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January 13, 2022 68 mins

In episode 1063, Jack and Miles are joined by comedian Steven Wilber to discuss Reminder - Trump and co can not stand being scrutinized over election fraud claims, Prince Andrew Going to Trial?, No, I do not like the idea of an NFT restaurant, yet here we are, The Oscars Will Once Again Have a Host and more!

  1. Reminder - Trump and co can not stand being scrutinized over election fraud claims
  2. Prince Andrew Going to Trial?
  3. The Oscars Will Once Again Have a Host
  4. Audiences for award shows are in steep decline. This chart shows how far viewership has fallen
  5. 2022 Oscar host poll results: Tiffany Haddish is your pick to host, followed by Dwayne Johnson


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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season two nineteen, episode
four of judeallis like, guys, the production of My Heart Radio. This.
This is a podcast retake, a deep brive into American's
sharre consciousness. I'm glad you asked. It's Thursday, January two,
which of course means it's national Well, I mean, Jack,

(00:22):
you don't know, and you don't know, and you don't know.
That's Look, it's Korean American Day. Shout out all my
Korean Americans. It's National rubber Ducky Day, National whatever sticker day.
We get about that huge day for my kids. Man,
they love all their Korean Americans who love stickers and
rubber duckies. Yeah, shout out. Don't let them find out

(00:46):
about this ship or they'll expect presidents or something. Anyway,
You're proud now, Okay, get that same energy up tomorrow
when it's not Korean American Day. WHOA whoa my name?
Well it's Jack O'Brien ak you out with t d Z.
Yeah you know me? I was Gray and j Ob
Yeah you know me? Who's down with td zy? Every

(01:07):
last lefty. That is courtesy at Chris Mackling. Mackling with
energy and I'm thrilled to be joined as always by
my co host Mr Miles Rod. I always being like
I just saw Michael Stipe, but it was just some guy.
Oh I always feel like I just saw Michael Stipe.

(01:31):
Guess I'm just super high. Oh, thank you so much.
The hoss Bussman on the discord rockwell inspired. I mean,
you know, a k they have continued to just get
better and better. That was that was a high point
for the you mistaken with some guy and Trader Joe's
from Michael Stipe a k S. I gotta say, very

(01:52):
well done, Hoss. Have you heard people call people hoss
and anywhere in your life, Like I remember people would
say that flippantly about like a big kid like grade
and that's like my flag football coach, kid, he's a hoss.
That's a real Kentucky thing as people calling each other has.

(02:16):
I think it's just like man, but in Kentucky. But
why was why would you say someone's a hoss and
like gesture to their physical presence, being like yeah, yeah, no,
for sure, that is the more common usage of the phrase,
but the in terms of just like being a general,
all purpose kind of greeting that that was big in

(02:39):
Kentucky and I've never heard it since I moved out
of there. Yeah, you're gonna give us more inside information
is like getting if you know the homology. But yeah, yeah,
well Miles, we are thrilled. We're delighted to be joined
by a very funny writer, graphic designer, illustrator uh and
one of the funniest stand up comedians doing it. His

(03:00):
sixteen Bits is available wherever fine comedy albums can be streamed,
heard downloaded. Please welcome, though brilliant the talented Stephen Wilbie.
Steven only happens when it's Wilber Wilbur's only love you

(03:22):
when they're Steve, and thank you to uh Bacarat for
that one, Stevens. They will come and they will go,
Okay Steven, Is that true or is it just rumors? Exactly? Oh? Okay, okay,
step Ship. Can we keep this going? No? No, let's

(03:48):
just end it right there. Let's new man. Nothing I've
moved to it. I feel like every time I've done
this show, I've lived in a different place. So yeah,
we're right. You know, I was in Kentucky, Land of
the Hosses, and uh now I'm back in l A. Baby,
you are okay because I remember the first time. I

(04:10):
think we were all in a hotel room in Portland.
Yeah and yeah kicking off. I believe there are rumors
that that recording caused COVID nineteen, that that's where it originally,
but you know, we're not gonna hold accountable for that thing.
And then yes, so then from there you went to
Kentucky and now you're back in l A. Huh yeah.

(04:31):
Did anybody call you hoss while you're in Kentucky? Uh? No,
They mostly called me things I are not podcast safe.
How long you been back in l A since August? Oh? Shit? Okay, yeah,
you were here, then you went to Portland than Kentucky,
and then you're back. What's what's it like coming back better?

(04:54):
I feel like COVID has really helped my expectations on
getting famous, so I get to appreciate it more. Was
a place leading indicators and symptoms of COVID. Is that
it helps your expectations with getting famous? Yeah? Absolutely. You
do have a photograph of a cat in the same

(05:18):
laser field that I was photographed in for my third
grade picture. Behind it's a blanket? Yeah, is that a
commissioned work or you that's a retail it was a gift.
This is my cat thunder. Yeah, he also only happens
when it's raining, but that's also not true. Just can

(05:44):
we let them know your your cat may only happy
when it's raining, but the thunder only happening when it's
raining is not true. And it's I've said it before,
I'll say it again. I do not listen to Stevie
Nicks when it comes to her meteorological ice. Mm hmmmm.
Fox me every time you guys, every single time, I

(06:06):
feel like, did did you guys have that laser background
childhood school picture back? I did for one of them. Yeah, yeah,
ours was like always like some shitty texture, like it
looked like granite or something. They never they never let
you like that. You never had the white no no,

(06:27):
but like everyone would come in there. There would be
like I think a couple options, but it would just
be like a green screen and oh god it. Oh no, yeah,
we had we had just one little sad uh you know,
seamless that the guy would roll down and it looked
like just like a painter's like what they like put

(06:48):
down on the ground when you're painting. Because it's kind
of like splatter painting on canvas. I don't know, it
was just very uninteresting. Never arrived to the laser level,
that's for sure. The thing I remember the most was
had the same guy every year and he would always
like call you out on something and then say that
instead of cheese, like he would be like, hey, you

(07:10):
look like you eat a lot of hamburgers, say hamburger?
Did you got? I had the same ur This one
dude had our school pictures on the lock too. I
remember he was a guy who was like this big
dude who had a ponytail and always wore shorts and
like I always just remember his like high white socks
and his shorts and he would always be like, oh,
this guy's got ears. Huh oh, look right here being

(07:31):
boom and I'm like, yo, are you talking? Like yeah,
it seems like I don't know, like if there was
a tereology to this kind of thing where it's like
get you with a line, distract you, disorient you, ask
you to smile, then I got it or maybe say
something that. Because he would also do sad ass jokes.
I remember being in mind like let's do fuck, did
I told you? About my ex wife. Maybe this kid

(07:55):
that rich parents say macaroni right, fuck, what a racket?
What they're they're still doing it. They're still for their school,
but that ship at home. They still they still do
it even though, Like there's a photograph of my kids

(08:15):
probably for every hour they've been alive, just because I
like taking pictures of them. I think they're cute. And
I'm sure that's true of most children who are alive
today taking pictures of them. Oh yeah, yeah, that's that's true,
most children taking picture They're so cute. Look over here, years,
That's what I like to say to them. Hey, years,

(08:36):
what that's all my pictures of me? Like in the
middle of being like, my face is like I was
hurt by that comment. Yeah, alright, Stephen, we're gonna get
to know you a little bit better in a moment. First,
a couple of things we're talking about. We're gonna talk
about Trump going on NPR and just getting owned severe
ownage by questions. Yeah, like the att rapper of NPR.

