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June 9, 2021 68 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season one, eight eight,
Episode three of their Daily Guys to production by Heart Radio.
This is a podcast where we take a deep dive
into America's share consciousness. It's Wednesday, June nine one. My
name is Jack O'Brien, a K. Chuggy, Chuggy, Chuka Chuga Chugi,
Brandon everywhere, Chugga Chuka Chuka Chuggi, Brandon everywhere, Brandon everywhere,

(00:24):
Brandon everywhere. Mantain dew might be Chugi drink it forever
goes down so smoothly. That is courtesy of Christie al
Gucci Man. And I'm thrilled to be joined as always
by my co host, Mr Miles Gray. Yes, it's your
local conspiracy theorist and founder of the Wash Conspiracy Chugann

(00:45):
It's Miles Gray. And I just had to come up
with that one off the riff because looky, I kind
of wouldn't do the Miss new Booty one too, But
it is what is it? Shout out to my brain? Yeah, yeah, Well,
we are thrilled Miles to be joined in our third
seat by Wanted, the funniest stand up medians in the world.
She's appeared on Last Call and at midnight where she

(01:05):
won the Internet twice you saw on Flaphouse. Sorry, but
I want the Internet six and or seven times? I know,
but I didn't want to. I wanted to let you correct.
Dare you did? You're a weirdos like I know you
know what that is. That's a happily married man. That's

(01:26):
the sign of a man who goes you know what
they Yes, you're right wrong once again? My bad? Uh
flop House. Her Twitter account was named one of the
seventy best Twitter accounts by Pace. Please welcome the absolutely
hilarious Marcella R. Wait, hello, Hi, Sorry for being outdated.

(01:52):
What does the show even about anymore? He's talking to
just getting people SATs wrong? So you want six or
seven times. One of the funniest things about Jack is
like how like his whole he's just so muted and
like the vibe is just like real chill. And then
when he is doing that introduction, he goes for it
and it really gives me some insight into what's happening

(02:14):
in the bedroom with his wife. So I'm just into it,
you know, I like it. I love to admire it.
Another gear I don't know where you don't know and
Miles is like the same at all times, which it's
really I wonder what you're like with your parents, you know, Yeah,

(02:35):
I know, I just annoyed the funk. I was gonna say,
are you an only child? Yeah? Okay, alright in the conversation,
I'm not interested anymore. There we go. Miles turns it
on for his like friends parents. I've seen him like
one of his friends parents and like a sandwich shop,
and it's just like, Darlene, I'm like, oh, because you know,

(02:58):
sometimes it's we when you see people out in public,
and most of the time you see people you don't
want to fucking see in public, but sometimes you see
like you're like your homie from high schools, like mom,
You're like, oh my god, Darling, what the funk bits
bring it in? Talking to Darling like that, are you no? No?
I said, how are you? Okay? Oh? You come here

(03:21):
to you work around here? Hopefully I run into again. Yeah, yeah,
that sounds I was trying to mac the laughter. Yeah,

(03:47):
we gotta add that to the intro. Also, fantastic animal intel.
Oh ship, damn, that is really something that this this replaces.
Mariah as No apologized, I'm sorry I'm so sorry. I'm sorry.
I'm sorry, I'm sorry. Yeah, this is a lifetime of

(04:09):
being terrified of conflict to a pathological degree. Do you
go through an emo like a gothic phase? Jack, No,
not really. I went through like, uh just I think
you grew up in the Midwest too much for you
to get emo. No, there's plenty, plenty of emo. I
work cross colors, and like Carl Can, I in a

(04:31):
town that was like the whitest town in the world,
and that was kind of my EMO phase. That was
like everybody was mad at me, like including my teachers,
that you didn't get dark, you got black. That's right,
he went another direction. Yeah, that's funny. Marcella was new
or it's still in the middle of a pandemic. Where

(04:51):
are you asking me that nothing is new? There's nothing
to update. I got trying to set up these hook
ups with these dudes and it's just not working out.
And I'm very annoying, you know. I'm just coming to
people's downs and I'm trying to, you know, make something happen,
and it's not. You know, I'm just upset. What's upset
is it? Does it feel like the energy is different?
Out there with the everyone being vaccinated or it's just

(05:13):
kind of the same same well. I mean, I'm just
trying to not hook up with strangers because i mean,
first of all, men lies, so like I don't I
can't trust some strangers like vaccinated with anyone, do you know,
It's like that's out the window. So I'm like trying
to hook up with people I like pretty much ke
known or like really like you know, kind of trust

(05:34):
in some way, and it's just not handing out. And
I'm like, really like, what is he even out there?
What are the options? You know? Guy, I'm just saying, guys,
You guys are lucky to be in a whatever you
want to call, But how do you like triangulate like
the people you know you feel like you have enough
like mutual friends or whatever to be like, Okay, I
think I can kind of understand or cage how honest

(05:54):
this person is. I mean, if I've known them for you,
I have to know I have to know them for
years to be like this can be a fine one
night stand, you know, because I've had poked up with
homies and it's fine, and then I tooked up with
homies and it's not fine, and there is no there's
no kind of navigating that. But you know, it's also
at a certain point, especially now through the pandemic, it's

(06:14):
like people are definitely approaching everything a little differently. You know,
everybody just like yeah, sexs okay, yeah, let's just do this.
I don't even want you know what I mean? Yeah? Yeah, yeah.
I mean that's another problem is that you know, some
people out they lie and they're like, no I don't.
I just want to do this, and it's like, no,

(06:36):
you don't, and I want that. I'm telling you right now,
too sensitive, fellows are too sensitive? All right, we are
going to get to know you a little bit better.
And switched it up when I said men are two sensive.

(06:58):
He was like, whoa, that's not here. I have such
a thick skin that I'm just gonna move right on
from that and into the stories that we're talking about today. Q,
Where where did you go? What happened? Hey? What happened?
It seems like right around when everybody figured out who
Q was, and he's got a real boring name, and

(07:20):
it's just like a mod that that, like he just disappeared,
So they must have gotten that one wrong. So we'll
talk about that. We will revisit the sentiment of fuck
the Koch brothers because they apparently have a hand in
Joe Mansion's quote unquote reasoning. We'll talk about that pro
publica report that reveals how little the ultra wealthy pay

(07:44):
in taxas a blair Witch escape room. But first, before
we get to any of that, Marcella, we like to
ask our guest, what is something from your search history?
I googled the word fromentation because I was texting my
friend because she is pregnant, so I was like, congrats
on your fermented semen. And then before I hit send,

(08:08):
I was like, is that even the proper? And I
started googling from it and I was just like, wait,
this isn't Twitter. It doesn't matter, it doesn't matter. It
made me realize how like I'm traumatized from Twitter, Like
because I think I've talked about this before on here.
It's like, I do try to consider all the reactions
that people are going to say to me, what with

(08:29):
you know, whatever I tweet. And then I was just like, wait,
this is my friend, you know, this is just me
being funny. It doesn't matter. I don't need it to
be accurate, and I was just like, so when I
was like looking at my Google, so just fermentation was
right there, and I was like, oh, this is really
freaking funny that I actually gave so much of a ship.
But I'm traumatized by Twitter. Yeah there's something like I said,

