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December 7, 2018 57 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to Season sixty, Episode five
of Daily zeitgeis Yeah, the podcast where we take a
deep dive into America's share consciousness using the headlines, box
office reports, TV ratings, what's trending on googs and social made.
It's Friday, December seven, two thousand eighteen. My name is
Jack O'Brien, ak Zyke, Gang Riot Riot. Smash the Patriarchue

(00:24):
with backs Zyke gang Riot Riot, Get the Truth with
Miles and Jack Oh courtesy of Serious Black on Twitter,
and I'm thrilled to be joined as always by my
co host, Mr Miles Gray. Smoke Weed, Miles Gray. All right,
and that's that. That was a short but steeling and

(00:46):
it worked well in Chicago. So you know what, I
brought it back Ak brought to you by I think
a lot of people. But anyway, Yeah, I smoke every day.
It's recycled ship. Yeah. Well, you know, sometimes I just
gotta do some reboots. Anything I learned from Hollywood. It's
how what they call him rebooted that a gay. Well,
we're thrilled to be bringing back for I think the
second time, and he was one of our earliest guests

(01:07):
in this very studio, Mr Kyle, or keep for having
me again. I yeah, A lot of people I remember
when you came on there, like bringing him back, and
well I have a lot of al accounts, like Kevin Durant.
So it was just mostly a lot of expect from myself.
I wonder, Kyle, how you been. I'm pretty good here?
Uh you know, pretty good? Has it been a year?

(01:28):
It maybe has? No, I think you're in April, in
April or whatever. I don't know how years. Work time
is no longer real? Thank you? So I don't know
if they ever technically was, but it hasn't been real
since I read an article about it not right real?
So how can I be late to work? I feel
like that's going viral right now, the idea that time
isn't real. And then Yoko on No tweeted about it.

(01:49):
Oh yeah, and Deepak Chopra we heard him say earlier
when we were a reading of his chatting with Deepak
and made construct for time not being real. It's sure
is exhausting to hear people talk to you out time long.
If I can I check my watch during this? Why
because it's real? Because it isn't all right, We're gonna
kind of watch you got on there. Oh, this is

(02:10):
I this is a bolva. And what happened was my
father in Missouri likes to send me watches he gets
at a state sales very cheap, and he's like, you
can do whatever with it. And this one wasn't working.
And I took the back off yesterday. Jimi, yesterday. I
took the back off of this watch yesterday, and I
cleaned the spring and then I took the spring out
and cleaned under it, brought it back and now it works.
What are you like, No, this is the first time

(02:32):
I ever had to Google hot open it, So you
just did some old I was like, worst case scenario,
it doesn't work, still right, and but now it works.
It has to. I had to wind it for so
long to change the day because it was on the
ninth and I had to go all the way around. Yeah.
Do you have good fine motor skills, like you're able
to make a good I do. I used to know.

(02:54):
I don't have the value of life that they might have. Well,
I think maybe a surgeon might have to have have
disregard for life. Yeah, they don't get too much pressure
on the line. You too much pressure, but no, I
had to fix the computers at the Apple store and
good with tiny screens, no wonder. Okay, I wouldn't sure
if you had like a methoddiction, You're like, you'd like
to bust it open and see how it works. People
like break it open and then replace the springs with

(03:16):
like celery, Now it really doesn't work. Do you know
how old that watch? Again? I'm sorry, I do know.
It's from nineteen sixty seven. Okay, I looked it up
because it says it says the band is definitely different
and looks like it has a little when you're saying yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
you could tell by the tread on the tires, And
then I just googled a little words on there and

(03:36):
saw the watch. Well, guys, if you need a watch repairment, yeah,
I can definitely refer you to help stand up comic
watch repairment. It's in the other order. If you're talking
about recent successes, just do a whole set on watching there.
All right, man, we're gonna get to know you a
little bit better in a moment, But first we're gonna

(03:56):
tell our listeners what we're gonna be talking about today.
We're gonna talk about Trump blaming Mueller for his low
approval ratings. So it turns out he was aware of
his low approval ratings all this time. He still gave
himself an A plus plus plus. Uh. We're gonna talk
about his rumored pick for his new attorney general, which

(04:17):
is probably the most shocking pick he could have had,
because it's like straight down the middle. It's not Judge
Judy or anyone judge to come on, don't bring Judge
Judy into this. Right, We're gonna talk about American individualism. Uh.
And uh, just a weird theory that we were talking
about earlier and Tucker Carlson all of that and the

(04:39):
Golden Globe nominees on Today's Daily Zach Kyle, First, what
is something from your search history that's revealing about who
you are? Um? So this is the what I searched yesterday?
Is uh? Is Mr Robot over slash coming back? There
you go, and what do you find? I guess it's over?
Oh it's over. M he's what was it's coming? No one,

(05:01):
there's no announced anything. I don't know. I don't know.
I didn't find enough. I wasn't sure if I had
seen it. I think I watched all of it, or
maybe I'm on season one. I'm not sure. I don't know.
I don't know what's happening in it. And I tried
to find out where I had left off, and there's
no way to differentiate between any of the episodes. But
I had the hardest time. I realized I had just
finished the second season like last year or something, and

(05:23):
before when we were flying back from Chicago, I was
download and stuff like, oh right, the new Mr Robot,
and I was having so much trouble, remember, like I
really don't know where I'm at in this, like f
Society is it? Yeah, I'm here. I watched Homecoming and
then saw that the guy who made Homecoming had directed
all over Yeah, yeah, it was the same. And then

(05:44):
I just couldn't really figure out where I had left
off with Mr Robot. And then I don't still not
sure if it's over forever or not. And how many
seasons of Mr Robot have there been? Maybe four? And
was the third one good? I haven't seen it yet. Okay,
I don't know. I can't even I couldn't even begin
to tell you where I quit watching Homecoming? Is getting

(06:05):
raves to call them in this town Raves and uh
brought their glow sticks out Golden Globe Conversation. Everyone in
the show is named Molly. Right right, there you go.
What is something that you think is overrated? Overrated? I
so I had to write Aline down because I'm not
good at I don't know, I think, and this is

(06:27):
a recent turn for me. I think it is overrated
to hate on astrology. I don't know if I believe
in astrology. I don't think I do, but I think
it's kind of exhaust It's just like, what do you
just yeah, sure, you don't leave it, just leave it alone.
And also I wear the same shirt every week to
watch the Chiefs play football, so I can't really be like, oh,

(06:49):
you believe the stars influence you. No, No, my shirt
influences young men. And every time I wash it, the
football will move in another DI got mad for not
wearing the shirt in the Chiefs law. That was my
first thought with the Chiefs. I wore the wrong shirt,
which isn't But then I also will be like, oh,
you can't believe in astrology. You don't control that, right,
But also I can I control sports? Well, what's your sign?

