in my interactions than with the police than other people
might be, and then ends it with I reacted emotionally
and made false assumptions about about his intentions, when in
fact I was the one who was acting inappropriately by
not having my dog unleash. I'm well aware of the

(25:34):
pain that miss assumptions and insensitive statements about race cause.
Cut to she's suing her bosses and former employer for
wrongful determination and she was discriminated against. Oh no, yeah,
she's really the victim. Let's think about it here. I

(25:54):
mean she, you know, poor thing. Yeah. I think her
lawyers are that band prod to Ge were like the victim. Okay, yeah,
that's right. This is in her lawsuit. She says. Franklin
Templeton is a company she worked for, characterize a former
employee is racist for calling the police on a black
bird watcher whom she had words with while walking her

(26:15):
dog in Central Park. Okay, they're saying that was the
problem is that they categorized it as racist. Amy Cooper
said The incident was spurred by her fear of the
bird watcher, Christian Cooper, who she says had a history
of quote aggressively confronting end quote dog owners for walking
their dogs off leash. She even goes on to say

(26:35):
that she can even back up her scary black man
claims with a testimony from a fellow black man that
would also attest to Christian Cooper's scariness for being like, hey,
have some respect for the bird watch Like I don't.
I don't. I still don't understand what is so scary,
but yeah, that's it. I'm wondering if like part of
their strategy is to wait a year and hope that

(26:57):
we don't remember what we saw in that video, because
like she is talking to the police and being like
a black man is like, I forget she says, accosting
me or attacking me, but whatever it is, she's definitely
you satronizing the description of this person on the phone
to the police, which is why everyone's like, you know,
you know what the funk you're doing. You're saying I

(27:18):
can call police, and that's why you should stop telling
me what I can and cannot do. That is not
your place as a black person telling me a white
person if whether or not I shot my dog on
the leash, and that, you know, is what it boils
down to. And even her employer was like, yeah, we're like,
we don't have anything to say. The video speaks for
itself end quote. Her lawyers sucked up because it should

(27:41):
have been like, we're suing her workplace for discrimination. They
were discriminating against Cuckoo for cocoa pust people are you
kidding me? My god? And they should have definitely used
that language to it's a mental health issue after all,
General mills Bhi. She's also suing for her lost wages

(28:07):
and like a bonus that she thinks she would have got.
Uh okay, I'm sure every every company is doing Bookoo numbers.
And she also says like determination caused obviously much trauma
and pain and distress as well. This lawsuit is not
busting bust never perspect. Sorry, it's so funny because she

(28:32):
it's like we're watching someone like find out about the
Internet in real time. But I feel like this isn't
even the Internet. This isn't like a clip taking out.
This is a three minute long clip where her actions
are so clear, so she's claiming that she was discriminated
against by like someone showing her behavior to lots of people,

(28:56):
like that's the only thing that happened. So it's I mean, look,
I'll play the video really quick, just so you can
hear she's because a lot of in her lawsuit. He's like,
you go, you should play the whole nine one one call.
The video starts off when she starts charging at him
for being like, Yo, can you put the dog on
a leash? Please don't come close to me. Please don't

(29:16):
come clost to me. Please don't come close to me.
Please please call starts the nice calling cops, and the
dog is like, yo, you're lifting me off the ground.
He's my dog threatening me? Right, there was an African

(29:37):
American man just like, I'm not sure if you heard me,
motherfucker threatening the dog. At this point, she's literally holding
the dog, like off the ground. I forgot and again
I'm sure, Yeah, you need the whole nine one one call.
But regardless, nice try, good luck to you, and you're
endeavor you want to hear my big conspiracy theory hots. Yeah, alright,

(30:01):
she you know that thing happens a year ago. She
she gets famous, She gets infamous. All right, that dies down.
We have other things to think about. She's like everyone's
you know, thinking like, all right, how do we make
money off this woman? She's the most infamous person, and
like there's like, you know, ten infamous people a year.

