Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to this episode of Trends
Giving Week. My name is Jack O'Brien. That ever, there's miles.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
Great stomach stretching exercise, isn't it. Yeah, you have Christmas
high a minute.
Speaker 1 (00:17):
That one was courtesy you knew, Chris. What are your
stomach stretching exercises?
Speaker 2 (00:22):
I don't know. I just say that. I'm just I just.
Speaker 1 (00:25):
War dog, upward, doug whatever, whichever.
Speaker 2 (00:27):
You can eat breads, kind of like how David Blaine
talks about like just holding your breath for long periods.
We try and do some of that.
Speaker 3 (00:34):
Just I'm gonna eat mostly mashed potatoes.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
I think this year. I love potatoes so much. I'm
doing a wress sheet. That's one pound of butter per
three pounds of potato. And these are correct, They're luxurious.
I encourage people. Look, you're probably like, I feel bad
putting in a stick. Put in a fucking pound. Okay, stick,
there you go. Yeah, I went.
Speaker 1 (00:58):
I went to raph yesterday and got my I so
I have I have this old recipe for sweet potato crunch,
which is my mom's famous Thanksgiving side. But like all
the things are, it's like from the seventies. So it's
like instead of asking for butter and asked for margarine.
Speaker 2 (01:15):
Oh yeah, it's just made by a man in a
factory downtown.
Speaker 1 (01:19):
Yeah, you can't get the ingredients at a Whole Foods
or something like that. You need to go No, yeah,
you need to go to Ralph. You need to get
just the very basic.
Speaker 2 (01:30):
I made past rolls a lot and I live near
like a healthier grocery store. Yeah. Like and her mask,
she's like, oh, make that cashro. I'm like, I can't
get the ship there. I need garbage, canned fuel.
Speaker 1 (01:42):
It calls for a can of coke as well.
Speaker 3 (01:45):
It's one of the.
Speaker 1 (01:47):
Things that bombs the food water. Yeah, one can of
tab and a cigarette. But my name's Jack O'Brien. That ever,
there's Miles Gray. This is the episode where we tell
you what is trending on this Tuesday. Ever twenty fifth,
we got some new data on ICE, the American Gestapo
and how all that's working out.
Speaker 2 (02:09):
Yeah, I mean, I think since the beginning of US
even hearing about data about who was actually being kidnapped
by ICE, it was always like around at minimum seventy
percent of the people had no criminal record or no
criminal conviction of any kind. And just now the libertarian
Cato Institute just got their.
Speaker 1 (02:29):
Hey, I know, if they're like clock.
Speaker 2 (02:33):
I'm curious what their angle is, because they're like this
is this is bad. I wonder if they're because we
need more money for like the local cops. Let's not
keep our like, let's not give everything the ice. But anyway, they.
Speaker 1 (02:43):
They have the government period right like this is I
feel like rand Paul has been kind of on the
right side of a lot of this fascist takeover shit.
Speaker 3 (02:52):
Yeah, just because it's such big government that he's.
Speaker 2 (02:54):
Like, ah, I mean, I'm backwards, but right the big
government thing is like the one thing I try to
be ideologically consistent.
Speaker 1 (03:01):
I should be able to shoot a poor person in
the street. It's kind of my thing.
Speaker 3 (03:06):
Without your dangoing through.
Speaker 1 (03:09):
Just like had a really bad hall monitor when he
was a kid, and just like can't get past.
Speaker 3 (03:14):
It forever, scarred from that. I have a bathroom passed.
Speaker 2 (03:18):
No you don't ran. Oh god, I'm now I'm pissing
here what you made me do? I am it now?
I'm a libertarian. So anyway, the Cato Institute got their
hands on some sweet sweet privately held data was not
made public, and they found since October one, seventy three
percent of people booked into ice Cut City had no
(03:39):
criminal conviction. Just five percent of these people had a
violent conviction. So that means like the other stuff were
like immigration offenses like illegal entry or re entry, they
got as many of those people on that offense as
they did for violent crime. So not the worst of
(04:00):
the worst. In fact, the law biting people that are
here is just not not who you're looking for. And
they're just being like small price to pay to terrorize
people of color in the community, very small price. But
their whole rhetoric has been, oh man, we're getting the
fucking decapitators of Earth, the guys who were boofing fent
(04:23):
and all into your elementary schools, the absolute demons and.
