Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season one, Episode two
of Daily Sights Guys production of My Heart Radio. This
is a podcast where we take a deep dive into
America's share consciousness and say, officially, off the top, fuck
Coke Industries and fuck Fox News. It's Tuesday, sept two
thousand nineteen. My name is Jack O'Brien. A K. What
(00:23):
do I do with my hands? Not a clue? Do
I put them in front or beside me? Lend me
your fears and I'll pass you the bunk. I will
try not to freak out or flee. Oh when I
get high, I can't cope with my hands. That is
courtesy of Wide Awake at three forty five am, and
(00:48):
I'm thrilled to be joined as always by my co host,
Mr Miles Gray. Look at these a kas, It's nickel
back every day. Why did I get so high? Chad KROGERO,
that's my guy. I wanna get a mixing mount hot
(01:09):
takes just under my belt. A hundred weeks of this show,
don't lie? You already know? Oh Man Hannis sold just
thank you so much, Hannah for that. Nickelback is partay gag.
And I was saying we could do nickel back this week.
You know what. Also, let's start also going into linking
part territory, because as if my going off your tasted me,
(01:35):
I just want to shriek. Yeah you know what I mean.
And for the people who don't like the singing, thank
you for enduring it. But this is what the new
show is. Uh. Well, we are thrilled to be joined
in our third seat by the hilarious and talented Kim Winder. Welcome,
I'm back, welcome back, Thank you for inviting me. Hey,
(01:58):
it's a pleasure having it. Um, it's been too long. Yes,
it's been a little bit, but grown as a person
a person, great, fantastic. How's your comic doing, Um, it's going, Yes,
it's going all right. Yeah. I have not improved technically,
but the comedy, as you can see, is landing. I
(02:21):
feel like, you know, and I don't want to take credit,
but since you were on this podcast, I feel like
I've seen your work everywhere. Yes, oh no, thank you
for the huge And if I don't get that same
kind of bump this time this time, well you can
come back and this place down. Hey, what's the name
of your comic? The Red Dot that's what I thought.
(02:41):
Go check it out, guys, where can they find it? Well, oh,
we're flipping this up. Okay, Well, I'm on Instagram and
Twitter the double underscore red dot and then double underscore.
I know somebody, I'm still over here with my amateur
as single underscore. I'm I'm high, been it up. Well,
(03:02):
I think it's good for people to know because I
think last time, after the fact, people are like, wait,
I know, I know that comic and I don't even
realize that's who's here. So that's who's here, that's who's
leaning about down. Yeah, your mom is a huge fan
of the zeitgeist, right, you were saying, enormous fan. Cool. Definitely,
(03:27):
she would have turned it off from the announcement at
the beginning of the show. Yeah, yeah, as with many moms. Well,
we're going to get to know you a little bit
better in a moment, Kim. First, we're going to tell
our listeners a few of the things we're talking about
today on this second episode from our hundred Can you
believe how do we do it? Congratulations? Oh, I don't know.
(03:52):
It doesn't break down perfectly like that, because we've taken
some days off here and there and we do some
bonus episodes with Recap. It's you know, we're not It's
not about the numbers, really, it's about the fans, but
about you guys. Yeah, no, no, I think we feel
worse because we don't even know our own output. Yeah.
(04:12):
I can give you a ballpark. I think maybe around five. Yeah,
it seems like five. Not good at numbers. So we're
going to talk about Seinfeld coming to Netflix. Uh, We'll
talk about Iran UH and Saudi Arabia, the bombing of
the oil fields I did not catch up. We're gonna
(04:39):
talk about that GM strike. We're gonna talk about Kavanaugh's dick. Unfortunately,
there's something very vivid about this particular accusation where I
can just like really picture it. Anyways, we're gonna talk
about that. We're gonna talk about an ex Google employee
who has a really I don't know. It's kind of
a controversial take saying killer robots could be bad. So well,
(05:05):
we'll see, I mean killing what they seem nice to me.
But first, can we like to t ask our guess,
what is something from your search history that's revealing about
who you are? Well? Um, recently I had to look
up womanizer charging issues. And you are both male, so
(05:25):
I don't think you know about women's sex toys as much.
Is that the one with the suction yes, okay, yeah,
I'm glad you're on board. Yeah, the one that sucks
the click, It sucks the click, yes, and then two
the clitteral function as well as they help you when
you're a male who cannot satisfy woman or they're a
(05:46):
way you know. But these sex toys are getting like
so advanced and so um well made, but they still
have like these really crappy chargers where it's two metallic
magnets that connect to another that charges. But I'm not
(06:06):
putting a box inside me. I'm putting a spherical object.
So it's hard to keep the charge. It always falls off. Wait,
so oh it's shaped in a way that isn't even
conducive to properly charge. Yeah, so it slips off or
you have to like set it just away for it
to stick, and then sometimes it doesn't charge fully. And
it's a pretty expensive toy, totally worth it, but at
(06:28):
the same time, when you have this charger, it just
kind of defeats the purpose. And I was trying to
find like yeah, ways to do it. And honestly, all
I found was women just ranting how stupid it is,
Like I paid two hundred bucks and it's not charging
two d bucks. Where's that on this? Like the price
scale of what we're talking is that super high end?
(06:48):
Is that Ferrari or is that like Kia. I'm sure
they go higher, but for me, that was the most
expensive thing I've ever fought. And wait, so when you're
talking about charging, like, in my mind, anything that's charging
typically it's like some kind of cable that you plug
in or whatever. But this is using some kind of
contact charging essentially that it's so's there's nothing it's a
(07:08):
bouncing act. Well, it still has a USB, but at
the end is like this little sphere with the two
magnets and then you have your toy with the two
magnets and you have to position it to where it
will stand because it's too top heavy it will fall over.
I pay too much money man for this? Yeah, sort
out the charging issues. How long does a charge last for?
Like how frequently do you need to charge it? A lot?
(07:32):
A lot because you know other but about like yeah,
two hours? So so I mean it's also not one
of those devices that like, I don't know, you don't
necessarily you're not like constantly thinking about it and like
thinking about it in a practical way. Sometimes it's more
of a need based thing. Yeah, it's not like I'm
(07:54):
charging my phone every night. It's just when I want
to use the toy and it it's not charged. Right. Well,
if anyone from Womanizers, R and D is listening, you
got a big problem here. Yeah, seriously, also changed your name.
Yeah yeah, womanizer? Is that like, is that a crime? Yeah,
(08:16):
trying to charge this person. I was thinking about toxic
toxic man? Um, what is something you think is overrated? Okay,
so you guys talked about this last week, but white
Claw is overrated. I know there's a shortage going on
in places. Yeah, yeah, and um, it's really just because
(08:38):
they can't keep up with the man and the cost
of the tin. Can I know this because my hubs
works in the industry and has a rep Oh and
he the t was spilled to him. Yeah, I see. Also,
it just tastes like watered down cool aid. It's not great.