(30:21):
I think she's trying to make a podcast's keeping her
name up there. Yeah. I mean when I saw that
this headline from our outline Central Park, Karen re emerges
in her final form, written by Miles Gray, I was
almost certain that she was going to be speaking at

(30:42):
like Sepack or like some some like conservative convention. Like
it's yeah, totally. Also, super producer Justin is pointing out
that she did get her dog back. Oh thank god.
Dog was like fuck really within ten days of the incident. Okay,
so look people, everyone lost their cool. Homi, let's just

(31:03):
let's just call it bygones. I don't know what I mean.
This is the the crescendo to be speaking at Sea Pack,
you know, just like with the mcclass keys who were
like polland guns on protesters and we were predicting, We're like,
they're speaking and I was just flippantly I was like,
they're gonna be at s Pack and they were. I mean,
the second she starts taking it to like cancel culture

(31:23):
or like the liberal media. She's not. There's no buzzwords
like that quite yet. But I'm sure you know, right right,
her fed up talk with all the conservatives, her ted
nugent talk. Oh god, all right, let's talk about the
big midterm issue that the GOP is planning to run on.

(31:46):
Last time, it was they made up a big like
zombie horde of immigrants that were coming to crash the
US border, and like started like using video footage of
that was not even from present day, the present tense,

(32:07):
but using that to just try and create a sense
of impending doom. And that didn't really work, right, Like
they they lost a bunch of seats. I mean, it
was who talked about how it's just about turning racism
up the three million in order to get people to
like turn up just be like this is where we're at, guys,

(32:28):
choose aside, here we go. And yeah, this is a
very very clear case of them trying to take something
like critical race theory and weaponizing it because it goes
hand in hand with this last story with Amy Cooper, right,
is that this idea that from our judicial system to
just the society of our fabric is so intertwined with

(32:49):
white supremacy from the origins of African slavery that we
it we were do we do ourselves a disservice to
not critically look at that and analyze that as a
means to pursue liberation for all people, especially Black Americans.
And you know, because of that, the right does not
want that, because they don't want nuance about anything. They

(33:09):
want to keep everything so clear and the lines so
clear that you can just pick a side without being like, well,
hold on, you're saying, even if I'm not, if I
didn't own slaves, there's a way for me to participate
in white supremacy. But no, this is not what they want.
So a recent analysis by Media Matters show that Fox
News has and a lot of conservative media has been

(33:31):
cranking up the volume on this over five fifty mentions
in the last eleven months. Uh and nearly Facebook posts
on the topic come from right leaning sources. And it's
just you know, all by design that, like what I'm saying,
it's a thought killing cliche that they want to introduce
to their supporters in the sense that you know, if

(33:53):
they can just immediately just you know, dismiss things and
being like, ah, that's it's it's critical race theory, critical
race Like well, hold on, do you even know what
that means? Are you just saying that as a way
to avoid a discussion. And this is you know, I
think what we're seeing. There's like a there's a few
tweets that someone dug up about one of these guys,
a conservative who has made it his goal to elevate

(34:13):
this as like a hot button issue. He said, quote,
the goal is to have the public reads something crazy
in the newspaper and immediately think critical race theory, thus
encompassing an entire range of cultural constructions. So this is
what they want to introduce now, and also sort of
hold up this boogeyman that it's being taught in like

(34:34):
K through twelve. Really it's in universities, and you know
with graduate studies that you're really looking at critical race
theory as it would maybe relate to like a law
practice or things like that. So it's just a very
bizarre thing. And I think because and we saw Nicolehannah Brown,
who penned the sixteen nineteen project, her tenure was blocked
by a Republican controlled board of trustees at the University

(34:57):
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. This is something that
they're all kind of getting on board with to sort
of say, let's point a finger at this and maybe
this will be enough to inspire our racist supporters to
come up. Yeah. I had a sense that, like I
was probably underestimating how angry this made conservatives and Republicans

(35:19):
when that Tennessee politician was basically like, keep talking about
critical race theory, guys, you see what happens. Like basically
he was like, we're tired, and you don't want to
see what we're gonna do. It was like threatening violence
in the Tennessee like state legislature. I mean, yeah, they
want to avoid it. They there's no way they can

(35:40):
keep winning elections if more people are like understand the
underpinnings of like the racism in this country at a
societal level. Like they that's like it truly, They're like no,
no, no no, no, like they can't have more information, Like
we're already losing them on the bootstraps things because too
many of them now are realizing there's no there aren't
livable wages, so we don't we can't add their understanding

(36:02):
of the racist history of this country to that, or
else they'll look at everything. So I just want to
play this clip from Fox News because they're even talking
about like they're sort of tipping their hat to like,
you know, no one was even talking about this a
year ago in the sense that like, because we were
trying to get people to talk about this, right where
you have supporters of critical race theory saying that it

