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May 16, 2018 64 mins

In episode 149, Jack and Miles are joined by comedian Laci Mosley to discuss Solange's selfie game, the recent primaries across the US and women and progressives sweeping them, North Korea getting cold feet about peace talks with the US, Airbnb and it's history of racism, Uber updating it's sexual harassment/assault claims policy, the infamous yanny/laurel debate of the internet, the dine and dash date scammer, and more! 

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season thirty one, episode
three of That Daily Night Guys. For May sixteen, two
thousand eighteen, my name was Jack O'Brien, a K Jack
station without representation. That is courtesy of Salt Davies at
Salt the Kid and also a courtesy of Washington d
C of Puerto Rico, and I am thrilled to be

(00:24):
joined as always by my co host, Mr Miles Gray.
Miles Gray, you can't that is by their knees. It's
like gang coming back to him. Me do it, Miles Gray,
Miles Gray say, goes Zi ganging and Chuck very thankful

(00:50):
so much with the vacuum vocals. Jackobran Jack O'Brien, that
was a self made a gay today I've been going
through and you know, I just was feeling some mush here,
so thank you to me. I will have myself in
the back. Thank you. At Great A little like JT
things on there a little bit, yeah uh. And we
are thrilled to be joined in our third seat just

(01:12):
by one of the great She is one of the
funniest performers at u c B and just a funny comedian,
one of the great Texans. One of the great Texans ever,
she is Lacey Moseley. What's up? Hey, what's up? What's
Lacey Moseley? Okay, pauls all just what I go by

(01:38):
sometimes social change your pronouns and oh no, no no,
I just like scams all right, okay, okay, that's why. Yeah.
When we had lunch, you hit me with that Venmo
from that Venmo account. I was like, you're like, yeah,
charge Paul, Yeah, okay, Hey, do what you gotta do, Hey,
social security number? What is? What's something from your search history, Lacy?

(02:02):
That is revealing about who you are or not? Just
something from your searches. So something from my search history? Um,
I just looked this up is a home depot mirror glass?
Okay okay, so um. Recently Solange had took some real
fire selfies with some glass. So it was like she
held the glass up and then she had her phone

(02:24):
and so it was taking a picture of her face
and the reflection behind her was like this beautiful like
foliage and ship oh yeah yeah yeah. Then she had
some like rtcass table set up in front, and it
was because then you could get too selfies in one
kind of like two environments. It was real fly. I
was like, I gotta go to Home Deep and get
some glass. The game is being stepped up, you know,

(02:47):
I gotta I gotta make strong more part of it
White Home Deeper. You're just like, I think that's where
I can get some mirrord glass. I mean, you don't
want the glass like a Solange's glass was like artsy
and smoothed on the side. You don't want like a
handheld mirror. Well, right, right, right, were gonna do what
you gotta do it right. I'm having a hard time
envisioning this. Oh you are, hold on. I got a
screenshot like that at that fire. Oh she doing it everywhere.

(03:11):
You see the one with the boat and it was
just like handheld lay you got yours about to be?
Oh God, how do I get a boat? How do
I go to Italy? Listen? Because I'm always trying to
you know, people people like to judge. People take selfies like, oh,
people take selfies and lonely and not. Oh. Sometimes people
just are narcissist. Okay. It's the difference between being a
narcissist and being um, your favorite thing to think about,

(03:34):
that's right, a narcissist and falling in love with your reflection.
You know what I mean. Sometimes you are just a
great photographer whose favorite subject yourself. You see yourself in
the puddle or shadow pool and you diving try and
catch it. Follow Lacy on Instagram. She's a great follow.
Oh yeah, oh my god. The stories are content. Your

(03:56):
stories could be a show if anybody's out there, you know,
developing a show. Watch lazy stories for real, Lacey. What's
something that's overrated? Oh? Okay, makeup? And this is weird
because y'all know I love makeup. You were just I
was near face. I was I put out makeup to
be on the radio. I sound better this way, Donna.
Nonna agreed, tweet me tell me that something better I

(04:19):
not do with the makeup on um. But just because
lately everybody's coming out with a pallette. J Logan a pallet,
got thirty five pallets, and I'm like, took the little
girls out there listening to the data set for nine
year old girls out there about doing fourth grade. There
is makeup that will change your life, and no it
is not found as CBS. I will say that there

(04:41):
is some stuff that can really blow you up and
get you to the next level. However, every cream stick
and contour stick ain't about to make you look off
flicking happy. Y'all don't know how to use that ship anyway,
so you'll just be out here looking at crazy. What
you need to do is send away to Lacey Mosley's
Makeup tips. Yeah, the make up, your social security cash,

(05:02):
cash at me, your social security number, and I'm gonna
get y'all some makeup there work for y'all. Shade you
tell these young women the makeup you were looking for
cannot be found at CPS. But between the front and
back pages of Ian La van Zan's book Tapping the
Power with Him, that's where you were going. I don't
know why. If it was anybody else, I would have

(05:27):
expected there to be like and that makeup is a
better opinion of yourself. But it being you, I knew
you were just gonna be like. But it's really expensive,
So y'all, y'all beat youll spaces if y'all want some.
I'm just saying you don't have to buy everything out there.
But I actually really look up to y'all, La, because
when I get old, I'm gonna just use my old
black lady crib to say crazy ship too, because y'all

(05:48):
said nothing wise or deep to nobody. If I saw
on this on Joe mckaill show where she was making
somebody wrap their lyrics to pictures of Harriet, that was
Hazel Hazily, you're right. She's like, tell me you're proud
of these lyrics and spit them at Rosa Parks, rose up,
get money, clap my butt, clap. But just look at

(06:09):
the Caroline to Harriet Tubmans like free to slay. It
was crazy. Yeah, it was insane, but you know, for
good gesture, I'm gonna get some implants. I'm gonna get
some larger titties because you gotta when you're old black lady,
you gotta have big titties for people to cry, all right,
right right, yeah come here, child, Yeah that's it, and child,
call your child. You are now just chat hot mess. Also,

(06:36):
for people who don't know, when I said beat your face,
I'm not talking about punching somebody in the face, because
I had this conversation with a person who did not
understand the vernacular that means to put makeup on, you know,
get your beat on. You know, if you watch a
drag queens, you know what that is. But I'm not
saying to assault your face, but your beat on I
appreciate it. A good beat means you're really beating that brush,
real hard face. So yeah, he's gotta let people know

(07:00):
each one, teach one, la see what is something that's
under ridding? Oh the show Good Girls on NBC. They're
not sponsoring the show. I just love this show. You
very well. I'm trying to keep it on their I'm
trying to Brooklyn nine nights. I have heard of this. Yeah,
they're bank robbers. Yeah, yeah, it's basically of Mad Money

