Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season point two, episode
two of DR Daily Sight Guys for March thirteenth, two eighteen.
My name is Jack O'Brien a K. Because I'm cool
like Jack. I'm cool like Jack, I'm cool like Jack.
I'm cool, I'm cool, and I'm joined as always by
my co host Mr Miles Great and I said great, yeah, yeah, great, yeah, yeah,
(00:26):
I said, Gray, that is that's my cell phone. But
we can't we can't retake that because that we're gonna
living in the moment, baby, and I had to drop
that phone line. Shout out to Chris Bond on Twitter
for that one, because you know how I love the pair. Yes,
she also were Beautiful by Christine Agular and most of
the hits on most people's albums, So yes, thank you
Chris Bond. That song will be stuck in my head
(00:50):
for the rest of the NIME. Mom loved that song. Man,
she didn't even know what was going on. Yet another
thing that's right. The song was asking the quest that
was in her heart. I mean, she stepped in the
morning and what is it step out, wake in the morning,
at step outside, step outside, and I take a deep
Bertha and I get me hi anyway, So saying from
(01:13):
the top of my loans, uh, my ak was courtesy
of Matt Rod And we are thrilled to be joined
in our third seat by the hilarious writer Jessica Gal. Hello, Hello,
how are you? I'm well? How about yourself? We're thrilled
to have you on. Just stepped all of them. I
answer for Miles. Miles, what did I say about speaking before?
(01:37):
I will have whatever he's having. Uh, Jessica, you are
writing on am I allowed to say what you are
writing on the Future Corporate? I finished writing you write
season two? Okay, and but that is the most recent
show I've written on. Right, and you also write on
Rick and Morty. Yes, I wrote on the third season
(01:59):
with a wonderful season of television. Very well done. What
is something from your search history that is revealing about
who you are as a human being? Uh? My most
recent weird search history thing is I looked up Thor
Bjornson's daily diet. He plays the Mountain on Game of Throws. Yeah,
(02:20):
and I really love knowing the diet. What what like
big strong people eat on a daily pay? Yeah, and
he eats thirteen pounds of food today. So he just
like puts it on a scale. And that's how he
decides because because because he's like a bodybuilder, everything is
all portioned out, so he there's like weights to everything
(02:42):
he eats, like everything that's listed, it's like whatever, like
kilograms of this and however many kilograms of that or
I guess it would be milligrams nine and nearly four pounds,
so I guess it does. Yeah, pounds of food, A
couple of potatoes and some steaks to power that thing.
I want to know how many poo he produces? Oh
my god, right, like no, because you're I mean, I
(03:05):
feel like you're saying the same size. Yeah, and then
I guess you lose some of the calories through like exhaling, right,
and do you ever weigh yourself right before and right
after you pooh oh yes, I exclusively exclusively myself after that. Yeah,
you didn't see our toilet is actually like on a scale.
He just tears. He just does a teror move when
(03:26):
he's on it tears the scale. And then that would
kind of be a dream for me to have a
toilet that way too. How much that would actually okay,
man venture capitalist up, honestly, if for like four teen bucks.
If I could turn my toilet seat into a scale,
I would probably do that just for the fun. A
(03:48):
little more money than that. That's cheaper than a fucking
squatty potty, and I think you need to spend a
little bit more on a scale for injection molded plastic.
But yeah, if the seat was the scale, what I'm saying,
then you got your feet is already off the ground.
So yeah, you just lifted a little bit. My voice
(04:08):
and distant because I got away from the mic to
demonstrate with uh Jessica. Besides Miles is shark tank idea
that he just described on air? What is underrated in
your book? Besides that? Um, I think Kirkland's signature everything
is underrated. I love. I think it's an Asian thing.
(04:32):
I I love Costco more than anything else in this
entire world. Okay, so here's my thing with Costco. I love.
I can't wait to tear you apart. Yeah, but there
are certain products where they give you such large portion
sizes that like, for instance, I love toast ittos. I
(04:55):
love toast atos and gringo salsa, but by the end
of a bag of toast itto, those that I get
at Costco. It's like so big that I like start
resenting the tostitos because like just how many there are,
and like I'm just like gotta get through this fucking
bag of tostitos. That's like a sleeping bag full of tostitos. Uh,
(05:15):
but that you're letting tostitos ruin an entire universe. But
also if you had bought a smaller bag of tostitos,
what would you do if you finish that bag, You'd
go and buy another another one. Yeah, so sorry, Costco
is saving you crips. Yeah, exactly, just vacuum seel like
you know, yeah, did you get one of those like
airlock little containers. No, I'm not. It's just something that
(05:37):
you know when I really first of all, fed Co
where which used to be like Costco, those like sort
of membership stores. About my grandfather still to this day,
he's convinced he was the first black man to shop
at fed Co or Costco, and he must keep saying
that people into his eighties. He's like, I was the
first black And I remember as a kid, we would
always go for fed Co lunch, which was the sample scamp.
(06:00):
But also the first time I had Kirkland signature light beer.
It was when I was like, yo, this the packaging
looks suspect because it's so generic, but it was pretty
much identical to like all light beers. That That's when
I was like, yo, they can do no wrong because
everything else to that point was on point, and I
thought maybe they might mess up with this. No is
Kirkland everywhere. Everybody knows what Kirkland is, right, well, if
(06:23):
you don't know, then Kirkland is the in house brand
at Costco, like the Acme brandy. But and then all
devotees of Kirkland will tell you that they use the
actual companies that make the products you love and they
just slapped the Kirkland logo on it, so like that's
part of their deal when the company is exactly so
it's not jankie, like actual companies that are actually making
the name brand stuff are also making the kirk Well,
(06:43):
the big thing is that that people like to espouses
that Kirkland signature brand vodka is Great Goose, and so
like I did some research on that and it technically
isn't Great Goose, but it's made by the same distillery
and using the same water. That's in the area and
it's part in the same region in France, so it's
(07:04):
basically like all of the elements are the same. Yeah. Yeah,
and I think most of podkas are approximately the same.
Like it's mostly you're paying for that. Yeah, really bad
is water mixed with rubbing alcohol? Well, there's here's the thing.
There's there's no real difference in taste, because that's the
(07:25):
point of vodka is that it's odorless and really and tasteless.
It's supposed to be like, but I think the real
difference in quality of vodka is really just whether or
not the impurity, so that whether or not you have
a hangover the next day. Are drinker? No, I'm a
Scotch drinker. Have you had? Do they do make scotch?
