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March 16, 2018 68 mins

In episode 106, Jack & Miles are joined by comedian Billy Wayne Davis to discuss the NPR Wine Club, Snapchat, Drake & Travis Scott on Twitch, the GOP's tough week, Stormy Daniels being physically threatened, bloidwatch, & more!

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season twenty two, episode
five of DARE Daily Life Guys. Y March two thousand
and eighteen. My name is Jack O'Brien, Potatoes O'Brien, and
I am joined as always probably my co host Mr
Miles Gray. Now all around the world Digital Underground, Pock
the Rudolf, Fred Knows Grain, Deerra the Rock. I take

(00:22):
my chain, Miles fifteen seconds of fame and come back
next year with the whole fucking grain. Ain't nobody expect
Miles to end up on top. They expected the Daily
Ze guys to drop out and flop. Then maybe he
stopped saving all the good jokes for himself. It's Jack O'Brian,
only hold me to help. My money was centered and
Miles Gray goateee hair now Miles Gray gotee hair cologne

(00:42):
filled the air. Yeah, this goes on forty five minutes,
so let's do it again. Little instrument on there, thank
you so much, because yesually I was talking about how
last called from Kanye West on my favorite song, so
that was from at Trees and uh the homie j
wrote on Instagram. So yeah, combined, you guys gave me
about a half verset. We are thrilled to be joined

(01:05):
in our third see by perennial great podcast host and
hilarious comedian Billy Wayne Davis. I'm not gonna wrap, all right, Okay,
I'm not gonna rap. I am not going to wrap,
Billy Wayne. What is something from your search history that
is revealing about you as a command? Yesterday I was

(01:25):
searching for drone video of scientology buildings that is interesting
to see if like how they end up or if
people can get Like what do you mean you just
want to see? Yeah, because there's certain there's certain places
like Gold Base. Gold Base, there's a video, a drone
video of it. It's one of the craziest thing. What

(01:47):
gold Base. It's the one out in Hemmett, California. Um, Hemmett,
Hemmett where you have to like where those people escaped from,
like they were like black cars coming for them and ship.
Yeah yeah, yeah, dude's dad escaped. Uh. It's really crazy. Wait,
so what inspired you to be like, wait, I need
to see this from this guy? I was in Humboldt

(02:10):
County and we were I just did radio in this
place called Ferndale and we were driving out to this
beach and we passed this like it looked just looks
like a mountain road up the side of a mountain
just where I come from. It was just like, oh,
that's where some hillbillies live, right. But there was like
one of those old sixties signs that says, uh, way
to petrol you. And I was like, what is Petrolea?

(02:31):
And dude was like, Oh, there's like a town up
there you have to blow blah blah. But it's next
to this scientology tomb blah blah blah tomb. And I
was like, what do you You You can't just say that,
And he's like, we don't have time. I gotta go
get my kids. And we were like, me and my
buddy that was driving, We're like, cool, we're gonna drop

(02:52):
you back off. And then the show's not till eight,
so it's like noon. He's like, yeah, you'll have enough
time to get there and stuff. I did this thing
where I was like, just looked enough into it not
to be like like you shouldn't do this right right right,
So I just looked enough like let's drive up there.
And he's like cool. Yeah. Then we get up there
and we've been driving what seems like forever on this
just mountain road and it like forty minutes and it

(03:14):
said we'd driven like eight miles and I was like, oh,
we don't have time, right, So then I looked it
up and there was no way we could have gotten
to it. And it's like where they keep all the
records of everything that l Ron Hubbard had ever written.
It's like everything and like every iteration of Tom Cruise
in his human form that so, I mean there's I'm

(03:36):
sure there's stuff, and there's like rumors like his body's
up there, and like all of it's like makes sense,
and it's at the top of this mountain. You're right, cool,
but someone took a drone and you can see it.
But then when I could see it like that, I
was like, oh, there's no way we could have got
right because it's at the top of the mountain, which
is very smart control who comes up at a certain
level and definitely picturing the end of the prestige where

(03:59):
like it pulls out and there's like thirty different bodies
Hugh Jackmans like roading dead and in a case of water. Yeah, exactly,
that's what That's what you thought that was, Nicole Kid, right, man, Yeah,
humans look like that. Um, well, that's that's crazy. Did
you see anything good? Did you see any uh any

(04:20):
people trying to escape or no? But every now and
then on some of them you can see people looking
up right. But like I know for a fact you
can't shoot those down because there was one over my
neighborhood recently. Thought it was like, well, I'm gonna look
that up before I do it. Man, you can't. What
do you mean you can't? You cannot shoot even if
they're over at least illegal legally, you can't shoot down

(04:42):
a drone even if it's over your proper right really.
Uh well yeah, and also you probably can't just charge
a firearm in a residential area. Even if I had
a baby gun, I could start take that motherfucker allegedly
I have a baby. Yeah, well I might allegedly have one.
Uh that's what's in the corner there. It's not actually
a palm tree. I just put it in a pot

(05:02):
of soil exactly. But yeah, everybody should read going clear.
Tom Cruise. His life is built around slave labor. That's
worth worth keeping in mind. Hey we'll call him interns
exactly fucking bonkers, all right, what is something that's underratability scientology.

(05:23):
You know, it turns out it turns out I got
my personality for it's like having a vision and seeing
it through. Yeah, serious, can can we? I mean ethically
and morally just that's not great. No, let's move that
to the side. But as far as being like, hey,

(05:44):
I'm gonna do this thing, and everybody's like okay, And
then he did, he did, he did. What was it?
Like the the thing like with him and like other
writers talking to each other, and he's like, I'm gonna
start a religion where the real money's at starting your
own religion, and its like anyway, it's he remembered one

(06:04):
of those like drunken conversations that I've had and forgotten.
Like he just kept it up there and then went
and did the fucking thing? Was he like, was Isaac
Asimov or something around? When he was saying that I
feel like I was here, his name brought up with
him talking like were talking to Isaac asthm was there
was a weird crew that lived together in like this
mansion of like sex religion. Uh, and I forget who

(06:27):
the other authors were, um, sex sex religion. Yeah, there
was this dude Jack something. It was like an early Yeah,
it's like an early NASA figure And helped found the
Jet Propulsion Laboratory and also founded his own sex religion.
Uh and Jesus and rocket propulsion uh and that guy

(06:53):
he and l Roun lived together for a little while
in the early days, and uh, pretty weird place in Pasadena.
I knew it was out here. I knew it was
like somewhere where it's like, oh, yeah, all these crazy people. Yeah,
and you never get any reading. No. I got kicked
to have a place in Louisville once because they saw Mike.
You went to Aiology Center. It was across the street

(07:15):
from the comedy club Perfect, and I don't think I
was the first or last comedian to do that. And
the dude was like, what are you in town for?
And I was like, I'm doing stuff. I'm looking for
a purpose. And he's like, get out of here. He
just know I was, Or you're like, hey, i'd love

(07:36):
to know more about my credit was probably the way
the order of the questions I probably asked you probably
like okay, Jack ads, Yeah, You're immediately like, yeah, what
the dianetics or what what's something that is overrated. Do
you think? Ah, the Internet all right as we know it? Uh?

