Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season thirty four, episode
four of their Daily Night Guy Yeah for June seventh,
two thousand eight. Team, my name is Jack O'Brien ak
Potatoes O'Brien, and I am thrilled to be joined as
always buy my co host, Mr Miles Pray Gay, your
taxi can step being and up and then this other
(00:21):
part will come through. But I'm just gonna do the
last part. I'm do you zanking and drunk. Thank you
too at rock City Rach for that a k A.
You know, I'm just you know, surprised. So I've been
doing like, you know, some some iconic tunes, do rainy men,
did some abba today doing Brittany, you know, hit me
with some some hit me with more ak s. I'm
(00:43):
really I'm in the mood to sing as usually all
the club jams, all the jams I like. I like
the fact that you always do me the favor of
acting surprise. When I do potatoes Obrian, You're like, oh,
that's a good one, never resting. Yeah, I've never heard
that one. Uh huh yeah, yeah, I just came up
with that on the spot. So we are thrilled to
be joined. Dinner third seat by one of the funniest
(01:03):
stand ups out there and one of the funniest writers
and great podcast host. And she's returning guests. She has
treason me reason, But why does she cry? Yes? Yeah,
I'm there. I heard you. That sounded like you. Are
(01:26):
you a singer? Do you have singing in your Oh?
I have a twin sister. Heard the singer. I did
choir growing up, But I'm very off tune. I can't wait. Really,
don't you feel like you're physiologically you're you identical? You're identical? Right?
We don't know. They never told us I've mistaken your
sister for you. We look, I don't know if our
(01:46):
vocal cords are identical, right, our faces are pretty? That's
an odd thing. Two of you sing. One person just
a marketly better singer than she was, like trained, she
went to Berkeley School Musical. Yeah, she she's honed those tunes,
but she can't do it five at an open mic, though, can't. Hey, no,
don't let her try. Maybe she'll do okay like Bradley
(02:06):
Cooper and a star is born. I was impressed. Um so, Teresa,
We're gonna ask you a bunch of questions, but Before
we get to that, we like to give our listeners
a little preview pre cap of what we're gonna be
talking about. Uh, We've got some breaking news from down
under that we we will talk about when we get
(02:27):
to it. We have a new theory on just who
Scott Pruett might be. Uh. There is more news on
the mystery illness that is striking the ear drums of
diplomats now in China. It is no longer just located
in the Havana area, so it is spreading around the
communist world. We'll talk about whether I still think that's
(02:49):
mass hysteria or not. We're gonna talk about why we're
fucked when it comes to this North Korean summit, and uh,
the resignation of Brian Colangelo. And we're gonna talk about
the movie that is taking the teens by storm, you guys,
a little movie called The Kissing Booth. Uh so nice
sound effects. All right, thanks for dropping that in. And
(03:11):
I did actually kiss Jack. But first up, we like
to ask our guest, of course, Teresa, what is something
from your search history that is revealing about who you are? Oh? Um, well,
it was just election day and I was looking up
how to get more information about political I guess groups
I don't know because I get these mailers. And I
got this mailer that seemed very vague. It said like
(03:33):
Leaders for Equal Rights, and then it was like here's
who we think you should vote for. But then it
had vaguely like a sort of off color rainbow flag,
like the colors are all a little off, and then
and then I had the lamb as And also I
was like, Okay, this kind of like implies that it's
lgbt q A or something. But then I looked at
the group and I couldn't find any information. There was
an address on it and an FPPC I D but
(03:54):
I looked that up. I couldn't find any information. So
I think it was created just for a handed it
to endorse themselves, to be a dark money group. Yeah,
maybe I don't think it was necessarily bad because I
looked up all the candidates and I couldn't find anything
terrible about them. But it definitely did seem like sketchy
that I couldn't find anything about this supposed group endorsing
(04:16):
all the candidates. It was called Leaders for Equal Rights,
and when I searched that, it just kind of shows
me a bunch of like general history about equal rights.
I know about equality California. That's like a big one, right.
This one just was so vague it kind of sketched
me out. And then I was like, oh no, like
I don't like that they're trying to trick me. Yeah, well,
you know that the five oh one C four is
the tried and true way to just obscure where the
(04:39):
money is coming from, and then by law they don't
have to disclose. Are those it's easy to have like
these flowery names, like you know Californians for working families.
Just look up the Koke Brothers. All their foundations just
have the most vague positive words just associated with them.
And we now know that like patriotism is now a
bad word, but like the Patriot Fund or something anything
(05:02):
Patriot Fund, it's going to be uh, some manner of
libertarian group. But yeah, if anybody knows what's going on
with the Leaders for Equal Right, yeah that's what it's called.
And when I googled the address, um, it's in Bourbank.
There's an address that has to be listed on it.
But then I just got some local businesses like a
(05:23):
vacuum store something, so it definitely didn't seem like it
was a long standing group that has been there. I
think they changed their name for the purpose of this,
but yeah, no, it sounds totally on the up and
up group. You can't find anything. It also didn't say
that it was for lgbt that's what sketched me out
was like. And then it said vote for people who
(05:43):
support us, but it didn't say who we were. And
then I was like, well, what does Equality California do?
And I went to their side. It very clearly said
it's like, what we support positions that support lgbt q A. Right,
So it's like, Okay, they're clear about their mission, right. Yeah.
That's that's why it's important for all people when you
watch political ads or get mailers and stuff, always look
because they do have to say who's paying for it,
(06:05):
to at least do some due diligence there, because it
may be a little bit hard to figure out where
the money is coming from. But it'll also be clear.
If there's no website, there's no real like I r
L sort of grassroots movement around it. Yeah, you know,
well the extreme opposite of that. I don't know if
you guys saw this in the the pamphlet of information,
but there's I think it's proposition seventy one. There's like
(06:26):
no opposition except for one guy just said Gary Wesley,
because that to say pros and cons and under the
con argument it was just like Gary and it had
his Yahoo email didn't have any information. I guess it's
just one guy was like, I'm just gonna oppose this proposition.
It's yeah, that's a good way of making friends. Maybe,
(06:47):
like like nobody's opposing this. Well, I will please email me.
I want to. I'm lonely, alright, that gang. We're giving
you guys some real homework. We want to know what
the deal is with this political action group or whatever
it is or Garry yeah or Gary either one yeah? Gary?
H Alright, Teresa, what is something that you think is overrated? Mmmm? Okay,
(07:09):
I think that movie pass is overrated because not because
I don't think it works. I just haven't gotten it yet,
and I'm tired of everybody I know having it, and
I don't like signing up for things, so I haven't
done it yet. Oh my god, you don't have a
movie pass? Don't And I keep getting shamed for it,
and I am sick. Of being shaped because like is
your friend group like going to so many movies now
(07:30):
because it's like like the payment isn't a barrier anymore.