They do? You know, I just purchased. I think this
is because I haven't seen this before, but there is
(07:47):
I just bought a kirkland At eighteen year aged scotch
that is aged in a sherry cask. And I haven't Yes,
of course, I only drinking the Okay, I don't know
what about I think this is mild game, Jessica. This
(08:08):
is why I don't let him speak first questions. Sign
off on that ball. Is Kirkland brand? Is it eighteen
years old? Even? That would be interesting if it started
as a different brand, right, well, no, but what they do,
I mean they buy from whatever distillery because I know
that they've done they've done collaborations with McCallen before, um
where it'll say they actually did one where it was
(08:29):
like Kirkland and McAllen, you know, like together on the label.
I'm gonna tell you right now because I had to
pull up the Wikipedia. Kirkland signature is Costco's private labels
Sloka Costco. The name is derived from the location of
Costco's corporate head introduced Kirkland as a private label. So
it is twenty three years old, six years old. I
(08:51):
do not know how to do that. That's the non
Asian side of you. Yeah, mafunctioning, Jessica. What is something
that you think is read? Um? I think that juicing
is overrated. Um, like cold pressed juice and basically juicing
in general, because you're just I mean, like it's so
(09:13):
crazy to me that people are like treat it like
it's such a healthy thing, but it's like you're really
just only you're extracting all the sugar from like fruit
and then not eating any of the fiber, which is
the part that's good for you, and then pretending that
that's like healthy. Yeah, there are people. I had a
few friends who would just exclusively just existing on green juices. Yeah.
(09:33):
I mean they're really just drinking flavored sugar water. Um.
Like my parents, um uh love pseudoscience and um and
my mom is one of those people who was like
always like very concerned about like body and weight and
things like that. And she's always on some sort of
like funked up, like dumb diet that like she claims
(09:56):
she read in a Chinese newspaper. I don't believe any
of these newspaper exist. I feel like she must be
getting flyers from people like outside of a Chinese supermarket,
um like, because you know, sometimes I'll go over to
their house and she'll be like, oh, I'm on this
new diet where like I drink coffee in the morning
and then I only have porridge for dinner and then
I'm gonna lose like it's all like crazy shit, you know. Um,
(10:17):
Like she did. There was this one time where like
after dinner, she stood up and she started she made
her hand, she made fists and she used her fists
to rub her belly and I was like, what are
you doing? She goes, Oh. I read in a newspaper
that if you do this for fifteen minutes after you eat,
you'll have a flat stomach. And I was like, you
think that the secret to having like washboard ads is
to rub your belly for fifteen minutes? Like if that
(10:40):
were true, everyone would look incredible, Like that's not a thing.
My uncle in Japan, he used to beat himself with
a bamboo stick on his arms and chest and stomach,
and I was like, that's how I get tough. And
I'm like, yo, you got mad bruises. You're not getting
more ripped. So yeah, it's pseudo science. And so like
my parents have been really into like juicing, and like
(11:03):
they bought like the jack Lane, like like juicer from
Costco obviously, and they you know, then they're just doing
it's like apples and bananas and ship like that, and
it's like, dude, you're just drinking sugar and they think
it's so great and they're like, this is so healthy.
You should really be like drinking orange juice every day.
Smoothies have the fibers still in them. Right. Yeah, so
(11:23):
like I like, I I'm very pro smoothie. Oh, because
you're just straight putting the fruit in there and blending
it right, Yes, you're eating the entire thing. Yeah yeah
cool um. Also, for people who aren't familiar with Costco,
we can all agree that the rotisserie chicken is one
of the best. Oh, it's the greatest thing in the men,
(11:43):
the best value. Yes, that's left in America. Well, they
take a loss on that because it gets people to
come and they all yes, and they put it at
the very back of the stores. You have to walk
all the way to the back and past all those
aisles of stuff. Most grocery stores, you'll notice, have the
milk at the very bad and that's by design because
people like always need to get milk, especially people with
(12:04):
large families who need to buy a lot of groceries
will buy milk and they put it at the very back.
But yeah, Costco knows what side their breads. But I mean, look,
you got to also get the pizza there, you know
what I mean? Garage for a big party. Oh yeah, yeah,
because I always would love going like with my parents
and then just being like I'm gonna eat the Costco
food stand food. Yeah, because it's like a dollar fifty
(12:26):
for a whole did you know I'm just reading now
that in Japan and Korea they have a Bulgogi bake Yes,
that sounds exclusive ship, and they have poutine in Canada.
So look, maybe we need to show where we go
around to the different costcos of the world and just
kind of do some I would love to do that.
That's like my dream. Oh. I read an article about
how the costcos in Korea um like people because you
(12:50):
know how like at the concession stand they have that
turnstyle of like onions, like where you turn this wheel
and it just drops out like freshly chopped onions for
like your hot talk. It's for your hot talk. And
then there's like ketchup and mustard. But in Korea, because
people are used to eating like any meal with like
bon schon which is all the side dishes, um, they
make their own that they call Costco bon schot in
(13:10):
which like they get a whole plate of the onions,
the chopped onions, and then they mix it with ketchup
and mustard. Yeah, and so the Costco in Soul I
think goes through fourteen times as much onions as any
other Costco. I'm honestly, we gotta go. We're traveling to
all the costcos, right, and all the costs. Yeah, I
(13:30):
firmly believe that, like the second half of my life
is going to involve like Costco just doing like there
are a lot of old white people who will like,
do the all the American ballparks, all the Major League ballparks, man, Costco,
you guys should do like a commemorative pin for every location.
(13:51):
First of all, I'm just looking to like, let me
tell you the places can go. Australia, they got me
pies Exclusive Canada, seafood pizza in Asian and Mexico, kin locations,
clam chowder in Japan, South Korean Taiwan, jacket potatoes in
the UK. I mean, like we're on a ward tour. Yeah.
Do do do Do Do Do Do Do Do Do
do quest All Right, We're trying to take a sample
(14:13):
of what people are thinking and talking about right now today,
and the way we like to open up is by
asking our guests, Jessica, what is a myth? What's something
that most people think is true that you know, based
on your personal experience to be false. Um, Well, I
guess I'm going to have to dip into TV writings.
Other than costco, I know very little most things in life. Um.
(14:35):
I find that oftentimes people don't understand that that there
is a hierarchy in the writer's room because people feel like, oh,
like if this, I don't know it's happened to me,
where like I've been like the only person of color
on a show or the only woman, and then people
will be like, well, why why why didn't you stop
this joke or why isn't the show more representative? And
(14:58):
it's like, dude, if you are a lower level writer,
you have zero power in the room. You have no control.