(08:00):
And what is a myth? What's something that people and uh?
Is not that you know based on personal experience? Is
not true? Ah? That men are simple? That men are simple?
That is a myth? What do you mean? What can
you give an example of, like a place that you
see this myth? Like you're talking about the sort of

(08:24):
dad's in commercials myth where dads are portrayed as having
the intelligence of I think it's the myth that we
don't feel the emotions right. It's just how we react
to emotions is different than females. Ah. But I think
the myth that we don't feel them right, Yeah, that's

(08:48):
mostly just terrible at processing without without Oh ship, what
was that? That was not it at all? And I
think having a raising him a boy has omised a
lot too. We're like, oh, chill, hey, I see what
you think you feel right here, But that's not what
it is. What do you what? What kind of lessons

(09:09):
you're talking about? I think overall we're taught that feeling
certain emotions in certain situations is the bad thing. When
it's like, that's not the bat You can't control the
emotions you feel. It's the way you react to those emotions.
It's the bad thing if you're accepting them or resisting them. Yeah,
I mean feeling them. You can't fucking control that. Like
sometimes I get mad. I'm like, why am I mad?
Right now? Right? And they're like, oh, because this reminds

(09:32):
me of this, And it's not that at all, right,
But I'm old enough to be like, oh, you know
your own patterns basically, but we're taught you shouldn't feel
that right now, right right, It's like that. It's not
you can't control what you feel. You shouldn't be who
you are right now. Yes, that's it's like, no, no, no,
how you react to that emotion was wrong? Right now.

(09:54):
You gotta be like okay, right right, right right, But
feeling it is not bad. Yeah, that's a that's a
conversation a lot of people have been having after the
mass shooting, the most recent mass shooting in Florida. And
you know, Michaele and Black had an interesting thing. I
think he's uh father to a son at least, and
uh he's talking about just the fact the way that

(10:16):
we train boys to you know, be men and what
masculinarity means is sort of off the mark. And I
think I think that is basically the sort of Rosetta
stone of of uh, toxic masculinity is just this idea
that a lot of young men get early early in life.

(10:37):
And I know I did. I don't know if I
think things might have improved to a certain extent, but
you know that the only emotion it's acceptable to have
our basically anger. And that's it. So like everything you
every emotion you have, ends up coming out as anger. Uh,
And that's that's not healthy and it's all it's also

(10:59):
not realistic, right right, Um, Yeah, there hasn't been a
real shift in how we define masculinity, especially in this
culture of like not allowing people to be sympathetic or
sensitive or anything like that. Well, and it's it's not
like a certain humans fault either. Like the way we
communicate has advanced so quickly in the last fifty years

(11:20):
that like it used to be like, oh, we had
to be angry a lot to protect ourselves because we
because things were out to get us and so you
had to be so like there's part of that that
it's like it's just tough. It's like a weird time
for literally everyone because we have all this Look at
this stuff. This is crazy. Right. If if I brought

(11:42):
my gram to General Technology, right, all this room is
just wires and we're talking to microphones and there's screens
everywhere to the end, and I bring my grandmother in here,
she'd be like, Um, this is a job? Is this?
He works for nassas NASA right, But like so that's

(12:04):
part of why we don't know how to process things too. Right.
Our brain was designed at a time, you know, it
was designed for survival, back when we hadn't made it
out of the food chain yet we were still in
the food chain, and you know that that world is
so different from the world we existed now. Um, I

(12:26):
mean we're still killing elephants, right. Really the coolest animal
that one that in giraffes. Every time I see that,
what are you doing? Shout out to Planet Earth too,
there's a great uh, it's a great giraffe lion chase
and planet planets to that ends ends the way you

(12:49):
would want it to. Yeah, the lion, the lion, Yeah,
like jumped. Yeah. Giraffes are fucking awesome, man. Yeah, they're
so fast. Have you ever seen the video of a draft,
Like there there were these German people on safari and
they're like the video opens and they're just speeding away

(13:10):
and they're like screaming at the top of their lungs.
And then like they put the camera back and a
giraffe is just running after dark from Jrassic Park scene,
except it's a draft, and the draft is like so
athletic and so fucking fast, and they're just like crying,
like what's it gonna do when it catches us? And
then finally they like outrun it. But it's like all

(13:34):
you ever see drafts do when you're growing up is
you know, leaves off of tall trees or whatever. But yeah,
they're athletic as fun. Man. Our whole source income just
closed this week. Rest in toys. All right, let's get
into format, guys. Uh. First off, I just wanted to

(13:56):
make sure that everybody has heard about favorite new club
that I'm going to be joining. I think we have
a sound clip support for this podcast and the following
message come from the NPR Wine Club. Discover hands selected
wines from around the world, learn the stories behind each one,
and amjoy you that models inspired by favorite NPR shows

(14:20):
if you're twenty one or older, uncorked a special offer
and NPR Wine Club dot Org. Come on liberals, Wait
what the liberals? And come satire of? What did I
just that's not satire? No, that's not satire. That is
fucking on NPR podcast this week. They just decided, I mean,

(14:42):
they've got to make money somehow, I guess, but right,
but that's yeah, you know, the All Grapes considered mall
back as next Stuff superproducer. Wait so they said these
are they Wait that's that's that's all okay, so out

(15:05):
I thought he was joking. The weekend edition All Grapes
considered mall Beck an NPR unquirked merlow what yo NPR like?
It sounds like they hired some people from like legit
terrestrial radio to come in and be right, we need
to make money. It's like some dude named Devin's I

(15:28):
know how to do this ship. Listen, Yeah, look at
your audience. What do they love? NPR NPR Wine, I'm done,
smoke bomb, where's my check? Bitch? And he's too fast
and everyone just too polite exactly. It's just what are
you scared? What are you? What are you talking about it.
You don't like this idea. And when he leaves, everyone's like,

(15:49):
I don't like is it? I do on the nose?
I just don't want to stay. Does that mean he
did before he came into pitch And then they just
go along with it because they don't want him to
come back because it's such a crazy alpha And yeah,
they got cocked into a horrible idea. Wait, so it's

(16:09):
basically they're just NPR. Devin is our new programmer programming manager.
Uh yeah, I don't. I don't know man more Hey
Warren all me, you can say bitch more bitch alright.
Another quick thing we wanted to hit up top is

