Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season seventy eight, episode
one of Daily Guy. It's a podcast where we take
a deep dive into American share consciousness and say officially
off the top Fox Coke Industry. It's Monday for two
thousand nine team and named Jack O'Brien ak rolling down
the street, slow and simple, sweating like cold orange juice.
(00:24):
If je so, I slide on my tummy and I'm
never gonna die. It's courtesy of Tray Gang at T
d C a K. And I'm thrilled to be joined
as always by my co host, Mr Miles g Baby girl,
I'm the man from the Big c A. What'll you
come play around my way home and listen to my
(00:45):
hot text home Gray, don't you know I am the man?
Got folks here in Japan? Happy checking check in my hand? Boo,
Gotta tell somebody I don't have the rest of that. Yeah,
we've got the baby quick ed white. Thank you too.
That's Dragon or don dragon zord down one. Doug you
(01:06):
a fresh for that one because Manlia baby for recipes.
That's a good girl. Tell like Trump talking about baby
took you too, So you have to get on that plane.
We left Dame Dash heartbroken. We are thrilled to be
joined in our third teeth by the hilarious actress, writer, comedian,
(01:28):
the hardest working woman show business. Oh damn to be
a great pleasure to be here. Is that's your great
Scandinavian modesty coming through? Yeah? I don't know about that.
Everything you say, hide myself, just shut the please just
(01:48):
tell me that. Don't tell him my apart to give
some of my flaws. What are your flows? My flaws? Claws?
For that act? She does fear intimacy and cannot be
trusted to watch your pets. Is that good? I really
(02:10):
hurt her, lizard. I really don't know any she doesn't
have any folks. Can How are you doing? Oh? Good?
I really I'm glad to be back. Um. Today I'm
flying back to London. So yeah, I'm sad to be
leaving me l A. But I know I'll be back.
But yeah, it's funny because I was saying the last
(02:31):
time I was in l A, I had the recall
for us and l so I flew out the day
before and cold in the flight, And then I found
out that Ben Affleck and Casey Affleck grew in the
audience watching and my knees started shaking. And I now
talk about how I sucked up my audition because I
couldn't believe my career was being judged by Batman and
(02:52):
a rapist. That's the Three Boots. Isn't that Batman and RAI?
That's terrible. Yeah. So I I've just been at the
Ground Lanes and I had this weird experience where the
week before my SNL audition I bumped into Kit Harrington
in London and he was so sweet and he um,
(03:13):
he was saying that when I got an SNL to
give him a call get him on the show, and
then he just did SNL. And now I'm doing my
first show at the ground Leans. So not quite there,
but you guys are both kind of holding up your
your ends of the bargains. Did he text you before
he went on? It's like, don't worry myself, you can
stop trying. I bumped into him a couple of times
(03:36):
because he lives quite near where I do himprov I
don't know if I should say that, um, but funnily
off the first time on Melrose exactly, and he gave
me his number the first time and then um, it's
quite funny because his name is Kit and then my
my nickname is cats are like, there's that chocolate cat
(03:57):
so um. And then he I bumped into a second time.
He's like, Katy, I had to change my number. So
I shouldn't probably even be saying this because some gave
it out on a podcast. I don't know, but yeah,
it is after after what I saw in Game of Thrones,
(04:18):
I have I need to talk to him. He's actually
got letters in his numbers at that level where yeah,
let we'll bleep that up because yeah, probably saying where
he lives isn't good, but giving out his number in
particular definitely not good. But that's what the shows about,
you know, yeah, boxing people from next Mazie Williams, stay tuned.
(04:45):
All right, we're 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 on
this Monday. We're gonna talk about Kim Kardashian's uh schedule
in law school. She's scheduled to take the bar in
two uh. We're also gonna just briefly mention what their
house looks like. We're gonna talk about the new Star
(05:06):
Wars teaser and uh, the old Meet Joe Black footage
that people were talking about at the end of last week.
We're gonna talk about the mainstream media still having trouble
figuring out what to make of William Barr, how the
President describes his kids in the New Atlantic article, all
of that and plenty moore. But first CARTI we like
(05:27):
to ask our guests, what is something from your search
history that's revealing about who you are? My search history? Okay, Um,
I've been actually googling a lot of celebrities because I
just got told by the BBC I'm doing a show,
so I find back to the UK today and either tomorrow.
So it's Wednesday. I have to do a BBC Impressions
show and they've just told me, um, I have to
(05:49):
learn seventeen new celebrity impressions and I was kind of like,
I don't know if my friend on SNL even has
to do that many in a week. But celebrities, yeah, yeah,
like who um. So it's like Ariana Grande. There's like
a bunch of British ones that um um. Caroline Flak,
she's like a famous British presenter. I don't think they're
(06:11):
not like anyone like Lady Gaga, Olivia Coleman, Like it's
more kind of like radio presenters or like, um and
then I have to do the voice of Spotify, like
it's just really obscure ones. Yeah there's a voice of Spotify.
I have to play Spotify. Yeah. I had to do that.
Actually I didn't Amazon commercial for super Bowl and I
(06:32):
had to do the voices. Yeah. I had to voice
like a bunch of celebrities for it. Um and then
be like the people going elect to slow down and
all this kind of stuff instead of getting them for
like yeah, it was to do the pitch like to
say these so it might be Christen Wig, it might
be Miley Cyrus HUMANAJ, which I was like, I don't
(06:54):
know if I could do that. It's problematic. Yeah, um
so yeah I did that. Um So Yeah. My my
search history has been just trying to like work on
these celebrity impressions. What's your technique? Do you just watch
a video and then just speak along and just try
it and like that, I'll try and find like what's
the unusual thing about that person or what's the thing
that sets them apart? From other celebrities, So like if
(07:17):
it was like Kim Kardashian, like the fact she's like
honestly like seriously okay, might um or like yeah or
else kind of see how their mouth sits, like um,
if they have like a drooping drooping lip, or like
if their voice comes from like their nose or their
forehead or their chests, and then like if it's like
(07:39):
or like or like if it's like yeah, someone that's
like that pretty. So this is the thing that you
have to do on the regular is just like suddenly
you have to be able to do are on a
grande Um not always, but yeah, Like if I do
(08:01):
voice over work, they'll call me in and say can
you do this voice? And I'll watch a few YouTube
clips and go nope or what someone go I think,
so yeah, I like, can you do a Jamaican nurse? Yeah?
