Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season one, episode three
of Their Dai Guys, the production of My Heart Radio.
This is a podcast where we take a deep dive
into America's share consciousness and say, officially, off the top,
fuck the Koch Brothers, Fuck Fox News, Limbu, Ben Shapiro,
Tucker Carl fuck fond Do not put fondent on my
(00:26):
wedding cake. I want regular, but we will not be married. Yes,
right now we say fond here Aristotle. Uh, it's pronounced.
It's pronounced though. I'm just for people who might be
listening and and no like cakes. Yeah, they might. You
might give a lot of hate mail. Whatever it is.
(00:48):
I don't want icing stuck in my teeth. Okay. Uh,
it's Wednesday, October. My name is Jack O'Brien, a k
Never gonna give it up, Never gonna take me down, Corona,
gonna get around and hurt you, gonna make oh y'all cry,
(01:12):
never gonna say goodbye. Your Grandma's gonna die and then you.
That is courtesy of Jay Music, Chicago, and I'm thrilled
to be joined as always by my co host, Mr
Miles Round. Thank you very much. In the White House,
(01:33):
I'm having a real good time I feel that I
have in this world. I'm turning upsad down and fluting
when you go fan sneeze. So don't stop me now,
(02:01):
don't because I'm having a good time, having a good
bassist season. Bout it, girls, Sancho crassly dead? What are you?
Eighty thousand years old? Hod me? Good luck with dad? Okay,
So that a K brought to you a little bit
of collaboration on this one from Christie Y'amagucci Slane and
(02:24):
inspired by at Emmy del fart uh or oh, I'm
sorry at least middle fart. Okay, I just I didn't
want to make Oh your name is middle part and
I'm turned into a whole other name. But shout out
to you all for that war. And we love a
queen ak round here. Actually hit me with a counting
crows round here, a k somebody here round here. I
(02:46):
don't know who that that queen akaid perfectly. I feel
like replicated the energy of our president, just getting ramped
up off them. Oh yeah, off the good good good.
So maybe that they give out of Waltz read well.
We are thrilled to be joined in our third seat
by the hilarious, the talented, the professor of pronunciation. Apparently
(03:13):
he is Mr ARISTOTLEA. Theoriz. Thank you, guys, thank you,
thank you so much for having me. I know you guys,
uh we're trying to get me for a few years,
and I know that and available my who I don't
know who contact was in my people or your my
(03:34):
people's people. We were we were, I mean once I
think we had wired the funds into that account. They
gave us the email address to then contact your management.
So and that was that was a year. Yeah, that
was a year and a half ago. They said, okay
about season one, fifty five, episode three, he might be
(03:54):
able to looks like he has a free morning. Yeah,
and you stick to your word. So thank you for that.
Thank you appreciate I appreciate it. And I checked the
you know, usually, like in my writer I always have
like a little random, like weird thing, right, uh, just
so that I can go and see if they pay attention.
You guys have filled it and you guys did it.
(04:16):
The red bike on the wall. Thank you. The red bike. Yea,
it's very extensive, but but I just you know, I
just throw that in there. It's kind of like if
I if I come to the show or the job
and then there's a red bike on the wall that
I know that fulfilled exactly right, and and that's if anything.
We like to respect our guests to most. So thank you,
(04:36):
thank you, thank you having me? Is everything okay? So far?
Just if we can get you and just want to
make sure that's comfortable at could I could be more uncomfortable?
Don't have that option? Well, um, certain, I mean if
if it's within reason. I mean, we just bring me
back to my days in the service industry and yeah,
(04:59):
me when I had to set up fucking dressing kind
of service. Oh gosh, waiter worst waiter of all time?
And butler which is which is just a bell hub
get in a British hotel. We could we could talk jobs. Yeah,
I guarantee you and I promise you more than I'll
(05:22):
put money on the line that I've had more jobs.
I would say probably than both of you combined. Of competition,
it's not a competition, not a competition. It is no,
no, no no, no no, it is definitely more than Jack,
possibly more than both you guys. So yeah, yeah, but no,
it's a it's okay, Well, we'll write them down later,
(05:43):
and why are why are we fu Jack? Let's just
spend the next hour rattling off our jobs. Let's go
with the first one you've had. I like had the
same job for ten years, so you've definitely had jobs. Um,
what if you deal different kinds of drugs? Does that
count as a different time? Yeah? I think. Okay, We're good.
(06:06):
All right, Aristotle, We're gonna get to know you a
little bit better in a moment. First, we're gonna tell
our listeners a few of the things we're talking about today. Uh,
we're gonna check in with our dear leader now that
he is immune. We're gonna see how all that is going.
We're going to check in with the nomination the Scotus
(06:28):
hearings for Amy Coney Barrett. We're going to check in
with voter suppression. Uh that's full effect, baby. We're gonna
check in with the youth of today. We're gonna look
at the iPhone twelve that was just announced yesterday morning
and Cops has been canceled and then uncancelled that that
(06:53):
was they were just like psych We we pretended to
do the right thing, but uh, y'all can need a
dick uh. But before we get into any of that Aristotle,
we do like to ask our guests, what is something
from your search history that's revealing about who you are.
The last thing that would be in my search history
is vintage time X watches. Vintage time X watch, like
(07:17):
searching for vintage time X watches? How how old? Like?
What's vintage? How back? How far back are we going
for vintage time X? For me, it would be, um,
I'm just trying to find this watch that I had
as a kid, and I always I think about this
watch a lot. I kind of little bit, so this
(07:37):
does speak to kind of who I am. I'm I'm
a little bit of nostalgic kind of guy. Maybe too
fault so I'm trying to not be as much. But
there's some things that I kind of never was able
to have or as a kid, or things that I
remember from as from my childhood that I wanted to
get back. So to answer that question, this would be
like something from like the mid nineties, what is this
(08:00):
something with the Indi digital digital back. I was there, baby,
I had the end of glow fucking wrist watch and
I when you started saying that, I was like, damn,
I remember my first Indo Glow and I I was
over the fucking moon when I had it because it
was so fucking bright and I was like, let's check
this ship out. I'm in a movie and I'm really
(08:20):
for everyone. The thing I remember was back then when
they were talking about INDI glow, like the myth around.
It was like this guy used it like he had
an iron Man time X watch and the like the
ninety three World Trade Center bombing, like was like it
was enough to help like guide like people out of
there through the smoke and ship It was like the
origin myth of the Indo glow and yeah, great marketing.
(08:45):
Do you remember the end glow watch chat? Or you
just you just didn't care about You didn't give it
about time when you were here. I didn't give it
ship man. I was just off in my own world.
No I didn't. I yeah, you can only in relation
to watch this. Uh yeah, I was. I'm a little
older than else, so I was like a Swatch boy
(09:06):
eighties Swatch the super yeah yeah, the and the funky designs.