They're like, oh, you're gonna pay regular people go to
movies and whatever. I want to hang out people. They
want to see movies because they have movie pass, which
is fine. We live in l A. I'm supporting our business,
but I just want to be able to live in
the past and not be shamed for it. Yeah. Payment
is the opposite of the barrier. It's now gym logic
(07:52):
where you're like, I got to get as many uses
of this because or else? Yeah yeah, yeah, what is
it still a temple? How much does it right now?
A month? It's like a sustainable amount of money. Right
They're trying to get you hooked right drug dealer style. Man.
I mean even if you go to what like to
a month, it already pays for itself less than the
(08:16):
tat I think, you know what, it's the anxiety of
having something auto to duct from my account that I don't.
I just feel like, I'm like, what if I lose
all my money and then it's negative ten? Do you
have any bills on auto pay? I do, and it
gives me a lot of anxiety. But yeah, so I'm like,
I'd rather just make the choice. Every time I see
a movie that I'm choosing. Yes, I know, and all
(08:37):
the money that could have been saved. You'll be like, yeah,
maybe I know it's bad logic, but you know what,
it's my logic. Hey, you know what, march to your
own beat. If everybody's on that movie, pass, you don't
have to be, you know. I feel like more and
more that is a financial model for businesses is just
getting people to subscribe to things and then forget they're
subscribed to. I still pay for like Office three see
(09:00):
five update, like Microsoft is always hidden for nine dollars,
and part of me can't let go because I'm like,
I may need Microsoft Word again, and I do, even
though like I could probably get a copy as part
of like working, but yeah, I don't know. Some things
I just can't let go off. And they got me. Yeah, well,
it's just you make it so that you're getting paid
(09:24):
for people's laziness. Nobody's going to unsubscribe. They looked at
the magazine model and they were like, what if the
whole economy was there, like the old Columbia house model
with what is something that you think is underrated? Oh? Um,
I've been obsessed with the whole Pete Davidson and Ariana
Grande relationship, what they're they're together. I don't think people
(09:46):
are talking about it enough. I saw on Twitter. I
thought it was a joke. Oh. They got matching tattoos.
Pete Davidson got a tattoo of Ariana Buddy years on
his ear behind like behind his ear, one of those.
And they dressed up as Harry Potter characters and posted
on Instagram and he posted it and she commented, uh,
(10:08):
I think something like let me slither in. And then
she was like, ha ha, I'm going to delete my comments. Gross.
But it was like she was like, well, it may
have been something else. I gotta find it. I think
it was less gross than that, but it's definitely like that,
but it was definitely kind of like flirty. And then
she was like, I'm going to delete my account hat
and I'm just like, oh, you guys are cute. I
like you guys. How old by those two rituals that
(10:31):
they did their millennial married Now they dressed up Harry
Potter characters and got matching. And what does she say?
She said, you trying to slither in? He wrote, the
chamber of secrets has been opened, and he wrote she
and she commented, you try to slither in. Oh they're
the same age. Get down. Yeah he's very young. I know.
I always think he's much older. I forget how how
(10:54):
young he is. He does look older than her. She
also tries to look like she's twelve, but that's true. Yes, yes, definitely,
and you'll only see the left side of her face.
I'm all for this relationship. I'm all for hot diva's
dating comedians because it opens a door for US comedians
to divas. Whoever, maybe one day, maybe Arianna, when you
(11:15):
move on from Pete Yeah yeah, yeah, there you go.
Um and Celine Dion when you move on? Oh yes, whoever? Selene,
get on a kayak to those children. I would get
the helicopter man watch that after her Katrina. She is
so upset at the lack of response by the government
for like those people. Uh yeah, yeah, I know. That
(11:36):
is the iconic moment post Katrina is Selena TV and
talking about that. Uh, you clearly are paying more attention.
But if you remember that, remember who well know that's
from my old co worker Ram who always put me
onto the latest Celine Dion dope. Uh, and I'll go Shania.
(11:58):
Shania seems like a real old catch and oh no.
She just said, like, you know, she's Canadian and it
would be fun cool. Then after all that backlash, she
was like, Okay, my bad. You know, look I don't
I'm just saying like it wasn't that. I agreed. Look,
I still come to my concert. At least I will
(12:18):
give her credit. She has a lot of country fans,
so she probably thought it was a strategic move and
then she was like, oh, I don't want to just
bubble yeah, bubble of fans or out of touch. She
has also been the subject of a couple of really
good comedic bits, The Broad City one and I Heard
hug Abies, So there you go. Finally, Teresa, what is
(12:40):
a myth? What's something people think is true you know
to be false? Um? Oh, this is something that before
so I recently like celebrated. I didn't do anything, so
I didn't really celebrate. But I passed the three year
anniversary of moving to Oh yeah, right before I moved here,
I had visited and thought about moving here. Because I
lived in New York, Um everybody said. I met with
(13:02):
like a mentor and he said, don't move here unless
you have something concrete set up, like build a bridge.
Make sure it's concrete, because a lot of sometimes people
just move here and uh and then just try to
do stuff. But I think that's people keep saying you've
gotta move when you get something. But if you want
to move, if you feel an intuition to move, you
just do it. I mean, there's stuff to do here.
(13:24):
Whatever is meant to happen will happen to Yeah, and
there's tons of jobs to especially if you're an entertainment
I think that's a big thing with comedians. They'll they'll
be like, Oh, I really want to move to l A,
but I'm gonna wait till I get hired on something
before I move. It's like, yeah, people don't want to
hire you if you live across the country. Yeah. I
feel like a lot of advice about l A is outdated.
It's like it's from the nineties and ship or from movies.
Yeah yeah, where like you could just pull up in
(13:45):
your convertible, look at all the palm trees with your
sunglasses and be like I'm here, and then I mean
I do that every day. You don't have a sunroof
or convertible. But uh, yeah, I think you know, I
think it's important just to follow your intuition. Like you say, like,
if something is pulling you, it's it's probably for a reason,
unless you're completely deluded about your situation. But like if
(14:06):
like again, because you could be the person maybe you
are meant to come and fall flat on your face
for you to realize that the thing that maybe you
wanted wasn't quite the thing you wanted. You can recalibrate
your desires or whatever your goals, but then other people,
like somehow can just pull it together seemingly out of nowhere.
