All Episodes

January 13, 2023 63 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to Season two seventy, episode
five of dir Daily production of I Heart Radio. This
is a podcast where we take a deep dive into
America's shared consciousness. It's warm, it's balmy in here. It's
Friday during thirty. Also it smells like garbage Friday, January three.

(00:23):
It's Friday. Yeah, holy shit, this one' snuck up on me.
What do you mean? Much like Jason, I usually like
know when a Friday thirteenth is coming, Get get down
in an athletic stance in case something unfortunate happ How
many do you do you ever avoid flying on Friday thirteen?
I have never once made a flying decision based one

(00:46):
In fact, one time I don't fly off. We flew
on nine eleven. I think out of Atlanta that one time. Yeah,
on purpose. That was cool, correct anyway, But if if
that's not the only thing on your mind. Also, it's
National Peach Melbourne Day. If you like that dessert, National
Blame someone else to Day. Okay, that's that's pretty good
for our American culture. Uh, let's see National sickre Day,

(01:08):
National rubber ducky Day, and shout out to all my
Korean Americans because it's your day, y'all Korean American. Really, yeah, man,
that's not really kill up on me. I need to
need to take my kids left. Yeah, live it up.
I just signed my six year old up for a
after school K pop class where they're gonna like to

(01:28):
learn the culture of K pop, like learn some of
the dances. My Korean hat has hungble on it. This says,
hold me no flower boy. Yeah all right, Well, my
name's Jack O'Brien, a k Potatoes O'Brien most aggressively mediocre

(01:49):
potato dish and existence, and therefore they named it for me,
Like do you know what else is mediocre? Anyways, I'm
thrilled to be joined as always by my co host,
Sir Miles ground Right from the slums of a MC
cool tank Corn strikes again. The Rizza, the jis a oil,

(02:09):
greasy passer, infect the bucket, great Corn, the chef, cool
God grease space killer and beu t t e r
Man bu t t e r Man. Hey, you get
off my cord. Okay, shout out to who is this
on the discord? You really came with? Up? Was Andrew

(02:30):
bubb on the fucking discord? You you got it. You
got it if you do some thirty six Chambers oil,
greasy panster. All right, that's it. I'm joining the chef
God the strength of that. Wow, you guys are forcing

(02:53):
Jack to learn the new fucking platform. Wow. Shout out
to Andrew Man, you look you inspired him. Good for
you the well, there's a lot of good ones for
you in there too, Man, And a lot of people
they usually they know you're not on Discord, so they
do transfer them over when it's a it's a heater.
But I thought you're gonna say, they know you're not
on Discord, so they do talk wild shit about you.

(03:14):
Oh yeah, but it's it's all love. It's all love.
Yeah's discord. It's all there for communication. All right. Well, Miles,
enough enough chit chat Worth thrilled to be joining our
third seat by one of our favorite guests on the
daily like Guy. It's a very funny comedian who's written
to a good mythical morning crack for Doctor's Brockmyer. You
can hear her on her podcast. You can tell me

(03:35):
anything where people admit to things like being a secret
smoker for a decade, which is that it's just wild.
Please welcome, the brilliant, the talented, Theresa Escortory. I'm a
unity on the app. I've got it one hundred somebody streak.

(03:55):
I could say that I'm tired and ask if you're hungry,
and every day I add a little know more Spanish
to my vocabulary. I'm talking to you, oh, lingo, lingo, Lincolno, okay,
one thing about me. I learned Spanish duo lingo. I
got it one seven day streak and I'm not trying
to hid it. That last part. I wrote that in

(04:19):
the five seconds before this. Wow, that's a dual link
a k A right there? How many days around that one?
One seventy one hundred seventy A couple of streaks freezes
in there, you know, but I'm not you know, I'm
going to take that out. W yeah, right, right right?
Days of like doing a lesson every day every day, Yeah,
at least like five minutes. My homegirld said she was

(04:42):
doing it. She was doing French or something for like
a year and then she's like, I only got through
to like two modules or something like that. But she's like,
but because she I think incrementally did it. She's like,
I'm pretty solid on everything from those first two. So
she's like, I'm not shook if I have to do
a little bit of French. I was like, that's kind
of good. Yeah, if you'd got really slow, if you don't.

(05:03):
Once I started actually trying to do it every day
and maintain a streak, I got a little more flow.
Let's see how good you are. Don't ast No, No,
it is you know who I see all the time
on it, because it'll just like randomly tell you big

(05:25):
acquaintance this or friends you know, but like you don't
talk to them on it. But like super producer Anna,
she is always be matched up with me, like hey,
you guys compete this month, and then she's always like
way more and then I'm like completely friend challenge completely
it's by Anna and then by being and like one

(05:47):
of the most produced. I'm so sorry, Anna, I have
I have a question for your Spanish and no dinero okay,
I'm just making sure. That's how I used to say
when I would do hand to hands in the mall
parking lot. You know you gotta be buying. You got
the money on you okay here yeah, no no saying

(06:12):
okay okay, uh okay, Okay, oh, okay, that's that's that's honorable, honorable. Yeah.
I want to say, because Jack, you mentioned the k
pop thing and I didn't want to interrupt, but that
is not a Korean parent thing, because Korean parents would
be like, no, you stop dancing, like go study. So

(06:32):
it's likely you're actually doing white culture when you put
your kids in, when you support their career, that is,
that's not some Asia stuff. They're like, what's that going
to get you? What's that in? What college? Is that gonna? What? What?
Harvard has a K pop program? Now? Kuman is Monday afternoon. Okay, okay,
back you back. I haven't even like I found an

(06:54):
email when I was playing on my emails in college
when I asked my mom if I could take improp
but I said, like, I wanted to cause that you
TB and she was, oh, that's great like Berkeley and
I was like, no, sure, that's exactly what my fucking
mom said to I when I left, when I left lobbying,
and I was like, yo, I'm getting in the comedy

(07:15):
and I'm like, you know, I'm really realizing too, I
really need to get into like I really need to
study and get my skills up and I'm gonna actually
start taking classes at U c B. And she's like
grad school Berkeley, and I was like, she's like, I
got wildly like in college, I was doing improblem and
she was like, all right, at least he's in college.

