Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season twenty eight, Episode
three of Danny Daily Zeitgeist for April two thousand eight. Team,
my name is Jack O'Brien a k. It's the state
that's untouchable, Like Elliott Nest. The Jack hits your ear
drum like a slug to your chest. Courtesy of Ozmodiar
Hack a Jack for you, Jimmy in the City and
(00:21):
Sex Chap. You got it, uh, And I'm thrilled to
be joined as always by my co host, Mr Miles Gray.
I remember when I remember, I remember when I lost
my mile. There was something so pleasant about that Gray.
This that MOUs me Gray? Does that me grace does
(00:45):
that MOUs me graz it? Oh? So be major chord
is what would go there? Now? Thank you to Jakotah
Dones ak a duck to Jones on Twitter for that one,
because you know, I like to fucking sing and I'm
going to stop just doing one word a k is.
(01:06):
I just need verses to sing because I'm a repressed singer.
So thank you for that. Oh man, that was that was?
And also I noticed how none of y'all sucking applauded,
so I think it was too long like if there
would have been a moment, but I was like, I'll applaud,
but not now. Now it's fair play to you, because
when I was rehearsing this before we got in here,
you were like, so, yeah, I should have listened. Okay,
(01:29):
we're a throw the beat joined inner third. You've already
heard from her, the hilarious comedian Megan Gaily up. Were
you married the last time I was here, I've been
You've been married to ten years? My god. I was like,
because you have a ring, but it's on you. It's
my pinkie and it's brass and it turns my finger.
So then I was like, am I a part of
(01:50):
some sort of optical illusion where all these men are
wearing rings to like shame me? But that's like a
real wedding bing. That's a dad band. That is a
dad band. And you can tell I've got like the
line under it, like my fingers like all white and
like withered. That's what we want. Yeah, when you take
(02:11):
it off, that's how you know. Before I get into
the house, my wife makes me show her that. Let
me see it, let me see good, see your white
withered finger? All right? Good? Our love remains intact years. Um, yeah,
it's insane. We got married, young Megan. What is something
from your search history that is revealing about who you are?
(02:32):
You know? I was really chorn on this because the
last time I did the show, I mentioned a product
that I had been searching and then they sent me
all of this trolley. You are incredible, Like I was
just like, oh wow, I think Trulley thinks I'm more
important than I am. Wait, yeah, wait did that that
just happened because you talked and then they appeared. Yeah damn,
(02:53):
so somebody's listening. But they do have new James Harden
sneakers and so that's exciting. So the beard, I'm this
is like an embarrassing thing. I had to google last week.
You guys heard me talking about couches my Google. So
just basically just couches right now, it's just places where
white women bisectionals. But I had to look up when
I was paying my taxes last week which side of
(03:15):
the envelope the stamp goes on, and I was like,
because I knew, I knew, but I was just like
so frazzled that I was like, I just didn't trust
myself with the I R S like if it was
a letter going to like my great aunt inside anywhere,
it'll get to her. But I was like, I have
I been putting it on wrong the entire time, And
I was like, this is such a like I guess
(03:36):
when I think I'm not a millennial, I'm like, oh,
I need to look back at this moment and be like, no,
this is I did not even mail something. I r L.
That's probably the thing I've googled most in my life,
beside them where to put the stamp and like where
to put the return address? And I just always, I
don't know, like there's something like dyslexic about it or something.
I always have to google that. But maybe you second
(03:58):
guess yourself because of the stress of sending off the taxes,
which is why you even entered that headspace. Are you
think from the beginning you've always never quite been I
think it was the stress. I also like, I was
in Chase Bank brawl less in a LaVar ball custom
hoodie ball customhood and my friend made against all everyone's
(04:20):
will that the printing company. Was like, I don't think
this is trademark. She's like, oh, absolutely, it's not. It's
very illegal. But I think LaVar would be happy. So
it's all it's the whole family reaching for a ball,
and then the ball kind of has like christ like
um globe coming off of it. The whole ball family.
(04:41):
But right that's you know, I mean, if it was
Justina would be happy, but once it's the whole crew,
it's Lavarentina, it's Lavartina. So I'm sorry. Back to that.
You're in the you're in the Chase bank, you're wearing
the hoodie, and then you you just feel like, I
don't know where the stamped and there was like an
old man next to me and I was like laughing, well, no,
I was trying to hide it from him because I
(05:02):
was like I don't want him to know that I
don't know what are you googling over? And he it's
so funny. Like I walked into the Bank Contacts the
thinking it was gonna be popping. I was like, where
is everyone? They were like people do it before today?
You know, you don't have to do it as you
can send that ship through the internet. And then I
(05:23):
was like I needed to put it in the mail
and the mailbox, like the blue one by my apartment
had already been picked up. So I saw a mail
truck and I just sat outside waiting for him for
like fifteen minutes and then to him, well he got
it done. He's my friend. I have always connected with
mail men. He's like my person, like the one from
my building and he's cool. I like him nice. Yeah,
(05:44):
the one the mail carrier I forget what her name
is in my neighborhood. She literally seen me grow up,
so like when I've moved out of the house and
I come back and seems she's like, oh my god,
how are you. This doesn't happen. No. I love male people.
They're wonderful. They have great tans, yeah, like one side
of the body. No, not like trug drivers right like
like legit, you know those cavs see the sign right right? Megan?
(06:07):
What is something that's underrated? I think this new season
of American Idol is really good. Granted I've stopped watching
it because I don't agree with any of their decisions, Like,
but if you're looking for something. The first round of auditions,
when they're like here and I don't know they went
to Charleston, I was like, I don't know if you
need to be here. It's really I mean there were
episodes where I was crying so hard I had to
(06:29):
pause it, go in the bathroom cry in a way
that I wanted to actually, and then come back out
and restarted again. I'm sorry, you're watching alone with my boyfriend.
That's why would go in the bathroom, because he'd be like,
are you okay? And I'd be like, I'm fine, And
then I get up and go in the bathroom and
like he adopted his brother's baby. Like there's just things
(06:52):
that wow, um, but it's really good. All the people
that I loved are kind of gone. But there's some
there's like three I've been jumping back in via YouTube
only now to watch the finals, the performances. Yeah, and
I don't know if I'm gonna vote. I've never voted.
Voting seems like an election either, right, Oh no, I've
(07:12):
voted in that also seems like you're divorced. That seems
like the demo of who's actually voting, American idle voting.
I'm like, I don't is this too bleak to do?
