Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season seventy nine, episode
three off Joe Daly's eight Guys Yeah Podcast. Were you
taking deep dig in New America's share consciousness and say,
officially off the top Buck Coke Industries and Fox News.
It's Wednesday, ap nine. Team. My name is Jack O'Brien
ak Smooth Jack O'Brian, Smooth Jack O'Brien. That's courtesy and
(00:27):
Mr b at my am virus. And I'm sorry to
be joined as always by my co host, Mr Miles.
Hoccoona Matata. What a wonderful freeze. Hoccoona Matata. Ain't no
passing craze. It means no Miles for the rest of
(00:48):
your grays. It's our Fox News free for lasteecoon Amatata.
Thank you too, Soldiers Hannah for that one. You know, oh,
thank you. Give me the tamone and Pumba Sirens for
that one. And whoever wrote that song not getting paid,
(01:09):
not getting paid and you know what, that's that's your
fault for fucking with Disney h And also it's April,
so I want to shout out all my Armenians who
are listening to the show. April is a Day of
Remembers for the Armenian genocide. Uh So, shout out all y'all.
I see you all riding around North Hollywood Lendo with
the flax. Uh so, yeah, Tamarmenian people bought it what.
(01:30):
We're thrilled to be joining in our third seat by
the hilarious comedian Lisa chanou Ak. If you don't know
now chanouh, good one. I love that drop the wow
hitting them all. I love your last night. What is it?
Is it? The frenchness set of it, the o us?
(01:52):
I don't know? Cho Yeah? Are you so you can
say no Tigers? No you don't Yeah, g a u
X Saints Tigers. Yeah, yeah, just the only limited it's
a very limited to a limited to your friends license.
Are you French? My dad was half friends. Okay, yeah,
(02:12):
that's French enough for miss Yeah. Welcome your first time guest.
We're thrilled to have you. You fit right into the
conversation the second you you walked into the studio. Uh
And we're gonna get to know you a little bit
better in a moment. First, we're gonna tell our listeners
a couple of things we're talking about today. We're just
gonna look forward to the Avengers end game. The anticipation
(02:38):
is building. Uh. We're gonna talk about an NBA men Ghazi.
We're gonna check in with the Scotus as we wait
for their probably completely fucked decision on lgbt Q discrimination. Uh.
We're gonna talk about Biden when he's going to announce.
(03:00):
Apparently it is tomorrow. Herman Kaine is out as you're
fed nominee. Uh, but not just because he'd be really
bad at the job, because he's too late. Yeah, we're
gonna talk about Sri Lanka. We're gonna talk about Wisconsin
being the number one state for frozen pizza consumption, and
(03:22):
the Playboy Club, all of that and more. But first, Lisa,
what is something from your search history that's revealing about
who you are? I was looking at my search history
and I was so embarrassing because everything I google is
can I give my dog this human food? Pretty much everything? Bacon, pineapple, uh, strawberry, Yes,
(03:46):
he can. I think those are the last few I remember. Yes, Well,
I find like cutting it. I'll like yeah, he's he
is accustomed to kind of coming up and begging for scraps.
Oh all the time. Yeah, our dog is just a beggar.
Oh yeah, I thinks he's a chooser. Yes, yeah, I
(04:09):
mean I feel like with meat, I'm always I don't
I don't think twice. If it's like a meat thing,
I'm like, yeah, I'm sure you can eat this whopper. Yeah,
with cheese. But then he has fruits that don't always
kind of get I always look up because I'm like,
you never know what is not good? What's the fruit?
Is blueberries? Not alright? Orberryes is fine? Avocados and no avocados? No? Yeah, yeah,
(04:31):
oh no. Our dog likes every food except bananas. Really well,
not with bananas. My dog is so picky, Like I
give him an apple slice and then he'll just leave
the skin, would you please cut the crusts off? Just
looks at it like somebody's getting lazy. R Like yeah, yeah.
(04:55):
Our dog is so about the scraps that I will
just find like a dried noodle like in his fur somewhere,
because he just like knows when my son is going
to like drop some pieces, right, So he's just always
it's like falling on his head constant, like manna from heaven. Yeah, exactly.
What is something you think is overrated, overrated, overrated. I'm
(05:21):
gonna say food trucks, I feel like they're overrated. I
feel like they're done. I feel like it's enough. Okay,
let's talk some ship. Did you go to one recently
and you're like, you know what, this ain't it anymore?
It's not that because I do feel like the taco
trucks are like fine, but only because the price point
is good. Taco trucks are great because yeah, it's right,
it's affordable, and it's like for the people, it's of
(05:41):
the people, and it's delicious. But like when you go
to on the way to work today, I got cut
off by the doctor Delhi fucking truck. Motherfucker cut me
off so hard, and I'm trying to practice some zen
ship I'm going through right now. I'm really trying to
get ahold of myself. Excuse me. But when the doctor
Deli cut me off, and I just saw like the
(06:02):
hokey nous of it, and they're charging all this money
for pastronomy grilled cheese, that is not interesting to me.
Do you know? If he was on his way to
a Deli related medical emergency, that's the whole thing. That's
the thing I don't like about some of these trucks
is how like uh kitchy or like nicky they are
with their menus because on that thing, it literally was
(06:23):
a prescription for grilled cheese, grilled cheese, Prestronomy sandwich with
Parmesan fries. I've okay, thank you two thousand seven. I've
seen that menu combination before. Also, it's like eighteen dollars.
It's not like I don't know about Dr Deli. If
their prices are fair, then I don't wanna bring you
into this. But you did cut me off, motherfucker. Any
(06:44):
of those where it's like a specialty waffle truck, You're like,
fuck this, it's gonna be so expensive and it's not
even gonna be a good waffle. Like just like, can
you get me a Lingua taco for less than one dollars?
Because if you can, I'm from all for it and
I'm here now. I will say. The good thing is
that it allows different people to get into the restaurant
(07:05):
game without having to pay the overhead for I'm not
saying for a spot. And where Cracked was located back
in the day in Santa Monica, we just had like
mobile Yeah, there was just a like mobile food court
that was always showing up. But it's also tricky because man,
there's some like the difference between a bad food truck
(07:28):
and a good food truck is just wide. Um. I
do want to shout out Vitos, the Salvadoran food truck
with the poopoosas that's like a moderny food truck that
I'm like, yes, I'm here for that too. Papoosa's, uh,
what is underrated besides Papoosa's monogamy? Monogamy is underrated controversial?
(07:53):
You're telling me here, not a lot of great movies
made about just really great monogamous relationships. I mean, was
the start like that because you consider the Nope, I've
I've never seen it. Yeah, I think it probably is
kind of about that, but it's also about mental littleness.
(08:13):
I think, yeah, there's a lot of other things going on. Well,
he has like what they have all signs one of them,
at least one of them. I don't know, it's been
a while spoiler alert, it's been a while. Well, yeah,
I think literally fifteen years. Did that come in two
thousand four or something? Yeah? Probably, Um, monogamy tell me more.