It's not egalitarian like. And also, at the end of
the day, the showrunner, who's the boss of everything, is
going to make all the decisions, Like uh. I think
that's the other thing too, is that people don't understand
that there is one person who is a writer called
the showrunner, who literally runs the show and they are
(15:18):
the end all be all of all decisions. Because I've
seen people like argue about casting too. They're like, well,
that's not the writer's fault, that's like the casting director.
And it's like, but who do you think that the
casting director answers too. So I guess for people, because
we're all l A people and understand the industry, please
break down sort of the hierarchy of power creative decision
making on a show. So I think for people to
(15:39):
really understand what how this all works? Um, So on
a show, there's a right one first of all, like
TV is the writer's medium, Like it's different in film
in that like in film, like the director's kind of
the end all be all and it's their vision. But
in TV it's always the writers and uh and specifically
there's always one writer called the showrunner, who is the
boss of every every single thing on the show, and
(16:01):
they usually are the creator of the show, but not
always because sometimes you know, like, uh, more inexperienced person
might create a show and the network will be like, well,
you've never run a show, you've never really worked on
a show before, so I'm gonna bring in somebody who's
more experienced. Yes, exactly, Um, but that's who the show
runner is, and it's always a writer. And then on
the writing staff there are two types of writers. There's
(16:22):
upper level writers and there's lower level writers. And the
simple way of explaining it is that the way they're
paid is differently. Um, but but it's also like experience
and power. So here are the titles. Like this is
what's very confusing for a lot of people when they
look at the credits of a show, which is there's
no credit, that's just writers, like they yeah, yeah, they
just all they all have different titles. And so these
are the titles of what writers are. Lower level is
(16:44):
staff writer. Staff writer is the lowest possible level writer.
That's like entry level, um. And then next up is
story editor, and then next up from that is executive
story editor. And these are lower level writers, um, they're
paid a weekly salary. And then upper level writers are
all people who have the word producer in their name,
so co producer, producer, consulting producers, supervising producer, co executive producer,
(17:06):
and then executive producer. So the show, well, the showrunner
is credited as an executive producer. And but most here's
what's more confusing is that not all executive producers are writers.
So like, so they'll be like ten executive producers, but
probably only like one or two of them are actually writers,
like James L. Brooks for The Simpsons. Yeah, yeah, totally
(17:28):
and like and executive like the show creators UM managers
if they have managers will be credited as executive producers
if they were the ones who kind of like put
the whole thing together, so there and then like executives
from like every production company that it went through, like
it's a whole thing. Um. But uh uh, upper level
(17:49):
writers are you know, because they you kind of work
your way up to that, so um, they're more experienced
and so generally speaking, at least in a comedy writer's room, Um,
most arrors will look to everyone's obviously different, but most
shore owners will look to the upper level writers to
kind of do more of the big picture stuff like story,
the structure of the story, like the actual story, emotional arcs,
(18:10):
seasonal arcs, whereas like with lower level writers, they generally
kind of just want them to pitch jokes and like
things just be joke machines. Really, I mean, everyone's different.
There are a lot of shore runners who are more egalitarian,
as like everyone should have a hand and everything, but
more often than not, that's kind of the breakdown of power.
So you as one person cannot completely dictate what the
show is going to be. You're not special, especially if
(18:33):
you're at the lower level. At the lower level, you're
just like looking for like when is the conversation you're
allowed to join? You know, Yeah, have there been moments
where you've tried to bring up a concern and a
million times and then it's just sort of just like
is it more like your heard or people just kind
of go. It depends. It depends on the people at
the top. It depends on who you're talking to. Because
there's some shore owners who are like, look, I'm just
(18:54):
trying to keep my fucking head above water here, Like
I'm trying to deliver a show, like and if I
don't oliver show, like my life is over. You know,
this is this is everything to me. Um, I don't
have time to like listen to the concern of like,
you know a young writer who's this is like their
first job, you know. But there are other people who
But there are also other show runners who are like, yeah,
I want to hear it. I wanna you know, especially
(19:17):
if they're like a more sensitive or wokesh uh like
white showrunner. And the person that is bring up a
concern is either woman or a person of color or
LGBT or something like that, Like they should like want
to listen to that and be like, how do I
not sound like a shitty eighties comic? You know, it's
crazy that joke writing is not like a main person thing,
(19:41):
because that's that's something that's like for the staff writers
because well no, like I mean, obviously everybody does it,
but like, but generally speaking, they kind of, at least
in more traditional rooms, they generally want the lower level
people to just be joke machines. Like when the when
the upper level people like get to a point where
they're like, okay, we just need like pitches, like that's
that's kind of when the conversation. Yeah, that's kind of
when you need to shine nice. All right, let's get
(20:04):
into the stories for the day. We will obviously get
to the dismissal of Rex Trailerson, but first up, we
wanted to talk about Joy Behar and Mike Pence, the
Pence controversy. He said, this was trending. I had no
idea this. Yeah, so this was the number one story
trending on Google this morning. I chat, I went to check,
(20:26):
assuming it would be uh Rex and and the Gang,
but yeah, so apparently uh Joy Behart, so I'll tell
you that from from the beginning. Almarossa went on Big
Brother Celebrity and was like, yeah, Mike Pence, here's voices
like he claims that she said. She said I'm a
(20:46):
big brother. Yeah, she said that I'm big brother, Mike Pence.
Here's like God talking to him. Like literally, here's voices
throughout the day. Uh. So Joy Behart responded to that
by saying, well, you know what they say, uh talking
to God, his prayer, God talking to you is schizophrenia,
which is an old joke for instance, that was in
(21:06):
an episode of The X Files in the nineties. Uh.
And she just kind of put it out there as
a you know what they say type thing, and this
just made Fox News explode. Uh. Tommy Lauren went on
Fox and Friends and was like, she just doesn't understand
what it's like to have a relationship with Christ obviously,
(21:29):
and uh one of the Fox and Friends host was like, yeah,
well she's Jewish, right, And then I had to come
back and be like, oh no, she's not Jewish, She's Catholic.
But I think just going off for a New York
accent and that only Jews. Yeah, but also as if
Jews don't believe in God the right. Um. But so
(21:55):
Mike Pence went on Hannity last night or two nights
ago and was just you know, furious and was like,
I'm being attacked for my faith and just made it
this big thing because he's like such a thin skinned
bitch like the rest of this administration, they're just so
fucking sensitive, but also the first to say that other
(22:18):
people that the left are of snowflakes and outraged by everything. Right. Um,
they took art delta discount away for the n R
A right, Okay, But yeah, I mean that's the sort
of joke like here, if you talk to God you're praying,
and if you hear from God your schizophrenics. That's like
(22:40):
a joke that I'm pretty sure I've heard a priest
say at Catholic mask growing up, Like it's the sort
of thing they would say, like the cool priest would
say it will be like hey, I'm I get it.