(36:24):
allows white people to empathize with minorities, and then opponents
of it say that it is divisive and quite frankly
unhealthy to look at everything through the lens of race.
And you know, I was just thinking about a year,
year and a half ago, we weren't talking about this.
Nobody really knew what critical race theory was and what
that's because it wasn't really called that. It was. It

(36:46):
was called diversity or anti racism training. And if you
speak out against that, well then you're racist. And then
certain things start to happen under the name of diversity
and anti racism training, and it was like getting rid
of schools named after are founding fathers or so again,
they're completely distorting the definition of it. They're saying, hey,

(37:08):
you know how like they are. They said, like Jefferson
Davis was a ship head. Uh, that's critical race theory.
Dr Seuss critical race theory. Colin Kaepernick critical race theory,
Like it's there. That's just like the repetition they're giving
people just the same way they get people talking about
anything that deals with, you know, empathy for the poor

(37:30):
or any marginalized group of socialism, like that's all they need.
And this is the other thing they're doing to create
an obstruction towards you know, increased understanding around race relations
in this country. Well, because Fox News doesn't see color
as actually, you know, it's divisive, Sarah, I mean to
look at everything through the lens of race. Oh, it's unhealthy,

(37:51):
especially if you're white, because you're actually you're you're you're distorting.
Your vision is so distorted because you benefit from the
fact that everything is seen through the prism of your
It's it's like, why don't you start doing that? Then
I'll realize how much of an advantage I may have had.
Oh no, no, it's divisive. It's funny to say, like
fans of critical fan of a critical race theory. I'm

(38:13):
a real fan girl of a critical race theory over here.
Oh my god, I'm just thirsting for critical race theory.
I'm thirsting for knowledge about like the history of um,
how power dynamics are established, right, I'm thirsty for understanding
hege hegemony. Alright, let's take a quick break and we'll

(38:36):
be right back to talk about that Friends reunion. Guys.
Oh no, and we're back. And as I mentioned, I

(38:57):
don't really have much more to say about those friends
reunion other than it seems like, I don't know, it's trending.
People are reviewing it like it is a feature film,
Like there's this They're like, this is top notch. It's
changing the game for how reunions are. And normally we
don't like to do entire segments where we talk about

(39:19):
something we haven't seen yet, but I as a concept
we can. Yeah, as a concept, I don't. I don't
care for this, Sarah thoughts. I'm piste off and you're
telling me there's reviews that are positive about this, and
then that's when I go reviews, Honey, that's called pr

(39:40):
where'd reviews go? I want to see people tear something down.
It's been a back out, chew it up. Tossing it around.
Why do we Why are we getting a friends reunion?
We've had enough. I've seen everyone knows friends the hell?
Oh see, Vox has one that's a little bit better.
It says, the empty comfort of friends the reunion? Could

(40:00):
this be any more pointless? Thank you Alissa Wilkinson for
coming through with that. Take Friends is age brilliantly and
not well at all to celebrate this series reunion special
is almost too tricky to attempt. Yeah, I mean it's um,
I don't know, like cool. Do you want a reunion?

(40:21):
I'll show your reunion every single Real Housewives of New
Jersey reunion moderated by Andy Cohen. Okay, we have Andy
Cohen asking hard hitting questions did your husband cheat on you?
Why did you go to jail? Blah blah blah. If
we have Andy Cohen moderating a friends reunion and being

(40:41):
like Matthew Perry, what happened in your like cocaine blackout?
And also like, how's your little Riya tour going? Because
every three year old in LA has seen me on that.
Oh no, that's very definitely Andy Cohen, things like what's
going on with you and Ryan? Mean, like, what the fund.
Is this that a reunion? Like when he admitted to

(41:05):
using Heroin on CNN where he was like, I feel
like I'm on Heroin. Anderson's warm, like you know, you know,
it's just like warm impulsing. He's like, but you just
said Heroin, Like you don't know what that's like. He
was like, Oh, yeah, no, I've heard, I've heard. I
was like, oh, okay, there, Like I get Anderson cooper

(41:25):
in him to talk more on that act. I know
you don't make it hot, like, don't We're not on
the h anymore like that. Yeah, I mean I would
like to see that. I want to see uh Teresa
Judici Judici answer for her her table flipping and things
like that. But yeah, would that be new ground to
have a reunion that was like bringing all the different

(41:47):
casts together or have they done that like a mega
like like a mega reunion. Yeah, I've never seen anything
like that, because also, reunions just end up being like
the laziest content. At the end of the season, we're like, Okay,
you got another episode out of just people sitting down
talking about what just happened. So I get I'm sure

