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March 13, 2025 54 mins

In episode 1828, Jack and Miles are joined by writer and prodcuer of the comedy sketch series Intercepts, David Huntsberger, to discuss… The Trump Tesla Infomercial, Mahmoud Khalil Still Hasn’t Been Charged With a Crime, American Companies Potentially Entering The Find Out Ohase, Too? And more!

  1. Trump: Wow… Everything’s computer (Clip)
  2. Musk plans to give Trump's political operation $100 million
  3. Johnson pledges House probe into Tesla threats
  4. Mahmoud Khalil Still Hasn’t Been Charged With a Crime
  5. Europe Hits Back at Trump Tariffs by Targeting Republican States
  6. ‘I feel utter anger’: From Canada to Europe, a movement to boycott US goods is spreading

LISTEN: Flump by Cesco

WATCH: The Daily Zeitgeist on Youtube!

L.A. Wildfire Relief:

  1. Displaced Black Families GoFund Me Directory

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:05):
As they just found one hundred and twenty eight new
moons on Saturn I think in total Saturday. Oh yeah,
it's approaching four hundred moons that just hang out around Saturn.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
These are point come on, yeah, yeah, what is Saturn?
The wu tang of fucking planets? You just found new
members all these orbiting like yeah, yeah, I'm not part
of Saturn. Yeah, what's what track are you on? The
album is a different album, but it had a logo on.
It had a Saturn ring of Saturn logo.

Speaker 3 (00:35):
I had some ad libs in the background of Cappadonna's
third album, Hello the Internet and Welcome to Season three,
seventy nine, Episode.

Speaker 2 (00:51):
Four of Guys.

Speaker 3 (00:53):
There's a production of iHeart Radio. It's a podcast we
take deep to have into America Shared Consciousness. And it
is Thursday, March thirteenth, twenty twenty five.

Speaker 2 (01:04):
It's almost high Day, It's almost Hie Day, but it's
actually National Dermatologists Day and National Jewel Day, National Canine
Veterans Day. Oh sorry a cab also includes Veterans, National
Coconut torch to Day, National Bits American Day, National Open
An Umbrella Indoors Day, and National ear Muff day, No
further questions, now, you know, I don't.

Speaker 3 (01:26):
I'm sober these days, so I don't do a lot
of like rock and roll things. But one thing I'll do,
I'll open motherfucking umbrella indoors.

Speaker 2 (01:35):
Dude, I'll do that ship under a ladder. Yeah, dude,
I'll walk right under a ladder.

Speaker 3 (01:40):
Don't even give a ship.

Speaker 2 (01:41):
Did you have any that fuck with you? Like, any
superstitions that you know?

Speaker 3 (01:45):
I actually don't do any of the superstitious stuff.

Speaker 2 (01:47):
I just don't. I don't want to pluck. That's not true.
I'm not gonna I'm not gonna fuck my life up.
Come on, man, what do you think I am? Oh,
that's why you almost passed out when we were driving
in that tunnel the other Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:59):
Yeah, I just hold my breath in tunnels and past
past cemeteries, and it's bad for the people who are
in the car that I'm driving, you know. Anyways, my
name is Jack O'Brien aka Potatoes O'Brien, and I'm thrilled
to be joined as always buy my co host.

Speaker 2 (02:19):
It's mister Miles Gray. It's Miles Gray. I'm out here
just like everybody else. And do I have an aka
uh yeah, I'm still the showgun with no learn lakers.
Now that I'm back in California, I feel like my
blood pressure has dropped slightly. And that's not because of
the stress of being in Texas. It's just because I'm
eating less salt. Oh my fingers have I have stretched

(02:41):
my wedding band out to the point that her Majesty
thought something suspicious was going on. But I told her
it's purely my swelling from the salt intake. That's nothing else,
nothing diffair.

Speaker 3 (02:51):
The food in Texas, it's no joke. It's it's uh yeah,
it's heavy.

Speaker 2 (02:56):
But you know what, frot bro I had a fried
chicken's hair was at the air for that was so
fucking good. That's when I had to lean into it.
I'm like, why get a salad? And I'm like, lean
into what they're doing. I'm like, you know, they're not
going to fuck up something deep fried And I was
so that book lean In is about I was about
doing for meretheesy Well. We are thrilled to be joined

(03:17):
in our third seat, Miles by a hilarious and talented comedian,
podcaster artist who hosted the classic podcast, Professor Blastov. Yeah
space Cave was also a great one in the podcast Intercepts,
which you should go check out on David Huntsburger dot
com as well as I think there are some some

(03:37):
of the specials, some of his artworks and his animations,
which smart place for him to put all of that,
because that's his name.

Speaker 3 (03:44):
Please welcome the brilliant, the talented David Huntsburg.

Speaker 1 (03:49):
Oh what a welcome. Thanks fellas. Good to be here
and great to have you. I used to live in Texas.
I agree with all the assessments of the food, and
also not particularly superstitious. However, what I've started doing is
when I'm watching a movie and it's intense someone has
to dive down to rescue someone and they're clearly not
able to breathe, I will at home hold my breath

(04:11):
to see, well, how hard is this? I just immediately
start going, all right, we'll see, we're in for it,
and then I'll hold it. And usually the scene, even
though it seems intense and their eyes are getting all big,
like thirty seconds in general, then they use editing and
make it seem like, are.

Speaker 2 (04:27):
You also like expending energy while zero? No, see, that's
the thing you're keeping your need fortag and much lower.
And you're like, I don't see what the big deal was.
I didn't swim down fourteen feet, And.

Speaker 1 (04:40):
Well, I'm assuming because I have nothing at stake. It's
actually harder for me.

Speaker 4 (04:44):
I think.

Speaker 1 (04:45):
If you're in that situation, you have no choice right now,
and yeah, you come up with something, your body's like,
you're gonna need this air, whereas me, my body's like,
why aren't you breathing, idiot, You're just sitting on a couch.
Go ahead and breathe.

Speaker 2 (04:54):
Hey, dumb dum dude, what are you doing? Do you
keep it going when they cut away? Absolutely? Yeah.

Speaker 1 (05:01):
And then if I lose, if I come back, and
there's still like, well this this is absurd.

Speaker 2 (05:06):
This movie's bullshit fucking done. Watching the Abyss, David one
of my favorite curious mind you know, so that somebody
who's open to all possibilities interested in space UFOs.

Speaker 3 (05:22):
Before we started recording, we were just talking about drones
and you mentioned that you have an experience seeing something
inexplicable in the sky, which I do not have. I
just believe in it out of a sheer like wanting it,
wanting to believe. But you've seen some shit.

