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November 24, 2021 69 mins

In episode 1037, Jack and Miles are joined by comedian and co-host of 420 Day Fiance and Private Parts Unknown Sofia Alexandra to discuss The Waukesha Christmas Parade Tragedy Has Been Fully Weaponized By The Right, Dallas QAnon Group Is Now Becoming Dangerous, Discrimination But Like We’re OK With It’ Leaves the Ahmaud Arbery Trial With One Black Juror, Alright alright alright - McConaughey Leads Hypothetical Governors Race, Streaming Check In - Will Seinfeld Become a Thing? and more!

  1. The Waukesha Christmas Parade Tragedy Has Been Fully Weaponized By The Right
  2. Neo-Nazis Are Using the Waukesha Attack for Propaganda
  3. Dallas QAnon Group Is Now Becoming Dangerous
  4. Discrimination But Like We’re OK With It’ Leaves the Ahmaud Arbery Trial With One Black Juror
  5. Alright alright alright - McConaughey Leads Hypothetical Governors Race
  6. Streaming Check In - Will Seinfeld Become a Thing?
  7. 5 challenges 'Seinfeld' faces in connecting with viewers on Netflix


Listen: 420 Day Fiance

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to Season to twelve, Episode
three of jurta at Least like guys, a production of
I Heart Radio. This is the season finale. We're gonna
take a couple of days off for old Thanksgiving. But
you should know up top that this is a podcast
where we take a deep dive into America's share consciousness.

(00:20):
And it's Wednesday, November one, twenty four days of mustache
growth on miles and my faces. Mine still looks like
an eighth grade or trying to buy cigarettes, but mine
is interfering with my life in many ways. Uh uh.
You know, children are being held closer to their parents,

(00:43):
which is good. It's like, you know, when I when
I enter a cafeteria, people woteed, like, oh Jesus, my
wife doesn't really make eye contact with me. And the
first twenty minutes of every Zoom meeting that I'm on
is about my mustache. But otherwise it's been fun. You know,
today is right, what is it National Taiwan On Day. Hey,

(01:08):
that's actually the first time that we've had one that
I'm like, yeah, now that's what that's what that should
be because it's the day everybody's going home for Thanksgiving
and getting drunk with their high school friends. But you
know what it is. You know what you're tying on.
You're tying on in apron, that's what it's ready to
start making your stuff. You're putting on and apron? Is
that real? Is that what they're that's because basically okay,

(01:33):
pre cooked day, so the the International Day Selection Committee
can't even get one right. They can't even get it.
There's also it's also a National Stardanes Day. I don't
know why, of course of course it is. Well, my
name is Jack O'Brien a k oh, here he comes,
Watch out, Jack, He'll chew your butt. Whoa here jaws comes.

(01:57):
He's a man eater. That's courtesy. And Christie have puci
mane And I'm thrilled to be joined as always by
my co host, Mr Miles Gray. Miles Gray, and I
shouldn't have told people I hated weird measurement derivations of
my name, but it's Miles Gray. A k A one
point six kilometers, Gray one thousand, six hundred nine, Grade
six three thousand, three hundred sixty inches, Gray five thousand,

(02:20):
two hundred eight pet Gray one thousand, seven hundred sixty yards,
Great three hundred, twenty Rod's Gray, eighty chains Gray, eight
for Long Gray and one third of the League Gray. Okay,
eighty chains. Yeah, that's your chain is twenty two yards
to Johnny Davis. That's all from Johnny Davis. And also

(02:41):
for all my mother fucking space fanatics out there. Point
zero zero zero zero zero zero zero zero zero zero
zero zero zero zero zero five to one five par
Sex Gray, Damn there it is. Well, fuck two chains.
We got eighty chains on the on the podcast. Thank
you doing terrible things to my neck? Yeah, I was that. Oh,

(03:06):
I just I'm always worried about I'm always worried about
your back health. I'm always like going on this time?
What's going on? Man? Well, Miles, We're thrilled to be
joined in our third seat by the very talented writer
and stand up comedian who stand up album Father's Day
was number one on iTunes. She co hosts the Great

(03:27):
Comedy Travel, Sex and Loved podcast Private Parts Unknown, and
her advice on sex and travel has been featured in
Men's Health, The Strategist, Betches dot com Anywhere men need
help Fingering. She also co hosts The Great ninety Day
Fiance podcast for twenty Day Fiance was some guy named Miles.
He's welcome the hilarious, the talented Sophia Alexandra. Yeah, I

(03:57):
am here on my seck in favorite podcast a. Yeah,
you look at you. You know, you know, No, keep
that low, keep that low. How's it going? How's it
going over on four twenty day? God, it's going so good.

(04:19):
I want to tell him. You want to tell him? Bro,
we got merged. Now we got merch. It's sick. It's
hand drawn by me and Miles and then screen printed
by fucking Gil Colabo sight gang. You know Caitlin, Yeah,

(04:40):
she's got Look go to four fance dot com and
you can go get we got shirts and stuff. Support
the show, baby, keep the lights on for you. Heavy
Titty Ghost, Yeah, doesn't pique your interest. Heavy Titty Ghost
can help you. You know, this isn't if it does.

(05:02):
Check your shirt out because it deliver name. Yeah, you know.
But other than that, how what's what's new? We're oh, yes,
you tell him you just got back. You were just
traveling on fucking all over the world. I did just
travel and a lot of my answers to the questions
how to do with my travel. All right, well, I

(05:23):
can't wait to get to those. We're going to tell
the people a few of the things we're talking about,
and then we're going to get to know you a
little bit better with those answers. We're gonna talk about
the waha a b come here. You want to say hi,
but my my three year old is in the house.
You just got a fresh new haircut. Oh nice cut, nice,

(05:45):
nice nice. This is the set. This bow second appearance
on the daily Sitegeist. I think the first one was trending.
So yeah, shout out, okay, baby, what's up? The smoke

(06:05):
detectors on? It's beeping? All right? Also, I'll change the
batteries later, thanks buddy. So we've gone from a second
rate tickto a second rate podcast to a weird, shady
TikTok video that has a fire a detector beeping every
couple of seconds in the background. We're talking about how
international banking is flawed. That's right, that's right. Oh my god.