Speaker 1 (04:26):
Ww they boof it into the elementary Yeah.
Speaker 2 (04:28):
Yeah, don't ask how. Don't ask how, folks.
Speaker 1 (04:30):
So they suck it up through their asses, don't ask
how far somehow that goes into the elementary school.
Speaker 2 (04:36):
I don't know how it works, folks.
Speaker 1 (04:38):
The ass through the mouth into the These people are
sick folks, that's all I know.
Speaker 2 (04:43):
That's all I know. But like when you look at
the bar graph of the actual or like pie chart.
Speaker 1 (04:49):
The me I'm a USA Today reader, so either give
me a barograph or give me a pie chart to
make sure it's colored.
Speaker 2 (04:56):
Please seven. Yeah, don't worry. It is like newly integrated school.
My man, this shit is colored. It's no conviction. Seventy
three percent traffic violations. There are more people for traffic
violations than fucking violent crime. And the others were like
property like this fucking nonsense.
Speaker 3 (05:16):
Damn ohoh, but I forgot. They did release other data.
Speaker 2 (05:20):
ICE actually did release some new data publicly and Puppy
Snuffernome's band of Mary losers. It turns out there they've
got their backs against the watch. She posted this. Over
the past ten months, for the Democrat politicians have compared
ICE time, Nazis, the Gestapo, and slave patrols okay yeah,
fueling an eleven hundred and fifty three percent increase in assaults.
(05:45):
From January twenty twenty twenty five through November twenty first,
twenty twenty five, there have been two hundred and thirty
eight reported assaults against ICE law enforcement. There was only
nineteen during this same period last year.
Speaker 1 (05:57):
When when it was not a thing that was invading
American cities and pointing guns at people.
Speaker 3 (06:03):
Yeah, and we should be clear on what they even
consider assault.
Speaker 2 (06:07):
It's things like people saying like get your fucking hands
off me, or like who the fuck are you? Yeah,
I've also read I was going through the data set
and the tabs, and they also do count children giving
them a thumbs down as assault, I don't know, I
feel like it would be Yeah, I'm not even looking,
and I'm gonna presume that they're like, yeah.
Speaker 3 (06:26):
Let's count that, we'll count that, we'll county.
Speaker 1 (06:29):
They are wildly undertrained to do what they're doing. But
the one thing they do seem to have training in
is like Euro League players when they get like touched
and then like fall to the ground to be like.
Speaker 2 (06:43):
I've been assault yep, ye you looking like they're doing
the high jump, just full arched back.
Speaker 1 (06:53):
Well, speaking of other consequences of sending a bunch of armed,
untrained people into American cities and communities without any training
or justification other than like round up people who look
like they might be from another country or not even
(07:13):
that just like you know, make people scared to not
be white.
Speaker 2 (07:16):
Honestly, it's up to the It feels like it's up
to the Ice age. Yeah, whoever, I have the beholder, Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 1 (07:24):
They you know. One of the reasons that we thought
this might be a bad idea, and we're just we're
just calling balls and strikes here. But one of the
things that seemed weird is that they all wear masks,
and so you don't know who they are, and they
also don't show identification, and there's no clear way to
identify who's who, and therefore they're just like making it
(07:46):
really easy for anybody who wants to, yeah, to have
power over someone, to just come through and be like, yeah,
I'm Ice, man, you get in the back of my car.
Speaker 3 (07:58):
It's actually they're doing it the way how they think
Antifa works.
Speaker 2 (08:01):
Yes, you know, but they're like these people just claim Antifa, man,
and like they're doing something like no, no, no, the people
who just anyway, so Ice, Like we said, it's happened again,
another fucking guy pretends to be Ice, this time in Texas,
where a guy who works at a mega church as
a safety director that must be dangerous work. Yeah, yeah,
(08:23):
decided he didn't want to fucking pay at a massage parlor.
Speaker 1 (08:27):
I mean, think about what he has to put up with,
like being a safety director at a mega church. All
the people falling out when they like get touched by
the Lord and like have to fall over backwards. You know,
yeah there.
Speaker 3 (08:38):
I don't even know if they're catching the spirit. I
think it might be just one.