But I really like Maddie Pope. Pattie Pope. Um, it's
just like Powerhouse Hope is No, it's sort of like
(07:33):
a I don't want to see like Feist, but it's like, um,
like a girl with like an interesting voice, not a
Florence in the Machine, but sort of like there's some
grit to it. And then there's this guy Michael, who's
incredible who I love, who actually works at the bowling
Alley right by my house. That's where they like is
like pre shoot. And then there's this girl Katie, who
(07:54):
I do like, and then everyone else I'm like, nah,
there's just so many country boys. This is the problem
with you. Like watch it and you'll be like rooting
for someone and then they're like they voted for Trump.
You know, like there's true they're too good down here.
And then you're like, fuck, like can I perform in
this white polo shirt? And know what's something? You think
(08:16):
it is overrated? Is that how you say it? Get
out of here? Bubble Tea no oysters? Absolutely not? Wait
what I don't like any of those? Okay? I was like,
I'm like, bubble tea sucks, but you don't like Boba No?
Why I got those beads first of all? The tapioca
like those, and it's like, I don't know, I think
(08:38):
I have an addiction to it just being Asian or
something I love. Oh my god, I love that ship.
Although recently though, I have started ordering ship without the
bobaka because I'm like, I'm kind of like Trump in
a way where if like, if I like one part
of something and I'm able to get it, then I'll
do that. So you don't like the bubble, well, sometimes
the thing is I like the flavor of like a
(08:59):
Taro milkshakes so much like the taro flavor that sometimes
I'm like, no, I just need a mainline to Taro.
I think it tastes like sticks is just sticky gross.
The flavored pearl ones are kind of wacky because that's
just like both kombucha and oysters have felt to me
like you're drinking slash eating snot. It's like they have
(09:22):
like a very snotty vibe. Oysters. Come on, man, you
don't like oysters? No, I do. I like them, but
I like snot you know. Yeah, yeah, oh that's why
you always asked me to put my boogers in that
tube where. But yeah, I love oysters. Cha, I'm not.
I don't really drink, especially once I started seeing it
like in l A, where the people doing like cocktails
and ship No, but the cocktail thing where like, you know,
(09:44):
you want to booch in like Jameson, I was like,
what the funk are you not? Bro? This is to
l a for me and I'm from here. But yeah, okay,
I see that. I don't like it. Fine? What about
oysters though? Was the problem? Is this not thing? The
thing with oysters? I wish I to and I don't.
You know, It's like how I used to be this
way with salmon when I was a young girl. I
(10:05):
was like, I think I should like salmon. I was
a young girl and then I and now I do
and so but like I'll be at dinners and people like,
let's get oysters, and I feel like a hillbilly that
I don't want them, but right, and then then I
also find oysters to be strange because then people will
be like, you know, it's enough, always always saying that,
and it's like this is like an Easter brunch, Like
(10:25):
I don't why are you trying to sell it as
like now we're all going to have sex with each
other because weird say, yeah, I like muscles and I
feel like they're like related somehow, well they're not, I know,
but they seem like the same, like if there was
like a food family tree, they would be on a
(10:46):
swing when they because they say that oysters have no
central nervous system, which is why vegans have began to
embrace oysters and nuts and knock against them too. Yeah, right,
and like because they're they're like these entities that filter
the water. They're like why or filters where? Yeah? But
either way, what is a myth? What's something people think
(11:07):
is true that you know to be false. I used
to work out a retirement community, and I don't think
old people are having as much sex as we think
they are. I don't think they are. Yeah, whenever, because
I love old people. I like do a lot of
things with old people that volunteer. I didn't want to say, Lune, listen,
(11:29):
I'm a better person than everyone listening. I volunte here
with the elderly population. But like, I don't think they're
they're getting down as much because we were like, oh,
that really high rate of STD. It's like, yeah, maybe
that's true. So there's a big story like in the
past decade that STDs were running rampant retirement community to
some extent, because um, there is there's so few men
(11:54):
and men die, so thankfully, finally something good happens at
the end of life, all of them in parish, and
so they'll be like one man left and then like
if he is having sex with multiple partners and gets in,
it's the same way that like it happens amongst young people,
but then the men are dead. But it's a function
of Yeah, I don't think it's actually them just like
(12:16):
having sex all the time. So and in your experience
being there, it didn't seem like there was a lot
going on. No, I mean people were following asleep at
like eleanor Roosevelt talks, you know, like I don't see
how those same people were like getting it up that night.
Are there like social activities maybe at night like wine
wine tastings or something like there is wine tasting, but
(12:38):
it was all women. There were no men there because
they're debt. Well, then I'm maybe your sample size is a
a little bit different because you were in like the
island that there were no men. Yeah, I mean there
was one man. He could still walk and he was
the hottest hot commodity life can still walk. Life wasn't
even past yet, and people were bringing him lemon tarts.
(13:01):
That's disrespect. I thought so too, but he and like
you could tell he'd never been cool ever in his life.
I was like, oh my god, I'm the last one standing.
Should we bring up the conversation we've been having in
the Office of Couples pretty crazy. So we were having
the conversation, how long do you think former President George H. W.
(13:21):
Bush has now that Barbara Bush has passed, because that's
the thing that happens, right, one part of a couple
of passes and then the other member of the couple
of the marriage guys. Uh. And we were like having
this conversation and we might have taken it over under
on like how long he had. He's also not in
(13:42):
good health. I think people were like, oh, he went first, right, yeah,
And then so we have to like sort of sheets
where our guesses are like, you know, five months, four months,
three months. And then immediately like right as we fin
having that conversation, we all got the news alert that
(14:03):
he was like going to the hospital, and so then
we are we rammed it up. Well. The thing was
really the whole debate circled around like a few points, right,
because it was really in the context of what happens
with an elderly couple when one of them dies, will
they survived? And then, you know, some people speculate that
if if George really loved her, then he would probably
(14:24):
soon follow because he was so heartbroken. Then other people
had theories that maybe he never loved her, that they
had a purely sort of like a business relationship kind
of thing, and he would probably live for a long
time because he was never really depending on her and
that part of him is missing, and so really the
debate started to be to center around what was the
real relationship, like did they love each other? I think
(14:48):
that they will probably. I mean he may he may
pass soon, and that would be that would be sad um.
