All Episodes

December 6, 2019 72 mins

In episode 530, Jack and Miles are joined by comedian David Huntsberger to discuss Justin Timberlake's apology, mental health experts being concerned about Trump, Judge Napolitano thinking Trump will testify, Bernie Sanders coming up in the polls, the Clinton's hanging out with Jeffrey Epstein, Nancy Pelosi, McDonald's chicken sandwich, the new Star Wars game show on Disney Plus and ride at Disneyland, and more!

FOOTNOTES:

  1. Guy Fieri, I am. For America’s greatest Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives I look.
  2. Everyone, Let's Circle Around Justin Timberlake Again and Keep Pointing Our Fingers at Him
  3. The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump
  4. Fox's Napolitano predicts Trump will testify on own behalf at Senate trial
  5. Bernie Sanders becomes top candidate for college students
  6. Warren and Biden lose ground, Sanders moves ahead in California’s shifting 2020 Democratic race
  7. EXCLUSIVE: Bill Clinton was Jeffrey Epstein's closest 'celebrity mate' and a frequent guest at his New Mexico ranch with wife Hillary, staying at the pedophile's cowboy-themed village, say estate workers
  8. James Rosen works for Sinclair. He asked that question purposely to get a rise out of Speaker Pelosi and for right wing propaganda purposes. Glad she shut his dumbass down.
  9. Now McDonald’s is testing a Popeyes, er, Southern-style chicken sandwich
  10. ‘Star Wars: Jedi Temple Challenge’, A Star Wars-Themed Game Show Hosted by Jar Jar Binks Actor Ahmed Best, is Coming to Disney+
  11. Disney Unveils Massive New Star Wars: Rise Of The Resistance Ride
  12. WATCH: Why Why Why Why Why - Sault

Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
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 eleven, Episode
five of jer Daily Sight Guy, a production of I
Heart Radio. This is a podcast where you take a
deep dive into America's shared consciousness and say, officially, off
the top, fuck the Cooke brothers and their coke industries
on fu Fox News. It's Friday, December six, two thousand nine. Team.

(00:20):
My name is Jack O'Brien, a K. Dick Squirrels, Oh Bra,
Dick Squirrels, jacko br Gotta go Bra. That is courtesy
of the four seasons and just t VZ a case

(00:40):
Trey Gang, and I'm thrilled to be joined as always
by my co host, Mr Miles. Hey baby, was like
guys calling Jack O'Brien and Miles of Gray quite stylish.
And I don't even know the rest of the words
other words the news, Yeah baby, they got you big.

(01:01):
I don't even is that the same melody part? Yeah no,
I think he nailed it anyway, the first part definitely nailed.
Shout out to no gods, no masters, no idols at
La Matte, I want to look, I don't, I don't know.
There's hard La Matte. I my tyke six five totally
fucked it up. But you know who you are. I think, Actually,
oh okay, so you know you know each other? Yeah, okay,

(01:22):
great for sure. I can't believe that song didn't launch
Kelsey Grammer's recording artist career more than I did. I
think that I would have expected a concept album after that.
The woman who married him that was on Real Housewives
says that was the moment she film really okay, baby,
uh uh. I'm glad to introduce I guess that we're

(01:48):
thrilled to have in our third seat. He is the
hilarious comedian Mr David Huntsberger. Hello Fells, Hello David. Hello,
are you good? Nice to be back. Um. I was
in Boisy when they remember to say hello to Sarah.
I was standing and near the bar at the venue

(02:09):
and this girl came over and said, hey, can I
give you a drink? I'm like I'm good, thanks, and
she goes, I'm Sarah side gang. Took me a second,
Oh right, I was trying to picture. I was like,
did she work? There have been gang? Yeah, we need

(02:30):
to have a you know the watchmen like the cyclops
hand gesture that, yeah, we need to have like a
hand gesture that is like zeit gang. So people can
just walk up and like really confuse the funk out
of our guests there on the road. Get it tatted
on your throat? Yeah, that encourage them to reveal themselves
to people. You just say their name and then something

(02:51):
that arose. Shout out to our one dust listener who
did get it tatted. Yeah, Bowie, I'm pretty sure that
you're just playing and I'll follow you. I see you
out there. Get that ink, yeah, I mean it looks
lequer as. They say somebody got baby Yoga tattooed. I
think Baby Yoga. Oh, no, you should I believe. I

(03:12):
believe that actually happened. Who's holding a white claw? Oh
baby Yoda? Oh they got that tadded. Oh that's tight.
That is super tight and also has uh no expiration
data is evergreen. You'll be telling your grandkids about white
claw and baby Yeah, you'll be saying that was Yoda
from Far Works, like they edited out to you know,

(03:33):
erase his white cloth pass. Can I just say that
I saw it, Like I heard there was this big
meme about baby Yoda. I was like, you know, people
were talking about it NonStop for like a week, and
then I finally saw a picture and I wasn't I
wasn't that impressed. Oh go go away. Really, I love
baby Yoda really, like you think it's like really cool looking.

(03:55):
The well, I think this is. I think the difference
is the way it's revealed when watched the Mandalorian is
what you go, what the fuck? Right? And then you're like, yeah,
I mean I get if you're just looking at it
and you're not actually seeing it on video, because it
has a lot of mannerisms and affects that make it
Baby Yoda. Right, it just looks more like a toy

(04:16):
to me than other you know, of those Henson type
like a muppet. Yeah, yeah, okay, Well, I mean I
still like real Yoda looked more lifelike. I think it's
it's dead black eyes shark guys. Is it half that
spiky hair? Like, no, that's an edit, So it looks

(04:37):
like Guy Fieri. I'm sorry Guy fii uh yeah, because
he has a sul patched two And I totally was like,
I'm seeing that facial hair because he walks are weird looking,
don't right? Yeah? That that's really what people think. You

(05:01):
know what for the uninitiated, start showing people that picture
of bab Yoda. Last thing, Man Baby Yoda is like
fifty years old or something like that. Crazy that they
would have designed it that way with the spiky and
salt patch. She fucking got you, man, an idiot, I

(05:26):
really got goddamnit, favorite town, this ship. All right, let's
talk about a couple of things we're talking about, and
then we're gonna get to know you a little bit better, David. Uh.
First off, Miles had his suspicions confirmed justin Timberlake. He
was he was mis behaving. Miles has never trusted that

(05:47):
man's being and he had to apologize for that. Uh.
We're gonna talk about some mental health experts weighing in
of them No Less weighing in on how Trump's brand
seems to them. Judge no Politano thinks Trump will testify,
which that that would be interesting. That would be the

(06:09):
television events right as we watch this thing burn influence.
Bernie is getting some pretty strong polling data out of
colleges and the minor insignificant state of California, and it's
being not covered, So we'll check them with those numbers.

(06:31):
The Clintons visited Epstein's baby cloning ranch in New Mexico
and yeah almost yearly. Oh not like now, no, no, no,
we just never covered it. We're going to talk about it, Uh,
Nancy Pelosi polost it on the Sinclair Reporter. Uh. We're
gonna talk about McDonald's attempt to keep up with the

(06:54):
Popeye Jones is a deep cut for NBA fans. Uh.
We're gonna talk about the legends of the Hidden Temple,
Star Wars TV show that might be come to us
on Disney Plus and the new Star Wars ride that
is opening at Disney World Land, both of the world.
I think world is world first. Yeah, yesterday, I think Yeah.

(07:18):
I almost don't want to talk. I mean I might
leave the room when you talk about it because I don't.
I want to experience it just in my straight through
my soul. Yeah, okay, and you can just plug your ears.
And yeah, Dan is in the booth with wacky eyes
like he's a dubstep DJ about to do the Sickest
Drop on the Gobi Pannet Coachella at two thousand and twelve.