(09:02):
Stevens keep straight exactly, Stevens keep the the b rabbit
of NPR. We'll talk about Prince Andrew. We will talk
about the new n f T restaurant, and we might
even get to the Oscars, which are looking at having

(09:23):
a host again. Oh yes, look at that, and it
will be Tim Allen. Yeah. Before we get to any
of that, we do like to ask our guests, Stephen,
what is something from your search history? Well? I was
looking this up because not to brag, but I'm working

(09:46):
on a bit of a screenplay. So like all my
Hollywood all my search things are like just trying to
make sure my references are right, like or like trying
to think of something to put in it. So in order,
I've got coffeemaker cleaning tabs, the Jamie Kennedy experiment, one

(10:06):
hit wonders from the two thousand's Blacklisted Celebrities, finance related holidays,
and then jumping a Ramsey. Okay, what it all leads
back to John being a rams And give me a
logline for the script? You know, don't don't you know?
I don't have to reveal everything, but what if the
guy was sad? All right, I love it and had

(10:30):
a computer? Yeah yeah, and Google and uh and final
and final draft. Well, I'm still on the trial, so
fingers crossed I get it done by then, hopefully I
got five more days to it's a great motivator. Yeah yeah, right,
So if you use another fake email to sign up

(10:50):
for a trial copy, it's a great clock menace threat. Well,
a little screenwriting. So what what's I mean? Let me
why was it hockey machine? Cleaning tablets? How you said
coffee made cleaning tablets. That's a thing? Yeah, like little
they then they dissolve in the water and then you
run the water through the coffee maker and it cleans

(11:12):
it up. Yeah. God, Okay, so this is an action film.
It's a buddy comedy. Okay, I got it, got it?
Got Oh yeah, I put the cleaning tabs in the
coffee maker, Roger, and Roger is a cleaning tab He's like,
what do you want me to kill myself? My favorite

(11:32):
genre of movies are are the ones that you start
out thinking they're about one thing, but then in the
end they're actually about John ben A Ramsey, Like The Rock, Yeah, exactly,
like that nine eleven movie, the one where it's Rob
Pattinson and then you find out at the end it's right,

(11:54):
because yours end with a reveal. Hold back the it's
the the neighbor, Like you pull back from a Home
Loan remake and then like he happen to live next
door to John ban A Ramsey because Christmas Christmas starts
out as a John ban A Ramsey thing and then
you zoom like the final the final scene finally like

(12:15):
makes the ultimate sacrifice the coffee tap does and let's
the other guy clean the coffee pot and then it
zooms out branch Davidian compound. I love this. Do people
know about that Robert Pattinson movie? Like it was a
talking for a little bit time, but because the revealer
is someone just scrawling it on a blackboard, right like

(12:38):
today's date? Yeah, yeah, yeah yeah. Last seeing his inter
cut between he has gone to meet somebody at the
World Trade Center. We're intercutting that with somebody who's in class.
The teacher just writes a nine eleven on the on
the chalkboard, and then cut back to him and you

(13:00):
pull out and he's in at the top of the
World Trade Center as like a plane is coming in,
and then you planes coming in and him and Mark
Wahlberg lock eyes through his window seat you to be continued,
Is that Edward Cullen? Yeah, I mean I would love

(13:21):
to just to see a John Bennet spin at the end.
If if that's what you're going in for, so I'm
signed up boom. What is what something you think is
over it? Something I think is overrated is the hate
that is already popping up over wordle, like the the
takes on wordle and it's popularity because I think we

(13:43):
had the mannequin challenge, We've had, We've had some like challenge,
so like it's a trend that like makes people think
a little bit like do it all you want? Because
I remember just seeing like the first article be like
why are people posting their wordles things on Twitter? And

(14:06):
I was like, I don't know if it's a fucking game,
Like why is there an article examining like the why
of it? Like clearly it's something that's become popular, But
it's like a scrabble type game. It's like a it's
a your you guess, So you try to guess a
word and then it tells you how many letters you've
gotten right or are in the word but somewhere else

(14:28):
or not in the word at all, and you go
down six times trying to figure out what the word is.
Mm hm m m. Yeah, I'm pretty good at it.
I gotta say, I have resisted the temptation to put
it out there, put out my scores, but I've gotten
it one out of seven times, so I'm fucking nailing it. Okay,
so you've actually hopped in based on the what you

(14:50):
saw on Twitter? I mean I I like funk with
the New York Times crossword puzzle and like they're you're
a short boy. Yeah, I do the the long one
and the what's the words scramble one where you gotta
make up as many words as possible bobble. Yeah? Yeah,

(15:11):
is that what it's called? Bobby game? The little the
board game? Yeah? But this I like word word is fun?
So yeah? Are you? Are you a word ale head? Yeah?
I am? Now yeah. After after I saw people hating
on it, I was like, well, these people are dumb.
You know what I do? I drive right into the hatred,

(15:33):
makes sense of it. There. Are you good though? Uh?
Pretty good? I'm pretty good. Yeah, it's not that completion rate.
Have you changed? Have you shared any of your Oh?
Christ no, I would, I would never I've but like
I have seen other people share their results, and I'm like,

(15:54):
I got that one sooner, I'm gonna But then I
don't I resist the urge to And is that like
people are hating because some people are like just being
like word yeah yeah, maybe or maybe people just don't
like a thing that they don't understand. I would also
seems to be we have we got so much fucking stress,

(16:16):
like why waste your fucking energy being like they're freaking
hate word scores, like seriously, like, and I get people
are frustrated, So we're we're all just big thundercras clouds
looking for a lightning rod to strike down our energy onto.
But I'm telling you it's not gonna it's not gonna
change anything. Articulating your anger at the word. There's other outlets,

(16:37):
Yeah yeah, like does Bozo Trump And we'll talk about
him later. Thanks, thank you want some of the chew
on folks. But the thunder doesn't only happen when it's raining.
Because we've covered what is something that you think is underrated?
Stephen Supply chain issues. Supply chain. Yeah, I think not

(16:58):
having a P five has really helped me with my productivity.
So you're saying it's good, thank you. Yeah, blessed, blessed
to have a chip's shortage? Is your character that the
main character is like searching for a PS five in
the script though it's like still entering your consciousness, or