Speaker 2 (08:42):
Of those very vanilla ones or they're like, Lord, I
lived your name on huh, thank god, we're all right.
And then they go home or go to caros or
wherever they go to have fucking safety director.
Speaker 1 (08:55):
Then there might be you know that a lot of
times they have people flying on ropes. They're trying to
do like Spider Man turn off the dark type and
there stone type. Probably he's just like somebody pulled the
gun at the UH at the entrance, and it's like
nobody's getting in here to persecute Christians like they did.
Speaker 2 (09:15):
You're tithing inadequate. So here's I'm just going to play
this local news clip so you can just hear how
this story unfolds. Where a guy goes massage parlor, what
do you mean you don't take credit card? And this
is how he resolves it.
Speaker 4 (09:32):
Investigators say do Little had booked and received a massage
from the victim. The problems arose when Doolittle went to pay.
He wanted to use a credit card, but the victim
told him she only accepted cash or Zell payments.
Speaker 5 (09:45):
She said he.
Speaker 2 (09:46):
Pulled out an ID card labeled ICE.
Speaker 3 (09:50):
Now you're hearing the judge talking to him at his arraignment.
Speaker 2 (09:52):
As you said. Now, they said that you pulled out
an ID card that said it was Ice.
Speaker 4 (09:57):
He was an agent.
Speaker 2 (10:00):
Her ID.
Speaker 4 (10:01):
Police say the victim could plumb showing him her temporary visa,
but that apparently wasn't enough, because they say Doolittle went
on to insist she also sent him money.
Speaker 2 (10:11):
He said he demanded she sell him five hundred dollars
or he would take her away and she would never
see her family or children again. Mm.
Speaker 1 (10:21):
Now the guy is the guy who did this is
standing there, looks exactly like you probably are picturing the
security director to Texas magare.
Speaker 2 (10:30):
Oh yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah.
Speaker 1 (10:32):
The orange is doing him no favors, hands behind his
back and just like shifting his weight from one I
do another like a kid who's in trouble. And he
also has to pee a little bit.
Speaker 2 (10:42):
Yep. So just the other story straight he goes to pay. Yeah,
the massage person says, I don't take credit card, cash
or Zelle. He says, well, I don't got it. I'm
ice let me see your visa and she goes here
it is. He goes, you know what, actually, you need
to pay me five hundred dollars or else I'm going
to ice you up. And she's like, how do you
(11:04):
want me to pay? Zelle? What the fuck would this
guy demanded five hundred? He just I think it's all
the point being was he was never going to pay.
I think he went in there and he's like, this.
Speaker 3 (11:16):
Is how I'm gonna get a free fucking whatever happened.
Speaker 1 (11:19):
And there's a fake card made up that yeah, I mean,
like how well worn was that thing? How many times
does he use that?
Speaker 2 (11:27):
Just like yeah, yeah, She's like, hold on this, this
looks like an Aero fifty one all access pass. Yeah. Yeah,
I just kind of scratch out whatever I needed for
I got it at a gift store. It's pretty cool though, right,
that'll make stuff like this. Yeah, it's not again, I
think predictable. And this is what happens when you have
people who are just so willing to exploit people's fear
(11:50):
around these kidnappings to go fucking to a massage parlor
and be like, I'm.
Speaker 3 (11:54):
Not paying, I'm ice.
Speaker 1 (11:56):
There are bad people out there, which is why you
can't just to have masked people who don't identify themselves,
yapping people under the authority of the government.
Speaker 2 (12:06):
Where's that people doing bad stuff for claiming ICE even
like in and they're not. But hey, it's the violent
democrat rhetoric around it that's giving everyone a bad rap.
Speaker 1 (12:15):
All right, let's take a break from ICE to give
a update on what it's like to be seduced by
RFK Junior. Ryan Lizza, who was the fiance of Olivia
Nuzzy and got kind of publicly cooked by RFK Junior,
made a post on his sub stack where he was
(12:36):
like describing for the process of like finding out that
she was having an affair. But the twist ending was
and I saw the name on the thing, Mark Samford.
This was twenty twenty, so he was like, I got
cheated on by both Mark Sanford and RFK Junior, so
nothing like a Ryan Liza spurned. He's also dropping some
(12:59):
of the romantic poems he discovered sent by o RFK
Junior seventy one to his fiance Olivia Nuzzi thirty two.