(07:38):
But first, David, we like to ask our guests, what
is something from your search history that's revealing about who
you are? Oh shit, I forgot that was one of them,
and I mentioned in the past I almost I don't
realized why my search history is so boring is I
don't like getting ads, you know, targeted at me, So

(08:00):
mostly just look like traffic and the weather and things
like that, fake stuff to throw them off the scent.
I used to, Yeah, but then I still get those ads. Wait,
so then how do you so do you just know everything? No,
I'll yeah, you would be like, hey, can you search this?

(08:20):
I'm trying to think, you know, I'll do it like
through the maps function, So I look on the map
and then search. You know, they're still getting that, they're
still getting it, but they don't seem to target it. Yeah,
it doesn't follow you, It doesn't follow me. And you
go to just uncut Google. Yeah. Yeah, So then I'll
search stuff through or like when I'm at home on

(08:40):
the computer, I'll do it in like a private browser,
which you know, I feel like that got a negative connotation,
like using a private trying to get aggressively targeted exactly.
And what's the other one, duck duck go. That's like
if you don't if for the precise reason you're talking
about here, a lot of people use duck dug go. Yeah. Um, Also,

(09:02):
what kind of phone you got there, guy? Key to
BlackBerry coming back baby? That Actually it looks like a
like a movie set in the future where they're like
creating iPhones or like it looks like ten years ago
and it was set in the modern day because it

(09:24):
has buttons on the bottom, like it has a full
on keyboard. And then you see that and you realize
that you miss it to some degree. And who's watching?
I guess some people are watching full videos on their
phone and they need a giant screen. I don't find
myself doing that much or really engaging with a ton
of media. I've never been like, man, I wish my

(09:44):
phone was bigger for this video. Like the phone screen
has been a fine size to watch video in your
hand for as long as I can remember. Yeah, yeah,
I thought it was fine size since the t I
E two you're watching video off of that? Could what
couldn't you like make animations on that? Like asking yeah

(10:05):
or no? You could play that snake games. Yeah you're
not initiated, just am not? What is something you think
is underrated? Romania? I traveled and did some vacationing in
Romania wonderful place. Just highly highly recommend Romania and Golden

(10:30):
Beats the food okay underrated, also good name for a record,
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah. What's different about Golden Beats versus
our traditional dye your hands purple beats? When I'm assuming
is the number one allure of it is not a
terrifying thought that you're going to die if you see

(10:51):
the remains in the toilet, and that's got to be appealing.
And secondly, it tastes a little crisper or or something
like that. It's just a little you know, like beats
that there's that nice earthly taste. But then it also, yeah,
there's some chill. Oh, come on, I don't know. Every
time I have beats, I'm always like the flavor is

(11:11):
not really imposing itself on the rest of the dish.
It's like has a sweetness to it. But I could
never be like, ah, there's that a good old beat taste.
That's my favorite kind of candy beat flavored vague. I
always felt like when Pee Wee Herman gave Francis that
gum that like beats had a hand in that Francis

(11:33):
is taking a bath. That's my favorite movie. That bath
Tubb and printed itself on me. Incredible the way he's
working around with all the toys. If I went to
someone's house that had an infinity pool, I would only
be thinking what you got indoors? And is Mr Francis
taking a bath? They had like cruise ships, yeah, doble

(12:00):
enormous And Romania. What's something that we might not expect
about Romania that you found was dope. Besides the fact
that Ikea is aggressively deforesting the funk out of it
the deforestation, there's a conscientious, uh push to keep certain
parts of their culture alive. As you know their nine

(12:21):
they came out of communism and so they're aggressively trying
to catch up. And you know, people um trying to
establish whatever they their freedom, their ability to make as
much as they want to make, which comes with its
own like, oh we do that here, and it's pretty cutthroat.

(12:42):
You see people like a whole family go by on
a horse and cart in Romania all the time, like
on the side of the freeway, people zooming by, and
then just a family like hollandsome Wood with a horse.
But they're always all together. It's always like the whole
family so you're seeing the two things kind of compete
with each other, this advance unchecked capitalistic world. And then

(13:02):
also like you know you can just get by cart style, yeah,
card style, Burnington wood, the living off the land. That
everything there seemed really fresh and well taken care of,
and um, I guess that's maybe something people wouldn't know
about it. And it's cool to see, like everything we
have here is like kind of Ikea because it's put
it together quick, get up there. It's going to be

(13:23):
broken in two years. It's a pile of garbage. And
they have Yeah, they have these old houses that like
Saxon influenced Germanic. Uh, they're beautiful. Everything's carved like ornately detailed,
and I think we have a little more time. Yeah, No,
it's funny. Last night I was watching that documentary series Broken,

(13:43):
and I specifically, just for whatever reason, of all the topics,
there was one about all those dressers. I was like
ike addressers that were falling over on kids. And part
of like the way they were talking about the evolution
of Ikea design was going to like they were talking
about how old school furniture was as heavy as fuck,
so you would never this is like a new phenomenon.
But because a lot of the stuff that Akia does

(14:04):
is just particle board impressed wood and things like that,
that it's lighter so it causes more tipovers. And then
one of the sources of a lot of that wood
is Romania. And they were talking to this activist who's
there is like, you know, they're while now here, like
they're fucking up, Like a lot of logging in general,
not just Ikea, happens in Romania. And it was so beautiful,
like when you saw these like forests and then they
were just showing these huge patches of like earth that

(14:26):
it just completely been like kneecapped by deforestation. Maybe whyn't
check it out? Go check it out. I highly recommended
Romania is gorgeous. That sounds dope. What is something you
think is over it? Oh? Man, this all ties in together.
Um um no, I'm going with tall, thin blonde women.

(14:50):
I just had it. And then for whatever they did,
not that there's anything wrong with tall, thin blonde women,
but I'm glad to see the canceled the Victoria's Secret
Walking Show or whatever they finally did. Yeah, it didn't
happen this year. Around this time, it was trickling down, trickling,
and finally they're like, people don't care, and they kept

(15:11):
I think, just pretending that that was an aesthetic that
all guys got together and talked about. Have you seen
this one? And I never heard which one? What's her name?
I don't know. We call her number three three eight.
I think actually Barstool Sports had a day off of
just morning because they canceled the Victoria's Secret Show. I mean, really,

(15:34):
that's crazy. It's like, I'm sure that it feels like
and then uh, I think that the queen and nothing
against her. Taylor Swift seems like a fine person, but
very over Artists of the decade, stop it, get out
of here. The artists of the decade um. I just
feel like you can't have people like Stevie Wonder and
Madonna and Whitney Houston and people that I don't remember

(15:56):
them getting recognized for artists of the decade at any point.
And I feel like we can't just start now, you know,
to do like a retrospect, go back and give it
to people who did it for a long time, who've
been out there touring forever, rather than oh and how
many mega hits that you like any idiot would be like,
I know, shake it off and then what else? And

(16:17):
I am that idiot, Like I don't know how many
super hits she really has had. Man, because popular cultures
leaving you behind. It always has been that I was
never a part of it, even when I was Yeah,
I was young, and it was like I like grs
when didn't fire? Are so the decade nineteen seventies should

(16:40):
have been Uh and that derailed their career not getting
that award, you know, it's just that recognition would have
would have done it all. They Yeah, what about Freakie?
It would have been actually played at weddings if they
had gotten that recognition. What is a myth? What's something
people think is true? You know? To be false? Ties
back into the People have said it so much now