(17:21):
they're searching for a turbomn action figure. Actually, oh my god,
and it's John and Patsy Ramsey for Christmas. She's gonna
be so upset if we home and we got a
turbo mat. Oh my god. That's so they're out shopping

(17:43):
the whole time. They never say say their full name.
And then they get home finally getting the thing and
the daughter. And I really hate to spoil it, but
sin Bad does it because he so mad and a
turbo man. Totally a breakout role for him, because it's

(18:05):
like Sindbad has been so family friendly. It's like when
like Robin Williams did like one Hour Photo and people were,
what the Is there a more unfamily friendly role than
that the killer? I don't think that you're a child
murder or No. Yeah, I think that's up there. Yeah,
all right, well I'm looking forward to that movie Hitting

(18:30):
the Black. The Black probably first, do not forget it
ends with Waco. I can't stress that. It's it's all
the John Bane stuff. Sinbad's the Killer. There's also a
b plot about coffee, Queeny Tabs, and Waco right the

(18:50):
right as the trucks are coming in with a t F. Guys, Yeah,
Janet Reno's just popping out the sun if you look closely,
Janet Reno's also looking for a turbo Man ball in
the store frenzy scene. Yeah, he's actually who they modeled
turbo Man after. That's true. Yeah, okay, don't give it

(19:10):
all away. What a great riff this has been. Someone's
already appreciate that it feels good to stretch the legs
again and just banter about nothing important at all. We're
just blue sky in this screenplay idea. Man, anything can happen,
Anything happen. I do wonder if the supply chain issues

(19:35):
just disrupting the constant stream of being able to get
everything you want whenever you want, it has made people
like see the matrix of like the version of consumer
and consumerism that we live in. They're like, oh, yeah,
I guess I'm okay with just the stuff that I

(19:56):
have for a couple of weeks. Maybe I had to
kill a board the their day. Right. There's been a
lot of articles about how like a lot of especially
small businesses, have had to like ideate around certain things
they used to get to still keep like their businesses going,
like whether that's like the containers that they put their
products in and things like that. But yeah, I mean,

(20:18):
I think for a lot of people it's it's a
good it's a good organic pumping of the brakes. When
you go from like I should have everything I need
within fifteen seconds to being like, yeah, okay, I can.
I can now think about a purchase and then what
way whether or not I need to wait nine months
for it, or if there's another thing or I'm just
in cotton. The rat race of buying shit unless it's

(20:40):
like obviously vitally critical, you know, medicine, but other than that,
like and get it together, get it together, people together asthmatics,
come on, your ventolin is taking too long to get
get it right or pay the price anybody watching? So yeah,

(21:00):
so your sort best. When we think about you, it
makes me want to fart. Okay, look we're really stretching
this thing, camp no one. I don't think a lot
of people think about that part, like in the intro
and when we think about you and it makes me
want to fart, and he goes say it right or
pay the price, like just sort of like that segue
part in the opening. Hey, man, that's why we get

(21:22):
paid the big bucks. You know, hidden yicle when there's
like a somebody's talking like they come yeah and you
still vamp on that. Well, it's a long way to
the bus stop. Wow, some someone. I'm realistic that that
camp counselor knows how to play the piano, to be honest. Wow, Okay,

(21:45):
doesn't he seem like more of like a gym teacher
type than a music teacher type. Yeah, but people got
fucking all. People contain multitudes. Man. Also, I don't think
there was another adult on that show, so you have
to fill them vaulted. Yeah, well as you are chef,

(22:06):
piano player and lifeguard. Mr Earnest he owned the ranch.
Oh what are you thinking, hey dude? Yeah yeah, wait
oh wait, wait what are you thinking of them? I'm
completely on a wanna is what it's? Drink snort ana,

(22:28):
wanna smoking on smoke marijuana? Wanna there it is? Oh
that's fun. Reboot. Bud Nick still bud Nick. Oh my god, alright,
good bud Nick selling fucking wild weed. Man, just keep

(22:48):
all this stuff. We gotta we gotta keep all this.
This is post credit sequence. Yeah, Kevin Ugly, Kevin Nugly nugs.
Oh my god, just say less. They're gonna fucking CBS
television is gonna come from us Paramount plus baby. Yeah,

(23:10):
all right, let's take a quick bright we'll be right back,
and we're back. Yeah. That hopefully, hopefully stayed for the
entire hour long camp wanna wanna riff your short riff?

(23:34):
There it is. Took us into the commercial break, but
we're back to get down to the brass tacks. Talk
about this Trump guy. Yeah, yeah, right, I guess that's it.
Remember that Trump by a Trump guy? Right? You know
this clip that came out on Wednesday, Well, you know
went viral because I for somehow we saw Donald Trump

(23:57):
on NPR and it was like they're like Steven Skip
I think starts the inn of you being like yeah, man,
we're trying to get you on here. Since um like, yeah,
thank you so much, let's talk. And this was a
very bad interview for Trump basically because he was being
asked to direct questions about his insistence on battling election
fraud claims, and he was confronted with like direct quotes

(24:21):
from other Republicans who were like we lost Farren Square
or you know, election officials being like, yeah, I'm a
Republican and I did this audit for the party and
we found no anomalies that would, you know, change the
results in any fashion. Maybe some administrative things, but nothing
that would arise to the level of like fraud or corruption.
So essentially the message to him was like, hey, yeah,

(24:42):
I'm gonna keep showing you evidence that you lost very fairly,
and now you, I guess you can just keep denying it.
And that's what the most of the interview was like
for about eight minutes, until which point it was clear
that Trump began really feeling the heat of this interview
because again on NPR, so you're not being interviewed by
a sick aphan, like you know, Steven Skip isn't necessarily,

(25:05):
you know, putting him to the sword. But he is
pretty consistent by just asking like, but why are you
saying that? But what about this? But what about this?
And there's nothing worse for someone who is used to
someone accepting your lies than someone being like, yeah, no,
but what about this direct thing from another person in reality?
And then this is the part where he essentially he
had too much, and he sadly bolted from the entire interview.