And I know you're a shoe guy to Aristotle, which
I am. Again, I have a nostalgic piece of childhood
that yeah yeah, um, I uh yeah, I didn't really
have I had I had one pair of when I
(09:28):
take that, I had two pairs of Jordan's as a
kid only because I was like I could only have
like either. It was just I could have my birthday
gift whenever I wanted it, but that was it for
the year, and I would kind of like it save
up birth Yeah, so I would save up on birthday
gifts because my limit was always like I remember it
was a kid was fifty and it got and then
(09:49):
like eventually it was like ninety bucks or whatever. So
I would like hold off a year or two and
then be like I want these Jordans, and uh, you know,
I kind of went strong. I end up getting two pairs.
And then I got to like a very um uh
like a heavy metal phase as a as a kid,
and I was like, these are dumb. So would you
(10:10):
rock Dring or heavy heavy metal phase or Chucks Orc?
Now is doctor Doc Martin's which the eights for the aqua?
Oh yeah yeah yeah and then yeah, so you know
in retrosp I feel like if I had started oh
(10:32):
and then the other ones were the elevens turned your
back on man, I turned my well, I turned my
back on the Elevens, not because of the getting into
metal and punk rock. It was really because of a
friend of mine. She would make me feel like I
was like, because I held onto those elevens for a
while because they were the uh they were the first
(10:55):
time they had ever retro them and so uh so,
and when they came out, I just couldn't get them
at the time, so then you know whatever. Anyways, uh,
she just made me feel like a child for having
these Jordans, and I was like, I guess you're right.
She's so she was such an influential friend. I was like,
I guess I'll just sell them. And then I sold
him some guy on eBay and he hustled me for him,
(11:17):
and then I think I sold him for like a
hundred and twenty bucks or something. They had never been
they've barely been warned. Don't other people's yums as they
said what she was she was like a child like
because it's like consumerist or no, because it just it
was like very like a base. Yeah. She's like, you
(11:40):
look like you're middle school wearing that, And I was like,
I don't want to be in middle school. My objection,
your honor exactly. But but but but now I have
a I have a real sneaker problem. Yeah I have,
I have, I have too many, so I'm we are
thinning out the But it is funny, I mean, I guess,
(12:03):
and it is true in the sense that like, like, yes,
I am wearing the shoes I wanted as a boy,
and I am I am I am like being able
to live that out. But either way, these fucking shoes
are fired. So try and ard this outfit. There's like
I'm not into collecting the toys that I wanted, or
like the under ruse or like whatever the underwear was
(12:26):
with like he man on it, Like that's not what
I'm into. But the shoes I think are just dope.
Like I think the design is like cool. Oh yeah,
come on, guys, we don't got to defend where we're
among friends here. But also don't come for the underwear
because the underwear is pretty cool too. When especially you
can find a dead stock unopened, you know, that's a fun. Yeah,
(12:46):
you don't want to, don't don't don't don't bend it
because it'll crack. You don't want you can tell because
that cardboard that it's wrapped around. When you pull that out,
this priest is trouble and I'll call you. Could you
imagine like you're trying to sell like a like a
dead stock pair of under ruse And then the guy's
looking at it, He's like, yo, man of cards creased.
(13:07):
I don't know. I can't really, I can't. Oh and
this is a this is this is verified on stock X. Yeah,
but this is this, this is from lot forty. So
you don't. I'm have to post this on red into
a legit check, man. I'm sorry, Bro, can I get
a legit check? These are reps? Bro would be mad.
We had an article from a woman who made her
(13:30):
full time living selling her underwhere I'm Reddit, So I
mean there's a lot of people really Yeah yeah yeah,
pretty dope out here, husting finding a way. Definitely not
dead Yeah, it's the opposite. Yeah, they will send they
will send those back to you, dead stock, active culture.
(13:51):
What is something you think is underrated? Aristotle? Uh? Seven
eleven nachos. I think love that love that Sunday. This
man in here, it's not it's it's not just the
seven of the nachos. It's the seven of nachos with
(14:12):
the you know, the coke slurpee, and then like you know,
you kind of get a little weird with some of
the topping. I don't know, man, something's like really, I mean,
I'm sure it's not underrat. I'm sure a lot of
people like those are fire. But I mean, like I
gotta get I think I gotta get a big bite
or a spicy bite, hot dogs something, you know what
I mean, and put all that nacho cheese on there.
(14:33):
I get. I have to get weird annually, you know
what I mean. It's a make my annual check up
at seven eleven? Are you on the toppings? Like what
other than the cheese and the chip? Uh, A little
bit of chili, a little bit, a little bit of onion,
depending on what seven eleven. I used to go to,
(14:55):
Like when the seven eleven it was like close to
my school because I had to I went to a
I went to school outside of my district, so I
had to take like the the public transportation to get there.
So that's that's seven eleven wasn't a very you know,
it was in a more cultured neighborhood, so they had
other topics like Pico degaio or like um or like
te patio and a lot of stuff, so that seven
(15:16):
eleven had like more stuff, and then the seven eleven
close to the house was kind of more generic. It's
like mustard, yeah, fine mustard and cheese. That would work
a lot of deal. Halapangos are big. That That's when
I became here grown up. Was when I started putting
halipgs on my uh seven eleven nachos and my popcorn.
(15:40):
That's the thing. I don't think they do that back
east that but out here you can get halapangos with
your popcorn and they are it's coming from a vat
that like might as well have people's like old socks
in it, but it doesn't matter because halipangos are so
spicy they kill off all germs. Is what I had
of the is the math I did in my brain?
(16:03):
Can't make me sit? What is some parasite I got?
H What is something you think is overrated? I don't
know if this is gonna sound so bad. That sounds
so bad. I kind of think school is overrated. Man,
This is like literally could be coming for me when
(16:24):
I was twelve. All of these uh this, I am
twelve I don't know if you guys know that there's
a there's a there's a red bike on my wall. Well,
I think I just I think when I say schooling,
I like, for me, like I have a real I
have a real problem with this country having an issue
with embracing like vocational schooling, um, because they do it
(16:46):
in a lot of European countries and it's and I
think it's um. I just think this like romantic kind
of infatuation we have with like this old school style
of schooling, as if like it's you know, this is
like a true intellect, but there's a lot of these
things that people are not going to learn that they're
they're not going to really you know, it's not very
pragmatic in the real world, you know. And so like
(17:07):
I just so that that's schooling to me is just
I think I think American schooling is way overrated, way overrated.
