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March 17, 2025 57 mins

In this edition of St. PaTrends Day, Jack and Miles discuss their respective weekends, Chuck Schumer caving to non-existent pressure, Trump invoking the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, Canada's 'secret weapon' in the trade war, Tesla halting Cybertruck deliveries (because they are falling apart), Conan O'Brien getting tapped for the Oscars again and much more!

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
There was a thing where someone was isolating how Trump
kept saying tesla tesla. Was he saying everything's computer wow?
And this is so nice. Everything is computer tesl Wow.

(00:24):
It reminds me of I Love Testler Plan that's from
the list.

Speaker 2 (00:41):
So this is one of those acts that doesn't make
any sense to me, Like Boston makes sense to me
because it's just lazy. It's like, instead of ours are
hard to say, so you just say pack instead of park.

Speaker 1 (00:54):
Yeah, there are less.

Speaker 2 (00:55):
Yeah, they're are less and that makes sense because like,
are you know, it's just easier your mouth is doing less.

Speaker 1 (01:03):
Word was going to say. I was like, and Robert
wool the way these motherfuckers are r less.

Speaker 2 (01:10):
But adding an R to the end of tesla is
so much extra work, yeah, because it's just not.

Speaker 1 (01:18):
Sodar in my tesla. It's like, but that's where I think.
Those are the connections from British English that carried over
because they do that in the UK too well. But
most of Britain is artless, Like but you go to
like the West Country and they start adding ours to stuff.

Speaker 2 (01:34):
Mm hmm, make up your mind about ours. New York
and England fucking.

Speaker 1 (01:40):
Reminds me of like, yeah, I was gonna say it
reminds me of a guy woman, a woman named Magda.
But the guy was like mag Well I started doing that.
This guy had a New York accent and he had
a check wife called Magda. But I stily just turned
into Magdar Magdor. I like Tesler. I love Tesler. There's

(02:11):
your cold fucking open, and we're back.

Speaker 2 (02:20):
We're not that we never left. Hello the Internet and welcome.
It was a seventeen minute uh cold open.

Speaker 1 (02:28):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (02:28):
My name is Jack O'Brien. That over there is Miles Gray.
Did I say Hello the Internet and welcome to this
episode Early's Guys. Yeah, Yeah, it's Saint Patti's day. My Hi,
you did doing a tip of the cop and the
top of the iron and top of the top of
the top of the morning.

Speaker 1 (02:50):
It's your time to shine Jack Saint Patrick's day. Ah,
and I'm Jack Trick's day.

Speaker 2 (02:54):
I have an extra little twinkle in my eye because
I'm drunk this morning.

Speaker 1 (03:00):
No happy, happy Saint.

Speaker 2 (03:01):
Patrick's It is really always I realize that Saint Patrick's
Day the morning of Saint Patrick's Day, and then have
to like dig through my kid's closet for like something
that's even vaguely green.

Speaker 1 (03:15):
We do not have any green. It's my favorite color.
I don't have green clothes my kids.

Speaker 2 (03:21):
I'm wearing a T shirt that like is moth bitten,
Like the collar is like coming apart.

Speaker 1 (03:26):
Yeah, just because it's green and you got a green
hat on. I don't get o bro. Yeah, yeah, it's
a kink. So this is also a time for me
to really shine when I when I pull up it
all black everywhere. Yeah. But today this morning, we also
had the same realization because, like you know, we record
the show early. So I was working on the show
and her Majesty goes to drop off the kid at daycare.

(03:48):
They get the text. Oh right, today's Saint Patrick's text.
I got it. I was like, his pants are kind
of irish. They were made of like flannel, like just
the pattern. Yeah, kind of traditional, but yeah, I forget that.
Like as a kid, it's like, yeah, dude, you fucking
we better pull up in all green, bro, where's your green?

Speaker 2 (04:10):
Why?

Speaker 1 (04:11):
Oh? Yah? And Jesse, if y'all pinch my two year old,
it's fucking ugly leave him alone.

Speaker 2 (04:15):
Very pinchable cheeks too, So it's it's not easy, but
you are demanded, you are asked not to not to
pinch house this two year old. Yeah, future HR imploy
Like people who work in HR are the ones who
are running around middle schools.

Speaker 1 (04:33):
You're like, where's your green?

Speaker 2 (04:35):
Are you wearing green?

Speaker 1 (04:35):
And it's St Patrick's Day? Now I get to pinch
you or deny you benefits, whichever it is down the
road for me.

Speaker 2 (04:42):
All right, this is the episode where we tell you
what was trend to go over the weekend and a
little bit about us by telling you something we think
is underrated, something we think is overrated.

Speaker 1 (04:50):
Miles, you want to kick us off? What do you
want to do? Underrated? Overrated? Let's go under. Let's go under.
Underrated swing sets? Yes, or just sucking a fucking swings, y'all.
This is sentimental music. Yes, the swing set is. I
fucking sleep on the swing set so much. But now, guys,

(05:11):
child is full grown playground age. Play on the playground,
swing on the monkey bars, swing on the swing set,
and more often than not, I find myself like, I'm like,
all right, he's chilling over there and I'm kind of
laying leaning on the swing. Yeah, I just started. I'm like, okay,
I got my eye legs and I start swinging on
that ship. Next thing I know, there is a line

(05:32):
behind me of children who want to use the swing.

Speaker 2 (05:35):
Okay, first of all, it's because you're like taking so long,
But second of all, it's because of how much you're
enjoying it. That is a communicable disease. They're like, God damn,
they're like that guy's fucking flying over there. That washed
old motherfucker likes that hold on forty something. Guy is saying,
maybe I should try that.

Speaker 1 (05:55):
As a four year old on a playground waiting my turn,
something I hate so oh, thank you, thank you. It's
just like wild, It's just so liberating. And I was like,
damn is it because like this is sort of like
our earliest sensation of like flight, and it's like soothing
as kids. And then I started looking into it too.
It like stimulates our inner ear on three axes, vertical, horizontal,

(06:19):
and diagonally, and there's a sensation in your inner ear
that you're also experiencing. That is like kind of part
of it, and that kind of stip simulation. We don't
get that all the time. And then I got deeper
and motherfuckers are drawing a line, because that is our
evolutionary pipeline back to primate swinging. That that was the

(06:40):
last time we were regularly getting that kind of stimulation
in the inner ear. So there is like this evolutionary
thing potentially. I'm a little bit hesitant on that, and
it's probably true because god damn, I fucking love the
fucking swing and it's so peeling. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (06:53):
I just had as a child every day, and then
not until I was, like, know, thirty five and had
a kid that I was like hanging out on the
playground exactly like you said, Bean and back on it,
and I'm like, what.

