Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Is that you the internet? Well, hello, this is a
different kind of intro because Miles, wait, what is that
you're clicking? Well, look, guys, welcome to the Daily Side
Guys Season forty two, Episode two for July thirty one,
two thousand eighteen. My name is Miles Gray, a k
A Miles, A Genie and a bottle baby. Gotta rob me.
(00:21):
There's that grandnameh Chapman, Rice would the heat? Thank you
so much to Chapman. Rice and I have a special
guest co host and I'm trying to figure out what
I'm hearing clicks? Is that what am I hearing? Is
You're being hacked? Am I being hacked? Waited? Dude, I
think I'm being hacked? Swordfish, it's the hacker. It's Jamie
loved this helped me Jamie. Actually, no, welcome Jamie. Hi,
(00:44):
how are you hacked? To show? This is Jamie lots Acid,
a hacker who codes ak. Hack O Brian, you've been happy,
you've been hack O Brian. I have two children, their
name zero and one. Well welcome hack O'Brien. So so
lovely for you to join us. And we are joined
(01:05):
by very wonderful guest, Hilarious stand up comedian writer, host
of the podcast Suicide Way. But yeah, do you write
it right now? I'm just joking. I've never heard myself
explained in such glorious terms. Oh well, that's great because
you just funked up your own intro, Hampton. But hey.
They're also the host of the podcast Suicide Buddies, with
yesterday's guest guest Easton Dave Us. Please welcome lived into
(01:28):
Australian accent instantly, Please welcome Hampton. You Hey, how are you? Man? Hey? Babies?
What's up? Baby? Hello? Little babies? All right, well, Hampton,
before we get into knowing all about you and some
of your short history and overrated, underrated all that, let's
do a little pre cap, as they say on the Internet,
about what we got coming up today. Computer enhanced, computer
(01:50):
enhanced pre cap engaged. Right now, we're gonna be talking
about Attorneys general from about twenty states are trying to
block the proliferation of your own three D print it guns,
you can make it home. The Cooke Brothers are released
a study on that dangerous Medicare for All scheme that
would give people, you know, healthcare with some very interesting,
(02:11):
really interesting results. I'm more scared of the Diet Coke brothers.
There you go, you're checked in. Also, we've got more
information or actually the announcement from Jeff Sessions about the
Religious Liberty Task Force. We're going to talk about ICE
and CBP. Obviously not good stuff with them, some Mengazi
stuff with less Moonvez, a little bit about Mila Kunis.
(02:33):
Maybe found out what exactly she did to poor mccoley Culkin.
In addition to some tea a t report from Mr
T himself to for Grace on how he used to
David Vanka Trump. And also I guess bigfoots Dick is
also a thing that's actually becoming a part of an
actual congressional race swinging long and life and that's not
a joke. Literally well according to these these drawings, say otherwise, Hampton.
(02:58):
But but yes, before we do all that, Hampton, my man,
what is something from your short history that lets people
know sort of what you're about? Uh? What I'm about.
I was searching my own name. I'm amazing, I'm very egotistical. Okay,
do you have a Google alert? Uh? No, you just
you just hopped on Google and you said, Hampton, Yeah,
I wanted to see if my video that I of
(03:21):
my stand up I put up on porn Hub was
still up there when it was it was yeah, they
really let anything on that? What did it? Comments like
very good, very good, very funny, very stern. I don't
think they want to possibly complicate things by being like,
why did you upload your stand up to porn Hub?
Wait when yeah, like six months ago. What's the view
(03:44):
count at it's like close to nine hundred. I'm hoping
to tip it over a thousand. I want to get
very summer. You got to get those summer reviews. I
wonder if reviews got to get him in doing a
good summer. Check out my stand up on porn Hub.
It's under Hampton cracks up audience with stand up comedy
three exclamation points. So even anyone who's on poart of that,
(04:07):
they see that there's nothing even to remotely suggest that
it's take a break about j n oh. It's not
all about beating off. It's about the l O L.
Sometimes it's about the l O L and the r
O f L. S If I if I can praise myself, well,
reach for the stars, reach for them, grab them and
bring them to you. Hampton, what's something that's overrated. Overrated,
(04:29):
it's coffee. Wow, okay, right, because everyone feels like they
need it every day. And I've taken a couple of
days where I just didn't feel like going to get
one or getting new grounds or anything, and I was like, yeah,
I feel a little tired. But I feel it's weird
that I just need to constantly drink coffee to exist, right,
Are you kind of wired like that? Like yeah, I
(04:49):
need like at least two, sometimes it's three. I drink
like one cold brew before the show. That's and I
don't even know if it really gets me all hyped up.
It could be a total placebo effect, but I feel
the same way. It's no, I'm so coffe I'm caffeine
like insensitive, Like I can drink espresso and falls. That's
what I'm saying is that I think we're making more
(05:10):
than a generation of people who are just desensitized to caffeine. Yeah,
it could be just caffy, right, I can't. I mean,
it's like I don't feel more energized when I have coffee,
but I definitely feel when I don't have it because
I get very mean sound of an addict. Yeah, like
you know, I get like mean, I get like nose bleeds.
(05:30):
I started start hitting cost start I hack in to
I don't hack for good. I had for black hat,
you know, I put my black hat and I started
hacking for banks and I don't have It's really bad.
You hack four Chase and I'm going to get them
their money back. They're nice guys. They're nice guys. They're
(05:52):
deeply nice guys. Trust and Chase guys. Yeah, well let's
make it there just be one bank. When did you
start drinking coffee? Though? When did I say? Boy? I
think I got into coffee ice cream before I got
into commgeus. That's the gateway drug. Uh And I think,
boy a little on that, like just ending college right
(06:13):
right right, just when your body starts suddenly being like
I am tired, right right right. I don't. I just
feel like I guess I've accepted it. I'm like high,
and I don't realize I'm saying people are too hyped,
because now it's like, why are there so many fucking
coffee places around the earth. It's like it's the boom
is insane. I don't know how people like how many
of those places really stay afloat because I feel like
(06:34):
the market is so saturated. You can get coffee like
in eight different ways within like an arm's reach, but
there's only seven Dunky Donuts in l A. So it's
like it's actually kind of hard for some of us
to get what we need. It's actually kind of like
a crisis. That's what I'm saying. Our brand is crisis.
So a few a few weeks ago, I was in
Boston and I ran into a woman who used to
(06:56):
work at a Dunk and Donuts. I don't think you
can call the people who are can Tuk and Donuts
baristas per se, because they don't really prepare. It's more
of a business classism for sure. But this is but yeah,
but they don't even call themselves Bury says, it's kind
of call themselves human. They hate life. But I ran
into someone who used to work at the Duncan Donuts
(07:17):
near me forever, and she was just like, oh my gosh,
you're the only person who ever ordered tuna at the Duncan.