(07:10):
I am a Gemini? You're a Gemini. People like to
make that sound. If you have any sign, people say that, yeah, exactly.
Oh you were born in the same sort of Gregorian Well,
I want to tell you, Susan Miller has two big
surprises for you, and she's bursting to tell you about both.
You can tell you about the first surprise, but the
second one you have to wait another ten days. I
don't even know if that's a hook to start paying

(07:32):
I'm having fun using captivated photos of my people. Anyway,
I guess it just says you will be This will
be an extraordinary month for you, Kyle, perhaps the most
memorable of the year. Jupiter has now set up shop
in your seventh house of marriage and partnership, making Gemini
the sign most likely to marry in twenty nineteen or
to gain from business based collaborations in the coming year.
Like that, Yeah, yeah, I like it. You will either
get married or yeah. Yeah, yeah. It's kind of the

(07:54):
way you have to make a decision to be Yeah. Basically,
the point though about sports is I absolutely am a
skeptic when it comes to astrology and most religious things.
But the second I start watching sports that I care about,
I'm like, okay, So when I'm not watching, they do better,

(08:15):
so I can't watch, even though that defeats the whole
purpose of being a fan of sports. Superstition is a
hybrid of religion and astrology. It's just like that on
a very like focused down level. It's like, yeah, you
want to know why religion exists. I'm surprised nobody has
exploited that mental weakness yet, right, like to be like
the scientologist of like sports fans, you've devised like us.

(08:38):
Whatever Philip Rivers does after he retires will be something
along those lines. He already has a big enough family
to all sign in. Right. But I mean, the reason
that I think it comes up in sports so much,
and the reason that it hasn't been exploited is because
it can't really be exploited. It's you literally never know
what's going to happen next. It can't be really controlled.
You mean, like life, well, but specifically sports is like

(09:02):
a very hyper focus. I agree with you, but yes,
but yes, but no, uh no, that was that was
good but wrong. Yeah, it was a good attempt. What
is something you think is underrated? Underrated? Underrated? Uh? Okay,
this one is very dumb. I think it's underrated to

(09:23):
have a cool name for your fans. Okay. I was
doing some shows in Denver a couple of weeks ago
and there was a comedian there kept calling himself a deadhead.
He's the grateful dead That's so cool. Yeah, I think
bands you should have to make your band name to
where your fans can have a cool name if they
like you. Yeah, because my this is my initial reaction

(09:44):
was like he was like I was talking to like,
none of the bands I like, all like sad indie
bands have cool fan names, and so I was like,
I like the national It's like, well, you can't have
a you can't think I'm a nationalist. That's my fan name.
It's going to get the wrong followers. Um, so I
need like Deadheads is such a cool name, and they're
actually an equivalent nash Er that sounds like you're into

(10:06):
uh yeah, like up and coming country music. Yeah yeah potatoes.
No it sucks right, Nash Bridges, someone who still follows
I haven't got the last VHS yet, but once I
get it, yeah yeah, once you get that thing working,
But did you put it back together at your VCR
just forgot that word. I probably I tinkered a VCR

(10:28):
to work once in college, just I wanted to watch
some you know, be cool and watch a movie on
a VCR is not worth it. I could have downloaded
why better quality resolution exactly one twenty. Yeah, a noman,
but I think everyone should have to have a noman.
Was that Nationalman? Oh yeah, I think that's someone who
avoids marriages. Yeah right, I'm terrible at this, but I

(10:51):
think that their name in particular sucks at that. Well
we looked out was that gang? So it's everything needs
to have a fan base. Yeah, you got to have
an identity. I wanted to be death Cab for cute boys,
but it sounded like the anti Proud Boy, which is fine,
but you know then the music might fall to the
wayside for political gain. Right. Uh? What about your fans?

(11:12):
What do you want to call him? I just hope
want to call them, text them, email them, it doesn't matter.
Some sort of engagement situation. I don't know. Air's heads
is all right? It sounds like that movie. That movie
is fucking fantastic. And the candy and the Candy I
love my friends have a mystery white mouth? Right maybe not? Uh?

(11:35):
And finally, what is a myth what's something people think
it's true, you know, to be false. I think that
a myth that some people believe is true is that
driving for Lift or Uber is a decent profession. I
did it for a little while. It's not a good
way to make any money. Yeah, I hope you guys.
Show isn't like sponsored by lift or something. No, they

(11:56):
we've been waiting, but they keep circling the block. And
I did it for a little while, and people would
always be like, oh, here, that's great. I hear, it's
pretty cool. I did it. I have no I don't
have a vehicle here, and they would like rent you
a vehicles and yeah, I was walking around. I was like, hey,
you guys want to getting somewhere, and and it would
just be very very difficult. It would start off great,

(12:18):
and they incentivized early on driving. And so that's why
it's like friends I knew who told me it could
be good, were like a month in there, like you
right do with this month that pays pretty good. And
for like two weeks, you know, it was like it
was decent enough and it was nice and it was
my own hour. All the stuff you here would be good.
But then there's a huge drop off. And I can't
imagine if it was actually my personal car, with the
toll that happens in the car, the cost of gas,

(12:40):
the upkeep for the vehicle you're looking you know, minimum
wage with hard, weird hours and so this the amount
of people who I did it for maybe three weeks,
and the people who were like, oh, here, that's great,
you can get pretty good from that. And plus they're
so their pr stuff is so like in your face
over and over and over again, and it is just

(13:01):
and and maybe people are listening who it's a I
get it being a decent secondary or necessary, but I
don't think it could actually it doesn't seem to be
feasible profession especially with gas. Yeah, I think what what
state actually just guaranteed like certain wages that New York
City yeah, for uber driver New York City. Yeah, Because
I think that's one of the biggest holes in it.
Is like with the gig economy, is like there are

(13:23):
so many other expenses that go along with that. Yah.
That's why even I mean, even like we do with
comedy and stuff, people be like, oh my god, you
got that for a week, and it's like, yeah, but
I had to get there. I had to do this.
I eat every day, you know what I mean, there's
every little costing around. I had to get to the
to and from the airport. Like that's just that's a
do you know it? All that it is? I think

(13:45):
lift and and and uber are just such a quintessential
example of the flaws of gig economy. Yeah, I had
no idea they did the like pay you more during
the first well and I even a friend referred me
and he got a dollar for each ride I did
and would just split that with me, And that starts
to add up a little bit, but it's still, you know,

