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September 26, 2019 70 mins

In episode 482, Jack and Miles are joined by comedian Eric Lampaert to discuss Jurassic Park 3 getting the gang back together, the CIA memo about Trump's call with the Ukrainian president, Rudy Giuliani losing his mind on Fox, Mitch McConnell pushing through the resolution to release the whistleblower complaint, Trump's approval rating, Samuel L. Jackson signing on as the first celebrity voice of Alexa, the unsettling story of the adopted 6 year old Ukrainian girl, and more!

FOOTNOTES;

1. Jurassic World 3’s Nostalgic Casting, Explained

2. MEMO ON TRUMP CALL WITH UKRAINE PRESIDENT

3. Rudy Giuliani is losing it. This is Infowars-type stuff.

4, Wow. Here's Rudy Giuliani throwing the State Department under the bus and saying State officials called him and asked him to get involved in Ukraine.

5. LOL! Rudy Giuliani made a guest appearance later during Ingraham's show and immediately started calling a co-panelist "an idiot" and yelling at him to "shut up."

6. McConnell says Senate will 'find out what happened' on whistleblower complaint

7. Trump’s approval ratings are bad news for Democrats

8. Samuel L. Jackson Signs On As First Amazon Alexa Celebrity Voice

9. EXCLUSIVE: 'She tried to kill us!' Indiana mother who adopted 6-year-old Ukrainian girl with dwarfism has been charged with abandonment but claims her 'daughter' was found to be a 22-year old 'sociopath' masquerading as a child

10. WATCH: SKULL SNAPS - It's A New Day (1973)

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to Season one, on one,
episode four of Judge Leiz Guy Production to Buy Heart Radio.
This is the podcast We're gonna take a deep dive
into America's shared consciousness and say, officially, off the top, fuck,
Coke Industries and funk Fox fun. It's Thursday, September twenty six,
two thousand nine. Team. My name is Jack O'Brien, a

(00:20):
k the Daily Sight guys comes on that dawn. It'll
come tomorrow unless it's the week gond uh courtesy of
Hannassaulted dretch that one and I'm thrilled to be joined
as always buy my co host Mr Miles Ray, Oh
I takes so scandalous and know another pod can handle it.

(00:43):
We'll be dropping knowledge like who's got a own scam?
Got it so devil it? We like a dance off
a Polster spots and your cruise just have ready to
connect the dot not just eight as we could use
some drops because we're living be Dan lunka. We like,
oh no Trump fuck fuck Miles like what what what?
I came movie a butt? But but I think I
singing again Off the top box and this fuck fuck

(01:05):
fuck and cook Industries all night long. Let me rip bath.
I had to rip the bong. Yeah, man, I love
it finding a sweet spot. People are starting to understand
maybe what's hitting nostalgic points for me. Yes, Cisco Thong
song spoke to my heart. But yes at Ross x

(01:29):
Andy Ross Andy in the Morning, thank you for that. Okay,
that was fire Ross? Was that the morning show? Ross
and Andy in the Morning and Andy in the Morning.
And again they're just friends who hang out in the morning.
I don't know when you look on the bio, I
don't see a link. I don't see Lincoln bio any work.
So Hannah Saltis was was the creator of my a

(01:52):
k uh and I don't often tell you how to
do your job, but that was uh not ambitious enough
for a miles ak you you would sent it at
miles that's more my range where it's only it requires
very little singing, right, Hannah should be honored because it

(02:13):
caused a fight over an eight. Yeah. Yeah, we fought
over it because you were like, well, I think there's
kind of more mispe and I'm like, well that's weird, Jackie.
You're not tagged, I know, and I noticed noticed. Uh
so thanks, See this is I think that's a high
honor though, to have people fighting hell over a case. Well,
we're throwed to be joined in our third seat by
the hilarious and talented comedian and performer Mr. Eric Lampere. Yeah, yeah, yeah, back,

(02:39):
I want an ak. Yeah, when's my oka? Do it?
What's um? Let's see what it's Lampere. I can feel it.
Pair with a nice spread. No, do you know em
C Solar the French EMPC. Maybe there's yeah, novel western,
great song you know for next time. I just want

(03:00):
I just want something for next time. No, No, this
is the show. This is it right, you're just gonna
be writing. Yes, Eric, it's Eric up my heart when
I'm with you. No, it's Eric up my heart is
pretty good. Yeah, it's Eric's heart. I wish your name
was hyphenated in your name was Eric Lampere heart? Yea, yeah,

(03:24):
because then it would be it's Eric Lampere heart. And
I'm when you when you're on this pod, I see
instru it's Eric Lampere's art when he's I like you
think of this. We're going to get first. We're going

(03:46):
to tell her listen to a couple of the things
we're talking about today. You know, Uh, there's a new
Jurassic Park movie and they're bringing the gang back together. Folks, Folks,
Lord Dern, sam Neil and that kid that sam Neil
threatens to kill at the beginning. It was like, sounds
like a giant turkey to me. No, Jeff Goldbloom's third. Uh.

(04:10):
We're gonna talk, of course, about the transcript that has
been released, memo memo, they released a not a not transcript.
I'm confused by that that they don't have an actual
transcript of the conversations that the president is having. But
we'll talk about that what it is, whether it is

(04:31):
a transcript, and whether we're surprised by anything. I personally
was not u We're gonna talk about why Mitch McConnell
hotlined that resolution to release the complaint. We're gonna talk
about the fact that Trump's approval rating appears to be
going up. Shooting through the roof. We're gonna just check

(04:55):
him with Foxy. How shooting through the roof of the basement. Yes,
we're gonna check him with fox See how they're doing,
how they're dealing with all this bad news about Mr. Trump.
We're gonna talk about why what Trump was talking about
in the conversation when he started talking about what is
it strike something straight crowd stroke, which which conspiracy theory

(05:20):
he was pulling out of his adult mind at that point.
AOC's new plan for Inequality, Samuel Jackson's new voice on Alexa.
He's going to be the voice of Alexa. And we're
going to talk about a twenty two year old, possibly
twenty two year old child from Ukraine who was adopted

(05:43):
and maybe a twenty two year old con artist associopath.
All of that and plenty more. But first Eric, we
like to ask our guests, what is something from your
search history that's revealing about who you are? Well, the
Brazen Bull. I was I was researching some methods of
torture and there's a really good one called the Brazen bull,
where it's a it's a bronze bull, and you put

(06:05):
the victim inside the ball and you close the sort
of hatch and there's only a little gap where you
can breathe, and it's like a pipe that goes through
the sort of bull's mouth, and so you breathe through that,
and then what they do is they light a little
fire underneath the sort of bull bull's belly and as
the torturous screams come out of the pipes, it sounds

(06:27):
like a bulls of because it's sort of being forced
through this human. Wow, that's how they used to do
special effects involved putting somebody inside of a whatever the
object was, you were trying to put life into it
and torturing them. Yes, I was researching that. I just
I just wished that, you know, Jack boo On use

(06:49):
that sort of We need some information. It's really heavy jack,
get the ball? Right? Who? Who? Who developed this a
wonderful device? I believe it was for the Spanish Inquisition.
Oh yeah, they love their bulls church and they love
their bulls. They really wanted you to know that they

(07:10):
love God. Yeah. Wow, that's fucking And was that used
how many people? I mean, in my mind, I feel
like you would probably die very easily in there, or
it was just made just to heat it up enough
that you got your bull screams. The court would laugh
and then you go Dr Torqumata, Mr Torkemata on his way.
But also it would make for a good oven that