I don't know, you're shaking your head over their dad,
What's what are you thinking? No, No, I'm just thinking
(14:26):
that that. I think that's good advice. You don't want
to be one of those people who is like middle
age and being like man, I could have been the
world's greatest actor, and you should come out and be
disabused of that illusion. If yeah, or well also a
lot of people think it's always one way straight, but
the truth is you can always go back. And I
(14:47):
think there's just a sphere of like feeling like you
fail because you went backwards, but nothing's backwards. The fact
that time is moving forwards means you're moving forward. So
whatever you do tomorrow is moving forward, especially especially moving
and like having that experience, like seeing a different part
of the world is going to be you know, there's
gonna be growth there. I'm just trying to get all
(15:07):
my friends to move to l A. So exactly. Alright, guys,
we have breaking international news that we want to get to. Uh. Brisbane,
as I've been told you're supposed to pronounce it, has
caught a serial criminal, uh the po and he has
(15:31):
been outed as corporate high flyer Andrew Douglas Macintosh. It's
like one of those spy movies or you know, where
the bad guy turns out to be, you know, the mayor.
This guy was like a big time dude. I guess
he works for like the retirement home company a Veil
or they do some kind of retirement village stuff. But
what's great is that, like people in this area, this
(15:53):
Green Slopes apartment complex, UH, they were just getting sick
and tired of this. Clearly somebody's just taking it on
the path and ship. Yeah, the couple of residents teamed up,
uh you know, Harriet the spy style, and like deployed
all kinds of a little technology. Like at first they
were using a like a night vision camera with motion sensors.
(16:14):
It's like meant for like nature photography of like elusive
nocturnal creatures to first kind of get some you know,
to build a timeline and get some blurry images to
feel like, okay, we're starting to see when this is
happening in the direction the person is moving. And then
from there just did some process of elimination. And then
one of the dudes just was there with his camera
waiting for the moment because he knew the spot and
(16:34):
got his picture. And this photo of this man being
caught in the act is I it's it's like what
dreams are made of in terms of catching people pooh handed. Yes,
it's really something. Also if you zoom out, like the
picture of the newer post is a wide version, and
the pooh is like water, it's like a pile of
(16:55):
it's not even like it's a puddle. Yeah, it's not
even like emoji poop. It's like oh, like wet pooh. Yeah, yeah,
this face expression too, is kind of like what of it.
I would recommend everybody look at the zoomed in version
and just trust has done the work for you in
describing that, because the zoomed out version is ugly picture.
(17:19):
And then article it says, so the photographer goes there's
a red light which goes on before the camera's flash
goes off. And he saw that and looked at me
as the photograph was taken. Then he just said, hello,
that's why you. Literally the cliche caught with your pants
down needs to be retired, because this dude is just
(17:41):
the most caught anyone's ever been. He's just looking over
to the side that's with the poo jogging though, So
this is a thing that is happening. In the very
early days of the Daily Zeitchgeist, we reported a story
from a Colorado neighborhood where a specific family was having
somebody ship in their yard like every day, and they finally,
(18:05):
you know, got the person on camera and it was
a woman. I don't think they ever caught her though.
It was just a you know, a woman dressed in jogging.
He well, the jogging loosens the bowels, So it's true, right,
because it's like when you look, because I I just
googled poop while jogging In the first articles like why
does running make you poop? Yeah? No, because I mean
it's a lot of bouncing up and down. The contents
(18:28):
of your stomach are going to get like kind of
pushed down, and especially when making a milkshake, like they're
just yeah, yeah, carrying a milkshake in a paper bag.
And yeah, especially when your first training for a marathon.
They even have a name for it. It's called the trots.
And uh yeah, you yeah, because there's countless articles from
(18:51):
like running magazines or publications that are just like, yo,
avoid the mid run poops or whatever. Yeah, do you
think that maybe he's try that's still not okay. I
don't give a sh you do not, But I guess
there's there's two versions, right. Someone is just a sloppy,
disgusting person with no regard for anyone else, and it's
(19:13):
just pooping because they have to run and like they're
doing like you know, they're just they don't know what
to do, but they always keep the toilet paper on
him clearly as this man did. Or it's like a
really evil person who is getting off on taking a
ship like out there in the streets because they're sick.
You know, they have like a weird kink that like
made them like to poop where people can see it
(19:35):
and like leave it there. Do you think whatever reason
I'm trying to put, could there be a world where
he's so embarrassed about pooping indoors that he has to
go outdoor? Oh wow? I actually like that that he's
like been shamed about about deficating since he was a
child or something. Something went off in his brain and
he like feels because we were talking, I think in
(19:55):
the office that we all know different people with really
strange ritual Like I know somebody who has never pooped
and not taking a shower immediately after, so obviously you always.
And I know someone who has to keep the shower on.
I know someone who puts a towel over their lap
as they poop. I know someone who gets button naked
clothes before not even jewelry. Oh wow. Like he would
(20:17):
take his earrings out and that's a lot, that's a
lot of work. He would take out his one dangle earring.
He's wearing a cross danglar hanging on the hook behind
the door. I remember high school though, he because he
used to do that. We sold his clothes from underneath
because he putting over the stuff. You find that out
because we just knew because we're like, yo, why is
(20:38):
your fucking school uniform draped over the thing too? Yeah,
and you know we're evil kids. So sorry, bro, I
won't name your name. And then there's also the Chad. Yeah,
well obviously it was Chad. Like, do you think there's
a group of these people who like it's like a
community like the way fur reas are where they talk
(20:59):
to each other, or do you think it's like a
lone wolf kind of No. I think it's on your own.
I think there's definitely an our public pooping like subreddit subreddit. Yeah,
maybe our trots sort of share where the best poop
places are. Oh yeah, or like what's your like, how
do you how do you do it? How do you
get clean right after? Real quick? I don't have a
(21:19):
lot of time and I don't know. Yeah, And now
for my recurring segment, what would Andy Rooney say about this?
Feel like it's this damn on demand culture. Everybody thinks
that they can just do it wherever they want. All
rights rest in power, Andy rooney, my man. All right,
we're gonna take a quick break and we'll be right back.
(21:50):
And we're back. Uh, And we just want to start
off with a real loose theory. We're we're developing. There.
There's new news on the Scott Pruett front. Yes, Um,
so we talked to yesterday about all these bizarre expenditures. Uh.
He bought a used mattress from trying to hotel he
got one. Yeah, it was getting his tracking one down assistant,
(22:12):
like someone who worked for him in a professional capacity,
spending tax dollars on having somebody try and track down
a used mattress from a Trump hotel. Uh. Spent over
a thousand dollars on silver pens from a jewelry store,
so like not even good pens because he's not a
broke boy using those G two pilots yeah, and uniball
vision pen and also used as connections to try and
(22:34):
get his wife a Chick fil A and not for
you don't forget his forty three dollar phone booth too.