Speaker 1 (05:42):
Yeah. I feel like my default setting is very skeptical,
like have you seen this? I should be more open
to like ghosts, but I've never seen a ghost. So
when someone starts a ghost story, I'll be in rapture like,
well it's crazy, but then deep down like crazy yeah, yeah, exactly,
dealing with a lot right now. And then I saw
this thing in the sky like I was telling you

(06:03):
super speed forward and then do an abrupt ninetygre return
in the sky. And I had a on Space Cave
my science interview podcast, I had a skeptic on who
is then, like you know, often when people see that
it's actually like a bug or something, And I thought, man,
I can't believe, like I'm I trust my brain a lot,
and so now when I see a bug in the air,

(06:25):
like at night, I will turn to whoever's next to me,
like that's a bug right beside.

Speaker 2 (06:30):
It's a bug. And it's so.

Speaker 1 (06:31):
Insulting that someone would think that what I saw could
anyway it was a bug.

Speaker 3 (06:36):
Yes, instinctively, yes, I do not believe in ghosts. I
don't believe in Bigfoot personally, like those just don't don't
interest me. I've never heard the story where I'm like, oh, yeah,
that is so like I you know, it just hasn't
crossed over for me in any of those situations. But
the UFO sightings and like specifically, they just broad array

(07:01):
of different types of people, different circumstances where they've seen
wild shit and like very similar to what you described
where it was like accelerating at a speed that you
were like, well that because you were you were like skywatching.
You were like looking at a sky that was like
very beautiful because of a lack of light pollution. You're in,
you said, Minnesota, and you were like, wow, you can

(07:23):
like see the satellites. You can see all the plane,
all the all the stars obviously, and then one of
them was just moving too fast and you were like it.

Speaker 1 (07:31):
Was just bigger and brighter and closer, you know, like
you see all the satellites go by at a pace
you get used you see the planes go by and
the blinking lights, and then you just see something. You're like,
that's that caught my eye because it was different. It's
just a little faster, a little brighter, and so I
was probably tracking it for a second or two, which
doesn't seem like a lot, but if you think about
yourself moving across the sky. Then then that thing just

(07:53):
hyper drives away.

Speaker 2 (07:55):
That was weird.

Speaker 1 (07:56):
And then it did like a ninety degree turn at
the end of that, which really made me be like,
what did they just see?

Speaker 2 (08:01):
Could?

Speaker 1 (08:02):
I don't know how even if it was a bug,
it's still bizarre. I mean, what the fuck bug was that?

Speaker 2 (08:06):
Then that bug is an alien famously fly in ninety
degree patterns, All yeah, yeah, so yeah.

Speaker 3 (08:12):
That's the thing, Like, it's it's the range of sightings,
the reliability of the people I've heard who talk about it,
and you know, they.

Speaker 2 (08:22):
Just like, these are trustworthy people.

Speaker 3 (08:24):
And then also the skeptic like what the skeptics say
in response being like, yeah it was probably bug. It's
like I don't I don't think so, Like that doesn't
scan to me at all, Like that just doesn't feel
it feels off to me. Anyways, David, we're thrilled to
have you here. We're going to get to know you
a little bit better in a moment. First, we're going
to tell the listeners a couple of things we're talking about.

(08:46):
We're going to talk about the Full Court Press Tesla
infomercial that we've been seeing from the Trump administration and
just the right wing right now. You know, I think
Hannity is doing a tesla away right now. But we
we got that Trump Musk White White House front lawn
infomercial that was was something else. The whole car is computer. Wow. Wow,

(09:13):
everything's computer. Everything's computer is an all timer. That's that's
not going anywhere. Unfortunately. We're going to talk about mack
mood Khalil is still being held, still being charged with
a crime. A judge is looking into it at the moment.
But this is again just a kind of mind boggling escalation.

(09:36):
So somebody being you know, the Trump administration is trying
to deport someone for saying things they don't like. They
have not charged him with a crime. It's just because
he was involved in organizing the Columbia University protests. So
just well, we'll keep checking in on that story because

(09:57):
it demands it. We'll talk about American companies entering the
find out phase, all of that plenty more. But first, Dave,
we we do like to ask our guests, what is
something from your search history that's revealing?

Speaker 1 (10:12):
Uh yeah, I was, Uh, I was telling you, well,
as usual, you know, like I think in years past,
I never really had anything saved but then and I've
gone even dude in response to all this stuff. I
mean it's probably been the last couple of years, but
particularly since the election. I'm off all the stuff, so
fucking mad at these tech guys. I'm mad at the

(10:34):
Nazi salutes, a mad at.

Speaker 3 (10:37):
The appeared to some to be great gestures, awkward gestures,
awkward gestures that just keep happening by accident, and everybody's
making a big deal about it.

Speaker 1 (10:48):
But yeah, yeah, then they keep doing a little nod,
a little come on, come on, it's.

Speaker 2 (10:52):
Uh huh, yeah, you heard me.

Speaker 1 (10:54):
Yeah, And uh so I've moved over to duck duck Goo.
I'm eventually probably get to like molvad VPN, like some
sort of browser that have to pay for, but for
now just using like Firefox. I haven't moved over to
Libra Wolf, which was just still a fork of Firefox.
I don't even know if you can like escape it
the triad of browsers, but all the security stuff with

(11:16):
that and the extensions. And so I'm using duck Ducko,
which I really like. There's no AI infused into it.
And I think the last thing we were talking about
that I searched was I was writing a sketch about
and I used the word payload, and I want to
make sure that I understood what the term meant. And
when I searched payload, it had a whole bunch of
stuff about drones. The drone dorks are really into, like,

(11:38):
you won't believe the payload of this drone you could lift.
And I shouldn't call them dorks, but Hobby's enthusiast. Yeah, yeah,
they're they're enthusiastic about the drones. And I it never
really occurred to me. I would think it would be
like the camera resolution and getting into like six K
and hate K stuff. But it's the payload and you
if you want to start a delivery service, this drone

(11:59):
can do it for you.

Speaker 2 (12:00):
That kind of thing. Oh, people actually being like, yo,
I'm trying to start a delivery service with drone? Is
best to like, yeah, this one? Is it regulated by
that season?

Speaker 4 (12:08):
I don't worry.

Speaker 1 (12:09):
The little bit that I read about it. It wasn't
people chiming in the comments because I was really I
think it's just a feature they listed that no one
seemed to care that much about it.

Speaker 2 (12:17):
I mean it's probably because of the cameras you can
attach to it, so you can go to like larger
format cameras rather than like GoPros or those kinds of things.