(06:28):
I'm on so many meetings where people have had the
smoke detector alarm going off for like weeks, just the same,
and I've given them, you know, tips on how to
change it. Because we have all our batteries dying at
the same time and was going off. Because it was
the middle of the night and I was sleeping, I
thought it was the alarm and called the alarm company

(06:50):
and I was like, I can't turn it off, and
they're like, man, it's not going off. But I'm like,
I'm in the house. It's going off the house. We're like,
we don't know what's not going off at least for
five minutes to interesting that Okay, this might be on me. Oh,

(07:18):
I should apologize that alarm company. Nah, We're gonna talk
about the tragedy at the Waukasha Christmas Parade. We're talking
about fentinal fearmongering continuing, but we're talking about the Dallas
Q and On group, which is now just it's taking
over people's lives. It's kind of, I don't know, interesting,

(07:41):
getting just trying to say we're the rhetorics definitely starting
to change a little bit here. We're talking about Matthew
McConaughey's hypothetical governor's race. He is in the lead, so
that's pretty well. And we're also gonna check in with
streaming numbers. You know. Seinfeld made its debut on Netflix,
and it's not really lightening up the charts. So I

(08:04):
just wanna ask, you know, what, what do we think
is going on there? And also get some miles of
Gray Simefeld impressions, because you know, it's a holiday and
I'm treating myself all that plenty more. But first, I
legitimately did cheehorn that story before we get to any
of that ship though, Uh, let me go a cruise

(08:26):
the high school, real quick, Sophia, what is something from
your search history? Okay? So I went to Portugal and
I was which was the first time I knew that
that is how you pronounce it, and Lisbon right, yeah,
And apparently Lisbon right you in front of our hotel

(08:50):
was of Luish Decamo, and I'm sorry if I butchered it.
I'm doing my fucking best. But he is Portugal Shakespeare.
And I never heard his name, because of course why
would I. In America, you learn about like four authors
and like, I don't know, maybe one book per so

(09:12):
I have never heard of him. And they said that
his influence on the language was so profound that they
call it the language of Como. Is that a flex? Imagine? Flex? Yeah? Imagine?
How about you is that. I feel like that's similar

(09:33):
to Shakespeare, right, didn't he invent like a bunch of words. Yeah,
but I'm just saying maybe we should be saying Shakespeare
is like commotion. The Yeah, the English language is commotion. Okay,
well this commotion for what all? I'm gonna CBS. So

(09:56):
I want I want to uh Liz Boa Lish Boa
a number of years ago, and I really loved it
was very beautiful. The language sounded silly to me, and
I feel I don't know if that's problematic to say,
but it just sounded like there's like a bounty, like
bounty nous to it, and also like some silly syllables
that always come back, So you know what's hilarious to

(10:18):
me about that? And very insulting that it sounds exactly
like Russian but without being at all similar. So you
constantly feel like you're being gas lit and you're like,
are you speaking Russian? And all the inflections are the
same and the sounds repeat, but it's not, And then

(10:41):
I you're hearing Russian through a wall or something. Yes,
it was like it's like hearing Russian, but I suddenly
no longer understand it. Sure, such a fuck. And so
I was talking to a Portuguese person about it and
they said, I said, do you guys feel like that
when you hear Russian? And he was like, yes, I always.
I think I should understand too, but I don't have

(11:04):
no idea what any of y'all are talking about. So
basically just insulted to cultures. Jack always, yeah, it's just
the sound of it is to my dumb American years,
sounded fun Hey, this is funny. Huh, just funny. Hey,
y'all talk funny? Hey man, you said, he said, peshka

(11:27):
door luish. What come on? That's not how you say?
All right, you wanna put some stink on it? Let
me get my shandwich without much? What is something you
think is overrated? Okay? So I ate so much fucking

(11:52):
seafood when I was in that I am literally, I'm
literally miles after he came back from Italy, and I
have to tell you that lobster is fucking overrated. And
I've always thought this, but it was confirmed when I
had so many different kinds of seafood in a week.

(12:14):
What are we looking at? We're looking at even? I mean,
I would take a biggest prawn over that I would
take a crab over that, Like, how are we not
putting crab over lobster? That's ridiculous? Interesting, Like just a
good solid like crab, like claw meat. Dude, I'll eat

(12:36):
a soft shell deep fried one that they have a
Japanese restaurant. I will eat any kind snow snow crab.
You pull out the meat, whatever, a crab, whatever, give
it for you. It's more of a personal thing. You
just hate crabs and want to eat them. Yeah, it's
a vendetta. It's a delicious vendetta. Or not sucking hermit

(13:01):
crabs fucking suck that thing out of the shell. What
was the most like remarkable thing that you had when
you're out there, like a thing that you're like, oh, ship,
what the what have I been? Why have I not
been doing this? Okay, I've never had the fish turbit.
Do you pronounce the tea? Is it turbot? It's turbot turbit.
But yeah, I've been pronouncing it wrong my entire list.

(13:23):
Just that I'm glad we're learning together because I felt
dumb and now I feel that we're all in it
in turbit together. I've been saying robot all wrong. Yeah,
it's actually the best silent. It's just rude, rude, but yeah,
it's it's like a really flat bottom feeder fish and

(13:46):
it has like almost no bones, so it's like, I mean,
there's no bones and it's all like fatty and delicious.
And when they grilled it, I was like, what the fuck?
It was awesome. Okay, that sounds really good. And you know, lobster.
We're never just halfway on lobster. We're either it's either
sea bugs that we feed the prisoners or it's the

(14:09):
famous yeah, the richest. The thing is, it's mostly just
like grilled and frequently overgrilled, and then it's like your
only options to dip it in butter and like that's
fucking it. Yeah, why why are we not doing more?
And it's sometimes they'll throw it in mac and cheese
to just like make it like they did something. When
people do that, I'm like, Okay, we get it. You
got you got lobsters in your mashed potato. Not it's

(14:31):
fun but not necessary, but you know you try. Is
like whenever, like I'll go to Ralph's and sometimes will
be like the like the langustine tails are like super cheap.
They're like yeah, man, these ships are like four bucks,
like nobody's buying them. I get him, butter poach them.
Then you have something that is like you know, if
you do it right, it's not overcooked and it's been
poached in butter, and you don't really need to dip

(14:53):
that ship anymore, and it's delicious, more succulent for sure
then grilling and then dipping. Jerry, Jerry, I just checked
done your duck and it's even a more succulent than
even I could have hoped. Poppy. Please. The butter poaching,
I'm assuming means you just cook it like melted butter
in like a fan and then they can basically submerge

(15:15):
it in full onlooking very low. And then you gotta
keep the heat low because you don't want it to start.
You know, you don't want to start cooking the butter.
Just keep it. You ruin the whole thing if you
overheat it. That's the thing. You got to be patient. Nation.
What is something you think is underrated? Okay, so I
bought a book when I was out of town and

(15:37):
I read it in one second, and though I brought
like eight books, but so this book is so fucking
underrated because I want everyone to read it and talk
to me about it. It's called Fashion Victims The Dangers
of Dress Past and Present by Alison Matthews. David Alison,
I'm gonna hollerate you on Twitter. This book is as

(15:59):
good as hell. It is illustrated and about all the
different like poisonous ways that we have made clothing and
the way that it used to kill people. So in
an interesting way, it is both about history and labor
politics and like um capitalism and fashion and crazy macab

(16:22):
deaths like Ballerina's being set on fire by their outfits,
no one giving a flying fuck. Girls that made like
green fake flowers getting poisoned by the green people making hats,
getting crazy from the hats. You know. Yeah, but like forever,

(16:42):
people are like publishing articles and being like yo, these
people are dying, and they're like, nah, it's cool. These
hats are cool. Though. Then there was a fashion where
they killed whole last birds and put them on hats,
a whole last dermied bird. They literally killed so many
that a bunch of those songbirds went extinct. We just