That's a bread bread. And then I also have been
looking for flights and because I don't know if you
(08:22):
guys ever use like sky scanner. If you keep checking it,
it bumps up the price so that you're like, oh
my god, I need to book the flight now. So
I've been trying to use a private browser. So that
it doesn't know that I've been like, is that thing
that people are having to do? Yeah, that's the benefit
of using nord vpn. Um. You know VPNs are good
too because it obscures your IP address and sometimes you
(08:43):
can put yourself in another country and be like, oh,
these are the rates people from out of the country
see when they're trying to book a hotel in this country,
versus rates that someone within coontryency. Right. Sometimes you know,
I don't think it's I've not necessarily said like, oh,
you have to do it that way, but I try
every which way because I know, you know, that's how
they get people to buy it would be up. Yeah,
because I would do that. I would book a flight
(09:03):
and then it would say it's this much in dollars,
so I'd change it to pounds and then it would
end up being cheaper. And Jacky Jake, those corporate overlords.
What if something you think is overrated? Overrated? Um? I
mean always like nightclubs and noisy bars. But I feel
like I've maybe said that before in this podcast. Um,
(09:25):
but I UM. I was like getting into a little
bit of like, because I have anxiety, who don't we all?
But I was I was like trying to do some
work on like looking at like self help books, and
when I was looking into them, I was like a
lot of them kind of just seem like they turn
people into narcissist because it's like you have to be
number one, like love yourself. You can be anything like
(09:46):
work towards your goals. And I was kind of thinking like,
oh yeah, like a lot of I don't know, like
I feel like it can. It has good intentions, but
can sometimes if if it's gone too much one direction,
can actually be really unhelpful. There's a self help look
I gotta share with you that does none of that.
It's called The New Testament and got the story of
a guy named J. C. Lamentations is really great. There's
(10:11):
it's really interesting because it is like a how to
guide for developing a personality like flaw or a personality disorder. Well,
I think it also depends on how you enter getting
into sort of the self help thing, right, Like if
you if you're sort of open and willing to be
honest with yourself about you know, what might be going
(10:32):
on with yourself, it's easy to be like, oh yeah,
maybe I do need to put myself first, Whereas if
you're in a little bit of denial, that's when like
I see this a lot with like I feel people
who sort of have a very superficial understanding of like
those kinds of concepts, and they just take it as like, oh,
you know you hear this with celebrities. Oh, I don't
like the negative energy around. It's like I have to
(10:52):
focus on me, which like sort of uses like, oh,
you've just used this as a way to like deflect
in your own mind and wrongdoing you may have out there,
or like any thing that might make you feel bad
to just avoid it rather than being like, yeah, I
could take care of myself. I can acknowledge things I
feel and all that. I actually just remember I was
a meltdown a few years ago when that comedy when
(11:13):
it used to run that comedy, Yeah, Nerdoe, Yeah. And
I remember actually seeing to meet you Martin do a
bit about how self help books. It wasn't like how
they if you're an asshole, they just make you more
of an asshole, right, sort of like drugs, yeah, or
the person you always knew you should have been, right,
That's what I say about Okay, Yeah, fair enough, I
(11:33):
always should have been like this. Yeah, yeah, my I
think my thing about drugs was actually a Bill Cosby jokes,
So maybe I should shut then up because I also
used drugs very productively for many years. But yeah, I mean,
like how to win friends and influence people. Have you
ever read that book Dale Carran. It's like one of
the most sold books ever. And one of my dad's
(11:55):
friends tried to get me to read it when I was,
you know, a kid, like ten or something. He was like,
this is going to be the best thing you ever read.
My dad was kind of into that like self help ship,
So like I I read it, and it really seems
like the guy is a sociopath, and like it's like
written through the eyes of a sociopath about like moles
for how to like yeah, how to interact with people,
(12:17):
like to just completely it really seems like he just
doesn't have the capacity to interact with people, and so
he's like just distill it down to like the formula.
And it's useful for people, maybe even people who aren't sociopaths,
because it just like gives you some rules for like
getting people. Like just to keep in mind, whenever I
see the title, I'm just like how to win friends
(12:38):
and like, no, I don't need that. Ones like hey,
how to live worry free life. I'm like, yeah, okay,
I'm really worried about how to influence people. Um, the
five hour work week, just the four hour work the
four facts are Actually they're doing that in Scandinavia. They're
trying to make more people work just four hours a
day because they're becoming more of it and that it's
(13:00):
healthier for you and um, yeah, just a better quality
of life. I mean, yes, four hours, but how much
are the people up top and the shareholders making with
that work? Right? You know that doesn't that sounds like
because the shareholder is gonna be pissed. That's with a
secret of the four hour work work cutting bonuses is
just find a way to outsource all of your work
to a bunch of less fortunate people. What is something
(13:24):
you think is underrated? Um, I've got a couple of things. Um,
I love how many wacky wobblers there are in America?
Those things that like side gas stations? Yeah, I love?
Is that? Is that the phrase? I don't know. I
just remember seeing a costume that was like a wacky
wobbler costume. I was like, oh, you can dress like
one of those. I feel like we haven't do we
(13:45):
really have a proper like I always call them the
cabul those arm wavy guys outside of inflatable arm dancing man.
Normally everyone has a different one, and we just I
think we need to just Yes, I like Wacky Wobbler. Yeah,
Wacky Wobbler is really good, although it doesn't really wobble.
It more flails, So the funky flailer Freaky is probably better,
(14:12):
actually because Freaky evokes more of a tall, lean lurch type.
So I like, wow, you're taking shots at Eric Lampere. Yeah,
I didn't know you guys know yeh big big yes,
Oh my gosh. I used to be on an improv
team with him. Yeah, we did Comedian Cinema Club back
in London before he brought it out here. This is
(14:33):
not good for anybody who is under the impression that
all people from the UK know each other already exactly.
Me and Meg's were like, that's so funny. Another one
actually that is a bit underrated is well I don't
(14:54):
know if it's underrated, but I find it kind of funny.
And maybe this isn't funny too. Americans but you know,
so if you guys do the V sign, that's like
peace in the UK. Flip it around. That means like,
so I was living with this girl here she was
just being horrible. So we were having an argument. I went,
you know, all and then I gave her the VS
and she was like what. And then I realized she
(15:16):
didn't realize I was being rude, So I just flipped
her own up peace and I see it up just
like deflecting the argument, and she was like, okay, peace.