(17:01):
that there's like a comfort in repeating it, which is,
there's no such thing as selling out anymore. That's what
people who sell out say. You absolutely can still sell out.
Taylor Swift again doing commercials for her album on fucking
Capital one. Stop it. At some point we have to
step in and like enough, you've lost all artistic credibility,
Go funk yourself. Uh. So, there are people out there

(17:23):
that are not selling out, there's just no one talking
about them. And then the people that do sell out
like that. We've gotten so used to it that it's
so competitive now that you either get in and like, oh,
good for my friend. They gotta they got an ad,
they've got a spot in this a T and T commercial.
They're gonna be able to pay their rent. It's so
competitive that who cares that they, you know, tied into

(17:44):
a company that's aggressively behind net neutrality and restrictions, and
da da da uh you can still sell out, and
so I feel like it's a myth thing that you cannot.
We just don't call people out on it as much anymore, right, Yeah,
well I think now in like max revenue culture, it's
just like, well, you're securing the bag, right, that's what

(18:05):
we call. And people are familiar with all the things
that these companies are doing, branding, etcetera. So people watch
an ad that's specifically target with him like that was
pretty good. It's great, you're gonna use my information, sell
it to other companies, then market that right back to
meet a nice one, right back to I hope you'll
buy my song. I think that's a good point though,

(18:26):
that it's like back you know what I talked about,
how I remember a time like late eighties, early nineties
when selling out was a thing, like Nirvana got popular
and people who are like, well they're not cool anymore
because because they're popular and they're signed with a huge label. Uh.
And but now that everything like just all the you know,

(18:48):
safety nets have been taken away, and like capitalism is
just this like fucking free for all where people like
don't have healthcare. I think people are maybe a little
bit more sympathetic, but the answer isn't to just be like, yeah, well,
I mean this is our new normal. Well, you know,
the answer would be to put some more some of
those safety nets back. Yeah. Well, I think when it

(19:08):
really becomes disingenuous is when you can tell like their
or their position on things begin to change because of
that alignment with certain companies or things like that, or
they still talk as if there is something like revolutionary
about the things that I had this problem when like
the Yaesus album came out with Kanye he was like,
what's you know, it's like this new slavery thing, and

(19:29):
like I'm trying to change how the music business works.
And it's like your tour is sponsored by a e g.
Like if you want to do some revolutionary like find
a way to subsidize your shows and make it free
for other people. But it's like that's when it starts
being like see, like I don't what what is it? Though? Uh?
You also just hate that album? Yeah, Yeah, I don't.

(19:51):
I don't think it's I don't. I don't. Yeah, come
fight me. I don't like it. I don't like it's
more of that. I think. Look, and I've talked about
this all the time. It was the beginning really of
the end in terms of like where he started to
see himself as an artist. Yeah. Uh, I agree with
everything you're saying. But Taylor swift partnership with UPS around
little launch of her reputation album was top notch. And

(20:14):
I mean obviously the A T and T series that
she did that was obviously exclusive to Direct TV. Yes,
I think it was fantastic too, especially when they're just
playing to each other's strengths and highlighting things that are
fully authentic about both brand and artist. I think when
you look at the story history about dependability and a
way to actually uh spread a message very quickly, and

(20:35):
that's the similar thing with Taylor Swift's music. That's why
we're really excited to be partnering with such a powerhouse artist. Right,
what is there something wrong with connecting people? I'm sorry,
something wrong with connecting our world? But in a room
there are people spouting these same exact scripts and meaning
it convincing that this is just gonna be so great. Well,
it's just like it's at a certain point when your

(20:56):
job is basically built off of like how do I
extract as much revenue new out of something? Like it's
not even you just have to say words that that
really the truth is how the how the funk do
we make a ton of money out of this? But
let's use these other marketing terms to whatever. Yeah, I
wonder like after we are out of this era, like

(21:17):
how how much that is going to taint like the
people who are famous now, Like I think about jay Z,
who you know, just had this NFL thing, but he's
always been like the like arch capitalist who like you know,
is making it work and aligning himself with huge brands
and like will because this period of American culture is

(21:41):
marked by uh, the advertising industry just infiltrating literally every
person's like entire existence and brand. Like will we look
back on jay z and be like, man, that was
that dude was like the same way we kind of
look back on Jordan's and are like kind of like,

(22:02):
what do you mean, like that we would somehow get
what he's doing? No, No, that that it would be
like diminished because he is so like I don't know, Yeah,
I don't know. I mean look as I sit here
on my Casper mattress, uh I Amazon brought to you
by everything else, to you through Sam dot com dot com, dude,

(22:25):
where I got my anson. But that's what's funny too,
Like even thinking about this show right, like that we
are also part of this machine to where you have
advertising and things like that. I think the one benefit
is like we have the ability to say yes or
no to certain things. And and also we've never had
a thing. It's like, look, if you do something with this,
you gotta knock off the pull it up, you gotta

(22:46):
knock off the anti corporate ship. It's like, I don't know, dude,
it's kind of part of the whole deal. Hey, but
I can't wait to sell the funk out man on.
There's like something terrible happens in the news. I'm like,
I don't know, man, Joe Biden, I think it's done
a lot. I used to think that someone who as
shoot all of it abstained didn't had a library card

(23:09):
and that was it, didn't go on the online at all,
didn't even have an email account. Maybe the future will
progress to a level where all of us are in
a room and VR helmets, and then we hologram ourselves
in a bubble out into the forest and we see
this person that we like went to high school with
and where above them and they look up rubbing sticks
together and all dirty a word, and we'd be like,

(23:30):
what are you doing, man, everyone's having fun in there. Yeah.
They'd be like, get away, and then something would pop
up in our bubble. It's like, to access more of
this experience, you have to take a survey and like, okay, anyway,
what were you saying, man? But then I also think
that person, so in that situation, that person is alone
their life. Maybe maybe they should have just joined the

(23:52):
hive and been a part of the whole grid system.
But then I think it won't be that much of
a stretch for AI to catalog and database everything ever said,
and even recognize it through voice or characteristics of speech
pattern to then have a miles database where everything you've
ever said. So if you anyway try to publicly go

(24:12):
out and say I don't think i've ever spoken out
against that, and then pull up instantly accountability algorithm. Twitter
already does that. When somebody gets enough attention, they're just
like okay, let's command f So then the algorithm, the
bigger system at large AI as we know it, learning

(24:34):
from that learning. This is how humans did it. Is
that the search just applying those exact same things. But
even like segments from a podcast that you did that,
all those bites are there. They exist, so it doesn't
even have to be typed. It's everything you've ever said
that is in the digital space. Yeah, I'll funk up
my AI created itself. I try and do that ship

(24:54):
watch well, boy, I've been doing a lot of fake
searches to throw the algorithm off though. Nice, you gotta
stay ahead of them. The documentaries are gonna be good though,
because there's gonna be so much material, Like nobody's made
that documentary that's like post iPhone where it's just like, yes,
so this person we have literally everything that's ever happened

(25:15):
to them because they were shooting it all. Do you
think that could be the future of like mosques and
mausoleums and things that you know they already have picture
frames now that are you know, it can display multiple pictures.
You go up and like press your thumb and it
just runs through their whole life videos and you just
walk through a mosque like cool and go to the

(25:35):
next one a life like wow, this person in Vegas
a lot. Damn the fuck. That could be like judgment
the future, like sort of artist economy is like making
documentaries about like people lives as like they're oh, bit,

(25:57):
give me your eye Cloud password and I'll make you
like a magnum Us based on photos. It sucks that
we will miss that older generation that had one photo
looking stock as the technologies like I gotta leave the
shutter open for a long time, so if you move
as and be blurry, stay the fox still all right,
We're gonna take a quick break. We'll be right back,