Speaker 1 (07:06):
Would happen if I lifted my legs up? Whoa, Oh, whoa,
who's this? This is just as fun as it was
when I was a kid. Yeah, there's something. They're so fun.
There's something here. Yeah. So I recommend, you know, if
there's an empty playground or fuck it, you know, just
do it, wait in line like everybody else, and use
the swing set.

Speaker 2 (07:23):
Yeah yeah, all right, great underrated Miles. I fully agree.
Everybody go go swing. You know, there's all these like
adult like dodgeball leagues and stuff. I don't know, I've
not gotten into the adult dodgeball leagues. But that's like
not a it's not a sense memory that I have
from childhood, like other than like getting beaned by top
balls and being like bad at it. But swinging, just

(07:45):
just do one swing, just stand back, let it go there.
You can't do one, you can't do just one. Hell yeah,
it's like the Pringles. Yeah, all right. Mine is a
kind of inexplicable and very specific type casting. I talk
a lot about type cat like just you know, there's
a certain type of type casting where the person clearly

(08:06):
just thinks they look good doing a thing, and so
they like always do that thing over and over. Movies
like the John Cusack knows he looks good in the rain,
and so his character always find themselves. Tom Cruise thinks
he looks good running. Yeah, his characters always seem to
have to run around. The Tom Hanks one is probably

(08:28):
the most inexplicable in this area because he it doesn't
make sense that he thinks he looks good peeing, but
he but he loves his characters like it's clearly coming
from the actor being like, I don't know what just
a note here, Robert zamachis what if Forrest said he
had to go pee it.

Speaker 1 (08:47):
No, there was like okay, yeah, I mean panther scene,
So I gotta get one somewhere.

Speaker 2 (08:56):
I gotta be somewhere. What he had multiple times in
this movie, uh probably did.

Speaker 1 (09:03):
The director's cut is actually just every every historical person
he meets, I have to be the speech at the
fucking reflecting pool.

Speaker 2 (09:13):
Preestcene ends with him and being like, and I gotta
go fee. That's what he's just running because he's looking
for a bathroom. Uh. But so then they're the ones
that clearly aren't the actor's idea. We've mentioned James Marsden
and Jason Clark being like two actors who just always
like seem to get cooked or like at least had

(09:36):
to run, Like James Marsden had to run in the
aughts where he was just you know, getting cooked by Superman,
getting cooked by Wolverine. Starred in straw Dogs, a remake
of this like horrifying movie that is uh yeah like that.

Speaker 1 (09:53):
It's just there's a lot of that in his career.

Speaker 2 (09:56):
Jason Clark, similarly, the blank Check Pot cast has pointed
out that he is also somebody who just always seems
there's something about Hollywood that looks at these guys and
they're like, man, I could fuck that guy's wife. I
kind of should, right, he's perfect. And then all right,
so there's a weird one and it's not. There's only

(10:17):
two instances, but it's so specific. On HBO right now,
are you watching the third season of A White Lotus?

Speaker 1 (10:26):
Finished the first episode, but we are. We're in the
process of it.

Speaker 2 (10:29):
So Walton Goggins, himself a tremendous tooth actor, keeps being
cast as someone with a younger girlfriend who has terrible
teeth or you know, notably.

Speaker 1 (10:40):
Different not American capped teeth.

Speaker 2 (10:43):
Yeah, exactly. And it's only two so far. But like
his Uncle Baby Billy and Righteous Gemstones, and in that one,
it like makes sense because he's like dating someone from
the Holler, and like, I think the teeth are like
meant to communicate something. But in this one, it's just
a very pretty woman whose trademark is like having weird,

(11:04):
weird front teeth.

Speaker 1 (11:05):
Basically, yeah, well, I think more because it's just like
the sense that our our perception of teeth is so
fucked up from movies. We're like, like that person has
like non or he had likely perfected teeth that you're like,
what the fuck.

Speaker 2 (11:20):
They let in normal teeth for once, and it's.

Speaker 1 (11:23):
Like, yeah, what is happening.

Speaker 2 (11:25):
I saw some like things that were like it's a
revolution for her really that like this he's gonna start
coming and well or just generally the revolution Walton Goggins
tip of the spear, you know.

Speaker 1 (11:35):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, but more just to be like, but
what did Walton Goggins teeth look like? Preed you know
what I mean, pre gigantic teeth. He's got it. Yeah,
he's got some big old champas. Yeah, but I don't know,
I mean, but yeah, I totally get that because I've
definitely that's been something that I've just seen being written
up about her teeth specifically and just how people were like,
I mean, I.

Speaker 2 (11:54):
Think it's yeah, I think I think it is great
to like normalize, you know, people with not the same
or as people. Yeah, exactly, but yeah, it's so specific
and if anybody's I'm not familiar with this full body
of work, like Injustified, I guess it would make sense
if it hadn't Unjustified, because that's all about like Kentucky.
But I don't know, let me know, are there other

(12:15):
instances of this in the Goggins Uvra. Yeah, it's pretty
it's pretty weird.

Speaker 1 (12:23):
Always like but it's like, yeah, because he always dates
younger women who don't have perfect teeth, right, it's just
and then his drink is like getting their teeth fixed.

Speaker 2 (12:32):
He's like, it's like the Lorne Michaels of predatory Rumors.

Speaker 1 (12:37):
Yeah, has dated every woman on their first season of
sn O. That's his thing.

Speaker 2 (12:45):
What is something, Miles do you think is overrated? Oh?

