Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to Season one, Episode four
of the Daily Night Guy production of My Heart Radio.
This is a podcast where we take a deep dive
into America's share consciousness. It's Thursday, May six. Nice little
push a t ad lib right there to kick us off.
(00:21):
My name is Jack O'Brien a k. For the life
of me, I cannot remember a second rate podcast with
guys that were stoned and had white thighs. For the
life of me, I truly believe that we will host
t Deezy even up in heaven. That is courtesy of
(00:45):
Christy Ambucci main a little the verb pipe for you
not to be confused with the verb A band randomly
too verb based bands at the same time in the nineties,
and I'm thrilled to be joined as always by my
co was Mr Miles Grass his hairlines Hi, oly Moses Balding,
(01:09):
He's so balding his hairlines. Hi, so far back there,
you got no heir? Yeah? Okay, So that is we
fly high inspired a k A to shout out to
my follically follicular challenge brethren and sisters and humans out there.
(01:31):
Hailey Bones on discord for that one. I like Haley
Hailey Bone, a new player has entered the ring, or
at least I've never heard that name before. Remember that's
a good, strong debut from the rookie. Did you know
that song the Freshman by the verb Pipe? Yeah? Yeah?
Did you? All right? So the beginning it says, when
(01:52):
I was young, I knew all of this cheer punk
CORRELLI never took advice. Did you think that was saying
cheer unk a relly like someone's name? You know? In
a way that part always just was the thing. I
took the l on and I was like, no, no,
I don't care enough. I always thought I was like, damn,
he had a friend named Chia punk a Relly. That
(02:12):
sounds right. She she a punk who rarely ever took advice. Like,
I didn't hear that. You were trying to make me
think it was chea punk, a real punk re cheer
punk relly. Uh that's my other a Chia punk Relly.
And we are thrilled, fortunate, uh in awe to be
joined by the brilliant, the talented, the hilarious Greg edwd Hey, Hey, hey, fellas,
(02:39):
thanks for having me. Man, it's good to be back.
It's great to have you thank you for stopping by man?
Yeahs hold the first and foremost. Let me see that
hair man, let me see that head. Come on, take
that top of Oh come on, man, you got a
nice got a nice yeah, great shaped head. You got
that Buddha Buddha dog. Oh yeah. I mean, like like
I said, if I ever you do need to flee
(02:59):
the law, I will just put an orange robe on
and go to Southeast Asia by motherfuckers. Give me my
bes and ship, I'm good. You should you know what?
You could be a dope DJ. Just put the robe on. Yeah.
I thought about that as like as a bit like
you just were like white on white air forces and
stuff like, Yo, he's got a he's on a wave.
(03:22):
You can make three billion dollars and like two bunchs.
He's TikTok experiment. I'm the funky monk uh. He smokes,
just gives wisdom like stage like advice. No, you can't talk.
You just gotta do it most depth style to write
everything down, Oh ship right, shout out your team, Bay,
that's the way to do it. He doesn't talking, you
(03:44):
just write things down there. Well he used to do.
He did that for like a year he just wrote
everything down. Yeah, I guess I guess that cocaine was
really good. That it's like I can't open my mouth.
It's moving weird bunch more two. All right, Greg, we're
(04:06):
gonna get to know you a little bit better in
a moment. First, we're gonna tell our listeners a couple
of the things we're talking about. Facebook has ruled kind
of They're they're saying Trump is not allowed back, uh
in the party quite yet. Uh. So he started his
on Twitter from the president's desk. Is Yeah, it's not
(04:26):
even a Twitter, because no way, it's not a social
media platform. It's just yeah, it's a tumbler, the trumpler. Yeah. So, uh,
we'll talk about that. We'll talk about where Fox News
that they're now bringing child soldiers into the game. Uh.
We will talk about m d m A being an
actual wonder drug, Like they just got some findings in
(04:51):
from a like double blind study and it is like
shockingly effective at treating PTSD. Uh. We'll talk about that.
We'll talk about the real cancel culture going on, the
GOP seeking to ban the teaching of history in the
U S schools, all of that and plentymore. But first, Greg.
(05:11):
We like to ask eric guests, what is something from
your search history that's revealing about who you are right now?
Sometimes I just uh, search for real, let's see what
he's wearing. I just want to know what's like, what's
for real into these days? What is he doing? You know,
he's like a style I economy. I don't have the uh,
I don't have the bravery to rock everything like for
(05:34):
Real rocks, but I do Like I'm like, oh, for
real is like deep into the sock game right now.
I see him. He's deep into like the shorts he's
doing like the above knee shorts, fly the thighs around
with some like low key chill shoes and some like
human made cool T shirt. He he got like this
(05:57):
cool dad wardrobe style right now. So I do that.
Sometimes I started to see what for real is rocking?
And yeah, I like to two. It's funny because at
a certain point, like his style got too fashionable, Like
I can't keep up with this motherfucker anymore. Like it
was one thing when it was babe hoodies, but like
(06:19):
now it's like okay, so I'm gonna worth this Vivian Westwood.
I'm like, Okay, I how much that hat seventeen dollars? Okay, well,
I mean i mean just remember what he did to
the hat game though, Yeah, I mean everybody was wearing
one of those hats, the trucker hat, and then but
that that bit crisp the cartoon where like part of
you was just in a cartoon all of a sudden.
(06:42):
You know, my style, I hunt is for l Williams
ten years ago. I wear what he was wearing ten
years ago. Always, That's that just No, I'm just always
like about ten years behind what fashion forward people are wearing.
I'm like, yeah, I mean even for ten years ago,
he's like three years ahead of now, right right. I
mean that's why I'm full top until oh seven, Ah,
(07:08):
this is I'm a little too simple for this now. Yeah,
I'm just looking at these twas like he was rocking
the tiny beanie like at the very back of his head,
like you know, ten years ago before, and that ship's
just now like filtering through, uh you know, the whole
like the bracelet thing, and then everybody jumped on that.
(07:31):
I mean, it's so crazy everybody just jumps on this ship. Yeah. Well,
I do have to give a shout out to my wife.
She's been rocking, you know, hundreds of bracelets at a
time since we were eighteen. Yeah, she's always been on
that man. Just yeah, I didn't even know she had
full sleeved tats for most of our relationship until because
(07:55):
her bracelet game was so on point. She looked like
she was training like in those martial arts films, trying
to get her strength. Yeah, she was full sleeved at eighteen. No,
I'm just joking and everything. Man, tis like ten years
(08:18):
into your marriage you find out that your significant others
like I never what's Dolly Parton stuff? Yeah? What are
those three dots on your hands? About that? About those jack?