(07:35):
And then like the then the economy was vaporized, so
they she kind of took it easy because like may
nobody got a job right now. And then when I
got into lobbying, she was like, yes, yes, go on, honey,
Barack Obama and all that, like you're part of this
thing now. And when I left, she was like, you
see Berkeley improv Let's go with that. Yeah, Berkeley, let's

(07:58):
go with that. Amazing. Well, Theresa, we're gonna get to
know you a little bit better in a moment. First,
we're gonna tell our listeners a couple of things we're
talking about today. We are. I'm gonna talk about Joe
Biden's continued sloppiness with the classified documents. Just not great. Joe,

(08:19):
would be my summary that that's yeah, I mean, like
when's Obama? What are we gonna hear about? Obama also
hasn't like every it sounds like does everybody is everybody
sloppy with these top secret papers. I don't, I guess,
so it seems like it, or at least maybe we
just shouldn't have people over the age of eighty working
in the most important job. They're doing papers too. I

(08:43):
feel like, right, well, that was the thing we learned
with Hillary Clinton, right that she like she got in
trouble because she would just make everybody print up every
email that got sent to her on paper. She's like,
Homa print print my emails out, all of them. It's
hard to like keep tracking, Like I have a bag
of stuff. I need a shred that just because it's like,

(09:03):
you know, things with banks and health and I'm like,
I can't throw away, but I don't. It goes for years.
It's just built up. Yeah, I mean I kind of
understand how you've got a very busy job, like running
the country. You might you might move the papers. I
don't know. So what if I kept a list of
c I a assets of rod okay, sue me? Yeah,

(09:27):
and mission impossible. Like the burn list is the knock
list was knocks That's what it is. Yeah, And you
don't want to burn the assets on the knock list,
And it's like this super well locked up thing. They're
like it, actually, you have to go through this underwater
vault that like electric electric cute to anything that is

(09:49):
touching it every fifteen seconds. And in reality, it's in
Joe Biden's Yeah, it's just like behind next vet that
you ever built, built out, like he said he was
going to. Yeah, and a bunch of Ethernet cables. They're like,
you here to loose Ethernet cables first generation USBs that

(10:11):
don't work anymore. Yeah, exactly, I thought that was pasta.
I could fit a whole five whole whole five megabytes
on this thing. I'm serious, man, I'm not kidding. I'm serious.
Good impression. Thanks, really is the thing, he says. They're
most often, we're gonna check in with effective Altruism and

(10:34):
continue to find out that it is a racist ship show.
In In there, we're going to see how the mainstream
media is covering the storms in California. Presumably you know,
people are like, wait, why is this happening? Why does
that keep? Why did this like happen in Germany earlier
last year and now it's happening in California and all

(10:54):
these places that were not used to seeing this ship happen,
and the mainstream media is dutifully shutting the funk up
about any connection to no idea how this could have happened.
All the gay people probably story those story times. HBO
Max prices are going up. We're gonna tell you that.

(11:16):
And also just talk about that whole model, the introduction
introductory market rate model that, as Miles explained to me,
it is called. But this feels like there's just it's
the new world we live and where they bombard you
with so much ship that you don't they're just gouging
us now because they're they're all in the red. They're
all in the red. Like that's a big part of

(11:38):
it too, because they the whole part of the streaming
wars is everybody trying to be a you know, be
a usurper to the Netflix thrown. But to do that
requires a tremendous outlay of cash. And that's why people,
that's why you see all this fucking back and forth,
breakneck cancelations, green light ship all the time, And didn't
I like a lot of places like Merge or like
get rid of their staff. It's like yeah, yeah, because

(12:03):
like their whole model of like we just burned cash
and like try and get the most consumers only worked
because money, like because of the interest rates, Like cash
was basically free for a long time, especially like massive
companies like that, and then like when it stopped being
free in the past couple of years, they're this genius
strategy just stopped working out so well for them, and

(12:25):
now they're like, oh no, we have to have a
triple princess. The laws of physics apply to our business now. Anyways,
all of that plenty more, But first, Theresa, we like
to ask our guests, what is something from your search history? Okay,
this is uh, it's gonna make me sound super old,
but I searched is contouring still cool? Because I decided

(12:50):
I'm gonna do I wanted to do the makeup, okay,
the makeup, the things. So I've been a light ago
and it's gotten a lot worse than the last couple
of years. And and I say this like no shame,
like happy to wear no makeup. But it's like I
go back and forth between like should I get you
foundations or one? And then I was like, you know what,

(13:10):
maybe I should learn more about how to do them
by face because I really just buy one and then
slather on and that's it. And you know, fortunately in
the past it's worked out because I had okay skin.
But now TikTok has all these trends and I'm so
confused what you're supposed to do. I went to Sephora.
There's so many products, Like I was just like, I

(13:30):
just want one that's lighter and one that's darker. And
they're like, well, there's like highlighter, luminescence gloss away was
I did buy um. I bought myself my first ever
concealer and bronzer or contour stick is what they call it.
I honestly I felt like a teenage girl buying her
first bra or you know, like dollars at Charlotte Rous,

(13:53):
just like, I can't wait to try this odd Yeah,
the drive home, you're just looking at it out of
the bag. I was gonna put it on that I
was like, maybe I should just play around with it,
but then it was like TMPM, and I was like,
that's done. I don't want to do that. Wait. So
I mean, is is contouring just something else now or
is that just not a thing anymore? And they can
make makeup world like that's something like is that just

(14:15):
seen as like prehistoric ship makeup techniques? Yeah, it's kind
of like it's still done, but it's not like trendy.
Like now there's all these new trends like TikTok. They
do stuff like what do they call there's the w
blush where it's like you draw a W on your
face and then you like blend it and it looks
like you're you went on the slopes and you burn
your face and that's the trend. Oh yeah, let's see

(14:36):
people like that all the time. I'm like, yo, motherfucker,
you are you looking straight into a laser all day
or some ship? No, it's the trend, so like still there,
but it's not. I'm sorry, it's not the thing. I
see people that are concerning me. Oh shorty, gotta eye irritation,
you know what I mean. And then I'm like, oh,

(14:56):
and then I see multipople like, oh, that's just the
wave right now. That's there's a button nose too. There's
one where you're supposed to make it look like your
nose just like popping out. I think like a button
nose literally like like a little white dot and you
look like good dogs it's not I don't like it,
but I guess it's cute. I mean, you do you

(15:20):
gen z or whatever? The next whatever the next generation
is called conturing, like making it seem like you're you
have lines in different places on your fit. Like it's
like I'm going to an illusion of definition, like you know,
like on your cheek, you know, get your cheek bones
look pop in and ship like that. It is very
cool to watch someone do it into like a video,

(15:41):
because it draw these lines and it looks like insane,
and then they blend it and you're like, WHOA, where
to go? But it sometimes looks like the same as before,
and so you're like, I mean it looks slightly better,
but the whole thing is it looks like you're not
wearing makeup. So I never wanted to touch it because
it looked like too much to learn and out I
am of the age where I have to start covering