(07:31):
if you did end up killing the person, you could
have a buffet at the end. Yeah, Yeah, that's true.
Cannibal Buffet. Yeah, that's got to be the name of
the band, right, Yeah. I mean you know, if it's
not definitely the name of a name. Mr Thomas, what
is something you think is overrated? Tandem bicycles. I had
a real good thing about this. Sounds like you almost

(07:55):
hit somebody in a car, was right in tandem. I
just I've never seen something on happy on a tandem
bicycle for for the first for the first third seconds,
a minute, yes, and then off that the second person
behind is like, well this is ship Like I'm just
looking at your back ConTroll any of this. I see
a lot of tandem bikes near Venice, and it always
seems like a thing people just do because it's a

(08:18):
thing to do, not because it's the thing they wanted.
It's like, it's gonna be cool. Let's red like tandem
bikes like by the beach, like in California style. Yeah,
and they're like oh yeah, and then they rent it
out for like a two hours, and I'm like this
is until you have to navigate around people like that.
And then there's always like the angry rollerbladers around the
Venice boardwalk. Get out the way right. But you know,

(08:38):
I think there's no joy in tandom bicycles, and I
think they should be destroyed, all of them. Good. It's
not fun for the person the front, or it's not
any more fun than would be a single bike, right,
Like like single bikes, you know, you get to like
see each other's journeys and maybe you follow each other
and you separate and you get a little freedom. It's
freedom on it. It's freeing on it when you're on
a bicycle solo and if one of you falls, the

(09:01):
other one can have a hearty laugh. But if both
of you fall, you're both dead. I guess also too,
if you think about it, right, there isn't what's the
benefit to it being a tandem bike. It's not necessary
that like, oh man, you get fucking speed when you
got two people. I get like if you're in a
canoe or whatever, yeah, two people might be better than
one or something like that. But a bike, I think,
aside from just being like it's like a double mint

(09:23):
gum commercial, I think that's it. I think it was
that double mint gum. I mean, obviously it wasn't invented
for that, but bike technology has always been suspect they
the first bicycle was the penny farthing was the big one. Yeah,
and then they were like, what if we made them
the same size, wouldn't that be get right? Well, if

(09:44):
if it brings you a little joy? My underrated is
the penny farthering? Yes? Brand I just I just thought,
you know, bring them back that they actually bring joy
to people. I feel like, well, at least they definitely
bring enjoy it to me seeing somebody because I think
it's so dumb. But it's also a penny farthing racing

(10:07):
in the UK for example, of course there's penny farthing
racing and then like the people that watch the racing
they have bells. This is very old school and where
is it? Is it a specific part of the but
someway you know where people have been forgotten? And do
women were like fascinators too? As it is it like
post or very Oh, I don't know. I think there's

(10:29):
a nice blend. Yeah. I feel like if I'm going
to a penny Farthing race and I'm a woman, I'm
throwing a fascinator on right, you know. Yeah, people don't
know what fascinators are. It's the fancy things you see
people wear, like do you believe just like a feathered
accessory non hat, Yeah, but does none of the work
of a hat. But it's fascinating. Yeah, it's a gesture

(10:49):
towards the hat. It's like having a hat shaped object
pinned to the side of your head. Yeah. I just
I just think we should bring it back, and as
the Roaring twenties are about to come upon us, and
I think that would be wanting thing. Wow, that was
too much. Think they're back. I'm still pricating what you said, Jack,
But um the penny. Have you written a penny farthing before? No,

(11:13):
I haven't. They just I like that they exist. Yeah, yeah,
tendem bicycles. I fucking hate them. Yeah, a real anger. Yeah.
Actually I'm seeing a therapist because of the ten and
what they have, the effect that they have on me. Yeah,
there's farthing. Yeah, there's no Finally one person that looks

(11:34):
at penny Farthing and just gets angry. No one, Yeah, No,
I mean again, it's it's I think you would and
they would probably be wearing a maga hat like that
sort of thing, like what is this bullshit? What is
this bullshit? Yeah? The thing though, Oh wow, there, I'm
looking at a video of the City of London's penny

(11:54):
Farthing race, and these people have like they're kind of modern.
I'm not gonna lie this at your great great great
great grandfather's penny farthing. This is like they look like
grand frames and ship. Damn, that's fucking I just feel
like to eat ship on one of these bikes would
be so dangerous. Like, that's why it's wonder you're hospitalized guaranteed.

(12:17):
We have free healthcare in Europe, so we can take
more risks. Yeah, well we would do the same thing here.
We're just we're still figuring it out. Maybe that's why
you guys have time to bicycles. Maybe one of these
got healthcast. At least you're take the risk. Then you
can lie about who's already injured. Yeah yeah, I'm actually
this is hilarious. And he's tall, are they Are they
tall penny farthings? Yeah yeah, yeah, they have to get

(12:38):
Yeah that is how okay interesting. Shout out to all
the pro penny fathers being watching them go around a
turn as pretty as something else because they're leaning all
the way over. I just like to see him a
motorized penny farthing. Yeah, in the future, you you often
see these big whaled like vehicles when you enter the

(12:59):
whale and then just right off and ride off on
that wheel. Yeah, it reminds me of the light circle
from Tron Yeah hell yeah. Um well, what's a myth?
You just engrossed it? Videos a lot going on. Last

(13:20):
time I was on the show, I tried to debunk
the myth of concepts and I was like, how do
I one up this? Which I thought was quite challenging,
you know, to deconstruct the abstraction of ideas. So this
one I really put some thought into it. And you know,
people might not like this one, but I really I
think I've found something. I think the n r A
is actually very good. Oh wow, interesting. I think it's

(13:44):
really really good for the country, not really assholets. I
think that's what they stand for, secretly, right, For every
death that happens via a gun, the carbon footprint goes
down drastically there, and so I think the n r
A is actually the best America has climate change. Wow,
that's dark. It's dark, but there's an element of truth

(14:05):
to it. There's forty people that die each year. Think
of the carbon fu When you think of that in
our inability as a country to actually address climate change,
like you know where you like? Correct, but interesting, I
think that's secretly you know, they get bad reps, but
to distract you from the fact that actually they're trying

(14:26):
to do some really good work. Right And when are
you going on, Joe Wigan? Is that next week? I
mean that might work if everybody in the n r
A didn't think that climate change was a hoax, right, Yeah,
But that's the cover up. So they actually they don't
want to the thing they're doing a good job. They
want to be hated while saving the environment. And now

(14:48):
they're just broken. I don't know where to go. And
if and if and if the n r A folds,
we really are fu as a nation. Yeah with climate
I don't yeah, because we'll see what happened with our
ability to address climate change in the country, right, Or
maybe they'll just insist that consumers do whatever they can
so industries don't have to. Is that I admitted acknowledge

(15:09):
take that birth control is part of the climate change
debate because I think like Bernie might have said that
during one of the debates or something. He was like, well,
you know, I think it starts with birth control, or
he like put that in there while he was on
the topic of climate change. Interesting, and it seemed like

(15:31):
it was a little bit of a dark road to
walk down. Guns are a type of birth control that
access to birth control for women for unwanted pregnancies, like
that in general, maybe not just in the case of abortion,
but just generally all forms of birth controms of birth control.
Is that what he meant? Yeah? Sign, but again, um,