(08:53):
I said that my a K yesterday runaway Train was
by skid Row instead of soul Asylum too, different bands
with like long blonde hair lead singers, and just had
my mentions blown up. And it's just it feels like
you're being assaulted or like, you know, people are just
like coming at you because like eight different people are

(09:15):
saying the same thing. So it feels like but it
I mean, they're right, but like my net my natural
instinct was to be like, god, damn it, everybody leave
me alone. But like it's just such an unpleasant experience.
But yeah, no, they're right. I definitely got that wrong.
And my bad, my bad Joel. Yeah, but that's I
would say, that's different though than what I'm what bothers

(09:38):
me because it's like if I just say the wrong,
like literally the wrong reference or the wrong you know,
like it's not a Conue song, it's a jay Z song,
like I'm like, oh yeah, that's that's a matter of fact.
And in comedy it's like she does not need to
be a matter of fact. It's like it's just meant
to be funny. And I think that I have to
keep reviding myself, especially that now that I'm getting back

(09:58):
into performing. It's it's not about it being fucking perfect,
it's about it being fucking funny. And I think that's
the that's the fuck up thing about some of these
audiences and some of these people on Twitter. It's like, okay,
but is it funny? And if it's not funny, why
do you not funny? Funny? Is it because it doesn't
like resonate with you, It doesn't apply to you. That's
one that's different. You know, your stand up set doesn't

(10:19):
have a fact checking department. You haven't checking from. They're
called hecklers and they're faced and they're us anyway. No, no no,
I don't hear him out until they shut the funk up.
And then every now and again we kicked somebody out.
I remember at a at fucking Chatterbox. Steve Hernandez has
his fucking fun well, he used to have a fun

(10:40):
Yes and West Covina and a guy was like on
the phone in the front, like on the phone, and
at first I was like, you have a chance because
I'm not a complete dick. And I'm like, okay, you
can wrap that up. You can't be on the phone.
And he just kept chatting on the phone and like
like like a show wasn't happening. It was bonkers. I
got the whole room to boo at him, and then
he like Steve walked him out as he was being booed.

(11:01):
It was hilarious. Well, and that's what I missed about
live performances. But it was that thing of like what
the hell, why are you? Like, also, just step outside.
It's a bar, Like why would you want to be
on the phone, you know when there's a show and
there's loud and it's like especially for someone to be
in front at the chatter boy, it was like so
big where you're like, okay, I get it's a gigantic

(11:22):
room and you're like, motherfucker, I'm three, I'm I can
see you. Yeah, I can see your face. He clearly
hadn't didn't know who he was trying to pull that
ship chapters. Sure you flattering men unless you want that.
Unless you don't want me to, I'll shut up. I

(11:43):
should just shut the Actually a quote on on I forgot.
I did this interview with Vulture, and I said, like,
I freaking hate compliments because they do. Because it's like,
if I'm feeling bad about myself, you can't make me
not feel bad. Like I just feel bad. I'm gonna
sit in it. It's fine. I'm gonna process these feelings.
But if I'm feeling good, you can't make me feel good,
or you're not gonna make me feel bratty or Jack

(12:05):
Brady as is. You know, it's a matter of fact,
though that our listeners should know that you are probably
comedian to heckle. I think that's a matter of fact. Yeah,
fun around and find out, come out, come see me
in Sacramento in New York this summery all around and

(12:25):
find out. Have you done any live shows? I've done
a couple. I did Um. I did a little string
of shows in Colorado and that was that was really fun.
You know, I will say that these audiences are really
generous with their laughter. Right now, I'm telling every comic
that's nervous, it's like, dude, take advantage if people do
not give a ship what you're talking about right now,
Like they yeah, dude, I can just be like I mean,

(12:47):
you can say the dumbest ship and they're so into it,
like it's it's really it's really fun. It's really nice.
It's also just like, yeah, this is the energy that
everybody should always have a comedy shows like fucking relaxed.
We're there to have fun, like life is good even
when it's bad, like we're having a moment to ourselves
like I am kind of glad people kind of mentally reset,
you know, and are taking ship for granted. Because that's

(13:10):
really what I hope a lot of people learned this year.
But it's been a few shows I've done have been
really really fun. It reminds me of when I would
I entertained the troops back in two thousand thirteen in Japan,
and they were like the most gracious audience, generous with
their laughter, but even when you bombed, they were so
sweet afterwards, Like because I bombed bombed half of my shows,

(13:32):
I killed the other half. But it was really funny
that even after I usually when you bomb at a
show afterwards, when you're like standing out there, if you
have the nerves stand out there. People will ignore you
if you bomb. But what I love about our troops
is that even if a bomb, they still came over,
shook my hand and said thank you for coming out
here and performing for us. We really appreciated it. And

(13:53):
I was like Jesus Christ, and they're like, why this
guy got the bomb disposal suit on? Sorry to take
a photo forget what? I don't like to do this podcast?
What's something you think is overraged? You know what? Like?
Once again, I did not want to participate, and so

(14:16):
I asked Twitter, and there are some really interesting answers
and here's what I would want to say. And I
don't because you know, I only hear myself talk. I
don't listen to those podcasts on a regular basis, So
I don't know what your guests are saying for overrated
and underrated. But my question to you guys, and maybe
it's just a comment I want to say, is do
people confuse overrated for just some ship they don't like? Yeah? Yeah,

(14:42):
I think that's the that's the quickest way someone will
engage with like that question. For sure, I don't like it,
or because other people like it, it's overrated, right, And
I just don't. I don't think that's the assignment, right.
I think that's why I have such a hard time
with it. I'm like, oh, you are taking the easy
way out. I didn't know that, right. I'm like, I
like to think about these things, which is why I

(15:02):
usually don't want to do them because I'm like, this
is too much work. Yeah, I mean we stopped doing
the myths because of you, I know. I mean that
was that was stupid. That one was dumb, and it
was just it was only guy Montgomery who was just
coming coming heavy with those ones. Shut the guy. So
other people's overrated, sore, you're overrated other people? Well, I

(15:22):
just here. Well I guess I'm like shocked because a
lot of white dudes were like beyonced it and I
was like and I was just like, Okay, just because
something isn't for you doesn't mean it's overrated. You know.
Somebody told me Outcast, which I found really offensive. I'm like,
you're a white dude from the suburbs, Like, of course
you don't like Outcast. That's fine. If you don't like them,
they're not overrated just because you don't understand it. It

(15:45):
was really interesting, and I wonder what your gut what
you guys, this is my question to you, is what's
been your experience, Like what's the most offensive overrated you
guys have heard on this podcast? I mean like you
were really like you like you lost respect about of
the person. Oh, we just we just we just don't
air those episodes. They don't get asked back, they get

(16:08):
they just get stuffed in the back. No, I don't know.
I mean it's all everyone just kind of it's always opinion,
so you know, I never really take it personal because
people usually articulate the thing first. I'll be like weed,
and I'm like, what the funk? And they'll be like,
because I'm this and I grew up, but that's not overrated?
Yeah see, I like this debate. Yeah. Like, so is
there something just in general in your lifetime that you

