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December 17, 2018 67 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season sixty two, episode
one of Dear Daily's Eight Guys the Podcast, where we
take a deep dive into America's share consciousness using the headlines,
box office reports, TV ratings, what's trending on googs and
social medias. It's Monday, December seventeen, two thousand eight teen.
My name's Jack O'Brien a k I was Jack o'bri

(00:21):
and when I met you, Kato's o'bri and when I
left you us courtesy of the reason my ster on Twitter,
and I'm thrilled to be joined as always buy my
co host Mr Miles Great. It's a thin line between
Mars and grave and that's all I'm gonna say. Thank

(00:44):
you to J. F. Despress at a k A at
Revenue Saints for that one, because it is a thin
lawn between love and hate. Great movie with Martin Lawrence too. Yes,
you remember that, one of the great death I believe
it's on the f L hundred Greatest Movies. You have
the criteria collection. I do actually steal books. Yeah. The

(01:05):
director's cut is amazing. Yeah yeah, yeah, there's some alternate
endings that will blow your There is an extended dance
sequence where Martin Lawrence is wearing fake teeth. Oh yeah, yeah,
he's breaking it down. Yeah, it's right. Well, we are
thrilled to be joined once again by an old favorite,
one of the funniest people who've ever had on this show. Yeah,

(01:28):
she's been gone, a prodigal daughter on the East Coast
doing work. Uh, and we're thrilled to have her back.
Lacey Mosley, what's up, Zychan, it's me. Lacey's mom got
it going on. Yeah, we're gonna go late fun. That's

(01:49):
she has. Oh wait, I saw a photo of your mom.
I was like, yeah, sister, I'm really tired. I'm tired
of that ship. Man. I'll be blocking. I'll be kind
of blocking on my mom's hardcore because I stup used
to be cute. Like you know, you'd be like, oh,
thanks so much. I have a great game pool and
I'd like my chill get out. My mom's dams like
happening right here. They're really trying it. But mc dank

(02:12):
at mcdank on Twitter, thank you for that. It really
touched me. I know, I also like your Twitter name.
I like that. You know, they did their research. They
were like, you know, Lacy's Mom's got it go WHOA
shouldn't have used it anyway? Get Twitter on the phone.

(02:33):
All right, we're gonna get to know you a little
bit better and what you've been up to. But first
we're gonna tell our listeners a little bit of what
they're in store for or what's in store for them. Yeah,
somebody told me I said that wrong. What's in store for?
What they're in store for? That doesn't make sense, does it? Yea?
This is a second rd podcast, man, this isn't Grammar City.

(02:54):
We're gonna talk about let's use a bunch of fake
sayings now from now on. Yeah, we are going to
about talk what was trending on Instagram in two thousand eighteen.
They've released their list of I don't know random information.
And then we're also going to talk about some scammers
on Instagram because we have the scam God with us

(03:18):
in studio. We're gonna talk about Rudy Giuliani's take on
Michael Cohen. We're gonna talk about terribly sad story happening
at the border and the fact that Johnson and Johnson
baby powder had asbestos in it all this time and
they've been covering it up since nineteen seven. I knew
I didn't like that smell for a reason. And then

(03:39):
we have a couple of fun stories at the end
to lighten things up. But first, Lacy, what is something
from your search history that's reeling about who you are? Where?
Where are you been? Okay? Um black Cowboy memes. Yeah,
that came up immediately, and I think it's because, um,
I really enjoy on Instagram like flex oh man shout.

(04:01):
I don't want to say this. I don't want to
jinx this ship. But the Cowboys have been doing pretty
well this season. I'm a Cowboys fan, if you know me,
I'm down for the d not to trade that. Come on, guys, Dallas. Um.
And yes, they've been doing very well. And I have
been using memes and gifts to flex on you know,
people who are less fortunate very often. So, but I

(04:24):
don't want to say anything about it because I just
don't want to jinx it. Like it's been so long,
so so long since we've had like we've had a
successful season. I mean honestly, everybody thinks until Jerry Jones dies,
like we're not gonna win a super Bowl, So that's
Greaters fans who felt that way by Al Davis. Once
Al Davis is dead man, yeah, then we're going to

(04:46):
put it together. Yeah. But Jerry Johnson is probably gonna
live for a long time, so we have he's so
he will, oh for sure. You know he got a
facelift when I was eight years old. He has a
face lift. Bro, You don't know. This is Jerry John's
second face. Yes, space, it just settled in Okay for
a while. He was looking he was real tight. Yes. Yeah.

(05:08):
I thought he was just traveling in a very fast
car all the time and he just got out. He
looked like the feeling when you wash your face and
don't put any moisturizer on it, like yeah, yeah, but
he looked like that. How he looked. Black cowboy means
specifically black cowboy. Yeah, and I got a bunch of
blazing saddles. Oh yeah. You gotta really dodge the racism

(05:32):
when you bring it in. It's a lot of racism
that pops up. I was just talking about that on Twitter.
You gotta know when somebody's gonna do racism to you.
And when I google this, like, I'm fully prepared for
people to do racism to me. Via the internet. But
but then I find some fun, like you've seen those
like those gifts or those videos of the two cowboys
who are black and they dance and sinc No, I
don't think, oh my god, are you serious? These videos

(05:55):
are what are they dancing too? Are they line dancing
or they like, well, no, it's rocket. They're just literally
in a parking lot in cowboy hats and they dance
to music. It's so lit. One of them looks like
Carl Tart. You're gonna be oh wait wait, okay, no,
I have seen. I didn't realize that was like a
whole I don't know it was a phenomenon. Oh yeah, yeah,

(06:18):
it's very late. Guys, go look at those they're very fun.
So you use that to just as you're just not
all people. Yeah, okay, well you know, because I look
down at black cowboy music, I see a lot of
Michael Jordan's l faces with cowboy hats on. People trying
to flame you. But hey, yeah, that's disrespect. You got
to call him through the disrespect. But being a Cowboys
fans it, but we're America's teams, listen, don't do that.

(06:44):
The Patriots are America's team, right, now yeah, yeah, well anyway,
I think the gifts come from YouTube video how people
from Texas dance tipp Yes, yes, it's very funny, very funny,
well done. What is something you think is underrated? Um? Underrated? Okay,

(07:05):
this is gonna be real basic. But I've been in
Savannah and I've been kind of really tuned out to
the world. I was working like a ship to um
and then other than that, like you know, it was
very beautiful there and I would take walks walks walks, y'all.
What is that like like when you go to the bathroom,
Like when I go from the studio to the bathroom,

(07:26):
right right. I feel like we love to work out
shame people and be like, you know, like, oh man,
I just did a tough mutter. I just crawled. Like
we make we make some bullshit where we like make
mud and dirt and stuff for you and then you
pay top dollar to crawl through that ship so you
can get on Instagram and be like I just did
a really hard work right right. Meanwhile, they set this

(07:49):
whole course up for you. This is not in the
wild like you know, marathons, like like working out, you know, diets.
It's all about do you know, doing the hardest thing.
And you know, even CrossFit, getting popular CrossFit is just
like abuse, that's just body abuse. You know, people like
to get listen, I get there like I'm bleeding. Oh
it was a workout. So like I just really enjoyed