(15:54):
I'm not going on Jean later. Yeah, I might be
get that talking point it from I learned about on
the Joe Rogan podcast by the name of Alex Jones.
Uh cool, Well, yeah, I think you've opened a lot
of minds, right, and uh, at the very least, maybe

(16:15):
maybe a couple of dark chuckles. Oh yeah, Well, I
mean it's this is the dark morbid timeline we're in, right,
we're just looking at our It's a very interesting time now. Really,
what I was trying to do is highlight the fact
that guns are actually killing people. Oh is that what
you meant? Well, I don't agree with that at all.
That I like that other take. Um well, speaking of

(16:37):
dark timelines, the new Jurassic Park movie is bringing the
gang back together into a world in which spoiler alert,
I guess at the end of the last Jurassic Park,
I guess, Look, if you don't want if we'll do
our spoiler alert warning. If you don't want Jurassic World
Fallen Kingdom I believe was the last one. If you

(16:57):
don't want it spoiled for you, skip ahead ten hours. Yeah, okay,
go the dinosaurs were all people in dinosaur suits. Fuck,
isn't that crazy? I haven't seen it? Oh uh no,
So the dinosaurs escaped into the world. Is that what
happens that? Then the last one I've Admitaly got halfway

(17:18):
through and fell asleep. I didn't get any of the
way through it, but accidentally turned it on when I
was trying to catch what was on after it, And
there's like a post credits thing where a pterodactyl like
lands on some monument. I forgot if it was like
a Vegas thing or wow. So in the last one,

(17:41):
dinosaurs are released into the earth. Yeah, but that I also,
if I remember correctly, in gen who are in charge
of the embryo races, we're trying to weaponize um dinosaurs.
So if you can control the astraptis and stegosaurs and
stuff and just you know, send them into wool or
instead of humans. Yeah, you can do some damage or

(18:01):
policing our streets to criminalize the unhoused, like a Rex
just in charge of the homeless, like a stegasaurus, just
doing that. But I think it's a great way to
enforce a curfew, just like don't t Rex comes out.
There's a veloci raptor curfew team that comes out and
they will eviscerate you if you're out there. I was

(18:22):
actually thinking of that kid who you were talking about
from the first one. Yeah, his name is witt Hertford. Yeah,
I've actually we got a pitch from him. Oh really, yeah,
I get correct. Oh wow he looks the same. Yeah,
he looks very Yeah. Just so he's the one that,
like sam neilso threatens with what does he say? He's

(18:46):
like he looks like a big turkey to me, and
sam Neil is like, yeah, he's Terry guts up kid,
and he's like he's hang your insides with spill out
in front of you. Right, And then Laura, you shouldn't
have a kid world like that's our protagonist. I was
looking at his credits. He was a dancer, in Farrell's

(19:07):
Happy Video, amongst many other things too, But I'm just
going to choose to look at that. I wonder if
he was happy to do that or his agent just
forced him to. I mean, well, technically, it wasn't that
a twenty four hour music video. The whole Happy video
was like, yeah, that was twenty four hours. Yeah, they'll
be like our one and it's all over, Like there

(19:28):
are many people who were in the hatty, did anyone
watch the whole thing like that feels? I remember. I
remember when it came out. I was working in radio,
so everyone was talking about it. I watched maybe ten
minutes because after that song loops for like the fourth time,
you're like, yeah, I don't thinks I see Angela trembor
dancing at a gas station, and I saw some other
people I knew, and then I was like, okay, they

(19:48):
think this is it. I don't see anymore, but hey,
look it's an our piece. I have a question. Do
we think Laura Dern is somehow too big to be
in this Jurassic Park film? And my mind, because of
big little lies, I feel like she's I don't know,
in my mind, I've elevated Laura der into this other thing. Well,
it's just that, it's just that it felt like she
sort of disappeared for a while and then she came

(20:11):
back and she smashed it in big little lines. Yeah,
I mean the whole team in big little lies. Very
very good. Yes, but no, I mean in a way
of Jurassic Park. It's not what made her, but they
like definitely put her on that right. So I think
maybe as an actor you'd have that sort of respect
Jurassic Park that you do like to be like, Yeah,

(20:32):
but I hope the script is good because they keep
messing it up. I am kind of annoyed with dress. Well.
It went from Michael Creighton novel, which has already it's
very interesting elements to it, to then these like tent
pole films are just like, hey, you want to see
fucking dinosaur of fuck it up? Essentially it's like Fast
and Furious with dinosaurs. Yeah, um, but I'm still going

(20:52):
to watch it. Yeah, Drinking Miller lights at the end
kind of went that action of Michael Creighton's career is
he thinks were going really well and then he started
doing like climate change hoax stuff he did at the
very end. Oh no, yeah, wait, like being like, I

(21:13):
don't I don't know about y'all. Yeah, his last book
was about how the whole climate change thing is a hoax. Interesting, Wow, alright,
and he gave us West World too, yeah and spear
but yeah, West World was in the seventies. I believe
it was a movie he wrote in the seventies. So
what do we counsel him? Now, that's not us, that's

(21:36):
not up to us. There's actually a cancel counsel that
we will then. Yeah, then we submit that to the
cancel council, and then they will determine, they will off,
they will hand down their determination at the end of sacrifice.
Gold Bloom seems also, I mean, well, think she's too big. Well,
not that she's too big, I'm just feeling like the

(21:58):
has the most swag to me. Boy, can we get
a bomb thing, sir? That was exclusive? I don't know.
I think I just have become a Renata fan. Yeah, yeah,
And I mean that performance is so big like that
that it almost doesn't feel like it seems like she

(22:21):
should be working on more challenging stuff than the character
from Dass Park is just like Sam, Well, maybe she
will scream at the dinosaurs. I will never not be
rich or something, and they're like, whoa, what that was
that in the script? Let's keep that although the sexual
tension between her and Jeff Goldbloom in that one scene
where he's come here in the water there. Yeah, put

(22:41):
in the hand. Think anyone that talks to me about
Kyle's ferry, Yeah, get it, all the variations, a little hairs,
All right, we're should take a quick break. Well, Miles
keeps doing that to my hand. Just put cold brew.
It's cold, and we're back, and it's time to get

(23:14):
into impeachment. Yeah, they pulled one on us the other day.
They did right after re record. Then they decided to
open up an official impeachment inquiry. Yeah, I mean we
kind of know it was coming. Yeah, I mean, yeah,
of course. And it was nice to be the same
page though, Nancy. Yeah, it was already confusing. What changed

(23:36):
other than it was like a press conference for her
to be like, but I'm on board this time, right now,
I'm doing it. I think maybe she felt the Russia
stuff and all the emoluments and all the other things
they would want to have wanted to fold into the
impeachment inquiry. Prior to this was just a little too
tenuous or something that wasn't it wasn't nailed on, like

(23:58):
just and then you have the president admitting to it,
where it's like, oh, fuck, thank you. But I mean
they were already in an impeachment inquiry, and it was
just like now we're really opening and officially right because
with Jerry Nadler, didn was sort of set the terms
of what it would look like. So it was like
a movement in that direction. But this is the full
on being like, Okay, now there'll be a officially an

(24:21):
inquiry inquiry got it with all you know, six committees
looking into Despite all the chalos that he's created, there
was something kind of weirdly enjoyable and watching what is happening.
Isn't that like with all the horrible hatred that he's Yeah,
I mean right, there's a bit of schadenfreude right where
you're like, Okay, maybe this is the act where the
bad guy maybe is held accountable. But I don't know.