(14:05):
all these little things to make you feel like you're
doing good until you've put off being able to do
anything else and you're doing this, and then you're still
and then they they want you to drive bizarre hours,
never accumulating, like never successive hours, just like two now
and then four later, and then it's a bizarre Hm. Well,
I think, I mean that's the next step is like
for those jobs to actually be worthwhile. I was like,

(14:27):
we have to get them unionized at something and have
some kind of standard practice for how they're everyone is compensated.
A lot of the drivers that I met in my class.
We're switching from Uber to Lift. I only drove for
Lift because it was even worse they were talking about
when they started. There was like forty now or doing
it and they're like, this is good because the upkeep

(14:48):
on my car. I basically been paying twice the upkeep
per year for a car and its lifespan is half
because no one drives UM. But then it just they
just cut it a little bit every month, in a
little bit every month, blah blah blah blah blah. And
they be like, bizarre incentives you can't make if you
do a hundred and twelve rides this week, And it's like, well,
one ride could be an hour. Yeah, so I'm probably

(15:08):
not gonna work a hundred and fifty hours this week.
And I mean this goes back to just things we've
talked about on this show, but it's very like it
goes back to you know, regulations and ship like that.
Like they the way that they chose to look at
Uber and Lift is they are companies that provide software
essentially and you can use it in your car. For

(15:30):
the main employer that they technically have to get the
government to recognize them as non employers, but as like
providers of a software I think is at least how
they were getting around it in the first place. So yeah,
if they're looked at as an employer, now income the
regular scions exactly, and then they won't make Infinity money

(15:53):
immediately off the backs of labor exactly. Um, alright, burn
it down. Yeah, Honestly, it sounds like I'm have described
the season of Mr Robot I think I'm going through.
So this this all sounds specific. I did drive around
in a guy Fox mask part of your lift drivers
and the uber drivers. One out of sixty people tip. Yeah, dude,

(16:16):
you got a tip man, motherfucker's And that's the only
money that I think a lot of it too. I mean,
at the I get how some people look if it's
a cheaper option, then you're like, I don't know, if
you know, you don't want to add whatever to the cost.
But if you ever worked off tips, like you know,
like I think most of us having here, you know
the value of the tip to the person who's receiving,
and you're like, yeah, I'm not going to fuck you
for this specifically for like Los Angeles. But here's how

(16:38):
a very broad strokes breakdown off how works. So if
I was driving someone from Hollywood to L a X Airport,
that ride probably cost him about thirty five dollars right
from from around from around Hollywood to l a X
about thirty five dollars. I would probably make seventeen of that,
and then that would be taxed down to maybe around twelve,
and then the drive would probably take an hour in
fifteen minutes and then and every cost, you know, the

(17:01):
gas is probably a dollar fifty, So you're looking at
about I wouldn't make nine to ten dollars an hour
doing doing stuff like that. Hit that tip though, but
if you hit it, if you and even if it's
fifty cents, if people getting fifty cents, it's nice. The
other fun way that this service has affected people is
the drivers who already existed in these towns and not

(17:23):
the like taxi cab companies were like the most up
and up, well run institutions, but a lot of people
who had invested money in like a taxi cab in
New York City. Oh, I know, a taxi cab medallion
is like a quarter of a million dollars and you're
paying it off over your whole life. Yeah, it's they
I've almost got funcked twice and having to have pay

(17:44):
for the medallion and then having it become irrelevant, and
there was a long New York Times series. I think
about these taxi drivers who like a lot of them
were killing who got in and realized, Yeah, then Uber
came in there, like what I mean, you'd be splitting
a cab with three or four other drivers, and yeah,
I mean think about like I'm sure that at least
has something to do with why we're actually getting regulation

(18:06):
in New York City is there's like a little bit
more visibility and they have some of the best journalists
in the world in that city reporting on the local news.
So meanwhile, poor l A just has us. So sorry
l A. Yeah, I hope I can break the story
if some people you have never heard of Lift or
Uber right sharing exactly because when people come to us
ride please, you know it's actually the worst branded. Yeah.

(18:31):
I didn't mean to harp on them so much because
also I don't have a car here, so I take
them everywhere I absolutely go. But I think that it
just is nice to have some awareness about how much
a little bit of a tip can go because that's
the only thing where it will go to employee. So
if you like to help employees more than companies, exactly.
All right, we're gonna take a quick break. We'll be
right back, and we're back, and a couple of quick

(19:03):
Trump points up top. He is claiming that Mueller is
to blame for his low approval ratings. That makes sense, Yeah,
because he's because Muller is making him look bad. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
is that what the yeah man claims that awareness of
how he's doing is reason people think he's not doing well. Yeah.
He refers to it as presidential harassment. Actually, his tweet

(19:28):
was it's called presidential harassment exclamation point, as though that
were a pre existing concept before he like did he
capitalize pH Like yeah, you know he did. Yeah, it's
a proper nown that I just invented. Well, what is
his wait, what's his full tweet? Exactly, my approval rating
would be sent rather than the fifty percent just reported

(19:51):
by ras Mussen, which is also way too high, it's
called presidential harassment. Yeah, okay, well, you know that's fine.
I gotta give rest mus gonna shout out for always
being Rasputin when I say it in my head and
still just trooping through. Yeah, I think I've called it
Resputin in my head every time I've ever read it. Yeah,
rass ross Putin. I think sounds like a roster version

(20:12):
of Vladimir Putin. Ye, Rasputin's yeah, Ross coming through. Yeah, dreadlocks.
He would be way more chilled, shirtless on that horse
with some nice, weird blonde dreads than dreads. Um. Well,
you know again, I think with this whole this whole
Trump nonsense, it's it's funny too, Like the the whole

(20:33):
presidential harassment thing is just the brand of the GOP
right now, just find unique ways to make yourself a victim.
So in this case, we're calling oversight presidential harassment. Yeah cool, okay,
well yeah, it's it's a shame what laws will duty you,
you know what I mean, it's the get Yeah, it's
it's just it is very bizarre. It's also the ultimate

(20:55):
move of accused your opponent of being what you are.
The entire time we were talking about that. Yeah, just
I want to be played liberals of victims. Liberals of
victims are the victims. And then immediately it's this is
presidential harassment because he's seeing what I've done and telling
people about and telling people and he's not even really
telling us. He's releasing a thousand pages and letting us

(21:16):
read to read to find out. That's how bad it is.
He usually doesn't even I don't think he's ever even
acknowledged his bad approval ratings before. Right now I know
he does. It's like, that's fake news, because this is
what it really is. That's the shocking thing is that
this suggests that he has been aware all along of
what a shitty job he's doing, or or doesn't know

(21:37):
how numbers know that he's such a baby that motherfucker's
have to keep poles away from him sometimes because he's
in his Fox News bubble and he's like, what are
you guys leaving it over there? Oh? Nothing, nothing away? No,
I want to see it. No, No, it's fine. But
what is this? No? That is what the like? You
know what I mean? There's reporting from inside the White
House that they specifically curate his media diet on a

(21:59):
day basis to just Things's curate at least one of
his diets, right, if it's just the media one, that's okay.
There's no fish fil a news that's going to get
across his plate because early on in his presidency he
was getting furious because he was watching CNN. So they realized,
if if the TV stays on Fox, we have easier days.