(42:08):
at the end of the day, this is a fantastic
bit of money for everyone involved, and that's probably the
only reason why it happened. If there's a reunion, I
want to see lives ruined. Yeah right, yeah, you want
it to be decades long, friendships burning in front of
my fucking eyes, get a sex in the city r

(42:29):
and going on, put whatever in the same freaking room
and say why don't you guys talk to each other?
And then you'll deserve the ten million dollars you get
for doing reunion. It feels a little frosty. And here, gals,
what's happening? You guys want to go over how the
relationship broke down. Also, here's some rusty ice picks. I'm
just gonna put loose. Go ahead, Uh, And you feel

(42:52):
free to express yourself via doop scatting scatting my best
Kim Catrell is wonderful legend holiday run for money. Alright, So, friends,
reunion your burnt. Let's talk about the new stemless air

(43:12):
pods that are coming. Uh. This is a boon for
those of us who like to press our ear when
we sing like Mariah Carry or Ariana Grande, because they
they are just like the inn ear thing. But it's
also part of Apples, like NonStop evolution of just removing
features until everything is just a shiny white jelly bean.

(43:36):
But they've removed the stems apart from air pods and
created little inn ear uh pebbles. And you're loving this
story as someone who goes how many air pods you've
been through? Now? Oh, I've only been through like they
slowly can like the battery because you were putting high

(43:59):
use on yours. Yeah, but yeah, I've had one regular
pair and one pro pair they last, thank you, and
now and you're looking at going for the trifecta with
the stemless. I'm not saying I'm gonna get them. I
can still do the in ear holding my finger to
my ear while I hit the high note with the

(44:20):
stems that just cover the stem up a little bit.
Got it? Wait, so this is an Apple product? Yeah,
this is a Beat Studio buds dude that they released too.
Lebron James Early he wore them in the tunnel before
a game and people were like, wait a second, but
these are disgusting. You know what the stem is, it's

(44:44):
a it's hell, it's the choking hazard for the ear.
Your ear mouth is gonna just choke completely. How many
stuck how many stuck studio buds are we gonna get
in people's ears? Yes? Could you imagine like a bad
like ear impact with one in and it's almost like
just hammers it into your ear canal. I'm sure there's

(45:08):
probably injuries like that anyway, people with big ear holes.
But my uncle was an ear at e R doctor,
not to brag, he was like, you know how many
cockroachers I had to pull out of people's ears more
than you think get things get in your ear and
these little little free these little stupid bullshits are underestimating

(45:29):
how much ship gets lodged deep into people's ears canals. Yeah, yeah,
butts and ears are like that's that's a big part
of being an e R doctor is things accidentally going
up people's butts. And I was doing air quotes and
then ears that that is so fucked up. When like bugs,
because that's a bug that like crawled into someone's ear

(45:50):
while they were sleeping and then they you know, freaked
out when they felt it, and then the bug just
like crawled deeper because they're all right finger poking at them. Um,
that is my fucking nightmare. Talk about body horror more
than the cyborg lady from Superman three. Uh, I don't know. Yeah,
maybe if I put me in like they, it'll it'll

(46:12):
turn me into yeah, shitty apple cyborg, apple cyborg. I
do wonder, like just thinking about this being the ultimate
evolutionary direction that apple products are all going into, Like
one's like shiny, smooth, white tic tac. Do we think

(46:33):
that maybe the tic TACs that we keep seeing everywhere
are Apple products from the future come back to Alright,
that's what we're thinking about, thinking about just just putting
it out there. Alright. I hate this like stylistic evolution
of just turning everything into nothing. It's so disgusting. What

(46:54):
is something to look at? Like when you when they when?
What was it that like Vogue twenty questions or whatever
walk through seventy three questions? Thank you very much. Yeah,
that was you're talking to one of the original um
one of the ogs of that series, but again one
of the creators of that series. Create just direct one
of the directors, one of the one with a living

(47:18):
legend right now. Yeah, did I hold a Dyson hair
dryer in front of Cindy Crawford to get a hair
blowing effect when we did that episode, Yeah I did. Okay,
it's super she was a legend and she was cool, right, great.
It was the day Randy Gerber sold Cassamigoes for a

(47:39):
billion dollars. We were at Cindy Crawford's house. I guess
that would be nice to they do. Did they rolled
out there like you guys want Cassamago handing people bottles?
Or like we don't live in Malibu and the driver
we're gonna take his treacherous through a canyon. The last
thing we need to do is drinking tequila right now.
It's like okay, okay, okay, okay, but like, but the