(08:11):
going on walks, like long walks and not like like
the walks you put all your dating profile like I
love long walks. It sounds like you literally just said
I love long walks. Difference when I'm there, I'm like
air punching, I'm making really kicking down the street. You know,
you know I do two steps and I did do
some push ups, like because think about if you're not

(08:31):
going to work out one day, if you just walked
on a day that you weren't going to work out
at all, I mean, that still counts for something. And
you can read this some I mean in l A
is some dirty as air. But you but I do
think exercise aspect aside, fitness aspects aside, like just enjoying
when you were able to go somewhere where you can
take a nice walk, like when I was up in
the Bay Area, like for Thanksgiving, we went like near

(08:53):
the uh where was that like point Reyes and took
like a nice walk and I was like, damn, man,
fucking earth. Huh. Yeah, i'mall like, and you can notice
some ship too, especially at night because there's less light
pollution so you can see the stars. Yeah, we'll shout

(09:14):
out to you for walking at night. That ain't my bad.
I'm gonna keep these lady parts safe up in the
jar a night. But during the day, did you get
a lot? Did you eat a lot of Zaxby's? Fully
missed Zaxby's and I'm meant to go and I just
kind of missed my window. But I ate around Savannah.
I ate every barbecue. Okay, I can go there either. Okay,

(09:36):
it was some spots that I missed, but we went
to almost every restaurant. No, wait, I'm confusing. It's not
slow slow in Detroit. There's another place. The one time
I went to Savantage, Georgia, I tweeted at Big Boy
from Outcast and I was like, Hey, where do I go?
And he actually tweeted me back and I was like, really,
it's a real one. Brought me on stage once when

(09:58):
I was trying to trick one of these this like
I had a student visitor. I used to give tours
on my campus and she was black, and I was
trying to trick her to come to our school and
I was like, oh, yes, lit lots of black people.
You definitely don't have a good black ass time. And
so I took her to this outcast concert that happened
on Carnegie Moutain's campus randomly, and Big Boy was there,
and I was like, he was like bringing people up
on stage, and I was trying to give her like
a once in a lifetime experience and I was like, oh,

(10:19):
big Boy. He was like yeah, y'all, come on up.
He was very nice. And then I went him again
at a nightclub and he gave me a huge tip
and was like super nice. Yeah, And that girl was
very upset when she came to the school and realized
that it was and not lit. Same Bamboo looks like
he's getting football too. He told me go to tricks

(10:41):
barbecue trick. That's what. Literally, I will still favorite this
tweet to the end of my days. Yeah, big Boy,
we are out here, We are out here. Big wait
big boys sons. Bamboo. Yeah, his son's name Bamboo. Yeah, man,
that's lit. You know you live when he says that
didn't bombs over bad dad? Does he really? I thought

(11:01):
he was just talking about Bamboo. No, no, no, no,
he has his his son his name Bamboo. That's awesome.
I just can't wait until I'm rich enough and enough
to name my kids whatever I want because it doesn't
matter in their success. My son car keys like it
does not matter. Just teslah. Yeah, okay, let's the brains

(11:23):
from some child names. Child lex names later. For some reason,
I thought Andre had Bamboo, and that's probably just because
his kid's name seven, right, yeah, seven, But by the
time it will probably be six the day in the
life Andre Benjamin. That's his child with Erica Bado, right, yeah, yeah,
Bamboo and seven lazy. What is something you think is overrated? Okay,

(11:45):
I'm gonna get shade for this. But the Stars wore soundtrack?
Turn that shut off? All right? All right? Was done?
All right? We listened to it? Yeah, Bradley Cooper can
growl on the microphone? Who can't? Um? Also, I want
to shame all of you who've been playing this album
a lot, because y'all are the same people who disrespect
Creed And this is create music. This is literally create music.

(12:08):
Scott Staff that's the lead singer Creed. Did I have
to google that? Absolutely, But he's been growling on audio
for decades. Yarlett side, look fold Look what I just
did there? Look how but Nickelback is also yar But
she's saying, I think, right, right right, I'm gonna throw

(12:31):
them into Okay, So you're saying you're saying that the
Jackson Main songs are you're just saying you're coming after
creating on like it, or you're saying that people are
just playing it too much. I'm saying they're hyping it
like it's not music that we used to make fun
of people for enjoying. Yeah, I don't like the Jackson
Main songs on that soundtrack. I like just shallow. Yeah,

(12:54):
And I don't even really listen to it. People look
at my Spotify though, I have that one song downloaded
to my Spotify, Like, so when I go on the plane,
I can't listen to that song. It makes me cry.
I'll never see that movie. That ship was so goddamn sad.
It was disrespectful. I started yelling in the movie when
I predicted the sadass movie, like I predicted the ending. Obviously,

(13:16):
this movie has come out four times isn't really a spoiler,
but I'm gonna still give y'all spoiler in case you
don't know what happens at the end of Stars Board
Get Your Ship Together, but here Come, Here Come Yeah, yeah, yeah,
So the one precursor they give us when Homie is
about to offer himself when they're just sitting in the
rehab center, he's like, yeah, by the way, I'm suicide.
I hell, you don't kill himself. And mind we watched

(13:39):
I watched this movie in Savannah right after the Kavanaugh
situation where he was getting confirmed, and we were like,
let's go watch an uplifting movie. R though masses had
no ideas like lady guy got gon fall in love
with this fine man, We're gonna see his abs. This
is feel good movie. That ship was so it was
aggressively sad. I love though that you had no context
for what you were jumping into because they are all

(14:00):
basically the same premise premise And it was a millenial moment.
It was a millenial moment for me of like this
movie is this is the fourth iteration of this movie
and I still had no idea. And when I yelled
out all hell, he's gonna kill himself in the movie theater.
This lady behind me got up and left. Yes. I
was like, damn, I'd upset that lady. I will ye,

(14:24):
And that's what it was. You you're on the right track.
She came back in. Look at you, Jack. She came
back in and she whispered to her little old lady friend.
She said, is it over? And her friend was like, yeah, yeah,
it's over. She was like, good good. I'm like, look
at me being a blessing? Right, yeah, just too much.
So don't tell black folks not to yell in the
movie theater. It might be we might be saving uh.