(16:30):
felt was overrated for you personally? There have been things,
I mean I have thought about them, and when I've
done this podcast before, and I mean I think we've
had some interesting conversations and some people brought up some
interesting points. But again even when I remember because I
did like the phone call one and there were people
that were like, I can't YadA YadA for whatever reasons

(16:52):
because of this with that and the other because of
mental health reasons or whatever, which is like, that doesn't
mean that it's overrated to you. That means that it
doesn't function for you as an individual human being anyways.
So I'm and I was really I remember that one specifically,
just being like, I literally hate how many people ship
on talking on the phone when it's like such an
easy way to connect with human beings. You know, that's

(17:15):
not no, not they got it backwards, you got you
want to talk one phone? Yeah, Well That's what I'm
saying is that's the difference between considering something's underrated overrated
and I'm just like it literally, how about how about
I posit one to you. Here's something that is very
highly liked right now in popular culture, the Olivia Rodrigo album.
Oh I enjoyed it. Okay, I had really had had

(17:37):
a good I had a good viral tweet. I said,
of course I love that Olivia Rodrigo album because dudes
eight ship at seventeen and forty seven bitches related the
young bitches, the old bitches. I even got some older
women to listen to the album because of that. Tweet
and they're just like, yeah, this is like this is
on the money because it's like it's not overrated. It

(17:59):
really like she really captures those like broken hearted feelings,
especially you have as a young woman, and sometimes when
you had another heartbreak after another heartbreak after another heartbreak,
you're like, this is the same old ship. Like dude,
my friend lady A Papovitch the last time I called
her up because I was like really heartbroken about some situation.
I was just what was ending. She was like myself,

(18:22):
you have the worst look with guys. And I was
really glad she said that because it made me be like, yeah, okay,
so it's not just me like it was really shitty,
but it made me just kind of it kind of
gave me some sense of comfort knowing that like I'm
really having I really am having the hard time that
I like, I'm not exaggerating it, but listening to like

(18:43):
a teenage girl, it's like, damn, you know what it
made me think? Though it definitely made me be like
parents should not be letting their teenagers date. If they
can control it, they should not allow it. It's so
fucking awful and such a huge distraction and it should
wait because I didn't date till I got a little older,
and I'm really glad it didn't. That song driver's license
has like really driven home. First of all, like how

(19:06):
young those those people? Right? Yeah? And like yeah, it
just made me feel old as fun being like, wait,
they're like dating and saying they're in love with someone
before they even get their driver's license. Yeah. Yeah, they
shouldn't get their driver's license that young either, But yeah,
I was like, oh, I'm in love with her because

(19:27):
she'll let me drive her brother's truck and I don't
have a driver license, you know what I mean? And
that's like that was my pieces room of which is
what I'm saying. Dudes ain't ship at seventeen, said I
got her sick ass Vaughn Dutch hat. So don't tell
me that he's like knowing Miles has always liked white girls.

(19:50):
Oh no, you should man keep it down over there,
say some wild ship, aren't you? No? No, not at all,
not at all. No, I've I've I've dated a plethora
of many. You don't have a type that interesting. For
a while, my type was dancers. Wow, you're weird. Like

(20:11):
in North Hollywood, the Millennium dance complex is there where
all the backup, like all the choreography for music. So
I was around that became my vibe for a little bit.
That's interesting. Okay, well then that's a good one. Overrated
is people having like specific references. Yeah, I think that
that's really disgusted because it can be you know, very

(20:31):
racist or um or whatever, sucking body discrimination and um
and I don't have a type. And people are always
a shot because I think people because I do talk
about black eyes a lot because black eyes like me.
That's what I'll say. Black eyes approached me. Black eyes
like me. Black eyes are like they don't they don't
mind my type of personality and uh so, like they

(20:53):
will gravitate towards them. But I do not have a
type of liked every type of guy. Um, I'm not.
I don't discriminate. I love a fat dude to look,
a skinny dude, to like short dude, like a tall dude.
What's the most important thing that like they can keep
up with, like not getting like taking the ships you
say personally and understanding your sense of humor or that
they have empathy. Like what's the first thing that you

(21:15):
look for I mean the first I don't know. I
don't know that there's the first thing I look for.
I mean, yeah, you gotta definitely have a sense of humor,
but I mean I I don't know. I like a
good a good laugher, a generous laugher. But that's because
I'm a comedian, but because the dudes, I think something
I noticed that because it happened in the household. My

(21:35):
brother he would always be like, who who said that?
If I said something funny? Who said that? He would say, who?
Who's that? From? The movie? Is that from? And that
was one of those things from It's Sucked Up? But
it's like it's how well it is? But he really
like he says it to my mom too sometimes when
she says something funny, and it's been like the thing

(21:56):
that I really noticed in guys where it's like, wow,
you're such a sexist and don't even realize how deep
it is. And I'm like, I really just if a
guy can like That's why I love doing this podcast.
I'll give you one compliment. You guys do laugh when
I do say something funny, and that is actually very
hard to find in more than one man at a
single time. But that's also why you guys are friends.

(22:17):
You know, we gonna do not laugh, but they don't.
Our job is easy that like we get to talk
with funny people. They're funny and I like to laugh.
So is it all? I know? But what I'm saying
is like that's it's such a simple thing, and yet
many men shout out to the page archie. They really
can't like wrap their heads around it, and it's really frustrating.

(22:39):
And and it's also like I don't understand why so
many guys like they really don't think I don't think
I'm like some drop dead beautiful woman. There's like really
really like like the traditional beauty beauty aesthetic that those
women are now like becoming known comedians and they're becoming
kind of popular. And the fact that guys like have

(23:01):
such a hard time seeing a woman with like a
nice face and a good body like be funny. I'm like, yeah, dude,
I know plenty of those types of girls. They don't
do some of them don't do comedy, and some of
them do. I'm just like, how have you not ever
seen this before? That was it so hard for you
to believe? But the reality is it's that they just
don't find women funny. That's what it boils down to. Wow,
this got really deep, really fast. That's we're here for.

(23:23):
We'll charge you for the session. What is something you
think is underrated? I don't know, Jack, Oh my god. Wait,
but I'll read some of the reaction. What's your favorite one?
My favorite one? What was my favorite one? There was

(23:43):
a few on here that I well, someone actually, this
might be my favorite one. Someone said overrated Saturday, underrated Tuesday,
and I was like, you know what, that's actually very
interesting on Tuesday. Underrated? Yeah it is. It's a good
day to go out. There's usually a happy hour situation,
you know, there's usually no cover to get into wherever
you're going. There's usually a really good DJ spinning wherever

(24:06):
your music is playing. That is really good. And I agree,
I think Tuesday. And I just say that as like
someone who has to be out at night for a living.
It's like, Tuesday is can be a fun night because well,
because it's not even that is that if you're out
on a Tuesday, you want to be out. If you're
out on a Saturday, you might have gotten talked into it.

(24:31):
Rep right. Yeah, So I will say that might have
been my favorite of all the ones that I saw,
But there was some really weird one I think, and
you know, probably being a comedian, especially with the dudes,
they think they need to be funny to say something
to me. And what was I found really wild? You know,
you can learn a lot about a person by these
types of choices. One guy said, overrated Michael Jackson, underrated

(24:54):
Janet Jackson. I was like, Oh, you just don't have
black friends, like Janet Jackson is not underrated at all,
like anybody, you know what I mean, Like, no one,
no one thinks she's underrated. You didn't see Rhythm Nation
well and it's not I don't even think is that
I think that they because it's a white person. I'm like,
they probably the people around them don't like Janet Jackson.