How you've been married? You know, I've been married thirteen
years years. Yeah, I just I just got married last week,
So congrats man. Oh yeah yeah yeah, I'm talking to
(08:42):
all my married friends and just trying to get get
a little insight. Thirteen that's dope, okay them. My experience
was that the whole like conventional wisdom about marriage that
it's like, you know, there's the honeymoon phase and then
it like gets hard round having years and like all
that ship like that's my relationship has gotten better as
(09:06):
it went like the beginning was the harder. The harder
part is, yeah, it's it's new. You're still figuring your
ship out. I think, yeah, it all depends. But like
I try to like solve issues in my relationship very quickly.
Like I don't like to sheet see ship faster because
that's what I saw growing up. And I'm like getting
dead ship immediately or else she's not gonna grow properly.
(09:26):
So yeah, like the first three years me and her, majesty,
you fucking why don't you know what I mean? And
then we kind of got our ship together and started
like you know, working on ourselves and being more like
putting our egos out of the way and realizing, like, shit,
if we're gonna like if this is gonna last, it's
about hearing the other person and being like, Okay, I
hear you on this. Maybe I can do that differently.
(09:48):
But yeah, now it's I'm not married yet, but it's
only been up you know. So yeah, yeah, that's beautiful.
That's beautiful. Man. I like the hip fallas talk like this. Yeah,
what is something you think is overrated? Overright? I think
social media is overrated? Yea? Social media? I mean forever? Yeah,
(10:09):
I mean, we all need it. But I think social
media is like smoking right now. I think in like
thirty years, everybody's gonna be looking back and be like, oh, yeah,
we let kids do this ship. Wait, predators were able
to holler at children directly. Yeah, I think it's gonna
(10:30):
be books. Ye dad, were you doing this ship? I
was like, look, man, TikTok was wold? You know? I
know there was like a study that came out recently
that said, like children interacting with technology didn't show like
negative results like in the long term. But I think
that's just going straight up talking about technology versus social media,
(10:52):
which plenty of studies have shown like the effects of that,
and like even listening to like some people who talk
about it to it in a way where they talk
about what it's done. Is also allowed you to like
almost read people's thoughts. People can come at you and
tell you what they think about you and all this
other ship that. It's like a superpower nobody fucking asked for,
(11:12):
And depending on how what your relationship with it is,
it can be absolutely devastayd That's why I like, yeah,
you gotta you gotta examine your relationship with social media
to find like a healthy balance. And mine is I know,
like parents that you know, like they don't let their kids.
Uh first of all, they don't let the kids have
a phone, and they don't let their kids do like
(11:34):
social media at all. And I'm like, that's probably a
good move, that's probably a good idea. You know, I
can't imagine if I had like Facebook, are all of it? Instagram, Twitter,
I can't. I can't imagine having that in high school.
I would have been such an asshole two people, you
(11:54):
know what I mean, just just to be able to
do that had like a slick mouth. So totally. If
I was able to funk with people over text too
and be like miles away because I was already in
ale well chat rooms fucking shipped up, so then that
was like the height of it for me. So I'm
glad I wasn't able. Yeah that's a double sword anyway.
(12:17):
How you know, people with kids that are in their teams,
what what the fund do y'all think? Is it their
heads up? But you can only imagine or do you
have to like lowrd over the ship, like give me
your phone, let me see your deal is going on?
What you like vape accounts? Just like knowing like you
already turned. You know, your your skin is never thinner
(12:40):
than when you're like a teenager, at least mine wasn't.
Just I would see three I was the inside out boy.
You could see my my skin was so thin. Um.
But I would clap back just sort of disproportionately, and
that's when it would turn into like I would become
a villain, you know what I mean, classic villain where
you're like you can't take it, and then you dish
out is disproportionately, be like oh my goodness, and I'm
(13:02):
like sorry, sorry, I'm hurting. You said wow over the
end of that, and it's always up there. It's like
that's not fair, man, that's not fair. Right, come on,
I could have be at thirteen. I'm like, I said
so much mean wild ship to people that was a record.
(13:25):
It's like, come on, look man, I was I was
a kid. So I think the worst thing I have
is like me of like videotapes of me and my
friends like crashing our bikes in front of cars and
residential streets to see if they'd stop and help us.
As like a frank, but really when you look back
at like were we trying to just get straight ran over.
This is so funny that lady thought I was hurt
(13:47):
and it was like, yeah, so jackass copycat ship. That's
in the archives for sure. Oh man, we were egging houses.
I mean we were doing we were doing so much
fighting people is just doing bad country, dumb ship. And
I would have gotten caught doing so much more SHIP
than I did, because, like, you know, I was hanging
(14:09):
out with wild kids, going like sneaking out, doing vandalism
and ship. When my parents thought I was at like
my good friend's house or whatever, you know that would
you had good friends for cover, I mean not really
like they were. There was one house that I was
not allowed to go to because they yeah, it was known.
It was just like the parents were kind of passed
(14:31):
out most of the time, and you just went there.
And it's weird, like when you think of like how
cool that house was when you were a kid, and
then you look back and she was actually the most
tragic thing. And so tried about my friend because their
parents were actually weren't there even at the time. We're like, yeah,
we could smoke weed in his bedroom, yes, you know,
and it's like, oh yeah, yeah, his dad passed out
on M D M A J. What does that do?
(14:56):
I can't. I'm not going to shout him out, I
will said, I will say that it's the same the
same kid that did I tell the story about. Oh no,
I was telling that to another friend. But yeah, it's
it was one of my homies who was just constantly
talking ship getting in trouble. Would have been all over
social media, would have found it funny that he got
(15:19):
me grounded for like three months. He was Jake Paul
basically yeah, yeah, yeah, are you still friends? No, okay,
that was dating. So that was I moved away from
there when I was twelve and didn't fully keep in
touch with all those people, but great times at his place.
All my friends like that. I'm not doing well right though. Yeah,
(15:39):
it's only a couple that like the scumhouse as like
a kid who like I just got out of there. Yeah,
because you, I mean, it's exactly what you said, like,
oh man, you could do this, we had we could
party three a boarded. Yeah, it's porn stash, you know,
all the good stuff. There's another kid named Miles at
(16:01):
my school who's like he lived with his grandpa with
a wild porno collection that like treated like a library.
Which tape did you get from Miles Grandpa? They're like,
you let me get the other one. No, not the
world and gas masks and Ship. I can't get. I
can't get with that one. I'm not joking. There was
this one. We're like, yo, like, because you know, when
(16:24):
you're like a sixth grade you only used a very
vanilla porno and ship and then his grandma just wild
compilation taste that were unlabeled, but news gas masks from
like the World War two era. Yeah, that's why they
were into it, like yeah, and they were wearing them
and like they were greasing each other up and ship
and I was like, huh, that's hilarious, love, that's amazing.