When I was last time I was in the UK
last summer, I was on set of people just doing
nothing and I saw like one of the cast member, Stephen,
who like I became familiar with, and I saw him
(15:37):
across the room and my instinct just as an American
and be like, oh what yeah, and I do that
ship up and I literally in the second one. I
know they get it, but I'm like at large, like
throwing it up like that. Yeah, what is like the
there's a There are many like myths behind why that's offensive, right,
(15:58):
like archer archer archers cutting fingers up, but that's I
think for the middle finger, because it was that you
need two fingers to pull the arrow back or they
they would cut the finger off. Um, so then they
weren't able to to pluck it. So then they weren't Yeah,
they weren't able to fight. So that's why. So you
(16:19):
like show your middle finger to be like ha ha,
you only have those fingers. Yeah, put a lot of
the things you were doing earlier before when we just
started recording in context, throwing those up at me a lot.
Just keep looking at me like I can't think you
were saying two things all right. And by the way,
(16:43):
I think wacky wobblers everybody should have one in their
front yard. That was that's that's that's the America of
my dream. Let's replace the picket fence with the way
Wobbler actually was trying to pitch a short film, Like
you know, there are those people that have that thing
where they fault, like a lady that fell in love
with the bridge or a lady that fell in love
with the objective Like there's yeah, yeah, objective. I wanted
(17:07):
to play character that was fell in love with a
wacky wobbler and I would just but nobody wanted it.
They refer to themselves as object sexuals. Yes, that is
not a scientific term in case you couldn't tell. Uh.
And finally, what is a myth? What's something people think
is true? You know? To pop um. I find out
that banana flavored candy, the flavor of it is actually
(17:30):
from an old strain of banana that has died off.
Because a lot of bananas are dying off, so that
flavor that we know of, like the banana flavored candy,
So the banana types are dying out, Like I think
it's like some mold or something that banana strands are
dying out. So the banana flavored candy is from a
type of banana that doesn't actually exist anymore. Yeah, thank god,
(17:51):
I hate that flavor. Yeah, banana flavor candy isn't great. Yeah, yeah,
it is interesting flavor, Yeah, great flavor class. Watermelon is
by far the worst kind of fake flavor of I
kind of like it. Really. Watermelon Jolly ranchers tastes like
petroleum to me. Yeah, they are very chemical. It's all
(18:11):
about like the context, the frame of mind that you
go in with. But it's a little bit of petrol
in there. Yeah, pass for me, right. Yeah. I think
cherry is almost always good, but it's not necessarily active. Yeah, yeah,
you know what, we'll just call it red. I know
(18:32):
what red tastes like, and it's whatever the chemical gods
determined cherry should taste like, you know, like Dr Pepper.
Who that kind of tastes like cherry coke to me,
at least it does. They have this drink Trader Joe's Coke,
like clementine something. It's like clementine and orange. No, no, no,
clementine and raspberry. That tastes just like Dr Pepper. Coloring
(18:53):
is different white, it's just clear, not white. But it's
like a little tangerine like a clementine. Yeah, yeah, I
think it is. I can't remember. It's like clementine and
cranberry or whatever. But it tastes like right, no, no, no,
not like have their own podcast. Yeah, they do actually
called like behind the floral print, behind the Jo's. I
(19:16):
feel like a lot of this stuff are really nice.
They're yeah, yeah, they seem like they are all on board.
Yeah with whatever whatever weird cult thing they have gone there.
Hey man, but they got that cookie butter. Yeah. I
will eat with a spoon in the darkness. First time
I came out to l a my friends that you
(19:36):
have to try this. And that's the other thing is
that American food is like crack, like you take a spoon.
It's engineered to be that. Yeah, and we just, yeah,
we make products that don't need to be made. Yeah.
Other countries have their best people working on like building
things for the country, and we have our best, smartest
people working on how to make cookie butter addictive or
(19:58):
how to put as much sugar in as small as
space as possible. Right, all right, We're gonna take a
quick break. We'll be right back. And we're back. And
(20:18):
Kim kardash And is going to go to law school.
We know what law school she's going to go to.
Know she's interning. I think so because in California don't
necessarily have to go to law school to take the bar.
There's another track you can take, yes, where she is
going to be working at a law firm basically to
get her to get her knowledge up. And then we'll
(20:40):
take what is most people say is one of the
hardest bar exams in the nation. I think California, New
York they say are the hardest one. So I went
to the David Letterman taping you know them, he's doing
that Netflix show and they don't tell you who the
guest is. And he went, um, this person makes me nervous.
And we're like oh, and he was like, um, this
person is like a firecracker of energy, got multiple personalities,
(21:03):
were like, who could that be? I was like, well,
Jim Carrey like plays characters. He was like Kanye West.
And then Kim Kardashian ran right in front of us
and start right in front of us. Were like, holy crap.
It was so weird. But it was such an interesting
interview because every time, because Kim was sat right in
front of Kanye, so every time he said something a
little bit controversial, he would look at him and she'd
(21:25):
be like no, like shaking her head, say that, Yeah,
I think I'd be interested to see what they kept
and cut right. Well, yeah, look, I guess we'll find out. Yeah,
I mean she could be a lawyer. Yeah, she was
actually speaking about that how they managed to free someone
out of prison. Yeah. Yeah, I would not bet against
her when it comes to literally anything. And I would
(21:48):
not bet against Chris Jenner paying the California bar assessors
to cheat on her score. So she could be whatever
she has going on, it works. Her dad is a
lawyer was a lawyer. Yeah, yeah, but it's funny, like
it either plays out and if this were a fairy
tale version, it would be like Kim Kay goes from
like just sort of vapid celebrity and you know, media
(22:11):
mogul to like civil rights lawyer. If that if she's
really going that direction, I don't know. I think the
more cynical people are like, if she's a lawyer, she
might know how to write her own contracts now can
cut more people out of her deals. But hey, look,
look just just just moving the direction of God, kim Kay,
you know, like and look God, that that does seem
(22:31):
like the sort of story that that a Kardashian would
know is perfectly like engineered for the modern media. And
that we everyone's like, oh ship, and like kind of
give her credit for going to law school essentially or
being being able to even think about passing the bar,
but like if she stops going or like gives up
(22:52):
on this in two years, nobody's gonna notice. No. Yeah. Also,
there was a interview with her, like one of those
seventy nine questions, one questions, seventy three questions. I would
be more impressed with seventy nine, where it's like a
tracking shot that follows her around her house. Uh, there's
(23:14):
like some cute bedroom stuff with her and Kanyen the kids,
and then they go they do like a walk to
the kitchen and their house has clearly never been lived
in by humans. It's the same I think it was
on Valentine's Day? Can you put loads of roses and oases?