And now I don't think anybody's like it's the best,
because it's not the best if you look at the
numbers and everything. But it's just I just I wish,
I just wish the American system would embrace vocational schooling
and not look down on it. You know what I mean. Yeah,
I think that gets like a very central issue that
(17:29):
we have in America where it's like there's especially more recently,
there's no because there's no class awareness. There's no awareness
that there's any sort of uh you know, class system
in the United States. There's no like pride around like
be having a vocational education, having a vocational job like
(17:53):
that doesn't It just feels like and they're used to be,
like in the nineties like that that. I feel like
they're used to be a little bit more pride around,
like being blue collar and ship. But now it's just
everything has like turned into this like pull yourself up
by the bootstraps aspirational bullshit, like mono culture, and I
(18:15):
think it's yeah, I think that ties directly into into
the schooling. Like it's just that's not seen as like
a way to like be the American ideal. Yeah. Well,
and then even like media, like after a while it
was like what what are you going to be a
construction worker? You got to go to college and you know,
(18:37):
more and more it's like so you can be in
the middle class that doesn't exist. There's like and so
it just like tastes like ship at many different turns,
especially now like considering the debt that it's causing and
still like the lack of opportunity to even be in
a position to like pay it off in a way
that it makes sense as humane and allows you to
also do things like start families and ship because most
(19:00):
we're just in a holding pattern because of this, because
of the debt. Uh so yeah, it's but anyway, school
fucking sucks, dude. And some schools we don't need no
education exactly, bro, And we don't need instead of vocational
schools America, Americans get funneled to for profit colleges that
(19:20):
will scam you out of money and put military service. Yeah. Yeah, yeah,
you guys are depressing me right now. You know that's
what we're here for. That's why school sucks, dude. I
did too much school man. Uh finally, what is a myth?
What's something people think it's true, you know, to be
false or vice versa. Um, well, uh, look, I'm I'm
(19:46):
all over the map here, so uh what I can
disprove is that Batman is a uh good person. That's
the myth. Batman is a good Yeah, that he's good,
That he's good, that's the myth that he's that he's
that he's a that he's the hero truly fighting for
(20:08):
uh you know, the truth and the justice and all
that stuff. Right, Yeah, he's just that that I can
I can, I get this. He's a rogue, privatized police
force that just like goes around doing what do you
say is an action that he does? Well? Point? You know,
if someone goes all right, name like when they go
he's all right, name one thing, name one thing he's done.
(20:29):
Oh that that that that that proves my point? Is
your point, bro, Because he saves fucking people, bro, and
he punches bad guys in the fucking face and ship
it's one thing he hasn't done, which is therapy. He
got a lot of That's how very big because if
he because if he did, if he went through therapy,
(20:50):
and if he was a normal person like insane and everything,
he'd be like, oh, yeah, what what am I doing? Yeah? Yeah,
I'm gonna leave it to the guy who who who
fucking flies that. I'll let that guy do that stuff.
I'm just gonna you know, maybe be just rich. I
don't know, you know. Yeah, in a world where Superman exists,
(21:11):
the existence of Batman it really makes no sense. It's
just like, yeah, I'm gonna use my money to continue
to pick up the slack for the Alien, the all
powerful Alien Justice Fighter. Yeah, make that a comic book
where like a just wealthy business person just gives all
their money away. And I was like, this is so sick.
(21:32):
Look at this. They have everything they want. They're the
tightest person on earth. Yeah, that's my power, generosity, generosity.
I mean, he's a fascinating character, don't get me. I
could talk about them all day, but he's not. He's yeah,
he's just he's a crazy person in essence, but your hero.
It is interesting that he always ends up being the
(21:54):
less interesting character in the movie in his movies, whereas
like he should be. Um, you know, they always give
like the Joker the bad guy will end being like
more interesting. I mean, Batman's kind of messed with it
a little bit, and like he's like Seinfeld, he was
the star, but yeah, they always make him the Seinfeld
of Batman movies, where he's just like the kind of
(22:15):
straight character and it's like he's like suffering from a
number of pathologies that like should like I like this
Batman guy, and I get it. I get why he's there.
It's called Batman, so obviously yes, but you know, without Batman.
But there's the other cool characters here too, So it's
(22:35):
just that I feel like there's a man such a
bad actor and laughed too much. There's like a depth
of you know, pathos to like at the center of
that character that like you can't really look at and
still have the center hold of the universe. So instead they,
(22:56):
I guess, lean into the characters who can openly embrace
the darkness, right, um, yeah, yeah, tight, let's get some
rachos all opinions on on. On top of my parents
left me a shipload of money, so it's on me.
(23:17):
Slippi's for everybody. Let's fucking go. Well, you're right back
and we're back. Thanks Alfred for buying us those cigarettes
(23:39):
of cool and you can keep one of those beers too.
I mean, I guess, I guess it would be kind
of shitty if Alfred being is like such a sweet
old man that he is, and then Bruce, if he
ended up going that way that you're mentioning. He's like, well,
I hope you a bis cigarettes. Yeah, He's like you
(24:00):
comes trump just like waste, like trust fund person. He's like, thanks,
I'm gonna be making dub step beats in here to
at least three am. So keep the red bulls coming.
All right, let's let's talk about our dear leader. He
is immune. He's claiming immunity from community. He wishes he
(24:22):
could claim legal immunity, but he is claiming COVID nineteen immunity.
He was in Florida a couple of days ago with
Rond Santis, who was not wearing a mask, no going
around touching rally goers and the president. It was especially
for somebody You're like, yeah, this guy has tested positive
(24:45):
for COVID nineteen, and no one is saying when they
last tested negative or if ever. Um. So it is
a bit of a fun, fun thing. Do you think
that it might have been all bullshit to begin with?
I mean, he's he definitely looked ill and sick, so
maybe he's he's a great actor. I mean, whatever whatever
(25:07):
is going on, he's his behavior still affects everything the
same way. But he was again, he's he's in front
of all these people, tons of fucking people with no mask, um,
and he just lets people know. He's like, I'm fucking powerful.
Y'all got those nachos. If you want to get out there,
get out one thing with me. The nice part I
(25:28):
went through it. Now they say I'm immune, I can feel.
I feel so powerful. I'll walk into that audience. Man,
it's kiss everyone in that audience. Wait, what kiss the
guys and the beautiful women and every violets. No, but
there is something nice. I don't have to be locked
(25:48):
up in my basement, and I wouldn't allow that to
happen anyway. So he's Joe Smith. Now I care less
about the country stray st Yeah, and then this is wow,
I feel so powerful. I'll I will walk in there
and kiss everyone in that audience. I mean, that's what
(26:09):
got him in trouble during the last election. Was But
he's starting to be like self deifi, you know what
I mean in a way, like but he's always like yeah,
I know. But but the thing it's starting to take
a turn out saying like into the supernatural. Ever since
he started saying like China, it was like a curse
and like people are monsters like that. It's like less
(26:29):
tied to like normal political rhetoric. And now it's like
spooky shit. And I just this idea where I was like,
he said he had a protective glow emanating from him
which kept that shielded him from the illness and contributes
to his immunity. So we're like, it sounds like magic
gatherings that type ship he's talking about. Now, well he's
(26:50):
he's talking to the you know, his his very you know,
his base kind of thinks. They sometimes they think stuff
like that, you know what I mean. It's like, you know,
it's it's it's crazy to me, Like I hate using
the word, but it's he's he's so brilliant with the
way he talks to his his people, you know, like
and and I know he doesn't believe any of this crap.