I don't take this whole thing too seriously. And Mike
Pence is like, no, I'm serious, Jesus talks to me.
Everyone knows that apologize for doubting it. Um. Yeah, And
(23:00):
did Joey Bart apologize? She did, so, what did you? Yeah,
that was it like a full throated I don't know
the specific details. I just know that she eventually went Okay,
I'm just kidding now in my ear piece. Super producer
Nick just said she called him and reached out. She
called him directly, apparently have a great chat at the
(23:22):
time he was reading about it. I'm I'm reciting this
as I hear it in my headphones. She had not
to that point apologize publicly on the view, but may have.
No I think she did today is why that was
good for her. That she has a direct line of
Mike Pence. Maybe she can talk some like how the fund?
Do you have that number? Yeah? Well, apparently like anyone
(23:43):
can reach like Trump, you just call his Like, wasn't
it like you just call his office or something. It's
like hotel and they just patch you talk to Trump
real quick, please hold just like that. Uh, I don't know. Uh,
that's a that's a bummer. Put another one in for
the people who claimed that Christianity is all about bullying
(24:04):
people into uh, you know, believing what you believe in, Uh,
letting you say whatever you want to say. Yeah, the
hypocrisy is like bonkers. It's yeah, all right, let us
take a quick break and then we'll be right back.
(24:28):
And we're back, and we're talking about Baskets, which is
a great underrated show. Great. Who is Louie Anderson? Has
he want anything? Uh? Oh great? Then I'm just gonna
fade to the back. Yeah. I also love that in
this current season, like it's basically Louie Anderson's show now,
Like that's the main character now. And the reason we
bring that up if you haven't seen it, is because
(24:48):
as the mother, she her her home is fully stocked
with only Kirkland Signature's finest products. And they don't like
call attention to it. It's just like a joke. Yeah,
they just talk about it like it's a part of
their lives, which is really great. And then also Martha
works at Costco and drives her a little Costco Brandon
car when uh and super producer Nick Stump is the
(25:10):
Baskets mom of our studio. He is wearing all headed
to Kirkland right, all Kirkland here all the time, wearing
Kirkland underwear, which I didn't even know was the thing.
Wonderfully comfortable Kirkland toilet paper is the best I love it. Yeah,
it's great and and I love I love having thirty
(25:32):
six rolls of toilet paper in my house at any
given time. Right, you feel safe, you feel confident. It
feels so safe. Never resent having too much toilet paper.
If Yeah, when I get down to my last six pack,
like I get real nervous and have to go get
another thing. Be Like when I get down to my
last twenty, I'm out the door because if any sort
of apocalypse happens, I need to know that I can
(25:54):
wipe my ass. Yeah, Like that's the one thing that's
the one reminder of home, like the my old life.
That's what I want, isn't Like Kirkland, A lot of
like doomsday preppers speculate that coffee will be the most
expensive post apocalyptic. You don't drink any coffee, Oh, then
you're gonna be Yeah, I'm gonna I'm gonna be negan start. Yeah. Yeah,
I can't wait that toilet paper. Why wouldn't it be
(26:16):
boozer cigarettes? Why coffee? I think because you could make booze, right,
you know what I mean, Like, if you really wanted to,
you could probably make people have a daily dependence on coffee,
Like most people like almost all people drink coffee, whereas
like booze and cigarettes. It's there at that point you
have gone crazy from all the radioactive fallout. There you're
thinking about turning up with a forty right um, all right,
(26:39):
well hey, from baskets to kicking the bucket. What uh um,
thank you stef writer. Right for Leno, there's a free one. Uh,
there's a free one Leno. So that is something that
lad the meal Plutin said. He said traders will kick
(27:03):
the bucket. As they were doing a spy exchange with
the UK, and the guy that they were exchanging to
go to the UK, who was a double crossing spy
according to Russia, was then like openly publicly attacked with
a nerve agent not too long ago, I guess in
(27:24):
the past couple of weeks. Right, there's last week, last week.
His name is Sergey script paal Um, perfectly pronounced by
me uh and uh yeah. He and his daughter were
at a mall and got attacked by some mysterious substance
that turned out to be a nerve agent that is
(27:44):
mainly produced by Russia. Right, Like, it's hard to find
anywhere other than it's very specific. I think it's called
nova chalk, which doesn't Yeah, that sounds like it was
made in America. Um it basically, yeah, they the Russians
are known to be manufacturing it, and that's their things.
So it's a it's very very obvious. It's a calling card.
It's like them signing the assassination and the I'm like, yo,
(28:07):
this was US, Like if it was Kirkland signature nerve agent,
you would know the US. Um I thought you were
going to say, you would know it was me, right. Um.
So apparently this is a thing that goes on in
the UK pretty regularly that Russia will just assassinate, you know,
(28:29):
enemies of their state in the UK and just get
away with it. The US spy agencies will tell, you know,
the UK government and British police, hey, these are like
clearly murders being committed by uh, you know Putin and
his government and uh the British police up to this
(28:50):
point have just been like, no, no foul play, this
all looks good to us and just kind of let
it slide. Yeah. Well, there's a lot of people don't
want to sort of antagonize Russia, and also Russians invest heavily,
like in the financial sector, like in London, and own
a lot of property in London. So there's like one
of those weird things like oh, well, you know, we
can pretend it didn't happen because it's so odd. But yeah,
(29:11):
I mean, because I think it's something like fourteen deaths
or something to this point, death of like of people
who were suspected of like victims of Russian hit jobs.
But you know that should be expected because Vladimir Putin
was basically like, yeah, anybody who is a defector or
like an enemy the state, like we will get you
wherever you are kind of thing essentially, and there's open
(29:32):
order that from the Russian government being like, you know,
you have a license to kill anybody who is an
enemy of the Russian state anywhere that's not Russia, like globally,
we you're We're good with it. You just do your thing, right,
is it? Do you know? Is it specifically Russian nationals
or is it anybody? Because I think that it would
be a very different story if they were killing like
(29:53):
British nationals, you know, No, I think a lot of
them have been former Russian like they're Russian nationals, but
they just exclusively that yeah, because I think that they
would have to take it exactly there was something more
serious if it was Yeah, yeah, it's a very delicately
Blair's buddy or something buddy, you know, Tony Blair. And yeah,
(30:14):
the guy he plays on the weekends probably sucks in basketball.
