Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:05):
I might get electrocuted and die. Web during this recording,
there's I have I've got in my house right now.
That would be fucking metal. You just seemed to be
like hard, but you wouldn't know because the charge would
hit and I was just stiffen up, and you'd be like, oh,
I think his zoom screen went down.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
And I was like, look at look at this posture.
Speaker 1 (00:23):
It was just hard. Damn. I think this dude is vaping.
He got smoke coming out of his nose.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
What's up?
Speaker 1 (00:31):
Okay, get me off of it.
Speaker 3 (00:40):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season four ten, episode
two of Dirt as I Guys, a.
Speaker 1 (00:46):
Production of iHeartRadio.
Speaker 3 (00:48):
This is a podcast where we take a deep dive
into America's share consciousness and it is opposite of ten
four season. It's four ten good, but we're saying hello
backwards on CBE Radio. I guess we'll be how it's going.
It's Wednesday, October fifteenth, twenty five ten.
Speaker 1 (01:09):
Good buddy Payday for some of you. It's also National
Schwarma Day. Is broad Day like shout out of Brazier,
National Esthetician Day, National Cheese curd Day, hagfish Day, National
fossil Day, Fucking LATINX AIDS Awareness Day, I Love Lucy Day,
Fucking Pregnancy and Infant Loss Remembrance Day, Heavy National Brouch Day,
(01:33):
White Case Safety Day for the vision and provisionally impaired.
What the this is? This is chalk ful of everything today?
Speaker 3 (01:41):
There's another food that has such a specific textural experience
to cheese curds being squeaky. I don't know another food like,
I guess the only example I have is like, if
you've been chewing a piece of gum for two hours
in it, it starts to get a little squeaky. Oh yeah,
you know when you bite into a cheese curd and
(02:01):
it's like stare. I can't think of another food that
is like so texturally specific.
Speaker 2 (02:09):
Well consistently squeaky is the thing, right, because the cheese
curd does kind of squeak through the whole thing like
an all over from time to time can give you
like a ooh, there's a waxy thing happening, But it's
not like the whole time while you're eating it.
Speaker 1 (02:21):
I mean, like a shitty frozen forever preservative leaden mazzarella
stick can have that experience too.
Speaker 3 (02:29):
Did You're like and you're like oil can Alive is
a really good example of another textually specific like.
Speaker 1 (02:39):
It's like kind of it's like, is this made a felt?
Has this little potato gone bad?
Speaker 3 (02:46):
My name is Jack O'Brien aka Potatoes O'Brien. Throw a
little cheese curd on your potatoes O'Brien dish, And I'm
thrilled to be joined as always by my co host, mister.
Speaker 1 (02:56):
Miles Gray, Miles Gray aka the Showgun with no gun.
Just right now, I want to say, up top, forgive
me if you hear little drip drops drip drops, those
aren't my tears over the passing of D'Angelo. That's just
a roof leak that I'm dealing with right now. Uh So,
just again, if people were like, here's something, it's a
(03:18):
little bit of drip drop. But other people you did
for their for them, tell them, tell them the Doc Brown,
Rube Goldberg shit that you put together for I don't
want toot my own horn, but I am named after
Miles Davis, so actually hand me that horn. Uh. I
had to like you. Normally you just put a bucket
under a fucking you know, a leak and then it
(03:38):
just drips. Sometimes you want to deafen or dampen the noise.
So you put a towel or something in there, so
it hits the towel and it's not just like water
on water. It was in the towel gets wet and
cowl gets wet, and then you got to switch this
thing out like every fucking five minutes. Can't do that,
I'm recording professional podcasts. What I did is I taped
a garbage bag up top around where the leak is ok,
and I've sort of made that into like a conical shape,
(04:00):
so everything was funneling to a corner of the garbage bag.
And then I took some gaff tape and I twisted it.
I wound it around like into a coil, and I
taped it to the corner of the bag cut a
small hole. So now the water just comes and drains
down the coil that I've created with tape silently into
a pot, so there's no more dripping. But you do
(04:20):
hear the impact of the drips inside of the bag.
It's not a perfect solution, but it is.
Speaker 3 (04:24):
One motherfucking Nikola Tesla over here.
Speaker 1 (04:28):
If that is his name, Yeah, yeah, yeah, I think
I got it. This is the real Tesla coil. He
was talking about that's crazy. Thank you.
Speaker 3 (04:35):
I'm impressed. Hey, speaking of being impressed, hell you, Miles.
We're thrilled to be joined in our third seat by
a hilarious comedian and one of our favorite guests on
the daily like guys. Dave Grohl once touched her arm
and said, hey.
Speaker 1 (04:48):
You're pretty funny.
Speaker 3 (04:50):
You can see her on stages everywhere, including upcoming shows
in Birmingham and Nashville.
Speaker 2 (04:54):
It's Lydia poploll.
Speaker 1 (04:59):
Hey. Hey, to be.
Speaker 2 (05:00):
Clear, when Dave Girld spoke to me, I heard it
as hey, you're pretty yeah, yeah, yeah, funny, Yeah you know,
but he did just say pretty funny.
Speaker 1 (05:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (05:12):
I was just cracking.
Speaker 1 (05:13):
One question up top for you, since you are the
Dolly Whisper, how did you take all that hubbub last
week of like, hey man, we need prayers on deck now.
Speaker 2 (05:22):
Honestly, I knew from Jump. I knew from Jump nothing
was wrong because that shit came from Freda. Okay, God
bless her. She's a beautiful gal. But like she is
that dramatic sibling. She is that dramatic sibling that is
constantly like overstepping. This is not the first time she's
made public statements about Dolly that have yielded some kind
(05:45):
of something. This one was poorly timed. So I knew
from Jump. As soon as I saw it was Freda
on Facebook, I was.
Speaker 1 (05:50):
Like, oh on Facebook, Okay, yeah, you.
Speaker 2 (05:54):
Know, Freda believe is older than Dolly, So like, let's
give her a break, right, She's an older woman and
she doesn't really understand how Facebook works. She probably doesn't
realize the depth of her reach, or she does. Either way,
I don't care. She's an elder. I'm gonna let her
be her. But I knew from Jump that was not it.
And also, you know, I have my sources. I have
my sources literal throughout the Dolly community, and.
Speaker 3 (06:16):
Nobody you knew she had kidney stones before she did, right.
Speaker 2 (06:20):
I did. Actually, the doctors at Vanderbilt send me a
message and they say, hey, listen, Dolly's going to be
in here. We just want you to know so that
you can give her prayers. No, I wasn't concerned. I
truly wasn't concerned because she had made her announcements. You know,
I knew it was Freda. Freda's predisposed to drama, so
I was like well, you know, Frida's just going through it.
And then it was just hilarious because literally everyone I
(06:42):
knew was reaching out to me like are you okay?
Are you all right? And I was like, she's fine, girl.
I was like, don't worry about it. And then the
next day, of course, she got on Dolly Parton that
is got on and you know, did her own statement online,
which I thought was just fucking great, where she's just
like literally at work doing TikTok's like, hey guys, I'm fine.
Speaker 1 (07:00):
Everything here.
Speaker 3 (07:03):
Was uncomfortable for a little that's gonna be wild.
Speaker 1 (07:07):
You're the younger sister of Dolly Parton, and the most
you can do is to be like, help my sister,
who said.
Speaker 2 (07:15):
Well, I think I think Freda is older. I think.
Speaker 1 (07:18):
She's sixteen, Okay, she's younger.
Speaker 2 (07:20):
Yeah, I mean, and forget me.
Speaker 1 (07:22):
Don't know the story.
Speaker 3 (07:24):
Yeah, So Dolly Parton had to cancel the show, and
then her show had to cancel a series of ses,
and her sister came through and said I've been up
all night praying yeah, please pramatic and then her explanation
when her when Dolly came through and was like, we're
good over here, thanks. Everyone was, Oh, I'm up all
(07:47):
night praying every night.