(25:31):
How come when he went to speak in different locations
nobody came to watch, But all of a sudden he
got eighty million votes. If if you're forgiving, maybe because
the election was about you, If I can just move
on to ask, are you telling Republicans in two that
they must press your case on the past election in
order to get your endorsement? Is that gonna do whatever

(25:52):
they want to do, whatever they have to do, They're
going to do. But the ones that are smart, the
ones that know, you take a look at again, you
take a look at how Carrie Lake is doing running
for governor. She's very big on this issue. She's leading
by a lot. People have no idea how big this
issue is. That they don't want it to happen again.
It shouldn't be allowed to happen, and they don't want

(26:12):
it to happen again. One of the only way it's
not going to happen again is you have to solve
the problem of the presidential rigged election. Mr President, One
more question I want to ask about a court hearing
yesterday on January six, Judge and meet Meta he's gone, okay,

(26:33):
so you know he's still got it. Yeah, I mean
he's still learning how to bolt at the right time,
just as like real direct questions are being asked, and yeah,
I mean, like, look, it's clear he's just this ad
old man who can't stomach the idea that he is
bullshit and every when most people know it unless they're
like a supporter or drone. And you know, the thing

(26:54):
he kept harping on in terms of like trying to
reinforce this idea of the fraud, which is why he
starts up being like, tell me why Biden gets eight
million votes. It's like because people eight million people don't
like you or prefer Joe Byron to you. And he
kept saying like I got the most votes for a
sitting president. Who else ever got votes? And Stevenski was like, yeah, right,

(27:16):
I understand you got the most votes, but you still lost.
So you know, the getting the most votes as a
sitting president isn't an election strategy or gets you to
the number of Electoral College votes you need. You need
to win fifty plus one in most states too, then
add your like whatever, Okay, so on one of only

(27:36):
thirty six presidents who have not died in office. So right,
so I think Joe Biden is cheating. Okay, that's what
this all blows down to. But you know, at a minimum,
I appreciate the kind of direct questioning that you know,
Steven skip was, you know, offering, just in the sense
because most people Donald Trump will come on, mostly because

(27:58):
he's going on Fox, are very Trump friendly networks. They
ask a question that if it was a real journalist,
you wouldn't accept the lie that they told, and they
just pivot like, Okay, thank you for that lie. We've
accepted it. Now this next talking point will accept his reality.
Please go ahead. But yeah, yeah, I mean I don't
like this isn't getting picked up anywhere really that his

(28:18):
viewers would be right, No, I mean they're probably if anything,
they're like, it was a hit job at NPR asking
about these congress people who are also Republicans who claimed
the election wasn't stolen. I wonder what the play was
to even go on NPR. What was the what was
the point of that? What did he think he he

(28:39):
would get away with? Right, Yeah, I think that's it's interesting.
It's it may be clear that you know he was
having trouble in January six right, he wanted to do
this whole live thing, and no networks would pick it
up basically, and that's why he didn't do it. So
he's like, funk this. I don't know if he just said,
they'll have me on and I can talk and you know,

(29:00):
be confrontational, because when the interview starts, Trump the only
thing he's thinking about is if they're live, like would
be live Steve and we uh and he's like, no, sir,
this is we're not going live. This is preticked and
he's like, okay, fine, So I don't know. When you
read his energy at the start of it, you're like,
did you just want to be on live anything? And

(29:22):
then they're like, I don't know. Fucking NPR would probably
do it and be like completely blown away because when
they first start off, the first questions around vaccines and
like he's like, what advice would you give to Americans
who haven't chosen to get vaccinated? That's essentially his first question.
So there's no like, hey, tell us about this rally
you have coming up, you know, like sort of PR

(29:43):
but yeah, I don't know. It's it's very interesting to
see him on places where you know they aren't maggot out.
I'm told the the are we Live thing was more
about he wanted to boba Billy the interview at the end. Yeah,
I mean so well, one thing that I'm just I'm
seeing in there's a CNN article and uh Washington or

(30:09):
Wall Street Journal article Hillary the case for a Comeback
it's happening. So that's sounds like a murder mystery, the
Case for the Comeback. Yeah, I mean it would be
essentially what a terrible idea? Yeah, I think people are
looking at the fact that Biden sinks to Biden's approval

(30:33):
is now at like an all time low. It's a
thirty I think, and they're trying to figure out, like,
who could we run that would be even less popular
than Biden in this election. Well, I think because all
of this strategizing is it has to ignore the basic
fact that all these systems that we exist inside of

(30:55):
within the US are failing at every turn. So it's
not that Joe Biden's on popular. I mean, like, yeah,
he is, but he's doing funk all to actually address
like what it like ails the country very in a
very tangible way. And they're just trying to act like
maybe we need Hiller, Like no, maybe you need to
pay people to stay home. Maybe you need a relief

(31:17):
and we need student debt relief. Maybe we need healthcare.
Maybe we need actionable results or you know, policies on
climate change. But yeah, it's yeah, bringing bring Hillary back,
because already it sounds like there's a riff between Trump
and Rhonda Santis. Later on Wednesday, he said some ship
he went on O A N. It was like talking
about like, you know, Rhonda Santis was asked if he

(31:38):
was recently like boosted, and he's like, I don't I
have the regular thing. I don't feel like I need
to really disclose, blah blah blah. And then Trump was
like your gutlass. He's like, if you didn't, if you
had the boost or not. He's just say it so people,
some politicians are gutless. So he's already coming at Rhonda
Santis and he's gone after Brian Kemp. It's I don't know, like,

(31:59):
you know what looks like if you find a Republican
who's like, I bet I can take the Maga throne
from Trump and see if I can go head to
head because I'm feeling myself. Yeah, as long as he's
still alive, they'll fail. Like, I mean, he's He's the
entire party at this point. Nobody's gonna succeed in doing that.
I don't love to see Hillary versus Nugent, Hillary versus Nugent. Yeah,

(32:22):
I mean, what if it was Clinton Nugent on a
ticket just to really confuse people, be like fun, Man,
I think Ted will balance her out. I think that's
a I have to think about that. The interview, the
NPR interview did remind me how much he is exactly,
Like all all the impressions just gave me a new

(32:43):
appreciation for like, oh, this could be that guy from
SNL who does a Trump impression like that. He is
an actual cartoon of himself that's truly just hits, all
the hits, all the notes. It's so stream of consciousness.
Sometimes I'm like, is he a grounding? Like he's Dell Close.

(33:04):
It's really he is what we thought he was. Yeah,
and yeah, we call that Trump jazz, you know what
I mean. He just goes off off prompter and he's
like watch this solo. I guess there was a part
of me that was like a little worried he was
like going to comeback with like a tighter, like a
honed like messaging and presentation. And you know, I was

(33:26):
going to start reading those Hitler speech books that were
that he kept by his bedside for for years. It
was the only book in his bedroom. Not a red
flag at all. But it seems like he's still just
he's got one speed and it works well for him.
But yeah, because I mean, yeah, some of his answers
to someone like when question Stevens keeps outs like why

(33:47):
is it that you think the vast majority of your
allies in the U. S. Senate are not standing behind you,
Miss McConnell. Yeah, because ms mcmon because Ms McConnell's a loser.
That's literally his answer was it could have that fucking
sound word like a big stupid dummy head. Yea, who
is your daddy and what does he do? Yeah? Alright,

(34:08):
let's talk about Prince Andrew real quick. A Manhattan judge
has announced that or has refused to dismiss a case
against him from Virginia Giuffrey. So I mean this is
we already saw how he held up in a carefully
choreographed interview where he was able to like bring in
notes and prepare and knew the questions heading in because

(34:30):
there was only like one real question that was going
to be asked in that case scarves like scarves drifting
down before to just be crushed out of the park.
And still was like, yeah, he stammered through an excuse
about sweat, like his inability to sweat while he appeared

(34:53):
to be sweating, And yeah, I mean he is probably
like the person who has encountered the least like actual
human interactions in the history or one of the probably
top five like living humans who like from the age
zero on to this point, has never encountered somebody who

(35:18):
was like telling him the truth, you know, like they
were always just telling him what they thought he wanted
to do. Here, like he could he could be a
psychological experiment. And the idea of that being put on
a trial, yeah, like literally, like he's basically the Truman Show.
The fact that that then he would be put on
trial and like asked questions that have the weight of law.