(16:50):
That's a shame what they were doing. But look, twelve
year old me, Sorry, couldn't get down to it for sure. No,
It's just it's just you know, I just it's just
a weird thing when it's like it's like old, you know,
like fucking Heather Hunter, you know what I mean, old,
like a Heather Hunter scene and then and then hard
and then gas masks and you're like, whoa. It was
(17:13):
weird because all the porno that you could find at
that area, Like early nineties was from the seventies. It
felt like or like eighties or is like weird aggressive
eighties bootlegs right right. It's interesting. What is something you
think is underrated? Greg niceness? Just genuine, straight up nice niceness,
(17:38):
like letting people in on the freeway, you know, just
speaking to somebody even if they don't speak back. Just
just country niceness, country like that ship. I like when
people just just nice for no reason. You ain't trying
to get nothing. Yeah, it ain't even for them, It's
strictly for you. I always say, it's I don't need
jarring for me. I've come across it before. Like the
(17:59):
first time I came across that kind of niceness, I
had my fist clenched because I was like, growing up
in l A. People are not people are fucking shitty,
you know what I mean. It's almost like, hey, how
you doing. I'm right for me right now? Like hey Lakers,
how I grew up out here? It's no way. It's like, yeah,
you can't trust anything Los Angeles. It's like, first of all,
(18:23):
l A is like fifty places in one city, and
this is what l A are you? Are you experiencing
sims is going on? Are you a fake working class
wealthy comedian version of are you? Who is pretending they
don't come from a wealthy, dynastic family. I mean, it's
(18:44):
there's so many versions, but yeah, the nice thing. I
think it's it's great because I've I think, over time,
gotten into it because it's less energy than like driving
defense trying to get it right now. Hell no, no, no,
they don't know about me. No, no, no, like now
that I'm just like yeah, yeah, fire, yeah, come on there, yeah,
go for a dog, all right, just switching that gear.
(19:06):
It feels very easy. I had a friend that was like,
because I drive like that, right, and my friends like,
why do you do? That's like, look, man, what's what's
the goal? I said, well, what's the goal. We're trying
to get somewhere, right, I'm not trying to fight nobody.
I'm just trying to get to the place safely. He's like,
but that's the goal. Then they don't think you a
little bitch, Like what, I don't care. I'm a bit
(19:27):
well not exactly, but like I wouldn't let that happen
to me. I'm like, well, that's your ego, so I don't.
I'm in a car trying to go buy a hot dog.
Where did you I grew up in Virginia for news
bad dudes. Yeah, which is very country and very grimy.
(19:50):
But it's so grimy that you like learn to like, oh,
I'm gonna be nice because I don't want to get
beat up. Yeah, sprinkles, you're not scowling all the time. Yeah,
it would be cool. Yeah, country nicest for sure. It
is a real thing, and it's just yeah, it takes
(20:12):
takes so much less energy, less thought, and you can
just focus on things that are in your control like that.
I feel like it's a thing that I wonder if
this is the way it is for everyone. But like
it was a bigger deal, Like how interactions with people
I didn't know when when I was younger, like the
steak seemed higher and now like as you get older
(20:33):
and you realize, oh, I'm never I'm literally never going
to see that person again in my life, like right, right,
if it just used to be Yeah, it's just like
sheer mathematics that like the more people Like now, I've
run into a million people over the course of my life,
and I haven't seen nine and ninety thousand of them
(20:55):
ever again. So it's just you're just like, yeah, like,
why would you put negativity out there into those people's lives?
And also YO, give people thank you wave to gratitude.
Also I do that too when people let me in
because I like, you know, truckers, Like I always like truckers,
and I get him where y'all got, y'all got you
got places to go? You're getting my ship around. I'll
(21:16):
swam my brakes to let truckers in. And then I
like when they hit me with the hazard flashers, I'm like, yeah,
I got you, I got you. Well, it's beautiful and
that ship like you know that that pay it forward
energy is real? Yeah, you know that like that that wave.
So I'm like, if you just keep doing that, you know,
maybe that in twenty years that dude won't rob me.
You know, it won't come back to me that way.
(21:41):
I I feel like a pre emptive like a thing
that you can do that's truly a selfless thing in
l A use your turn signals. That is not the
status quo in Los Angeles. People do not use their
turn and people, I think we're all mind I don't know.
That's why I'm like, I mean, this is car talk. Basically,
(22:05):
we're talking to car talk with some old guys talking
about how to be nice and pick up pick up
one piece of trash. Yeah you know if you pick
up one piece of trash and I just pick just
pick it up, just like you never know that one
of the teachers at school might see you and you'll
get a price. Like, hey, I saw that you got
doing a good deed. Here's a free ice cream. I'm
(22:26):
big on that ship. My dad. My dad's one of
those dudes. My dad's like, hey, man, be nice to everybody.
Because my dad was like, man, you were first day
of college. My dad's like okay, So we go to
the cafeteria. He's like, look, my middle name is Trent,
and I'm a julious to my dad's like, look, Trum,
you see those cafeteria ladies. I want you to know
their names. I want you to be sweet to them
because they're gonna hook you up. All He's just rights
(22:51):
was nice to everybody, and he gets he was a
bound man. So like Christmas time comes, my dad's get
hooked up. I me hella bread, just money and gifts
because he's that nice old black man mall. It's like
everybody's looking him up right. Yeah, this is aig that
that quality and that energy and that that genuine niceness.
(23:13):
You can only win, you know, by putting out positivity whereverone,
whenever possible, because you know what, life is one big
curb your enthusiasm. Episode you come to talking that dumb ship,
wait till the act two. When that character is the
person that you need some from. It's always just just
treat it like that. So when act two that person
comes around they say I remember, or if someone asked,
(23:35):
they said, I want to know about them, they're fucking dope. Yes,
I like that person. Especially in Hollywood too, it's like
you get work from other people. Yeah, and it's funny.
There's so many fake ass nice people who think they're
being slick with it. You're like, I can it's so
clear to see someone who's sincerely like a kind person
and someone that's being opportunistic. Some people can't read that
(23:57):
as well, but I think a lot of the times
they're people doing a lot extra ship when you're like
you're being a little too mm hm true, but yeah,
just be nice. Yeah, shout out to the nice mailmen
of the world. I've had so many nice mailmen. Man.
Shout out to the mail man. Yeah, all the postal
(24:17):
carriers out there, Postal Care. Hopefully we get Louis to
joy off your backs, no doubt. All right, let's take
a quick break. We'll be right back. And we're back,
(24:38):
and after all the positive vibes up top, let's descend
into let's descend into talking about Donald Trump briefly, because
it's pretty open and shut, or it should have been.
I guess Facebook, the scotus of Facebook, the Supreme Court,
they were basically like, I don't know, why are you
guys asking us? Yeah, he can be ba, but like,
(25:00):
you guys need to make a decision. Don't throw it
to us, right. Facebook had like basically through to their
Supreme Court whether they were right in banning Trump for life,
and they were like the for life things. He was weird,
but it's you guys will call you're you're the business.