(17:06):
wanted them on to fucking have how insane I love itself?
And because what the was the mad hatters because they
were using mercury. Right, I loved to throw some mercury
on some ship. This wasn't even that. It's like tanning solution.
Oh that that's not like the mad Is that because
Matt is a Hatterard was like, that's like from the

(17:27):
UK right of Like, no, this is all the same thing.
But I think the story wasn't about got it, got it.
The solutions changed, but stayed poison is peak mercury use.
Oh and then shoot shot polish like people would polish
their shoes, go out dancing all night, come home and
die because the shoe polish seeped through their shoes when

(17:49):
they were sweaty and poisoned them. Yeah, it sounds like,
you know, so good. And they have pictures of all
the stuff that kills, that has killed you, and they're
still testing all of these hats and they're like, yep,
that's still tests positive for mercury. Like it's been so
many fucking years and the hat will test so positive

(18:12):
for mercury. It's enough to kill like a ton of people.
And they're like, yeah, you used to just wear it.
And are the illustrations scattered throughout the book like when
a subject comes up, there's a picture there or is
it the like standard adult book thing where there's just
like a center fold of a bunch of pictures. No,
they're all throughout and it's so perfect and all the

(18:36):
references for all of them are in there. It's like
meticulously researched. So when they're like this is the kind
of green hat that killed people, there will be a
picture of the green hat, and they'll also do a
thing where like this is an advertisement from that time
that that is like a cartoon that shows that kind
of green hat or people dying from the green hat.
It's it's pretty fire. The ads like those people are liars,

(18:59):
are green hats didn't kill no kids. That is how
ads were like slandering people who are a lot of
the by green hats, and a lot of them blamed
the people wearing the clothes. They're like, you're a dumb bitch,
and that's why you died from setting yourself on fire.
So you know it was Yeah, you didn't know your

(19:21):
ship was a soaked and kerosene to make it that
nice texture that's on you. Yeah, exactly, But you're right, Miles,
like the mercury thing is a big part of it.
I just want to say that there's so many more terrible.
It wasn't just the mercury though, And then Max would
be like come to bed, and I'm like, no, hold on,
I have to read about these poisons real quick. I
got to get back to take that hat off. It's

(19:45):
just a baseball hats. Well, it's pretty creepy because apparently
a lot of the green dye is still toxic. Yeah,
and there's a lot of stuff that you when you're
reading the authors like and actually, this is still real dangerous.
And we don't know where most of the cheap clothes
that you buy come from or who made them or

(20:06):
died them, so actually you could be wearing something that
poisons you. Have a great day. Oh. I just want
to tag on an underrated of illustrations and adult books,
like not just a bunch of pictures in the middle,
but like, give me some illustrations. Throughout the publishing industry,
you know, they need to, like they find a happy

(20:26):
medium between adult books and children's books. I think that's
why I read a lot of historical books because like
cartographic image images and like certain portraits are in there
because you're like you gotta understand, like what you're looking
at her, like how close this city is to this city?
And I'm and I think, pardon me, is like yes, maps.
And also I feel like, don't you feel like it's

(20:48):
a treat when you get to it? And I don't
want the treats to just be all in a big
gass pile randomly. I wanted to be distributed some getting
little treat all the time. Yeah. Otherwise, And also sometimes
it ruins it for you if they put all of
the pictures earlier. Sometimes you'll see a picture and I'll
be like, oh, it's her dead husband. You're like, he

(21:08):
fucking died. I didn't even get to that part yet,
you know what I'm saying. Yeah, that's very true. Also,
just on the mercury thing, they liked mercury so much
that the way that we they liked it so much
that they used to stick it up their ass when
they had incontinent or rather constipation. And that's how we've

(21:29):
been able to reconstruct Lewis and Clark's journey is because
one of them was constipated and sticking mercury up their ass.
So you just like go along and find the latrines.
That have mercury in them, and that's where they stopped.
I'll do you want better? You shove it in your
dick hole yourself from syphilis. Yes, And that is what

(21:51):
they were doing. And that is apparently one of the
like myths or like theories for how they discovered that
mercury helps the tanning process. That like a was pissing
in the tanks because you're in like does does stuff,
and because he was treated for work for syphilis, that
his process like worked a lot better than other people's,

(22:13):
so they deduced it. That's like one theory. They're like,
damn yeh, John's dirty dick is making good as man
if you try. Regie's so soft. What's your secret? Man,
I got syphilis slowly going insane? Okay, thanks, And it's

(22:36):
it's probably just because like it looked cool, right, it
looks like liquids, Like it looks like the from like
ten there two. So like they were just like, well,
that ship must like be good for something. Let's keep
it around and try it and rub it on everything. Man,
all right, let's take a quick break and we'll come
back and talk about the news. And we're back. And

(23:07):
so there was a tragedy you've probably heard about at
the Walkershaw Christmas Parade where somebody drove into a crowd
of people. Five people died. The thirty nine year old
man who was driving the car has been arrested, and
this has been turned into racism fodder. Yeah, and I

(23:30):
think just general progressive pushed back on anything like the
the right and you know, Nazis whoever you're looking at,
has found a way in to turn this tragedy into
you know, whatever they're looking for it to be. And
you know, I think the thing that a lot of
conservatives are holding onto is the fact that you know,
this guy had This guy, Darryl Brooks, had an extensive record,

(23:51):
and he was recently arrested for allegedly running over somebody
during a domestic dispute, and then he was released on
a thousand dollar bail two days before the parade incident.
And that whole thing of like this guy got out
two days before on a thousand dollars bail for like
a violent thing. Already they're saying, now this has to

(24:11):
be a whole issue that we need to now be
looking at bail reform, and how bail reform is terrible
and how there's no need to ever make bail more
humane or not just a thing that you know, makes
it so rich people can get out of the jail easy,
and if you don't have money, then it could completely
destroy your life. And you know, I think the d
A in Milwaukee, you know, his like sort of progressive

(24:33):
policies have basically come under attack as as a result
of this, or just looking at anything that has been
slightly forward looking as being like, we need to look
into this d A man because he's tied. Someone said
he was tied to George Soros like one post kind
of ship. Yeah, of course it has to be. You know,
let's also raise the specter of anti semitism as well,
to tie this all in and saying that, like we

(24:55):
also look into like all of their progressive connections, like
what's going on? Like do we need to completely you
think all of this? The d A himself said that
the bail amount was inappropriately low, Like he was like,
I don't even know that there truly needs to be
an investigation into why this person who was committing a
violent crime had had such a low bail amount Like
that I definitely see. But the thing is this guy Edwards.