I would I would love to see him throw a baseball, right,
oh man, because you don't have the throwing motion in
Europe like we do. People really don't say, like we
can't kick ship in the US, like watching American trynk
kick something like but like it you'll be surprised, as
(30:34):
an American watching somebody try and throw something who's from
another country, how unnatural that motion is. Like it's really
it's something we learned from an early age. But like, yeah,
they can't get it like five feet in front of them,
Like they don't even have the chess pass, you know
what I mean. Like even with soccer, like when they
get the ball, they do the overhead and not many
people do this the chess pass, like not into play
but just to each other. Anyway, that's a that's a
(30:56):
whole other nuance conversation. Anyways, the UK has decided they're
not fucking around this time, right, So Theresa May went
to Parliament yesterday and was basically saying, like, you have
until midnight tonight Tuesday, the Russian government, that is, to
explain what the funk happened, because like they did that
with like Litvinenko was another uh, like former spy who
(31:17):
got hit with like polonium like years ago, I think
like eleven years ago or something polonium in his tea.
Polonium is like a radio active substance that literally could
only come from like the Russian government. They put it
in his tea and he died a slow, agonizing death. Yeah. Uh.
And so this time they were like, look, this nerve
(31:37):
agent is clearly you guys. So her thing was like,
there's only one of two conclusions. Uh, you guys fucking
did it or you gave the nerve agent to somebody
else to do it. So which one is that you
can pick it and then answer to us. Uh. And
she's based saying like, yo, we will we will retaliate,
like we will figure something out to do that. Will
you will feel the effects of trying to kill somebody
(31:58):
on British soil. So like a lot of the things
that have been float your sanctions which is the typical
thing expelling diplomats. Sure they could see his property because
there is a lot of like assets. Apparently a lot
of Russians have been moving like liquid assets into Russia
out of like EU places, but fixed things like property.
You can't just fucking carve out your house and then
(32:18):
air lifted the funk out of there, so they could
they could see that like cyber uh like retaliation, Uh,
military is unlikely, like they would evoke like Article five
or something like that with NATO. Uh. And one thing
that was plotted was like boycotting the World Cup because
it's in Russia. But the England is not going to
you wrote seriously, Well, yeah, like seriously, but l O
(32:40):
L they're not. There's no way, you know, they every year,
you know, England has to massively disappoint all their supporters,
uh chasing that's part of that's the greatest tradition. It
is because they didn't six. But again, they're not going
to make a point, like no football fan is gonna say, yeah,
take our team out of the most important sporting event
like in the world. So yeah, we'll see weapons. But
(33:03):
the Trump administration is totally on board and they've come
out and they said, funk Russia. Yes, we're on board
with our ally, right, Oh of course. Look but we
already know that this administration goes through painstaking length to
not say Russia and or or even like suggests that
there Russia could be a four pound guy in his basements. Yeah,
(33:24):
so for starters. Yesterday, I think that Sarah Sanders really
did a good job of commenting. Someone asked her, what
about this attack of of script all in the UK.
What do you think She read a statement and literally
massively avoided actually even using the word Russia once. You
should hear this. Look, we've been monitoring the incident closely.
Take it very seriously. The use of a highly lethal
(33:46):
nerve agent against UK citizens on UK soil is an outrage.
The attack was reckless, indiscriminate and irresponsible. We offer the
fullest condemnation and we extend our sympathy to the victims
and their families and our support to the UK government.
We stand by our closest ally in the special relationship
that we have. You're either you're not staying that Russia
(34:06):
was by right now? Um, we are standing with our
UK ally. I think they're still working through even some
of the details, and we're going to continue to work
with the UK and we certainly stand with them throughout
this process. H Yeah, we'll see how long we're allies
with the UK. Also like yeah, so to go along
(34:28):
with that. When Trump was asked I think this morning
about like what would happen if they agree with the
assessment that the UK has, they were saying, well, we'll
let them, you know, finish their investigation, and if we
agree with the facts, then we will we will condemn
Russia or maybe whoever else it was. We agree with
the facts, because that's how facts work. You have to
agree or disagree. Yes, it's subjective. Right. When the doctors like, yes,
(34:52):
you have male pattern balled in this, I said, I disagree,
now don't. Yeah, Like, tell me something different, tell me
it's a cool design of hairline, and they wouldn't. So yeah,
but facts are too fashionable. Horseshoe patterns, don't call fuck
you mail pattern, get the funk on it. But yeah,
And then this sort of feeds into the rex Stellerson
thing because I think yesterday or the day before, Rex
(35:14):
Stellers and unequivocally was like this was clearly the work
of Russia, and did you say Russia specifically, he came
out and said, Russia. Oh that wasn't smart man, what
happened to him? His words are, it's highly likely that
Russia was responsible, and the poison was part of a
certain unleashing of activity by Russia that would certainly trigger
(35:34):
a response. But yeah, he was basically saying the nerve
agent definitely came from Russia. So let's talk about the firing.
Everybody's been talking about. Everybody in America is talking about
John Mcentie, who is Donald Trump's personal assistant, has been fired.
Um that among other people obviously were like to the
(35:55):
other one, very dubious financial. It's really weird. These reports
are just so strange. So first of all, it's just
weird that his personal assistant, like the guy who has
all the dirt on him, was a like he has
a seven million view trick shot compilation on on YouTube
where he's like throwing footballs in the basketball hoops from
like way mega. But he so he was last night
(36:22):
escorted out of the White House. Uh, and it was
such a you know, serious matter that they wouldn't even
let him get his jacket. So it was between thirty
six and forty one degrees last night and Washington d
c uh. They were just not letting him go back
to get his jacket. They just kicked him out in
his shirt sleeve. Come get the funk out. They're throwing
(36:46):
out a drunk from a bar. But that's kind of
what's crazy is we all see this unfolding stuff like
this has been unfolding for the last year and a half,
and yet more people continue to want to win this administration,
which is so crazy. Yeah. I mean, it's one of
the few places you could be a felon and they'll
hire you. Ye, So obviously with something that's serious and apparently,
(37:10):
according to sources close to the administration, it was related
to quote serious financial crimes. Uh so, obviously he is
screwed and won't be able to find a job anytime.
Oh wait, he has already got his next job to
be the senior advisor for campaign operations for the Trump campaign.