I just think that well, I'm a stand up comedian,
(08:35):
and I feel like I hear all this uh talk
about how like cool it is to be open and
and that's great if that's your thing, that's cool. But
I think monogamy is cool too. What is it? What's
the advantage for you? The value that you feel people
aren't seeing in monogamy, Like I guess with the openness,
people like, well, you can try whatever you want to
be a little more free. Yeah, if that's your vibe,
(08:56):
you know, that's your vibe. But some people need consistency.
I guess. I think a lot of times that for me,
the parts of relationships that are hard are what makes
it more valuable to me. Oh we've been through this together,
We've gone through this thing. To me, that provides me
with a lot of comfort and security and maybe for
other people it doesn't. But that's why I think that
(09:20):
monogamy is underrated. Yeah, easy to take for granted, but yeah,
it could be an amazing thing. Yeah. I mean, if
I didn't have Her Majesty, my partner by my side.
When um, I found out Taco Bell wasn't serving Maxims anymore,
I just found out right now. Yeah, but luckily our
(09:40):
listeners are so fucking about that life. They've taught me.
The men you hack, you know, get a cheesy roll
up at beef at Pico blood al hacked Maximo would
actually even more beef. So you know, the Lord take it,
then the Lord giveth back. That's how I see it.
But yeah, it's true, like there is something to the
hard parts of life that do add a dimension, like
(10:01):
a depth or quality to a relationship. But I guess
I wonder if that's a thing, like if that's just
the nourishment we need in our relationships that someone who
is more has like an open relationship isn't as interested
in that, because maybe it's about literally the actual being
able to love as many different people as possible. Yeah, yeah,
I don't want to shoot on people who are in
open relationships. I just think monogamy is underrated. The only
(10:24):
people are shooting on people talk a bell for taking
the Mexic and making me sound wild when I'm trying
to reverse engineer the ship at the drive through. And
I think just in general, like in the same way
that like certain crimes are overreported because they're just like
more interesting and get better ratings. Like uh, you know,
monogamy just doesn't really get talked about because it's somewhat boring,
(10:45):
but it is a It is a thing that probably
gets culturally underrated. People think it's not cool and it's
actually really hard. Welcome to the new show called Yeah,
I guess our single friends are having fun. But there's
like also something pretty tight to being a loving man too,
that's right. Uh? And finally, what is a myth? What's
something people think is true? You know to be false?
(11:08):
Are good? The buffets are good? Yeah? Wow? Okay, all buffets?
I mean yeah, like I guess, I guess there are
exceptions every rule, but yeah, generally generally they all suck.
What do you think when in your mind the kind
of buffet being like, that's bull that's a bullshit buffet.
(11:28):
What do we what are we talking? Like Vegas buffet?
Like any I don't know anywhere, Sue plantation, any like
anything of what those many ice creams you know, I
mean I don't really Yeah, you could get you could
get ice cream somewhere, that's very totally. I didn't know
that though. After the show, if you could tell me
(11:49):
some other places. I thought it was only a super plant.
I just you know, what the only reason I recoiled
was because I love a breakfast buffet, and that's where
I think it's a little a different hotel in the morning. Yeah,
like on a cruise ship, like I'm nasty, I like
a funk. I just want to blow the plate up
(12:09):
with I'm a nasty breakfast eating motherfucker, and I just
want to have like because on a cruise ship they
have like international breakfast, so you have bangers too, you know.
Then they also have like a little eggs benny, you
know if you want to if that's your jam, and
then Asian stuff too. I was like, what me, So
soup yea and eggs with bacon sounds gross. I'm not
(12:29):
gonna Yeah, I know, I know that's what I'm saying.
And I'm a self proclaimed nasty buffet dude, but I
know that they're also when but when you get into
like the actual like a dinner buffet, that's when the
quality is just like ship, I think, just breakfast, it's
easier for me to lower my bar for quality. The
qualities grows also, I mean it's so much easier to
(12:49):
guess it because people aren't just hing stuff with their
hands and like doing the most it's so bad. Yeah,
well breakfast buffets, breakfasts and then yeah, but even like
in Vegas too, there's like the ones that are like
good or like sixty five bucks, and even then you're like,
let's just go to a restaurant, but it's all you
(13:11):
can eat and you expect it to be good and
it's not. And also like the service is usually okay,
like they come and fill your drinks up or you know. However,
however often is right yeah yeah, And I bet those
people probably don't even get like tipped or anything because
people are just like, yeah, I know, yeah right, that
(13:35):
people be like I actually did all the work, even
though you cleaned up my nasty ass mess, like in
between me getting new plates and ship Yeah yeah again,
always tip, always tip, real quick. We wanted to bring
up the fact this has been an ongoing survey ever
since yesterday when we talked about the stomach pump rumor.
(13:55):
We've gotten some wild ass answers on winter people heard
that rumor about and uh, Lisa, you said that you
didn't really have the stomach pump rumor you had heard
the Marilyn manson moving a rib for at that seems
to be the number one rumor everybody heard in high school.
(14:17):
I don't think there's anybody who was alive between the
years and who did not hear something to that effect. Right.
I had actually also heard it about Prince I think
at once yea in the seventies or early eighties. Uh um,
(14:37):
but yeah, we heard Alanis Morrisset Britney spears. So it's
basically any woman that like made men slightly uncomfortable or
made young men slightly uncomfortable, and then any dude who
was like a little bit like, you know, fluid when
it comes to like there was Elton John, there was
(14:58):
a UK rock star who I wasn't familiar with, but
I think Sanctaneed Love was the UK version of that rumor.
Uh so that's when you know you've made it. Yeah,
if you get if you get the wild homophobic myth
about you, I can't wait to get my stomach. Would
(15:20):
people please start that rumor about me? Not oblige maybe not.
Miles is looking at me like maybe that's it. I mean,
it's better that they start organic. You don't want to
look thirsty. Um, you don't want to be too thirsty
because thing you might have to get your stomach bumped exactly.
(15:41):
Just let it happen. Let the let the controversial ship
just come to you organically, and who knows it could
organically happen. We're also talking about New Kids on the Block,
had a bunch of hits, had a bunch of hits.
Chinese food makes me sick, but I love when girls
stopped by you. You know. We're talking about this rumor
(16:03):
that the New Kids on the Block. Like I think
the rumor I heard was that New Kids on the Block.
Like a doctor found other members of New Kids on
the Block semen in the but of like one of
the other members, and Miles was like, yeah, because of
that always common medical practice where you're going for a
(16:26):
checkup and they check your butt seen and they cross
reference that with people you know, and there's thousands of
untested rape kids. Yea, we got to check out check. Yeah. Yeah,
maybe that's why that one didn't spread to New Kids.
(16:47):
And Mark Mark wasn't the one that was in New Kids. Yeah, wow,
don't slander Jordan though, right, he didn't deserve anything he did.