So I I don't even know like what this board
(25:22):
is is for, but he at least remains banned for
probably the next six months. Yeah, they'll revisit it in
six months, and they're just saying just go with your policy.
If if he violated the rules to actually be banned,
then then do that. So what's going on? But I
think because it's like this oversight board is sort of
quasi independent, and there's still a lot of questions about
(25:44):
like how much they actually like, how many, how many,
how many of the decisions they actually inform and like
mother Jones, like back in March, heem will Levi wrote
this sort of just blurb about it, saying, quote, while
the company has touted it as an independent body that
will make final content moderation decisions, thus far, the board
has only decided a handful of cases, and concerns about
(26:05):
its true independence remained. The outcome of the Trump case
could either help build the body's reputation among academics and
civil and human rights advocates as a valuable shield against
harmful content, or dash hopes so they can with the
well kinda sit right in the middle, a bit of
a chest pass right back to him. That the fact
(26:26):
that they were like, I don't know, you guys decide
was actually made me hopeful that they are independent, because
that's doesn't seem like if Mark Zuckerberg could have written
this publicity like hit that he would have had them
say that, you know they're ruling would include them being like,
I don't know if Facebook is, you know, being derelict
(26:48):
in his duties by throwing this in our court. It
should be up to them. They can make the decision. Yeah,
they're just the only the only thing that they didn't
like was just saying, like, figure out what it is
because indefinite it doesn't and that goes against whatever your
policies are. So he's either back or he's gone for life.
Tell us in six months, okay. I think Facebook is
trying to like trying to differ from being a monopoly,
(27:12):
you know. I think this is all like they're looking
at the long game and like if we don't let
them back in, then sooner or later, the big government
is going to come into us and try to break
up this monopoly that we have over social media. Right.
I think that's what they're looking at. I mean, they're
definitely looking at many things, right because one side of
it is like, do we piss off the democratic administration
(27:35):
that's in right now by saying he's back, baby, and
here's a fucking li g live to go with it?
Or yeah, like what do what do they do. I mean,
at the end of the day, I think it's true.
They need to come They need to figure out what
to do with these companies very quickly, because the fact
that Mark Zuckerberg could just unleash a storm of disinformation
with the snap of a finger is a problem. And
(27:58):
it feels like we're in this It doesn't feel like
we are in a situation where if like three oligarchs
are having a bad day, they could funk up the
whole world. Yeah. Yeah, they need to figure this out
quick um. But it seems like that's like the one
thing that there may be some bipartisan agreement on because
(28:19):
on one side, they're like they're they're stifling us, even
though we're like nine out of the top ten content
creators on Facebook. And also, you know, for the other side,
democrats like, yeah, this isn't healthy at all, right, Yeah,
it's too much power. They know it. The fact that
he described this board as a supreme court, it's like,
(28:40):
companies aren't supposed to need a Supreme court, my guy,
Like that's yeah, like that, but that is a tacit
acknowledgement of the fact that you guys have way too
much power in the world, and you're basically wielding the
power of a massive like nation state. So maybe maybe
let's break that up. But yeah, I think you're exactly right, Greig,
(29:03):
Like this is everything they do has to be seen
as a reaction to the you know the fact that
they're trying to avoid being broken up. And you know,
Democrats want to break them up on principle because it's
poisonous for the I mean not Democrats, not big d Democrats,
(29:24):
but I'd say like people for the left want to
break them up on principle, and then people on the
right now are gonna be pissed because they're yeah truck. Yeah,
So we should also talk about that the hot new
social media tool that is just a single web page
where Donald Trump writes stuff a k. A blog. Yeah,
(29:47):
he he has spent to the blog. I think it's
bull dot shit, bull dot ship here dot out of
hair slash gun. But yeah, it's it's all just And
what's wild though, too, is it's actually worse for him
because at least the tweets were succinct. Quote, you know,
(30:08):
like you can only do you play ramble so much
in a tweet. Now this one got paragraphs and like
you get exhausted, like he's this one on May five
am warmonger Liz Cheney, who is ritually knows that it's
just like, oh my god, I can't like war monger man,
(30:28):
like whatever that's already just does my head in and
it goes on and on. He's like taking shots at
all these other people and yeah, it's just it all
continues with these just one off blog posts that are
just not good. So you think he'll run again. You
think he's gonna run again if he clears all that,
if he clears all that legal ship. Probably, I mean
it's possible. But part of me feels like he knows
(30:49):
how much he It probably stressed him. I don't know
if it's stressed him out or didn't. It's so hard
to know what he knows or thinks. But I know
he didn't like doing the actual work of the president.
I think he definitely wants the status again at man. Yeah,
he loves that energy. Yeah, exactly. He can't. He's I can't.
He's like join, He's like, I can't walk away from
(31:10):
the game. He's absolutely. Yeah, he's like every athlete, you know,
the like it's not in the best interest of his
of anything for him to run again. But I would
be shocked if he's able to stop him. So even
if people don't, like if there's no if people are
like he really is going to get killed by DeSantis
(31:32):
or whatever, like, he would have a hard time stopping himself.
I think because he's a he's an arcisist who has
that one experience where he was right and the world
was wrong. And I don't think he's ever getting past
that hit that high. You know, he's gonna be chasing
that high for the rest of his life. He's like,
what the you mean I left? I started off with
(31:53):
the four or five on me like Michael, and he
got a big crewe. He's still got a whole. But
I mean, I think there is I think people underrate
how specifically perfect he is for Twitter, like how he
and Twitter were made for each other, because like I
(32:16):
remember when like during the rise of Trump during the
sixteen election, Cody Johnston pointed out to me that like
he had a YouTube page where he was doing basically
his ship his Twitter thing where he's like, you know,
just being like Kristen Stewart needs to dump Robert Pattinson.
(32:37):
Actually it was vice versa, but it was that mixed
with like him doing birth or ship and like racist
ship and like all the dog Whistle ship, all the
stuff that would make him really popular on Twitter. Those
videos had like three views, like they were just like
very like nobody gave a shit about them at all,
and like they were a minute long. But it's just
like that's not what people go to YouTube for and
(32:59):
so uh, because he can't sustain an entire idea for
more than a certain amount of characters anyway, so it
gives it also helps, you know, helps him to like
punctuate his ideas because he's limited by what he can
say in one tweet. Yeah, but anyway, peace out. I
hope to never see you on this cursed internet. Yeah yeah, yeah, man,
(33:22):
I hope be fine. Something in his life, man, you know,
like actually would be amazing, you know, just do something manous.
I don't though, or like the Ark of the Covenant
that he thinks he can open up and look straight
into Oh man, he kind of looks like he's melting.
(33:42):
He looks like maybe like he gotta look at that
for like a split second and like started the melting
process and then I shut the lid up real quick
or like a homie showed him a picture on their
phone of when it opened up and they got like
the second hand park of the governant melter off of it.
