Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to Season one forty, episode
three of J Daly's guyst of production of I Heart Radio.
This is a podcast where we take a deep dive
into America's shared consciousness and say, officially, off the top,
fuck the Koch Brothers, Fuck Fox News, fuck Rush Limbaugh,
fuck Sexton Funk, Jak Rowling, Fox, Sean Hannity, uh fuck
(00:25):
who else? We talk? Ben Shapiro, let's go with that today.
It's Wednesday, July one. Happy July everyone. My name is
Jack O'Brien, a k com Mr Bright Thighs. I think
I've done that all right, but maybe not. Uh, and
I'm thrilled to be joined by once again my special
(00:46):
guest co hosts the scam Gods herself, This Lacy MOVELA.
What's up, y'all? It's Lacey Mosley a k A Scammon
in the Moaning, Scamming in the evening, scamp up. A
time when Robert is on a bagel, you can have robberty.
In a time when Rye Bread's on a bagel, you
(01:09):
can robbery robbery. Got it on a metaphorical bagel? Got it? Okay?
That's the Pizza Roles theme. Songs. You pizza roll heads
out there who love the past commercial so much. That's
a bagel bite, right, Yeah, oh yeah it is because
(01:31):
it's because I just said bagel is not a bagels.
A bagel, you can have pizza that should burns your mouth, bro. Yeah,
it's the fourth love thermodynamics though, when pizza's on a bagel,
you can have pizza any time. Yeah. Like the foot
game to like unruly boys, to get them to shut
up while you have their afternoon wine. As a mom. Yeah,
(01:53):
that I gave to unruly boys. Not that was crammed
into my mouth by my h Lacy. Who is that voice.
There's a voice that joined us. It's such an iconic voice.
I mean Mount tight More sight More, we gotta, we
gotta half of the Mount Spemore up here on this podcast.
(02:15):
He is the hilarious, the talented Mr Billy Wayne day Ros.
How you guys. I couldn't I'm sorry, I couldn't stay quiet.
I was like, that's not pizza rolls. That is hey,
you're doing You're doing what I was protecting. Yeah, I
was protecting you jumped him from the internet, is what
(02:37):
I was doing. Scores of people who be in my mentions,
and d M is like, Hey, I know you're dealing
with a lot right now, but I just want to
let you know you can believe fucked the bagels a
lot of misplaced anger right now that I'm trying to absorb. Yeah,
fuck fuck pizza rolls. I mean, we can all agree
on that that ship does burn your mouth real bad.
(02:58):
That's like it's like almost like it was designed to
destroy your taste buds. It's like hot Captain crunch. It's like,
you know, we all know Captain crunches tears, shreds the roof,
and then I feel like they do the same thing.
Like you ever, you can never eat it at room temper.
It's like a hot pocket. You're always like, yeah, it's
not edible at temperature. Pizza sauce congeals. It's the preservatives
(03:26):
they put in that it is, the only way it
is edible is if it also hurts you. I wonder
if there is an ideal way to make like if
you put pizza rolls in like a deep fryer or something,
or maybe not deep for I'm sure those would be delicious,
but like in a air fryer or something that like
(03:47):
you Gormond's out there. You let us know what is
the way to uh prepare a pizza role that doesn't
make it like it seems like it is always inherently
at three different temperatures that are designed to just destroy
the inside of your face. I think if you put
a pizza roll in a deep friar a County fair
(04:07):
just happened. That's where my southern brain went. I was like,
we fried Coca cola, ice cream, Bubba gum so and
it's all good. I hate to report the first time
I had a fried Twinkie, I was like, man, look,
this is what a stupid everyone's fat. This is the
best thing I've ever had in my whole one. What
(04:29):
what is deep fried Coca cola like? Is it just
the like basically the fried outsides with like a Coca
cola flavor? What what is it? You got it? You
got it on the head? Yeah. I think they freeze
the coke and then they fry it and then when
you bite into it, you're just getting like, you know,
Coca cola flavor and fried. It's the same rednecks that
(04:51):
work at NASA or putting this stuff together. Those NASA
rednecks shout out to them. Uh, Billy, Wayne, We're going
to get to know you a little bit better in
a moment. First, we're gonna tell our listeners a few
of the things we're talking about today. We're gonna talk
about the Elijah McClain story, just the worst, so sad.
(05:11):
Every time you look at even a video of him,
it's hard not to cry. Uh, and yet I feel
like it needs to be told over and over again.
It's getting even more infuriating. So we're gonna talk about that.
We are going to talk about the new Trump books
that are coming out, not by him. We aren't getting
(05:32):
a sequel to the Art of the Deal unfortunately. Uh.
We're gonna talk about the video he shared the mccloskey's
in St. Louis. Uh. Just that that couple, that image
of them standing on their lawn with their with their
guns is just I mean, it is our new American Gothic.
(05:54):
It's it's the greatest. Uh. We're gonna talk about Splash Mountain.
We we talked last week or a couple of weeks
ago about how they were getting or doing a complete
overhaul of it to remove the Song of the South
from the themes surrounding that ride, which I didn't even
know was the theme of that ride. But now they're
(06:16):
redesigning it around the Princess and the Frog. So we're
gonna talk about the movie, The Princess and the Frog,
all of that plenty more. But first, Billy wayam. We
like to ask our guests, what is something from your
search history that's revealing about who you are? Oh? Here's
I had to look up some Pokemon stuff. Uh, some
Pokemon stuff. Yeah that's. I mean that's as much as
(06:40):
I can because my son's really into it, okay and
into Pokemon. Yeah that like did you make him into it?
Is that still on TV? I thought ask catch him
and them? Are they on syndicate? I mean there's he
was watching one the other night that was from like mine,
(07:00):
so there's always new ones. It's the rackets pretty impressive
what they do, and it's cool. It's just like little
animals they make up and it's just right for kids
imagination and adults. And I mean it's a really smart racket.
But it's all nonsense too, so I can't follow a
lot of it. And it's all based around, based loosely around,
(07:23):
like let's make a children's show around. Uh the idea
of like dog and cock fighting essentially is like the
overall theme I didn't want to Yeah, you're exactly right,
is it's making these little things that you have in
your pocket fight your little pet. Yeah, um, which you're
(07:43):
not supposed to do, like I've done it a couple
of times with my you know, rest in peace, Finny.
But you know he was a he was a prize
fighting king, Charles Cavalier. Uh. He his special move was
when he would get into a fight, he would immediately
roll over. Even if the other animal was a squirrel,
(08:05):
he would roll over. So that was my fighting dogs.
Uh So he was just a loser. Yeah. He was
like a basketball player who liked tries to get the charge.
That's right. He took the charge dog fighting. He wasn't
even taking the like his feet were moving. He wasn't
even taking a charge like a tough guy. He was
(08:26):
like moving back where he was Like that's a block, dude,
you're just kind of getting in people's way. Yeah, yeah, exactly.