(24:44):
I think a lot of Americans students just have this dark,
fucking cynical feeling that nothing will ever end this um
that which is also my concern. But I feel like
there is something I take joy In. It's mostly Rudy Giuliani. Uh,
he's incredible every time he's on the news. Because now

(25:05):
as we have you know, the transcript, as quote unquote
as they call it, it's really a memo that's basically
a lot of the impressionistic transcript. Yes, exactly where other
people intelligence people are listening in on a call and
just just jotting everything down so you have a nice
summation of what happened. And even then it's very clear,
but we should explain for people, a transcript is like

(25:27):
a sort of PDF file that feels like inside document. Yes,
thank you, just in case there, Yes, thank you, thank
you for advocating for audience who might not know about
what a transcript is. Uh So, even with this it
gets so. But even in the transcript, right, it's very
clear the Ukrainian President's like, hey, I think we're ready

(25:49):
to buy these anti tank missiles. We need to fight
the Russians, and the responses okay, I need you to
do me a favor though, which to me sounds pretty
clearly like when you see use the word though, that's
sort of the operative word. There he's saying, Okay, I
understand that. However, there's this thing I'm asking you for,
whether or not you know, they're going to argue that

(26:10):
it's just you know, it's all misunderstanding, it's bullshit. Whatever. Fine,
but if million dollars Trump was actively withholding from him,
we're not overtly mentioned in the right there's no I
don't know what I don't know what is. And again,
if you really think about it, if you really want
to get that fucking myopically focused on what it is, like,

(26:31):
well he didn't say those words. Just imagine the situation, right,
You're a newly elected president in a country where the
eastern part of your country is being annexed actively by
the Russians. You have you do not have the means
to defend yourself. You're relying on foreign aid to do that.
You're in a dark, dire situation that where where like
the stability of your entire country rests on the protection

(26:52):
of this region or being able to at least fight
off this insurgency, and your funds are withheld by government
who told you they like help is on the way.
And then suddenly it's like, oh, that guy from the
country that you need a ton of ship from wants
to talk and then you get on the phone and
it's like, hey, Joe Biden. Maybe he's looking to Joe Biden.

(27:12):
How what do you think about Joe Biden? No, you
want Javelin's here? First thing Joe Biden though, the second
defense spending. He's like, yeah, we could buy some things,
some weapons from you. Trump starts asking him to look into.
The first thing he asked them to look into is
a d n C server hack thing that will will
explain what that is a little bit later. But then

(27:34):
he goes into the Biden thing. So can I ask quickly, Yeah,
how does it transcript get written? Is is there a
human being that actually has to listen to a group
of there's a group of people that are listening in
on a call and then transcribing what's the AI ultimateically?
Does it like Siri? You know you can talk to
your phone. I think lend From what I've heard from
past uh n sc like people who have been doing

(27:55):
interviews this last week, from the Bush era to the
Obama it's pretty much the same thing. The only difference
with Trump is that it's less people now involved in
listening in, but they do use a mix of like
I think technology to sort of help transcribe things, but
also there's a lot of humans also doing it to
also figure out the nuance, so they can actually put
that in the summary. Right, So can we take a

(28:16):
moment of silence for the people that have to do that. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
that is what a job. That's a job to listen
to that man. I have to write down his words. Well,
and I think it got it got worse because after
that one transcript that got leaked where he was begging
the Mexican President to be like, hey, can you just
stop saying like I'm going to pay for it? Like

(28:36):
I don't, it doesn't help me. Like when that came out,
I think they really tightened the leash on that group
because they're like, I mean, I know he said it
and looked completely ineffective as a leader, but like, please
don't leak this. So now only like a couple of
people here, So anyway we all get how big this
controversy is before we get to Rudy giuliat Ar. Yeah,

(28:57):
let's just I think we should get to Rudy Giuliani
because when he's sort of at the center of this
because prior to this whistle blower complaint, he had been
talking about going to Ukraine and talking about all this
Biden stuff and now that like all this ship is
coming on the open and maybe he wasn't able to
like affect the plan that they thought they could, where

(29:17):
like magically Ukraine would be like and here is this
damning report on Joe Biden. He was very confident. Now
that everything's coming out, he is not doing very well.
He's been sort of in a downward spiral in terms
of being able to spin this um. But this first uh,
he was on Laura Ingram and she was really doing
her best to try and act as if Rudy wasn't

(29:41):
just feeling everything. Yeah, and just like digging a deeper hole.
He's like he's like shorting his lawyer. I love it,
you know, like I didn't do it. I did, but
if I did, and I did. Wait, but here's some
more I don't know. He exists in separate states at
the same time. It's very quantum, but he uh. And

(30:02):
Laura Ingram, you won't hear much from her, but she
has a very person talking to a drunk person at
a wedding and like just kind of getting restless. Yeah,
And in this case, I think what happens based on
what he's talking about. Senator Chris Murphy had visited the
President of Ukraine before, and Zelenski told him, He's like,
I think Trump might be withholding these funds because of

(30:23):
he wants me to do some other ship. And when
he came back and said that, Rudy is I think
trying to I don't know, some weird conspiracy that in fact,
Chris Murphy was telling the President of Ukraine, if the
President of Ukraine didn't cooperate with the Democrats, the Democrats
would with I don't listen to this ship Biden did
or Chris Murphy, by the way, who should be impeached.

(30:45):
He went to see the President of the Ukraine and
he told the President of the Ukraine that if he
cooperates with the president, they'll cut off aide. That's a
quid pro quo. That's a quid pro that's threatening. Should
be outraged that Chris Murphy, he's interesting, perfect interesting. She's
really trying to be like, so, what are you saying here?

(31:07):
This isn't good for any of us right now? And
it gets better. Yeah. He then I don't know where
what exactly he means here? We can talk about on
the other side, but he sort of suggests that he
has receipts in case he is made to look like
the total fall guy in this or something um where
he is essentially scapegot to the State Department for his action.

(31:28):
State Department being like Pompeo, like Secretary State. So right,
so Secretary of State is Mike Pompeo and they deal
with a lot of our you know, our foreign relations
and things like that. So I don't know he's claiming
I don't here listen to this saying you mocked this up.
Your response, man, I really did, and you know who
I did it at the request of the State Department.