(27:12):
He's doing it, and he's doing it on purpose to
just just to win. Like his this guy's in my
opinion is my opinion. I think I think, you know,
he's he's just he's really good at exploiting the thing
that he is going to help him win, because I
just I don't he's just he's a he's a master manipulator.
(27:34):
He really really really is. And even in his interviews,
like you listen to him, I'm just listening to him
talk and I'm like the guy. The guy is not
very verbose, and he actually kind of sounds like and
if you look at what he's saying on text, it's
he sounds like more on you know what I mean. Yeah,
it's like yeah, like I'm I'm like, he doesn't sound
like an educated person at all. But you know, a
person who's watching that, he's even a Trumper who who
(27:58):
you know, like, I don't know, just that they don't
they just eat it up. They just eat it up.
And I'm just like, if you're remotely susceptible, it's very
like it can be intoxicating. And I just think that
having four years as the president has given reality too
(28:19):
much time to bleed into that so that people are now, uh,
you know, his numbers according to polls, and we'll see
if the polls are accurate, but according to polls, like
more and more people are kind of rejecting the that
version of reality that he's I mean it, and it
(28:41):
is a harder version of reality to swallow. Right, that
he got COVID nineteen but is like immune while other
people are dying, and he's claiming it's like because of
you know, he seems to be implying that it's something
(29:01):
special about him and that they have a cure that
he's going to give to everyone. Um, but it's just
so like the shape of it, not like I think
you're right that, like the the texture when you're like
up close and watching it and you know, at a
rally or just open to it and watching him speak,
that can be persuasive, but like the overall shape of it,
(29:24):
if you're viewing it from afar, is so transparently just
the snake oil ship, Like it's just like that's yeah,
we've been seeing this for two fifty years, Like yeah,
at the and along with that, because all of this
stuff is if you can get enough people to just
demand that everyone just dies due to the lack of
(29:45):
control over the like the virus, then the economy will
do better. And that's the main thing is to get
people out there so if they get if they can
buy in on this like immunity, I'm healed narrative that
can start building more confidence for people to just be
more wreck us and take risks like we're seeing like
at these rallies, and you know, the idea is that
(30:06):
like yeah, you could get it, you'll be fine. Well,
we have immunities and that's that's how we're going to
get through this. But now we're getting reports of reinfection,
like cases of reinfection in the US. It used to be,
you know, everyone was saying, well, if you get it once,
you can't get it again. At that point you'll have
built up antibodies and things like that. But now they
and the Lancet uh one day they they issued a
(30:30):
repeat report saying this twenty five year old guy in
Nevada had got COVID in April and then tested positive
again in June. And they were sort of different strains
apparently genetically different versions of COVID. But this is this
is like really, I mean, if anyone who was you know,
buying into this idea of herd immunity, like based on
(30:51):
what the Trump campaign was saying, or even what he's saying,
like I've got it and now I'll be okay. This
is not good at all, um, And you know it.
Of course, it's not going to be discussed because it's
science that makes the other you know, it's too too
inconvenient of the truth. Did I make this too serious? Guys?
(31:11):
You did not? The news the news. This is what
this is. Every day man, as my my favorite YouTube
stars say this every day. Man, Uh, it's every day whatever.
I got it right, my reference. Come on, man, they're
(31:32):
gonna kill us in the YouTube comment. Alright, let's talk
about the Supreme Court nomination of Amy Cody Barrett. You
know it's been going on for a few days now.
Dnzy Graham spoke. I saw some Ted Cruz where he
just like talked for forty five minutes about like how
(31:52):
Democrats want to destroy crosses because they hate Jesus essentially, uh,
and then just used her to adopted children from Haiti
behind her and just the most like aggressive, like proper
like standing people up a prop way And I don't know,
it was pretty whack. Uh, But the whole thing is
(32:16):
a fucking disgrace to begin with, Like plenty has already
been said, she's she's you know, skirted answering questions on
things like Roe versus Wade or even gutting the A
C a UM and healthcare and things like that. So
you know they're doing a good job. You know they're
at the attacks. There are the strategy the Democrats seem
(32:38):
to want to do, like not really go after her
more than just sort of being like this is inappropriate.
The president is using this person to like act out
this like really harsh shit because they don't want to
turn her into like a victim of like their attacks
basically are allowed their you know, Republicans to start saying that.
But like Lindsey Graham, who is presiding over this whole process,
he cannot stop talking about Jamie Harrison, who he's running against. Um,
(33:04):
Jamie Harrison has basically been shattering fundraising records like left
and right in his race against Lindsey Graham, and like
he's talking like he's alluded to it. And then earlier
he's like, I want to know where some of this
dark money's coming You should see the race I'm in. Uh,
I'd like to know where some of this some of
this money's coming from. Maybe I'll have to investigate that
because anyway, um uh, Amy Coney Barrett, where was I?
(33:28):
And so, you know, like he's been, he's been at
the center of this because obviously he was the one
when in Barack Obama's you know, in the election year,
was saying they weren't gonna allow him to see the
Supreme Court justice in election here he completely one eightied
and he started the proceedings saying quote there you know,
because everyone was like, you know, pointing to what what,
what's up with this hypocrisy? Lendsy like come, this is
(33:49):
fucking disgusting, and then he overall his description of what's
going on a quote there's nothing unconstitutional about this process.
This is a vacancy that's occurred through a tragic loss
of a great woman, and we're going to fill that
vacancy with another great woman. The bottom line here is
that the Senate is doing its duty constitutionally. Uh So
the argument being like, well, it's not a rule we're breaking. Um,
(34:10):
so y'all were dumb for, you know, allowing us to
do that the first time. So yes, So I don't know,
I don't it always feels like this perpetual battle, like
no matter where we are in this country, like it's
just this constant like and then and I'm talking about
like the most colloquial you know, like thought on on
this process because I feel like we kind of go
through this like this cycle of like, you know, it
(34:32):
just always feels like roversus way there's everything that everybody
wants to you know, it's just like this constant over
and over and over again and everything that's kind of
within that same umbrella. You know, I don't know at
what point this is. This is part of my I'm
not fully disenfranchised with with you know, trying to figure
out what's going on with the country. But you know,
it's just I'm getting there. You know. It's just kind
(34:53):
of really hard to kind of well wrap wrap my
head around like just a constant pickering, you know, and
there's a lot of money fueling the bickering and like
making it this ongoing sort of like culture war thing
to keep this base engaged and make it feel like
there's stakes and a reason to sort of check in
because like numerically they're outnumbered. So now like the real
(35:16):
the frontier that they're trying to you know, make make
headway on is just being able to completely funk up
the judiciary and and just have this you know, really
obscene minority rule. The Republic not a democracy is their
new rallying cry. Yeah that I think Mike Lee tweeted
that recently or something. Yeah, exactly. But yeah, it's just
(35:39):
you know, the I mean where we're seeing it now
with speaking of important Supreme Court decisions, the voter suppression
in Georgia is completely out of control, like they're Yeah,
there's a lot of people. I think I knew this,
but just seeing people from other countries these like Canada
(36:01):
and the UK and Australia tweeting recently like that they
have never they've voted in every election that's come up
in their adult life. They've never had to register to vote,
and they've never had to wait in the line for
more than five minutes to vote. Uh. Those are both
those Both of those things are voters suppression, just like
(36:24):
enacted to make it more difficult for people to vote. Yeah,
I mean the Shelby versus Holder Supreme Court decision that
basically eviscerated the voting rights actors just sort of like
telling people like, hey, dude, you can do racist ship
as long as like you're not putting like full on
racial slurs in like your legal briefs. Uh, and if
you dog whistle enough, we'll look past it and you
(36:47):
can get away with all kinds of ship, um, like
taking away polling places in majority black districts and things
like that. In Georgia, early in and in person voting
has begun and there are lines in some places and
not lines in other places and ull let you guess
(37:07):
what those places are. Uh. You know, this first photo
we're looking at is in majority white Buckhead, where the
wait time is apparently only fifteen minutes. This was taken
on Monday. Uh. And then in black you know, majority
black South Cobb, they're looking at lines of ten plus
hours in like a fucking parking lot that is snaking
(37:30):
like you thought the like a fucking new you know,
attraction to open up at six Flags or some ship.