He was like, just make it quick was his overall
strategy on any confrontation. Just kill me quickly, which is
that's pretty serious, not just the softest part. Yeah, that's
not a dumb fighting strategy. It'd be like if someone
(08:47):
comes at you, you just vomit them mediately. That's right.
That's why we as a species shipped ourselves and throw
up on ourselves, is to make ourselves taste bad for
when we're being eaten. Uh, that's wise. Also, there's something
very thought about getting to a fight and just immediately
getting on the ground yourself and like giving the other
person no satisfaction, Like I want to see that happened slowly,
(09:12):
like like the fight starts to like yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, no, no,
we don't fight, we gonna fight. Look, I'm just getting
started for you. I'm gonna kick it off. I'm gonna
get the water boiling. I'm gonna be there on the ground.
I'm not gonna lie to you guys. That was kind
of my strategy when I was growing up. I was like,
I really loved the Rocky movies, but I'm more identified
with the early rounds when he was getting the ship
(09:33):
kicked out of him, and so I was like, I
I got beat up a lot when I was a kid,
and uh, I was really good at it, Like I
would make it look dramatic when the bully kicked me
in the chest, like I would fly backwards. Uh. That
maybe why they can't picking on you, because awesome he
really sells. It makes us look strong. Yeah. I remember
(09:57):
one time in college, defensive lineman wanted to fight me
at a bar and I just whispered in his ear,
you can tell everyone you destroyed me tomorrow, but I'm
going to leave. And it confused him so much that
I wasn't trying to like bow up to him because
I was like, well, immediately, you're gonna win, just I
(10:18):
can't beat you. He looked so confused. He's like, just
get the funk out of here. I was like all right,
And the girl I was with, she was like, what
do you say to him? I was like, I deeply
confused him. That is what I did. Let's go see.
I told him what was going to happen, and he
immediately decided he didn't want any of that. I'm kind
(10:41):
of the opposite, like I'm short, So I don't know
if that just always made me like have like a
little Napoleonic complex or something, but like I wanted to
people to believe that I could fight, and I've never
been in a physical altercation in my life unless I
was playing with my cousins. So, like, I remember this
one girl was like harassing me in college and like
it was really really bad. She was like mad and
(11:02):
I like stole a boyfriend story short anyway, Um, this
is like we're children. I was like twenty no, yeah,
I was nineteen, I think, and um, she just kept
harassing me, and so I like this sounds insane. I'm like,
I can't believe I'm saying this on podcast. Um, I
was like, no, fuck it, I'm gonna show up to
her house because this is college when I live, like
(11:23):
on the I'm gonna show up to this bitch's house.
So she didn't know that if she keeps working with me,
I'm gonna put these hands on her. And like I
could convince people, I'm gonna act. I can convince people
up fight. Were like I've had to fight no boy.
And one of my friends was like, you know what
you should do. You should put basiline on your face.
And I was like yeah, yeah, So you showed up
with asiline on your face. Yeah, like you had a
(11:45):
cut man in your corner. That's amazing. Um, yeah, I
just mine was not really a strategy. Mine was just
I had no control over my emotions. I was very sensitive,
little boy, Billy, Wayne, what is something that you think
is underrated? Unity? Unity? Yes, and I think we got numbers. Okay, Yeah,
(12:14):
we're going Billy, which numbers? I think as poor people,
we have numbers if we would quit letting them divide us. Yeah,
I think that's the real that's what that's the war
where we're actually fighting here. Yeah. I mean, and I
think we've seen more of it in the in the protests. Uh.
(12:39):
You know, we're seeing a more diverse coalition, especially in
the younger generations. Uh. I'm not saying these other problems
don't exist, but I think if we move forward and
we take care of this poor versus rich thing, the
other problems will be easier to deal with if we're
(13:01):
all taking care of on a base level. Right. Yeah,
it's just hard to get us back to that. I
think Jack and I were talking about that the other
day of just how well, for a second, it felt
like we were going to get like poor people from
across the aisle to be like, oh, this is a scam,
Like everything's funned, and then the whole mask thing started
(13:21):
to happen, and then it just drew a line in
the sand again of like people just being will fully ignorant,
but also realizing that they're not necessarily just being ignorant.
They're railing against like the just want some control over
something in their lives, but I don't know how we
get them back because they're acting well, it's yeah, I
if you really listen to all sides, they're saying a
(13:45):
lot of the same things with these tiny, little and
not tiny sometimes but huge problems, but the fundamentals are
usually the same, or like, like you said, we don't
feel in control of our lives anymore, and no one's
helping us. And it's like every everyone that's got it's
the same thing they're saying. They were like, oh, we
(14:06):
gotta like you said, I don't know what they did
too to move that thing again, but we were very close.
We've been a very close a couple of times. Yeah,
And I think we just keep saying it too, because
that's what the media is so so good at, just
immediately taking things and putting it back in the terms
(14:28):
that we all understand of uh, you know, where that
they understand of division, Yeah, and of it not being
a you know, America being you know, we were talking
about how a lot of the face mask stuff goes
back to the founding of the country and the founding
fathers being petulant about like no taxation on the wars
(14:50):
that you're paying for for us uh. And you know,
I I also think the idea that there's no class uh,
no class system in America is like our most deeply
held uh bullshit myth. Yes it's the same, but it
can just come on up. It's the same as Okay.
(15:12):
I was having this conversation with the Robert Evans the
other day. It's I'm reading this book about the s
A S the you know, the British Fighting Force, and
it's written by a British to British guys, and the
way that Great Britain talks about what they were doing militarily,
they were very open about all the things they were doing.
(15:33):
We've never been open about that about our empire building
and stuff. It's always like we're gonna go make things
better and do it and like now we're going to
get that oil and Britain was like, yo, we're just
going to try to control that island because we want
it and I think psychologically that's why it's it doesn't
funk with the British people as hard as it does
(15:56):
with our people, because we've been lying to our soldiers
and our more people about why we're doing all this stuff. Yeah,
like colonizer was a term that black people kind of
took back and weaponized because we're like, yeah, you stole everything,
and then you continue to lie about it, like your
Gray robbers, you stole people, you tricked people. Manifest Destiny
(16:19):
is the biggest scam phrase I've ever heard in my
entire fucking life. And I love it because I'm like,
manifest destiny today, Like I just want to show up
with somebody's house and be like, hey, Manifest Destiny, run
me them keys, this is my house now. That told
me so. It's but until we stop rebranding every fucked
thing that we've done, and that's led to the systems
that we're in right now, we're never gonna be able
(16:41):
to get those people. And that's exactly what you know
the government knows and relies on. That's why when the
statues fall, it's important for them to make a big
deal of it because they have to be able to
tell all these folks that they've lied to that look
at all these black and brown people who are destroying
your history when it's like the to the victor, when
the spoils and it just lied about everything. And I
(17:01):
mean the ukay, we knew that they were callingized. There's
not to say that they're better off than we are.