Speaker 1 (12:25):
But and just being able to lift itself, you can
go higher, and you know you can the bodyweight of
the camera itself. But yeah, you're right, like you could
you could attach like a full jib to the bottom
of this and not miss a beat. Stuff like that.
But I think that was my last search was.

Speaker 3 (12:41):
Yeah, I just saw one that has a one hundred
kilogram payload capacity, which that seems like a lot. That's
two hundred pounds.

Speaker 2 (12:52):
When's some asshole gonna make a suit that they can
hook up to a drone and just try and fly
themselves somewhere to be like, Yeah, I just hooked this
up to I drone and I only weigh about ninety kilos,
So I'll use this to fucking zoom me across town.

Speaker 3 (13:06):
Yeah, I'm immediately thinking about school drop off when I
when I read these, just like you get my kids
to school.

Speaker 2 (13:13):
You know, the one rotor is really it sounds like
it's really taxed dad, Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Now you
guys combined are barely ninety eight kilos get in there.
What is something you think is underrated?

Speaker 1 (13:27):
Underrated? Again, going to the text stuff, I really think
that open source software, Lenox, the decentralized web, the fetti Verse, Mastodon,
pixel fed, so these these things that cannot be purchased
by billionaires where there is like an actual community that's

(13:49):
not just aggregated out of an algorithm to you and
proliferated with ads.

Speaker 2 (13:53):
Right, what's the fetti verse fans? Right?

Speaker 1 (13:56):
Yeah, that's yeah, that's how it so blues Guy is
on an open protocol and these things I don't fully
understand completely. The the fetti verse is on the activity
pub protocol, which is the equivalent of you know, how
your email can reach every other email account, like you
could send from AOL to Gmail to proton or whatever.
So you can you can follow people through different and

(14:19):
interact with people through different social sites. So like of
pixel fed hashtag, you could follow it through Mastodon or
peer tube, which is like their version of YouTube. So
it's it's more it's reliant on donations and people chipping
in and helping, but it's also people volunteer and just
run servers, and so it's a little more socialized, so

(14:40):
it's it's not impenetrable, but it's certainly a little more
insulated from getting billionaireed, getting musked, you know, having what
happened to Twitter.

Speaker 2 (14:50):
Awesome, getting just so good thing. It's like it's like
X on steroids.

Speaker 5 (14:57):
Dude, Southwest, Yeah, oh man, we're down at south By
Southwest during like the interactive part where like all these
people with like pink lanyards are just like walking around
with just the hungriest eyes trying to make eye contact

(15:17):
with you. How you guys, ask you what you think
about AI and this new corporate landscape.

Speaker 1 (15:23):
Yeah, I would say that is something that's overrated. I'm
so sick of that, like being perpetuated as though. I mean,
when you start a community, you have a town of
have you ever driven through a small town there's like
fifty people, you know, like they have a post office.
You're like, how the fuck are they doing this? And
they're basically all just trading around a million dollars. Maybe
they're happy with it. And then to get to get bigger,

(15:44):
you have to like create this new horizon, new landscape.
So you're developing, you're growing, you're growing, and I think
they've kind of run out. They've sold us on this
idea that it's just gonna keep going and AI is
the next frontier and we're going to create so many jobs.
And then today Google just laid off a ton of people.
Their last or earnings were like twenty six billion dollars.
I mean, get out of here.

Speaker 2 (16:03):
None of that ship with stock performance, Dave, did you
see the stock performance?

Speaker 1 (16:08):
That's yeah, that's what I care about. The shareholders. Bless
their hearts.

Speaker 2 (16:11):
Ye jobs, Shit, it's not because a Trump fugging the
economy will just fire these people to keep our stock
price up.

Speaker 3 (16:17):
Good good, good on these layoffs are going to put
their stock price on steroids. Man, it's going to be
like Google stock on steroids. Yeah, and their employees talk
about putting things on steroids. I feel like, yeah, the
idea that everything needs to grow forever and ever is

(16:38):
like I remember that when we started the website cracked
and like we were like growing and we were like, man,
this is like a good size for this, Like we
have a good team, we have like a good amount
of like let's just.

Speaker 2 (16:52):
Like chill here for a little.

Speaker 3 (16:54):
Bit, just get good, get good and better at like
what we're currently doing.

Speaker 2 (16:59):
Well, and like telling that to the.

Speaker 3 (17:02):
Parent company that owned us, They're like, no, how do
you how do you scale?

Speaker 2 (17:11):
How we put this bad boy on steroids? Dude? How
do you know? All right?

Speaker 3 (17:15):
So you guys are like doing way better than we
ever thought was possible. Uh, how do we one hundred
x that?

Speaker 2 (17:23):
What the fuck are you talking about? How do I
one hundred XU by next year? That's the question.

Speaker 3 (17:28):
I need you eating, breathing, sleeping. So yeah, I think
when that is your entire civilizations like DNA for a
number of years, Uh, it's gonna it's gonna lead to weird,
weird places. And I would say we're in weird places
right now. And just how refreshing the idea of a

(17:52):
small town where everybody's just trading around the same million
dollars sounds.

Speaker 2 (17:57):
To me right now? Is probably it's probably a problem.

Speaker 3 (18:01):
Really suggests that there's something at large that's not not
quite right with.

Speaker 1 (18:06):
I think everyone feels it to some degree, though, because
I think that people do. I've been trying to, like
I think of how when self help books come out,
or when people like have a ted talk and they'll
do some little like snippet or phrase a little axiom
they have mine lately is like mayke a little bit harder.
And I think of like like two thousand and five
to ten inch, when all this tex stuff was just

(18:27):
kind of starting and going back to there and be like,
all right, it clearly blew out of proportion and made
trillionaires and they don't give a shit about anyone else,
and this wealth disparity is nuts, and people do miss
that idea of like wait, wait, there are way more
businesses like you could see brick and mortar businesses. Did
everything have to get applified? Did I? I mean we
all hated Blockbuster Video. We all hated like walking in

(18:48):
there and getting the late fees because you couldn't drive
over when you were sick to return your thing. And
that was a bad version of how they did it.
But then you think of I used to like call
ahead to a restaurant and go pick stuff up. I
didn't have to have like a car service swing by
and grab it for me, and everything getting applified on
that level, like every delivery you get everything being like

(19:08):
I'm just at my computer all the time and like
life is coming to me from these apps I use.

Speaker 2 (19:13):
And I mean there's still an advantage in calling a
restaurant because a lot of the times they change their
prices for those apps. So yeah, it's funny when I
look in like my phone book that has been like
based in like you know, like Google Calendar whatever for
like years, Like all of the numbers that I have,
and there's so many are restaurants that I used to
just call up straight up and just make my order
and then go pick up. And like, as I scroll through,

(19:34):
I'm like, damn, I don't It's just that shit is gone.

