Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet end. Welcome to season one, seventy seven,
episode one of the Days like us to production of
My Heart Radio. This is a podcast where we take
a deep dive into America's share consciousness. It's Monday, March
twenty nine one. My name is Jack O'Brien a K.
I like big boats and I cannot lie you. Other
(00:21):
sailors can't deny that when a boat floats into an
itty bitty space because around good hope so waste, it
gets hung. That is courtesy of Christie. I'm Bucci man.
Take two. We we edited it out, hopefully we added
out me fucking up an earlier version. Um, and I
(00:41):
mean you didn't suck up. Christie got sucked up than
using the wrong case. I wasn't up on his revision.
That's right, that's on me. Anyways, I am thrilled to
be joined by my co host, Mr Miles grad. I
don't want to wait to me know right now, fun tweet.
(01:06):
I don't want to wait. But what's some stuff so
that you get good good man? You know, I feel
like they didn't they didn't get the rights to that song.
So when you watch Dawson's Creak on streaming they got
the wild flagrant fake ass theme song. Oh really, does
(01:28):
it sound like that? Or is it like? No? It's
like you're the Dawson's Green creaking it upon a patient.
Look at this chick, I'm up to all the sister's
got a black boyfriend and they say that so aggressively
in the show. What about her black boyfriend? I don't
like Wow the nineties huh, but yeah. Shout out to
(01:52):
Johnny Davis for that one. Given up, you know, dude,
due um? Wow, what a show, What a time to
be alive. We are thrilled to be joined in our
third seat by the brilliant. The talented is DJ Daniel
good Man. My name is dan Zula, the mic ruler
(02:17):
Game of SCHOOLA. You wanna pod, I'll bring it to you.
What's up? Wait? Come on now, keep going. There's there's more.
But the resident was kind of a little bit off
the beat, and I was like, we're gonna leave it
at that right there. Okay, But shout out to Matt
Frederick at Matt Underscore Frederick nine. Thank you so much
(02:38):
for the Frederick from Uh Sister Podcast. I actually think
it's actually a different Matt Freendi. I don't know, man,
that's a very name. That's a very name. Two first names.
Come on, come on, uh dj Daniel back again, so
(03:00):
back in the cradle. Indeed on the other side. What's
good man? What's good man? Daniald you know, not not
a mood show, you know, a lot of the same.
Just moved into working with the exactly, still working on
the Spanish skills. Um, just move into a new apartment
(03:20):
with my own, her majesty, And it's been it's been
like that's what she's over there with you because she
hasn't been home in two days. Yeah, that's that's his
way of telling him that she is my own with
her majesty. Oh, you love to see it, and I
love to hear the adoption of the proper Norman clature
(03:43):
for talking about our significant others. Truly, I mean, she
is the queen. How is the you know, this is
how many times you've been like living with with the
booth thing. This is my first time, the first time
living with a significant other. I know that going. How's
that going? It's going well so far? I mean, you weird,
that's there's adjustments for both of us. But what's your adjustment?
(04:04):
You're such an easy going dude. I'm I'm because I
feel like you're probably like the best person to like
for the other party to move in with. You're very kind.
I appreciate that because you're a very considerate person, like
at your own expense. Sometimes it's like, yes, it's okay,
I don't need to sit on a normal sleep. I
can move over with these milk grades. Daniels such a
trooper man. Definitely adjusting the whispering, my man. He goes
(04:34):
over and closes the door and turns like it's funny,
because that's literally what I was gonna say, adjusting the
volume of my voice. I have a I have a
posted note on my computer that's just stop yelling because
I've been it's I put that there myself. That wasn't
(04:54):
something that that and that Stephanie came in was like,
you need to quiet down. I'm like, I'm in like
the room, the office is not filled with ship yet,
so I can hear the out fair place. I totally
that's a really good point. Thank you. I started exparing it.
It smells terrible, but otherwise it doesn't help the acoustics.
(05:14):
Contrary to what you believe. They keep telling me that
I think I was get controlled, so you have to,
So you have to. So she's adjusting to your loud
talking yes, And then what are you adjusting? What are
what are the what's your growth opportunity in terms of
rearranging your expectations and feelings of entitlement in your living space? Um.
(05:35):
I think one that is certainly an adjustment, but is
really something that I just needed to change in general
is just eating better. She has a very low tolerance
for like shitty food in general, and I really appreciate
that because it gets me to not be like, oh
it's late and I'm hungry. Dominoes is still open, right?
And then also yeah, not having not having two bros
(05:59):
around who are so probably high and can also co
worked into ordering Dominoes with me just after a bit
like you're you're not hungry? Sure, yeah, dude, if it
was here, you eat it right. If it was here,
you eat it right. If it was here, That's what
I thought. So when I get it, you're not gonna
want to slice. You're not exactly drag him down with
(06:20):
you in. And the best two is like the group
like a reason, like you're like, yeah, I kind of
eat a small lunch though, so yeah, we could probably
finish the whole. We should probably too, because I probably
eat a whole one. Yeah, is that something you learned
the hard way? Like she caught you just like housing
an entire Domino's pizza like in the bathroom the middle
(06:40):
of the night. Okay, it's only been just about a month,
so so the craving that hard yet, But it sounds
like you're actually terrible. You're bringing in bad eating habits.
You talked too loud, and she's perfect. Yes, yeah, that
precisely she is perfect. Look at you couldn't even could
the thing. I was like, what are you adjusting to?
(07:00):
You were like, she's healthy and helping me. I my
life just being around someone who's better than me and
will accept, uh, just the bullshit that I bring my
thing that just straight up is like whenever I've moved
in a couple of times i've lived with a like
a partner, is always having to have like be upfront
about my need for person like my alone time, just
(07:23):
as like your only child, like I recharge in solitude.
So like that's one thing i'mways like I gotta let
you know, like it's not nothing personal. This hell, I
get down. That was that was something that was super
I would say, like convenient for both of us. Is
that like she has pretty much only lived alone, um,
since you know, entering adulthood and so in terms of
like entertaining herself and stuff like that. She's like, I'm
(07:46):
kind of I'm chill on my own, Like you don't
have to you want to go, like do whatever you want.
Like that's fine. I'm like, you know what did I say?
Put those away? And I've had to adjust to the
fact that she hates p knees and I keep getting
that wrong. Uh, I'm trying chrysanthemums. Yo. I was just
(08:09):
about to say, I'm thirteen years in and still finding
out all sorts of things about myself. It is actually
today is my thirteen wedding Anniverse my wife, Yeah, thirteen
years ago DJ Daniel Rocket party at my wedding. Um,
(08:31):
that's a funny story about that wedding. Yeah. Yeah, so
so I was on acid Well no, but um I was,
I was eighteen, I was in college. It was my
I think I was just like I'm literally looking over here,
what month is it? Like I'm in my second semester
of my first year. Thank you as my second semester
(08:51):
of my first year of college, and you know, it
was a wedding. So the bartender is like, you look
all right to me, and I think at the time
it was open bar party, and I just remember my
mom at that party seeing me drink my first of
all drinks, gin and Tonic evening and my mom on
(09:11):
the dance florce has to be just just don't be
that guy, you know, and then don't be that guy,
and then you ended up being that guy. Man, I
gotta tell you, uh, pants around his ankles by the
end of the night. Was your nickname after that, piss Windmill.