(25:18):
He wasn't released as part of like a program that
you know, this DA had put in place, which was
to find alternatives to cash bail for non violent offenders.
This guy wasn't part of it. So this was some
kind of oversight legitimately occurred because yeah, I don't I
can't see how you are committing a violent crime. And
then it's like, you know, if you're trying to get
out very quickly, sure like there maybe you want some

(25:39):
safeguards to protect the general public, like in this case
it would have been something absolutely necessary. But then on
the other side, you also have racists who are now
using this to say this was a response to the
cole Rittenhouse verdict and this was anti white domestic terrorism.
And you have a lot of like accelerationists, like on
telegram and stuff starting to put like you know, swastikas remembers,

(26:01):
like with the stuff that's saying like remember Waukesha and
like all this other ship to really try and like
stoke those flames to you know, create more racial violence.
Those are the first people to be like, whoa, you
just politicized the oscars right right when someone like says
the mildest thing that's their opinion at an award show,

(26:25):
like whoa politics doesn't belong here, and then this kind
of thing happens and then you immediately like exploited for
your own fucking gain. He had just committed a violent
act two days ago with with a car. He was
on November five, and he wasn't He was arrested and
released like that. That happens a little bit closer to

(26:46):
the way, so well before any written house verdict and
any of the bullshit that they're claiming. I mean, the
police are saying that he had just left the scene
of a domestic disturbance and was not acting fleeing on
any terrorist influence or organization, but was in some sort
of disturbed pays. Yeah, and yeah the cops even like, no,

(27:08):
this we're not saying this was an accident like you know,
like some elderly person lost control, Like no, like this
guy was trying to go. He didn't give a funky
plow emote these people down. But to then say that
this was connected to the other, like that's there, Like
as we see it, it was this person fleeing and
just did whatever the fun they're we gonna do. But yeah,
all that to say, is this is now just created

(27:30):
another you know inflection point for both you know, people
on Capitol Hill or in political commentary spheres and just
finally extremists to try and create some more hatred and
you know, fucking anger when we can really use less. Yeah.
And I also think people are a little bit like

(27:52):
the holidays are coming, and I think instead of everyone
just being like frustrated with the way that the government
has handled ships so that most people are like poorer
than ever heading into the holiday season or feeling the
pressure of that, instead it's giving them like this weird
little straw man to like focus on, and it's like, oh, like,

(28:14):
why don't we talk about how angry you are about
this instead of about the really like big issues. And
I also think like it's I try to google frequently
whenever someone says something causes something that is very frequently
the timing is alive if you're being sold that it's

(28:34):
like those famous you know, all those interviews where they
would ask like, uh, people who would say that Obama
was responsible for nine eleven do you think he was?
When was he president? People knew he was going to
be That's why they did it. Yeah, just like that
you know, when people are like, oh, actually, you know,

(28:57):
he was not even and yeah, that's why I think
to these people aren't even focused on like the tragedy
of these five people that died menu were in this
group called the Dancing Granny's. It's more just like it's
not to give a funk about that. Go straight to
the part where I can use this to keep bail,
like keep the cash bail system and make that like
drawn completely dial the time back on any progress that's

(29:19):
made on that, or if you're a neo Nazi accelerationist,
you're saying, I don't care about the people that died.
I'm going to use this to try and create more
like you know, racial animus, to hopefully direct that towards
my worldview and get some people, do you know, jump
on into the fray. So yeah, it's just a you know,
just stuff, really funked up incident. But this is I

(29:41):
think this is this is truly now like as we're
talking about like backsliding democracies, like there's there's always gonna
be and something that's going to happen that will always
be the all people always find a way to like
truly use it to justify whatever fascist ideas they have,
or to just help progress completely. Yeah. Do you remember
when that guy drove into the farmer's market in Santa Monica. Yeah,

(30:04):
that old guy, right, Yeah, that wasn't necessarily was that
that person trying to do it intentionally? I thought it
was like he had lost control, like in a panic,
just kept like driving. That's what I think it was.
I think it was an old person panicking after it
started happening and making it worse is Yeah. Yeah, that's

(30:28):
something that actually, like people losing control of the car,
mistaking the break for for the gas or the gas
for the break is something that is more common than
people realize that. It's what was happening with those like
out of control Toyota cars where it was they couldn't
figure out like why these things were accelerating out of control.

(30:50):
The people thought they were stopping on the break. They
were stopping on the gas. Like that's what the computers
and inside the car show. It's just an honest mistake
that can happen, and that like people in a panic
just sort of double down on the first mistake they're
making and keep like stomping on on the gas. Think
against the break, especially like if you're in a new car,

(31:12):
it tends to happen more if you're in a new car,
and if you're smaller than the person who had been
driving it before, like that's when it tends to happen. Yeah,
that he that, Yeah, he claimed he would matched the
accelerator instead of the break. Yeah, and this apparently, like
I think this there in this article are time about
there was a there was footage of him in a

(31:32):
previous accident that was very similar, and like that sort
of kicked off this whole debate of like do we
like we need to actually be careful about like the
states some people are in when they get behind the
wheel of a car. But yeah, one that just you know,
the today the a mod are Very trial is going
to jury deliberation. So I mean it's just I'm again

(31:55):
this is this is a story that we've covered before,
but the jury is eleven white people one black jurer.
Prosecutors accused the defense of striking eight lecturers from being
selected Sully because of their race. The defense claimed the
jurors had already formed strong opinions about the events that

(32:16):
led to Harbury's death, which again was somebody being chased
down and shot with the shotgun for their race, so
that was disqualifying them having heard of that happening in
their community. But the judge found what he called intentional
discrimination while reviewing the prosecutor's objection, but said he ultimately
couldn't do anything since the defense put forth legitimate, non

(32:39):
race related reasons for So it's it's just another example
where we're seeing in a courtroom a judge be like, hey,
it's out of my hands here, like just using these
like little selective like you know, close up views of
the law to just tilt things in the direction of

(33:00):
a white defendant or three white defendants. A judge is
able to be like, no, they were legitimate, you know,
sort of non biased reasons that they gave. Because they're
still in a courtroom, people treat racism like it doesn't exist,
like so much time about sucking Narnia and they're like,
what do you think happened? Oh, I think this was racism.
They're like, did you hear that this motherfucker believe in Narnia?
Get him the funk real folks. Yeah, and this is

(33:23):
a trial that fucking completely hinges on racism, right, And yeah,
to be able to just say that they were if
they've already they already came to their very very biased
conclusion based on their terribly misinformed worldview. Be terrible to
have them here. We're looking for people who are so
ignorant they don't know what's going on, and then we

(33:43):
can hopefully, you know, nudge them in a direction. Over
the course of the trial the closing arguments, the defense
commented on our Very's long, dirty toenails, he was wearing
sneakers at the time of the crime, that you know,
that's not the point though. The point is that this
is the South, and police in this part of the
country we were invented to, you know, as slave patrol,
and they're trying to like use these this imagery to

(34:08):
like appeal to the biases of a white Southern jury.
And yeah, I don't know, Just to reiterate, the killer
was heard to have uttered a racial slur after murdering
mod are Very according to one of his fellow defendants,
not like according to some. According to one of his
fellow defendants, the theft they claimed they suspected him for