Speaker 4 (19:38):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (19:38):
Yeah, so we've tried to get back into that and
just little things like make it a little bit harder
and just going back to kind of a two thousand
and eight sort of Yeah, I can call and swing by.
It feels it feels a little more like that little
town as opposed to like living in this gigantic future world.

Speaker 3 (19:55):
Yeah, giant hive mind, where what what content are you
going to can tribute to the giant iive mind? And yeah,
they just removed all the friction from everything, which is
what we thought we wanted. Like it's what like even
now when I like wake up, I'm like, oh, that's
like I have to see people today like that I

(20:17):
don't want to do that, Like I don't want to
you know, the stuff that I'm not looking forward to
is the friction. But then that turns out to in
retrospect be like the best parts of life that was there,
the texture that was exactly that was, oh you mean life.
They just removed all of the contouring and different.

Speaker 2 (20:38):
I don't want to see anybody day so like in
that version of the ideal world just being in some
like matrix style pod where it's I just take my
body heat and run the computer.

Speaker 3 (20:47):
But I feel like that's that's how I view things,
Like what at my worst moment where I'm just like
I just don't want to like risk anything. I don't
want to, you know, it's just my laziest, worst inclination,
and it always like I now know that that's the
wrong instinct, Like I need to fight against that instinct,

(21:07):
but I feel like they have used that instinct to
just make our lives more and more closer and closer
to the just being.

Speaker 2 (21:16):
Getting out of bed. Look what happened? You got to
eat salad pot pie? That's right, Salad in Texas were
salad pot pie. Miles term.

Speaker 3 (21:32):
Yeah, all right, let's take a quick break, and when
we come back, we're gonna talk about some news.

Speaker 2 (21:39):
We'll be right back. And we're back. We're back.

Speaker 3 (21:52):
We are we did it. We made it back.

Speaker 1 (21:55):
I'm still here too.

Speaker 2 (21:57):
Oh my god, he's here holding on. He's barely holding
I tried to not come back. I was like, I
don't know. That sounds hard. That sounds hard. That sounds
like friction.

Speaker 3 (22:05):
The recording the rest of this episode, let's just leave
it in a forty five minute long ad.

Speaker 2 (22:12):
Let's just all go uh huh uh huh uh huh
for the next forty.

Speaker 3 (22:20):
All right, let's talk about the infomercial. First of all,
you know, we we've been talking about this crazy thing
that's happening that the media is like trying to get
their mind around. But like the Testless like stock is
not doing well because they're like not selling as many
cars around the world.

Speaker 2 (22:37):
Why is that and why?

Speaker 3 (22:39):
Uh So we're trying to figure gesture we're trying. Then
we'll mention that in the fourth paragram, the words under
the we're going to focus on Doge and we're going
to be like his complex policies uh and controversial leadership
style chaos. Yes, but yeah, it's it is, it's the

(23:05):
Nazi car. Nobody wants to drive a fucking Nazi car.
I feel like we just like it's pretty straightforward that.

Speaker 2 (23:14):
I mean, it is that other stuff too, but it
is when they talk about, oh, and especially in the
European market, really what happened in Europe like eighty some nineties,
can we can we just do a run back? And
their problem is that does that have a great Are
people really warmed up to the Nazi brand in Europe?
Because I don't think so. That might be a huge
issue too. But again, it could just be.

Speaker 3 (23:35):
Even like the Nazis keep their Nazi like plates or
whatever shit they have, like their Nazi guns like hidden
away in a weird like basement compartment in movies, you know.

Speaker 2 (23:46):
Right, unless your billionaire, in which case you're like, in
which case you're like, these.

Speaker 3 (23:50):
Are curios call curios term, Yeah, check out my Nazi curios.

Speaker 2 (23:59):
Some of the sick as Nazi curios you've ever seen.
This is Ryan hard Heidrich's notebook.

Speaker 3 (24:06):
So as things are going down, the whole trump Elon
kind of meta brand seems to be recognizing that that
might be a bad look for them, and so they're
they're trying to stem the bleeding with a super sick
infomercial on the on the front lawn of the White

(24:28):
House where that you know, there was just a tesla
there and Donald Trump was seeing a tesla for the
first time.

Speaker 2 (24:37):
But dude, they were so fucking awkward for it. Again,
the whole thing was so awkward because again, you're like,
I can't believe you guys are actually going to do
a literal tesla commercial right now with complete with like
the first person who had a question, it was so
clear it was just some sick of journalists who just went,
President Trump, are you gonna be buying releasing today? That
was the first fucking question that came out from the

(24:59):
from the report. And He's like, oh, definitely buying, but
I can't drive car. I'm not allowed anymore to drive car.
That he because apparently you know, obviously I think it's
maybe just the fact that he doesn't drive ever. But
he was just saying, I'm just gonna sit in the car.
But then it got so awkward as you just doing
the same thing we saw with like Elon on Hannity

(25:19):
when he's like, I'm just trying to save people like
the government. Trump just didn't hold He's a patriot, what
a great man. Everyone should support this man. That's why
I'm buying this. Ignore the Nazi stuff. Just please buy car.
And then he was giving off the fucking like sales
numbers and shit, and a photographer caught like what he
was holding in his hand, and it was just the
literal sales figure, like what the entry price was for

(25:42):
all these cars as if again it was a literal
fucking commercial, like a bullet pointed sales deck for yeah Tesla. Yeah,
and it did get can we hear the like? So
he walks up.

Speaker 3 (25:54):
He hasn't been in the driver's seat of a car
in a long time. It's also so it gives us
a great Trump turn, a phrase that I want to
comment on. And then at the end he's also so
proud of himself for having sat in the car. But yeah,
it's like Elon Musk have to be like, so it's
kind of like a golf cart. He's explaining a car

(26:15):
to him for the first time.

Speaker 4 (26:18):
That's beautiful.

Speaker 2 (26:19):
That's different panel than Everything's computer. Yeah, alright, that's all
that's what I needed. Everything's computer is.

Speaker 6 (26:29):
Such a banger, man, It's not like I mean hate
this dude him, and yet he just pulled up from
the logo and it was nothing but ship everything everything.