Speaker 1 (12:48):
Man, overrated? God bro. The consultant class. So I was
talking with some old friends from my political days over
the weekend at a function. Naturally we all got to
talking about, Yo, what the fuck is wrong with these people?
Like what are they fucking doing? And one of my ogs,
like my mentors and all of this just was like

(13:11):
he was kind of confused by my question because I
was like, is it that, Like I'm just guessing it's
just all of this, Uh, these habits that are just unbreakable,
and the consultants are the ones that enable everything. He's
like yeah, right, yeah, yeah, yeah, man, what do you
think what's happening? And basically, you know it's that the
consultants they do not have an ideology aside from working

(13:33):
on the next campaign and getting that money. They're like
fucking seasonal workers. They're like mall Santa's political consultants, especially
the ones that work on campaigns. They're just looking for
what's the next crisis, what are donors going to try
and turn the money hose on? And how do I
get in front of that money hose. It doesn't matter
what the fucking politics of it are. How do I
let the money hose touch me? And when you look

(13:54):
at races like across California too, there's like a well
defined number of like consulting firms that do a bulk
of the campaign work and messaging and things all that,
and they've been using the same playbook for decades now,
So like not only are they inflexible with their thinking
like if and like you know, they just look at
again campaign season as money making season. That means also

(14:15):
when you're used to doing shit over and overweight and
you don't change anything, you start cutting corners in the
way that like twenty candidates have the exact same looking
website and flyers and even TV ads. But because they're
in different races, people aren't going to realize that you're
just doing the same thing for people and just like
swapping out a candidate for your bit, like just very
generic messaging, being like and that's how we'll win because

(14:37):
it's California. But I think it's really interesting to see
that the way like we I think a lot of
in America, there's this exaltation of the political class in
a way that people think that these are like, these
people are eons smarter, and they're like in doing a
job that no one else can. But again, it's like
any job, any sales job, anything where you're sort of

(14:58):
oriented towards fine where the money comes in. You do
whatever you can to get the money. That means saying
yes to their bad ideas. That means showing them polls
or whatever your own data that helps them feel better.
So they always like, yeah, you know, I like working
with that firm. I'll give them more and more and
more money. It's just a very like entrenched way of

(15:19):
doing things, and I think it I think it's just
better that we begin to realize there's nothing special about
these politicians. And we'll get to what happened over the weekend.
But you know, anyone can do this, Yeah, at the
point anyone.

Speaker 2 (15:32):
I mean there now, like those people who are involved
in politics, I feel like are at a disadvantage because
they're so embedded in this. There's like a narrative happening
on the New York Times side with like Ezra Kline
and Matthew Iglesias where they're like talking about how the
groups are the problem with the Democratic Party. But like

(15:53):
when they talk about the groups, it seems like they
mean progressive politics, Like they always like tie them to
progressive policies and like being like that the groups is
synonymous when they talk about it with standing up for
trans rights and you know, viewing trans people as actual people,
Like that's what the groups means to them.

Speaker 1 (16:15):
And I thought the groups are getting all upset that
people need health care. It's like, I can't wait to
how they broaden out what the groups are in terms
of what we think of what we service people.

Speaker 2 (16:25):
There's a truth there that there is a thing that's
broken in the system, and this is it.

Speaker 1 (16:31):
It's it's the consultants.

Speaker 2 (16:34):
It's the people whose job it is to take polls
and tell you where to change your positions.

Speaker 1 (16:41):
To you know, keep in line.

Speaker 2 (16:43):
And just like the ones who are like playing it
like a game that disconnects it from anybody's real lives.
I think you're absolutely right that like there's it's really
a thing with like education and like all these people
like went to you know, Ivy League schools or whatever,
and they uh are like they when they talk about populism,

(17:04):
So they're in an industry that's supposed to be like
about getting votes, and they like use the word populism derisively,
like like synonymous with racism. Like in a lot of cases, say,
what the fuck are you talking about? That's not populism
is just like trying to appeal to people. It's not
it shouldn't be a bad word for what you're doing,

(17:26):
but they need this. How do's the thing about this?
Over the weekend with regards to like also the Luca trade,
because because like I was thinking about Nico Harrison's like,
uh like thinking and like I think probably what happened
is behind the scenes, like after they lost the championship,
he like started telling this narrative to people around him,

(17:50):
like we actually can't win with Luca, Like Luca's he's yeah,
he so he got this like take that people were like, oh,
that that's actually like kind of an interesting, counterintuitive take
and like that's what we want from like a GM,
so that's like cool and interesting, and he just like
got so gassed up on this take that he made

(18:12):
the worst decision in the history of basketball because of
like this just insidery shit that goes on, where like
you have to justify that you are you have your
job for a reason.

Speaker 1 (18:27):
You know what I mean, You're so fucking you're so
outside the paradigm that you can see the whole matrix.

Speaker 2 (18:33):
Because if everybody else is right that Luca, you just
have a generational talent and the smartest thing you can
do is shut the fuck up and not build ordered
him and just like hope that everything comes together then
like you're not important, But like I don't think he's
like waking up being like how do I make myself
feel important? But I think that is like what myth

(18:55):
led him, and that's what misleads the Democratic Party so much.

Speaker 1 (18:58):
Yeah, because you're used to for so long you think
you're like, oh, bro, this is it. This is the formula,
and I don't really need to change much here.

Speaker 2 (19:05):
And it's rewriting the history of you know, like Obama winning,
Clinton winning Biden winning those had nothing to do with
these consults. Dallas getting to the finals had nothing to
do with Nico Harris. But they want to rewrite that
history so it is about them, and so they take
they make these like you know, counterintuitive interesting to say
over cocktails, deductions that are just complete, complete bullshit.

Speaker 1 (19:30):
It's the groups you mean, like the base.

Speaker 2 (19:32):
Yeah, there's this poll from NBC over the weekend that
just seven percent of people say they have a very
positive view of the Democratic Party. Yeah, which is like
an all time low. And the lad when you dig
into like what they want from them, Like back in
April twenty seventeen, people asked, like, what what do you

(19:56):
want Democrats in Congress to do? Back in April twenty seventeen,
it was sixty percent wanted them to make compromises with
President Trump to gain consensus on legislation. That was a
time when people were out in the streets, and like
you know, now March twenty twenty five, it's thirty two
percent want them to make compromises with Trump. Sixty five
percent want them to stick to their positions, even if

(20:18):
this means not getting things done in Washington. But they
don't like it's I think it's exactly what you're talking about.
Like they just want them to believe in something and
stick to the thing that they believe in, Yeah, and
for that thing to have something that is related to
what there's season.

Speaker 1 (20:36):
Life democrats, they're seasonal holiday workers. Ro I'm Santa this
time year, then I'm the easter Bunny this time of year.
Then I'm a leprechaun, then I'm a jack o lantern,
whatever I need to do to court the money. And
not to say like you're ideologically fucked up for being
a season, but like that's what it feels like. And
I think the other difference is all of us who

(20:57):
are regular people who are not you know, coming from
dynastic wealth or obscene wealth, that we are forced to
live in a principled way no matter how we live,
Like we don't have the ability to just kind of
like fucking like just live life like this, Like we
are beholden to being like, no, I need healthcare all
the time, I need my rights all the time because

(21:19):
I can always get touched by the state or by
bad actors and things like that. But you look at
your representatives and they don't they're not standing on the
same shit consistently, Like what the fuck is this? Like, yeah,
how does this make sense to me? A person who
is at the will of this system. But the people
that were quote unquote electing to represent that are there
and it's been like I don't know, man, it's it's

(21:39):
getting too hot for me. So like, fuck everything I
said on the campaign trail. I got to stay in
office and I don't want to own a shutdown. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (21:46):
Yeah, we'll talk about that after the break, all right,
am My. I overrated is the versatility of the song
Shipping up to Boston, the Dropkick Murphy's song, That's.