(34:29):
I was later found to be committed by a white couple.
They chased him in a pickup truck, pulled a gun
on him and are claiming the murder was self defense.
So that's and and people are like, it's a fucking
it's a it's a coin toss. It's like how how
how how you chase someone in a truck and then
when you hopped out with guns and they were unarmed
that you defended yourself with like lethal But again, that's

(34:52):
what because unfortunately you say things like this seemed like,
you know, to anyone just looking at it, you're like,
this looks like people chasing someone down and killing them. Like,
even if I don't know the context, that's what this
looks like. But you know, you have you have the
slightest bit of ability to recognize the situation like that

(35:12):
is having some kind of racial animus, then you're the problem. Yeah,
and let's check in with the Dallas Q and ON
group real quick. So you know, they went down to
Dallas for Trump's coronation, which we all remember was a
great event. It was great, wasn't it. Yeah, So the
Rolling Stones concert, actually it never happened, but people are

(35:33):
staying there and despite the predictions of Michael Brian Protsman,
who he was the he was the guy who reported
from the Rolling Stones concert that like Prince so that
despite everything he said turning out to be nonsense, people
are doubling down on waiting for his predictions to become reality,

(35:53):
and family members of the people who went down there
are very concerned. Yeah, there's a Vice article or they're
like people are straight up being like, yo, my sister's
completely lost it like she's not she's left her kids
behind or other people like you know this. One person
said at like requesting anonymity, said quote, I'm very worried
about her safety. We don't know if she's given him

(36:14):
any money, meaning Michael Brian Prattsman, because a lot of
people have apparently been just handing over cash to him.
But her husband is about to cancel her cards. She's
blowing through their money fast. There's another one where this
like I said, this woman's sister, she said her this
woman's sister so far handed about two thousand dollars to
the group and it's being forced to drink hydrogen peroxide
solution and take quote bio pellets to ward off COVID nineteen.

(36:37):
Her phone calls and messages are also being monitored. She
left her children for this and doesn't even care she's
missing birthdays and holidays for this. She truly believes this
is all real and we are all the crazy ones
for trying to get her to come home, but she won't.
And a lot of people like, we don't believe she'll
ever come back, and we're now warning her. So this
is you know, it's always had this very cult like exterior,
and now you're starting to hear like, oh wow, they're

(36:59):
isolated people like they're monitoring your calls. They're like, there's
also there's some infrastructure in place and maybe keep people
and you know, for this very specific group of Q followers,
you know, sort of in line or in check. And
the other thing is, like people have noticed in some
of these telegram channels there there was like talk from
members of you know and in sort of debating like

(37:21):
what's going to happen? What's the truth? Like is JFK
actually alive or dead? And it's Trump really the president.
Some people were saying, like using the words that we
need to experience a physical death in order to learn
the ultimate truth of all of this. And another another
post in a different telegram channel was like giving people
directions to the site where David Koresh had his like

(37:43):
deadly standoff with the Feds in Waco, and people are like,
what the funk? Why is this? Why are people now
started talking about experiencing physical death? Why is this? Like
there's more Waco ship coming. I mean, that's always kind
of been part of it, but the a lot of
extremist researchers are like the fact that people are now
uttering things like we must experience a physical death to
arrive to the truth. They're really kind of you know,

(38:06):
that's been sort of sending sounding off alarm bells, and
it's it's very similar to that guy Matthew Coleman who
you know, murdered his children, who was also had this
sort of rhetorical shift from their q and on beliefs
to this sort of other thing. And you know that
FBI and Dallas has said they haven't commented on whether
or not they're looking into it. And then the Dallas

(38:27):
police are like, no, this this group is not something
we're concerned with at the moment, according to them. I
feel like there's such a connection between the like all
of the stories, you know, because the stoking of the
hate to make people more radicalized and more fringe also
leads to these like cult like things, because the more

(38:51):
entrenched you are in the fact that like everybody else
doesn't see the truth quote unquote, the more the more
easily you will be prey to all kind of ideology. Yeah,
I mean it's all the same kind of cult like thinking. Yeah,
it really seems there that there's like a a breaking
point that people are coming to. And yeah, the the

(39:14):
Caroline or Bueno was like these are basically the exact
same spiritual religious teachings that the guy in California was
getting into just before he really murdered his two young children.
Like she's an expert on these, Like she pays attention
and like understands the various theologies and yeah, she's like

(39:34):
this is this is the thing. Yeah, but it's okay
if Dallas police say it's not a big deal, Like
it seems like they're pretty good at, you know, gauging
national threats to security and just making sure they have
a lockdown. So I think we should be good those
funny folks down and de Plas, I mean, they're they're
just in the way, if anything, once again failing to

(39:57):
uh take a threat in deally plaus of very seriously.
All right, let's take a quick break and we'll be
right back. And we're back and speaking of Texas, So

(40:18):
Matthew McConaughey is not announced that he's going to run
for governor yet, he has expressed interest, and so people
are theoretically putting out some polls to be like, if
this guy ran, we love ourselves a hat famous governor
and policies. Let me see that ass, Yah, work for democracy.

(40:44):
He's not gonna work though, he won't work. That's where
it draws the line. Yeah, he'll just play the bongoes naked.
Yeah exactly. Bongoes. Yeah, yeah, they they're all you know,
Beto ROURKEI announced, He's like, yo, I'm getting in the ring,
and people are like, okay, was just born to run, man, Yeah,
what was the thing on the cover of Vanity Fair?

(41:04):
I was just gotta be in it, man, I was
just born for that one. He's like in the truck
like that that that yeah, the failed Vanity Fair spread
cosplaying as a real American folks folksy Texan guy. But yeah,
there's some you know, they said, let's do some hypothetical
head to heads um. First, what if Beto Rourke and

(41:27):
Matthew McConaughey went head to head. Who wins to matt
sent to beato and they said, okay, if he advances
that round, what if it's the incumbent governor Greg Abbott
running against the insurgent Matthew McConaughey, and that hypothetical runoff

(41:48):
based on this pole And again it's very you know,
loose point't even know how they did it, but it
Abbot gets thirty of the vote, Matthew McConaughey gets forty
percent of the vote, he would be eight points ahead.
And that's just a very that's a snapshot literally right
now of probably people they just called on the phone,
and who knows how serious they were, But it is
interesting to see that it but oh, but like when

(42:10):
they put all three in a three way race, but
obviously that wouldn't happen because that's not how elections work. Well,
I mean, it could be like a jungle primary or
something like that, but in this straightforward race that in
that instance, Abbott gets a plurality, so like because they

(42:31):
would split the vote between that. But it also showed
but which is interesting because you're also like, oh, but
it looks like some people would go to Matt though,
if it came down to Matt and Abbot. But I
this is just like such a threesome is always better
when you split the vote. Yeah, I totally know what
you mean, But why don't you explain it to the people,

(42:51):
just like I have tons of experience reasons, obviously I
know how to rock the vote. Jack, your mustache says
that it has had a ton of three ways. It
does does add some character to my face that is
completely unearned. It looks just soaked. It could be it