But I think that when you're in the public eye
and deaf and being a president, you fall out of
like what is normal. Because he has people caring for
him all the time. It's not like he's just likely
took him to the best hostile country. That's that's a
(15:09):
really good point kind of changes. But I don't want
any of them to die. I just feel like more
criminals just end up living exactly I think will live
for well, Yeah, Dick Cheney's on his seventh heart. I
think that h dub could outlive Trump. I think we
like sort of forget that, like he has to be
(15:31):
in bad health. Yeah, but if it's a thing where
the worst person you are, the longer you live, then
Trump is going to be the last human being seventy
to seventy one. Men are very interesting old because in
like six weeks he may look a hundred. It happens
like they just like, oh year old, right, right, you know,
(15:52):
like I'm supposed to happen with presidents like immediately and
like very precipitously but working. Yeah, because they're working their
ass off, which is not happening with him. Yeah. Like
Obama was like, oh damn, I'm taking over after this
economic ship, Okay, and then he literally like it looked
like that scene in Private ryanok He's like where Matt
(16:14):
Damon turns to the old man at the end of
saving Private. Right. That was like within the first ten
minutes of Obama being and Michelle had some stress and
she's looked better than ever. Is a different an alien?
All right? So wait, do you think that the reason
that you know, when one part of a couple passes
the other one follows soon after is because that person
(16:35):
like they're used to taking care of each other. Yeah.
I think they sort of like fused together. It's like
they have like, well, no, he used to clean the
dust off the fan, and like when that's gone, you're like, well,
I don't know, right, right, Because a lot of times
when someone passes and another one will then go and
live in a retirement community like pretty immediately, and sometimes
(16:55):
it's the family making the decision, but it is like, oh,
two people can kind of look at to each other
even if they're both sort of old and in failing health,
but one person can't, right. Yeah. And also my grandma,
when my grandfather passed away, we immediately brought her over
from Japan, and we're like, just don't even begin to
experience life without him. Came over, lived to be like
(17:18):
a hundred one years old. I loved America. Yeah, I
like I love Disney, eating a Trumpian diet. You changed
her environment enough, though, Yeah. I think that's I think
another thing too, because if there's if you're used to
sort of the rhythm or the patterns of your day
to day and that included that person, Yeah, like when
that's disrupted in such a such a clear way, like
(17:40):
I can see how that could just yeah, I mean
they say that after a divorce, like it's almost like
suffering from brand damage because your mind is like sort
of fused with the other person's mind and like one
person is like used to doing this part of the
task and the other person. So I'm sure the same
thing happens, like when one part of a couple of diys.
(18:01):
It's like, well, the person who did my thinking for
this thing is just gone, I mean love or not.
They were together for many years, so probably like in
between because the romantic ideas like he died from a
broken heart, and it might just be like he didn't
know him exactly. He died because he was worthless, I
(18:22):
mean not who cares? All Right, we're trying to take
a sample of the global and national share consciousness, what
people are thinking and talking about right now. Uh. And
the thing that at least the city of Philadelphia is
thinking about is that the Sixers moved on. They won
their first round series with the Miami Heat, and it
happened to coincide with Meek Mill getting out of prison.
(18:46):
Meek Mill just had like the greatest most triumphant return
to reality, to the best day to get out of jail. Yeah, exactly.
Like the Sixers owner like went and like picked him up.
He got to the game. Uh, they let him ring
the bell, which is like a thing that happens at
the beginning of every game. The crowds like going crazy
for him. There's this video from like in the guts
(19:09):
of the stadium. Uh, the acrobatic like cheerleader people are
practicing doing flips off of a trampoline and suddenly, like
out of nowhere, just Meek Mill runs up and does
a fucking front flip and like totally sticks. It just
sticks the ship out of it, and everyone's like, people
just went crazy. You finally get out on bail, you
(19:31):
fucking go you're doing flips and then and then your
team wins to move on to the next round of
the playoffs, Like, yeah, I gotta go through a lot
though too. Yeah exactly. This is a story we've been
talking about for a while because the reason he was
back in prison is some bullshit, because how this fucking
loop of probation people can get stuck in after, you know,
years after they've served out their time or done whatever
(19:53):
they had to to move on. Yeah, Like because basically
Meek Mill was like on this never ending probation for
like a decade from one thing. What's everybody going to
do with their free Meek Mill Eagles jerseys now? Fraeum, Like,
is that going to go in a man cave? Exactly?
I went to the super Bowl this year. I don't
know if that was after I did. My boyfriend works
for the NFL and couldn't have rolled your well because
(20:16):
I think you might have just sprayed your he left it.
He left today to go to the draft. Did I
just miss him? And I know he works for the league.
Oh my god, are you dating Roger Goodell? I mean
I almost said I wish, I wish, but just for
the plane. Um. And I saw like a young probably
(20:39):
like fifteen year old white boy sell a free Meek
Mill jersey like cash to a guy. Yeah wow, that's
called entrepreneur. Seriously, I know your market. So another rapper news,
Kanye is continuing to just tweet crazy shit hired as manager?
(20:59):
That fired, So he fired Scooter Braun, who anyone his manager?
He's also like the crazy person, crazy talent whisper, like
he got Justin Bieber back from the brink when he
was like, yeah, I mean, I mean there was a
while where he was like one of the few people
Bieber would listen to. I remember when I said work
(21:21):
at Power one of six, Justin Bieber supposed to come
in to do an interview. Dude got so high he
just like literally called ten minutes before he's supposed to be.
He was like like, or Scooter Braun called the stage,
was like, I'm sorry, dude, this dude was asleep, um
and this he was like, can we do this tomorrow?
And he was like I promise, Like I'm gonna get
him there the next day, like he didn't come, and
(21:42):
then the third day, like Scooter Brown basically dragged him
in by the scruff of the neck. This is like
at his peak, like I'm not making music, Justin Bieber
like I'm just discovering weed now. Bieber kind of survibe.
And it was amazing though, because he brought him in
and was like you could tell that this was like
one of the few people despite Justin being on his
own schedule. Scooter Braun was like, no, you you're fucking
going to this thing and he went because they listen
(22:03):
and he's, yeah, I think he understands a lot of
these artists. But yeah, Kanye acting and it's like reminds
me of Trump getting Really the adults can explain, does
the Twitter breakdown seem I mean, I don't Is it
a breakdown or is he just like I'm back on
Twitter and this is how we've been behaving, and I
just I guess you look at it a couple of ways.
It could be that he has come out as being
like a trump Ian alt right, like similar thinking what's
(22:27):
going on? Yeah, like he was, he was like shouting
out people who are like aligned with the right. He
tweeted recently like I love Trump, right, Yeah, he's like,
I don't care what y'all giving me to say, I'll
always love him. We have dragon energy and dragon energy.
It's the same thing we were talking about this yesterday.
It's like this sort of idea of like we see
through the matrix because their sociopaths and they treat other
(22:50):
people like objects and they think that that makes them
like some next level humors people mentally ill. But Kim,
I mean, for all of her drawbacks, is very politically
vocally against Trump, you know, was always like her husband's
Twitter account. Yeah, no, I think his tweet talking about
(23:12):
Trump was like, my wife just called me and told
me to say that I'm not for Trump, but I
do love him. I will always love It's all right, Um,
this means the beginning of the end for them too.