(09:32):
That's cool, though I don't know what that means. That
sounds tight. It was actually impressive, actually impressive drunken breakdancing.
I'm glad you thought so. My mom was horrified, but
alas you behaved, you're yourself admirably. Yeah. Shout out to
uh my wife for putting up with me for thirteen years.
(09:52):
I was going to say the thing that I've had,
like I am a whole probably s we're then a
person should be just in all aspects of human functioning.
For the first like three hours that I'm awak uh
and being around her when she hits, like gets out
(10:13):
of bed and is sprinting when she hits the ground,
and like, h I opened one eye at a time
over Yeah, Yeah, sounds about right. It sounds like we're
in a similar bout. Yeah. Anyways, Daniel, as you know,
we're gonna get to know you a little bit better
in a moment. First, we're gonna tell our listeners a
(10:35):
couple of the things we're talking about. We're gonna talk
about the arrest of a Georgia lawmaker, and it's not
the one that should be arrested. It's actually somebody knocking
on that politicians door. Someone knocked on Governor Kemp's door
and got arrested for doing so, for knowingly knocking. I
(10:57):
believe whatever that means it was an accidental. Um. I
want to talk about the trend we're seeing of attacks
on Asian people in America being explained away by the
police as having nothing to do with ethnicity. We obviously
had the big example in Atlanta, UH last week, and
(11:21):
now there's another kind of example of a sixty nine
year old Asian man who was attacked by a twentysomething
man while he was walking his dog. And the police
have done the same ship, and I just want to
look at the history of that. There's a really troubling
historical precedent for that. I want to look at a
(11:43):
couple of the uh storylines that we're now seeing used
against Joe Biden that we also saw being used against
Trump from sort of the MSNBC mainstream media. Just wondering
if this is like a new rhythm to presidencies and
(12:05):
their modern era of like everybody being kind of siphoned
off into their own bubbles, if like these are the
storylines that will emerge about every president until somebody tears
Twitter and Facebook down. We're gonna talk about all sorts
of just Republican funery. We'll talk about crafts, anti veggie campaign,
(12:27):
all of that plenty more. But first, DJ Daniel, what
is something from your search history that is revealing about
who you are? Well? Also in the spirit of moving
in toilet bowl brushes, Oh man, looking up that toilet
bowl brushes that's been so you know, Uh, my partner
(12:48):
take huge bowl in their honey event horizons where it
like appears out over the water. It's just as one
of those ones. It's just it's always becomes you know,
I'm sorry about that. It's a podcast that I'm saying
second rate, more like a number two podcasts. Anyway, toilet
(13:09):
bowl brushes just been in the process of getting things
for the house. We've had different responsibilities and while uh,
Stephanie is covering the main things like the couch and
the bed frame, she's like, why don't you look up
a good toilet bowl brush, Like, babe, I got you
(13:29):
on that one, No problem, let's get it. And so yeah,
I've been searching a lot of those, and the market
is right. There are so many toilet bowl brushes out
there of all different designs and shapes. Now that I was,
I mean, I'm thrilled by there's just there's a lot,
and it's very it's very fun to shop west a
(13:51):
new technology. I mean, I feel like they need it's
pretty gross it is. Toilet bowl brushes exist and we
just leave them there, and uh, like I'm trying to
come up with like maybe like a squirt bottle or
something that we could, uh we could use or it
isn't like the other lazy versions like you put the
thing in your toilet tanks and then like it's always
(14:12):
just kind of like there's like some kind of with
that blue ship. Remember, like in the night it looks
like a yeah or you or you stick one on
the side of the I don't think yeah exactly. I
just throw a couple of those in there every time
I go to the bathroom. Just drop a couple in.
You're gonna need that plot plot fist fist. Oh my god, guys,
(14:37):
we got it. We're off the air, We're off the internet.
What's happening. I remember, like anytime I would move into
a new place back back in the day, there was
a bed bath and beyond trip that always took place.
Oh yeah, oh yeah, we hand we handled the bed
bath and beyond trip got are necessary, you know, shower
curtain hangers and all that jive. But the the other say,
(15:00):
the funny thing about the toilet pol brushes that babe.
I've had a really a couple of really cool ones.
There's one from CB two. There's this other one who
displays She said, no, we're not going to CB two
because I have a gift certificate there and we're only
going to buy stuff from there when we have a
bunch of things to buy. And I was like, okay, okay,
So I won't get that one, idiot? What about this?
So we also have a gift certificate from there, so
(15:20):
we're not gonna buy anything from there because we have
a lot of stuff to buy. Wait, y'all got like
moving in gift certificates, dude, like all of these. So
I'm trying to remember which service it was. Oh, it
was changing your address with the USPS. Change your address,
they give you like just a right, Okay, that's different
than a gift certificate, where I think people are making
(15:42):
I have cards on you. It was definitely improper improper
language there. But yeah, we've just been you know here
there on whole order. I mean, like makes you wonder,
makes you wonder? Yeah, yeah, what are they charging normally?
What's that really? What's that exactly costing them literally nothing?
But it's saving us pennies on the dollar. Well, you know,
(16:05):
let us know which brush you end up with. Oh,
I will be updated. What does it matter? That is conical?
I want that slightly conical, that way you can really
hit the underneath sub rim as I call it. I
want the good points, but I also want the one
that has like the cap attached to the stick so
that when you put it back in like the tube.
(16:25):
It stays like that and then like you push it
down like venus light. Also also very nice. I've been
looking for those, but they all have a kind of dos.
Ones all have like a very like future kind of
aesthetic where I wants me a little bit more, a
little bit more. You've always said that like cottage, cottage
(16:46):
core and very cottage core, you know, Spanish style. Hoo.
We can't have this future tech toilet ship, so which
is why you're going with like a tree branch with
a cotton bloss and thank you. Precisely, you've nailed. You
said you're fashion. I kind of blake lively, right, nail,
then thank you. What is something you think is overrated?
(17:07):
Overrated is small glasses and cups. Recently, since again since
we moved in, I've been drinking everything out of a jug,
like everything out of a large glass jar. You know,
Bell jars, Mason jars, all that stuff. Yeah, and it's like,
I don't know in what scenario I'm going to be,
you know, giving someone a glass that like, you know,
(17:29):
there are dinner glasses that are like you know, this big,
like almost pint size basically, and that seems like a
size or a serviceable glass to drink liquid out of.
But literally those ones that are this big, that are
so small, maybe like three or four inches tall, that's
two SIPs of liquid. Two SIPs of liquid. And if
we're talking wine or whatever, sure, you know, wine, liquor,
all that stuff go off, you know, sip nicely. But
(17:51):
like I'm drinking of water with dinner, give me a jug.
I will not be drinking out of a tiny glass
that I will take two SIPs out of and it's
gone and I need to go and refill. Even liquor.
I like to drink out of a jug with three
on it, you know and banding. Yeah, but yeah, as
(18:11):
we've populated our cup. Thing you wouldn't like you hate,
you hate Japan tiny ass glasses of water because I
remember being like Pubert Puberty boy in Japan my American applets.