I mean they are in some ways, but I don't know.
I don't know how you stop, you wake up and
just get everybody to realize they're not confused in Great
Britain about who they are and where their places in
the system. That's what's that's what is confusing in America
(17:21):
that comes with all this division is because no one
knows their true place because it's all lied to and
it's all sand underneath everyone except for a very select few. Yeah.
And I don't think that our system, I mean I
I do definitely believe that our system was designed to
(17:42):
hold black and brown people down. But I don't think
it was designed to keep everyone poor the way it
is now. I think that's been hijacked in this century
or the last century. Yeah, I think there's something to
the because there's you know, like with Great Britain, the
(18:03):
like the system is lying to them, but everybody knows
it's lying to them. But in America, we've been taught
to lie to ourselves. And I think there's something about
that dissonance that is really unhealthy. You know, there's a
study that came out late last year that was all
(18:24):
about how poor, uh you know, non college educated white
people are seeing a decline in their average life expectancy.
And it's like the first demographic cohort to go in
the opposite direction in a century. And I think there's
something to like this media complex that uh, you know,
(18:46):
Fox News and just the modern conservative Republican movement has
built up that like that just isn't healthy. It's not
a sustainable way to exist where you kind of, you know,
hate yourself, like they're not stupid, Like that's the that's
the lie at the center of it. It's just they're
(19:06):
being lied to and they're lying to themselves, and that's
really dangerous. I I want to bring it back to uh,
you know, a Bug's life, as we always do the
Uwer text a Bug's Life, because they talk about how
like the grasshoppers are holding everyone down until the ants
realize that a lot of ants united can really fund
(19:29):
the grasshoppers up. So, uh, watch Watch a Bug's Life.
That's our greatest Marxist text. Uh. What is something, Billy Wayne,
that you think is overrated? Overrated? Uh? I think the
value of investment is overrated at this point, the value
of investment. Explain what you mean? I think somewhere along
(19:52):
the line, Uh, you know, there's like invest in your
future and and that's how and that's how we're all
taught to build. Where ealth and money now is it
is through investment and not through actual hard work. I
mean they'll tell you like hard works how you make
money and stuff, but then if you examine it, you're like, no,
how you make money is to have money already. That's
(20:14):
the only way to make money. So I think that
whole thing, that that's an overrated system because there's you're
just no one's working anymore and then there's no product,
so we're all grifters. Absolutely, that that's a like a
huge underlying problem. Is Like I mean, I've talked before
(20:39):
about how a lot of the smartest people I grew
up with or went to college with went into just
managing other people's investments in a spreadsheet and then like
carving off a small percentage of those investments to make
their own money. And then now they're investing that money,
and that's that's the work that's being done with our
(21:01):
smartest like our brain power as a country. Is that
and like you know it under the New Deal under
earlier in the twentieth century, like when you also just
described apps by the way, right, yeah, apps exactly just
the same thing, but funneling our time like finding a
(21:21):
way to waste people a little bit of everybody's money
that uses it, just a little bit. That's the same. Um. Yeah.
I think what always keeps me frustrated about that too
is that I've seen over this pandemic and I've contributed
to so many go fund me, so many bailout funds,
so much crowdfunding, when the government should be doing these
(21:45):
things and instead we have to keep passing the same
fifty bucks to everybody. To me that we have set
up this this whole system where it's like you take
money out of my check involuntarily, and if I don't
give you the money that I got, a guess and
be like, I guess that's how much I owe you.
And if I guess wrong as well, go to jail.
(22:05):
You know, it's like it's such a gaslighting process. And
then after all that, you can't get your government to
help you if you need them, you got to get
on Facebook and tell a damn sob story, you know
what I mean. And then even now there's so many
of them that you know that they start to drown
each other out, and it's like, why are we paying
for this stuff when our government should, like why aren't
we paying taxes? So that because people are taking all
(22:28):
that money that we're putting in there, like we'll take
that and we'll also use it to build stadiums and
ship like that, and we don't realize proportionately how much
of it they're just straight up stealing. And so it
seems like a hundred fifty million dollars can sound like
a lot going to an underprivileged area in l A.
(22:50):
Until you've really billion dollars and that's a drop in
the bucket. And it's like, but that's what's happening, and
we elect politicians and then they get comfortable and they
start robbing us too, so who is they're really helping us?
And power corrups, So it's like, how do you how
do you fix this, and like, I don't know, I
just don't have as much effigier confidence in the government.
(23:11):
I don't think I ever have because I'm black, so
I always knew this it was fun, But right now
I'm like, I don't know how we get all the
poor people to realize, like we're almost at the point.
We're passed the point honestly where it's like Marie and
what like, we should all be storming the BUSTI like
it should. I kind of missed those olden times when
if your leader was sucking, y'all just showed up with
the pitchforks lit you know what I mean, and gry
(23:32):
mob style. Well, I mean, we're trying to do that now,
and I think that's the path that we're about to take.
Like the cool thing about what you're talking about is
like the path there is a blueprint to all the
workers combining in the government helping us out. We did
that in in the New Deal, in the c c
(23:53):
C build a lot of communities, So there is a
blueprint of how to do it. We just also involved
on white people this time systematically. Yes, we have a system.
We just involved fucking everybody this time. Yeah, the blueprint
is there. We know it works. Other countries are pulling
(24:16):
it off. We know it works. We're recording this at
a time when the Kentucky Democratic primary senator results are
finally rolling in and one of the candidates who seems
to be speaking about what we're talking about, Charles Booker,
is you know he was with had a hundred thousand
(24:39):
more votes, and then all of a sudden, the New
York Times is like, and he lost. Yeah, he lost,
so uh, cash rules everything around me and voter suppression.
They like, there were there's one county that had over
six hundred people, mostly people of color, and they had
one polling place, Louiville, that was in louisvill fucking Kentucky,
(25:01):
the biggest city in Kentucky. Yeah. Yeah, I'm truly baffled.