(31:48):
I never talked to Ukrainian official until the State Department
called me and asked me to show it, and then
I reported every conversation back to them and Laura, I'm
a pretty good lawyer, just a country lawyer. But it's
all here right here, this phone, the first call from
the State Department, the debriefing of the state So why
are they I will compliment myself a pretty good job

(32:14):
for him, and they try to destroy everybody around him.
I's I'm still not sure what he's getting at, but
based on what I think he is. He's saying, well,
I'm not the one that fault here. I didn't just
go out here randomly to fucking you know medal over
there in Ukraine to get something for Trump. The State
Department asked me. I never spoke to a Ukrainian official

(32:37):
until the State Department asked me to. He also starts
like laughing in the middle of it for no reason,
but like it's in a way that like suggest I
don't know, Like there's this, uh, there's this episode of
Malcolm Glabbows podcast where he like talks about how Elvis
had this one part of one of his songs that
he couldn't get through and like because he like had

(33:00):
a mental like block around it because it was like
tied to something in his childhood and like he played
some of it and like he just starts he's like, well,
you know, and like just like starts like laughing up
ruriously and like can't like he's just like yeah, And
that's what Rudy Giuliani sounds like. They're like he's like,

(33:21):
you know, I got right the State Department. I'll tell
you what, because it feels like his backs against the wall,
and that's what I feel like in his responses, well,
I have motherfucking receipts upon my cell phone, holds up
his cell phone like it's the ignition switch of a
fucking bomb, right, got strapped to him, And I wonder
if it's like a man. That's another piece, which is

(33:43):
why this gets even more interesting. And then he goes
in his third act, Lord starts coming apart. There's a
panel of people talking. One person I think is probably
saying something about how Rudy Giuliani is saying things are
are probably gonna worse in his situation. I'm not sure
what he specifically said, Laura leave him alone. Yeah, but
he goes after. Rudy goes after this panelist in a

(34:05):
way that is very emotional and I think might be
telling of what his situation might be. But listen to this,
and really you've been listening to this conversation I have,
and I would like to say that I'd like to say,
Mr Haunt, I should sue you reliable because he irresponsible things. Yeah,
well you you actually usually say incredibly stupid thing. You're

(34:26):
a public figure. Yeah, and you can see do you
have any idea that the State Department up? Shut up,
shut up. You don't know what you're talking about, Chris,
You don't know what you're talking about, idiot, I do
the state, No, you don't. You just I wish you
would stop. I wish you would stop. Why don't you

(34:48):
tell I wish you would stop. Why don't you tell
him to keep his mouth shut till we can tell
the truth? Just keep you shut up? More on that
guy is I think a former Chuck Schumer aid. I
know he's worked for Chuck Schumer at some point. Here's
something that's I think interesting right to look at is
the entire administration and the people working with them, right,

(35:09):
all they know that they're not really being honest, right,
which means that ultimately none of them trust each other.
And that's something that's kind of interesting to watch because
you think, oh, you know, they're lying to all of us,
but they're working as a team. A lot of people, yeah,
a lot of people don't consider actually they're all lying,

(35:32):
and therefore they don't trust each other. And then often
they're constantly looking after over each other's back and worried,
and and they have to play with each other while
at the same time not trusting each other. That must
be a wildlife to live. It's constant, constant fear and
straight And then to that point, I think that even
underlines why Rudy Giuliani is like, what do I know.

(35:53):
I'm just a country lawyer, but I know how to
protect myself in case someone once I have evidence to
insulate myself from something very strange appearance from him. What
And I think this also goes to the point of
with Mitch McConnell. The day before he there was Chuck
Schumer brought uh forth a resolution to to make all
the whistleblower complaint material available to the respective intelligence committees

(36:17):
in the House and the Senate, basically saying like they
need to release it to these committees. Mitch McConnell did
not push back against this. He fucking hotlined it, which
means no debate. It just goes straight to a vote
in the Senate unanimously voted for this, which is very
what the fuck is going on? And it makes me wonder, like,
what the fund does Mitch McConnell know or think is

(36:38):
going to happen, because it doesn't make sense if you
ask me any other time, like if like what Mitch
McConnell would do, I would say he would stone wall
because that's all he's been doing. This guy won't even
fucking put up forward a bill that's passed in the
House to deal with gun violence or fucking securing our elections,
things that have all kinds of support from the You
know that that's not going to get you in hot

(36:59):
water with voters, but it's always meant to protect the president.
And then in this instance, it's like, yeah, okay, great,
no debate. What's everybody get in line, unanimous consent, let's
fucking release this material. Now does he know what's in
the material? And he's thinking that's all good, like we were,
we were able to weather the Mueller Report storm and

(37:20):
we can fucking just we'll just lie our way out
of this one. Or is it that it's like, oh fuck,
does he know it's really bad and he's trying to
get ahead of it by being like you, I was
very transparent blah blah blah, so I never push, you
know what I mean? Like if he's trying to set
himself up already to be like no, I was. I
was with it from the beginning. I knew that was bad. Yeah,

(37:41):
it's hard to know because this is until we start.
I wonder if they're gonna be any real Republican defections
aside from Justin Amash from Michigan in the House. But
like I wonder if those well, Mitt Romney seems to
have set himself up to defect, right, Like he said,
it's very district, deeply disturbing or something right, which is

(38:02):
what he said even before the transcript or whatever you
wanna call this thing came out. But it's evolving in
this odd way. And again there's no honor among thieves.
If Mitch McConnell knows. Wait, this ship is too radioactive
for me to even be around, and I have to
think about myself. Now, maybe it's time to sacrifice the
orange Yeah exactly, the orange cow to the sun god

(38:23):
of impeachment. I don't know, yeah. Uh. The Washington Post
was reporting that there are cracks in the Republican block
in the Senate, kind of appearing. There was a lunch
on Tuesday, so before the impeachment and quarry was opened
where they seem to like anonymous sources, but people who

(38:43):
were there say that two factions were forming, one that
was kind of behind the president and being like, yeah,
he should look into Biden. Biden did a crime. So
that was Johnson I think from Wisconsin, Wisconsin. And then Burr,
who is the head of the Senate Intelligence Committee, which

(39:05):
has a reputation for being you know, actually on somewhat earth. Uh.
And Richard Burr was the head of another sort of
camp in the Republican Senate, which is kind of like
this is bad. This it's on paper objectively bad a
good thing. It's bad for our party, it's bad for him,

(39:28):
it's bad for our country. This is what's weird though,
too right, And I think to what you I maybe
you were going to say, Eric of like this is
the line right for Republicans, Like it wasn't all this
other heinous shit what's really odd to me? It's like
maybe it's like, well, we can dance around all these
other terrible things of how we're mistreating and abusing, abusing
human beings, but this, since this actually falls into a

(39:53):
thing that can actually be like like constitutionally adjudicated or something.
Now they're like, fuck, this is bad. I don't understand,
but it's interesting. Calculus will never know because everyone is
just self serving, self dealing. Yeah, it's it's interesting too.
I never really knew much about politics before anyway. Really,
But it is about winning, isn't it. Everything is about

(40:14):
winning any cost, even even lying spreading rumors, you know,
you spread rumors about your the opposite opposition, right, and
and you're winning. And I find that interesting that politics
isn't about taking care of the country. No, especially not here.
It's just a game. It's just that's what it is.
It's just a game. It's a game, and it's the
and I say it is all the time. It's the

(40:35):
way to be the most popular person. And you're part
of your state, you know, if you're a center, if
you're a congress person, you know, like in that thrill
of you know, shaking hands and kissing babies and ship
I think it's addictive. There are some people who are
trying to do good, but they're definitely in the minority.
And then you have to play the game. That's the
frustrating thing. You have to do good. You have to

(40:55):
do good among a sea of tortures. Shit. Yeah, and
so then you're like, well what do I do do
I just keep doing good, but no one's listening. Do
I kind of play the game a little bit? Push
against the title waiver do I serve the title waves? Right, Well,
one thing that's probably going to affect all of this
is how the American people feel. And so I always

(41:16):
look at five thirty eight for their overall average approval
rating because they take a bunch of different polls and
weight them. And Jason Pargeon from Cracked writes from Cracked
as David Wong I was pointing out on Twitter today
that Trump's approval rating is at an all time high,
or at near the peak of where it's been in

(41:39):
his presidency. It's at forty three. It's not a good
peak for a president, like this is kind of around
the low of the Obama presidency, but it's still like
relative to his past approval ratings, it's up. He's underwater
less than ten percentage points. So you know, his approvals