It's really it's so fucked up to see, like it's
just looks like violence to look at the difference in
the access to be able to vote, just something that's simple.
And this is and again another visual representation of the
Republican Party saying we will burn this whole fucking thing down.
(37:54):
We don't give a fuck before, like we let go
of this ill gotten power that we've manufactured and you know, uh,
formulated through all of these this all this terribly cynical
legislation and jerrymandering and ship and it's it's it's weird.
I mean when you look at their interviewing, a lot
of the people in these lines who are waiting for
you know, many hours and sadly or luck I don't know,
(38:15):
however you want to look at it. Many of them
are like, I don't give a funk how long it takes,
Like I know what the funk they're trying to do,
and I'm not gonna let them fucking win, so I
will fucking vote. But that's should not be the fucking case.
And it's just heartbreaking that that's, you know, so many
the stakes are so fucking high, yet they're so cynically
being like, all right, well, let's see how you do
(38:36):
with one fucking ballot drop off location because in Texas
that apparently, uh the higher court there is allowing that
decree a stand um. So you know, if you want
to drop your ballot off in a gigantic county, there's
only one place to go, even if you drive a
thousand miles. I mean not to be negative, but I
just don't think I think it's gonna work, you know,
(38:56):
like just the hurdles and and and the constant like
they're just gonna get disenfranchised really fast and then not
want to go. I I think they're going to be
successful and and and and with their voter suppression, and
it's worked in the past that's why they keep doing it.
And so it's and it's just it's really kind of
like it's it's really it makes it does make me
(39:20):
feel like they just can't win, you know. So, I
mean that's actually a question I have, Miles, you know
politics better than I do. Like, if like you know,
god willing, the Democrats take over the White House, the Senate,
(39:41):
the House, like, how impossible is it for them to
make it so that like all this ship goes away.
I mean, if they if their will powers, they're very quickly,
you know, because you saw what for when Trump even
had everything was about to go off until the Senate
(40:02):
where they just couldn't get their votes together to send
ship straight to the President's desk. I mean, if that
pipeline is there and everyone that has the political will
to do it, it can happen. That's why I think
so many people are invested in the idea of just
a blue fucking way of crushing the hill and being
able to say, like, Okay, now they can do we
(40:22):
can get a ton of you know, protections for voters
and things like that passed and signed into law very quickly. Um,
but you know who knows and then it's gonna be
another battle because I'm sure just like everything will get
democratic administration in there, and we know what the fucking
solutions are. But it ends up being like a sixty
(40:43):
percent or even it maybe thirty percent of the way
solution to the thing we know how to solve. Because
they're still vulnerable senators or congress people. They have to
think about two that are gonna affect it rather than
people are gonna be like I don't give a fuck,
make it happen the right way, Like I'll put my
fucking body on the line, just funk, I'll be I'm
there for the votes, like let's get this ship done.
But people don't. Not enough people think like that. Um so,
(41:05):
because it's because it's it's too much of a career.
You know, absolutely, they make too much money they make
you know, there's there's just too much. I mean, they
make obscene amounts of money. You know. It's like you
shouldn't go into politics because of you know, because it's
a viable career that you can you know, earn a
good living. It's like it's it's literally just something you
should do as a service that you feel like, I know,
(41:26):
that's a great ideal pathological narcissism, Right, I think we
can all agree on that. Yeah, it's that. And just
I think as more younger people get into office, it's
going to help. You know, like you're seeing how people
are just looking at ship differently, like where our generation
has just been like what the funk is kind of career?
(41:47):
Is this to be like some old fucking ghoule senator,
like when people are and yeah, they're going to be
plenty of people who are also in it for that reason.
But you can even tell, like in the like rhetorically
like how this older generation and like just can't match
wits with us. Because even when Pete Buddha Judge goes
on Fox News, like he's just even like being you know, intelligent,
(42:08):
They're like, oh fuck, like he's got us off center here.
We don't know how to respond player Pete, Yeah exactly. Um.
And even like with like AOC and like many other
the like younger politicians, like they have a way of
communicating ideas that I think will energize people and like
in a way also make them less vulnerable because saying
like I'm voting for this because you saw me break
(42:30):
down this banking executive right, you saw how I did
that and how they don't know. That's why I'm voting
for this thing and you can hopefully understand that. Do
you ever do you ever wonder like, do you do
you ever look at AOC and just and just are
just kind of scared and thinking, God, are you always
going to be this good? Right? Are you always going
to be like this this pure? You know? Well, you know,
(42:52):
to me, that's like the biggest tragedies to watch a
kind of change. You know, Ever since I had, you know, Urkel,
since Erkele broke my heart, had to learn to not
have heroes. Um, so you know, I just treat them
as imperfect humans who are doing right. In the moment
which hercle storyline broke your heart, was it when he
turned into stuff on? Yeah? Yeah, it felt like it
was a total betrayal for who aren't you know, necessarily
(43:16):
the cutest kid in the photo studio? You were adorable,
I can tell you guys are really adorable as kid.
Tell I have a good I have I just somebody
just sent me in my text messages, like a photo
from me in like fifth grade fourth grades song where
I had a mushroom cut like surfer cut, which kind
of looks like in like like Vibe now with all
(43:38):
the K pop ship and I was like, yo, like
I look like a K pop star whose career was
ruined by racism I had. I had the biggest throw,
like I don't know if you could talk, wow you
hit it? Oh wow? But yeah, my my hair was
like because my dad, my dad used to always just
straight up rocke throw and and uh and I and
(44:00):
I was like, I don't never. I never wanted to
be like him. So for me, I was just like
I don't want to have hair. So I grew my
just trying to get me drow my hair out as
long as I could, and then so I could put
it kind of like in a ponytail and be a
little bit more like you know, like heavy metal and what.