Yeah yeah, okay, that's going to say Frontman, classic front Man. Alright, guys,
let's talk about Avengers end game. The anticipation is building. Miles.
(17:09):
You said you've never seen an Avengers now man, you
were gonna I got. I saw I think what was
one of the first big Marvel movies to come out
of the Disney side of things, or the Iron Man
Iron Man? Right, Yeah, I was there for Iron Man.
I was there for Iron Man too. I was there
for Iron Man three Man. I went there for Oheda
(17:31):
iron Man. I was there, and then like Thor came out.
I wasn't a big Thor fan because I was just like, dude,
just got a hammer, and just as a comic. I
never really read Thor. I read x Men, so I
was seen every x Men film and then Marvel just
came out with New Ship like every couple of months
that I just got overwhelmed and I just kind of
gave up. I was like, I can't keep up, and
I'm not gonna want to see Black Panther too, right,
(17:55):
you I've been lying about that too, know. I was
like saying, that's the one Marvel film that I have
seen and had seen repeatedly. But I got overwhelmed. They
hit me too hard and fast, and then I'm like
such a person who likes to read everything and know
about everything. That at that point when the Avengers film
came out, I had people telling me like, oh, well,
they all connect. It's really cool how they connect with
the other films. And I was like, then, this is
(18:15):
probably wasted on me because I have not seen any
of the other ones, and that that built on itself
snowball effect, And here I am, I'm the ignorant one
during this huge cultural moment. Yeah, speaking of the Stomich
pump rumor, Yeah, snowball effect. Snowball effect, Lisa, you're you're
an Avengers fan. Jack can't wait to see it. I'm
sure it's going to be great. Yeah. I do feel
(18:36):
like every time you watch when you do, feel like
you want to watch all of the other ones over again.
So I totally get being overwhelmed. Like when Infinity War
came out, my boyfriend I were like, let's see, like
which ones around Netflix. Of course there's like none, but
we were like, oh, we'll see if we can find
a way to watch them. And now there's a ton
on Netflix. I feel like I don't even have excuses
anymore because like, most of them are accessible, we can
(18:56):
find them. I didn't have a similar issue with Thor too, though.
But Ragnarok is so good. Okay, everybody, everybody. I started
watching it and I was too high, and when I
woke up, the credits were happening. Ye, but it was
it seemed pretty tight. Yeah, I don't remember. That's my
experience too, But that was that during the whole thing. Well,
(19:20):
I mean it makes sense because it is also when
I see it, I get it for what it is.
Like You're seeing all of this great concentration of superhero
stuff and one contained thing, and you can see them
interact just like you did in the comic books. Um,
and you know when you look at the the fervor
across the globe, Yeah, you know. I guess I'm the
odd one. I mean, this seems like it happens every
(19:41):
time a new Avengers movie comes out. But you know,
all my friends are texting, like where where they're going
to see it? When they're gonna see it, like if
they got tickets or whatever. That doesn't happen with really
any other movie or franchise. AMC theaters have announced they're
going to stay open for seventy two hours in a row,
uh to make room for all the people who want
(20:03):
to see it, and also the fact that it is
as long as The Godfather. It is three hours long.
It's three hours long. Yeah, yo, can you imagine I
feel bad for people? Yo? Good look, keeping your eyes open. Man.
I saw Fast and Furious eight off edible fell to
sleep through the whole zombie car sequence. Um, I just
(20:23):
have a problem sleeping movie theater tired. No, it's the
seats are too freaking comfortable now, especially those the ships
that like fully recline in a bed at a certain point.
Anyway to the AMC thing, Yeah, seventy two hours. Can
you imagine like you're already in a like a tour.
Let's say you're at a one o'clock showing and you
(20:44):
got to stay all the way up through for too
old for that? Yeah. The first I think I went
and saw a movie a midnight showing of Terminator two
when I was very young. And that's the only time
I've seen a movie that late. That's that's what you
saw Bridge to Terabithia midnight show. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah,
that's true. I love going to a midnight movie. Really. Yeah,
(21:05):
I don't sleep well anyways, right, Yeah, Well, are you
looking for any specific outcome in this film. Nah, I
just like when there's when there's an ending. Yeah, Um,
China has pre sold twenty seven million dollars worth of
midnight showing tickets alone. That is that's for you. I mean,
(21:29):
could you even do that in America? Like, I feel
like that China is just so big that I mean,
I don't know how. I'm sure that that has to
compare to the US and on some level, even though
there are you know, way more customers out there. People
don't think it's going to be a billion dollar opening,
but that idea of a billion dollar opening, the possibility
of a billion dollar week at the box office is
(21:52):
has been raised wait for real, yeah, like worldwide because
with the global might that this is gonna be huge
in the United States and it might be even bigger
in China. So but yeah, for a bunch of actors,
this is the end. This is my only friend. For
r d J as iron Man, I think is what
people are expecting. And Chris Evans, I know, for like,
(22:15):
has has tweeted about the fact that this is it.
So yeah, man, Ruffalo, I think I think he's gone
after this. He's um. Also, he's just been taking a
lot of internet breaks, and like, I think he wants
out the game. What do you mean he's taking a
lot of internet break, Like he'll go off Twitter. I'm
a big fan, he'll like not be online at all. Oh,
(22:36):
so he's just he's I think he does those environmentalist
things too. So I think he's really um, maybe taking
a step out your fan of you can count on me.
I haven't seen it. And you're a Mark Ruffalo fan,
Yeah you should check out what you can count my
favorite Mark Ruffalo performance. I like Mark Ruffalo. Okay, I
can't wait. Okay, yeah, new Mark Marky Mark movie. Yeah,
(23:02):
all right, Well we're gonna take a quick break and
then we'll be right back and we're back and uh.
We have consulted some people from the younger generation on
(23:23):
the younger like a a friend in college, a friend
or one of our co workers who is not too
far out of college, and they have confirmed that the
stomach pump rumor did not persist, which just goes with
the Flynn effect that each generation is smarter than the last.
So yeah, I think is that they're just like, yeah,
(23:43):
that doesn't make anything, because back in our day, the
only like way we could fact check something was to
ask someone's older brother or sister who was probably the
origin of the myth. They're like, yeah, dude, it's true. Yeah,
I'm all right, thanks Mark. Yeah, yeah. I don't like
keep saying Mark, Mark Ruffalo, he's on the brain. Yeah,
maybe he's the one who told us this rum. Better
Mark Wallberg Ruffalo Rufflo. I don't know. I mean better
(24:08):
in what way, like as a human being. I don't know,
as a human being, Mark Ruffalo. Come on, dude, Walberg
gets up at two in the morning work. I don't
know how many racist attacks Mark Ruffalo has done on people.