All right, let's take a quick break and when we
come back, we'll talk about your myth. And we're back,
(25:22):
and finally, Billy, we like task our guests. What is
a myth? With something people think it's true? Uh, you know,
to be false or vice versa. That hard work alone
will rise you above your position. That is very much
a myth. Ah, it takes more than hard work. It
(25:43):
takes intelligence, it takes opportunity, and it takes chance. Yeah,
and that's that I mean that those are the facts,
that those are always the facts. It's like, yeah, you
have to work hard, but then you also have to
work smart, and then you have to you have to
(26:04):
take advantage of opportunities and recognize those opportunities. Like it's
not just that myth of like if you are sweating
at the end of the day, because because that's what
all those guys that are born with money think too,
because at the end of the day, they're tired too,
so they were just as hard as everybody else. Yeah,
(26:27):
hard work is like the one thing that you alone
can control, whereas like intelligence, good breaks, luck, like those
are things that so I understand the focus. But then
we have gone and edited all the other stuff out,
like the system that makes it like twenty times more
(26:50):
likely for somebody in one neighborhood to succeed than somebody
in another. Uh. And that that's the first thing that
happens when some of these uh you know, success story
gets written, they immediately edit out all the people who
helped them along the way, and it becomes the great
person narrative, like their personal triumph over adversity. Nobody believed
(27:14):
in them when it was just haters. It was just
haters the whole way. Haters motivated them. Uh, and it's yeah,
that's very powerful. America loves that ship. And it's also
just completely completely untrue. It's bullshit. Yeah, And if you
want to if you don't think it's bullshit, look at sports.
That was the first place it was clear to me
(27:36):
when I played well, I went from high school sports
to college sports, being like, I'm working way harder than
some of these guys and it never will matter. Holy shit. Yeah,
just talent. But also I wonder if people can't let
go of this narrative because then their lives seem a
bit more bleak. Like if you you really feel you
(27:59):
alone can't change your station in life without a credible
amount of help, a good amount of luck and you know,
a lot of fortune, then it kind of becomes like, wow,
the place that I was born in life, financially, I
can't seem to increase my station. And that's supposed to
be the American dream, which is why I think people
love billionaires so much. Is the poor people who they're
(28:19):
killing because they're like, yeah, but if I had had
all that money, It's like, but you don't, and you won't.
That's what gets you to realize. It's like, you have
a better chance at it if we got them to
pay their fair share, but right now you have no chance,
and you're just like, I don't know, jacking it to
the fact that maybe one day you're gonna wake up
sitting on a bunch of gold coins. Well yeah, And
I mean to add to that point, I think a
(28:41):
lot of it is psychologically. We don't like a lot
of people don't even want to be billionaires. What they
want is not to worry about if they get sick,
they're gonna be poor and destitute for generations because they
got sick. Now their families in debt for two hundred thousand.
(29:01):
I think that they just want to be able to
be like, Oh, I've got a good job at this
factory or whatever it is, blue collar and I make
a decent wage. I get together the lake on the weekends,
and I'm I mean that was what Detroit was until
they fleeced it, right, we had all that, we had
(29:22):
it all it was. I mean in Detroit wasn't just
white people. I mean, that's why it's destitute now because
all the white people left and let all the black
people suffer because that system allowed that. I just think
it's like, it's so fucked that that we put all
that that that mental success is like by money. I
(29:44):
think that's another thing where they hijacked the church too, right,
I mean the church has always kind of been Look,
churches are scams every now and then, you get it, No,
I don't. I didn't agree though. I think a lot
of churches are being run by con artists and now, yes, okay,
(30:06):
come on out, you go back back even in the
eighteenth century, like the church would be includes with the
government like there's always been. I'm not talking about system.
I'm talking about community building. That's what our mamas talk
about when they go to church. They're not talking about that.
They're talking about they go see their friends. That's their community. Now,
(30:27):
that was hijacked by a bigger system that started preaching
them about gays and abortion for political gang for a
long time. That was not their whole scam. Was just
like I live a little better life than my flock.
That was their whole scame. And it's you know, megachurches,
and it's not let's not to say that you can't
(30:48):
have a big church or you can't be rich. In
the name of Jesus, I'm not saying that. I'm just
saying that once you know, you start swiping your credit
card at the altar, a thing, uh things pop. Okay,
wait that's the thing. Yeah, Like well, like when you
do um. I don't want to call it the specific church,
but there's a big mega church in Dallas where like, yeah,
(31:08):
when you do tithing, like which makes sense, like it's
you know, it's more efficient or whatever. But yeah, the
credit card swiper comes down now, I mean, yeah, that
doesn't make sense. And we prefer you have the one
that you can just tap it. It just everything now
it's like more tasteful and from your phone until you
put your card in phone on your phone and then
you just do it through the phone. But I remember
(31:30):
distinctly as a kid seeing uh swiper, like I need
a giving app for my shows. You do his name okay,
under his eye. Alright, guys, let's uh, let's get into
some stories. I do want to talk about the Elijah
McClain story. Uh. This is one that we've brought up
(31:53):
and been like, I can't even like, look at the videos.
They make me cry. There's a video where he walks
in and people at his job are having a surprise
party for him, and he's just such uh, he's like
so clearly moved by the fact that these people are
having history's most half assed surprise party for him. It's
(32:15):
like two people and a cake, and he's just like,
I don't know. It's you cry when you watch it
and know what happens to him. You see the police
body cam footage of them running up on him. He's
holding his hands out in fear, uh, and sort of
instinctual defensiveness and just like, oh no, no, no, I'm
(32:35):
I'm what what's happening. They put him in a choke
hold that is designed to deprive your brain of oxygen
until you pass out. Then the paramedics injected him with
ketamine when they arrived, and he died on the way
to the hospital. You know, a combination of all the
ways the institutional racism dehumanizes black human beings. They didn't
(32:57):
see a kind, gentle human being, which is what you
get from just like watching two seconds of a video
of him. If they had just stopped to hear a
single word he was saying, but they somehow saw a threat.
The paramedics didn't treat his body like a humans body.
They shot it full of an unsafe amount of tranquilizers,
(33:19):
which is, you know, the medical industrial complex we're realizing
is I mean, a lot of people aren't just realizing it,
but it's becoming more evident to mainstream culture that there
is a huge institutional racism problem in medicine. Yeah, why
did they tranquil I don't understand that because he was
(33:42):
already restrained. Correct, the same reason that you know, these
white folks do anything that they do, the cruelty is
the point. Also at the time that they were I
believe that department was experimenting with using kenemine as a tranquilizer,
which is so bizarre to me that you think you
can run experiments on people that you found on the street.
But I mean that the history of black folks when
it comes to medicine, you know, like we've always been experienced. Yeah,
(34:05):
to see, hell, they're trying to deal with COVID Like, hey,
black people, y'all first, no, no, you know, I mean
Henrietta lacks steal our DNA use it for fucking century
like it's so it's just really disgusting, and I'm just
like you, I don't know if there's any humanity left
in a lot of these white folks, and it's so
so disappointing to see that there's just because I mean,
(34:26):
if you, if we all are traumatized from slavery, there
has to be some kind of trauma as well on
the white side of Like we, you know, grew up
with cruel watching cruel figures put their foot on the
necks of other people, and that was normalized for so long.
I mean, people were having barbecues around hanging black boy bodies.
(34:48):
Like so you can't tell me that kind of psychological
trauma hasn't been passed down with these racist white folks
as well. And at this point, it's just you see
the videos. Nobody cares Brianna Taylor got murdered in her home.