(07:22):
and the cast of Mad Money, but re cast for
tv UM cast of Mad Money was this Dye Key
movie would Clean the Tifa and it's like it's like
all the ladies have to rob a bank, which you know,
for one, I'm I am annoyed that lady bank robber
movies always got to be motivated by love and and
and some look key and being sick of ship, Like
why can't be just rob banks? Because they want bags

(07:44):
and you know, they just they want the bag. And
my mind is like, why can't be thus bugs? They
want the bag? Now, every movie you see where a
woman is robbing the bank she first has to have
like her life file apart her kids gotta be crippled, Like,
can't she just want money? Man? She's like, wait an
birken bag coss what you never see minute movies like,

(08:04):
oh man, yeah, I gotta take care of my grandma.
That's not how Ocean's Levin starts like to get his
wife back. But it's a cute TV show. You can
actually binge it on Hulu, and I just don't want
it to get canceled because it's very Do you like
it because you there's you have an affinity with the
scam life that it's sort of I've gotten tips and

(08:26):
tricks from that show for Yeah, you know, you'd be
surprised how much stuff you can still get away with
if you just act confidently. But the show has not
been canceled. No, I'm pretty sure Gary renew but I
just want to make sure he stays on the air.
Y'all tune in, okay, because it's good and nobody's talking
about is the pilot good? The pilot was good. It's cute,

(08:48):
it's very cute. I forget who it was. I think
it was Danny who came on and said to watch
Ship's Creek with Euen. Now watch this creek. I ned
just start watching us stuff on pop. I absolutely watch
this creek. I didn't know January. I can't talk about it,
but watch that. Watch that. But to say, yes, I

(09:11):
want to watch this creek. But the pilot was losing
me a little bit. But I'm gonna doore. I'm gonna
get through it because I'm looking at Mad Money the movie,
because Mad Money, to me is that Jim Kramer show
where he's like bye by Yeah, so apparently there was
a movie that he stole his show's name from. Uh

(09:32):
and the cover is just the most dated two thousand
and eight thing because it's got Queen Latifa and Katie
Holmes and they're like holding money. And I just can't
buy Katie Holmes as like this person who's like, I
don't know, she will just always be enough all of
her life. Right. This was way better than Dawston. She
was random in this movie. Was like, Kate Date, what

(09:53):
are you doing here? Oh? Yes, very date? By that yeah,
it looks like she's confused by holding money. She's like,
just got a handful of cash and she's like money
for all we know. That was a steel from her
real life she seyn lead Tom Cruise. She was like
enough yet um so good girls on NBC and Pop

(10:14):
Pop TV. Is that the name of the chain? Oh,
this is starting to make sense because I was watching
her stories and she was alluding to certain things. Interesting. Okay, Miles,
you were saying ship's creek. You checked it out and
the pilot wasn't good but it was slow. But I
love comedy pilots. Yeah, comedy pilots are never to Yeah,
they're tough. That's why I asked if if it's it's

(10:34):
blit from the pilot. Is the drama that is a
gas joke? For all my water heater people out there,
it's lit from the pilot? Oh? Yes, very good, very good. Also,
anyone is that gang? If you're a plumber, please contact
me because I'm trying to attach the thing under my
sink to put an ice maker in my new refrigerator
that to go leave to get pretty soon. Thank you. Oh,
You're going to get so much feedback from dudes like

(10:55):
and the thing you gotta understand, man, like you gotta honestly,
I'll take that because just wait till I come in
here soaking wet tomorrow from anyway lazy? What is a myth?
What's something uh that people think is true that you
know to be false? Uh, you can't catch up on sleep?
I know it's and technically, I guess if you want

(11:18):
to be this type of human being. Apparently I was
looking at researching this further because when I was in college,
it was just like a hard fact, like you just
couldn't catch up on sleep. But apparently if you like
adding a couple of hours extra hours each night over
the course of several nights. But I was like, that's
not what people want, Like if I would stay up
like I've like I stayed up maybe like last week

(11:39):
until four in the morning, and now my sleep pattern
has been thrown for like a week just from that
one night. Yes, because then I like slept in the
next morning, and then I stayed up because I had
a bunch of shows and shipped all night, and so
it just continued because I ended up having so many
shows at night until now the past two days, I've
been like meditating. I go to sleep with like the
sounds of rain playing on YouTube. I have I used

(12:04):
to I should go to sleep with the sound machine. Uh.
In the college because I was so stressed I could
not sleep and I had to get like this NASA
approved one that had like certain brainwave frequencies to like
get have cause I have no money to give. Now,
well let me tell you. He's working coach store at
the mall. And what I did was I switched out.
I did a trade for like some Brookstone gifts because

(12:24):
I'm like, look, I'm gonna give you my employee discount
for this ergo back because everybody wants to. Yeah, it's
a scamp, you know, so you make money, how you
gotta get listen, I appreciate it. The podcaster Bill Simmons
Sports Guy, used to be at ESPN. Now he's the
head of the Ringer. He has this. One of his
more problematic theories is he was like, I'll tell you what,
you become twenty percent crazier if you're a woman, when

(12:46):
every kid you have, you become twenty percent crazier. So
what if you have six year beyond Apparently that I
really think that it's I it's I think it's no
I noticed it happening to me. I think it's like
you build up a sleep debt and you just never
recover from the sleep debt when you have a kid,
because you just don't sleep for like six months, and

(13:09):
then you just your mind doesn't work as well, and
then you can't make that sleep det up ever again
ever again, Really that I don't know. Well. Also like
the older you get, the less sleep you need. But
I think I don't know if your body doesn't sleep
as well. Uh So my mom always said that, She's like,
when you have a kid, you just don't sleep, You
don't sleep as well because you're worried about exactly like

(13:31):
my mom used car I love her, she's a queen.
But she used to like let me go out places.
And I was in the suburbs, so the only place
to really go out was like the mall. Like every
parent would just drop their kids off of them, right,
And my mom would never let me do it. But
one time I really convinced her let me go to
the mall. And then she dropped me off at the
mall and she called me five minutes later she was like,

(13:55):
God told me you need to come home. Like what
I had that with my did too. He would just
like get these feelings and be like, no, you can't
stay out tonight, and just feel like and then he
was usually right, it was really weird. Peah, Yeah, uh no,
but I just think I also think that it's like
because god damnit, sorry, I think it's also good again. Yeah,