(14:47):
And finally, what is a myth? What something people think
it's true you know, to be false. Well, we were
just talking about this, um and it's it's just a
fun one, a light one. Um. So I was obviously
gone working on a TV show for a little while,
and obviously while we were here meddling in our second
rate podcast teams. Please, I love this, I love us.
I missed you guys. Can we have a hug? Can

(15:09):
I hug you? Dizzy? Are we hugging right now? All right? Not? Alright?
No one, such everyone, No one touch my hair. I
love you guys, But like I learned that when you
see actors who direct, and this kind of does throw
back to a star is born, Like when you see
actors who direct and they're like, oh, they directed this movie,
just please know that they did not direct it. And

(15:31):
by that I mean, like directors have very complicated jobs
where they have to like make shot lists and make
sure they get coverage, which I know that word may
not mean it's like a jargon word, but like there's
a lot of complicated stuff that goes into directing something.
And when actors direct projects, like when you see TV
shows and it's like this this episode was directed by
so and so. I promise you they just put on
a cute outfit. They came in, they made lots of

(15:52):
hand emotions. They probably told people how to say a
line or two, and that was it. That's not directed.
I just want you to know. And you said what
I thought was directing absolutely, because I fully was like,
Oh why can't I wait to start my directing career?
It is easy. I listened gesticulation a bit. She got

(16:13):
it covered. You know what I mean? Do you have
your right I don't have a face for glasses. Okay, okay,
don't you should, but you need a quirky hat like
a old right. I also don't have a hair for hat. Yeah,
I'm not even kidding. Once I spit all hats, that's
some bullshit because they don't fit my head. My head's
too big. Yeah. Every time I say once I fed
all hats, they don't fit. My mom has to encourage

(16:35):
mehen I was a kid, she was like, but that's
good for you wear like a seven and five as Oh,
I think it's like eight. Wow big. It's probably because
you've got you got a thick hair too. Yeah, yeah,
I know you're coming from my we've t anything about
actual layer. That's like your mom's right. Actors who appear

(16:55):
on TV and film all have huge, big old heads, yes,
but yeah, Directing is like one of those things I
think a lot of people take for grant or not
that they take for granted, but don't realize like how
collaborative it really is to direct and do well. Like
you know, you know with people we look at, we're like, oh,
Fonso Croon or whatever his DP Emmanuel Lubeski, like they

(17:17):
were constantly winning like hand in hand DP and director
like Academy Awards, and you realize just how much you
know that one needs the other. Someone has the vision
for that. And of course directors do do a lot,
so I don't want to say that there are definitely
people who they come in and there I'm directing when
the creative infrastructure is already there for them to just
sort of say, you know, give their notes here and there,
and a D s like that's a job that like

(17:38):
you hear assistant director and you're like, yeah, whatever, Like
my uncle is the first a D to this day
still and it's the hardest fucking job because you have
to scream at everybody. Yeah, you do the hard part
of the director's job, which is like making sure everybody
fucking is where they needed to exactly and pre empt everything.
We're like, okay, we're this far off from meeting to

(17:59):
set up okay blah blah. Yeah he I don't know
how my uncle needs to retire, but he's still he's
still out here. But directing, I mean, can be a
really hard job because it's, you know, you're running a business. Basically,
you are running a very complicated a lot of operation
that just started like right that day, Like you're having
to this it's like running a startup every day. But yeah,

(18:22):
I mean there's other ways that you can offload the
directing duties. Yeah for sure. Yeah. That being said, I
fully planned to, you know, give my name on some
stuff as a just No, I wasn't really doing ship,
you know what I mean. Absolutely I wish with my scam. Yeah,
but I think you also capable of a good finesse
scam to where you would be like, well, this is

(18:43):
my vision from the beginning. Absolutely, the DP was a
joke and you're like you were working with Emmanuel Lubetti.
He's a fake, you mean, loser to producer around and
hosing it. By the way, as we're going to break,
just let us know that when Miles is asking with
the name of Alfonso Kroons, DP was she kept saying

(19:04):
chiev oh, and he was like, no, that's not it.
That is his name. I need his legal name, his
Christian name. So well done to producer on the Hosny. Alright,
we're gonna take a quick break and we'll be right back.

(19:25):
And we're back. And Instagram has clued us into what
was going on on on the Graham on their platform
In two thousand eighteen. I guess love is popular. Is
a popular emotion? Well, they're talking about the most used emojis,
most used Instagram stickers, So the most used face filter

(19:46):
on Instagram stories, hard eyes, most used Giffy sticker on stories,
the heart love sticker by huh number of times the
heart emoji was used in comments fourteen billion. Yeah, but
that's not about love, well, I think, but I think
just in Jed, I think that's just the most overused
emoji is probably what it is because it's all fake love.
It's like, yeah, oh my god, I love your vacation.

(20:10):
It's easier than having the same words. But also the
heart filters probably the most popularly because that ship was
makeup on you. Oh what do you mean? Hard eyes
gives you blush concealer, flattens everything and makes your face skinny.
Oh that's why I love it. I look so good

(20:30):
in it. But there's also some other things too. They said,
um that the happiest geo tag location in the world
Disneyland Tokyo, because it had the most used of the
smiley face emoji. And that's not surprising to me though, Yeah,
because it's already like Asian people are about the emojis
was going to get and then you add tokyo and yeah, yeah,
that's just the emoji game is. I mean, we gave

(20:53):
y'all emoji, so the word is emo. It would be welcome.
We being me, I'm my mother. Yes, we worked very
hard in the lab getting this game. Thanks to the
Unicode Consortium for allowing this, because those are people who
run the emoji game. I was surprised by the top
niche community trend because this seems like a sort of

(21:15):
just fake trend to me. A s MR is the
top community. I feel like, well, because I get what
you just get your kicks for one minute. And the
videos yeah, well it's like you know, people have that
brain tingly thing. But it seemed to me like it
was like more of a novelty story where people were
like smr, like those videos are getting people are because

(21:38):
it's not just people talking. I personally like to watch
the Crunchy ones. Oh yeah yeah yeah. So it's like
where people make slime and then they like sometimes they
make heart slime, or they'll make phone where they don't
like have something and like I don't know, it'll be
like a sharp object, but they'll have an even sharper
object cutting it, and it's just like yo, like watching
it is just like, oh I watched it so much

(21:59):
that it comes up in my sport page. Just like
maybe I don't want to watch you want to watch
people cut this soap? Yes? You know my heart Instagram? Yeah,
because it's not even just people talking, although I think
that Chee doesn't talk these girls, so I think the
other thing too, is like the haircut one. Like I've
heard too that. I'm like, I don't get the feeling,
so I'm not fully into it. But like when you

(22:20):
kind of listen to you, like, oh I could see
maybe I was getting haircut, Like that feeling is great.
Well that's your privilege. You know, you're not just crying
with a hair clippers in the bathroom. Girlfriend asked you
what's wrong in there? And I'm like, I think I
don't have no more hair. But like it went a
little broader because at first the only thing it was

(22:40):
was like people whispering and like fingernails tapping, And now
it's like gone to all things, like all sensory experiences
that are kind of weird, but yeah, somewhat enjoyed being
a twins. They're going to be seen as the brothers

(23:02):
whispering to them. It's just like if it's soft soft
he was saying. We're like yeah, yeah, sure, sure, that
is such a wild life totally he's soft. Like do
you want to see if it's well? I think he
was saying, He's like, mind if I touch it and
see if it's soft? Could say he got a sexy

(23:24):
has body, Yes, looks so see And I was like sure,
I mean you asked me, I mean, do you mind
if I touch it just to see if it's soft?
Whispered just to confirm my suspicions, because your ass is
looking soft? Yeah? Any like boys, it would sound so
much better. That might be like cat collars. Here's one.