(42:02):
forty three point one percent, his disapprovals fifty two point nine.
It seems to I mean, like when you look at
the chart, like it's going directly up in the past
half a week. So maybe I wonder what the news
it's tied it's tied to, because that do they say
when the poll was taken probably the end of last week, right, Yes,

(42:23):
it's the end of last week. So it's it seems
to be around when this news was first starting to break,
which seems incredibly confusing that the presence of the scandal
would cause people to support him more. But I mean,
I'm more. I think we should probably look at see
what next week's poles look like, because I don't know,
so much has happened this week, and I don't know

(42:45):
it could It's possible it could go up to because
now it's like the real culture war left verse right thing.
The gauntlet has been thrown down in the form of
actually now we're hurtling towards impeachment. Yeah that now, people like,
all right, go to your corners. It is quite difficult,
you know. I've spoken to a few Trump people who
are just unwilling to even just take a moment, just

(43:06):
even just listen, to forget the news, just listen to
what he's saying. And so it is amazing to really
watch the level of consciousness and self awareness that actually
doesn't exist in the entire world so much as America
a bit. You look at loads of other things, people
are just asleep. Yeah, they're just sort of reacting every

(43:27):
single day to things without a goal in mind. That
just sort of reaction really little vessels without any sort
of thinking. I don't know. I mean, it's amazing to watch.
That's that's the thing is. Yeah, and it's really alarming too,
because with things like that are so critical to just
are even are the survival of our species, right is

(43:49):
somehow looked through some lens of not just objectively taking
like you know, put fact aside. If you said, would
it be bad if the Earth's weather got so bad
people could to live anymore? Should we do something about
that if that was a problem, And like, I'll here
you go, man, you're trying to replace my cheeseburgers with
kale And no, dude, listen to what we're saying, or

(44:10):
even just half the policies, even on the left that
are like everything the left advocates for benefits every American person. Yeah,
this Paul is about as depressed as I've felt for
the country, like at any point. But maybe it's not
tied to the impeachment, but it does seem like I

(44:32):
don't know what else it could be, And it just
seems like it's just everybody retreating into their own corners,
being like there is no objective truth. The only objective
truth is fuck you like I you know, that's it.
All right, We're going to take a quick break. We'll
be right back, and we're ac and let's talk about

(45:03):
Samuel L. Jackson. Yeah. I love him. Yeah. One of
that is he still the highest grossing actor of all time,
probably I think at this point because now he's also
in the fucking event who's fucking sam Jackson? He's Avengers,
fucking Jurassic Park, Star Wars. But still almost tarante eyes. Yeah,

(45:23):
shout out to all the Mace window fans out there. Um,
So I guess there's maybe an I don't know if
there is an arms race yet to have celebrity voices
attached to your smart device. But Amazon they just had
an event where they announced that they're gonna have many
celebrity voices that will be able to tell you jokes,

(45:43):
let you know if it's raining, set timers, alarms, whatever,
all that ship that it does. But now they want
to marry all of that ability with celebrity voices. And
the first one they unveiled was Samuel L. Jackson. And
so this is like a mode you can upgrade for
nine cents whatever. But the thing that I like is
that there are two modes explicit and not explicit. So

(46:04):
I'm hoping that if you miss here, the Alexa give
you the weather and you're like what, it's just like,
say what again? It's keeping me on my fucking toes um.
But there's I don't know. I this feels this whole
event as I read about it, like all the things
that Amazon's unveiling, I feel like we're really hurtling towards

(46:26):
this future where Amazon is going to be the source
of everything that we need or what we will do
everything through fucking Amazon. Because another thing they brought up
was right now there are now a hundred million devices
equipped with like these echo speakers. But at this thing,
they said that they've begun a collaboration with Discovery for

(46:47):
a upcoming subscription streaming outlet called Food Network Kitchen. And
it's a seven dollar a month service that will supplement
live and on demand video programming with ingredient and equipment
delivery route Amazon and playlists optimized for Alexa. So it'll
be like, Okay, we have a we have a playlist
of videos that are essentially recipes, and if you check

(47:11):
your front porch, the ingredients for this next recipe in
your playlist will be there, or you can see we're like, oh,
I want to do Coca Von, but I don't have
these things, and then all the ships you need is
just there. Yeah. It's almost like a magic trick, except
the way they make that magic trick possible. There's a article,
I think it was pro public and the New York

(47:32):
Times did a co investigation into delivery of Alexa packages.
And they don't use the trade like UPS has UPS
trucks that all around, fed X has fed X trucks.
Amazon created this network there. It's kind of like Uber
for package delivery, and except the people are under insane

(47:57):
deadlines and because they're the package is not a person
who's going to give you a bad rating if you
drive badly and like in a terrifying way, they're going
to do that occasionally. And so there there have been
all these accidents where people have been killed, people have
been injured by delivery cars, unmarked vans that are delivering

(48:20):
Amazon products and they don't know to sue Amazon because
you know, there's nothing on the car that hit them
that says Amazon. And Amazon and their nation of lawyers
have arranged it so that they're not responsible for like
they can't be sued essentially because they're like they're not employees, right,

(48:41):
they're not employees there will Yeah smart, that's pretty smart
as well with Facebook and Amazon and all of that
is it's very hard to complain to them. Have you
noticed how like you know you're going to the contact
area if you need to like make uself complaint and
it's like, how can we help I'm trying to complain,
have you that's just a constant like a labyrinth of places. Yeah, yeah,

(49:06):
we have millions of articles in our database. It's actually
very small the assess and well, it's also the irony,
right is like Amazon is this gigantic company with all
this money, yet they won't even they can't even pay
these people a living wage to prevent this kind of driving.
It's the root of all of this, right, is that
people are not taken care of. And they say, well,

(49:29):
now the only I was not able to maybe go
to college or get a degree, So now I'm relying
on the gig economy to sort of supplement my income
or be my income. And then on top of that,
my options are limited to driving very unsafely under unrealistic deadlines.
From my own survival. That's right. Yeah, what is the
world's used to be? I mean it's pretty simple though.

(49:52):
I mean it used to be like delivery driver used
to be a union protected job, and now it is
a freelance gig that you up and you know, I
have to drive around like you know, your your life
depends on it, and so like have to deliver packages

(50:12):
so quickly that you can't take bathroom breaks and sometimes
you occasionally killed. This is the thing to even talking about, right,
Like the even the frustration on the right for people
who might not even be politically savvy, Like there's a
group of voters who really do believe immigrants are why
their financial situation is the way they are. That's why
they're anti immigrant. It all ties back to people's needs

(50:33):
are just not being met, you know what I mean,
that's the root of all of this ship Because if
if everyone's belly was full and they don't have to
stress out about maybe their parents having cancer that they
don't know how to afford their medical care and things
like that, if those stressors are taken away, it's much
harder to be susceptible to xenophobic propaganda and things like that.
And you know, that's where I'm like, My hope is

(50:55):
that if we can actually take care of people right,
that some of these things can at least begin to dissipate,
maybe not for this generation, but going forward in general,
that if the government treats you with humanity, if society
treats you humanely, then maybe you can treat each other humanely.
But it's really it is again very complex as one

(51:16):
person to consider the health and mental health of three
million people in one country. Right. You know, a lot
of people blame old people for things, but I'm not old.
I can't even imagine what it's like to be sixty four.
At thirty two, I went to psychiatric hospital. What will
I be when I'm sixty four? Honestly, I am terrified