Speaker 2 (26:42):
Wow, I think it's like now it's slowly I think
just gonna make me more angry because I can't believe
how fucking just unintelligent this man is, that he's there
and going it's every because remember he did the same
ship too when he's like and Eli's very good at computer.
Yeah yeah he did. He had a lie like that,
so he gets hung up on the computer as catch

(27:02):
all phrase for anything that is in a rotary phone. Basically,
my parents are so impressed by like anybody who helps
them with technology stuff, Like they they're like on a
first name basis with like the geek squad person who
set up their computer like seven years ago. Like so
to have to have Trump next to Elon Musk, it's

(27:23):
a very dangerous situation. I just like that. He's like
in your family Christmas photos too, now.

Speaker 1 (27:27):
Yes, oh that's Rick.

Speaker 2 (27:30):
It is fair Yeah Rick, great family growing again?

Speaker 1 (27:34):
Yeah shift alt delete did you know about that?

Speaker 2 (27:38):
I know it's hot keys at the end. Also, like
so he sits down, people like.

Speaker 3 (27:45):
Are you gonna take it for a drive, mister President,
and he's like, do I take it for a drive?

Speaker 2 (27:49):
I don't know, should I do it?

Speaker 3 (27:50):
Like obviously not, he hasn't driven anything that's not a
golf part and then kill everyone there decades.

Speaker 1 (27:55):
I have positive. I don't even know if two decades
is accurate. Do you think he's ever driven into Yeah,
I don't think as a New Yorker, no need to.
And I think like when they kick criticizing like coastal elites,
he's elites. But I think true elites like billionaires, the
idea that like oh we just opted for the Bentley

(28:15):
blah blah blah, Like what are you a fucking peasant?
You drive yourself? Yeah, I think it's just doors opening
into private cars, into helicopters, into jets, into yachts, and
back into the backseat. I don't think he's really been
in the front seat of a car potitionally in his life.
I don't think he's ever driven. And like, you can't
find video of him laughing. I'd love to see if
someone can find footage of him like driving a genuine

(28:39):
genuinely laughing or drive.

Speaker 2 (28:40):
Open mouth smile. Yeah, but not like yeah, well something, Yeah, No,
he's definitely, it's only been probably chauffeurs also got it'd
be so funny, just like if one day he had
to try and put a car in like gear, yeah,
like in front of people and he's like, right, what
the fuck? But in a way, where's the go button?

Speaker 3 (29:02):
He he did at that conversation kind of happens in
the front seat of the car where he's like, Elon
Musk has to be like, do you want to turn
it on?

Speaker 2 (29:13):
Do you know how to turn it on?

Speaker 3 (29:14):
Like they're having very awkward I don't and I will not,
And then he gets out and goes You think Biden
could get into that car.

Speaker 2 (29:21):
He does say that at the end where it's like
he's accomplished something or like done something difficult by getting
into a car and saying repeating the word beautiful three
times and saying everything's computer. It sounds like, Okay, he's
getting something. I think at this begin in this club,
Elon's explaining the car, it's like it's like driving a
golf cut. Basically, it's just like driving a golf driving

(29:44):
a golf cart. So it's just literally like the golf
cart that goes with It's literally like a golf cart.
That goes through. Biden could get into that car.

Speaker 3 (29:53):
I don't exc what the few thinks Biden could get
into that car? What does your think he just did?
That is hard to do, Like, that's that's an amazing
level of white male mediocrity to be like you think,
I bet, I bet nobody else could get into that car.

Speaker 2 (30:11):
What do you think Biden can sit down? What can
he sit down in a car?

Speaker 4 (30:16):
Sure?

Speaker 2 (30:17):
I think so, yeah, I'm pretty sure he could. Like,
I't great, but that was other yours the hardest shit
I've ever done. But yeah, here he is. I mean,
I think the one nice thing about this was that
it's so clear that the Tesla stock price going down
in all of the efforts to make Tesla as toxic
as possible, it's clearly freaking musk out and like Hannity

(30:39):
is doing a fucking Tesla giveaway giveaway right now, trying
to make the car seem like some shit conserve conservatives want,
which is ironic given the amount of energy Trump is
spent shitting on electronic vehicles when Biden was an office,
being like they're not even good. What are you gonna
do with them? You plug Them's? Like, I don't even
understand these things. And he was telling I remember when
the auto workers are striking, He's like, who gives a

(31:00):
shit about like electric vehicle? Like, you guys striking because
electric vehicles are gonna take over and you're not gonna
have jobs anyway. So it's a massive amount of energy
being spent, and not just trying to rehab the brand
of Tesla, but even try and go back on all
the rhetoric that electric vehicles were stupid coming from Trump. Yeah,
and it's just very they're watching them navigate. This has

(31:22):
been wonderful, and you know, I think to fully confirm
how transactional the stuff was, Maggie Haberman is reporting that,
and now we're seeing that, like in the New York
Times that Musk has basically pledged another one hundred million
dollars to Trump's political operations. So, you know, try as
you might. I'm sorry that the consensus is these are
Nazi cars that stick now, So yeah, yeah, that's for

(31:44):
some reason.

Speaker 3 (31:45):
I don't know how people got it into their head
that that's what's going on here, but yeah, I don't
It sounds like David, you've been like kind of off
mainstream media for a little bit like the they like
still really won't acknowledge like how big a deal that
was that he did too aggressive Nazi slips. They're still
just kind of like.

Speaker 2 (32:07):
Well, I think that's I think that's how you're seeing
how the media is too completely capitulating to the administration,
Like they don't want to keep pointing at the thing
that makes this so odious to people, and they just
they figure, like if we just pretend we're being like
down the middle objective rather than like being like that
was a huge thing just given you know, for the
historical context of everything, and they don't. But but it

(32:30):
also shit's become so bad that Speaker Mai Johnson is
now saying that he will look into these quote domestic
terror attacks on Tesla infrastructure in dealerships, saying he's going
to bring down like the full force of the law
on people. So uh yeah, that's that's that's that's really cool.
I mean, we're talking about the most thin skinned dickheads

(32:51):
over here who.

Speaker 1 (32:52):
Just will And this is just a PSA. If if
you go to Tesla takedown dot com the image they
have on their homepage, if you just wanted to maybe
see about joining in a protest, or setting up your
own if you know there's a dealership near you, is
a bunch of armed guards in front of a Tesla dealership.
It's a pretty striking image in terms of like how
thin skinned they are and like not here, get out

(33:14):
of here in this sort of peace states. It's a
very close look at like what it could become and
is very clearly trending toward.

Speaker 2 (33:21):
Yeah, that they have no qualms about.

Speaker 1 (33:23):
They have no problem being like, yeah, we just want
to get away with it if people keep it keeps
stopping us from getting away with it. But the Nazi
salute a big one, and then the the Columbia Palestinian kid,
I mean everyone, even the most like Second Amendment, you
know right now twiddling his thumbs like do I turn
in my F three fifty and get a Tesla?