(22:20):
I will always think everything is just an equivalent of
the no, there were more people at my inauguration. Yeah,
everything is just a blown up or a scale down
version of here's a photo of people and him saying, no,
it isn't there are more people than in this picture.
He would have been the great uniter if that hadn't.
I think, you know, if exactly I was. That was

(22:43):
just such a strong, like first public statement from the
administration was just what's his name? Dug In? If you
asked me how long ago that was, I would say
forty years, two thousand seventeen. I would say four scores. Yeah,
he was just again and like period, it was the
biggest stop. I mean, every single thing that happens make

(23:06):
it seems I mean, when we were talking about how
it seemed like a year, but I was here in April,
but it seems so everything is so tiring, and time
seems to be so slow, and months I have no
idea when news stories happen relative to other news stories
or what is important because things disappear so fast that
show because it's been like it ever happened. It's like
I've been a slow zoom out. Yeah, like we've been

(23:27):
seeing the same things and then we're now just seeing
how more and more they're intertwined and connected and just
how bad something actually is. And you're also like getting
a new perspective on things like as they operated when
things were working, Like now, no matter what, I will
have less respect for the White House Press briefing because
of just what a complete fucking satirical mockery they've made

(23:51):
of the White House Press briefing, Like yeah, funk that
like something, Yeah, I think sometimes about you remember when
days would go by and you didn't wonder or know
what the president for like three days always in France,
good for him, like days like two or three days,
Like if if you didn't pay attention to politics, it
was like having like a child that was well behaved
that you didn't have to monitor all the time because

(24:11):
doing his homework and doing all the assignments. And now
it's like what's Donald getting into him? Exactly? I smell smoke,
I smell up there false these are just these are
light flames. But he has been paying attention to the
media that Another thing that was reported by people who
spend time in the White House is that he gets
uncomfortable when his name is not in the media, isn't

(24:34):
like a headline, and he is getting super itchy these
past couple of days as George H. W. Bush's funeral
has sort of dominated the news for basically like a week,
sucking up all the oxygen and very inconsiderate of him,
if I might add, yeah, exactly. And Trump has basically
behaved himself because he's kind of gotten the sense that

(24:58):
it would be a bad look for him with literally
everyone what he had like three straight terrible weeks or
four straight terribly so he probably in a way it
was like I kind of like this just for a second, Yeah,
take the heat off. But he's so into all this
good pub that Bush forty one is getting that he
is now looking at people from his administration to bring

(25:20):
in that. That's my loose theory. I was so certain
you were going to be like he is. He loves
the good publicity. W is getting that now he wishes
his dad was alive so his dad could die so
he could give a eulogy, but maybe you imagine a
eulogy delivered by him and like, how just the maybe
fifteen seconds of hope before he brought it back around

(25:43):
to himself. So I get infuriated seeing media things where
they call him well behaved because he didn't have an
outcry at a funeral of a president, because he didn't
freak out, and people were like, is this is this
a new leaf? And now not really leaves are big,
you know, they have points and stuff. There's a clip
of everyone reading the apostles creed at the funeral and
they're like, here's your evangelical president. He like he wasn't

(26:04):
even looking. He's just staring and nothing and looking around.
Well yeah, but anyways, William Barr. Yeah, and he's it's
looking like he's gonna pick William Barr, or at least
he's the leading candidate who is a former attorney general
under President George H. W. Bush and is emerging as
a consensus candidate to succeed Jeff Sessions, which is shockingly

(26:27):
just right down the middle of a choice, like that's
a normal president. That's a normal but he's in the past. Though,
Bar does fit the Bill because he's kind of said like, well,
you know, if you wanted a probe Clinton allegations doc,
that could be all right, and also has criticized Mueller. Yeah,
I think that where the center is has just shifted
so far too. But yeah, to give him credit or

(26:50):
whatever he said, like when it came to the Clinton thing,
it was just sort of saying like, I don't see
a problem with a president calling for the investigation just
so long that it's just because he wants it. So
I guess he's and he might be just slick enough
to be like, look, I'll take the job, but I
know just enough you know, nice things to say that
won't be music to his ears and so weird time
to jump on the ship. Yeah, And it's not like

(27:11):
he's a perfect you know, like anybody's going to like
him in the end. He's a super hard line pro
executive power. This is just where it's at though. If
it's anyone with any experience who can be seen as
neutral or even just quiet, Yeah, they were like, good
for him not picking like his neighbor or something, or
a guy with a gun avatar on Twitter. Good for

(27:34):
him for not making a poll online to have someone again,
it's the extremely low expectations we have for Trump that
were like, he picked a quiet person who seems like
he's done the job before. That's amazing since some of
his other multiple of his other picks were racist cowboy. Yeah,
we just we're meaning back over here or Huckleberry Hound.

(27:56):
But it seems like he might be quiet in the
way that Dick Cheney was quiet, like terrifying. Yeah, just scheming,
just like George H. W. Bush's funeral. Dick Cheney was
scheming in the road behind them. It was incredible too,
that Dick Cheney is alive. Yeah, it's I don't want
to say good medicine, but even for only him, good

(28:17):
for him and only him. He just wants to see
this biopic, I think, Yeah, I want to see Christian
Bale pulls it all like he's going to be disappointed.
I bet he's one of these guys who watches the
first of every movie and then he'll leave me like
pretty good and like to see how that wrapped up.
Let's talk about Tucker Carlson. You guys, finally you saw

(28:37):
my tattoo. Yeah it's Tuck Gang. We go by Tuck Finns.
We just want an excuse to say the N word. Right. Hey,
it's in the book, man, my teacher read it in
seventh grade. I don't want to put her on blast,
but she just out like we wouldn't have been able
to follow had she not. She didn't to say word.