Does anyone think that? I mean, there theories that, like
they have been saying that for a while, according to
Boyd Watch when we do that, I feel like their
(23:33):
stories have never been about how everything is going well
between Kanye, and it's like he's not really around, he's
getting better, or they're staying way from each other, who knows,
but anyway, it's just I think it's more. I mean,
today he's just tweeting ship like decentralize, I'm nice at
Ping Pong, Okay, I need to meet Larry from Google,
(23:55):
Like Okay, my man, this is this book is looking amazing,
by the way. And there were rumors over the weekend
that he was addicted to opioids, or that he said
nobody was there for me when I was addicted to
opioids and that's why he was hospitalized, or you know,
had to cut that tour short, which would mean that
(24:17):
he doesn't get like I guess he had insurance for
the rest of the tour in case something happened, which
you know, it was sort of a medical condition that
cut the tour short, so he got a bunch of
his money back. But now that company who paid for
that is basically saying if it was a drug thing
and you don't you don't get it. Well, insurance company
is aren't really known for being I will always side
(24:40):
with Callane over the insurance we're always looking for. And
also who knows what? How do think he even knows
what he's saying? Yeah? Uh, And then we just want
to check in with There was a special election in Arizona,
uh last night, two nights ago. Arizona you know is
deep red country started le little bit. Yes, it's it's changing.
(25:02):
So I guess in this district, I don't even mean politically.
You go there and you're like, oh, everybody wanted to
have plastic surgery, but like the science wasn't here yet
and has fuck up faces, and then you're like, Okay, well,
I guess I'll tell jokes to these cookie town peop Paul.
This science wasn't there yet. Wow. Scathing review of the
(25:23):
medical board in Arizona. UM. So yeah, this district that
was up for grabs yesterday went between Debbie Letsco and
this other woman, Herald Tupper Ninny, and so Debbie Letsco
one and she has now just said, oh, I'm going
to be joining the Freedom Caucus, which shouldn't be a
surprise because this district is it's just deep Trump country,
like he won the district by twenty one points. They
loved Joe R. Pio there, like this was never going
(25:45):
to be won by the Democrats, so everyone was saying,
look if the Democrats somehow win, holy sh it. But really,
what you need to look at is what the margin
of victory is between these two candidates. And we find
last reporting on it is that Debbie LESCo was only
winning by about six percent, So that means they lost
about fifteen points on the Democrats in this election, which
is not a good sign at all because the Republicans
(26:08):
even had to spend like over million dollars in this
race to try and keep it competitive. So again, yes,
Republican won the special election. But if you look at everything,
I mean, it's you know, it's starting to follow this
well established trend that the GOP brand has not done
well since Trump took office. When you look at all
these special elections that have been you know, flipped. I
think if you're anti GP, this is almost a good
(26:30):
thing because they're not as panicky. They're not thinking it's
as big a deal the coming Democratic wave. They're like, okay,
so we won that. So it's not like one if
Democrats had one that that would have been like, yeah,
that would have been. But again, they're not dumb. I mean,
they're strategists on both sides. Anyone who's looking at it
knows that that's not a good result, especially for something
(26:51):
that's such typically solid red. I can't imagine voting for
someone named Debbie. It's like, at any point we're like, oh,
maybe I should go by Deborah. You know what if
I was like, hey, guys, I'm running first Senate in
Indiana's Meggie for Meggie Gale. It's so embarrassing. We're gonna
(27:14):
take a quick break. We will be right back, and
we're back, and uh, I do just want to stand
up for I've been to a cool small town in
Arizona called Jerome, Arizona. Of course, Tucson, I'm with you
(27:37):
some other slack staff. Yeah, we're more talking about we're
talking Phoenix, Scott Stale. There you go and not even
the Suns. We're with you two. Wow, Big Kevin Johnson,
you're an NBA fan. You've talked about James Harden's beard
and other NBA references. So you're following the Pacers this
(27:59):
exciting time. They're playing better than anyone thought they would. Um. Yeah,
I mean I think we all thought that this series
would go this way. I mean, the season definitely out
performed during the season, but this UM series is not
a surprise too. I was like going into it being like, yeah,
(28:19):
I very much think that they could win. I think
it's a really bad matchup for the Cavs that I
do think since we lost that last game, it's gonna
be tough to I think like when we were up,
it was like, oh, it felt even, and now that
we're even, it feels like we're down. I think Vic
is due for a big game. I really do. Vicky
(28:40):
my angel. I loved him. Victor Oladipo, who went from
being like sort of and also ran in a trade
last year for Paul George that people were like, Wow,
they got robbed, the Pacers got robbed, and then suddenly
he was just a All NBA, like all star. I
(29:02):
never agreed with the fact that we got robbed. People
in Indie really like Boo Paul George and it's like, no,
he was gonna leave, and so he left in a
way that we were able to get something. And maybe
you guys are too dumb to realize that, or you
hate black people too much to like overcome that. We
actually ended up with a good trade difficulty with India. Yeah,
but it's it's a land Stevenson can't play anywhere else.
(29:26):
Everywhere else hates him. And then it comes to India,
the home of the KKK, and is the biggest star
And you're like, Okay, I mean I wish you guys
could have this for just people you see on the
street too, But alright, take what you can get. That's
the important thing, you know, because Meggie, you are running
for government. Nicky Mackey, all right, we have a little
(29:47):
bit more on the Toronto attack. Uh so you know,
like we said race on Twitter, we're quick to call
the attacker terrorist and a g hottest and or then
have a debate eight over whether if an Armenian person
like what menascian the last name men and whether or
not that qualified as a white person. Tucker Carlson was like,
how could you say that he's not a gee hottest already?
(30:10):
Like and he he wanted to leave it open to
this being about terrorism. Uh So we do now know
that it essentially was about terrorism, but it wasn't for
the thing that they like to be afraid of. It
was about a guy who is in cell involuntary celibate,
who hates women because they won't have sex with him.
(30:33):
Have you heard of the in cell community? Um, I
just if you're celibate doesn't mean you're choosing. We'll see
there's val cells, there's voluntary celibacy, and then there's in cells,
which are involuntary celibacy. And those people look at the
world as why don't women want to fuck me? That's
why I'm celibate because I'm fuckable And fuck fuck these people,
fuck these alpha males who get the women or whatever,
(30:54):
and they're just angry at just essentially women for not
having sex. But I mean, I've just seen some of
the sad men get late though. You know it's like
I just don't tell. I don't I don't think, well,
I don't know, come on, honey, get out there. You know.