I was fucking it up, like I was like I
need nine on trees and this this just class will
(18:34):
not a lot of times they'll leave a picture on
the table because they know, like you know, do your
own shack because also it helps, it helps you be
less wasteful overall totally, because you know, you go places
and sometimes motherfucker's don't even touched the cup of water
at all. And now you don't be wasting water. But
if at least you're being like, okay, okay, if you
want more, I got more for you, but I'm not
We're not in the business of just pouring up of
(18:56):
water for you. Yeah, so you've been shammed appropriately. Yeah,
let's see if you can do any better with your
underrated something you well not getting any better. But um
podcast live shows. And this is not because I'm about
to be doing one later tonight, no plug because this
(19:18):
comes out on Monday. But I just watched the dough
Boys live show UM that they did for the finale
of munch Madness Pioneered sponsored by Manscaped, and I I
could not have had a better time seeing the podcast
that I love play out exactly the way that I
know it plays out, like getting to see all of
(19:40):
their expressions that I like you, you hear the conversation.
This is not news to you, guys, but like everybody
loves podcasts because they feel like they're part of the
conversation between their three best friends who they've never met
before and blah blah blah. Obviously, I feel that way
about the dough Boys and seeing every x S facial
expression that Wiger has whenever Mitch says something is do
bit or every Mitch shaking his head whatever, Wigger is
(20:03):
just a robot. Was like it was exactly the It
was candy. It was truly visual candy to watch that.
Just be like, yare exactly as I expected. All right,
justin ed and all that ship out about other podcast?
What is this? Man? Yeah, I heard about that. That's
(20:24):
the word on the street from a salty person. Oh man,
it is something I'm trying to think of a podcast.
I mean yeah, I mean said we went to go
see Jesus and Marrow. Yeah it was great. That was
a great live show. And it is play out when
you're like they stood up, They stood up the whole
time and just talked off the stage and you're like, great,
(20:48):
played perfectly for their audience. Like I know that when
they were when they were rattling off the a k
as you hear like there's there's half the crowd that
was there because they're like, oh yeah, Jesus A Merrow.
I'm familiar with their new showtime show or or I've
seen their new clips. And then the Bodega Hive who
was saying back every single a k A to them,
and it's like, that's the screaming that ship out. I
(21:12):
remember that show was so funny when that was really
Farrow talked about the drug dealer who had the sub
zero mask that he would wear a drug It just perfect.
It was just perfect. It was truly perfect. But yeah,
I think, like anything, like whether it's music or like
a podcast or whatever, it's like whenever you have like
(21:33):
your idea, like because you're when you're world building in
your head and then you see the thing in real life,
it always is a wonderful moment. It's candy. It was
candy and watching what do you What's your Vibe on
your live podcast that people unfortunately we'll have to see
the replay or something or maybe not at all. Have
they didn't get tickets? I know you can you will.
Fortunately with this this service, you can buy tickets to
watch a week later. But yeah, it's I'm you know,
(21:56):
we're you know, Joel and I will be doing kind
of like m c intro duties to introduce the wonderful
Donald phase on Zach Braff and then we'll be sitting
back and letting them just you know, do all their
silly business while I'm fielding the live chat of people
asking the same question a thousand times. And then and
then in the middle there will be a live performance
(22:16):
from piss Window exactly. Intermission. All right, let's take a
quick break. We'll come back and talk about news. And
(22:41):
we're back. And the fuccory in Georgia is hitting new levels. Yeah,
I mean, I guess not hitting new levels. It's coming
in new forms that are yeah, next level ship from
Governor Kemp, government camp on government camp do something. No. Yeah,
(23:07):
we talked about, you know, the diabolical fucking voter suppression
bill and Georgia, the one that is racist revenge for
people of color organizing to vote in and you know
we've talked that. It's it's all horseshit, it's all We're
going back in time to Jim Crowe. It's not new
Jim Crow because it's just Jim. Like stricter id laws.
They're shrinking early voting periods, making absentee voting harder. Mobile
(23:31):
ballot boxes are trying to cut those back. They've even
made it illegal for volunteers to give people food or
drink that are waiting in the intentionally manufactured long lines
uh in heavily minority districts to vote, so they can't.
They're not evenna Let you hook somebody up with something
to sustain them as they are being you know, forcibly
(23:52):
made to like like maybe we can just you know,
run the clock down on them and they won't vote.
As this was how happening. Governor Kemp was signing the
bill into lot at the capital and a state representative
part Cannon, a black woman, knocked on his office door
as he decided that this kind of racism was best
(24:13):
kept behind closed doors. And she just knocked on his
door being like, you know, trying to like bring awareness,
Like sir, you should like do that. You're you're so
ashamed you're doing it back there. Also, this is absolutely nonsense,
and she was arrested for knocking on the door that
was or knowingly knocking whatever funk they is there? What's
(24:37):
the what is the accidental knocking? What? What? I don't know?
Oh no, you knew, you knew, you knew what you
were doing putting your lightly tapping your hand on a
fucking door. As this governor tries to disenfranchise millions of
people Like what the anyway? I mean, it's just it's
just really the image of seeing her knock on the
(24:59):
door and then have these state troopers just whisk her
away is just really awful to watch, Just like watching
like like this manifestation of white supremacy reassert its power
in legal form. Uh yeah, from a different It feels
like it's from a different decade, different century almost, Yeah,
(25:20):
and yeah they are just getting away with it. Like
like we talked about these Uh these are people who
get uh donations from some of the biggest corporations in
America and need to be I don't know, they it
can't be accepted. Like if you found out that fucking
Coca Cola was donating the bull commer, Like would you
(25:43):
would you still be cool with that? Right? Yeah? This
is then then immediately after that she was released, Um,
I've because fucking nonsense. But as soon as she was released,
I mean, fucking lawsuits were just filed immediately because they're like,
this is this is absurd, Like it runs a foul
of so many things and laws that exist, and it's
(26:03):
because this is just a voter suppression in its purest form. Um.
So a lot of the one of the main lawsuits
is targeting nine specific measures within the new law UM
as they see it, like those being like the ones
that probably have a really good chance of being turned down.
But at the same time, it makes you wonder why
the funk they're not passing something up top in d
(26:24):
C to make these standards like a new you know,
just a new standard of how we're going to vote, um,
rather than allowing for this ship to continue. And yeah,
there's like people saying like, well, just wait, we will,
We're gonna do something in d C. Okay, I'm waiting, UM,
But I think unfortunately a lot of people be waiting
in lines trying to vote. It feels a lot sometimes
(26:46):
like politics exist only in the bubbles where the people
physically are. It's like you hear a lot of noise
that comes out of d C where it's like, you know,
Congress is very active about trying to make this happen,
and yet state government is just like, you know, it
doesn't matter to us. We're going to continue the fun
no matter what. And that's countrywide and and it's it.