It's like spy proof because he thinks and not to mention,
I mean, can we go we can go on how
he has to fly first class because he's afraid that
the regular people will hold him accountable for his earth
fucking yeah. So. But then so there's this he tried
to buy a Chick fil A, like a whole uh
(22:57):
yeah franchise with his wife to become a franchise as you,
but he finessed because he was like, I I wanna talk
to you all about a business opportunity. Why the opportunity
is you're gonna hook her up with a franchise, And
they never got very far. So there's a new detail
that he had to be reprimanded by White House staff
for overusing the mess hall. Yeah. Yeah, this has just
(23:19):
like kind of flipped things in a direction where I
think Scott Pruett might just secretly be George Costanza, Like
he's just yeah, he's George Costanza working for the Yankees. Miles,
you were saying that you think you know where the
mattress is because he will probably put that ship under
his desk so he can sleep, because you know, the
man is like we're saying, like, when you're anti government
(23:40):
and working in government, you basically go to work and
don't do ship because you're like, well, I'm not gonna
best Yeah. Yeah, So it's the perfect thing. But when
you realize sort of like what this restaurant is, it's like,
this isn't just like the cafetier at the White House.
Like there's a very specific like dining room that's only
accessible to like a small group of White House official
(24:00):
um and it's ran by like members of the U. S. Navy,
and it's next to the situation room in the West Wing.
And the I think the appeal is that they sort
of like really high quality food but very very low prices,
just so people if you're like, you know, you need
like a good meal, or maybe you just need to
entertain someone quickly in the White House, you can just
take them there rather than like leaving campus or whatever.
(24:21):
But a privilege that, yeah, it's a thing that they
had to remind him. They're like, yes, it is not
for daily use, my guy. And apparently he already racked
up a four bill in one month, which to me
doesn't seem Yeah, that seems like that much, but it's
probably what I don't mr foa bron Um. But yeah,
(24:43):
there's the things he was over partaking in, where beer
Bray's Brisket, Tacos, chocolate Freedom, a multim lava cake, crafted
with imported French chocolate. Are we still doing this dumb
fucking don't use the F word for I like that
they call it, oh yeah, but freedom, but then it's important,
(25:05):
you know, I didn't even notice that. What would it
be normally? I don't know, but I mean, like what
because I remember the freedom fries thing is what happened,
because you know, France is like, don't unilaterally just invade
a country. We're like, oh, fuck you. We can call
these fries freedom fries, but at least the fries are
made in uh, you know, I don't know, but if
(25:25):
they're they're specifically calling it chocolate freedom, but then importing
the chocolate from that's kind of just so stupid. And
it's like it's like this leftover Bush era dumb nationalism thing.
It feels like a lot of this is that sort
of well, we can't have fancy panty food here, so
beer braised brisket tacos That sounds no, it sounds really good,
(25:46):
but I feel like they have to undercut it with
like beer miller lite braised brisket tacos. Um. There's no
like brion crute and there exactly which I'm sure it
was with Obama, you know my right, All right, guys,
let's talk about diplomats. So now we have two different places,
(26:08):
uh maybe three if you listen to our early reports
on the Havanna mystery illness that is striking down diplomats. Basically,
the way this happens is they hear a strange sound
and then they start feeling like woozy in the following days,
and their symptoms are like the symptoms of getting a concussion,
(26:30):
except they're not physically concussed. So it's sort of, uh.
My theory all along has been that it's mass hysteria
just because thank you, thank you very much, totally undermined me, Nick,
thank you. Uh and I don't know. I just reading
about a bunch of examples of mass hysterian us history.
A lot of times it's stuff that you would think
(26:52):
couldn't be imagined by people, and like the Beatles, right exactly, Um,
are these victims all female, because because obviously they're hysterical. Yes,
thank you, good point, but no my first question, first question, right,
so now this is starting to seem like but these
are people that are working in the consulate that we're
that we're getting these pains or whatever, because in Cuba
(27:14):
it was in a hotel, right, it was all over
the place, people thinking that it happened to them at
their house and then in a hotel, and then it
never happened. I don't think in the consulate. I think
it was always like at their home or something. What
are doctors saying. Some doctors have said that they see
brain trauma, and other doctors say that they don't really
(27:38):
see anything, and that the symptoms that people are reporting
are consistent with the symptoms of aging. Like it's like
my hearing is not as good and my head hurts
a little bit when I wake up. It's like connecting
the dots of things that aren't related and being like
this is all and I forgot what you call asshole paper.
(27:58):
Oh yeah, I keep pop like but so I don't know. Uh.
Producer Nick Stump floated a theory that it is some
sort of surveillance technology that uh you know, various uh
communist governments have developed and it has a side effect
that is unintended. Maybe, um, I could a lot of
(28:21):
testing with it, a lot with the technology. They're like, actually,
although you can hear them, ah, you're frying there. You
can hear their thoughts. On the downside, they will hear
an ear splitting sound and in three years will no
longer be able to hear uh. So, I don't know.
It is interesting and there is so. One of the
reasons I thought it was mass hysteria is if you
(28:42):
look back in the sixties in a Moscow consulate, uh
there was a similar outbreak of people thinking they heard
a weird sound and that they were using microwaves to
like funk with them. And then I'm pretty sure they
found that to be nothing and that microwaves cannot go
through walls in the in the way that they were
(29:05):
speculating they were going through walls. But I like that
some doctors like, yeah, it could be brain trauma, and
other doctors like shut the funk up, you're getting old basically,
or like are less likely to believe that there's something
darker happening. And it seems to me that the doctors
who have less on the line and are more independent
from the government are the ones who are more likely
to be like, yeah, this doesn't really seem like there's anything.
(29:28):
They're like, oh, so the ones who are like there
could be some fuor or more right to kind of
push some kind of weird narrative what's happening in our consulates? Right?
And you know this is in keeping with the Trump
administration desire for everything to be conflict oriented. And you know,
fuck Obama because he had good relations with If you
(29:48):
want to be told nothing is wrong with you when
you're in pain, talk to my mother, it's also a
doctor for everything who just said you're you're whining. Don't
take down all you don't need that, you will get hooked.
I'm not so. I also think because doctors have to
like I feel like, even if there is something going on,
if there's not enough evidence, because they're very science space,
(30:08):
if there's not enough evidence to say that they're all linked,
they won't say. But I feel like that happened, like, well,
that happened with like birth control. They're like, there's certain
birth control pills that we're causing brain like cloths and stuff.