(48:00):
house is unbelievable and like their kids are like parodies
of themselves. But anyway, I'm sorry, go on, you were
watching those videos products and I'm watching the Kim and
Kanye on and I'm going, you guys don't have anything
in your house. You're the richest, most powerful people on
the fucking planet and you've got nothing. There's nothing to

(48:22):
look at in your whole house. I hate this thing
and everyone's looking like nothing. It secks a morphous things.
It's like, oh, look this is this is my birth
control device. It's a white square. Oh wait, I'm sorry,
that's my credit card? Is it my car key? Everything's

(48:44):
every morphous and white pebble. Yeah. Yeah, it'll be like
what wasn't there like a movie or is that um
Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, like the that you could
just put the thing in your ear and you can
hear every language or whatever. Oh yeah, I feel like
we're probably moving like towards these like wearable singular devices.
It's like you can understand any language. It'll like beam

(49:06):
information to your head from ESPN if you need it
from ESPN, from esp to ESPN. There it is our
inter ear device. And it looks like a sick ass
dangle earring. You know, it was not a good advertisement
for cochlear implants. The sound of metal they made that
ship look uh not good. I don't know if that

(49:30):
wasn't added for I don't know that that call bad call. Guys.
You shouldn't have done that bad calm the spawn con
because that was what they do. So it's about somebody
who lose their hearing. Say, uh spoiler alert, he saves
up to get the cochlear implant and it just like

(49:52):
he it doesn't really solve this problem, and like it
sounds really like robotic and shitty when he gets it,
and like that is often a first stage. But then
like they really like you know, lock it in after
a while, and like people are able to use it.
But because that it can't be the solution to the

(50:14):
protagonist problem, they make it seem like it's yeah, Like
they really make it seem like it's yeah, they get
sued by the manufacturers, like this is fucking slammer man. Alright,
So this is kind of a weird one, but it's
kind of based on a Twitter thread that I've had
going for the past twelve hours. I've talked before on

(50:38):
here about how I was. I was shark guy when
I was like four to seven, probably, like that was
the thing my aunts and uncles and like friends all
knew me as is like, uh, kid who said he
wanted to be a sharchaeologist even though that wasn't a profession,
a k A kid who like said he wanted to
be eaten by a shark. Like and I had I

(50:59):
watched Jaws over a hundred times, like just so I
could say that I had watched Shaws over a hundred
times Uh, like you were like counting them off. You're
like fun before tomorrow. Yeah, I pulled an all nighter
the night before second grade started. Uh, but we're worried
about Jack. He comes into class with just dark circles

(51:20):
under his eyes, like he's not getting much rest, and
he keeps just like muttering jaws lines. What what the funk? Man?
But yeah, so Fairbrook on Twitter tweeted that she missed
being like nine years old when being really into dolphins

(51:43):
was her entire personality. And I have a five year
old who's going through a similar phase with trains, and
so I was like, what, what were other people's like
singular like obsessions when they were kids. So, before I
get into kind of a hervey of the responses, did
you guys have these? Oh? Yeah, I have a million.

(52:05):
I replaced my personality with anything around me to this day. Yeah,
what was an early singular focus you had? Though? When
Sarah Hughes one the gold medal for ice skating and like,
I don't know what a million years ago. So she

(52:26):
Sarah Hughes won the gold metal for some ice skating thing,
when I was like what, Like, I don't know too,
and she her name was Sarah, and she was from
the same town a Long Island that I was from.
I mean that's all I need. That's huge. I am impressed. Yeah,
so I was like, I am my name is Sarah,

(52:47):
I'm Sarah using from Long Island. I want to gold medal,
no problem. And I just printed out black and white
pictures of her from the computer from Google Images and
hung from my room. That's awesome. That just a line
to it. You're like, yeah, that's me. I loved um.
I loved dinosaurs. I was dining. I was dino child

(53:08):
for a while, like I was fucked up off of dinosaurs,
like you know, like my parents. Like he only says
words that have to do with dinosaurs, like he's really
into it. And then there's a great part in the
and sorry to interrupt, there a great part in the
New Lord and Miller Netflix, like the Miller's or Mitchell's

(53:28):
Versus the Robots where the younger kid will just like
go through the phone book and call people and be like, Hey,
do you want to talk to me about dinosaurs for
fifteen minutes and then people are like Nope, and he's
like okay, by and then like just crosses them out.
But like that's literally how my son is about trains,
Like he's just like, let's talk about trains, like to anybody.