(29:01):
The rest of it was silent. You just call him Jim.
You know. James is even good, he works. But Tugger
Carlson is, you know, basically the world's whimpiest white nationalist.
But he gave an interesting interview to a Swiss magazine
where he basically gives Trump an f in presidenting. Yeah,

(29:24):
well this man, it's funny. I didn't really as you
read the thing, you realize, dude, Tucker Carlson like went
to some elite boarding school in Switzerland too, and he's like,
I got kicked out. Yeah, And they're like the beginning
of the interview so weird. He's like, I love the
cheese here. Imagine Switzerland taking a stand on you right now.
How's once you have to suck for them? We actually

(29:44):
have thoughts on this. They're like, we'll look, we'll hold
your Nazi goals, don't there. But I think there's so
many of these, like really wimpy alt right guys who
don't realize they are the guys the guys they love
hate right, they are weak, they are they all look
like thumbs. They they're not beloved by these guys they
cherishes like who are also pieces of ship. But these

(30:05):
guys that they like look up to, hate them, they hate,
they look down on them, they bully them. Everyone's less
than these guys they love. And he's one of these
guys that's just like he has no idea. Everyone on
every side actually dislikes him. Yeah, I mean they were
even kind of like tongue in cheek. I think a
little bit with the interview, You're like, oh, what do
you know about Switzerland? He's like the how they're in
the movie. There's always all these movies from the nineties
where kids are rich and they don't realize all their

(30:26):
friends are only around them because of that. And then
when it comes out and they're like, no, you're bad.
We all like each other and hate you. That's how
he is. Is he just you just he just has
a show or whatever? Right, Well, these quotes. I was
surprised because we were talking i think earlier in earlier
episode this week about how I'm waiting to see more
people on the right begin to be actually critical of
the president, like to demonstrate that they're looking at the

(30:48):
situation and can call it for what it is. Now.
Mind you, this isn't the most staving thing, but uh,
it's it's part of I guess sometimes Tucker Carlson can
be somewhat honest, tries not to look like a total
sick of fan. But when he said his chief promises
or that he would build the wall, defund Planned Parenthood,
and real pee Obamacare and he hasn't done any of
those things, He's like, I don't think he's capable. I

(31:09):
don't think he's capable of sustained focus. I don't think
he understands the system. I don't think the Congress is
on the side. I don't think he's own agencies support him,
and he's just not going to do that, right. I Mean,
it's not exactly, you know, the most hard line criticism
you've ever seen. But at the same time, he's at
least acknowledging he's an ineffective idiot. He has achieved funk all. Granted,

(31:30):
he is saying that like the way he's arriving at
that conclusion is because he hasn't shut down Planned Parenthood
and built a wall on the Mexican boards US. But yeah,
because and then he goes on to say, like, but
that might not be his place, Like he could just
be this president that's meant to begin these conversations about
xeno phobia. That one gout an idiot scene that he's

(31:52):
been had by a different idiot that I kind of
enjoyed watching. But then he kind of talks about how
Trump's just sort of generally doesn't get it at all.
So he says, in order to do it, I mean,
like I guess he means effect change in d C
is like you really have to understand how it works,
and you have to be very focused on getting it done.
And he knows very little about the legislative process, hasn't
learned anything, and surrounded himself with people that can't get

(32:12):
it done, hasn't done all the things you need to do.
So it's mostly his fault that he hasn't achieved those things.
I think he's These people who thought he actually cared
about them blow my mind. I think he's achieving what
he wants to achieve, which is he will be richer
when he leaves office than when he went into office,
he will be in jail. Hopefully he's in jail. But
you know, it's all he wants is to benefit himself,

(32:34):
and he's benefiting himself. And now these people like where's
the wall. He doesn't care about the wall. He cared
about the idea of a wall to get elected, to
get himself something. And to be honest, I totally don't
believe that he thought that Trump was going to be
an effective leader as the president. I mean, the guy
made the most like glancing references to like, yeah, I'm

(32:55):
gonna do things for this country. But the only time
he's ever been convincing Rump is you know, talking about
how awesome he is, like he's changing everything else changes
on a day to day basis. Thought this self motivated
narcissist had my best thoughts, and well, I think they
maybe thought it could be a thing where w came
in and he had a team around him who knew

(33:16):
how to do ship on the hill and he just
had to be like these are my terrible fucking ideas
or chain he was like this is this is a
game plan. But I think maybe they were hoping that
he would have that kind of potency, Right, Who would
have thought these people would be let down by this
man who would pretty much let down everyone his whole life. Right,
So let's talk about the president's hotels because apparently they

(33:38):
are very popular with tourists from his specific nation. Yes,
which one, Sudrabia? I was going to guess that one? Yeah,
interesting it? Well, yeah, I mean I think we all
know money is the key to this man's clogged heart.
Uh so, yeah, the Saudia is I think realize this
how one dimensional he is, like like and get basically

(34:00):
putting up arms deal on the table to sort of
leverage that for other things. But Mohammed Been salone's been
really helping out the ailing Trump hotel in New York City. Apparently,
like after two years of decline at the Manhattan Hotel,
the Trump International revenue from room rentals went up thirteen
percent in the first three months. Huh what caused that?

(34:20):
A last minute visit to New York by the Crown
Prince of Saudi Arabia. Yeah, but of course Mohammed Been
someone will not be caught dead at a Trump hotel.
That's where all his like underlings Entrege stayed. Yeah, come,
on now. Yeah, I mean Mohammed been some money. Won't
even stay there if they didn't just rent it out
to give him money. Yeah, NBS actually has money. So

(34:42):
he's like, you can always tell the people the few
people that Trump will say nice things about other people.
He's jealous of the people. He wants to have their
lifel Like, he couldn't bring himself to say a negative
thing about it because he's jealous of it because he
wants to be him. Right, He's like, well, maybe he'll
let me in my club, but we can touch that
globe again. I want to be give me in on
that high five man. His hungry eyes when he saw

(35:06):
pooting an MPs. Oh yeah, just he's looking at that
being like dream we it's I so much will I
wish one world leader had done that thing on Instagram
where it zooms in and flame shootout everywhere while it
was happening right there, Come on, Merkel, just throw up
a dramatic super zoom. I don't know if I don't
know if I'm one of your v I P friends,

(35:27):
but I follow the story. Yeah, get your you know,
get your story games up. But also, uh, NBS has
also been will not him directly. But the Saudi lobbying
arm has been also very very nice to the d
C Hotel, the Trump d C Hotel also, So like
all incidences everywhere, Yeah, within a month of Trump selection,

(35:48):
the lobbyists who represents the Saudi's they paid for what
they estimated around five hundred nights in just three months
at that hotel booked it for five Maybe they're making
a sequel to that Joseph Gordon Levitt Zoey Deschanelle movie
of Winter Nights of Screams. Uh well, yeah, but the
wild thing was the reason though is even more absurd.