So have you seen the Wallberg's television show Reality? Yes,
it's excellent. Is it really excellent? I love trash TV
(24:30):
reality because they're just they're insane. They're just just angry
at each other all the time. They're just yelling and
like talking about the Yeah, okay, ok, let's talk about
the Supreme Court of the United States. The only subject
that can follow that conversation. Stomach pump. I mean this
(24:53):
whole thing, right, The Supreme Court is has a very
very busy schedule coming up. First, they're gonna be who
knows whether they're going to come down on the census
case on whether or not to include a citizenship question, Um,
that will probably you know, the census people have said
they need to know by there should be some kind
of decision around June when they need to begin printing
(25:15):
census materials. But that would be the one that would
add a question about citizenship, which most people on the left,
they're saying that's gonna have a chilling effect on people. Yeah, exactly.
And then but you know, the argument on the right
is like, well, we need a holistic answer, we need
to know what we have to keep track of everything.
But the census is so important, like in terms of
how funding is moved around and things like that, subsidies, uh,
(25:37):
subsidies and the like that to have this question that
they know could prevent people from answering. Honestly, they're like,
this could this could potentially hurt states that have more
illegal uh like or illegal immigrant populations or people who
are not citizens. Yeah, I mean, on its what's the
point of a census if we're not gonna have people
answering it or you know what I mean? Yeah, Like,
(25:59):
it doesn't I think any sense to have it if
you're gonna I think, on its surface, it's hard to
argue with We'll just ask him the question, like why
why wouldn't answer it? But there's like this huge, long
history of people being scared to take the census and
the senses being used to kind of pry and just
like dark Ship, like there's a whole oral history of
(26:20):
the senses being like a conspiracy by the government. So like,
from a practical perspective, adding this question is basically designed
to make the country seem wider and less diverse than
it actually is, and it shifts congressional representation to It
has that effect too of how things are represented in Congress.
(26:40):
And if you do something that is meant to keep
some people from answering, then you're like, ha ha, brit Yeah,
I mean I'm a American and I definitely check white,
So I don't know, and maybe that's the problem, but well,
I think it's just and I think at the very
sense it's you know, I think a lot of people
the question is like, like you're like, kids will affect
(27:01):
the accuracy um because people who are undocumented could avoid
it all together or deliberately misreport themselves as legal. So
there's no way to read that's that's why. It's like,
even if you ask, you don't know how the person
is going to answer truthfully, So like, why don't we
just get a number of how many just fucking people
are here? Let's we don't need to know how many
people are citizens, because if you want to, you can
(27:23):
use that information for aims that are less uh compassionate,
more about you know, maintaining power. We don't ask sexual
orientation or anything on there, right, So I don't know,
I think that the more detailed and specific it gets,
the scarier it gets a little bit. Yeah, And I
think that's I think that's just sort of shitty defense
that they're using from the Trump administrations, like, oh, of
(27:45):
course not, We're not trying to do anything evil. We
just we just have to know so we can do
ef move direction. And then in addition to that, they're
also hearing three very important cases having to do with
discrimination against lgb t Q people. That's Altitude Express VERSARDA.
Bow Stock versus Clayton County R G and g R.
(28:06):
Harris Funeral Homes versus E E O C. So they
aren't just on the surface, it's about people who have
been you know, fired or their employment terminated, because of
their sexual orientation or gender identification. And Title seven of
the Civil Rights Act of nineteen sixty four, the way
it's written, it prohibits employers from discriminating quote against any
(28:28):
individual with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges
of employment because of such individuals race, color, religion, sex,
or national origin and sex meaning gender. Here. Now, if
the Supreme Court, like if they're looking at it, just
at the text, when you use the term because of sex,
that would actually forbid anti l g B t Q
to discrimination because it's the same way, you know, like
(28:51):
if you're you're looking at someone's orientation as a function
of their gender or whatever their sex, and if it
doesn't abide by what the employer thinks is right, then
they're using that to discriminate against someone. But then you
have people on the right, on the Trump administration, who
are arguing that, you know, the Civil Rights Act wasn't
intending to cover those rights back in nineteen sixty four,
so they're not actually protected. They're using a very narrow,
(29:14):
narrow view of it um and that's where like, so
all of these decisions are going to have a knock
on effect because it might not just be about these
specific cases, but also how the Supreme Court is viewing
the Civil Rights Act, which could lead to just bizarre
interpretations of what even sexual harassment is. I also think
that if we want to talk about what the intention
(29:36):
of that Civil Rights Act was, maybe they would have
wanted to cover right, Yeah, and I think maybe they
didn't include it in the verbage, but maybe they would
have wanted to cover well. And that's what even like
antonin Scalia had to sort of face that in a
case about male on male sexual harassment. And you know,
(29:57):
they use this thing of like the principle evil that
the Congress had identified when they passed it. But they're saying,
but the language and it does you know, sometimes it's
not about what the people were specifically talking about then,
but the language of the law done covers things beyond that.
And it's whether or not they're going to take that
view of it or or well, what did they say
(30:18):
when they did this? Um. So it's a very it's
you know, it'll well, we'll see what happens. But these
are three cases to keep our eyes on. Will four
with the census case, just because it could have very
bad repercussions in terms of discrimination. Um, and with you know,
Gorsch and Kavanaugh on the team now, so it's hard
to think of how the Supreme Court would decide this
(30:42):
that isn't in favor of the Trump administration. Yeah. I mean,
they have surprised some people with regards to uh, you know,
some of their rulings on I think abortion rights. But
this seems like that more gray area where they're going
to side with the Trump administration, not even gray area,
just like I don't know, I just get the vibe
(31:03):
that they're going to be fucking assholes about this. Well, yeah,
and it's going to take a very distorted view of
the law from the Supreme Court to try and arrive
at this conclusion to like a potentially upending decades worth
of anti discrimination law. Let's talk about Joe Biden, shall
we for a moment. Yeah, one of my sounds like
(31:25):
he might announce his candidacy tomorrow, Thursday. But then they're
also rumors that maybe it won't be Thursday because his
aids are being so specific and tactical of like, well
when do we want it? What messaging doing type, when
do we do it? But it seems like Thursdays the
day and he's leading in the polls. Excites me because
I think and I obviously live in the liberal bubble here,
(31:49):
but a lot of my friends have been kind of
bickering about who and what and how, and I think
a lot of them would be excited to see Joe Biden.
I think a lot of people are excited because of
the familiarity of Joe Biden. And then for me personally,
his politics aren't progressive enough for me to be excited
because there I feel like we need a lot of
(32:11):
radical change. Um. But when you look at the polling,
a lot of the establishment money, the polling data is
like the money's on Biden. Yeah, but Bernie Sanders is
very close. I think it's t is Biden is Sanders,
and then there's nobody else with double digits, well did
not even Yeah, there was a poll that just came
(32:32):
out that had Sanders five points ahead of Biden, which
I think it was changing. Man. Yeah, I think that
might be what kind of put a fire under his
ass a little bit, maybe because it seemed like it's
easy to sit out of the race when you're the
front runner and you haven't even announced, right once you
(32:55):
start losing some of that edge to to somebody who's
picking up momentum, and you see, you know, other other
candidates picking up momentum, and the only thing that you're
making headlines about is uh, you know, kissing people on
the back of the head and mashing your foreheads together.