(43:16):
could be just soaked. It look just soaked right now.
I thought I cleaned it up. That's coffee, mate, Okay,
it's coffee. It's coffee, mate, asshole. I drink it straight
out of the bottle. I want to be in it, man,
I'm just born to be in it. That was the
quote on the cover of Vanity Fair that I tell
me how that's not about a threesome and wanted Oh

(43:38):
you just just outside of an orgy room exactly. You're like, hey,
if you're not participating, no staring. Okay. So as stupid
as this is that he would possibly run like I
would probably prefer him over Abbott. Right kind of. Yeah,

(44:01):
it's just another It's like another American election special. You
want the piece of ship or the person. You're like,
I'd rather not two options, right, So yeah, I mean,
you know, when we've talked about some of the policies
that he's articulated in the past, and you know, he's
he's very like, he's like, yeah, man, like radicals, you

(44:23):
gotta have your gotta have your abortions. You know, I
definitely that you gotta get gotta get a bobo if
you want one, and uh and that have your kids.
I mean, if they want to get vaccinated, I'm gonna
have to wait on that. That's when he starts getting
a little you know who woo l a h Yeah,
all right, well alright, right a diversity, I mean, and again,

(44:47):
stranger things have happened. I mean, Arnold Schwarzenegger was our
literal fucking governor. So what about the fucking wrestler Jesse
fucking Ventura. Sh It happens, you know, Americans, Americans of
a fucking nonsensical celebrity like situations, we don't care what
context it's iner Like George Foreman sells grills. We're in love,

(45:10):
like we don't care what the crossover is. You know. Yeah,
it almost feels like McConaughey's too high profile to run
for governor, you know what I mean. It's like you
can still be in movies like The Mother people like yeah,
I not to say Shorts, I mean Shorts and Agger
was very at his prime. But like in this day
and age of celebrities running, I feel like we need
to go like two levels below to see, like, you know,

(45:33):
I don't know who who that person would be, but yeah,
like little Flip I wanted to. I wanted to be
an all little ticket flip yachtie. Let's get it popp
in Nazas, you know what I mean. Has the celebrity
who's not kind of right leaning ever one, it seems
like they're very successful on the right. You got your Reagans,

(45:56):
your Ronald's Reagan, you're venture uh your Schwarzenegga. But like
who who is centrist and has one? Like neo cons?
I feel like neo cons reject this idea because they're
not neo cons. Neo Libs reject this idea because they're
all straight a students like we talked about, so they

(46:18):
like want to believe that. Come on, man, this is
serious business. You have to you have to study economics,
stick to the pot, right, Yeah, I just feel like
this won't go as well, but the fact that he
appeals to the right as well might might make it work.
But I mean, dude. Fred Thompson was also an actor.
Al Frankin also frank There is Frankin's one. Yeah, yeah, okay,

(46:44):
Franken is the answer? All right, so let's do a
quick streaming check in. Squid Game still continues to dominate
on the Originals charts, but probably how a little bit
of a Christie Teagan boost? Am I right? Little? Yeah? Yes?
Because that's party. Yeah, I was there, damn should looked tight. Also,

(47:08):
Jesse Venture, I think it was like Green Party or something.
He's not He's not fully republic because he's always like
nine or leven was done by goblins, you know, rightful,
Like yeah, you feel like you're like I feel like
maybe libertarian or am I yeah? Maybe I just party.

(47:29):
He was Independence Party from two thousand two thousand three,
Reform Party from two thousand. He was an independent before
and then from two thousand. I think all that to
say opportunistic weirdo? Was he leftist, am I just like,
because I was such a fucking like just eight everything

(47:49):
that the mainstream media told me, like, is that why
I think he was. I don't ever remember him being
portrayed as lefty, right, not really, but I mean he
I think maybe because he would be like the Bush
administration is out of control, and you're like, oh, okay,
I would be even more efficient. You're like, it's contextual.

(48:13):
I guess you're right. There's way crazier people now. I mean,
he's not like cinema or something. No, no, no, but
I mean he for the most part, he said like
he's his like quote was like George W. Bush was
the worst president of my lifetime. Yeah, that's that's facts. Yeah.
I guess so iantly to that point. Yeah. And then

(48:35):
when Pierce Morgan asked him about nine eleven, he said,
my theory of nine eleven is that we certainly, at
the best we knew what was going to happen. They
allowed it to happen to further their agenda in the
Middle East and to go to these wars. That's not
the very least, but that's a plausible possibility. I guess, yeah,
But I know again, I'm sure Za Kingle tell Us

(48:55):
and it's like none, check out this hot take on
Brianna Taylor and you're like, oh, I don't know. But
all that to say, I don't know enough and I
don't care enough. So Netflix is monitoring streaming these days
and they're telling us, you know what, people are actually
watching Netflix dominating the originals. Uh, it's basically on Netflix

(49:17):
except for only Murders in the Building and Ted Lasso.
Everything else in the top ten is Netflix, but on
the acquired front, acquired, which is like, you know, shows
that they brought over that were not original programming, they
are the top ten, but they also like, so Shameless

(49:38):
is number one, Cocoa Melon number two, in the Dark
number three, I wasn't even like that didn't jog anything
for me. Yeah, it's the Blind Woman, got it okay?
And Seinfeld at number four, which sign felt like just dropped.
I think they were and the money they spent on that,
they were expecting that to be like a Friends Slash

(50:02):
the Office style like phenomenon. I think they forget that
those are escapism shows and that is not. Yeah, Seinfeld
is is like the world is terrible and people are
selfish and like let's laugh at it. People are not
ready for that, right, They're like, we want hugs. What's

(50:24):
the show that's hugs? Lasso, thank you. I want to
live in New York in jobs don't matter. Friends, Yeah, exactly.
I just want to worry worry about whether Ross and
Rachel are going to end up together. I don't want to,
you know, worry about whether I see a lot of
these selfish tendencies in myself. I mean, I think hilarious.

(50:46):
But that's why I think Curb is like its own
little world, because not everybody likes that. If it makes
you look upset and nervous when that kind of stuff happens,
then it's not the show for you, whereas Friends is
so much more and the office so much more easily
like calming. Yeah, and I feel like comfort fed with

(51:09):
with Seinfeld, there's more. It was like more influential. First
of all, like Got it was, it was more original
at the time that it came out, and then now
like I feel like it's influenced. First of all, obviously,
Curbs like just a spiritual successor that like does a
lot of the things Seinfeld did, but like in a
more pure form um. But also I just feel like

(51:32):
it was like Seinfeld was probably more influential on like
the comedy writers of the world than like Friends or
The Office, and so now like in the same way
that like Belushi was great and super original but never
really like translated to later generations because he was like
so influential on like Farley and like a lot of

(51:55):
those people that, like, I feel like people didn't really
get as much. Like I wonder if Seinfeld has more
thoroughly like infiltrated the culture to the point that now
it feels like an earlier version of something that we've
already seen like executed super well with like Arrested Development
and you know shows like that that are uber despicful people.