(25:15):
It's like, yeah, the people that you surround yourself with
a racist Like everyone I am friends with is they
love Janet Jackson. I don't know anybody who doesn't think
she's fucking great, even if they don't like her music,
they don't she's I mean, that's that's super Bowl halftime
show was such a mistake. What was she thinking? Like?
Nobody thinks that overrated, the Dave Matthews band and Kenny

(25:37):
Lagin's underrated. What tell me you're white without telling me
your tell me you wearing two polo shirts layered right, yea,
one of the funniest ones that I don't even think
this dude realized what he was saying. He said, underrated,

(25:57):
chocolate milk, overrated, but stuff, And I was like, one
certainly explains the other. Can't you know how much chocolate milk?
Of course your think, but stuff is overrated if you're
fucking chugging chocolate milk. Yea, that's a mess man. Yeah,
poor woman invital a day. Okay, whoa, alright, let's take

(26:25):
a quick break and we'll come back and talk some
news and we are back. So this is something that
I feel like I wasn't fully aware of that the
Q drops had stopped, like Q has dropped off the

(26:49):
face of the Internet for the most part, because I
always thought that like the origins of Q drops were
like kind of hard to verify, Like it was hard
to like be like, no, this is definitely actually Q.
But I think that they did know when you got
an authentic Q, and they're not getting any authentic cues anymore. Yeah,

(27:12):
which is just really sad, I think is what is
why we're talking about that everyone thought, you know, they
they presume as Jim Watkins, who of eight Cone which
was formerly eight Chan and all this other ship. So yeah,
right now, because he's not there, it's created like a
power vacuum for just a bunch of lion ass hucksters

(27:33):
to try and like claim the throne of like the
Q leadership. And it's like everybody. So there's first Sydney Powell,
who you remember she was like the cracking lawyer from
you know, right after the election, who was you know,
getting sued by dominion voting systems and all those other people.
She's like gone a direction where she's like actually like
going against a lot of the accepted beliefs of Q

(27:55):
and on where she just said, you know, there is
no military tribunal. I know you were from demon pedophile
democrats going to Guantanamo Bay with these military tribunes, Like
it ain't happening. She's like, the fucking plan, the trust,
the plan. Ship ain't no fucking plan. There is no plan,
you know, like we gotta figure some ship out on
our own. Although she did say but don't worry Donald Trump,

(28:18):
good high chance that he will be back in office. Unfortunately,
because Joe Biden was in office for these first couple
of months, that doesn't mean he can extend his second terms.
That was like the one weird thing she gave the audience.
And they're like they were like, okay, great, and like
that makes sense right right, No, just come up with
like one little like thing that's different. Yeah, They're like, well,

(28:41):
I mean she said he can't do it for we
don't have landish beliefs. I mean, obviously yes, when his
term ends, then President Trump can go into I When
she she strikes me as like that mom that has
been supporting her loser son in the basement. It's like, okay, honey,
it's time to kind upstairs and get a shower and look, look,
look you can have here whatever the funk, And she's

(29:02):
just like trying to reason with him, and luka, mom.
It just seems like this whole like falling apart ship
and everyone like trying to grasp grab for power feels
like literally January six, but online, like no, it's they're
trying to do everything right there, like there's it's not
just some people are trying to make this ship more

(29:22):
of like a grassroots political movement because they're like, Yo,
we can't really keep going full steam on this conspiracy
theory because it will flame the funk out, But like
there is a way to maybe funnel this energy in
a way for someone else's in the farious plans. So
there are other things go on. So telegram has just
become like where everybody gathers to exchange like all their information,
whether it's financial promises. Quote claiming, for example, that Q

(29:45):
and On believers will become wealthy if they buy a
specific cryptocurrency or near valueless currency like the Iraqi dinar.
Others have claimed that the world economy will still soon
be radically restructured in a quote global financial reset that
will bol fish debts, meaning Q and On believers should
feel free to take on huge debts and not worry
about paying them back. But why bother if the money

(30:10):
is all gonna be wiped out? Why bother doing that? Oh?
I guess like you're they're saying, yo, buy my ship,
by my ship doesn't matter. Let's go all in on
this because there's gonna be a global reset and then
we'll just wait till they come and just take your
fucking geo storm from you. It's gonna I mean, it's
all transparent. Just look at like what they get out
of it, like what they benefit. So I mean with
the people who are selling ship, that's very obvious they

(30:31):
get your money. But like with Sidney Powell, it's like
she's saying that there's not like some made up legal
entity that's gonna like just clear the table for them.
So her as a lawyer who actually believes in this ship,
like she becomes more powerful because she knows how to
like yeah, although it turned out she may have completely

(30:52):
fucked up her defense because you know, she's being sued
by dominion voting systems because said the election was rigged
and the machines are all like, oh yeah, scammed and
ship and they're like, yo, this is death worth taking
your ass to court. At this Q and on convention,
she spoke at the same place where she said there
is no plan, there is no military tribunals. She first
her whole defense was these were just her opinions about

(31:12):
what was happening with these voting machines. But her dumb
ass said out loud, she was like, well, the thing
is h this is true and we got the evidence
to prove it, and every legal expert was like slapping
their foreheads in celebration, be like, oh, you you may
have completely funked up your defense by saying this. So
you know, it's suffice to say it's very chaotic. Michael Flynn,

(31:34):
General Flynn. He they say like he's probably the closest
to having like the most authentic Q power because like
a lot of things intersected with what he was doing,
and he even took a Q oath last summer, like
your front of his family ship was so fucking sad.
And he's even out here saying things like no, like
in the there's like the military isn't running things secretly

(31:55):
for Donald Trump, Like that's not what's going on. He's like,
but we do need to be like alert, you know,
pat is because all this other ship. But the real
thing that is really I think probably I think where
we're gonna see a lot of this energy go is
that like whatever they consider the more respectable QUE leaders
whatever the funk that means, like the ones who just
don't want to go all in on like the you know,

(32:17):
like anti Semitic like tropes and like other kinds of
nasty conspiracy ship. They're more trying to be like, no,
not not outlocked, just through just through very blatant racist
iconography and things right now. But ba, they're the ones
saying like that local politics is the way for everybody
to put this energy and essentially creating like an army
of drones that are in office. Yeah, that's what they're saying.