That would explain a lot of Yeah, exactly, it was
(34:02):
not quite melting it, but it's like your face looked
heavy though, Oh oh no, look look at my man.
You could tell he looked into Look at his face.
What what are you talking about? Like the fucking fucking
arc of the bootleg. That's hilarious. That would explain a
(34:27):
lot if the Conservatives all just like had the ark
of the Covenant and like couldn't resist looking at it,
like every once in a while they're like, gosh, Mitch
McConnell looks like that. Yeah, when miss McConnell's face like
turned purple and ship that was because he yeah, come
on his wife like like what are you doing? It
(34:57):
feels so good? Oh there, Uh, let's talk about what
Fox is doing in there. They're they're enlisting child soldiers
in their culture wars. Now, yeah, this is the thing
Fox and Fox and Friends likes to do. We're from
(35:18):
time to time they'll have like kids come on and
like a panel of children just to sort of do
like a thing to underline it take like even the
kids see how bad this is, Like even the kids
see how great Trump is. Type shit. So this time
because they're so bored and they can't talk about real
ship anymore because if they talk about Biden, it makes
(35:38):
it makes the viewers like him, so they can't talk
about him in any way to report it, So it
has to be all like a dunk slam dunk contest
on Joe Biden constantly on Fox that a report or something. Yeah,
they well they show like when there's any massive reforms,
like when the stimulus and stuff was getting past, or
like anything else that was like a sweeping bill, they
(35:59):
would not report on it because a lot of them
had bipartisan support, like from the people, not necessarily from
the politicians but from citizens were like yeah, I like
the relief bill, and so they didn't say shit about it.
I think that was the Doctor Sue sweek. It's always
like whenever one of those cancel culture things pops up,
it's usually just a distraction from some news which is
(36:20):
either really bad for the GOP, like talking about Matt
Gates or having to report something good about Biden. So
Brian Kill Meade has these four kids on for them
to just like have this like panel of children to
take a ship on Joe Biden like in his like
handling of them going back to school. So the first
clip is just you know, Joe Biden and Dr Jill
(36:43):
Biden just out of fucking school talking to kids who
are back in class, just to get like a temperature check.
How did you like remote learning? Yeah, yeah, it's good
luck with that. The President getting an earful from students
in Virginia this week, was he prepared for that? Kids
across the country are stuck learning on zoom and begging
(37:05):
to get back in the classroom, including our next three
guests joining us, now sixth grader in Philadelphia, Mason aggressive
intro for something about yeah, good luck with that. Kids
are fucking pissed, bro. One kid said I didn't like it.
When kids said I liked it, oh wow, good luck.
(37:27):
They got the pitchforks out for this motherfucker. Wow, good luck?
What the what are you saying? I can't believe that
that was actually how it was presented. They got I
didn't like it, Yeah I did like it, okay, and
then wow, pissed America is pissed then, But the way
(37:48):
he talks to these kids like they're the leading experts
on child development is hilarious. So this is way he
talks to a little girl who was so brave because
she memorized all the things her maga parents are making
her say on live television. Mind you, this Fox, This
this ye was airing at six forty Eastern, so this
child had to wake up at three thirty in the
morning in California to talk all this nonsense on a
(38:11):
school day. But anyway, let's allow kill me to just
let me get let me get the tone from this
ten year old. An expert in this really got up
at three forty for us. I appreciate it in California,
but guess what your numbers are the lowest in the country.
You should be back in school right now. The danger
is infinitesimal. What's the reality for you? Way to use? Uh,
(38:35):
nice small words that kids can understand very clearly used
to talking to children. What are you talking about? What
do you want her to say back to that? Yeah?
I don't know, man, Joe Biden is he's he's fucking
up huh so pumped up, animated. It's like the energy
is really something else, like to scream at these kids
(38:57):
to get them to be like Joe Biden sucks right,
and you know what your numbers are? The lowest is
like such a weird like whoa what? Like you know
what numbers like three, four or five? I know those numbers.
I'm a child, dumb mathematics numbers. Yeah, so this is
(39:19):
this is him talking to this young girl and then
like he again, he's talking to these kids like they're
fucking assholes. Do you think we really need to get
back into the classrooms because it will be far more
beneficial than online is right now, Literally, it's unbelievable. I've
never heard of this. You have to go, you get
your assignment, you do it at home. That's ridiculous. School.
(39:41):
You can't even get a teacher to zoom call with you. Yeah,
that is nuts. And you're not learning anything you just
told me right, No, I probably haven't been learning anything
since March thirteenth, which is the last day school that
we have. Well, I don't blame yourself, blame your politicians
and your unions. Your unions what the child union? Who
(40:07):
are unions? Wait? Come about again? Because he's kid? Oh yeah,
don't get me started, Brian, I know about organized labor
is gonna sunk up the American dream. You don't have
to tell me, Brian. Now, Tommy, if I understand, you
think school sucks? Is that correct? Actually? So he does
go to Mason, the sixth grader, and this is where Mason,
uh he fucked up okay because he made the grave
(40:30):
error of saluting Joe Biden to Brian kill Me In
this next clip when Brian kill Me thinks it's a
toss up, He's like, Mason, what do you what do
you miss? What do you miss him? School? What are
you missing out on? Tell us about that? Um? I
miss most obviously seeing my friends and all the after
school of two d's that I've done. And I think
that we're very very close getting back from school. And
(40:52):
I think that, um, the way that our new president
is handling things is a very good way. And we
would not have gone to this if it were still
the last president. That's hard to believe because the last
president was saying I want every kid back in school.
Uh So, Lily, for you, it's throwing it back to Lily. Mason.
(41:15):
Shut the funk up. More on that later, Lily. He's
treating this young kid like he's some drunk asshole that
wandered into a kid's soccer game. Okay, really, come on,
I sill you go. Actually, what the funk was that? Sorry,
but really that's hard to believe. Mason literally bring it
back home, Blue Lives Matter, right, kid. It sounds like
(41:37):
he actually has a head on his show, and he
was like confused when Brian was like really, he was
like yeah, yeah, Like because this new administration believes in science.
Last president almost died of COVID. We're in school, and
school teaches like science and ship and thank Copernicus and
(41:58):
the Unions for that. You can thank Mason for you guys,
have any grandparents that died? Yeah, comes to the skull.
Fuck your dad's four one fifty and turned into a
little electric scooter. Okay, poor kid, poor kids. Like it's
so stupid, this so fucked up. But again, this is
(42:21):
it's really it's just idiocracy type ship just in real
Like you're like, holy dude, he's screaming at him. Believe
they brought kids on and he's screaming at the kids
and they brought up But also like, what exactly was
the point of this, right, because even if Mason didn't
get out of pocket like some fucking free thinking asshole
like that. They were just gonna tell They were just
(42:42):
going to tell the Fox audience things they already believe.
