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April 30, 2021 63 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season one eighty two,
Episode five of Jo DALYs Eite guys to production of
I Heart Radio. This is a podcast where we take
a deep dive into America's share consciousness. It is Friday,
April thirtie, goodbye April. Hello may Uh. My name is

(00:20):
Jack O'Brien a K. I would cast five hundred pods
and I would cast five hundred more just to be
the man who talks the news with miles of thousand
times or more. Baha baha, baha, baha, baha, baha, baha,

(00:43):
baha baha blast. That is courtesy of Mats Demigod rock
Uh and I'm thrilled to be joined as always by
my co host, Mr Miles gragn was that Tim Scott
be like, America's not a racist country. Okay, cool, Tim,

(01:09):
thanks for that assessment. Combla tube. Sure that just came
to me while I was just really just watching it again,
So shout out to jay Z for that beat and
oj Sit We'll not shout out to you, but the
story of o j Okay, did jay Z write that beat? Who? Who? No, No,
he doesn't produce come on man, yeah, yeah, all he does.

(01:30):
He just moves. Unit's man, he's not making the beats.
He doesn't even write the lyrics down. Yeah, he's no
business man. I'll tell you that. Yeah, Justin's coming through
no idea. It's no idea. Yeah, yeah, that's beautiful beat.
I would also like to shout out Rob Cunningham for
pointing out he said, congrats on nine hundred episodes. Did

(01:53):
you know we hit nine hundred episodes? What is that?
What it is? Jack? Yeah? It is not even like
thousand yards stare. It's it's weird to think of it
like that. Yeah, ship, maybe if this is you know,
holy shit, it doesn't feel like it. I also want
to shout him out for doing the uh thing where

(02:15):
he basically wrote a song about a thousand and then
was like, congrats on nine hundred though. Oh that's like
my mom does that sometimes with me, where she's like, hey,
congratulations on your six year anniversary and it's only five.
She doesn't. Yeah, she's always a year ahead. Just let

(02:37):
me know. But hey, that's why that's why her stock
picks our next level man, because she's always she's always
a year ahead. Wow, But Miles, it's fitting then, this
being the nine episode that We are joined in our
third seat by the Man, the myth, the legend, d
J Dranel good Man. That is incredibly this windmill in

(03:02):
the building, I'm getting that wedding firm. How are you
doing at times? I'm sucking shellon. I'm very well happy
to be here on this delicious Friday morning. Yeah, according
to the audience, very delicious. You have you have a
sandwich you were eating before and maybe at that later

(03:22):
Oh oh we'll get into it. Okay, Uh you know what.
Fuck Rob Cunningham, this is only episode eight nine. Come on, dude,
don't do me man make me look like a fool here.
No friends, that happens before this. Yeah, come on, come on,

(03:43):
come on. I don't know. He's not some math demigod.
I'm not a step no no math demigods. Yeah that's true.
Maybe maybe he's next level. Either way, Thank you, Rob,
appreciate you. Shout out. Rob Daniel. What's good man? What's
what's new with you? Um? Not a mood shoust just
doing some you know, house housewarming kind of things. We
finally got a dinner table. We hung up some lovely

(04:05):
pictures in my office. Um, I mean I'm not gonna
see one picture, well you see one picture back there,
but I assure you there are three whole pictures in
front of in front of Trump. I feel you two
to three weeks for my camera around for one, because
you might recognize Jack that picture over there Portland, that

(04:26):
is one Dr Jack Ramsey and it looks like Gandhi
going through the streets of India. Indeed, my most white clothing.
He's sitting next to DJ Daniel's mom, my god mother. Indeed,
keep it in the family here. And I just want
to highlight this for a second. Is that you can
kind of see it, but right above Dr Jack's head

(04:47):
is a sign that says way to go Mighty Mo. Now,
the funny thing about the sign is it says way
to go mighty Mo, and then in parentheses next to mo,
it says more ree in the case you didn't know,
and then even further down below that, it says Luke
Maurice Luke so Maurice Lucas right. Yes, So this person

(05:10):
didn't think that you would understand the phrase if it
just said way to go, which was like exactly very
like way to go Air Jordan's uh. And then in
Prince Michael Michael that Michael Jordan's basketball player who just
won a championship precisely specifically, and Portland wasn't used to winning,

(05:32):
you know, that was that was new for them at
the time. This is seventy seven when Portland Trailblazers. Daniel
and my grandfather coached the Portland Trailblazers. They won a
title and I don't think they've won one since. But
that was a big That was huge huge. Do y'all

(05:54):
eat free over there? Uh? You should be able to? Yes,
almost started saying I work with you all when I did.
When we did our live show in Portland on a
told cab driver that I was a doctor Jack's grandson
and he he really freaked out but did not give
us a free ride. And wow, man, that's great, that's

(06:16):
really cool. Freaked out because he misunderstood. He thought it
was a doctor he owed money do. He's like, oh, man,
tell them I'll pay him back, Like what doctor to
the coach, Never mind, sir, Like fantastic. I was wearing
a stethoscope around my neck and making her call me
doctor Jack. There you go anyways? Uh, Daniel, Yes, you

(06:40):
had a good sandwich this morning. You seem to be
in good spirits. I am in good spirits. We'll talk
more about the sandwich when we get to either under
or overrated, and we'll let you know which one. My goodness,
that's what we call a tease cliffhanger. If you will,
all right, we're going to get to know you a
little bit better in a moment. First, a couple of

(07:01):
the things we're talking about. Uh, we're gonna make it
three straight with a little Trump update. But he wants
he wants credit. He's saying I did the vaccine, so well,
we'll talk about that. We'll talk about his homie Tim Scott,
who did the rebuttal from the Republicans. H we'll talk
about the Biden speech just in general, some pretty some

(07:23):
pretty good Pool quotes, and then a lot of kind
of platitudes, vagueness, but you know, shout out to those
great Pool quotes. Apparently Amazon cheated and that union that
union vote like Amazon crushed it. They should like unions
are done in America. The people who wrote those headlines

(07:44):
should be banished. Yeah yeah, look at that. A lot
of times those headlines were on top of stories that
then talked about, like just the utter fuccory that Amazon
was pooling, but they were like, I guess you know,
this is why it's hard to unionize in America. Moving
on staged and they might have gone even over the

(08:09):
absurdly uh you know, corporate biased line that they're not
supposed to cross. So we'll talk about that. We'll talk
about the Summer of n Y, that sex god Mayor
de Blasio has declared keeping things very sexy in the
Big Apple. We're going to talk about the Roaring twenties,
all of that plenty more. But first, DJ Daniel, what

(08:34):
is something from your search history that's revealing about who
you are? Um? How to use after effects? I've I've
been recently trying to spruce up the old Twitch stream
with stupid videos and animations and fun stuff, and I've
decided to take advantage of our access to the Adobe
suite and try and you know, figure out after effects.