Speaker 2 (07:50):
Sorry.
Speaker 3 (07:51):
I was just letting you in on what's going on
with me, which is I love prayer and so should you.
Speaker 2 (07:56):
Yes, so her Uh, Frida's daughter is also someone that
I'm friendly with. And Frida's daughter came up. She had
a very funny post that was like, Uh, raise your
hand if if your mom got on Facebook and scared
the world. I was just laughing because it's like, it's
(08:16):
just kind of great because you're like everyone has those
moments with your own mom when you're like, geez, mom, No,
Like everyone's mom has posted something cringy, but like, imagine
the power of your mom posting something so cringe about
like the world's angel.
Speaker 1 (08:30):
Yeah, yeah, right.
Speaker 3 (08:32):
I just shout out to the young en for this headline.
Dolly Parton shares video confirming sister a shit stirring bitch.
Speaker 4 (08:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (08:44):
D We're thrilled to have you here.
Speaker 3 (08:46):
We're going to get to know you a little bit
better in a moment. First, we're going to tell the
listeners a couple of things we're talking about today bad news,
and that's a rare bit of bad news. In this
second trouble administration. Dominion Voting Systems, the company that was
a cue of election for by the Trump administration. Fox
News paid over seven hundred million two and a defamation
who just sold to a Republican election official and they
(09:12):
changed the name to Liberty Vote. So we'll talk about
that and why that could be bad for this country. Yeah,
I mean, I don't, I don't see it. We're gonna
talk about Instagram upping there, crackdown on content for teens
so that it's more in line with they keep using
the comparison more in line with the PG thirteen movie ratings.
(09:34):
So we'll talk about that. We'll talk about here like
fuck once, yeah exactly.
Speaker 2 (09:39):
I was like, so still tits right?
Speaker 1 (09:41):
Cool?
Speaker 5 (09:41):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (09:42):
Wait, because what eighties PG is like today's are? Yeah,
Jah Joel's with blood, you know what I mean?
Speaker 6 (09:55):
You know?
Speaker 1 (09:56):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (09:56):
I also found out an interesting piece of information. I
had always thought that Temple of Doom was the first
PG thirteen movie, and we'll talk about why that's not accurate.
We'll talk about the turning point USA a non super
Bowl super Bowl halftime show that they announced good and
the urban legend that Disney will not let you die
(10:18):
on their premise premises that they will haul your ass
to the parking lot so you die there, so that
statistically nobody ever dies in Disneyland. It is both an
urban legend and also the origin of the urban legend
is fucked up, kind of just exactly what is suggested
by the urban legend.
Speaker 1 (10:36):
Right, somebody someone died right on haunted mansion or some shit. Yeah,
someone recently died on Haunted mansion. And so people are like, Aha,
this is an urban legend and a lot ironic. The haunted,
you say, And then you dig a little bit and
you're like, there might be a good reason people believe
that lie. All of that plenty more. But first Lydia,
we do like to ask our guest, what is something
(10:56):
from your search history that's revealing about who you are?
Speaker 2 (11:00):
Oh baby, two things. Diet Coke lime. Since they teased
diet Coke lime about three weeks ago, I have been
just stalking Kroger, stalking Walmart, stalking on my local publics,
waiting for this diamond beverage to arrive. And I finally
saw on the Diet Coke website that the lime was here,
(11:22):
and I was so because then I was able to
get onto Amazon call daddy bezos and get myself a
crisp one. Look, man, there's few things that I live
for more than diet coke, lime or diet coke. I have,
like really don't drink soa at all, but there's just
such a sweet nectar of the diet coke that brings
me such supreme happiness. And the lime version is just
(11:44):
like makes you feel tropical, makes you feel like you're
out there, makes you feel like you got a little
excitement in the middle of your day, you know what
I mean, just a little extra something. And it also
tells you that I am rapidly approaching fifty. And the
diet coke with lime just brings me much happiness as
a perry metopausal woman. There's just like a crisp beverage.
(12:06):
I never done it would be this important to me
in my entire life. And now it's like I hit
those like two o'clock afternoons where I just want to
fucking sleep forever. Nope, diet coke with lime gets me through,
gets me through, gets me through, makes me feel good.
Speaker 3 (12:19):
I have to talk about McDonald's as the thing McDonald's
prize is being the thing that gets the worst when
it goes from hot to cold. I feel like diet
cokes are also the most temperature dependent food if it
gets above a certain temperature, if it's not on the
edge of freezing. From me, you got to marinate that.
Speaker 2 (12:38):
I'm with you.
Speaker 3 (12:39):
You dom diet coke. You're like, oh, you're questioning all
your life decisions. You're questioning every diet coke you ever
consumed up to that point. Oh yeah, I hate to
did you When you said that? I was reminded of
a study that I read last week. They're they're saying, hey,
leave those sweeteners alone. According in Europe they're like, don't
do of.
Speaker 2 (13:00):
Course, but you know what, I don't give a fuck.
Speaker 3 (13:03):
I do a Coca cola, have four or five cigarettes.
Speaker 1 (13:06):
No, they're just like I mean, they're Europe Yeah, exactly,
They're just like jout. Apparently it can lead to some
kind of liver.
Speaker 2 (13:13):
Yeahs as they like shove whole croissants into their mouths.
Whre You're like, all right, seven tuns of butter. Calm down, bro,
But yeah, Now, honestly, like I I don't really eat
sugar for the most part. Like I'm a diabetic person,
so like I'm constantly eating like the boringest foods and
all of the vegetables. So like for me, yeah, man,
(13:33):
it's just but it's he's He's totally right though, like Jack,
like if it is not ice fucking cold, it doesn't count.
And some people may ask, well, lydia, why can't you
just put a fresh line into it? Then you can
have diet coke lime when you have your want. To
those people, I say, get the fuck out of here.
I'm trying for a whole chemical peel of my.
Speaker 1 (13:48):
Insights, drip the paint. Okay, that is my detox.
Speaker 2 (13:55):
Some people are like, drink water. How would you know?
I want to have two dit cokes a day and
I want to strip my insides and wake up in
the morning and feel clean again. There you go, you
know that's all I want. I want the chemical, give
me the cancer. Let's go. I'm ready.
Speaker 3 (14:07):
What is something you think is underrated?
Speaker 2 (14:09):
Underrated this? I've thought about a lot. Ligaments, you know, ligaments.
We're all just bags of bones, right with like a
weird fleshy covering that is just hanging on for dear
life by what ligaments? Little funky ass pieces that aren't
quite muscle, that art quite bone. That attach everything together
(14:31):
and make it so that we can move around and
function in this universe. And when one of those ligaments goes,
you're fucked.
Speaker 5 (14:37):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (14:38):
I learned this because I watched my dog, My dog,
my big beautiful king Corso tore her ACL, which is
called a CCL and a dog and I she just
got surgery last week, but I watched her for a
month limp around while we waited to get her surgery
to eight. And then she got her surgery, and I
was just like, dude, one little tiny ligament took this beautiful, majestical,
majestic beast out like where now she is just like
(15:02):
got a metal plate in her leg. They don't grow back.
Once a ligament is gone, that shit has gone. It's
the same for us. Like it's when you bust your ACL,
they cut that shit out and they give you like
a robot knee, you know what I mean. Yeah, it's crazy,
but it just it's wild to think about how much
relies on this little tiny piece of sinew. And I
just think about all of my body and with every
inch and pain in my body, I'm just like my ligaments.
Speaker 1 (15:24):
Think of my ligaments. I stretched so much now because
I realized I was talking to yesterday's episode about like
knee pain I'm having, and I realize a lot of
it is from having too tight or too weak of
quad or ham strings, and it's not necessary your knee.