(14:18):
he's like getting the show, go go go. No, no, no.
What I was saying about the Simmons thing is I
feel like he's the type of guy who would like
let his wife do all the like staying up parenting.
So he's like, she's crazy. He's right, exactly like Billy
going home. Dude, I don't know, fucking wife, dude. She

(14:38):
I'm telling you, she's getting twenty percent more crazy with
every kid. I'm gonna go back. She's be like, why
aren't you home take care of these kids, like you're
mom on the fucking dad right, let's play huh uh dog? Sorry, yeah,
a little Nate dog. I haven't heard that. I'll be
the dead child. All right. We're trying to take a

(15:00):
sample of the global share consciousness, what people are thinking
and talking about right now, and we wanted to open
up with a little primary. Watch primary Watch Yeah, primaries.
Some primaries happened last night. Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, and uh,
it looks like man, Pennsylvania is turning a different shade
of red because I'm pretty sure four women were backed

(15:22):
by the Democratic Socialists of America won their state legislature
primaries in Pennsylvania somewhere uncontested. Uh and some against like
traditional kind of centrist Dems. But Sarah Inamorato and Summer League,
they brought the progressive ideals fucking hard. Uh. Some release especially,
she was campaigning on things like ending cash bail, fifteen

(15:42):
dollar an hour minimum wage, creating millionaires tax, moratorium on
prison building, renewable energy, universal free pre kindergarten, childcare, abortion
rights of free college. I mean, yes, this this woman
one on this platform. Not to mention. If Lee wins
in the general election, he could be the first black
woman elected to the state legislature from southwestern PA. So yeah,

(16:05):
women and progressives had a lot of wins. Not to mention.
In Nebraska. Uh, Karat Eastman, who I think was a
former local nonprofit president. She beat a former US Congressman,
Brad Ashford. Uh. And you know Eastman campaign on the
same sort of not total socialist kind of agenda. But
she was campaigning on Medicare for all, you know, decriminalizing marijuana,

(16:27):
ending citizens united and she narrowly beat Brad Ashford, who
was like, you know, an establishment guy, you know, like Obama,
Like he's you know, he's chilling with Obama in the past.
He's kind of the safe choice. So again, it looks
like there's a lot of energy for going left of center.
So take note, uh D triple C because that's where
the energy is. Um And yeah, and in Pennsylvania, a

(16:49):
couple of things too, is that the Democratic turnout was
pretty big, that cast a hundred thousand more votes than
Republicans did. And I know last week we were talking
about what was going on in the blue wave or whatever. Well,
you know, let's let's not get too excited yet, but
let's just take everything in stride, because I mean, also
to mention in Pennsylvania, there were a couple of primaries
that were just all Democratic candidates, so that could also

(17:11):
add to it. But nonetheless, good turnout. And also in Pennsylvania,
they still have no female members in Congress at all.
So let's try and get this change. I think it's
guaranteed that there will be at least one I think
there's at least one race in Pennsylvania that where it's
women going against each other. So uh will no longer

(17:31):
be all male. Um. Yeah, it seems like a situation
where going to the base, like the the Republicans went
to the base with Trump and it you know, went
against everything all conventional wisdom that you hear from people
who are experts in electoral politics. You have to go centrist,

(17:52):
you have to like do the triangulation Clintonian thing. Uh.
And then when they went to the base, they suddenly
just uh bucked all predictions and you know, Trump Trump
did incredibly well. And I think you're going to see
the same thing if the Democrats are willing to you know,
buck conventional wisdom and actually you know, get behind candidates

(18:15):
who are willing to step up and support things that
people are actually you know, the people, uh, the masses
are actually excited about. Yeah. Also in Pennsylvania, Republican lou
Barletta he won narrowly won his primary race despite spending
nearly eight times more than his more moderate opponent. Um.

(18:37):
He even had like the explicit endorsement of Trump. He
pretty much he underperformed pretty severely. Uh. And a lot
of the GOP sort of strategists are kind of like, well,
we don't know if we want this guy to go
up against Bob Casey in November, because lu Barletta is
like of just a problematic, obnoxious xenophobe who, like, you know,
when he was mayor of a town, was like from
criminal charges if you higher legal aliens, like English is

(18:58):
the official language of this town. Like, he's just kind
of on that sort of nationalistic, you know, anti immigrant stance.
So yeah, that's another thing to check out in Pennsylvania
because now they they may have a little bit of
a tough time against Bob case but we'll see. So
that Republican going to the base, uh, you know, using
xenophobia that that has not been working as well in
these primaries, not as much. And the guy he was

(19:20):
running against, I mean, he was pretty central in terms
of like you know, his landing page wasn't like him
wrapped up in American flags, like putting immigrants on a
bus or anything. It was just kind of like, you know,
he's about openness, transparency, accountability at all levels of government.
So it seems like he's a perfect sort of balance
to what this other guy was running for. But yeah,
I mean this guy Christianity, he only had like I

(19:42):
think two or fifty and this Varletta campaign. Uh, they
spent close to two million, so even with the money
you barely want. All right, let's take a quick break
and then we'll come right back. And we're back. And

(20:04):
the other kind of story of the moment when it
when it comes to politics, is that we're gonna have
to put that Trump Nobel Peace Prize just on hold momentarily.
I'm not saying it's not gonna happen, but there just is.
It's looking like the North Korea talks might be in
danger stalling out a little yeah, stalling out a little bit. Um.

(20:27):
And this is actually how I know that I'm not
a true partisan because when I heard this, I wasn't
like I'm not rooting against this like I I actually
like felt my stomach sort of turn when I was like, fuck,
they're fucking this up this morning because I don't know,
like I don't want North Korea to be holding a

(20:48):
nuclear weapon pointed at my family and me all the time.
So basically, North Korea is threatening to reconsider peace talks,
uh if the US and South Korea don't knockoff their
military exercises. Um, because we'd already I guess done some
naval exercise in April and apparently some other things that

(21:09):
are pissing them off. Kim Jong Un doesn't like the
fact that Trump is saying the meeting is straight up
about denuclearization, like he did at the you know, hostage
release celebration greeting event uh directed by Michael bay Uh
and he got out a little bit over his skis,

(21:29):
like you could tell that he'd already converted these North
Korea talks into like campaign talking points, and he was like, yeah,
you know, we're gonna get the nuclearization, and you know,
he totally forgot that Kim jong un was listening, because
Kim Jong Un was like, all right, man, let's not
spike the football just yet. We're we're not totally on

(21:50):
board with that. And around the same time, John Bolton,
our new head of literally looks like a fucking muppet, right, uh,
said Sally. The worst thing he possibly could have He said,
don't Libya. Don't exactly. He said that we're planning to
use the Libya model and conversations with North Korea, which