It's deceptive because the first time I was like, oh,
I mean I think I had two in a row.
(09:00):
For the first my first clock experience, and I was
like the first like, I drank it so quickly I
thought I was drinking Seltzer, and then they had that
alcohol after taste. But then at the end of the day,
I was like, it almost takes the fun out of
drinking alcohol because it seems it's so flavorless. But if
you're just trying to get at it, I think that's
I think that might be the X factor for people
(09:22):
who just want to like, you can't handle the taste
of alcohol. We just want to be drinking constantly. That's
just so many calories because it's still like a hundred calories.
The taste isn't great, and then I don't know, I'm
left dissatisfied. And there's better seltzers out there, hard Seltzers
in my opinion. Yeah, I mean some might even advertise
on the show. I don't even know. If you're out there,
(09:44):
maybe I'll give you the testimonial. It may happen. What
do you how do you ever? Do you have a cocktail? Choice?
A cocktail? Yeah, a n aviation or a black Manhattan.
What's a black Manhattan? Oh, it's whiskey ango, Sarah Bitters
orange I'm always missing one other thing I should know,
because what makes it different? Um As, it's a extra
(10:08):
level of boozy nous. So it's a it's a nice
fall winter cocktail that you have to sip. You can't
just down that, right, right, we get to respect it. Yeah,
there's no wonder you don't work with White Claw because
you're over here being like I like dimensions of flavor,
like you're evoking seasons. I'm sure you think of a
color story about like a cocktail even Oh, I'm totally ruined. Yeah, well,
(10:30):
I mean, but that was what's wrong with that? The
finer things, as we say, exactly now, our white cloths
thing that people order in a bar, will you like
you can you can depend? Yeah, I guess so. I
haven't seen it in a bar, but it's definitely at
the liquor store closes to my house. Because all people
at that liquor store by our tall cans of pre
(10:50):
made michelada's, the clamato and bud light ones. They can't
keep those on the shelf, and blunt wraps, which they
can't keep on the shelf. Thanks to that, I do
see a lot of people buying the micheladas or whatever
those Uh, the pre made Yeah, there's man, there's so
many now, there's like one with Golden Road Brewery, whereas
Mango cart plus the Clomado it's it's like it's I
(11:13):
don't know. I don't know if the wave has quite
reverberated outside of California, but I feel like more and
more people like drinking Michelloda's. I've never tried one. Really,
do you like Bloody Mary's? I do? Will you drink
a savory cocktail? Yes? Then this is like a very
you know, like an easy sipper of basically clomado or
clam juice, tomato juice, Mexican beer, maybe a little tahin
(11:36):
on the rim. Maybe you put some Jugo Maggie in
there to turn it up a little bit. Um. You know,
there's ways to do it. Like for me with cocktails,
it's always I have to have a bartender make it
because the canned seems so unreliable, right right, right right, No,
I much prefer a handmade Mitchellotta versus like the canned ones.
The canned ones out here are just too salty, and
(11:57):
I'm like, my insides have been preserved. But I'm afraid
of either too salty, too sweet, and I'm just gonna
be fucked up the next day. You're not looking for
your insights to be a preserved. That's usually one of
my top one of the top considerations. Also shout out
to the father of Twitter user Kendra who said who
(12:18):
tweeted over the weekend producer around a hosnie. I shared
this with a thread that my dad thought white claws
were just like La croise and has been drinking one
every morning on his drive to work. Left my ass off. Um.
That's the thing though, that I've heard somewhere that in
the South, like that was the thing people would do,
(12:39):
is like to take a shot once in the morning
and once at night just to like get loose. I guess,
well that was the base of basis of the old
fashioned or a morning cocktail, because you were so hungover
from the night before and I have your dead end
coal industry job, so you had your old fashioned, which
(12:59):
is a cheap way to make a cocktail, and then
you would just go about your day. Yeah, good for
your healthy nerves. I've heard what is something you think
is underrated? Well, this other seltzer u underrated. I'm going
to say TikTok. TikTok is underrated. All right, let's get
(13:20):
into TikTok because I don't know what it is that
the kids what's the new vine? Pretty well, yeah, it's
the new kind of vine musically, um it was formerly musically.
And then on Reddit there's a subreddit TikTok cringe, and
it's there. It was a lot of furries, a lot
(13:40):
of lip syncing, just like really dark stuff sometimes, right, yeah,
weird kind of or maybe I'm thinking of a Twitter
that was like there was a Twitter that got shut down.
But behind all that cringe, there's like goal, there's some
really funny ship. At three am, I'm scrolling through laughing
(14:00):
my ass off just because some of them are really
really funny. So I think it's underrated because you hear
so much of the cringe. But if you have the patients,
there's some really funny stuff on there, like intentionally funny,
really funny shit, like really good comedy. Although one thing
I will say is I'm pretty sure they've scrubbed like
(14:22):
all existence of any kind of Hong Kong protests from TikTok,
which has been interesting, But I mean that's that's a
separate issue. Who owns Tiktokcu? Is it just like a
company that sprung up in the Vine Void? Um no,
who owns it? I mean there's something yeah, Vine like
a lot of really talented comics and you know, just
(14:45):
funny people start out on mine. So there's like the
kinds of bits you will see. Um it was owned
Byte Dance, which is a Chinese company. So yeah, um
the like some of the bits you see are so funny,
like because they're playing around with videos that you think
are going to be like like wow, amazing videos. So
like it would be someone making a latte and putting
(15:06):
like a heart shaped filter over the cup and like
pouring foam through like this like filled the shape or whatever,
and like when they reveal it, it's just a blob
underneath it. Or there's another one where this woman was
doing a bit where she was like I had a
water bottle in front of a coffee cup and pours
all the water into the coffee cup and then takes
(15:27):
a coffee cup and dumps it upside down and it's empty.
But then when she stands up, water all over hers
like we're just doing like dumb ship like that too.
I'm like yes, that's what makes it wonderful. And then
you have a function like do it where you can
take someone's either super serious uh TikTok and then just
(15:48):
do a side bite side and people like endlessly mock
or somehow add to it. It's really really funny. So
I mean the functionality is it just is like a
more flexible like almost like Instagram video another video platform,
another video platform with cool functionality like the duet thing
(16:09):
you just mentioned, but it helps make good video content.
Like it's like these other things are sort of like
allow you to put post video, but this has sort
of like been like, look you want to make a video,
Like here's some tools, yeah, tons more tools than I
think Vine ever had. Um. I never was online. I
was okay, but not in like uh maybe posted three
things and they didn't go anywhere, and I was very discouraged.
(16:32):
I have spent a lot of time on YouTube just
watching Thomas Sanders vine the um. He does a great
Stewet Griffin impersonation and then a lot of just optimistic
dark He's funny. He's on Instagram now, not on TikTok.
You had me at Stewey Griffin impression. It's really good.
(16:53):
That's all Jack shares with. What is a myth? What's
something people think it's true you know to be false?