(26:27):
and we're back. Miles. You had a feeling things were
maybe rocky at home. I justin timber Lake. We all saw,
we looked at the video. He justin timber Lake was
he's shooting a film or at the time, was in
New Orleans and was hand holding with his co star
and he had the vibes that he was grabbing her hands,

(26:49):
she was touching his leg. He had those eyes were like,
you know, they're very drunk, and you're like, the DVR
stopped recording a few hours ago, so I don't know
what you know if you know what you're doing here,
And it was like we were specting, like is this
what's happening? Is he is something going on? And at
the time I thought they were just gonna deny everything.
But it seems like because of how you know, straightforward

(27:13):
this video stuff was of him, he's now come out,
and also because rumors of him cheating a constant theme
with him, it seems like, um, he came out with
this statement, says, I stay away from gossip as much
as I can, but for my family, I feel it
as important to address recent rumors that are hurting the
people I love. A few weeks ago, I displayed a
strong lapse in judgment, but let me be clear, nothing

(27:35):
happened between me and my co star. I drank way
too much that night, and I regret my behavior. I
should have known better. This is not the example I
want to set for my son. I apologized to my
amazing wife and family for putting them through such an
embarrassing situation, and I'm focused on being the best husband
and father I can be. I am incredible. I'm credibly proud.
I'm incredible. I'm incredible. I'm incredibly incredible. It's gonna bean may. Uh. Yeah,

(27:59):
he's talking about working on the film blah blah blah.
But yeah, it seems like maybe his own wife was
probably like, what the fuck are you up to? Uh? Okay.
I just like it's got confirmation that he was feeling
bad about it, because it looked like anybody who has
been drunk and maybe got a little too flirtatious when

(28:20):
you shouldn't have been. I saw the exact eyes down
to the head tilt from how he was drinking out
of his glass when your chin is down and you're
still sipping your chin down literally, if you're correct, this
might be just me, But do you guys have a
preconceived notion as to how mega celebrities interact with each

(28:42):
other and with the opposite sex outside of you know,
their relationship, Because I remember when Brad Pitt and Jennifer
Aniston were together. There were these photos of Brad Pitt
at a Laker games when you had this long beard.
He's with Katherine Keener, very similar to these photos hand
holding hands on the opposite knee when I remember at
one point there was video he went to talk to

(29:04):
her and he reached up under and like sort of
cut the opposite side of her head and then leaned
and was talking to her that way, the side of
her head. And I remember seeing that, like, celebrities are
just weird. That's not his wife, but I guess that's
how they talk meaningful dinner parties where everyone's doing that,
as you know, I don't know. I think I'm sure

(29:25):
being subjected to the treatment that celebrities get over a
certain number of years completely fox up your idea of
like where the ground is and what boundaries are or
what is accessible or inaccessible to you. And I think
you just get so used to being inauthentic that even
really not intimate but authentic type behavior has become sort

(29:46):
of wrote he just walked through them like this is normal,
right of your face here real quick in for for
a comment about this. Lakers game. They are not trapping enough.
Van Excel should stop shooting so much. Never. Uh, Eddie
Jones is looking great. That's a that's a very good point.

(30:08):
And yeah, I'm sure it's it's got to be hard
for Bread, you know, as somebody who just everybody he's
interacted with for the past what forty years, it's probably
like it's just like begging, like with their entire being
for him to grab the side of their face right right,

(30:28):
like I will leave my husband right now for you.
Just grab the side of my face. I will leave
my wife right now for you. I will leave my
podcast for a direct quote from what I said, shouted
at his window when he was driving by. That's how
he lost that at that hotel. Let's talk about the
mental health industry is speaking up about their thoughts, UM,

(30:51):
what's going on with the president? What? What? What do
they think? Well, there there's a petition that came out
that was signed by three hundred fifty differents like call oologists,
UH mental health experts that are really saying, please consider
what is actually happening to him right now from our perspective,
because the impeachment UH proceedings seem to be ramping up

(31:14):
his like sort of uh erratic behavior. Um. The first
one or one of the first line says, we were
speaking out at this time because we are convinced that
as the time of possible impeachment approaches, Donald Trump is
the real potential to become ever more dangerous a threat
to the safety of our nation. And this is from
doctors Bandy Lee, who's a Yale psychiatrist, Gerald Post, a

(31:34):
former CIA profiler and and who's also a psychologist, and
John Zinner, a psychiatrist at George Washington University. They're like
the big names on there, and there are many others. Um.
But the things that they're saying that they're worried about
was quote. What makes Donald Trump so dangerous is the
brittleness of his sense of worth. Any slight um or
criticism is experienced as a humiliation and degradation. To cope

(31:55):
with the resultant hollow and empty feeling, he reacts with
what is referred to as an oar scissistic rage. He
is unable to take responsibility for any air mistake or failing.
His default in that situation is to blame others and
to attack the perceived source of his humiliation. These attacks
of narcissistic rage can be brutal and destructive. Um, And
they're saying like they're willing to testify to like give

(32:16):
more texture to what they're talking about or more detail.
And they say, we implore Congress to take these danger
signs seriously and to constrain his destructive impulses. We and
many others are available to give important, relevant recommendations. Blah
blah blah. So are they suggesting that the Democrats pump
the brakes on the impeachment inquiry? I don't know what
it is. I'm not sure if they I don't know

(32:38):
if they think it should. Uh, maybe it'll bolster the
reasons why he may need to be removed from office.
It's it's a weird thing because a like, you know
a lot of mental health professionals like, I'm gonna I've
not actually treated this person, So I don't want to
go out there and be like, this is what I'm seeing.
But I think for them, they're like based on what
we know and then the countless accounts from people who

(33:01):
work in there, like with his slurred speech and ability
to remember things, It's like and I think just from
comparing video from even and fucking seventeen, and now there
are moments where you're like, it's definitely the breaks are
being depressed a bit. Yeah, I mean when I saw
that this was happening, I assumed that that was going

(33:22):
to be. What they were talking about was just like
slurred speech and stuff. But the stuff that they're talking about,
the narcissistic rage, is all stuff that's been pretty obvious
to me since before the election, you know, right right right,
It's like how he's always operated, I think before because
the language we've all been using is like he's so insecure,

(33:43):
and he's being so petty, and he's being so reckless,
and they're sort of like no, when you actually categorize,
like how what the pattern is someone holds him accountable,
or there's a perceived humiliation goes after that person relies
on absolutely like debunked theories, conspiracy theory, or will just
lie about things like this is a we see this

(34:04):
in a certain type of person. Yeah, I mean, I
don't know. To me, it's like it's so apparent to
people I don't I don't necessarily need three fifties mental
health actually be like I think something's wrong. I mean,
this is yeah, this is why I've always thought his
presidence he was so terrifying was because he seems so
unstable and impulsive and just easy to have his sense

(34:28):
of self worth uh threatened. Uh. Fortunately he's like not
taken that sort of rage to the international level. But
that's that's when it gets really scary. Storm enough from
the NATO gathering was probably the first step in the
right if like the next thing is like we're actually

(34:50):
pulling out of NATO, that's when you're gonna be like,
hold the funk on, like what it will no, no, no, no, Well,
like when Jim Jordan and all these guys, they're just mad.
They're mad because sixteen Okay, that's what this whole thing
is about, as if like a sterling, high character individual
was put in place and people are just mad about that.
But there was a very cautious like, funk, what's this

(35:12):
guy gonna do? Because he says all this crazy ship
and then when he exhibits that behavior as the president,
people like, Okay, our fears were confirmed. We should start
circling around this a little. Yeah. Well, it's like there
and they have such a terrible endgame they're going towards
or like you know, for the Republicans. They can't be
critical because his his base will just vaporize them like

(35:34):
at the polls, or they'll they'll invite the wrath of
the president, which none of them want. So like they're
in this space where like they can't even they just
have to be like, yeah, this is fine, and we're
maybe projecting the things we felt about Barack Obama where
we were just like we don't like this guy, and
that's and we don't we don't, we don't we reject
the result of this election. So we're gonna be well

(35:55):
obstructing things like that. But it's uh, you know, it's
a slippery slope. Yeah, uh so one thing that that
might lead to Judge Napolitano, the Fox News legal expert,
Isn't it crazy, just started interrupted that he's on there
all the time because almost every story that he's attached
to his him pushing back and disagreeing with Fox. Yeah. Yeah,

(36:16):
well I think it's their one good I mean not good,
but like it's there. He's been their main legal analyst forever.
He was like a New Jersey Superior Court judge, you know,
the heights of the legal system. Shout out to New
Jersey um, but yeah, because of I don't know it
it is. I think maybe they know it's good to
have him there because he's slightly keeping it somewhat reality based.