But yeah, like and then the moment I would let that,
let that go, like if I would open, it would
just go from this to like just like a caricature
(44:23):
artist's version of your dad. Yeah, right, Because I also
used to stuff my hair and hats like this, you know,
like I had more hair. And I remember like one time,
like I was with some friends and then he goes, oh,
there's a cool head, just took it off my head
and then my hair goes like like a like a
Jack Lanard whatever, not a Jack Landard. They all just
(44:43):
kind of came out. They go oh, and then he
was like, I'm sorry and just rested it on top
of your um. All right, let's take another quick break
and we'll come back and talk less serious ship and
(45:11):
we're back, and Miles, you brought a story about kids
being less cool. Yeah, they're drinking what kids are boozing
less token a little more and apparently getting really cross faded,
switching it up, mixing the two, which is kind of
(45:32):
actually not that great as So this new study came
out again. You know, we love a study around here,
but they're saying between two thousand two and two thousand eighteen,
the rate of abstinence, okay, fucking abstinence among college students,
uh eighteen to twenty two increased from twenty to and
then for eighteen to two year old who are not
(45:54):
and if they weren't in college in this but in
the same bracket, they went from twenty four sent to
thirty huh so yeah, which is And the other thing
is more kids smoking weed that went up from one
percent if they were in college, and then if they
weren't in Costo was the same thing. But yeah, you
(46:15):
know that's yeah, they're drinking. Do you think there's a correlation.
You know that some people in this stuff, like are
in this article in the take out, they were saying
that some of the researchers suspected that it could be
because a lot of people live with their parents, that
it may affect um that like how much they're drinking
or if they drink at all, because like they just
don't have the privacy to you know, get fucked up. Um.
(46:39):
But but they're smoking, but they're smoking more weed. Yeah,
but I guess because maybe you can like smoke weed
and then like you know, get a ton of mouth
wash and hit the eye drops and like for breeze
yourself and be like, yeah, I was at church. Yeah
we were just crying talking about uh we were just
think the be attitudes anyway, it was so beautiful. But
so the other thing is they said that the combin
(47:00):
nation has gone. So this article says points of concern
that deserve more attention are the rise in co use
of alcohol marijuana. As we know that polly substance use
can have more negative consequences and be more difficult to treat.
And they're saying that, for like, in two and a
half percent of young adults who didn't drink or didn't
smoke weed, only two and a half percent said they
(47:22):
would misuse prescription drugs. But if they were co users
of like weed and alcohol of them, we're using like
tenfold difference to So yeah, So I mean that's true,
like when you're getting you know this at the same time,
or they just saying us using both like in general, um,
(47:44):
probably broadly, and then you know, one thing typically leads
to another. But I mean who who normally? I mean
like I mean when you look at your prescription bottle
and you're like, I think I need a little bit
more than that. I mean everybody does that, right, Yeah,
I just I used sometimes I don't even know the
name on the prescription bottle. He just kind of like
(48:05):
this color makes me feel like I think this will this,
this is this is going to having a blue day.
It's viagra? WHOA what the ship? Okay? That school biology
class at all would be a pink day? I think
is there a pink day? I thought ads were blue.
(48:27):
I don't know, is it time release in a gel cap.
Oh yeah, I guess it's different. Um, Mr President weighing
on this, Yeah, just get up and I just haven't
they just shoving it up? No, it's way too rocky.
You got a grinder for that. I also wonder how
many of the like how much of this increases people
(48:50):
like getting sober younger. I know that that's definitely increased.
Is like people who realize they have a problem at
like age eighteen or like before college. You see more
of that in recovery, in the recovery community. I mean,
there's definitely the world has changed rapidly and even fucking
(49:11):
four years, so who knows what enough four years from
you know what the two study looks like. Yeah, yeah,
when was when do you remember when you stand? At
least I know the year for me, But do you
know the year for you when you were just like Okay,
I give up. I can't. I can't possibly know all
the music that's out there anymore. Uh. Yeah, it would
(49:31):
have been twenty seventeen or twenty sixteen. For me. It
was whatever I used to like pick the music for
the Cracked podcast that I did, Like that was my
way my incentive to stay like plugged into what music
was cool, and then like at a certain point, I
was like, I'm spending more time figuring out what the
(49:53):
music is for this than I am like on the content.
I gotta I gotta stop. Mine was a little earlier,
probably like two thousand and twelve. I was like, this
is too much. Yeah, I can't do it. I don't.
It's like I gave up on genres. I think is
what happened. Because I still love music and I do
a lot of like exploring of ship because I just
love to hear me new music. But I remember like
(50:15):
when the whole SoundCloud wrap wave took off, and like
I was working in radio and shipp I was like
I thought I was aware of everything that was coming on.
I'm like, oh my god, what the funk is all this? Now?
I'm like, no, I can't and I'm you know what,
I'm just gonna listen to my Warringy records and just
leave me the funk alone. Yeah. Apple had their conference
(50:38):
where they release what what all their upcoming products are.
We got their version of Alexa, a new like mini
version of that, and we also got the iPhone twelve,
which also has a mini version that's like a kind
of zagged there. I feel like iPhones have been just
getting bigger and bigger, the smallest, lightest and this cutest
(51:02):
little phone you ever did see that does five G
and will direct George Soros's Antifa waves straight to your
brain and give you some kind of thing. But yeah,
they're it's all kinds of new tech, and I don't know.
I felt like the fucking new phone. I just got
a new fucking phone, and I'm like, what the funk
are y'all doing already? The fuck? Yeah? I really I
(51:24):
was the fucking you know, Joaquin Phoenix as Joker in
the tech Suit meme, uh or just like taking the
l or I'm like, I just bought a fucking okay whatever,
because at this point, I honestly can I do not
know how this is any different than any Like it's like, okay,
they got night mode, they got a wide lens. I know,
if you're gaming, the gamers are turned the funk up.
(51:46):
Like DJ Daniel, I know, he was all over that
League Legends ship and he was like, which one do
you have? Now? I have no, I have the Yeah,
I have eleven Pro Max. I'm rocking the eight I
still got a button on all. I'm way back, way
way back, and yeah, I and I'm starting to notice
(52:06):
like some compatibility issues. I'm noticing like weird things happening
with the phone. I'm I'm guessing they're probably going to
start doing some uh you know, four stops a lescence
ship with the eight. But so far it served me
pretty well. My wife has the more up to date ones,
and anytime there's like an important moment happening with our kids,
(52:27):
she like pushes me out of the way and takes
the video herself because her camera is much better. This camera.
This camera, Like that's always the thing that I try
and pay attention to, because the cameras are like the
place that you always notice it more than anything else.