And it was just kind of like this is not
(23:34):
there was nothing else, Yeah, just Kenny yeah I think
it was. It wasn't Kenny g or somebody who was
playing yeah, yeah, yeah, but it makes like modern art
museums look like cluttered and over. It's just so yeah.
They have like this one weird sculpture on this like
(23:59):
fifty foot like it's like an Olympic swimming pool sized
kitchen island, and then like one like weird sculpture on it,
and the guy's like, wow, your kitchen is amazing. It's like, damn,
I guess it's funny because my old life, before getting
in a podcasting, I used to make those videos and
(24:20):
there's It's what's funny is normally like whenever they follow
a subject around their house, they have their back to
Cameron and be looking over their shoulders, but I think
because maybe Kim just doesn't want to have the yeeks out.
It was like back like very awkwardly back tracking like
I've never seen before. Uh yeah, it's funny though, Like
went to hear Joe who does who directs? Those videos
(24:42):
kind of have to be like, wow, this is this
place is great and this concrete bunker very very strange?
Is it the Vogue ones where they're like the kind
of those time stage and feel a bit awkward try
and do these jokes but they're so like and then
I felt un tripped. That was some of my best work.
(25:06):
Wait you made those? Yeah? Yeah, I used to work
at Conde Nast. That's why a lot of people they
hear me do voice over for like Wired magazine videos
because that was from old life. Oh my gosh, I
watched a Wired magazine video. It was like, I need that,
I need that. Whoever just said English quit my cracked job.
The second I heard that voice. I don't know this
disembodied voice in my life. Let's talk about the new
(25:31):
Star Wars teaser that came out at the end of
last week. It's called Episode nine, Rise of the Skywalker.
Yeah right, there's Yeah, it's the final one. It is
every year. Well, there will be more Star Wars, there
will be more films within the Star Wars universe. But
the Ridge trigge was allegedly, uh you know, four or
(25:56):
five and six, and then there was supposed to be
a seven, eight and nine and a one to three
and so this would be nine of the originally planned
nine films. Uh, try by trilogy. I don't know, three
by trilogy, Tree by Tree, tree by Tree. But yeah,
I think look rise with Skywalker. Okay, so maybe Homegrows
(26:16):
go some gonna do with them. Well that's the title, really,
I mean it's a dope trailer, like J. J. Abrahms
knows how to make a good teaser trailer. Uh And
but I think the best thing about it was the title,
because like the question, like maybe my biggest disappointment with
the eighth one was that. And I don't know why
(26:37):
I shouldn't be disappointed by this, but when they were like, yeah,
your parents are nobody, You're you're they were nothing, and
you just happened to have this immense like access to
the force. It I don't think I'm a monarchist. I
think it's because it suggests that the force is just
some bullshit you happened to be able to get at
if you if you meditate really well, you just like
(27:00):
iditate yourself into having the force. Well you medicalorians man, right, Well,
so the menicalorians is stupid too. But it's just like
when she had no reason to be this forceful, it
bummed me out. I was like, wait, so the universe
is just like anybody can have the force and it's
(27:20):
just like you have to believe hard enough for something, Yeah,
Daisy Ridley. So then when now that they're putting back
like the trailer is all about her just doing some
dope ship where she jumps over tie Fighter Tie Fighter
and fights it with a sword. I didn't know anything
about Star Wars like I would watch them, but it
(27:41):
felt like they could have just been in French because
I just would watch it and be like, I have
no idea what the Force of the jeddis mean. And
then I just the other week had to film BBC
thing for uh, well it'll be coming out but from
me the fourth where I play all the Star Wars women,
So I had to do impressions of Carrie Fisher Natalie Portman,
a Listy Jones, Daisy Ridley, and Amelia Clark, and I
(28:03):
didn't know anything about it, so so I was doing
these impressions, just trying to say the lights like the
thing I don't know, learning the language phonetically. Yeah, exactly.
And I had to look at the Star Wars website
and like learn the bios of all the actors, and
I was like, I still have no idea what this means,
Like she conquers the journey of the like you bloody, scruffy.
(28:27):
It's like that isn't okay. Well, I guess that'll count
for Leah, right, But so the title Rise of the
Skywalker does suggest that that question is like that mystery
is at the center of the ninth movie. Yeah, who
is the Skywalker? Is it? Daisy Ridley? The Rise of Skywalker?
(28:47):
The Rise of Skywalker? Is it? I was gonna say
old as Billy D Williams, is it? Old? Asked Billy
D Williams. Somehow does Luke suddenly come back? And he's like, nah,
let's just playing. Uh. And also, speaking of the return,
I do want to just talk about Meet Joe Black
because Meet Joe is back on on social media. Uh huh. Yeah,
(29:11):
I'm on fire. I'm on fire today, Miles. You don't
have to say it. Everyone knows it. No, that's why
I'm dialing all the fire department. Um, doctor, it's happening. Yeah.
People were just rediscovering this movie and one of my
favorite scenes of all time where Bred Pitt gets just
(29:33):
totally wrecked by a traffic going both ways at the beginning.
It's like one of the opening scenes of the movie.
And then there's this e er scene that maybe people
can help us with this because I might uh be
legitimately losing my mind. But I thought I saw it
for the first time on Thursday night, and apparently Miles
(29:55):
and Nick thought that we had talked about it on
the podcast before. But let's just play a brief moment.
This is when Brad Pitt, who is being inhabited by
the body of death like the Grim Reaper, uh, suddenly
breaks into a Jamaican Patois. I think it's very uh,
(30:17):
it's very accurate. No, yeah, no, but it's just a
no devil, everything going to be irie go with the doctor,
Lady Mom, gonna be fine, evil, I navel Loma and
what you is? Then that's not friend. From that next place.
(30:39):
So they're saying that if Brad Pitt meets the devil,
he becomes Jamaican, he can just like do whatever he
can inhabit. Like, so he's speaking to her in her language,
and it is don't worry, noll, not beat me, not devil, right,
So mere offering a special and two for one p s.
(31:00):
I'm antego, Bay just signed this. It's an indemnification agreement
in case you are injured during the experience. I don't
know what again, man, cool, great call Brad Pitt Jamaican icon. Yeah,
you know, he's like the least scratch Perry of acting.
