Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season eighty one, Episode
three of Guys Yeah, a production of My Heart Radio.
This is a podcast where you take a deep dive
in Neue America's share consciousness and say, officially off the top,
fuck coke industry and funk Fox News. It's Wednesday, May eight,
two thou nine team and names Jack O'Brien ak take
(00:20):
that rewind at Jack's a gang. Got that takes to
make the booty go, Bryan. That's courtesy of Hannah Assaults
and I'm sorried to be joined as always buy my
co host Mr Miles Round control the Graga Tom, get
my light to fill the bomb And I just added
(00:42):
that second line. But anyway, that was from at saultis
Hannah for that space oddity? Take two? Do for Hannah
turn two on that one ye has she ever done
a hat trick and given our level? But then but
that will require them knowing who the guest was or
(01:02):
the person that was a real the universe conspired with
against us, or for her to provide the person the
inspiration to use something to aspire to Hannah, something for
h T d z a k is to aspire to. Yeah.
One day I had tricked. I guess maybe one day
what we can do is announced who the third person
is and then bry and see if someone could do
(01:23):
the trifecta. That would be impressive. Well, we are thrilled
to be doing dinner Third Seat by the hilarious comedian
one of the very bases on Mountain Site, Mr Billy
Wayne Davids. Hey, guys, like that intro, Like you guys
going back and forth? It felt like human airhorns. Yeah,
that's the club, but I think it actually sounds like this. Yes,
(01:49):
but that's how it failed. Changing my Twitter bio the
human airhorn and dance hall airhorn. How you been man, good.
You're hanging in there with your baby. Yeah, no, it's
been fun. I've been traveling and going back to a
now he's three months old, nine year old. Yeah. Yeah,
it's just just NonStop. Yeah. Yeah. We're gonna get to
(02:13):
know you a little bit better, catch up with you
in a moment. First, we're gonna tell our listeners a
few of the things we're talking about. Guys, there is
a Pokemon region of the brain apparently, we're gonna talk
about that. We're gonna talk about the best way to
work with somebody to get somebody to work with you,
and it involves eating chips on salsa. We're gonna talk
(02:34):
about how it's beginning to look a lot like Rush.
We're gonna talk about zello, We're trying to secure. We're
gonna talk about the craft foods, how they're helping mothers
out with free childcare and just really you know, making
the world a better place. We're gonna talk about Mega
(02:57):
Markel and Prince Harry's baby. Uh and you know just
how the world is responding to that. We're gonna talk
about the met Gala. Yes, I would like to do
that is Oh I thought you're gonna guys. Can you
imagine just like like dragging your buddy in there he's
passed out, and then him waking up in that room
(03:18):
with all those things that it is one of the
weirdest Yeah, just places just to to take an alien
and be like you got to get audit. I would
be like, I'm want to do acid for the first tonight. Yeah, yeah,
Like and why is Billy laughing? He hasn't left the
table the whole to walk over and touch famous people's faces. Yeah,
(03:43):
real ship Uh, Woodstock fifty could still hey you never know,
you never know. Uh, and we might even check in
with the latest addition, the latest attempt by conservative comedy
to make a daily show. Uh. And it will make
your eyes water. Uh. Not not the way they intended.
(04:06):
But first, Billy, we like to ask our guests, what
is something from your search history that's revealing about who
you are? Plumbers? Yeah, what's that? What's happening? Man? Haven't
some girthy ones? Just god, I wish it was that easy.
I've just been pooping a lot. It has. Uh. We
redid their back little place, and we did it on
(04:29):
the cheap, and now we're learning first homeowner lessons about
your back a little places the outhouse. Well, no, okay,
that's been real quick. If we didn't it was going
that way. But the guy we saved money on wasn't
good at plumbing return on investment there, so we had Yeah,
(04:51):
we've had to been like, well if we had yeah,
So the world of contractors and like people like that.
You it really does like make you that you some
of the old school ship of like knowing people in
your neighborhood who are like have done this before because
they've just like walked into the fucking bricks and like
stepped on the rakes that you would step on if
(05:12):
you're like, oh, I'm thinking about going with this guy,
and they're like that right. We had a very bad
experience with this. One of my really good friends, her
dad is an electrician, like firefighter, but you know a
lot of firefighters have like dual jobs. So he's also
an electrician, and like, you know, we've been down forever.
So he helps me up, helps me regularly with my
electrician huge. Initially what I did was like, just teach
(05:36):
me how to do the basic ships. I don't have
to keep bothering you, so I can do that's a
good thing to be. I can put outlets in switches,
light fixtures, do all that. Ship But like amateur electrician
totally worth it. Just just sunk around, try try some
different things out. He's just like sum of being electrician.
And then he was always like he's like, dude, it's
so easy. It's so easy. But he's also one of
(05:57):
those dudes who has been around so many construction projects.
It's great to see him walk through a home because
he'll look at a little ship and just be like wow, Okay,
I see what they did here with this line right, Well,
you see the conduit over here, and I'm like, I
don't know what the fun this is, but I love
that you realize, just to your point, Billy, that there
(06:17):
are such levels two things of building things that like,
if you're very literate in the construction of something, you
can look at something and it would just make you laugh.
This is gonna fall down, right, He's like, are you
trying to catch fire while you sleep? I'm like, no,
in the winter? Um, what is something you think is overrated?
I think airplanes are overrated? Okay, yeah, well you prepare buses,
(06:43):
train travel. I just will stop move on just that.
I don't think, Um, why no, I don't have an alternative.
I don't yet. You try an alternative. The train is
nice if you if every things slowed down to like,
but we were the youngest people on the train by
(07:04):
twenty years. You took you took a train from what
l A to Colorado, Trinidad, Colorado. It looked like it
was beauty. It was beautiful. Um, I could imagine there
might be stretches of time that would feel a little boring.
It's fine because you can get up and move, but
it's just so time consuming, like if you're in a
like if you're trying to do stuff, it's right. It's
(07:26):
also kind of expensive. How many days journey is it?
Twenty four hours? Which is about six hours where I
was like, all right, I'm ready to just were you
traveling with your three month old? No? God, no, no
babes on a train. My friend did get offered cocaine
on the train. Dude, train came yeah, And I just
(07:48):
looked him as like, do not. Yeah, this ain't the
place you want to start blowing up Here in a
small cabin together, you were drinking. I am not right,
this is and I you do not need to be
amped up? Hey man, can I workshop some material with
you real quick? I'm gonna hey, hey, you think I
can dump, I'm gonna jump train to train. I'm gonna jump.