I mean like they're there are groups on like four chain,
lady deal with this stuff. Yeah, and and it's sort
of this He even posted on Facebook which was now
(31:16):
like a lot of people were saying it was it
could have been a hoax or whatever. That he was
basically talking about how the in Cell rebellion has already begun,
and a lot of the way these people are talking
about in the community, they all worship that guy Elliott
Roger well at ucs B who and they're praising this
guy who did the truck attack and Elliott Roger who
shot up UCSB and a bunch of sororities that had
pretty women in him as st Rogers and sat Menaggian
(31:40):
and yeah, before he went on this rampage, like ten
minutes before, this guy tweeted the in Cell rebellion has
already begun. We will overthrow all Chad's and Stacy's. Chad
is their word for like good looking guys who have sex,
and Stacy's are good looking women who won't have sex
with them. And then they said, all hail the supreme
(32:01):
Gentleman Elliot Rogers. So these are like granted their deeply
disturbed people deeply disturbed and also using all the language
of terrorism like you know, they're saying, spread his name,
speak of his sacrifice for our cause, Worship him for
he gave his life for our future. That's being posted
(32:21):
on in cell boards today. Like you're telling me that
if that was about you know, ISIS or al Qaeda,
like in the aftermath of a terror attack, that people
would not be freaking out and like banging that person's
door down. But they're just I think because uh, they're
mostly white kids, uh, and because it's sort of a
(32:45):
pathetic thing. Granted, most terrorists are part of an in
cell community, whether they admitted or not. Like a lot
of terrorists, terrorism organizations recruit young men who are sexual frustrated.
But the fact that these people define themselves by that,
(33:05):
and I think maybe makes them less threatened. Well, yeah,
and the whole rebellion is meant to basically say, if
if we act out our frustrations in the real world,
people will eventually begin to see our plight. Like they
have this talk of like their struggle, and I think
they're gonna have a tough time keeping members. I mean,
I think they need to take them seriously, especially if
they're doing some horrible, terrible, violent things. But it's like
(33:30):
you know, isis is recruiting based on like how terrible? Yeah,
and like this is like, oh, if you get fucked
one day, sorry, but you're out like Lee, you know,
and I'm sure some of them are fucking that's what's annoying.
It's like, I mean, it's a bigger than annoying obviously,
but it's like I don't I just go away, just
(33:50):
go away. It's just this yeah, like there are a
lot of these people, you know, like they come on
and sort of like to pick up artist world and
ship like that where it's all about sort of looking
at women as like non human like sort of cogs
in a machine that you if you manipulate property, you
can get it to work the way you want to.
It's hard to say that this thing isn't a movement,
although the people they talk like on post like, well,
(34:12):
we're not a movement, you clearly are like they're contradicting
post from other people saying like this is a movement
and these are struggles and this is people are clearly articulate.
I mean, I don't know if you can say someone
is smart who chooses to blame their like lack of
uh sexual partners on just the opposite sex that doesn't
strike me as a sign of intelligence. Then also hot
(34:32):
men too, or what they deem. I would love to
be like, what do you think as a hot man?
I'd have to see their opinion of a Chad. Well,
Chad is like a you know, like a built dude
to the strong chin yea, what cam you know? It's like, okay,
we're I mean, we're both we don't like Chad. Okay,
can we find some common ground there? Obviously women want
to have sex with a bodybuilder. Um, but yeah, they say,
(34:55):
the path to radicalization for them starts with the pickup
artist community. They try to use the you know, pseudo scientific,
dehumanizing seduction techniques, and when that doesn't work, they just
get so angry. That's how Elliott Roger went down before
he went on a shooting spree. He was venting about
the pickup artist community and how they had failed him. Right. Well,
(35:18):
because the way that ship works, it really is like
when it began, it was like, hey, you don't know
how to talk to women. It's because you don't talk
to them. You've got to do this sequence of sentences
and then they'll be so hypnotized that they're gonna fuck.
And so when people sell somebody on that, these people
really hang on that and think that is really going
to change their life. And it's just such a fucking
(35:40):
odd problem. And it's such a problem with like masculinity.
It's flawed from the get go because they don't see
women as human beings. Like there isn't a formula to
talk to all men, all women, all don't like they're
just even the fucking dog whisper doesn't work sometimes, you know,
like we're human beings, you talk to us, it's just
like we're being killed. If we've people were being killed
(36:01):
that we don't, it's just like what what right? It
makes me afraid that they will like go on apps
and like we'll seek out victims in that way. Well
that's the other thing that people were concerned about because
I know, like on a couple of writeups, people were
sort of looking on these boards and they do regularly
talk about how to get away with like assaulting somebody
or like you know, rape or whatever. And that's why again,
(36:24):
if you have a message board where people are like
praising the acts of Osama bin Laden or other people,
uh that you would say, okay, hold on, like what's
what's the energy going on over here? And what like
where are they trying to go? But it's clear that
this is not the only attack of somebody who had
a similar motive about like this sort of anger at
the world in society at large for their their lack
(36:44):
of sexual connection, because you look at like the Charlottesville
crew and you're like, well, they're not sucking either, you know,
like a lot none of these people are sucking. I mean,
and if they are, it's not great. The just the
front right, I'd say the same thing is true of
the nine eleven hyjackers. They probably weren't having tons of sex,
which is why you could convince them to fly plane
into a building and say because once you do that,
(37:07):
you'll be able to have sex with women in heaven
or whatever. I think that's probably the next evolution of
this conversation is now talking about these communities and really
having to look at them to like the lens of
law enforcement, like this is this like if you're if
their aim as a community is to get people scared
or to fall in line or be like, hey, these
(37:29):
people who are involuntarily celibate, we are victims and you
need to hear us or we will get our message
out by taking lives, Like yeah, I mean that's every
terrorist organization. And now we have two mass murders that
were basically motivated by this ideology. So it seems like
we should be taking them fairly seriously. But I doubt
(37:50):
that's going to happen. So we also wanted to take
a look at Sean Hannity and his real estate empire.
Uh So it came out that he basically owns eight
hundred and seventy homes in seven states, what which You know,
he had talked about how Michael Cohen helped him with
(38:11):
real estate stuff, and you assumed it was like, yeah, hey,
could you look at this contract for with my landlord
for me or something like the foundation might have a
crack in it. Should I go through with this? So
he's bought like entire like con Yeah, so the thing
is he then the Guardian there was a report that
showed that he basically is in control of these shell
companies that have spent at least ninety million dollars on
(38:33):
like properties that are mostly distressed home like you know,
homes are about to before closed on. And it was
just like mass purchasing them. I think he has two
condos that actually have agreements with HUD with the Housing
and Urban Development Department. Uh. Which also makes it weird
when you have Ben Carson on your show and you
know you're praising him but not disclosing. It's like, I,
let's have some buildings that you know, Fox News trying
(38:54):
to get in that h G TV business and he's
going to be flip or flop or flog. So you
have Ben Carson on what did he talk to him about?