It's like everything else you're looking at it. Yeah, And
I'm like, if you want to take care of your liquorments,
(15:45):
gotta stretch, you know what I mean.
Speaker 3 (15:47):
I mean chicken wing and I do eat, I clean
the bone and there's there's some ligament in there. I
am judging the chicken on whether how loose their ligaments were,
whether they were stretching or not. I'm like, no, this happened, Yeah, okay, yeah, career,
I tell.
Speaker 2 (16:01):
You know if they were, if they were organic or not. Right,
Like all those ships from those ships from Wingstop come
off clean because those chickens ain't walked a day in
their life. But you know what I mean. But you
go to Whole Food, you get you some organic chicken.
You're like, these are a little.
Speaker 3 (16:17):
This is this chicken doing yoga? What the fuck it?
Speaker 2 (16:20):
Strong?
Speaker 1 (16:21):
What is something you think is overrated?
Speaker 2 (16:24):
Okay? I'm over everyone's hauls, Like Trader Joe's Hall Marshall's
Hall groceries.
Speaker 1 (16:32):
Yes, like that's where we're at used to check out
my I mean I get it. In the era of
how much groceries cost, you might as well stunt. You're like, yeah,
I bought that eight dollars bag of flour, right, Like
I just.
Speaker 2 (16:46):
I just to me, it just screams mental illness right where.
I'm just like, I don't either. You went shopping and
spent too much money. You shouldn't spend on ship that
nobody cares about, Like, don't unbox me or irmez perse
like I'm sorry, in this economy, nobody needs to see
that ship, bitch. And then also like you said, oh
your groceries, you mean you went grocery shopping. You want
to show me that you got the fucking ice to JoJo's.
I don't care, like what are we doing? What are
(17:08):
we doing?
Speaker 1 (17:08):
It?
Speaker 2 (17:08):
Just I just remember like when my mom used to
go out and she would spend a morning doing errands,
right and I would fucking beg and plead to get
out of them because I didn't want to do it.
And then she'd come home and she'd be like, you
want to see everything I got? And I'm like no, no,
I don't. I didn't want to go. Why do I?
And now I'm on the internet and every third thing
I scroll past, it's like here's my hall. And it's
like it's just that you consumerism and peace, just do
(17:32):
it in peace. I don't want to see it. I
don't need to watch your shop.
Speaker 1 (17:35):
That's what's frightening is that like hyper consumption as content
is just like a very normal thing where it's like
why I bought six thousand dollars of stuff and here
I am, or just seeing like the kinds of shit
now people like collect Like there's like this completionist form
of hyper consumption where it's like, yes, oh I gotta
have every version of this bath bomb or I have
(17:57):
every single variety of this, like like skincare prive. So
there are a couple of people I watch on YouTube
who are just kind of like they're like, yo, check
out this shit I'm seeing on TikTok. And people have
like whole rooms like just dedicated to like cosmetics and
things that are unopened that are purely like and this
is this and here are my sacred consumable consumables. Welcome
(18:18):
to my chamber.
Speaker 2 (18:20):
Like I remember we just had to deal with couponners,
you know what I mean. Rab You know, there's just
like this notion of coop on it, and you had
like this store of stuff because you had coupon so hard.
And it's like now people are like, no, I don't
need a coop on. I just not I want the
nine different boxes of tide. Yeah, because they're you know,
what are we doing. We used to get this from
being able to afford to go to the grocery store, right,
(18:43):
and now we have to go like synthetic diet coke
lime version of consumer like the White Noise scene where
he's like spiritually fucked up and he like makes his
family go to the grocery.
Speaker 3 (18:55):
Store to be like, look at the colors. Jesus, this
feels fucking great. Like now you just get that online.
Speaker 1 (19:03):
Well I think that's like it's all because they're all
just downstream of watching billionaires by shit, and everybody's just
trying to do their version of it. So billionaires like, yo,
check out, there's lerigit, there's among the Jeep six or whatever,
and people like, okay, what's my version? Okay, I bought
five one hundred dollars worth of Trader Joe's canvas shopping
bags that I've like framed on my wall. And then
now it's get smoke for those Now, oh wow, you're
(19:26):
telling people you got all that shit. Okay, would maybe,
but like in the same way too, Like the grocery
thing I get in a way because it's so expensive
that why wouldn't you be like, yeah, I got it
like that. I went to the fucking grocery store. I
bought this much, and when it gets to that level,
I'm like, God, this is so fucking free.
Speaker 3 (19:45):
You in the money phone with a box of tide,
yeah yeah, with toilet paper, yeah no.
Speaker 2 (19:50):
I had like basically the like checkout gall at publics
and the like you know, check yourself out section, and
I bought six things. I bought or blackberries. I bought
organic Kiwi's. I bought an organic mango. I bought some brassola,
which is dried Italian beef, and I bought a thing
(20:11):
of Feti cheese. And then I bought like a jar
of honey, right and I'm ringing them through and the
girls watching me ring you know, you know it was
close to seventy.
Speaker 1 (20:23):
Yeah, that was going to be my big wow because because.
Speaker 2 (20:28):
The organic berries were like six dollars like a carton,
and I thought that they were three for five. So
I had bought like the three of them, you know,
they weren't three for five, and so I had to
like call her over and be like and she's like no, no, no, no, no, no,
those are the non ones. I was like, yeah, the
non organic ones that were molding in the containers. Yeah, okay,
that makes sense. But this teenager had to come over
(20:50):
and take them off. And when she saw how much
it was, she's like, let me check it. And I
was like, no, babe, that's just what shit costs. Like,
it's not it's not wrong. And then she was just
like she was like concern for my well being. She
was like are you gonna be okay? Like can you
afford this? Like are you all right?
Speaker 7 (21:06):
Like?
Speaker 2 (21:06):
And I was like, I was like, girl, I do
have it like that. I am okay buying these things,
but I'm.
Speaker 4 (21:11):
About to actually follow me. Yeah. But like the look
on her face when she saw how much seven things
cost and she was just like.
Speaker 1 (21:22):
Right, this is like the one. I'm just so surprised
Democrats aren't even talking about this, Like the one thing
you'd probably get some Republicans nodding along with to be like, yeah,
I bought a loaf of bread that was seven dollars,
like a loaf of white bread.
Speaker 3 (21:40):
We remember how talked about like greedflation once exactly once
uber people got.
Speaker 1 (21:47):
Her to fucking come on like whoa, whoa, whoa woa
weather in lawge fuck up about that, broy to make
me less money.
Speaker 3 (21:54):
I'm fucking stalin over.
Speaker 5 (21:57):
No.
Speaker 2 (21:57):
But the it was the honey. The honey was like
seven teen dollars.
Speaker 1 (22:00):
I didn't honey, damn Jesus.
Speaker 2 (22:03):
And I was just like shit because I was like
what is I was still adding it up we as
we're going through to decipher what was so expensive? And
it was the honey, and she's like, do you still
want it?
Speaker 1 (22:10):
I was like, yes, I still want choice until I
have my apery set up.
Speaker 2 (22:15):
Correct and someone in my house is allergic to be
so that'll be never situation, you know, Oh yeah, for real,
for real, I would be devastated. I would be devastated. Thomas, Yeah, crazy,
but yeah, man, keep your groceries to yourself, Doug. It's expensive.
I don't want to see it. Don't show me what
you got make me jealous of food hard enough from
(22:35):
a fat lady.
Speaker 1 (22:37):
Me like, yeah, I got it like that, but you
don't have to know about it, you know what I mean?
Speaker 3 (22:41):
Organic cut just drizzling organic honey over your head.
Speaker 2 (22:44):
Right all over myself.
Speaker 1 (22:45):
That's right.