(22:12):
is basically evoking Kim Jong uns number one fear about
the talks because Libya denuclearized and you know, not too
long after that their dictator was brutally murdered in the
streets by like mobs uh so the one reason that
he has like raised, like the the idea that he

(22:33):
would never take his nuclear weapons off the table. Look
what happens when you do, right is look what happened
to Libya and fucking Bolton just straight up it. It's
crazy too because Kim Jong I think he took power
like the day after daf he was killed, like his
first day in the job. He's like whoa, whoa, whoa,
and yeah, like everyone was saying, don't say Libya. So

(22:56):
it's so easy. But again they are just so thirsty
for fucking wins. Can you wait until the ship is signed,
wait until the deal is broken? But you know, but
I think people were a little naive and anyone and
everyone right myself included, to sort of just immediately jumped
to conclusion because Trump was like, oh, he's he's really
open to do something. He's really gonna do something here.

(23:16):
And to know that the his his nuclear arsenal is
his only bargaining ship in this thing. So he cannot
give that up just like that without any getting anything back.
So I don't know, I mean Trump is the deal master,
so I guess we'll just wait and see. Oh wait,
he cave to China on the fucking ZTE deal, the

(23:37):
telecoms deal, or not the deal, but rather punishing them. Uh.
And then it's maybe who knows if Kim Jong un
is like, you know, let me see what I can
get out of this dude now too. But this follows
a pattern with North Korea being like, yeah, we're down,
We're down, We're down, We're down, and then the Hawks
breakdown her collapse. Yeah, now that I'm totally bummed out
about the prospect of them falling apart, I'm realizing I'm

(24:00):
becoming very pessimistic about the likeliness that they succeed because
we're basically counting on too like overly sensitive and capricious,
pathological narcissists, not to offend each other like before in
the lead up or during this meeting, and I don't know,
North Korea, it seemed like they were just like, you know,

(24:22):
eyes on the prize. They were focused on doing this
meeting and accomplishing whatever South Korea had convinced them to accomplish.
But now that they've sort of wobbled a little bit,
I feel much less optimistic about where this is headed.
I won't lie. I had a little bit of hope
you get too crazy together like that for all you know,
I speak the same way. You can't be saying I'm

(24:43):
talking to a crazy person. But if you're both crazy,
I mean, like you know, on the same page. I
just wish that everything didn't have to like I do
appreciate the government being transparent, but it's like with Trump
is like one, he's always lying to us, so it's
not transparency. It's like so just hold off. He just
likes to make it look things much better than they are.

(25:05):
But you know, uh, it's it's not totally dead in
the water, but it's just it's just I think what
it is just a reality check. They're like, Yo, hold
the funk up, bro, don't go being like, hey, they're
gonna fully denuclearize and we're gonna give them nothing back,
because that was their main thing, is that like if
these talks are just for you to come to Singapore
and be like, come up off your nuclear weapons and
that's it. They're like, no, we're not doing that. And

(25:25):
so I think, you know, obviously he's trying to set
himself up Kim Jong going to be like, Okay, we
are going to have to work on ship, have to
be concessions made for this to be a reasonable negotiation,
but you know, we'll Pompeo is dangling the idea that
once they denuclearize, American businesses will pour in and invest in, uh,

(25:48):
you know, North Korean infrastructure, and you know North Korea
when you look at the globe from space at night,
like all the other countries are lit up in North
Korea is just completely dark. There's a lot of structure
to add to that country and a lot of money
to be made. So Pompeo was saying that you're going
to see a lout of American businesses if we open

(26:08):
up trade with North Korea and if they are willing
to do nuclearize. So that's that's a bargaining chip we have,
but I mean it's also a bargaining chip that we
had with Iran. And uh, you didn't see a ton
of American business poor in there, because yeah, we did.
Definitely it seemed like who knew what was going to
happen with with the nuclear deal, And now we've shown

(26:32):
that we back out of those so uh, all right,
let's move on to a brief history of Airbnb and racism.
Uh So, Airbnb had an incident the other day where
the neighbor of uh four people who are renting an

(26:52):
airbnb for airbnb guests, uh waved to them. Uh, an
old white woman waved to them. The four people who
were renting the airbnb happened to be uh, three black
women and a white woman, and uh so their neighbor,
this elderly lady, waved to them. They didn't wave back.

(27:16):
We don't know why, but they didn't wave back. And
she immediately called the police and said that there were
suspicious people. As they were checking out of their airbnb,
they were greeted by seven police cars. Uh And by
the way, when she called the police, she described three
suspicious individuals, not four because the white woman. Yeah, they're

(27:38):
like three suspicious woman and a hostage. I think usually
usually if you have the white person I mean being black,
you know, or usually that helps make you less suspicious.
Because but the white lady probably didn't wave either that
she was like a right, that's that was a symbol

(28:00):
be like because I remember as a kid, like in retrospect,
and I think about the wild should I did when
I was with white kids and did it no problems,
never like when they're at least anything involved. And you
realize you think that in this situation that this person,
I don't know, this just could be my weird hindsight
of my life, but that the old lady would be like, oh, well,
there's a white woman maybe co signing for these people,

(28:22):
so I can suspend the three white women and one
black person should have been like, oh and the cleaning lady,
they're showing her what Rialto has to offer. Now the
home owner came back, The person whose Airbnb it was
came back and blamed them for not waving to the woman. Now,

(28:44):
now we don't know why they didn't wave back. Maybe
they didn't see her away. Yeah, there's also that. And
also it's just worth noting that this wave from a
white woman might not have been as friendly and neighbor
really as she might have perceived it to be. Like
she she was testing them to see if they were

(29:05):
like the good kind or the bad kind. And so
by way, if she looked through her and she looked
at hers and dialed, now, whine as because we know,
we know that when white people call the cops on
black people one, they don't wave, they ly in too.
They then already added several weapons to your person. Like

(29:26):
we just saw a man in a hoodie. He had
a knife between his teeth and two guys and his
eye patch and he was and he was walking into
the waffle house. What I don't understand, Like what do
And this is a serious question. Is there a sign
that us as people of color can give to white
people to let you know, not are we looked upon

(29:47):
that everybody is a criminal and thug? Can I Can
I do something like hi, I'm a human being or
I don't assume all people of any race or could
be perpetrators of violence or crime or whatever. In my theory,
the white people have sent out a new blodder. They
sent out a new flyer, and they were like, we
got a new form of oppression called the police on