(32:43):
At this Q conference. Quote, they urged audience members to
build up local Q and On organizations and take precinct
seats in local Republican groups. Far from the vision of
a world reborn through violence that sparked Q and On,
one that's likely more achievable for the Q and On movement.
In the spirit of Q and On new localism, one
promoter urged Q fans take get involved with their local
school boards. A battlefield raccoon On has already seen some

(33:04):
early success, this organizer said, quote, go to your local
school board meetings, get on the school board. That's so disgusting.
It's also like wild to be like the they were,
you know, the whole pizza pedophile ship, and it's just
like you guys are now just gonna be the pedophiles. Like,
why are you doing like why are you getting involved
with these school boards? Like it's so disgusting, it's so weird,

(33:26):
it's so disgusting. I mean, all along with that, you
got Matt Gates, who's all the reports coming out like
he's the one trafficking miners. But that has nothing Okay,
but that doesn't intersect with your because it's not really
about that anyway. You just needed some weird ideas to
justify your your shitty world. And I wasn't at a
convention two weeks ago, like supporting my political beliefs. But

(33:50):
these motherfucker's were that also scares me, like they're i mean,
they're involved, they're motivated. I'll give him that. I gotta
show a little respect because but here's the question for
both of you guys, what's the big guess scam you
ever felt for? Because this is like it's wilder people
far from the Okay, that's like that all this for
a penny? That was that was a good one. I

(34:11):
was gonna say the food pyramid, Yeah, that's a really
good It was a national scam that we all embraced,
fat free, sugary things. Yeah, just food. Food pyramid is
really good. Credit card debt is a good one. Yeah, wait,
what do you mean credit like that? It's not real. Well,

(34:32):
it's not just because there'll be a great financial reason exactly.
That's what I felt for all this free money, right up,
man up in the Lambeau. The other biggest scam I've
fallen for is men um back. Well, let's talk about
a couple of the good ones when it comes to men.

(34:54):
Are you gonna say Q and non members? I was like, what, No,
the coke O there's they're the good guys. Yeah, they're
they're out here um pressuring Joe Manchin. So CNBC just
published a story about how they're just all over his
ass with lobbying, with like radio commercials and all over

(35:16):
West Virginia, just really trying to They're just focusing all
their money and energy on getting him to oppose the
filibuster and to oppose protecting voting rights. So yeah, I mean,
it's just it's their standard playbook. But they're still out
here even though one of them died. Yeah. Well, because
if this HR one goes through the four the People

(35:37):
Act mass, it's gonna be hard as fuck to to
pull a lot of the funkory that they normally do
to eke out these you know, jerrymanderd winds and ship
and suppressed votes that they count on to be able
to balance the scales in favor of their platform. So yeah,
I mean efficient for them. Just focus it on like
two people. You don't have to do all this massive

(35:57):
other things, like not just getting this dude's head and
he's you know, he's not very intelligent, so I mean
they're not getting into Heather getting his bank accounts. I
mean when you look at the wording of the lobbying
and like so they went to some I think it's
like the Americans for Prosperity is the name of the
fucking group, the Brothers group, and like it literally sounds

(36:22):
like his talking points from the statements that we're talking
about yesterday, where he was explaining why he doesn't support
abolishing filibuster and doesn't support the Voting Rights Act. It
was like directly lifted. It was like they could have
written them for him. Why No, there's definitely been like
footage from those kinds of meetings where they're like saying

(36:42):
they'll write ship for you. Yeah. Yeah, Like and even
the legislation for voter suppression and things like that, because
that's just how this network moves. Yeah, that doesn't surprise me,
especially when he said, like if it's so good hokum
new Republicans voted for It's like that only makes sense
to a Republican. What the fund are you talking about.
It's also just indicative that like the Voting Rights Act

(37:07):
is going to do more good than just like what
it's like specific you know, specifically it's supposed to protect
the rights of people to vote, like all people to vote,
but it would also lesson the impact that like wealthy
donors have, which is why they're posing it like it
has all these other like benefits that that's why it's

(37:29):
it's not so dangerous. It's not even like the bill
that like real like activists and people who are like
looking at this should want like it's like it's not
even going that's water. We're getting out all this dark money.
They're like, can you know it's it's they're still ways
to funk around. Yet they still are like, oh, no,
you're gonna register kids before their birthday to vote. Rich

(37:51):
powerful white dude love to uh be like yeah, but
that's the first domino, and once that first domino falls,
then the entire Asian continent falls, or the entire Republican
Party falls. It's just really fucked how like anybody, like
all the really good people in the world, like we

(38:13):
wish they would get politically involved, but like, if you're
a good person, you don't want to be politically involved
with any ship because you know how fucking sucked up
and corrupt it is. And it's but it's that mentality
that we need in the system to actually work and
fight against these types of people. And that mentality again,

(38:33):
like if you have that in you to like, you know,
not be corrupt, not be aligned piece of ship, not
all that, you don't want to pursue that. It's just
really frustrating. It's just it feels like it's never ending,
you know. And I think the easiest thing though, too,
is like I have friends who work in government, and
they're always saying, like, you know, they're not elected, they
work there in bureaucracy right there, Like what we need,

(38:55):
like we have plenty of people, won't people who want
to run for office have enough bureaucrats? Like y'all need
a job, and I'm I have a good head on
my shoulders, you should probably work in some form of
a bureaucracy, not to say that it's good, but at
the very least, when you have these budgets, right that
come down the it's the people that work in the

(39:16):
bureaucracies that are figuring out how to spend it. The
politicians will allocate the money, but then it's those people
who are like, well, let's just fund the same tired
as departments and programs that don't work because we just
have decades old as shitty habits that aren't going to
the right things. And because of that, you only have
a couple of people in these rooms being like, now
we need to actually fund more, you know, social workers

(39:36):
to be able to be deployed to people having a
mental health crisis rather than police. Are like, maybe we
can put a little bit more money into these other
programs that we're seeing real benefits in. But they have
to push back against like sixty and seventy year old
people who've been there like, no, no, I know, Bill,
they'll do what's right with the money. They'll buy a
bigger hummer this year, and you're like, this is and

(39:58):
that's where a lot of the ten shouldn't happen. So
you can see it in the District Attorney's office in
l A. Like, it's the bureaucracies too that have play
a huge role in being able to move progressively because
there aren't enough people in those positions who are elastic
mentally to be able to switch gears. And I think
that's like, yet it's you know, so you don't check
it out. You know, maybe it's frustrating, Great, it's frustrating.

(40:21):
All right, there's a new pro public report I want
to talk about real quick. Uh that basically is illegal
what they're doing. Uh there, Yeah, they're basically revealing these
dudes tax individual tax information. They're like, we're not going
to tell you where we got it. But their argument
is that this has greater public value than like not

(40:45):
doing it. Essentially that like there's enough public value, so
it's not I mean, it's not illegal, Like it's just
when when they interviewed Bloomberg's people, for instance, they were like,
and we think this is indefensible to reveal the tax
information about private individuals so that they'll probably be sued
over this, but it's worth it. That's what I'm saying.

(41:09):
If you want to actually do stuff that's for the
greater good, it gets you into trouble because if people
in power are corrupt pieces of ship that of course
don't want this ship revealed. Like that's exactly speaking to it.
I just said, it's so frustrating. It's just evil cycle.
So it's like shout out to them for actually doing this.
Yeah alright, alright, so yeah, not to overcomplicate this because

(41:31):
it's like evil as funck. But basically what they did
is they looked at not just income, which is like
you know, we know how income is taxed. They look
at how much income you make in a giving year,
and then they tax a certain portion of that. Well,
the way rich people do it is they grow their
wealth by having like stockholdings, uh that go up and value,

(41:53):
and you know, they become they make a hundred billion
dollars in value in a year, but they don't actually
sell at stock, so then I have to pay taxes
on that um. And so just to put that into perspective, uh,
between two thousand and six and two thousand eighteen, Jeff
Bezos is wet wealth shot up by a hundred and

(42:14):
twenty billion dollars. And again we like our brain can't
even process what a hundred and twenty billion dollars means,
but it's just an unimaginable amount of wealth that could
solve world hunger like ten times over. Meanwhile, typical Americans
his age paid more in taxes than they saw it

(42:35):
in wealth growth. That is, for every one hundred dollars
of wealth growth over that period, a typical American paid
a hundred and sixty dollars in taxes. Bezos paid one dollar.
So we're paying the average American is paying more in
taxes than their wealth is growing over a period of time.