(36:10):
So what they did was it was part of a
quote unquote lobbying effort where they were offering US military
veterans like all expense paid trip to Washington, d C.
So they would lobby against a law that the Saudis opposed. Um,
so the Saudis were paying for US military veterans to
come to d C. And then the US military veterans

(36:33):
were just suddenly having Arabia in their best interests. Well,
the thing is they didn't know that the Saudages are
paying for it. So like what happened was they found
a few veterans to like organize other ones and just
be like, hey, we should come by. We're gonna Just
one of the emails said, quote storm the hill, uh
to talk about this law to keep soldiers safe. You
know what that law was. It was the law that

(36:55):
allows victims and families of victims of terrorism to sue
countries that spawned to terrorism. God, I mean it looks
look at the nine eleven hijackers board here, Yeah fifteen
so yeah, fifteen out of the nineteen hijackers were Saudi's.
So I think that is the big reason that they

(37:15):
want to do not want that. Well, the crazy thing,
I think it's just a bunch of coincidences. It's just
I don't see the law where the line is drawn,
Like well what I mean, what are they gonna do?
But it's like if you put up a bolton board,
you know how there's all those conspiracy theory years would
be three photos with one piece of string going straight
across three photos, Like I don't know, I think I
might have solved it. There's no way it's the city.

(37:35):
There's no way they're hiding in point sit but and
in plain site. Well. The the whole thing too is
they were going with the most tired talking points, like
they'd go to Chuck Grassley's office and like Chuck Grassley
is like aids were like, this hasn't even like we
haven't publicly discussed this yet, but okay, and they're like, yeah,
we just feel like it's going to put the soldiers
at risk. And then like other people on the hill

(37:58):
began to be like, are you the guys that were
bribed to come in here? Like it was it was
such a farce to like the actual politicians they were
living that so transparent and yeah, the irony was most
of them didn't know that that's who was at the
you know, paying cutting the checks for their little trip.
Just two middle men and wittes the I just think
they're getting trip. We can you imagine It's like your

(38:18):
country sponsors the people who kick off the thing that
give you the pretext for this massive war that takes
millions of lives and the wrong place. Yeah, and these
are people who like probably presumably fought in those wars
to come back and then are now lobbying on behalf
of It's such a mind fuck. He's Trump is the
best for veterans. I was reading about it on his Twitter. Yeah, yeah,

(38:39):
He just gets them, you know, he gets the sacrifice
and the willingness to just give up your life. Although
last week he did tweet something He's like, why are
we paying so much in defense? Right? Like it's like
what that was like one of the things you were
petting yourself on the there's not money for school lunches
because you wanted to do that, right, And then suddenly like, whoah,

(39:00):
well I didn't Okay, I don't know. I don't know
where I am day today. So all right, we're going
to take another quick break and we'll be back after that.
And we're back and the Golden Globe nominations are here.

(39:22):
Yes woo who Yeah I didn't know that. Yeah yeah,
I mean there were here. Let me do that again
now yeah. Uh. You know, some people are very excited
about the nominations. Other people are not. The Golden Globes.

(39:44):
Movies and TV, yes, movies and TV, but they really
don't care. It's really they care more about the movies.
Which one is the one where everyone gets drunk. Okay,
get in trouble because he's too fucking real. You know,
he's an atheist. I saw think about. That's annoying. That
doesn't believe in God. You know, I don't know, because

(40:07):
covers him carrying a bloody cross, So it doesn't make
any sense. Bet Or he thinks he's not gonna get
struck by lightning. Well, yeah, I think some of the
things that were people I don't know. There were snubs,
I guess, but let me just read off Best Motion
Picture Drama, Okay, Black Panther, Black Klansman, Bohemia, Rapsodi, if
Beal Street could talk. A Star is Born? Now, so

(40:30):
this is the this is the Awards show that has
a musical or comedy category with the Martian, right, yes, exactly.
And but they didn't put A Star is Born in
the musical category because Oscar lobbying problem. Because it's no,
it's it's it's up to the studios to submit it first. Yeah,

(40:52):
That's why I think get in the studio wants it
to win in Oscar. That's why when the whole uh
what the mars thing we're talking about Martian the Martian
came out, every was like I wish we didn't tell
you when I wish we watched your damon Marsman. We
are Marsman? Yeah, um no. So yeah, like because they

(41:16):
submitted it because it's such a congested category. That's where
it gets a little weird, because like, don't don't game this,
this this is like I'm like, this is I feel
like Bohemian Rapsy. You should have gone into the musical
one if it wanted a chance to win, because it
feels like what is it? From what I didn't see it,
but from what I heard about it, it doesn't seem
like it was an award winning Yeah, people like I guess,
you know, but I think when you look at the

(41:36):
voting block, it's a it's there. No one's American. So
like their tastes are a little bit different too, Like
they like they love musicals a little bit more. They
like sentimental stuff like throwback e looking stuff, prosthetic teeth
them love them. Um you know. The So for the
musical or comedy nominations, it's crazy rich Asians, The Favorite

(41:57):
Green Book, Mary Poppins Returns, and Vice, the Dick Cheney film.
I haven't seen any of the movies except Black. I saw.
Black Panther and Black Plants are the only two of
these I've seen. Black Panther, A Star is Born, parts
of Black Clansman like that was on a screener. Well,
I've seen parts of all of these in the trailers. Okay,
basically you only watch talk to learn. If I want

(42:20):
to see a movie, someone has to have animated at home. Yeah,
I don't know, man, So what's up? What's up for
best Sound edit? It? I'm just it's really good. Although
it is fun to I don't know. I have no
real opinion on on any of these movies. Here's what
this is. I don't want to spoil what my tweet
is for the end has to do with this a
little bit ahead. I couldn't. We just will actually censer this. Okay,

(42:43):
that's fine. So uh it is legitimately just the tweet
saying that Black Panthers is rotten tomato sweet. This Black
Panthers for Supermo would be nominated for Best Picture Drama
at the Golden Globes. I didn't. I couldn't. It's such
a waste land of sadness on Twitter. I couldn't find
anything very funny um to pick. But I have so
many thoughts on superhero movies as as they I'm not