Ponents as like wait really, and she's like, yeah, he
used to talk about it, and because they did, they
would call me Tuna when I would come gotta get
that morning tuna burns. Yeah, that comes to me for
the rest of the day on the croissant. And they'd
be like tuna and I'd be like before the office,
(07:40):
even before the office. Yeah, and then so and then
they like and then one day they did discontinue the
tuna because it was poisoned. It was really it was
like just it was just like, man, it's like the
actually shipping into the coal I from Chipotle to put
on it for me. Yeah, and then they were like,
there's no more tuna. And I remembered that day we
talked about it. Is that what you tweeted something about
being really upset about the canceled tuna. Yeah, they cancel.
(08:03):
I mean now it's canceled across the board, but they
we were one of the we we were one of
the beta locations where tuna was canceled. Okay, duncan donas
should get behind it and be like, we've heard about
the crisis of overfishing tuna and we're taking a stand.
Yeah and no more. I'm in a Facebook group to
bring back the subway seafood sensation. It's all about advocacy, Hampton.
(08:27):
What's something that's underrated? Underrated? I was gonna say Queen
the Band, I was like, they can because I've just
been listening to him a lot recently. I'm like they
were probably one of the best live like performing rock
and roll bands, rock and or roll, rock and or
get all of them. I'm excited for the movie. Yeah,
that'll be fun. Little Hacker Rammy Malle Yeah, yeah, he
(08:49):
hacked many, Yeah, he hacked Sasha Baron, Cohen and Hampton.
What's a myth? What's something that people get wrong that
you know to be true, or maybe that's something people
think it's true that you know to be false, vice versa.
Do you understand it's so rapid fire Russian collusion go on? Oh,
(09:13):
I don't have time. I don't have time to do
all of Mueller's case. We'll tell me. Just give me
the top line notes. Top line notes. Is I've never
seen somebody so embarrassingly bad at lying as Trump, Like
it's just funny at a certain point, yeah, right where
it's like in the way they talk, it's like this
is embarrassing. And Juliani too, like he got kind of
(09:35):
the perfect lawyer, the same sort of like they're really
just good at media, but they do not know how
to talk or function like an intelligent here, right, So
what is the myth exactly that you're saying that you're
trying to dispel. I don't know that the Robert Mother investigation.
People think it's bullshit or you know, right that it's
like just a sham, right, and you're saying it isn't
(09:57):
it has like actual backing. Yeah, okay, well that's good.
So yeah, I think our audience would mostly agree with you.
That's the thing. You can't assume everybody's on board. Oh yeah, well,
now you know the Ze gang out here there, they're
ready for Mueller. A lot of people are more concerned
with the day to day stuff. Yeah, that happens with him.
(10:17):
And it's like, well, you should take more of a
long view if you really want to like actually impeach
this guy. Yeah, no, absolutely, And I think it's a
it's a tough question of whether or not. You know,
some people are like I can't wait to see Trump
just you know, marched out of the White House and
striped pajamas going to jail or whatever, and like, I
wouldn't I wouldn't invest too much in that fantasy. Fantasy. Yeah,
I can't wait for the day when he's just getting
(10:40):
reamed in a show like whoa, Really, that's not how
that's gonna work? What what world you? Then? Yeah, I
think that's just how people are dealing with their stress, Like, well,
that's going to be his end Gamett in prison. It's
gonna come down to a really like nuanced word game
of like that don't mean that, and that doesn't mean that.
Well we've already gone with oh there's no collusion, no collusion,
(11:02):
no collusion to what is that? Julian Julianni going like, well,
what if he did? Clue that's not a crime. So
I love that, just like gas lighting, Like what if
a crime wasn't a crime? What if he did it?
And y, I ask you? Is mail fraud? Even fraud?
That's literally like the equivalent of Robert Durst being like,
I murdered in self defense and then they're like sounds
(11:23):
raised and got away with it. Now let me just
smell one of those purps, lean in for one of those.
All right, Well that's my favorite, ye Robert. It's got
a jazz night in l A. He does yeah, he mcs.
He doesn't play, but he does bring he's a jazz fan.
(11:44):
He brings. You know him, Fred Durst is a dabbler.
Good for him, for him. Okay, he picked up a camera,
tried to be a director. Get out here. He's living
his best life. He's cute. Shout out to all the
red Yankee hats that people wear the nokie Yeah, I
mean and stick it up here. Yeah. Yeah. Well let's
get into the news. So right now, obviously, gun control
(12:07):
is an ongoing thing that goes on in this country.
But there is a large group of attorneys general from
many states that are basically suing the Trump administration to
block a Texas company from publishing the blueprints for three
D printed guns like guns you can just legitimately print
on your own so you can be in your home
and make an untraceable, undetectable by metal detectors weapons. Uh
(12:32):
that first Obama the Obama administration was suing them to
stop it, but then the Trump administrations sort of dropped
their suit. And the company is called Defense Distributed, and
they have like they have exactly they want to include
all kinds of things like a single shot pistol and
a R fifteen lower receiver, which basically that if you
have that part, you can buy many of the other
parts without any kind of scrutiny and make your own
(12:55):
assault rifle a baretta handgun. Uh So this is something
that you know a lot of people are very worried
about because it's like, oh, yeah, let's not you know,
we already have a proliferation of gun problems. We can't
regulate the ones that are legally acquired. Like yeah, I
mean not to be like totally pessimistic that I thought
about this a lot. And it's funny because it's like
(13:15):
it seems like we're only going to get gun regulation
the minute this technology is out of the box. There's
no way to turn back on three D printing like
it you can't really fully legislate this the way that
people think, and it's like it's too far gone, almost
like three you will be able to print up guns.
Well yeah, well right now, I know that they're saying,
like a lot of these plans do exist in like
(13:36):
the dark web in certain place if you know where
to look at it. But like they're trying to make
it just like just go to they want to make it.
Guns aren't that complicated, right, But I'm saying in terms
of getting the plans for this would just be going
to like their website and it's like download this. A
lot of guns are like six parts. It's not even
like a complicated mechanism. It's a spring loaded thing a
lot of times only this is something a person could
(13:58):
design themselves any but this just makes it that much easier.
And I think that's the concern, is like, but it's
like you can't like it's sorry, like we fucked it up.
So we should be taking care of guns back in
the fucking like late eighties, right right, right, So then
what would you do to handle this? I mean, like,
everyone buy a gun and let's all die. That's the way.