(27:09):
And and also as you were saying, it's like, you know,
I hope I mean, of course, they're not. But I
hope everybody, and when I mean everybody, I mean the
kind of public that is surprised by things like protests,
by things like public anger. I hope they're keeping track
of these moments because when people are like, where did
these protests come from? Where did these you know, where
did these angry displays of people expressing their anger with
(27:33):
the state of the government come from? Here's another moment,
here's another bookmark, Like we can pull out every tweet,
we can pull out everything, because like as laws in
the past used to be something that could be not
necessarily behind closed doors, but definitely not shout out over
social media, it's like we have that now, and so
it's just bookmark all of these moments when it's like
you want to know why this happened, here's ABC through
(27:53):
fucking z of why people are acting like this, because
everything it's all right here, it's happening live in front
of your face, and it's just because you're not paying
attention that you're surprised by any of it. Sure, unfortunately,
feel like some of the people that would probably be
the ones that need to unfortunately need to see a
list of how people arrive at a point of anger
(28:14):
after being oppressed. I don't know if that's gonna help. Unfortunately,
I'm a little cynical, but you don't know. You never.
Sometimes you may have someone somewhat slightly reasonable and you're like, Okay,
if you really are confused, let me tell you why.
Because at every corner there this system of oppression is
finding a way to claw back any gains you've made,
and it will, it will try and respond doubly in
(28:37):
the in the face of your own advancement or pursuit
of whatever form of liberation we can get. And part
of this is the design of racism is too make
you hopeless, to make it just deflating, right, and to
like to make to send that message clearly, uh, and
just keep the pressure on, keep you know, without saying
(29:01):
the thing out loud, doing it so where everybody can
see it. And then like I feel like there's probably
some like Democrat, like big d democratic politicians who are
going to act surprised by this, but I think like
for a Kemp or you know, the Republican Party, like
(29:24):
this is all part of the calculation, is like do
things that are going to enrage people when people are
enraged publicized that so that you're you know, white supremacist
voter base or have something to be afraid of. Like
I think that is perpetuate all stereotypes of vicious, angry
(29:46):
people of color when there's no context of like, oh,
these are people fighting for their lives. It's not like,
you know what, I just woke up and decided I'm
gonna just start screaming about voter suppression. No, that's not
what it is. Oh and also one other thing about
Brian Kemp though, let's not forget this is the guy
who erased like over three hundred thousand people from the
(30:06):
voter scrolls to beat Stacy Abrahams by fifty votes. So
this is this is just like part and parcel of
his whole fucking m O, which is the erasure of
the ability and you know, presence of a black vote.
But you know what, I'm hopefully these lawsuits uh coalesce
into something effective. Hopefully, I mean hopefully something will happen
(30:28):
at a federal level that can provide some kind of shelter.
But I have a feeling this is again going to
fall on activists to try and do as much work
as possible to try and make you know, clawback some
fairness in all this. Well, did Biden announce like some
overarching like federal push to try and protect voter rights, Like,
(30:50):
is that something that's being like moved through. Well, that's
what HR one is, Like, that's the one that is
enshrining a lot of these things to make them like
to invest in the ability to have better access to
voting and to make it easier and to have people
registered on their eighteenth birthday automatically ship like that. You know,
(31:13):
that's the kinds of things that typically people who are
trying to push back against have to do, like, you know,
voter registration drive to make sure everyone's eligible. But like
it would be so much easier if it was just
sort of like, hey, you're eighteen, you're eligible enough to
register because that's your right and we're not trying to
make it cumbersome or create obstacles for you to exercise
those rights. Right, And their only argument against that is
(31:35):
voter fraud, which is not a black people voting, Yeah,
fraud is the code. And then that and then they
just call it a socialist wish list or some ship
like that, and it's like get to fucking vote, you know, asshole.
That makes it makes it easier for you assholes to
vote too. So I honest see where the advantage is
(31:56):
because they know that it's it's an existential threat to
make voting easier similar for people. All right, let's move
on to another story about white supremacy, in this time
in the police force. There was a search early last
week for a suspect who had attack attacked a sixty
nine year old Asian man while he was walking his
(32:18):
dog near middle middle school. Uh, there was video of it.
They circulated the video that dude just like runs up
and hits him on the back of the head like viciously.
People were outraged they caught this dude. He was like
a twentysomething guy. And now the police are like, actually,
it was a dispute over their dogs and it had
(32:39):
nothing to do with ethnicity. Wait, so, but the video
is someone getting sucker punched in the back of their head. Yeah,
and apparently they had had a like their dogs had
been like growling at each other. But the idea that
the police can enter a suspects brain and determined that
(33:03):
the race of their victim had nothing to do with
the crime that they've committed. While there's a massive rise
in violence against Asian people, while a white supremacist movement
headed by somebody who used racist language to like blame
Asian people for five thousand deaths in America. Like that,
(33:27):
it's just so reductive and dismissive and like just de
fact or white supremacy. It's just like yeah, no, no, no,
it's that we we don't have to worry about that.
And there's there's a long history of US law enforcement
like looking the other way when it comes to racial
(33:49):
hate crimes against Asian people. There's a guy named Vincent
Chen who was beaten to death in two because too
white laid off auto workers mistook him as Japanese and
reportedly said that he was the reason they don't have
jobs while murdering him, and they got fines and probation,
(34:09):
and the judge in the case of when people were like, wait,
why the funk are these people not serving jail time,
the Justice Kaufman, the guy who presided over that decision, said,
these weren't the kind of men you send to jail.
You don't make the punishment fit the crime. You make
the punishment fit the criminal. Yeah, yeah, I mean, you
(34:33):
know this is just similar patterns no matter what group
you're in, of just a lack of care or sense
of duty to protect um. And then to also because
you know, the arm are policing is just an extension
of white supremacy. That to to look to that body
(34:55):
to try and see the nuance of white supremacy is
just like it's impossible, um and it and it only
allows for the obscuring of the actual hate that's going
on and on and on top of that, it's what
it does is further this fucked up you know, model
minority view on what Asian people, Asian Americans, Asian immigrants
(35:17):
are that if it's not a hate crime, then they're
not a group that it has to endure white supremacy
because they don't get hate crimes because they're actually the
model minor. They've came they've come here and put their
heads down and they're not bothering. They don't bother anyone,
and they don't get bothered. You see. That's what that's
how that's why they're cool. And but but then you
do you do the insidious work of then erasing the
(35:40):
acts of hate against them to keep you know, to
not have to have a reckoning with it. Uh yeah,
and it's just it's I mean, it's just it's how
it it's it's always constantly happening. And I think that's
what's self tragic and ironic and ridiculous that when sometimes
people get bogged down and like, well, what is a
hate crime? And who who decides what? Because couldn't he
(36:03):
just be a white guy and just punch somebody out
that's browning in not be a hate crime? And Okay,
but I think more than that, like how we're defining it,
is we rather or not it meets this criteria hate crime,
We need to look at who the victims are and
what the effect is on the people that are part
of that community. Because even if it's, uh, you don't
if this person say it's about dogs, I look at that,
(36:25):
and I add that to the list of anecdotes that
I've heard from my mom, my family, friends, everybody, people
in my neighborhood that have the older Asian women being
attacked where I fucking grew up and I'm begging my
mom to not go outside and it's a fucked up
place to be in h Yet we're not having we're
not going to have a real upfront conversation about really
(36:49):
what this all means and how it affects people. But again,
this is but we're asking something, we're asking for, you know,
of a culture to evolve at a speed that it
just is able to at the moment, right, But it's
it's had plenty of time. But yeah, yeah, and I
and I'm and I really I'm afraid to see how
(37:09):
it keeps, how it keeps building because the but the
pandemic being over isn't gonna be like the release valve
for all this anti Asian hate. It's not going to
be this is it's it's going to it will evolve,
and that's what's the most frightening thing. And to live
in a country to where you know, the powers that
be are unwilling to actually intervene, you know, it's it's
(37:32):
hard to not be super fucking cynical. Yeah. Um, all right,
let's take a quick break and we'll be right back.