(35:41):
Is I think a lot of people are rooting for it,
and obviously like if you want justice, this is a child,
he's sexually assaulted, So yeah, it's the old that would
be an interesting case to see how that all plays out. Yeah,
like to your point, like yeah, it's being a child
star or something where it's like, yeah, man, you're kind

(36:03):
of gonna you're gonna live in a bizarre reality as
being part of the monarchy, Like you're not gonna have
people been like yo, Andrew man, you full of ship man.
Why don't you pipe down really quick? Man? Just get
yourself adults you're talking here. It would be like, yes,
your highness, Like I can't imagine you're built to then
face criminal charges and you know, somehow find yourself in
an environment where you have to stand to account for

(36:25):
your actions. Wasn't there something about like he didn't think
he could get he should be on trial because his
transgressions were included in a deal with Epstein. That's right
where he was like where that was going down, and
he was like, hey, hey, hey put me in there too.

(36:46):
So that was that was that pretty good admission of guilt.
I just be like, hey, I did it, but it
was already handled. I thought, right, wait what that? So
that was the case where Epstein like pled guilty but
like did a deal with somebody who I think worked
in both Obama and Trump administrations two basically do a

(37:09):
deal that was like, Okay, i'll do ten months community service, Yeah,
Alexander Hasten, I'll do ten months community service and like
stay at this nice resort that's supposedly a prison. But
you can't be mean to anybody who I know, was
essentially the deal, right. Yeah, so it's and I guess

(37:30):
the judges like that doesn't seem to hold up anymore.
I'm sorry for him. Yeah, what mechanically, how do you
do that? Legally? I'm just understanding you can't be mean
to anyone. And then that's why it was like I
showed poor judgment in that case. That's that's a euphemism
if I've heard one. Yeah, anyways, let's take a quick

(37:53):
break and we'll be right back. Yeah, and we're back.
And Miles, I know you're huge in the n f
T world. You're always you know, I bought one, took

(38:13):
an l Did you really about thirty n f T
like way back and like this it is like it's
like worth this and it's not doing it And I'm like, ah,
that's why about us? Yeah? Well, was it didn't have
any like anything cool about it? Was it a drawing
of any type. It's the frog, but with jist body exactly.

(38:37):
I don't think I wouldn't know that. I don't think
i'd be able to tell the difference. Oh you would
just a hype thing. Really, once you see a gunn body,
you can't unsee it. I'll tell you that. But yeah,
I mean I dabbled, but was just I don't know
what the funk I'm doing. And also I don't have
the bandwidth to get super versed in like what a

(38:57):
good n F T could be. But you're also our
expert on like private restaurants and like eating eating clubs,
dining clubs, So you like the Soho house would be
cool if it was more exclusive. I think you always
said crypto based. Can imagine crypto based SOHO house? Can
you imagine a place you'd want to be more elbow

(39:19):
to elbow with like minded fucking lizard people. I don't
know what the feeling allot of interlacing your fingers from
both hands while biting your bottom lip. Synergy and then
you're saying the word synergy and walking out of the room. Yeah,
like that's kind of your beat. Hey man, take my pen.
It's a mom blanc, you know, you can have it

(39:39):
and then you wow, thanks tech guy. But yes, n
f T restaurant is the thing. And again, what kind
of just for y'all, what kind of images are conjured
in your heads when you hear n f T restaurant.
I'm curious, I'm just hearing that. What that does to
your mind? Uh? Themed? N f T themed? So yeah,
but like Pete with chard Yard's body on the walls

(40:04):
and like, stop trying to make your pepe jarren f happened?
Do you want? Do you want beef or non fungible tofu?
Like that's sort of all the items, all the items
are and beef. It's like beef with a crypto bro,
you know you want beef, Homie, we're talking about decentralized
movement is sucking falling off the tracks? You're talking about

(40:25):
to Planet Hollywood with with just but for the n
f T like moment the year that I just see
like a bunch of Elon musk musk wanna bees up
in there, Like I bet every single person thinks Elon
is this ship in restaurant like that, maybe they make
like like a burger, okay, but then they never make

(40:48):
that burger again. For anyone else. I mean that is
so you're like, can I have a burger? Like, no,
man did that three weeks ago for a guy, So
pick something else, man burger with ketchup. It's like nothing.
You're like, well, what dishes have not been made? It's
like you gotta do your research for it. Come in here, man,

(41:08):
I've got a lot of tables. I gotta go nothing.
This last guy just took fruitcake. Yeah. No. When you
ask me what n f T restaurant makes me think
of it, my true answer is it makes my brain
shut down. And like going to a fetal possession position
or possession by a fetus feed. I got busted for

(41:31):
fetal possession for a friend time. Yeah, I like more
religious possession, demonic possession by the demon fetus. But all
that to say is this place is real and I
picture like so much like nouveaux reiche bullshit, like where
like the RAB Report is their bible, like those kinds

(41:52):
of people. For people to know the RAB Report, it's
like the rich people like hottest ship you can buy
magazine basically, so if you ever need to be like,
these are the things poor people could never afford. Welcome
to the rob report like sky Mall. Come on, come on, man,
we're not We're not. It's not that fancy. Just in
between yeah, it's just in between sky Mall and the

(42:12):
hummack Er schlimmer Cata. But this place is you say,
what the fund is an FT restaurant. Well, it's something
that is actually coming to New York City in the
first half of the next year. And it's called the
fly Fish Club. See it already sounds fucking horrible and
it's like, so how house. But the way you get
a membership is by purchasing an n f T. That

(42:33):
is your membership. That's how you enter. So you say, like,
what the wait, what okay, find your person in FT?
But what's the club actually? Like? This is this is
from this article on grub Street from the New York
I Think New York magazine, saying that it's gonna have
quote a cocktail lounge and upscale seafood restaurant and ohmakase
room reserved for top tier members only, and and and