Then uh, yeah, it makes sense that he wants to announce. Now.
(33:15):
I was just gonna say, he's one of my favorite
people to discuss when it comes to uh in the
context of Conservative Supreme Court nominees, just because he was
so helpful. And Clarence Thomas, yeah, um, he was team
team Thomas on that one. Thomas. I mean, so we'll see.
But at least now you know, we're starting to move
into that phase of the campaign where candidates are actually
(33:36):
like saying things out loud of substance. Um, and you know,
Elizabeth Warren's candidate is saying things well, I guess two
candidates well and yeah, and uh. Everyone kind of has
their way of kind of being vague enough that they
don't have to get really fully defined their positions in
case things swing the other way, they don't have to
(33:58):
change their positions suddenly. But like with even Elizabeth Warren's
announcement of like forgiving student debt, and then she even
gave a really good answer and at a town hall
where this young college student was saying like, you know,
I'm I'm an aspiring police officer, Um, what kind of
legislation will you put forth to protect police? And she
was like, I hear you, And then she was just
(34:18):
sort of like, I'm gonna be real with you. The
criminal justice systems fucked up because of racism. And then
he's like, there's your answer, essentially. But I think her
who whole idea is like the way you would even
begin to protect police is to create some sense of
trust within the community that the criminal justice system is
actually working. And she did like this very She's got
(34:38):
that school teacher energy where she was just like, you know,
here's some stats. You know, African Americans are more likely
to be arrested for the same crimes than a white
person doing the exact same crime go to trial, and
just you know, boiled it down very easily. And I
was like, and I think we have to just confront
these kinds of things head on to just make the
criminals astice system fairer and leaner, more balanced. And I
(34:59):
was like, Okay, I like it when people answer the
question that they weren't asking, you know what, I mean,
they wanted to say, right, and I think someone else
might just be like the real politicians answer could have
been something like, you know, that's a really great question.
And I think we all need to ask ourselves when
we live in the community such as this one, who
are the people we want to protect? And are those
ones that are protecting us? Are we doing enough to
(35:20):
protect them? And that's something I want to look into. Miles.
I didn't know you were running this year. Yeah, I'm fou,
but I use it for good, not evil. I mean,
I could use it for evil, but you'll you'll you'll
see when my line of homeopathic remedies products come out. Yeah,
I mean, Elizabeth Warren is blowing everyone out when it
comes to like actually putting forward policy and policy ideas.
(35:45):
But that is not a thing that people typically do
this early or even at all in a presidential campaign.
And I mean did it she did. She put out
a ton of white papers and then because she was like, well,
here's all my here on my positions. Here my positions,
but it kind of lost. They got lost in the
in the Medican That's what I was gonna say, is
I think there's a reason political analysts and you know,
(36:09):
all the fucking terrible people who ruined politics, uh tell
you not to do this is because it doesn't get
that big of a hit. I'm gonna actually read a
tweet by Mike Drucker. He tweeted Elizabeth Warren and that
is why I've created a sustainable plant based fuel that
will allow us to colonize Mars and prevent any future
(36:32):
wars over media versus in media. Hey, everyone quick, there's
a dog on a skateboard running for president. Everyone runs out.
I do feel like that is sort of how Elizabeth
Warren's being treated a little bit. People Like she's putting
out all these policies. People are like, oh, that's dope. Anyway.
Pete bog though, man, he's he. I like the way
(36:52):
he talks. It's like, no, she just gave off. She
just said she was going to cancel student death for
sevent of the country. Yeah, okay, whatever. Anyways, but I
want you know what you can at me if you're
listening on this. One of my favorite things are those
surveys where you fill out what you believe and then
it tells you which candidate when those start coming out,
send me those. Yeah, it makes it very easy, and
(37:15):
it gives you the percentages because then I'm like, oh,
I didn't know I was so closely aligned with Jill
Stein or whatever. You know. And I think just to
your point about candidates not articulating their positions early on,
I prefer if they do, because that's somebody who's saying
they already have a vision for what they want to do,
rather than like, let me just do what's gonna actually
(37:37):
be the popular thing, and I can just you know,
wiggle my way into that position if you come off
the rip saying these are the things I'm I want
that I'm saying, oh, this is a person who at
the very least has a well defined idea of what
principles or values they have as a president. Not to
say that someone who doesn't doesn't have values, but I
I just there's something too that if you're confident in
(37:58):
what your platform is, then you know, and I mean
Bernie like has had a lot of success just just
being a policy guy, just being like, these are the
things that I stand for. These are like the five
to ten policies that I will always say I stand
for and like that's it. He doesn't have a lot
of other like charismatic ship. It's just he's the he's
(38:19):
the guy who has these policies that are fairly easy
to understand and very popular. Um and I think, you know,
Elizabeth Warren has really you know, policies that make sense
on a Okay, I just sat down and read a
paragraph and it makes sense to me type policies, which
is something that I do think in comparing it to uh,
(38:41):
Hillary Clinton in two thousand and sixteen, that Hillary Clinton
never really had that like coherent okay, She's like this
is where she stands on everything type thing like it.
I feel like it was more like nuanced with her
and more yes. But at the same time this and
that like it was it was little bit harder to
figure out exactly where she was yeah, or I don't know,
(39:04):
or just not paying attention because most of us are
like yeah, yeah, whatever you yeah, yeah, more on them,
not like yeah yeah fine, good, good good. It's not
this other guy. Yeah that's true, and then cut to
you're like, oh, yeah, okay, yeah, well I'm just explaining
why I didn't vote for yeah, right, I just couldn't
know I'm just well, yeah, I mean, look, the the Russia,
(39:26):
the Russian Bureau of Tourism treated you very well on
that junking trip you went on. That's true. As a
charismatic leader, I mean, what can I say? Hey, and
hell of a judo practitioner and attractive. You see him
play hockey, I mean as if you scored twenty goals,
and because people let him, I thought he couldn't get
more handsome. And then I saw him play hockey and
(39:48):
I was like what I saw him nail a slap
shot from mid ice with mid ice hu Yeah, not
even you can't say like the Blue Liners. Yeah, I
mid ice like mid court in basketball. Yeah he did.
He did a wrist shot from the other side. Anyways,
(40:08):
he hit him. He hitted him with his dick. Was
it's the fourth quarter there on the three yard line.
I know Miles was a hockey player, and so this
is all driving him crazy. Yeah, Well from someone who
would regularly score wrist shots from the brew line. Yeah,
that's how nasty my wrist shot game was. Real quick.
(40:29):
We should talk about Sri Lanka. Information keeps coming out
after those horrifying terror attacks. It now seems like this
was specifically a response to the christ Church terror attacks.
Uh that's what security officials from inside Sri Lanka is saying.