Do you think is it offensive or is it just
(31:22):
bizarre and surreal? It's a mix of everything. Yeah, it's so.
I think it's so offensive that I'm trying to understand
how it happened. But also I get in the creative
mindset of a script, you're just saying this person has
a physical presence but can tap into many spiritual things
and therefore is channeling this Jimmy ken um. But I
(31:46):
think it will always be jarring to see, uh, Like,
especially like that stage Brad Pitt when he had like
the beautiful golden blonde hair uh, suddenly you know, acting
like he's, you know, the mayor of trench Town. The
movie is brad It maybe at his most beautiful like
as a human being, Like he he looks like he's
glowing in every scene. And it also has exactly and
(32:11):
it also allows him to eat a lot in the movie,
which I found out not by watching it but by
doing a bunch of research. But that is bread pitts,
Like that's the number one thing Bread Pitt likes to
do on camera. Eat. Yeah, yeah, if you like see
have you seen Oceans eleven? Yes, and everything, Like he
(32:31):
just knows that he looks cool eating and so in
this movie he is death. So he's like inhabiting a
human form for the first time, and he gets to
try peanut butter for the first time, and so you
see him like he really gets to ham it up
when it comes to him when it comes to eating.
All right, let's talk very briefly about serious shit. The
(32:54):
mainstream media is still they still have figured out like
how to deal with William Barr at all. They do
not know how to observe something and then describe it
out loud. Uh. In certain terms, William Barr is the
attorney General, so he runs the Department of Justice. And
(33:15):
the reason why he is very important is because the
Robert Mueller Report, which is look into all the interference
and obstruction charges or you know, allegations against the president.
Uh that report was supposed to be or we thought
would be given to Congress so then they can see
what the evidence is. But William Barr has decided to
only first give out his version of the report, which
(33:37):
is very it seems like to minimize many things that's
in it, and especially when people who worked on the
reporter saying his description is very inaccurate of what this says.
And then now he's just been dragging his feet about,
you know, when he's going to release it, in what
and how much detail it will it will be released.
So he's you know, a lot of people suspected from
the beginning, especially on the left, that he was brought
(33:58):
in to do a job, which was to either end
the Mueller investigation outright or to basically try and protect
the president as much as possible by not releasing the report.
And that's what he's been doing essentially. But he's been
doing in a very clever way because he'll say things
and then walk them back later on, or have people
from his office walk the comments back. So on one hand,
(34:19):
he'll give the base or the conservative gop media machine
they're talking points, like for example, when he said, you know,
he thought the intelligence community was like spying on the
Trump campaign during the election, and that word spying, you know,
everyone's like, okay, look what you're You're feeding the paranoia,
the conspiratorial ship, like the deep state stuff by saying that,
(34:40):
and then have people come out right after be like, well,
that's not what he meant. It's it's actually like just
a term to him. It means no difference than doing,
you know, a counterintelligence operation surveillance. It's the same thing
to him. And he was just saying that like that.
It's not to mean that they were overstepping. But at
that point the cats out of the bag. And then
you have people like uh, Eric Trump and his wife
law on Fox News sort of taking this and being
(35:03):
able to run with his deep state ideas. So this
is them on Fox. The deep state guys does exist.
By the way, it still exists, but it does exist,
and it did exist, and you see all these emails
between FBI people about insurance policies and other things. You
see dossiers that were paid for by political candidates that
were leaked through people's wives. I mean, it's really incredible.
(35:26):
That's who the first person is that called him out,
Donald Trump, way back when. And he's always right. You
might not like it when he's but he's always right.
So again they use a little bit of spying thing
to then be able to relitigate this idea of you know,
another government that is actually the shadow government that's really
in control of things. We're trying to ruin the president.
(35:47):
But don't worry, that's only how over the population legitimately
thinks right, Like he's always right. Guys, you say he's wrong,
but you know, give us enough time to find something
to convince us that he's right, and turns out he
was right. Well then so then you get things like
on CNN when everyone's looking at this and go, William
(36:07):
Barr is trying to obstruct Congress and the media, the
people obstructing our access to the truth. And they describe
even his comments is on CNN and they say Mr Barr,
who began his career at the c I, did not
intend to imply that spine was inherently wrong. According to
a person who has discussed the matter with him but
was not authorized to share their conversation, Mr Bars is
no technical difference between the term and surveillance. He indicated
(36:30):
that the issue was not the act of surveilling, but
whether officials followed proper procedures. And they just so again
they're doing it a very like, oh well, this is
this is what the explanation is, without really giving any
attention to like what the effect is of this very
implicit and premeditated strategy. Yeah, And I just wanna once
again raised this kind of fear that I had when
(36:53):
the Mueller report first came out and Bar was like,
you know, gave out his impressions that it was, you know,
no collusion, no collusion, no collusion. Him and Mueller are
best friends. People have pointed to that more like he's
Bar secretly trojan horse for the resistance, and he's going
to go in there and end it. But you know,
(37:14):
who knows like how much influenced Bar had over him
to get him to just kind of ease up and
fucking end the investigation, like he's their buddies. I don't know,
Like we we like to think of Mueller as this
like beyond reproach, like you know, lawyer superhero. But he
But I think just as easily even he could have
(37:36):
let Muller do his thing and Bar can just do
his completely separate from that, you know what I mean. Yeah, No,
that's true. This is just my bullshit conspiracy theory. But
I'm just saying, like it, it does seem like that
is more likely than Mueller, like getting him to turn
on Trump. No. Yeah, And I think our people point
to the fact that William Barr is part of like
(37:56):
the old guard of the Republican operatives, and they're like,
they really that Trump is just such a disruptor that
maybe he can do it. But again, all the Republican interests,
which is the wealthy corporatocracy, they're being serviced by this administration.
So it all works out, you know, at the end
of the day. What I can say about all of this,
right is that we just don't know what is in
the It's not good to speculate, Jack, we just don't know,
(38:18):
all right, enough, serious ship, let's talk about the president. Uh,
he was in the Atlantic talking about his children, and
there's just a great quote that is so revealing. Yeah,
this the whole article. It's called Inside Ivanka's dream World,
and it just started talking about just the bizarro reality
(38:42):
she's living in. But you know, some of the funny
things in here are not funny whatever. At this point,
we're just we're living in a fever dream um is. Again,
I think people this has been sort of reported here
and there, but they again are reporting that Donald Trump
does still refer to Ivanka as baby, even in official
meetings having to do with government issues and officials. So
(39:06):
it's like, baby, what about this anyway? Do you know
anybody whose father refers to them as baby? Like I'm
trying to think of it, like maybe maybe that's the thing.