(16:32):
Snapchat had this ad, uh for for a game called
would you Rather? And uh the ad that was approved
by Snapchat was would you rather slap Rihanna or punch
Chris Brown? H and Rihanna replied by, you know, just
explaining very uh, you know, carefully and kindly why that

(16:57):
wasn't funny and you know how disrespectful it was to
victims of domestic violence and children and women who have
who are victims of domestic violence. And then she was like,
shame on you throw the whole app bology away and yeah,
like preremptively, preremptively was like, don't don't worry about apologizing

(17:19):
to me. I'm just deleting your tweet. And uh, apparently
a lot of Rihanna fans, which is a lot of people,
the Navy of the people. Uh yeah, they they have
been deleting the Snapchat app and its value on the
stock market went down four percent and one day they

(17:40):
lost over a billion dollars because some dumbass, uh you know,
approved this add that was designed by Devin from the NPR.
That's what got me fired. You're thinking about it, man,
you're appealing to the women who want to punch Chris
Brown and the bros who were like, man, I'd slap Rihanna.
You see what I'm say? Check out this ven diagram

(18:03):
real quick, right right? And then the overlap here just
Cox he started yelling at numbers. I hate that guy. Uh. Snapchat,
of course is the same app that recently lost a
bunch of uh their Wall Street value because I think
Kylie Jenner said is it just me? Or does nobody
open Snapchat anymore? La wa wa wa wall And uh

(18:29):
that was like plummeted. Could you imagine like that would
be so maddening to like the CEO of that company
and just be like, fuck Kylie Jenner. All the stories
about that place are fucking wild too. Like I've from
the few people I know who have who worked there
or have worked there, I it sounds like a kind
of chaotic place to be. Yeah, yeah, but we're probably

(18:50):
do a deep dive. They were buying up all the
real estate in Venice, yeah, Like all the coolest homes
in Venice were being bought by Snapchat and people were
not it's psyched about it. It's that weird thing when
they get money like that and they're like, let's spend
it on real stuff, so we have real stuff, right right,
instead of this made up thing they gave us money for.

(19:11):
I left Snapchat like because I was going around doing
general meetings here and it was like two years ago,
and everybody's like, uh, do you have like a Snapchat show?
So I downloaded and looked at it and I was like, no,
I don't know, and I never will. I'm not interested
in this me now. No, this is do you guys

(19:34):
think this is gonna last? And they're like yeah, And
I was like, is this this thing? I said this
in a meeting. I was like, is this the app
that the pictures disappear? And everybody's like, you know, you
can just the pictures disappear. And I was like, mmmm,
I don't think you guys understand how pictures work or
data works. They're like no, no, no, And then it
came out that all those pictures are somewhere right, It's

(19:56):
not it's not truly ephemeral, like they say, what, oh man,
I need to find someone, give me one. I've made
a terrible It has a moble on it can find uh.
And then, lastly, speaking of technology, I don't totally understand
Twitch had It's a most streamed event a couple of

(20:20):
nights ago, just when Drake and Travis Scott decided to
start playing some video game with a well liked Twitcher
Ninja Ninja. Could you believe Drake and Travis Scott played
Fortnite with Ninja on Twitch? Come on, door or a window?

(20:40):
I need to jump out? You know? Like Twitch, I
understand why people use it personally For me and I
told I told you Jack. It reminds me of when
I was the little kid playing video games with older
kids and I only got to watch them play. I
want to I want to have my hands on the game. Right.
So Twitch for people who don't know, it's just TV
where you get to watch other people playing video games
and you hear them and see their faces and you

(21:01):
can interact with them, interact with them and comment and
a lot of people are making a lot of money
that way, and a lot of people. Yeah, and so
Drake just made a cameo on some one of these
professional gamers uh streams, and it like blew up. It
was like a huge event a couple of nights ago,

(21:21):
uh six and twenty eight thousand concurrent viewers is like
what a typical, you know, major sporting event would get
like not not not like the super Bowl, but you know,
like a good NBA game would probably see about that
many reviewers at a yeah at a at a given
time about um not if like Drake was playing Yeah,

(21:47):
if he was playing basketball, that would get a much
bigger right exactly. The one thing I the clips I
saw of it were kind of just funny because it's interesting.
You know, like people who online game right, we talk
a certain way because you're just to functionally describing, you know,
to strategize, like oh, wait, someone's around like the door,
like I just got killed or whatever. So to hear
Drake be like the one guy's like, oh damn it,

(22:07):
I got killed. He's like, damn you got killed again.
And then like those long pauses because it's not like
a real conversation like alright, alright, I'm gonna come around.
I'm gonna around just like. But hearing Drake sort of
just be talking very sort of like involved in the
game was the most uh, I think, I don't know.
That was the interesting thing to me. I find that
he's a person, yeah, but you know, because he has

(22:31):
sort of certain personalities he adopts and one when he's
Rapper Drake, but clearly it felt like he was gaming
as Aubrey Graham like so, which was funny because I'm like,
oh that this feels a little more sincere to you
because you just had his middle name, Yeah, Aubrey Graham. Yeah, sorry,
did that just change things for you? But not once
I saw him on Starting Night Live and he did
all the rappers, and that's when I was like, I

(22:52):
want to see who you are. You're just some mimic
more than anything else. Yeah, he's and he's a writer,
of amazing hooks. I mean, yeah, I'm not taking away,
but I mean as like an artist like i'd much
other listen to, like to change a little wing. Because
they were like they were from the South. Well that
helps Canada. They were also on Nickelodeon. I have always

(23:17):
linked twitch and podcasting in my mind because I feel
like they're both. They both say something about like craving
for authentic human interactions. I feel like like people wanting
to just hang with somebody. It's like totally unmediated hanging
out with somebody watching what they're doing in real time.

(23:38):
There's no editing, and you know, podcasts, you feel like
you're listening on a conversation with people who you want
to hang out with, essentially kind of like forums were, right,
I remember, like there's a special thing. It's still a thing,
especially that there was a forum on that website where
like Luis c k and Pat Oswald would come on

(23:58):
and talk sometimes. I remember that that was like ten
or fifteen years ago. Yeah, but I mean sometimes it's
not even like like a lot of the twitch streamers
is just like people who are only famous for being
twitch streamers. You guys know who Dan t d M
is no, you don't have an eight year old, do
you know? I don't Dan t d M T d

(24:20):
M d T d M. Yeah, he is a YouTuber. Yes.
He lives in London, England. My son dressed up as
him for Halloween. He watches. What he does is he
plays like mine Craft and all this stuff and he's
kind of funny. But to them he's like really funny. Yeah,
but like I watched it, I'm like, okay, he's like

(24:42):
he's not a hack, right right, right, right, Okay, it's
like four eight year old, but it's like he understands jokes,
like he's funny. It's like hanging out like I would
go when I was eight years old. I would go
to like my funny friend's house and watch him play
video games and just be like entertained by that. And
they learned, like and then he'll go back to Minecraft.