(08:09):
I'm gonna get on the top making that you have
that podcast recording stuff. I'm just I'm just doing a
podcast right now with somebody. There's not many people we
ran into. That's what's also I keep thinking about. It
was like we probably saw six people and one of
those one of those dudes offered my friend cocato. You
got one in six chance on Amtrak for a little
train Kane. What's also funny is he looked right at
(08:32):
me first and then walked by me and then went
to my body. He's like, nope, because you have like
a stoic Warriors look. Also kind of looked like a cop.
So it was a hell of a game, right, would
be like that that guy's a cop. But hey, you
you want to coke? Hey, you crazy hair cop out
of the way. I gotta offer this guy coke. Yeah,
(08:53):
this guy looks like he needs some coke. This guy
with a boot like Bart Simpson tank top looks like
he knows what's up? Oh man, it was I was like,
what is anything ever? So we're basically advocating for teleportation
or some other jet packs something besides plane travel bullet
train bulletin. Yeah, man, you're like, you know, living in
(09:14):
Western Europe, they have better train systems than we have
over here, and you just like can go anywhere and
it's not like terrible and it's beautiful. So I don't know, man,
it's yeah, I wish trains were better here in these
United States. I feel like clean toward the driverless car.
If you had the time though, to do like a
(09:36):
long winded train thing. I can see how that would
be enjoyable, but it's it's more that you're doing it
for the experience rather than using it as a mode
of transportation without a doubt. You know. It was I
knew going in and I did. I wasn't like freaking out.
I was just I noticed about, you know, five hours
until the destination, until we got there. That that's when
(09:56):
I was like, I'm tired of this, but I would
like freak out or anything. But because I knew, because
I was like, this is one time I'm never going
to do this, right. That's how the coke dealers get you.
They're like, all right, five hours to go, man, you
want to make five hours fly? It was like nine
time too, where you're like we can go sleep. This
(10:18):
is we have a bed. Also, don't come in here,
I'll bloat up man farting up our sleeping so funny
our car and the coke car well well. And also
breakfast was from six am to eight am and then
they were done. Yeah, like like no more breakfast. You
have to get like doughnuts or whatever from the cafe.
And I was like what they were like, it's packed,
(10:38):
And I was like oh, because old people just wake up. Yeah,
it's somewhere between, like on a plane or like in
an airport, they have they know they have you captive,
and so they're just getting they funk with you. But
like on a train, it's like somewhere in between, they're like,
we try to make this somewhat amenable, but it's not
like you're out there, but we will tell you to off.
(11:00):
You try and get some breakfast. We live on a train.
There was one lad, Yes, there's one server lady. She
had this voice where the whole time I was like,
where are you smoking? Hat? How? How? And where on
this trainer you smoke? But between the cars her dining car,
and she owned that tree, and I respected her. Um
(11:23):
or blips. We we really gave up on Blimpse after
the Hindenburgh. Let's let's give that to try again. What
is something you think is underrated? Helicopters quick, quick, and dirty?
Are you going for a license of something? No, I
mean I'll get a pilot's license for like as cessain
or something before I get it's because the margin for
(11:47):
air on in an airplane is greater. Yeah. Yeah, you
just followed the funk out of the sky. Yeah. Um,
but I just think about it all the time in traffic.
Oh yeah, well you see, and like I'm an not
a Kobe Bryant fan at all, but when people are
giving him ship about taking his helicopter from Newport Beach
(12:08):
to the I was like, I was like, you guys know,
if any of you could do that, right, you would
do that. You drive from Newport to the Staples Center.
You tell me that's the thing you want to do
a lot. And if you had the option to not
do that, that you would still choose the option to
do it. Yeah, that carbon footprint is your Yes, So
(12:31):
I think about that all the time. We all secretly
aspire for the chapter. Just yeah, I do feel like
the pilot's license of one sort or another is probably
if I thought about it long enough, I would probably
start investing in that, like studying that because like I've
read so many books where people are or or just
like heard Bill Burr talk about getting his helicopter license,
(12:53):
where it's just like, oh, this like totally changes everything
about like how you look at the world. You can
just be like, Okay, I'm gonna fly across the country
from city to city and not have to land in
like those major airports. I can just like land in
like a airport somewhere and like see parts of the country.
You just fall existence. You just follow the interest. Yeah,
(13:14):
that's all you have to do. Yeah, great, I took us. Yeah.
I took one cess in the lesson when I lived
in Washington State and he flew around. I was like, oh,
this is very doable. Yeah. Yeah, it's just you always
hear about people dying in Yeah, but who here's you get?
There's way better than like a Sami hit me, Like
what happened? I crashed into a bay right and there's
(13:36):
a statue of me. Yeah, And people are like, yeah,
there's not the guy who overdosed on coke on a train. Yes, exactly.
There's a little wooden cross next to the highway from
the Native memorials. It's like the trash island in the Pacific, Like,
(14:02):
someone clean up that gyre. Not a memorial boy, he
was bad at flying. What is a myth? What's something
people think is true you know to be false? Ah?
That there's two parties. Yeah, m how many you think
they are? Ah? I mean party, the pre party and
(14:25):
the after party. Three that you know about that you know,
and then there's the after then there's then then some
guy in a tuxedo pulls you samuels this is the
real party and takes it through a secret door where
all the wealthy people are, where all the train coke dealers,
the mat too. It was like when you think about
the Matt Gal I was like, that's what they do
in public, right, right, right? Right? Can you imagine what
(14:50):
are they doing in private? Yeah, Like Kim kardash And
saved her better outfit for the after party. Yeah, And
these are the things that I know about because we
do this ship because you know about it, right, and
also because just I know about it. What a weird world. Yeah,
but what are you talking about? Political parties? Or Yeah,
you're talking about like party parties. There's so many parties,
(15:13):
a bunch of parties that just means like, I don't
think right now, I think both the Democratic and the
Republican Party have been hijacked by something. Yeah, so I
don't think they're I mean it's been I think it's
sort of been like that, right, Yeah, But I think
more than never, it's like open and kind of evil,
whereas before it was just like there was some kind
(15:34):
of that you could pretend it's like yeah, progress, yeah
for profits. Yes, right now, it's just like very clear.
Like I was in a meeting some it's like, where
do you staying politically, I'm like, well, usually somewhere in
the middle because I've read a bunch of books and stuff. Um,
but right now it's very clear. It's like good versus evil,
(15:55):
and I'm on good. Yeah. Yeah, alright, Well let's get
into something that I think ties right into, you know,
the battle of good versus evil in these realms of
reality that we live in, and that is that there's
a Pokemon region of the brain. We have Detective Pikachu
coming out in the next couple of weeks this weekend maybe. Uh.
(16:18):
And you know, Pokemon is going mainstream as if it
already it's been mainstream brand. Yeah, I think it's stream. Well,
I think we're talking about this Pokemon thing. Yeah. Well,
I'm a little bit mad because I did have idea
for rasta inspired Pokey restaurant with the main character of
(16:39):
it the face of the company Pokemon. Yeah, who would
sell all of his you know, right treats, no but Pokemon.