I just want to read from this because hold on
to your butts.
Speaker 2 (13:12):
Guys.
Speaker 1 (13:13):
You put a towel down. I mean to squeeze your
cheeks to force open your mouth. Goddamn what I am
a river, you are my canyon. I mean to flow
through you. I mean to subdue and tame you, my love.
Oh so yeah, I get it.
Speaker 2 (13:30):
Guys. Oh wow, what a son God. I can hear
it with the same intensity of RFK. Just screaming that
at you squeeze.
Speaker 1 (13:41):
Your cheeks to force open your mouth is like I'm
picturing the part in Goonies where the where Yeah, that's
like hander the well, there's a part in Gooni's where
Chunk has hidden the jewels in his mouth yep, and
the Telly's like squeezed the side of his cheeks and
then like his mouth was horsed open. And it always
(14:05):
bothered me because I was like, dude, I would just
bite down my teeth. But like when they do it,
the gems just like start falling.
Speaker 2 (14:11):
Out about mouth. Yeah. Yeah, just like too good. So
this for you just evoke the Goonies and You're like,
this isn't hot, bro, this is Goonies.
Speaker 1 (14:18):
I mean, well, I thought it was really hot actually,
because I've always wanted Anne Ramsey, the actress from Goonies,
to squeeze my cheeks and flow through me like water.
Speaker 2 (14:31):
Yeah. I am a river. You are Mike Canyon. And hey,
I guess well, Cheryl, she ain't going nowhere, baby, so
don't worry about her.
Speaker 1 (14:40):
I know Loyal Opening Loyal, the new book from Olivia
and Nosey, which is about to drop. Was I think
people are like that. This is probably what like caused
this Ryan Lizza post and the podcast Choppo trap House
was reading a excerpt of it and it's just like
like overwritten, turgid literary, like over literary garbage where she's
(15:06):
just taking the politician eyes blue blue of flame, Like
it's just like fuck.
Speaker 3 (15:14):
You know, the blue flame is unnatural.
Speaker 1 (15:17):
Especially like natural gas, which we should invest more in.
Speaker 2 (15:22):
But it's you.
Speaker 1 (15:23):
You look at RFK is his I will say, his
eyes are his shrinking? His eyes look like they're being
eaten by his skull.
Speaker 2 (15:32):
Dude, it looks like a night walker putting on makeup
to try and pretend he's fucking he's like with this ship.
Like everybody They're like, are you dead? Oh man, I'm
fucking chill, like everybody fucking haunted ass eyes.
Speaker 1 (15:48):
She has a type which is failed Republican presidential candidates.
Apparently Mark Sandford too, of all of our Sandford such
a he's always been in some weird eyes like kid
in Carolina politician who like went missing for a little
while and he was like on a hike with his
mistress and I forget where.
Speaker 2 (16:09):
And then he said, I remember he called. He was
talking about he was at his friend's house. But he's like,
we called it Jurassic Park. It was the weird I
remember that being the dumbest explanation because.
Speaker 1 (16:20):
He said, he said, the reason I couldn't be reached
for a week and my wife reported me missing was
because I was at my friend's house. We called it
Jurassic Park.
Speaker 2 (16:30):
He would know, he was saying, like about a guy
he was with. This is just I have this part.
He says, I want to apologize to my good friends.
Tom Davis came over to the house. He drove up
from Beaufort and he has been an incredibly dear friend
of mine for a long time. My first governor race.
He moved up and he lived in the basement of
our house for six months. We called it Jurassic Park
because it was the kid's dinosaur sheets and all kinds
(16:52):
of different folks were living there in the campaign and
Get and then he just like kind of mean, like
I just remember this meandering apology. He was like, yeah,
I dude, my friend, we caught a Jurassic Park and
we're like, dude, what are you? You went missing and
you're cheating, you're the governor.
Speaker 1 (17:06):
What is this anyways? So that's information you probably didn't
want to hear. But just so you know, little seduction
lesson from RFK Junior.
Speaker 2 (17:18):
I think it's better people hear that so they're protected
against it when they have a chance encounter with RFK
and he says he wants to squeeze their cheeks to make.