Speaker 3 (22:47):
All right, let's take a quick break and we'll be
back to talking about the news. And we're back and
uh yeah, bad news in America. Trying to think back
(23:09):
to the last time we oh yeah, it was like
at the very end of the last recording.
Speaker 1 (23:13):
Yeah, literally DiAngelo as we were talking about Diane Keaton
got the second, the second one, the second plane hit
the towers.
Speaker 2 (23:24):
Who's gonna be the third?
Speaker 1 (23:25):
Oh god?
Speaker 3 (23:26):
All right, so we all remember domain voting system we
wedn't have except for the you know, campaign that was
launched to be like they gave Biden all the votes.
They were accused of election fraud, very publicly, to the
tune of seven hundred million dollars paid by Fox News
to them in a defamation lawsuit that they settled last week.
(23:48):
That company was purchased by a quote former Republican elections
official and rebranded as Liberty Vote, which was Liberty on
its surface seems bad but should we should we dig
a little bit deeper the pressure, They said, As of today,
(24:10):
dominion is gone, Liberty Vote assumes full ownership and operational control,
and Domingon's website now redirect to Liberty Vote. The new
company made more than a few references to right wing
conspiracy theories in the announcement, suggesting that it will be
incorporating paper ballots enabling compliance with President Trump's executive order.
(24:33):
That executive order was shot down by judges being and
I don't know what this word means, unlawful.
Speaker 1 (24:42):
Those are one of the banned words. Jack.
Speaker 3 (24:46):
They are headed by Scott Lean Decker A one time
you can guess what city is from based on the name.
For some reason that that name just shouts Saint Louis, Lean,
Get Lee and Decker over here. One time Saint Louis
Republican election director who founded the company No ink all
(25:08):
capital except by Eye and Inc. Which makes electronic pullbook pollpads,
which is the iPad custom software that poll workers use
to verify your eligibility and check voters in. You may
remember those fucking up a ton in the twenty twenty election.
They made headlines in twenty nineteen when it was revealed
(25:29):
that the device's default password is care to guess what
the default password was?
Speaker 5 (25:34):
Anyone one, two, three, four, five, six seven. No, you
went too far, You went too complicated. That's too high, which.
Speaker 3 (25:46):
Makes them apparently easy prey for hackers looking to disrupt
voting in key precincts or so chaos and mass. One
version of this that, like, as I'm reading this, like
one version of this is that they use this to
just straight up joint elections. You also have the option
where they're like health insurance providers who make it impossible
(26:09):
to submit and like track health insurance claims and like
you'll technically be able to vote, but it will be
just a huge pain in the ass, like and you
you'll have to like stand around for hours and like
miss work, right, which, yeah, which I could totally see
that being how they do it is just through inefficiency
(26:30):
and fucking up they you know, or just straight up yeah,
or just straight up fucking goose the numbers, you know
what I mean. I think right now twenty seven states
use dominion voting machines. Yes, that's a significant amount.
Speaker 1 (26:46):
And that's not somebody who's just entrenched in right wing
election conspiracies be the like the CEO of that company
is I don't know what's the word, like fucking freaky.
I guess, oh yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 (27:01):
He is an expert. What are you worried about? He's
an expert in elections fraud. He wants to make sure
that people are elected fraudulently, you know, right.
Speaker 1 (27:11):
Kind of is shit?
Speaker 3 (27:12):
That's all shit thing.
Speaker 1 (27:14):
Yeah. The the other uh, just just the part about
it too, is like because at the time Dominion had
all these like lawsuits also is going after people like
that were in Trump's orbit from just saying bullshit like
fake conspiracy theories, you know, maligning the company. They had
like other cases open. But part of the deal for
(27:34):
these people to turn it into liberty was they asked
Dominion to just settle many of these other like these
other defamation lawsuits and so they didn't have to end
up like the one that Fox settled for for like
seven hundred and eighty seven million. They're like because Giuliani
was being sued, Sidney Powell was also being sued. One
American news network was being sued.
Speaker 3 (27:53):
Yeah, everybody was being sued, and like the amount of
money that like seven hundred million dollars.
Speaker 1 (27:59):
I feel like it.
Speaker 3 (28:00):
It's a private company, so people don't know exactly what
they sold for. But the company made fifty five million
in annual revenue and was valued at around eighty million dollars,
So like that they're getting vast sums of money compared
to like what they were worth, So it seems weird.
Speaker 1 (28:18):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, I mean again, it just feels like, Okay,
with this move, we can shore up our defenses against
you know, democracy and being able to protect people from
exercising their voting rights and also maybe turn the heat
off of Rudy Giuliani and Sydney Power. They were both
being sued for one point three billion dollars each, I
(28:39):
mean not that Rudy even like they don't have that,
and one American News one point six billion, Like those
are existential sums for these people. And to be like, no,
I got this, I got this. I'm gonna say, party
y'all getting this money as you settle for something. We
still don't know what that will be.
Speaker 3 (28:54):
But yeah, yeah, once again assigned that this system where
we leave it up to the capitalists to just like
regulate everything and do everything doesn't really work because they
can be bond and you're always just like an acquisition
away from crazy shit like this happening or Barie Weiss
taking over as the head of CBS, or you know,
(29:15):
it's just any system that leaves it to the oligarchs
to be like, oh, they know how to run this. No,
they know how to accumulate capital and cover their ass.
That's what they know how to do. I did just
want to read that, and I don't know why this
is completely out of context, but this is from an
article about the monarchist Curtis Jarvin, who has helped shape
(29:38):
a bunch of this like oligarchic takeover of the US
that we've been seeing. So this is from that. Both
Teel Peter and Belagie Srinavasan, then a general partner at
Indrees and Horwitz, had become friends with Yarvin after reading
his blog, through emails shared with me revealed, though emails
shared with me revealed that neither was thrilled to be
(30:00):
publicly associated with him at the time. How dangerous is
it that we are being linked, Teal wrote to Jarvin
in twenty fourteen, and then here was Jarvin's response, Again,
this is somebody who is overseeing the oligarchic takeover of
the United States currently kind of completely in line with
what we're seeing with this voting machine takeover, Darvin said.
(30:21):
One reassuring thought, one of our hidden advantages is that
these people social justice warriors and like people on the
left wouldn't believe in a conspiracy if it hit them
over the head. This is perhaps the best measure of
the decline of the left. Linkages make them sound really
crazy and they kind of know it. So in that case,
they were talking about, you know, doing a thing that
(30:44):
they're already doing with each other, which is like you know,
Teal talking to somebody who's a monarchist who's just like, yeah,
we want to be we want oligarchs to be the
new monarchy, and being like, the best defense is that
the shit we're getting up to is so shady and
nefarious that it sounds paranoid.
Speaker 1 (31:01):
Yeah, and nobody will believe it. M yeah, so yeah, yeah, yeah, that's.
Speaker 3 (31:07):
Good defense, good defense something. But it does seem almost
true like that in the lack of a defense to
the oligarchic and like fascist takeover that we've seen, by
the way, I've just said oligarchic three times in a row.
And I don't know if it's a word, I'm just
going to say that up top, but that that takeover
(31:27):
that we've seen in the last year and a half,
the lack of a defense, it just feels like people
are like, yeah, well that Like I just read an
article where someone was like talking about calling people who
are interested in the Epstein documents as like people who
live on planet Epstein who believe that there's like conspiracies
(31:48):
undergirding everything, and like conflicting that with like real news journalists,
and it's like, I don't know, man, I think maybe
real news journalists also have to be open to the
fact that these people are trying to take over the
world openly and in front of all of us in
a way that sounds like a conspiracy theory to the
point that nobody wants to be caught pointing it out.