(08:55):
And so far, I would say, I would say so
would be success so far? And what are you trying
to add? Like a little animations to the your overlays?
Precisely so. They call them stinger transitions, and it's when
you go from one scene to another rather than its
simply fading or wiping or whatever. You have a cute

(09:16):
little animation like I have. I have a I have
curtains opening and closing, and for when I played D
and D, I actually have I made a little like
animation thing of like a castle coming into frame of
a person with a bow getting eaten by a bear,
a wizard casting a spell, and then two cherubs carrying
a little sign that says dungeons and dragons and then
and so you're animating those like you just sort of

(09:37):
have the vector art that you're sort of animating exactly. Yeah.
I mean I remember when you were telling me about this,
when we were comparing O B S Twitch overlays. You
have all your scenes set up and I really thank
you for that. And because of that, I did get
the l BATO stream deck x L because of your recommendation. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
because you said, for what I'm trying to do, it's
the regular one ain't going to be enough and absolutely not. Yeah,

(10:01):
I like you, xcel. I would that sounds like a
weird character which is a car salesman who sell video
game ship and like like you, same fucking strategy but
video game but knows nothing by about it. Can I
go in a cup of coffee. What you got the

(10:22):
RPGs going, Yeah, Yeah, thing's got good RPGs on it too. Man,
you're gonna in this Xbox. Yeah, frames are gonna look good.
But yeah, it's my latest search. I'm just enjoying on
a hose. Knee is commentary along in the In the chat,
she pointed out, this is an audio format, Daniel, Exactly,

(10:42):
my handotions don't. I don't really do anything or showing
pictures of our grandfather not really not really translating to
the audience. But lot, now you're talking about graphics. N
What if something you think is overrated? Well, oh, I'll
tell you something traumatic pause. I feel like it's gonna
be one of us. Which one something that's overrated is

(11:04):
this Uncle Pauli's Delli bacon, egg and cheese sandwich. You're
going over with it, going overrated? Unfortunately, we're going okay. Yeah.
So here, So there's there's a couple. There's a couple
of things that factor into this decision. One, the advertising
is trying to sell them like a classic Bodango breakfast sandwich,

(11:24):
and I think something that comes with the classic boeg
And breakfast sandwich is is speed and affordability. Oh yeah, exactly.
This is a ten dollar breakfast sandwich here, ten dollar bacon,
egg and cheese. I think it's like it's eight it's
like eight fifty, but then after tax you're looking at

(11:44):
like nine thirty, and so you're paying ten bucks to
the sandwich. Get a little change back. Yeah, the way
you tip ten bucks at least moreover. I called in
my order. I said a bacon, egg and cheese, and
the lovely person who is who is on the other
line said, that's it, which I think is an appropriate

(12:05):
thing to say, because the breakfast sandwich, you whip it
up eggs, bacon on a on a kaiser, and in
terms of the in terms of the definitional ingredients of
things on this on this sandwich, it's eggs, bacon, American cheese,
anarchis roll. In terms of ingredients, I couldn't ask for
anything more. That's more or less exactly what I wanted to.
But then I say, yep, that'll be, and she says, okay,

(12:26):
fifteen minutes. Fifteen minutes. Now, I imagine that like imagine that,
you know, you walk up to your local bodega and
you say, I'll take a BBC exactly a line out
the back for a breakfast sandwich, and like, you know,
I'm saying there, well there, I mean there were people
waiting outside, but partially because of the fact that it's

(12:46):
only one person in the storey at the times Stace Socialty.
Of course there was a line of there was a
lot of people waiting, but alas I ordered my sandwich,
I drove on over there because I figured that the
fifteen minutes was generous. I figured that was like it's
a BBC, they're telling you to get in there at
fifty minutes. That when you show up in ten and
it's ready, you're like, oh, boom, great. It took twenty
It's sook twenty minutes to make the sandwich. And if

(13:07):
I had just walked up and was sitting there on
my way to work, per se and was like, I'll
take a b easy, take a bacon mag and cheese,
And I waited there for twenty minutes to get the sandwich.
That's a little too much time in my in my
personal opinion, Locking fetishized bodega Overpress that way, and they're like, oh,
it's so cool, like when you live when I should

(13:28):
live in New York, bodega. I get like, fucking I
can get anything. I get a fucking chop cheese whatever,
at any time of the night. And then now it's
all about just like bringing that here. Because we're bringing
it here, the fucking qualities sub centered, and it takes
too long, and it's more expensive, and it's not convenient,
like the reason that people are into it in the

(13:50):
first place in New York. Precisely now, something I know
I want to make a very careful amendment to this review.
Right here, I'm reviewing specifically the bacon egg and use here,
which I really like Uncle Pauli's. And in fact, there
are other sandwiches which are only ten to thirteen dollars
for a high quality. A bunch of really high quality

(14:12):
deli meat sandwiches are good, and that's the sandwich that
I would wait fifteen to twenty minutes for. But I
just feel like when you're selling a breakfast sandwich where
you're saying only till noon on the weekdays and all
day on the weekends, come get your breakfast sandals here,
you're setting an expectation that you're selling a breakfast the
item that's like, that's what I think, that's what New

(14:35):
York obviously can dunk on l a all day with,
which is the lifestyle sort of and how that relates
to food because here it's a bunch of motherfucker's that
don't work or like our trust fund kids, and they're
like they're like, yeah, I can wait. I'll pay ten
bucks for a thing all wave forty minutes for for
Breakfastly I don't have anything going on, whereas like I
like the pace. I just like how when you go

(14:56):
and have to get shipped in New York, like especially
when I used to work for Conde, like in fucking
down by the World Trade Center, and like it's just
a lot of people working in all the lunch spots,
like move at fucking lightning speed, just like that ship.
Agree efficiency, but we're very very efficient. We're such fucking man.
And you're incidentally walking past those bodega's. You're not like