(36:38):
But when you look at when it turns to the
opinion hours at night, like none of them want to
talk about him, or their guests will come after him,
or I think Tucker Carlson even went after him. So yeah, well,
so he thinks that Trump might testify himself in the
Senate trial. At the Senate trial, which would be that
would be something makes I mean, he probably also thinks

(37:01):
he's going to turn over his tax documents, and to me,
that just seems so improbable. I would put just as
an outsider with no no, I would put the odds
of that happening at less than point one percent. You think,
because people on his team would be like, you're going
to self phone right there, you will incriminate yourself, you
will perjurys that it's going to be bad. So don't

(37:23):
Actually that's and that's when you even look at it.
You don't even have a president who could go and
coherently lie for ten minutes or an hour. I mean
within the bigger part of the ego, aspect of that
as him being like, I don't have to do this ship.
I'm above that. I don't need to answer to any
of you. I'm your boss. Well, the thing is, he
was recently tweeting after Nancy Pelosi was like, you know,

(37:45):
she told Jerry Nadler and Adam Shift to move forward
with drafting articles of impeachment. He meets like, let's just
get it over with, then, let's do it. Let's do it.
I'm they kept having to throw their bodies in front
of him, going and talking to their lives rather than
the So I mean that's where the people around him
know that this is not a good idea, but he

(38:08):
increasingly and throughout his presidency has been able to just
override the people around him and be like, you know,
it's my gut rule. Especially Yeah, when you think of
his ego, though, I could see that the one part
that entertains the idea that it is possible is that
his ego would not allow someone else to testify on

(38:29):
his behalf. Because what Napolitano is saying is, quote, if
you go to a Senate trial who testifies on behalf
of the president himself himself, you and and then someone
said you believe that could happen. I do. I think
it will be the most dramatic legal political event in
the history of our era. Oh, it would be. It

(38:50):
would be really rewarding even if nothing came of it,
just to watch just too. And I think we've all
gotten to a point where we like to have this
weird rage of I knew I was right about that,
and then nothing comes of it, and then you're like,
but I still feel like everyone's got their own facts.
Everyone's walking around with that feeling out of the way
I saw it, I've got it, I had it right. Yeah,

(39:13):
I mean moment though, do people in the Fox News
bubble think the same thing? Are they like, oh, well,
once he gets up there, like we'll feel vindicated, Like
that's what they'll say on TV because that has to
be like the narrative. But do you think that because
just in in this universe where we're all walking around
with our own version of the truth, do you think

(39:35):
that there's part of them that still suspects like this
guy is completely full of ship and because that that
is the thing you always here when someone's like how
could you support this guy, They're like, well, he you
can't take what he says seriously. You have to just
look at what he does and think, well, because if
you're honest and someone says, can you take this guy

(39:56):
or what do you think about this guy? You can't
say the second you go out, man, he's all over
the place, right, then you go why would you support him?
And then you're like well, and then you have to
sort of give up the ghosts like, well, he's a
useful idiot, right because he's you know, deregulating the funk
out of everything, like Wall Street. There's are there are
no breaks on Wall Street right now. There's no protections

(40:17):
for the environment right now. There are certain industries that
are loving it in terms of their business, and I
think that's why they have to say stuff like you know,
it's wet, understand he's polarizing, but they're like, in the
back of their minds, they have just cash Boners and
they're like this cash though it's the name of our
production company or cash boners, cash boners. Uh. Let's take

(40:39):
a quick look at the Democratic primary. There's been a
couple good polls, and these are polls that come from
within the uh Kamala Harris campaign. Yeah, specifically for California voters. Yeah, yeah,
that Bernie Sanders is sort of on an upward trend
and most other people are on a downward Yeah. It

(41:01):
seems like September was a huge dip for people like
Elizabeth Warren and Joe Biden. Buddha Judge and Bernie are
the only people with a little bit of upward movement.
But in California, of likely primary voters, Bernie Sanders has
overtaken Elizabeth Warren percent of likely voters they would vote
for him. And look a lot of delegates in California. Uh,

(41:24):
it seems like Mayor Pete is starting to eat a
little bit into the Biden Warren support. Yeah, when you
consider that they're going down and he's going up, there's
got to be a little bit of back and forth.
And I think also with Bloomberg copping into, he's he's
nibbling a little bit away. Uh, considering his guess name recognition. Yeah,
I wonder how many people are like the channel, Yeah,

(41:46):
I'll vote for him over the channel. Well, let's going
to run. I don't really watch Bloomberg. And then there's
a poll, uh with college kids where Biden was leading
among this group in April and then By and then
Warren and then Wren. Uh, and now Sanders has the lead.

(42:09):
It's just asking, you know, who would you vote for? Uh?
To all likely to vote college age kids, I think
it was somewhere round there. So Sanders got two, Trump
got seventeen percent, Warren fifteen, Biden twelve, Yang nine, Buddha
Judge eight. So uh, I mean, hey, debt forgiveness, I'll

(42:34):
line I would line up to Bernie, And I'm curious
to know what the issues are, like, how many kids
are Obviously the student loan stuff much weigh heavy on
every college student because they're like I'm gonna walk out
into the real world with a boulder crushing my spine
of debt. Uh. And how many people you know are
like woke and trying to, you know, bring the power

(42:54):
back to the workers. Just I checked the front page
of you know, CNN, New York Times to see if
anybody was talking about this stuff. And maybe these poles
aren't like that relevant. I mean the axios at the
college one is from Axio, so pretty mainstream. Uh. And
CNN had a Bernie Sanders headline, and that headline was

(43:15):
analysis Hillary Clinton destroyed Bernie Sanders and or Howard Stern interview.
Uh so when face Yeah, she was on Howard stream
recently and just tour that ass up like yeah, I'm
yeah exactly. They're like, hey, Bernie got dunked on by

(43:35):
an irrelevant person. Yeah, it will be interesting to see though.
You know, this is going to be a good test
of the Bernie blind subreddits theory of the case that
the mainstream media is ignoring him because I mean, if
he starts like taking up to being tied for first
or in the running for first, like it would be
strange for them not to cover that. Yeah, but I

(43:59):
think that's what you'd really you see that full blown
like corporate bias where it's like, dude, shut the funk
up about this guy. He's about to eat into my
yacht money. Yeah. They always said that was why the
movie Idiocracy didn't do better. You know, they go after
Pepsi and Fox News on these giant companies and then
try to get ad space to promote the movie and
they're like we're good, Yeah, good, what's the film about? Oh?