(43:04):
even a comic book guy, but just how they exist
in culture. I think it's an exciting moment for one
of them to be taken a little bit. Any step
of their legitimacy makes me happy because I think they're
kind of all the most universal storytelling. Now is this
giant universe we've all bought into for forty hours, right right?
No one's watching any TV show that long. No one
has read anything not, there's no nothing that a billion

(43:25):
people have all spent forty hours doing together. I mean,
you know, the in terms of TV, right, Like, somehow
Atlanta got snubbed. That's when I'm like, yeah, that isn't
bizarre good because that was a great show that also
seems critically beloved. Yeah, but I think because they already
gave Atlanta a Golden Globe last year, I think they
missed it last year too, didn't They didn't. I thought

(43:46):
John Ever went up talking about me, goes, oh, he
just won for writing First Performer. Okay, I think this
was the best season of the show. Yeah, yeah, but
I guess, you know, but at least they got the
good good place, you know. I'm happy about that for
for them getting their little shine. Uh and Barry, I
feel like was a really Mike was very impressed by Barry,
but a lot of people were like, how was John

(44:07):
Krasinski not nominated for Jack Ryan? Who the funk was that?
They said that on Vulture some other website. I mean,
he didn't necessarily show range in that because I think
he also played that guy in a movie about Benghazzi
was just like a military cop man. Yeah, who just
who had to fight back doing like a half movie

(44:28):
that they showed at Dallas Cowboys Stadium to premier it.
Until they did, they wanted to rally together, so they
got a hundred thousand people to come watch the Benghazi
Michael Bay movie in a football field. And Hillary didn't
get elected, right, they well they all voted there, right
right there, and they're like, okay, who are voting for
that campaigned at that stadium a little more And if

(44:49):
Bernie would have let that stadium, I don't know. Yeah,
but The Alienist was one I feel like every once
in a while they're these Golden Globe nominations that suggests
to me it's almost like by sheer like tyranny of
will the studios or the companies behind them just like
get the show nominated in the category, Because like The Alienist,

(45:10):
I saw nothing but like ads everywhere for the alienist, like,
I don't. I don't think I heard one person say
they thought it was good. I think it's based on
that novel where Teddy Roosevelt is a police chief of
New York and is dealing with like one of the
earliest serial killers. It's a piece of historical fiction. Was
Teddy Roosevelt actually a police chief? Yeah, of New York City? Yeah?

(45:33):
For him? Yeah, he's a bad mother. Fest sounds interesting. Yeah,
it does sound interesting, but they just the way they
promoted it, it looked like the Nick or who I
loved the Nick I did too, but it just blended
in with that. Yeah. Um, Sasha Baron Collen got nominated
for Performance in a Television Series. He's not really, he's

(45:53):
just doing what was it him as a whole? Or
did they say his performance of one of who They're like, hey,
who is America? Come on down? That was? I love
that show so much. It made me so tired. Yeah,
it made me so tired watching it, But I thought
it was a fantastic. But I could watch like a
segment and then I was like, well, I gotta walk
around for a little bit and and I can't do

(46:14):
especially this where they went to Arizona and pitched building
the mosque there. I thought was like, I was like, oh,
this is the peak of what comedy can be. And
I think this is incredible. That's like a piece of
art and comedy where if I made something like that,
I would be happy with my life. And also at
the same time, I was like, I need to watch
this with other people, and I needed I need to

(46:34):
be in a well lit room, and like it was
crazy how uncomfortable it made me. I don't need Yeah,
I mean what it sounds like, I'm a libtard. Get
a little of this guy. He has to watch in
a well lit friends, and that's what libtard is short
for lit and uh tartists. Ye, it's librarian tartis. So
I watched it a read in a phone booth. Actually,

(46:56):
we always talk about how comedy never gets any credit
in award shows and this best performance by an actor
in a television series and it is musical or comedy.
But you have Sasha Baron Cohen, Jim Carrey, Donald Glover,
and Bill Hayter. Oh you're don't leave out Michael Douglas comedy.
Michael Douglas, Jim Carrey is in a show called kidding

(47:19):
that reunites him with Michelle Gondry from Eternal Sunshine. Um,
I'm one of the best music video directors ever. Yeah,
I'm glad. You know. In terms of limited series, the
alienists what you're saying, the assassination of Johnny Versaci, escape
at Dana Mora, sharp objects, and a very English scandal,

(47:41):
doesn't he How long has the assassination of Johnny Versaci
been around? Is it limited? It's like in the eighth
season of Being Limited. I mean it's like, you know,
American crime story, So last year is the o J one?
Was the American crime story? That seasons was Johnny Versaccia.
So I think if you have a completely new storyline,
you're allowed to call it a limited I kind of
like these limited series that seems to be where we're
moving with all this stuff. It's like sometimes I see

(48:03):
a movie I wish was four hour television episode, and
sometimes I see twenty episodes of a show that I
wish were four episodes. I'm sure like the limited ones,
you can be like, look, it's like a really long
movie you're doing. Yeah, and it's going to be premium
prestige TV, so why not? Yeah? And miles, Will you
be going? Will you be attending this year? I've been

(48:23):
barred this year, so I will not be going. Last year.
You know, I I stormed the stage. I tried to
to get Santa University an award and that didn't work out. Yeah. Yeah,
well you know it's the wrong season for that. Probably
not in affluence Zeitgeist. Um yeah again. People were I
think shocked that Roma wasn't in the main contention, but

(48:43):
it got in for Foreign Language at a movie. Yeah,
it's released on It's the first movie that's made by
Netflix that people think are is going to get a
Best Picture nomination. They've released it for like three weeks.
I think if Netflix wanted to be taken little more seriously,
let's go ahead and just kill the career right now.
If you're overwhelming me with things, yeah, just so, I

(49:08):
don't know which ones are you actually really like, But
they don't know which ones are going to be getting.
They're not going to get me to watch anything if
their shows keep having such funny names. I'm not gonna
watch anything called Peaky Blinders ever, I don't care how
good it is. I'm not gonna watch anything called uh,
what was the one I can't even remember the Oh A,

(49:28):
that's okay. I'm not gonna watching. The names are too
fun Like, the names are too funny. Flaked is too funny,
and all the posters are yellow to orange gradient with
the same script. We all go to defont dot com
pay for them. Ah, but one funny. I mean, Alfonso
Karon is nominated for Best Director for Roma And then
I didn't realize that Peter Fairley did Green Book of

(49:51):
the Fairly Brothers. Is that him of motherfucking Kingpin and
everything fucking dumb and dumber fame? Is Is that why
it's in musical comedy category? Is it just I don't know, Well,
I guess like we said, it's this doesn't say Fairly
brother No, just Peter, what happened? You know? That's like
when Lewen Davis tried to go solo. Right, We'll see