Because a friend of mine had that happened to her,
and the doctor basically like, well, we can't say it's
linked to this because there's not enough evidence to say
it's linked to it. But you're not the first person
(30:30):
who has come in who has been on this birth
control with these exact symptoms, so maybe just stop taking it,
but they can't. Sometimes I think the evidence is out there,
they can't say. Well, that's the thing about sciences, you know,
we like to prove things because we like to treat
things as fact, but we have to wait till after
like huge clinical trials, somebody dies or something or whatever. So,
I mean, one of the reasons I think it's bullshit
(30:52):
is also because when you ask scientists who know how
sound waves work, they're like, sound can't do what you're
saying did right, so um. And one of the other
reasons I think it's might be bullshit is that a
lot of the things that they're saying that the sound
beams are doing that are affecting their brains are like
(31:13):
coming through walls basically because scientists have said that it
would have to be like this enormous machine to create
sound waves that would actually damage somebody's ear even um,
and they're in a room where there's nothing else besides
them in the room, and you know, they go and
examine the room where they said these things are happening,
(31:34):
and uh, there's just physically nothing there. And you know,
it's basically been described as physically impossible by a lot
of scientists. So see, maybe it's a it's all just
a publicity stunt for the next X Men movie, I
think marketing. Yeah, they're like I subjected myself to brain
damaging sound waves. Now now speaking of comedies, Miles, Uh,
(31:58):
we have a sit down with the North Koreans coming
up Pinko's and uh that there are some things that
I'm starting to be worried about, besides the idea that
President Trump will be attacked by sound Uh. Yeah, well, look,
so this could potentially decide what the relations are between
(32:19):
North Korea and America for like a generation. Let's say,
let's look at that as our baseline. But so Shinzo Abe,
Japan's Prime minister, he is, he's in d C. Right now.
He's at the White House talking to Trump about trade
in North Korea. Uh. And you know, when they both
sat down and take some questions from the press, obviously
one of the big questions is because of Japan and
(32:40):
South Korea also have a very vested interest in how
these talks go. Uh. They were asking, hey, Mr President,
how is the preparation going for your big summit with
Kim Jong un? That could you know potentially helped bring
peace to the Korean peninsula, and this was his response
when they asked him how prepared he was. I think prepared.
(33:00):
I don't know think I's to prepare very much. It's
about attitude, it's about Willie is to get things done.
But I think I've been preparing for the summit for
a long time. As as the other side, I think
they're preparing for a long time also. So this is
an a question of preparation. It's a question of whether
or not people want it to happen, and we'll know
that very quickly. It's treating it like when you ask
(33:23):
like athletes before going into a big game. There's like, yeah,
we work hard practicing that we're gonna play a good game. Yea.
But even him, he's been arrogant. He's like, now I'm good.
I feel like I'm ready for this one. I'm very
well prepared. I've been preparing my whole life for a
moment like this. People wait a lifetime from him, like
he's coming in with the idea, Like it's an athlete
being like what you just can't think about it too much.
(33:45):
It's like, no, that is not because it's stressing him.
The funk out to think about it, like you should
have like a hundred different possibilities of how the conversation
could go. You should prepare for this, like it is
a fucking guy said, it's all about attitude, my guy.
I know it is not about attitude, because we've heard
about what your attitude is when you try to negotiate
(34:05):
with people. This is like, it's not like an improv scene.
You can't just go in right okay, like really come
in on a tent. But it's really all about times. Yeah,
first thought, best thought, because we know what his first
thought is because so back during I think it was
the Reagan administration, it might have been first uh George H. W. Bush.
(34:26):
He really wanted to get named like to some high
level diplomatic part of the president's cabinet as like the
main negotiator with Russia, and you know, that was a
really important position at the time because the Cold War
was still going on, and they were like, pah, that's hilarious. Man.
So anyways, Trump saw the guy who got the job
(34:48):
at a party later on, and the guy tells the
story that Trump went up to him and he was like, yeah,
you know, I should have gotten that job, but uh,
you know, asked him how it's going. He's like, you
know what I would have done? Uh, if I had
gotten the job, I would have sat down across from them,
looked them in the eye, and the right. Wait, wasn't
it make sure they're real comfortable to yeah, sit down
with them, make sure they're real comfortable, real comfortable chairs.
(35:10):
Like the way the guy describes it, it's like definitely
in Trump Jazz. Uh. And then I would have said
fuck you and walked out of the room. So hey,
it's all that attitude, have an attitude of gratitude when
you go in there. Mr Trump was planned for solving
the Cold War. Well, you know that's it's just really
disheartening because this is a very complex issue and we
(35:32):
already know that they're already competing definitions of what de
nuclearization means in terms of what the US wants, in
terms of what North Korea wants. Um. And when you
add to that, you have a president who, I guess,
for whatever reason, it feels so prepared he doesn't have
to look into anything. Uh. And pair that with the
fact that John Bolton, who is the National Security Advisor, Uh,
(35:55):
he has not even called one cabinet level meeting to
prepare for this summit. So I'm not sure if like
they really just are like, no, we got this, because
in the past, I mean Rudy Giuliani, I think this
week was like, oh, Kim, John is on his hands
and knees begging for this summit. If they really think
that's attitude and there's going to go in and roll
him over, which every expert is like, no, that's not
(36:17):
gonna happen, or they already know they're going to go
in there and just blow the fucking thing up and
just act like, oh, well we tried and now we
gotta fucking we have to take some kind of military
action against it because we know John Bolton is not
here for diplomacy, like you mean they yeah, they want
to throw it just so they have an excuse, right,
and just antagonized, right, or just or they're going to
be so rigid in their negotiating thing like that we
(36:37):
don't need to prepare because we're going to go in
there and say hand over all of your you know,
your nuclear weapons and begin dismantling your program, or we're
not we're the funk out of here. But there's been
plenty of like back and forth with Pomping. I mean,
he they have to be getting some kind of like
information that it's not going to be this easy. So
(36:58):
that's just really a little disc concerning, Like I don't
understand why they're he thinks he doesn't have to prepare.
Clearly John Bolton doesn't think they have to prepare if
they just think there's some kind of foregone conclusion. He's
treating it like when you get a group project in
class and he's like the one guy who doesn't do
anything and then just shows up in the last Yeah.
But then everybody's like, we're not going to give you credit.
And then he's like, well then I'm destroying this whole thing. Yeah.