(42:55):
Because the way that most of us make our money
and grow our wealth is through our income. But because
the extremely wealthy like Jeff Bezos and Warren Buffett and
Mike Bloomberg like are all just foregoing and income basically
but still making billions and billions and billions of dollars

(43:16):
through growing their stockholdings, they are able to pay less
than we are. And so you know, think about if
you only had to pay one dollar on every hundred
dollars that you may. I don't even say that ship.
I don't even say that ship. It's some fun because
everyone's first fucking brutal lesson with this fucked up system

(43:40):
that we have is when you get that first fucking job,
and as when you're whatever age you are, you're in
a teenager or whatever, and you're like, fuck, yeah, I'm
making x an hour times everything I did. Oh shoot,
I'm getting like two hundred bucks in this check. And
then you get it and you're like, what the fund
is all this other ship they just took out of
here and I made this need and then even to

(44:01):
know that these people are like living the fantasy version
that like we were as kids, where it's like okay, yeah,
maybe like a dollar comes out, like I can work
with that twenties six percent or whatever the funk, it
all ends up being Oh, it's fucking infuriating, and all
also leads me again that we have to start bullying
these motherfucker's Yes, thank you. So that's what we're talking

(44:22):
about yesterday is just we need to make Jeff Bezos
the most hated person on earth and then make sure
he knows that because clearly good on the Megan the
Stallion cover yesterday, he clearly wants to be liked because
he's doing this, like going risking his life to be
liked to go to space like he is clearly desperate

(44:45):
for public approval. I mean, even the way he dresses,
you can tell he's desperate to be liked a little looser.
And he's been like like the lifting weights and eating
alms for the past like fifteen years to try and
get ripped, which is like nobody wants to see that man,
But like that's I think it eats him up. Beside
that people like Elon Musk even I think they should,

(45:06):
but I think he really like, fuck man, I'm cooler
than Elon Musk, Like, let's do a video one wearing
a cowboy had and drinking a beer with my brother
I've really talked to. That's what I love about this
report is that so rich people have been taking advantage
of America's sort of, you know, being just incredibly horny
for individualism, like and wanting to like lionize anybody who

(45:30):
becomes a public celebrity, so they make themselves public celebrities.
Elon Musk host s n L. Bill Gates gets to
like lecture on anything he wants to give a speech
on and like assumed to be an expert. Warren Buffett
gets like a flattering documentary on HBO, and pro public
Is basically using the fact that they have created these

(45:50):
public profiles for themselves and being like that is going
to make sense to people. That's the one way to
make the theft that wealthy people are getting away with
makes sense to people is by using those public profiles
and being like, Okay, this is how much this individual
motherfucker like is stealing from your basically while you pay

(46:14):
more in taxes than you actually make. Right, So in
a way, you should you should be able to pull
up to one of these people and be like, where
is my Lamborghini? Yeah, because you that's a minimum that's
we're looking at that you've siphoned out from me, So
let me get that and I'll be god d That's
why I wish again there was just places where you
could run into these billionaires and I have all their

(46:36):
goon like i DF former security guards like harangue. You're
trying to keep you away where you can really get
in Jeff Bazel's space ship and everybody knows you a
fucking frog. I mean, shout at you, that dude who
flap that French Like God, we are we could, we wish,
we all wish. I mean, God knows how he's gonna

(46:56):
be funished. But like damn, Like that's the ship we do.
We're we could straight in my veins. You're like, yo,
you smacked your look you wanted to smack the ship
out your leader and you did. That must have felt good.
It must have felt really good. I'm just thinking about
because these numbers are crazy. They pay a dollar for
every hundred or whatever the fuck, and it reminds me

(47:18):
because I keep thinking about how miles to what you're
you were saying, like when you were attained. But when
I was six, my like we on Halloween. Halloween was
a day I learned to hate the government. Was my
dad would like have I told this story before, I
don't know, but like my dad, at the end of
trick or treating, we had all our candy out and
he would walk through because we would be treating our candies.

(47:39):
He'd be like, taxman's here. He would take ten. That
is all the numbers. I know, that's huge, and he
would he would take and he wouldn't just take something
like the like the gross circus peanut candies. He would
take like some sneakers And yeah, yeah he would, but

(47:59):
he was like you to learn about Uncle Sam, you
gotta learn how the government works. I was like, I
fucking hate the government when I was six years old
because my dad taught us about taxes and it really
like it's just it's wild now that I'm an adult
to be like this ship is so fucking corrupt and
it feels so out of it, just so out of hand.

(48:19):
And again, which is going back to the same point,
it's like we need people really in the system that
aren't sucking trying to all be AOC and like actually
like infiltrating this damn system and it's so frustrating, And
you know, I can't say too much Ship because I
was like when I was like because I was like,
you know, doing going to marches and doing this and that,

(48:42):
and I was like, do I want to do this
and really do this or do I want to pursue comedy,
And selfishly, I was like, I want to do comedy
because I do want to be happy, because I saw
the like how fucked up and deep and how unchangeable
things really seem, and how it felt like even if
I got into politics, like even the most change I

(49:03):
could do would still leave me really fucking sad. Yeah,
you know, like it's really shitty. How when you think
about how fucked up it is because it's like my
family is from Al Sabador, and like the ship that's
going on in Al Sabador right now is like so crazy,
and it's just every like every topic we talked about,
all you guys talked about all this show, it's just
it's like, fuck, man, if this ship is relentless, relentlessly endless,

(49:28):
you know, like it's the end we're just waiting for,
I think, to die. That's what we're to die, or
just like the tone of what we talked about to
always be. The pressure we're feeling is because the weight
of the wealthy is being just put onto us, all
of us. The ship they just take every day. They
are the same people who pay are fucking cut our paychecks,

(49:52):
but at the same time they don't pay ship. The
whole thing is built upon exploitation of your work and
your wealth and things like that. And I think right
now it's much easier to be like fun man. I
want to make it like Elon man. I won't warm
Buffett money, you know, And that's like that. And I
think that is the because we're the most propagandized fucking
beings on earth that we can't even be able to

(50:14):
like only a few people are like, no, man, it's
just these couple of fucking greedy fox that we're unwilling
to tax, or because the way the system is. That's like,
you know, for me like leaving politics very specifically to
like just follow my ship in comedy and just do
what if the funk I wanted to do. It was
because I realized, you know, this system is, it can't

(50:37):
be changed, and it can't be infiltrated, like the real
substantive change is going to be like when you know,
American people begin to understand how much we have to
work collectively to be and to be like, oh ship,
they figured out how to fucking stop working and put
the pump the brakes on. Do you think the pandemic
opened a lot of people's eyes about that? Yeah, sure,

(50:58):
I don't know. I don't know where we're at out
like what that means measurably, but you can tell just
from like reading like profiles on people who like after
the pandemic were like, yeah, I'm done doing this other ship,
like I'm done being a bartender actually, like it's too
much work. I don't like the energy. But people are
pivoting like I want to organize better outcomes for people
who work in bars, Like that's more fulfilling to me.