Speaker 1 (32:11):
Yeah, yeah, I mean this is a Peter Thiel's a
guy who thinks he can live forever potentially through like
blood transfusions. He is all in on the Antichrist thing
because I think he sees that as a way to
get a lot of like sort of allies in like
the more evangelical space. There's just so much about him
that is known that you're like, what the fuck that
(32:33):
you wouldn't put anything past, just especially people who they
know that the clock is ticking in terms of like
the cycles of history where all this wealth is accumulated,
it eventually gives way to something where there's a rebalancing
on some level, and like they they know, we're like
the machine is smoking right now because it's it's hoovering
(32:54):
up all this money. People are having less and less
access to stability, to wealth, et cetera. That they're they're
constantly now actively thinking, they're trying to learn from history
to be like, well, how do we keep how do
we stave off a rebalancing of some kind? Is it
through bunkers? Is it through that like we just hide
from everyone and they're gonna have to fight each other.
Is it that there's some war that we're going to
(33:14):
protect ourselves from. Is it that we use AI to
just fully be able to analyze everyone's behavior and just
identify rabble rousers to make things a little more calm.
There's so many things. Is it through the capture of media,
through government, through all these other things to kind of
create a unified message that dulls people's senses to what
is actually happening around them. They are thinking very proactively
(33:37):
about this. So yeah, so when Curtis Yarvin, someone who's
you know, is like the face or at least the
mind behind this idea that like oligarchs will have their
own sort of fiefdoms that we live in. It's like,
do you live in the Bezos zone or a Musk
zone where each oligarch has their version of how like
what protections are afforded, what your housing looks like. Because
they're going to be controlling everything. Yeah, the idea that
(33:59):
they would then be like, yeah, buy up the fucking
voting machine systems, and then you just fucking puts your
thumb on the scale a little bit. What the fuck
are you talking about? Fucking stop pissing your pants.
Speaker 3 (34:08):
You're another thing you, Evin says, I was whearing that
article is he's like in despair at the beginning of
the Trump administration because he's like halfway revolutions just like
get top, like they they don't do anything, like you
need to go full out. And it feels like since then,
that's what we've been seeing. By the way, I think
I said the last year and a half of the
second Trump administration. It's been less than a year. It
(34:30):
just feels like fucking an eternity.
Speaker 5 (34:32):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (34:33):
Well, and I hope shit like this starts opening people's
eyes a little bit because I think everyone's so like
myopically focused on Trump, and I think in the last
six months we've seen that like, yeah, Trump's bad, but like,
how did he get there? This is much bigger than him.
Speaker 1 (34:44):
Yeah, yeah, Trump was a dud boy before this.
Speaker 2 (34:47):
They Trump's the dude on the box, right, Like there's
a bigger movement. So like people are like I mean,
and especially like liberal people who like live on the coast,
are like, we just got to make it through this
Trump administration that everything's going to be great again. And
it's like is it? Is it?
Speaker 3 (35:00):
Think so?
Speaker 2 (35:01):
Or are we giving them four years to get their
shit together to buy up all these fucking voting machines
and turn things inside out? And like you said, like
we're going to be living in the Musk zone, the
Bezos zone, the whatever zone, Like we gotta people need
to start realizing this is a long term problem.
Speaker 3 (35:16):
And the videos about the cool stuff that we got
at the Bezos Company store exactly.
Speaker 8 (35:22):
This is seventy dollars honey. Oh, it tastes like five
dollars honey, but it's dollar honey. I got it for
fifty because it's Prime Day and the Bezos zone in
your face, Musk losers, good luck in your tunnel where
there's a little bit of my blood plasma.
Speaker 1 (35:37):
And I was able to get a discount on my television.
Speaker 2 (35:40):
Yeah. As it turns out, my DNA allows me to
have as much diet coke climb as i'd like, fucking sick.
Speaker 3 (35:49):
Yeah, well, at least those of us in the Bezos
and Musk zones will be better than the people in
the zucker nerd zones, you know, those losers.
Speaker 1 (35:58):
Uh so mandated jiu jitsu lessons for everybody.
Speaker 7 (36:04):
Yeah, this is one of the This is one of
those stories that just teases at like, oh man, it
must the ship that they're seeing on Instagram.
Speaker 3 (36:14):
The numbers they're getting back for what that ship is doing.
Two people must be so so bad, because they are
reportedly cracking down on what millions of young people can
see on the platform by modifying teen accounts so that
they're more in line with what they keep referring to
as PG thirteen movie ratings, so the platform could hide
(36:37):
posts that might feature strong language or encourage harmful behaviors
like risky stunts or marijuana paraphernalia. Oh god, careful, care
I think the kids. The kids aren't going to be
able to find out about that ship. I think, Yeah,
I mean I found out about Wheat through Instagram. Yeah
that's right.
Speaker 1 (36:57):
Yeah, changed my life.
Speaker 3 (37:01):
But yeah, I mean I don't know, like they they
have fought restricting content for so long, like as fucking
you know, genocides are popping off in other countries and
they're just like, yeah, well not us. So who knows.
I mean, we do know that none of these people
let their kids near the products that they sell to
(37:23):
everyone else's kids. A writer Jam pointed out, though the
PG thirteen rating is kind of a weird touch point,
considering that it was basically just created because George Lucas
dumped out his bad Divorce vibes into Indiana Jones and
the Temple of Doom in eighty four. So I always
just assume they created PG thirteen four Indiana Jones and
the Temple of Doom.
Speaker 2 (37:43):
But it was.
Speaker 3 (37:43):
Actually that that ship was rated PG. That movie where
like a victims they pulled someone, Yeah, they pulled someone's
hard out.
Speaker 1 (37:53):
It was so.
Speaker 3 (37:56):
Kids and saw that shit and complained enough that the
MP it was like, okay, maybe we were a little
too leaning on that, And then due to the outcryst
Fielberg decided there needed to be an interval between PG
and our Wow.
Speaker 2 (38:10):
Damn, but isn't that also I mean I don't remember
exactly what movie, but I mean this is a tool
that studios have also used to like they're trying to
target that thirteen to sixteen audience that can't get into
our So like sometimes when things are PG thirteen, they're like,
put some tits in it, put a couple of shits
in there, so we can get that PG thirteen. Yeah,
because teenagers don't want to see a PG movie, right,
(38:30):
that's for babies. So it's like we've always walked this
fine line, at least in cinema, of like what's appropriate
for children? Right, Like what is okay? And I mean
even some of these movies like that are animated have
like very like a lot of innuendo like jokes that
are supposedly like oh, the kids won't get it, but
you'll get it. You're like that was a straight up
sexual innuendo, Like what am I what?
Speaker 1 (38:50):
What character did the finger into the whole gesture like that?
Speaker 2 (38:54):
Yeah, yeah, sex, Yeah, you know that's what she said,
Like you know, like just weird shit like okay, Array.
Speaker 3 (39:03):
Wally and Eva just sixty nine, I'm pretty sure nasty.
Speaker 1 (39:10):
But yeah.
Speaker 3 (39:10):
People have pointed out, like there's a good documentary called
this Film is Not Yet Rated about the way the
NPA restricts sexual content while allowing violence to be everywhere.
Once I found that PG thirteen movies now contain more
violence than are rated movies back in the nineteen eighties.
Speaker 2 (39:28):
So just so is Instagram trying to keep violence off
of Instagram or tits or just weed, because like I
see all of those things every single day, like you
know what I mean, like to a point where it's
even I don't want to see that kind of stuff, Like,
but then it's also really hid and miss Like I
posted a picture of like literally edibles that were in
(39:50):
A ten and was like I really enjoy these, and
I like still shadow band from it, Like I still
can't monetize my account because I said, hey, I like
these got reported for like try to sell things, And
I was like, you can't even see what that is,
but it's a tin. Yeah, it's a tin full of
things are.
Speaker 3 (40:08):
Very specific about like what they're restricting, and like marijuana paraphernalia,
they're they're real.