(14:18):
There's gonna be a way to like definitely open Like
there's no way you're going to take all the guns away,
I think from the people who already have them. But
I guess at the very least, they should make it
as hard as possible for just anyone who because you know,
there are people who who already shouldn't have access to guns,
whether that's because domestic violence or things like that. But
I think they absolutely should put the kai bosh on
(14:41):
making it as easy as like I have a three
D printer, I can go to you know, but I
just I want them to be on top of it,
but I want them to also be realistic about where
things are going and what could happen technologically inside of
like five years or something. So it's like it's true,
we do need to be proactive, but also like I
feel like they're chasing the talk a lot of times.
To use a hockey, you got to go to where
(15:04):
it's going to be. It's like they're just and then
comes in that's legislation, that's a cleans up to clean
up the well, we need government's amboni. You're saying, you
think a lot about the three D printing things, so
like where is the puck going to be? That you
think is a better way to tackle this problem of
(15:26):
like widely distributed. The way I would tackle it would
be to go talk to like engineers and people who
actually like work in that field and stuff and ask
them like what they think is going to be happening
with that technology and like because say, like it's a
machine right now that you have, it's expensive. I don't
know if even theoretically this could be something that could
be like so small, you know, right, like the technology
(15:48):
could be so accessible so ready, Yeah, like just to
get a three D print. Yeah, yeah, to print anything,
a knife whatever, Like it's like, I'll throw this out
of there. A knife three D print and one of
the easiest things. I mean, you can make those of
popsicle six the only thing that scan something with your
phone and then like prints from this other device or something, right,
(16:09):
sort of three D scan it, and that could be
inside five years. The only thing that I would be
hopeful for, which is like a depressing form of hope,
is if the n r A can't figure out a
way to monetize this in their favor. I could see
this being regulated well, which is why that's because they
should check money off of everything. Guys got to get
(16:29):
in this. You make the ballistic plastic that you need
to print this, So you gotta write like, if they
can't make another million billion dollars off of this scam,
then what's the right Which is interesting because Donald Trump
this morning he tweeted he was just saying, I'm looking
into three D plastic guns being sold to the public.
Already spoke to the n r A. Doesn't seem to
(16:50):
make much sense, so it's as well, yeah, well no,
he probably was just like, hey, are y'all cool with
this or what should I do? Like A good plays
it completely like double sided, and it's like, well, you've
been paid off by the n R race, right, and
they basically dictate the gunlation they have full control, but
you know whatever. I mean. What's funny is definitely he's
(17:12):
so compromised Trump by so many different people having money
over him that it's like, I think he there are
some things where he's like, I don't know, like plastic
guns that actually put it again, and then he's just
like he looks at his like overlords and he's like, Okay, well,
I guess that's why I'm not sure if that means
(17:33):
he's going to like do something about it, because I
guess if I guess what he's saying is he speaks
to the powers that beat the n R and they're like,
we can't make money off this, get rid of it,
and he's like, okay, doesn't make sense there. That's so
I think that's essentially straightforward. Yeah, rather than talking to
maybe the engineers, you're saying like, where is this technology headed?
(17:53):
Is this even the worst thing that can be made?
N A to fucking put the kai bosh on it? Right,
we use that as like our you know ends. They're like, hey,
the n r A doesn't like this gun nuts, so
this can't be good. Uh. What else sweatouse? Oh? You
know the Koch brothers. Uh, they those lovely, lovely boys.
They have like this think tank where they were basically
(18:16):
working on what they thought would be like a hit
piece or hit study on the whole Medicare for All
plan that you know, Bernie Sanders and many other progressives
have been propping up, especially a lot of people who
we suspect will be running for president. But there's also
you know, this this thing is obviously a huge threat
to the status quo. Uh. And there are naysayers from
(18:37):
the left and the right who have been like, you know,
where is this money gonna come from? Or it will
never work? And the answers the money will come from
all the rich people who aren't paying taxes, Like actually
rich not people, not your uncle who's making two hundred
grand a year. Times of people are making hundreds of
millions of dollars. Anything is they eventually do give money
to the government, not through taxes exactly, through massive payoffs,
(18:58):
right exactly taxation right, No, it's your choice of taxation,
which I think we should have on the low level, right, Like,
wouldn't it be great if you're like, Okay, I'm never
gonna have kids, so I'm not going to support schools.
I don't give a fuck. But you don't get anything
else wants sweet roads? Well, then what do you do
you get on the payment down? Cruise down the one? Yeah,
(19:19):
I want to like like launch my test law down.
I want to lose on the one and launch my
testla down like a slippery little to bog out. And yeah,
that's a utopia. It's it's impossible. And that's why the
Koch brothers have done their part to tear this myth down.
I guess they released a study. What's there that's their
(19:41):
funded group. I think it's like the Mercatis Institute or whatever,
where they were saying like they wanted to gross people
out of what the price tag is of this whole
Medicare for all idea where you know, everyone has health
insurance and people just don't die because they literally can't
afford it. I mean, that's just you know, I'm gonna
feel like it's going to be surprisingly low. Well, they
we were saying that, now hold onto your butts because
(20:02):
they're telling us it's gonna cost thirty two trillion dollars
over the next decade. So let's take that in perspective,
that's a huge number. I guess that would be about
three point two trillion a year for ten years. You
look at our like, you know, government spending, Yeah, trillions
is a pretty normal thing, especially over a decade. But
I guess they want to just put it as like
this Medicare for all things is gonna cost thirty two trillion,
(20:25):
and then like the quick and you're like, and my
spinal surgery will cost me my life, so let's just
do it. So in the US, right, we spend about
three point three trillion a year on healthcare costs. That's
like the that's between like the government, people, private employers
and things like that. That's about what's being spent. So
(20:45):
when you take into account like things like inflation and
things like that, we would actually end up saving about
two a little over two trillion dollars over the next
decade if we moved to a Medicare for all plan.
But again, I don't think realize that that's what their
their study would actually show people. It's like, fine, let's
(21:05):
compare that to what we're doing now. It's still cheaper
and we can't profit off of that. Right. I love
when rich people cut themselves. It's such it's such a
pleasure to watch, especially the Cooke Brothers that no one's
going to think about inflation or things like that. Oh absolute,
especially the average person. They're like just the well, and
then you think about, like, what this thing, what this
(21:26):
actual plan would be like? The Sanders Plan would be
to provide comprehensive coverage for all residents of the United States,
including primary preventative care, emergency and hospital services, maternity and
newborn care, prescription drugs, substance abuse and mental health services, pediatrics,
lab and diagnostic services. It guarantees dental, vision, audiology, and
(21:50):
abortion coverage. This is the kind of thing them away
from me. Yeah, it's discussing what's this. I think be
just want us to stay a lot. I don't see
how that works. Yeah, well that's just kind of how
that's Again, when they're massive industries behind who stand to
lose trillions of dollars, that's when they have to activate
(22:11):
the machine to be like this is what it's gonna cost.