And so they're saying the Pro Models, which is like
the I think it's gonna be biggest screen ever, probably
(52:48):
also their most expensive phone ever. It's like the high
high end of the new batch that they're releasing. Pro
Models include a telephoto lens in addition to wide and
ultra aide lens, is bigger camera sensors. It also has
a lidar scanner, which I think is like a visual
radar that can create three D scans of rooms with
(53:11):
depth data that Apple says makes auto focus faster. So
that's just like I don't know that it does like
heads up display style ship like that when a terminator
walks in the room and just immediately like scans it
and knows like the coordinates. Oh god, it's like, yeah,
we've already mapped your home based on the photos you've taken. Thanks. Yeah,
(53:33):
yeah exactly. So they're apparently the pro is like aimed
more at serious photographers and weird videographers. I'm a serious videographer. Now,
hand me my iPhone. I mean, yeah, there's I think
that movie Tangerine shot Yeah, yeah, yeah, I mean I
understand people are making content on it, but like the
(53:56):
idea that that is somehow like I get that it's
pro sue were facing and it it feels good, but
I guess, I mean, at this point, most people will
buy it, even if they don't consider themselves even like
a professional. They be like, is that the most expensive
one with the best camera? Yes? That one? Yeah, exactly.
The only time I would ever shoot, Yeah, the only
(54:17):
time I would ever shoot, Like if I were shooting
like a film or short film with an iPhone if
that was kind of the gimmick, you know, like here's
my short film and it was also shutter and otherwise
I would never do that ship. I mean, it's that's
sucking bananas. But I don't know. I don't know if
I'll get the new one or not. I probably won't.
I'm so tired of these phones. What do you what
are you working with right now? I have I have
(54:38):
the ten um, so it's it's older. But before that,
I have the six. So I went from like six,
I skipped so many years and finally I was, and
then I was. It wasn't because of the four stops
lass like that that I think it's a real thing
that they're going to do that that they do do
um and so I just had to get the new phone.
So I got it, but I was looking at this
other phone called the Palm. Have you heard about the
(55:01):
new Palm phone, like from like the Palm trio? People
like who made the Trio. I don't know if it's
the same people, but they call the Palm but it's tiny,
it's like this bit. And so the the idea is
that you're not gonna go surfing the web. You're not
gonna do all this, you know, time wasting on this
tiny phone you can still do so you can still
(55:21):
use your email and all that stuff and texting, which
is kind of what I wanted. But I just you
just text no like pictures and ship. I guess you
know there's a camera on there too with pictures and whatnot.
Like I had to you know what I mean. They
got the razor that's background. But that's that's got a
whole thing too. Man, Like I opened it up. It's
like it's it's like an iPhone, that's right, Jesus. I
(55:43):
was like, yes, the razor and it's of an iPhone.
You know, it would be great if like twenty years
from now, like people look back on the period where
like you walk into a restaurant and everybody's looking down
at their phone as like a weird historical anomaly, like
we can't believe ever happened. That would be gonna be
(56:04):
like maybe like people went to restaurants, Can you believe that,
Like people looked face, people walked around facing up right, weird, Yeah,
people walked Yeah. While the universe people I can see
Postmates doing like like Postmates Gold or Postmates Fancy where
(56:27):
you can order it. That's like Postmates, but then you
can order like the fancy or the Gold option and
they show up to the house and they serve it
to you the waiters there. Yeah, that's yeah. Actually, if hey,
if anyone's got some venture capital money, right, I got
a lot of ideas. Then I also wanted to mention
(56:48):
that Cops, you know, earlier in the year, because of
the Black Lives Matter movement and you know, movements across
the country that we're pointing out just the injustices around
police in America, Cops was canceled by the PARAMOUNTA network,
and that it has quietly been uncanceled with regards to
(57:11):
foreign distribution, so distribution any non American market, they're still
going to be making it, and then who knows, like
how it's going to be distributed in the US. I'm
sure they'll find us channel. They're like, well, if you
get BBC America, then you get Cops, right, Like wait, what,
I don't know, I mean yeah, now, it's just like, oh,
(57:32):
but we're still in the market of exporting copaganda if
you're interested in that for your burgeoning authoritarian state where
you want the police to walk around like militarized guns
so cool. But yeah, I like how it just sort
of like we cancel, but it's just for internationals, just
for international We know it's illegal here. Okay, we know
(57:54):
this is totally illegal and not cool to do here,
but just across the borders for Canada. And it also
of the same company, so it's still like, you know
that that gesture was just kind of performative, no performative
gestures in such a critical moment regarding the civil rights
of black people and other minorities. God who made a
(58:21):
big deal about retiring Anjemima, And of course the right
made a huge deal about it because they love to
have have stories like that where they can be like,
come on, what's next. Uh. According to one executive, they
still haven't actually retired Anjemima. According to one executive, it's
(58:43):
because get ready to feel queazy. During these trying pandemic times,
customers are still looking for the Anjemima products they know
and love. Yeah, so we've yeah, rather than using the
terrible trope of an Jemima, We've re branded to Mammy's Pancakes.
(59:03):
It's like, oh no, they're doubling down. It's uh, yeah,
of course, of course, it's in the end. It's like
any companies like, look, we would sever ties with the
racist tumor of our business, but it's part of our
business and it generates money, and money is our god,
not fairness. So yeah, I think that's that's that's kind
(59:25):
of the reality that people just have to kind of
you know, money, Money pretty much guides I mean, if
it wasn't profitable for them, you know, they wouldn't be
doing it. And and the fact that I think the
scary part to me is just that it's still continuously
even even as bad as it is, it's still continues
to be profitable, meaning that there are people out there
who are buying it and they're finding it viable enough
(59:46):
to continue. I wonder if they just said they called
it fucking they did a Lady ante Bellum type rebrand
and they called them A J's pancakes or Auntie Jay's
and it's just text. There's no face. Are people gonna
be like, where the fund did it go? Where's the fun?
(01:00:07):
I guess I'm gonna that's really good idea, Like that's
a really good where the like what's the psychology of
the consumer that they're concerned about? Like in this thing
where like in these times people need their racist thanks.