(42:56):
outdoor space spanning more than ten tho square feet quote
in iconic New York City location. And the article goes
on to say, although that exact location has not yet
been announced. Okay, right, so what does it take to
get in? You buy one of these n f T s.
Last Friday they dropped fifty tokens that you could buy
as your membership, and they're gone, Like they were pretty

(43:17):
much bought up pretty quickly. The standard membership, which gets
you like into the lounge and the seafood restaurant, was
going for like two and a half ethereum, so about
like almost eight thousand dollars. And if you want the
oh maak, say you want the fucking the baller version,
you had to pay close to fourteen thousand dollars for
one of those tokens. And the way they're also presenting

(43:39):
it to people who buy the tokens is like it's
a passive income opportunity man, because you'll be able to
lease your membership to some other hype beast who wants
to get up in there. And now you can make
a little scratch because they're using your like they're like
subleasing your n f T to get access to this restaurant. Yeah,
this is a take I I can admit, but and

(44:03):
that's a bit that's a bit much a membership to
a restaurants not great. But if there's any use for
an n f T. A membership card is sort of
a bad like way, like, oh, I get it, like
a unique a unique picture that can only be authenticated

(44:28):
by the owner, and you use that to get into
things or like your gym membership or I don't know,
plane tickets or something. I could say, I could see
that working instead of, you know, just betting on them
that they'll go up in price, but as an actual,

(44:48):
like useful thing to confirm one's identity, not bad. This
is well, this is your your identity will be confirmed
as baller because already if you want one of these
membership tokens, you have to go to the secondary market
where they're now over eleven thousand dollars for the regular membership.

(45:09):
And so I guess like you could ride the wait
like Ethereum market and like by the dip and maybe
get like a membership on the cheap. But it's it
seems like this whole model is like just bait for
like the thirstiest of the thirsty and the cloud chasing
champions of our world. I think this is this reminds

(45:30):
me of that that story about Ashley Madison where it's
like a dating website where you can cheap. But then
like behind the scenes, they're like, yeah, it's nine dudes
talking to each other and talking about I feel like
they're going to have this out there. It's going to
be very popular until it's actually a real thing, and
then they're going to realize that it's all like wealthy

(45:52):
tech dudes and that's going to be it. I think, Yeah,
there's like a level to it that I can already see,
Like this oho house right, it's like I mean like
you have to be vetted to get up in here,
you know, like we don't just let anybody whereas this.
I think the real bougie people will thumb their nose
that the thing is like, okay, so you paid a

(46:13):
lot in ethereum to get into this like mediocre restaurant,
Please get out of my way. But yeah, it's I
think we're all just seeing all these different ways that
I'm sure for the restaurant too, that's a way to
raise a round of funding by being like here's an
n f T you gotta buy for our restaurant that's
coming on like an over a year from now, And
I'm sure they're taking those funds trying to figure out

(46:34):
how they keep fucking put that towards the restaurant. I
don't know. It's just a very confusing business model. And
I don't like membership restaurants because the food usually isn't
that great. Yeah, all I'm saying is I would buy
an n f T to get into Magic Castle instead
of having to ask a nerdy friend. Right right, that's

(46:57):
a good that's a good example. Also, like n f
T S A is just like social Security cards like that,
just things like that where it's like you want a
you need a card or like something to identify with.
That is like singular as opposed to this shitty restaurant
that is going to be only people who are really

(47:18):
into n f T S. But people, it's not just that, Jack,
You're missing the point. It's kind of a lounge at
cocktail bar, you know. Oh, makase, that's like the most
bothered way to eat sushi, which is like I love
how that word has completely taken over like restaurant culture
because now like everywhere it's like this is like an
omakase like empanada restaurant. Wait, what does mean is that

(47:41):
where you eat it off the body? Like like it
means like I'm deferring to you. Like so when you
have sushi restaurant, and that means that like you're saying
to the sushi, I'm surrendering to your taste. Please take
me on this journey as I trust you the person
who's the mass chef. Y like those restaurants, Like those

(48:04):
restaurants where they insult you to your face and you
order a milkshake and they give you coffee and you're
like right and they're like shut up. You know those restaurants.
Isn't there like one that's like a hot dog place?
I feel like back on the Food Channel, there's like
some place in like Chicago or something where like the

(48:24):
you just knew like when you went in there, the
people talk straight ship to you when you were but
that was kind of like the that's the thing about it. Yeah, right,
there's a there's a place in l A called Sushi
Park where they just feed you until you're like until
you say done. They just feed you sushi and it's
really good, really expensive, but it's worth worth truck. Does it?

(48:46):
Does the Weener Circle? That's what it's called the Weener Circle? Yeah,
in Chicago. In Chicago, Oh like Winner Circle, Yeah, exactly
I thought it was a weird episs for something else.
It's known for its Maxwell street polish blah blah blah
and the mutual verbal abuse between the employees and the
customers during the late weekend hours. So like, yeah, when

(49:08):
we go later and I think the funk you want,
yeah yeah, but the I think the mouths on the
people that work there are way spicy. When you guys
go have a circle jerk about n f T s
or a weener circle if you will. But do people
know what's Soho houses who aren't from Yeah, that's our

(49:30):
coastal bias. Yeah, it's a very pretentious membership club. Jack,
didn't you work at a Soho house? I was a
pool boy my first job out of college. I was
a poolboy at a Soho house because my sister's roommate
worked the front desk. That's Soho house and she got
me an inn. Yeah and yeah. So And the my
recollection of the like membership process was that it was

(49:55):
like the applications were like stockbrokers and people businessmen who
they would turn down because the whole point was that, no,
we're protecting you from those type of people who we
want creatives, right, who got rich just by going to
Wharton or whatever. Anyways, but that sounds like the episode

(50:18):
of that Fuck Wharton, fuck you losers, I know, but
seriously rubbed their feet at the pool pool? Boy, what
was that about Wharton? Jeffrey, my name's jack whatever, Jackery
all right? Uh? And finally, you know, I think we've
all been saying, when will the Oscars go back to

(50:38):
having a host? We love the days of Billy Crystal,
we love the days of Ellen, we love the days
of Rock. Did you ever do an Academy? Yeah? He did,
won Academy Awards, and by making a joke about Jude Law,
like Sean Bell was like, I'll tell you who Jude
Law is. He's the finest damn actor I've ever fucking seen,

(51:00):
like the greatest philanthropists that our world has ever seen.
But yeah, so they've taken a break from having a
host recently. I mean, my favorite Oscar's host ever, I
think everybody agrees is the James Franco. But the so
they're taking a break just to like give Franco some
time to rest. But the yeah, so they haven't had

(51:23):
a host, but ratings have been going down and down,
and so what one like storyline that people are bringing
up is like you gotta nominate the Spider Man movie
for Best Picture and then just like get people to
tune in for that so that they're then like mad
when it doesn't win or something. I don't. I don't
know the strategy really, but they're instead planning on, I guess,

(51:48):
asking Tom Holland to host the Academy Awards. Oh okay,
because it's definitely that the no host thing is cause
a dipping ratings, not because Green Book one, right or
just in definitely the host situation not crash. Yeah, the

(52:12):
selection of films that we've proclaimed are the best picture
ever according this very narrow group. Yeah, I don't. Yeah,
it's it's it seems in general like people don't have
the same appetite for awards shows unless it's like a
Grammys or something, because that's just like a big ask,
like it's a concert essentially with awards interspersed. Yeah, But
so they did do a poll to see who people wanted.