That's the thing, Well, if you're if you're black, I
hear that show, Oh yeah, yeah, yeah yeah. Like I mean,
my my aunt calls me baby, she calls her my
(39:28):
cousin's baby. Okay, but that's different. That sounds that I
think in the vernacular. It's a little bit different than
like if you're like a waspy family, like right, baby,
But I don't know, trying to convince people that you're
not practicing nepotism, Well, I mean, I think baby, everyone
has everyone has weird names. I'm sure their parents still
(39:50):
call them to this day. I can't sure that with us,
whoever has the weirdest one, maybe we'll discuss maybe not
so then about this nepotism thing, right Trump Also they
have quotes of him saying, you know, he was thinking
about having her replace NICKI Haley, who was our ambassador
to the U n when she stepped down, because he
says she's a natural diplomat, she would have been great
(40:11):
at the United Nations as an example. And then they
further asked, like, well, then why not nominate her if
she would have been great. If I did, they'd say
nepotism when it would have been had nothing to do
with nepotism. But you would have been incredible. I mean,
they would have said it was nepotism because I put
my daughter, who has no governmental experience, in the position
(40:31):
of UN ambassador. I don't know how you could have
Do you believe these people? I know there's just a
bunch of haters, you know, And that's what you gotta do.
You gotta you gotta just brush the haters off and
focus on you. I loved his attempt to give compliments
to his other children because so this is I think
this is a direct quote. Baron is young, but he's
(40:53):
got wonderful potential, so that's kind of a compliment. And
Tiffany is doing extremely well. Don is he's enjoying politics,
actually it's very good. And Eric is running the business
along with Don and also very much into politics. I
mean the children. The children have been very, very good,
(41:16):
so clearly a doting father who adores Don and Eric.
That gave me chills. I don't know if I'm proud
of you, guys. I don't know if you had like
friends who's like, you know, parents for whatever reason, maybe
because they're too busy with their careers or whatever, aren't
around a lot. Yeah, and it's just from like phone
calls where you're like, well, the kids are really into science. Yeah,
(41:39):
my kid, he's into science, and that's very good. And
Baron is young, but he's got I don't understand the
construction of that one. Baron is young, but he's got
wonderful potential. So he's like I tried to let him
run a part of the business and failed, but he's
got wonderful potential. He's still I tried to get him
(42:01):
to like fire a bunch of people for me, and
he started he broke down into tears. But I'm told
that's because he's young. Because he's young and he's still
got wonderful potential because genetically and he's got that. He's
like Tiffany's doing extremely well because all the reporting is
that she's in law school and all she does talk
shit about him. Yeah, how does he come up with
such a yeah with Marlon Naples? Yeah, I don't know
(42:24):
how he comes up with such a detailed, uh compliment
extremely well. It's everyone's doing well. And it's just about
what modifier of well or good you're using, because you
can be they're doing well, you can be extremely well.
You can be good or very good. But the Don
and Eric, it's just things they're into. And what's what's
(42:47):
wild too is he also said that he was thinking
of having like Ivanka could have ran the World Bank.
The World Bank, yes, and then and the quote she
would have been great at that because she's very good
with numbers. Motherfucker the world, but very good with numbers.
Yet the other kids are just descriptions of they like politics.
(43:09):
But I love baby number one baby baby. Wait, is
she the eldest No, Oh, I don't think so. Baby
just baby number one. She's in his heart yet she's
definitely not the eldest. Okay, guys, we're gonna take one
more quick break and then we'll be back with even
less serious ship. And we're back. And super producer Nick
(43:39):
Stuff just pointed out he said, the best part of
Joel is that it's three hours of that ship. Wait,
it's three hours long. It's three hours. You know. It's
funny for a movie that I know certain things about
really well and not seeing it's it's amazing purely off
of my love for Claire, for Lonnie did I venture
into that film. She's very striking on camera, like she
should have been Jennifer Aniston or like she should have
(44:03):
had an amazing career and for something she did she
was in Maltrats, right, and then what else? What else?
What else? Alright, guys, she's been and other stuff. Hold on,
I don't want to do that. Oh, that's why Shent departed?
She who who she planned the departed? She was the departed.
(44:25):
She's the one that left. Yeah, she was like, sorry, boys,
I've got a departed. I love that part. That's amazing.
And then Mark Wahlberg's like, what the hell, man, what
the hell? What Brot? You's gonna depart like that without
telling me? Brouh, Let's talk about Wisconsin. Uh, since we're
doing the accent already. Uh. So Wisconsin restaurants or a
(44:50):
Wisconsin restaurant has banned middle schoolers. Uh. And this story
just brought me back to a time in my life
when I was a middle schooler, just a shitty middle
schooler looking for some grown up behaviors I could do
with my friends and fucking it up beyond reproach. Hold on,
I just had while we were talking about this story.
(45:11):
I don't remember clear for Linny being in the departed.
I don't, Nick Stump, She's not in the departed. That's
a merry. What's her name? You burned me, Stump, you
burned us. Let's talk about this Wisconsin restaurant the band
middle schoolers. I would have had no place to order
(45:32):
water and try and buy cigarettes out of the back
like cigarette vending machine, and then fight over a twelve
dollar bill with my friends. I mean. So, apparently Tom's
drive in Tom's fo sorry that was me. So apparently
Tom's driving in Fox Cities, Wisconsin has had it Tom's
(45:55):
you burned me, So they have They put a sign
up in their window or on the door. It says
middle cool students highlighted due to mistreatment of Tom's drive ins, property, guests,
and staff. You are no longer inside of the building
without parental supervision. For those who did not cause any
of the incidents, we are sorry for this. Inconvenience, you
may still purchase food through the walk up window now.
(46:18):
W f RV Local five news. Uh, they were saying
that this has been a problem because they've just been
acting out of pocket. So we're talking carving into booths,
drawing Genitalia with sharpie markers, making just a fucking mess
of the restaurant in bathroom, stealing soda, fighting with customers,
yelling profanities at the manager, even tattooing. So I think
(46:42):
they were using like jail house ship with pen ink
and needles, like when the like the only the wildest
middle schoolers do brush shout out to my homegirl Sarah,
who has like a smiley face to this day that
looks like a crying circle and it says, yeah, so anyway,
these so the cops didn't even call. They were just
trying to deal with it, and apparently they just they broke.