(37:34):
For uh so, they're apparently he knows something because they're
trying to keep him as close as possible. Thenn't want
him having another seven million view YouTube video where he's like, Okay,
so this ship was crazy. For my next trick shot,
I'm gonna play a voice note I took uh, and
(37:56):
but I guess yet that that was a big firing.
That was a big firing. But the other story that
everybody's really talking about Game of Thrones for dumb people continues.
Rex Tillerson is out as the Secretary of State. Uh.
This was something that had been rumored to be coming
down the pipe since the fall, that he was going
(38:17):
to get fired because you know, once he called Trump
a moron and then the press was like, did you
call Trump a moron? He was like, I'm not. We're
not talking about this, Like he just refused to say. Yeah. Well,
like he could have lied all you guys the media,
that's all you do. But he was I think he
was sending him because idiot. Yeah, He's like I'm wrong. Yeah,
(38:43):
you're gonna sit here and tell me you haven't called
him a moron? Um? And yeah, So Trump fired him
over Twitter. Uh. And you know, Tillerson's main like right
hand guy, uh told the media that Tillerson found out
about his firing on Twitter, and uh, oh he on Twitter.
(39:04):
That's what That's what Tillerson's right hand man said. And
then the White House contradicted that and said, no, we
told him Friday that he was going to be fired,
and so he knew about it because we're a professional organization.
Why would we fire him over Twitter? And then they
fired Tillerson's right hand guy, who had contradicted them for
telling the truth man for these very important negotiations. My
(39:28):
favorite part of the firing is that Trump did it
and said he'll probably be much happier now, which is
like the sort of thing that you would write, like
like that a passive aggressive like wounded lover would say
about someone like I bet you're real happy now? Does
she go down on you in a theater? H honest? Uh? Anyways,
(39:53):
he continually undermine Tillerson. I'm sure he is much happier now.
Everybody who has any history and diplomacy was like, you know,
this guy should quit, Like especially when when he was
negotiating with North Korea and Trump came out on Twitter
and was like, don't waste your time Rex these guys
(40:14):
like He's like, no, I think dialogue is the best route,
right well, because so now that means that Mike Pompeo,
who is the head of the CIA, is now next
in line, or if that's who is going to be
the next Secretary of State. Right, so we'll see how
that goes because they differ a lot a certain policy issues.
He's pretty hawkish, right yeah, And like he's down to
(40:35):
pull out of the Iran deal, oh um, because, like,
as we're saying before, that's the only thing keeping them
from having nuclear weapons. But just Trump just wants to
make good on his campaign pledge because it's just a
bad deal. But okay, sure it was done by Obama's Yeah,
so i's everything is bad, Obama bad. Everything good. And
like Rex Dollerson wanted to stay in the Paris Climate Agreement,
(40:57):
Mike Pompeo doesn't really care. He's kind of like a
climate chan's and I I think in his in his
confirmation hearing, he was like didn't really want to talk
about science at all. So in that way, I guess
Trump has found a buddy that will just kind of
go along with whatever he says. And also Tillerson came
out in the aftermath of the announcement that North Korea
and the and uh Trump would be meeting and was like, well,
(41:21):
we're let's let's pump the brakes a little bit here, guys,
Like we're not gonna just like throw Trump in there
like in a meeting, and Trump apparently didn't like that,
and he's been sort of against Tillerson getting any credit
for North Korea from the start since he released that statement,
being like, don't waste your time, Rex, And apparently, according
(41:43):
to insight sources, Trump decided to replace Tillerson now to
have a new team in place before upcoming talks with
Kim jonguans. So it was explicitly like the North Korea thing, Jesus,
Mike Pompeo, Dennis Rodman better be part of that delegation
for sure, he will be, just to make I feel
like that would be the only safety mechanism we have
(42:03):
at this point. Sadly because his whole yeah, he just
showed up. He's like, hey, my man, it's Steve kerr to,
I got even got Luke Longley right or not Jordan
because Jordan is an asshole and probably wants to watch
the world burns. So but then that means then there's
(42:26):
an opening at the CIA, which means the deputy director,
Gina haspol Uh is who Trump wants to be the
new head of the CIA, and she would be the
first woman to run the Spike group a victory for
all of womankind. Yeah, but you know, she's got a
little bit of a past, like most CIA people do.
She I think she was one of the she ran
(42:47):
the first black site like torture facility in Thailand, uh
and was also you know, she's one of the top
people running the torture program, along with the Alkaheda suspect
abu Za Beta, who they waterboarded eighty three times in
a single month and like slammed him into walls, put
him in a coffin heregging to other parents. At one
point they thought they killed him from all the torture
(43:09):
he did. He and then they found out he didn't
have any useful information to provide any went through all
that ship just for that and also ordered like the
destruction of video the videotape. Yeah, I know. Diane Feinstein
blocked her once too, when she was going to get
a promotion again. A lot of intelligence people was like, look,
you're not gonna be able to be a top ci
A person and not have your fucking hands all over
(43:31):
the dirtiest ship. But at the same time, I don't
know if that's like a good enough reason, because a
lot of people will say, like, you know, she was
basically carrying out a program that the President in the
White House and other top people had signed off on,
and she was just following orders. But we'll see, because
she'll still have to get confirmed. And if, like you know,
John McCain is not a fan of torture, so he
might not be a vote that would confirm her. Rand
(43:54):
Paul I think voted against Pompey there, I mean, so
there's she might not be immediately uh seated or I'm
a can is not a fan of torture apparently, yet
he wanted something he had a bad experience with that.
Uh So do we have any reason to believe that
Pompeo will be like somebody who actually staffs the diplomas,
(44:14):
like the diplomatic positions, because I mean that's the thing
that Tiller since tenure has been marked by, you know,
just not hiring any of the positions in the State Department.
We'll see, I mean, he systematically gutted the State Department.
So I don't know what Mike Pompeo's vision is for
the State Department. He didn't like gut the CIA when
he took the no, I mean, he was just yeah,
you can't, like you gotta keep that agency running, baby,
(44:36):
right right, all right, let's take another quick break and
we'll get down to the important news after that. And
we're back and uh we we can't stop thinking about
(44:57):
the the idea of Pompeo like uh hafting the State
Department with like the ninety six bulls and Jordan coming
in at the last minute and saving us, which would
mean that Space Jam predicted the future kind of in
the sense that like Jordan is playing basketball for the
fate of human kind. Yeah, and who watching Space Jam
at the time it came out didn't think it was
(45:17):
a prophet the future, like this ship is going to happen.
Just watch. It was in the National enquir We know it.