Um okay, So I had like three I was debating
on and I guess I'm just gonna call it now.
I think sending nudes over the Internet is not a
bad thing. Obviously, when you do it, it's gonna have
(17:15):
the potential to get out publicly to the person that
you didn't attend. We live in an age now where
dating is not just in your social circle, not at
your community, could be someone across the country. And if
you don't see each other a lot, you're still allowed
to be intimate and sexual. But if you're going to
send a nude, you might as well just take the precautions.
(17:36):
Keep your face out of it, keep any tattoos out
of it, just be smart, and if you're under eighteen,
don't do it. I feel like euphoria was all built
on people weaponizing the distribution of child porn against each other. Yeah,
like did you watch you for you? Okay? Yeah, they're
like moments where they're like and I'll get you for
(17:56):
distributing child porn, like to like other miners and like wow, okay,
but yeah, I think there is, like a lot of
people because a lot of the backlash tends to come
from older people who would never themselves imagine how that happening.
But it's like also it's like to an older person, like,
have you been so horny that you had to send
your nude body across the internet to get some kind
(18:17):
of feeling back? Right? Yeah? Well, I just I see
a lot of girls, especially just feel like, uh, my
ex boyfriend is threatening to share, which obviously that guy
is a cunt, but she has to apologize for doing
it in the first place, Like, sweetie, you're allowed to
be sexual, Like I'm sorry you were with this jerk,
(18:38):
but you're not wrong and wanting to be sexual with
your partner, So I just stop apologizing send nudes. Just
be over eighteen. Yeah, I feel like it should be
if somebody's threatening to do that, like outing them for
threatening to do that should be the actually damaging part, right,
(18:58):
Aren't there aren't there like laws that are being put
into yeah, because they have to like really articulate a
whole you know, vocabulary around it to be like properly. Yeah,
but yeah, I mean it's people love to moralize about
ship that they never even had the option to make
a decision about So yeah, older people are going to
(19:20):
be like, well I never did that, and it's like,
well yeah, because you would have had to fucking get
a VHS tape and like ship it across the country
a Beta max right back, we used to just do
sketches of our stories. Uh yeah, I mean Titanic, Yeah
that was nude. That was could you imagine how man? Yeah,
(19:42):
or like just classical sculptures, like if those are really
like those are actually nudes art pieces. That's is how
those people got down. I mean when you think about it,
like that's exactly what they were. It's just because they're
so removed from any distinguishing features, like some of them
have the head taken off, like the mile of that's
they're hard all the time. It doesn't matter. Yeah. Yeah,
(20:04):
although even though we're talking about with air clampear, the
look the reasons some of the penises are small because
there's an adrenaline Russian not that's just David or maybe
just David. Yeah, I've heard that. Um back in like
Greek Roman times. I could be off, but having a
smaller penis meant you were smarter, like you were less brutish. Yeah,
I believe that that sounds probably right. Yeah, I mean
(20:26):
I think that's physiologically that's pretty spot on from how
I would see. What was the reason they had It
just means that you're you're more intellectually sound, right, right, right, right? Yeah.
I remember reading a very intellectually sound like something like that,
And they had a quote from a like a Greek
writer that was like his beautiful small pecker that was
(20:51):
like seeing it was like a manly, awesome thing to
have a little little weener. Alright, alright, well we are
off to a fun and great start. We're gonna take
a quick break and we'll be right back. And we're back.
(21:16):
And a Saudi oil refinery got bombed by a drone,
few drones, a few drones, and uh it was apparently
a very successful bombing because it threatens of their oil output. Yeah,
it's huge. I think it's one of their largest refineries,
(21:36):
if not the largest one. Um, but I think you know, again,
it just kicked off the who done it? Where you
have on one side in the US, just out of normal,
like yeah, that's probably ron. Even in Saudi Arabia they're like, well,
we're still like we're still looking at it could be
obviously it's having like the rebels in Yemen are the
ones saying yeah. But it's also just again we've right
(22:02):
when John Bolton leaves, you know, I feel bad he
was this. This would have been right up his alley
to start banging the war drums again, doing six solo
on the war drums um. But you know, I think
as as things developed, will see what happens. I think,
like anything, if the Pentagon has information or intelligence that
actually confirms who it was, they're very quick to try
(22:25):
and shove that in people's faces. Because I remember when
like Nicki Haley back in the day, was like holding
up pieces of like missiles or bombs or or fragments,
was like see it says right here, it's stamped made
in Iran, so it has to be ronest. So I
think we have to go to work like it was
like whoaoa easy easy easy, right. I mean even the
some of the more recent reporting on this is saying
that uh Tehran arms these hoothy rebels, so if it
(22:50):
is them, Iran is like at least partially responsible. But
it just seems like I don't know, is that that's
not really a one to one. Uh well yeah. And also,
I mean, let's be real, like we're we're backing Saudi
Arabia like in the middle of a humanitarian crisis that's
happening in Yemen, and like we're constantly on the wrong
(23:10):
side of sucking everything right now, so uh, this is
just another moment too. Or like even with what Trump
was like tweeting, was essentially kind of like, well, whatever,
we'll see what the Saudi Arabians say and then based
off of that, will attack whoever they we they think.
It is kind of essentially what was sort of the
gist of his tweet I think was racist. But we're
(23:31):
waiting to hear back from the Kingdom as to who
they believe was the cause of this attack and under
what terms we would proceed, which odd because it's like
saying like hi u MBS, like just point we'll shoot,
yeah exactly. And if you can't trust Saudi Arabia, like
who can we trust? Right there? Who can? Maybe John
(23:51):
Bolton changed teams, Oh wow. I mean I think he
still wants to have his like special where he gets
to talk all this ship about Trump. But I don't
know if anyone wants him. Wait, does he have a
special coming up? No, but I mean, like just when
we were talking about how he got fired, how he
was basic, like every all the reporters in d C
were like, he's really piste off and wants to have
(24:12):
his moment to tell everybody how bad he thinks Trump is.
But we've yet to see that happen quite yet. That's
amazing that a guy who has that mustache would be
that upset about how something made him look like that
image conscious Well, yeah, the one interesting thing was searing
Tulsi Gabbard. Yeah, I just came said Trump awaits, and
(24:34):
so Trump was talking about basically what you just said,
that he's waiting for Saudi Arabia has taken. She said,
Trump awaits instructions from his Saudi masters. Having our country
act as Saudi Arabia's bitch is not America first. Uh so,
we we'll see what he does with that one. We will.
But I mean, yeah, again, it's we'll see what kind
(24:57):
of talks they're gonna have. I mean, before it seemed
like he was willing to Trump was willing to have
conditions or no conditions talks with Iran, and other people
have said it numerous times, and now suddenly it's like saying,
like the media is saying that I would meet with
around with no conditions. Oh, that's that's wrong. That's wrong.