It's I think it's just I think it's people's like
um uh romantic connection with memory, you know, And it
(01:00:28):
comes down to this thing where it's just like, oh,
you're gonna take this, what else you gonna take? You
take my my mom or my childhood, my mom? Like
I can. I could take away G I Joe for
a lot of those guys right now, you know what
I mean. And they would hate me for it. But
that's like one of the most racist cartoons on the
on the fucking planet. Like and I know this as
a brown person because I remember watching it as a kid,
(01:00:49):
you know. And then there was like uh um, like
I remember every time we would play G I. Joe
like with the with my friends, I would I could
only be Cobra only because had this thing where they
remember that would go right, And and I thought about it,
and I was like, oh, that's supposed to be us, right,
(01:01:11):
I mean like there and cover space is always in
the desert. And it was like it was clearly like
this programming famously American Snake. Yeah yeah, right right. It
was just it was like this, but it bothered me
and I remember like feeling so sad as a kid
because I did like g I jo you know what
(01:01:32):
I mean, But I didn't want to feel like I
was always gonna be painted as the enemy. So but
that I mean, there's just there's just a ship ton
of that stuff, ship tons, I mean from back in
the day. I think what their research is probably telling them,
you know, and their research being listening to the beginning
of this episode of this podcast, that people are, you know,
(01:01:53):
drawn and especially especially during these trying times, people are
drawn to, you know, nostalgia. There there's a general Mills
thing that's happening that we talked about in a recent
episode where they are going back to original recipe breakfast
cereal on like all their on Golden Grams and Coco
(01:02:17):
puffs and all these things that we didn't know they
had changed the recipe on. But just being like, it's
gonna taste like childhood was enough. It's gonna taste like
your parents are together. But that part where they were
fighting a bunch and about to get divorced, I'm not
I'm not gonna lie. That sounds good to me, Like
I think I'd be right. I haven't touched breakfast cereally
(01:02:37):
in a long time. But that made me feel like,
oh man, I think Donald Trump was smart. He would
campaign on that. He's like, we're gonna make it feel
like back. Remember your parents were together, Remember that ship.
It's gonna be like that. You just didn't even worry
about ship, did you? Yeah? Okay, but yeah, I mean
in these trying times, you know, as Black Americans struggle
(01:03:00):
for equality, we want our customers to retreat to the
safe harbors of the Antebellum South and chattel slavery. Yeah,
they're demanding that the market basically regulate itself, which has
never ever worked. Um, I mean memories, I get. I
guess Retro Jordan's too. It's kind of profiting off memories exactly. Yeah.
(01:03:24):
I've been regressing though, so I was ready for it all.
I've been in my mind for many years. Hell yeah,
I'm gonna put the Fuji's the Score on right now.
Great album. Aristotle has been wonderful having you, ma'am. Where
can people still find you and follow you? Oh? God?
(01:03:46):
I have an Instagram. It's Aristotle. So it's air like
Nike Air Underscore and then Stottle So I'm on Instagram.
There and then just my last name on on Twitter,
which is a theory at at a theorist a t
h I R. Yes. Other than that, I mean, I
have like I think I have a LinkedIn. I have
old where we can see all your jobs if you guys,
(01:04:06):
if you guys want to come and find me on LinkedIn,
find me on on friends to find me on Um,
let's see what else I got, uh, live journal, live journal?
You can find me on gas Buddy. I have a
I have a I have an account on gas Buddy.
So like when I go to gas, yeah, find me
(01:04:27):
on gas Buddy, find me. Find me on Ways Yeah,
get ways and gas Buddy. Probably you're gonna I'll respond
to the moment. Hey wave at me on Ways. You know,
see where it goes. Uh? Is there a tweet or
some other work of social media you've been enjoying? Um? Yeah,
I mean, to be honest with you, I think Twitter
(01:04:49):
is a little evil kind of I've been trying to
like it's just really hard, you know, Like I remember
I thought about it, and I just like I haven't
been on Twitter and so long because I just think
it's so toxic good, um, wonderful. I mean, it's got
some there's some good things, but there's some, you know,
there's some kind of like you know, this kind of
toxic things too. But it's as hard, you know, it's
(01:05:10):
I don't and I don't like being like that, right.
I don't want to look at what's going on because
it's it's getting too much. But we are. This is
the worst year I've ever had in my life. So anyways, Um, okay,
all right, Yeah, Miles, where can people find you? What's
tweet you've been enjoying? Uh, let's see you can find
me Twitter and Instagram at Miles of Gray. That's gray
(01:05:31):
with an a not an eat. See a lot of
people who spell my name wrong inter tweet but then
tag get my handle right? Uh, you know, please please
put some respect on my name. Uh. And then also
the other podcast for twenty day Fiance. You know it's
talking about niney day fiance. If you want to avoid
the cruel world and enjoy the cruel production of ninety
day Fiance, hop on that podcast also on I Heart Radio. Okay,
(01:05:55):
let's see a tweet that I like? Yes, no, this
one is from at Bronze Hammer about Amy Coney, Army
Army Carmi Barnet or whatever the supreme Uh that quote
was this tweet is she wasn't my first choice either,
but we need to confirm Amy Coney Barrett. Oh now,
(01:06:16):
and once she's sworn in, then we can push her
left nailed him boom Uh. Derek Derek tweeted if I
was Bruce Wayne, I would pretend to have a shellfish allergy.
Then as batman, how would get photographed eating a plate
of shrimp? Blaine Copette tweeted washing my seven year old
(01:06:39):
clothes and spaghetti sauce to save time. And p J
Evans tweeted a picture of the Amityville horror House. Uh,
and it's got like just really subdued and kind of
whack Halloween decoration. Hap and and say, uh, the Ebityville
horror House where six people were murdered feels the need
(01:07:02):
to decorate for Halloween. Uh, that's funny. And yeah. You
can find me on Twitter at Jack Underscore O'Brien. You
can find us on Twitter at daily zeit Geist for
at the Daily ze Geist on Instagram. We have a
Facebook fan page on a website Daily zi guys dot com,
where we post our episodes and our footnote. The link
(01:07:25):
off to the information that we talked about in today's episode,
as well as the song we ride out on Miles?
What are we riding out on? Two days? Uh? This
is another one. I'm gonna be on SoundCloud, folks, but
it's it's worth it. Uh. If you like Hendrick Lamar,
you like a little backseat freestyle, if you like a
little Burt background all mashed together, and you want some horns,
(01:07:49):
some brass and Compton Kenny. Uh, this is this is
the track for you. I just love good remixes that, like,
you know, honor the original track well enough, you're like, oh,
this is just a trash remix, Like this one is
like you're giving me something new on top of lyrics
already love and this is a real So this is
called Backseat back IRAQ by West Wax. So you got
(01:08:11):
this ship on SoundCloud and put it all in your
fucking ears and blow the doors off your hondas. I
do love a like a remix that is clearly based
on the name being like a fit. But also, uh,
they just make it work. Oh right, well that is
going to do it for this episode. The Daily Zyka
(01:08:31):
is a production of My Heart Radio. For more podcasts,
for my Heart Radio, visit the heart Radio app, Apple podcast,
or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. That's gonna
do it for this morning. We'll be back this afternoon
to tell you what's trending and we'll touch you all that.
Bye bye. Damn god bites, Damn I got bites and
(01:09:02):
damn my god bites. Wife. He go friending mistress all
my life. I alone running bro He stoke my mind.
Nor nigger, it's go time. I broke and don't with
a to crime and I'm running. Hold with at. That's
what we say. Race with him and kay. They say,
take you for marry minds. Behid be behid, No way
to beat you now