No one has a good excuse for that. Her colors
are still running free and black women rarely get justice
and it's so fucking disgusting. Um. But the with the
(35:09):
Elijah McClain thing, people staged a kind of a beautiful protests,
used to play the violin for uh cats and animal shelter, uh,
to help them sleep at night, just because like literally
the most gentle human being to ever exist. And so
(35:30):
people stage of protests where they're playing violin in the
park to honor his memory, and these the police just
roll in like stormtroopers, start grabbing, hitting people while people
are like, you know, playing violin, saying no no. And
now we learned in the past few days that three
officers have been suspended from that same police force because
(35:54):
they were re enacting the choke hold on the memorial
people had set up where Elijah McClain was murdered by
the police. And I don't know. We have a new
show on our network with Barton day Thurston Club. We're
having a moment where he talks to an activist and
photographer who was at the early protests in Minneapolis and
(36:14):
talking about the protest functioning as sort of memorials for
you know, the hundreds of black men and women and
children who are needlessly murdered by the police, like Mike
Brown's mother and Eric Garner's one of his parents are
at the protests, and uh, you know, I I've seen
(36:36):
people kind of like a small movement starting to kind
of turn a lot of these protests into a memorial
for Elijah McClain, and I think that's I don't know,
I think that needs to Like, I think that's a
good strategy because there's just no way to look at
this story without realizing, you know, what we're talking about
(37:00):
out just how how stark it is, like how like
that is just as cartoon tunishly evil, as like Bull Connor,
as like the ship that we were seeing in the
sixties that I think a lot of white people had
convinced themselves doesn't exist anymore. Um, I'm just hoping that
like something can come out of that story, because it's
(37:24):
it's just fucking unbelievable. Yeah, there are no words. There
were really no words right now for me. Um, the
there's no defense. No. Yeah, it seems seems like the
only the instances where we're seeing any kind of justice
(37:45):
have been when things were on fire and the peaceful protests.
You know, news isn't covering them anymore because the cops
are no longer for the most part, out there inciting violence.
Which obviously that's why this Elijah story brought that back
into the mainstream, is because they showed up like goddamn
stormtroopers when folks were just playing violins in the park
and me and sad um not a terrible move, I
(38:08):
think too, just oh yeah, NonStop. They just can't help themselves.
It's like my friend mom and You has a joke
about that where he was like, we're like, please, guys,
no more police brutality, and they were like, oh, you
you don't want police brutalities, will smoke a whole pack
of police brutalities like like like, we were like, please stop,
and they were like, oh we we could actually do more.
(38:29):
Like no, that's what, yeah, I think my thing is like.
But the white liberal thing to me was very clear
when I moved to Seattle, Washington from the South, was
that I thought I was going to this this fucking
liberal oasis where I could really do some cool stuff.
(38:51):
And what I found out when I got there is
that yes, they are liberalists, Hale. If you have two
hundred and fifty thousand dollars, if you if you, if
you have that anti en you can be in this
liberal oasis where they don't care what you look like,
what you who you fuck, where you come from, anything,
(39:14):
as long as you can play this game that they're playing.
But that's the way they see it. They do not
understand poor people, and they don't know how to make them.
I mean, they don't understand black people either, that's what.
And they know they just see black people as poor people,
that's the thing. That's the thing. In Seattle, they kept
calling the black neighborhood the ghetto when I moved there,
(39:34):
and I was like, there is no ghetto in Seattle.
That's where black people live. That's a nice neighborhood. You
pieces of ship. Oh yeah. And I've had so many
well meaning, you know, liberal white folks try to talk
to me about childhood and they'll be like, yeah, well,
you know when you're a kid and y'all doing the
dozens and you know, you get you getting couart of waters.
(39:55):
And I was like, I didn't grow up poor, Like no, shade, no,
But how you just go assume because I'm black, They're like,
don't know how it is when you scratching and survive it?
Are you quoting Good Times to me, sir? But they
have the same racist issues, it's just they're more micro
and not micro because they're still harmful. But it's like
(40:17):
little ship that they're doing every day and fucking ruining
your psyche, you know what I mean. You get a job,
they're like, oh, that's good for you, because you know,
white white comedians out here with white men, we didn't
getting no jobs. And it's like no, the room is
there's there's nine other white men and then there's me,
like you know, like and that's the kind of thing
you get on the left. So it's like we've been
just fucked all around. Oh it's your point of like,
(40:40):
how do we rally up you know, everyone who's being
marginalized by society. It's just I don't know. I'm still
I would love to do it, but it just seems
like the cruelty one is the point for a lot
of these people, and to like people would just rather
have someone to look down on than be able to
be successful with. Yes, I agree. I think that's the
(41:02):
problem is that they need to feel better than someone.
And they're also not terribly educated people. So if they
can look at one group of people that looks different
and has less than them, there they can be like,
well I'm not them. Where they don't understand like, yo,
(41:24):
other poor people aren't holding you back. That's not how
that works, right, That's the fundamental thing I think it's
an education thing, and I just keep preaching like fundamentally,
if we take care of all poor people, the whole system,
it's okay, look at it as a plant or a house.
(41:46):
If your foundation is fucked, the whole thing is fucked.
If the roots are fucked, the whole thing is fucked.
There might be a one really cool part of it,
but the whole thing is gonna come down. And that's
I think a lot of it also goes back to
white liberals and how they have treated, um, that rural,
(42:09):
marginalized white community as well, with just complete disdain and
you know, dehumanizing or treating them as stupid and not
engaging with it and with them as as human beings.
That has allowed that community to then be prey to
(42:30):
forces like you know, the Fox News and the Donald Trump's.
Like I do think a lot of it goes back
to like a lot of the ship that they claim
about white liberals in the mainstream media is absolutely true. Um,
And you know that's that allows the sort of dividing
(42:54):
of of uh, you know, communities who don't who are
being originalized. Uh. And it's well, and it speaks to
a problem the left has. I think the biggest problem
the left has is there is a communication issue between
the classes. On the left absolutely is that the upper
(43:17):
class is constantly policing the lower class about language and
how they speak and their jokes and things like that,
where they don't understand that you don't understand blue collar
people communicate different mhm. Like me having a job in
corporate America was totally different than me being a server
(43:38):
or in the back of the house at a restaurant,
and I made more money being a server. Right now,
it's it's that's an issue that the left needs to
talk about. Two. Now, the right we need to accept
that they don't give a fuck about being hip a cripts.
(44:00):
They think that's funny when we called them that. They
don't give a ship. They just want a response to
whatever we have to say it. That's all it is.
Most of them at this point, most Trumpers, if we're
being honest, there's about thirty percent of our country that
are pure assholes. Doesn't matter color, creed, sex, gender. We
(44:22):
just gott motherfucker's and all they want is a response
to make you mad. That's their whole life. We've got
to stop arguing with them there, that's all they want.