(15:19):
going seeking them out having to wait in the line.
I'm making a reservation. Love New York. Yeah exactly. Yeah, cool,
So you're overrated as a local. Los Angeles is a
very very standard of taking something and then turning it
into this plus stup like oh special experience when the

(15:41):
doll is efficiency. That's why, you know, Like it's like
when you see like Tucket is in New York, miss me,
miss see, because they're doing the same thing. Like, oh man,
no good the tacos are in l A. What if
we did that over here in New York and we
do all this other ship And not to say that
there's good tacos there, but it's like they're they've they're

(16:02):
doing the fund up thing. We're here. We keep it
quick and grimy because that's just the that's the scene
it's born out of. But when you try to get
fucking city fight it, it loses all its ship. Also,
just something that I don't want to skip over the
use of social d as for social distancing. Yes, I

(16:24):
mean if they had made it like cool, like sunny
d the whole time, I might have actually done that ship,
you know, I might have board over to breathe each
other's mouth. During the whole pandemic. I was like, Jack,
we literally just got locked up. What are you talking about? Party? Man?
We got a raise, we still got a rave. It's

(16:45):
social distortion canceled. I was thinking to social distortion. I'm like,
they're from Fullerton. I wonder what what came with social
distortion in the year of our thord them out anyway,
they could have done a sick p s A for
social just exactly. Darn it. What is something you think
is underrated? Underrated? And if any of you listeners follow

(17:07):
my Twitter, you're seeing me talking about this a lot
recently is this artist named Swarty. Swarty and I texted
Miles about this yesterday. Swarty is this artist who was
formerly of the group The m Machine and has struck
out on their own solo. I used to I mean
struck out is I feel it's the wrong phrase because
it means to go out in your own, but it
also has the implication of like failing because you strike out,
but like they have gone out on their own to

(17:29):
the exactly home run on their own as this as
this odd, Yes, in my personal opinion, as this artist
extra basis, I don't know what that means, but it's just,
you know, in this time of everybody doing all of
these like internet based live sets like as music has
tried to continue on in the world of places like

(17:50):
Twitch and YouTube and livestream format, you see a lot
of people doing performances where it's like their band or
their DJ set either in front of a green screen
or in their garage or something, and it's like, that's
really all people have right now. It's like I don't
expect everyone to be performing on a fake, huge stage
or even a real stage of any kind. But when
someone takes the medium of like a film performance of
some kind and really goes all out with it, I

(18:13):
just have an extra appreciate for that. Appreciation for that.
And this set from this festival called Secret Sky hosted
by Porter Robinson, this artist Swarty did probably my favorite
performance I've seen over the last year. I could not
recommend it enough. Thirty five minutes long beginning to end,
so well produced, directed by this like master puppeteer, has
all of this awesome music, an awesome profle. I just like,

(18:35):
I really can't recommend it enough. So if you have
an opportunity to go look up Swarty Secret Sky set
on YouTube and you will not be disappointed. Now we're
gonna need a spelling on that, because when I go Swarty,
the first thing that comes up is Urban Dictionary, a
game played by homosexuals in which they use their penises
in the place of swords, replicating the popular sport of fencing. Uh,

(18:59):
it is that so make it's swarty swarty, but it's
s w A r D Dictionary Mitch McConnell Urban dictionary
is what we have now that yeahoo, answers is gone.
Uh just yeah Swarty Secret Skuy s w A R

(19:19):
D y Secret sky set on YouTube. You just sit back,
relax and enjoy thirty five minutes of really enjoyable vibes
and masterful puppetry. Very cool, very cool. Oh, by the way,
two things that have been recently or I guess Anna
was saying, Chad, uh is something worth checking out that

(19:40):
while we're talking about underage ship and I wanted to
shout out shows on Amazon Prime. I'm on my second
Amazon Prime streaming show that has no coverage, Like they
don't even have reviews for the second and third season,
Goliath with Billy Bob Thornton. It's fucking good man compared
like Netflix is guess all the attention because everyone has it,

(20:04):
nobody really pays attention. But like I watched Patriot before
that shows fucking good uh. And no, like you can't
find very many people. There's just like a small subreddit
talking about it. It took somebody to tell me to
watch it, for me to watch it, that's the one
where to do it is like the CIA spook. But
he does like folk music. Yeah yeah, and yeah it's

(20:25):
good like it's I don't know if it if it
was on Netflix, people would be uh talking a lot
about but instead it's on Earth Fucker Bezos channel press.
I feel like he gets too much bad press and
I just want to shout him out. Toxic. But like
for these people who are making good shows that are

(20:47):
just getting buried on his shitty platform, like getting to
see Billy Bob Thornton be a dirtbag lawyer is fun. Anyways, Uh,
let's take a quick break and we'll be right back.

(21:12):
And we're back, and uh let's let's make it a
trafficta three straight days of Trump men cheese. But the
first is as strong as you put it mouth. Yeah,
it's look from first from us. Yeah, well you know,
you know, like dating all that, you know, what are

(21:32):
you gonna do? Keep the ratings up? But yes, Mr
hydroxy chloroquin has a new take because it seemed we
just saw if we were talking about for three days.
First it was oh, support is slipping for Trump. Then
the next story is hey, he's thinking about doing rallies again,
getting back out there. You know, he's kingmaking again. You know,
he's still very relevant to now. Because Joey Badass had

(21:54):
to have his first big boy congressional address, Trump now
had to swoop it called fox Baby to let him
know that he had some ship to ramble about. And
it's all about the vaccine. Specifically, He's like, I did
the vaccine. He said that sentence as a statement, I
did the vaccine. It's not The vaccine is not a dance.