(16:05):
things up anyway, So I was like, why didn't I
learn to steel? Yeah, that's how I learned that contour
of my apps. Yeah, yeah, she's really good with the
air with the airbrush. Summer Brad Pitt abs from Fight
Club were painted on those exist. Yeah, those were a
contort and like how many motherfuckers felt for that one? Yeah,

(16:29):
that's how I'm trying to look dude like fucking Tyler
Dirting bro like I'm come on that ship, dude, like
needing me that Just give me a flashback to like
when it was I was in middle school summer can
cap drawing fake cludyvage line because you know, when you're
like a kid, you think got him yea, So it's
like you think the line like before you understand that

(16:50):
what is going on? Like the line because it's connected
to boobies, like people love a line. Yeah, liked little line,
but just just like, did you have open heart surgery? Did? Yeah?
I actually did have open heart surgery though even weirder. Yeah,
but yeah, anyways, I thought you were saying that because

(17:12):
you knew, and then I realized that No, no, I
just that someone would just say like, oh, you put
that line on your chest. I'm not familiar with what's
going on there. No, no, no, the surgery scar is
like white, it's like lighter, but you got draw a dark,
crisp line. Yeah. I wonder has has a conlok movie

(17:33):
villain ever been like the contour somebody who completely changes
their appearance based on their makeup skills. That that feels
like it would end up trending into some homophobic ship
you know what I mean? Make up guy who can
be anyone feels like some Bench Shapiro movie that's about
to come out. They're like shape shifting. But yeah, that's

(17:55):
interesting because it is the idea of changing your look on.
But if I agree, it would get a little okay,
how about a superhero? Yeah, yeah, you could just delight
people with new looks. You know. It's like, oh yeah,
that would be dope too, because you'd be in a
bind and they're like ship man, they got his corner, Like,
get your makeup bag out, y'all, now look like a

(18:18):
bunch of different people coming out the building. They're like
the robbers are in there. Isn't what men an impossible?
This whole thing though, that they just do the like lazy,
They just put on a fucking hood that was just
like and that change your box, Yeah that ship come on? Now?
Haven't have they been doing masks in the past? Couple
of ones I've seen them, but they The only thing

(18:39):
I remember is the sustained feeling that Tom Cruise was
trying to kill himself in front of me like creative voice.
I feel like, yeah, I remember like one of the
last ones I saw because I had a few had
passed and I saw. I'm like, oh, they're still on
that rip your face off ship. Yeah yeah, I know
they did it and goes protocol, but but it actually

(19:01):
like the technology fucked up and figure. But it's funny
how like you don't think that, Like it's clearly when
they do it, like they'll just have the actual actor
that they're portraying to be that person, but there's something
like their build changes when they take the mask off.
They're like, oh you're what did you in your shoulders
said they have the actors like yeah, they're not really

(19:24):
doing the mask that he's stop stop stop stop with
this man. Somebody come get him? Are you talking about
I'll come get acting like he doesn't understand what is
something things over it. He's acting like boomer somebody. Okay,

(19:47):
I don't know if this You guys have seen these
ads on your Instagram but overrated using trauma for cloud
like I guess so much. Instagram and TikTok etc. Are
like beyond like for it was like get therapy online,
it's like okay, okay, And now I literally had an
ad that was it looked like a like a TikTok
that had a comment on it, so you know when

(20:09):
people share a comment, but the comments said only people
with trauma responses can solve it. And it was like
some thing where you have to like solve but like what,
like I don't understand the the like did a robot
right this? Because I could see if a robot road
because they are just going like people click on trauma
because they want to fix it, and then they're like

(20:31):
they're engaging, please push the trauma. But it's so strange
and I get a lot of these. That's the weirdest one.
But there's a lot like do you may have a
d h D or like use this notebook and it's
all like kind of exclamation point stars like this is
trauma trauma response. You could be in the trauma club?
Are you a trauma survivor? And you're like what like

(20:51):
oh yeah, yeah, it's like why are you trying to
make it cool? Like it's so I don't know, it's
really weird. It gives me weird vibes. There's a I
mean the amount of like diet self diagnosing that you
can do on TikTok is absurd. Like if you're young
and impressionable and you get in that wormhole, like you

(21:12):
would be convinced. I can't believe they're actually using that
as marketing though, you know what I mean. Like I
get that the content was really popular and people were
trying to like learn more about themselves, and I get
the appeal of something like that, but it, yeah, it
is like with so many things on there, it's you're
starting to see like the more insidious nature of it,
especially when it's likely just using it to market. You're

(21:32):
just like, wow, Wow, that's marketing though, well, because I'm
like the whole idea of connecting people to understand each
other's great, But you can tell there's money behind the
influencers and the brands now because of these kinds of ads,
and you're like, Okay, there's what's like the clearly the
goal of this is just to sell something, Like it's

(21:52):
not help you. You may have trauma. Try to solve
this puzzle, and it's like you may have trauma. You'll
love this mobile game where you're a band of three
bikers fighting seven thousand zombies like only trauma survivors solve.
It is so wild. Yeah, I remember when I was
when I was really young, Like one of the first

(22:13):
kind of fantasies I remember having was like finding out
that I had like some condition that made my life
harder than everyone else and like that that is I
would like find out and people would be like whoa,
like he's in constant pain or like you know, like
something something like his pain hurts twice as bad as

(22:35):
everyone else's. And I always thought that was so weird,
And now it feels like it's like what everyone is
going through is that we're all just like I want
to learn that, like my baseline is like harder deal
with than everyone else's. We all want the magic, like
oh this helps and saves everything, but I mean just
some degree like there are you know, like getting helped

(22:58):
can sometimes Like remember when I first got on that,
it was like, oh, I felt like I was like
swimming underwater. Now the atmosphere is different, but but like
what you're saying, yeah, I mean that that's like some
young people that could be a sign, but it's definitely
not something you should be Like, I can't wait to
sign out my super trauma, Like it's like become a
superpower now. I don't know. Yeah, maybe there's some care

(23:21):
would be like your life's easy, you're white Jack, You're
like no, please go ahead tell me. I feel paining
place as bad as people. This whole thing is my fantasy. Yeah,
like I'm not a personal color, but I feel pain
three times like, okay, cool, equal, he's cool, he's cool.

(23:44):
What is something you think is underrated? Theresa? I'm gonna
go real basic organizing bins. I'm moved to my boyfriend
recently and intellect where are Oh, thank you? But I've
been like it's great, but you know, and this is
probably something guys who have been through this will relate to.
I think, because I think that it's more common than

(24:06):
I realized. I moved things around constantly because we weren't
moving together, so I'm like shuffling things around. I started
getting bins to put things that are out like flast pens.
Now everything's in bins, but it's still like around because
I'm not trying to So now like his friends will
come up and be like, ah, I see there's more
bins around, like just like all the loose items that

(24:28):
were out and about are now in bins. But I
love it and I think that it doesn't distract from
his flow to like do you mind showing me, like
give me example of something like yeah, and then there's uh,
well I wish I can't grab it now. But these
bright room clear ones, if you target sells them, they're great.