Do you think Ron Harper is okay? Do you think
Ron Harper would show that he's doing well? I bet
he's He seems like real solid. Remember Robert Parrish played
on that team too, Did he really care night Roberts
played on that team? Chief anyway? All right? Um, but yeah,
(45:41):
like I said, we have to get down to the
serious news because there is a video that is currently
number one on YouTube. There's a new Taylor Swift video.
You guys. Oh, and it is a site to be whole,
So it's it's getting a lot of ship for being
(46:03):
a rip off of the Spike Jones video starring Margaret
talib Quality from The Leftovers and The Nice Guys. If
you don't know, uh who she is, she's I don't know,
really recognizable face but apparently also a trained dancer. And
there's this video Spike Jones made for Kenzo with her
(46:23):
dancing around that's just really fucking awesome. I hadn't seen
it until this morning. It's a gorgeous video, really cool,
and it's for perfume, right, which made it that much
more memorable because I think the only perfume ad I
remember is White Diamonds. Yeah. I'm gonna go out and
say top five perfume minutes. Yeah, I mean, look, but
(46:45):
because for you, white Diamonds is number one through five,
the White Diamonds, I only know White diamonds. Um. Also,
did you guys see the Apple Spike Jones FK Twigs? Yes, Yes,
that's a great video that he's on. A uh Yeah,
this Taylor Swift video. Taylor Swift video is getting ship
(47:07):
because it seems like she's basically stealing moves from the
quality Spike Jones joint. I mean not just moves, the
whole thing, the whole live, the tone, the setup, the look, everything,
because Spike Jones video starts off with Margaret like at
this like gala in a beautiful ballroom gown and in
the middle of it, she walks out and she goes
(47:29):
through this like you know, uh, in the building. She
just basically does this crazy choreograph dance all through the
building in her ballroom gown. Um. And uh. In the
Taylor Swift video, it's very Simmarch. She's at some black
tie event like an award shair gale or something like that,
and uh, and she's also wearing a floor length ballroom
gown color. And then also that's how they get by
(47:55):
on that technicality and they're like, well it's a blue
yeah yeah. And then she does the same. She she
dances through the building and out into the street. But
the only difference is that she's not a good dancer
the way that Margaret Quality is right, Margaret Quality, it
looks amazing, Like the crazy thing is she's doing all
these like crazy aggressive dance moves in a ball gown.
(48:17):
And Taylor Swift it feels like she's making fun of
the concept of dancing when she's dancing, Like it's like
she's doing these like exaggerated things where it seems like
she's sarcastic the differences Margaret in her performance and she
is living in her choreography and Taylor Swift is kind
(48:38):
of just dipping her toe into the pool of life.
It also feels like Taylor Swift doesn't understand what irony
is and so like it's never quite She's like approximating
what she thinks irony is, right right, yeah, well, and
if you look, yeah, there's even like facial court. There's
a lot of overlaping stuff. I even think there's a
lot of choreography kind of similar to the Weapon of
Choice video that Spike Jones er Fat Boy Slam that
(48:59):
had Christopher walking dancing around like an empty mall um
and apparently as a super producer Andjsie just sizes me
the stone quality improvised most of that routine. Anyway, Just
google Jess, Google Spike Jones, ken Jonah, Spike Jones, Kenzo
Katie n Zo that video take from this episode and
(49:19):
is a talent and watch someone live, Yeah, and then
you can watch Taylor Swet the like shitty version. Yeah,
although I don't hate the song alright, movie, I watched
that video on mute. Do not hate the song? Yeah,
you don't love her? No? Oh no, look Jack love her? No,
(49:42):
I do not love her. Every once in a while
picks a good song out of the loads of songs
that get offered to her. It sounds like Jack love her.
That is what that sounds like. So we we wanted
to talk about the An Smith that Star Wars is
going to be making a TV show, which after the
(50:06):
last Star Wars, I was kind of like, yo, like
do we need more? Do we need more Star Wars
after this? But apparently we do, and it's going to
be a TV show made by uh professional vanilla filmmaker
Jon Favreau is going to be sort of the overseer,
the show runner, um and you know, I guess he'll
(50:29):
be hiring different directors, but he's the show runner. And
uh yeah, it's just yet another in a long line
of Star Wars movies that have been given to white dude,
straight white man, straight white men. Uh you know, the
which is weird because like the entire story department is women,
(50:50):
and it's like exclusively women, like by design, so like
they did that, that's really cool. But then for some reason,
anytime they're hiring a director, it's like, well, obviously it
has to be a straight white guy, right, Yeah. And
also what's interesting, what's that's been happening with this franchise
is that they hire like dudes who have like very
(51:10):
specific kind of styles and visions. Then they're like, no,
we don't want you to put any of your standing
on any of it, you know, Like then why hire
these guys have very specific styles and it's not like
they're misrepresenting themselves as like conventional by the Numbers directors
and then doing a bait and switch. It's like, no,
you know exactly who these guys are, and then you
(51:30):
hire them and then you're like, don't do any of that, right,
And there's such a merrygo righting for like for the
solo film and like episode, like the people are just
I don't know why the films just get sanitized suddenly
and they're like, WHOA, well we didn't expect like you
to do the film like this or whatever. Yeah, and
it's like if you want Paint by Numbers directors, then
hire Paint by numbers directors, right exactly. Well, well, I
(51:51):
mean because it's interually like jam mcnaba, right, it kind
of wrote sort of like other things of sort of
like the legacy that women have had on Star Wars,
Like you know, the first three were really good because
his wife edited them, right, Yeah, isn't that true? Yeah,
that is true. Yeah, and then when they got divorced,
he said it was the most expensive editor. Yeah, it
was something like that because they may have gotten like
(52:12):
divorced between films or something, right, and ye did Empire
and Jedi, and then she did not edit the prequels,
so I mean, and those were great. Yeah, those were
exactly as well received as the rest of my vice.
And it's traty to think that they were even like
female X Wing pilots in Return of the Jedi and
(52:32):
then they just hit the cutting room floor. Also another
like example of like giving chances to male directors you
would never give female directors or like people of color,
because like, I mean, these guys are like TV guys,
you know, and like I know they've done like some
like feature work, but I mean, this is a huge
fucking franchise, you know, like and it's worth so much money.
(52:54):
It costs so much money, and like, but these guys
who basically who do TV are given the reins to
something like this and you'd never see that, like for
a female director, Like female directors have to work so
many years before people still wouldn't even consider them for
stuff like this. He did the whitest TV show in existence. Also, yeah,
(53:15):
the way right right? Um? I mean, like what would
Catherine Bigelow star Wars look like? Probably pretty good? Yeah,
I mean, I just I don't know. I don't know.