(22:16):
It's not the Millie Rock. You know what I mean?
I did You did the vaccine? What then does that mean?
And then he said, if I were president the vaccine,
you wouldn't have had a vaccine for five years, three
to five years. It would be in the minimum. He
wasn't shooting with him in the lab. And then he said,
I got it done in less than nine months, and

(22:37):
that's only because of me. And look, I guess in
a certain way, I'm the father of the vaccine because
I was the one that pushed it. To get it
done in less than nine months was a miracle. People
are saying, okay, okay, sure, you're the father of the vaccine.
Thank you. It's like you can almost discount it without

(22:58):
his like massive Twitter megaphone. It's just like that that
seems silly, Yeah, because this would get retweeted to ship
and quote tweeted and dunked on and create all this
other thing. And I it's funny that I had to
go looking for the people who talk about what happens
on Fox and Ship to figure out what this take was.
I mean, obviously once that happened, this became a headline,

(23:21):
but it does like, you know, that would have been
if he were still had his Twitter, he would have
tweeted that ship last night and it would have fucking that.
I don't know, whatever would have happened. Media would still
be like, yeah, this can you believe him? Mm hmm yeah,
I like this way better. Yeah, but yeah, he did
the vaccine. Go, he did did the vaccine. He did it. So,

(23:46):
speaking of Biden's big hundred Days speech, a couple of
pool quotes that I thought were pretty impressive. White supremacy
is terrorism. Yes, indeed, trickle down economics doesn't work. Yeah,
I mean like we've known that for a while. This
one was the most surprising to me. And also the

(24:08):
one I want to talk about because it seems to
symbolize his willingness to say the right thing and then
just completely not back it, but with any policy. He said,
Wall Street didn't build this country. We stole it from
indigenous people and had slaves do it. The middle class did,
and unions built the middle class. Unions built the middle class.
He said, Okay, okay, so what you gonna do? Right?

(24:33):
I like I like those sentences since he was of
the white supremacy thing. Or is a police reform bill
that's in Congress that is obviously going to be Wolfley
inadequate to the problem, And he's bragging about how it's
gonna get cross platform across the ill support, So you
know that's not you know that over here? Yeah, cross

(24:55):
platform Xbox man. You know me and me and uh
show are both big gammers. We have gaming on the brain. Yeah,
y'all just been farming a ton in the division two.
Huh yeah, too much, too much. Uh. No solution to
the problem of unions just getting railroad in this country

(25:15):
that doesn't involve going to war with big business. And
I don't see that being a path he's willing to take.
But he's certainly talking like that, and I don't like,
is this just the new strategy where he says the
right thing loudly and then it's just I mean, look,
you look. You and many other people were spell bound

(25:37):
by the idea that he said words that were you know,
prior to this would have been a hot takes that
you couldn't say as a president. But because too many
people in this country now, like are awful lot of
these myths like that's where you gotta be, you gotta
say stuff like that's true, White supremacy is terrorism. Trickle
down economics doesn't work, sure, but if you're not backing

(26:01):
that up with the real ship, then it's just you're
just taking advantage of the Overton window being all fucked up.
And you just came in here saying just making observations
and not really offering something radical. Which is interesting because
he said things like I was trying to pay attention
as I watched. It was very difficult, but he said
he would say things like, you know, from everybody, we
got to help the poorest of the poor. But it's

(26:23):
like you'll use these terms like poorest of the poor,
but you won't actually address the concept of their being
the poorest of the poor, you know, like it's a
rhetorical barb to use to say, like, this is gonna
help everybody, you know, even the fucking dirty people that
I don't have a plan for that, but you know them,
We'll get to them too at some point. And then

(26:43):
he also said this other thing that was like he
was treating rising insurance premiums like a boogeyman that and
like not a societal issue that he had the power
to change as president, you know what I mean. And
that just felt weak as fuck, where he's like, and
we gotta do this, you know, to protect them from
rising insurance premiums. Well, then why don't you slay the

(27:04):
rising insurance premiums beast by completely changing our health care
like rather than be like, oh what, because then the
other things on the other side of the door, you
act like you can't do that. You act like you
can't fucking like actually advocate for real substantive change. So
while a lot of the other stuff is a good
step forward, I think like everything and I'm you know,

(27:26):
I'm part of a certain group of people that always
be like this is just not going far enough. But
that's what if the energy was like it was like
stuff that I was like, Okay, cool. He said that
he's pushing back against a lot of old school like
neoliberal nonsense that Democrats used to say out loud in
these kinds of events. Um, but I'm also like, yeah,
there's some so so much still to be done. But

(27:48):
it's a start, I guess. But that's I don't think
we can keep getting fooled by by accepting it's a start. Yeah,
that's the sort of pivot that the pundit class or
whatever we'll do is to be like, but it's a start.
You know, it's a start. It's a start. It's a start.
But we've been it's a starting for centuries. Now have
they stopped paying attention? It's a start, it's a start.

(28:09):
Are they no longer reading? Okay, we can move on exactly,
we can move on to talking about the dick measuring
contest between Hey, that's big news. Um that like there's
a start that I just like found that just is
is perfect like democratic speech writer not saying shit, uh said.

(28:36):
I've often said our greatest strength is the power of
our example, not just the example of our power. My
conversations with world leaders and I've spoken to forty of them.
Now I've made it known. I've made it known that
America's back. What funk are you talking about? Like? What
does that even mean? Bro? Uh? And if that if

(28:59):
hold on and then Jill, can we get a transcript
of that call? Are you like there? Maybe and you
can take that to the bank. But it won't be
gold back just by the threat of our military see
you later. I don't, okay, but you know again, it
was refreshing, though, I'll say this, it was refreshing to
have someone go up there and say things like I'm

(29:19):
trying to look after trans people, I'm trying to look
after X group. But I think that's the part that
kills you inside. Is like a a person who who
will vote for the Democratic Party, is you're like you're saying,
you know, they all know how to say the right ship,
but when it comes to like actually making ship messy
for the people that are oppressing us, then turn the

(29:40):
volume down. Turn the volume. This is I mean, I
I equate this to the conversation about climate change right now,
where people are like, hey, you can do your part,
like we worked together, we're all strong. It's like you're
talking about making changes on this very incremental level when
the bigger picture is these ten companies that make up
the fucking waste and our world. Right now, it's a
we can't touch that. You can't touch that, but you

(30:02):
can keep using you know, less straw don't give me
that much money my campaign, So how about y'all start
using these metal straws. He also referenced the Martin Luther
King Jr. Thing about the long arc of American history
bending towards justice, or I think he said the long
arc of history bend towards justice, whereas I feel like

(30:24):
it bends more towards the at least in America, the
Great Man theory of history, where everything is like anti
democratic and shaded by like you know, every everybody just
pull themselves up by their bootstraps. I mean, I think
that quote is more like that bend towards justice is
actually an optical illusion being caused by the curvature of

(30:46):
the earth. There is actually no bend towards it because
it's like it's so fucking slow, and I think it's
just it's these a lot of these things that allow
this idea that's like it's trending there removing there. Meanwhile,
you look at other kind trees, like just wholesale being like,
now that ship isn't working for our country. This is
a new thing. We're doing paid paternity, maternity apparently, whatever