(37:20):
Then I'm gonna say y'all cheated. Yeah Yeah. I Mean
the way that the people around the president treat the
president is as a volatile toddler. Like I was reading
an article yesterday that was about he and Hannity's relationship
and was this in volatile toddler magazine Toddler Magazine, which
I'm reading now because my son just turned to and uh,
(37:43):
they basically changed his media diet from being you know, CNN,
MSNBC and Fox News to just Fox News because he
was making their lives miserable because he would start off
every day hearing bead shit about himself. And the way
they got him by hearing yeah, by hearing facts. And
so the way they got him to do that was
by just repeatedly complimenting Fox News until he and like
(38:07):
saying that MSNBC couldn't be trusted until he started saying that,
and then being like a good idea, man, that's a
really good idea. So they're like treating him, you know,
it's it's very transparent, and so it doesn't really surprise
me that he isn't being overly prepared by the people
around him. I just don't know how they plan on
(38:27):
puppeteering him through this meeting, right, I guess is Pompeio
going to be there? Yeah? Of him alright, has to
be there, right, So maybe Pompeo will just do all
the speaking and they'll find a way to make it
so that that doesn't really Trump's ego. He Yeah, Pompeo
really goes in and closes the deal, and then they
let Trump in after everything done, and he's like, okay,
so we got it done. Like just to be like, look,
(38:49):
when when you come in, can I do the thing? Yeah?
Just say fuck you. He won't Kim Jong Oon won't
be in there, but just come from and then we'll
be good. You get another Asian guy because he can't
tell right exactly they might actually do that, be like okay, great,
and then he's talking to like a Korean pop star, right,
he's like fuck you. Also, your hair looks great. Uh,
(39:12):
your swag is on one hundred and then just slightly
related to the North Korea story, actually very related to
the North Korea story. Um, I think a lot of
our hopes are riding on the possibility that Dennis Rodman
is going to be involved in the negotiations in some way,
and apparently there has been some complications. So there's a
(39:35):
company called pop Coin, which is a cryptocurrency that is
meant to help people in the cannabis industry basically like
give them access to banking services that like a lot
of federal laws, you know, forbid them from using like
most financial institutions. So Popcoin is a cryptocurrency that is
like basically going to be paying for Dennis Robman's trip
(39:56):
to Singapore where he will act as peacemaker in chief,
and you know he's been seen like wearing these shirts before,
and he clearly has a relationship with Popcorn. Around here,
we've been thinking, I don't know if that might affect
his entry into Singapore or whatever, because they are, you know,
pretty strict with drugs. But at the end of the day,
(40:16):
there's been a lot more writing about the possibility of
Dennis Rodman going and it's just really uh, just funny
to have to hear like high level people who have
worked in like diplomacy just like talk about the situation.
This is a quote, uh from an Asia expert for
the Center for National Interest. He says, if the administration
has any inkling that Dennis Robin is thinking of turning
the Singapore someone into some sort of freak reality show,
(40:37):
they need to privately reach out and ask him politely,
to ask him to take his talents elsewhere. Uh. The
simple fact is that this something could decide the fate
of the US North Korean relations for a generation, and
turning this meeting to some sort of publicity stunt would
be a real shame. But for pop Coin, I mean,
they need that, deserve it, I mean. And then also
I think some of his reps when people ask like, oh,
(40:59):
what is Dennis rob been going there for? Like is
he going to be at the table, Like clearly no,
but they've described his reason for going is quote moral
support to President Trump and Kim Jong gun so and
so he's doing the celebrity thing where like they have
their brand like plastered all over the place, right, like
he has popcoin hats and like popcoin jackets got to
(41:20):
I mean, god can if somehow he does, like gets
in the pictures. If he does, I'm I don't know
what I'm gonna gets Kim jongun to put on a
pot cooin T shirt for the picture that like defines
like like a prop joint. Well, they're kind of getting
what they want because even if he doesn't go, they're
(41:40):
getting all this publicity now, um and all these uh
news articles debating it are mentioning popcoins, so that I mean,
when ads no, they don't want to pay for the
super Bowl and they get banned on purpose, I feel
like it's like even if he doesn't and he's not
gonna probably gonna not gonna be able to wear a
T shirt in the pictures, but the fact that we've
been talking about it now we've visualizing it and and
(42:02):
you're literally in the Washington Post and everybody. Because now,
I mean, I don't know, I'm kind of out of
the crypto game. Uh, superduced An Hosey. Have you heard
of pop coin? Yeah, that's the only because I just like,
look at all the silly ones that come out, like
dog coin and stuff Like dog coin is because people
is that for like black market dog trading. It's because
(42:24):
people love dogs, Okay, just like it's branding the currency
guys dog dog Jason. Yeah. And I don't play the
cryptocurrency markets. You know, one one you buy one Bitcoin
and everyone thinks ch coin. Christcoin is one that's like
(42:44):
to connect it to your salvation. Yeah, because God is
all about making money. Well, that's why it's it inspired
many people to just come up with their cryptos. I mean,
I I understand why there would need to be some
kind of other way for people who are in the
cannabis industry to have access to financial institutions because this
is so smart. Christ Coin is using faith, So it's
(43:05):
sort of like do you have faith in all? Yeah,
but it's like put your faith in Christ but also
in the market value of ours what you don't think
Jesus can make you rich, wo, then this coin is
not for you. Yeah. If there's one thing my boy
j C's about, it's getting that cheddar bro Um. All right,
let's take a quick break and we'll be right back.
(43:35):
And we're back and uh, just an update to a
story that we talked about last week. Was it when
the Clangelo thing broke? That was last week I think
when we had the Ladies of Night call on. Yeah,
that's right. So, uh, for people who aren't up on
this story, Brian Colangelo was the GM of the Philadelphia
(43:56):
seventies six ers. He was associated by the ringer to
some burner accounts. Uh. They reached out to the seventy
sixers for comment on whether Colangelo was associated with just
one of the accounts, and um, the only people at
the seventy sixers organization, according to the person they contacted,
(44:18):
who knew about this request for comment was Colangelo and
the person they called. And that night all five accounts
got shut down. So yeah, they were like, uh huh
and these were fake Twitter accounts that he was allegedly
using to just sort of like trash trash. The guy
who had the job before him, trash, the coach, trash
(44:39):
other players that like he like the best player on
the seventy sixers or second best. Wasn't he releasing and
he also released confidential medical information and defending player they
were trying to defending the size of his callers. Most importantly,
he was defending the size of his collar. I've seen
it referred to his collar gate. That is the best
tweet was somebody was making fun of the size of
(45:01):
his collars. They were like, this guy loves collars. And
one of these burner accounts responded, that's a normal collar.
Find another angle, which is still not him, not him
at all. So yesterday afternoon I had a mild nervous
breakdown because Miles pointed out a story on an NBC
affiliate in Philadelphia, uh that said that the sixers they're
(45:23):
finding was that Colangelo didn't know about the accounts. They
believe him. How they believed him, um and somehow, you know. So,
So the story allegedly is that his wife was the
one who was running these accounts that were just you know,
wildly criticizing. Alright, he through his wife under the bus.