Speaker 1 (17:25):
Their says this to everyone just has the same one.
Speaker 2 (17:30):
You say that to all of the journalists.
Speaker 1 (17:32):
Let's take a quick break. We'll be right back and
we're back. Oh, we're back, We're back. A little word
of wisdom for people traveling this week. You're you're driving,
(17:53):
but you're not flying anywhere.
Speaker 2 (17:55):
Were driving? Yeah, Yeah, we we're driving. We're driving. We're
going up north to Bay to see you know, I
got to get the guys. Shelled with his cousins because that's.
Speaker 3 (18:05):
Always it's actually free child care.
Speaker 1 (18:09):
You just get to the older kids.
Speaker 2 (18:11):
Dude, you got four kids. My oldest niece just don't
turn thirteen. My nephew's twelve, he's about to be thirteen.
Then the kids next level down or like nine. Bro,
those ratios with one kid was not Oh my god.
They treat them like fucking like groku. It's amazing. I'm like, yeah, bro,
y'all do whatever the fuck y'all want to do. Just
I don't want to hear any screaming or crying. And
(18:33):
they they're great anyway. So yeah, Thanksgiving? Are you saying,
are you're.
Speaker 1 (18:38):
Just friends thing? Yeah? We're hosting.
Speaker 2 (18:41):
Okay, I got a.
Speaker 1 (18:43):
Family, My seven year old's best friend and his family
coming over.
Speaker 2 (18:48):
Okay, he's cooking the bird. We're ordering a bird, all right,
all right, yeah, I'm cooking the bird.
Speaker 1 (18:54):
You're cooking the bird.
Speaker 2 (18:55):
I'm going up. I'm cooking their Yeah, dry, Brian, it's
my sister in law. Yeah, that's what I call her,
my sister in law. She's she's dry brinding it starting today. Nice.
Speaker 1 (19:08):
Yeah, that's I feel like the best turkeys I've ever
had were either dry brind or, like you know, fully
in a wet brin.
Speaker 2 (19:18):
Yeah, I'm gonna make I'm thinking for Christmas. I'm gonna
make the Salvador and Christmas turkey that Marcella was talking about,
where you just just fucking.
Speaker 3 (19:27):
Ladle the tomato over and over and over again.
Speaker 2 (19:31):
Yeah. Anyway, well, that's not what we're talking about. We're
talking we're talking about you guys, y'all traveling, and y'all
dressing like pieces of absolute scummy ship when you get
on an airplane, to the point that the fa fucking
Sean Duffy, the traveler, he's out here, Sean Dulphe he's
(19:54):
out here at Newark International Airport. Okay, shout out e
w R. I know the three letter code. Basically say
like there's been a four hundred percent uptick in in
flight disturbances. They're saying people haven't acted this bad since
twenty nineteen. So again, with the holidays coming around, please
be nice. I think this is a good opportunity for
(20:14):
take the focus off of him, and you know, maybe
his lack of apology for air traffic controllers and TSA
people who were not paid through the shutdown and had
to eat shit and grin through it all. When he
should be doing that. I think he's like, I'm actually
gonna the focus should be on the passengers. Y'all are
the ones fucking up. So here he is.
Speaker 1 (20:34):
Focusing on the clothes people.
Speaker 2 (20:35):
Where he's it's so weird. He's doing like a respectability politics,
like y'all need to dress better. If you dress better,
you act better.
Speaker 1 (20:45):
But he's pants up.
Speaker 3 (20:48):
He's really coming after.
Speaker 2 (20:50):
I feel he is a full frontal attack for how
I'd like to dress on an airplane. But here he
is just going through this. I don't know.
Speaker 3 (20:56):
He sounds like such a dorky school principle.
Speaker 5 (20:59):
We have to think to what, how do we do
a better job? How do we, you know, maintain.
Speaker 6 (21:03):
Maybe some of that frustration we have as we travel
this Thanksgiving season, maybe we should say please and.
Speaker 5 (21:09):
Thank you to our palace, to our flight attendance.
Speaker 6 (21:13):
I think again, I call this, uh just maybe dressing
with some respect. Uh, you know, whether it's a pair
of jeans and a and a and a decent shirt.