(23:47):
Maybe try whispering people on the street. That might be
an approach that works. Actually, that might be real creepy.
It's less aggressive. It look just creep seems like they're
just trying to hide it. But also like yeah, yeah,
but then you would also have to like huh, yeah,

(24:09):
I can't hear you. What did you say that I've
ever given any heckler on the street. But then they'll
maybe be embarrassed, like what your ass is looking good?
You're soft? Do you mind if to see if you
know now that I say it out last, the sound
is good. I apologize. I'm going to get back to
work and your soft have a great dance. Actually I

(24:32):
have to get back to auto zone. Yeah that's where
they were. Yeah, but any think other interesting things. The
biggest growing hashtag community was obviously Fortnight for the top
dance movement in My Feelings challenge, there were I think
the funniest thing about those are all the people who
are sucking up their cars doing it. I know some
were fake, but other ones you were like, oh, you

(24:53):
really fucked your car up because you don't know how
to just let a car roll and drive like Derek's.
They're just like, yeah, I think I can keep up
with a car going ten miles an hour and a
slight incline or decline, yeah, or why not? It's a
two person job, guys. You can't just hop out of
your own car. Is like, get a driver, get the uber.
Somebody a driver Uber And I was like, look, I

(25:15):
just want you to do the philistic can you tape it?
I'll tip you. Another Instagram story we wanted to hit
on real quick is there's an Instagram influencer who was
offering her followers the chance to join her master's tribe,
Master not math, master tribe where she sounds like a
very problematic slave owner. Not a master tribe. Doesn't sound

(25:37):
like a problematic master, said, try master card. Trying to
cards away to that. I think I was trying to
make it sound like a master's program, but instead it
is master tribe where she would teach them all the

(25:57):
secrets to becoming a six figure in a gram travel blogger.
Because you know, that's what they deserve. That's what we
all deserve. Anyone who's on the wave, who's like I
need to be that has a very terrible sense of
self and what their entitlement is. That like my job
should be to take photos in first class, take photos
with my bag on the jetway. I don't know, I

(26:19):
don't know. I don't know if I agree with that. Okay,
well let me tell you something. Wait that you so
you do deserve that? Well one, I think that anything
that you want to be a career in America. That's
why we set this bullshit up this way, you know
what I mean, That's why we're getting shot every day,
Like this's what we're dying for is the fact is
the you know, opportunity to make your whole job flexing

(26:39):
on the ground. That's what we're died for. It. Let
me let me tell you if you're down with this program.
Fast of all, So this woman, her name is Aggie Law,
and she's at Travel Inner Shoes. I don't know what
travel in her shoes. Um. So she was offering people
a twelve week course for four hundred ninety seven dollars

(26:59):
called how to Grow your Instagram and she and you know,
you join her Master Tribe. You get behind the scenes
video from being broke to woke or not a joke. Uh.
The wild thing is three eight people signed up for
her program. So she pocketed a k for this. And
this wasn't the thing people had to show up in
physical space or like I'll send you videos and like

(27:21):
just advice and like interviews. It was and let me
tell you something, like two weeks in people like this
is a fucking scam. So the first piece of ice,
she was like, start your own. The first they started
smelling ship when they were like, I think a weekend,
she was like, Okay, here's my challenge to the Master Tribe.
I want you to share this course with your followers

(27:42):
and tell them to sign up, and you're like, oh,
we're building a pyramid, aren't we. Right, So even before
she has like hooked them when sort of brainwash exactly,
like just not how you do it. Yeah, and then
she's like, oh, and also I think getting them to
sell like her preset i G filters that they could buy. Yeah,
she had like that was like the challenges were basically

(28:03):
just multi level marketing ship. And then people then they're
they're like, yo, I want my money back, Like you're
not even giving a useful information. Some people were like
I loved it, but I think those are people who
probably have the disposable income to throw five dollars away
and be like that was fine. Um. But the funny
thing is they were saying they were promised six weeks
of videos, but like after that the videos kind of

(28:24):
stopped coming. And when BuzzFeed asked this woman, Aggie Law,
for comment about like what happened with the uploads, she
said she was unable to upload four out of sixty
six course videos due to quote hurdles with my health
and WiFi connectivity. Hurdles with my health and WiFi connect
over out in the desert, right, Yes, I think that's
what That's exactly what that means. But then a lot

(28:46):
of the people who are in the course were like
a little confused because like, how come you still uploading
your own content to your fucking pay Yeah, you know, guys,
it's coming. Don't worry, it's coming. Yeah, so she had to.
I think she gave a lot of refunds and was
just sort of like, oh, I hate to think that
people thought I was like trying to take advantage of them,

(29:07):
but you know, because that will not be profitable. Scam on,
you know, scam on. Shout out to her for giving refunds,
because that would have been like the first disclassed. The
thing was at first she was like I'm sorry, I
can't like this is what it is. And then she
did it on some platform like called Teachable or some
some kind of like online platform that they were, and
they have a thirty day policy. Were like, yo, if
you don't like it, you can get your money back. Yeah,

(29:29):
and other people after the thirty days, like, I still
want my money back. This is a blatant scheme or whatever.
They're like, oh sorry, Like even the woman was being
dodgy and then one person like threatened them with a
class action lawsuit and they're like, okay, here's your money back. Yes, people,
we're dumb enough to just pay fifty dollars. Is a

(29:52):
good scam. Numbers like ult and with processing fees, you're
definitely paying over five dollars. It's crazy, though, because she
could have just if she really wanted to be dedicated
to a good scam, this is a solid scamp, give
people some of this bullshit up front, like and then
hook him with the spread the word multi level marketing

(30:13):
things like, she could have had a really great scam
here going, I'm starting my own church and you know great.
Is that why you're asking me to help you with
that tax paperwork? Yeah? Yeah, yeah absolutely, Church of me,
church of you. You know what I mean. It's all
about worshiping your inner self. Like anyway, I'll get into
it in my book. But how much is that? So
it's a pa per chapter right yeah? Yeah? Yeah? So

(30:36):
you say, like scientology or scientology, they don't have the
T on their building right now, Scientology building the T
fell off. Damn, I'm surprisedly haven't gotten that face. They're
just going British science but also like, this could have
been a real good scheme. I'm sure you could have.
This is why I brought it up because I know
your commentary would be that she fucked the scam. She

(30:58):
did right she saw it was like, where where are
we headed as a culture? Yours is? The scam could
have been more? Oh, it could have been so fruitful.
When everyone wants to pop on, I g like, sir,
how everybody gets high these days? People buy Instagram followers
that should don't work. So it's like, you can teach
people how to make an Instagram that's full of ship
that people will enjoy. If you don't have a private jet,

(31:20):
star small, go to l a X and pay two
hundred dollars to take photos on a private jet, bring
a few outfits. Is two an hour, guys, write this down.
That's free, you know what I mean? Like you can?
You can you actually telling me about that? Real you
can go talking about about that. So I'm like, these

(31:40):
are these are real tips because she could be giving
these people. That's awesome. Well, first you have to create
the illusion and then people buy into that, and then
that's where you get your power. Exactly. You could be
broke as hell. Doing this. But anyway, she's lazy. Obviously
she's living good. She probably got a man. That's what happened.
Like she was out here really trying to make her
own empire, and then she met somebody who start paying
all those bills. Next thing, you know, she high, you
know high, and she didn't have time to send high

(32:02):
that influencer money, right or whatever they get Now, I
know the influencer market is dying. Yeah. Yeah, they're going
after micro influences now, like people with like thirty below
because like those fans are more engaged, like they see
that people will buy more from someone who has a
smaller fan base, and like a three million follower account,