Speaker 1 (21:55):
What it's called. I think, well, yeah, it's just so
funny because when I saw you, I didn't know that
at all, And at first, when I read your take
this the versatility of being up to Boston, I was like,
is he No? I first thought you were talking about
mailing something to Boston. Boston is overrated. It's actually versatility. No,

(22:18):
you can't get suf there, but yeah, that's the Dropkick
Murphy's Yeah. Every Guinness ad.

Speaker 2 (22:24):
Guinness ad, every Saint Patrick's Day thing like it's it's
become the fucking like jingle bells of Saint Patrick's Day
of like anything having to do with Irish culture, and
I don't like my kids this morning asked Alexa for
a Saint Patrick's Day song because they're still in that
age where it's like, this is a holiday, this is
a thing to celebrate at school, and that was the

(22:47):
first thing that came on. And it's just like a
little aggressive for like that song does go hard, Like
I don't I like that song in the right circumstances,
but I feel like it's just so so specifically, like
such a specific energy to just be like and this
is our Saint Patrick's Day anthem, Like they're there's like screaming.

(23:12):
It just feels weird to have like a holiday for
people who are like fun loving and I don't know,
you know, they they fight sometimes, but they're every once
in a while.

Speaker 1 (23:25):
But I think because like we just like the worst
habit we have in America is flattening. Whole culture is
based on the most popping movie that like intersected with
that group. All Irish people are the Depotted exactly. That's it.
Pal everything is that if you're Irish, it's the Depotted
or the town maybe, but it's still the Depotted and

(23:47):
not to be the Depaded, because for me, it's huge
In The Departed.

Speaker 2 (23:52):
Yeah, yeah, there's like a sick part where they're like
all driving to like the Irish Boston Ship.

Speaker 1 (24:00):
It's so funny. Then I was like, yeah, yeah, that's Irish,
that's Irish. That's it.

Speaker 2 (24:05):
I mean, we got you two, we got the Cranberryes,
we got Shinead O'Connor. You know, well, there's plenty, but
the problem is that that's the only one that has
that like Irish fiddle, like taking a walk all over
the place, but.

Speaker 1 (24:20):
That like as consumers were so inflexible, that's all I got.
Where's that classic Irish fiddle? Irish? Like this is the
most Irish band you're listening to right now. I don't know.

Speaker 2 (24:32):
It's just such an ass kicking music to be the
like number one song associated with holiday.

Speaker 1 (24:39):
Hell yeah, that's what I got. Connor McGregor at the
White House. I know.

Speaker 2 (24:42):
I feel like this is the fact that that is
the song that came on when my kids were like,
let's listen to St Patrick's name music.

Speaker 1 (24:49):
Yeah, is a sign that Connor goes on And then
you see literally Connor McGregor at a White House podium,
screaming xenophobic ship again, the America Movement, the Maira movement.
I guess, make Ireland myga miga, make Ireland great, Ireland

(25:11):
great again, megam.

Speaker 2 (25:13):
All right, let's take a quick break and we'll come back.
We'll check him with Washington d C and uh other
less shitty things.

Speaker 1 (25:21):
We'll be right back and we're back.

Speaker 2 (25:33):
And the Dropkick Murphy's are from Quincy, Massachusetts. Bro, Quincy, Massa, Bro.
They're shipping up to Boston for real.

Speaker 1 (25:41):
Though I did a when I used to work artist
hospitality for concerts, I did a show. This was crazy.
So there was a call of Duty game that was
coming out, like Call of Duty, like I think it's
modern Warfare two. And there's this huge fucking thing where
they paid Kanye West and the Dropkick Murphy's to perform
at this thing. And I was in charge of setting
up both of the their dressing rooms. The Kane dressing room.

(26:03):
We had to get like a tires stream, dude, it's
so so fucked up. You had to get an interior
designer to get the right like. He had all this shit,
like they had to be the right fabrics. He couldn't
see dry wall. It had to be all fabrics around him.
Then he wanted like cold press juice from Australia that
we tried to fed like he at the last Mews,
like I need this shit tomorrow, like it's only available

(26:24):
in Australia. We called this company in Australia, like there's
no even if we send somebody on a plane right now,
wouldn't get there in time, so we had to navigate that. Conversely,
the Dropkick Murphy's, their writer was just like some Miller
high life, some sandwich stuff. The only interesting thing was yeah,
truly like mayonnaise, bread mustard, and one bad action movie

(26:48):
on DVD, Like there's like the kind you would find
in a bin on your way to check out at
best Buy, And they allowed that was up to you
dealer's choice. Just some bad, bad action movies. That's fun, man,
Like that was only specific thing. I was like, Yeah,
this shot out to you guys should be like our
weird thing is like we want to see a shitty
action movie and sandwiches rather than fabrics. Oh only metal

(27:12):
straws for a fucking Nazi West. Also wow, yeah, very
very very stupid anyway, Sorry.

Speaker 2 (27:19):
And I do want to shout out there. You were
saying there's a clip where somebody wore Maga shit at
or Dropkick Murphy show and they called out So yeah,
there again, nothing wrong with that song, just I feel
like we need another one, like I think it used
to be Sunday Bloody Sunday, like the U two song.
Like that one just sounds like a You two song.

(27:40):
It's it's just like jangly guitars, you know, so like
you yeah, like you said, we just need that. That
Irish fiddle taking a walk, Yeah, Irish like pub music.

Speaker 1 (27:52):
Is a blast.

Speaker 2 (27:53):
You ever go over there, that's just like there's always
going to be people just fucking around on three around
the fiddle.

Speaker 1 (28:00):
There's roop on every corner.

Speaker 2 (28:03):
Yes, it is literally like what they ask us to
believe about duop groups in the fifties. But it's like
every pub has just like some people just fucking ripping.