(25:04):
My son will and be like do this other stuff.
He's like, oh I saw him do this and I
learned it. Like, oh that's cool. I don't have any
problem with this. Yeah, Like this isn't mindless. This is
like it's okay, it's an interesting thing that's happening. I
think it's interesting too, I don't think this is something
that would happen fifteen years ago, because I don't think
we had like commodified just general unmediated human interactions, like

(25:27):
we just hung out with people. But like, I don't
necessarily see it as a bad thing if you can
like hang out with the best video game player and
like watch him be funny, you know, like, yeah, it's
kind of cool. Yeah you found it. I think in
the neighborhood was like have you seen Kevin play punch Out?
He's better than everybody else. And then you go to

(25:49):
Kevin's house and you're like, god, Kevin house, and I
would know you could do that. Oh I see what
he's doing. Yeah, now it's just like Kevin happens to
be in Paris, right that. Yeah, yeah, it's like a
cable guy play Mortal Kombat with a friend in Vietnam
stand on the satellite. But yeah, I also think about two.
Like the performative aspect though, is interesting also because I

(26:11):
feel like as a kid, I would perform as I
played video games in funt of like if I played
G t A, I was like having commentary as I
like wild it out in the streets and I would
just say crazy shit. So you know, suffice to say,
when Red the new Red Dead game comes out, I'll
probably start twitching and acting crazy in that game. Watch
out for that. Kids. All Right, we're gonna take a

(26:33):
quick break. We'll be right back, and we're back. And
uh So this past week, it's been sort of a
rough week for the Republicans. Um really not not that

(26:54):
rough week for people who partake in schaden freud. Uh
because Fred and we just wanted to go through a
rundown because a lot of ship was just dropping in
the past couple of days. It was a ship storm
for the GOP and uh, you know, and I feel
like ship's probably happened as we're talking, right, that probably is.

(27:17):
It's just look outside and there's ship. Uh. Pennsylvania special
election loss was tough hit that they took. We took.
We talked about that on Wednesday, but um, you know,
it hadn't officially been called for Connor Lamb. I still
think that the Republicans are probably going to challenge it
because they just don't want to come to terms with

(27:41):
the reality that they lost a district that as as
recently as the two thousand and sixteen election that was
plus twenty Republican. UM, so people are thinking that basically
any district is in play now anything that's like right,
like like that one, that's the one that they really

(28:03):
they're like, oh, son of a bit, we cheated, you
still can't win. Right. Well, you know, the messages, uh,
they matter to people now as people become more and
more engaged with how the government works and what that
means to their day to day lives. So that's where
Greed really fucked him as they over instead of just
slowly fleecing like the Dick Cheney kind of old school

(28:25):
Republican way, like hey, we're taking them, but just it
was like fifteen years chill and just say some America
stuff and we'll get a little bit of it these guys, right,
we will take all of it right now. All yeah,
it really is Row really is just highlighting, like the
Trump is taking a highlighter to all of the ship
that you know, they were just kind of sweeping under

(28:48):
the rug and we were letting them get away with
for a long time because even like all the you know,
the fucking voter suppression ship they're trying to do, like
Chris Kobak who headed up that voter Fraud Commission. Like
he's getting owned in court like every day apparently because
he actually doesn't even know how the law works. And
he represented himself and the judge literally was like, hey man,
do you need to take a second to learn the

(29:09):
law because you don't even know how to like and
enter evidence. Just getting dunked on but like a local
it's like, yeah, pardon my counselor do you have Google? Yah? Yeah,
why you need a Google law? Okay? Okay, so uh
moving on because we, unfortunately for them, have a lot

(29:30):
to get to. The Mueller uh investigation has taken a
step of subpoenaing the Trump organization for apparently a lot
of financial documents. Uh yeah, it's again well and he
went straight with a subpoena too, right where it wasn't
like because that's the move is and this is because

(29:51):
I've had a fun life. Um right, because you were
you were accused of treason many years ago, I mean
domestic treason divorce is yeah, you got the like can
we have those documents? And right they're like now we're
good and you're right okay, then you go and do

(30:11):
that right like yeah, well, I mean because when you
look because remember for a while, like Trump was like
that's a red line, like don't get into my personal
finances and my family business finance. But now Trump's like,
I don't give a flake fuck your line like here
the subpoenas. I'm sorry, Yeah, what did I say? Trump? Yeah? Whatever, Yeah,
fuck it? That is the turn. Yeah, but yeah no

(30:35):
and then so and now to know that, yeah, they're
really looking into like sort of what kind of correspondence
was happening with the Trump organization. It brings a lot
of things into like you know that from the Trump
Moscow tower deal, you know, because they're saying that could
have been sort of a huge element of this collusion
case money launder ring, right or even like how like

(30:56):
this like weird as Marshall plan they had to like
carve up the Middle East like with like different power plants.
I was funded by you know, Russia and the Americans
and like people in the United Emirates. Uh god, I
mean it just seems like they're you know, it's getting hot.
I mean the way I look at it is, Okay,
we we've all like, okay, none of us are rich

(31:16):
people here. We've said for me, asked me seven thou
dollars at a week, so that you gotta learn you
can't can't tell you podcast and people be like, he
makes a ton of money, he's been a sitta. I
think you understand that's called a joke. Every yes, but
I'm sorry, go on, but we're not rich. No, And
anybody has been like, I need some money, you know

(31:38):
what I mean. So, and when you need money, you
do some dumb ship from time to time. But all
our dumb ship has been like, yeah, I fucking something
or yeahhah, like I wrote a bad check and then
they caught me and it cost me hundred fifty dollars
or something like that. Well, when you're a billionaire and
you need money, you do shaky ship and you never

(32:00):
think that the Russian government might make you be the president. Um, yeah,
I mean this, like just Rick broadly. The Trump the
story of like how Trump gets into all these weird
financial things is he bankrupted multiple casinos, which is hard

(32:25):
to do because people it's like a business where people
just come in andre like here and then they go
steal money to give you more money. Here, here is
all the money. And uh he kept bankrupting those and so, uh,
you know, actual legitimate financial institutions in America just stopped
working with him. They were like, you know, we're not money.

(32:48):
Uh So he started having to go to overseas countries,
other countries that you know, the world banks and you
know all the all the people who pay it tensition
to international finance or like, uh yeah, like these people
seem to be just straight up financial criminals. And I'm

(33:10):
also good at paperwork, and now I'm going to Brazil.
It would take huge loans or you know, do giant
real estate deals with these people who are just you know,
traditionally seen as if you're doing business with them, they're
probably like just laundering money, like straight up just using

(33:30):
you as a place to store money that they got illegally.
Uh So that that's what it looks like might have happened.
And the reason this matter is like you know, for
people who don't give a shit about financial crimes, is
that like gives so much leverage to other people. If
you have like these you know, financial crimes in your background.