(24:50):
You can stack them like by our it's not filling
up like rubber made storage containers. Very they're in the
bathroom then kitchen. It's like that what is that ludicrous
song like in the car the b oh yeah in

(25:11):
the back seat had the movie Yeah I know that one.
Yeah yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, I got I can't. I
can't recommend any more of these clear bands because if
they stack, you could put like coffee pods, tea, chocolate,
every like yeah, that's true, and I've never it's funny,
so you've probably seen this. I feel like Asian people

(25:33):
will use like tupperware to container storage things like I
grew up at all. Yeah, I remember my mom like
like i'd be like six grades your rooms a message
like I organized it, just put all my pens like
in a and other ship like that, like you go
to you go to like an Auntie's house and there's
like those Danish cookies. Then yeah, it's just like yeah

(25:59):
that for But yeah, I think it's just it is
funny because I think of that too. I have it's
just not in my brain to think of buying organizational
bins or holders or things like that. So I think

(26:20):
as just how I'm kind of like a messy person.
People who have been to the I heart office back
when it was running, My desk looks like some kind
of sucking hoarders, like nightmare. But I'm gonna organize your
office for I literally loved it. Like it's like, I
think a new addiction because it's it's fun to organize.
Percentage when you're organizing. What percentage of the stuff are

(26:41):
you throwing away? My high is my high? How high
are you? And what percentage? Well, so like I'm trying
not to throw away too much because that's the part
I think will become annoying. Like literally, I'm like my boyfriend,
like it's fine, do whatever. So I just try to
be organized. But I already moved and so a lot
of my stuff is gone, so it really is just rearranging.

(27:03):
And I think that part I love it because sometimes
until you move, you don't realize that that's what the
flow is gonna be. So I've had to shuffle where
the keys go like maybe four times and that is
probably annoying. But you know, my bofriends saying and he
his acts like he didn't mind. I hope he still
loves me. But are you saying that they've also improved

(27:25):
the container get like it's no longer like the containers
that you can get are are better than they used
to be. Yeah, I think so. I think they realized
we were using tupper wear and repurposing like like you
know boxes and ship like I used to put my
magazine in our old Amazon bucks like cut in half,
and now it's like you can you know, you don't
have to spend a lot, you can just couple of

(27:46):
bucks and get these like nice plastic bands that stacking
or my mom should put a wrapping paper like nice
wrapping paper on other boxes to turn them up. Yea,
my mom has this closet up old boxes like literally,
I'm like, we don't need this. It's like stores that
are out of business, like we don't need this make
company box anymore. So I feel like the one time

(28:07):
we made a real run at getting organized. My wife
and are both very disorganized people. And yeah, yeah, oh
I thought your wife was like the opposite attracting, Like no, no, no,
we are like identical attracted in that respect. Looks at
me and it's disgusted sometimes. Now that's why it's it's

(28:27):
truly like we we were like should we really get married?
This is this is gonna be a problem. Like we
really love each other, but this is gonna be a
problem because we are identical, like identically a D D
messy people and we've made it work so far, but
we've like made multiple runs of getting organized, and sometimes
it like that the last time we did it like

(28:50):
via a container store approach, the stuff just kind of
looked like ship and ended up kind of all over
the place. We just had a messy house with containers.
And yeah, you gotta go not to him because I
used to be like too ambitious and be like I'm
gonna do the whole room, and then you start doing
it and then nothing matches, but the little thing you
start small, like you you organized the desk, and then

(29:12):
you you get like you know, and now I have
confidence I could do the kitchen. I could do the
bathroom and then pretty soon it's like the insides are good,
so you can then the outsides follow. Yeah, oh man,
such as life. So let's take a quick break. We'll
be right back. And we're back. And so, speaking of

(29:42):
messy ass people, Joe Biden apparently had some secret files
lying around in his fucking garage. Goddamn garage. Not great, Joe,
not great, not great. Not help him? Did the what? So? What?

(30:03):
How many? How many? How many secret files did this
old man have to fucking know? At this point? Man,
I know, I know that that is in this story.
That fact, I just don't well, there was like one
document in like they're like all over the place in
this place, in this place, and like I think there's
only one in the garage. But at the end of
the day, you're like, it's a fucking bad look if
you're trying to bang the drum and be like, man,

(30:24):
how dare you have these top secret documents and they're like, oh, hello, motherfucker,
you got them scattered around your ship too. Is this
being done by like some rogue trumpet pointee? Or this
is just them being so self serious about their ass coverage.
The U S attorney who got Merrick Garland, who basically
recommended to Merrick Garland to appoint a special counsel to

(30:48):
look into Biden's document problem is a trumpet pointe. So
there's that, But i'd imagine too, if you're actually on
some level, this is just what happens, right, Like, if
you're going to try and get Trump on this ship,
get the very least want to say, well, we did
an exhaustive investigation into Biden, and we did. There's a
you know, declination to prosecute. But he also did like

(31:11):
as dumb as it was, they like immediately operated, right.
I mean there's like like something like no, I don't
don't come in. Oh you came in. It's planted like
it's it's it's Grandpa was microwaving his shoes. Yeah, it's
really Joe. When he was pressed as to why these
documents were stored beside his corvette, he claimed it was

(31:34):
a quote locked garage. It's not like they're sitting out
on the street. Okay, Grandpa, I'm serious, I'm telling you,
oh man, and then said he was going to I'm
gonna get a chance to speak on all this, god
willing soon. It's just like so very enthusiastic, well, like

(31:58):
not having any idea where he is, like it's very
serious about what he's saying and has no clue where
he is. It basically wonder though it does it does.
This is the thing that I feel like maybe there's
the Republican agenda is just so doubt in general, because
whether or not fighting cooperates, it doesn't matter. Now we're like, oh,
if this could happen, what else is out there? And

(32:20):
then you start questioning the government, which we already are,
like after watching the whole mccarthurny thing, it's like, you
guys don't know how to do things, just supposed to
know how to do things, and so now it's really
easy for them to just plant like like this whole
thing is falling apart, and you know, like you don't
know documents can get out, what else can get out
your address? You personally are gonna be docs by Russia