(52:18):
But like that's the that's the whole joke. I like
that theory. I I there there's something I don't know.
I think. Yeah, like your point about Seinfeld being like
a like a comedy like for comedy people, people like
it's pretty They're like, yeah, man, there's like there's the
Seinfeld things are like my favorite pieces of comedy or whatever.

(52:40):
And you understand, like so many writers do talk about
the way Seinfeld was written and like the like their
whole writing style especially of like making scenes of like
stuffing the sausage as they called it, of like just
taking the dumbest premise and just cramming as much drama
into the stupidest nothing you can do to make that
just load with over emphasis, and like that was sort

(53:02):
of like the engine of it. And it's also very
like improv derived, Like it's pretty much every episode is
a herald because like which is like that the long form.
I'm so sorry everyone, Yeah, but you know it's where
they said the ten poles fought far apart and then
then they come together in ways that are unexpected. So

(53:22):
you know, that's that was like a classic thing the
thing that they had mentioned about the one thing is
going to come back always at the end and be
the thing that fox this other thing up. And I
think the way that they did that consistently every episode
was like pretty remarkable. Yeah, And if you're aspiring, right,
I think for you know, kids that grew up in
the nineties, you're like look back, You're like, damn, Like

(53:45):
this is really like the people want to emulate that.
And I feel like maybe because of that influence, like
you're saying, it's it's coming back around again. For like,
you know, just people to recapture their love of it,
or younger people being like, oh, it's just chooky ship
all the old people talking about science felt and then
it's like, what are you doing? Alright, this is my

(54:08):
this is my final place. Seinfeld himself not I don't
know man, going in the same direction many older comics
who like don't understand why people don't like them anymore.
Like old ass old man takes very specific to the
nineties with just his like style and why people don't

(54:30):
want to hear about cereal again, right, yeah, yeah, And
you know, like this MPR article about like why it
might not hit quite as hard as Friends makes the
point about Mike Michael Richards, which, obviously, like his you know,
racist screed on stage makes his performance harder to enjoy.

(54:51):
But I also think, like A, I think we're giving
America way too much credit. Are you fucking kidding? Sure? Yeah, yeah,
that's what's ruining it for people. Oh no, he was
racist one time, Yeah, Okay, Woody Allen and she gets
to make movies. Mel Gibson out here saying I hope
he gets raped by a bunch of animales. Louisa Louie

(55:12):
and Dave Chappelle has got a Grammy knowledge. You can't
touch me. Yeah, damn, don't cancel me. Recently, you can't
cancel me. The show is already. We didn't cancel it.
We decided to end it on our own. I've never

(55:36):
been canceled. He's uh. Yeah. Someone recently was talking. His
name was in the headlines again because another comedy was like,
I don't care for him much because of his proclivity
for younger women back in the day. Yeah, he dated
a dated. It was called at the time, high school students,
not statutory rape. Yeah, it was he hey whoa whoa

(55:58):
publicly dad a high school student. Yeah, And they were like, look,
how fun he's picking up his girlfriend at her school
or whatever. You're like bringing here to Nick, Like he's
grooming a minor before everyone's eyes. But because he has
like a kind of a mullet, everyone's school. And then
everyone was like, well, it's it makes sense. She has

(56:19):
big titties. I was like, do you hear yourself? Yeah?
What do you mean? Like my hearing? But yeah, she
has big titties. I'm sorry, she's an adult. Oh my god. Yeah,
well Seinfeld, he's laughing on his gigantic piles of cash. Yeah,
and I think Steve Bannon too, that we we get

(56:40):
Steve Bannon because of Steinfeld. Also, yeah, what what was
that story again? The publisher was like, yeah, like one
of the production companies that like sold the rights to it,
he had a stake in it. So he got a
piece of like this huge payout for like the like
when I went to syndication, like mass indication, there was
like some it's so he became very wealthy from his

(57:02):
associate from his failed Hollywood career, and that gave him
a lot of money. And who knows where we'd be
if that didn't happen. But either way, America is gonna
America with or without Steve Bannon. Yeah. As bad as
the Michael Richards take that like people aren't watching it
because of the racism, NPR also has the take that

(57:24):
it's set in a shockingly white New York City and
that's why people aren't enjoying it because I know they're like, yeah,
have you seen Friends? Aisha Tyler holds down that entire
show for the entirety of time as the only black person. Yeah,
simpler times, Yeah, because like what did what's the did

(57:45):
he ever date a person of color woman of color
on this show. I don't think so. I don't think so. No, Jerry, No,
he would never. Mhm, he would never. Do you remember
there's that one episode where Elaine thinks that the guy
she's dating as a person of color and she just
doesn't know what and and that guy thinks she is too,

(58:08):
and then when they both find out that they're white,
they're very disappointed and they're like, what do you want
to do and goes all right, I don't know, let's
go to the gap, which is the only time they
address the race things the ever so, the one that
ages so well, the Cigar Store Indian episode, Oh there
you go. Yeah, And then I'm trying to think of

(58:31):
anything else that made super any wrong with that, Like
there's plenty of what about all the transphobic stuff? Friends
was like, oh yeah, yeah, it's like he's a cross
dresser and you're like and he like hated, hated. Remember

(58:51):
the punchlines were always like I'm fucked up and the
reason I can't have intimacy is it turns out my
dad was fucking my piano teacher and he's a girl.
That was like mm hmm. Yeah, right, brought to you
by the same people who wrote the Cheers Name song
that has that weird line in it. Yeah, there's like

(59:11):
and youre's like, what is it? It's the it's the
long version, like the verse that wasn't on the TV show. Okay.
I was like, have I missed something from Everybody Knows
Your Name? Part? Yeah? There was a if you're what
that's the part they cut. It's where is it? It's

(59:33):
like something really like a woman being a man or
something like that, and that being like a point of stress.
That's why I gotta go to Cheers with Friends, because
I just didn't watch it for the reasons. I was like, well,
I don't see myself in this show, so I'm gonna
keep watching Wayne's Brothers or Jamie Fox Show or something
like that. I remember, like her majesty, she'd be like
when you know, when we were first dating, She's like, oh,

(59:55):
you don't watch Friends. I'm like nah, And she she
was watching in the background once and I came in.
It was one of those episodes where Kathleen Turner is
playing Chandler's mom, and I was like, what's going on?
And like and then I was just watching them just
talk about it and I'm like, Yo, this is fucked up,
Like what is this? Like yeah this this doesn't age
well at all, And I'm like, wow, okay, but look

(01:00:17):
all shows have I mean, it's wild to watch a
lot of stuff. I recently started watching things that were
sort of like formative for me, like sitcoms just to
kind of like understand, like how much I can't believe
how much the Fresh Prince of Bell are like formed
my entire like like mental Scape. But there's also like
ones with like like you also like watch Jamie Fox
Show and they're like, okay, bro, like you are you

(01:00:39):
are not about consent at all. Yeah, it's just a
fucking punch line the whole time, and you're like just
start watching these things. You're like, wow, these were very
subtle things that we were taking in. Also, we were
so brainwashed that entire time. For on the Jamie Fox Show,
we were cheering for Jamie Fox who just would not
leave this fucking poor woman alone and like just ruined

(01:01:01):
her life by sexually harassing her at work. Fancy. But
then but then they're like no, and then you were
down and it works out. Hey, hey, fellas, you get it.
Wear them down, wear I'm down. Oh that's the word.
Your husband wants to be a girl, that's the one. Yeah,
it's roll out of bed. Mr Coffee is dead, the

(01:01:23):
morning's looking bright, Andrew Frank Grant off to Europe and
didn't even right, And your husband wants to be a girl.
It doesn't even really work in the thing doesn't even
make sense stream. It just sounds like the writer was
trying to work out a personal problem, right Yeah, Well
on friends, Sophia is such a pleasure having you as always.