(51:20):
And I think I think once people get I think,
for yeah, the churn of capitalism stops for a second,
and people were like, Yo, what the fuck do Yeah.
I think the only thing I would correct in what
you said is that it's not that it's impossible to change.
It's that the change that we desire isn't impossible to
see in our lifetime. But I definitely think that the

(51:40):
chain will be small, but it will be needs to
be constant and needs to be um with as many people.
But I don't want to think like us, but have
maybe progressive ideas that go in there and they do
with the best that they can with this fund up system,
because you know, hundreds of years of bullshit, you know,
and and um, And I think as you see it

(52:03):
play out in more places, because it's not just people
like in the inner cities and things talking about gentrification,
you're seeing it happen and like catchum Idaho or like
it's near like where all these celebrities and like rich
people by properties and it's driving up the cost of
living for just these normal people. In this small town
that like their town is like, yeah, man, we're thinking

(52:23):
of letting people pitch tense and part there r vs
to live there because we we haven't we don't have
any regulation on affordable housing that like even people in
these Midwestern places like what the fuck is this? Like
why are wealthy people allowed to just turn up the
rent prices on us out of fucking nowhere? Like we're
the people that served them, and they want us to
live in fucking tents And it's like, yeah, man, is

(52:46):
so crazy. Yeah, it's just the limitation of the human mind.
Like I can't conceive of a billion dollars. Nobody can
conceive of a billion dollars. Who doesn't like have a
billion dollars? Like nuts? And the most money I can
conceive of is like that scene in blow where they
had all the cash in like legal boxes, and I'm like, oh,

(53:07):
that's a lot of money, But that's the most I
could even fathom from money. Ever. Think about like how
you could spend all all the money you could possibly
like get your mind around in a single year and
you would still have hundreds of million dollars. Were sucking
crazy when I worked at when I was a bank manager.
It was I was responsible for wiring like millions upon

(53:28):
millions of dollars every day. That was one of the
things I had to do the first thing in the morning.
And it's fucking fucked with me. Man. I was like,
I don't understand this. I hate that I have to
do this. I'm really like, I felt like I don't
want to use the term slave, because that's the you know,
a little razelous, but it's like it just felt I
just felt I felt so small, like a surf and

(53:50):
a medieval Oh my god. It was the beginning of
me starting to be like, I do not want to
do this. This feels so fucking weird. It feels out touch,
it feels unnecessary. Like also, what are these companies really doing?
You know, because I mean, if you know anything about anything,
you know none of these companies are just clean all
the way through. It's not possible to to have that

(54:12):
much money and not exploit labor and and people. And
it's just it's so it's just bizarre, the money and
we and what's it sucked up is that money isn't
even real. It's a concept that was created and and
yet here we are. It's controlling everything. It's sucked up. Yeah,
I mean, just think about the amount of money that
people are making off of moving those wire transfers from

(54:35):
one thing to another compared and like not adding value
to anyone's life other than their clients or whatever. And meanwhile,
people are who are actually serving people, uh and actually
serving a purpose in their communities don't make ship and
then are made to pay a hundred sixty dollars in
taxes for every hundred dollars of wealth growth, and that

(54:58):
makes them hate taxes, which then the billionaires used to
their advantage by being like, yeah, taxes suck, am I right,
Let's let's get rid of all these high taxes they're
killing us. Am I right. Elon must didn't pay any time,
he paid zero dollars in taxes, milkshake, these assholes. You know.
I also was, I'm just like, we would respect these

(55:21):
people a little bit if they were like, Okay, I'm
not gonna pay taxes, but I'm gonna give this city
a million fucking dollars. Like when Tulsa Tulsa, and you know,
they have their issues, but they put that park together
out there. It's this free park that's available to everybody,
and there was like the wealthy, which I'm assuming it's
like the guilty white people. You know, it's their money.
And they open this insanely huge but free outside park

(55:44):
that is available and you know, for anyone to use,
and it's beautiful and you know the historicalplications are there.
But I was like, well, let's sucking nice that these
millionaires did this because the city needed it. And and
again it's Tulsa, so they have their own bullshit that

(56:04):
they have anything where they can just sort of wash
over their own acts by doing like these little Yeah,
but I just like, and it's not like the best
use of money, but I was just like, that was
the first time I was like, oh, yes, some millionaires,
billionaires can actually do something for cities, they just choose
not to. Like it was just that that's that is
how I felt about it when I got to like,

(56:26):
I mean, I enjoyed it and you know, got to
see it before it opened, and that was cool as
a comedian, but it definitely like sucked me up because
I was just like, these people and their money, it's
just too much. I'm sorry, and we're taking a break,
and we're taking a break and we're back and we

(56:53):
have time for It's got one quick story about an
escape room. I mean, this is something that I didn't
really has existed. Horror movie themed escape rooms. Yeah, you know.
I like escape rooms. I like using my mind for puzzles.
I'm not really fucking with haunted houses, mostly because while
I'm high when I go out to make things more

(57:13):
interesting or palatable for me, and I don't want to
stinky motherfucker's popping out at me and trying to scare
the ship out of me. M. But I guess this
is like a huge It's a lucrative thing. Like there
was a Saw themed like the Saw movies themed like
mystery escape room experience that did, I guess really well?
And now they're announcing one based on the Blair Witch

(57:33):
Project shout on Montgomery Blair High School, where Steve Francis went.
But what is this Blair which escape room? This is
what they say. Quote. As guests enter, they will immediately
be transported to the lifelike small village of Burkettsville, Maryland
to investigate mysterious happenings and disappearances within the community. Investigators
will then need to work together to escape multiple rooms
that bring the classic film and the Curse of the

(57:55):
Blair Witch to life. Trekking through the iconic Black Hills
Force will be just one of the memorable, dramatic, can
terrifying elements that provides exciting twists and putting guests to
the test. I don't know what that means, um, but
it just means white people love love a reason to
be spoked because they're not scared in real life. They
just walk out of the house all comfortable and happy,
and so they go to these escape rooms. They're trying

(58:17):
to take it up a notch. So they're like, we
gotta do their which we gotta do, So we gotta
do conjuring in order to feel something because we don't
feel anything when we read the news. Did you imagine
could you imagine feeling powerless? Existential threats abound around you?
Oh speaking, people not get nightmares? Do you guys not

(58:39):
get nightmares? I don't, I can't, I can't. I don't
watch scary mood quote nuote scary movies because like I
get actual nightmares, that's like the stress dreams, and I
can't sleep, So I don't watch these things. Do you guys?
If you watch a movie like this, do you get nightmares?
That's my question. I don't watch. I don't. I don't
really folk with horror, okaya, Oh, I don't really with

(59:00):
horror that much too, Little Sweet Pies. Yeah, unless you
think it'd be cool if we did. Oh, I mean
I definitely would have thought you had a huge dick
if you did Number one. Now I know the facts,
so that's why you like white women. But I wish