So there there was an analysis done. You know, there's
a lot of them, like a lot of research on
I'm just sort of how we organize images and memories
in our brain. And you know, there's there's never a
consistent there's never consistent part of the brain where they're like,
(17:02):
oh yeah, all the all your visual memories are here,
here here. So in this in this study, what they
did was, uh, they recruited eleven adults who were experienced
Pokemon players. So these are people who played between the
ages of five and eight or started then and continued,
because that's when your brain you can really build these
sort of pathways in your brain, very elastic. Yeah, and
(17:24):
so and then eleven novice players who weren't as into it.
And like, first they had to make sure these people
were like legit experts. They'll be like, okay, what characters
this is? This is this cliff Fairy or is this
fucking chassis? Uh? And then once they did that, they're like, okay,
we can break them up. So then they scanned their
brains as they showed them different images. So first they
(17:45):
showed them all one fifty got to catch them all
original Pokemon um alongside other images like regular ones like
cars and faces and words and things like that, and
they showed that for people who had been like really
experienced and really had the Pokemon information stored, it was
responding or it was activating this part of the brain
(18:06):
that was different than the novice players, meaning that you know,
for I think for the novices, the region is called
the ocip fuck it, I'm not, I don't even can't
keep to do it, but anyway, occipital occipital ox occipit,
totem occid occipital temporal sulcus boom, Miles Gray neurologists, thank
(18:29):
you for dropping that bomb um. And that's a place
where often there are animal images, but it didn't show
a preference for Pokemon. So you know, this is our
This isn't new to researchers because they've done different research
on like certain cell clusters that respond to very specific images,
Like a few years ago they found that there was
even a part for recognizing Jennifer Anderson. So yeah, I
(18:53):
think this is all all to say that we're still
learning about the brain and how is such a like
every time him you read a little deeper in these
studies about the brain, you're like, wow, we don't know
ship oh yeah, or even when I watched like gifts
of like neurons fire and like, oh my god, what
if it's just Also it's just changing every time we
(19:14):
learn about it. It's like, yeah, oh you think you know,
I'm sure it is. I mean like when people's brains
get like an entire part of their brain gets destroyed,
like they just the brain just re routes around that
part a lot of the time, like not not sometimes
you let my uncle who can only talk in rhyme, right, Yeah,
that's also a possibility. Yeah, no, I'm not. I'm not
(19:34):
suggesting you try that at home, but it is pretty
cool that they are able to. Yeah, just like read
the brand circuits are able to reorient themselves in a
lot of cases. Right, is my grandfather's brother who had
happened to Is that true? Yeah? When they were kids,
some idiot threw a bullet in the fireplace and it
went off and they've struck him in the head, didn't
(19:56):
kill him, but from that injury, like his speech was
effect did and he was like really tried to emphasize
like rhyming a lot. Wow, So shout out to the
Great depression. So that's a great depression injuries. There's also
a woman who got a brain injury and spoke with
a French accent even though she was like from Indiana
or something that some people would argue me talking in
(20:18):
Australian accent is also some form of a brain injury.
But yeah, I can't help it. I mean that explains
a lot of this town as a brain injury. In
the brain injury around here. Oh, everyone has a head
injury here. And briefly, there's an economist artist economist as
(20:41):
Myles calls it, UH, where they talked about a study
where they basically had big groups of people do negotiations
based on I guess it was like a hundred pairs
of participants, uh, in return for a three dollar gift
card twin fifty dollars based on their performance during a
negotiation game had to like sit across from somebody and
(21:04):
like basically play this negotiation game. And they found that
people were way better at it when they were sharing
a bowl of chips and salsa forty grams of chips
and fifty grams of SALTA like that. They were very
specific about that, don't don't get cheap on the salsa.
I do like the idea of going like to the
rose Bow fleat market with my own chips and sausa. Friends,
(21:30):
I'll give you two hundred dollars for that chair for
all of your records, and he's like four hundred some chips. No,
but yeah. The whole point was that like sort of
this communal sharing or family style eating would actually help
in business negotiations. So, like the way the experiment worked
was first they had they had one group where people
had their own chips and salsa, and they're like, before
(21:51):
you even begin negotiating each your chips and salsa, So
first you might just be eating your own bowl, or
other groups might be sharing a plate of chips and salsa,
and then and then the game would begin where it
was sort of like role playing where it was like
a one was like an employer having to deal with
like renegotiating an hourly wage or something. And they found
(22:11):
that the peep, the group that had shared the food
prior to the negotiation beginning, resolved the negotiations like much quicker,
like in terms of rounds of going back and forth
of negotiating. Um, so hey, next time you gotta go
fucking you know, maybe buy a car some ship pull
up with some food. Just a bag of tested that's
(22:32):
just or if you're a true person who's in sales, right,
it might help. This is a great add for a
bucata beppo where everything's family style and you could eat
a big thing a calamaria out of a giant martini class.
But I mean this is the old This is I guess,
another example of that old style wisdom that like actually
probably has some wisdom to share with us of breaking bread. Yeah,
(22:54):
breaking bread with your fellow. But like that, I think
that there's also that old adage there's no such thing
as a free lunch. But did did they talk about
like whether the person I guess this just suggests that
it gets it. It's more efficient negotiating as opposed to
one side getting the better of the deal, right, Yeah,
I mean it's I guess, yeah, that's so. I don't
(23:15):
think it's about winning. I think it's about actually about
finding a common grant where everyone is winning instead of
being like a right well, because I think at first
people were sort of the researchers theorized that possibly it
could create an atmosphere of competition if they were sharing food,
and then make people less likely because yeah, they're looking
(23:37):
at like a scarcity problem right in front of them.
But they always do a power move where I sit
down across from somebody and just take something off their
plate and eat it, or I like the other thing
on the table but mine. Whenever we go to eat
a Mexican restaurants, Jack just puts his hand in the
chipple and crushes all the chips and and he's like
(23:58):
and then and then we're just eating cross his arms
would be like, oh, you don't like your chips, And
I'm like, what, They're just gonna bring us more? Did work?
And then before they come, he's just crushing them up anyway, Um,
they found that basically when they were sharing, it actually
just inspired more cooperation because it made the people the
(24:18):
party is more aware of the other's needs in the
sharing of the food. So you don't have to like
feed them or anything. It's just straightforward just both of
you eating from the same I think that would be
a funny power move. Two did they try this? Up?
And up? You gotta try it? We need to, all right.
We also like, if you think about it, there was
(24:40):
in uh that what was it? The office? Right? Doesn't
he go to He goes with Tim Meadows to Chili's
and he closes the deal because they're like getting all
those appetites. Yeah you know what I mean, you have
the school board. Yeah, yeah, so there's that. So well
there's the proof fuck you Science Answer documentary. There's a
reason that agents are always you know, doing lunch or whatever,
(25:04):
but they always are eating their own ship. Yeah, eating
their own ship. I've never had one of those meetings, hey, Billy.