Speaker 5 (21:23):
I would encourage people maybe dress a little better, which
the courageous encourages us to maybe behave all a little better.
Speaker 6 (21:30):
Let's try not to wear slippers in and uh and
pajamas as we come to the airport.
Speaker 2 (21:34):
What I think?
Speaker 5 (21:34):
That's what?
Speaker 2 (21:35):
What is this guy? Who the fuck are you? Bro?
Speaker 1 (21:39):
The we're pasting that like that is over, That battle
has been lost. People just wear pajamas flying dude, you
if you.
Speaker 2 (21:46):
Wear jeans and a nice shirt. I'm like, this guy
is gonna bring the plane down? Why is he dressed
like this? Why is he dressed like he ready to
meet God later? I don't want this. You should be
dressed like absolutely, that's the fun because you're getting nickelin dimdar.
He's like, oh, you got a backpack that's fifty two
extra dollars. Yeah?
Speaker 1 (22:07):
What Just be comfortable and just go on. I think
it's nice to be polite to the flight staff. Actually,
you know, yeah, that's a that's a good idea. Don't
but don't don't go from that to be like and
stop dressing like fucking slobs.
Speaker 3 (22:20):
Keep hearing going on. He's like, don't worry, you don't
take your this one.
Speaker 2 (22:23):
I kind of did regree. He's like don't don't take
your slippers off and then put them all over the
seat like the arm wrestler. Friend. I'm like, okay, let me.
Speaker 1 (22:29):
Yeah, people take their slippers off and put them all
over the place.
Speaker 2 (22:34):
I think you're saying, like your bare feet, don't put
your don't take your slippers off, don't don't have don't
have bare feet up. Just generally I agree with that,
but I think generally he's just trying to just say,
because this is going to be the busiest travel season
for fifteen years, yeah, he's just like just trying just
just try and be chill out there. You know, don't
don't dress sloppy, like you don't give an f. Okay,
(22:58):
we're trying to look nice up here.
Speaker 1 (23:00):
You start dressing like it's you know, the olden days
when air travel was really nice and people, uh, you know,
the government actually helped fund it so that it was good.
And so you guys do that, and we'll keep treating
everyone who works for us like absolute ship, just to
(23:20):
the point that they treat you like shit and won't
bother me that that won't be a problem for me.
That actually works out pretty well for me.
Speaker 2 (23:27):
Sean Duffy men should be in suits, women in pearls,
and children and their Sunday's best. That's that's that's how
everyone should be flying. I love dressing, like like you
have to be comfortab I think, especially since I've had
a kid. Yeah, because.
Speaker 3 (23:44):
Yeah, I wear ship that.
Speaker 2 (23:45):
I'm like, this is gonna get dirty as fucky already,
too much that can go wrong. You just wear a.
Speaker 3 (23:50):
Beautiful shirt, Sean Duffy.
Speaker 2 (23:52):
Okay, when a microwave this light stick and have it
explode on my shirt.
Speaker 1 (23:58):
The Komi case and the Tisha James case both tossed.
Speaker 2 (24:02):
Both Ah.
Speaker 3 (24:05):
Out of here, fucking gone.
Speaker 2 (24:07):
Really nothing to say.
Speaker 1 (24:08):
Yeah, it was just that the cases looked completely fucked
from the start, and the judges looked at them and
were like, these cases are completely fucked.
Speaker 2 (24:16):
Are you joking right now? No?
Speaker 1 (24:18):
Okay, well then the cases are lost.
Speaker 2 (24:20):
And then they're like, oh, you're not joking. Okay, let
me go one step before you even pretended you knew
how to fucking prosecute a case. Your appointment is completely
it's a wrongful appointment.
Speaker 3 (24:31):
Therefore you are null and void. You are not a.
Speaker 2 (24:34):
Prosecutor get the fuck out of here.
Speaker 1 (24:37):
They questioned her appointment position.
Speaker 2 (24:40):
So you were wrongfully appointed.
Speaker 1 (24:42):
Fam on the record, you this was a bad decision,
you were bad at your job. I just want to
stay for the record. You order at your job, you're
your career shouldn't exist in the form that it does.
You should be working for state farm in the state
of Florida.