That's right. But it's my man, You're gonna have to
(25:18):
meet with these people if you want to avoid some
kind of you know, terrible, terrible, catastrophic armed conflict. Can
meet these hands, hands, meet these tiny hands. Yeah. And
also I do like how spicy the Democratic candidates are getting, Like,
like we were talking about after the debate, Kamala Harris
(25:41):
being just like fuck you man, Like just how she
was talking about Trump, like she was just basically wanted
to get him to respond. And now Tulz gabber like,
I feel like there's a race to try and get
him to engage with one of the Democratic candidates. But
I think he has explicit instructions like don't give to anyone. Yeah,
(26:05):
that's the only time he'll listen to the aids because
it keeps the focus on him and not help any
of them. Yeah, it's free press, can't give it away.
He gave a Christy Tiggen and John Legends, And I
guess if you're not running for president, then maybe he
can see the value in that, right, although it's gonna
take his one more poll and he's gonna like Pocahontas
(26:26):
and yeah, wacky Bernie or whatever the funk he calls him.
I think he does talk shit about Biden because I
think he was he already recognizes that he's like the
presumptive nominee, right, but he slowly started to his gaze
has shifted towards Elizabeth Warren too, But anyway, it all
depends on the day. Alright, let's talk about the GM strike.
(26:49):
It's the biggest strike, biggest US labor stoppage since two
thousand seven, the last time GM struck or striked. I
don't know which one is the past tense. I don't remember.
I was asking people in the office if they remembered
that strike being a huge news story, because this one
feels like it's being covered as a as a huge
(27:12):
news story, which I think it is, And the teacher
strike last year was covered as a big news story.
And I'm just wondering if there is a slightly more
labor friendly kind of underpinning to the mainstream news cycle.
I wonder if because it was sort of fallout from
the two thou eight financial crisis, they were getting bailed
(27:35):
out that they probably didn't want as many stories about
how that Actually it was like corporate welfare, right, because
I feel like a lot of from my drug adult
memory from back then, it would seem like a lot
of it was talking about like how we need to
save these companies, right, we really we don't want to
bail them out, but if we don't, it's really going
to take a hit to like one of the biggest
(27:56):
industries in the country, the automotive sector or whatever. And
it wasn't so much of like, uh, we're just letting
them completely funk up and we're bailing them out. I mean,
I think a lot of progressive news outlets were like that,
but I think the story was more like, guys, we
gotta we gotta save the banks in GM. I think
the way of the collective thinking has shifted, because back
in two thousand seven eight, it's like, let's save the
(28:19):
companies because that has the people. But now we're really
focused on the people instead of the company, which is
I think a great step forward. Yeah, I mean, I
I think probably the media is at least partially taking
its cues from Bernie and Elizabeth Warren like pulling as
strongly as they're pulling despite the fact that they're you know,
(28:42):
not the traditional candidates that the media would cover. So
at least they have to take into account that, you know,
there seems to be more general support among the general
public for these more kind of worker friendly, labor friendly policies.
Well yeah, and I think again it's just a function
of the way the economy is moving and working people
(29:05):
getting sucked over consistently, and now we're slowly, I think,
entering an era where people are beginning to make sense
of like who the perpetrators are, and now it's being
more like, oh right, yeah, unions, yes, good, help each other, work,
live better together. And now we're looking at because I
think a lot of it too is they think they
were promised raises during the financial crisis and they're like, yo,
(29:30):
we still have not fucking like what what happened there?
Like y'all got bailed out and nothing has happened, nothing
is improved for the workers. And the amount that they've
moved on the contract is like they said, something like
two of the contract has been negotiated and only there's
and there's just been a lot of foot dragging. So yeah,
I mean, god, I mean, do what you gotta do. Yeah,
(29:54):
speak out, stand up, you don't. You're working for them,
it's a partnership, not are indebted to them for your jobs. Yeah. Yeah,
But sadly, I think it's still companies all look at
their employees like that, right, it's just sort of like, yes,
how much can I get out of you? Well, it's
time for a fucking change, like go GM workers. I
(30:14):
support you. Yeah, absolutely, um, And I mean, you know,
just back to the more general like zeitgeist vibe of
the country. You know, it's uh, there's a change when
uh CEOs are actually changing to be more like worker
friendly and employee friendly, at least in like what they're saying.
(30:39):
Jamie Diamond and a group of CEOs are basically challenging
other CEOs to change. They're the governing principle of corporate
America to be less profit and share price focused and
more like holistically focused. This is a story that I
was covered in like the New York Times of the
(31:00):
New York or the fact that CEOs are doing this
and I don't necessarily trusted as far as I can spit,
but it definitely at least this change to the zeitgeist
is being observed by them. You know, they're not trying
to say that they're they're not going to like change
(31:21):
the core principle of their operating procedure if unless they're
really think it endangers their future profits to do that. Yeah,
Jamie Diamond as the head of JP Morgan Chase, Right,
he's probably seeing some things in the forecast that might
suggest that you're dealing with a consumer base who, like
(31:42):
you're trying to get to buy more ship but realizing
their wages are stagnant and they're like the ability to
accumulate wealth is not is nearly impossible for younger generations.
So yeah, like at a certain point, I feel like
just in terms of a business, the you need to
begin to pivot. But I don't know if that's again
Jamie Diamond said some other thing earlier this year, but
(32:03):
I was like, really, Jamie Diamond, But again, talk is nice,
but I'm curious to see like what functionally that actually means,
Like are they going to incentivize I don't know what
what what what? What what are we doing? What's what's
really good? Jamie? Yeah, I would see like they're testing it,
like can we get away with just saying good ship
and will they be quiet? I'm sure we'll buy you
(32:25):
two months. Yeah, and then they're slowly going to have
to accept it because suppressing it is not going to
work anymore. It's just we're at a phase where people
are going into adulthood with debt from school. You can't
buy a house, you can't do anything. And that's what
it was, I think is what Jamie Diamond was talking about,
where he was like, they gotta we gotta deal with
their debt or they're not going to be able to
(32:45):
buy stuff that we sell, essentially. But I guess that's
more of just a very logical thing of like, look
you off, if we need, if they need money in
their pockets to give back to us, then we need
to sort of cancel some of this debt out. Yeah.
The New York Times piece that I the CEO is
talking about, was kind of giving a general history about
how this is the most that any CEOs and business
(33:09):
leaders have most attention. They've paid two workers since the seventies,
and like they explained, the way that it got this
way was during the eighties, a bunch of CEOs like
I had always heard the term corporate raiders. But apparently
there were these like hostile takeovers where CEOs would come
in and basically say, this current CEO is like giving
(33:30):
away too many benefits and like we're going to strip
it down to the bare minimum. And so CEOs became
afraid of having like hostile takeovers of their companies. So
like the organizing principle of like CEOs became like to
make it as shrewdly profit driven as possible. And that's
sort of the period we were still in up until
(33:52):
right now. Put the New Yorker piece that it was
a part of. UH started off looking at this like
corporate retreat where like all these people, it's the thing
from the end of Madmen, if you've seen that, where
like everybody's meditating, but they're all like Fortune five D
CEOs and Ship and they're all just like it's like
this blending of like New Age wisdom and ship and
(34:15):
like the corporate predatory predatory capitalism. But yeah, it's this
exclusive place like corporate retreat or something. I think I
can't remember the show tobiases on it. He has a
hook development. I think they had something like that too,
where the dad tried to do a New Age cult
retreat out um on the border of Mexico with his twin,
(34:40):
so kind of yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, that was great.