(53:49):
To the male man, it was yeah, it was dinosaurs.
And then that that turned into X Men and Star
Wars vehicles and Star Wars technology where I was buying
like schematics of like blasters and a wing, bombers and
ship to like really understand what I was dealing with,

(54:09):
like from a mechanical sense. From onto, I was like,
it's not enough just to be able to say what
the funk it is? You need to know how this
ion engine works. Fam, don't care for spake, but some
time with me some nonsense. Yeah. So Um. A teacher
in the UK and then a bunch of like parents
in the UK said that World War two airplanes in

(54:29):
particular are like they're like, yeah, there's one kid in
every class in the UK, like who is obsessed with
World War two airplanes? And I wonder if that's like
because that was such a like cultural trauma over there,
like the bombing raids from the Nazis that like that's
just passed down through the generations because I feel like

(54:51):
ours is not necessarily world War two airplanes. Um, I
don't know, it's weird. I had a friend who I
grew up with, handsome Nick, who you met. Oh, yeah,
we were all in on World War two ship. I
think part of it had to do with my grandfather
talking about World War two, so that gave me like, oh, ship,
Like I want to know about this thing that you know,

(55:13):
my grandfather was in. And I got into the planes too,
but like not so much like I knew I could
talk about like, uh, you know, like a Mustang P
fifty one or whatever is the American one and meets
be she zero is a Japanese one and ship like that.
So the ones that seem like they are pretty standard
Dinosaurs seems like it's the one that is to the

(55:34):
point that it's almost like a phase that every five
year old goes through, or like most five year old
go through. Um space seems to be kind of up
there too. Trains up there as like a thing. I
think that's like more on the younger side. Yeah, well,
but a surprising number of girls were like really into

(55:56):
cars and fire trucks and but okay, So one that
I was not expecting that we got multiple responses on
was Greek mythology. Yes, it's it's very queer. Friends were
obssessed because it's like epic drama, right, but it's those

(56:17):
names were so confusing to me. I was also a
very dumb kid, So I think was there like a
simple book to get into Greek mythology. I think like
one person was referencing, like there was an illustrated guide
and they were just obsessed. But Alex Schmidt was really
into Greek mythology, one of the smartest humans I know. Yeah,

(56:38):
but he was like, yeah, that was my my thing. Uh,
that's super cool turtles, which makes sense because they're just
like slow dinosaurs that are still around and you get yeah, yeah, exactly,
legend legend legendary as zombie by the way, I mean, yeah,

(56:59):
what's going on. There were a couple people who just
had colors. Like one person was obsessed with the color
red orange from like when they were young all the
way up through they said, like when they went away
to college, grow up, Jesus, that color sucks, and somebody
else's in the green. And then there were like historical events.

(57:22):
The Titanic was a big my well because the best
movie at all time. Were you also in on the
Titanic just yes, because the movie. I mean, like when
I was a kid, it's like that movie is life ruining, right, Like,
name a movie that's more life ruining than Titanic ruining?

(57:43):
In what sense? How did it ruin your life? Be?
It just took you away data stay, it made me
on what my wildest imagination? Right? Well, you know we
can you can go to that full scale replica they're
building in China. Yeah's a billionaire who's building at to
scale one serious. Yeah, but he's like obsessed with it

(58:05):
and everyone's like why is this guy building? It's like
I don't know. This dude has so much money and
nothing to do. So yeah, you know he's gonna sink
that ship like he's doing like that. That's the only
way to opening. Yeah, just know, motherfucker's you really got
on the Titanic Maiden voyages. Fucking dumb. This is a
fucking sociology experiment. Some of the Salem witch Trials was

(58:29):
one uh that Like I like, I like the idea
of just like having an obsession with like a historic period.
Like I definitely got into like castles and swords and
ship like that. I was obsessed with trench warfare that
not even World War One. I was just obsessed with

(58:49):
the idea of a bunch of guys and like a
hole in the dirt, yeah, living in living in holes. Yeah.
And so my friend who's like into like trippy stuff,
said that like when kids are obsessed with like historical
events like that, it could be like past life, like
residual past life, so weird. I was into so many
war stuff, Like I had a huge Civil War phase

(59:11):
when I was a kid. It was wild because like
by the time we got to those things in school,
I was like, yeah, I know, Stonewall Jackson is Actually
I was insufferable when it came to like the war
units in class because I was like, I mean, I'm
not really telling me anything new right now, so I
don't know if this is actually an education. Speaking of insufferable,
So when other kids got into dinosaurs, I was like