And we're back. And I wanted to just take a
(37:53):
quick look at how the MAGA world in particulars responding
to Biden's presidents so far um, because I'm actually seeing
some overlaps in some of the ways that I think
the MSNBC sort of mainstream media initially reacted to the
Trump presidency um that in retrospect, we're probably not the
(38:18):
approaches to take to you know, resisting that presidency or uh,
you know, trying to report on that presidency. So, uh,
number one is cognitive decline. Mega is apparently on some
Biden tripping proves he's not fit for office ship and
(38:40):
his rigidness as a politicians, right exactly, but like the
going after that, right, but the it just reminds me
of like I was looking back at some of the
articles that were written about the twenty five Amendment during
Trump's presidency, uh, and like everything they're saying about him
(39:03):
is true. Like they're like he he uses these violent videos.
He's clearly like obsessed with violence. He wants his supporters
to use violence, but they always like end it with
and he's unraveling and things are about to get like worse.
That's why we need to which seems like it's like
that's not something that I feel like was necessarily there.
(39:24):
I feel like he always told his supporters and his
critics who exactly who he was, and the thing that
happened was that his supporters did what they've been saying
they were going to do, so like just kind of
calling that out as a thing that seems to be
(39:45):
like a an easy way to criticize somebody that might
not always be supported. And obviously they're both very old men, right,
so yes, it's in the ballpark or if you like,
I don't know, maybe right, but then like name every
WU Tang member, so you might you might have cognitive
decline the but like there's a bunch of Republican senators
(40:07):
who met with Biden were like, actually, like this doesn't
really seem to hold water. He seems to be all
there because they're all his age too, you sharp as
literally sharp attack was the word that they used. And
then the election fraud thing is something that a bunch
(40:29):
of the Republicans who voted for Trumps still can't get over.
And there's huge portions of the population who still think
that Biden's an illegitimate president. And I think, just in retrospect,
that was probably the aspect of the Trump resistance that
feels like the most wasted effort and time was like
(40:52):
the whole Mueller investigation, like Russia angle. So I guess
I'm just like curious if these are just the things
that we're going to see from both sides now whenever
there's a president, it doesn't make because it's all stupid,
and it's just like it's like, let's exchange hats. Okay,
so I have the your your your president sucks hat,
(41:13):
presidents fucking whack fuck old, decrepit a fraud, and you'll
wear the oh my god, I love him hat. And
then the second that the inauguration came in, all right,
let me get your hat real quick. Okay, switch wrong okay,
And then now they go by, didn't did everything so wonderful?
On the right media and on the right it's like
this god, decrepit, n this fraud. It's just it's just
(41:38):
it's like it's like fucking clockwork, and it's just it's
it's basically the egos of these ideologies playing out through
the news, which is basically allows them to immediately focus
on an external issue rather than take any time to
have a postmortem on how things could have gone so
wrong based on an election Dems Democrats would rather not
(42:01):
talk about how clinging to a dynastic family with a
ton of political baggage was a bad move In nearly
both elections, okay, and then Republicans don't have to act
like they didn't show their whole asshole from seventeen to
twenty one by hitting the switch on the Biden came
to go upstairs mode, right, because it allows you to
(42:21):
completely ignore all the ships you were saying, all the
ugliness that you stood for. Um. And I just want
to play this clip because like on Fox News, the
way they were responding to the press conference, it just
shows like you can feel the energy that they're so
like they want to forget that they were pieces of
ship and they're like, you know, we're actually like the
(42:42):
dope journalists like this whole time and the just just
listen to the tone of this uh this crew. Well,
if I had been there, I definitely would have taken
told the President to call on Peter Doocey. Um. Peter
Doocey is not Jim Acosta, and he's got good questions.
And the President showed his want to answer questions from
all those other people. And what Peter Doocey just said
(43:05):
were the two questions he wanted to ask. I think
that the President would have had a way to answer them.
Why make Peter Doosey a story, right, just take his
question and move on again. They're just you see, like
this is because on the Fox News reporter, Yeah, during
during the thing that's there, that's the story they're they're
(43:27):
trying to cover, right, right, Yeah, And it's just and
again they can put this again. You just put your
hat on now, because now you're on the other side.
You're in the minority, and this is and this is
the space they do. They do it best from there
because people can't see the video, but she's actually wearing
a Derby hat with a press card in the brim
(43:48):
while she's making this critique. Oh man, that's funny. What
annoys me about all of this is that it just
completely lowers the discourse about just talking about the president
in general or talking about Paul tics. It silences the
people who are criticizing every president on everything that is
valid criticism, and it makes it the shouting competitions, which
(44:10):
you're absolutely right, and it's just like you know, it's
it's it's truly, you know, the media keeping this this,
keeping this narrative alive and ruining any chance for a
good conversation. I mean that is literally high school ship,
Like he didn't talk to him like he he like
totally ignored him. Yeah, it's just it's just annoying. It's
(44:33):
I know, he's a dick. We're not talking to him anymore,
Like what the and it's and it's unfortunate because yeah, Daniel,
to your point, like they are just protecting their egos
by not engaging anyone with an objective criticism about anything.
If it's because the second you you came and be like, well,
you know Joe Biden, you know if if you look
(44:53):
at his record, he seemed like someone who may not
be up for protecting social security, but well, you know
that was oh my god, damn, just look at the
look at the ship with me. That's true. That's not
a lie. That's the ship he's saying back then was problematic?
Is fuck racist? I don't know how I can. I'm
(45:14):
I'm failing to see the evolution this man has had
in his spirit that he's willing to look upon communities
of color or minority groups with compassion, especially after he's like, oh,
you're smoking demon weed. That ship unbelievable, unbelievable flip flop.
How are you like it's just so? And then so,
if you are someone with a criticism and I'm not
(45:35):
gonna say like objective or whatever because it's fucking politics,
but something that's at least rooted in truth and not
so hyperpartisan, then you're just gonna get fucking shoe aside
by these protective mechanisms for each party's ego, which is
they're like media sphere and if you're not and if
you're not in there throating the boot, then you're like,
then you're a comy, fucking rabble rouser who just hates everything,
(45:59):
or you know, and like I'm the conserv I don't
know what to call people who are the Conservative Like
criticizing the Conservative Party, I'm about to wake up racists, um,
whatever they are. But like, there's always a label and
a way to dismiss anything that would remotely encourage good
faith conversation about how to improve something. Right, you either
(46:19):
love the funk out of what they're doing or you
hate it, And if you hate it, that means you're
the other side. There's no in between where like you
can hold two thoughts at the same time. Right. So
one detail that came out at the end of last
week that I just from to cover really briefly, that
gives me hope for the future of the Republican Party
in the sense that I hope that it disintegrates and
(46:40):
fucking crashes and burns. Is that Donald Trump is kind
of running the Republican Party like like one of his businesses.