It's an abusive relationship. It's like the cops where we're
like hey, like peacefully, we're like, hey, you guys are
being your little much and their responses that we're a
(44:44):
little much. Fuck you. I'll show kind of what we're
talking about that. Yeah, but you're right, it's not it's
not enough for some people. They're like, it doesn't matter
how many George Floyd's or Brianna Taylors there are, Like
they're never because like they want the cops to keep
(45:05):
other you know, they want the cops to keep everybody
with the brown people down. Um, because that's the whole point,
is it for them to protect property and to keep
the white areas white. And they're doing a great job
at that, you know what I mean, They're not policing
their own neighborhoods. They're they're not. No, that's another huge problem.
You need to live in that community. Yeah, No one
went to shoot Andy Griffith because he lived in that
(45:28):
community and he kept that community cool and he didn't
have to wear a gun. Barney, We need less Barney's
up there, that's what we need. Mm hmm. Alright, guys,
let's take one more break and we'll be right back
(45:51):
and or back uh. And during the break, as my
microphone was falling off the shitty plastic table that I
have attached to because it's like literally tearing through it
like it's made of paper, we're talking about how scary
it is that Trump is kind of doing all of
(46:12):
this based on instinct, and you know there are people
around him who are trying to exploit it, but you
know he's he's hard to pin down and he doesn't
want anybody to have too much success from him, so
he like kind of torpedoes like the abandons. But it's
scary how dumb he is, but how effective what he's doing,
(46:35):
Like he's still in this even though he keeps stepping
on his own dick like every other day. If that's
in this, I think this metaphor has been my it
is pro wrestling. What he's really good at is he
he gets that emotional side of everything, like that's his base.
(46:56):
His base is not intellectual at all, It is pure
emotional human being that are they're angry and they've been
taught that black people, these other poor people have kept
them damn and they're rightfully angry. Is the confusing part
(47:16):
I think that people miss is that they're also being
held at they're poor there, their health care system sucks,
they don't have jobs either, but they're they're being told
and force fed that it's these other poor people they're
fucking up their dream. And when they're right to be
angry at the liberals and the mainstream media too, I think, uh,
(47:40):
they're just they focus most of their rage at someone
that's a different I have a bit about that on
my second record, is like that's it's easy because we
all have like negativity inside of us, so dumb, so
dumb people just label that as like, oh, well, your
skins different, that's why I don't feel good. And they've
(48:02):
been taught that. I mean, that's the reason it's been reinforced.
If it hasn't been taught, it's been taught, it's been
taught in school, it's been reinforced in media. That's the
reason black face was such a huge deal to us
is because it was a tool that was used by
white folks to demonize black people, and it's spread like
wildfire throughout the culture and you know, reaffirmed these hateful,
(48:22):
you know things. That's why the stereotype of like Black
people love watermelon that comes from a lot of freed
slaves made a business and made a living selling watermelon,
and they started making money. And you know, then white
folks saw that and they're like, wait a minute, negroes
are making money, they're getting success somehow, we have to
turn this into a negative so that you know, poor,
because they got jealous in it's like we don't want
(48:46):
you all to have nothing, or if you have something,
you gotta have less than me. Yeah, that's insecurity. It's deep,
deep insecured. So just briefly on the subject of Trump,
too quick things. Uh one, he shared this video of
the mcclus keys. I just have a feeling that the
(49:07):
picture of those two standing on their porch in front
of their McMansion with automatic and semi automatic weapons, like
and they're like, you know, country club where. I have
a feeling that's going to be in history books just
(49:27):
because it's so perfectly encapsulates like the sort of white
fragility and impotent and confused dissonant rage that's happening that
I think it's even hard to make well to me
if you really look at that, if you examine those pictures,
(49:50):
in those images, what it signifies more than anything else
is I'm trying to think of the right way to
word it. It's that the idea that peaceful people are
(50:12):
gonna come take your stuff. They're not afraid of their
stuff getting taken, even though that's what it looks like.
It's that they know systematic change is coming. If you
see them pointing the way they're waving those and they're
not holding the guns correctly because they're not trained to
(50:33):
shoot those guns. They don't know how to use those guns.
Either of them fingers on the trigger, her fingers on
the trigger, could be holding a n M sixty. He's
holding an M six team like it's an M sixty
and he's rambo. That's if you really watch them, they're
(50:54):
not those black people and those people protests are just
walking by being like all right, just these there's a
lot like down the street, stay on, Jesus Christ, look
at these and it's just they're scared. They're like, why
are you guys? Organized? Why are you And it's so
you're supposed to be in downtown St. Louis or East St. Louis,
(51:15):
West St. Louis is our What are y'all doing? We're
bringing it to the rich neighborhoods. You're supposed to suck
up Ferguson. Not that, No, m Yeah, that's what's happening.
That's the fear in their eyes. It's not that, oh,
because they would love on some level if they went
into their homes and sucked up some antiques, because they've
(51:37):
got that ship so over insured, it would be they'd
make money on that. Yeah, they're begging for They would
love for something like that to happen. Did you guys
see a photo of inside of the house. Yeah, that's
what I'm talking about. It's insane. It's a museum. It
looks like a museum. It's like in a scary way.
They have marble steps, they have these like you know,
(52:00):
like old school kind of like, uh, who's the guy
who painted on the ceiling first? Uh? Yeah, they have
like Sistine Chapel esque like paintings on their ceiling. It's
the ugly ship that ever speaking said on Twitter it
looked like the uh the part of the parking garage
(52:21):
at the Americana is what they're inside of their house
looks like yeah. No, when she said, I was like,
holy ship, that's exactly. But then you start looking at
that's when people are like, look at all these rich
people's are their taste is terrible. I'm like, no, it's not.
All that is money laundry. All that stuff is money laundry.
All that is a scam. So it's all over insured
(52:44):
and they've got it's all overpriced and they can move
tons of money to another rich person by just selling
them this voss from the sixteenth century. That's how they
do all that. It's so for them to be like, oh,
we're protecting our property. Now you're protecting a system. That's
what you motherfucker's are protected, and you're scared because you
(53:07):
know it's changing. Also, they just didn't seem that confident
with the way they were holding their guns. Like I
feel like if the crowd had just decided to jump
onto the sidewalk and run up on them, I don't
know if they would have been able to shoot anybody
in time. She would have shot him in the head
on accident. She was brandishing that weapon just like limpus,
(53:27):
wrist finger on the trigger, just way even and around.