I mean, this is this is the political like or
what I don't know what social structures of say capitalism
and socialism. It's like it really feels like so many
people just claim to capitalism because they're like it's like
playing the lottery all the time, where you're like, I
could be a millionaire though, right, I could be massively
wealthy and like just you know, be a star or
(22:33):
something like that, and socialism is all just like I
just want everybody to be Okay, let's start from it's
just so bizarre. Let me have five hundred million dollars
and then let the poor people fucking deal figure it out.
Speaking of someone who has literally three weeks left of
health insurance die, Yeah, this story is infuriating. Oh, you're
(22:59):
about to get off the family plan. I'm about to
do that fun thing that you get to do leading
up to your twenty six birthday where you just see
doctors for the last time. You just see him for
the last time. They give you a kids. It's like
the Wizard of Oz. Yeah, I don't know how to
great run. You're going to college, you know, if you
break up with the high school. If listen, I'm gonna
(23:20):
the gum disease is gonna come back. It's gonna I'm
gonna start bleeding, you know, and can you show me
some roots I could dig up that would help for this.
I'm literally gonna go to my doctors and be like, so,
what's like an at home hack for surgery? Body push ups?
Body hack? Do ten push ups in the morning to
ten push ups in the evening. Gum disease cured. Gum
(23:42):
disease probably cure with push ups. Al Right, guys, let's
take a quick break. We'll be right back, and we're back.
That's my thank you so much. It hack O'Brien. Yeah,
you just had to show the internet and we're back
(24:04):
and you've hacked the show successfully. Jamie, Yes, we're back.
Let's talk a little bit about what legal Sniegel Jeff
Sessions is up to, because uh that for me, know,
it's something I completely came up with last night. But
since the world does revolve around you, yes it was. So.
He was speaking to a group full of you know,
(24:26):
kind Christian people about how they need not worry about
the threat of progress or gaze because he's creating a
religious Liberty Task Force that will ensure that Essentially, the
d o J prioritizes the rights of religious people and
groups in its policies and legal battles, and he went
on to mention the SPLC, the Southern Poverty Law Center
(24:47):
as like this liberal monster that you know, it's like,
can too easily throw the label of hate group on
nice Christian hate groups like their Family Research Council that
is a straight up anti gay hate group that just
sort of uses the Bible to justify like they're horribly
homophobic agenda. Um dude, I'm down for America sharia law. Yeah,
(25:08):
it's pretty soon this is gonna be do um So Yeah. Essentially,
Sessions is telling people that, you know, if you hate
gays for Jesus reasons, then the d o J will
protect you. Um. So the government is yeah, fully stepping
into the culture where it sucks because I was just
becoming gay. Oh man, that sucks for me because I
(25:28):
decided three weeks ago I'm gonna be gay. Wow, and
and now not anymore. Now, what's the point. Yeah, if
the government's gonna be against it, well this verse time, ever,
the government is just like they're really trying to say,
I think speaking to the people of like the the scared,
ignorant faction of America, like, look, you don't have to
(25:49):
worry about the secular world coming for you now, Americans, Like,
with this kind of ship, we will actually not be
free from religious like bs and intolerance everything. Who do
you think they're going to back? Everything Sessions does is
like a church and state separation issue. It's yeah, and
it's like separation, but then embracing the church believe exactly,
(26:11):
like yeah, the church is the state and and the
This is like a small grip. But he doesn't even
choose clever names to try to you know, some hate
groups will try to trick you, but the Religious Liberty
Task Force couldn't sound more like a hate group, like
it just they sound fully strang. Any kind of force
is like it's it's bad Magnum Christ Force. That's that
(26:35):
would actually be more of a fun name than this one,
which is just already feels like you can see like
the what this group looks like that they have their
own uniforms and go around and torment people. But I
think when you put that again, sort of what the
climate is around the country, like LGBTQ people are under
a dire threat with this administration and this d o
J like in in Hastings, Minnesota is reading about like
(26:58):
this this small city, which was basically they they signed
like a resolution like the city saying like celebrating all
kinds of inclusion and supporting of diversity and like no
matter what you're like, your gender, you know, race, everything.
They were just sort of like, this is great, we
are as a city that we want to embrace this.
Then eight religious leaders popped up and pushed back on
(27:19):
this resolution. And this group of quote unquote religious leaders
were insisting that gender dysphoria, which they described as confusion
about gender identity, is factually unsubstantiated and hazardous to the
well being of our children and young adults. So when
you start looking at this, you're seeing this more and
more where it's like not shameless, it's it's just completely
(27:41):
shameless of being. So yeah, it's like when they labeled
gay people as crazy and put it insane asylum, right,
And this is the same thing of dehumanizing transgender people
and being like these people are confused, they are a
threat to the status quo of our community. And they're
slowly trying to see this information like through the guys
of these like religious maybe they're just sure of themselves
and all of society is being shitty to that, right.
(28:04):
It's so frustrating to see this, especially in because like
we're so you know, like protected here, but seeing in
areas of the country that aren't necessarily known for always
being progressive making these progressive calls and then seeing them
like gradually walked back is so fucking frustrating because it's like, no,
it took so long to get there. There the city
(28:25):
to be like, yeah, we embrace our transgender community members
or any place in Minnesota, are you kidding me? Like
that's incredible, and then and then to see this happen
is so frustrating. And that's a common story though in politics,
is like it always goes progressive for a while and
then gets walked back, And yeah, the pendulum will always
like yeah, freedom of like expression or being an individual
(28:45):
always has like dominance. So I think progressive values generally
move us ahead, right, absolutely, It's just a really slow process.
But then I guess that that progress is then hindered
even more when you have Jeff Sessions being like, well, look,
if you're religio just and you feel like this is
dangerous or whatever, we'll come back you up. Because that's
you know, fear not coldest like government that's been in
(29:09):
office in a while, like Jeff Sessions feels old as fun.