Um Man, it's funny again. I think, like you're saying, right,
there's this is we're hopefully slowly getting into an era
where people are looking upward class wise as an explanation
for why they have a little rather than down or
(35:02):
to the margins of society. And I think that's why
now I think maybe that's the heat CEOs. It was
like some guy said I was evil just for being
a Billionaire's really weird. I worked hard for this money
and not understanding. It's like I guess numerically, now, more
and more like these people are going to be viewed
(35:22):
as like the real fucking pariahs, or at least to
a group of people who are engaged enough in understanding
like the nuances of our economy and things like that.
But maybe that's the thing. They're also trying to do
a little pr spin because if I was at that level,
you would think, like one of the pitchforks come out right,
and then like did I say enough that like maybe
I can like they'll remember that I was one of
(35:44):
the good billionaires that was like kind of on their side,
but also took everything they had. I don't know for sure.
The the thing that's weird is not that the CEOs
are having a crisis of conscience. That's the thirty years
that preceded it, where ceo s were just raiding and
you know, mistreating their workers to increase their share prices.
(36:09):
But uh, it's still you know, at least progress from within,
or it can look like progress from within. Yeah, well, yeah,
we gotta well maybe selection and election can begin begin
some kind of shift there, right, All right, let's speak
briefly about Justice Kavanaugh. Brett what a guy. So the
(36:33):
New York Times dropped a new report that involved another
incident that had been brought to the attention of the
FBI and kind of totally discarded, Yeah, not publicly known.
I mean so during his confirmation, right, Christine Blasi Ford's
uh testimony was the focal point of sort of like, oh,
this is the example of why Breck Havana should probably
(36:55):
not be anywhere near a court unless he's in the
defended seat. And there I think once that happened, I
remember the weekend before then, there was another allegation that
came out from this one when Deborah Ramirez Um and
that f has like, all right, well, hold on, hold
on a second, fine, we'll look into this for a
couple of days, and then we'll say we're quote unquote
(37:16):
investigating so we can give cover to Jeff Flake and
Susan Collins. Who's gonna get this fucking guy through because
that's really the end game everyone was looking for. Um,
So that was sort of like how things had left
or ended. But now we're finding out that there was
another classmate of Brett Kavanaughs. This guy went through Chris
Coons and the FBI to be like at a party
(37:38):
at Yale, he put his genitals like thrusted his genitals
into the hand of a pasted out well another classmate
of theirs. Miles. Now, what you are missing, what you're
leaving out, is that his friends pushed his genitals into
her hand. Is that who says that? Who's that's that's
the story actually, But that's the thing that can servatives
(38:00):
are like seizing on and they're like, so he was
the victim because they pushed his genitals like he was
this unwilling person. He was just at a party. Yeah,
you just do it, And how dare they grab his
penis and force it into another hand just where they
really so we're I know I was joking early when
(38:23):
we were talking about it about being like, I feel like,
I think they need to find out who those guys were. Yeah,
that's what Ben Shapiro was saying. He was like, I mean,
it's I mean, that's basically sexual assault on on their part. Uh,
it's just a bad faith argument. Do you make Breck
Havanaugh victim? Like just by hearing it back? Do you
know actually Breck Havno has been the victim this whole time.
But I guess that's how the logic works of that party.
(38:45):
I want to know if his dick was hard in
the guy's hand, that's sick, because Justice Havana, he's a good,
stand up standing penis was hard. He enjoyed it, right,
And it's no the I mean this whole thing right,
it's just bringing back to light how fucked up that
whole confirmation process was, because it was clear to fucking
(39:09):
anybody who wasn't so gassed up on GOP propaganda that
Brett Kavanaugh did not even have the fucking temperament to
be a fucking toll booth operator like he was just
he was very upset, very angry. Everyone knew he was
lying under oath. He unequivocally said, I have never blacked
out like I don't blackout ever he was Mr Blackout
(39:30):
during high school and college. Right, Everyone are like, no,
that's not changed the definition of a devil's triangle. That's
how the drinking game, where do you two guys have
sex with a woman anyway and again? And so now
I think because of that. Oh, another thing is I
(39:50):
think the d o J gave like some just like
one of the highest recognition like awards to the team
of lawyers who got his confirmation through done on shady
and if you look at to like how the FBI
did pretty much nothing they said on their hands. Now,
you know a lot of Dems and especially candidates, are like,
we need to impeach Justice Kavanaugh. We need to have
(40:13):
an investigation into what the funk that investigation was, because
it was not an investigation. Um, and it's kind of
bringing this whole thing back. But I think when you
look at just the mechanics of it, I know we
there are a lot of people calling for his impeachment.
I think he absolutely needs to be removed from being
a Supreme Court justice or probably just judge in general. Um.
(40:33):
But it's the same thing as with the president, right,
like the impeachment for removing a Supreme Court justices, it'll
go to the House. If it gets out to the House,
then it's off to the Senate for the trial, and
then they need a two thirds majority to remove him.
But that the numbers aren't there for something like that. Yeah,
he's not going anywhere. Isn't Mrs Ford still in hiding
(40:53):
because of death threats? Yeah? I think I don't think
things have improved much out of all of that. That
just enrages me even more. Just yeah, she's like watching
like old history where like the bad guys win and
you're just like, god, that must have been so brutal,
Like it's happening in front of us, like now, like
(41:14):
it's just beyond words for me that this woman obviously
put herself on the line in front of the entire
country like detailing her sexual assault, and yet the bad
guy wins and she isn't hiding because people want to
murder her for speaking. What the fuck is this country
if you can't talk? Like Number one Amendment I just
(41:36):
I get I'm so mad about that. No, I mean,
and again I think too, and the people who are
rawing and from the sidelines are the people who are
like just want the kind of Supreme Court justice that
will slowly dismantle the federal government essentially or like take
away a lot of programs that support people because you know,
you have all your fucking your coke brother type people
like you know, working to get these kinds of Supreme
(41:59):
Court justice. This is in to help these major decisions
that fundamentally changed the laws in this country to go
in their favor. Um. And again, I mean, look, if
he can help motivate people to vote for a Democrat,
like you can talk about this, but I think it's
hard to it's hard to figure out how this could
possibly happen because historically it's just been very, very difficult.