(31:08):
you gotta do. And here it's like and that's the
reason that I worry about like the this like incremental
ship is that like you need drastic changes to show
people what is in their best interest because American culture
is so like just allergic to any sort of collectivism,

(31:31):
Like they need to be shown, Okay, this is in
your best interest or else. You know, I'm sure the
Republicans will find some some way to weaponize it. Um
that will be effective because everybody likes to believe that
America is just a bunch of great men pulling themselves
up by their bootstraps. And you know, you just gotta

(31:53):
give people the opportunity. Anyways, Tim Scott, uh you know that.
So that was our bottle. Tim Scott had some other ideas. Yeah,
I mean, look, they got the sole black Republican. Uh
and I don't mean soul like s o U L
like he got soul. I met s O l E.
Like he's the only black Republican. Although I'm sure. I'm

(32:16):
sure there's some weird emails with people like they get
the soul black Republican up there much this whole thing
is they had him go up to give the response
because it's so transparent, Like it's so cringe e to
be like, hey, we're dealing with a lot of people
are observing that we're one of them. We're just a
toxic racist party. Uh so we need to deploy our
token black senator to go and soothe the base, to

(32:40):
convince them that what's happening is actually not happening and
everything is all good, because he was Oh my god,
it was really it felt like everything that was like
a huge sort of pain point for the Republicans, not
not pain for them, but like something they're having to
deal with optically is sort of all these voters suppression.
Else for people saying this ship is racist as funk.

(33:02):
You all are trying to disenfranchise people of color and
you don't want them to vote. That's what these things
are for. And then you have Tim Scott explained this
to the base, say no, no, no, no, this that's
not racism. That's not what any of this stuff is. See,
we're just protecting the integrity of elections. It's oh, thank god,
like it like all of these things were offered, I

(33:23):
think for the base's like, yeah, that's that's right. Okay,
good it wasn't because because everyone's saying, like everyone around
me is telling me that I'm I have this like
white fragility and my unwillingness to confront my own feelings
of tenuous de facto racial and socio economic superiority are
clouding my my observational awareness of this country. But then

(33:43):
he goes on again, it's not that we don't have
we don't have a racist police system. It's just that
Joe Biden is dividing us with this rhetoric. It's a
lot of misdirectionable shit. So it was also Joe Biden's
fault in where back during the Trump administration. Yeah, it's
so stupid. It It's like, that's the thing is all

(34:04):
of these things are said in this weird space time
continuum where Donald Trump didn't is like literally Abraham Lincoln
and Joe Biden is some fucking weird Joe Biden is
some weird old guy. So yeah, but all that to
say is that's it's still coming from this is very
unaware place. And then the other thing too was they

(34:26):
had to have this man say he's like, as a
black man, you know, I'm tell him just hey, just
so y'all hear from me a black man, America is
not a racist country. Come on, everybody stopping around. Meanwhile,
the Democrat version was actually the same because Kamala Harris
was like, no, I don't think America's a racist country.

(34:46):
We just need to be honest about our history. See
those are words for white people. You are afraid of
upsetting when you say a ship like that because you
can't just say what it is. If there is an absolute,
trump mendous problem with racism in this country, it is systemic.
And to act like it's like having a blue house
that you just bought and you're like, oh, you got

(35:08):
a blue house. You're like, no, not see the owner,
the last owners. It was historically blue, this house. I'm like,
I'm looking at the ship. Now it's blue, but you're
the owner. Yeah, but it's not blue, you know, But
we have to acknowledge the history. Yes it was blue,
but I'm like, but so a you're gonna paint it? Nope, Nope,
someone to paint it blue, uh before um, and we

(35:29):
just have to be honest about that. We don't have
to say that it is currently blue, right, Like, so
if you can't acknowledge, like if something isn't, then how
are you going to figure out how to address it?
M hm. That's what is so infuriating about sort of
takes and quotes like that, because it's it completely lets

(35:51):
people off the hook again to go off be like yeah, no,
everything's okay, everything's okay. Kama said it, attempt Scott said it,
it's fine, like we're just we just have some things.
We gotta store it out. It's like no, yes, then
they're active and they've never stopped. But yeah, it's interesting,
you know. So some of the ship that Biden said
was straight out of a like Bernie Sanders speech about
like billionaires getting richer and everybody else getting fucked. So, well,

(36:16):
it'll be interesting to see where this like rhetorical direction
takes us. Yeah, I think the one benefit was he
he did have some good sort of verbal like rhetorical
setups that will make it. It will be interesting to
see what Republicans do because he's sort of like, well,
we can't do nothing looking at that side of the
chamber to be like, because that's what the options are

(36:39):
are either gonna fuck it help or y'all do nothing,
And then that's what we'll keep saying. They did, they're they're, they're,
they're rebuttal to trying to do good for the people
was to do nothing. But you know, we'll again, you know,
we'll see It's it all depends on like what kind
of legislation comes out, what they agree to, and then
if it ends up when the whole fucking Republican water

(37:02):
down bit and it becomes some like just you know
Bill that's just like has a cool name but doesn't
really do anything. Yeah. I also like how the Republicans
used the pandemic as an illustration of why we should
have shitty public schools. They were like, well they didn't open,

(37:23):
uh when when we thought they should have opened. So
this is a great argument for charter schools. More privatization, please,
more privatization, more racists educational system. All right, let's talk
real quick about this Amazon union drive. Let's get it.
Let's get it Amazon. Uh. The Yeah, the vote was

(37:49):
hailed as like a complete demolition of the drive for
collective action like for employees of Amazon. I heard, you know,
normally progressive NPR shows or w M y C whatever
on the media. Is like, take that headline, take it
as a given that like socialism had been dealt to

(38:10):
massive blow and then go on to describe just this
like wildly unfair practice in the actual election and be
like huh, so that's that's it, Like it's I don't know,
changing the venue, having massive like pep rallies that were
propaganda after which you were like walked out to the

(38:32):
ballot box to cast your vote. Uh. And so now
the details are getting even worse. Uh. The Amazon's agents
of allegedly threatened employees with closure of the warehouse if
they joined the union, and they emailed a warning that
it would lay off of the proposed bargaining unit because

(38:56):
of the union. So yeah, this is this is being
reported in uh notorious socialist Zene Reuters. Why, um what
a funk? Yeah? I mean I was, I was like,
why don't we hear those stories? I feel like that's
always like the threat of loss of job is like