I mean like like like when I've gotten to industry,
general's like a general meeting with like studio or whatever.
I don't I have not encountered a family style meal.
You know, it's always like how do you always get
(25:28):
it is a competitive Yeah? Right, yes, yeah that's true.
What would be interesting next meal? You go, my man,
what are we getting? Ship? Right? And then you call back,
hey mom, I sold it in the room in the
dining room. I'll text you if that ever happen, just
go next time, what are we getting? I want a
(25:50):
salad for the table. I would like a little bit
more done in this study to see how important it
is family style and also if the boss in the
situation makes out better they're doing the sharing as opposed
to you know, like if there's any advantage on either
side of it. Yeah, but I guess there. But most
negotiating happens where they're like the power dynamic favors one
(26:13):
side over the other. Right. Typically, I mean there are
like even like there are I to eye sort of
level negotiations, but typically I feel like it's one person
asking another party for more of something. So I think
in that sense, it probably makes the person who has
to do like the giving rather than the receiving a
little more. That's why when I go to a car
sale a used car lot, I always make the car
(26:34):
salesman drink coffee while I watch, just like no another one,
have another one, another one, please, sir? Alright, we're gonna
take a quick break. We'll be right back, and we're back.
(26:55):
Just take a pistol. Just just put a gun on
the table and I'm like, spin it around. I don't
even have to say anything. What's your friend? Now, I'm
gonna tell you something. I'm a straight shooter, are you. Uh,
let's talk about what is going on in our government. Yeah,
there's so much going on. And look rather than just
(27:16):
it's a smooth sailing ship. Oh yeah, I mean, we
can just scream about it all day like most shows,
or we can just move on to other things, you know,
like talking about how to share chips and negotiating textiles.
But I mean, just in the last few days, right,
like the whole since the Mother Report came out and
the showdown has been happening between the Department of Justice,
(27:38):
the White House, Congress of like being like who's checking who? Uh,
the crises are just building more and more so, for example,
like Trump fucking out here saying like, oh, I think
I should get an extended term because of all the
bullshit that happened the last two years with the Russia nonsense,
because he's funny. He's saying like longer than four years, yeah,
(28:02):
or like a third term. He wants a late checkout,
late checkout. But again, wow, I mean that's that's a
that's a that's very authority. Yeah, coming into like what
y'all think about that? No, we're good, Okay, maybe I'll
fly this balloon a little bit high, like he couldn't
he could think we've missed used that word authoritarian and
dictator like uh throughout time. Whereas like some of them yes,
(28:25):
and then some of them are just like they're just idiots,
just idiots with a lot of power, where people are
just like I don't know what's happening. Yeah, yeah, but
some of them are by designed and it's impressive. You know. Well,
I think this is by designing his subconscious, you know
what I mean, Like, I think if I think his
(28:47):
ideal administration would be to be godhead of America like
Ji Jim Ping and be like I'm forever king, forever president. Yeah,
I think, I mean, yeah, I do think that there's
a mental littleness to that too, where you're just like, well,
I mean if I got to be president, why wouldn't
you just make yourself keen? Right? Yeah, what do you
mean a genie? I got to ask the genie for
three wishes, unlimited wishes? Do boom done? Because he does
(29:10):
have that way of thinking. We're like, I just lied
to them because I'm smart, That's what I do. Yeah. Um. So,
I mean a lot of authoritarians, we in retrospect give
them a lot of credit for being very smart, like Hitler,
and it turns out he was kind of a dummy
who just had very efficient people around him, smoking a
lot of train cane to yeah, a lot of training. Uh. Well,
(29:34):
and then so that's that's one aspect. Right then Mitch
McConnell on the Senate floor was like trying to put
a button on the whole Mueller Report nonsense in the Senate,
saying like, okay, he's closed, there's okay, there's no one
more doovers for democrats on his neck, got in the way.
Everyone go home. Yeah, essence in case closes, nothing to
see here, basically go to your homes. There's no collusion.
(29:55):
And then was trying to suggest that Obama emboldened the ructions.
So not only do we have the typical like no
collusion line, now we're going back to the days of
like yeah, and actually if you think about his probably
Obama who really was behind it anyway, because he was
emboldening the rest and so there's that boldening the Russians. Yeah,
but now I think by not doing anything, or is
he like, well you could have said something, it's like
(30:17):
the whole country is in a terrible relationship, or like
you're arguing all facts and then they're like Bud Obama
and you're like, wait, what can you what does that
even have to do with anything? And then they just
run and jump out a window like what happens, Like
I don't know. I said I was gonna hang this
picture on Saturday, and I did it Sunday, and then
it turned into something about Obama and then they jumped
(30:38):
out the window. Um, but also we the more money somehow.
So also Trump went from William Barr should decide if
Mueller is going to testify in front of Congress. So
now I don't want to talk to anyone, not even
his mom. Bad idea. They just want to do over.
We've gone fully like I'm fully exonerated. It's all good. Yeah,
(31:00):
to go talk to mother too now, because I think
what it is, it's easy to bluff until people start
being like, okay, then let's do that. And then now
you have to actually show your give the game up
and be like, actually no, I can't. You can't actually
talk to anybody or look at anything because that will
expose the truth, which I'm very afraid of people learning,
which goes hand in hand with uh Stephen Manuchin. Uh
(31:22):
Yeah that ship. Yeah, they were like Jerry, now there's like, um,
I'm asking for the president's tax returns and he basically
said eat a bunch of ship. So there's no there's no,
we're in a place now where no one is complying
with the with Congress who has the you know, their
powers are very well defined in the constitution, um, and
(31:43):
now we're just gonna do this thing where it's like,
let's just keep saying no until like it gets to
a real crisis point and we're gonna, what, I guess,
handle this in court court, Well, it get to the
Supreme Court, but like maybe not before well I don't
know if it's not that it would have to be
argued to the Supreme Court. But they were going to
use like just very laborious legal procedures to draw it
(32:03):
out as long as possible, which was his strategy always
in the private sector too. He would just su su su.
He had like more outstanding lawsuits. Right, he was like,
kind is he just paying a retainer anyway for their time?
So they were just going to draw it out. And
he also doesn't pay anybody. And he also has Don McGann,
who you know, a lot of the things that he
(32:23):
told Robert Mueller made up a good bulk of the
obstruction evidence and the Muther report. And you know, again
Congress was subpoenaed his records and said we want to
see the documents from this time as it relates to
what we're investigating. Uh. He was like, oh okay, uh.