Speaker 1 (40:13):
Yeah, But again I think this is all part of
you know, this is why oli ARC's running. Everything is
so dangerous because they're all gonna get together to be like,
what are the new social norms we want to push
through our owned properties, like our social media platforms, or our newspapers,
or our film and TV networks or our video game developers.
(40:34):
What are the new norms we subtly seed through these
things to reflect back to somebody that X, Y or
Z is normal or not normal. And that's like, that's
just what. It just feels so overwhelming because every day
you're reading about fucking like Larry Ellison or some fuck
buying some some other huge media property, or fucking Saudi
(40:54):
Arabia and Jared Kushner buying electronic arts, and it's like
sometimes it's like, well, what kind of games do they make?
Or sometimes it's going to be about like what do
they not make anymore? What are they not showing? It's
not necessarily about hitting somebody with an overt message where
suddenly like, well America is now the bad whatever fuck
it is. It's also about what they don't show you
and what they don't normalize and what they want to
sort of nudge people towards. So anyway, this is all
(41:18):
very cool.
Speaker 2 (41:19):
Yeah, not in settling at all, not nineteen eighty four ish,
not you know what I mean, like.
Speaker 3 (41:24):
Nothingour mad and just got taken to the hospital for
a weed overdose.
Speaker 1 (41:38):
Damn this career, this career mode sucks.
Speaker 2 (41:42):
Kids are just going to fight a way around it too.
I mean look at TikTok and all the extra wording
that they have where it's like unlived, like yes, three
oh four, like segs, Yeah, like all of that stuff.
It's like they're still going to see what they want,
you know what I mean. Strippers are still going to
go work their shift and count their money on camera
and tell you exactly how much they make.
Speaker 1 (42:00):
Because I mean, like we were even chasing that ship,
even like in the more certain buttoned up era where
people were really like don't look at this, don't look
at that, don't look them like we found.
Speaker 3 (42:09):
Away, we found away, finds away. But it will probably
be used to restrict videos from Palestine litter show.
Speaker 2 (42:20):
You replaced with with AI versions.
Speaker 3 (42:22):
Right right, all right, let's take a quick break. We'll
be back to talk about the super Bowl non super
Bowl halftime show and Disney. We'll be right back, and
(42:42):
we're back and turning point. USA has announced that as
an alternative to the Bad Bunny halftime show, they will
be putting on the All American halftime show at the
super Bowl. You know, one of those super Bowl halftime
shows that doesn't happen at the super Bowl in caters
exclusively to white supremacists.
Speaker 2 (43:03):
It's like when the like your school has a prom
and they're like, don't go out drinking afterwards, We're gonna
do a lock in where everybody could sleep in the
gym together safely, not touching. You're like, I'm gonna go
fuck my girlfriend in marijuana.
Speaker 1 (43:15):
Like in the boiler room or something. You're not gonna
stop me, nerds.
Speaker 3 (43:22):
They announced this before booking any actual acts.
Speaker 1 (43:27):
What you do, Yeah, so you do when you're a
reactionary group like this and their whole energy is giving
off not just that they don't have experience putting on
halftime shows, but that they just found out what music
is because they have they announced it.
Speaker 3 (43:44):
They issued a survey to their users saying what music
genres would you like to see featured? Select all that
apply Americana, classic rock, country, hip hop, pop, worship, anything
in English.
Speaker 1 (43:59):
It's like, dude, American, what are you going to fucking
a Caruso shopping center in Glendale?
Speaker 2 (44:06):
What?
Speaker 3 (44:07):
What is America? That's just like land is your land?
This land is no.
Speaker 2 (44:12):
Americana is actually like a sub genre of country that
is largely based in singer and songwriter music that tanks
to be a little twangy Okay, it doesn't necessarily have
like overt like country stuff. So I'm trying to think
of like an Americana artist that you would kind of know.
I mean, Sierra Ferrell is kind of Americana.
Speaker 1 (44:34):
It's sort of Siera.
Speaker 5 (44:37):
Yeah, you wish, you wish.
Speaker 2 (44:41):
He has a lot of a lot.
Speaker 1 (44:43):
Of those like you're saying. It's like it's so sonically
sounds like country, like with like slide guitar, like lap
guitar kind of thing.
Speaker 2 (44:50):
Can but not necessarily Okay, So it's kind of.
Speaker 3 (44:54):
Like more singer songwriter.
Speaker 1 (44:55):
What is it not you singer songwriter?
Speaker 2 (44:57):
More acoustic. It can of all of those things, but
it's not necessarily going to be like two chords in
the truth, you know what I mean when you think
of like that country, you know, okay, but it can
it can involve elements of all of those things. And
usually when they when an artist is kind of buttonholed
as Americana, it usually means that like they are playing
(45:21):
like there's usually going to be sort of like a
banjo guitar. That is that kind of aesthetic. Yeah, that
it's it's you know, very singer song already is the
best the best kind of way I can kind of
describe it. So it is an actual job, well, it
has an actual.
Speaker 3 (45:35):
Job learning and that's what Turning Point USA is after.
In the end, so a lot of right wingers were
fooled by a fake poster for the event that was
like boasting. The poster, says Turning Point US A kid
Rock America's halftime show, Ted Nugent, Travis Tritt, Jason Aldean,
Aaron Lewis of Stained, John Rich see Greenwood Forgiato Blow,
(46:02):
featuring a guest appearance from Measles. I didn't read to
the end. They a bunch of people were like, uh damn,
look how fast they put this amazing lineup together.
Speaker 1 (46:14):
This is gonna be incredible.
Speaker 3 (46:15):
Everyone was like sharing it and like Alex Jones's guy
Owen Schroyer was like talking about how impressive it was
that the Conservative organization impacked in so much talent in
such a tight time frame. And he was also like, also,
isn't this show twenty minutes? How the fuck are you
gonna use all those people anyway?
Speaker 1 (46:33):
I'll figure it out. How are you gonna get a
fucking guest appearance from measles too? But okay god. And
also the second you look at her like this is
ai slot, like the graphics and me, I'm come.
Speaker 3 (46:45):
I mean whatever, they're not that they're listening, but they
spelled us a correctly.
Speaker 2 (46:50):
Yeah. For some of those in the South, this looks
like a very professional This is a very professional poster.
I'm telling you. Himself probably woke up and was like, fuck,
I got drunk last night. What I say yes to?
It's got an eagle on a head and a beer.
I must sounds legit. I'll be there. I will be there. Good,
I will be there.
Speaker 1 (47:07):
Good luck to them, you know what I mean? Nobody's
gonna watch that ship and they know people are gonna.
I mean, we'll watch clips, listen people capture it and
talk about it. But I'm I mean, I barely watch
the super Bowl as it is, but maybe I never
watch it.
Speaker 2 (47:23):
I mean, I will be tuning in absolutely for Bad
Bunny because I'm telling you what, uh, we need to
have more dog flap on TV. And as long as
that man is doing that dance and you know what
I'm talking about it if your algorithm looks anything like mine,
that's all I want. That's all I want for America
is just that's just it. I just I need some
just flap it. I want to, dude, I want to
(47:44):
see him walk that dinosaur across the stage. That's all
I'm talking about.
Speaker 7 (47:47):
I want.
Speaker 2 (47:48):
I want him to re record that song but was
not was with Bad Bunny just walking the dinosaur. That's
all I want is just a super edit of just
dog flapping Bunny with that in the background. That's all
I want. That's what I will see.
Speaker 1 (48:00):
Maybe that'll change America's minds, hearts, and mind I see.
Speaker 3 (48:03):
That would be so great if it was just like
a bunch of shaking around. Oh my God, just America
trying to kill the people who were up.
Speaker 2 (48:15):
Camera like this, yes, yes, yes, it'll be me and
John Ham at home just happy at ship like hell yeah.