(42:20):
And I don't I'm not sure if it has, like
a Supreme Court justice has been removed maybe in like
the eighteen hundreds or something. Yeah, they tried to impeach
a Supreme Court justice because he was like blatantly like
weighing in on partisan stuff. But even then, like it
ended up not happening. I think Vox was writing that
(42:42):
you could remove a judge from office office without resorting
to impeachment or driving them out to the woods and
yelling at them to go home, like in Harry and
Henderson's Uh, Like there's apparently it says that you a
judge shall hold their office is during good behavior. And
they think that the term good behavior would have been
(43:04):
understood to have legal implications at the time Congress couldn't
peach over treason, bribery or other high crimes and misdemeanors. Uh.
But also like good behavior right, meaning that there are
many other things because they're pointing to like other judges
who have been stripped of their bench duties from like
(43:25):
taking bribes or other things like that. Um. But what's
funny is like that that paper about good behavior was
written by these two law professors who you're like, oh,
hell yeah, man, he's like progressive like legal scholars looking
into it. One of them was a law clerk to
Clarence Thomas and the other was just a frequent contributor
like libertarian conservative think tank like op ed writers. So
(43:48):
it's funny because even though you think this was like
laying the groundwork for a liberal victory like this was
just another this was from the wreck coming from the
right of even examining the constitution understanding like, oh, is
that is that possible? Well, because the right is the insurgency,
like they've had an insurgent mentality because they have, you know,
a far smaller base of voters, so there they have
(44:12):
to use just horrible trickery and you know, just conniving
ship like this. And it's good that more liberal institutions
are even like thinking about stuff like this, about using
things like this. But the Democratic Party is legs way
behind on this ship, like they won't even impeach the
president when he committed high crimes and felonies in a
(44:36):
report his own executive branch order, Like so are they
going to use this very uh kind of circuitous route
to try and get Kavanaugh out of office? I doubt it.
I don't know why the Democrats are so hesitant on
making change in progression because last time, I would really say,
(44:57):
the sixties with the civil rights, like we to through
ship out the window and just did it and it's
for the better. Why are we so complacent on holding it?
How it is, We're not going to get anywhere, especially
when the right wants to play dirty. Yeah, well, I
think you have less and less people who are you know,
I mean, like they say politics, politics, but there I
(45:19):
think there are even less people who are in office
now who actually care fundamentally about like the well being
of the country or the democracy or anything. It's like
it's a job. I happen to be, like a really
savvy business person in my part of the specific state.
Other people said like, I could probably do this politics thing,
I will, you know, Like, so there's I don't know.
I mean, it's just it's really difficult to watch, like
(45:41):
when you see all of these things happening just in
broad daylight. But uh, but one thing we've seen is, uh,
many of the leadership or the leaders on the democratic
sides of things just fear a boat that is rocked
too hard is going to throw everybody off. Because they're not.
I guess there's no belief that some like real meaningful
(46:02):
change is actually very could energize many people rather than
like the well funded minority groups, uh, like our minority
of wealthy people or other stakeholders who just want to
you know, fund messages that are counter to that to
kind of obscure the narrative. Right, all right, we're gonna
take another quick break and we'll be back. And we're back,
(46:33):
and we've talked about how Netflix lost Friends or is
going to lose Friends and the Office fairly soon. Um
really really so they needed to win, they needed they
needed something. Yeah. Yeah, the answer has come in the
form of Seinfeld. Uh in a way. I think how
(46:54):
no one's cheered right after that shows that Yeah, okay,
that makes sense. I mean, it's a good show people
like watching. I remember when it first went to Hulu
that was a big deal. But then I'm not sure
what those numbers are. When you think about the actual
the amount of like man hours people are spending watching
Friends in the Office on Netflix, ya gonna make up
(47:16):
for it. That seems like a big weight because when
it first went to Hulu, Hulu was the kind of
crap like no one really cared for. It was a hook. Yeah,
now it's going to Netflix, the weights are changing. The
one thing that I was impressed with is that this
will be the first time that all hundred eighty episodes
(47:36):
will be on one service globally and in four k Now,
I don't know, if I'm not sure, I need to
see Seinfeld in four K got see it and it's
full glory, Yeah, beautiful. Yeah. I feel like sometimes it's
like when things are upres like that, I'm a little
bit like, this doesn't have to be like that. Alway
we could have gone, we could have stopped it at yeah,
(47:58):
you know, don't need to go that far. But there
was It's odd like even the there wasn't much of
a bidding war, like the way Sony who was pitching
it to other streamers, they were kind of just sort
of like, we don't have an asking price, but we
just want something like that shows that you treat it
in like or view it similarly to a friends or
(48:19):
the office in terms of their bids. So I guess
it's like a hundred thirty a year three millionaire. I
think with streaming services it's definitely younger audiences because we're
much more quick to cut the cable. Like I don't
have cable. I have Hulu and Netflix and YouTube, but
(48:39):
well the premium for those commercials just some cool stuff
on that YouTube, dog videos, favorite channels. Yeah, so with
Office and friends like those get quoted all day long.
Still where Seinfeld, I've like I told you guys I've
never really watched full episode. Yeah, were you a fan
(49:02):
of Friends and The Office before they became like streaming phenomenon. Definitely,
Friends the Office is when it was on, But I
think that's just like my personal schedule. Yeah, and I
can turn that on and like still kind of laugh
with it and do something else. I feel like I've
watched The Office too much. Where I can, I'll basically
(49:25):
say the words along with the episode, and I'm no
longer being entertained. I'm doing some kind of like memory
recall exercise of a show that I like, which I've
had to start distancing myself, wean myself off The Office.
In the brief DVD period, like I didn't give a
shit about like Friends DVDs, but I did like by
Seinfeld DVDs, like because yeah, see that was the thing.
(49:47):
I think there was this attitude maybe for us elderly
millennials too, that like Seinfeld felt like an important thing
in the nineties. So like when the whole DVD thing
was happening, I felt like a lot of the DVDs
I bought work Again, it wasn't about like watching them,
it was about manifesting your tastes on a shelf and
they're like, and that is who I am. Okay, City
(50:10):
of God, Uh, The Office season four, The Professional Uh,
and The Rock Sorry I'm catching, but you know that
was kind of the I think the attitude and now
that like we're in the post DVD world that things
which felt is definitely like quotable and they're like funny
like concepts in the show that I could see like
(50:32):
being memorable and stuff like that. I do think there's
like something to the fact that like Jerry and George
are like having sex all the time and they're like
these ugly middle Yeah. I feel like that might jump
(50:54):
out to people, as to young people as being like
really like that's well, yeah, George, especially at times you
couldn't believe like how what those moments are like where
he was being charming. But you know, I guess watching
Curb Your Enthusiasm, I get Larry David's charm and knowing
that that's just supposed to be Larry David, right, like
(51:14):
not actually seeing full episodes are really knowing much of it.
There's still stuff I know, like the Soup Nazi and
then I think there was an episode where what's her
name Diane in the show um Eline see yeah is
basically cheers to younger millennials. It might as well be.