It's a it's a big fucking mess. But they also
(40:52):
had to close down social media and because of just
all the anti Islamic sentiment that's going to be that
they knew was going to be coming in the immediate
aftermath and probably still will be. I mean, there was
anti Islamic sentiment when Notre Dame had a fire, because
people wanted to be like, yeah, it's probably Isis. That's
(41:14):
gotta be Arson, It's it's gotta be Isis. Uh So,
I mean this is like wish fulfillment to a certain
type of like right wing European nationalist right and I
think a lot of people in the counter terrorism sphere
of like the intelligence communities around the world were bracing
for some kind of response when you have someone terrorizing
(41:37):
mosques and killing people as they worshiped that they're saying, Okay,
well we've seen, we know how this plays out. These
things tend to be eye for an eye kind of thing.
And yeah, like three people, right over, three people lost
their lives, including like the owner of Asos. Yeah, the
richest student Denmark. Him and his wife have four kids
(41:57):
and they lost three of them in the attacks. Fucking
just the worst thing I've ever heard. So yeah, I
mean it's a it's a horrifying story, but it is
something that is going to be I think we're going
to be dealing with probably for a long time. I
like the idea of shutting down social media, and I
(42:18):
want to see how that plays out, because I feel
like it's a good call kind of to bring people
more into their community and find that kind of support
and like close knittedness that you need during like destructive
and tragedy times. Hopefully it like I think it needs
to be, like it should be a mandatory thing in
(42:41):
the aftermath of an event like this, because like there's
just so much toxic, dangerous ship that happens. And I mean,
the fact that we feel that way, and I don't
know if it will effectively prevent that sort of thing,
but the fact that we feel like you have to
shut down social media just points out like how much
(43:02):
social media, these like gigantic multibillion dollar companies have just
completely just shipped on the social construct of the social
contract of like you know, don't do harm to the
society that you're making money off of. They just like,
don't give a funk. Yeah. Well in Sri Lanka though too.
I think last year the year before, they were having
a lot of Facebook based problems because a lot of
(43:25):
fake news was spreading that was leading to violence against
Muslim people there and Facebook they were like, people were
begging Facebook to do something about it, like yo, because
a lot of people, Facebook is their portal to the Internet,
especially in that country. So you know, despite people asking
Facebook to monitor this, like yo, you're you're in action
is actually causing a lot of problems in this country.
(43:48):
I think that was another reason that led to this,
because they're like this time and again the social media
thing has been the source of a lot of conflict
and yeah, for like reasons to whether people can just
sort of find support with each other, and also just
to keep like you're saying, just the nasty ship from
spreading and exacerbating the problem. Um, there's a good call.
(44:09):
But also I think in indictment on social media, when
the government is like, oh, what's the person to do, Yo,
shut that ship down, because we don't want people to
get you know, further energized in the wrong direction or something.
All right, we're gonna take another quick break. We'll be
right back, and we're back. Uh and uh quick men
(44:40):
Ghazi update. Uh. Luke Walton from who he was last
year the coach of the Los Angeles Lakers and was
just tired as the coach of the Sacramento Kings, is
being sued for sexual assault on a woman who is
a reporter. Reported on the Lakers. Luke Walton was supposedly
(45:01):
going to write a forward to a book that she
was releasing. He met her at a hotel astrup to
his room too. I don't know, see a book or something.
The specific details of like the things he said, it
just like paints such a clear picture of like an
entitled douche bag who's like just right, thinks he's well.
Also that your response after assaulting somebody is being flipp in,
(45:26):
just saying like nice to see you. Yes. She reported
that since the incident, when he saw her, he would
hug and kiss her and say stuff like you're killing
me with that dress. So yeah, just is he being
So it's not a police matter, it's like a civil lawsuit.
I think it's a civil lawsuit. I'm sure why maybe
it's a statute of limitations thing. I'm not sure, but yeah,
(45:50):
if if true, which I tend to think it is,
what a disaster of a human being. Well, I just
appreciate you for telling me who Luke Walton was. He's
one of the shittiest coaches of the Lakers and one
of the shittiest players who got a contract. You should
have never got human being too. Yeah around, Well, Wisconsin, guys,
(46:13):
let's get back. Let's get to some brass tacks here.
Brass tacks. Important important news. Wisconsin. Uh, it has been
announced as the number one state for frozen pizza consumption.
That is a sick title to have. That is awesome.
I thought they had just legalized weed or something, but
it turns out this was like just some insider information
(46:34):
that was being shared. They need to put that on
their license plates on all of the signs when you're
entering Wisconsin. Welcome to everybody. Everybody's blood type is di
jorn um. Apparently there are people, like a lot of
people are interested. It's like, what is it about Wisconsin?
What the funk is going on? Like you think that
would be like I thought would be a state where
(46:54):
people are smoking wild weed all the time and just
eating frozen pizza. But someone that was asked for a
comment that the state's appetite for frozen pizza lies in
its populations ties to Norwegian immigrants, so noting that Norway
is the only country that eats more frozen pizza per
person than America. And I'm like, wait what and this
(47:15):
this is kind of a trend throughout the rest of
the Midwest also, which they say each about twice the
rate of frozen pizza as the rest of the country.
But also Wisconsin is the home to Di Jorno and
Tombstone and Jack's, So there's that's I think there's a
thing they love cheese there. Yeah, I mean is the
(47:36):
pizza in restaurants. They're good. I feel like this is
the only thing that they have, like Milwaukee style pep
I mean, they have their own style of pizza. I
don't know that's where z gang. Look, if you're Wisconsin pizzahead,
what what's good? What am I supposed to tell people
what they should be getting instead of that? But I
mean it's also like when I lived in Missouri for
(47:57):
a couple of years, I definitely saw my consumption and
a frozen pizza go up just because it's like money saving,
easy to do at home. You don't go out as much,
at least when I was living there, I didn't go
out as much. So it's just like, yeah, this will do.
I like that Norway has this insatiable appetite for frozen pizza.
(48:17):
That's interesting to me. I love that. I wonder if
it's because of the cold and just not wanting to
open the door when a delivery person comes, or you
could just store your frozen pieces outside your door. You
have to put him in your freezer. You're just like, hey,
you'll go out back and grab a pizza off the pile,
staws it in the oven. Do you guys funk with
(48:40):
any frozen pizza in particular? Mm, the grosser the better. Yeah,
you know, like when it's trying to be like a
respectable pizza, I'm like, you know how to do all that? Like,
we know what this is. It's a frozen pizza. My
boyfriend makes fun of me because I dress it up
and he's like, why do you got to fix it?