Speaker 4 (33:42):
Fuck?

Speaker 1 (33:43):
Like that guy should be up in arms about Every
person should be up in arms about that. But yeah,
like the way the media covers it, like they don't
really frame it as though it's as horrific as it
really is.

Speaker 2 (33:54):
No right like that, we're fully like they're like, oh,
we're disappearing people now for there.

Speaker 1 (34:01):
Did you see today that this was posted on Reddit?
So who knows it'll how long it'll stay up there.
But it was taken down from Instagram because they're in
on it. But the ice in Spokane, Washington breaking the windows.

Speaker 2 (34:13):
Oh yeah, those people that were on their way to
fucking court on the way to court.

Speaker 1 (34:16):
Yeah, I mean that's gestoppo level stuff. And then for
Meta to be like, look, don't need people seeing that
to take it down, like we shook a hand, we
made a deal at Mari Lago. Got to take this
shit down. I mean, it was pretty terrifying to be like,
how do you navigate all that? How do you stay
informed of it without being a part of it? And
and to see it then do you even do anything?

(34:37):
People are just kind of like, fuck, I see stuff
every day. How don't I fight all of it? What
do I So there's a weird feeling there for sure.

Speaker 3 (34:44):
Yeah, but it feels like the with my mood Khalil,
like this is this has to be a turning point,
like this has to be a thing that people rally
around because this is so fucking startling, Like so, yeah,
I mean the thing I'm waiting for because like, just
having read what the police state did during the quote

(35:07):
War on Terror, like they charged people with like aiding
terrorism on some wild shift like they would be they
would like do staying operations with like eighty two year
old guys who were like confused and it wasn't clear
like that they even knew where they were, like what
was going on, and like get them to testify that

(35:28):
like they were secretly behind al Qaeda's like attack on
nine to eleven, and they like I'm waiting for them
to like put together just some trumped up bullshit. But
the fact that they haven't, they can't, that they haven't
even charged him with anything, makes me think like that

(35:49):
would actually be the easier thing for them to do,
is to fabricate some fake ass charge. The logic they
keep doing is like, well, we're actually doing it on.

Speaker 2 (35:57):
A foreign policy basis, that it's actually a threat to
our foreign policy and our like it's again even fucking
flimsier when bright you see, like America's great at just
trying to fucking block somebody up on some bullshit. But
this time it was just purely like yoink and your
lawyers don't know where you are right now. It's being
reported that he's mostly I think in Louisiana, but hasn't

(36:18):
been able to talk to his lawyers. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
So I mean I think that's the other part too,
because it's like watching all of this, right, everyone is
so like they're like, yo, okay, this is really bad. Obviously,
depending on where you get your news, they might report
on it as being like, well, you know, he was
a rabble rouser, or other people are like, this is
we're crossing over into full on fuckery. But like with

(36:42):
the Democrats, you get a couple token tweets of solidarity
from them and nothing else. And right now, as this recording,
there were fourteen members of the House that wrote a
letter to Department of Homeland Security and Christy Nome demanding
his release given the obscene violation. The illegal violation was
First Amendment rights. But like, fucking only fourteen of you, Yeah,

(37:06):
like fourteen of you. There's only fourteen of you signing
on to this. And it's one thing, if it's really
that fucking big of a deal, then you should all
be demanding, like you know, that this man is released
over these bullshit fucking charges. But we can only get
fourteen Democrats with the fucking spine to actually put their
name down on something that demands that we actually would

(37:29):
acknowledge the Constitution. So those people are Rashida Talib, Mark Pokan,
Nidia of Alasquez, Delia Ramirez, Ilhan Omar, Jasmine Crockett, Summer Lee,
Ayana Presley, Latifa Simon, Gwen Moore, Nakima Williams, al Green,
Andre Carson, and James McGovern Jim McGovern. Great that you
guys passed the low bar. Everybody fucking else, God damn.

(37:52):
And you wonder why people are so angry at the
Democrats because for how Look, we just talked about how
soft the Republicans are and how thin skinned they are,
and some of the Democrats are softer than them, and
just be like, well, even when we have the actual
Constitution on our side, they're just like, I don't know.
Chuck Schumer had a thing where he's like, well, obviously
his what his politics are so backwards, and I disagree

(38:15):
with them, but it is the First Amendment and we
have to protect it. It's just kind of really not
getting the kind of full throated defense of this man
that we really should be from the supposed people who
want to be resting control back from the Republicans.

Speaker 3 (38:30):
Yeah, all right, let's take a quick break and we'll
come back.

Speaker 4 (38:34):
We'll be right back, and we're back, We're back.

Speaker 3 (38:49):
And yeah, so the economy guys, you know right, these
dang tariffs. No, it feels like that is a thing
that has made the questionable nature of like how this
administration is running hit home for a lot of the

(39:09):
usual media outlets that we count on to be able
to be like, hey, things are bad. Now they're like, okay,
you're right, are bad? Things are in fact fucked up
here and now we're seeing you know, just it kind
of come home for some US companies.

Speaker 4 (39:28):
I feel like as well.

Speaker 2 (39:30):
Well, there's clearly a lot of anger that is rightly
being directed at America right now. And you know, Trump's
made it very clear that this country is no longer
a reliable partner in anything, not even fucking working people
over Like no, like we are unreliable, Like we're not
even a you can't even count us as a military

(39:52):
ally at this point. And I think the most like
the most palpable anger is coming from Canada because Trump
continued to bang the drum of it becoming the fifty
first state and going back and forth and escalating and
then de escalating this trade war. But like, there there
are a lot of different sort of very kind of
specific trends that are happening that are also kind of
happening around the world where people are trying to pull

(40:14):
back on buying American made products. There was like a
survey where like almost twenty five percent of Canadians that
were just planning on taking like an easy road trip
across the border and now like, nah, fuck that, I'm
not doing that shit anymore. But then there's like, also
they've got some apps too. This is from the Guardian quote.
A slew of apps has emerged with names such as
buy Beaver, Makele Scan and is this Canadian maybe works

(40:37):
op the first one to allow shoppers. Yeah right, yeah,
I guess that's different up there. But it allows shoppers
to scan QR barcodes and it'll be be like alert
American bullshit, do not buy not even like from everything
they say, from alcohol to fucking pizza topics. Wow, So
if you're not playing that shit, there's there's an app
for you. And it's not just Canada. That's like one

(40:59):
very small thing. We're obviously seeing the back and forth
over like energy production, but that seems to be settled
for now. Like in Europe, they're also just as disgusted. Naturally,
Norway's largest oil bunkering company has said it's no longer
going to help fuel American Navy ships on the heels
of that disastrous Oval Office meeting with Zelenski. Like their
official Facebook page, it's like described it as like that

(41:21):
shit show that happened in the Oval Office, Like that's
their description of it.