She could acidually shot anybody at any moment. Somebody had
just head faked at them. I feel like she would
have dropped her gun and he would have just started
firing it wildly in the air. The kick back just
blows him into the grass. Yeah, briefly. That's another example
(53:48):
of him kind of co signing white supremacist violence in
line with his you know, Tulsa speech and then the
old guy yelling white power from a golf cart. Now
he's retwee eating this video of these people brandishing uh
firearms that peaceful. I forget who said it. Someone tweeted
(54:08):
he's like they will those two, that couple will speak
at the Republican National Convention. Absolutely, And I was like, oh,
damn it, You're so right. They're probably getting so much
pressed right now, so many people reaching out like we
need a story, we need to talk, Like I'm sure
that they're going to become the darlings of I just
hope he wears chaps and he comes out and he
(54:29):
just shoots in like Yosemite, Sam when he comes out.
Do you agree that there was like something sexual about
like how they like I felt like they had like
some like after they went inside, they just went to
town on each other. Oh, they haven't been that turned
on towards each other. Yeah, thirty forty years they've not
(54:54):
had that. Yeah. I mean people said the same thing
about Derek Schoff And because the whole time he has
his foot on George Floyd's neck, he's got his hands
in his pockets, and we're like, what's happening here? What
is this? Um? Yeah, there's a thrill there. I'm sure
that's the most thrilling thing that's happened in quite some time.
It's so weird that we just have allowed Donald Trump
(55:16):
to just tweet whatever he wants. At this point, he
can tweet anything anything really, and it's not startling. It's
like we're fatigued. We're so fatigued. Yeah, uh well we
know it means nothing or something. That's the that's the thing.
And I think it's here's the thing. If it didn't
make Twitter a ton of fucking money, he'd been gone
(55:39):
a long time. Yeah, that's that's the truth of that. Yeah,
he'd be on what's it called? Did they give it
a French name? Yeah, that's what it's. It's apparently a
French pronunciation somebody was making for calling it arler. I
(56:00):
was like, yeah, that's what it's called, right, isn't it?
Am I wrong? That just goes to show they mean
nothing they ever say about any right exactly. Um. There's
two new Trump books coming that are worth keeping an
eye on. One was just held back by it's one
of his relatives who's just like airing the dirty laundry
(56:22):
of the Trump family. And how much more laundry is there?
I know apparently, I mean when you look at what
their practices are as a family, it's wild. Um. And
so maybe this will be like a more detailed, more
entertaining version of that, but like this was all there
when you looked at uh, you know, the reporting on
(56:44):
their taxes and like his dad's taxes and you know
when he was gifted tens of millions of dollars as
a baby, and then uh, you know, they just basically
laundered it by you know, treating people like Ship who
lived in low income housing. Um. And then but the
other book that's coming out is uh Bernstein from Woodward
(57:09):
and Bernstein has a book coming out where he got
access to the transcripts of Trump's calls with foreign leaders. Uh,
and they're apparently very uh entertaining and oh if well,
I'm sure they're entertaining until you move back and then
realize who he's talking to and saying this stuff too,
and you're like, this is terrified. Yeah, very He's apparently
(57:34):
uniformly just so kind and personal and friendly to the
authoritarian leaders. Uh. And then it is like openly bullying
and demeaning to the Australian president or prime minister whatever
they have down there. Anyways, those will we'll keep an
(57:56):
eye on those. Those should be interesting. And finally, I
want to talk about The Princess and the Frog. Splash
Mountain is going to be redesigned around that movie. It's
a movie that was released right before Avatar. I hadn't
realized that, but apparently it got swallowed by that news cycle.
And you know, just passive disinterest from the media, bad
(58:19):
marketing planned by Disney, just ambient racism of our country.
But they're hoping that this revives interest in the princess
in the Frog, first Disney movie to star a black princess. Yeah.
But in that Disney movie, she was a frog for
most of it. That's the other thing. Two thirds of
(58:40):
the movie. Ye. They're like, we can't have people just
looking at a black princess that long. They will get upset.
We'll make off a frog for most of it, Like
it's crazy. So I'm wondering what this exhibits gonna look like.
Is it going to just be a lot of Nick
Nati Roses character as a frog? Because thank you, well,
I know it's the Yeah, that's so funny. It's like
their thought was like, we'll do the reveal two thirds,
(59:03):
so we've already they've already invested their time and money.
It's like, do they reveal that she's black at the
end as you're going down the rise, she's a black
Lady's all right? I don't honestly, maybe that would have
been better, you know, just from a comedy standpoint, it
would have been better. But yeah, she's a black princess
in the beginning, and it's like all in New Orleans.
(59:24):
And then you know, quickly on she begins, he turns
into a frog and then she's a frog. But so
much of the movie, so she starts off as a
black yeah, and then Jesus Christ, then she's then there
will make her a frog. It'll be fine. They'll forget
and then I Carns'll forget that they have to look
(59:44):
at a black person as a princess. And then because
they're just looking at a frog, A frog? What a
great voice. Uh. We're talking on last week about third
degree racism, this concept of like when companies try to
do diversity initiatives, they just do really half asked and
don't follow through and don't treat it with any of
the same attention and you know, uh intellectual firepower that
(01:00:08):
they would anything having to do with profits. Uh. And
I feel like that's sort of what happened to this movie,
Like they just didn't They just really half asked it
and gave it a bad release date, gave it a
bad title, The marketing sucked, the they made the Princess
a frog for half of the fucking movie. Um. And yeah,
(01:00:33):
it just like I I remember the movie coming out,
but I feel like it never really like hit the zeitgeist,
Whereas you know, people blame the fact that Avatar came
out a couple of weeks later for kind of swallowing
it up. But Alvin and the Chipmunks the squeakwel uh
came out at that time, and I remember that movie
(01:00:54):
like more than The Princess and the Frog in terms
of like being something that happened in pop culture history.
I feel like it just got kind of ignored. Well,
and if we're being honest about how those businesses work,
Disney has a lot of money and when they want
to promote something, the world will know about it if
(01:01:16):
they want to promote it, and if they don't, that's
a decision that that's that decision was made in That
wasn't hard. Oh, Avatar did a better job and Chipmunks
did it. That's all those companies. They everything they do,
there's a meeting in a decision. There's too much money
involved in all that. That's on purpose and I'm sure
(01:01:37):
they But the good thing is Walt Disney was just
a good dude all around, and that's that is no
evidence of any other just any anti Semitism, not good dude,
just good dude, like like we're talking about good foundation
there at Disney. Yeah, uh, just reading the Sony email hack,
Like I I just know that they've used the you know,
(01:02:01):
reception of this movie a thousand times to just find
not making another Disney classic with a black lead and
a black filmmaker. But yeah, they need to try that
many more times like effective immediately. Oh I can, I
mean and Lacey can probably tell you too. Networks those
(01:02:22):
they they have any corporation has a great way of
telling you why your project or whatever. It just it's
just not gonna work right when you're like, but it's
kind of the same as that one that you already do,
and they're now it's different, it's not right, and they
have no idea. Everyone thinks that network because I just
(01:02:45):
have some kind of grasp on what's popular or what's
smart or what people will like. No, they just fire
out so much ship and hope that they get lucky,
and that's all it is. That's why there's tons of
shows that you've never seen or heard before that come
and go pilots all types of ship, movie ease everything,
and it's like they just waste a house, a whole
bunch of money and hope to recoup a lot of
that on big you know, hit shows and blockbusters. You
(01:03:07):
know when they get lucky, but they don't know what
they're doing. If they did, there'd be three shows. Uh yeah,
that did you guys read? Uh? Well, what's it? What's
the William Golden book? I forget what it's called, but
he was Adventures in the Screen Trade where he just
(01:03:30):
talks about how nobody knows anything. Uh, and just like
points out five examples of movies that they like wanted
to shelve because they thought it was going to tank
so bad when it came out and they became like,
you know, iconic, monstrous hits. He's just nobody in Hollywood
knows anything. Don't let them tell you any of the other.