(32:43):
or whatever. They're just gonna like break everyone out. There's
it's just funny too, because like they're they're CNN went
all in on Monday when this story first broke. Okay,
so MSNBC did about fourteen minutes of coverage. You get
that because they're the lips animal and they don't want
to really be like Joe Byron Senile and then Fox

(33:04):
News twenty nine minutes of coverage, they may be twenty
nine minutes of coverage, and CNN an hour and forty
seven minutes of coverage to the story and feature length
film coverage of coverage, and you're like, wow, look who
the new right wing darling is on the cable news block.
Like it's so funny, Like we need to really balance
this out. It's like, bro, you're going harder on this

(33:25):
than Fox News, Okay, I it is a very CNN
s thing to do. Like they've been so focused on
being like we got to cover both sides and like
anytime the Democrats funk up, we gotta go extra heart.
I mean, it's the whole media. It's like the way
that the game is rigged is you know, the quote
unquote center left media is actually like the most focused

(33:49):
on being like fair and balanced, you know, complete pores
and then fair and bounce everything that's not the left well,
because it makes it really easy for the cuckoo's to
really pull the other side further. Because if you're all
about the center, all they have to do is like
become a real outlier. And you're like, I guess I
gotta move too, But it's like no, no, you can
ignore the outliers, Like the cuckoos are saying this to

(34:12):
move the needle, not too because they can't believe keep
falling for it. They're like, no, we can also be
fucking vile also bleed for clicks. Let's check back in
with a what is it? It's e A because it
is effective altruism. Yes, yes, is this the Sam Bakman
free thing? Yeah, I mean for the forefront. Yeah, he

(34:37):
was their their biggest donor. But it's like this philosophical
school that is secretly a fucking hedge fund basically, and
they're all about donating money to the most effective means
for making the world the most people the happiest. And
it started with this philosopher who was like, you should

(34:59):
focus on fine, do as much money as we can
to donate two countries that like need bed nets to
stop the spread of malaria and ship like that. And
then he because he was like, and therefore, I'm gonna
start hanging out with VCP like venture capital people. Suddenly,
after like a decade of hanging out with venture capital people.

(35:19):
It becomes this thing of like, actually, we shouldn't send
that much money to foreign countries. Instead, we should be
focusing on like artificial intelligence and all these things that
can like make people money and the just just complete
bullshit and planetary exploration. Man, yeah, exactly. And when when

(35:40):
you do a deep dive into what the philosophy has become,
it is it has like eugenics in it, Like it
has there's a value system too. Here's a yeah where
the people in poor countries, they are like, yeah, but see,
their output is not that great. It doesn't create that
much good for humanity in the long run, and therefore

(36:03):
we don't have to focus on helping the people in
the poor countries because they're essentially their lives aren't worth
as much, right, Hey, Yeah, pull up the KPI s
on Mr Real quick. Like chreates the otherness I feel like,
because it's like, I mean, Hollywood does the kind of
stuff a lot, but a lot more like transparent, but
just the whole like we want to help as long

(36:24):
as we're it's clear that we're helping someone much more
unfortunate than ourselves. There's never really this acknowledgment that's like,
we're all people that could one day need help or
maybe today need help. Like you could need help and
still be helping someone. Those two things could happen at
the same time. You know, like yeah, and I have
the most money and I'm smart, so let me let
me tell you how to fix this. Guy Nick Bostrom,

(36:47):
that's this is the philosopher who is like, you know,
sort of at the forefront of this. And he also
he's not, but he's the one that, like with Sam Bankman,
Freed had a lot of influence over this like movement.
And he's also the guy who really made the idea
that like this is a simulation man. That's his big thing.
But earlier this week he said he wanted to get

(37:08):
ahead of a potential smear campaign because he caught wind
of somebody looking into an old email list serve that
like for sci fi fans he was like involved in
in the nineties and he I forgot to delete. He's like,
fuck it, let me just tell you I was racist
before this Guardian piece does. So what he said is,

(37:29):
you know, he talks about this thing is like this
list serve in the mid nineties quote where people had
conversations about science fic, science fiction, future, technology, society, and
all sorts of random things. I was. It was not moderated,
so the noise level was very high occasional interesting ideas,
but also large quantities of silly, mistaken or out white
offense or outright I said, Fredian sleeve slip. So this

(37:54):
is one of the This is like an excerpt from
one of these emails that he posted that he's saying, Look,
I'm just gonna be a from with y'ad. This is
some ship that I said. Quote. I have always liked
the uncompromisingly objective way of thinking and speaking. Oh my god,
shut up already. Um, the more counterintuitive and repugnant of formulation,
the more it appeals to me, given that is logically correct. Take,

(38:15):
for example, the following sentence blacks are more stupid than whites.
I like that sentence, and I think it is true.
But recently I've begun to believe that I won't have
much success with most people if I speak like that.
They would think that I were a racist, that I
disliked black people and thought it is fair if blacks
are treated badly. I don't. It's just that based on

(38:37):
what I have read. I think it is probable that
black people have a lower average i Q than mankind
in general. I may be wrong about the facts, but
it is what the sentence means for me. For most people, however,
the sentence seems to be synonymous with I hate those
bloody and words. And he didn't redact that in his
fucking thing. He's just well, he just said, look the
hard are bombs coming out? Yeah, And he goes with

(39:00):
this like weird, fucking defensive like this. You know, I'm sorry,
my words offending, just like the early months, my facts
offend you. Ship, But he says quote. My point is
that while speaking with the provocativeness of unabashed objectivity would
be appreciated by me and many other persons on this list,
it may be a less effective strategy and communicating with
some people, some of the people quote out there. I

(39:23):
think it's laudable if you accustomed people to the offensiveness
of truth, but be prepared that you may suffer some
personal damage. Oh my god, he's talking like you know,
when someone's trying to write an essay and bullshitting about
a topic they have no idea about, but they need
the word count like this essay would get poor marks,
Like yeah, hey look man, fact you don't care about

(39:44):
your feelings? Yeah wait, was that was that last paragraph?
My point is that while speaking with the was that
that was part of his original post. Yeah, okay, So
he's kind of doing that thing where he's like, no,
if you don't agree with Like he's like, if you
don't agree with me, and I know you probably don't,
you're just on the other side of dumb, and so

(40:06):
like you really can't. There's not even a really he's like,
you got to see, this is the thing. The fucking
world doesn't want to accept that black people are just dumb. Right,
But he's not even living room for discord. I mean,
like not that that should be, but like it's like
a manipulation tactic because he's kind of be like, here's something,
but if you don't believe it, which I know you
probably don't, you're also dumb and you're like that. I mean,

(40:28):
at the end of the day, it's for all these
people to like circle jerk and be like where the
fucking smartest dudes? And I'm sorry that we're seeing through
the fucking matrix like that. But he goes on to
say this is this is his follow up. So after
that expert he says, quote, I completely repudiate this disgusting
email from twenty years ago. It does not accurately represent
my views then or now. This is the funny part.
The invocation of a racial slur was repulsive. I immediately apologize.