(44:21):
Speaking of Hillary Clinton, that also seemed to miss a
lot of mainstream news coverage was the revelation from the
security expert on Jeffrey Epstein's baby cloning Dick Ranch in
New Mexico, like where he was trying to inspregnate all
these women trying to impregnate like a continent of women

(44:43):
to uh and also I have his dick frozen. Wouldn't
it be great if we had the AI software in
place there where we something was listening in those moments
because we here talks about like the m I T
people who would go or Bill Gates there and they
would leave going. He has some weird ideas what he
says he should impregnant every fourteen year old girl on

(45:04):
the planet. But ay, the mash potatoes were exquisite. So
the guy who was in charge of his security there
and like technological things, Jared Kellogg, was brought in by
longstanding ranch manager Bryce Gordon to improve the security and
set up a camera system at the main house as
well as the cowboy village. This is something I didn't
realize Jeffrey Epstein's Young Girls had it basically had an

(45:32):
Epcot attraction. Yeah, like it had an Epcot attraction of
like Old West Old West Stile Prospect. Yeah, those are
the good old days. And Dusty Shaw you're where in
the middle of Western village. Um. I was saying, how
cool the replica houses where This is a quote from

(45:53):
the guy who Jared Kellogg was new and he said,
I was saying how cool the replica houses were. And
the man manager of the ranch said, yeah, they're built
for guests. It's really cool. The Clinton's come out and
hang out with Epstein. Uh. And then he went on
to say that they would hang out with him at
least once a year at the ranch every year after

(46:16):
Clinton left office. So people that are good friends in
Los Angeles don't see each other once a year exactly
happening in the same city. And they're not so busy
having just been the president. Dave, I see you more
than my family, legitimately true style. I'm like, I don't know.
They live west The west side is off limits. I

(46:42):
just moved from the West Side. I just had to
make new friends. Yeah. Sorry, I can't talk to you anymore.
I'm moving moving east. Oh my god, is everything okay? Uh?
And let's talk real quickly about Nancy Pelosi. She was
having a press conference talking about, you know, plans to

(47:03):
impeach where where things were going with the impeachment inquiry,
and a reporter from Sinclair Media as she was leaving,
asked her, do you hate the president? Miss Pelosi, and
she just kind of went off, go off, Catholic queen.
She came back around and she's like, as a Catholic,

(47:25):
I resent that kind of language. I was respect raised
with love in my heart and a blind, wilful denial
of children being molested. I'll never acknowledge. I will tell
women of color who are new to the to the
Congress to stay get in line. But I do not
have hate in my heart. I pray for She was like,

(47:47):
I pray for the president. If anything, I do not
hate him. Blah blah blah. And she's like, don't mess
with me on that, and then she stomped, like walked off.
It was kind of it was if it wasn't well
orchestrated or like, if she hadn't had a plan to
do that, it was pretty pretty impressive. I think if
she looked like Meryl Streep, she everyone would acknowledge that

(48:07):
she's such a badass. Yeah, but unfortunately she does have
and this is unfair and it seems so critical to say,
but she looks like a stereotypical California older woman, very
botox and pulled that she's not even really blinking anymore.
So I think his group, even if what she says
is exactly how they feel, there's this inherent bias by

(48:30):
looking at her that has like the physical presence of
what they would consider like like if an algorithm created
liberal absolutely uh and what does she in her seventies
that that's what would come out? Absolutely, So they don't
really hear her words because I think this is just
a theory I've been working on. I believe it. We're so,
we're so we don't even listen to ship anymore, like

(48:51):
what's it? Look? What is the face? What is the gender,
what is the race? What everything is? Like? Yeah, but
I think it was uh yeah. She she did a
very good job though, too, because the whole strategy that
question was born out of Representative Collins in the Judiciary
Committee saying like, the Democrats are doing this because they
hate the president, that they have hate in their hearts

(49:14):
because they can't actually if you notice, they'll never actually
deny what the president did. So they've been like, well,
it's because they hate the president, they hate America, they
hate constitution. Wait, the constitutions against us? Well, then they
hate George Washington. I'm a necromancer. I gotta go. It
was kind of weird that she was so after that
guy were Essentially what he was doing was giving her
a layup, just say no, no, we don't hate him

(49:37):
like I love everybody. And instead she was like you,
how dare you come after me? Yeah? I mean he
was clearly trying to create Well he was being so like,
what's a develop question? I mean, that's that's what he said.
That's what I was thinking. It's like transcription said you
rape dinosaur ghosts, like you can't answer a simple yes

(50:00):
or no. And then they said Then right after that,
Trump tooted. I was like, oh, look like Nancy Plosi
had a nervous fit. It's nervous because she was, I
don't know, like the fucking Jeffrey Epstein's Old West Town.
She's shuffering from nervous fits. And yeah, all right, we're

(50:21):
going to take another quick break. We will be right back,
and we're back. Get her ether? Rag uh? And what
was that a thing for? Like huffing ether? That was

(50:44):
like old to put you under. Basically, yeah, I just
got you tuberculosi, teared of coffin, got the berculoso. Better
sleep the day, got the berculosis this stage on your
neck and also off this ether rag damn. Shout out
to anybody huffing ether rex. It was only a matter

(51:06):
of time, you guys. Tell McDonald's came out of their
uh scientists scientific lab kitchen with a chicken sandwich. Uh.
They I think earlier this year we're talking about how
franchise owners and McDonald's are like, we're getting fucking killed
by Chick fil A and this chicken sandwich. Like we

(51:27):
got nothing. People fucking hate rat meat burgers. We need
the chicken. Uh. And now they have a This is
only in a very limited number of markets. So if
you're in Knoxville, tenn a Key or Houston, Texas, uh,
and you're zyking, let us know. I actually want to
know they have the Southern style buttermilk crispy chicken sandwich. Man.

(51:48):
They really it's everything. It's hint of dill, they got
a pickle on it, they buttered the bun. They know
what they're doing. They know what they're doing. They're trying
to come after that Chick fil A market. And I
need to know how bad or good it is. I mean,
so they're going to do this locally, I'll be interested
to see if it's one of those things like with Popeye's,

(52:09):
where they roll it out locally because they can't afford
to make the sandwich as good as it needs to
be on a on a massive scale. Yeah, I don't know.
I can try to remember the last time McDonald's made
something that was new and I was like, hey, you
know what I do remember when they made, however, such
a weird like hardline stance at times that they always

(52:32):
came in on they go, we've had this menu for
fifty years and will never have salads people watch in
a cup though it's a shaker and then such an
old iceberg in a classic cup with apples, and when
they may put that salad on the menu, they became

(52:54):
America's largest purchaser of apples, like they're like a little
harvesty salad or where they have basically created a doubled
the apple industry. I'd love to see the meeting when
the guy came in, or I assume it's a guy,
the CEO of McDonald's comes in and like, all right,
we're doing it. They've complained long enough, We're gonna make
breakfast all the time. Just sick of having people their

(53:15):
entire YouTube streams of comics just laying into the fact
that we don't serve breakfast all day, so we're doing it.
And then everyone went this, our forefathers wanted us to
the same maybe, and then they changed it in the morning.
If there's like mc jonald's constitution original, they just ripped

(53:36):
it up and we're new and hip. Now you're an expansionist,
and no one cared. People there were maybe a couple
of tweets are like thanks, but I was like, fucking,
I'm starting levitating. When they felt too, I felt like
the one thing I eat phenomenal, I've ceased to eat
like the daytime food. There. I'll eat the fries, the

(53:59):
occasional nugget, the chicken nuggies. Don't eat the burgers really
unless I'm feeling I'm really wacky and high. But usually
I'm just eating a bunch of sausage muffins with egg Okay, yeah,
I don't think you're alone in that. And then when
they doubled it up, boy Miles, when then doubled up