So how's that gonna move the needle? Like or it's
just more to be like, let's just keep them more
entrenched and use this cacophony of child voices. Nobody vetted
the kids. How did they know? The producer got fired quick?
He was like, what the fuck is Mason? Do Fran
(43:02):
getting here? I mean, miss my friends? Yeah, it sounds
like it sounds about right, miss my after school? You know,
at least this new president is on some science ship.
Oh yeah, really yeah, well because the other president wanted
to open up schools when everybody was dying. So shut up, Mason,
you look like a torp. Okay, yeah, look like you
(43:25):
even developed, look like a fucking bird full get on
my face, on my face, mazing, really back to you, Lily,
isn't Mason like this? Don't we think Mason sounds like Mason? Right?
(43:47):
That's really mean, don't Brian. It sounds like you're kind
of bullying him. My teacher said, that's bullying. Oh shut
up Lily, you fucking lose. All right, let's let's just
go to commercially. These kids are sucking dumb yo. Is
that has that like gotten a lot of play that
is wild that segment. I mean, people like first rate
shows and podcasts like I don't know, possibly just happened today,
(44:10):
So I think, you know, hopefully, uh maybe some writers
on last week tonight are listening, and you know, you
know that is beautiful. I mean, it's it's truly like,
I mean, it's kind of it makes sense, but they
are like the conventional wisdom is that like when the
(44:32):
other administration is in office, they'll be able to Fox
News gets to eat, you know, that's when they're really
like served up all all the red meat that they
can like outrage their base with. But their policies like
went so far with Trump that like they and they're
just not popular, like they can't do it. And the
(44:54):
that myth like the bootstraps like we're so number one.
Everyone's life it is perfect myth has eroded so like
to a much further degree where it's hard to bullshit
people about their lived experiences day to day anymore, Like
where people are more in denial it about it because
on one hand, they could be like, look at Joe Biden,
(45:14):
just given all these lazy people like all this money away,
which they do to some extent. But if they reported,
like on the stimulus, like too many people like no,
I actually need that money, so they're like, fuck what
we do? So I guess we just have kids say
dumb shit. Yeah. Look they painted themselves in a corner
eat ship idiots. Yeah, And I mean a version of
(45:36):
that happens on you know, like on MSNBC two where
it's like they can't fully you know, for how like
progressive they seemed when Trump was it's like where it's
not the same intensity now that Joe Biden's in office.
So it's just a little bit like, oh this is great. Look,
you know, everybody has their the people that they have
to protect in the yea, the if it just feels
(45:58):
like the thing that used to be doing with Fox News,
which is like criticizing the substance of like the bullshit
that they're reporting, that has now shifted to like okay,
that's more like what the mainstream media is doing. And
Fox News is just this like strange, like disconnected parody
of itself that like it it's not even like they're
(46:20):
not They don't even like make a claim to any
sort of accuracy. It's just wild. Alright, let's take a
quick break and we'll be right back. And we're back,
(46:42):
and let's talk about some lighter stuff, such as, did
you guys see the picture of the bidens with the
carters looking like actual human giants next to the carters?
(47:02):
It was my favorite. It's my favorite photo right now,
like the Carter. I don't know whether to be terrified
of the bidens or like really, you know, worried about
the fact that the Carters are deflating. Yeah, the jokes
were pretty funny that we're coming out, but I mean,
clearly a lot of lens distortion. But it's nice to
(47:24):
see because I remember looking at him like, hold on,
So they got custom built tiny chairs because I'm like,
how Joe is stacking up? He can't fit in that chair?
I think these is this a tiny room they had made?
But you're like, m it's a white angle. Yeah it's yeah.
So I did like a bunch of research on not
a bunch, like twenty minutes of research on just how
(47:47):
how this happens, and finding like pictures that were taken
with a wide angle versus a you know, regular angle,
and like the person looks completely different, Like they look
like a different person, right right, Yeah, sort of destoryan yeah,
your features and ship. Yeah, like if if you're up
close to something with a wide angle, like you'll look
(48:10):
like a completely different person than you normally look like.
It's yeah, pretty well. They were so little though, I
mean it makes me mad that they aren't that little.
I know, like I like to think like you just
you just shrink into a little fun person as you
do shrink a little bit. Yeah, you definitely shrink for sure.
(48:31):
But like this looked like, you know, Tolkien type ship. Yeah,
I kind of want to see the Carters with jay Z.
The other card is jay Z and Beyonce and kids.
I want to see the Carters and the Carters, all
the Carters. I want to see all of them with
different families, you know, switch it up. So Jay and
Beyonce are the tiny ones and June and Jimmy are
(48:55):
like just towering over them. Like right, Jimmy Carter. I
love Jimmy Carter on that dude. So it's peanut fun
to become president. Yeah, look at him and he put
up solar panels on the fucking White House. He did,
and he's had Yeah, and then Reagan took him right down,
you know. Good old Ron was like, it's gonna mess
(49:17):
up my satellite for my TV show. It's like, how
I am gonna get the latest track crack statistics to
shoot on my roof cracks the crack ticker in the
oval off the scenes. It's wild that, like they get
credit as being like more down to earth than Jimmy Carter,
(49:40):
because Jimmy Carter let people like smoke weed on the
roof of the White House. But Nancy Reagan was consulting
a uh like psychic basically an astrology for her shoot
her food a hundred times before she's swallowed it or something, Yeah,
it's time to eat, Like well, her mom would choot
(50:01):
a hundred times before dropping it into a little bird. Yeah.
Of Nancy Reagan with Mr T. I think Nancy Reagan
sitting on Mr T's laugh, Yeah, captures a moment in time.
Any celebrity who came to that White House. Every photo
(50:22):
looks surreal, Yeah, even like that Patrick Ewing one. Yeah,
you know, yeah, and John Thompson eighties were a wild
bad but very fun to look at. Era. Let's talk
about m d m A. M hmmm. So we've talked
in the past about how therapists who treat PTSD or
(50:43):
like very encouraged by early trials of m d m
A when paired with you know, actual therapy. So they
finally got this sort of major groundbreaking study double blind,
you know, had a significant number of people, and they
found that two months after treatment, sixty seven of participants
(51:07):
in uh, the m d m A group no longer
qualified for a diagnosis of PTSD compared with thirty in
the placebo group. So the placebo group got place ebo's
but then they also did the therapy. So uh, this
guy gold Dolan, who's a neuroscientist that Johns Hopkins who
has has like no involvement, is just like, from an
(51:30):
outside perspective, this is about as exciting as clinical trials get.
There's nothing like this in clinical trial results for neuropsychiatric disease.