Trump as old as fuck in terms of being so
out of touch, violently out of town. I think it's
are they the richest cabinet? I don't know, Like there's
I don't know if they're rich. I'm like, I want
to see a Reagan Trump like Hue. But I think again,
(29:34):
Like also in places like Michigan, the court ruled there
that transgender women are in fact not actual women. And
this is because of a case not even trans They're
not even here, not here, this is not where this
case is from where a woman saw a transgender woman
(29:55):
who she described as a man in the woman's locker
room of her Planet Fitness Jim and she complained to
management and warned other customers and prompted the gym to
cancel her membership for inappropriate and disruptive behavior. So she
sued Planet Fitness for over like twenty five thousand in damages,
alleging that she suffered a violation of privacy as well
as embarrassment. YadA, YadA, YadA. So she lost her suit
(30:19):
over the damages, but they Planet Yeah, but she alleged
the Planet Fitness misrepresenting the nature of its contract when
it said that she would have access to a private
women's locker room but did not disclose that so too
would quote men who self identify as women. In this
court ruling, they kept using this same description when referring
(30:41):
to the this transgender woman, and so they're saying the
inclusive inclusion of the policy would have affected her decision
to purchase a membership and thus is irrelevant to her
claim that Planet Fitness engaged in deceptive business prior. So
we're increasingly in a world where even the courts are
not doing their job of protecting all Americans. These are
people in our community. There there's nothing fucking dangerous about
(31:02):
people who you are not familiar with. And this is
like the theme of the US right, how we do bathrooms?
For one, Why does the government get to tell you
where to ship and piss? That's on a biological level,
So you should be able to ship, piss wherever the
fun you want. Ultimately, the most perverted thing in the
world is thinking they can tell you where to ship
(31:25):
and where you can't. Yeah, tell you where can't? I
mean it's you know, you're a human being. But now
I really feel like it will eventually have to come
down to something where it's like a private bathroom or
a public bathroom. That's it. What do you mean? What
do you mean part of the gender thing? It's it's irrelevant.
Oh right, right right? Do you like to ship and
piss by yourself? Do you mind being? Or you want
(31:46):
to every and that's literally it probably? I mean, I
mean I've been doing, like when you go to like
non gender bathrooms that are multiple stalls, I don't mind being.
I've been in bathrooms like that too, and those stalls
are actually better because each stall is a room, and
you can take the wild ship in public and not
have people hear it and you know, shout out to
(32:08):
those people are private. I'm very private, but I can't
take I can't. I think that a lot of people
are allowed exactly. So there you go. I mean like
out on the street. Oh really, because we've got some footage.
Bit no, the same cases like this is so it
is really frustrating to see this poor woman who was,
you know, trying to get justice just to be acknowledged
(32:30):
as a fucking human being. And then you know when
when you see cases like this, you know, the statistics
of how often issues like this are actually reported and
brought to court make total sense because the court is
just used to absolutely humiliate someone for being who they
are and they're just you know, exactly, and then it's
just like a public humiliation situation where uh, evil wins,
(32:54):
and that's the American justice system. Yeah, well, it's crazy,
Like when you think about people would been like, yeah,
like this feels like what Mike Pence probably would have
done if Trump were had to resign and Pence became
president all of a sudden. This feels in line with
like what his whole public he's like Religious Liberty task
Force because he really wants to, Like I think that
(33:15):
the presidency has been a little up and down, especially
with all the scandals or whatever. It's like it's really
hard to ignore that, like the FBI is like looking
into the president and that like a lot of his
promises haven't happened. So this is a swing, especially gearing
up to mid terms, to go after the fucking Southern
religious base. Oh yeah, I mean it's the Southern strategy
that it's created. It's like you just go always anytime
(33:38):
there's any problem. It's like a big red button you
can just push and be like, oh but Jesus wants
you to have guns and no abortions, Like you just
always go to that. And especially this is the new topic.
It's like a full corpus because yesterday Trump was like,
I'll shut the government down over the wall, so hey,
let's dog whistle to all our xenophopes out there. And
then you have Jeff Sessions being out there being like,
and I got this thing where it'll be legalized hate
(34:01):
if you're Christian, and it's like this is the thing.
It's like also a ship that's like so demonic like that,
like it gets some leeway and then we walk it back.
You know. It's like I feel like there's enough reasonable
people who don't want to just straight up like murder
poor people like that work. That's what's funny, Like we're
(34:22):
I don't know, I don't know what we were talking about.
This woman last week who like writes for the ultra
conservative Daily Caller, and she went to a rally where
Alexandria Casio Cortez was speaking and like describing medicare for
all that, and she comes back, no, she comes back
to Fox and like what was it? Like, She's like, well,
you know, like they're saying stuff like yeah, like free
education for your kid and health care for your kid
(34:43):
and you and like it's all stuff you want to hear.
And it's like I can see how people would want that,
but it's like I don't know, like where do they
Who's going to pay for it? Like panels? Yeah, they
really didn't know how to navigate that. Like, yes, of
course this appeals to people because we live in a
country where the wealth divide is so great that we
have people who literally can't afford to live. Just look
(35:05):
at who owns your news network. How about that? Right,
look at their values? It's right exactly, Like that's how
you know what the network, you know what their line is. Yeah,
like yeah, I was talking ads like that. I'm like,
you might as well just have like baby backgrops of
poor people in front of you while you're talking. Well,
I guess moving on to other stuff with the d
O J obviously in Jeff Sessions, uh, things in his purview,
(35:29):
but just quickly, I know we've been talking a lot
about immigration, but we have we've kind of haven't updated
on the fact that the child separation issue is still
a problem, and there are still families that have yet
to be reunified. Um. And there's also a story from
BuzzFeed a few weeks ago about just sort of the
general awful mistreatment of pregnant women who have been detained
(35:50):
in these immigration detention facilities, and like they're talking about
being denied proper prenatal care or even general care when
they've miscarried in custody, and the stories are just their heartbreaking,
like to the point where I don't even like just
you can look at the links that will put in footnotes,
because it's really really dark. And if you think like
it's abstract and it's just families being separated, no, there
(36:12):
are mothers in there who are routinely just treated awfully
because of their status as non Americans. And it's it's
just really disgusting to see these holier than thou conservatives
who are so about pro life or whatever not give
a flying funk about these women who are in custody
who are actually being you know, some women were being
shackled around the stomach like while they're in custody. That
(36:35):
just seems like basic, basic like human decency, like shackle
of pregnant women. Like it's just the over like militarization
of the police force like kind of bleeding down. It's like,
look like they just don't even know how to do this,
like in a humane way. It's like, if you really
want to make this case, why aren't you doing it
(36:55):
the most humane way possible, Like make a really shining
example of what it do you think? Why are you
doing it in the most stormtrooper esque fashion? Yeah, because
it just wants to be a warning, a warning to
the anyone who else thinking about it's a warning to
people who aren't criminals, who do have family members inside
the United States. They fucking talk to people, like the
word gets out like this ship is like awful. It's
(37:18):
it's and and and I mean obviously like the issue
of like part of the reason that pregnant women would
immigrate here is to have a better life for their
child and and the fact that the government is literally
putting that pregnancy at risk even with how they're being detained. Yeah,
they don't get a fucking chance to like how It's
just it's funny because it's like they're like, well, they're
(37:38):
going to come here and have the baby. The baby
will become American and it's like, I guess anchor baby's
and what's and what's that kid gonna do for the country.