(47:02):
And I get it because if honestly, being a young
child with no job at a restaurant, like as a patron,
you do not know how to act, first of all,
because you're normally. For me, when I was in a restaurant,
I was with with my parents, and then the second
I'm in there feeling like an adult, of course I'm
going to act out the dumbest ship. Well, six of
us are trying to spend thirteen dollars on fries and
(47:25):
then fighting over one drink. Yeah, totally. I remember when
I went. We used to always go to pizza Hut
because I lived in Perth in Scotland, so it was
like a small town. There's like one pizza hut that
like allowed all the kids in and we would get
a pizza. So I mean it was just kind of
where we would all hang out and I remember we
want we'd um get our like ice cream and pizza
(47:47):
and the chili flavors, the parmesan. We'd put it all
in one thing and it would be like I bet
you twenty pounds if you drink that, I'll give you
twenty pounds and all the guys are like, no way,
no way, and I was like, I'll try it, and
I actually enjoyed it. It tasted amazing. It was like
weirdly tasted like licorice. And then they were like they
almost didn't want to give it to me because I
(48:08):
was joying it. Another do it again? Why y'all had
a twenty pound note like that where you're like, yeah,
I got this on it. Yeah, I don't know. It
was probably a birthday or something. Okay, I'm just making Yeah.
I was like because I'm like, wait, what year was that?
I'm thinking the exchange rate? Yeah, that's big. I've never
(48:28):
seen math magic, Like what would happen when there was
like ten middle two early high schoolers at a restaurant
and the bill comes and everybody has put in twenty
and we're still fifty dollars short bill. Somehow, somehow, somehow, somehow,
Dion Scott, you, oh, you've forgot your wallet when we
(48:50):
went to Vitelo's before prom out of here, bro. I
still remember that ship and I was like, I only
had a salad, motherfucker, don't you were eating my motherfucking pizza?
Little too, Dion, Mine was friendlies in Centerville, Ohio. That's
where we used to function up. I lived there in
middle school and h R I p to friendlies. I
(49:11):
think they've gone out of business. Well, you know, so
sorry to the kids. You know, I got to learn
how to at least, you know, don't be I'm surprised
that they're tattooing each other. That was my favorite little detail.
Like I'm like, of course kids are gonna draw dicks
on stuff and stick gum places and just be farting
up and screaming and doing dumb sh it. But like
the fact that like someone would look like is that
child tattooing the other one with? Just like bad kids
(49:36):
in Wisconsin? Man. Uh Well, speaking about of business, Jesse
Taylor uh the influencer that called the cops on Instagram
for deleting her account. Uh. Yeah, So she had about
a hundred thousand followers and then her Instagram was deactivated
when the quote haters reported her account. Maybe it had
(49:59):
something to do with racist ship, she said in past dreams. Anyways,
we we have some audio not of the right Well,
let me first just a little bit of background. So
there was an interview with her and Insider, and she,
first of all, was claiming that she was making five
thousand dollars over the last three years from her Instagram account.
(50:21):
How old is this true? Twenty one, maybe two or
something like that, and she was basically she said that
when the second that was taken away from her, she
had no other option but to phone the police because
it was a fucking it was a death. As she
describes it quote, I felt like it was a homicide,
like somebody murdered me and then went online to say
(50:43):
I murdered this girl. I don't even know what that mean.
I called. I called the police actually and told them
about this, and they said, you can't compare a murder
to this, and I was like, no, that's exactly what
it felt like. Okay. So then she goes on YouTube,
like right after her ship got deleted and just delivers
(51:04):
this this victim's monologue straight out of a Bizarro Lifetime film.
I don't know what just listen to this, hey, guys. So, like,
I'm in the middle in my Instagram account I deleted,
yet I am nothing without my following. I am nothing
without my following. I want to say to everybody that's
(51:25):
been reporting me day twice, because you're ruining by life.
When some of you guys have to realize this, I
have no skills, I have nofications. I can never work
a normal job. I am worthless I have. I bring
nothing to the table, zero. I bring nothing to the
fucking table. When it comes to that, I always gonna
(51:47):
fight with people. I was getting data places like I'm
not work material. I will never be work material, So
stop fucking reporting me on mother fucking Instagram. The last
thing I want to do is be a fun I
must prostitute in the street doing that. That's just what
Norwegian stay to each other day. Today we cut that down. Uh.
(52:11):
There are moments where she said she was like she
worked at a strip club and claims she was a
prostitute for some of that time and then but there
are other parts to where she goes after working people.
She's like, I'm not like the fucking okay who you guys,
just go do your nine to five Okay. That's why
I moved to l A so I could do Instagram
because I'm not trying to live that boring life. And
(52:32):
then just comes at like working people. Uh So, clearly
the comments were not kind to her and even like
her and then her I g was restored and Instagram
said it was deactivated like in an error or something,
due to error or something. Now this is where I'm
become a little bit I'm a little dubious, okay, because
this is either the saddist indictment of the social media generation,
(52:57):
I think, or it is a very very clever marketing
thing because this has been written up so many times
on the pure face of Instagram. Influencer calls police because
account is deleted, and you get like everywhere from the
sun to motherfucking business inside, like everybody is writing about it.
So in a way, I'm like, that's a good way
(53:18):
to bring some attention to your account. Or I mean,
she was seemed like those tears were legit. It did, Yeah,
I mean, if it did seem like the pain of
someone who had it is the greatest, the most pathetic
and greatest performance since Bill Paxson and true lies. Yes,
she was basically and then like really does not do
(53:41):
much for defending yourself because every time she's like, I'm
not saying like okay, like that you're you're lame if
you have a job or whatever. She's like, but like
fun that I would never work a job, but you know, Jesse, Yeah,
I mean those are those all sound like good things
to consider as you decide, Okay, I need to broaden
(54:05):
my skill set maybe like the things she was saying,
It's like Jesus man, I don't get along with you.