And then the White House is like telling him, do
(32:44):
not comply with the with the congressional subpoena because we
may we may exert executive privilege here, but we're not
gonna say yet, but don't do that. And we're gonna
tell the Jerry Nadler that they actually subpoened the wrong
person because if you want information that was happening from
his time in the White House, you actually need to
go through us. It's not just like a presidency based
(33:05):
on the Gish gallop. We've talked a lot about the
Gift gallop, where it's like they make you use a
lot of words to explain why what they're doing is wrong,
and then they just like use very few words to
lie and then you have to like say a lot
and it gets complicated for you. Like the Muller Report
is four hundred pages, so like it takes a long
(33:26):
time for people to read that. So when bar says
Trump never said to fire him, he never said those words,
and then you look at the Mueller Report and you
have Trump saying get rid of him, call me when
it's done. He should not be the special prosecutor anymore.
Like those are those three terms necessarily mean? But bar
(33:48):
so bar is completely lying and his whole game is
nobody's gonna actually read this, so nobody's gonna know that
I'm lying, and it's fucking working. Trump val is as
high as it's been on the five thirty eight thing
that is like a you know, brings together all the
different polls. It's as high as it's been a long time.
Like it's going like disapproved. I mean, he's still at
(34:15):
historically low points, but like he's lower than anybody except
Carter with the past disturbing, like hey, what the fun cars?
Like come on, really, I put solar panels on the
way building the house. Yeah, but net approval, he's lower
than everybody except Carter, and Carter was presiding over a
(34:35):
historically bad economy, so it is shocking that he's as
low as he is. But he's still moving in a
direction that, like you, it seems like it should be
the opposite, Like when historians look back and they're like, Okay,
this Mueller report came out and said all these crimes
and described them in very specific detail, and then his
approval started going up, Like, I just don't know how
(34:58):
that's going to be explained other than just like they
just bombarded people with bullshit. Yeah, people don't care. I guess, um,
but I guess. And also when you look at too,
we're also in an era where people like, because of
the nature of politics, we're not even willing to discuss impeachment,
or at least leadership in the House is not willing
to take it seriously. And I think that's a luxury,
(35:20):
right because this presidency has already presented a number of
existential threats for many groups of people in this country,
except for the people who are really in charge of
trying to impeach this president. When you look at the
sort of the rights that are being restricted of people
who are trying to immigrate into this country, or two
are if you are a transgender person, if you're seeking
(35:41):
an abortion. There are many things that are happening that
on one hand, if you are just some cis gendered
person who's like and you know, has is very wealthy
in a person of means, there's a lot of these
issues that don't really touch you, so it's easy to
be like well, let's see, but there are a lot
of people who also look at this administration go, this
is the worst thing that is ever happening to me.
And we're having to balance these two. If you're a
(36:03):
person of means, it doesn't what that what they're doing
doesn't truly affect you. If you don't have means, it
affects you across the board because they're affecting the education system,
they're affecting people of color, transgender people, it's it's affecting
just poor people. And I don't know how we flip that.
(36:25):
We could everyone to understand that's the issue. Well, that
they're taking everyone's money, everyone's money, but the strategy of
still saying like, hey, you know why you don't have
the stuff you want, it's these brown people are that
We've got to break through that divide and conquer strategy
that they've always used and get past that. And they
(36:49):
did a really good job of shutting down the Occupy
movement like that was That's when I was like, Oh,
we're onto something here. And then they systematically shut that
down beautifully because yeah, these people know about the one percent.
I think the Occupy movement went down in my memory
as like a weird thing of like hippies pooping in
(37:09):
the street. But then like it turns out that that
like laid the foundation for like a lot of the
Bernie movement and a lot of the socialism that we're
actually seeing pick up some traction uh these days. But
you also have the mainstream media that first of all,
is you know, being rejected by a lot of people
who are don't have as much money in in the country,
(37:32):
who like go to Fox News because they feel like
they're being condescended to by the mainstream media. And then
the mainstream media also has a bias towards your Joseph Spiden. Uh.
They're you know, giving him the benefit of the giving
him the bet because he will keep giant corporations in power.
He I just needed to be said anything corporatography. Yeah,
(37:59):
And then you have a behar I think on the
view today, it's like, why can't we just skip all
the primaries and make Joe Biden the nominee. It's like,
get the funk out of here, right, It's like you
don't give a funk because you give them some money.
I heard a twentysomething said person says the same thing though,
because It's just like if you read the USA today
or like something like some mainstream thing, and you're just
(38:21):
seeing all these polls, all this polling that's coming out,
that's like Biden has it like it's basically he has
like a thirty point lead over Bernie. That's something that
came out today was that a poll issued said that
Biden has a thirty point lead over Bernie. But then
when you look at the poll, they didn't give people
the opportunity to say, I don't know who i'd vote
(38:44):
for where I wouldn't vote in the primary, would you
vote forget Joe Biden if he's the nominee, Right, It's
just you have to pick a name. And so a
big portion of the people who don't know shit about this,
who aren't paying any attention to that, they're like, that's
the name recognition, right. So that's there's all these very
subtle ways that they're presenting this polling data to make
(39:04):
it seem like it's a foregone conclusion, because yeah, they
don't want the socialist values to be taken seriously, and yeah, ideah,
I do think there's like a lot of powerful forces
that are kind of behind this whole idea of like
Biden should just be made the nominee. Let's let's get
this Trump fella out of there. I also want to
just note too, with the whole Trump nonsense that's happening
(39:27):
and just sort of the lack of oversight that people
want to exercise, especially on the right. I mean, fuck me, um.
There was a letter that nearly seven hundred former federal
prosecutors signed onto that said, unequivocally, were it not for
this memo that said a sitting president cannot be indicted,
the president full blown committed obstruction of justice and would
(39:51):
be prosecuted were this in any other dimension or were
there any other person, So like this idea or to
assert that there was no obstruction is absurd. But again,
I think it seems like the only things are the
only weapons that there are in this this battle are
just sort of saying like, oh, this is bullshit, and
clearly they're like legally, the way our systems set up,
(40:12):
it's allowing people, these bad actors, like the Trump administration
to just maneuver through these like the cracks because we
used to run on a system, I guess, I mean
people thought that people would maintain the problem with people
that are truly immoral. There's no point where they're being
like fuck you got me, there's like it is, they
(40:35):
will slither, like you said, even through the court system.
There's no honor in what they're doing at all. So
there's no like, Okay, people are gonna respect me. It's
like I don't as long as I don't get in trouble.
Who cares about anything, right, And that's who we're dealing with.