Speaker 1 (48:23):
John Ham's like, hey man, I had to open that
door for people to bust it open.
Speaker 3 (48:27):
He does, like me and the gyration, and then it
just does that like zoom pool thing from Hitchcock movies
like The Jaws, where it like seems like the background
is going away as you're getting closer to it, and
then it's just that for forty minutes.
Speaker 1 (48:43):
Somehow you get that dolly zoom.
Speaker 3 (48:45):
Dolly zoom is the word. Thank you, Miles all right,
heys into the world of film. Was recently reported that
a woman in her six sixties tragically died on Disneyland's
Haunted Mansion ride. The cause of death is heet to
be revealed, but this is fly in the face of
a long term urban legend that people are not allowed
(49:05):
to die. No one dies of Disneyland other than the
souls of exhausted parents, because the people of disney will
immediately risk anyone in need of medical help away so
that they can be declared dead in some hospital and
not in the happiest place on Earth because that would
be a bummer. So obviously legend's not true. Even before
(49:27):
the Haunted Mansion incident, there have been many documented deaths
at Disneyland, including a plane crash in the Epcot parking
lot in nineteen eighty. Yeah, I feel like that would
have been hard for them to just be like.
Speaker 2 (49:37):
Yeah, you can't whisk that away, right, You can't just
be like no, no, no, no, that was that was that
was That was a ride elsewhere.
Speaker 3 (49:43):
And as we've covered on the show last year, Doctor
suffered a fatal allergic reaction at a Disney World restaurant
despite having told the restaurant that they you know, allegedly
did telling the restaurant that they had a food allergy,
and when in the wrongful death lawsuit, Disney attempted to
wriggle out of that by citing Disney Plus's terms and
(50:05):
conditions and be like, sorry, you get this term in
condition from Disney Plus that says we're allowed to kill you.
So this is seems like a straightforward, like debunking story.
And then our writer JM is like, seemingly these rumors
stemmed from the first ever homicide that occurred in the
park in nineteen eighty one, a woman was pinched at
(50:27):
a private party, leading her boyfriend to attack the guy
he thought did it and ended up stabbing him. At
the Submarine Voyage Voyage ride, security found the guy bleeding
to death, but instead of calling nine to one one,
they threw him in a Disneyland van with no siren
and drove him to a hospital and Garden Grove, even
(50:49):
though two trauma centers, which were better equipped to handle
a stabbing, were missed, and everyone was like, what the
fuck did you do that for? And I like, I
think basically they found that it was because they were
worried that paramedics would spoil the magic of other guests.
Speaker 1 (51:09):
So it's it is.
Speaker 3 (51:10):
It did start with basically what we're talking about.
Speaker 1 (51:13):
Yeah, I mean I would ask for a refund the
way I would ask for a refund immediately because it's
already so expensive. I'm like, I saw somebody fall down.
I need a refund. Man, I can't deal with this.
The fucking magic has been ruined. Man.
Speaker 2 (51:25):
Oh, especially if we saw somebody get stabbed. You're like, uh,
submarine Voyage I did not know included shaking.
Speaker 1 (51:31):
Yeah, right, exactly.
Speaker 3 (51:33):
Okay, They're like well, we're glad that you've enjoyed our
evening of entertainment, but we have to get Captain Jack
Sparrow out of here.
Speaker 1 (51:43):
Sorry yeah, sorry, yeah, giving new meaning to the phrase
stuck in line the fun watch out now.
Speaker 3 (51:51):
The family of the victim filed a wrongful death suit
against Disney for sixty million dollars. They won the case,
but only got six hundred thousand dollars for some reason.
Speaker 1 (52:00):
Away the fuck that is?
Speaker 2 (52:02):
So that's a that's a that's a very wild disparaging
between sixty million and six hundred k, that's all. That's
a huge difference.
Speaker 1 (52:11):
It's called a bit of a discount, you know what
I mean. We threw some sweeteners and we said they
can go to Club thirty three next time they come
back to the murder scene, right yeah.
Speaker 3 (52:20):
You guys rushed to the scene and found Yorba bleeding
to death. According to media reports, Yorba may have been
bleeding for as long as twenty minutes before a consequential
decision was made. Instead of calling nine one one, Yorba
was picked up and put into a Disneyland van, accompanied
by two security guards and the nurse. The nurse without
light sirens or even life saving. It was just Daffy
Duck in a nurse costume without even life saving equipment.
(52:43):
The van drove through city streets to a hospital and
Garden Grove. Two trauma centers, which were better equipped to
handle the stabbing, were missed.
Speaker 2 (52:50):
See I wonder if this, though, is like related to race.
Do you know what I'm saying. Like we're talking eighties,
We're talking Orange County, We're talking you know, there was
a lot of prominent gang activity going around. You know,
you guys remember movie colors, colors colors like.
Speaker 3 (53:06):
I feel like Disneyland.
Speaker 2 (53:09):
It was in Disneyland.
Speaker 7 (53:11):
You know.
Speaker 2 (53:11):
It's actually based on historic beef between Donald Duck and
Daffy Duck, who I know are from different universes. But
that's what I'm talking about. White Duck, black Duck. You
know what I'm Sayings absolutely, But no, I wonder about
that right where they're like, no, we can't have gang
activity camps, somebody bleeding, we can't have a violent death.
But they're like chokings, No, all right, old lady has
(53:32):
a heart attack. All right, But all right, I mean nobody.
Speaker 3 (53:36):
Wants that violence that they're playing to make it seem
a little, as they noted in their press release about
the event, No they didn't.
Speaker 1 (53:47):
Yeah, this is so it's so grim. But again it's
like it makes so much sense too that they're like,
I don't give a fuck about this person. I'm talking
about my business full like, I can't have people fucking
expiring on the then knowing.
Speaker 2 (54:00):
About that ship.
Speaker 1 (54:01):
Put disappear this person into a van and deal with
it off site the American way.
Speaker 2 (54:08):
That's right.
Speaker 1 (54:09):
Make it go away, Make it go away, make it
go away. Dang damn.
Speaker 3 (54:13):
All right, Well, and that's why everybody should go to
Dolly Parton's Amusement.
Speaker 2 (54:22):
Park, honestly. Yeah, you piece, you can die in peace. Man.
They don't even let you bring knives in. You know
how many dads I see take their pocket knife out
of the pocket and go what the fuck and have
to go back to the truck.
Speaker 1 (54:34):
I can't bring this buck knife in. No, what do
you mean? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (54:37):
I could bring a gallon of sweet tea, but I
cannot bring my knife. I don't understand.
Speaker 1 (54:42):
What about the one boot.
Speaker 2 (54:44):
Now, they have like full body scanners like when you
walk through, like the same ones they have the airport
where you just walk and then it like heats up
a heat zone if you've got something on you or whatever.
Speaker 1 (54:53):
I was like yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah.
Speaker 3 (54:56):
Come over here.
Speaker 2 (54:58):
He slow downs. What is that?
Speaker 4 (55:02):
You?
Speaker 1 (55:04):
We got a social They're like, sir, why you got
all these socks in the front here? Oh? Trying to
save on luggage costs? Man?
Speaker 2 (55:14):
You know, it's very very spirit very cold, very cold, Lydia.
Speaker 3 (55:18):
Where can people find you? Follow you all that good stuff?