Like why wait? So what do you how do I'll
(49:00):
pack it up. I'll put like Italian seasoning on it,
or like slice garlic. If we have any meat in
the house, I'll throw it on extra cheese. And is
it uh, I'm sure it actually doesn't prove it or
does it feel like you're it cooks the same? I
mean yeah, but if you I don't know, it makes
me feel better about eating it. I ain't no regular
(49:23):
as one. I put one basil leaf on here. There
was like there was a type that I used to
always eat that was like two dollars per pizza and
I can't remember what it was. I had like allian
Grandma on it, and it was like, oh, Mama, yeah,
Mama Celeste, Mama Celeste. Right, yeah, that ship was never
(49:46):
leave a cardboard on, uh, like in the oven and yeah,
oh hell, I mean I probably did that once and
then it's I was smoking up my house and I
was going on and I quickly sucked that off. It's
not Mama Celeste unfortunately, or just Celeste, and I'm not
gonna yeah, it's not Celeste either. What is it? Because
I just I can't find it. I'll update It was
(50:09):
like it might be it might be, but it had
real crispy crust and a lot of them do yeah,
especially when you just or was yeah, Red Baron, I
think they would have that at my school cafeteria in
high school. But anyway, get your celeste on Okay, and
DJ Danield is pointing furiously at his notepad that says,
(50:30):
Tony's maybe that's it. Yeah, see that one. That's kind
of that's that's that's the kind of garbage I'm talking
about when I look at it. Yeah, you don't want
it to really look like pizza. It's like I just
want a round disc of cheese and bread. Yeah, it's
like cafeteria like school cafeteria level pizza is what you're
kind of working with. H And let us know, is
(50:52):
that getting what the best frozen pizza is if it
is in fact a jordanal I prefer bubbally? Oh no,
I'd remember the eighties they would always say that commercial
and I always wanted to get the like the fully
baked pizza like dough that they would have at the store,
and my mom never obliged. To this day, I've not
had it. I grew up in an Italian restaurant, so yeah,
(51:15):
my mom I would make a lot of pizzas. Yeah
that oh so you that maybe maybe that's a of course, yeah,
because to you. It feels like fucking blasphemy to just
have you like you, We gotta put something on here.
It feels like home. Yeah. Was the name of the restaurant, Sorrento?
And is this in Texas? Okay? Sorrento. I bet some
(51:37):
listeners know about the pizza. Hey, have you ever had
rows homemade marinara sauce? All? I call it raos, but nah,
ras is probably right. You haven't had it. It's more expensive,
but it's fucking good man. The restaurant is very good,
my favorite, my favorite. Like they they solved pasta saw
(52:00):
as far as all concerned. Did you know bon Jovie
has a pasta sauce? Yeah, that's insane to me. Have
you had it? No? Have you? It is? No? It
is darkshit slippe. No, it's gross. It's just gross that
he has one. Joan Bongovi. Um, that was offensive and
(52:22):
I apologized listeners. Um, alright, guys, let's talk about Playboy Club,
where I grew up inside a Playboy club apparently not
doing so hot. They're not doing well. Um, you know,
as someone who used to work at play Yeah, just
like Jamie Loftus, things aren't going well there and Hugh
(52:44):
Hefner's son, I believe is a driving force behind bringing
nudity back to the magazine and also going like just
pedal to the metal with opening up this Playboy club,
which you know, if you recall, we had an opportunity
here from Gloria Steinham silly and she famously went into
worked at a Playboy club undercover to write about it,
(53:06):
and when she heard that it opened, she's like, how
is this even opening now? Right? Because most people are like,
who is this for? And apparently one of the biggest
problems it seems to be the service, because page six
they're getting very messy and they have a sort of
it's like, yo, it's hell in there, apparently, um but
essentially the managers are just, they say, are more worried
about how the prospective hires looked and of course sit
(53:28):
in fluffy tail than their relevant experience in the service industry.
H service has been so bad that new management had
to be brought in and they fired half of the
bunny staff. Now the club has hired real waiters and
called the bunnies, although it has kept some of the
flappy eared friends on with adjusted job descriptions and slashed paychecks,
So now they're basically just having the bunnies just take
(53:49):
the drinks from the bar to the tables rather than
like actually doing any of the waiting and things like that,
and they've like slashed their pay from forty dollars an
hour to twenty five dollars an hour. The things just
kind of in free fault. And when you look at
the yelp reviews, I was like, what's the yelp got
to say? It's a mix between like people who are
like Wall Street bros, who are like, Oh, it's fucking sick, dude,
(54:09):
it's the tightest fucking place. I feel like a fucking king.
Then there are people who are like the food is ship.
Then there are other people saying it's not toxic enough
for them. They're like, dude, they're not even hot in there.
One star for that. People are like one star because
it's so aggressively like out of touch. So you know,
it's being pulled in many directions. But there's also a
lot of five star reviews that I suspect are maybe
(54:31):
friends of the people who rent it, because they're like
the vague ones, like you know, the Homie five star
review were like, oh great, time five stars. No detail
really loved it. Awesome place. Food is sick. I mean
I got sick from the food, that's right. So I've
never been to one of these. I actually didn't know
they existed prior to this story. It sounds like it's
(54:53):
like a mix between a strip club and a theme restaurant,
like a Jacqueline Hide. Yeah, it's like a it's like
a Hooters if it went to college or something. Like.
It's like this weird fake air of sophistication, but it's
still the same oargle the server staff type vibe, but
(55:13):
like also made you know, that's trying to create that
that playboy ship that they're chasing, like the dude who
walks in and it's like, you know, fond over by
beautiful women and blah blah blah. So I think actually
they should lean into the strip club model a little
bit more and have the bunnies be the entertainment. They
(55:34):
don't have to dance or anything, but they can talk
to the patrons and like then have real good servers. Yeah,
they just don't know. That's the problem with this company
is like they just don't know. They had a club
in l A that was on the Sunset Strip that
was like this little tiny bar and it was just
like another business that wasn't ran well where you know
(55:55):
the thing that like the battle crying that company is
that like the Playboy Bunnies. I think the second or
first most recognized logo on Earth, like without context, people
know what it is, and that behind the Swoosh I think,
or maybe Adidas, but like those are like people just
no matter where continent, like internationally, know that that logo
(56:18):
and they're just sort of coasting off the strength of
that thing and without realizing, like it's a dying brand
that's left over from a bygone era and they've not
really been able to figure out how to evolve with
the time. So I think they've just resorted to their
old ways and just hope like, well, we'll just catch
the people who still think this is like a thing
they want. Yeah, it's a little bit too late for sure,
(56:38):
but I don't know, I feel like they can make
it work. Yeah, right, if you're gonna if they did
it right, if you're gonna be like a brand that's
about objectifying women, they're half asking it and that's why
people are like confused. If you're just gonna be a
disgusting brand that's gonna just like full on just be like, yeah,
come in, like you can just talk wild to these
bunnies and do whatever the fun you like. Just be
(56:59):
some gross too, would it is what it is? Yeah,
but I think trying to thread the needle of being
like it's fine dining plus like men in course it's
and like it's just like people are like, I don't
know what to make sense of this place. Yeah, I
mean Hooters for sophisticated people seems to be like by
definition like an error like does not compute. Those two
(57:21):
things don't really overlap in a way that oh, sophisticated
people can't like the sight of a beautiful woman Jack.