Speaker 4 (41:25):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (41:26):
In Norway. Yeah, in Denmark, their largest grosser is going
to be making our marking European made products, so they
black star so consumers have an easier time buying European
and an easier time just saying no to American shit.
And again it's not just the consumers right and the companies.
The EU is now hitting the US with retaliatory tariffs

(41:47):
and they are specifically going after Red States. This is
from also, this is from I think New Republic quote.
The EU on Wednesday announced tariffs on twenty eight billion
dollars worth of US imports, including but not limited to,
stealing aluminum textiles, home goods, aultral products, aluminium euminium textiles,
home goods, agricultural products, motorcycles, alcohol, and even jeans. With

(42:11):
a special focus on Republican states. So they're going after
soybeans in Louisiana. That's where my that's where Mike Johnson,
the Speaker of the House is from. And then beef
and poultry from Kansas and Nebraska, and produce coming out
of Alabama, Georgia, and Virginia. So it seems that the US,
like siding with Russia very publicly at the UN over
a vote in Ukraine made everyone a little skiddish.

Speaker 4 (42:35):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (42:35):
So yeah, almost as if the US was benefiting more
than anybody else from global free trade and now that
they're like attacking people through it and they're like, there
won't be consequences, we hold all the cards. Like the
amazing thing with Canada is that they're like, we're gonna
cut off power. You get like a bunch of fucking

(42:56):
electricity from US, and we'll just stop giving you electricity.
And Trump was like that's not fair.

Speaker 2 (43:03):
Yeah, I'll double your nerves now for anything we send
to you electro and then they're like then they're like,
all right, forget it, we won't right, and they just stopped.
But like it's I think, honestly, it feels like right
now just to put it into the parlance of twenty
twenty four, it feels like like Trump and America, they're
like on the verge of getting not like the not
like us by Kenn like this idea that like the

(43:26):
run that America has had has made it easy to
bully other countries. But now they're like, yo, this this
motherfucker looking weak as fuck right now, Like what the
fuck is up with these people? And I think that's
a that's a that's an awakening that it seems that
even conservatives are happening too, because I think in their minds,
they really thought they were just gonna elbow everybody out
of the way with just sort of the massive buying

(43:47):
power of the United States. And now that they're like, no,
fuck you, we don't give a fuck. Yeah, go do
your fucking clown shit over there. And now it's not
as tough as it sounds.

Speaker 1 (43:56):
Do you see shy bombs? How do you say your
last name? In Mexico? Her letter and then the like
how full that area was, Like yeah of supporters was
like two hundred thousand people enthusiastically backing her through approval
ratings like over eighty five. I mean, she is knocking
it out of the park because she's just singling out

(44:16):
like we can change this for this, this, for this,
this for this. I think that's what's so hard about
seeing Americans not leave any of the stuff. We see
Nazi salutes and like I can't and then we're still
like fucking mad at the senators. Why can't you stand
up for something? And no one leaves their stuff. That's
hard to leave. But I like seeing the Canadians like
the elbows up or like targeting Bourbon or just specifically,

(44:39):
like their whole unification has been really fascinating, Whereas like
I feel like everyone here dislikes the Democrats. That should
be a rallying cry, where like everyone's like we all
like nobody, none of these fucking politicians are doing anything.

Speaker 2 (44:51):
Yeah, and it's we I think, like back like a
year ago, if you said you don't like Democrats, We're like, oh,
because you were a maga person. It's like, nope, because
they are fucking They are doing tremendous damage to us
because with their lack of action and their lack of spine,
and they're on the brink of averting a government shut
down because they don't want to be the bag holder,
and then they're saying stuff like well, we have so

(45:12):
many people already in pain. But it's like, dude, you
are they are going doesn't matter what they are going
to keep doing this shit, no matter what the fact
that you're even like yeah, go ahead, and apparently they'll
they said they'll keep funding it at the at the
at the levels that we had, you know, in previous
in the previous year. There's there's nothing that says that

(45:33):
they're going to actually follow through on that.

Speaker 1 (45:36):
You know, like in any sort of situation of like crime,
they are like, never go to the second location, fight, kick,
do whatever the fuck you out do not ever let
someone jumps in your car with a gun, like drive
just be like nope, you don't have to fucking shoot
me in this parking lot. I'm just going anywhere. Take
the keys, throw them out the window, like do it
if you're gonna just fuck But like what they are doing.

Speaker 2 (45:57):
As let's see where they're going with this, you know,
their whole like I can't.

Speaker 1 (46:02):
I can't vote to shut the government down. I gotta
drive out to the woods.

Speaker 3 (46:06):
They might harm me and also maybe there's a treat
waiting for me out there.

Speaker 1 (46:11):
They might let me go there and do things the
right way once I get there when no one's around.

Speaker 2 (46:16):
Yeah, that's really good. I mean, yeah, you're basically all
the Democrats who want to act like you know, John Fetterman.
He's like, I'm not going to I'm not going to
be responsible for that. It's like, no, then you are
in league with these people. That's what you're doing.

Speaker 1 (46:28):
Yeah, you're driving to the woods, you fucking asshole.

Speaker 3 (46:31):
Yeah, do you need me to drive? Actually, because I
can do that.

Speaker 2 (46:35):
He's got theman's got the directions. He's like, actually, do
a great spot where you can like do a summary
execution in the wood.

Speaker 3 (46:41):
Nobody's gonna hear you shoot me in the back of the.

Speaker 1 (46:43):
You went to shallow Graves, dude, let me take you.

Speaker 3 (46:46):
Hey, let me just hit my wife real quick because
she's expecting me home for dinner. Let me just like
get her off my back so that nobody comes looking
for me for a little while.

Speaker 2 (46:54):
Yeah, I'm gonna let me tell her real quick that
I'm having second thoughts about our marriage and I'm actually
leaving and I'm going to go to the phillip Beans.
Don't look like weeks. Actually, should I get on my knees.
Should I get in the pit first or should I
do it right on the edge? So I just flop
into the pit right whatever, like it's you, it's your movie,
all right. They're just weirded out there, like you're in

(47:17):
directing me. What it's like A Scorsese is a quick
to me, like cry before.

Speaker 3 (47:22):
I feel like a nice big flop would be kind
of nice, say kinetic, you know, yeah yeah, yeah, uh well,
David Hansburger, such a pleasure having you on the daily zeitgeist?