(52:34):
Tiffany Hattish is number one with eight the Rock number
seventeen or number two with sev Tina Fame, Amy Poehler.
Have they not done the Oscars? They've only done the
Golden Globes. I think so, But that would make sense.
That feels like it would make sense, not not if
they're like trying to fun up and young up the demographic,

(52:55):
but I mean they're definitely at least would make it
fun to watch. Queen Latifa, Paul Rudd, Lin, Manuel Miranda. Well,
here's what I like about this list, because it's Paul
Rudd and then No One and then made Miranda gets
half of what no One yet he's got four percent

(53:16):
and No One has eight percent. I can't feel good. Anyone,
anyone beneath the No. One standings on that list is
feeling pretty bad right now. Sorry. Oh yeah, Jamie Fox,
Sorry man, I don't honestly good for you for even
getting on that list. Like people, there were enough people
checking fear they're like, you know, Jamie Fox, Yeah, that's

(53:37):
I mean, yeah, that's that. That is interesting. That's an
interesting choice. I'm wondering, like where they This feels like
a pole of agents would have come up with this list,
Like it feels like just people who have careers. Oh,
the top three all represented by U t A interesting

(53:58):
but yeah, so they asked Tom Holland. Tom Holland was
then interviewed and said, like, maybe sometime in the future,
but I'm too busy right now, and then called the
reporter back and said, actually, I'd do it if I
asked me. So apparently there's something in the works there
and it's probably gonna be him. But yeah, it's completely

(54:18):
the like they they give it to Green Book and
Crash and like fucking bad movies for so long. So
I remember what people thought Shakespeare in Love was the
best movie that came out that year. Yeah, wouldn't it
beat Saving Private Ryan? Yeah, that's the private and like

(54:40):
Spielberg one Best Director and and that's not usually like
the momentum of the Oscars, Like, oh man, Spielberg got
Best Director for Private Ryan. You know, best pictures of
fucking rap baby, and they're like Shakespeare in Love. Um,
but yeah, when we were all caught up in ship
cargo fever that we were too blind to see that

(55:03):
it wasn't around. Oh goodness, goodness. Girls are all Merrimax movies,
by the way, And like they they proudly were like, yeah,
we'll get you, we'll get you. I will intimidate my
way into your movie being best picture, whether it's good
or not that seemed to be. But so this first

(55:24):
of all, if you want to like get an understanding
of like just the difficulty of making a watchable oscars,
like just go back to any Oscar telecasts like before
the nineties or like before you started watching them. They've
been bad forever. They're terrible. It's like watching a like

(55:44):
award show that like your company puts on for like employees,
Like it's just it sucks. Like they one time they
try to like get the young uns in ninety three
by having Frank Sinatra host, and he opened the ceremony
with a monologue about how the Mona Lisa like the
painting would be received by modern Hollywood producers. And I

(56:07):
got a quote here, and I think you're gonna love it,
you know, Leonardo, Baby, I like it. I really like it.
So it's pretty good stuff. Like that's I think my
favorite comedy. Well, first number one with a bullet is
the stand up challenges on RuPaul's Drag Race. Those are
always top tier. And the right below it is teleprompter jokes. Yeah,

(56:32):
watching the delivery of a prompter joke, like, oh my god,
like he said the punchline out of okay, sure, yeah,
I'll used to it. Paul Hogan, Okay, Crocodile Dundee once
hosted the Oscars and and did that it was actually yeah, yeah, exactly.
He co hosted with Chevy Chase and Goldie Han. And

(56:55):
because they're all or at least Paul Hogan and Chevy
Chase are like famously massive egos, where they were ever
on on stage at the same time. Oh really, hope
they were both like I ain't sharing the stage, yeah
that guy? Or yeah is check the Chase? Just Paul
Hogan with on right? How come you never seen him

(57:19):
in the same place at the same time. What double
different on that? Check. The thing at the end of
the day, I think with all these awards shows is,
you know, across the board, awards shows are just declining,
like in terms of viewership, and it's it's like, I
think it's again if they're too insular, no one watches
it and feels that they have any any way to
affect what they're seeing. So it's just you, I think

(57:41):
for a lot of people are trying to realize, like
I don't know, it's a it's a way for all
these people in this room to clap at each other
like I don't know what the like these are my picks,
so I'm not as interested. And I think as that
glamour fades, they're like, like, I think you brought this
up Jack like a while ago, is like, is there
like a fan vote or something like do you democratize
an award within the oscars where people can you know,

(58:03):
participate And I get that, like it's about everybody in
the Motion Picture Association, But I bet you that the
m p a A Is looking at me like this
is how we generate revenue, like we need to have
a better award show, and if we have to fucking
change things, then maybe we will. But I think there's
there's that aspect of watching it where it's just like
frustrating and like you just you just don't care, you
know what I mean. I think they should make the

(58:25):
voting public. I don't. I don't think fans should get
to vote because then it would just be fucking Disney.
But or something that actually speaks to people as if
it's like and you know, I think you were phrases
like the most popular movie of the year or something
like that, like as an award where it's clear where
you can be like okay, like we're not having to
look at it through the lens of like what is

(58:45):
cinema and you mean like the best film versus best movie.
I was like differentiating between like this one the the two. Right, Basically,
I think definitely the like the role of celebrity has shifted,
or at least our opinion on celebrity, where you know, influencers,

(59:07):
people people who dressed like us or they're my age,
like they look they're they're more praise than some guy
in a tux and not only that, like some guy
in a tux who goes up on stage and talks
about that we need to get the hunger situation sorted out,
and it's like you're a millionaire. I think that's probably

(59:29):
that just doesn't look good a bunch of people in
tuxes and dresses being like film has the ability to
touch all lives and save the world Stephen, Yes, all
lives matters, and then like some canned joke that like

(59:54):
they intentionally just like fucking drop to just like yeah,
let people know they're better than the material is just
like fun man, Right, Yeah, I don't know, but I
think that's I don't I don't know another way that
I would be interested. I guess yeah if the voting
were transparent, but then it's like what we see who

(01:00:14):
how each person voted? Well yeah, because then like people
would be like, Okay, this dipshit voted for green book,
like we get to like the yeah yeah exactly, yeah,
but then yeah, I think the awards need to be
a little bit better, like best stunt, best seen, best
like like things that you can like actually enjoy. Yeah,