(50:11):
if he's got it learned from his mistake. I hope
his brother didn't throw us off a bridge. I know that.
I haven't seen a movie since Inside Lewen Davis, So
I did get it, did not? Man, they keep getting
snubbed the Cohnes. That's another Netflix thing. I don't it's
so weird for me. If whatever the Cohen Brothers made,

(50:32):
what is it, The Ballad of Buster Scrugs had come
out in theaters, I would have paid fifteen dollars to
see it. But I haven't watched it on Netflix yet.
Is that that's my fault, right, Yeah, that's that is.
But I like going to the movies. Yeah, I watched it.
It's good, Okay, check it out. I don't know. And
while we're on the subject of awards shows and awards season,

(50:55):
there's a current headline when we're recording this on Drudge Report,
my number one source for news is Oscar Drama host
homophobia headache Kevin Hart tweet delete real triple h of
a headline. Yes, it's all about the game. But that
is something that is apparently transpiring on social media yesterday

(51:16):
that he has some problematic tweets in his background, and
people are saying this guy, he shouldn't be hosting the
Academy Awards. I'm sorry the right is complaining about that.
They're just point out that there are many people actually
on the thing. I think that the right is excited
that the left is mad at the left. Right, Yeah,
that's rude. Yeah, So Drudge is putting this out there

(51:39):
because they like to. They're like, look how crazy these
liberals are. They get mad about stuff like this. Well
that's it's called we're trying to have a just and
equitable society, right, try it out. Yeah, outrage Yeah, I
think that's outrage is actually an acronym for that our
universe though really all guys exist, and then outrageous is

(52:02):
now like when when you all guys exist? Uh? Oh
us sometimes that's because these guys which is and so
they're like, oh, just sometimes what am I doing? No,
it's amazing, it's an amazing I think amazing. History might
show stroke, history might say stroke doctors might say, you
might say amazing. Well, Kyle, that's all the time we have.

(52:26):
Where can people find you? Well, at least we wrapped
up that Kevin Hart thing. Uh, there's no, there's nothing
really to report. You gave us the golden out. That
was the button on the whole bit. Was you trying
to do outrageous as an acronym for a liberal progressive group?
The News will wrap that up. You can you can

(52:47):
find me. I'm pretty much Kyler's across the board on
all social media. You can. You are pretty much Kyler's
across the board and that's what we like about you.
And you've already told us what your tweet is that
you like. Um yeah, if I can, can I do
an unfunny tweet for another one? I'm funny? Let me
just pull it up real quick. Okay. It's the fact
that it's a tweet isn't as relevant as the information

(53:08):
of the tweet. Does that make sense? Like the wording
or anything has nothing to do with it. Um okay.
So let's a tweet from Nick Turner. Uh. Nick Turner,
who's comedian, said that, uh, his best friend and comedy
husband Jason Signs suffered a bad accident and is going
to need a lot of help over the next year.
Please retweet and donate. So Jason Signs is a comedian
in New York City or in Los Angeles where we're
at now? Who I met in New York City. He

(53:29):
was a very funny guy. And Jason had an accident
and fell like fifteen twenty feet and is now paralyzed.
And is it was two weeks away or his insurance
kicked in on January one? So he's looking at isn't it.
I'm upset that this is a thing that people have
to keep talking about if this keeps having to be
a thing where we rely on each other persistance. But

(53:49):
if you go anywhere, Jason has a very funny Instagram
runs called Signed Signs where he puts up fake advertisements
and fake wanted signs. Uff Uh, so this is going under.
Nick has started the hashtags spines decent sense of humor
about himself. Right, But if you look around my Twitter around,
just look up Jason signs s A E N Z
and and you can read a little bit about's going on.

(54:11):
If you have the means, you can help Jason out
as well. Yeah, Buck, because that will be a pre
existing condition. I'd imagine it's gonna be It's gonna be
a long situation for a long time. And but it's
sad that it keeps coming up for everyone. Well, yeah,
and we have we talked about this week where people
you know, run into issues with their insurance and like
the insurance companies like have you tried a you know,

(54:32):
fundraise a doctor telling you that have you tried having
If only there was like some sort of national fundraising
system we could use to help benefit medical procedures in
medicine and people Texas. I don't know. No, that's theft
right miles where people find you. You can find me
and follow me on Twitter and Instagram at Miles of
Gray tweet I like is from the Onion that just

(54:54):
says women relieved, so mate turned out to be in
same socio economic bracket. Stroll the onion and laugh sometimes
yeah that rejects. And another one it just said herpetologists
discover species of frogs that evolved to spontaneously grow top
hat and cane. Uh. Sean Clements tweeted, Hey, gang, want

(55:17):
to make sure I say this now When I die,
go ahead and keep the US Postal service run, which
is nice of him. Good of him to let us know.
You can follow me on Twitter at Jack Underscore O'Brian.
You can follow us on Twitter at Daily Zeitgeist for
at the Daily Zeitgeist on Instagram. We have a Facebook
fan page on a website Daily zigeis dot com where
we post our episodes and air put notes where we

(55:40):
link off to the information that we talked about today's episode,
as well as the song we ride out on Miles with. Well,
just I was just thinking about ross putin uh, and
I wanted to do a song by Lulu be called
rude Things because it has some of that Island vibes
to it. Uh and yeah, Lulu bes a dope artist
and this has kind of got you know that island

(56:00):
that Ross Putin would really be feeling. Another tweet that
I just wanted to show if you guys at at Paris,
Lay tweeted her, when can I expect you to stop
by me Colin? And then he retweeted Yoko oh No,
who said, I don't rely on time. Time is what
man made for our convenience, and in reality it does

(56:20):
not exist, which I thought was appropriate for this episode.
All Right, we're going to ride out on that. Have
a great weekend everyone, We'll talk to you on Monday line.
I'd be the queen of the pet I'd be the
thing with the gloves, thing with the glove. I did,
the queen of the path. I'd beat the thing with
the gloves. I'd bean that, I'd be that, I'd been

(56:42):
the queen of the pep. I'd beat the thing with
the glove. That's one with the I be that I'd
be the be the be the I be that I'd
beat that one with the rootings bad with the mood swings,
how at the moon like the wolves be, and stay
getting coffee not just of a Google. I'm a lying.
It's a Jude out run. Royalty threw him up Chicago, IDIOPI.
When I walk, hang them them, you could be biggest Madonna.

(57:04):
I still give you shrugs because I'd be on my
tim tip. No time for that. When she watching

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