Speaker 1 (28:14):
Yeah. My mother in law, she's a big fiddler. Oh yeah,
that's like her goat activity is just like every couple
of years she's like, I'll go to Ireland to get
down on fiddle because that's a legit fiddles blast.

Speaker 2 (28:28):
All right, myles, let's check in with Washington, d c last,
last time, last time on Creek, Washington.

Speaker 1 (28:38):
Yeah, Schumer cave. You probably heard this guy was saying
he wasn't interested in this Republican spending bill, but then
did a fucking Vince Carter one and gave the Republicans
the support to pass the continuing Resolution in the Senate.
So we moment to maybe stop things up and apply
pressure do something drastic in the face of drastic illegal

(29:01):
activity from the Trump administration.

Speaker 2 (29:03):
Everybody seems to be asking for exact right now you
co signed it.

Speaker 1 (29:09):
One argument again was like, well, we don't want to
own a shutdown. Polling came out that a majority of
voters were like, bro, this is not on the Democrats,
it's on the Republicans and Trump, like the people could
see what was happening. Now that arguments can be made
for why shutdown could potentially make Trump more powerful, as
then he could maybe abuse the shutdown to truly be

(29:32):
like here's who's essential and here's who's unessential, and not
going to do maximum pain because the government's shut down.
But also at the same time, that would be something
Trump would wholly own and would only create more outrage
for what Trump is doing. And potentially get people in
the fucking streets.

Speaker 2 (29:48):
The thing people are upset about, and the reason people
it would have been popular like that people are asking
for this is like it feels like this thing is
fucking veering off the rails and nobody is hitting the brakes.

Speaker 1 (30:00):
Do you guys want knife slow or knife fast? And
then it was like, so so so so slow. I
want to feel every fiber of my chest breakdown as
this serrated blade fucking stabs me, rather than let's get
to it and now let's figure out what the fuck
we're doing anyway, So there's a lot of debating now
like or what could have happened, And there's infighting because
clearly the House Democrats like, do not just fucking shut

(30:22):
this shit down, dude, this is already fucked up. But
we will see. But it's just really hard. Again. I
think I think we were right to really hang on
that clip of Chuck Schumer leaning that protest outside of
the Treasury building, like early on in the administration, he's like,
we will win, and you're like, we will win, yeah, sure,

(30:43):
and here we are so much winning. So yes, there
are there are your Senate Democrats, folks, and then Trump
defied another judge, So the courts, Yeah, we'll stand up.
You thought Trump deported hundreds of Venezuelans that he alleged

(31:03):
were trend de Aragua gang members by invoking the fucking
Alien Enemies Act of seventeen ninety eight. Okay, this is
what we did to fucking in turn Japanese people, Germans like,
you know, this is a wartime type thing. But he
just basically used that because it allows him very broad
powers to be able to do executive actions that speed up,

(31:26):
specifically mass deportations. A judge was like, what the fuck
are you talking? No, absolutely not. It's like, bring these
people back. And Trump basically was like, oh, sorry, the
planes can't turn around because when the decision came to plate,
the planes were in the air. Trump basically claimed that
they were in quote international airspace, so it wasn't he

(31:47):
was doing the international waters yeah arguments, And everyone's like,
that's not even a fucking thing, asshole. You you were
the administration. We're telling you to reverse an action through
a legal court order, and you're like, oh, but it's
an international out of my hands now. Yeah, truly, So
this is again another constitutional crisis moment, and you have

(32:07):
Dan Bongino, also the guy who's the deputy director of
the FBI and his fucking podcast. I was like, who's
gonna fucking enforce this? Trump? Trump owns the Marshalls, So
what's the problem.

Speaker 2 (32:18):
Yeah, that is the I mean, we're going to talk
to Alec Carrickott Sanas on tomorrow's episode. But that is
a thing that kept coming up for me as we
were talking about, you know, the his new book is
awesome copaganda. Yeah, but it really feels like, yeah, I
mean he does own own the cops, and they're ready.
They're yeah, they're on standby. They're fucking ready to do the.

Speaker 1 (32:40):
Very least, do their jobs the way they'd like to
do them right, and then exactly let the chips fall
where they may. But yeah, it's fucking anyway. Constitutional Crisis
entry number four hundred and thirteen. Yeah, all right. Wanted
to check in with jd. Vance.

Speaker 2 (32:56):
He went to the Kennedy Center prior to Thursday night
performance by the National Symphony Orchestra. Him and his crew
filed in and people booed them lustily for like thirty seconds.
People were shouting, you ruined this place.

Speaker 1 (33:13):
You know. It's sort of like when you hear a
symphony warm up and you get to hear them dial
in their their stringed instruments. This booing is so great
and watching him and Usha try and cope with it
to like smile it off to each other, like look
at this, Look at us, honey, here's the chorus of booze.
Here he comes. He sat down here, Like wait, what

(33:33):
they start up? You're realizing who just sat down? Uh huh?

Speaker 2 (33:41):
Drinking his red wine. He's waving. He's getting some thumbs downs.
I bet yeah, was that?

Speaker 1 (33:53):
Honey? Haters are gonna hate, aren't they? Honey, haters are gonna.

Speaker 2 (33:58):
Hate a sign of how cool we are. Yeah, some
people were shouting, you ruined this place. He just kind
of smiled and waved to the crowd. But yeah, I
mean this is this is what Like he turned the
Met crowd into a bunch of like Mets fans. They're like,
you're a fucking bomb Vance.

Speaker 1 (34:14):
Yeah. When it's like fuck you Soto, they're like, wait, wait,
Yanke Space, why the oh sorry, yeah, fuck you Vance, go.

Speaker 2 (34:23):
Back to Ohio. You couch fucking douche was the sentiment.
They didn't quite say that. Instead, and you were ruined
this place, How dare.

Speaker 1 (34:32):
You which still fantastic, because let it be known, Let
it be don't let these people have a fucking second
of fucking peace. Let them fucking stay at mar A
Lago and insulate yourself because you are not welcome out here, Brett. Yeah,
refusing to.

Speaker 2 (34:48):
Give them the social credit that they do all this
shit for, you know, like the social credit they never
got in their normal lives, because they're fucking losers like
Elon Musk should not be allowed in Polay society without
people going full you know, drunk Yankees, outfield standing.

Speaker 1 (35:06):
Guy who tried to catch the fucking found where they
all out. They're actually they're they're Elon's bodyguards, now, those guys.

Speaker 2 (35:17):
But these are deeply uncool people who are desperate to
be cool. Yeah, and it feels like it's surprisingly effective
to attack them on the level of a high school
mean girl, you know.