(32:23):
we get like twenty people or something, right, because they've
already been ruined by they've already been ruined and they've
you know, they paid for the courses. Alright, let's check
in real briefly with the trumpets fear Rudy Giuliani responded
to the details of Michael Cohen sentencing and just everything
by saying, quote, nobody got killed, nobody got robbed. This

(32:47):
was not a big crime, a felony campaign finance. M
that's what he's saying. That's where they're at. Now, that's
the level of defense coming out of this lawyer is
nobody got killed. Got I would actually argue that people
did get robbed, American people straight hood winked. But then
he followed it up. He then had to tweet, I

(33:08):
goes correction, Okay, I didn't say payments were not a
big crime. I've said consistently that the Daniels and McDougall
payments are not crimes, and tweeted a great article yesterday
making that point. If it isn't a witch hunt, why
are they pursuing a non crime. So it's a non
crime that Michael Cohen is still having to do with
three years for after cooperating, Yes, like after the sentence

(33:33):
coming down. That sounds like a real non crime, real noncrime.
But apparently I heard rumblings about the prison facility he's
going to is like it's club fed. Yeah, I mean,
come on, people, fucking lesson man put him in gen
pop fucking rikers or some shi it. Can you imagine?
I mean what but I'm saying, like, you know what

(33:54):
I mean, that's that's like the other weird shitty thing
about the criminal justice system is like, okay, and then
if you do white collar crime, we don't to quit
you with the violent criminals because yeah, because we're putting
on white time out while people are sucking dying in
solitary at these other prisons. And they're like yeah, and
they're like, is it was the BOC court? Was the

(34:14):
grass cut low enough? You guys? Do you want to
play a game of patonk later? Right? Yeah? Anyway, So yeah,
that's I think it's just very telling of how you
know where we're at in terms of the panic levels
within the administration that we're actually at the part where
because remember what truth isn't truth was the last hot
fucking single from mc giuliani, And now it's, uh, hey

(34:37):
nobody got killed, nobody got robbed, nobody nobody got robbed.
You know, so we'll see what happens there. But it doesn't.
I think they know that it's getting worse and worse.
And then again, this could be us if living in
our fantasy world where we're hoping that's the case, but
objectively it looks like more dominoes are falling down. Yeah,

(34:59):
no movie and onto a super upsetting story, but one
that we feel like we have to cover. Uh, seven
year old girl died of dehydration while an ice custody
while she was attempting to cross the border. Fox's take
on this is, you know, yeah, well we told we
told people it was dangerous. Uh yeah, well, yeah, she

(35:20):
was crossing with her father, or they were taken into
custody in New Mexico and like a larger group, and
eight hours after going into custody, she started having seizures
and then first responders came or she had a fever
of like a hundred five, and then they took her
to a hospital. They said she had an eaten or
had water in several days. And then once she got

(35:42):
to she was airlifted to a hospital passo, she went
into cardiac arrest, was revived, and then eventually passed away.
And yeah, this is uh a fucking awful situation. And
you would think that the head of the Homeland Security,
Kirsten Nielsen, would have a more compassionate take when asked
about why white child died in their custody. This was

(36:05):
her comment on Fox when she was asked about this tragedy. Uh,
you know, this is just a very sad example of
the dangers of this journey. This family chose to cross illegally.
What happened here was they were ninety miles away from
where we could process them. Uh, they came in such
a large crowd that it took our border patrol folks
a couple times to get them all. We gave immediate care.

(36:29):
Will continue to look into the situation. But again, I
cannot stress how dangerous this journey is when migrants choose
to come here illegally. Yeah, they're not people. To her,
they're not people. Shame on the father, the parents, Why
are you trying to take your child out of a
situation in the country you're coming from that is untenable
right now? When she said it took our border agents

(36:50):
a couple of times like that, that is a very
important like phrasing there, because it's like, what do you
mean by that? So they were there were so many
carloads of migrants they had to go back. So, because
this is going to be something that needs to be
looked into and investigated, is like how long was she
in custody, how how many which trip was she on? Exactly?

(37:10):
While people were getting actual attention, why were they not
paying attention to the condition of these people that they
were taking into custody? You know, they're currently twelve thousand,
eight hundred children in custody of Health and Human Services,
Like why are they just like, yeah, just another one,
throw it on the pile, and the kid is fucking
dying in your custody. And it's just worth noting that

(37:34):
as she is coming to this very crucial wording of
like times she laughed, Yeah, what the she's like Clowes,
it was like a who's a whole mess of Yeah,
I'm sure, but you know, Bush, I also think she's
also fucking there is something missing in you when you
can go up there and that's your comment and you

(37:55):
go and you can't even for a second have some
kind of a shred of humanity about to and you're like,
I mean, this is an example of like, hey, we
told you don't come here, and if you do, come
in the right way, come in legally, but but not
mention the fact that you've made it almost seemingly impossible
for people to actually present themselves at points of entry

(38:15):
to seek asylum and they have to hang around these
border towns with no infrastructure in place for their health
or their safety. And again, her outlook is completely indicative
of their view of these people, which is they're not human. Meanwhile,
this country we're doing diet genocide at the border, and
we're just like, yeah, let's you know, yeah, what are

(38:37):
we gonna do. We were talking with Sophia Alexander last
week about how we can get desensitized, like in things
like Yemen, in places like that where there might not
be a lot of coverage. And granted, there were a
lot of stories that came up that we didn't talk
about about abuse of detainees by border patrol and ice
because to a certain extent, it was killing me to
fucking think about that this thing is going on. But

(38:59):
I think I'm partially a fault for not wanting to
talk about it, for to maintain my own sanity. But
my god, I mean, I don't know what the funk
we're gonna do. I hope this new Congress can do
something about it. Will link to the Southern Border Communities
Coalition in our footnotes, so you can look at other
ways that you can help contribute or get involved if

(39:20):
you happen to live in, stay in nearby, or you
just want to help support from Afar. But yeah, man,
what the fuck? I don't know. Yeah, I mean, super
producer Nick Stump before we record it was pointing out
that the thing that's so infuriating about this argument is
just how patronizing it is, as if the people who
are bringing their children, who like are the most important

(39:42):
things in their world, on a one thousand mile journey
by foot, that they don't know that's dangerous, right, No,
of course they know it's dangerous. It's just what they're
trying to get away from with no acknowledgment for what
might be motivating someone to travel that far on foot
with an unknown destiny on the other side. But that's

(40:03):
the point. In order to continue to speak this way
without people looking at you like you're a horrible monster,
you have to only present one side of the story.
So it's easy for a lot of Americans, a lot
of Americans who just don't have any humanity. I think
that racism and and and sexism and a lot of
things that have been like instilled in our country have
taken the humanity away from people who are on the

(40:25):
oppressive side of this. You lose two yeah, we lose
our lives. You also lose your humanity. You're not people
anymore because this is what you have to do to
put people in boxes in order not to lose sleep
at night over the fact that you are, you know,
complicit in people's genocide and murder. Essentially, it's like to
be like, oh, yeah, they just took a risky trip
and you shouldn't come in here illegally, and that's all

(40:47):
there is to it. But if you were in that position,
it would be devastating and completely different, and it's just
luck that you aren't. Yeah, well it's amazing, yeah that.
And there there can be people who are on the
right who are arrants themselves and somehow can can't imagine.
I guess it's too incominable thing like wow, what would
that be like or something like you couldn't process that.