Speaker 2 (55:22):
Sure? You can follow me on Instagram PG. Thirteen and
up only please, that's right at hater Tuesday is where
you can find me there. Same thing on TikTok. I
don't post on TikTok as much because I barely posted
enough on on Instagram. It's let's I'm not hauling things,
you know what I mean? Maybe to start putting my
groceries on there. Who knows? My website is Lydia Popovich
(55:42):
dot com. You can also check me out there. As
previously mentioned, I will be in Birmingham, Alabama, at the
Stardome on November twentieth. I will be at Zany's in
Nashville on December seventeenth. Those are upcoming shows and there'll
be other stuff in between. There but if you check
those places yet where you can come and find me
and see me in the streets, holler at me and Kroger,
(56:03):
you know what I'm saying. Some lady stopped me in
Walmart once and was like, are you Lydia Papovich? And
I said, who are you trying to serve me? And
she's like, no, fan, just saw you to showing Franklin
last week. And I was like, oh, all right, how
you doing? But yeah, that's that's how you find me. Yeah.
It was very unsettling. I was just like, I'm in
White House, Tennessee and a Walmart. This woman knows my
full name. And then I was like, oh, that's right.
(56:24):
You are a public facing person and I forget.
Speaker 3 (56:27):
Sometimes Lydia, you've been served as your number one fan.
Is there a work of media you've been enjoying?
Speaker 2 (56:38):
I mean I already kind of spoiled it. As previously stated,
I've been trying to really tighten up my algorithm, and
right now I am getting served a lot of bad
bunny do on the dance from the Puerto Rico Residency,
and honestly, I just keep saving them and when I
have a moment of sadness, when I just want to
feel happy a little silly. Just click on over to
that saved bar, look into that little thing, and then
(56:58):
just a couple of minutes to walk in the dinosaur
and I'm right back at it, right back in a
good mood. So you know, I say, you know, embrace
some dog flapping in your life. It's a silly dance.
Speaker 1 (57:08):
This generation's di'angelo untitled how does It Feel? Music video?
Speaker 2 (57:12):
I mean possibly I was thinking about that earlier because
I was thinking about how God that really that video
really was a moment for a lot of us, Like
it was crazy. I've only had two moments in my life.
The first one was with Carl Weathers when I was
watching Action Jackson when that first movie came out. I
went on my first date to re see that movie
and watching him walk around in those jeans with no shirt,
(57:34):
just fucking painted on, I thought his thighs were arguing
with his pants, and then he starts making out with Apollonia,
and I was just like, I got to do something
about this, you know what I mean, I feel those things.
That's how my body awakened. And certainly the second time
it happened was watching that untitled video.
Speaker 3 (57:51):
Yeah, I got to meet Carl Weathers, shook his hand
and Jones engulfed my entire forearm his hands where he
knew Oh my god.
Speaker 2 (58:01):
Yeah, up until the day he died. I mean I
still I still diddled it to it. When he was
in Happy Gilmore, I was like, yep, he still got it.
I don't care one development. Yes himself, Yes, Carl Weathers
was fine as hell. He could still get it and
he's dead.
Speaker 1 (58:19):
Goddamn alligator bit in my hand.
Speaker 3 (58:22):
Miles Where can people find you? Is their working media
you've been enjoying.
Speaker 1 (58:25):
Find me everywhere at miles of Gray. I'm talking about
ninety four to twenty day Crudy. Let's see. Oh, a
couple of things just works in media. I just more
like little news things that I relish that happened over
the weekend. Drake's lawsuit against Universal Music.
Speaker 2 (58:43):
Yes, for he was like.
Speaker 1 (58:44):
Ken Drink bodied me in a rap battle.
Speaker 2 (58:47):
But you guys weren't playing fair.
Speaker 1 (58:49):
That ship got dismissed. Okay, so Lobb, go fucking sit down.
You you want to fucking cross swords with a wrapper?
You did, and you o God, now just move on.
And you tried to sue come on, man, come on.
Speaker 2 (59:05):
Guy so bitch made.
Speaker 1 (59:07):
Yeah, really sad, but again makes total sense because he
has this This is the reason why people are just like,
I don't know if this guy understands hip hop.
Speaker 6 (59:14):
Actually, oh right, he doesn't know what we're doing. He
just makes hits, which is fine, that's your rate. And
we look, we enjoyed him along the way, but you
shouldn't it. He on top makes abs. Okay, he made abs.
He got them made, He's got them.
Speaker 1 (59:29):
He's got it like that. Literally, he's got it like that.
He bought it like that. A work at media. I'm
liking just everything happening with DiAngelo. Josh Gondleman, who's like
the nicest guy. You know, we've had him on this
show boosted before. He's just like the sweetest dude. Just
his post about Dangelis is Josh Jesus, Josh yeah, pack
(59:51):
watch rest hold on.
Speaker 2 (59:54):
Why is he smoking a blunt?
Speaker 1 (59:56):
He said, you just hear it in his voice. I'm
really sad about d Angelo. He made so much of
the best music in the history of music. Everyone's remembrances
of the artist and his work are making me emotional,
and just his very sincere observation made me emotional because great,
I feel that shit too, So thank you, Yes, Josh, yes,
(01:00:17):
Josh yes?
Speaker 2 (01:00:18):
Oh sweet?
Speaker 3 (01:00:19):
All right, a workimedia I've been enjoying. Andrew Nadeau tweeted,
just saw onto the sidelines. They literally have enough footballs
for all the players. They're making them fight over that
one for no reason.
Speaker 1 (01:00:34):
Fucking truth bomb. Hell yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:00:36):
You can find me on Twitter at Jack Underscore, Brian
on Blue Sky at Jack o b the Number one.
You can find us on Twitter and Blue Sky at
Daily Zekegeist. Where at the Daily Zeikegeist on Instagram you
can go to the description of the episode wherever you're
listening to it, and there at the bottom you will
find the footnotes is where we link off to the
information that we talked about in today's episode. We also
link off to a song that we think you might enjoys.
(01:01:00):
Is there a song that you think that people might enjoy? Yeah,
there's a whole fucking album that you should enjoy. It's
called Voodoo. Okay, it's DeAngelo.
Speaker 1 (01:01:09):
Look, he made three albums, Black Massile is also great
Browns Classics. Voodoo to Me, and people know I love music.
Voodoo to Me is one of the most perfect like albums, creations,
you know, like people you know, like Marvin Gaye is
What's going On is like a classic. People always talk
about that, and it's a seamless album for me. Generationally speaking,
(01:01:30):
Voodoo is that album for me and for people who
really like music, like if you people don't know that
Jay Dilla, I'm a huge Jay Dilla fan. He was
in a lot of these recording sessions. He's not he's
not credited in the liner notes for working on Voodoo,
but at Electric Lady Land Studios where they were recording,
there were all these artists swirling around at the same
(01:01:50):
time during the recording of Voodoo that just give it
all these little touches and questlove. He was also the
drummer on it, one of the producers on it. Another
reason why Voodoo sounds so good. He talks about all
this collaboration that happened and like the magic around that
and like the's just how intentional they were with this album.
This album is fantastic. Listen to every song on it.
One of my favorite songs is called one Mogime, and
(01:02:14):
that is one of my favorites. It's like sexy rain music.
It's painful. It's beautiful. Ah Man. Dangelo is just such
a fantastic and music nerds even though too the chord
progressions this guy was playing so top notch, so next
level to you, it just sounds really good, but when
you really think about what was actually being played, you're like,
the variation is unbelievable. Anyway, Recipe St Angelo love you
(01:02:39):
check out one Mogain from the Voodoo album please.
Speaker 3 (01:02:42):
And we will link off to that in the footnote
to Daily is that guys to the production of iHeartRadio.
For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iHeartRadio app Apple
Podcasts wherever you listen to your favorite shows. That's gonna
do it for us this morning. We're back this afternoon
to tell you what is trending, and we will talk
to you all then.
Speaker 1 (01:02:58):
Bye bye.
Speaker 5 (01:03:00):
The Daily Zeitgeist is executive produced by Catherine Long, co
produced by by Wang.
Speaker 1 (01:03:05):
Co produced by Victor Wright, co written by J M mcnapp,
edited and engineered by Justin Conner.