(39:17):
the first play you you want to make goodbye to
your fucking jobs. Then so they must have done a
good job. But keeping that all very low, I mean
or not just like h yeah, okay, so they're like, wait,
that's bad. Oh I don't know. I'm I'm so far
removed from the experience of people that would work in
a warehouse. I didn't know if that was a good thing,

(39:38):
but it's it just seemed like the way that this
story was covered just accepted that union votes are basically
like an election held in a dictatorship where it's just
like every like everything is tilted in one direction. They're
in charge of, like where votes are cast. They're like

(39:59):
physics intimidating you into voting a certain way, and people
are like, big win for Amazon. Let's move on to
uh Bezos and Musk's fucking dick measuring space race. Like
it's just I don't know, boy, yeah, well you know
it's it's like it's like, I mean, do you realize

(40:21):
they had to put so much into this because Amazon
saw that the domino effect. They're like, we we can't
handle this. If this place unionizes, then many places are
and then what we gotta pay people humanely. That's not
our business model is to grind people into bone dust
and then put a prime sticker on it and have

(40:41):
your little pool floating at your door within twenty minutes. Yeah,
that is like we we talked on yesterday's episode about
how like the primary like d n a uh like
central mission of Facebook is like expanding the user base
then getting those users to spend more and more time,

(41:02):
and like anything that is counter to that is just
going to inevitably fail until like something until that company
has fundamentally changed, Like at a cellular level, Amazon's like
Big Innovation seems to be treating their employees like ship
and that's going to uh yeah, just like squeezing every

(41:26):
last drop out of like that. But that seems to
be the secret sauce. Like with all these revelations of
what's happening now, that means that the people at the
what does a retail, wholesale, wholesale and department store union
can appeal the results and have possibly have them overturned. Right,

(41:48):
That's what the this article is talking about. That like
there is a board that has overturned several union elections
over the years. In two thousand and sixteen, they overturned
an election and uh, the United steel Workers union lost
by a decisive vote, and you know, us business lobbies
were post they also like helped Trump overturn some you know,

(42:13):
pro labor practices. So it's not it's not like a
clear cut thing where these are like they are, i
think considered to be more down the middle. So it'll
be interesting to see. Yeah, well, because I can putting
someone off. He installed a ship head at the n
l RB during his time there, so wacky, wacky time.

(42:33):
You know, I'm kind of hoping that, you know, as
the the push for voting rights happens in political races
across the country, and like we're seeing horrible things happen
in Texas and George and all these other places where
these horrible you know, voting laws are getting passed. Like
I would hope that that extends into workers voting rights
because I know it's it's not a political election, and

(42:53):
I know these kinds of like the votes are just
different or the way they can be conducted, these these
kinds of votes are just different. But it's like it
should not. You should not be able to intimidate your employees.
You should not be able to do all this this.
I mean, Okay, let me tell you something, Daniel. This
is called America, Okay, And I didn't start a fucking

(43:14):
business with when my grandpa died and gave me his
money to fucking pay people fucking fairly so I can
have a smaller seed boat. That's correct, No, but yeah, absolutely,
And that's what I think it's so fucked up is
that we are not enough American people feel that like
these are rights rather than like you fuck a mask,

(43:37):
where's my gun? Like it should be you know, we
shouldn't allow your fucking employer to fuck you. How about that?
How about that as a right? How about you shouldn't
be able to go at anything where you have to
advocate for yourself and you got goons breathing down your
neck threatening your livelihood. Like it's like, but yeah, I
think that's just I think there's just a bit of

(43:59):
um ampathy that we have in terms of how we
view our relationships to corporations, because that's just it's always
felt like this sort of thing like what the fund
can we do? But it's things like this that companies
like Amazon fight tooth and nail against because that would
begin to upset the balance of power, like, well, fuck,
I gotta do this union like collectively trying to figure

(44:21):
out what's best for them around the means of being
threatening to close the warehouse, and that just used to
be how I kept the profits up. Hmm. Alright, let's
take one more break and we'll be right back. And

(44:42):
we're back and this might be a might be a
big summer for New Yorkers. Yeah. Yeah. Mayor to Blasio
has told the masses that the success of the vaccination
program has allowed for just straight up Central Park. Fuck.
I think back baby, exact words. I mean, that's that's

(45:05):
what New Yorker has heard. I think, like in the
New York Times, like they have that like offshoot grub
Street website. They keep calling it the summer of hedonism
is what they They talk about the impending reopening of
New York being um. But yeah, I mean the plan
is what fucking July one every like yo, Jim's stadium, salons,

(45:26):
museums a hundred percent capacity. And this is what he said,
this is going to be the summer of New York City.
You're gonna see amazing activities. And he's hoping people will
quote funk to New York City because they want to
live again. M M. Amazing activities. Sounds like a Scout
leader more than somebody who's like throwing out that sounds

(45:47):
like that sounds like someone like who like the religious
kid is school's birthday and you're like we're doing laser
tag or some ship and they're like no, but they're
amazing activities. I'm like, funk out of here, Tim. We
made our own doubledare of course, where we dare you
to follow Christ's teaching. But yeah, this is gonna be
I mean, it seems like when I just look at

(46:09):
even Twitter from New Yorkers or other places like in
the UK too, where they have like dates where they're
all looking forward to being like it's happening. The energy
is intense, and I don't know, you know, they call
it the Summer of Hedonism, the Summer of George, whatever
you want to call it. But I'm curious how wild
shit is actually gonna get, Like if people truly are

(46:31):
just like you know, horses at the fucking gates just
being like I need this motherfucker to open because I'm
fucking gone that second I hear that bell, or if
it's kind of like yeah, you know, we did this,
we had a little fun over there, or you know,
or like you know, the fucking Starbucks is going to
be the new turn up spot. I'm about your neighborhood

(46:51):
it already, baby, I mean that would be sick. I would,
you know, Daniel, what we should do is go around
the city with like massive p A system and is
like and just blow parks out with likens. Yeah, turn
them out. I feel like I would. I feel like
that's a new thing I would probably be inclined to do.
But like, yoh, he's like random turn ups happen at
these parks? Yeah, was that anything that used to happen?