(33:51):
Oh god, you know that's probably why one can get
a security clearance on his staff, right and also that
that have they given him one, Well no, they say
if if he actually were to apply for one, he
probably wouldn't even get a security Okay, that's yeah, right
in the entire system that the president has security clearance. Yeah,

(34:11):
because you're because but when you look, you know, because
he's been because Trump has had a pretty calm week, right,
because dude, there's a lot of departures and things. A
lot of people say the Mueller and like Stormy Daniels
things have been sort of fully thrown him into. Like
I don't think he fully ship funck about the Stormy
dandl ship. I think he thinks it makes him look cool.

(34:34):
I think that's who that dude is. I think psychologically
I was, he fascinates me because it's like it's that
weird mushrooms kind of trip and balls thing where you're
just like, we're like where you start thinking about perception wise,
he's not wrong. That dude has never lost, right, So

(34:54):
that's why he acts and does the thing. And like
even to this point when it's still like to him,
he's not he didn't give his shit about doing good
for the country or doing good for Russia or anybody.
It's like he gives a shit about is the bad
I sleeping super nice? Do I get to ride in
the helicopter to do the thing I want to go do.

(35:16):
But it doesn't even like he wants to do. Like
I mean, a lot of the reports I think frustrated
character because he has to get up and talk to people.
That's why I think it's like it's like you're it's
like a eight year old. He reminds me of my son,
where it's like he likes swimming class. He doesn't like
going to swimming class. Oh like, but once he gets
there though, it's fun, it's right, right, but like, hey,

(35:38):
we gotta go swim I don't want right, it's like
go to do all the fucking jet stuff and talk
and go the rallies. You have to go do this stuff.
And he's like, I don't want him do it, Okay, Well,
then just lie to Trudeau when you're negotiating me. He's like, yeah,
I did, I did. I don't know anything, and he
believed it. He's so dumb. But now he didn't believe it, right,

(35:58):
he actually knows what's going on in his country and
he's like, yeah, so I don't care because I'm gonna
go watch TV and eat food and some fucking guy
with the guns, gonna go get it for me. I'm
the best in your some of a bitch, he's kind
of right, Right, that's the most frustrating. Well, that's why
I think a lot of people, especially as legal councill
worry about even how he's going about even dealing with

(36:20):
like the probe and things like that, because yes, in
his mind he's operating on a certain level. But then
eventually you'd think that he would have to reconcile his
reality with actual reality. He never has. I mean he
may not, but the effects could very well come to
the door stuff whether or not he chooses to acknowledge
his one thing his life has like all the failures

(36:41):
in his life have never affected his lifestyle. Right, So
to someone like that, there are no consequences to your actions,
or at least in the traditional sense of how we
think of consequences. Um, his son is getting a divorce.
That's you know, we don't know much about that other
than just oh who don't you don don JR. I'm yeah, right,

(37:10):
that's what's going on in that house, I mean down down, well,
I'm sure after two because she was the one who
got the fake anthrax letter, right, right, So yeah, I'm
sure white powder was rushed to a hospital. I found
out it was from their side, right, And yeah, that's
gotta be on something too. It's like, look, I'm married
to you for you know, for a nice apartment in Manhattan,

(37:31):
and now I'm getting fucking fake anthrax in the mail
and I have to talk to federal prosecutors all the time.
And they told me you're going to jail by right,
and yeah, I'm gonna go to California where it's so.
He also had to admit that his main man, Vladimir Putin,

(37:52):
is actually a bad guy. This was just a bad
week in terms of being someone from the West who
is a fan of the mir Putin. Uh. And you know,
Russia straight up murdered a dude last week, or tried
to murder a guy and then might have murdered another
guy as people were like, hey, why did you murder
this other guy? And they're like yeah, yeah, and so yeah,

(38:18):
people are calling it like the colder or war or
the coldest of wars between the UK is kicking Russian
diplomats out of the UK, Russia's kicking UK diplomats out
of Russia, and America finally started punishing Russia for their
interference in the election. But it's even then, it's not
really that much of a departure of the sanctions Obama

(38:40):
had already put in place. It's like it's just sort
of like being able to say, like, oh, we added
a couple of names to that list without fully like
going all in. But you know, I didn't even expect
them to do that much. But yeah, and what you're
talking about is this putent critic, Nikolai Glushkov, who was
found strangled to death, uh at his home in London. Yeah,

(39:01):
so the nerve guess was obviously them, like they that
was like them signing the crime with uh, you know,
a Soviet nerve agent. The strangling. At first, it seemed
like they were pointing towards suicide because all of his
friends were coming out and being like, no, he seemed
very happy. There's no way he committed suicide. Like I
was talking to him right before he was found strangled,

(39:23):
and he was the happiest I've ever seen him. And
the last thing he told me was like, you know what,
I'm never gonna do commit super right. Uh. And also
there were apparently a bunch of like power or what
are those called supercars that just like randomly showed up
at his house the in the days before he died,
and people are like, huh, he doesn't usually drive like

(39:43):
five Lamborghinis at the same time. Uh. Anyways, Uh, this morning,
the morning we're recording this Friday morning. Uh, the UK
has officially opened a murder investigation. So uh it's no
longer being like viewed as an accident or a potential suicide.
They're looking into it as a murder investigation. So yeah,

(40:05):
what a time. I mean. Putin is fucking Christopher Milan,
the joker is what he is. He's just like he's like,
I'm gonna watch this whole thing burn in that country.
You guys looted my whole thing after the coal warranted.
Everyone had every one of you capitalist molifars come in
and just looted my whole country. Now I'm going to

(40:27):
slowly destroy the whole thing in a very obvious way. Too. Well,
I think now he's just seeing how much you can
get away with. Yeah, like the Russian spy, like the
spy thing. Just my first thought as a as someone
who enjoys history, is like, oh, that's very Archduke transfer In. Yeah,
where it's kind of like most people are like, oh,

(40:49):
this is like nothing. You're like it feels more. Why
does everyone care so much about this nothing? Because I
think now we were in an environment where like, yo,
Russia as wild in the funk out, and then like
when it becomes sort of it's really in your face,
like double agent murdered with Russian or not attempted murder
of of a Russian double agent with like a very

(41:11):
Russian specific nerve agent, right, then people like looking around
like are we gonna do some god? Right? Which is
how World War two started, right yep? And I mean
that's the thing is I think that's I think I
always had the impression that, you know, Hitler was this
guy who like stormed to power, and then the war