They're just it was just kind of, oh, how great
of a job you do it? Just like you know,
it's just like a softball thing, like just making them
look really publicity for the housing exactly when Ben Carson
is fucking up in an insane amount. Uh. And then
(39:18):
but also then we find out that not necessarily that
Ben Carson, uh, like you know, put these new regulations
into effect that the same buildings that Handity owns, like
they're part of a program that in ten like you know,
they will be allowed to turn it from like subsidized
housing units into condominiums that they can just package and
sell on their own. So before it was like okay,
(39:40):
well look we'll give you these loans, we'll subsidize the
housing if you're allowing people to stay there because they
need like cheaper housing. But then they're saying, but look,
just wait a couple of years and then you can
flip the building everybody and then nobody has to lived
there and then they can figure it out on their own,
so that we in that instances, HUD, we're like, we
will help finance this so that we have cheap housing.
(40:01):
And then yeah, but that's not necessarily the entire game
of HUD. But like that's just good. Yeah, they're supposed
to be good. They're trying to That's what's That's what
kind of makes it more infuriating when Sean Hannity goes
up there and it's just that disingenuous, right, and just
talking about how great Ben Carson is at his job
when yeah, like you said that, HUD is supposed to
(40:22):
be the good guys who are helping poor people who
like need places to live, and instead, uh, even this
morning there was a news alert that he was suggesting
that they raised the rent in subsidized housing, in subsidized
housing and make people like get jobs in order to
(40:44):
live in places. So basically His read on the situation is, well,
these poor people are just too lazy. Well yeah, I
mean that's that's how all conservatives think though, like everything
is hand Yeah, just smoke me to fu makeabies. So,
I mean he is part of this huge trend which
all comes from the financial crisis in oh eight oh seven,
(41:08):
oh eight, uh, where you know, lots of people lost
their homes, their homes were foreclosed on, and Wall Street
just bought up all of these houses and then started
renting them out to people for you know, hiked up rents.
So a lot of people in Wall Street are making
money off of these home foreclosures that they caused in
(41:30):
the first place. But they see a financial crisis as
an opportunity to make more money off of people who
are in crisis. Everyone has I don't I don't even
know who I meaning when I say everyone, but like
I've heard from multiple people in the real estate world
they're like, another crash is coming and I'm like, no,
I thought that you had to put down and then
(41:50):
and they're like, oh no, no, no, no, like it's coming.
Like if you want to buy a house, wait three
years because it's bottoming out again. And it's I don't
know if it's gonna be as bad as oh seven
and away, but like a new wave of it, Like
prices in New York have already started to drop, and
that's like an indication of like, oh fuck, it's going
to happen. Yeah. Well, I mean the thing with these companies,
(42:11):
like especially you know, Blackstone is like this huge private
equity company that they have, they're like one of the
biggest offenders like of this sort of trend. Yeah, well
it means it sounds like a fucking as jam mcnev
says a Harry Potter bad guy. Yeah, these companies they're
kind of like, hey, look looking at Wall Street, like
we have an opportunity just buy all these houses that
(42:33):
are like going on the cheap. And in some cases,
like someone that Hannity was in business when he went
to jail for like artificially tanking prices at these auctions
to be able to buy them at lower prices. Who
like once those houses about, that's money that probably could
have gone to the homeowner, probably to pay back their debt.
But anyway, and that guy went to jail. But that's aside.
The point. The thing is a sort of thing that's
(42:54):
happening is there taking these foreclosed on homes and basically
buying them up cheap and taking away these assets from
the people who were victimized by the financial crisis. So
Sean Hannity is like the guy behind the guy behind
the guy like making shiploads of money off the people
who watch his show and are like, there's a normal,
(43:15):
everyday American right there in Hannity. He's making money off
of you and putting you out of your fucking home,
or even just saying, oh, you know, look at the
home ownership is going down, Obama, look at these foreclosure rates,
and it's like, my man, you are the destroyer. You
are the same person who is taking advantage of this situation.
I feel like there is sort of this dialogue of like,
(43:36):
home ownership is going down because our generation is like bad,
like we've ruined chain restaurants. It's like, okay, we don't
want to to It's like, yes, we are afraid to
buy home. That wasn't our fault. We were young kids.
We were just like in high school, college and buying
a home became this catastrophic, terrible thing. So yeah, now
we don't want to want to buy a home. And
(43:57):
there will be people that are forever renters. And guess what,
we didn't fucking make that happen. You guys did. And
also the fact is the wages don't really match. Younger
people aren't making the kind of money you even need
to begin thinking about buying a home. It's depending on
where you If you live in a huge urban center,
I mean clearly there are other places where it is
more achievable, but like for example, California, New York, I
(44:18):
mean you can't in the city. Yeah, it's it's every
big cities. It's a huge thing. And you know, when
they look at like when a lot of these houses
went to auction, when they're being foreclosed on, you know,
you'd have people who are trying to buy a house,
like maybe first time homeowners who you know, like maybe
you're people of color who had a really hard time
buying a home. You have these Wall Street people come
in with cash up front and go, we'll buy this
(44:40):
ship for cash right now. And that's already puts people
who are traditionally trying to buy a home at a
tremendous disadvantage. So when they buy up all these houses,
they amass this like massive revenue stream of just renters. Uh.
And then they've also started selling the bonds of taking
all the rent that's being paid and selling that off too,
and that into a bond where I guess is more
(45:02):
sort of predictable than the you know, mortgage that they
had before, like all those shitty mortgages they had before.
But uh, you know, when you have a home that
is essentially owned and like tied up in a Wall
Street bond, like your landlord does not give a funk
about you, like they're not in it to help you out,
(45:22):
and like there are all these horror stories of people
who you know, have who are paying rent for these
houses that are owned by giant private equity firms, who
like there will be a crack in their ceiling and
they'll be like, it's getting worse, it's getting worse, guys,
nobody's been by to look at it. And then they're
fucking ceiling caves in or like one where there was
(45:43):
like water squirting through a light fixture. Um, so it
just seems dangerous. Live wire with water shoot down. Yeah,
that sounds fine. And then you try and call your
landley like sorry, look, we're way too massive to look
at the actual renters. And that's a problem too, because
if if the renters are not satisfied, they will leave,
and now that is going to affect the rent that's
(46:04):
being paid on those properties. Like part of those bonds
being healthy too is that you can keep people actually
in those units, are in those homes. And if they're
not doing that, that's why a lot of critics are saying, like,
if you can't even keep people happy or safe in
their homes, how do you expect to maintain you not
have super high turnover without a real plan to address that,
maybe we all got to stay in. Like on a Tuesday,
(46:24):
and rewatch The Big Short, because it's like that just
came out we already. I mean I haven't seen it.