(54:20):
what when you could put like two sausage patties. Like
it was like Behemoths style stacker. Yeah. Um, they also
are I saw a billboard that showed that there selling
breakfast sandwiches with chicken on it. No, that's a new
thing with fried chicken chicken breasts. Gosh, it just feels

(54:43):
a little wrong to put an egg on the chicken
and just you know, let's give chickens a little break. Yeah.
They and they even like drew attention to the fact
that it was like, yeah, it's like a chicken egg
no egg and they but they the advertise when I
saw for it was like here's a yolk of an
idea or something like like this breakfast sandwich is no yolk,

(55:07):
and it was like chicken without the egg, but with
the breakfast sandwich, uh bread part and uh yeah the
biscuit uff. It's funny even though I'm like, oh, that's cool.
One of my favorite Japanese dishes is called booty, and
Oya means parent and cole means child, like the Kanji thing,

(55:28):
so it's literally parent and child riceful and it's eggs
and chicken like so I'm like what I'm talking about, Like,
we have a dish that's like, man, funk this whole
family rice. I want to make sure they came from
the same blow exactly. H alright, let's talk Star Wars stuff, David,
a Star Wars guy. No, I don't live in a

(55:51):
great universe in that. I think the beetles are fine.
I think Star Wars is fine, and uh, comic books
the same way, the every and running around so elated
and over the moon about all these things. I just
feel like, what am I missing? Yeah, I got dropped
on the wrong planet or something, right, what does get
you running around? Lots of stuff? Everything else gets me

(56:12):
up to like a seven? But everyone else with those things,
is it like an eleven in eleven for anything? I
don't know that it's in my nature. They're like, I
mean that answer tells you. Yeah, I don't know that
it's in my nature to get to have an answer
you get from somebody who goes to eleven. Have I
ever like for something? I don't think I have, Like

(56:37):
most scales are to ten to eleven would just be superfluous, right,
That's how I feel. And they lost, but I did
try to watch him. I like to relate to humans.
I want to be able to talk, Oh, Dr Manhattan,
I'd like to relate to humans. Hold on, man, this
guy saw all this about AI and algorithms. I don't know.
He's not a true trying to batteries are coming out.

(57:03):
It's like that fluid like Bishop and Alien. This is
this is regular blood. Its irregular blood, regular human blood.
Here fellas I watched what the Rogue One, or I
watched the maybe the Last Jedi Rogue One, I just
had had enough of the fucking Death Star and that

(57:25):
same storyline over and over. I was so sick of
it that they lost me, and I've gracefully bowed out.
I have no contempt necessarily other than uh, it feels
like people are They sailed and kept right on with it.
The Mandalori as if again going to marketing and all
that no one and people were aware of it that boys,
Star Wars will make as much of this ship as

(57:47):
we will buy, and they don't really care about the quality.
They would make ten a year if it would make
a billion dollars each time, and people well, now, yeah,
Bob Iger, the head of Disney, was like, we're slowing
down the Disney ship because they realized that the Star
warship this what I say that Disney, Yeah, the Star
Wars stuff, because they realize people are getting fatigued a
little bit. Not that like the enthusiasm is dying down,

(58:07):
but they saw, like with the Han Solo movie and
other things, are like, I think we're cutting them too
many pieces, Like we can't build that sort of critical
mass to like release every time we put something out,
which I think is a good idea. But the expansion
continues because there's a new game show on Disney Plus
that's coming out. Uh, that's called what the funk is

(58:28):
it called Legends of the Jedi fuck Temper Jedi. No,
it's called the Jedi temp Star Wars Jedi Temple Challenge,
and basically it reads like Legends of the Hidden Temple,
that Nickelodeon show, which I would get to an eleven four. Yeah,
be honest here. Yeah, if they remade Legends of the

(58:49):
Hidden Temple with like modern video game, yeah, whatever it is.
I mean that ship was so bad. Yeah, oh my god, Yeah,
there were some games in there. Well there what was
the one game where that you went in a video
game that wasn't That's the one that I still watch, Oh,
Nick Arcade, that was the one where you in the
whack house of the hidden town. No, that's like the
one that was like a mac and ship and they

(59:10):
were like the blue Barracudas and ship like that. Yeah,
blue Barco. I was thinking, Nick Arcade. I think I
can still watch videos of that because it's captures my childhood.
But this game is, I don't know, essentially the same thing,
setting a galaxy far far away, and we'll test young
contestants abilities in the core Jedi principles of strength, knowledge,
and bravery as they face thrilling and fun obstacles in

(59:32):
an attempt to achieve achieve the rank of Jedi Knight.
Being hosted by what's his name, the dude who played
jar Jar Binks. Yeah, yeah, and uh the one of
the co hosts is a hilarious humanoid droid companion voiced
by Mary Holland, which will be funny, but you think, yeah,

(59:57):
why did they gotta reduce her to a droid? Though?
You know, right is Star Wars, right, But there's an
article is reading about like how like we're constantly making
women like sort of these female energies like into robots,
and like how that's like being like, are we this
the new thing we're doing. It's like produced it to
a robot who's in this situation? Uh old developed? Yeah,
me and the development executives. I thought you're saying it

(01:00:20):
was dudes, like all dudes doing this? Oh no, And
I think just in general, like a lot of this,
Like they they talk about Darcy Cardan's character in a
good place, like we're seeing more and more of like
these sort of serie type characters coming out that are
just sort of like they're they typically played more by
women or there there they come off as feminine. Is
that cross cultural? Like is the serieu or the alexa

(01:00:45):
in other countries like in Japan? Uh woman's voice or
do you think so? Yeah? But I think but now
there's so many ways. You know, you can make Siria
any voice you want now, it's up to you. But
the is the default. Yeah, do you think some of
that come done? No matter how much everyone talked to
you when you were in the womb, your mom talked

(01:01:06):
to you more because the voice you've heard more than mom.
Your mom said nothing to you. She took a valive
silence to make sure I came out as balanced as possible. Yeah,
there's only white noise. No, I don't know, yeah, but
I think obviously there's just there's a connection I think
biologically in that sense. But there's probably something about mothering

(01:01:27):
in there. We just because it has to be soothing.
And it was like, um, yeah that album was released
in n go on if it was some dude, I
was like, right, I don't know what it is. I
think we just a word. We live in a patriarchy,

(01:01:49):
so it would bother you if it was a dude
that it would bother me. I'm Michael Strahan's voice. Oh
that would be kind of that would because that would
be kind of tight, kind of a little bit for
a bit with navigation systems are using like Morgan Freeman.
If you get snoop, you get a few people that
remember one of the times for like a terminator one

(01:02:10):
of them. On ways, it could be Arnold Schwarzenegger, Right,
I did that? Yeah, sure, I was just laughing. He's like,
you're gonna ton right, But it couldn't have didn't have
any of the street names. So I was like in
three dred feet that one another piece of Star Wars ephemera,

(01:02:32):
or maybe not. Maybe it's the best thing Star Wars
has ever produced. A new ride is opening in Galaxy's Edge,
their Disney theme park. Uh. That is the one that
people have been talking about since the idea of a
Star Wars themed part of the park came up. This
is called Rise of the Resistance. It opened to the

(01:02:54):
public yesterday and the details like they they say, it's
basically four are different types of rides fused together. It's
like a roller coaster, but then you are also interacting
with like live actors who are like playing you know,
Stormtroopers and different characters. So it's like got a you know,

(01:03:16):
haunted house Westworld vibe to it. Where bry Well Prospect
or the funk are you doing here? Um? I don't
know that this review kind of spoils some of the details,
but it's like a four act story takes eighteen minutes
to complete, which is pretty I'm a Stormtrooper actor and