They keep doing this like we're like we're trying to
move forward, right, and like we're still just doubling down
on like straight white man. God, was it Collin Trevor
out Now? I don't I don't want to slander camp,
(53:35):
but was it? I feel like it was something director
like him who said, like, oh, well, the reason women
are doing these like big temple movies is because they
don't really want to. That does feel like a thing
Colin Trevor would do, because it seems like he'd begrudgingly
made Jurassic World, like the whole thing was like about
how shitty like commercialism was, or like he tried to
(53:55):
make it that and then didn't really come through. But
but he's a great exact couple of a guy who
did like an indie movie and then got like a
movie that's huge and enormous and like a legacy franchise. Yeah,
here's a quote from Colin Trevorrow. So it was contrast.
It was, and it's pretty interesting. I want to believe
that a filmmaker with both the desire and ability to
(54:16):
make a studio blockbusher will be given an opportunity to
make their case. I stress desire because I honestly think
that that's part of the issue. Many of the top
female directors in our industry are not interested in doing
a piece of studio business for its own sake. These
filmmakers have clear voices and stories to tell that don't
necessarily involve superheroes or spaceships or dinosaurs. Um, I can't
(54:39):
believe nobody knew that. At the Women in Hollywood meeting
they elected Contravorrow as their official spokesperson. Like, how did
that not make that? Or maybe he just has this
like direct mental pipeline to the minds of all women.
It's like what women want kind of right, he gets it. Yeah,
they don't want and it's the same ship people always
say about distant franchise groups in anything, right, Like it's
(55:02):
like the same thing when John Kelly was suggesting that
immigrants weren't getting off their ass to register for DACA,
Like it's like, oh, it's not us, Like they just
don't want it enough. Yeah, yeah, and it's just yeah,
there's not one woman on earth who would want to
direct a Star Wars movie. Who yeah, who also has
the ability? Yeah, exactly because desire. Yeah, Because here's the thing,
(55:24):
Like the subtext of that is there's already such a
small group of women who have the ability, and then
within that group there's stero desire and that's the only
reason there aren't any who are directing Temple movies, and
not because like guys like him get told by people
like Steven Spielberg. When I look at Controvery, I saw
a younger version of myself. That's the Steven Spielberg said.
And it's like, yeah, well, that's why he like took
(55:47):
him under his wing, because he he reminded him of
his younger self. And it's like, yeah, because you're both
fucking white dudes, you know, Like you think Steven Spielberg
would have looked at Ava Verney and like been like
I see a young man. No. Um, well, but I
think we have the answer for why it's all straight
white too. It's because Colin Trevor has just explained it,
(56:08):
so we should Yeah cut that out. Yeah you got
to the bottom of it. Yeah, never mind. Sorry guys,
sorry for wasting your time. Uh, Jessica, it has been
a pleasure having you. Where can people find you? Follow you? Um?
Dan Harmon and I have a podcast called Whiting Wongs
um and it's about race and writing. Uh. And I'm
(56:30):
on Twitter at Chairman gal Gow spelled g Ao. Got it? Miles,
Where can people find you? You can find me on
Twitter and Instagram at Miles of Great. Can find me
at Jack Underscore O'Brien. You can find us at daily
Zeitgeist on Twitter. We're at the Daily Zeitgeist on Instagram.
We have a Facebook fan page, uh and a website
daily ze guys dot com, where we post our episodes
(56:50):
and our foot We link on two sources of the
information we talked about today. Uh, that is going to
do it. Miles. Do you have a song do you
want to write of? Alum? Yes? Okay, so Rapper Craig
mac died last night. Uh at his home in South
I don't know. I think his home in South Carolina.
Heart failure. Uh. He was one of like the first
(57:11):
like he basically had the first hit on bad Boy Records,
Flavoring Year. Uh. And look, people, just you know this
is this is hip hop. Uh, this is history. So
I just you know to to to send him out.
I just want to play Flavoring Year by Craig Mate.
Hold up, yeah, alright, that is gonna do it for today.
We will be back tomorrow because it is a daily podcast.
(57:32):
The shooting the flabbody kicking lab bit, a battle to
the chatta turn. Your body's just slack. Stop my stomach
with the ex king is what I mean. I mean,
(57:53):
my man, get a cup of change. Stop. Hold on,
let's make a sufficion making everybody. Let's agreement. That just
need addition. The folks. My only issue. I bet your
mama this shoe, and I bet the mact go off
like mix mss no more. You're winding on the dust
climbing as I make the phone. Get get out my
oner than that. And if you didn't know who's writing,
(58:14):
I guess I'm gonna stick Drake Mac with perfect time,
you won't be around like ship my rabbute to beg
kick get math flavor and you ain't down the rad
tavor and your man time flavor and yeah I can't
get flavor and yeah ran new flavor and yeah Drake
Mack one thousand degrees, he'll be on your knees and
(58:37):
you'll be burning mag and leaves brother frees man went scooted,
didn't deep bok smoke and leaves your brains booted? Its
mad m what's stammin on? Like we stood off? The
winner takes of m seats for dinner. You crazy like
that glue that check it out and do my one too,
that sink like the flue shake the way I pla
boy all the time. But they die like the slu
(59:00):
competition in this back where lex petition, you come around
and knockout position, knock him out. No flavor could ever
take a grave back. I want packing back making the
make rapping and here comes the brand new flavor. Yeah
back to brand new flavor, and yeah you're the mad
new flavor ground time for new lavy and yeah I'm
(59:21):
taking labor, Yeah backs brand new flavor and yeah labor
then comes the bad Nu labor and yeah time for
flavor and yeah, I'm kicking new flavor rad new labor
and yeah him not remote for empcs more nights the room.
(59:42):
I'd like to break it down down breaking for taking
lords the empty shaking with this track that my man'smation
and she's a run like a mom threat. I beat better. Yeah,
make your swacket and how to let the sun. Yet
break back is to play that mocks from here to
that point, I break the rule with my action at
the backs into MC started relaxing this brand new sheriff
(01:00:05):
that's in town. Get down leaven body berriied in the ground.
I stood up rhymes for a decoy down a bad
way while them not destroy. Come the bad flavor in
yea flavor and yeah I'm kicking dou flavor back brand
new flavor. Come the bad dude flavor in yeah flavor
(01:00:29):
in year I'm kicking the brand new back brand flavor
in yeah