(59:28):
you guys could have seen Miles eyes rolled the back
of his head. They almost got stuck that she was
a hell. But we're not doing this. But yeah, I
don't don't. I feel like it just feels like a
weird opportunity because this is a decades old film that
I thought no one like. I know there was like
a reboot recently, but I loved it. I know, But
is this I feel like there might be other films

(59:49):
that would get more people interested. I don't think it's that.
I think it's the way that it was shot. It's
got it because it's got that reality vibe to it, right.
I mean no, no, no horror scary movie since then
has captured I don't think they've replicated that concept the
way that remember we I mean, when we saw Blair,
which we actually thought it was real, We're like, oh
my god, this is really children. Yeah. But with that

(01:00:13):
being said, like there was something original and interesting about it,
you know, so I can see why, like that concept
is cool. The I mean, I'm also assuming that like
this isn't the number one I P like opportunity. Like
I'm sure if they could get a conjuring escape room

(01:00:34):
they would, but they it's just Blair, which is what's
willing to work with them. Yeah, that's true too. I
also just find that funny that the nerdy of sentence
this is this I P opportunity. Let's talking about I pity.
This is hot. I mean, the podcast networks are just

(01:00:55):
I P factories concern many. You want to lunch at
my office at ut A later, bro check me out.
But yeah, it's the other thing is like, man, a
conjuring won't be fucked up. It's all like Catholic themed.
I feel like, see that's too real and something like yeah, no, no,
nothing they could bring in my real life, right right,

(01:01:16):
keep it, keep it. Freaky Saw is the one that
makes the most sense of any movie, like horror movie
or not horror movie. Like Saw is a movie about
people being trapped in an escape room that is deadly,
So it's like that makes do you think that one
was all funked up? Like do you want to play
a game and you're like strap to a chair and
like waters filling up like they kind of with you
like that. I wouldn't be very nervous to go into

(01:01:39):
one of those, because like the escape rooms that I've
been in are not like expertly put together or run
like like I'm not much. You gotta learn how to splurge, baby,
you gotta learn how to splurg to make it worth it.
That's saying those weird motels escape room. Yeah, sure, it's

(01:01:59):
an escape room. Trying to find the laundromat Marcella as
always such a pleasure? Is it? Is? That? It? That's it?
Oh my god? Really fast you are enjoying exactly, poor me?

(01:02:22):
Where can people find you and follow you? And at Marcella?
Comedy is my social media handles to else Merseille, Yeah, comedy. Um,
I'm at Sacramental punch Line six, punchline, sack dot com
or the tickets. I'll be at the Bellhouse in New
York City in July thirty Brooklyn, July thirty one, two
shows social everything is social distance and that is exciting.

(01:02:47):
And those are my first headlining dates like weekend dates.
I should say, my first headlining weekend dates. And I'm
very nervous and excited and it should be fun. I
will be funnier at those shows than I was on
this podcast. That's what I'll say. Oh, come on, you'll
be good. No, I know I will be finding out
the shows and I wasn't this podcast because this is
this ship. Sometimes I'm like, book, is there a tweet

(01:03:13):
or some of the work of this girl at Jessicai
she said micro docing hell by liking men. Yeah, girl,
this is a this is a lot miles. Where can
people find you? And what's the tweet? You've been enjoying? Twitter?

(01:03:33):
Instagram at Miles of Gray. Also check out to go
to twitch dot tv slash for two zero day Fiance
to see that Tuesdays and Fridays, let's see another. Some
tweets that I like ship first. One is from Rochelle
Friedland at Rochelle Underscore. F says when a person I'm
dating calls me their partner, it's because I'm on the

(01:03:55):
board of fucking and sucking LLC. Wow, it's like, okay,
shout out to you. And another one actually, just like
to tweet from Vanessa Guerrero, past guests at Ess Guerrero.
You know she's working at G four and she she
loves the G four and she just was really happy
to share like the things she produced. And I brought
it a smile to my face to see people doing

(01:04:16):
what they love to do. So shout out to you.
Vanessa's horrible bo Yeah it was nice. You can find
me on Twitter at Jack Underscore O'Brien, he's never on there.
Let's see there there every day, you know, getting corrected
about my early nineties rock knowledge. I like this from Lils.

(01:04:38):
Michelle tweeted, you know your ex is not over you
when they literally go to space, and then I liked
from former guests you do ya, you do ya Underscore
quote the book was better than the movie. No, you
just have a beautiful and limitless imagination. Fucking idiot. Damn,

(01:04:59):
it's horrible impression of your doyer. But I know you
didn't think I nailed it. I was I was doing
my best. Uh uh. You can find me on Twitter
at Jack Underscore brand You can find us on Twitter
at Daily Zite Guys. We're at the Daily Zite Guys
on Instagram. We have a Facebook fan page and a website,
Daily zy Guys dot com where we post our episode

(01:05:20):
done our foot no where we link off to the
information that we talked about in today's episode, as well
as a song we think you should go check out Miles.
Are you gonna You're gonna do it? To him? You
can record we're listening to International. Of all the things
you guys make me do, I would love to bring

(01:05:41):
music onto this show. I just want to say that.
I'm like, whatever, next one, next one, we'll do all
music based search history over under. You see, That's what
I'm talking about. We always will tailor it to you.
I know, I know you will. That's why I just
thought about it. I just thought we killed the whole
part of the show for you. I know, I love it.

(01:06:05):
Understand how happy that makes me and your fans get
annoyed about it is some of your fans fucking hate
me and I fucking love it. You there fans, if
they hate any of the ship that comes, I don't
know if well they they are fans of you, but
they don't like it, yes, which I understand that concept
because as a women Crest Wednesday person like I would
sometimes get that where I'm just like, I booked them

(01:06:26):
because I like them. I guess that you don't like them,
but shout up about it, right, Yeah, yeah, it gets tired.
But hey, that's the fucking thing about the internet something.
That's that's why fucking social media, Like I barely check
it half the time too. I'm not interested in hearing
much about anything aside from the terrible world and the
news that we have to look at every day. Oh
my god, I have a bell that rings every time

(01:06:48):
I get a mention. I eagerly open it up to
see what they said. Oh boy, you're getting flamed, dad,
Dad's getting flamed. But yeah, this is a track from
Park Kejon, who is a South Korean you know MC artists,
And this is a track that is being produced by

(01:07:08):
Clams Casino. Remember Clams Casino from like a lot of
early asapp Rocket stuff. This track is called why like
the letter Why don't you the letter You? And it's
just I don't even know show her flow is fucking sick.
I don't even speak Korean, but I'm like I feel
it like you, this is something you're not working with
somebody based on this delivery and I love it. So

(01:07:30):
this is a track Partkejon, why don't you and we'll
have that footnotes. Yeah, this is the hardest I've ever been, Like, Yo,
what is this? What is this? What is this? What
is this? Yeah? This is very very dope. Uh So
go check that out. The Daily Zeika is the production
by Heart Radio from More podcast from my heart Radio,
visit the heart Radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you're

(01:07:51):
listening your favorite shows. That is going to do it
for this morning, and we're back this afternoon to tell
you what's trending. We'll talk to you all that by

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