(30:08):
black people for being asleep at their dorms in college,
for walking down the street. You know what I mean,
Chances are they'll get murdered. It happens, you know what
I mean. If you go for a jog, next thing,
you know, you got twelve one of shots in your
back because you're on your cell phone and y'a are like,
I mean, there's really nothing that we can do because
it's there's the police are here to police and control

(30:28):
people of color and to make sure that we don't
get too much, you know, they're here to murder us.
And so white people calling the cops like, please be
aware out there. Like when you call the cops on
someone who's suspicious, they better be suspicious. If you just
feel uncomfortable, that's not so same. You're putting someone's life
at risk and you are knowingly complete, not even just complicit.
You're involved in that person's murder like I was. You know,

(30:51):
it's like it's like showing your freedom papers or some ship.
That's what it is. But it's okay because black people
we sent out a newsletter to and we're gonna start
calling cops on y'all from burner phones, like, Hi, this
woman is a popeye. There's a woman out here kicking
the dog. She's kicking the dog and she's throwing away
avocado at the same time. Get out here immediately. Now.

(31:14):
I do wonder if it's happening more now or if
we're just noticing it more now as there are, you know,
noticing it more more social media more places that people
can report it. Um. But it also I could see
it being the fact that as we get more divided
as a country, they're just more uh you know, white

(31:35):
people who only encounter people of color on Fox News
when they're being when crimes are being reported, and so
maybe they're just more scared white people out there. Tell
you why people, I'm not here to harm you in
any way, Well, why y'all scared of us? With y'all
murdering us like this is a fun as narrative, y'all
set up of us being scary. Yet every time I
turn around as y'allking in us because y'all scared? Can
I be scared? I'm told I be scared of every

(31:58):
time I walk past the whole fools I shut or
just or like even as a man, like you know,
I have to, like you have to come off non
threatening sometimes really smile, you know, like really smile with you,
Hi man? How you doing with women? Are ye? But
even in context to like you have to the idea
of this violent black man or whatever exists. So the

(32:19):
only way you can disarm that without verbally addressing it
is to just appear like, oh, I'm a jovial person.
I'm nice and that's kind of you know. I was
going to jokingly suggest that if you get an Airbnb,
you have to like go door to door and be like, Hi,
how are you? We are renting the Airbnb. But also
people will shot. Yeah, you'll get shot. I was just
gonna say, that's happened, slug through the door. Yeah, and

(32:40):
this is actually so Airbnb has had some problematic uh
policies in the past, or problematic instances where people would
not rent to, you know, people, people of color. That's
what I want. White lady was in the group. She
had her face exactly, and I was telling Jack with
my girlfriend who white, I will have her book the

(33:01):
Airbnb because there have been times when I've done it
and it's like, oh sorry, like the booking had to
be canceled. Five minutes later she does, and they're like,
you're all good. Oh, I book places where the owner
is not on the property, and I have a white
person name lysy mostly, so I leave my name up
and then I just go to stock photos and give me,
you know, a nice happy salad. That's my profile photo.

(33:23):
Racially catfish people now through Airbnb. Yeah, there's also Asian
woman who rented an Airbnb drove four hours to Big Bear.
She was gonna go skiing with her friends, and when
she got to the door, the woman turned her away,
uh and responded like in text message, I wouldn't rent
to you if you were the last person on earth.

(33:45):
One word says it all Asian. So you got to
make sure that they're not home right right there you go.
I don't even get it. Wow wow wow. But so
Airbnb has like tried to address this by uh, they
created like a deal with then double a CP where
then double a CP would get commission on every black

(34:09):
host they recruited for the Airbnb site Pyramids. Yeah, basically,
and they're trying to blackwash with the double A CP
basically essentially. I think it's probably the best because you're
not going to get people to Airbnb is different because
you can't get people to open up their homes. It's
not a public business. So if people want to be look,
this is my one place where I'm like, if you

(34:29):
want to be racist in your house, and your house,
get your racism all turn up, you know whatever that
means for you. Um, but outside of your home, you
can't act that way. So if I think getting more
people of code to rent their places out is probably
the only viable solution, because the truth be told, we're
not going to change the hearts and minds of these

(34:50):
people who have decidedly chose to be fucked up or yeah,
I just decide that every person of color is a
threat to them. Yeah, and this is one of the
last just openly racist industries in America. Not like covertly,
but you know, real estate is basically still openly racist
by redlining, like you know, try and get home loan,
and try and get a home loan in a white neighborhood.

(35:12):
I mean, their instant booking thing did kind of help
solve some of the biases that a host might have
because it's just sort of like, well, this is the
person that has the money and can be there, so
you know, you can't look at them or vet them
to decide whether or not you can host them or not,
but you can't shut that door when they get there.
But it's just it is what it is, and it's
just part of the long continuing trend of doing anything

(35:34):
while black. Yeah, and it's funny because I feel like
so many times I hear white people even well meaning
white people are like, well, do you guys bring up
race so much? And it's that's also the problem, and
it's like, no, we I have to think about. Blackness
is an insecurity that I had to realize I had
so that I could control it, because I would show
up places and be like, oh, do they even know
I'm black? Like no one told you that. A job

(35:59):
interview like that, you come out and they're sitting there
looking around and you're the only person. They're like, oh, Miles,
and You're like, oh, yeah, that that's me. You're like, oh,
you sounded different on the phone with the name like lazy.
I used to like baby sit in my neighborhood and
it's a very white neighborhood. Um, then people have money.
But I should be just babysit because I just, you know,
wanted to, And I would like leave these little door

(36:20):
tags on people's doors, and then they would call me
and be like Hi, Lazy, and I'd be Hi, yeah
for sure, And then I get I'm like, I were
your kisold in the free years, be like, oh my god,
you're light sick. Yeah. The trend continues, you know what
I mean, because even just there was like someone like yesterday,

(36:41):
a guy in I think Memphis or something. He was
like a real estate investor and was looking at a
home to like just do an inspection to flip it.
A woman called the cops on him. They called police
on a black police officer who was looking for shell
casings outside of like a crime scene, Like there's a
black man out here in police close like they being
a police officer. I don't know. It could be a costume.