(47:16):
Like I remember seeing it in Back to the Future
with the mayor the mayoral election, where they're like driving
around with a massive speaker on top of the car.
Like old school? Yeah, is that Yeah? Yeah, I'm not sure.
Yeah it's old school, but but you know, I feel
like it would be a lot of these days you
could do it. I mean it's yeah, it's so certainly illegal,

(47:38):
but like it would be a lot easier to carry
enough power to make like a very small turn up
happen in a much more confined space rather than that
would like spend literally an hour setting up your two
huge p A s, in which case the police just
walk up and they're like, hey, no, yeah, and I'll
be like, you're on a camera, officer, you better think
about the optics of this clip. And they're like, oh, ship,

(47:59):
is that Playboy already? H You're like, hey, turn up
copaganda baby, hell yeah? Oh shit, is this trippy Red?
Hey man, I missed the rage just like trippy man.
So beyond the summer, there are a lot of news

(48:22):
outlets that have been speculating, uh that, with rising vaccinations
some parts of the country returning to a sense of normalcy,
we might see another Roaring twenties, you know, the because
I think everybody's memory of the twenties, the collective way
we've remembered the twenties, because like I said, we have

(48:43):
just like a Great Man shaped version of the past,
and we're just like you just focus on the rich
people and uh that that's what was going on. So,
you know, people see the twenties as the time of
the economic and social boom that happened to give us
the Great Gatsby. And they're saying this because there was

(49:04):
a pandemic nineteen eighteen flew that was the biggest kind
of modern pandemic. There was also World War One, so
everyone from the New Yorker, what what the new Roaring
twenties will be? Like Bloomberg, the nineteen twenties roared after
a pandemic, and the twenties will try. Uh, And somebody

(49:24):
else was like, are you ready for the Roaring twenties?
But so our writer and jam was like pointing out
that the twenties were really bad. Uh, and for a
lot of the reasons that, like the past five years
have been really terrible, Like the twenties were the time
of the resurgence of the KKK in America and just

(49:49):
massive inequality that led to the Great Depression. Okay, but
what about it? What if we what if we ignore
that part? What about like the champagne glasses and like
pyramids of champagne glasses that are being poured and we're
all wearing tuxedos. It's is that is that not resonator,
It's just it's like we already have massive inequality and

(50:12):
so to like set the goal, like set our you know,
destination on now, like I feel like we already had
this in the odds, Like the Odds were sort of
the the Roaring Twenties of the modern time, because you know,
Americans were off in foreign wars killing millions of you know, Iraqis,

(50:37):
and the top songs at home were like the Black
Eyed Peas telling people to like party and literally get retarded. Yeah,
like we're like damn, okay, uh, let's baby, we don't
give a about it. And that wasn't the stand they
took is we should be able to say this about

(50:58):
how hard we're party. And then also, I think more importantly,
like the nineteen twenties, the odds led up to a
generations defining financial collapse that like we're in the midst
of so I feel like that's I don't know, it's
weird to be like we've got some roaring twenties coming

(51:18):
when you know, we we've already had the depression, We've
already had the rye, like the kind of startling re
emergence of like mainstream white supremacy like in the streets.
And yeah, I mean and and and it's not that
it was coming off the hills like you know, fucking

(51:38):
forty million people dying from World War One either, that
was that was another thing in people's minds, like in
the lead up to the twenties at all, like ship right, Yeah,
I mean part of that like excess was informed by
uh survivors guilt from the pandemic. Historians like kind of
with the perspective you get with hundred years or like,

(52:01):
they were probably going off because like that pandemic killed
so many people, and it killed like young adults that
wash it targeted. Basically, COVID has killed two point seven
million people worldwide and the nineteen flew killed fifty to
a hundred million, and they were all like in there,

(52:24):
they were mainly concentrated, and they're like twenties and thirties,
So like, if half the people around you are just dying, Yeah,
you know that that leads to a very strange you know,
yeah XO exotour life hits different When I love that song,

(52:45):
I don't really right, but yeah, I mean you should.
I don't know what That's why I'm curious to see
how it compares, because I don't know if we're dealing
with the same energy, and I don't know if we're
in the same points of like the have been flow
of inequality and boom bus cycles that it's actually gonna
match up like that. But I don't know. I think

(53:06):
I don't know if this is just a way to
like kind of in our minds, give ourselves something to
look it's like, yeah, it's so bad, but then we'll
just completely funk off for the next ten years and
pretend that, you know, shit is I mean, I don't know,
like I don't know if it will ever quite mirror
the same thing, because we're still in a period that
you you could argue that this is the twenties, the

(53:27):
ots or the twenties, that there are so many times
when inequalities rising, fascisms creeping, and then there's a whole
group of people who are like, yeah, I mean, in
addition to like some of the big like you know,
resurgence of the KKK, the massacre against black citizens and Tulsa,
and there were multiple in America, there were also like

(53:50):
a lot of the things that we fetishize about the
twenties were actually super racists, like the jazzy speakeasies were
only accessible to a small orson of wealthy, urban and
mostly white Americans, and the whole Uh Temperance movement and
prohibition were driven by like racism and like fear of

(54:13):
people of color like drinking basically, and then they you know,
it didn't apply like like many laws in American history
like basically didn't apply to rich white people and it
was just an excuse for the police to round up
whoever the funk they wanted to round up, which, you know,
I think I think it's the twenties now, right, That's

(54:35):
what I'm saying, Like I feel like we just lived
through this ship. Like I don't. I don't, because it's like, yeah,
there's a resurgence of you know, white supremacy and nativism,
like in a very like a non nuanced way, um,
and like just there's like labor movements trying to fight
against the corporations and things like that. It's or you

(54:58):
know what it is. It's like just never really fucking
figured it out from the twenties, you know, and it
never ended really, and it's just like this idea that
we just sort of pivoted to World War two and
like the depression and be like yeah, yeah, that's that's
the hot thing now. World War two and the depression. Right,
the eighties could also be seen very similar to the twenties,

(55:18):
and that it was like, you know, they just focused
on the rich people and like Reagan and country clubs,
and meanwhile he was just letting aids ravage the country
and you know, ignoring poor people and destroying unions and
ship which was a big part of the twenties. Also
is that we're just described all right, let's do the

(55:40):
nineties next, so like it's just really it's like it's
almost weird, like where we started to be like we
don't want to know the twenties and we're like ship
has not changed since the fucking twenties, Like what are
we doing? And I think that's like the deception that
we have of history too, is like that we can
sort of act like they're these sort of points to