(40:53):
That's how he said. Yeah, invocation of a church motherfucker's invocation?
The is this? So I think again? He then he
does the other thing of the I'm not a racist
white guy by then track, like going down about look
at all this money I've given to the bloody pores
and negroes out there. And then at the end of
the day he doesn't really apologize for his use of

(41:16):
the N word or even this stupid ass way of thinking.
He's not even He just he just goes about, low,
I saw it invoked a racial slur. Yeah, so talk
about the bullshit thing that you were saying and explain
why it's incorrect. If this is part of your fucking
like apology. And also that exact thing is a big

(41:36):
part of effective altruism. Like the profiles that you read
about it, they spend a lot of time being like,
how do we communicate our god level genius ideas to
outside people without offending them. So this is like already
what he's talking about when he's talking about effective altruism,
Like effective altruism is just like at its core, you know,

(42:00):
just right, it's it's like we know how to help you,
just let us, and it's like help yourself, dude. This
is what he says the two or later on, he's
like when he tries to kind of dance around the
fact that he's saying this racist nonsense, he's there like
he goes, what about eugenics? Do I support eugenics? No,
not as the term is commonly. Yeah. See, but anyway,

(42:25):
this is again, these are like the minds that are
at the forefront of like trying to shape what they
think fucking the next iteration of our world in society
can be, which is basically facts and figures. Oh, I'm
sorry you live in this. If you live in the
Global South, I hope your outputs good. Otherwise you're a
non participant in life. Yeah, jeez. I think we should

(42:49):
stop like letting rich people show receipts to show how
quote unquote good they are. Like, I think the news
standard should be how many poor people have given you money,
because then it's like you're probably cool with poor people,
like you know, because if you're just I mean, if
you're rich and you're just like making money in a
bad way and you're giving people money, it's like that

(43:11):
tells me nothing, That tells me that you have a
lot of money, and then you feel guilty. I'm not
saying don't donate, Like, hey, anyone listened to this. If
you want to guiltily donate, keep doing it. But just
think about how much you're also willing to how often
you're willing to accept help, and now just don't donate
through ethical whatever that is. I think we need to

(43:33):
all give and receive in life in the way that
you know, Like I'm not saying I hate this sixty
nine position, but I'm just saying, like, think about life
like sixty nine. You know, like if you're only ever giving,
you're not really giving. You're like you're making up for
some ship. Right. You gotta feel like you can ask
for help because you fellow humans. Thank you. I love this,

(43:59):
Ted talk to It's beautiful. All right, let's take a
quick break. We'll be right back, and we're back and

(44:19):
real quickly we got to talk about the storms in
California that have been happening for the last two weeks
are probably going to continue in the next at least
the next couple of days or over the weekend. Yeah,
we got there's like two more storms coming. Yeah, nineteen
people have died already. It's bad. Million dollars with the damage.
Is the atmospheric river, Yeah, atmospheric that turned into a

(44:43):
cyclone bomb is what we have, which is basically just saying, oh, yeah,
here's we're just gonna empty a bunch of water on
this part of the earth days at a time. Yeah.
And it's like they they told us this was coming
or like about within the last twelve months. They were like, California,
because of climate change, is going to start seeing these

(45:03):
once every millennial millennium storms happening on a regular basis,
They're going to be flooded, like constantly, repeatedly, and it's
because the climate change. So you would think that as
once the disaster arrives, that's how it would be covered. Yeah.
I mean most people saw the footage and we're like

(45:23):
that looks not good at all, which would then probably
lead a person to say why this happened? And then
that's usually when the news would inform you of what
is happening in the world around you. But sadly, during
the first few days of the storm in California, there
is barely any mention of climate change. Media Matters did
an analysis of the news coverage on TV and found

(45:44):
quote found that, with one exception, cable news network CNN, FOX, MSNBC,
and national broadcast Networks ABC, CBS, NBC failed to link
these events to our warming climate cable, they said, CNN, Fox,
MSNBC air to total of thirty three combined segment on
the California rain. CNN covered the storms the most with
twenty four segments, followed by Fox. Blah blah blah. CNN

(46:05):
was the only one to mention climate change, but that
was only because they were interviewing San Francisco Mayor London
Breed who brought up the term climate change. It wasn't
them saying and they were talking to somebody in California like, yeah, man,
we'll climate change and are and like these kinds of things.
This this is sort of the world we're having to
prepare for unless we do something urgently, Are you saying, Uh?

(46:26):
The news on TV an industry much sponsored by advertisers
that adjectlimate change. Maybe maybe no, no subtlety to this one.
It's just it's it's just really it's just the wild thing. Though,
is this like this weird habit of the media, you know,

(46:48):
funders aside is that they treat climate change like a
seasonal thing, like Christmas time was climate change time, Like
this ship has been happening all over the world all
the time, Like yeah, it's still going on. Pick any
given season like Earth season, and I'm telling you there's
some wild shit happening somewhere somewhere where the heat is

(47:09):
like you've never seen the in in Europe, they were
like all the people like our ski seasons fucked because
it's so fucking hot over here, Like what do you
think the funk that is? And that's what I think
is really alarming too, is because most people are like
you know, aren't critically ingesting the news that we're just
defaulting to this thing. It's like, damn bad storms again,

(47:30):
huh not, Damn the clock is fucking ticking on this
place and we have to get shipped done. And I
get it because obviously that's you know, it's about maintaining
the status quo on that. But yeah, fucking disheartening. Yeah,
so let's talk about it. So HBO Max prices are
going up, as are a bunch of the streaming prices.
HBO Max is gonna cost an extra dollar or so.

(47:52):
It's going from months as an egg cost right now,
wholeful's so fucking egg anyone. That's a whole other thing.
But this whole model like that, this isn't new. This
isn't new in streaming. It's not new elsewhere like that,

(48:14):
Like where Cellular plans TV and any subscription model Cellular
I like that, we don't call it cellular. Hell yeah,
to get on that cellular telephone, get on that cell phone.
But they get you in the door, and then once
you're there, that's an auto renewing and no longer paying attention.
They just like ramp up the price to some ungodly number.