(01:03:37):
I have to reboot every eighteen minutes. Ago where are
we headed? Guys? I think left? All right, slugger. I
wonder how long it'll take before you see some of
those like Stormtrooper actors start phoning in their job. They're
like man doing this ship? It would I can't imagine
blaster at QUI right time, and none of you assholes

(01:04:01):
tip funk all of you. I have a name. I'm
just not t K four to three. At one point,
a stormtroopers addressing you, and you look to the right
and there's fifty stormtroopers lined up and like they're actually there,
but I think they're animatronics, but they have like little
movements built on so that it makes you think like, oh,

(01:04:22):
those are actually people standing there. Like it it gives you.
And then they're taking jobs. That's real, that's true. They're
taking her jobs. People start sucking sucking up body. But
that goes back to the selling out conversation, that level
of bottom in selling out or selling herself. Say the

(01:04:47):
AI car, the automated cars have taken over and open
downloaded like fifty million times, so it's roughly fifty million,
say conservingly thirty five million people that are now don't
have that as a means of income. And then they
go home like I get this job as a stormtroop,
I just gotta move my elbow and someone good. That's good.
Good for you, man, you did something right. That's a

(01:05:09):
terrifying thought that could be extremely real. Well, I think
that is somewhat real already. I think, you know, because
the gig economy exists because there aren't necessarily like living
wages for people in other places, and you have to
have multiple income streams. Uh. Yeah, this would have never
happened if the Republic took over here from Star Wars,

(01:05:32):
the Rebel Alliance would not have allowed this to happen.
Do you find it like sort of uncanny or like
a black mirrory when you're at the grocery store and
you see people who are like doing the grocery shopping
for like uh like insta car, but like it's it's
weird because it almost feels like they're like a proxy
doing the like well they like they really are that. Yeah,

(01:05:54):
it's it's kind of I don't know. That feels weird
to me. But that's why I just, you know, that's
why I use instat cart. I don't want to see that.
I don't want exactly, I just don't want to. I
just want to knock at my door and have bags
minimal questions or reminders of like what the rest of
the world is like. Or instat cart make them look happier. Okay,

(01:06:17):
they don't look happy enough. That's why everything surveys everything
these days, because quietly someone could fucking do that, and
then some poor you know, just like what kind of
fucking milk do you want? Beats make milk, all right,
and they go to beat. It also just underlines like
this new cast system we have to where it's like

(01:06:39):
you're like, I'm either the person who on what what
part of the equation am I into? And that's when
you start seeing like, oh, ship, I'm the instat cart orderer. Yeah,
and then you're like and then that's another strata or
another way of of of living. Sustaining yourself is to
do the jobs in the gig economy. That's what atomized.

(01:07:00):
Just grow your own downtime. Uh yeah, I don't know.
I think also I've not really seen I go to
the grocery store pretty late in the day, like at night.
I don't know. I'm a night I'm a night grocer.
It's kind of nice grocer. Gregory Isaac's night nurse. I
was thinking night swimming. I was doing Gregory. And that's

(01:07:22):
the difference between you and me. Man, I'm a Gregory Isaacs.
What crime? We found out everything we need to know
about the three person David It's been a pleasure as
always having you, ma'am oh. Thanks fellas always a joy.
Where can people find you? Follow you David Huntsberger dot com.

(01:07:44):
And then I have a streaming animated comedy special called
One Headed Beast that's on a bunch of different platforms,
the biggest probably being Amazon Prime, and I'm filming a
sequel to it here in Los Angeles January at the
dining the Typewriter. I would love it if you were there.
It's critical to have an audience. That sounds stupid, because

(01:08:06):
I agree, but it's not just because, like well, I
wanted to look full there. There's a premise behind that
that involves uh, different realities, etcetera. And so one of
the realities is like a very full theater. So I
need to get those shots. So I'd love to have
some people there. So if you haven't come to my
monthly variety show I do here in l A called
The Junk Show, come out January. I'd love to have

(01:08:29):
you there. I need some support, So get a group,
come on out. Be like Sarah Zeitgang, Come say hello
from a drink and confuse him. We'll work on a
weird hand signal for people to Oh yeah, up, had
just get d Z tad it on like a tear drop. Right,
you're really for people to permanently z and sign language

(01:08:51):
is just penciling Z. Yeah. So if people did that,
do you see a five? You are no. You wear
a Zoro mask. That gang there you go from the
from the neck up. You gotta be Zoro. So you
gotta wear that flat brim cap, you know, a little mask.
And he didn't even a little thin mustache mustache optional. Okay,

(01:09:12):
And is there a tweet you've been enjoying? Joe Zimmerman
did one that said, remember when Michael Jordan took a
couple of years off to play minor league baseball. I'm
thinking about also doing that. That's great. Miles. Where can
people find you? You can find me follow me on

(01:09:33):
Twitter and Instagram at Miles of Gray. Tweet I like
is from Megan Gaily at Megan Gaily. It says, oh,
I'm the woman singing and farting at CVS. Now. I
don't know why, I don't know what that is, but
just picturing somebody singing and farting at CBS brings joy

(01:09:55):
to my heart. Uh. You can find me on Twitter
at Underscore O'Brien. Uh. Tweet I've been enjoying is of
course Eva Victor's video that she made when my husband
gets me a peloton for Christmas. That is just her,
you know, re recreating that ad, the viral peloton ad,

(01:10:19):
and it's fucking amazing. Everybody should go check it out. Uh.
It ends with her divorcing her husband. Uh. Really well performed.
She's hilarious. You can find us on Twitter at Daily Zeitgeist.
Were at the Daily Zeitgeist on Instagram. We have Facebook
fan page on a website Daily si geist dot com

(01:10:40):
where we post our episodes and our footnotes where we
link off to the information that we talked about in
today's episode, as well as the song we ride out
on miles What's second to be today? Okay, so this
the track we're gonna write out on is from a
group called the Salt s a U L t Uh
and the song is called why Why Lie Lie Lie?

(01:11:01):
That's five times you're asking the question why, and it's
got like a you know, it's sort of like the
internet vibe, you know, said the kid's band. But uh,
for whatever reason, I thought if the Mandalorian was sniffing cocaine.
This is what he would be playing in your ship.
It's got like it's just I don't know, it's like
dystopian needs, Like I don't know. There's a there's a

(01:11:21):
degraded quality for the sound, but it still has that
bump that bob to it. So you know, just just
go mando it up. I think that that one sentence
should be there if the Mandalorian was sniffing cocaine. The
Daily Side guys, just a production of I Heart Radio

(01:11:42):
from more podcasts from my heart Radio as the heart
Radio app, Apple podcast or wherever you listen to your
favorite shows. That is going to do it for this week.
We will be back this afternoon with what's trending at
that moment. But until then, a good day and we'll
be bad come Monday with more podcasts than by. You know,

(01:12:02):
you'll think about it how my body makes you feel,
and we can fall about. But I don't want to
have to steal up. I I understand or not by day?

(01:12:25):
Why why why? Why? Why? Even when or with me
you I like

The Daily Zeitgeist News

Advertise With Us

Follow Us On

Hosts And Creators

Jack O'Brien

Jack O'Brien

Miles Gray

Miles Gray

Show Links

StoreAboutRSSLive Appearances

Popular Podcasts

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Ding dong! Join your culture consultants, Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang, on an unforgettable journey into the beating heart of CULTURE. Alongside sizzling special guests, they GET INTO the hottest pop-culture moments of the day and the formative cultural experiences that turned them into Culturistas. Produced by the Big Money Players Network and iHeartRadio.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.