I've fallen asleep three different times trying to watch it
on a plane. Um, it's a tough plane movie. But
it's like, I think it's about this. I think we
need to I think we need to regroup because if
this happens again, it's gonna be pretty embarrassing, right And
(46:44):
Like and one of the reports they say that, like,
you know, the difference with these sort of other these
bonds that they're selling now is like, you know, when
banks will repossess a mortgaged home as collateral, there's at
least the assumption that the homeowner has probably defaulted on
the more it and then it makes sense for this
person to be you know, to be ousted or evicted
from their home. Whereas like in these bonds, like if
(47:07):
a bond blows up, so many families are tied up
in them, like one bond melting down could lead to
a ton of evictions, just even if you never were
laid on your payments. So it's just a very weird situation.
I think, what you know, obviously it's not it's not
that Sean Hannity is exactly uh this company, but he's
employing the sort of same sort of tactics and uh
he saw the same lucrative opportunity to do this. And
(47:29):
people need to be aware that this company blacks and
I think they went up to eighty thousand single family homes.
That's a fucking racket, you know what I mean. And
people don't realize that. Wow, like even the housing market
created a new corporate overlord for your rent. It's like
they had their eyes on this ship from the start.
They're like that, well, look the market or bottom out
and we can just jump in with cash and buy
a massive amount of properties at once. President Trump has
(47:51):
even said before he was president, he said he sort
of hoped for a housing market crash, so quote people
like me will go in and buy like crazy. Z So,
I mean that's right, Yeah, that's kind of scary. All Right,
we're gonna take a quick break. We'll be right back,
(48:15):
and we're back. Uh yeah, So we're gonna hit a
couple of quick stories on our way out here. Federal
judge has said that this administration's attempt to sunset DOCCA
is actually like they never gave a reason for it,
and he's like, no, you can't just do that without
explaining why you want to do that. Essentially, it's a
crucial blow because essentially they're saying, well, now you've got
(48:38):
to accept new applications and renewal applications, and it kind
of helps bring the program back to how it was
during the Obama administration. I just thought about, like when
they get news, do you think that you remember like
the Staples button? Do you think they have a button?
It's like, oh, man, like they were just like they're
always like, no, you guys who can't do that, and
then they go back and they're like and they're like, no,
(48:59):
you can't. They're like, I'm sorry, what was your reason
to like, well, someone might have sued and and that
would end. So we're like fuck it, and the judges like,
I'm excuse. I just feel like every workplace that I've
ever been or like in has some sort of like
fun gag. You guys have that Jersey Shore. Does the
Trump White House have any fun levity? Is there like
Chaco Tuesday? Oh? They all vape. There's there's a there's
(49:22):
an office in the that's where the dead beats are. Yeah,
the dead there's an actual office of dead beats and
like like the nepotism hell, but it's like a bunch
of kids vaping which comes once a week. Yeah. He's
like and they're like, how did you get in here?
He's like, they can't kill me, baby, yeah. Yeah. Uh.
(49:44):
And so supermarkets are kind of fucked. Well yeah, maybe
there's like this like industry article where basically they were
urging like grocery store operators to be like, look, we
get that young people don't cook anymore. They've used things
like instat cart and Postmates and Amazon. So people. They're not.
(50:05):
They're younger people aren't going to grocery stores, but they
love restaurants and they're like why because they graham their food.
So their logic now to under other supermarket operators is like, man,
just make your store more grammable, baby, you know what
I mean. Let that boar's head turkey, that saw litle turkey.
Why don't we make a little carving out of that
or something. Anyway, it's crazy that their idea, because these
(50:26):
people are so old and out of ideas that they
think it's the lack of social media sexiness that is
contributing to it. You're thinking turkey sculptures is the way
to do that. I mean, look, if I saw you
know give away. You know what they should do is
like it should be free groceries. At it like a
like a set time, like you go on Twitter where
it's like the first time people to get in here.
Right now, get free groceries. Now you've got people going
(50:48):
to the stores, just don't. I just love grocery stores
like I love them. I loved being there. I love
the shelves and the aisles. I have a bagger friend
bag vans. These are that's my crew. Yeah, which which
Ralph's on Ventura and cold Water, and I tweet everyone
that works there is so lovely, so helpful, amazing. I've
(51:11):
tweeted at them multiple times just to be like I
love everybody and not even a favorite. They don't even
they don't care about me at all, And I'm like, Ralph's,
I just want to tell you're doing good works. You
know what's so funny there in the in this thing
they were another industry thing. They were pointing the fact that,
like you know, a lot of these stores have like
social media accounts, but only like a small number of
people actually follow them. So maybe that's another thing to
(51:33):
look into. Maybe they should be interacting with their hard
core customers like you would love it. I see their praises.
That's what's going to be sending you stuff after those
flips that are pretzels on one side, cracker on the other.
I'll take is the supermarket gonna go away? You know,
it's weird because it is the one rending away right
(51:54):
when you hear people come to America for the first time,
it is the one thing that they're just like, this
doesn't exist anywhere else. It's just like the most beautiful
thing to like see all like that you can have
like twenty different types of chocolate chip cookies like and
a thing like and like Trader Joe's isn't going to
go away anytime soon, you know, like are packed. Like
(52:17):
I guess it's like the Krogers of the world that
are trying to be like how to make this Kroger popping. Well,
I've noticed that the routes by my house now has
both a sushi bar in it and like a wine bar. Yeah,
wine bar, like super upscale like beer bar in it
for like people to you know, hang out and drink
next to the fucking produce sile, which is weird. But
(52:39):
I think that's the idea, is that you make it
this sort of upscale experience that I also nobody's I would,
you know what I would do. I would go to
a supermarket where all the ship was like meticulously placed,
like someone with O. C. D arranged it, and like
just to be like, damn, this motherfucker's perfect. That would
appeal to me. And also, uh, you know, old stand
(53:00):
up joke, but the fucking shopping cards they still don't work. Yeah, gross,
And they're also like you might as well be wheeling
around a trash dumpster because like they're never cleaned. So
that's why I was when they started putting those like
handwipe stations at the grocery show, was like, that's right.