Uh and TV shows, Yeah, slash one of his TV shows,
which that those never for. It's good, it's good for drama. Um,
(47:03):
it's good for TV, but it's bad for businesses. And
it's not how you run a business, and it's bad leadership.
It's so he had five people who want to run
for the open UH Senate seat in Ohio at a
like fundraiser for a candidate in Ohio for a house seat. Uh,
(47:26):
and he had his people called them all into like
a boardroom, like a back room, and he met with
all five of them where he made them attack each other,
like it was the scene in The Apprentice where he's like,
and she said that you're not very good? What do
you what do you have to say about that? And
(47:47):
just like playing them off of each other for his
own entertainment. Essentially check this out, yeah, right, which the
worst at is running a thing like running an organization.
He fucking has been shown repeatedly to be terrible at that,
(48:08):
so he can't. He can't keep a casino in business.
So it's like, if they are just willing to hand
overpower to him, I would, I would really can't we
expect the party to fully burn up because it's so
(48:29):
out in the open toxic, you would hope, So, you know,
like at a certain point, like it can't. You can't
really have much cohesion in a toxic organization, like at
least like the Democrats are like kind of you know,
pretending that like they're on the side of good while
like ignoring a lot of the other bad ship that happens. Uh,
So it's like a less of a version that might
(48:50):
be as toxic as this. And it's just out and
me like, touch shit, you're gonna sucking backstab them and
then we're gonna then we're gonna move together in solidarity
and succeed as a party. But I don't know, I
don't know, Like if my logic feels like if this
was a reality show, the team that's the most toxic
would probably end up having the problems around episode eight
(49:10):
or nine, right right, right, Yeah, But Her, Mussolini, Hitler,
and Trump all seemed to be able to have a
lot of success with a lot of toxicity out and
he opened So yeah, there, it's just funny. Like just
reading from the political report on it, one of the
candidates said he was crushing Timpkin and pulling Timpkin touted
(49:36):
her support on the ground thanks to her time as
state party chair. Gibbons mentioned how he'd helped Trump's campaign financially.
Moreno noted that his daughter had worked on Trump's twenty campaign,
Like just you can just like picture that meeting, and well, actually,
it's funny that you mentioned your campaign because my daughter
was actually working on it. That's great, except I'm fucking
(49:58):
crushing you and pulling witch ship. It's um whoa and
he you know, was presumably wildly into it. Um. I
was gonna say orgasming, but I didn't want to put
that image in an Alright, let's talk about craft. Oh boy,
(50:18):
let's actually forget it. Let's talk about and forward, forward, forward, dude.
Craft there. You know, commercials are like meant to like
capture like the vibe of like you know, like like
whatever the product you're selling, you wanted to resonate with
your target demographic yourself too, And look, we all get
(50:39):
the blue Box Blues, you know, Kraft maclaroni and cheese,
but everything is in moderation. And you also need to
eat vegetables too. You can't just eat scrape blue box
all day. I'm learning and thank you, thank you, blue face,
bust down Flatiana, but you also need to eat your veggies.
And but if you're a kid that has a Craft
(51:00):
TV commercial recently, you may be ingesting anti vegetable propaganda,
according to some watchdog groups, because you know, like the
whole vibe of like kids we get a kids don't
like vegetables is like the cliche that I think there's
so many uh they think these sort of commercials operate on.
But I just want everyone to take a look at
this anti vegetable Craft commercial and then we'll talk about
(51:23):
this on the other side. Please, you're having Craft for
the win, win for the Okay, So that commercial where
is one where I guess Enya is the voice of
caloric salvation. So okay, we're not gonna play the whole
(51:44):
commercial because the craft will probe come after us. But
it starts off with a young child running from their parents,
and you hear the parents being like one more bite
and they have like a string being on a fork
and then just a smash cut too, like literal smash
cut enya's only time to like someone making a back
a box of a blue box and then the kids
(52:07):
eating it and smiling and like the parent feels relief,
and it just says, for the wind, assumed that this
was going to be mixed vegetables in with your mac
and cheese. That's a good way to like make mac
and cheese not a complete waste and toxic uh empty
calorie dump. Uh. The fact that they're just like eat
(52:29):
this instead of vegetables, it said, for well, the win.
The thing they're doing is like encouraging parents would be
like you'll give up on trying to feature kids ship
that they need. Fool, what are you a parent? You
a stoner who fucked raw wants and now your life?
You know what I mean? So hit the blue box
like what it didn't even well, first of all, for
(52:51):
the win win is just like I but but also
if they didn't even try and like play around it
by having like the full plate of food allah like
your complete breakfast or it's like oh yeah you have
eggs with your whatever, and even though that whole thing
was its own kind of propagand about eating way too
much breakfast. But like the fact that they didn't even
like pair it with or just like you're saying, like
(53:11):
not even mix it about if you didn't have like
the fake plate. It was just like a straight little
tiny bowl of like what the fund does that have
to do mac and cheese? Like the piece the tranquility
it's providing the parent to not like trying to get
their kids nutrients. So what happened was there was a
(53:32):
formal complaint that was filed by the Center for Science
in the Public Interest and another organization that is the
Better Business Bureaus National Programs Children's Advertising Review Unit or
carew uh for sure, they're here basically saying, you know
that CRAFT was like running this ad in very similar
(53:54):
ones during children's programming on Disney XD Nickelodeon Cartoon Network
in nineteen and they're saying it was violating the strict
advertising standards set forth by like this unfortunately industry funded
self regulatory group UM. But according to those standards, like
telling kids that healthy foods is are shitty and like
(54:16):
reinforcing this idea that vegetables suck, uh is it runs
a foul of these like regulations and you're like, right,
then you find out with or Ida, which is another
Kraft Heinz brand. You know, we all know or Ida
frozen potatoes. They got the hash browns and tots and
fries and Idaho where that comes from? Oh? Is that really? Yeah?
(54:37):
The company was. I think that's right. Yeah, that makes sense.
I know Idaho got potatoes, and I guess Oregan too.
Right there, you learned something every day aside from that
vegetable suck. But and then or Ida commercial they were
basically the messaging your parents and this one was saying
bribe your kids with fries where it was like eat
one carrot, you get one fry, you eat a mushroom
(54:57):
viet three fries, Like what the that's so weird. The
funding for non industry funded UH like watch groups is
one of the great examples of like the evils of capitalism.
When you look at like the f d A and
(55:17):
or not the f d A, the who who's the
ones who made the food pyramid that U s d
A like that is the funding for that organization is
it's like a thousand a million dollars a year, like
and then you look at the things the funding for
other organizations that they're competing with, like the farm lobbies
(55:39):
and ship It's like, you know, hundreds of millions of
dollars a year, put chips at the top of that.
It's just like one of the great examples of if
you like believe that in market based like capitalism, like
this is, uh, that's not what we have going on here.
The deck is stacked against us, the consumers. It's they
(56:00):
are every everything is trying to value the benefits of
corporations over your health, your ability to continue living, or
to even teach your children life skills on how to
like eat healthily and understand how nutrition was. This is
all just this is all just like bad cooking propaganda
(56:22):
as well. It's like you present these things as if
they can't be prepared in a nice way. It's like
every time I see like broccoli thrown in there, it's
like broccoli, It's like, broccoli is the easiest thing to prepare,
make it taste fire. There are a million ways you
can do brocco, and you can't, really, you really can't.