(41:31):
started and we had to fight Hitler back. Like Hitler
was a thing for decades, Like people were like fucking Hitler,
you know, like that what he was doing. Yeah, but
he was a household name, and we were also appeasing
him as well. Well. For a while it just looked
like he was rebuilding Germany that was in shambles. So
for a while they're like this Hitler, he's all right, Yeah,

(41:53):
he cleaned up the neighborhood. He was pretty popular actually
in America because at that time they at that time,
eugenics was like the hot ship in America, like business
leaders all wanted to that went away. He said, well
has it? I don't know that was I said it dripping,

(42:15):
but with my accent. So what was the Trudeau thing?
I actually didn't catch this. That was just him Like
when talking about trade deficits, he basically just lied to
Trudeau about facts that were just not real. And then
he was told in a room full of donors, I
think in Missouri or something, he was like yeah, and
I told him it was this and I don't know,
you know, just making up and people like ha, like yeah,

(42:39):
So there's like, yo, you straight up lied. But then
like then the obviously the White House had to scram
will be like, oh, that's him in entertaining mode. You know,
he's just riffing with donors and stuff like that. So
it's like, did he so either way he lied to
the donors or he's lying to Trudeau and there's no
you know again, but this is such small potatoes when
you look at so many of the like, we're not
even really fully through this list. Of ship about Trump

(43:02):
right now, because this thing is really kind of getting
into real free fall. Like you know, there's rumors now
that hr McMaster could be leaving and John Bolton would
replace him. What the yes, Like the people who know
say that's like the scariest no that's in the history
of the Trump administration, which is saying something yeah, exactly.

(43:25):
And then there's they're saying John Kelly might lose his job,
but then they came out like, no, John Kelly. Oh,
Betsy Devas isn't doing too hot. There's like rumors that
she's just really yeah, no, absolutely not. Uh. Jeff Sessions
might get fired uh, and Scott Pruitt would replace him,
who would definitely be willing to do whatever the Trump wanted.

(43:47):
I mean, I mean the end is not. Yeah. The
thing that really worries me is if if John Bolton
really became then I say, like if bones a national
security advisor, like and that's the guy who is now
the fucking security whisper who with all his quacky ass thoughts,
that is fucking frightening, especially going into this, especially as

(44:09):
you go into this, uh, these crunch talks with North Korea,
Like it's very very disconcerting. Unfortunately Trump is not I
see what makes you come ha ha Yeah, this is
showing us a picture of Bolton just laughing at the
top of it is frightening. It's like you can see
the mushroom clouds in his eyes. Also the other thing too,

(44:31):
Ben Carson, Ryan Zinky, they're still in hot water because
you know, they're spending too much on their fucking offices
and there's like just so much scrutiny right now. And
then Ryan Zinky uh said some dumb shit to uh
Congress Owen Hanna busa and a fucking and a hearing
about like free funding uh, like historical sites that talk
about Japanese and tournament And when she asked, like can

(44:53):
you guarantee that you know you're gonna you will refund
these uh, these sort of programs, he starts off by
going knuts in the morning and she was like it's actually,
ohiogo zymos but whatever, and like that's that was his
first line. After she's like talking about like will we
refund these programs that you know, keep educating people about Japanese. Terman,
He's like the first thing he said, Bruce Lee, Yeah,

(45:17):
he might as well have this video clip that was hilarious.
There there's a there's a woman in the background who
when he says Nizia, her fucking jaw drops. She's like,
somebody's gonna do something where she's like her, God, that
can't really really God. If Jesus could come back right now,
I'd be great. We should just talk about the Stormy

(45:38):
Daniels thing. Uh what happened? So I think most people
is that is that are up to date that the
president had had a had an affair with her. Uh.
There's like this back and forth going on between her
legal counsel who are like, well, uh, something definitely happened,
and you didn't have the president sign it because you

(46:00):
and even uh you know, do hush payments. It feels
like you're bad at your right and uh, he's like, no,
we didn't. We don't know who you are, lady. But
then they're like, but but we won, but we won,
but we don't know who you are ladies. Second of all,
we beat you in court when we told you you
couldn't say this stuff. So it's three dudes, dude whippets,

(46:26):
um did you not give her that money? But her
lawyer has now come out and said that she was
physically threatened to keep quiet. So and and also that
there are six other women. Uh so that's happening. Uh.
There is the collusion inquiry rollout from the House Republicans. Uh.

(46:50):
You know you might have remembered at the beginning of
this week they came out and we're like, we didn't
see anything. Investigation over Devin noonez Supreme truth Master has
revealed no collusion all caps right, um, and it just
it didn't go very well. Apparently, according to an article
in Politico, House Republicans are privately venting that they've fumbled

(47:14):
the release of their own Russia report. Uh. I want
I was in d C in November, and if you
just walk through the streets, if like when it's quiet,
like like on red red lights and stuff, you can distinctly,
like faintly here the whole town of like what is happening?

(47:40):
He had Connaway, who was the guy who came out
and announced that there was no collusion. Uh. And he
also came out and said that, well, yeah, Russia intervened,
but they were not trying to help the Trump campaign. Uh.
And people are like, wait, really, that's that's like everybody
agrees that they were trying to help Trump campaign, and

(48:01):
the next day he had to like walk that back
and be like, well, I mean it's a matter of
whether he was trying to help Trump or hurt Clinton,
which is just like you, clearly one person benefits from
no matter which way you look at it. That's how
I argue with my girlfriend now if she brings up
anything idea that was like, well Hillary did some ship,

(48:22):
so maybe cool it on me. Um, that's a good strategy.
Throws her off every time she's like, I don't even
know what you're talking about. Was like exactly exactly, and
you just start putting the seat down on the Like
She's like, just give me your half of the rent.
And I was like, that's what Hailey would say. Uh.

(48:45):
And then last thing on gun control, Uh, you know
there was the thousands of students walking out of school. Uh.
They were also so there they were dumb kids. The
main Republican retort to tail me hand live my life
calls for gun control has been, uh, to say, no,
we're just gonna buy even more guns, give them to

(49:07):
the teachers. And there were two teachers who like accidentally
shot people or one one in one case was trying
to write. I was trying to do a public safety
class at Seaside High School when the gun accidentally went off. Straight.
Every gun should come with its own pistol, right, Uh.

(49:27):
And then there was another one where somebody inside his
office at George Washington Middle School. Uh, and Alexandria accidentally
fired his gun. Nobody was hurt, fortunately in the teachers
guns and the principal's bombs and the guns and the
janitors minds. Uh. So yeah, we did we miss anything?