(45:44):
That's one way to look at it as somebody who
has one way to look at it, so I can
totally see doing this. For like, my dad is a
basketball coach. I have like been furious at media like
before who are like criticizing him. I've wanted to do
some of the things that these accounts did. I just
(46:06):
wouldn't because I recognize how stupid it is. But so
I can kind of sympathize if it really was his wife.
The details that make me skeptical that it was his
wife are that the accounts were shut down the same night.
So that means that Clangelow, upon finding out about these
five burner accounts he didn't know about, immediately put it
together that it was his wife for his son, and
(46:29):
then had her shut them down. The other detail that
somebody pointed out is in the report, the law firm
that did the analysis said they couldn't check the wife's
phone because she had restored her iPhone to factory settings,
and all the posts from the most damaging account were
posted from an android. So a little Twitter slew thing
(46:53):
they're done by the internet. Um So, anyways, I think
what happened is they said they came to an agreement.
They would say he was innocent and didn't know about
the accounts, which is where that report came from. Yesterday.
This morning Colangelo resigned. Um. So therefore, you know, the
seventy six is presumably don't have to pay him the
(47:15):
rest of his contract, whereas they would have if they
fired him. Um. And now his name is somewhat cleared,
and he'll probably get another NBA g M job and
a couple of years once all this blows over. Well,
good for him. Yeah, you know, I'm just I'm it's
good to see. You know, white men aren't aren't having
trouble on their feet, right, even when you're doing messy
(47:37):
ass ship like making fake as twitters and talking shit. Cool. Yeah,
he wrote a whole statement that just threw her under
the bus. I'm looking at it right now. He just
released a statement. It's a p D. It's a screenshot
of a PDF from his iPhone. It says, Okay, well,
I'm grateful that the independent investigation conducted by the seventy
(47:58):
sixers has confirmed that I had no knowledge or of
or involvement in the Twitter activity conducted by my wife.
I vigorously dispute the allegation that my conduct was in
any way reckless. At no point did I ever purposefully
or directly share any sensitive, nonpublic club related information with her?
She goes on, Okay, her actions were seriously misguided effort
to publicly defend and support me, And while I recognize
(48:18):
how inappropriate these actions where she acted independently and without
my knowledge or consent. Further, the conducted share was filled
with inaccuracies or conjecture which in no way represent my
own views or opinions. Well, this is obviously a mistake.
We are family, and we work. We will work through
this together. But he basically just says I'm not responsible,
and also like, how inappropriate was of her? Oh? Man,
my wife really fucked up. Hunt doesn't even stand by her,
(48:40):
like I love my wife and you know whatever, it's
just straight up like, he's no idea. I didn't even
tell her these secrets. She just somehow snooped and found it. Man, ladies,
always wife, you know, she hold me down with the
fake Twitter accounts. It's crazy to be like and as
the investigation concluded, clearly as my wife, Wow, where's her statement? Yeah?
Uh oh? He ends up with Basketball has always been
(49:02):
a core part of my life since childhood. I love
the game and all those who play and coach it.
Blah blah blah. I want to thank everyone. So I
love the game and everyone who participates, and I love
my wife kind of but just be defending their husbands
on Twitter, just you can't. You know she's emotional, right,
we talked about hysteria or that's clearly what was So
(49:24):
you think do you think she's she's ride or die
or this his bust throw. I don't think she even cares.
She's probably like, what you want? What do you want
me to say? Okay? Sure that I okay? Whatever, great things?
So you take out the color thing is my one
piece of evidence that suggests that it was not her,
because no wife would be like, yeah, his collar looks
(49:45):
good when he's doing giant flair collars. So she probably
she probably was a troll that insulted the college, right,
that's more like probably she's like, oh I had fake Twitter,
but they were to flame him. I have a friend
to change his outfit. Was in a relationship and he
was sort of the breadwinner. And uh, he and his
(50:06):
girlfriend got pulled over and she took the fall for
the weed that was in the car. Uh. And I
don't know. I think sometimes people are like, Oh, well,
I don't want to hurt his career, so I'll just
take the blame for it, because the sentence is only
of what it is. I'm not questioning her desire to
do it. I'm just trying to get to the bottom
of it. Is she just she was really incensed by
(50:28):
all the negative stuff about her husband and was like,
you know what, I'm a clap back on my man's behalf.
Or is she a victim of this man's fucker. I
don't know, man, and we'll never know, and we'll never know,
but yeah, I think I could see it being a
combination some of the what does she do? Is she?
I mean? Is she in sports? And I don't think so. No,
(50:49):
she is a Russian body her last name. Oh there
we go, Algorithm and Blues. Are you gonna check in
with the teens Jack? Yeah, we should check him with
the teens in our weekly watch. Hey, fellow teens. So, Uh,
(51:10):
there's a blockbuster movie that a lot of people around
here had never heard of starting last week, I guess,
so it became a big thing on Netflix. Uh. It
is a rom com called The Kissing Booth. And Netflix
doesn't release their data, but when you look at Google trends.
That's usually a good indication that usually lines up with
(51:30):
how well the shows do based on how Netflix treats
shows and treats movies. Uh, this is their biggest breakout
hit since Bright because there's no god. But we knew that. Yeah,
we knew Bright was a huge hit, and this is
their biggest hit since that. And it seems like it's
just a really straightforward early nineties sexist teen comedy type
(51:54):
thing that the kids are loving. Why are they loving? Well?
The plot is is basically centers around a team girl
and her male best friend right exactly, and her best
friend and her best friend's older, hotter brother, and then
the main character, the team girl and the older brother
of her best friend. They become a couple after making
(52:16):
out at the titular kissing booth, which are there still
kissing booths? Where there? Ever? I've never ever seen a
kissing booth. I think I saw him when I was
six years old, but it was like it was like
pecks on the cheek. People were not adults. Is there
any sort of like what are the rules here? It
feels really creepy. Yeah, I don't know how you have
a kissing booth that does not come into some kind
(52:37):
of weird problem that wants to support your little business,
but like it would be weird if they got online. Well, look,
clearly the writers of it are not concerned with the
reality of how kissing booth works and the legal mechanics
of that. But yeah, so then through the course of
like their relationship, you know, the whole thing is kind
of centered around like she wants to hide from her
best friend that she's with the older brother because her
(52:57):
best friends just basically sessive, like not even like really
in love with her. He's not in love with her.