And we never dealt with anybody like that before. Yeah,
and now we're finding ourselves like realizing we don't have
(40:55):
the tools to deal with something like this. We have
to fix our ship right and then. But we also
need Republicans to do that because they're just not going
to get the snakes there too. They slither there. To
that side, no offense to snakes. Snakes. A lot of
snakes are great, but these are bad. Specially shout out
to snake moms and dads out there who take their
(41:16):
snakes out of public and also allow people to take
a picture with you for free. And I'm like, hey, man,
can you be like two bucks man expensive? Yeah? No,
it's snakes. Snake in Austin on Sixth Street at two
of the morning, I was like, you guys, it's just
like on its own chilling. No, I did it. Well.
It was just in the street. It was a big
Boa constrictor and I was like, okay, well like just
(41:36):
being like man, good after our spot. Yeah, it's just
like in here with your with your nine year old.
Have you been around any snakes? I don't think so,
because like my two year old is like just no
fear of snakes. And I thought that was like an
inherently like in our brain thing. But I'm just wanting
(41:59):
to like, snake people are just people who never had
a part of their like childhood crushed, or the people
who didn't read the Bible right or didn't watch Indiana
or something. No, that's not true. My friend that the
Secret Service, that his dad was a wild like a
game warden. And I remember us, me and him, me
and him and his brother walking through the woods and
(42:20):
we looked at it looked like a car part and
we weren't reached down. It was black snake and it's
just like I had us and then slithered off and
I ran the opposite way, and both of them ran
after the snake and caught it. And I was like, oh,
people are different, so crazy that you guys were like
(42:41):
get it, and I was like, I'm out of here. Yeah, yeah,
I don't know what. I wonder what it is. I'm
sure there's a brain study that there. You've got snake
brain or no snake I have no snake brain. Snake
brain doing train king, Yeah, I hate him, but I
do love the reptile house at the zoo, Yeah, I
love I'm looking at lizards and ship yeah. Man, I
(43:03):
remember we had a snake person come to school, like
in seventh grade or six, you know, elementary school like
for people just some dude to the van. It was
a bunch of snakes and teachers like why don't you
come talk to the key? Yeah, And I was like
I could kind of get down with the snake when
it was quiled around my arm until it started kind
of constricting and it wasn't like a big snake. But
when I felt that, I was like, nah, you know what,
(43:24):
you know? Good on that you guys are. It's just
that it's like they're weird snakes. They're weird. They're very weird.
There's like an uncanny thing that I feel like goes
back to like my lizard brand that I'm just like, fuck,
you're in control of and I don't like it. There's
there's a study that was done that women who are
ovulating are better at spotting snakes in like a picture,
(43:49):
and because yeah, I and I know this because from
the office ship, no woman who's ovulating, Yeah I know. Well,
but I went on a hike through rattlesnake country and
I had like, for some reason, No, I didn't, I
didn't know about that study. I was like, why am
(44:10):
I so good at like looking for an ovulator? I
was I must have been whatever the male equivalent of
ovulating is, because I was just fucking spotting all the snakes. Yeah,
that's exactly right, fucking snowflake. What a what a kind
(44:30):
of weird superpower? I know, Yeah, it was very weird. Anyways, Uh,
those are my customer. Let's snake talk. Let's take another
quick break. We'll be right back and we're back. Okay,
(44:53):
we learned a lot about each other in the break
animal stories. Okay, let's talk about Mega Marko. Prince Harry
had a baby. Don't care. Harry found out how babies
are born. Why is it a big deal? I don't know,
but it's big because it's an American who is now
in line with that and a person of color, so
(45:13):
I get that part. She is not she is way
in the backroom line for the throne. But no, no,
but the child seventh really Okay, well then that could happen.
Plane crash. Don't say that out loud, um, sorry, train
crash that train can um. Shout out to my birthday
(45:35):
twin Prince Harry born in the exact same day, because
that has already invited family members to be like, huh, well,
Harry had a baby same day you were born, the
same exact same Yeah. Man, look at him and I
don't like I don't you know, great, I'm compared to
constantly and I'm like I'm better than him. Yeah. Actually
(45:56):
I compare myself to him and feel better about myself,
so it's not a it's not a toxic comparison. I
remember when those those that video came out of him
like in a not sweet in Vegas like run around naked.
Yeah yeah, yeah, that made me like him a lot
where I was like, that's what you should be doing. Yeah,
he's definitely normal. Yeah, and he's like the one that
he's like a in the army and ship. Yeah. Yeah,
(46:17):
and you find a helicopter thing, right, he was on heloter.
He seems fun. Yeah, he seems like the Prince. You're like,
I don't know if that's just the way they're making everything.
You're hanging out with Prince Harry practically right now, who
grew up in l a without you know, in a
less stable home. That is a good then that I
don't that's pretty unstable to begin with. Yeah, so yeah,
(46:41):
but I mean, I I still I'm just always amazed
when I see like pictures of dudes. Like we were
looking at a picture of a guy who was like
shaking champagne and sprang it in the air and like
a Union Jack blazer, because like we just look at
pictures of guys. We just look at pictures of just
like those pictures. Yeah, but he was he was celebrating
(47:02):
the arrival of a new member of the royal family,
like a magnum of champagne. Yeah, like it was and
on the street, so people are like getting sprayed by champagne,
Like what the fuck? Uh? Prince Harry did seem to
like in his statement. He seemed to be finding out
how babies are born, sort of like what he was
like on the border between being you know, I think
(47:24):
we're all in awe of women after witnessing the act
of childbirth. But he was like, I don't know how
women do it, but like he did it. He was
saying in a way that was like I had no
clue that understanding how that process work. I do not
know what. I just kind of pissed that Megan didn't
(47:46):
tell me that was what was going to happen. But
you know, all good, the babies here, babies here. So
I don't know the name right, no name, Uh, we'll
see okay, well, you know, like a shout out to
I hope it's like Ashley. They said it was something
like that was gonna unite the It was like a
(48:06):
name that would like reference the UK and US. Someone
on Twitter made it jokes said, oh Iraq war Jesus Christ.
Josh Gondoman said on Twitter it was like, oh, they're
gonna name it. Fuck you, Piers Morgan. Yeah, like it.
Let everybody gets your jokes in now. Other British Royalty
(48:29):
Harry Styles was one of the hosts of the met Gala.
I don't know. I think he was like one of
the main, dudes, what does any of that mean? I
don't know, man, I don't even know what it is.
You said it like you like he's the host. I
don't know. I read that Harry Styles. Yeah, they were
like the the heads of the thing. And I like
(48:50):
when it when people were first arriving, people were making
a big deal about Harry Styles. But I saw him, guys,
get this on some of the Worst Dressed list. Whoa yeah,
uh no. He was wearing something that was like sort
of gender fluid, like a see through sheer thing with
like a ruffle, and people were like, that's brave. But
(49:12):
then I think in retrospect looking back, so that the
theme was camp. Uh and no, not like summer camp.
My person showed up like Jason. That's what I was saying.
Just one person got it completely wrong. Yeah, Crystal Lake.