(56:00):
these periods because the chapter is different or the decade
numerically changes, wherein we have not addressed any of the ills,
so they just sort of take different shapes and metastasize,
and you know, look at us today. Yeah, I mean lesson. Yeah.
The war on drugs was not just the thing relegated
to the eighties or nineties, but it was exactly what

(56:23):
I was just describing with prohibition. It was like an
opportunity for law enforcement to basically weaponized racism and making
part of they're like, oh, what do what do Mexican
immigrants like, this's like smoking weed? Okay, well that's a
that's illegal now, right, what else? And then we'll and
then we'll use that, we'll create all this like this
threat of out of control black and brown men who

(56:45):
are high to then you know, create more even stringent laws.
Because yeah, it was just more about being like, okay,
what do they like? Okay, let's make that illegal. The
government's Prohibition Bureau literally deputized clan members, uh, which sounds
shocking until you look at the number of people who
were law enforcement officials who were raiding the capital and

(57:07):
they're like, no, I'm good, I got my badge under
the it's a good. Yeah I am. I am actually
trying the deputies ship all right, well, stop stop saying,
stop saying hopefully, like are we headed for another we're
in twenties, because how about let's look at inequal If
we're observing inequality right now, we need to address it

(57:29):
and not trying and synthesize it through like fucking weird
movie tropes and shipped from culture to be like is
that what this is? It's like, no, we haven't fucked.
We haven't dealt with our rampant racism. We haven't dealt
with our rampant inequality, and it just keeps taking on
new forms and we just give it new labels. When
it's all this it's just the same thing over and over. Yeah,

(57:49):
it's just on this season of quality, you know what
I mean? Yeah, Daniel as always such a pleasure having
you worsh gosh unleasure is truly mine. Where can people
find you? Follow you? How you can find me on
Twitter and Twitch at DJ Underscore Daniel d a n
L Wednesdays and Sunday's Baby. Yeah. And is there a

(58:12):
tweet or some of the work of social media you've
been enjoying? Yes, there is actually from My Heart fam
podcast host bridget Todd of the There Are No Girls
on the Internet podcast. I love that pod. Everybody should
take a listen. I just a tweet that garnered a
lot of sympathy and a lot of love from me,
or sympathy more specifically. The second Madurner shop is no joke.

(58:33):
I haven't been this out of it and fever since
the last time I was real sick and brought what
I thought was a hard boiled egg into bed with
me for a snack and only realized it was raw
when I tried to crack it and got yoke all
over my sheets. God damn right, I'm so sorry, Bridget,
but we love you so much and stay strong. Yeah,
vote for a podcast on the web es. I think

(58:54):
it's nominated for nominated for Internet indeed, go vote for
bridgetad also a huge technical in general, if if there's
ever an opportunity, just to give Bridget a vote, just
you know, just ended out there. Blind voters, vote Todd,
vote Todd to Miles. Where can people find you? What
the tweet you've been enjoying? You can find me Twitter, Instagram,

(59:17):
miles of gray with the AT symbol before that, and
then twist dot tv size for twenty Day Fiance, where
let's go Tuesdays and Fridays talking reality nonsense. Crossover thank goodness?
Say what? Who? What now? I said, So we don't
have any crossover. People don't have to decide which Twitch
stream to watch. They'll pick yours. Bro, I don't you know,
come on, come on, you know you don't want to

(59:39):
see two nearly four year old people smoke weed And
I know, how do you do? I want to watch?
But the takes are so fire. I mean, it's there's
a there's a level of consciousness. I tap into there.
That only happened with reckless smoking. Let's see a few
tweets that I like. First one is from Zach Llerberg

(01:00:01):
and what he did was it's it's I hate to
describe it, but what he did was he took a
picture of Shrek talking to the donkey, but then he
turned Shrek blue and made him look like Doctor Manhattan
with the hydrogen like Adam some on his forehead, with
the white eyes, and it says, I'm tired of this
swamp these people, I'm tired of being caught in the
layers of their lives and it just looks so stupid.

(01:00:22):
Shrek is Doctor Manhattan. Let's see. Another one is Kadisha
at no mg at e M M e G. She said,
if you drink black coffee, I know you'd be doing
your job at work. That's a whole other that ship
hits completely different. And then one more, this is from

(01:00:43):
T t Heen. I don't know, man, I'll retweeted this
is it's not even words at or this handle my therapist.
How are you me? I'm okay, how are you That's good?
I've done that time right back, potato, I'm good. What

(01:01:07):
about you you are right, Yeah's and then like follow
up question asking them about something they had mentioned to you,
right and then and then or they'll they'll let you
say and they'll say, oh, okay, no, I'm fine, I'm
just just seeing if anything. Yeah, No, it's good. You know,
the weather is actually been really good. You know, I
hate my dad right now. You know, he did some
ship over the weekend. And then you're like, oh, thank you.

(01:01:27):
You only keep the walls up for some long st
Vincent Price tweeted, the funniest genre of song is lookout dudes,
this woman only wants to fuck. Uh. And then Andrew
Nado tweeted, your story reminded me of a related story, Well,
not really related, it reminded me I'd like to be

(01:01:49):
the one talking. Yeah, you can find me on Twitter,
Jack Underscore, Priyan, you can find us on Twitter at
daily Zi Guys, we're at the Daily's like guys on Instagram, Graham.
We have a Facebook fan page and a website Daily
He's like guys dot com where he post our episodes
that our footnotes to the information that we talked about.

(01:02:10):
What was a song we think you might enjoy? H Miles,
what song are we saying, hey, maybe check this one out.
Just this just a song. It's Friday, okay, so you
need to watch someone. What you need to do is
watch Swartie a secret Sky. This the puppetry Baby. So

(01:02:33):
check this link out in the footnotes. It's not just
a song, it's a whole audio visual experience. And you
know the recommendations from d J dam are infallible, so
check this one out. Also. Uh, shout up to I
feel like I want a little hard on matth demigod
up top. Shout out to you that we I do
greatly appreciate you, knowing that you're you're a sweetheart. We

(01:02:58):
love you. He's a mod for my stream. Oh hell yeah,
okay mon squad, all right, never mind forget that ship
I just said. Oh but you don't mind for us, Okay,
I seem okay alright at the going to buy our radio.
For more podcasts for our radio, visit the I Heart
Radio app, Apple podcast or wherever you listening to your
favorite shows. That is gonna do it for this morning.

(01:03:21):
We're back this afternoon to tell you what's trending. We'll
talk to y'all then, bye bye,

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