(01:00:34):
but then yeah, like but less stupid than that. Those
categories were like best fight you know what I mean, Yeah,
action scene and you work. I remember being like, holy
sh it, okay, yeah yeah, like that done. If that
award show were created by like people who actually work
and like love movies, like I would, I would be

(01:00:55):
interested in seeing that as opposed to being made by MTV.
I would. I would even like because I think we've
voted on things before where we're going through it, even
like election stuff when it gets down to like city
council person or like I I don't know, I'll pick
the name I like the best. It would be cool
if like every category, so like if they had the

(01:01:17):
best stunt, only stunt men vote on that, only the
only the field of stunt people voting that best best
sound editing, you get the the Sound Editing Guild to
vote on that. And then instead of like here's yeah,
and then instead of having like some central like you know,
a word show writer like being like sound editing is

(01:01:40):
the art of and like doing like a broad description
of what sound editing is, you then like have a
sound editor explained, like what was so like amazing about that?
Like do really like put some thought into presenting that
art form, like or like what is so fucking cool
about the stunt in a way that like that's it

(01:02:01):
seems like there are pretty straightforward ways you could like
make it better and make it about movies without it
just coming off like the fucking Nicole Kidman AMC commercial
where like the magic of movies and it has clearly
never been to a movie theater watching enchanted. Yeah, yeah,

(01:02:24):
but I guess yeah, could you imagine they're like, yes,
we should give the unions more influence on how these
awards are giving out is sort of what that boils
down to, right, It's like, yeah, keep it specialized, but
I think it would make more sense because you feel
like rather than some like someone's grandpa who used to
be an editor in the seventies, who still has a vote, Like, yeah,
they're gonna their taste is all over the place, like

(01:02:46):
let's I like this idea specialized pots. But then nobody watches.
I guess, you know, I guess people watch the SAG
Awards or the d g A Awards and they just
feel I mean, they broadcast them, so clearly there's enough,
there's enough revenue to just ty to continued broadcast of it.
I gotta start watching those awards. I think that's the
thing I've learned. I need to watch more award shows. Yes,

(01:03:08):
exactly the lesson to today's lesson. I don't know I
even in that respect. I'm in the w e A
for jingle Albanet, So you don't want my opinion about me.
Uh Steven has always such a pleasure having you. Where

(01:03:28):
can people find you and follow you? You can follow
me on Instagram, Twitter, Instagram Twitter. They just merged Uhler
with an E, Wilbur with an E spelled Wilbur with
an E, and Wilbur is spelled spelt with the somebody
has made that mistake before, spelled my name w I

(01:03:49):
L B you R, and then put my Twitter name
right next to it. Yeah, you do that all the time,
where they they'll somehow spell my handle correctly and then
misspell my last name like right next I'm like, how
did you get the handle right? And then not? Then okay,
you know what's I had the lesson I learned from

(01:04:10):
that as you guys are spelling your names wrong, and
you should listen to the people. Thank you. You're just
people are speaking to you and you're not listening. Joe Biden,
is there a tweet or some of the work of
social media that you've been enjoying? Two things. I guess
there's a tweet from a couple of days ago by
this um or should Anna said free Palestine, Uh whatever

(01:04:33):
that means. But yellow Stone really posets what if cattle
ranchers were annoying as hell? I think that's pretty funny.
And then a t shirt popped up in my algorithm
that said, yeah, I'm into IBS Irritable bow syndrome and
that's leaning right into it. That was pretty good. Shut

(01:04:59):
up to super do sir. No, Uh, Miles, where can
people find you? What's a tweet you've been enjoying? Twitter? Instagram?
At Miles of Gray also the ninety day Reality podcast
four twenty day fiance or Sophia and alex Sophia, Alexander
and I just talked that reality shop. I like three
tweets today. First one is from ron Amaya at Juan

(01:05:21):
Underscore A Maya tweeted this month, I'm doing something called
January where I try to make it through every day
of January. Yes, that feels about good. Yeah, that's a
good goal to have. Another one sounded like Hedberg. Yeah,
thank you. I'm trying to do this thing called January
where I will do The next one is from at
Moderate Moderately Mused tweeted twenty five year old will look

(01:05:44):
you dead in the eye and ask you if you've
heard of led Zeppelin all the time as relates to
rap and other music. And last one, slap R s
l v p p Y tweeted, I hope my kids
are good at math because I won't be no help
after third grade. And I thought that, I'm like, yo, man,
division fucking multiplication, Like, don't put these fractions, don't put

(01:06:06):
fucking coast, don't putting that other ship in front of Yeah,
that's why calculators exist. Common Core still around. They doing
that still common core. Yeah, the common core math or
did they give up on that? Was that it's like, uh,
it was like a trendy way of doing math. That
was like, I don't even thinking like kumon math the

(01:06:30):
Japanese or they called it kuman math in the US. Oh,
I called it come on because I thought they were like,
come on, learn this stuff. Come on, you know, like numbers,
you know it's kumon. I don't know. Shout out in
the comments if you know what come on math was?
Jack's just processing that one. Some tweets have been enjoying.

(01:06:52):
Michael Cruz Caine tweeted, there's nothing I won't do to
make sure the waiter likes me. I will sell out
everyone at the table. I'm so sorry about them, even
if they're being totally normal, nothing matters more to me.
I would give it all away, yeah man, Yeah, and
then Sandy Downtoe tweeted, oh, you didn't have any taste

(01:07:12):
before COVID either, honey. Uh. You can find me on
Twitter at Jack Underscore O'Brien. You can find us on
Twitter at Daily Zeitgeist. We're at the Daily Ziegeist. On Instagram,
we have Facebook fan page and a website daily zi
geist dot com, where we post our episodes on our footnotes,
where we link off to the information that we talked

(01:07:33):
about in today's episode, as well as a song that
we think you might enjoy us something that we think
people might enjoy it that I mean, you were close
to the weekend, close to maybe feeling a little more
relaxed despite the tense, tense time we're in. So check
out this remix of Lovely Day by Bill Withers. But
it's like a very bossa nova like Brazilian version. So
it's the real studio version of Lovely Day by Bill Withers.

(01:07:57):
And I don't know, it just feels like, I don't know,
look at a screen saver of a beach or something
and listen to this and and you'll probably feel good
for about five seconds. All right, I need that. I
need that. Take two of those and call Miles in
the morning exactly. All right. Well, The Daily zeit Geys
is a production by Heart Radio. For more podcasts for
my heart Radio, visit the heart Radio app Apple podcast

(01:08:18):
wherever you listen your favorite shows. That's gonna do it
for us this morning. But we're back this afternoon to
tell you what's trending, and we'll talk to you all
down by ye by bye bye

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