(59:32):
right at the right age. When Jurassic Park came out
that I was like, I think I was like eleven, Yeah,
so I was twelve. Like the way that I approached
that was I was like really in that. So I
had read Jurassic Park and I really liked it, but
then like read all of Creton's books, so like people
would be like, dude, have you seen dazsic Park. I'm like, actually,

(59:53):
that's like Lesser Creighton. You should really uh, you should
really check out Sphere or Congo. Those are really his Like,
it's actually not the ending in the book. Just the
worst piece of ship kid in the world. That was
the thing. Every kid, like older kid who read it
would like dunk on me. Was like, you know, the ending,

(01:00:15):
it's actually different in the book. It's not saying it's
the movie. I'm like, what there's ending in the book.
I have no idea. So no, that was a thing
that everyone lorded over. Hammond the old guy doesn't make
it and he gets eaten by the little the little
tiny dinosaurs, and yeah, it's kind of cute. That's what

(01:00:36):
I was telling everyone about it. I'm like, you know,
in the book, all the kids have sex with each
other and then get eaten by tiny dinosaurs and then
this was just a cute story. Like so there's a
lot of people who were like I was in the Heman.
I was in two different characters, and Angie Grivel's Twitter.
One of my kids was Buzz Lightyear for three years.

(01:00:58):
Slept in the PGAs were the costume, and Cape asked
to have the eyebrows applied before daycare. Uh, the idea
of the eyebrows is such an adorable detail to just
like have drawn on eyebrows. I'm looking foolish pulling up
with his fucked up eyebrows. Mom, Oh my god, he
has like normal eyebrows, right, but there's like an arch

(01:01:21):
to one of them, right, Like they're kind of arched
and thin. So like this dude very like, yeah exactly. Um,
he's like he even shaved his own eyebrows off. He's
like they were getting in the way of the buzz
Lightyear ones that we need to draw on. What do
you talk about? Mom? There were multiple people who are
obsessed with talk shows as kids, like Ricky Lake, Sally Jesse, Raphael,

(01:01:42):
Like they would set up audiences and just like do
one person talk shows? Uh. And then there's sporting positions
that wear masks. So one person's little brother was obsessed
with Major League Baseball catchers and another kid was just
obsessed with hockey goal least like for the masks. So

(01:02:05):
I played. I only got into hockey for the helmet
and the Yeah, I didn't. I wasn't attracted to the
sport by anything else except this kid I went to
school with. Parent was like, I don't know what my
als can come by to see the game. I was like, yo,
they get to whirl all that ship coult me in.
But yeah. My other weird phase I had was I
was so into Swat the Swat Cop team because I
watched speedily completely. I was so caught brained as a kid,

(01:02:30):
like talking to the fucking neighborhood watch copy, like, yo, man,
you take me like a SWAT meeting. I want to
see if the MP five is the same weight as
I think it is, Like, you're not sucking eleven. We'll
get away from and I hand you a fucking submachine gun.
All right, all right, whatever I know to cut the pie.
I know a dynamic entry, got that angle mirror and
forty five. I'll scout it in. But anyways, people, when

(01:02:52):
we're running daily's like guys movie studios, we can we
can look at this list and figure out what what
needs movies because you know, Titanic gest movie of all time,
Jurassic Park second biggest movie of all time. Jaws is
like one of the biggest movies of all time. So
like these kids obsessions are like, right, yeah, that's all
you need, and then you're your golden diamond cobblers, right, sister,

(01:03:17):
h yeah, that would I hope. That's like a weird thing,
like when gen Z starts adulting, like they're starting in
like medieval practices, like just rejecting consumer culture and like
they're like, no, everything's homespun. Actually I'm refining my own
rubber from my own bicycle wheels. Isn't there an Adam
Sandler like drama called The Cobbler? Oh God, you're so right.