Oh god, I remember, like when you were talking about
the Playboy Club. I thought we were talking about the
two thousand and eleven TV show where they were trying
to make the Playboy Club. I think it was basically
(57:41):
Madmen came out, they saw that that was a hit,
and they were like, Playboy was like, how do we
get in on this? So they had a show, had
a show. Uh, let's see here. First episode date September nineteen,
two thousand eleven. Final episode date October three, two thousand eleven,
their three episodes. Wha what network was it on NBC?
(58:02):
It was like a big, big ben Yeah, a lot
of dudes walking around in suits being like the Playboy
Club is gonna change everything. But it had the Bunny
in the Bunny logo in the title, so it was
like an official Playboy joint where they were like, our
brand is gonna explode, yeah, because the people who owned
it up until recently, we're just like a licensing company,
(58:24):
right who there They were getting their money out of
owning Playboy by just slapping the logo on anything and
selling it right um. And then a dude who has
no experience running restaurants or clubs was like, I'm gonna
take this over, yeah, and has no experience doing anything
that being you have ner Son working in that, that
place is a time war you. I couldn't believe this ship.
(58:47):
I would hear of working in there, even from the playmates. Man,
some of those players has some racist ass fucking takes
on Jesus, because I was there, like in the midst
of the election heating up for the guys sixteen, like
going into and like there were just times not even
having to do with the election itself. But like you know,
(59:09):
when I was doing video there, we would be like
make content like let's let's do a profione this playmate
or whatever, and asking about like people they would date regularly.
I would have to cut sh it on, like that
was that was racist. They're like, um, no thugs, Like
I don't like thugs, Like I'm not about thug life,
or like saying like then you're like, oh, you're cuddling
(59:30):
this ship out. Um, but yeah, look shout out to y'all.
Got some healthcare from y'all. Good on, good on you,
Good on you. Then yeah, and Kanye had Sunday service
on Easter. It was I thought it was cool. The
part that I watched of it for some reason, they
(59:51):
shot it through a fish is lends because that's how
myopic is eyesight is in his version for the Future.
It was like, would you want to watch this live? Now?
Would you want to watch this live if you had
to detach Retina and glacoma and you were a fish? Um?
But the music was good and I think they were
(01:00:11):
selling crew neck sweatshirts for like three dollars, so you know, spiritual, spiritual.
You know, that's because he's he's still preaching that uses ship,
you know what I mean, because he's he's disrupting the
whole business and he's selling fucking merchandise for two dollars
don't really even wrapped, like more than a couple of verses.
But it was just like a cool band playing live
(01:00:32):
gospel and Kanye tracks with the gospel choir. Yeah, but
I mean doesn't like hit what an ego? Huh? I'm
I'm right. I'm re contextualizing a church service. So the
choir is singing my songs and I'll just gonna hop around,
uh and do all that. It's very surreal because there
was like a small group in the middle of this
(01:00:53):
giant field and then the crowd was like held back
from them. It was it was weird. Man, wake me
up when he wakes up? Right, how about that. I'll
take a free sweatshirt if anyone has, Yeah for a grant.
Anybody's got a free sweat sweatshirt? Wait, Miles, didn't you
(01:01:14):
know he has arisen the Yeah? Oh Ship, Yeah, that's
what that's what Easter is about. Sometimes I lose track
of Easter. That's why Friday, Yeah for good Friday, and
then good Friday. Maybe I'm did I get that wrong?
I did go to church. Yeah, it was the church
(01:01:35):
of YouTube livestream. Okay, uh all right, well, Lisa, it's
been a pleasure of having you. Thank you so much
for having me. Where can people find you and follow
you online? You can find me on the internet at
a s I L n o u x, or find
my comedy dates at least as dot com. Alright, how
(01:01:56):
are you spelling the h A n O u X?
And is there a tweet you've been enjoying? Yeah? I
really like this one from at Ler's man. Knowing how
to role joints is the new knowing how to drive sticky?
Uh miles. Where can people find you? Uh? You can
find me on Twitter and Instagram at miles of gray. Um.
(01:02:21):
Some tweets I like we're actually from other listeners who
responded with their regional versions of the stomach pump myth um.
So let me just very quickly, I want to shout
you all out. Shout out to Anta Claire Hodge for
saying that who has been online dating she has come
across George Zimmermann's profile as well. Um, sorry that you
had to see that sense nor Sensibility at Sense Nor Sensibility.
(01:02:44):
Shout out to you for saying the myth in your
region was Alanis Morriset in Britney Spears. Also Sam Z
said in Virginia in the nineties it was also Alanis
Morris set. So it seems like the big, big Anti
allanis center there that that song, uh you want going
down on somebody in the theater must have really fucked
(01:03:04):
them up. David Coulier, David, you are the first person
I've heard referred to him as David. You go way
back with him when he was a child. David's so funny.
He never he only goes by Dave. His name is David. Actually,
it's just Dave. Dave. Actually that would be Plants were like,
(01:03:31):
this guy is going to be a prop comedian. We
should just go out formality the I d out and
just go with Dave. Rob Delaney tweeted just saw the
New Avengers and the audience went nuts when Shrek showed
up and saved the day. Uh, and I was truck
Mike Drucker. Elizabeth Warren tweet. You can find me on
Twitter at Jack Underscore. O Brian you can find us
(01:03:53):
on Twitter at Daily Zeitgeist. We're at the Daily Zeitgeist
on Instagram. We have a Facebook fan page and a
website Daily dot Com where we post our episodes and
are we link off to the information that we talked
about in today's episode, as well as the song we
ride out on H miles. What's the song we're going
to write out? Feel so psychedelic right now and so Japanese.
(01:04:16):
So let's take it to a Japanese psychedelic rock band
that I really like called Kagaku moyole uh, which means
geometric patterns. But they are I saw them years ago
uh and like people like these do are trippy, and
they play one of the trippiest psych sets I had
ever heard or witnessed here in l a yeah, um
out in the desert actually at like this thing called
(01:04:38):
Desert Days, and they've just been cuting slowly, slowly getting
their shine on and people are starting to come come
around to them more so. This is a song by
them called Nazzo Nazzo And you know, if you're if
you like psychedelic shit, like, they have all kinds of
a little other genre influences in the band. Check out
their music really dark and that's spelled k I k
(01:04:59):
a g ay you m oh, yeah, everybody do that?
Why how do you think we thought you'd spell it? Yeah?
American people say kick a gaku ma yo. You know
what I mean? I gotta I gotta honor the language.
Never that alright, unless it's Marie Condo, then I say
it like how America people also check out our March store, Zackgeist.
(01:05:24):
Where are we public? Public? The zageis store with the
Zageist mouth, which is the fifth most recognizable logo in
UH in the world behind Jordan Brand, UH, the Apple
and the Red Cross making sution red Cross. Anyways, that's
gonna do it for today. We will be back tomorrow
because there is a daily podcast and we will talk
(01:05:46):
to you then bye and ny the won't not content
for somebody acker, but what do know? He took part
(01:06:11):
of baby and come chicken in no check the kid,
so do