(49:52):
I mean that burned the books for fuel. I mean
we've pretty again, we've lost our minds. I don't know.
I mean, I mean even started with the Betsy dev
Us uh sixty minutes interview that was That was Sunday night.
So that's how the we kicked off. Okay, can we
can I address that one real quick? Okay? Just um
and everyone has addressed it. But I have a different angle,

(50:12):
I think because my question just as a human being,
like if you watch that as Betsy, watch that and
you my first thought, even if I'm a narcissist, my
first thought is who am I surrounding myself with that
didn't get to me and be like yo, she's gonna

(50:35):
ask you some stuff, and she's good at asking stuff,
and you're gonna deflect, and then she is gonna ask
it again and ask it. So you're gonna have to
have something and she's like, I got it. Watches that
show anymore? Yeah, I feel like anytime someone is that

(50:57):
ill prepared, that person is rounded by a bunch of
people who are just like, yeah, fuck you, we'll see
how well you do, you know, just like giving up
or like yeah I know you got this one, huh,
or it's her arrogance, yeah, where they're just like fine whatever, Yeah, exactly,
she's like, oh I got it. No, I'm I'm fine, no,
because even the most basic questioning will reveal how horribly

(51:18):
flawed you are. Yeah, they're just like hitting the table.
Here's the thing. You don't got it. We'll see about that.
We'll see. My brother started black Water, so I think
I can drive the American education system into the ground
a bit. She does have us there. She's playing a
different game, yeah, because she's not trying to do a
good job. She's trying to burn the motherfuck Like we're

(51:40):
just Jack's furious the correct words, but whatever, I can't
do enough drugs anymore, right, because it's like, yeah, when
you work for a boss and ship and like they
have a dumbass idea and sometimes you always push back
and like you butt heads, like with the decision sometimes
go yeah, what do you want? Like and ship yeah,
or in a relationship that kind of thing, we're like, okay, yeah,

(52:03):
do it your way. I will love this. Yeah, like
most sitcoms. That the b storyline of most sitcoms, like
do it you? And then Danny Tanner's right in the end,
always always and then, but he's secretly thinking about how
to funk both those twins. Jesus Christ, this has been

(52:26):
a true Hollywood story when you guys didn't it's on
his special yea, guys, I'm not. I didn't. I didn't
invent just reporting. Yeah, thank you. Your journalists just have
a good memory, son of a bit. All right, we're
taking a quick break. We'll do that back and we're

(52:50):
back and uh, we just want to go out on
a little bloyd watching. We do every Friday. We look
at the covers of the tabloids that people are passing
by as they're checking out of supermarkets because people still
need groceries. Uh so these headlines, which, by the way,
we can outsize enough owned by like one company for

(53:12):
the most part, other than okay, I think Okay is
the only one that people are Yeah, okay and people
are owned independently by different companies, but the Globe, National,
enquir Us, Weekly, Star, in Touch, all of those are
owned by a company called American Media, Inc. And uh,

(53:35):
it's a guy named David Pekar who is Trump's homie
in New York like loves Trump and yeah, and it's
crazy like they write in Trump's voice, Like the articles
are all written like the same as Trump, like with
exclamation points, and like, uh, just really weird, right exactly. Yeah,

(53:56):
he is a creature born out of eights New York
tabloid culture and lots of amphetamine. So Miles, what she
got over there? Well, let's see, I got a couple
of things. Let's start with, Well, the National Examiners always
dud because that one is always for old people, because

(54:17):
all they're talking about is like the secrets of Mash
and Reba McIntire's new life, how faith and family helped
her he'll after divorce, heartbreak, I mean, and then also
some talk no, no, it's always like inside her she's
a good she has a good publicist's human that's a good. Yeah,
keeping in the absolute garbage magazines. Let's see, they're just saying, uh,

(54:41):
you know Keith Urban Nicole divorce, lies, fights and therapy,
hell Ice Squeen Nicole treated him like a child. Who'll
get the kids? No one gives a fuck? Uh star
just more, you know, the Jennifer Aniston justin Thurreau will
they won't they? Then will Brad and her will they
won't they? But the first thing they have is Paris Jackson. Uh,

(55:03):
Michael Jackson's daughter quits Hollywood and moves into t P.
He okay, it might as well be, but apparent like,
what's funny is this? This story is also the National
Choir and they both have the exact same quotes uh
in both stories, which isn't you know, obviously not a
surprise since they're both the same company. But they're just saying, like,
she's escaping to like the hills of California. I'd imagine

(55:25):
it's probably some more like the Panga Canyon. And she's
like hanging out with Marlon Brando's granddaughter Prudence. Yeah, and
I was like smoking weed and a t P because
she's just they're saying, like, oh, the insiders like she
she loves the positivity from their bond. Sounds like a
bond of people heard Paris Jackson like kaling it if
you heard that story about how Michael Jackson, Marlon Brando,

(55:48):
and Elizabeth Taylor all escaped from New York on the
day after nine eleven together, like drove across country in
a car. Could you imagine driving like you're like on
the highway, you look over and as the car of
Michael Jackson, Marlon Brandon. I don't know, that's that real. Yeah,
that really happened. I think Zadie Smith wrote a short
story like sort of historical fiction speculating what that must

(56:12):
have been like, but it's actually based on an actual
anecdote about what happened the morning of nine eleven. They
were like they're coming for us, and everybody just bounced.
So all the flights get canceled, the two towers come down.
You're driving down I for to go see your grandma,
and you look over see Michael Jackson, Elizabeth Taylor, Marlon Brandon. Right, yeah, man,

(56:35):
I don't If I wake up, that's gonna make more
sense than this is the weirdest I've ever had. I
got the globe over here. They hit me in my
weak spot because they have more stuff. Yeah RFK, which
I've always thought was even more suspicious than JFK because
obviously it was the second one. But yeah, the whole

(56:59):
thing's yeah, it's just really weird. Uh. And the guy
who killed him, like was just some random twentysomething or
old who was like, I don't remember killing him, like
I just came to with no idea. Yeah, no, no,
no clue why that happened. I know y'all keep saying,
you know whose gun this is. I'm sorry, but I

(57:20):
don't remember, And I'm sorry I did it right. Um.
So they have a couple of interesting things that I've
always found suspicious, like the fact that three top CI
agents were at the hotel on the day that he
was shot. Uh and and friends of Okay, my conspiracy

(57:40):
was there too. Now that's my conspiracy theory music. That's
how superproducer Nick Stump undermines the seriousness of what I'm
talking about journalism makes it more legit. And he's also
one of the CI agents has been with the lady
running from the thing in the Polka Dot dress. Right,
So that's the that's the thing that they are really

(58:01):
focusing on here. Um. And so apparently sir Hand, Serhand,
the guy who killed him, said that he was hypnotized
by Harvard professor Daniel Brown, which just this was the
thing that America believed for a couple of decades that
you could hypnotize people and gain access to parts of
their brain that like they couldn't in their waking time,

(58:24):
and like that everything that came out of that was false.
This is where we got like all the satanic panic
and ship like that. But he recalled under hypnosis having
coffee with a woman in a polka dot dress. And
then there were people who claim later that a woman
uh left the hotel shouting we shot him, We shot Kennedy.