You can't. You burn the funk out of it. Okay,
(56:43):
you burn the f and even then so it's like, hey,
I don't mind. I don't mind. I like mushy brock,
so yeah, I'm lessmushy brock. I'm more like burnt ends
on the broccoli. Give me roasted PAMs, some garlic and oil.
It's like game over. Yeah, cattle flip m game over. Also,
(57:09):
broccoli is the easiest food to get kids to eat
if you just tell them that they're dinosaur and there
those are trees like that. My that works for adult
stoners say. That's why Stephanie kept saying that, like little
eat your trees. I thought you was blowing trees hunt.
(57:36):
Actually another Daniel. Dinosaurs don't use their hands, so you
have to let them eat in like with just their head.
Oh yeah see or like a little see what I
would like my mom would make like like a weird sauce,
Like I would just dip my broccoli in because I
couldn't just eat on like just you know, even if
it had seasoned stuff. The act of dipping opened the
(58:00):
door for me to start eating vegetables because I wasn't
just feel like I was putting like a green thing
and I was like, okay, I'll get it. I hit
it with a little dab with this sauce. Oy, I
eat it, and then that was a good momentum. Shout
out to you, mom. La America wants us to uh
bribe our kids with macaroni and cheese and and just cheese,
just covering broccoli with cheese. But then when those kids
(58:24):
like avocado, they want us to be mad at them
for tanking the economy. For God's sake, it's because we
did it again. It was the poor children bankrupt. No okay, uh,
but again great way to recontextualize how capitalism is failing
generations of people right now. They're ruining everything. Huh though
(58:47):
these brocast motherfucker's where we siphoned up all the wealth
and left nothing. Oh and one other things with Kraft.
They also had a fucking print ad that was just
like suggesting you inundate your broccoli with their shredded ceddar
cheese and the things said so it tastes quote less broccoli.
Just to jump back to the broccoli thing here, inquiring
(59:08):
minds want to know, can we get a little information
on that dip you were talking about? Yeah, oh okay, look, okay,
you don't have too I understand as simple as I
know what man, just dip that ship in some range. Yeah, Jack,
that's what my Japanese came dog fuck me over with you. No,
(59:33):
she would just do like what many Japanese people have
in their house, CUPI mannise and soy sauce. Yep, was
cut a little bit. You can't don't overdo soy sauce
because look, people know, cup you get the MSG in it.
That's why that ship hits um. But then you do
that just a little bit of soy sauce as brown
and then you know, actually the o g of that
sauce was actually Mutsie erskin from pen fifteen. Oh. She
(59:57):
was the first one to throw that down in front
of me and my and her brother Ty when we
were real kids, because we didn't like broccoli. And then
she said, okay, what about dippie dippy That's what she
would call it. Were like, oh yeah, we look with
dippie dippie dippie dippip it sounds a lot more fun. Yeah,
And and look she wasn't that And then I think
that's what my mom was like, how the fund you do? Oh?
(01:00:18):
That was that's it? Man. He's okay, yeah, Dippie Dippy
over here too. I like a little dippy dippy my my,
my broccoli dippie dippie of choice thus far, because I
mean now I'm gonna try that and my whole game
will be changed. But basically a dicheon mustard vinigrette. God
damn you just you there you go? Are you eating that?
(01:00:40):
Hitting that broccoli? We're all is that when when you're
talking about dipping, No, I mean like after after the roast,
after after Yeah, once it's cooked, once you got that
nice little char on it, like a little little garlic
so you have a little bit of extra tang in there,
and then just a dip in the in the mustard.
It is just like, oh yeah, broccoli. I thought you
(01:01:02):
said broccoli Rob, I loves yeah exactly. That's actually from
the office, right That was that was one of the
guys from the Acapella group, Andy's Acapella Group, Broccoli Rob,
I love it. Real quick. Before I leave you guys
(01:01:26):
for a week, I want to cover a podcast that
I think we all, all of us in the podcast industry.
Here the footsteps coming behind us. It's like when you're
on a mark away but then you hear Lebron behind you.
He is going to clean the glass with my attempt
(01:01:47):
at a layout. In my case, I would just dunk it.
But I know, like all of the people that's an
option like you, they got boost. He's like you. But
uh Ikia is entering UH new players represented the podcast game.
Last year, they announced they were discontinuing their catalogs, and
(01:02:09):
now they have announced they're going to adapt their most
recent catalog into podcast form, a tour for your ears
consisting of a narrator flicking through each page and describing
what's in it. UH which sounds stoked totally depends on
(01:02:29):
who the narrator is. If it's Man, I was mad
and then buyer, I would That's the only way that
this could be salvaged. I think for me, I need
some I need I need ear valium. I don't want
to be too entertained by I wanted to sound like
I Kea, so I wanted to be like a Scandinavian
(01:02:50):
accent and just very soft and subtle. Theyvin with the
matching bertis Lamb. That's the that right there. That's why
I'm excited. I'm excited to be in the car listening
to us on a long drive with Stephanie and we're going.
That's how it's pronounced. You're you're driving on the wrong
(01:03:10):
side of the road. What are you talking about? I
was hoping they would make it sound like shopping at
Ikea for your ears, you know, and then you have
to hear like that couple, Yeah, the wild fight in
the fucking fake kitchen place, and you're like, yo, try
to pull the knife, trying to pull a knife out
of the knife block, but they have that ship all securious.
(01:03:31):
Just broke the ship. Um I saw. So I've seen
so many ridiculous couples battles at the Ikea and Burbank,
It's like unbelievable. I think one of the first times
I saw like adults act like children was like when
it first opened the early nineties and like like my
mom or something dragged me there and I saw like
(01:03:51):
two people scream like say car swards I'd never heard of,
and I'm like sick. UFC for for Toxic Couples began
of Ikea. Burbank just went there recently, so you know,
moving in that's the narrative. There is the narrative. What's
actually happening? Then Disney Yes, Disneyland Line, Disneyland Style line.
(01:04:13):
I'm talking full you know, separators snake read like three snakes.
I'm talking a one to three into the parking lot
one to three and further into the parking lot one
to three, a huge Disneyland style line to get into Ikea.
Straight up. I was ready for there to be the
person who like has the big stand and be like
(01:04:34):
from this point is forty minutes? It was? It was?
It was I think thirty minutes again in yeah, I mean,
I'm thankful for the sense that Ikea isn't truly like
mobbed as hell and everybody was massed up, so that's
like nice, but like, damn, that was a lot. That
was the sight to be seen. It was. It was
a it was, but also like stopped cutting down all
(01:04:55):
them trees, you know that, you know, those documentaries are
sucked up. One thing that one quote from this article
that I wanted to point out though, is uh so
the logic this obviously makes no sense as a podcast,
but Ikea like this. Ikea said, yeah, so Miles and
I are on the development team. We hear a lot
(01:05:17):
of pictures for podcasts, and I'm gonna go ahead and
say that the thinking in the following sentences too pervasive, Uh,
they said. According to Ikea, it's because people have probably
binged through every possible podcast that's we gotta line up
(01:05:40):
here that you should listen to instead. That is Surelius
that they think that there's a podcast scarcity. I think
it's just like everyone's doing it, and you know they're
just like, fuck it. Catalog the podcast anyway shout out.