(51:37):
in a way of what I could become, because life
just sort of takes you sometimes right in a place
that you could not even have imagined. And for me
as a sixty four year old even now, like my
sister's twenty and she sometimes tells me how life is,
and I try. I tried to sort of stay calm
because I remember what I was like when I was
twenty and stuff like that. But sometimes you know, like

(52:00):
young people can get you know, and see and like
full of passion and energy and they're getting people's faces
and it's like, bitch, you have no idea what life
can take. My God, So you have to think of
all the complexities of social economic backgrounds and geographical location
everything and on top of your own life. Right, So

(52:21):
it's so difficult to sort of think about other people
when you struggle, and I find that xenophobia, biggotry, all
of that. It's actually a sort of tool two alleviate
your stresses if you if you really struggle, it's so
much easier just to go, well, it's that person's fault
that I feel kind of better. I'm on the right

(52:42):
side because they're the problem and I don't like them. Yeah,
and it's sad. It's sad because it's like and a
lot of it's just born out of lack. Yeah, you know,
of course, I don't know why I just googled this,
but at the start of the Civil War, the Northern
State has had a combined population of twenty two million,
in the Southern State has had nine million, though it
was less balanced than our country currently is. You just thought,

(53:07):
you're like, what were then what's the what are those rosters?
What does that roster look like? They got two million?
Damn shit. Let's talk about one of the wildest stories
that has come across the Zeitgeist news desk in a while.
It's the story of an adoption. This couple in Indiana

(53:27):
has adopted a number of children. One of the children
they adopted made national news for being a genius. Yeah,
like the child they adopted had autism, and then just
I think the doctors are like, I don't think you
can really even expect to be able to communicate with
your son, like it could be really bad. And then
the mother I think father started tutoring the kid and

(53:47):
is now like a math genius. And that was like
sort of like the gist of this. They got famous
because of that. So, uh well, if you love and
care for someone that time, you get the best of them, right,
rather than just disregarding them. So that family adopted a
troubled nine year old girl from Florida who had had

(54:11):
to she basically had to be emergency adopted. Is that right?
It was to an emergency adoption, right, So the family
that she had been with was emergency Like it was
bad enough the previous situation was bad enough that they
had to get her out of there, but they didn't
know what the reason was for the emergent. They when

(54:32):
they were adopted, they're like, oh, this kid just needs
a home. We'll do it because we're very kind people.
Let's open up our home. And then so the nine
year old they adopted was from Ukraine and she had
Dwarfism and she they just felt like things were kind

(54:52):
of strange from the start. Yeah. Well, within the first
year of the adoption, things oh man, So they say,
this little girl threatened to stab them in their sleep,
would like be watching over them as they were sleeping
with a knife in their hand. Uh. She pushed the

(55:14):
mother towards an electrified fence and was caught what they
caught her pouring bleach in their coffee? Is this not? This?
Is this is a horror movie or if it's called
the Old Yeah, yeah, then this is what happened. And
then so then they're like, hold on, what's going on
with this kid? So then there things got a little
bit more interesting. They they noticed the father was giving

(55:38):
her a bath. She had full pubic hair and was menstruating. Yeah,
and they're like, are we sure, those little girls eight
years old, nine years old, and then would like even
there was like all this trouble. They went to a
family council counselor. This nine year old girl was like
said that she described some of the connection exercises of
the family therapist suggested describe them as childish, and they're like, yo,

(56:00):
she has a robust vocabulary. She just shaded this therapist
like this, these are very childish exercises. Uh. The mom said.
At the time, I ran a little school and I
remember this nine year old girl said to her, these
children are exhausting. I don't know how you do it.
But she's like kind of she's kind of a cute
thing for like a three year old kid to say

(56:22):
or something, but like to like part back as like
something that she's heard adults. Right. And then there was
another example right where the child was like she was
asking for her parents to like carry her into the
ocean there at the beach, and like the siblings were
playing by themselves and she's like, oh, you carry I
mean they're like not, we're tired. Can you give us

(56:42):
a second and we'll take you. She's like because she
was acting like she couldn't walk or whatever. It's too
much for her. She was just like fuck it, and
it just ran herself into this you know, like what
is that right? Like there are a lot of these
moments when she was pretending she couldn't walk at that time. Yeah,
and then just ran off into the sea because she
wasn't to wait to be carried. So there's all these things,

(57:02):
and then she had to be admitted to like a
psychiatric hospital um where they were thinking like they're like
a lot of the behavior sociopathic. Then they're like this
sort of story evolved into the mother and father claiming
that they're like, this child is not eight years old.
This child we suspect is twenty two, twenty two year
old adult who looks very young, who's just pretending to

(57:25):
be a child. And that's when these parents got in
trouble is because they essentially got the State of Indiana
to like change her age to consider her an adult.
And then they took off to Canada with their other
son who was like the math genius so he could
study abroad. So then now the state was treating them
leaving to Canada as like a child abandonment. But they're like,

(57:46):
we paid for her rent or whatever. We tried to
keep her there, but she's not a child, so we
couldn't have abandoned her. Like he gets into a very
strange legal situation like the movie or from just ends
with them basically I think killing her, like as she's
trying to kill them, because like somebody's like, oh, my gosh,

(58:07):
she's actually fifty years old or something like that. But like,
because they don't have this person's papers, they have no
way of saying like how old they are, right, because
they did like two different bone density scans or something
where they took them, took her to a doctor. The
first one said they're like, no, yeah, she's eight, but
like she's eight, and then I was like, no, she
might be ten, which is only a year older than

(58:27):
they had suspected, and then there so, but the mystery
is like they don't understand the doctor who sort of
verified that she was in fact twenty two I think,
passed away and they're like they're not quite sure why
the courts allowed her to change the age. So it's
a bit of a mystery even on the parents side,
because you also have the father saying like, oh, the

(58:48):
my ex wife is lying about this stuff. But then
his lawyers say the cops weren't actually like they were
actually completely misinterpreting what his intentions were when he was
saying something like that, and when insider basically like who
knew who was working on the case, was saying, this
is going to be a fucking movie essentially. But like,
I think they've they've done the horror version, they should

(59:09):
definitely do the comedy version, right because I imagine being her,
I'm just kinda shoot, I'm gonna put these dolls for
the next few hours. Its just like just to keep
covering pay red And she's like, really like, I was
never going to hurt them. I was just trying to
get them to emergency punt me so I could find
a new family. I was getting bored with these people.
I just don't It's the whole thing is very very

(59:31):
and I'll be honest, you know, financially, I could do
better currently speaking. So if there is anyone out there
I would like to adopt me, I am two up front,
just up front, I'm up front, thirty two Francophone. My
bone density is i'd say average great for your age,
but his bone density usually a reliable indicator or I

(59:54):
have no idea. Damn girl, you got some nice bone
density an come on in, hi, I have thoughts, okay. Apparently,
when they put her in the psychiatricy word after she
tried to push the mom into an electric fence, apparently
all the doctors that she interacted with confirmed that she's
definitely older because and then she admitted to being older

(01:00:14):
and said that she liked to kill people because it
was fun, it was just something to do. So it's
like some a lot of like sociopathic behavior, and they
started to realize, oh, she just needs a lot she
is not okay and she needs help. And apparently she's
just I mean, it's a lot of issues going on
at once to create um this woman slash girl who
knows it's like issues, But like, I think she's an