Speaker 2 (47:34):
Where can people find you? Follow you, hear you all
that good stuff.

Speaker 1 (47:38):
Always a pleasure to be here, fellas. I'm on Blue
Sky until they sell it. They're always posting the valuation.
It's like seven hundred million now, so some sinister billionaires
just licking their chops to do that. Yeah, but decentralize.
I'm on masted on and pixel fed. I like with
most social media, I'm not all that active, but David
Hansburger dot com has links to like you mentioned all

(48:01):
the things I've made, and I do a scripted sketch
comedy podcast called Intercepts and you can find that through
David Hunsburger dot com. As well as The Space Cave,
which is like a science sit down interview podcast as well.

Speaker 3 (48:17):
Yeah, is there a work of media of any sort
that you've been enjoying?

Speaker 1 (48:22):
Huh. So we've like I mean, when I think of
like dystopian future worlds and people just sitting there melting
into their chairs scrolling through when you see articles where
like then Netflix has to say, no, no, we didn't
do that. But the article is about how like Netflix
is making second screen viewing where the plot is like,
oh my god, I can't believe I have to get
to Rome by eight am tomorrow or else you're not

(48:44):
going to be my girlfriend type exposition nonsense, because people
aren't watching, they're just on their phone and oh what
just happened? That scares me as to like where people
are and that the tech companies need to keep saturating
us with stuff. It sucks because so many comedians get
these things, Oh my god, everyone's gonna see your stand
up thing or whatever. At the same time, we're all

(49:04):
just sitting there bleeding into our couches, like dulling our minds.
So I've moved off all that shit and made it
a little bit harder, and like, uh, we're using like
Canopy or Hoopla or like the free library apps to
just check stuff out there and watch things a little
bit more intentionally. So what was the last thing I loved?

(49:26):
Perfect Days that's available through Hoopla from Moving from twenty
twenty three about a janitor in Japan, So fucking mellow
quiet speaks to like the human condition. Highly recommend Perfect Days.

Speaker 3 (49:39):
And it sounds like good second screen viewing too, right,
you could just like knock that out while you're you know,
making your own content.

Speaker 1 (49:48):
Not really a lot of subtitles. Oh yeah, yeah, I know, gone,
you know, yeah, it's a jesting. Yeah. I recommend that.

Speaker 4 (49:59):
I thought it was good.

Speaker 1 (50:01):
And books the Overstory. I've been telling everyone about that.
If you haven't read it, Richard Powers, it's about and
if you're feeling hopeless right now too, Like think back
to old growth deforestation and it wasn't like every person
in the Pacific Northwest tied themselves to trees. It was
like one hundred people. And then that totally changed how
we moved over to Canada, and now Canada is like, well,

(50:22):
fuck you guys, you came up here to get like
twenty five percent of your lumber. But still We did
change our deforesting of old growth forests because of the
active work of like a handful of people. So little
bits of resistance do amount to stuff. So keep fighting
the good fight, folks.

Speaker 3 (50:38):
Yeah, amazing, Miles. Where can people find you as their
working media you've been enjoying?

Speaker 2 (50:43):
Uh, just pretty much all the places with the act symbols,
Miles of gray, fine jacket on the basketball podcast, Miles
and Jack got mad Man most us. Also, I'm talking
ninety day fiance on four twenty day fiance. I do
like a few posts. Uh, Jack and I got to
meet one of our favorite Twitter personalities over the weekend.
Juniper shut out June very fantastic to meet you, and

(51:07):
she tweeted at Chuck Shuter sorry. She posted on Blue
Sky to Chuck Schumer that said, all caps, let the
Republicans shut down the government, let them destroy everything, show
the country how inept these people are. Your base with
one hundred percent support this, and then she took a screenshot.
His account blocked her after treating her after posting that shit.
Because it now does sound like Chuck Schumer is also

(51:29):
trying to get the Democrats to back the you know,
the Continuing Resolution to get the budget going and not
shut the government down, and again showing that these people
are actually in league with them, not opposing. Gotta work together,
gotta work together. And then when I used to eat
with strom Thurmon and have breakfast with gerbels you know, dude,

(51:55):
milkshakes with gerbels Man. Fuck what happened to us? His
name got really hard to say after you drank milk.
And then another one is from Andrew Lawrence at n
d R eut E skuy not social posted because everyone's
doing this new trope on Blue Sky about how like
Gavin Newsom's podcast is so fucking backwards because he's having

(52:16):
all these conservatives on. So the first one says Gavin Newsom,
thanks for joining us on the pod today. Now childcare
is obviously difficult. Do you and do you have any suggestions?
Casey Anthony, so many, there's so many ones like this
when he's talking to everyone. This new construction of Blue
Sky Prep Post is fantastic. So yeah, those are my

(52:39):
two favorite books that you can get them on.

Speaker 3 (52:42):
Hell yeah, you can find me on Twitter at Jack
Underscore Brian and on Blue Sky at Jack ob The
number one I like the Blue Sky Post from ed
Zitron word has it Doge has terminated the five Men
protecting the cursed seal that holds the five Dark.

Speaker 2 (52:57):
Sages and their slumber. It's from eight days, but it
still feels it still feels right to me.

Speaker 3 (53:03):
You can find us on Twitter at daily Zeitkeeist. We're
also on blue Sky at daily Zeikeeist. We're at the
Daily Zeitgeist on Instagram. We have Facebook campage on a
website Dailyzeigicist dot com and you can go to the
episode wherever you're listening to it and check out the description,
and there you will find the footnotes Nope, which is

(53:24):
where we link off to the information that we talked
about in today's episode. We also link off to a
song that we think you might enjoy. Hey, Miles, is
there a song that you think people might enjoy?

Speaker 2 (53:34):
Yeah, I was listening to a new producer named Chesco
cesco H and got some you know, sort of like garage,
kind of drum and bass roller kind of vibes to it,
but very like uptempo and just kind of fun to
listen to. This is called flump f l u MP
and is by Chessco. So check this one out. It's

(53:55):
available everywhere. But it's a good, nice little electronic. Just
to get slump. I'll just get a little flump to it.
Get your shoulder blades going all right.

Speaker 3 (54:05):
Well.

Speaker 2 (54:05):
The Daily's Eye Guy is a production of iHeartRadio.

Speaker 3 (54:07):
For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcast,
or wherever you.

Speaker 2 (54:12):
Listen to your favorite shows.

Speaker 3 (54:13):
That is going to do it for us this morning.
We are back this afternoon to tell you what is
trending and we will talk to you out then.

Speaker 2 (54:21):
Why are you

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