I mean, so I kea, I fuck it's it's ugly.
(01:06:02):
I said, say the funk up out of my lane,
you know, and I wouldn't enter yours. So now that
you said that, check out Miles's meatballs not horse but
also not gonna tell you what it actually is. And
they're cheaper than I kea, and come buy them something
them out my Mamsda in Northwood. You check out Jack's
(01:06:23):
furniture parts that just come in a box. Uh. They
don't necessarily fit together, but you'll figure it out. It's
like a director said, yeah, there you go. You can.
I mean, you can do all kinds of ship with it.
But actually I'm sorry the fucking catalog again because the
names don't make sense to fucking anyone, unless because I
know it's Swedish. So for the American to hear a product,
(01:06:47):
I'm not gonna go, oh yeah, we need that, Like
I'm sure they're not just going to read the names off.
I'm sure, you know. But then it's like it just
sounds like I'm starting to feel like hear like the
labor of how like the podcast sounds. Yeah, you know,
I'm very much as somebody as a podcast fan. I'm listening,
I'm enjoying to hate listening or I'm looking forward to
(01:07:08):
hate listening this but right because I feel like I'm
just looking at a list of things, like let's say
this is the section for home office now stream sits
a Scarsta with the back, tabletop on top. Is Elovin
for your other items. I don't know what the funk
(01:07:29):
that men are talking. I just just got up. I
just described the desk with the tabletop. Elovin is the
monitor stand with drawer. Uh so, look, I'm just a
hater because you know, I'm very insecure about my own podcasting,
so to hear about a behemoth like I can't entering
the game. You know, if you guys need a development team,
Miles and our you know, yeah, we're around, we got
(01:07:50):
the game will work for meat boss uh DJ Daniel,
it has been a pleasure having you back visiting be
from the beyond. Thank you for having me. Where can
people find you and follow you? You can find me
on the on the twitters at dj Underscore Daniel. You
can find me on twitch Wednesdays and Sundays at seven
(01:08:11):
pm on twitch dot tv slash DJ Underscore d A
n L. Hell yeah, dog, Hell Is there a tweet
or some of the work of social media you've been enjoying. Yes,
I've prepared everything because so who's your favorite cousin? Who's
your favorite cousin? Me or Jack? Anyway, so my tweet
that I have always say your name instantly. So I
(01:08:34):
have two tweets here. I have two tweets here. I
don't wonder if one was already done because knowing the
popular area the tweet, I'm sure it already was. We
can cut it. If it was was the male friendship
tweet male friendship is beautiful. Nope, alright, then I got
two tweets male friendship is beautiful. Once a year, one
of you text the other something like we should write
a movie, and the other person response that would be sick,
and that's it. The other tweet. The other tweet that
(01:09:02):
I loved is from Vinnie Thomas. You may recognize that
name or the video of the Earth applying for Intergalactic
Federation partnership when it's someone's like, do you have the
the trades? No trains? Okay, well at least you don't
have wars. Oh you do still have wars. Oh that guy.
Great great tweet. Great tweet from Vinnie. Right now, I'm
(01:09:23):
obsessed with the early two thousand's Animal Planet series Fatal Attractions,
in which someone is eaten by their pet lion and
then all of their friends look at the camera and say, girl,
I told her not to have that lion. Um. I
love it. Miles, where can people find you? What's tweet
you've been enjoying? Twitter? Instagram? Miles of gray uh and
(01:09:44):
also you know twist on TV last four Day someone
tweeted me and said I was saying four twenty day Beyonce,
And maybe that is why the show has suffered so much,
because y'all were looking for a different show called four
twenty Day Fiance like the show Fiance And shout out
(01:10:07):
to the first that tweeted that, because I laughed really
hard that you thought I was saying that the whole time.
That's a common like Beyonce auditory dysmorphia, where people anything
that sounds vaguely like Beyonce, they just that's what they hear. Whatever.
And I'm to any of the stoner Bee Hive that
came to just check the podcast out, I'm sorry, we're
(01:10:29):
not paying off what you thought it was. Okay, um,
but yeah, some tweets that I like. The first one
is from Audrey Kaufman at Kaufman Audrey. My mom once
told me about how she was a p a on
a film set for twenty minutes and then they asked
her to carry a pole and she just left without
telling anyone. To me, that's a girl boss. I just
(01:10:50):
like the id and not saying ship anyone. That's I mean,
that's a very production specific experience, but I love it.
Another one is from Kel's at keely k e a
l l Y twenty two, tweeting I feel so goddamn
guilty pulling weeds Like no, I don't want you in
(01:11:11):
my garden, but that doesn't mean that you didn't do
a great job at growing uh And yeah I feel
that too, just as when I like weed my yard
and stuff, because like when they're thick, you're like, oh man,
you you put work in, you put but guess what
it's time to school rock um. And then finally this
is just somebody said, y'all look at my Facebook at
(01:11:32):
at ed wild though put and it's clearly a Facebook post,
and it's like this dude on like the beach with
his lady and she's got like the wild high cup
bathing suit with the veeeks out and the whole thing.
This guy posts, I'll choose my girl over my family
any day, because blood ain't thicker than that ass and
(01:11:59):
his crowd and his stance in it is looking like
he's trying to fight you, Like, come try and tell
me that blood is thick. Nah, amazing. Uh, let's seem
sorry you got Jack gives the heaters, gives the heaters. Yeah,
(01:12:28):
anybody who missed that uh sketch where there are different
it's actually the same actor playing different pharmaceutical companies representing
the various uh faccine. Yeah, check it out. It's so good.
From leading up the black Man can follow them on
(01:12:49):
Instagram because all they're it's always funny. I love it.
Andrewndo tweeted girlfriend crying. My dog died me who was
only dating her because of our dog? So I have
more bad news also, like what a sad state of things.
I'm only with this person for that the dog, Damna,
(01:13:14):
and that's real shit. You can find me on Twitter,
Jack Underscore o Brian. You can find us on Twitter
at daily Zeitgey Square, at the Daily Zeitgeist on Instagram.
We have a Facebook fan page and a website daily
Zygeist dot com. Boy. We post our episodes in our footnotes.
We link off to the information that we talked about
in today's episode, as well as a song that we
recommend you check out. Miles, what is the song that
(01:13:38):
we think people should check out to that? Okay, so
look we're going into the week. We need to get
our energy up because yeah, there's a lot to get
down about, but there's a lot to get up too.
And this is another mashup. I know you like the
other like one of the mashups I did that was
Biggie and Express Yourself. This is the box by Addie
(01:14:00):
Rich with controller by Drake and it's pretty seamless. It's
pretty seamless. Uh, you know, we have to listen for yourself.
I'm not. I just tease out the tracks for you
to go to SoundCloud and find this track because it's
another one from nick Bike. Nick Bike edits on SoundCloud
(01:14:20):
and this is the box Nick Bike and Adam w
Controller mix. All right, well go check that out. The
Daily is like it's a production of My Heart Radio.
For more podcast My Heart Radio, visit the heart Radio app,
Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
That is gonna do it for this Monday. We will
be back this afternoon to tell you what is trending
(01:14:42):
and we'll touch you all that