(37:04):
We don't Halloween is soon, capri jesus. So this is
also part of a trend, a wider trend of companies
that started just as like some halfasst fun, part time
thing that turned into like giant behemoths. Because so Airbnb

(37:25):
started ten years ago as two guys renting out an
air mattress in their apartment. Basically they noticed that all
these hotels were getting bought up, like during conventions. I
think it was in San Francisco, and so they started
renting out their air mattresses and called it air bed
and breakfast and people were just like that, desperately in

(37:46):
need of housing, and then somehow that evolved into them
being Airbnb. I'm dealing with finding out the origin of
the name right now, Like when people found out about
megos being short for amigos, right, I was like, why air?
What an air mattress? Because San Francisco real estate is
so fucked up, someone will probably take your house, so

(38:08):
it's not even like in a lady house. Like it's like,
come on, yeah, you can run aero, you can you
can write like a joke nasty exactly, And then it
turns into this like world changing, right, game changer, and
what nasty ship can we run out to make a
fortunate I know, but it's people just you know, stumbling

(38:32):
backwards into multibillion dollar behemoth. And so Uber similarly was
started by a guy who's just like the all time
biggest asshole. Apparently when Uber first started taking out, he
took to calling it Buber because of how much it
gets me laid bro, Travis Kalnik Bober Bouber because that's

(38:57):
that's because boobs and sex, you know, guys stuff, right,
And it grew like out of this crazy misogynistic fat
brow tech bro into a crazy abuse of the misogynistic
company with just a horrible culture. And so now they're

(39:17):
trying to reel that in UH and the new CEO
has this is being treated like they are, you know,
making the world's biggest concession. Uh. They have stopped forcing
people to go into private arbitration when they are sexually
assaulted or sexually harassed by an Uber driver. Yeah, it

(39:39):
happens a lot. And the reason that you don't hear
more about it is because when you sign up for Uber,
you sign away your right to go to court. To
go to court, you solve everything with them in private arbitration,
and you know, private arbitration means that it's not going
to be publicized and also like not a fair way
to because they can't bully you. Right, So you know

(40:03):
your Congress handles are assault cases to like if several
version of just sort of like okay, let's take it.
Other congresses is even it's because you have to you
have to go to work for six months and like
do uh in Congress if you accuse somebody of sexual
harassment or even assault, you have to like go to
mediation with them for six months while you guys like

(40:26):
try to work it out. Um, Yeah, which is basically
just be like, oh well, we'll make it so uncomfortable
for the person that that they just don't want to
work with this process. But I think they're they're trying
to mend that. If maybe they have already, they're working
on it. Chris and Jill Brand. But as for Uber,
I don't know. You know, your company has made some mistakes.
If your new messages, if you get raped using our product,

(40:46):
you can have your day in court. We're changing our ways,
like not like it used to be, right exactly, Um,
that's super Man Uber Uber Uber. What can you do? Yeah,
I mean they're like because they're sucking up a taxi
industry in certain places to or like you know, I'm
mad about that. Yeah. I lived in New York City,
and when you're like, oh yeah, especially being black, I'm like,

(41:12):
at least when I pull up, I can get in.
I'll had cars taxis clipped me. Have you been hit
by Actually, I know so many people who have been
hit by taxis. I've had I've had a door taken
off by a taxi, Like as I was getting out
of another taxi. It wasn't like my car. Wait, actually
I always think the door yeah yeah, And you were

(41:34):
like yeah, ye oh, sh crazy. I know somebody who's
died from getting hit by a taxi. Daniel O'Brien from
Daniel No, No, he got like but he got hit
really bad, to the point that he came back to
work limping. Uh. Yeah, d o b was hit by
a tax cab in New York by taxi cab and
the only thing that saved him is like he was

(41:54):
so surprised that he jumped up in the air. And
that's apparently like exactly what you're supposed to do if
you're about to be hit by a rather being planted
right really yeah, yeah, so I don't know, man, Yeah,
you have a body camera and you can get that
scamra But yeah, like I think I would feel worse
for the taxi industry if they hadn't been such trash

(42:15):
for so long. It's more like in other countries to
like Paris, who they were fucking ready to like beat
the ship out of uber drivers. Now they were dropping
bricks on ubers and ships from overpasses. Yeah, it was
no fucking jokes, serious game. Yeah. The they do not
funk around when it comes to uh unionizing and organizing

(42:38):
and won't even let their drivers unionize, you know what
I mean. So like it's just like you know, they
can not to mention that the drivers are treated shitty
to like, it's just it's hard to find a good
thing about it in terms aside from the convenience of
being able to summon a vehicle to get from point
to point. There was a heartbreaking story about a cab
driver who invested basically, you invest in these medallions, these

(43:01):
taxing medallions, and like they used to cost one point
five million dollars when this dude bought them, and like
he was paying it off, paying it off, paying it off,
and then Uber came in and now they're worth less
than a hundred thousand dollars, and so like there's this
huge rash of suicides among cab drivers who like did
this because they just like lost all of their savings
from Uber. My god, Uh so yeah, it's Uber's fucked

(43:24):
up in many ways. Granted, so are a lot of
cab drivers. So but yeah, so, I mean, the one
thing you can say is this is a start for Uber.
Like they did look at the what they were like, Okay,
what is the single most fucked up thing about our company?
And then they actually addressed it and like openly addressed it.
You know, this is like some ship that Facebook might
fix in their user terms of service and then like

(43:47):
just you know, quietly make it go away. But Uber
is like, all right, so we're really fucked up company.
We're trying to fix stuff. So here's the thing that's
gonna be doing differently. Those are the best apologies though, too.
You know, when you can come and be like, hey,
we've been fun it up right and we're going to
do something about it. Because most places, especially in this country,
are most people too in the public eye, will you know,

(44:07):
give half ast apologies or whatever and ship like that.
So I feel like those we've been sucking up moments
always come on the heels of somebody about the auto
ass though, because I feel like when it kept it
real quiet, somebody was about to blow whistle right. But
in Facebook, like they're not out here. I mean, although
they are trying to run new ads like we're getting
back to like what Facebook was about. They're running those
ads ads all over the NBA playoffs, being like remember

(44:31):
when Facebook was a good check out griends. Yeah, we're
not gonna steal your info no more. All right, we're
gonna take a quick break. We'll be right back, and

(44:51):
we're back and yeah, we just blew by that megos thing.
But I did not know megos was short for um
egos until the Donald Glover sketch on SNL where where
they called them friend does. I was like, oh right,
I thought that was a reference to No Country for
Old men. Friend. Um, I love teeth. That was my

(45:15):
favorite ad libe. But apparently it was trending yesterday because
Drake's new tour is Drake and the Three Amigos. So
now we're gonna get onto something that is currently blowing
the minds of everybody in our office, um and the internet.
It is the Laurel or Yanni debate. So let's let's

(45:36):
just hear. Let's let's just get right into it. Let's
hear this piece of audio. Um, and everyone tell us
we don't tell us. You know, we can't talk to you?
Is the one way medium? But uh you hearing? Yeah,
Laurel Laurel. Okay? Now Laurel again, Laurel, Laurel, Laurel Laurel Okay,