(41:09):
But I think you have to because that's the only
way you have to maintain an attitude where these people
are not human to be able to rationalize why this
is occurring. Uh, And you know what, I think it
behooves people. I mean you, my top would blow off
if I saw a fox actually do a story. I'm like,
what are these people running away from? Because they they'll
never talk about that. They can never talk I mean,

(41:30):
they don't really do that in mainstream media either. You know,
like really actually trying to bring the focus to you know,
do you understand what like years of meddling on the
US and on the side of the US in a
lot of these Central American countries has left a legacy
of violence, corruption, all this other ship that creates the
forces that would drive people out too. And I think
it's upsetting, uh, And it's not the kind of thing

(41:52):
you want to talk about going into holidays, but this
is the reality. And I think this is something we
need to be vigilant about when we we talk about
our immigration policy and that this isn't just some obscure thing,
you know, So people's lives are on the line. All right,
we're gonna take another quick break. We'll be right back,

(42:18):
and we're back and real quick. I just wanted to
check in with the good people of Johnson and Johnson.
I've always trusted them with my children's safety. I put
I used their no tears baby shampoo. And you guys,
just when you think that this whole unregulated corporatocracy thing

(42:40):
is gonna work out just fine, a story like this
comes along. Because Reuter's investigation found that a scientist came
to Johnson and Johnson with his finding that Johnson Johnson
baby powder, a product that's everywhere from like the fucking
score first table and NBA games too, you know, on

(43:04):
every baby's butt for the past forty years, that that
product causes cancer. It has asbestos in it because when
you mind talc, which it's talcum powder, When you mind talc,
it's often found close by asbestos, and so sporadically they
would just get these big pockets of asbestos that would

(43:24):
end up in their baby powder. So it's not that
they're adding it that in the process of mining talc,
you'll encounter you'll encounter asbestos that then just gets in
the mix, that gets in the mix. And instead of
right and instead of heating this scientists warning, they put
him on an internal list of hostile persons and you know,

(43:48):
banned him. And there have since been thousands of cases
of people who died from mesothelioma, which is a disease
that almost exclusively comes from somehow inhaling asbestos getting asbesto
singer lungs. So that that's really how this came to
light is people were like, well, I don't I didn't

(44:10):
work as right, Yeah, exactly. Uh, they wrote about this
one woman who had two daughters and was a masseus
and so she just worked with baby powder and yeah,
that's how she got it. Fuck how I mean, like honestly,
what you think at some level, right that if you

(44:31):
know about the process of mining talcum or talc, that
you know that this is this is something that can happen,
not even just on the Johnson and Johnson side, like
on just like a minerals side, like a scientist level
that you know. I'm sure there's some crazy backstory of
how many people it took to suppress this information and

(44:51):
we're so this just we're finding this out now that
this happened. Has there been any kind of class action
lawsuit or something against Johnson and Johnson? Yeah, I think
there's been thousands of lawsuits, oh right, and now but
now they have like a smoking gun where they're saying, like, hey,
seventies uncovered a bunch of documents where they found out

(45:12):
in the seventies that this was happening. And the seventies
were a wild time man. And that's the thing about
lawsuits is like you can sue a corporation and pharmacy
or pharmaceutical companies that are like famous for this, Like
they'll get sued by you know, wrongful death suits and
stuff like that, and even after paying all of these suits,
they've still made way more money. Um, So it's not
it's kind of just something they factor in r like, yeah,

(45:34):
we'll pay these people off because they died, but then
we'll keep selling this to everyone else. But I thought
the talk was like I thought we all were kind
of weary of talk um in recent years. I don't know,
I just I mean I put it on my because
they were already like spray between my thoughts when I'm walking. Yeah,
but there have been other studies that have come out

(45:56):
about talcol and how it leads to cancer. So it's
interest saying that baby powder wasn't under siege when all
of that was happening. I think you might have just
like good pr though. There they're like keeping stories. That's
the problem with corporatocracies is these people who have all
the money, these Jaran corporations have all the money to
keep stories under wraps and keep people's keep the ship

(46:18):
they don't want it. You know. It's funny. As a kid,
I hated the smell of baby powder like I hated it.
My mom was like, you just hated that ship and
as like, and I would get near and I'm like, oh,
you can smell as best. I don't know what it was.
I just didn't like it. And maybe what I'm saying is,
you know, my old factory senses were just so off
the charts that I was able to sense his bestes.

(46:40):
But bloodhounds, no, but I mean one of those dogs
that can smell. Yeah, that's those Shout out to Jacoby
and Myers though, and everybody else was about to start
running those miss Leoma commercials again because yeah, it's lit.
I mean, yeah, you think front row at a Lebron
James gas because yeah, go to witness the goat, right,

(47:02):
were you a witness, you might be entitled to settlements, right,
So what's the Is there an alternative product for parents
to other than I'm sure there is. Do you use kids?
I haven't know, So what is it for just to really? Yeah, yeah,

(47:22):
what's it really? Because from the friction of the diaper, no,
from like the yeah, so you're changing the baby frequently helps,
but also like having some kind of barriers and people
who use diaper, but that's usually after the fact that
they already have the rash, but like powders can keep
the area so the kids don't. Their skin isn't wrap

(47:46):
up a brick. Okay, yeah, yeah, trapping up a brick.
But it's your baby, right, I've only handled the only
other precious thing I've ever heard. Bricks of cocaine. Ships
are worth more than a kid. Yeah, I mean to
get for a two year old on the market blue Eyes.

(48:12):
It's like Yeasis anyway. So Postmates, huh yeah, Postmates using
are starting to use robots. The future is here because
they are starting to use little delivery robots where they're
planning on using delivery robots that they have somehow decided
will not get kicked over immediately. I mean when you

(48:34):
look at this thing, I mean, I'm thirty four and
I still want to just kick the ship out of it,
like I'm twelve years old. And not because I don't
like the things because I'm a luddite, I don't like technology,
but yeah, there's something about it that I just feel like,
you know, we're not quite used to robots yet, Like
we're already throwing bird scooters in the l A river
because what is this thing? Yeah, and some people use them,

(48:56):
but I can't imagine you see this little basically like
cool were on wheels with yeah, like rolling down the
street and someone's not gonna sunk with it, or you know,
you might try and open it yourself and get the
food out of it, like where you're going a little postmate,
right or something? What does happen? So this thing is

(49:17):
capable of caring like I think fifty pounds and can
run on a battery that will give it a range
of thirty miles. So they say twelve delivers a day.
But Postman is like, worry not. We're not trying to
took her jobs. We're trying to help our human postmates
work smarter. So they're saying, like in places like where
parking is a mess, you can just you can send

(49:37):
the robot. Yeah, you can just send the robot out
real quick to even bring the food from the restaurant
to the driver, so the driver doesn't have to circle
the block to find a park. This is more for
like them internally. It's not like I could send this
postmade robot to my man's house to see what's what
are you doing? I mean, I'm sure if you confiscated
one and you had a programmer who is savy enough,
you could maybe rework its programming. Go inside his house.