(58:44):
And this theory suggests that she was like a CIA operative.
They say she secretly set him up with mk Ultra, uh,
which mk Ultra was just like a giant like decades
spanning uh, you know, conspiracy by the CIA, where they
like looked into all these different things. It's not like
a magical elixir that you put in someone's drugs, right,

(59:08):
put on her tongue right exactly on the tip of
his dick and he kaled RF. Also, what a pro
she what a good C agent? She she runs away
from a top secret assassination yelling we shot him. I
nailed him, secret secret secret um. But yeah, anyways, so

(59:33):
they're the woman with polka dot dress I've always thought
was kind of bullshit. But the CIA agents being there
and just a lot of the circumstances were very strange.
I could say, like one CIA agent like fucking some
dumb girl that not before and being like, I accidentally
told this girl she wants to come on. She she

(59:55):
thinks she's part of it. Shot him. Yeah, she wants
to him. She is hot. Then after it happened, she
runs off like, wait, god, damn it, I really shouldn't
have done that. The one thing that these tabloids are
pretty good at is telling us ahead of time if
a celebrity is in trouble health wise. And uh. They

(01:00:19):
have a story in The Globe Crippled Collins Crawling to
the Final Curtain about Phil Collins, and it's really it's
really just mean the way they write, it's just a
pack of lies. But apparently he has been struggling with
alcoholism and things just haven't been gone well for him lately.

(01:00:44):
They keep calling him the South Stup singer. Uh, he
is sixty seven. That's not struggling with alcoholism. It's since
you made it, you're just you're just fucking doing it right. Uh.
And yeah, they have a doctor saying if he continues
as he is, he'll be dead soon. Says doctor Gabe Merkin,
who has not treated the Easy Lover singer. It sounds

(01:01:07):
like a made up named Gabe Merkins, with Phil Collins
follows up, that's the plan exactly, Gabe Merkan. Yeah. The
other thing in the Inquirer is basically they're saying how
there's a coup at Buckingham Palace where Kate and William
will be crowned King and Queen, and they're gonna leap
frog Prince Charles because some of the people there's a

(01:01:27):
coup with the some of the Commonwealth nations. Basically somehow
get Queen Elizabeth to advocate and then they will just
I don't know, I mean, I don't I don't necessarily
know how the succession works. If it's that easy that
you can just conspire to if that's gonna happen, I
will volunteer and I will take my family to England
and and support that coup because I just why, I

(01:01:51):
don't know if I just found it interesting. I want
to skip him to do it. I'm just trying to
be a part of something like he's he imagine who
would be Like, No, I'm with Charles like that. That
guy seems cool. Yeah, it's odd because the only reason
I'm saying I don't do that. But the logic they

(01:02:12):
used to try and say, like why this is logical
is just because he has too many scandals. So therefore, uh,
William and Kate are better because of all the weird scandals,
like that's not that's not how cou's work. And also
you know, again whatever, it's a national choir and it's bullshit.
And then it also says Obama's a war criminal news
flash of the United States. Every president of the United

(01:02:34):
States is a war criminal, without a doubt. But the
Globe says it is the most devastating scandal of all time.
It's that military personnel were like terrible to the dead
bodies of people they killed in the in the war
in Afghanistan. And they're saying that because Obama told them
to do it. Probably that's how then another person told them,

(01:02:57):
and then another person and they told you friends and
they That's how the military works, right. The main purpose
of the globe is just finding sinister photographs of Obama
and putting them on the front page. A lot of
them when they're when he's young. Yeah, yeah, like no
gray hair. Yeah, Billy Wayne, this has been fun as always.

(01:03:18):
Where can people find you? Follow you at Billy Wayne
Davis on Twitter and the Instagram Billy Wayne Davis. And
you just google Billy Wayne Davis, all that ship comes
up and maybe like some preacher lady or preacher dude.
Oh was there, Billy Wayne Davis. Preacher, it's Billy Wayne fingers.

(01:03:39):
We do you tour together? Right? Not anymore of anymore anymore?
That confusing? Yeah, from the search engine. We're going after
a different different souls. Miles. Where can people find you?
I can find me on Twitter and Instagram at Miles
of Grace. You can find me a Jack Underscore O'Brien
on Twitter. You can find us at daily Seyitgeist on Twitter.

(01:04:00):
Where at the Daily zat Guys on Instagram. We have
Facebook fan page and a website Daily zai guys dot
com where we post our episodes. And our miles. Yeah,
what are we going to ride out? Well, you know,
like we had a kind of heavy show, just feeling
really good about the state of our government here in
the United States. So I think we need to light

(01:04:21):
it up with something people can laugh about this weekend. Uh,
super producer and a broad to our attention, a great
parody song of you know, one of Los Angeles's greatest
bands of Red Hot Chili Peppers. Uh, and tell tell
the people what this song is. It's by the Pepperman
which consists of John Day the comedian, and I think

(01:04:43):
Jack Alfainak has had a bit of starting it back
in the day. Um. And it's called Abra cadab Lifornia
something like that. It's it manages to be a cover
of every single Red Hot Chili Pepper song. It's just
like sums lemma. So just take this this soothing musical
opium and everyone enjoy your weekend. And that's gonna do

(01:05:04):
it for this week. We will be back on Monday
because yeah, that Bok will be around. Yeahs Rost talk
to you guys. Then bye, baming down the phone five
and the ball field line taking it said for the

(01:05:32):
ship told miss she was my bed I'm a bad
jump up from Giotto. I'm playing in the bed. I'm
a bamber tell us I turned about. I never take
a picture with the camera. I hope we don't contrinck
the Amabama's came upon getting a game again, a bone

(01:05:53):
bomber back down on you in a set. That's where
that sacks out? Yeah, shump, come le ma, jesss the

(01:06:15):
neighbor where I wis my cat rolling? Don I man
up with li say I'm a bimber sevel with your
sex as crum up the hu turn green when the
reds get come up. I'm a trumble with your grimmer

(01:06:36):
because I ain't a bummer. Come. If you want to
get a fresh jump, you're gonna get grimmer thing a
bowl a bow a bone ban gigg a game begin
and gig a bander thing a bowl a bona boner
gigging gegga get got the kidd for love said why

(01:06:56):
that sacks out? Ship him my bat with a big stick,
and I proceeded to the sucking my dad and jam
my boot with a big stick, and then said into
the sucking my day, chem me lout with the upperman
chemming love with the fimper Band jemming over with the

(01:07:21):
wepper Man jem was the emper Man thing. A phone,
the phone about the bank you can get. You can
get glan about the phone about buil Bank. You get
get the ty baby bill. I'm gonna tell you Tom,

(01:07:50):
that's gonna be the

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