(01:03:42):
Why didn't it stick? Right? I mean I think it
would have. It would be one of the one of
his biggest hits if any of these kids had said Cobbler.
But that that was just never never in the cards?
What was that one even about? I believe a cobbler? Okay,
so I'm not mistaken. Yeah, And then like some I think,

(01:04:04):
like there were some curses and some like time travel things. Frustrated,
Shoemaker finds a magical sewing machine that allows him to
see the world in a new way by stepping into
the lives of his customers. There you go, oh, walk
a mile in someone's shoes. Oh, and method man is
in that I think there's gonna be a lesson on
race here. Uh huh, oh for sure, Sarah, it has

(01:04:25):
been so fun having you. What a pleasure place. Please?
Where can people find you and follow you and experience
your work? You can find me anywhere on everywhere as
Sarah's warm, and you can watch my new little movie

(01:04:47):
that I made on means TV means dot TV And
you know what, why don't you go watch it? Okay,
watch it? Go watch it. It'll funk your day up.
It's fantastic. It's very Is there a tweet or some
of the work of social media you've been enjoying. This
tweet is from October from at Merman five parentheses me

(01:05:15):
telling a story, my story how I survived a plane
crash and lived on a desert island for a year.
It was crazy parentheses. Friend who wants got a text
from me where I actually called the crank is a
great tweet. Will never forgive some things, We never let

(01:05:41):
those things go. It's always unique to a friend group. Miles.
Where can people find you with the tweet you've been enjoying?
Oh man? You can find me on Twitter and Instagram
at Miles of Gray. Also the other podcast four twenty
day fiance, you know where it's the intersection of weed
and ninety fiance and just a couple of immigrant kids
talking ship. Um tweet out, like the first one is

(01:06:02):
from past gast Amy Miller. I think this is two
days in a row. We're calling out some of her tweets,
but it's from earlier in the week. Amy tweeted. A
lady of Target just looked at me, pointed to her
full cart and went, I don't need any of this ship.
She says. You know, uh, some days you meet an
icon just like to someone, like those interactions where it's

(01:06:24):
a stranger but they look at you like you're my
friend now, and I'm gonna say this thing. You're like,
I don't know, but cool. Oh, sure you don't need
any of this ship. Okay, this one is from Tony
News something at Trondy Newman tweeted, quick, everybody check it
in to see if you can moonwalk. It's been a minute.
Very skill. I was the other day. I had socks
on and I was just tormenting her majesty, and I

(01:06:45):
was like, look how smooth I'm hitting it like Jaden
And she's like what And that's just for wait, can
you moon walk? Yes? It ain't hard jack what I'm
not hitting. Look I'm when I say to smooth Jaden,
I need a little bit of practice. But yeah, I've been.
I've been as a kid growing up in the eighties

(01:07:06):
and nineties. That has been a thing I've been hurting
myself trying to do on wooden floor since I could walk.
I'm not gonna lie to you. I'm only okay with
you using that as your tweet. If you couldn't moonwalk.
The fact that you can moonwalk, you know, makes me
resent you a little bit. Hey, shout out to Boogleloo
Shrimp from Breaking Who's you know? They actually say the
original creator of the moonwalk, not Michael Jackson. Yeah, yeah,

(01:07:28):
he's There's a great actually documentary about Boogleloo Shrimp on Amazon.
If you like Breaking and Ship. I don't know if
you do a very niche thing, but it's really interesting
because you realize how much him meeting, like Michael Jackson
just changed dancing because the b Boys vibe came into
the mainstream because of him, and he was very like humble,
just like a very humble guy about it. Tweet. I'm enjoying,

(01:07:52):
uh shout out Fairbrook again for saying nostalgic for when
I was nine and liking dolphins was my whole personality
because that gave me like ten hours of entertainment. And
shout out to all the people who got back to
me with their weird childhood obsessions. Uh. You can find
me on Twitter at Jack Underscore O'Brien. You can find

(01:08:12):
us on Twitter at Daily Zeitgeist. Were at the Daily
Zeitgeist on Instagram. We have a Facebook fan page and
a website, Daily zeitgeist dot com, where we post our
episodes on our foot notes where we link off to
the information that we talked about in today's episode, as
well as the song. We think you might want to
go check out, Miles, what's what song? We I'll do

(01:08:34):
another one from Dirty Art Club this time. This one's
called Linked L E A N T. And again it's spooky.
It sounds like a funky ass haunted mall that you're
like you're doing edibles in and you're like, wait, what's
this track called? Um? That's why I love the hole
acidic of Dirty Art Club and their work. So check
this one out. Was called Linked All right, we are

(01:08:57):
gonna say you should go check that out the dailies, guys.
The production by Heart Radio. For more podcasts from My
Heart Radio, visit Yeah Heart Radio, app, Apple podcast, or
wherever you listen to your favorite shows. That is going
to do it for this morning. We're back this afternoon
to tell you what's trending and we'll talk to y'all
then by say

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