(49:59):
What are you doing the inside you're hiding You're like, surprise, motherfucker.
This would make a lot more sense if it was
a drone, because you can't kick drones over they're through
the air. But how much can you carry on a
draw exact apparently, but I guess yeah. I think the
other thing too, is though if you live close enough,

(50:20):
they are experimenting with it, just taking it straight to
your house too. But l A, we're gonna will be
the first city to see it in use next year
or so. There's so many people out on the street
with nothing to do. Yeah, well luckily, Like this isn't
a real pedestrian friendly like no one no one's really
walking anyway, So but they're kicking it, like we're talking
about like central l A. Oh Yeah for sure. I mean,

(50:41):
like other there are definitely places where there's good pedestrian traffic.
But I feel like, like you know, where I live
in the valley, like it will just be like rolling
down the lonely street. Yeah. I wonder like how this
is going to change just the feel of the city
to have little like druids rolling around around your knees.
Like that's the sensation. I feel like I'm gonna will

(51:03):
be weird. We're like, oh, we're there. I know, but
I know I was as a child is excited about it.
But now when I really think about it, like if
I see this thing coming by, like I'm gonna start
and be like huh huh. Okay, So that's where we're
here already, like a little robot, little food delivery robots.
Maybe that's why I like drones. Just keep out right,

(51:23):
or I don't want the robot come into my house.
I don't know who else is going to tap into this.
I mean Apple Pay just started and the scammers are
already all over that ship. Oh hell yeah, well you know,
Brooklyn is really the heart and center of all scams.
Um you know. Yeah, Like everything comes out of New
York and then it kind of spreads and people learn
how to do it elsewhere. But right now Apple Pay

(51:43):
is so lit like people are learning how just like
like swipe your Yeah, they're learning. Yeah, they're learning how
to basically hack people's phones or get into their Apple
pays and then use their card information to like buy
gift cards at stores and like rack up all this
money and it's easier than like stealing people's credit card
information and cloning their cards. So like, I don't need

(52:05):
a little Postmates pulling up to my house. The next
thing I know, the scammers have all my dat Like,
I'll take the regular John Tony then is outside. I'll
come outside. I come, I come outside. I don't like
them coming to mind. Oh no, absolutely, I don't need
because I look like someone catches me off guard for
a delivery. I just look terrible. I need to like
look like a guy. You trying to look nice. I

(52:26):
try to look nice. I try to look like a
guy who's not eating food for three just for one. Yeah,
you try to look like you have a family. I'm like, yeah,
I'll be right out. Yeah, the food's outside. And they're like, yeah,
you got a party going. I'm like, huh yeah, big
big party. Big party is very quiet. Yeah yeah, we

(52:46):
have fuller house on pause. We're going to do a
marathon all my business. Yeah. Uh so I wanted to
talk real quick. There's more information coming out about Netflix.
We talked last week about how secretive Netflix is about
what they're like, stats are and there's this independent research
firm that uses like peer to peer file sharing and

(53:08):
social media and social meds, social meds to estimate how
many people are like watching and following different shows at
any given time, and they and we trust their their
the it seems like methodology. Yeah, it's it's interesting. I
think some of the things get over inflated by like memeship,

(53:30):
Like SpongeBob SquarePants is the number one show overall, and
I think that's probably inflated by memeship. What do you
mean just from people's like love of the memes. Yeah,
because they're they're using social media to gauge like mind
show got you, got you, just because like they'll have right. Okay, Yeah,
I watched SpongeBob. Still, dude, I do. I think I

(53:51):
think a lot of I think it's a high culture
to a lot of people, like smoke Weed like to
watch SpongeBob. I think SpongeBob might be that lit. Yeah,
SpongeBob is good. I've show it to my kid and
I like it way better than him. No, I don't
like it better than him. Turn it off. Wait, oh man,

(54:15):
he lives in a pineapple under the season a SpongeBob
is hell awoke too, though it's like very like non binary,
like very pro get it's pro everything. It's a very
woke shop. And I saw someone saying, like one of
the characters, like the first mental health advocate who like
show people about depression. Yeah, the squid word for sure,
squid word or I don't know, I don't watch the show,

(54:36):
I just know the memes. W w E. Monday Night
Raw is huge in South Park. So those are some
cable shows. Like the other ones that are huge are
like Walking Dead, Game of Thrones, Riverdale, like all this
ship you always hear about. So that's on the cable side,
and then on the Netflix side it's Narcos is enormous,

(54:58):
thirty six million p bowl who are watching that show,
they think, they think Chilling Adventures of Sabrina thirty four million.
Stranger Things and this was in October had thirty one
point three million people. So that means that like when
the series first came out, or when the season two
first came out, it must have been fucking crazy huge. Wait,

(55:20):
season season three isn't out, yere no, no, no, it's
just this is just residual like Stranger Things Pop were
just like I'll start watching. Yeah. Um, Like, on the
one hand, cable audiences, according to these metrics, are still
way bigger than like the Netflix audiences. Like you got
South Park at forty million, and then the biggest Netflix

(55:40):
show is thirty six million, and SpongeBob's at ninety million.
But that's like a show that's in syndication and it's
just always on and it's like part of the language
of the Internet exactly. But then when you look at
like streaming digital shows, I'll just go down the list.
So you've got a Narcos, Chilling Adventures of Brina, Stranger Things,

(56:01):
Marvel's Daredevil. You go through all those before you get
to a non Netflix show Handmaid's Tale, and then the
rest are all Netflix shows. It's The Last Kingdom, House
of Cards, Oranges, The New Black, Thirteen Reasons Why, and
The Haunting. So it's just Netflix is dominating in terms
of the top viewership for all streaming platforms. Yeah, so shows.

(56:22):
I do love a handmads Tale though. It's good. Yeah,
it's white slavery. That's not why I'm watching it, guys.
I don't want slavery for anyone. It's just very fascinating.
It's interesting to think about. No, no, I would like
I didn't say that, guy, No, I know, but it's

(56:43):
interesting because like I always thought, hit me under the table,
I would be so bad. Well yeah, I mean the
other ships, you know, Like I was looking at Big
Bang Theory, which is like the thing that I had
always associated with having huge ratings. It peaked at like

(57:06):
twenty million people in two thousand fifteen, So that's like
smaller than most of these shows. Well. Yeah, Narcos does
a great thing though, too, is that they can energize
many audiences because it's bilingual, right, you know, so I
mean that's the thing. And Netflix also released their list
of like the most binge shows this year and the
biggest like shows that grew in viewership this year, and

(57:29):
their number one show is a show on my block
which I had not heard of. Yeah, it's The Youth.
It's about it's like a coming of age story like
that follows high school kids in Los Angeles. But it
goes along with something we were saying last week when
Sophia was on that, Like Netflix actually has the data

(57:49):
and they're like, oh, diversity works, Like he would you
look at that have a cast that looks like our
audience people like that for some of that one non
Latino who plays a you know on my block. Yeah,
she's the only one who gets some smoke. But it's
all right. Is she doing the Ariana Grande thing? Yeah?
Kind but but it is. It is to your point, though, Jack,

(58:12):
like they're doing a lot more than network television is
doing for as far as diversity goes. But is there
anything to the accessibility of these shows, because like, when
I watch a network TV show, I can't really like
go back and watch episodes of it other than on Hulu,
right like, whereas on Netflix, I'm I have access to
these shows. I think definitely, you know, yeah, I think
people consume them differently for sure. Well that's what the