(48:36):
And then you turn around eighteen months and you're like, wait,
why am I poor? Oh because my ESPN Plus account
like went up to a hundred dollars on you know,
like whatever the funk it is? The I I feel
like it's all part of this. They've built this world
of just information pollution where like we're just so snow

(49:00):
it under by so much different ship and they're just
they're counting on that in some ways where there's just
like everybody's fucking helpless to keep track of all of
the things they need to keep track of, and so
you just get buried in all this noise. Like our
email inboxes are like dominated. Christiem Gucci Man put it

(49:22):
on Twitter a few weeks ago. He was like, my
email inboxes places that I bought a shirt from seven
years ago. Just you know, like they they've just completely
and like that that's how the weight is with like news.
There's like so much news coming in, like only some
of it we have to give a shit about, but

(49:43):
they've like gamified all of it. So now you're like
on the winning team or the losing team and just
like bombarded to the point of exhaustion. So at any
given moment, it's just like I don't know, like what
am I going to do? That is interesting because yeah,
like until you said that, I hadn't really like thought
about how streaming it used to be, Like you know,

(50:04):
HBO is more like like narrative, like cinematic, but now
everything has a mix of sports news like real time coverage, documentaries,
funny comedies like whatever. It's all like everything's everywhere, and
so can't just all I want? Yeah, but you can't,
like you can just be like, oh, like you know,

(50:24):
let me just consume like you know, nonfiction, because it's
like where do you go for that? Even like the
old school, not like na Geo Discovery all that is
doing that. All those places are doing um fun reality
and whatever. Now it's like they've abandoned the learning channel
is now about watching toxic, abusive relationships. And you're like, huh,

(50:45):
but yeah, I mean this is just kind of like
someone recently put a graphic up of like if you
add up all the streaming ship, they're like, you paying
more than cable. Yeah, at this we've crossed, we've we've
we've reached that point where it's like there's too many
damn of services and if you want to keep up
with all of like the mainstream media like offerings out
there for TV and ship, you're spending way more money

(51:07):
now and you and you lose track Because I think
it's really it's kind of brilliant because you're like, oh,
that's just only six Okay, I'll get that one, oh,
that one, And then you look you're like, hold on minute,
what the funk am I doing right now? Do you
think like it's possible? Because when Steve Jobs made like
the iTunes store, at first we're like, there's no way,
but now you buy music a la cart and I

(51:29):
remember thinking like I would not do that. Do you
think there's a world in our near future where we
get rid of like the big conglomerates and we're buying
programs like you know, like books, books can be sold
in all bookstores. Why do we need to watch it
seems like subscribe to the whole streaming platforms. It seems
like most people in like in the industry think that

(51:51):
it's gonna turn into a singularity again like cable, Like
they're gonna find a way to package all this ship together.
And it's not going to be because then you stand
to lose money if you allow people to buy things
all a cart. That's why I like sometimes an advertiser,
but not as a or as a platform, but not
as a creator, like sure, sure, oh absolutely, but then

(52:13):
that's a complete that's like, that's a business model that
would completely upend the predatory nature of how like people
are compensated in the industry, I'd say, but I think
like with how like you know, if you think of
how like a cable company is like I want I
just want the Internet. They're like, we're you gonna get
this phone and cable too, Like what can I just
get the other thing? It's like no, No, this is
how we help you try and like incentivize you to

(52:35):
add more ship on and stay within our ecosystem, so
you end up being like a higher margin consumer, which
is what this ship is all about, is creating high
margin consumers. It's not just dreaming to like all like, um,
I bought Microsoft Office because I had to update, and
then they offered me a free year of Uber one
and I'm like what, how are these things related? But

(52:57):
Uber all the Lift plus Postman They're like, you want
to watch the Big Game? How about three months of
free delivery? And it's like I kind of understand how
they're related in that where all people who are who
have to use these big companies because they're like basically monopolies.
But I'm like, why are they all taking up to
take our money? Like, yeah, what happened at the competition

(53:18):
making the product better? No? No, no, how can we
squeeze the fucking life out of you with all these ads?
And I'll be at Uber one like one person. Like,
if anyone needs to delivery, text me, I will whatever
rate be it. If I'm free, I will deliver it
to your house. Yeah. I just just for the glove
of wanting to take down these big companies. Okay, let's

(53:40):
all just start delivering against Uber. Yeah. Yeah, there's no differentiation.
It's just all one big like gray. It's like Plato
after you like put all the Plato together and it
just becomes gray. It's like that's what we just live in,
this weird gray Plato mob. And everything's the same and

(54:03):
it's all providing the same service and it's all bad
and god a nightmare. Well look, they're, like I said,
they're all struggling for cash right now, so and I
could care less about the corporation strugglings and get rid
of the big executives. Come on, man, bye, Bob Iger

(54:24):
just told all the Disney folks you're back in the
office four days a week. Bobby is back. I think
we've get rid of all the sea level jobs and
all they're the ones being like nobody wants to work.
All of them are unemployed and no income. They have
enough saying means to just go on vacation for a
little bit and then when they come back they can
work for us, you know. They that I think is

(54:45):
the plan, that's the way forward. Well, we just need
to send them all to that tropical island that Larry
Summers is on like waxing philosophical about the future of
the economy, and just put them on a closed circuit
TV that only they can see, and they're just like
doing interviews back and forth like taught talking about their speculation.

(55:08):
And then we're back here burning down their whole this
whole fucking mess that they've created, because it really it's
really like any sort of human interaction has been removed,
as like we're creating a friction list consumer environment. And
that's like I literally called my health insurance today because

(55:31):
I got an email that it was canceled. I'm getting
a refund. It turned out that I had switched it
without realizing. But what I called the Persson phone, who
is just doing a job. She doesn't know, but she
was like, oh, I think we've been getting a lot
of calls like this. Um, I think what Blue Cross
has been doing is they've been canceling people's numbers just
because they want to give people a new member I
D so they'll refund and then people can't pay their

(55:52):
bills because they don't know what their member I D.
So you probably have this. Let me look into it.
Turns out it wasn't that, so I don't even know
she was lying and just you know, saying I'm like
that's bad, Like why is that happen? She's like, I
don't know, but you should, like you're the person people call,
they should tell you. American consumers and American corporations are
in the most toxic relationships. It's just like they're like,

(56:15):
I'm gonna treat you like ship and then you're gonna
have to like just come back to me, and then
I'm gonna treat you like ship again and give you
the worst excuse or no excuse, and you're going to
keep taking it because there's nothing you can do. That's
really it sounds like something that you'd see me. Actually, yeah,
it sounds like something you see on what on TLC.