(46:01):
we'll can hear it. Lay right here Laurel or Yanni?
Oh yeah, I don't hear that little lady in the
back like hell. We have established that Lacy had superhearing,
Like we were playing this uh high pitched thing in
our old studio that only people who are like under
a certain age are supposed to be able to hear

(46:22):
because their ears haven't just been completely fucked yet. And
Lacey was the only person who was able to hear it,
like the full frequency range of protect these little drums, right,
so as it really reflects on people with you're hearing
are Laurel? You're Laurel? Right, I hear Laurel. I heard
Laurel all day yesterday. I heard Laurel when we just

(46:45):
listened to it there, but all morning this morning I
heard a version of it that sounded like Yanni and
started hearing Yanni. And I hadn't been able to hear
Laurel again until just then, So no, you didn't hear that.
Was watching a rerun of Jersey Shore where thinky was
like Yanni? Right, yeah, it was like um, but this
is basically when that dress thing happened, where like some

(47:07):
people saw it as black and blue and some people
saw it as white and gold. So see, now I
got to keep listening to this like a sociopath or something,
because when I saw the blue dress, I first saw
it as a blue dress, and then I started looking
at that ship just forever, and then it was white
to me, and I could go back and forth. So
now I need to listen to this until it's Yanni

(47:27):
because I need to be a lightened right. So yeah,
so I don't it sounds like Laurel. Laurel. Second, for
a second, Laurel, No, did you change that, Nick? What
you're doing? Nick? The first time you played it, it it
sounded like Yanni. Yeah. I think what happened is because

(47:50):
Lacey was saying something distorted disrupted my hearing for a
second that I hear it. So aren't they saying that
it's a combination of like Yanni is in there too,
but it's at a high frequency or something. But you
can't hear them both at the same time, and when
you're hearing one, you can't hear the other. It's crazy
because when I was hearing Yanni earlier, I couldn't hear
Laurel at all, and you can only hear you. I

(48:12):
could only hear Yanni, and now I can only hear Laurel.
Like an auditory illusion, kind of those ones where it's
like where you see like those like on an electric
sign where it looks like something spinning and you can't
tell direction. Have we been in the room with people
who are hearing different things but they're in the same room. Yes,
yesterday Caitlyn Dante and Jamie Lofts were in here and
Caitlin Darante heard Yanni. Yeah, and Jamie Loft has heard Laurel.

(48:35):
We were all hearing Laurel. And then just now in
Nick's booth, I was hearing Yanni and everybody else was
hearing Laurel. Okay, because all about the same. Maybe it's
just us. It's like, it's crazy. So when the dress
thing happened, they were like these articles saying it was
all about how our visual cortex interacts with a light
reflecting off surfaces in our visual frame. There's like this

(48:58):
wire article where, uh, they were saying our visual system
is supposed to throw away information. But I've studied individual
differences in color vision for thirty years and I just
never really bought that that it was like a color
specific thing. And now I think I'm vindicated. I think
this is proof that it's it's not just colors, it's
basically how our senses interact with our brain. Um, there's

(49:22):
this book Incognito by David Eagleman, that is one of
my favorite nonfiction books that everybody should read. But uh
he talks about how there are way more nerves traveling
from our brain to our eyes in that direction than
from our eyes to our brain. Uh So, in other words,
we see with our eyes, but we also to a
large degree see with our memory. Like our memory fills

(49:44):
in a lot of our visual field with just what
it knows is they're based on what you've seen in
the past and in context. So if that's true, and
if that applies to all of our you know, sensory
perception organs, then you know you're bringing so much of
your memory and your personal experience to everything you hear

(50:07):
that it is going to be totally different to different
people basically. Um, And I think, like, I don't know,
think about how completely different it sounds when you hear
a song for the first time, to like when you
hear it for the seventh time and you absolutely love it, too,
when you hear it for the hundredth time and you're
just like so tired of this song, it's like it

(50:28):
sounds like a different song. And I don't know, I
feel like that's partially what's happening with how this is
hitting our brains. I don't think I'm ever gonna hear Yanni.
I think if I do, I'm gonna have to like
bring the audio tracking the logic and start like fucking
with the speed of it or something, because that's what like,

(50:48):
what's crazy is that this thing has even like Mother
Jones is writing about it and ship and like they
have like they were linking to tweets where someone was
pitching it up and down in different directions and different
uh quantities or whatever, and they're saying, like you and
here Yanni at certain levels. But honestly, I'm team Laurel.
So I've been both, man, I've been to the other
show the other That's why I want to go. I

(51:12):
wanna make sure my chakras are online. Yeah, I gotta
hear them both. Yeah, f t before make sure all
your Meridians is moving right. Yeah. So super producer Nick
Stump was just asking if there is like a definitive
answer for what is actually being said in the same
way that once you saw the dress, it yeah it

(51:34):
was blue and black like we always said, and all
those other people were crazy. Uh, there is only one answer,
it is Laurel. Okay, then I'm just saying that because
I my ego can't handle anything. Yeah, So I don't know. Alright, Well,
I guess superproducer Nick Stump just ruined it for us
and found out that it's from vocabulary dot com. When
you type in the word Laurel and have its speech
it back to you. The text speech it says Laurel.

(51:57):
And obviously there's not gonna be no Yanni because that's
a name of one of the greatest vocalists of our time.
M hm, I don't buy it, all right, Well, we
don't have to, you know, fake news, fake news. No,
it definitely sounds just like Laurel to me now, but
I don't know for some reason when I was hearing
it earlier, out of speakers, try from different speakers to speakers, distances,

(52:20):
you know, all kinds of ways, quadrophonics, round sound. Have
you got to do it? All right? And finally, Lacy, uh,
you said that there is a meaning behind your a
k the Paul Gonzalez thing. This is not a scamper, uh. No,
Paul Gonzalez is a scammer. Uh. And maybe this will
help people in the Southern California area. But this is
a man who's on dating apps, who is um going

(52:40):
on first dates with women and then yes, Fagnzalez is
the diyning dash dater. He is going out here and
taking women off for his days and then he is leaving, yeah,
before the check. It's usually the thing is they show up,
he's like, oh, I came here early and already are
but I'm down to eat again, and so the waiter

(53:02):
will come match, they'll order the thing, and then he'll
bone out with leaving her like with the fucking check
while he's had a whole steak dinner and the first day.
So you don't know this person and he's meeting these
women on apps like go on, go on Jesus and
Merrow's YouTube channel because they've talked about a couple of times.
Is hilarious because yeah, like one of the recent times,