Or it's just like Earnest and this goes to camp,
(49:38):
but they bill he's not invited to the met Galen. Yeah,
it's Earnest. It's Earnest. Come on, Burnt up to the
check in. Hey, come on, Burnt the I'm sorry, sir,
you're not on the list. I think the I think
a Lady Gaga kind of one it with her. She
(49:58):
came in in five outfits that were l it on
top of each other and kind of did the equivalent
the red carpet equivalent of like tearaway pants. Uh. No,
we have to gamify this, billy. That's okay. That's how
media works. Winners and losers put on your most expensive
outfits while parents struggled to for childcare. Get ready to
(50:19):
eat ship Harry Styles because you lost the metal. Which
one thing is funny. You can see past guess Katie
Willard in the back of many photos because she works
a lot of those. I'm literally looking at an article
from last year. There's Rihanna and look over her shoulder
is Katie Willard. That is Katie Willard. Anyway, that that
last year was yeah, Pontiflex. Uh. This year was, like
(50:43):
I said, camp. So it just gave people an excuse
to uh people, Yes, basically just go over the top,
go over the top. But it is for charity, you know,
is it? The gathering is for charity? Yeah, right, okay,
And I think the I don't know enough. I mean
I used to and I would have to do a
less about this, and I'm still like, I just think
they just dress up in the Nanna Wintour invites you
(51:06):
or doesn't, right, Yeah, I'll do it. That's what That's
what I'm saying, Hey on a winter you don't hit
me up. Yeah, I'm ready to come back. Just for
the megala though, so um Jared Leto was my favorite
outfit because he showed up with a replica of his
own head in his arms, which I thought was like,
if it had been like ten percent more realistic, it
(51:29):
would have been uncanny enough to like really be weird.
But as it is, it was just made the first
time ever. Cardi B continues to just be grade at
everything she tries because her outfit was fucking dope. Yeah,
(51:49):
it was just an excuse for people like to overdo
it is sort of what's ce right, Yeah yeah, but
I guess sometimes the themes in that past people have
been like, oh, isn't that right for the theme? But
you know this was just sheer spectacle. Yeah, it's like
them doing what the strength of a met gala is
is like, you know, letting people get weird with it
(52:12):
and just show out. Well, yeah, let the weirdoes really
do the weird. Yeah, that's why Gaga one, because that's
her jam her in a room with some fabrics and
shapes and a pound of cocaine. Train caine, right, yeah, train,
she did come in with a train. Yeah. Yes. Katy
Perry also was on brand and that she was like
(52:35):
very literally like she was dressed as a chandelier. Like
it it looked like a Halloween costume, like more than
a Like usually I'm against people surrounding themselves with people.
They always say yes, but in Katie Perry's it's case,
it's like it always results in something insane. But I'm like,
(52:55):
I kind of like it. Yeah, yeah, like that, like
someone should have been like, hey, no, you look like
you are part of the stage cast of Beauty and
the Beast right now. Yeah, I was someone took it
to the more penny levels, you know, like their outfits,
like she could have been a chandelier or a Shonda
Leer inspired by the works of Shonda Rhymes in the Chandelier,
(53:17):
so like one of those like clever wordplay Halloween costers. Yeah,
like just go all the way a year for Halloween.
I was for well Williams Wallace Wallace, but I wore
the big ass hat. Uh And yeah, anywhen is Brad
Pitt one year to a college Halloween party, just dressed
(53:38):
my normal clothes. What are you? And I was like,
Brad Pitt And it made them so mad. You look
like Brad Pitt. And I'm like, I know that we
just had blonde hair. That is the only God. You
didn't even you didn't even wear clothes that even mimicked
(53:59):
something I would. You just came. He just showed up.
I was like, I don't want to and then yeah,
you look like, yeah, I'm aware of that. Any other
outfits we want to, uh, you know, comment on nah,
and I like the ill equipped comment on anyone's fashion.
(54:22):
Ryan Murphy went with a very Liberacci thing that was
kind of dope. It was Ryan Murphy, the guy who
made fucking people verso J Simpson, Oh like yeah, and
oh god, he's like one of the biggest Slean Dion
American horror story. I know, Selene Dion, Yeah, Selene Dion,
(54:43):
the greatest singer indoor. I feel like that's where she
was made at was that a mcgalad Janelmoe was looked
like a Picasso like weird cubist piece of art. Uh,
she's so pretty, she looks like art being Kara de
Levine in same Cara Cara de Lavine. I call her
(55:03):
care because it's an inside because you don't care about
how to say her name properly. I thought Travis Scott
looked cool. He looked like a video game character. Yeah,
he didn't look like a video I saw Marlon Wayne
Is just tweet a photo of him and his brother
from White Girls and like doing a side by side
to Kendall and Kylie Jenner. They're like, like this ship
(55:23):
rights itself because they had kind of similar color palace.
But man, that's fun. Do what you gotta do. Uh,
And then would Stock fifties still going on? So by
your tickets, I mean not quite. Yeah, a lot of
the promoters pulled out, like densu ages. They pulled out, um,
and then a few other people. So that left Michael Lang,
(55:45):
who was the guy, was like, no, it can still
go on, right, it's the organizer who probably has they
should do it again. It has not gone well yet,
like including the I was gonna say that was not
like a thing. No, it was a lot of people,
like people died got run over in the mud by cars, like, uh,
(56:07):
nobody could bathe or eat, but they were on so
much acid and drugs that it didn't they didn't notice,
but we made babies in the yeah fucking punchy. Yeah. Well,
the one thing is like they still you know, there
is a little bit of light at the end of
the tunnel, because all they have to do, if you know,
if they really want this to happen, it's just by Friday,
(56:29):
raise thirty million dollars. Oh so well, ship guys, what
are we sitting here doing. They need to set the
Notre Dame Cathedral on fire again that you can raise
money quick Yeah. Um, I mean this does seem like
the perfect event, like the perfect grouping of people to
(56:49):
raise a bunch of money quickly. Because if sitcoms have
taught me anything, you just need a musical act or
a dance off or something to just raise money to
save the big festival and get the car washed performing
is I don't know, bony bear. Yeah, And basically this
is that's what they could do. They could throw a
festival to right beforeval Yeah, that's how yes do it,
(57:13):
which would just begin this like never any domino effect
of like always trying to fund the next thing, but
was really just funding the thing before you know, when
Stock fifty is actually a charity event for I'm playing
the Ponzi Festival. I've played it every year. They keep
saying they're gonna pay me. Well, Billy Wayne, it's been
(57:34):
a pleasure having you. Uh. Where can people find you? At?