(56:36):
You see relationships exactly like that on MA Fiance. Yeah, well, Teresa,
such a pleasure having you as always, where can people
find you? Follow? Oh? Thank you so fun. I love
coming on the show. Um, you can follow me on
Instagram at recently bought. I'm still weirdly on Twitter, but
I'm not going to plug my Twitter. Just gonna be
there till the whole ships thinks. Um. And if you're

(56:58):
around in l A, I'm hosting a miles to this
but Genre Cram. It's like, uh, twenty four hours sketch
cram show, but we're doing it with genres at UCB
on Saturday. Basically we're all gonna write, rehearse and produced
and put on the show within twenty four hours. And
there are some of the people. Some of the people, yeahses,
we got James Third, we got Jeral Milligan. If we

(57:19):
I think there's only people who like have like real
writing credits to like come to my apartment and like
stay up and write a show. So I'm pretty pumped. Yeah,
it's it's great. Bab's Grady Jess Parker. Um, you guys
can see the whole whole lineup UCB Comedy dot com.
It's called Genre Cram and listen to my podcast. You
can tell me anything. I still gotta get you guys

(57:41):
on and yeah, you know, whenever you're not not not busy,
I would love to have you guys on. I feel
like every time I come here and plug it, I'm
like I want to be like, yeah, there's enough, and
they're like fuck but not because not because there shouldn't.
They should be Yeah, yeah, yeah. Is there a tweet

(58:01):
or some of the work of social media you've been enjoying.
Ohh yeah, Okay, I'm gonna quote this one from at
Katie Hannah. I don't know the person, I just saw it.
It posted as a therapist. I can say confidently that
while therapy is helpful, what most people really need is money.
Appreciate that tweet a lot. I'm shot at this TikTok

(58:22):
just because it made me smile. It's like, not so
funny but astleutly Murray who plays Josie on Riverdale. No,
I'm not a big fan, just sawdust. But this guy
on New Year's Eve was like showing a true mirror
at some party and she someone got her reaction looking
into this true mirror And it's really cool video to
watch because I think she posts on her Instagram too,
but she like really lights up as she's realizing, like

(58:45):
this is what people see, and her eyes like light
up because he's like, yeah, this is when you look
into someone's eyes, like you can see the light, but
usually in the mirror you don't see that because it's
not reflected. And you watch her whole face like, oh
my god, like really, and she like lights up realizing
that she lights people up. And it's a really sweet video.
That's awesome. Miles, where can people find you? What's the

(59:07):
tweet you've been enjoying? Oh? Find me on Twitter and
Instagram Miles of Gray. And also check jack and I
out on our other podcast, Miles and Jackson There Boots
Uh Fantastic Basketball Podcast. And also, like I was talking
about if you want to talk about the trash on TLC,
check me and Sophia Alexander out on four twenty Day Fiance.

(59:30):
Let's see. I really just like, oh, this was from
Winter Mitchell at Winter which Winter Mitchell tweeted the Coachella
lineup release always signal the key moment in my twenties
where I'd buy fast fashion, new makeup and launch a
three month full scale skin, body and metaphysical journey to
combat thigh sweat on the grounds miss that rush. It
really used to be something. And this one is from

(59:52):
Grayson Allen Enjoyer. I don't know if you saw this.
What's the Bucks coach name, Mike Buttonhaller or something like that,
Mike button hall booden Holzer or something, but you know,
but but he this man took a sip of a
Do Sagni at a press conference and his face melted.
And I just love this video because as Bud's reaction

(01:00:13):
to drinking Da Sagny, the water should be illegal. And
somebody'all can't see this, but he's gonna take a sip
of Desagni. He's like looking off and he's like, yo,
what the just drink? And he looks at him goes, no,
this ain't it. This ain't it. I think he has
a beef with Da Sagny. I think some of the
people are saying in the comments, but you know, like

(01:00:33):
he was being messy on purpose. Some people were like
it almost feels like he was, you know, like he
had the reaction before he actually had a chance to
taste it. Look, I'm as king, I know you especially
a nice cold one like that, so you see the condensation. Hey,
fun bottle water in general, you can drink tap water
for it in most places, unless you can't because the

(01:00:55):
government has failed you. But it's definitely not as bad
as he just made it. Same. Uh, let's see a
tweet I've been enjoying another shout out to Christie. I'm
a Gucci Maine at Wapple House tweeted, Gwen Stefani is
now the age Wilford Brimley was in Cocoon. H Yeah,
how old I think he was like in his fourties? Wow?

(01:01:20):
Oh no, because when Stefani is like in the fifties
now okay, so jeeze man, that's how ye Look what
a difference, uh, A lifetime of being that girl makes.
And then Gazz tweeted cheerleaders should start doing said interpretive
dance when their team is losing. Wait, hold on when

(01:01:42):
Stefani says she was hold on, bro, I can't handle
this when Stefani phraces criticism over I'm Japanese comment in
a Lure magazine interview, because he's trying to defend that,
how did you girl ship? All right? All right, I
don't know. Maybe there's something else going on, but I
just saw that probably not probably that's probably exactly what

(01:02:03):
you people don't care about It's like Katie Perry, appropriatezard, no,
nobody right right, right, all right. You can find me
on Twitter at Jack Underscore O'Brien. You can find us
on Twitter at Daily Zeitgeist. We're at the Daily Zeitgeist
on Instagram, we have Facebook fan page and a website,
Daily zeitgeist dot com, where we post our episodes and

(01:02:25):
our foot Nope, we lak off to the information that
we talked about in today's episode, as well as a
song that we think you might enjoy. Miles, what song
do we think people might enjoy? Oh Man going to
the weekend with This track is called Hot Flavor by
Hadiyah George you may have heard this track. I think
it's pretty popular right now. But this is the god
Mode What then? Is this super Smash remix or someone?

(01:02:48):
Hold on, let me make sure I have the full title.
H Yes, it's the It's the god Mode Smash Bros
Remix And you know, do you George is dope. It's
from Atlanta, I think from Atlanta, definitely from Georgia. Uh
and like singer rapper and this track is like nice,
like sort of kind of laid back beat and she's
kind of her flow on it gets kind of a
little more intense and like the message gets a little

(01:03:10):
more aggressive. I really like it. So check this out.
Hot Flavor by Adia George the Super Smash Bros. Renix.
All right, well, we'll link off to that in the footnotes.
The Daily Zika is a production by Heart Radio. For
more podcast for my Heart Radio, visit the Heart Radio
Rap Apple Podcast or wherever you let's see your favorite shows.
That is gonna do it for us this morning, back
this afternoon to tell you what's trending and we'll talk

(01:03:31):
to you all then Bye bye,

The Daily Zeitgeist News

Advertise With Us

Follow Us On

Hosts And Creators

Jack O'Brien

Jack O'Brien

Miles Gray

Miles Gray

Show Links

StoreAboutRSSLive Appearances

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

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

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

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.