(58:35):
other thing too. Even we were talking about the Christmas Chronicle,
They're like, this is the biggest movie right now, or
would be if you know, we counted it. There's also
that level of like you can be so passive and
still consume it, and it requires much less energy to
break inertia for you to be like I'm gonna watch
this Netflix, think I'm gonna take my ask to the
movies and pay for a ticket. But I do think
that the reason behind Netflix, Like being better on diversity

(58:59):
stuff is not that Netflix is more progressive. It's that
they have access to even better information and they're more
driven by data and analytics, and they're like, oh, we
see a trend in like this particular thing, which is
people like like this genre of show right with this

(59:19):
kind of cast. Yeah, shouldn't let the fact that a
bunch of our executives And it's really simple, guys, just
look at population demographics and appeal to those groups and
you will have a successful show. I mean, it's also
about seeing something new, Like I think that sometimes it's hard. God,

(59:41):
I don't even want to say this like this, but
I have a lot of artist friends who are straight
white men and they feel like now their art is
not interesting and they're not interesting as people in the world.
Is kind of saying they're not interesting. I'm like, that's
not it. It's that you guys just decided to dominate
everything so much that it's like, okay, well, once we
seen similar things so much, it's like we've seen this

(01:00:03):
so much, Like you have to diversify just because that's
what keeps everything interesting. I watched Crazy Rich Asians, and
I remember crying because I was like, damn, there was
only three white people in this movie, and I remember
who they were. To know it made me so I
cried tears of joy, like I didn't know anything about
my jong, Like I got to learn stuff and it
was hell, yeah, that's my new scale. Listen, break them,

(01:00:25):
break them bricks out. Alright, let's go. But like there
were two guys in the hotel and then there was
one guy in the airport hangar who was mixing drinks.
White people in that movie. Well, you know, again it's
all about representation, but look what happens and just interesting stories.
I just want to see something different. Yeah, no, right,

(01:00:46):
you can only like I think, you can only rinse
and repeat the sort of same structures and like, yeah,
you know, not everyone lives the same way. But at
the same time, like you know, there's certain television shows
that have an all white cast, and I'm like, this
is how this show should be because this leads people
probably wouldn't have a black No, I think I'm still
going to watch it. Yeah, like we're gonna watch full
of House, you know how to We don't have to
tell me it's lit. We're gonna watch Fuller House. I

(01:01:07):
will watch trash Burn and that's what I do when
I watch Fuller House and hey, hey, full House is
a great show made by great they're great creative minds. Well, Lacey,
it's been wonderful having you back. Maybe we'll also have
you back for one of our shows for next week
during your holiday week. Yeah, if you're not doing anything.

(01:01:29):
But first, where can people find you and follow you?
So you guys can find me on the goram and
on the Twitter at the same handle, keep it all
one brands at DEVA Lacey. That's d I V A
l A c. I. Is there a tweet or active
social media that you've been enjoying a tweet or this

(01:01:52):
is my own tweet brand down that I'm enjoyed. Nothing matters,
So do whatever the funk you want. And by that
I mean just like make yourself happy. You know that
was your tweet? Nothing matters? Yeah, yeah, great, I love nihilism. Yeah,

(01:02:12):
that's basically what it is. Huh. Also, you can find
me soon. Um, there's a television show that I just
worked on, um that I can actually now talk about.
It's called Florida Girls and it'll be on It's about
four Florida women who are very poor and very ratchet,
and it's very funny and I think very revolutionary. It's
not about men. There's like there's crazy ship that happens.

(01:02:32):
It was gang Bangs. It's it's it's a it's a show, um,
and it will be on Pop TV and it'll be
streaming and the next time I talk to you, guys,
I'll tell you where it'll be streaming. But yeah, the
girls nice. So when you're watching, watch Florida exactly and
you will look, we're gonna gang will pull up for
our all. Um Miles, where can people find you? You You

(01:02:53):
can find me on Twitter and Instagram at Miles of Gray.
I like a couple tweets, wouldn't you like that? And
they're not all reductress beats. One The first one is
from caps Lock Christ all caps. The stweet says, I
eat gummy bears two at a time so they don't
have to die alone. Another one from Ali Maynard at
miss Maine Trump's chief of Staff shortlist, Geraldo Rivera, Brian Kilmeade,

(01:03:15):
a racist meme, New Gingrich boner pills, a pissy mattress,
left Shark, Roberty Lee statue, Miss trunch Bull NYC pizza
rat or truck nuts and last one is from Blair
Saky past guests. He says, I fucking hate paper straws.
Can't we get rid of dodge rams instead? I was
going to do that one ship twee wow WHOA. Well

(01:03:41):
you can find me on Twitter at Jack underscore o
Brian some tweets I liked. Pixelated Boat tweeted. Kanye West,
like all great artists, is able to take his pain
and insecurity and channel it into being extremely online. He's
going through it again. Yeah, what's going on? He was

(01:04:01):
out here saying like Travis Scott and Drake were threatening him. Yeah,
I don't know what happened, Like softass threats, Like what
are they threatening you with? Like R and B remix,
Like like Drake and Travis Scott are not doing violence. Well,
if you believe it. There's that rumor that Drake had
Triple X Tantason killed. There's another wild conspiracis Drake wishes

(01:04:23):
to have somebody cute. Hey, you never know, I mean,
that's not his life. Send you this thread. You know that.
That was his Luminatti offering. Listen. As soon as I
joined the Illuminati, will hot okay perfect and you'll Scandy
Luminati absolutely at sin a Snark tweeted, what even is
the point of Jason Momo's bodyguards? And there's a picture

(01:04:44):
him with two bodyguards who are like come up to
his shoulder and it's amazing A superproducer around a hone
It tweeted is it still keto if I boof a cupcake?
Which she's putting all our business out here. She's the
best with the butts uf with the boot. That's a
weird thing to say. But we asked her what her
predictions were for two thousand ninety and she said that

(01:05:05):
she was going to book Cupcake, so uh, cree prediction
and blank Patch tweeted, I saw coyote eating McDonald's on
the side of moholland his hair was perfect And at
cash Bones tweeted Tom Clancy's pro skater too. Uh. You
can follow me on Twitter at Jack Underscore o Brian
follow us on Twitter at daily z eykeeis for at

(01:05:26):
the Daily Zeycheis on Instagram. We have a Facebook campage
and a website, daily's geys dot com. We post our
episodes in our foot where we link off to the
information that we talked about today's episode, as well as
the song we write out on Miles What are we
Gonna write out on? This is a track from an
artist called jitwom Uh and it's like someone like, I'm

(01:05:47):
gonna low fi rock kind of thing and I'm really
vibing off of guys. Uh yeah, and uh. The title
is alone uh and hopefully don't feel alone to this,
to this, but I like it. If you feel like
I listened to it, I should be on a commuter
train just looking out the window and just being like, yeah,
I want to get this money, all right, Yeah, so

(01:06:09):
use that to motivate. You don't know how many you'll
take commuter trains, but if you do, please think of me.
All Right, we're gonna ride out on that. We will
be back tomorrow because it is a daily podcast. We'll
talk to you guys and by that's well, girl, that's

(01:06:59):
your posted them

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