(01:03:52):
The same goes for st and L. Will Ferrell, pitch More,
cow Bill every episode for like three years and they're
like no, and then they finally threw it in and
it destroyed. It's iconic. Yes, you don't know. That's why
comedy is what it is. It's like, that's why it
takes ten or fifteen years to get really good at
(01:04:13):
stand up, because it takes ten or fifteen years to
learn what works for you and what doesn't. And they're
doing all these comics disservice, throwing them out there at
five to seven years in. They're fucking them over because
they've got like a funny ten minutes, fifteen minutes and
the rest they're just grasping. And then people are like, oh,
(01:04:34):
he's not funny, and you're like, he is. They just
fucked him or they fucked her. You know, I've never
understood that, Like if they because I've noticed that in
a lot of specials recently that I've watched, Like Netflix
sometimes gets it right where it's like, Okay, we're gonna
gather everybody fifteen, or we're gonna give them their tight
ten or sometimes even five. I've seen where it's like, Okay,
we know that they're going to have like the hits
(01:04:55):
for the short amount of time. But then sometimes it
is like a whole special like p D even Since
special where I was like, I think Pete Davidson's funny,
but I think he got up there and did a
lot of improv where you're just like, what else, what else?
What else? We're like filming this and it's like twenty
minutes of what else? What else? What else? What else? Well,
it's like, I'm sorry, dude, it's that. It's that thing
(01:05:16):
you were talking about where it's like they throw all
and once he got hot, they're like, oh, well, then
have him do a stand up special because you got
a movie coming out and he's on this, and you're like, well,
maybe he shouldn't do the stand up specially yet because
he's been working on all that other stuff. But they're
like cash in, cash in, and it's hard as a
performer not to be like, how much, Sure, I'll talk
(01:05:38):
for an hour. I don't comics have writers. I'm like,
I couldn't hook my boy up with some some materials. Well, well,
Pete Pete, because you can't tell Pete what to do,
So that's what makes Pete wonderful. Well, guys, it has
been lovely talking to you both to day. Uh, Billy Wayne,
(01:06:02):
where can people find you and follow you? And also,
why do you have a tiger behind you? Yesterday's guests
had a tiger behind her. If it's a now you
have a tiger behind you? What's happening? I'm just in
my son's room. We found this at a yard sale.
It's like a life size tiger for like twenty dollars um.
(01:06:22):
And you know we don't get to use it a lot,
so it seems pretty. Is this what using it entails?
I guess yeah, because it just sits there and startles
me sometimes when I walk into his room where I'm like,
there's a cat in there? Where do people find you
and follow you? At? If you just google Billy Wayne Davis, any,
all that stuff comes up, so whatever you choose to follow,
(01:06:44):
Like I'm on Twitter, Instagram all that. Uh, and I
have a cannabis podcast that we're about to start working
on the second season. So there's a whole first season
that you can ben John. It's called Grown Local, and
what it is is it's not like I do. My
my co host is a world class cannabis grower out
(01:07:06):
of Eugene, Oregon, and that's where we base the first
season is out of Eugene, and it's not it's not
gonna be over your head, and it's not two stoner.
It is two stoners, but we're it's for people that
are curious about and if you like people, that's what
the podcast is about, is the people that make up
these communities. So we're trying to take that stigma away
(01:07:26):
from the plant of this of the lazy stoner, because
it's just the salt of the earth, wonderful human beings. Huh.
Cool Grown Local. Is there a tweet or some other
active social media you've been enjoying? Like I said, I
think I'm gonna call back to Morgan Murphy's wait about
(01:07:48):
about the couple that they look like they lived in
the parking garage exit at the Americana. If you don't
know what I'm talking about. Google those right now, Google
American on Brand, part Can Garage, and then those people's house.
It's so accurate. Lacy. It's been wonderful having you as
guest co hosts these past two days. Where can people
(01:08:12):
find you? Follow you here? You all that stuff? Guys,
you can find me as always a d I V
A l A c I D VA Lacey on all platforms,
and you can listen to my podcast if you like scams,
that Scam Goddess pod on wherever you listen to your pots.
Actually just called scam Goddess. Why did I say that?
But yeah? Um? And then the tweet that I have
(01:08:32):
been enjoying is this comes from Gina DePass on Twitter
and she says, laying on a skinny dud's chest is
like laying on the porch that's look yep, there's old
lazy dog underneath it. Just who knew chess have ribs? Uh?
(01:08:59):
You can find me on Twitter at Jack Underscore O'Brien.
A couple of tweets I've that enjoying. Uh. Matt Moore
tweeted what if you put your fingers in a girl's
mouth to be sexy? And she just made a really
loud whistle with them that called a horse over, uh
prody goop. That tweeted if let's win win right there?
(01:09:20):
Prodi to tweet if I were an X ray technician
after I took the first X ray, I'd say, Okay,
now let's do a goofy one. I think people would laugh,
have a good time. And then Isabel Steckle tweeted if
not no worries me sexting, which, uh yeah. You can
find us on Twitter at daily Zeycheis. Were at the
Daily Zeygeist on the Instagram. We have a Facebook fan
(01:09:42):
page on a website Daily zy geys dot com where
we post our episodes and our footnote link off to
the information that we talked about today's episode, as well
as the song we ride out on. Who's got a
song today? If no one has what I have one lace?
Do you have a song that we can ride out onto? This? Yeah?
(01:10:03):
I actually do, guys. Um. I've recently gotten to the
girl band Ham Jay I Am and on their new
album Women in Music Part Three, there's a song called
three Am and it's just so dy and like wonderful,
So get into that, get into it. We're going to
(01:10:24):
write out on that. The daily Zeit, guys, is the
production of My Heart Radio. For more podcast from My
heart Radio, visit the heart Radio app, Apple podcast, or
wherever you listen to your favorite shows. That is going
to do it for this morning. We'll be back this
afternoon to tell you what's trending. We'll talk to you
guys then by the change, I from no whare I
(01:11:04):
keep fee nowhere us from nowhere from nowhere to do
not keep doping? Call ahead, m