I don't get along with people, so I probably needed it,
like hit a therapist at least once a week. I
don't have any skills. I can't like go places without
getting thrown out. Yeah, like, yeah, those are all problems
that like you are using this Instagram thing to you know,
(54:27):
shield yourself from so let's and but also like I
don't know where she's gonna get any no one's gonna
feel bad for her, because there are plenty of people
with like legitimate disabilities who still go to work, who
still find a way to do things, and like this
is That's where I'm like, God, are we gonna have
to take care of these like young dumb kids were
just like I don't know, I don't want to work
(54:48):
because you see a lot of people like when she
said I moved to l A to do Instagram, I'm
like that struck a chord with me because I'm like,
this is this is sort of the mirage about this
city that peop do really believe because it's ship like
they see on keeping up with the Kardashians, like this
influencer really is a coveted career. Uh. And and then
(55:11):
I'm like really worried when you see people are like
just shattered over this. And I don't know worse the
five thousand comes from, because I didn't see any sponsored polts.
And remember the first time I walked down Hollywood Boulevard
it was a rainy day and I like, I was like,
they never show this on TV. It is like a
hooker without the glitter. It's just all rotten teeth and
so creepy. Yeah. Yeah, no, there's a really bad drug problem,
(55:35):
yeah Los Angeles. Yeah. I mean, at the same time,
I do not want to say it's a generational thing
where generation they're probably smarter than millennials, who were smarter
than Gen X, who were smarter than the Baby boomers.
I think there's one in between there who's smarter than
my grandpa. Yeah, not smarter than any of our grandpa's.
(55:55):
They were the smart if you think about man, my
grandpa didn't go to college with his high school education,
knows more than people that will go to college. I
feel like, yeah, well, I just feel like just in general,
like the grasp of like there are things that I'm
surprised that people who graduate college just don't know, like
basic stuff, and I'm like, wow, the education system used
to be more robust back then. Yeah, but I feel like,
(56:18):
but anyway, I'm saying, my grandpa's as smart as guy
on Earth. I do feel like judging a generation by
their influencers. I just don't like, we didn't have the
baby boomer equivalent of somebody who got famous for just
being like an idiot, right, like they they were famous
(56:39):
in the UK they have like eight girls or like
the celebrities. But remember yeah, right, I feel like we
like the maybe the plus equivalent we've had is like
reality stars at this point. Yeah, reality ushered in the
era of of fame being the achievement rather than you'd
(56:59):
be came famous for achieving or for a talent. Yeah,
that that flipped around. Well, I mean I think it's
always sort of been getting there, but Reality TV just
blew that door open because now it's like, oh, yeah,
the person who screwed everyone over in that competition game show. Yeah, Like,
well it's been a pleasure as always having you. Thanks
for having me. Where can people find you on social media?
(57:23):
Since finding you in person is going to be difficult
since you're gonna be flying all over the damn place.
Um So I'm on Instagram and Twitter. Use Instagram more.
I've got Facebook fan page. If people use that, they're
both just Katia finger k A T I A K
V I n G. I almost had to think for
some of my own name that is not I am tired,
and he did not. Yeah, I will post about shows. Um,
(57:48):
I've kind of just been writing and filming, but I
will eventually be doing more live shows a pop along
as we say, Is there a tweet you've been enjoying? Oh,
oh my gosh, not tweet, but I saw an Instagram
It was they had sped up the footage of the
Moon London and it's one of the best things I've
(58:08):
seen where it was like they're like like bumping and right,
it's amazing. Um, Miles, where can people find you? Find me?
Follow me on Twitter and Instagram at Miles of Gray
tweet that I like, Uh it brought to my attention
by a gang from at the real HINDI not individual
(58:28):
When your displaying name you put me onto This tweet
from at Andrew Channings Chamings. Yeah, we'll go with that.
It says me. Do you think Chewbacca has pecks or
a trail of tiny teets like a piglet uber driver?
Why did you sit in the front? Hey, what do
you think though Chewbacca got teezer pecks? It looks like
(58:50):
he got pecks. Yeah, it looks like that, but that
would be funny thought a third nipple, Yeah, where he's
got the defined pecks and then like if you just
pull the hair to the side, he got wild little
teats on the apps, all like on his six pack
each yeah, each pack. Great. As you know, I solved
incredibly high nipples. Yes, so we want to talk about that.
(59:10):
Called him schipples because around your shoulders shoulder nipples. Uh.
Johnny Soon tweeted does it still count as a depression
nap if it happens at PM and then you sleep
for fifteen hours? Uh? Colin tweeted Benny Hanna style pizza
restaurant where the chef is a big mustachio stereotype guy
and he comes out and throws the dough in the
air and says, mama mea and stuff. Maybe his adult
(59:34):
son could come out at one point and he'd scream
at him in front of you, Hey, what are you doing?
That's so true, man, Benny Hut problem. That's the same ship.
Just like I was talking about the good Luck Bar
and they're like, Asian do what are the Chinatown themed bar? Like,
(59:54):
come on, broke, we are the most oriental quote unquote,
they're like oriental theme place. You know what that's um
In the UK, if you go shopping like it, test
goes the Sainsburase, they will have a section it's called
Oriental food. Yeah. And I came out here and I
said to miss oriental food and they're like, you cannot
say that, And I was like, oh, I didn't know.
Like sorry, Well, if you had dominated that part of
(01:00:16):
the globe, you would say oriented too. And Andrew Thomas tweeted, Hey,
Miles and Jack, if you weren't impressed by the zoom
damn blurry picture of the black hole, check out the
zoomed out version. Much cooler. In my opinion, it is
much cooler. I was trying to find that ship last
week before reported uh and yeah, go find the zoomed
out version. It is really really cool, so check that.
(01:00:39):
You can find us on Twitter at daily z Eyegeis.
Were at the Daily Zeitgeist on Instagram. We have fit
book campage on a website Daily zi guys dot com
where we post episodes in our foot nowhere were link
off the information that we've talked about today's episode, as
well as the song we ride out on mysos. This
is from shag Ghetto and Zo Loopers called a two D.
(01:01:01):
Shaghetto is a dope producer I think from Detroit, maybe
not anyway, I know he's a Japanese Japanese American man.
He makes the sick beats. But this is no difference.
So get your get your week starting off with the
beats raps. All right, we're gonna ride out on that.
We will be back tomorrow because it is a daily
podcast and we will talk to you guys then by
(01:01:25):
a pocket pocket. I'm hoping on the mind on the
imp on my mind, on the on the mission. Why
you want to go on with death on me? Made
me work around like I gotta best on me. It's
(01:01:45):
gonna hand, but it hexts on me for the hecks
on me. But the mess on me made me walk
around like me because the pitch want to child like deathing.
I'm just trying to paint. I'm ast