They even acknowledged that you are walking into a petri
dish of back to you. My brother is a realtor
(53:20):
and he like took out an ad on a supermarket
handwipe station. Oh wow, that is smart. But I love
a salad bar any restaurant with one, but a supermarket definitely.
And do they make me sick sometimes? To make me
sick sometimes, But I'm back there right you said it
(53:42):
was such a genuine smile. It's I don't even care.
I love it whatever. I love crab Louis. It's like
pooping after talking about your like, I still like it.
I'm still having problems, but I love it. Yeah, it
makes me sick, but only for three days. Oh no,
the clearing the system. This makes me think of So
there was this article, uh recently, I don't remember what
publication it was, but they said that supermarkets were the
(54:04):
new place where people met others. Like you've been married,
so you didn't even know how to describe a place
where hook up hook up spot, which I don't think
that's true necessarily. I've never seen people like start talking
to each other at a supermarket who weren't already there together,
And so I was like when I read that article,
(54:26):
I was like, wait, why who's writing this? Like this
is such bullshit? And I think it's probably whoever is
behind this, like marketing push to like save supermarkets and
make them grammable, probably like pitched that story or sent
out a you know, press release that was like, you know,
like supermarkets, or they did like some sort of small
(54:48):
bullshit study with like a zero samples. Someone was like,
we met at your store, now we're married. I think
in l A that very much could be true, but
I don't really And I've been to a lot of
supermarkets in a lot of different markets, and I just
don't see that being true. But here, people like look,
especially during pilots season, oh my god, He'll go in
and be like this bitch has heels on, and like wow,
(55:11):
everybody is just meanwhile, you're in your LaVar ball hoodie
to trot titties right, And I'm like, get it, okay, cool,
I got to be doing that when I go to
a supermarket. I'm so like in a zone and probably
just like faded that I'm already not really trying to
talk to people, Like I like the supermar because I
just like to see everything and not interacting. It's not
(55:32):
the interactive part of it that appeals to me. And
also I just feel like, how could you even begin
a conversation. I mean, if you're a pickup artist, they
would be like neg the ship out of the woman's
serial choice and then follow up with your name, like
you we sinam toast CRUs. That's dumb. I'm jeff right.
Maybe when you're in line or something, but yeah, I
(55:52):
don't see. I feel like airports people there, people are
ready to find a fairy. Where are they like a
step ball? I think I think they establish it. But
then also, oh my god, they're kissing in the produce
superducer and Hosie and is showing us an article from
the Wall Street Journal, and like the cover photo is
just people making out in front of stock photo. Those
(56:13):
are not two people who met at the supermarket. People
who are like a middle aged married couple like kissing
each other on the cheek, and they're like to see
if this is the new hook up. And the headline
on the article is the hottest social scene in town
isn't the singles Bar, It's the Supermarket's Wall Street Journal.
Who someone was like a man? Our stock is crumbling?
(56:34):
Can you even lie slightly? Like? Yeah? For the Wall
Street I think I see a lot of videos of
old people meeting young people at the Superman. You know,
like little kids hugging old people, and I think that
type of interaction going on, Like there was like a
girl who just was like waving at everybody and being
like I love you or like and this old man
had just been going through a tough time. I watch
every single video about old people and they like created
(56:57):
this beautiful friendship. I will send it to it. It's
so amazing. His wife had died and he had just
been like kind of a hermit grump and then met
this like four year old girl and she changed his life.
And they met out a supermarket, but her mom was
with her. Yeah, of course, yet I was Yeah, he's
yeah that the youthful exuberance made him believe again. Yeah,
(57:20):
I love taking my son food shopping. Yeah yeah, yeah,
he added one. Since the last time, you should try
and get them a supermarket friend. Yeah, well we're out there,
we're putting it out there, and these old people just
started picking it up. But like, hey, hey, hey, what
about him. Maybe maybe he's not old enough he's about
to turn to but he's super into it, like he
(57:43):
just like loves it's stimulating. Wow, it's so funny and
not that you'd say that. That's the same reason why
I went to supermarket because it's a bunch of to
look at. And I hate when the labels, you know,
I'm like, I like I revealed him a virgo, so
I like the perfection. And you know, oh my god,
a Japanese supermarket whoa ship is so properly laid out.
Even if you have a local Japanese supermarket in your
(58:04):
city in America, check it out because the way they
are putting their ship on the shelves second to nine.
All right, Megan, that's my plug for the Japanese supermarket industry. Megan,
it has been a pleasure having you. Where can people
find you? Oh my website is about to be up
and running again. It got hacked by a type warn company,
but I go for real. But I've gotten it back.
(58:28):
I've been in a dispute and it's I now am
the proud owner again of Megan Gailey dot com, so
you can go there or my Instagram is better Megan
Gailey and my Twitter is Megan Gailey. I'm on the
road a lot in the next two months. So how
you spell that Megan Gailey? I mean J and J
allis quick? You you guys all got that? I'm sure
(58:49):
Miles before can people find you? Oh? You can find
me on Twitter and Instagram at Miles. You can find
me on Twitter at Jack Underscore O'Brien. You can find
us at daily zeitgeis on Twitter. We're at the Daily
Zeygeist on Instagram. We have a Facebook fan page and
a website Daily zeitgeis dot com, where we post our
episodes and our foot We link off to the articles
(59:13):
and information that we used in two Days episode, as
well as the song we ride out on, which Miles,
don't you tell him what that is? Okay? So I
love this artist called sev Dliza. She is in Iranian
Dutch singer. She's got like this spooky songstress five and
I just found out that she put an album out
(59:33):
last month and I didn't know, so I started listening
to this morning the first track, fucking fever track. I'm
not gonna lie to you guys. Sometimes Miles is playing
the song that we're gonna ride out on, and you know,
it doesn't necessarily jump out of me. This is one
of the ones where I was I was like, Yo,
who is this? That's how I know who's this? What
is that? It sounds like, yeah, this is something you
can put a bath on, like the candles to, you know,
(59:55):
put your LaVar ball hoodie on yourself talk Yeah that
bath fanger bathter uh. And this is yes, Billie's a
new song called Soul Sinkable uh. And it's just it's
just great. It's fine, you're gonna look all right if
we're gonna write out on that. We will be back
tomorrow because it is a daily podcast. Talk to you
guys them. M cot On can say and see you
(01:01:27):
go all skind way, I fi I didn't see SUSI
(01:02:04):
se so sla all bo so sure and style so
(01:03:00):
sure say say this s S S S S sinko
(01:03:32):
for