It's like, what the funk are you doing for the country?
How are you making everyone's life better? Making this country worse? Yeah,
you're the fucking drains. They're just making people who are
(38:00):
are scared of progress feel comfortable, like, well, look, we're
treating them like shit, so you can still feel good
about what's going on in your life. But luckily there
are Democrats in the House and Senate who are now
introducing bills to make sure that ICE and CBP are
at the very minimum not shackling women who are in
any phase of pregnancy, and also mandate that DHS goes
(38:20):
to the Obama air policy of where they would just
have a pregnant woman they would just set a court
date and then release them there and then that's fine.
On the also keeping in mind that it's like high
levels of stress during pregnancy can cause a person to miscarry, Like,
so just the sheer act of doing that matter like
assault m er exactly, Like yeah, well, so let's move
(38:43):
on to some other news. There was another UH installment
of the very uplifting. Well, you know, yeah, that's that's
just show. Sometimes we have days where we're only talking
about taco bell and dominoes, and other days it's it's
heavier because definitely making me admit my communists. Yeah, the
BuzzFeed story is is really compelling. And if you if
(39:06):
anything is abstract, anyone you know about this whole immigration debate,
have them read that story and if they still feel like,
oh that this is fine, then maybe watch any other
videos of these children who are like meeting up with
their parents and they're clearly traumatized. Any child psychologists, which um,
and then so yeah, So on Friday, we found out
(39:27):
that the head of CBS, Less Moonvez, was written up
by Ron and Pharaoh into The New Yorker for a
string of sexual assaults and unwanted kissing and groping and
just sort of general revenge type ship of women who
were not favorable to his advances. Uh. And then we
found out CBS yesterday was saying basically that they don't
(39:49):
believe any of the accusations because they're saying, well, we're
going to do our own investigation and then we'll and
then less Moonvez will stay in his job until then
as we figured this out investigate sending the investigative branch,
it just feels like it feels odd. It's like one
of those things where I don't know if it's because
he less Moonvez at CBS is like because he's like
the godhead figure of CBS. He's also too powerful and
(40:13):
he's been guiding the company into like just good profitability.
That it's I guess different than Weinstein, where there was
like his influence was waning. So there's still this protection happening.
I don't know what about. That's it right, that's it's influence,
it's power. Can you readily like topple down and everything?
Because I mean, also maybe this is timing, I'd say,
(40:38):
because this is like pretty far now, not far really,
but like in the news cycle into the me too
like movement. So now you've seen other companies do We're
doing our own investigative research into it. So it's that's
a precedent and then companies think they can get away
with it. Well, this is why I've been um following
(40:58):
stories like this for I mean everyone has, but I
have a column on this exact topic coming out tomorrow,
uh in paste, and it sucks because there has been
so much progress made in the past. I think it's
been almost ten months since the first story broke, but
it is reaching the point now where it's been enough
time that some people who are in like kind of
(41:20):
the first wave of these you know, like your your
Louis c. K S and you're you know, even later,
you're like Mario Batali's, they're already starting to plan how
they're going to come back, because there is you know,
there was so much progress in some ways, but you
could also argue there were some sacrificial lambs of you know,
the Cosby right and the people, and by and large
(41:43):
the people who have actually been punished had to do
a lot. Like you know, Cosby's got like four thousand
people that she's assaulted, and Harvey Weinstein got away with
it for twenty five years, and so you when you
see the less moon vez is out there, they're like, oh,
it's not that bad, right, And so now it's reaching
the point where people are already starting to come back
(42:04):
and figuring out how they're going to come back. Mario
Batali right now is in the middle of making a
company where he plans to install a female CEO so
that people won't argue with him, like it's just like
a virus smart demon. It's really, it's it's extreme. If
I have a plan for all the comics, it's a
comedy festival and it's called the Monsters of Comedy cosby C. K.
(42:28):
Hard Miller. But yeah, I mean, I mean a hardwork
at his job back. That was one. Uh you know,
t J. Miller is back back on shows, He's back
at it. We gotta hear what this guy's gotta say.
It's just do you think there's a responsibility of other
comics to be like I'm not going to perform with
this person or like, you know, there there has been
(42:52):
like pretty massive blowback when when t J. Miller was
put back on shows, people were like not happy about it. Yeah,
especially when you can't of that change in your own
social network. It's like it makes perfect sense for like
l A comics to be like, well, I prefer not
to perform with this person, and you know what, losing
a spot for the night is not going to kill me.
I would rather make you know, I'd rather like myself
(43:12):
than not like myself or have my name on that
list with that other name something you And that's I
think what people are thinking about a lot of hours,
like if everyone in l A comedy abandoned together way sooner,
like millership, wouldn't have been as much of an issue.
But it's like I know to an extent, I was
complicit in it, and I in that I you know,
(43:33):
most of a knew about it, like way before the
story broke. But if like people took this standard like
New York City stand up comedy, there would be no
New York City stand up comedy. Like they don't even
have any morals. But the reason this bothers me is
there was a really well put together a segment about it.
The main segment on last week Tonight this week was
about workplace harassment and passed me past attempts at movements
(43:59):
like this inclosed to Anita Hill, right, yes, yeah, where
John Oliver interviewed Anita Hill is very good. But they
are repeatedly referencing during the Anita Hill because that whole
case was in UH one, there was this huge movement
of pro female empowerment and and it was an analog
to the Me Too movement that failed ultimately because after
(44:19):
a while, there are a few sacrificial lambs that were
taken down and then you know, the world moves on
and these guys sneak back into their jobs. And so
it's like if people are not very aware that this
is happening, which they're not right now because actual government change, right,
because it's because if it's only been you know, however
(44:40):
many months, none of these people are learning anything, Like
it's just they're just going away and coming back. Yeah,
and you've even got the people who have like the
clever pr of like you know, I think the one
man I've heard of actually like apologizing was the Dan
Harmon thing where he actually apologized and it was like, oh,
this is a at least the illusion of products committed
(45:01):
it in a way that was more self aware than like, hey,
I'm sorry if whatever I did hurt somebody like that
seems like how a lot of other ones are written.
And he benefits from that because three months after that,
like small thing, he gets you know, a thousand million
episodes of Rick and Morty, and it's it's confusing to
me that people don't see that taking actions like that however,
(45:23):
like yeah, I mean right, but it's like that isn't
net positive for culture. So it's like if you can't
admit to your own mistakes, then I don't know it.