Billy Wayne Davis on Instagram and Twitter? And is there
a tweet you've been enjoying? Yes, I enjoyed the If
you go to Tim Dillon, Uh, he's a very funny
UM comedian from New York City. He plays Megan McCain
(57:55):
If you just go to his tweets, it's some of
the funniest things I've ever seen. Nice so just at
Tim Dillon. They had a good run on about Megan
mccainn on last Culture Stas this week where they were
talking about about whether John mccainnon actually loved her. Uh.
Pretty funny. Uh, Miles, where can people find you? You
(58:17):
can find me on Twitter and Instagram at Miles of Gray.
A tweet I like is from Reductress. A couple of them.
One is says try not to cry. This deployed soldier
surprises girlfriend by getting bangs. Uh. And one more because
(58:37):
we've been talking a lot, you know, super producer Ana
hos Nate. You know she has aggressive skincare routine. We've
been here a lot of all kinds of talk of
different things, products that I've I've heard of, I've heard
tell of, but we're acting with him. Yes, And this
reductor's headline is this serum works on all skin types
except whatever you have going on, which I feel like
(58:59):
is a I don't know. I mean, I know enough
where I hear people talk about seriums and like that
one didn't work for me, but not all people can
be blessed with this. One tweet that I loved is
Adam Sack's good friend former CEO of Your Wolf, pointed
out a tweet of his from three years ago. I
was talking about Reggie Miller being the worst commentator in
(59:20):
the world, and he pointed out that he had tweeted
Reggie Miller once made eight points in nine seconds. Would
it kill him to make one this quarter? Um boom, Yeah,
so you've been owned Reggie Miller. H and also very
very clever Adam. I like the balls it takes to
retweet something you tweeted three years ago and be like, hey,
(59:41):
what do you think about this one? Stand by this? Hey,
I feel this way again. Uh, and then someone is
like getting tweeted no pun intended, Steph Curry because at
one point back at Cracked, I did a video just
tearing Reggie Miller's analysis apart, and it was just this
one minute clip where he was like, and Anthony Davis says,
(01:00:02):
you know, he's out here saying I'm the best player
in the league, no pun intended, Steph Curry, And so
he doesn't know what a pun is. Apparently he was
just there was no pun. The best in the league,
no pun intended, no pun intended. Just look dumb as fun.
I hate that dude so much. Has my dad the
(01:00:22):
rare problem of being that guy in front of my dad,
But I think Reggie Miller has the rare problem that
of an NBA player. He's like one of the best
NBA players of all time, but with the sun tattoo
around his name, but also his sister is still a
better basketballer, Yeah, way better. And that's this weird chip
(01:00:44):
he has. Right, he may have gone out of body
in a few of those games in the nineties, but
at the end of the day, people all know Cheryl
Miller is probably one of the greatest one's players of
all time. Well, and that's how he talks trash and
like it's always like it's always he says stuff and
it's like he wants to go like right, Cheryl, right right,
like he has that. I mean, I'm saying they could
both destroy me. And I just think from that Cheryl Miller,
(01:01:08):
you could not take. I think you could take Reggie Miller.
His sister is maybe the best of woman's basketball player
of all time. Definitely want to just even's the pantheon
of the greatest people to play basketball. Reggie Miller has Again,
what the fund is that sun tattoo around his belly button?
I don't want to you know, if that's how that's
(01:01:30):
that's his aesthetic, fine, but that felt like a misguided
boy band mistake. From it was like, I think it'd
be kids. Has he ever explained what that is? No,
he just thought it was dope. You know. Do you
think Rodman inspired him? That's because didn't. Does Rodman have
one like that? He's got all of them almost definitely,
he's got all of them. I feel like, oh, that's right,
(01:01:52):
he has a Rodman has very similar when he has
an onc with a bit of a sun flare around it.
But that works for him, well, that works for obviously
Dennis Rodman, but Reggie Miller, who's like, you know, light
skinned nos ferat, I don't know, you know, he's he's ugly.
But no, I'm loving I'm loving all of the ship. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
(01:02:18):
This week Thursday, I will be at the Secret Group
in Houston, Friday the Paramount Room in Oklahoma City, and
then June six, that's the Thursday, I'll be at Zaney's
in Nashville. I'm coming home. I haven't been there in
a long time. So while crashing the shores for D Day, huh,
get your ship. I'm not gonna promote it that Houston. Yeah,
(01:02:41):
I don't need to connect you with Wayne d Day. Um, yeah,
you'll be Houston. So Houston's a gang pull up and
Oklahoma okay see and always comes out. Yeah. Everywhere I've
been on the road, there's like three and they're always
very polite and very smart. So just keep coming out,
keeping exactly. It's like doctors and ship coming out and well,
(01:03:03):
you're always great on the show, so they have a
good reason to come out. Oh one other thing, somebody
pointed out Jeremiah Cincinnig pointed out that we missed the
best example of Tom Hanks peeing. So Tom Hanks p's
and all his movies we were talking about, and the
best example is that's how his character is introduced in
A League of their Own? Is he just rolls in.
(01:03:24):
They're all like sitting in the locker room. He rolls
in and takes like an hour long. Yeah damn, that's yeah.
He loves to his career is a p morality play. Anyway,
somebody who pointed out that we cover that on After Hour.
I wrote that episode, So that's why it's un played.
Vingt you and you retweeted yourself, Yeah, retweeted uh, And
(01:03:49):
we did cover the League of their Own back abound.
Great movie. My favorite line is from John Lovitt. See
the way it works is the train moves, not the station.
League their Own is one of my favorite sports movies.
Great man, what a hitter? All right? Is that anymore? Sold?
(01:04:14):
You can follow me on Twitter at Jack Underscore O'Brien.
You can follow us on Twitter at Daily Zeitgeist. Were
at the Daily Zeitgeist on Instagram. We have a Facebook
fan page and The Daily Zeitgeist is a production of
iHeart Radio. For more podcasts from My Heart Radio, visit
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are given away for free. We also have a website
(01:04:36):
Daily zet guys dot com where we've posted our episodes
in our footnes where we link off to the information
that we talked about today's episode, as well as the
song we ride out on my on both we are
going to do some music from Chicago native Jimmy Lee Woods. Uh.
This track is called Geovanni uh and really really dope
(01:04:57):
R and B singer songwriter production dope. Oh so preparefully
all right, We're gonna ride out on that. We will
be back tomorrow because it is a daily podcast and
we'll talk to you then. Bye guys, Bye bye bye
bye bye bye bye bye Little Viti. You wanna call
(01:05:17):
me A hundred motherfuckers can't tell me how i'mful to
look when I'm angry. I I'm supposed to shrink when
you're around me. The mission did not to rearrange me.
I am the kingdom. I am not your queen. I'll
step better step from up around me. I am not
your ri I am not try in a minute. Now,
(01:05:41):
you'll get some messed in any money for a description.
I'm impressive. You can check my job for last moment
and sunk is very blessing.