(53:23):
one of the managers the restaurant recognized kicked him out
and then comp this woman's meal because he was like,
it's okay, queen, like I'm sorry about him, but listen,
that's a dope scam. I don't I don't. I don't
want to encourage men to do that because look when
women go on day. It's like, you need to pick
that check up. And then if you want to do half,
that's cool, but you're never gonna see me again. But no,

(53:47):
we're not going half on the first day. I'm a queen.
You need to pick that up. You can't afford me,
and if you day somebody who can't. If you if
you both broke, it's cool because then you're both broke.
But if one of you is not broken and the
other one is, then you make the other person broke
because yeah, exactly, and then put your sink a little
bit because she was hired. But all I'm saying is

(54:07):
is like, that's a great scam. My man's is out
here really dining. They've made articles about him. Women are pissed.
If you google him, you can see his face. He's
like moderately attractive. He looks I think he lives with
his mom too or something. He's like running. He like
lived around the corner with his mom. And there's there's
many demensions to people like, hey, queen, let's go out
to Mastro steakhouse tonight. Yeah, but think about it. If

(54:30):
you're a woman, and you probably I mean, if you
live in l a ship will be out here just
rolling the dice with dudes and be like, well why
not Paul, He's like, oh, I want to meet you
at Crustacean. Right, He's like, I want to meet you
at Mastro's Queen. He like his top line, looking to
stop looking. That's a scam kind kind of guy you

(54:53):
could get seriously disarming. You like that, looking to stop looking? Yo,
that's good for my wallet, because that's what. Oh, I
forgot my wallet, my favorite First you be looking for me.
I've done that before. You know, on a date. You
forgot your wallet? Oh you lost your Oh shit, I

(55:14):
can't believe I forgot my wallet. You can't say oh
shit like that, Miles. You said oh it before you
even started patting your pocket. I can see you. That's
not good. The devil knows their own like you have to.
I'm not like, because you just said you did it,
I don't know. Look, it's a comedy show. That's a bit.
That's not a big guys. Luckily scams you got the

(55:37):
Hey people, don't don't put it out there like that.
A good guy. Hey, what is that? I'm also mad
at Paul Man. That's my scam, right, Well, for that
was supposed to be for women. I mean, look, I
guess some people are out there going, duh, that's good
for y'all. Women need to start doing that. Just go
just scam. I showed up to the day. You don't

(55:58):
have to wear makeup. You know much makeup coss Okay,
I paid already. I know a lot of dudes who
feel like they have girls that they're seeing on these apps,
who are just using them for free meals. Like that
was some I did someone in college like that. I
did this volleyball player. Oh my god. I was like,
I loved her and she would only hit me up

(56:18):
to eat. It was always she would be like, oh,
what's up. I'm like, oh, yeah, you want to kid.
She's like, yeah, I'm hungry. You hungry? And I'm like
and then we're always eating. And then I remember one
time I was like, I brought it up. I was like,
why do we always eat? Like when we're doing this,
she got so defensive, and I was like, that's when
I realized, don't know, why do you always eat? Yeah, well, guys,
if you want to know the chicks into you, like,
I don't know, take the business to the park, go

(56:40):
walk on the beach. That's cute. And on the first
day you're not drounded me, but she got her meals.
We can go to a park during the daytime. It's
got so much fresh off. That's not bad. But when
you're in college, you were store and you and you're
slinging bags on the side to get a Brookstone sound machine.
You don't have the you don't have to spend. And

(57:01):
at that point I sat through some pretty rough dates
because I was like, oh food, and then I'm gone
back out with the mcghinna. I was like, you know,
I don't like you, but I am. He's like, you
gotta understand Lacy about Info wars is. Alex Jones does
have a point. I dated. I went out with a
guy who literally asked me if I knew what app

(57:22):
was because he was trying to tell me what he
did because he was retired. He was like, oh, I'm
developing an app and I had a blank stare like okay,
and you develop an Apple for what? Like you sound
like you're lying, And he was like, oh, do you
not know what an appisode? Know this? Motherfucker? Oyeah? You
know what? Do you have a mobile device? And then
after that I was just petty. He tried to tell
me Iowa wasn't in this wing state. I said, one

(57:43):
of the Iowa caucuses. What is that what he told me?
He in the politics. I was like, Oh, you just
thought I was stupid? Do you know what the blue
dogs Democratic? Listen. As soon as he closed the tap,
I left sounds trifling. I'm not trifling, guys. I'm looking
for a love. You're looking to stop looking. And if
people are looking to find you, where can they find you? Yes,

(58:05):
you can find me on Instagram and Twitter, same hands all.
We got a brand going over here, Diva Lacey. That's
d I V A l A c I um. We
can also see the at U c B on Amati
Mama and on a Harold team Leave Roy, and there's
a few other places. I can't tell you what you'll
be able to see me yet. Next time, next next,

(58:28):
I'm very excited for you. I'm genuinely yeah, that's exciting time.
And it's not like as soon as he's might go off,
I'm gonna press you to tell me anyway. Yes me,
you can find me at Miles of Gray on Twitter
and Instagram. You can find me at Jack Underscore O'Brien
on Twitter. You can find us at Daily's Like Guys
on Twitter, where at d Daily's like Guys on Instagram.
We have Facebook fan page and a website, Dailies like

(58:50):
Guys dot Com, where we post our episodes and ire
but we link off to the information in the episode
that we talked about today. Uh, and we also link
off to the on we ride out on miles. What's
that gonna be there today? Okay? Well, because we're talking
on with Korea and I was trying to find world peace,
I wanted to play a track by the group Warpaint
Lovely Band uh fromm Yeah, they're most they're La based ladies.

(59:14):
Uh my goodness. This song is called set your Arms Down,
because that's what all we're trying to do is set
our arms down and just find peace. We don't need
to be aiming things at each other. We don't need
to be aiming the mobile phones at each other to
call nine one one because I'm just trying to return
something at target. Okay, anyway, please love each other, set
your arms down, and you know, keep somebody hug today.

(59:37):
But ask them first, guys, Yeah, yeah, yeah, fellas ask
them first, all right, we're gonna write out on that.
We will be back tomorrow because it is a daily podcast.
Talk to you guys by oh he stayed to night.

(01:00:14):
We bring poker, okankners. You find me, you want to
find for godencent of me. See your seal bay and

(01:00:47):
to we want to fire. My love is your first
love life. They find me, they want to find for

(01:01:10):
by time sent to me. See so walk way to

(01:01:59):
get b say w's born to chill, Sad said s

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