It's I'm frustrated and concerned that the productivity of the
whole movement. Yeah, it'll be interesting what happens with CBS,
Like if talent on the network speaks up like, I
(45:46):
don't know if I can be on a network that
basically it's from the top find is this collective bargaining
thing really does help. It's like an entire cast say,
I mean very bad example, but Guardians and Galaxy, all
the cast was like we want that to actor you
fired and we think that's bullshit. And that makes a
bigger thing, right because then it's like an entertainment story.
(46:07):
So if people who work on that network like say something,
that would absolutely affect change. And then Moon was the
last thing I wanted to say about that. It's just
like most of it is that men need to evaluate
their ingrained behaviors and and sort of sort their ship out.
And that's the big takeaway, and it has to start
young and in the whole bit. But because Moon was
(46:27):
at the beginning of the me too movement, was you know,
like breaking in praise and he was just like, yeah,
we gotta get these guys out of there and either
was you know, like I would, I would buy that
he was deeply in denial that he had any ingrained
behaviors and had done any of this himself. Uh So
you know, if if you're you know, man over the
age of one, I would recommend just you know, turning inward,
(46:52):
you've probably done something funked up and weird. And and
if you're confronted with that information, cop to it, and
in general you will be like, even if you're a
selfish piece of ship, you'll be looked on more favorably
from that. And say, I recognize that, and I'm that's wrong.
I can move forward. I'm trying to evolve past that.
It's when people begin to defend themselves even if, like
(47:13):
you know, just these half hast apologies they ring hollow
and that doesn't help anyone. Yeah, like when Louis Kay
said the word dick and his apology Jesus, all right,
let's take a quick break and we'll be right back
to talk about more dick and we are back, so
(47:39):
vamp what happened with old Mila kunis Jamie, Because last
week we're talking about how she basically said did something
so fucked up to McCauley Culkin that she's like, what
I did was fucked up, and how I did it
was fucked up, and I can't believe what happened all
right by here with Mila News, Mila, Mila hit the
(48:01):
WTF this past week. She's hitting all the good network
getting thereat shake. So Marin and coonas they're good as
you would say, uh no, but he like doubled down
on that question, was like, what I think reference the
first interview was like, you were telling Dex Shepherd that
(48:21):
you did some funked up stuff and and like asked
if she and mcaulay culking on good terms, and she said, no,
we're probably not as friendly as we could be. There's
too many aspects of it that prevented us from every
moving forward. Blah blah blah and so. But then I've
since read some some excellent timelines put together by some
great content creator slash scammers who are sort of saying, Okay,
(48:43):
this is what we think could have happened. Basically, it's possible.
I wouldn't rule out that Ashon and Mila have possibly
been dating on and off since that seventy show and
it affected Ashton intom his marriage and it also seriously
affected McCauley and so, which I mean, that's kind of
the most boy they were. Now they're happy together, yeah,
(49:06):
I know, which is actually kind of frustrating. They they're
just hanging out the same old day week. Yeah. But
(49:27):
but you know Macaulay Culkins dating Brenda's song so that
she was on The Sweet Life was acting Cody, So
I was really excited. I think The Sweet Life was
only yesterday. That was a while ago, wasn't That was
(49:47):
like Dylan and Cold Sprouse. Dylan and called her my age,
but they are. They were the little kids from Big Daddy, right, Yeah,
see that's how that's how I know them. And I
was like, oh yeah, they played the twins on Senior
Citizens from Big Daddy, So the play two kids play
because you've gotta have twins to be able to work
those twilve our days. Miners can't work those same hours
were not so exciting. Just figured it out. Why didn't
(50:12):
they get into like the you know, the old Sun
twin type ship, you know, making like mystery novels and
little they're not on their hustle like those because they're
very funny they're like, they're really good on social media.
All right, let's get into one more story, because we
talked about how Bigfoot's penis is literally a thing that's
(50:33):
being discussed in a congressional race right now. Never see
bigfoots Duke. It's almost like that, do you ever see it?
You you ever wondered what it's like? I don't care.
It's a joke. Well, I guess king shaming. What's interesting
is that in Virginia's fifth district there is a man
running named Denver Riggleman the Third, but he only runs
(50:58):
a Denver Riggleman. Uh. But he's a yeah. And even
though that you know, there's reported associations with like neo
Confederate white nationalist leaders, that isn't the thing that's getting
the most attention. That's a past yeah, because we're like,
we're past what's this? What's the second layer of this?
So we find out that his opponent, the Democrat Leslie Cockburn,
(51:22):
she posted some really chill screen grabs from his now
private i G account, and they're literally like photos like this,
it's a sketched ripped big Foot with a long censor
bar over such a long sensor bar this guy apparently
has a very interesting background. So they are like a
couple of photos where he was saying like, oh, they're
(51:43):
goofs that my friends sent me. Uh. He's written books before.
There was a book called big Foot Exterminators, Inc. The
partially cautionary, mostly true Tale of Monster Hunt two thousand six,
solid title, very easy. Uh. And then now these these
other images of the as we call it, the bigfoot
(52:03):
erotica apparently are like promotional images that he was floating around.
He's calling it cover art for his new book, which
is called The Mating Habits of Bigfoot and Why Women
Want Him So take that in first. I mean some
king shaming is funny. This is I mean, I guess
if you want to be with a like adult babies,
(52:25):
it's funny adult babies at babies. Yeah, the adult person says,
I'm a little baby. How do you expect me not
to laugh? I clap an eye, cheer. You can laugh,
but I'm but if that's how you got to get
your jolly, you know? Do do you? I jingle the
keys in front of them, I play I love the
whole king community is fun and wild love it. Oh yeah,
(52:47):
I guess we have a little time to talk a
little bit about the Tea report with Toeford Grace. Uh
so he dated Ivanka Trump. He did. He's kind of
spinning it to make people see us new move um
out of here. I know he was. He's a little
dodgy about it, but just sucks. Maybe. Oh no, I
(53:08):
was okay, I was saying this earlier. I think if
we're ranking, obviously Danny Mainson is dead, but I think
to for Grace is the second worst one, and he's
like the coolest one is Red because he was in
RoboCop here. Yeah, we do include Red and canonically, but
(53:28):
I would go Danny Masterson obviously trash badu told for
Grace just like not someone I want to look at.
Didn't love when a date with Tad's whatever that Hamilton
Hampton loves that movie. I watched a couple of Grace mobies.
I thought he was my guy, and then he turned
out to be the shitty guy Wilmer. It might be
my He's a middling guy and there's nothing bad about him.
(53:53):
Not interested in Wilmer. Yeah, he's just a guy. He was.