But she wanted to start a store where it was
(51:36):
just selling muffin tops and like twelve year old meat
like mine fucking blans. Yeah, of course no one needs
the bottoms, right, Oh are you that kind of person
like you resonate where you're like, of course, no one
would dare to eat the bottom part. I'd rather not saying. Okay,
that's and that's your information to keep. But that's funny.
(51:59):
You were saying that, like you would watch The Simpsons
and then Seinfeld would come on and that was your
queue to leave, like stop watching at the end of
after school. Yeah, like that was so Seinfeld was essentially
your Mash. Like that's what Mash was to me. I
was a kid. You don't love Mash. That's so funny
that you like, you're like, I've never seen this thing, Like,
(52:21):
but you don't like Mash Mash Like that ship was
serious and funny and I'd totally hackye Okay, how did
you get in? He's around? Mr Hawkeye Hawkeye? Um, My
dad was in the military and my mom thought cutting
(52:42):
cable in the summer would make us go outside. I
watched Bonanza, I watched Mash. I've watched all the oldies. Yeah,
that that shows great. It's funny because in my mind
I would be dozing off to the theme song of
Mash because what l A. It came on after the
ten o'clock news a lot of times on Fox eleven. Okay,
(53:03):
shout out to John beard Um and also frequently in
Arrested Development. I think I sucked up on Arrested Development.
Tobias is the never nude, right, okay, because you're talking
about Buster. Yeah, okay. The theme song to Mash is
suicide is painless as a dark man. I think you
(53:27):
can actually go on a hike here in l A.
And they still have like some of the prop stuff up. Yeah,
me and my roommate keep talking about doing it, but
it's like pretty far north towards like Malibu and everything, right,
but they still have like where the helicopter takes off
in the very last episode, And I really want to
(53:47):
do it, just because that out of anything seems really
cool to me. So what New Zealand is too? Lord
of the Rings fans the Santa Monica Mountains. Yes, as
long as it's not on fire. I'm totally yeah, it's season.
The season is upon us. So that is funny that
that was shot in the Santa Monica Mountains because it
was supposed to be about Vietnam, but it was actually
(54:08):
set during the Korean War because you couldn't say something
about Vietnam. But it definitely looks like neither of those
countries really. It's like dry shrubbery and like totally southern California.
Uh well, Ship, Well we'll see. You think it'll be
a hit. You think it'll be a office level hit.
(54:30):
I don't think, because Seinfeld's time has come and gone
in a way, and I don't think you're gonna there's
gonna be a revival, right, you know what I mean?
I think the revival Seinfeld had was on DVD. Like
it went off the air, and then people like sat
on a little bit. The DVDs came up there like, oh, Ship,
I can get the fucking puffy shirt deluxe, a dish
of box set or whatever, and then it died off
(54:52):
and it came back on Hulu. Some people were like cool,
but then it's these other shows. I don't know. I mean,
we'll see what the watch times. I'm sure Netflix will
either share or not share how intense to watch. Just
talking more about like the meming and like the fact
that The Office became like the comedy show that was
like part of right. Well, I guess the difference is
(55:13):
like with The Office especially, like a lot of people
who make content or even younger people who are from
the meme era, they were like coming they were watching
The Office, so that's already sort of hardwired into their
sort of sensibility that that happened, Like where Seinfeld like,
you probably have to be in your thirties forties to
be like yo focus. I felt heavy And then at
(55:35):
that point, are there enough people I don't know? Yeah,
well see, maybe it'll be like the gen z the
Office were like, even younger people will be super into it.
Hell yeah, my kids will be Uh well, I think
the two ladies from the Office, Jenna Fisher and the
Lady Angel. Yeah, they just started podcast, so people are
(55:58):
still really into this ship. Yeah, absolutely, I don't. Well,
I guess Jerry Steinfeld's doing comic and cars getting coffee.
But that's why a lot of people thought that. One
of the reasons why I went to Netflix too, because
he was already doing business with them. Yeah, that was
a hundred million dollar deal. She has not Wait, Comedians
and cars time, Yes, coffee, Sorry the episode I've seen
(56:26):
that show. All right, let's talk about Google and a
former Google employee named Laura Nolan, who was an engineer
who worked on Project Maven. Yeah, just their joint venture
with a Pentagon. Basically, she's saying autonomous weapons are going
(56:48):
to could bring about terrible disastrous consequences unintended. Yeah. Yeah,
she was like briefing fucking u n diplomats that diplomats
in like Geneva, New York, kind of saying because uh,
you know, Project Maven was a thing like over three
thousand Google employees signed ont to be like, yo, knock
this fucking ship off. We want nothing to do like
(57:09):
the work we're doing on like you know, machine learning
to be helping killing robots identify humans better. Like that's
so they let that. They let that deal you know,
collapse or whatever. They didn't renew it or whatever, so
they're no longer involved. But she's been really out there
campaigning by saying like this is going like just from
our standpoint, there's a lot of things that could go
(57:30):
wrong when you have a ton of you know, uh,
basically killer robots on autopilots just flying around, right, that's terrifying.
This is actually the first that I'm hearing of it,
and in my mind, I just keep thinking back, like
the first law of robotics was do no harm to humans?
Or that computer robotics. Yeah, I think it was the robotics. Yeah, um,
(57:52):
but that's terrifying. I mean, I wonder what Isaac Asimov
would say if he did see this. He'd be like,
what the funk are you? What the fuck are you
guys doing? Right, Like, I don't think I think his
vision of the future was like, well, they wouldn't be
so stupid as to do something like this, right, like
just create hunter killer drones. Because the things she's also
(58:12):
pointing out, She's like, look, yes, obviously, like the target
recognition thing is going to get more and more sophisticated
by discerning between like someone may be holding a gun
or versus uh, you know, a box or an inanimate object.
But context is still a huge piece that's missing from
these things. So she she cites an example to this quote,
(58:33):
you could have a scenario where autonomous weapons that have
been sent out to do a job confront unexpected radar
signals in an area they are searching. There could be
weather that was not factored into its software. They come
across a group of armed men who appear to be
insurgent enemies, but are in fact out with guns hunting
for food. The machine doesn't have the discernment or common
sense that the human touch has because right now drones
(58:54):
are operated by crews like human beings, and you know
that are using some of this AI to how helpe them,
but it's not the decision making still falling to like
a human operator. And they're saying that the other scary
thing about these autonomous war systems is that you can
only really test them by deploying them in the in
a real combat zone. And she speculates, quote maybe that's
happening with the Russians at present in Syria. Who knows
(59:15):
it's going to get to be like where Amazon delivers
your package VI a drone and then makes a hit
on its way back right just to get the most
out of YEA, really utilize the technology for the benefit
of here's a new docking station for your womanizer. I
also have to go put down an uprising in a city. Uh,
and when you look also though, at the other weapons
(59:38):
that are already being developed by like just the US,
Russia there already on this wave like into it. There's
a the and tow Anaconda gunboat, which is the U. S.