(01:01:47):
Where can people find you? Follow you all the good stuff.
Thank you so much for having me. I love you guys,
and you can find me at the Sophia on Twitter
and instagram s O f I y A. You can
listen to My and Miles this podcast go to four
Fiance dot com and you can also listen to Private

(01:02:11):
Parts Unknown, my podcast with Courtney Kosak about loving sex
around the world, and get my album Fathers Say and
Happy Holidays, Thanksgiving, y'all doing you guys doing family stuff?
What's what's up? We're kicking for like thirty people? What?

(01:02:32):
Mm hmah, look at you? What? What? Yeah? I'm going
to New York. I can't wait to see the DMX
documentary from Bill Simmons. That's who I want to hear
they've got he's the most famous DMX fan. How dare you? Oh,
that's right, I forgot he was in the rough Riders. Yeah. Yeah,
he's got like this whole HBO documentary like sweet called

(01:02:54):
music Box and one of them is like a DMX documentary,
which and he knew this with the rough Rider's anthem
dedicated to him to build my business with my Simmons.
Is there a tweet or some of the work of
social media you've been enjoying. Yes, I have a couple

(01:03:20):
of favorites. I like this one by at J. T
Houset seven. I don't have an agent, but there's a
small fox that lives in the woods next to my house.
Who would I think, given the opportunity champion my work?
And then um, there's this one by Future Mensa and

(01:03:41):
it's to the season to go home and remember why
you left your family for a life of literature and marijuana.
That's right, I felt that. And then finally this one
by Megan Gaily. There are haircuts that only exist in
Indianapolis and nowhere else on earth. Oh, man. Shout out

(01:04:02):
to Megan Miles. Where can people find you? What a
tweet you've been enjoying? Find me on Twitter and on
Instagram at Miles of Gray. And again you heard Sophia
tell check out Fance. Check out fance dot com and
consider supporting our show by buying some Marchian dice. That's prettiest. Look,

(01:04:23):
we hand designed this ship Galen Gill on the production
and I know that gang comes through for guarantee shirts,
so you know it's the same same family, so come
by the same family. And Miles drew the sickest heavy
titty ghost you've ever seen. Yeah, it was it. What
did it come from? When we were talking about episode
with Angela got the breast reduction? Yeah, the character this

(01:04:45):
one Cash remember how a brest reduction and her husband
was like, what am I gonna do? And we're like, oh,
this is gonna be a heavy titty ghost out there. Anyway,
all that to say, hy score went down. That's the
whole thing. This is what you're going to, This is what
what you're gonna come for to the nonsense. But yes,
some tweets that I like. The first one actually from

(01:05:05):
at mfc ericson Hey, gang in here. I saw your
tweet my man who said, we demand to have names
that slightly changed periodically as we grow into adults, like Pokemon,
because really curious to see what my final form name
would be. That's what daddy's been doing for years. Yeah,
great for everybody. Well, yeah, people have like posted like

(01:05:30):
a meme of how you could be like your names
like Robert, but then your Robbie, then Robbie or maybe
Bob and then yeah, and then you die as robb Um.
But and then another one is from at fire Beats
b E E T S. Who's your favorite date? Who's
your favorite beatle? Me panicking um gregor samsun. It's good

(01:05:58):
that joke is coughka esque. That's pretty good. All right.
You can find me on Twitter Jack under Squirrel, Brian
and nowhere else. No, that's not true. I'm also on Instagram,
but I'm private, so but I've approved literally everybody who's
has to follow me. You're private because he posts so
many thirst traps. People's people know they got on his

(01:06:23):
ass and dong dong oh. Brian Ariana Lenarski tweeted, I
think we learned about planets too young. They should keep
it from us until we're like sixteen, then be like,
guess the fuck what? I love that so much? I

(01:06:43):
like that? Oh. Andrew Nado tweeted a woman once casually
said nice haircut to me twelve years ago, and that's
been my haircut ever since. The power, the power, the
power of being alone and someone and someone you fancy,
even a compliment. I remember some one time my face
was so bad, like when I was younger, it's even

(01:07:04):
patch here, and I was like, no, I think it's cool,
Like it's kind of makes me wonder, like what's up
with them? Oh? Cool? And then subsequent people were like,
what's are you okay? What's wrong? Is there? Your costs?
Playing as like a stranded like a car, like a
boat crash early in stages, Gregor Samson. Yeah. You can

(01:07:24):
find us on Twitter at dailys like Guys. We're at
d Dailys like guyst on Instagram. We have a Facebook
fan page and even a website Dailys like guys dot com,
where we post our episodes and our footnote, which is
where we link off the information that we talked about
in today's episode. That ship is also in the show
to script, and we also like to link off to

(01:07:45):
a song that we think you're going to enjoy. Miles
song do we think people might enjoy? This is a
track called love Galaxy and look, I feel like it's
it's time. I feel like now. After Ellen Scanlon told
us that Wednesday before Thanksgiving is like the big Pot,
like with a real big pot holiday, listen to this
track Love Galaxy, because it's gonna it's gonna make you

(01:08:05):
feel good. First of all, so if you you know,
maybe have a tribular relationship in your family, get into
the zone with this track. But more than that, it's
the people on this track Little Silva, j Electronica and
Paul Epworth. You know, Paul Epworth is a really amazing producer.
You might know him from stuffing Done with Adele, you know,
famously or remix that he's done with Celo Green of

(01:08:26):
Nobody's Gonna Love You. Right, I've never heard of any
of these people. Well you got it man, Okay, and
then like Del like Del Curtin, Yeah exactly right, yeah, okay,
right one just one Dell and yeah, so check this
track out. It's just like really great production, really great
vocals and you know, just rich Son Escape for your ears. See, well,

(01:08:48):
the Daily Zeka is a production of I Heart Radio.
For more podcasts from I Heart Radio, you can go
visit the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcaster, wherever you
listen to your favorite shows. That's gonna do it for
us this morning. We're back this afternoon to tell you
what's trending, and then we are the funk out of
here for the holiday. But come back this afternoon and

(01:09:08):
we'll talk to you all. Then Bye bye,

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