Speaker 1 (35:28):
Oh yeah, yeah, sadly, but we just have to go
back to the thing that made them hateful people. Probably, Yeah,
you don't think this made a mark.

Speaker 2 (35:35):
The interim president of the Kennedy Center, who was you know,
appointed by Trump, Richard Grennell, called for more diversity and inclusion,
but only in regards to uh, you know, making room
for people with opposing political views. Ah, so you know,
we're actually into DEI just as long as it's in

(35:58):
the service of insulating powerful people from fleeting moments of
discomfort caused by their own actions, that is when that's
that's what the guy is really about. In the end,
the diversity of you know, you want to be able
to have wealthy people and also like really wealthy people
in the same room.

Speaker 1 (36:19):
So it was wild to man. Rick Granow has had
such a fucking weird He's like one of these like
gay conservative guys who's had all these different roles. He
used to work in national security like the last administration.
He was hired on the Romney campaign in like it
like back in twenty twelve, and all of these hate
groups are like, you hired a gay guy and then

(36:39):
he got fired. He's like, oh my god, he's had
all these like this fucking wild ass career and then
to land on we need more diversity. He's like, I
love that we're Muslim and Jewish and agnostic and black
and white and Asian, but also and gay, but also
no drag shows at all. Nope, anti American, nothing thing

(37:00):
here anymore.

Speaker 2 (37:01):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, Intolerance towards people who are politically different
is just an unacceptable It's just as unacceptable as intolerance
in other areas. Yeah, what other areas? Do you think
intolerance is unacceptable? Because it's nothing from your actions seems
to have anything. He has previously criticized the Equality Act

(37:25):
and railed against transgender youth rights.

Speaker 1 (37:28):
So yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, cool guy. He's dude,
he's sick, and you know, I can't wait to see
Sebastian Gorka's spoken word poetry jam at the Kennedy Center.
It's going to be fucking awesome. Let's take a quick break.
We'll be right back, and we're back.

Speaker 2 (37:55):
And you might have seen this story that Canada, So
a couple of weeks go, maybe the beating of last week,
Canada was talking about possibly turning.

Speaker 1 (38:04):
The power off.

Speaker 2 (38:05):
They give the US a big power electricity you know,
comes down via tubes.

Speaker 1 (38:13):
I think. I'm not pipe pipes, ripes and pipes, I believe.

Speaker 2 (38:17):
But now it was being rumored that they were going
to go with the nuclear option in the trade war
and take away porn Hub because apparently porn Hub is
a Canadian website. This is a bullshit story. However, we're
going to do the service for you here telling you

(38:37):
this is bullshit.

Speaker 1 (38:38):
It's wild when you see that and you're like, oh damn,
that would I mean, yeah, American people love their pornography,
and the biggest provider of pornography being shut up would
be an interesting arrow in their quiver. But again, I
think this is it's just funny that this becomes a
headline and then when you really go back to it,
it's basically this story should be called how Twitter clips

(39:01):
become headlines for clicks there aren't actual news.

Speaker 2 (39:05):
I mean, and they are going to you know, Trump
Trump's policies are going to eventually take porn away from
people eventually with like all the like page dating and shit,
like I think it's already in Utah right, like the
and it's going to be like spreading around the country
where like you have to give like scan your license

(39:28):
to get to like go on a porn website.

Speaker 1 (39:31):
Right, so you know it will be taken away, but
this is probably not how it's going to be taken away.

Speaker 2 (39:36):
It's owned by a Canadian private equity group that took
over after Pornhub became the target of a number of
lawsuits over sexual exploitation, was the subject of Netflix documentary.

Speaker 1 (39:48):
That was unflattering.

Speaker 2 (39:50):
And so, you know, private equity is the place that
extracts wealth while creating so many shell companies that you
can't be legally liable for anything. They just get tired
of chasing you through like layers and layers of shell companies.

Speaker 1 (40:06):
Right.

Speaker 2 (40:07):
But the whole reason that this became a thing was
there was a New York Post article which noted that
it called porn hub Canada's nuclear weapon in the trade war.
This quote exclusive article, as it was titled, about an
interview with a Toronto based stand up comedian who floated

(40:28):
the idea in an Instagram video. Yeah, so, I mean,
maybe getting it a deeper truth. But if this is
what they need to understand that the Trump administration is
coming for their porn, if they have to blame Canada
to do that, then you know, hats off.

Speaker 1 (40:47):
I wonder if like, also, like that's like the New
York Post trying to like soft push stories that make
you like, let's not fuck with Canada, guys, because it's
sucking up everyone's bag right now. Yeah, Yeah, just fucking
just say that they could do that. It's if they
have a nuclear weapon are born. But yeah, I mean
I'm sure, like, with all the fucking data they have
on Americans, couldn't they fucking turn that into something a

(41:08):
little more useful. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (41:09):
I bet Trump doesn't look at internet porn. I bet
he's like eminem in that bay like a bunch of
He's like this eight millimeter film I've got and it's like,
oh God, to do a screening room.

Speaker 1 (41:23):
What's written on that film? Canister says Pellicolas day snuff.

Speaker 2 (41:28):
Yeah, I was gonna say it looks like the there's
like people wearing stag heads and ship. Yeah, it's like
the block and white from from the first season of
True Detective.

Speaker 1 (41:43):
He's got that ship. Uh fuck all right?

Speaker 2 (41:46):
Uh. In real news, Tesla has had to halt cyber
truck deliveries because and this is apparently like I'm no
car industry expert, but this is apparently bad. Uh. The
cyber trucks are literally falling apart.

Speaker 1 (42:01):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, that's right. That's right.

Speaker 2 (42:04):
We've seen various videos where like, you know, the pedal
falls off, like the gas pedal falls or like get
stuck and shit like by like something else that fell off,
and now like the bumpers are falling off the like
various panels, so like the cyber truck is just glued

(42:24):
together essentially. Yeah, So they're being put on a what's
called a containment hold while they try and figure out
like better glue to use.

Speaker 1 (42:35):
I guess ah, yes, glue don't need rivets or anything
like that or I don't know how other sh it's
made or welding technology. But yeah, I remember so many
early videos who were like, bro, like look I can
just take off this window trim in the interior like this. Yeah,
I'm feeling it off. Yeah. It was a fucking sticker.

Speaker 2 (42:52):
Yeah, Like it's like a cheap you know, like trinket
that you get at I don't know, like I'm thinking
of like you know, little like things that you would
win at like a church carnival or something, and then
you like pull on one thing and it all just
like comes apart, like tes.