He has another love interest, right, He for some reason
wants to control who she's with, which is like weird
and creepy, but it's just treated as like sort of
a natural yeah, because it's not even like a regular
love triangle where it's like, oh, these two people are
(53:18):
interested in this one person and or you know, or
this one person in these other two. It's like there's
this couple and then there's this friend who's just a
possessive asshole. Yeah, wouldn't he be excited if they actually well,
I guess they're not going to get married because they're
in high school. But like, I don't know, I'd be like, oh,
my best friend could be my actual sister. That's cool. Yeah,
(53:39):
well this isn't the This is a weird universe that
this takes place. And like, yeah, the older brother who
she's with, he's even like always trying to keep her
away from other guys. Well, other guys are constantly groping her,
and instead of being like Wow, that guy's a creep,
they say that she was asking for it because she
was wearing a short skirt. Like that literally happens the
(54:02):
love interest. The older brother later apologizes to the girls
dead instead of her because apparently, um so, I don't know,
is this like some weird like retrograde like backslide into
early like Dowry politics or something, you don't know. I
(54:23):
mean there's that like how there's one line where one
of the characters, Hey, when did you get the boobs? Yeah?
And then like the younger brother like this like answers
for her real quickly. It's like, yo, what the the
body monitor? And it was June second, it was the
fall after summer from eighth grade. Uh yeah, And but
(54:45):
I guess it makes sense because it was written by
a fifteen year old girl, right, So that actually puts
a new perspective on it because it's like, yeah, the
guys that age are fucking awful, and like that's kind
of what she knows at that when you're existing in
a patriarchy like that, and I don't know how many
self aware fifteen year olds or I certainly wasn't uh
(55:05):
to then be like oh and then as you write
something out, you don't realize how much of that ship
is infused in your own creative output. Totally. Everything is
kind of just fantasy. It's not it's not creepy because well,
I don't know if she's had sex yet, but a
lot of people have that I haven't yet, So everything's
version yeah, and it's not like a real like, oh
that person has been a cree right, But yeah. It
was published on what Pad first and then later as
(55:28):
a book and now Homegirl shes twenty two. Now she
got a little book deal. Oh yeah, I thought she
got oh now twenty two awesome, yea, she has landed
a major publishing deal. But the creepy overlay of the
story also makes sense because after she wrote as a
fifteen year old, it was adapted to the screen and
(55:49):
directed by a you guessed at sixty eight year old man. Hey,
if there's one thing that directed I get this man,
I remember kissing booths in the sixties, right, I'm the
perfect guy when you look at that guy's uh IMDb
like he directed a bunch of like other kids kind
of stuff, like teen Beach movie, an American girl Grace
(56:13):
stirs up success. Uh so you know this guy, Vince Marcello,
he's I guess that's like his bag is doing like
young team girl stuff. Yeah, did you also do the
Rebecca Black video? I don't know. I mean this this
makes the case of why that movie Blockers. That's actually
that was like, yeah, like at least like a not shitty,
(56:36):
overtly problematic film about this kind of era in a
young person's life without getting into all the male gazey
wacky ship. The first one, Hey, look at that. That's
the first movie, which is why it's so refreshing to
do you watch it and it's a a female director,
and then like someone who director is not falling into
the same pitfalls of like the just cliche ship that's
(56:58):
in all these movies. Per I just see my girlfriend.
I saw the film and she just hated it. Yeah.
I mean, like on Sundays we try and watch like
one garbage fire of a movie, you know, weekly, just
to kind of like decompress. I like, as soon as
the movie started, I just fell asleep. I blockers, not blockers,
(57:18):
I'm I'm talking. We're talking about We're talking about wasn't
that theater? Yeah? That I was gonna say that was underrated.
That's how plugged into the Zeus teen films. He's always
up on it, and I'm always wearing my Spinney pat
or whatever that thing is with the propeller on top.
But I just she said, like the next day, she
(57:41):
just went on a rant at work. Yeah. It reminds
me of like Suzanne Myers. You guys, I know Twilight
so well, I know exactly what the other's name is. No,
but yes, Scott, that's sort of like she you know,
it's this weird version of reality where it's like the
man saves her but also like sees her as an individual,
but only her, Like I don't. It's like, yeah, right,
that's not how the world is, just to a bunch
(58:04):
of men fighting over control for this woman's body. I
guess I don't know, do they like? In the description
says she loses her virginity. I just like imagine it's
also has to be through a kissing booth like virginity.
Virginity just escalates behind a curtain. Yeah. I think that's
called a choral Teresa, has been a pleasure of having
(58:25):
you as old. Oh thank you for having me? Is
it over already? It? Where can people find you? Um?
You can find me on Twitter and I have a
podcast You Can Tell Me Anything, where I have comedians
tell me something they've never told me. A lot of secrets.
Fun had some of the Zeit Gang on. I just
had a Jackie snel on Oh my God, it's so
dark that episode We're Homeless. Gu No, this show is
(58:50):
really good. Listen. Yeah, and I'm on Twitter, Larisa Tea, Yeah, yeah,
how about you man? Twitter, Instagram at Miles of Gray
follow me cool on my journeying to possibly getting ten
thousand followers. Nowhere near there, but that's how we're thinking.
It's all about goal set, you know. I mean you
follow me at jack Underscore O'Brian on Twitter. We are
(59:12):
also on Twitter at Daily Zeitgeist. We're on Instagram at
the Daily Zeitgeist. We have Facebook fan page and a
website Daily dot Com where we post our episodes and
air or we link off to the information that we
talked about in today's episode, as well as the song
we write out on miles. What that? Oh, just you know,
a little little some some music, some something to make
(59:33):
you feel good. Uh, something to just play at home
when you're just winding down with a glass of wine
or whatever you like to get down with. This is
River Tiber with a track called Barcelona. Uh, and it's
off the album Indigo. It's just a good man. Uh,
nice little vocal harmonies in there. The rhythms section is good.
It's just you know, it's got. It takes a lot
of boxes for me, as you can tell by my
(59:55):
musical taste. So yeah, check this out. Barcelona. It gets
the jack O'Brien. Hey, what is this? Approval? Hey? What
are you listening over there? Buddy? Yep, that's what I say.
That's how I sound. Hey, pal, what is this? Uh? No,
it's really good. Alright, We're gonna write out on that
and we will be back tomorrow because it is a
(01:00:17):
daily podcast. Talking gets I one you fit to Oh,
(01:01:06):
I not any want to mean I'm not any wanta
mean amore? Oh, I wanta mean I'm not only wanna
mean yeah God you love it? Saying it is not
(01:01:34):
cold in enough, say it's a thing, no oh oh
something and I see you by do love w e,
(01:02:04):
I love deal mm on about want to be I
want to lead a more, saying it's the feel call sayings,
(01:02:33):
the feeling, calling saying, the saying, calling in a saying
(01:03:28):
is not all, says not call who SI? Saying it
(01:04:00):
just to pus