So yeah, it's just super encouraging. I also, I feel
like this is something that should be a movement over
the course of like this entire next like generation of
(51:54):
humans that like, there there's a reason people were risking
their lives and uh, you know, their freedom to self
medicate with these drugs. It's like they there's, uh, there's
something useful and if you use them in a very
controlled environment, like it's it's going to be powerful. Like
(52:16):
if you just take seriously the experience of drug users
who say, actually, like psychedelics gave me a really positive
shift in like my mental spiritual life like that. Like
if you think about, like if any of the other
you know, if like Paxel or like one of the
(52:37):
prozac was taken off the market tomorrow, there wouldn't be
like a booming Paxel or Prozac market where like people
are smuggling those drugs because they're just not like I
I think that combining the market uh instincts of just
like people and like the black market with what we're
(52:58):
able to find uh through like clinical trials, I feel
like could be could be a big deal, could be
really ul to science. I think that the thing that
makes it really psychedelics advantageous and sort of therapeutic context
is that, like you know, like when you're you're partying
(53:19):
on them, what you feel is this like openness. You know.
That's why people enjoy that because it it allows you
to sort of experience your yourself in a way that
is completely uninhibited, like you might normally be if you're
not taking psychedelics. But and a very small level, it's
that openness that helps, along with the therapy to really
(53:39):
examine ship to get through it. Because we have so
many walls up and trauma causes all these fund up
ways we try and protect ourselves that it's more like,
let's melt those walls down so we can fucking get
like really to some healing um. And yeah, it's true.
I think the next few years are really pivotal because
it's almost like we need to start Also, we need
(54:00):
to have more of a I mean, there's clearly a
movement to move away from just like drugs that are
just gonna mask things and actually trying to figure out
how we can improve things for someone rather than to
just make things bearable. And I think this is a
really important step. And for years a lot of people
have been pointing to this year. They felt like could
be the year where we're gonna finally start getting some
like legal m d m A to start using in
(54:21):
these therapeutic settings. Yeah, and I mean all you read
and here are just like really interesting stories of how
much it's helped people, and you know who, who'd have
thought that it would work better than the ones that
are just meant to sort of numb you. Yeah, they
this one person's experience. I always find like descriptions of
(54:42):
psychedelic experiences kind of mind blowing because they reveal the
power of the mind. Like this person describes their experience
in the therapeutic setting, and it's basically like this drug
gives him access too a part of his mind that
just creates this like beautiful surrealist work of art that
(55:07):
his brain was just producing in the background in order
to allow him to heal himself. Like, so it's talking
about this guy Ostrom who was in a rock. His
days were punctuated by panic attacks. He had nightmares, like
really vivid nightmares about like being stuck in a town,
like cut off from his troop and like being followed
(55:28):
around by insurgents. The bullets like instead of firing out
of his gun, with like dribble out of his gun um.
And so he like dropped out of college, pushed friends
and family, way, got into an unhealthy relationship, was charged
with assault and attempted suicide. So then he does this
therapy and they describe his sessions. He now says he's
(55:52):
literally a different person. During his first of three sessions
in early twenty nineteen, lying on a couch with I
shades and in a loop sid dream like state, mr
Ostrom encountered a spinning, oily black ball like an onion.
The ball had many layers, each want of memory at
the center. Mr Ostrom relived the moment in a rock.
(56:13):
He said that I became the person I needed to
be to survive that combat deployment. Over the next two sessions,
mr Ostrom engaged with quote the Bully as he calls
his PTSD alter ego, and asked permission for Scott to return.
That was who he was before the war. Uh. Now
he worked steadily as an HVAC specialist, owns a home
(56:36):
which he shares with his girlfriend, has a service dog. UM,
and he says, the reason I like calling this medicine
is it's stimulated my own consciousness. Is conscious consciousness is
ability for self healing. Uh, you understand why it's okay
to experience unconditional love for yourself like that? Uh? For
(56:56):
that passage really gets it. Like what I find so
honest thing is like the thing that the thing that
gets in the way of our you know, psychiatric uh
progresses like that the mind is this massive, powerful, constantly
shifting uh just more complicated than we could even possibly
(57:20):
like conceive of thing that we mostly don't have access to,
like with our conscious mind. And like the fact that
this just gives you access to this thing that's so
much more powerful than uh, you can you can imagine
as opposed to like you were saying, miles as supposed
to like numbing one part of that thing or you know,
(57:40):
separating us from the effects of that thing. Like I
feel like that is kind of again it could be
like a c change in yeah, because I think it's
like almost undoing all of this ship that we have
societally that creates that puts us in the condition we're
in currently, and it and depending and if the environments
you grow up in your experiences or traumatic and things
(58:02):
like that, that on top of all of this can
create a situation where it becomes can become nearly impossible
to have a level of self examination or awareness because
you've had to build up so many layers to survive
and just prolong your experience even no matter how tormented
it is, that you sort of need this. Like again,
this idea that experiencing unconditional love for yourself I think
(58:25):
sounds foreign to most people, well at least in America.
Like a lot of people maybe on a you know,
pinterest way, no loving yourself, but in a very truly
holistic idea of like what that means to engage in,
you know, practicing unconditional love for yourself, to treat yourself
with kindness, to be aware that there is a relationship
(58:46):
between you and yourself that you have to enrich. I think, yeah,
some of those things that you can like feel vibrationally
in those moments. Yeah, just reading the and you know,
silocybin has been you for people who are about to die,
Like they get to have these clinical experiences where they
(59:09):
encounter that, and I don't know, it just makes me wonder,
like why we wait to give people a fear of
death curing like circumspection pill until they're about to die.
Like what if our teachers and police and leaders and
you know, all had the opportunity to view the world
with that wider lens, maybe we wouldn't have as many
(59:32):
soldiers coming home from wars with PTSD in the first place, right, Yeah,
to consider what it means to be human. Yeah. Well
and then but like then you have people like Elon
mostly Yeah, I'm Mike rudeous all the time, exactly right,
That why became Snake from the Simpsons. But like there's
(59:53):
a but I think there is like to pair it
with like the the desire to improve yourself and having
someone there to help you with that professionally. I think
it's like, man, yeah, again, I hope this will become
the norm because we so much of our medicine and
(01:00:14):
things like that is just to get people to like
zero or like neutral, never to go past that, or
you know, just to make things bearable, like rather than
how can we actually help everyone move pushed past certain
things and actually enrich themselves from the tech industry. Yeah, yeah,
(01:00:36):
it's funny that the tech industry is using this tool
for like greater human understanding and like circumspection to like
it makes me better at capitalism, dude, Just like that
makes me I'm like so much like just on it,
you know, in the post ready to go thinking outside
the box on how to exploit all this intellectual property?
You know what I mean? Man, so I came up
(01:01:01):
with n F T S. Yeah, that's totally that's totally
just I got something. I got some, I got something.
Get it away from the disrupt the entire fucking world.