Navy's completely autonomous warcraft equipped with artificial intelligence capability. What
basically is going to do quote loiter in an area
for long periods of time without human intervention. So it's
(59:59):
like a sentry boat that was just covering in the air.
No no, no, no, no no, it's a gun boat. It's
a boat, but like it's just sort of being like
it's on autopilot. It'll blast out whatever then off in
the distance, just waiting for waiting for you to funk up.
Russia has Russia has a tank that is unmanned and autonomous. Um,
there's another one. The reason that she speculated that maybe
(01:00:23):
Russia is already deploying these in Syria is that at
the U n they opposed any treaty, let alone ban
on these types of weapons. So right, yeah, they're probably
already out there killing people with these. Yeah, we're also God,
how many fucking issistential threats are do we have to
fucking face? Right, it's like fucking global warming. Now we're
like the war toys might fucking kill us all too.
(01:00:47):
At the same time, I feel like there were just
fucking white class shortages that We're fine. I'm personally already
terrified of my room, but like that ship sucks up
shoelaces left and right. I just I can't like with
you with your shoes, like you have your shoelace on
tied and you're like, oh, yeah, it just gets it
(01:01:07):
and goes on its way. Now just put a gun
on it, you know. Yeah, yes, you have. My three
year old both can't stand the room. But there's something
that's inherently, inherently terrifying about it that wait for real,
yeah yeah, he doesn't trust it, can't trust yeah. Uh.
And anytime it's on, he doesn't want to be around.
(01:01:28):
And when I'm telling him, like, oh, you don't have
to worry, it's fine, like it's my friend, I only
half believe it. Like maybe like I just have too
many Like my like sense of what's normal is so
calcified that I'm not terrified of this and I should be.
Like this robot that roams my house, it knows the
(01:01:50):
dimensions of your house. No I cannot be trusted. And
then is that sent to some kind of skynet? I
don't know. Actually I becauld you imagine, because then you'd
essentially have mapped out the interiors of people's homes. Yeah,
for there should already be public record with blueprints. Right,
Oh god, you're right? When is it stopped? Can? It's
(01:02:15):
been a pleasure having you on the dailies, like, very fun.
Thank you? Where can people find you? Follow you? Let's
remind them support you? Um well, to restate, I'm on
Instagram and Twitter, the double underscore red Dot, and recently
I made the very bold and courageous step to say
I want to try to do my comic full time.
(01:02:36):
So yeah, so push your boat out there. Yeah, my
Atomic Warfare Womanizer boats. Yeah. So if you want to
support that project, um, follow me on Patreon. I draw
my nudes there. So there is benefits and I think
(01:02:59):
also it's you just if you've never read her comic,
you're gonna love it. Yes, it's amazing right now, it's poignant.
It's oftentimes nudges up against the things we talked about.
I remember I think somebody sent me the pineapple pizza
topping one when we had a furious debate about pineapple pizza.
Not to mention, I see your work on redd it
(01:03:19):
a lot too, um and the good parts. You're just
making me feel a little happy. Thank you. We should.
I mean, I feel like, at least to people who
might be like Internet humor literate, they've probably might even
without knowing maybe the title of your work. Have I
would wager they've They're familiar with your work. That's the
coolest ship since I've started it, because I follow tons
of online artists already, but getting to interact with them
(01:03:43):
and then say like, oh, I saw this comic of
yours I love and like, oh my god, I've loved
you since tenth grade, right right, right, Yeah, that's been
the really neat part. Well and again please I yeah,
I think it's always important to, you know, support artists
out there, and I think it's great that you want to,
you know, take it to the next level. Yeah, main street,
and then we'll be like asking you for you know,
(01:04:03):
like to draw us. Although that's how it all started.
Remember when with nipples high asked nipples shipples it's high art, yes, yes,
high art, high nipples. Is there a tweet or other
act of social media you've been enjoying. Yes, I actually
have a tweet from a fellow comic artist on Twitter
(01:04:27):
that had me in stitches. Um, it's from at Tiny
Snick Comics and it goes, warn, I touched the damn bill.
Or excuse me, let me start this over Bernie, I
wrote the damn bill. Pete, I smelled the damn bill. Booker,
I saw the damn bill. Warren, I touched the damn bill. Biden,
(01:04:48):
I played my record player to the damn bill from Beato,
I wrote the bill. And then there's more, But it's
just on point from last week's debate. Put your record
players on. So your baby's here words? What was the
question about Miles? People find you? You can find me
(01:05:11):
on Twitter and Instagram at Miles of Gray. Um. There's
a few tweets that I like. One is from Molly
Lambert who was just retweeting another tweet. Um, she just said,
this is the funniest thing to me. And it's from
another person who tweeted from tash Do dick Um in
memoriam Joe Kerry's Immaculate Hair. Now, Joe Kirey is the
dude who plays Steve on Stranger things, and if you remember,
(01:05:35):
he has a head of hair on him. But this,
this evolution of hair is a fucking crime. Wait what
is it from Stranger Things? Oh? My bad? Oh ship
it blew it up? Yeah, so there's original And then
now he's rocking like a fucking weird nol Gallagher bowl cut.
(01:05:57):
Did he have a bad breakup? Don't know? Man, that
hair was for a man who is follically challenged. Bro,
I should fight. I should suck you up, man, like
I know the pain because I just chopped six inches
of hair off because it's so much to maintain and
it felt heavy. But at least I think my hair
looks good. That just b No, this is a terrible decision,
(01:06:21):
terrible problem. That's a fucking I mean, we're gonna talk
about crimes against you man. One right there. Another one
is from Ivo driscoll at no money, no honey would
use so not h o or m o um. It
says a lunchable is a charcouterie. If you're not a
fucking classist. Uh. Daniel kibble Smith tweeted, you're killing me, smalls,
(01:06:46):
please small as I'm your friend. You're not a murder
Oh god, smalls. Oh God small ast, I don't want
to die. Uh. You find me on Twitter at Jack
Underscore O'Brien. You can find us on Twitter at Daily's Eye. Guys,
We're at the Daily Zetegeist on Instagram. We have a
Facebook fan page and a website Daily zis dot com
where we post our episodes and our footnovers where we
(01:07:09):
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 going to be there Day? This is
a track from I don't know. I'm not FAMILIARUS artists.
I was just hearing it and then I got nostalgia
because it kind of reminded me like drum and bass jungle,
but like with kind of trappy music and very nineties
(01:07:30):
E d M vocalist on it. Uh. And this is
from Angelica Best and it's called Sales to the Sun.
Um And yeah, I just I don't know got me
in no stalsia. It made me feel like I was
listening to like electronic music from like the mid nineties
but updated so early nineties. Rather, I want to misspeak
for any E d M historians out there. Well, The
(01:07:52):
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