Speaker 1 (43:09):
To dust somehow, like what the fuck? It like transitions very.

Speaker 2 (43:14):
Stately assembled and mostly with like not very strong glue.

Speaker 1 (43:18):
Yeah, poor guy.

Speaker 2 (43:20):
There was already a recall last summer due to improperly
adhered trunk bed trim sale applique applicquet, but a recent
viral post highlighted just how terrible and dangerous the problem
is with just like stuff falling off the front of
the car falling off the back.

Speaker 1 (43:38):
It's like wild too, because I I'd regularly look at
the like Tesla cope sort of posts because you know,
I've read it as a place for aggregating that stuff.
And there's like a couple of posts because there's like
certain like these engineer type guys and like car people
on YouTube who are like reviewing the car and like, dude,
this thing fucking sucks. Like they're like, this can't even

(44:00):
hoe anything. Another guy who's like this former NASA engineer,
he's like this camera system is fucking not good at all.
Like when you think about the technology that's out there,
like it might be interesting to people who don't know
what other technologies exist or like the advantages of like
lidar and things, and people are like these people shouldn't
be posting this. This is like they're trying to create
an agenda against the truck. It's like, motherfucker, this guy

(44:20):
worked on technology though he's on the fucking Space shuttle.
I think his opinion holds a little bit of weight
when he's analyzing this thing, and very matter of fact,
they'd be like, ooh, this feels like smoking Mirrory, like
it works but is not the best by any stretch. Yeah,
and yeah, a lot of people are so. I mean,
you know, the brand has become toxic. There's that story

(44:42):
from last week where like a bunch of car the
Tuzla's at their wheels stolen. I got a lot. They
were all on cinder blocks, and shit.

Speaker 2 (44:50):
I don't know out there. What changed you guys? What's
what's wrong? Mm hmm, Yeah, forty wheels were stolen to it,
Brian the editor this paragraph. I guess I didn't because
you do see cyber trucks around LA in particular, and
like we saw some down and not as many in

(45:11):
Austin as you see in La. I feel like is
maybe the hot and probably San Francisco.

Speaker 1 (45:17):
But there's this.

Speaker 2 (45:18):
Paragraph from a Fortune article from a few days ago that,
according to Cox, automotive sales failed to top thirty nine
thousand last year, even though Tesla had installed capacity to
build over one hundred and twenty five thousand. So like
that the thing that had made it through to me
for some reason. Was that like they were like just
not able to make that many. But they could have

(45:40):
made more if people wanted to fucking buy them, but
nobody does. The Fortune article goes on to say the
cyber truck can be considered a flop already given its
lofty expectations. Musk said demand was so far off the hook,
you like can't even see the hook and rezor and
also claimed that rezor vasions were taken for almost two

(46:02):
million trucks. Mmm, he sold thirty nine thousand and like
they can't sell anymore.

Speaker 1 (46:09):
Yeah, wow, I mean it's that's that sucks. And it's
interesting to think of what the states are that had
the highest purchasing intensity for Tesla. That's all Blue states man. Yeah, yeah,
that's what happened. Now, look at what happened. Yeah, but
also just it all went downhill. When you called that
that guy who's trying to rescue them kids in the

(46:30):
Taie cave a pedophile, Yeah, that's what you mean.

Speaker 2 (46:34):
That's when we first started seeing the signs. I think
I think the thing that really made his car uncool.

Speaker 1 (46:42):
Is this sea hiling.

Speaker 2 (46:44):
The sieg hiling really hurts, and you know, I'll give
you that.

Speaker 1 (46:47):
I'll give you that. It might be that. It might
be that why did they start doing swapstickas on all
the cars? Now it could be his his leadership style.
Yeah yeah, leadership price cuts. I think a job cut.
I think that's what people are objecting to. Oh.

Speaker 2 (47:05):
Also, the person most associated with any car brand in
the world is out here doing sigiling.

Speaker 1 (47:11):
Yeah. Somehow Henry Ford, who was a Nazi, managed to
fucking you know, Duck and Duck and Dodge and was
next to Adolf Hitler's work desk. Yeah, wasn't he putting
the protocols in the fucking glove boxing it in the
glove box? Yeah? Somehow that guy spun it better. Yeah.

(47:32):
Motherfucking Elon just seek Island on.

Speaker 2 (47:35):
Stage there is like you still read like he was
the Elon Musk of his time. Like they people were
just like as Henry Ford would say, like in books
from that time. Uh, that people just you know, America
just loves to create a fucking uber genius who is
like all knowing and like did it all himself.

Speaker 1 (47:54):
He's so smart. It's like, no, he learned how to
like exploit the labor better with the assembly line, right,
was efficiency so he can make more money.

Speaker 2 (48:02):
Yeah, and like Elon Musk what he does, he's not
like good at creating products. He's not good at creating technology,
like his space ship keep blowing up spectacularly. This car
is a piece of shit that like nobody seems to
want to buy at the price that he can make
it for. He's just he hypes the shit out of

(48:26):
products and just himself uses his popularity with a very
specific type of person who falls for that shit, and
then like pretends to just be a genius and then
he lies. You know, he realized like the fact that
you can say you have two million reservations and then
you only sell fifty thousand like that, he just knows

(48:49):
what people won't pay attention to, like this sort of lies.

Speaker 1 (48:53):
Yeah. Well, and again, all of these people, they operate
under a different set of laws than regular people do.
We can't we can't do at our job over promise
some shit and then be like, oh, actually it's the
supply chain and no, you can't do that. Same way
the Trump administration or just even companies will be like, yeah, dude,
all these wage garnishing we did, Oh we have to

(49:15):
pay that back. Okay, we don't go to jail, but
we just have to we can just always be like,
oh fine, I fuck it. We didn't get away with it.
Like that is kind of a mentality. And I think
he knows he knows how to manipulate the markets because
someone put together how the consecutive times he's been promising
full self auto drive for like the for the for
the Tesla and years is like twenty six, it'll probably

(49:36):
be next year. Then they show the next year. I
think we're within in the next eighteen months, just every
fucking time. And he was just like, damn, these people
are so fucking dumb that they let this guy keep
kicking the promise down the road of full self drive,
never delivering and still sending the value of the company up.
And I think that also has to do with a
lot of the fact that a lot of huge like

(50:00):
so many people's retire, like a lot of these company
people are buying Tesla stock too and making them part
of like four oh one k's and things like that,
so like a lot of people are kind of stuck
in this sort of circuits of how Tesla is going
to go up and up and up and up. But yeah,
it sounds like hard Times.