Wasn't he your mama? Wasn't that his show? Oh? Yeah,
he'd do that was his show. Um. Anyways, Tofu Grays
briefly did date Ivanka Trump uh in two thousand five
Avanco Trump Uh. Then at a twenty four year old
New York socialite this is from the cut, dumped her
long term boyfriend wait for it, Bingo Google man and yeah,
(54:19):
who hasn't raw doctor guy named We've all been there.
Bingo was his name. Oh and then she rebounded briefly
with with Tover Grays and he was spotted at her
twenty five birthday party, um, which was also attended by
Ryan Cabrera, Chelsea and Maroon five Adam Levine. Okay, so
(54:45):
what he has to say about it is he never
met Donald Trump. He didn't do it for political reasons.
Please go see Black Clansman. Like that was basically Black Klansman.
He plays a white clansman. Yeah, to make I want
to watch that. I love people to use tangential Trump
stories to try and promote something that he had to
(55:07):
really just specify. It's like I just wanted to daughter
to make it clear. And the thing though he does
say that they dated, well, yeah, he said that. He
said that they went in a couple of dates. It
seems like she was coming off a Bengo. Yeah, he
hooked up with there a couple of times. Quincy Jones
the opportunistic thing that mentioned though, and then you really
(55:29):
specified by the way, I wasn't sucking her because her
father's a racist. I don't do that, and I didn't
meet him because I'm political because I don't want to
put off any right way people who might see this
movie too. Story you should just be like, hey, I
know I met Ivanka wants to see this movie. And
some celebrities they did meet. Guarante, yes, they did meet.
(55:51):
When Ivanka was traveling with Paris Hilton at the premier
bash for her hit single one of my favs stars
are blocking. That's one. Yes, so there is that, and
that's the Tea Report Baby, and then Hack O'Brien, well
throw the shades right back on. Yes, how come Paris
hasn't come out with another banger? I the only one
(56:14):
was a great one. Gosh, I mean, she's probably in
the lab right now. If she's in the lab with
Well Hampton. It has been a pleasure tell people where
they can find you. Support you, Venmo, you whatever you
want to do these Uh yeah, guys, I run a
podcast myself. It's a comedy mental health podcast. It's called
(56:37):
Suicide Buddies. It's with me and Dave Ross. He's a
comic you had on yesterday Yesterday, Yeah, And it's funny
and it's basically we talk about depression, mental health, and
we often discussed like a suicide in history that we
kind of want to analyze and talk about, like what
the funk happened? Amazing? So what's your interest in mental health?
How do you guys get start on that? Um? I've
(56:57):
had like suicidal depression for a while part of life.
Like I've also like talked about it in my stand
up and been able to like be funny, you know,
and talk just be open about it, and like that's
often times what people most you know, wrote to me
or wanted to talk to me about thing. So I
kind of knew that, like maybe there was something there. Amazing.
Yeah all right, well yeah check that suicide buddy. What
(57:20):
about on the interwebs? You got you on social meds? Yeah,
check me out on Twitter. That would be the easiest.
At Hampton Hunt, it's mostly self promotion right now, guys,
I'm trying to get funny again. There you go. It's
going to be boring for a little bit, but I
post a lot of good arts. There you go. Is
there are there any tweets that you've read recently that
you're liking in particular that you want to shout out? Yeah,
(57:40):
this one I selected earlier and it actually ties into
the collusion thing. Is Elliott Kalin. He's the head writer
at a Mry Science Theater three thousand, uh and he
wrote a collusion doesn't have to be listed as a crime.
Treason is a crime, the same way hurling someone into
the sun isn't listed as a crime because murder is
(58:00):
a crime. What about you? Hackey, oh oh, hackey, sack
over here, got got a little I'm gonna I'm gonna
choose a tweet that involves me because apparently I'm obsessed
with myself according okay, so uh so I did a
few like gang. People were asking me about this because
(58:23):
sometimes it's like gang doesn't quite They're like, what is
the youth? So what is the what is youth? Me?
Don't understand? Your girls here to help. So I'm choosing
a tweet by Tabasco Sweet my friend and associate I
last week we were talking about my terrifying Ariana Grande
Ariana anti cosplay. So that video and up today. Uh yeah,
(58:45):
So shout out to sworn enemy at Jamie Loftus help
for roasting me during my special moment. There's a twenty
minute video of me insulting Tabasco Sweet that came out today. Uh.
And so that's the tweet I will sign. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
amazing you if i'd me at miles of Gray on
Twitter and Instagram. Let's see what a tweet I like,
oh is from Travis Hellwig. Let me Travis Hellwig. He
(59:08):
wrote it. He said, if you're under thirty and you
quote love to travel, congrats you grew up rich And
then it set off a whole thing underneath and be like,
what if I just worked my whole life. It's like
a gay easy buddy, and I kind of take away
that your heart work to commentary on our society. You
can also find the Daily ZiT guys pretty much everywhere
on Twitter at Daily Zeitgeist, on Instagram at the Daily
(59:30):
Zeitgeist from on Facebook got a fan page so it
can be hacked by Russians. What else where? We got
a website? Uh, Daily zeitgeist dot com where you can
find links to our shows and there we go there
everybody gets trying to do in that one. Uh, and
also a link to the song that we ride out too.
And today I think, you know obviously a little a
bit of a heavy episode. So I want to play
(59:51):
a very bright song that almost gets so happy. If
you don't start smiling when you listen to this, get
your smile muscles check. I don't know how to finish that,
but this is a song by Celeste called a more Address. Uh,
and yeah, it just gotta again. It just feels like
I'm on a beach smiling, the sun is baking me
and I'm drinking something refreshing. So take that because only Tuesday,
(01:00:14):
and we live in a healthscape. We live in active health.
This suicide buddies. All right, guys, we'll see you. So
you want that depression by else, you know, gettle them
(01:00:49):
box people vince that dozy. But I no Siskin s
no Bill Star wanted what through I wain't now go
(01:01:10):
I can kill foolish it someone at a super prison.
You don't put your name out love because something should
have a three sisen who taking me? Now? Stead I've
been dree saying, I put you yeah heavy's black yea.
But for you, my being up keep being up, keep
(01:01:34):
being up, keep being up seeing, but keeping what I've seen.
(01:01:59):
The look on dancy. Don't get fuzzy, but just this
your mola. You know what do you die? Let them
die and you go in see you get out to
your mind? Is that louzy brodo siskin? Sist shut wonder?
(01:02:22):
What do I more? Ain't man die? I kick your
food ship? Someone that fn't put your name myself? You
got something? Sure? I need this. Gonna ta kiss me,
he said. I've been saying, saying, I put you a
heavy tack. One more for you, my feeler, keep keep
(01:02:49):
feel keep saying my favor find strement of that act
with the sample, give you the bay man, I find
(01:03:10):
samentun tree simple given