No nobody asked for that. I mean, he's gonna disrupt
(01:01:21):
the funk out of inequality Player one and all. That
ship is totally just psychedelics, just on a whole another level. Hold,
so I could just beat this dude when I put
these grasses on, and I could just feed out into
my old world and I could fly four hours. Like
that's called me and Me on the Occupus right now.
(01:01:43):
Oculus is pretty cool. I just used it for the
first time a couple of weeks ago. Those are oh yeah, yeah,
that's pretty well. Yeah, watching a movie in there. I
haven't watched the movie yet. I just like, I just
I've seen a little bit of video kinds of like, oh,
this would fucking ruin me. I haven't done like certain things.
I'd be like you with like some good headphones on
good thing I don't have one. Yeah, yeah, Greg, as
(01:02:05):
always such a pleasure having you on daily's. Like, guys,
where can people thank you so much? Find you and
follow you? I believe you are on a podcast. We
were recently talking. Yeah, yeah, my homie Brent Weinbach. We're
doing a gangster party line podcast. Uh, Brent. Brent created
this video like ten years ago, maybe it was about Yeah,
(01:02:27):
I think it's about ten years ago, where like he
did like a weird infomercial about people calling a hot
line to get talked ship by gangsters and uh, and
the video and you know, Brent's like the homie from
way back, and the video is weird as fun and uh,
you have a real hot line and people call the
number so and people been calling the number forever. So
(01:02:48):
Brent decided to do a podcast of the people that call.
And so it's me him, Adam Sherry, and we have
comedic guests and people just calling. We just talked ship
to people and it's great. You know, it's it's really
fun because in the world of everybody's kind of not
scared to say, you know, everybody's casts, nobody wants to
hurt people's feelings, nobody wants to get canceled. But in
(01:03:10):
this realm of the gangster party line, people just say
whatever the funk we want to say, and it's kind
of fun. And I like you with. Somebody calls and
they're just like, oh man, your mama eating nothing barbroccoli
and they just they just called the immediately start talking
ship and then we talked to each other and then
we're like, all right, cool, got that off my chest,
thanks man. Alright. See it's funny as something that calls
(01:03:33):
and like they're like, oh really okay, well your mom
and they're like all right, thanks guys, yeah cool cool, cool, thanks,
And then it's like it's great. It's like, yeah, yeah,
it's real fun. That's some good ship talks. So yeah,
Gangster party Line podcast. You can check me out on
Twitter as well, Greg the Grouch and on Instagram at
(01:03:54):
Greg Comedy. Al Right, is there a tweet or some
of the work of social media you've been in. I've
been you know what's my mentioned this uh website? This
is not this Instagram account where people in New York
leave furniture on the side of the street and people
take pictures of it and you can see free furniture.
(01:04:17):
I forget the name of the site. I just saw
it the other day, the name of the Instagram account,
but it's pretty fascinating and I love it. I just
love New York and every time I go there, it's
just a fun city that I never got the chance
to live in, like I wanted to stooping and stooping NYC. Yeah,
and it's great and people find like dope furniture all
around the city and like really good for you know,
(01:04:39):
New York. People like, man, I just wanted to live
here for a month and I got to put all
my furniture out I'm not paying for so they put
it all on the street and other people grabbed it
and sell it. Yeah. I just I just found that
Instagram account. It's great. Yeah. York just feels like one
of those places where inexplicably people like, do you want
all this stuff? You're like what They're like, you know,
(01:04:59):
I have to you just bought this teams like yeah,
it's got a job in Chicago and I'm not taking
any of it and they're they're paying for me to
just leave right now. So do you want everything? I
guess yeah, that's my mom can take the tv? Uh, Miles,
where can people find you? With? Tweet? You've been enjoying Twitter, Instagram,
Miles of Gray and also the other podcast fiance Hit
(01:05:22):
That Up on twitch dot tv. Slash four to zero
day fiance. Uh. Some tweets I like, first one is
from at French Eeks tweeted five years ago, I quit
my job at Applebe's to do comedy today. I just
started working at the same exact Applebee's. Didn't really work
out for me. Uh ship. And then this one is
(01:05:47):
from an Arco HOODI is um um. This is just
quote tweeting a Tommy Larran tweet where she tweeted this
is from like over the summer, said Hey, cops, next
time you're in danger, call a thug. Let me know
how that works for you. He said, She don't know.
That's my go to move all ways. Yeah, Dallas seven
(01:06:07):
digits and you have Glon's come through not fucking police.
Oh that's amazing. Shout out to that person that didn't
burn that bridge at Applebee's though, Man, that's how you
do life, you know, don't burn bridges. Yeah, yeah, you
answer that one tweet I caught out like a few
months ago. This is some dude said when he was
(01:06:28):
working in San Francisco. He called like his friend who
was an aspiring writer who worked at like an apple
Bee's and called him up and said, like, hey, I'm
calling from Hollywood, California. I love your script and I
want to offer your job working at the Apple Bee's
in California. This whole sweet him over the phone. I
got this dune so excited and it's like, Yo, so
(01:06:50):
fucked up tweet. I've been enjoying Greg at Greg sixteen
sixty seven six nine three five four two. Oh there
are that many Gregs on Twitter. I guess just tweeted
got him and then tweeted conversation. So jose Canseco the
slugger tweeted looking for a crypto token developer. Uh, and
(01:07:14):
this dude on tweeted, Hey, it's Greg dm me Jose
I can help, and then jose Can say O DM
dem and said, hey, are you a token dev uh?
And he replied no way, Jose. Uh. You can find
(01:07:35):
me on Twitter at Jack Underscore. O'Brien, you can find
us on Twitter at daily site guys. We're at the
Daily Zeitgeist on Instagram, we have Facebook fan page and
a website Daily ZiT guys dot com, where we post
our episodes and our foot notes. We link off to
the information that we talked about in today's episode, as
well as a song that we think you should go
check out miles. What are we recommending? Okay, look, it's
(01:08:00):
almost the weekend, so you need to get your body
limber for the weekend so you can lay in the
sun or the cold or whatever part of earth you're at.
But this is from French synth pop group Magazine sixty
with the four hit don Keyxote. Okay, and if you
don't funk with this energy, I don't know what to say,
you might be dead. But it's got It's like so corny,
(01:08:21):
but it's a fucking jam too. And if you remember,
for people who have a ear for samples, Will i
Am sampled this in his track Got It from My Mama.
If you also remember that you guys are super walks
in from fifteen years ago, so check this track out
by a Magazine sixty. How are we spelling don quixote? Oh,
it's actually spelled so if G O N SPACE q
(01:08:46):
U I C h O T t E. But check
the Food News for that. Go check that out the
Daily Ze guys, the production by Heart Radio. For more
podcasts for my Heart Radio, visit the radio app, Apple
podcast or wherever you listen to your favorite knows that
is gonna do it for this morning. We are back
this afternoon to tell you what's trending, and we will
(01:09:06):
talk to y'all that Bye bye, m