Speaker 2 (50:15):
A good thing that Malcolm Gladwell wrote was a New
York article about like studying how people become uber wealthy,
and it just comes down to their ability to be
like predatory, find like deals that benefit them and like
screw over the other person and then just like hammer
that over and over and over until they're like, so

(50:36):
that's that's all it is. It's just predatory opportunism is
what he's good. And like with regards to like making
a ton of money, it's nothing besides that. But because
we worship money so much, we're just like, he's actually
tech Jesus, right, and actually.

Speaker 1 (50:56):
He's tech Jesus. In video game parlance, we call that.
You know, if the games, when you had there was
a move that you could just lock somebody up in
the corner, like for example, Mortal Kombat, you could use
sub zero, you could freeze the motherfucker then trip the
face over. They don't have a they can't get a
move out, and you're like, yeah, I won that shit,
and like, yo, you fucking cheesing bro. Yeah, that's all

(51:17):
you're doing. And that's the same thing that these billionaires are.

Speaker 2 (51:21):
They have one move and then they go back and
rewrite their career to make it seem like they were
actually geniuses.

Speaker 1 (51:28):
No, like sub zero, you're freezing and tripping philosophies.

Speaker 2 (51:32):
Yeah, but yeah, I'm glad we're putting him in a
position to totally fuck over everyone in the US.

Speaker 1 (51:36):
If it enriches him, we'll see. We'll see if if
he chooses to do that or not. Be interesting.

Speaker 2 (51:43):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (51:43):
And finally, some good news for for the Irish, you know,
finally so uh.

Speaker 2 (51:51):
Conan O'Brien has been announced as the host of the
twenty twenty six Oscars already.

Speaker 1 (51:57):
Wow, wow set the ratings up sky high, I bet
from announcing so early. Well, so, okay, that's Snicky Glazer
for the Golden Globes last week too, So I wonder
if that and they're really locking it in early. I
mean they both failed it. No, it's going to be
worth watching next year, just so you know, we're giving
you a year or like nine months to just so

(52:18):
you know you're gonna want to watch it.

Speaker 2 (52:19):
So Nielsen updated the total uh streaming numbers okay, based
on and on the Oscars, and it was a billion Sorry,
no it wasn't. It was a nineteen point sixty nine million,
but it it did top last year's telecasts, which was
surprising because, like as as mentioned, you know, the year

(52:41):
before was Oppenheimer and Barbie, two movies that like everybody saw,
but this one had more people watching it and interacting
with it on social media. So I do think that's
the testament to the fact that people are you know,
the movies are open again, baby, people want to go
back to the cinema. And also he did a good

(53:02):
job cinema cinema, yes, exactly. I do want to thank
the Academy for making a pot of gold reference because
Conan O'Brien is Irish and their tweet announcing him, they said,
forget the pot of gold, this Saint Patrick's Day, We're
giving you something even better. Conan O'Brien is officially returning

(53:24):
to host the ninety eight Oscars, and then him against
a green background holding an oscar.

Speaker 1 (53:30):
I mean, I guess it's much easier to reduce Irish
culture to pot of gold than also with the cool
parts that are like standing up for fucking social justice
and equity, like a strong tradition.

Speaker 2 (53:41):
Of that we can't really identify with that we can
identify with pots of gold. Gold yeah, and greedily guarding
pots of gold. That's kind of the thing that US
Americans appreciate about.

Speaker 1 (53:55):
Yeah, exactly, exactly.

Speaker 2 (53:58):
I just got to say, me and Conan have to
put up with so much databases, not knowing what to
do with the apostrophe in our last name.

Speaker 1 (54:06):
Yep, that fucking sucks. Dog, Dude, I get it, I
get it, bro. What are you saying to me? I
get it, bro, I know what it's like to.

Speaker 2 (54:14):
Be would like to be discriminated against. You know, the
Irish were slaves too. Here's this photo shops picture of
the signs says Irish need not a fly. Anyways, Conan
said that the only reason I'm hosting the Oscars next
year is that I want to hear Adrian Brode. He
finished his speech because his speech was really long, and

(54:37):
that is the joke. Anyways, there you go, Happy Saint
Patrick's Day, America. Irish guy, Yeah, enjoy, enjoy, enjoy.

Speaker 1 (54:49):
You can have Connor McGregor or Look, there are two
genders in America. Are you for Connor McGregor or are
you for Conan O'Brien. Conan O'Brien. Yeah, fuck, dude, that
Gregor thing is frightening.

Speaker 2 (55:00):
I gotta see it. So he just went up and
was just prove what was He was just talking about
how I can play as he's just being taken over.
It's basically he's.

Speaker 1 (55:11):
Trying to do the exact sort of like you know
America First type agenda by blaming, like saying like Ireland
is giving too much money to immigrants and not enough
on the Irish people. But it's funny this the way
this video shot, it almost looks like he just got
up there and started talking because the camera work is
as shaky as his speech voices of the people of Ireland.

(55:34):
And it's high timed that America is made aware of
what is going on in Ireland. What is going on
in Ireland is a travesty. Our government is the government
of zero action with zero accountability. You know, our money
is being spent on overseasons. No, your money is being
spent on cocaine, a condor regret.

Speaker 2 (55:55):
He's also getting Barry Bond's head. I feel like, you know,
his head is changing shape. Yeah, he's I don't know,
I don't know exactly what he's on, but I don't know.

Speaker 1 (56:03):
Yeah, but the head is getting bigger. The head is
It could just be like post he's not in fighting weight,
so it's like as he gained his weight, it he
just looks rounder, so maybe his head looks bigger. I
think he goes pretty hard, it would seem based on.

Speaker 2 (56:15):
It goes hard on the streets, on anything having to
do any any publicity he did for Roadhouse.

Speaker 1 (56:23):
Yeah, yeah, just go what's going on in America? He's
got a rattle in it. It's got a bit of
a rattle in it. Doesn't it feel like I got
down mechanic? All right, those are things that are happening
on this Monday, Saint Patrick's Day morning. We are back
tomorrow with the whole last episode of the show.

Speaker 2 (56:44):
Until then, be kind to each other, be kind to yourselves,
get your vaccines while he still can, get your flu shot,
don't do nothing about white supremacy, and we will talk
to you all tomorrow.

Speaker 1 (56:55):
Bite, Bite,

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