(01:00:37):
adult because apparently also she wouldn't she didn't like playing
with toys. She would actively be like, I don't want
to play with these, like stop trying to give me dolls.
There's a lot of weird stuff, and I think it's
very important to know. Is they're important to know. They
don't know where her whereabouts are. She's disappeared. Ah, that's
which means that she's probably conning another family, the mom

(01:01:00):
listening to the dailies like face and then pulling her
headphones off from the little girls right behind. But that
I think is more terrifying than anything else, and I
think speaks to her clear something because how could she
just disape How does no one know where a child is?
Like she just was like, all right, I guess I'll

(01:01:21):
just move in here. Well, I mean I couldn't look
behind you could also be a tragic story of you know,
a child who whose parents are like, nah, she doesn't
play with her toys, she's an adult. Yeah, that's why
I'm saying it's well, I know the things that put
me in the adult camp is that she had had
pubic hair and was menstruating and developed earlier. Right, maybe

(01:01:46):
don't have a full But then they said she was
trying to hide. Yeah, she was trying to hide her
menstrul Yeah, like any underwear that she had bled into
and things like that. So she ob I don't know,
but again, that could be that tries to hide. But
car teenager who you carry mom? But it's very confused.
It's but again, like that's why there's enough to see

(01:02:06):
that there's a darkness where she originated from that she's
carrying through to like her new life harrying, thank you.
What happened to the original people who adopted her that
decided that they couldn't keep her anymore. Something is going on.
Something is going on that we are not there's details.
Also the woman I don't know. I watched that interview

(01:02:27):
she did. That woman is she's been tortured something. She
was so like something she had gone through it like
broken up after the after the true but there was
things that there was she did not look like. Yeah,

(01:02:49):
it feels like that is a con woman who has
understood that I have these disabilities and it's hard for
me to live on my own and it's easier for
me to act as a child and I get away
with it. And then also has potentially and as a doctor,
which I am. I don't know. Maybe maybe it's so
deep in it that has kind of lost touch with

(01:03:10):
reality in many ways and leads her to try and
I don't know, kill people. I don't know. I would
believe that she's less aware of herself consciously doing this.
It might just be socio sociopath, I agree, I think,
And that might be like, Okay, here's my plan versus
like she's just she's got lizard brain on and she's
just doing whatever. She's gone from one so, you know,

(01:03:31):
foster family to another. Then people are just replaceable, right,
People are just momentary, you know, moments of time and
so like to manipulate them. It's just like, yeah, you're
just another adult to me. I've been playing anything like
she doesn't play with dolls because you ought to do?
What if that's the explanation she gave when they were like,
why aren't you playing with your dolls? Because you're because
you're the doll ding ding ding. I think this is

(01:03:57):
an appropriate story to end this episode because this is
what America is burying our head in. Is true crime
ship or like everybody's obsessed with true crime that country
dissolves or set off by a Daily Mail article that's
do you love true crime commercials? You know, because it'll
be like and he murdered his wife. Anybody, We'll take
a break, now, have a broad Let's just check out

(01:04:21):
Maiden Form. Maiden Forms a great company. H who do respect?
Throw Haynes here? I love all the Haynes brands. Eric,
It's been a pleasure having you. Thanks for having me.
I just want to say that my show is on
tonight at the Broadwater Theater, So anyone that's in the
Los Angeles area, I'd love it if you came, and

(01:04:42):
if not, I've got another one in October and you
can find out the dates and stuff on my Instagram. Yeah,
thanks guys. Uh And is there a tweet you've been enjoying?
Oh yeah, we'll come back to me. Okay, Miles, where
can people find you? And is there a tweet you've
been enjoying? You can find me on Twitter and Instagram

(01:05:03):
at Miles of Gray. Are there tweets? I like? Yeah,
I think so. I want to hear a couple like here,
here you go. The first one is from your dot
Travis at professor Dot. It says black Compliments ranked number five,
you did your thing four, you stupid three. Okay too,

(01:05:25):
I'm just trying to get like you one. Damn, this
ship sounds like it's from the goof Troops soundtrack. I
don't know why that bucked me up so much. I
love that. And then the last one is from Louis
Pitsman Louis Pitsman at Louis Pisman that says, I keep
singing impeachment. Like the Sampson's uh tweet that I'm enjoying

(01:05:52):
is Katie Stole tweeting It's here, you guys, the show
we have been threatening you with for months. It's here.
That's about worst year ever. It's a new podcast from
our network from Robert Evans, H, Mr Cody Johnson and
Katie Stole. Uh. It is very good. It's going to
be a weekly podcast about the lead up to the election,

(01:06:18):
the political wildness that we talked about today. But you
always learned something new every time they recording episode. I
I learned, for instance, in the first episode that Jake
Tapper got his start with a column in which he
bragged about having dated Monica Lewinsky during the Lewinsky scandal
and was like and she didn't put out but uh

(01:06:41):
what yeah, yeah, you gotta check out out. And there's
an even wilder revelation in I think episode two or
three about Joe Biden uh that I think might end
up derailing his campaign. So listen to this podcast that
everyone will be talking about around the water cooler. Uh.

(01:07:03):
You can find me on Twitter at Jack Underscore O'Brian. Uh.
You can find us on Twitter at Daily Zeitgeist where
at the Daily Zeitgeist on Instagram, we have a Facebook
fan page on a website Daily z I Guess dot
Com where we post our episode and our foot swear
link off to the information that we talked about in
today's episode, as well as the song we write out

(01:07:24):
on Miles. Before we get to that, I want to
shout the Zeke Gang out. I want to put their attention.
If you're in Chicago, October sixteen, that's a Wednesday, seven pm.
The Chicago Podcast Festival will present Ethnically Ambiguous the podcast live.
If you want to hold it, if your Zeke Gang,

(01:07:45):
you better be at this motherfucker's show. Okay, pull up
tickets are affordable, I'd imagine as they are because it's
my podcast. Maybe it's not gold, you know, so October
check that out. It didn't hold the comedy gold at
Gang of Wonderful. That's why I want to bring in

(01:08:05):
case you are unaware, In case you are ignorant to
the reality. October sixteenth, Chicago, Illinois, Anna and Sharine are
coming from Okay, so prepare thyself and Chicago Podcast Festival
that show. Uh so the song Yes, let's do a

(01:08:26):
song by now last week, if you looked on my
Instagram stories, I talked about de Wally riddim, which is
a dance hall rhythm that's used in many songs. Sample
to many songs. I wanted to bring people's attention a
little bit more to another drum sample that's very, very
u pervasive. It's all over the place. It's uh, it's
the track It's a New Day by the Skull Snaps.
It's from three the Drums. If you are a hip

(01:08:48):
hop head, you will recognize off the riff. Okay, maybe
if you're a Lincoln Park fan, you might remember it
from the track on the Hybrid Theory Cure for the
Itch that Mr Han does. You remember that black anyway?
And it's also in a Butterfly by crazy Town. This
fucking samples everywhere. It's also just a great hip hop song. Yeah,
or hip up to the Hop Up Old Dirty Bastard

(01:09:10):
tokay or Mike checkup by Dots Effects. It's everything. So
check out this song, and you know, let's just embrace
the history of it. All right. We are going to
ride out on that. We will be back tomorrow because
it is a daily podcast and we will talk to
you end by that round. Who yeah, yeah, it's not right.

(01:09:58):
Do you get stay on hands and cried

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