Speaker 2 (25:00):
Thank you, thank you Veryonere do like the Miss Senior
Colorado pageant or something now, right, because you're thirty six,
I think that's when that's the senior league start for
those things pageant.
Speaker 3 (25:10):
So so do that they have said.
Speaker 2 (25:12):
Then unsurprisingly, they're like, well, we're gonna we're gonna refile
against the black woman, Leticia James. So interesting, they haven't
said shit about Leticia James. They're like, oh, we're going
to go for it. But every every person who predicted
this outcome is like, bro, they're not going to good
fucking luck with an appeal. Also at this point, but
(25:32):
this is what happens when the people that actually could
have prosecuted this case, we're just not interested in getting
like legally mopped in court because the cases we're weak
and fucking transparently unethical.
Speaker 1 (25:45):
Yeah, all right, just checking out Drudge Report job losses
have accelerated consumer confidence as spiraling. Just some news from
the economy. Turkey price up twenty four percent year over year.
Speaker 3 (26:00):
Yeah, my god, y'all they're so afraid of just just
it's we've been in a recession, I feel like since
last year realistically.
Speaker 1 (26:09):
Yeah, well, instead of saying that it's just isolated economic indicators.
Speaker 2 (26:13):
It's not that like the economy's bad. It's just like
everything's just like unaffordable. Yeah, just describing the vibe of
a terrible of a recession.
Speaker 3 (26:23):
It's just like everything's just out of.
Speaker 2 (26:24):
Reach for people right now. Kind of gnarly.
Speaker 1 (26:27):
It's not a recession though, you people, not not necessarily
us the people who work at MSNBC and cover it
and have cushy relationships with the people who have all
the money.
Speaker 2 (26:38):
There's a there was a Washington Post thing about like
the SNP four ninety three, because you know, it's the
SMP five hundred. They're like, if you take out the
top seven, okay, you're actually looking at a completely different economy.
Speaker 1 (26:51):
Yeah, it's just a hand like literally a handful of
big companies that are probably in the whole thing up. Yep,
But it's they're probably gonna up with AI, so should
be fine. But on the other hand, Donald Trump Junior
got to go to a sick wedding this weekend. This
is just a great snapshot of how some people are living.
(27:12):
There was a double Low seven themed wedding in India.
People got to see some video of Donald Trump Junior
trying to dance. It was just doing a clap to
the beat, you know, on stage with Oh come on,
don't don't ask me to dance some class clapping along.
Speaker 2 (27:32):
Sorry. People were like, my plug didn't come through with
the eight ball, so I'm going to be pretty low
energy at this way.
Speaker 1 (27:40):
But they also got j Low to perform at this wedding.
Hell yeah, a mere two million dollars, which I get.
Speaker 2 (27:47):
I can't.
Speaker 1 (27:48):
I cannot blame j Lo for doing something for two
million dollars for a half hour of work or whatever
it took.
Speaker 3 (27:55):
Oh yeah, let me see oh day, everybody got leather on? Wait,
I know, is that is that Gilbert? I think I
know one of those dancers.
Speaker 2 (28:04):
Good for him?
Speaker 1 (28:05):
Wow?
Speaker 2 (28:06):
I mean yeah, they got the fan blown. Look at
your hair, weave looking good. J Lo could barely see
the tracks. Okay, yep, two million because her last tour
got canceled. Oh that's right. She couldn't fucking sell ticket.
Speaker 1 (28:20):
I mean some people said it was she couldn't sell tickets.
A Jaylo just wanted to spend time with her family,
which I'm for that. If you get you can get
two million dollars for going to a wedding for a
single day, then.
Speaker 2 (28:33):
Yeah, all right.
Speaker 1 (28:34):
Those are some of the things that are trending on
this Tuesday, November twenty fifth. We are back tomorrow with
the Who last episode of the show. Until then, be
kind to each other, be kind to yourselves, get your
vaccines way you still can't get your flu shots. Don't
do nothing about white supremacy, and we will talk to
you out tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (28:50):
Bye oh bye.
Speaker 3 (28:51):
The Daily Zeite Guys is executive produced by Catherine.
Speaker 2 (28:53):
Law, co produced by Bae Wayang, co produced by Victor Wright.
Speaker 1 (28:58):
Co written by JM. Knab, and edited and engineered by
Brian Jeffries.