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April 29, 2021 70 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season two, episode four
of J Daly's Eye Geice to production of I Heart Radio.
This is a podcast where we take a deep dive
into America's shared consciousness. It is Thursday, April nine one.
My name is Jack O'Brien ak. It's driving me out

(00:22):
of my mind here in them argue for gun rights.
It's driving me out of my head. Shooting us, kill us,
bill us, wrong move your dead, gun cultures, poison, poison, poison, poison, poison.

(00:43):
You never trust to beat cop with a smile. All right.
That's it. That is courtesy of Rap Bohemian and I'm
thrilled to be joined as always by my co host,
Mr Miles Rap Miles Miles Gray Well a walk back
in the day. I'm a gamer, I'm a chef and

(01:04):
a pretty good podcast. I'm a comic. I make beats,
I'm every thing between and yes I do smoke weed exceptionally.
Thank you to Skip Meredith Brooks Fanger. You know what
I mean, well done. I mean that that really does

(01:24):
some you. Yeah, he nailed. I never thought about being
a chef, you know, like I just I like to cook.
I don't look at it. You know if that makes
me a chef, and so that's how I that's how
I always that's a that's an awesome thing for like
an actual chef to say, if that makes me a chef.
You know, I've I've I've I've only looked at it

(01:47):
as nourishing others in my community. And if either way
a chef and so be just like food. All right, well,
we are through to be joined in our third seat
by the brilliant, the talented Kate rap Wow. Hi, thanks

(02:09):
for having me. It's an honor and a privilege. With
your yellow vibes, I'm here to bring I'm here to
bring yellow vibes. I love it. It's healing, it's healing.
You invented yellow, if I'm not mistaken. Is that correct? Right?
That's I forgot about that. You didn't I invented yellow? Yeah? Yeah,
that was me. We appreciate it. Yeah. You were like,

(02:32):
I'm first it was red and orange and I said no.
I was like, I was like, you know, I'm just
spitballing here. What if you tried yellow? Had some ideas?
How about his red? Orange, yellow, blue, green? Integra val?
I don't know, let's let's just go off of that. Yeah,
I can't. I don't claim the whole Roy g Biv

(02:52):
like just yellow that was me. It was a whole
bunch of people coming up with a bunch of stuff
right with Without you, they would just be rob Biv. Right,
it wouldn't Roy, It doesn't roll off the Topekay, where
are you coming from? Where you zooming to us from?
I'm here in l A and Echo Park. Okay, Okay, yeah,

(03:12):
we got it. We got a little heat wave of coming,
didn't we do? Do we? It's weird tomorrow he supposed
hit the high eighties nineties, Thursdays, today, the reality of
the show today and tomorrow, Thursday and Friday. Yeah, exactly.
This is the weather portion of the show that we
do up top. Just really quick, man, Just want to

(03:33):
make sure all the locals no time to get the
sun's out the guns or buns or whatever you want
to put, you know, exposed to the sun's rays. Miles
her Letterman made his big break as a weatherman. As
a weatherman. Yeah, was Will Ferrell also weatherman. I mean
it's my uncle was a weatherman at Omaha, Nebraska. He

(03:56):
was like the only black man to be the weatherman ever,
being Omaha, he said. The only other black dude he
knew was the janitor at the at the TV station. Wow,
but everyone everyone starts off with weather. Yeah. Yeah. Alright, Well, Kate,
we're gonna get to know you a little bit better
in a moment. First, we're gonna tell our listeners a
few of the things we're talking about today. We're gonna

(04:19):
talk about the Republicans having a tough time with their
vaccine pr Uh. We'll talk about Trump gearing up to
do rallies again. We we've long suspected that Trump is
like Gang and listens to the show and he heard
yesterday's episode where we were saying, is he slipping a
little bit? Is he out of side, out of mind?

(04:40):
No longer relevant? And uh he he has responded. We're
gonna talk about the zoom effect, the effect of seeing
our faces on zoom constantly. H We're gonna talk about
speaking of vaccine PR. The number one spokesperson for vaccines,
Joe Rogan, and I just wanted to there's this new

(05:03):
report on Facebook from the m I T. Technology Review
and like just the impossibility of getting them to do
the right thing, And I think those stories kind of
tie in together because Spotify is like backing Joe Rogan
on the basis that he is extremely profitable. So we'll
talk about that all that plenty more. But first, Kate,

(05:26):
we like to ask our guest, what is something from
your search history that's revealing about who you are? Okay?
So I wanted to be like completely transparent and it's
not that exciting, but I just this morning I googled Capricorn, okay,
And something about me is that I love astrology a lot,

(05:47):
but I only know like my own sign, and I
don't really know about other signs. I'm a cancer. I
can tell you a lot about cancers, and I feel
like I know a lot about my own sign, but
I don't know lot of like other signs. And I'm
trying to get to know my full chart a little
bit better. So I make cancer sun, I make Capricorn moon.

(06:08):
And I saw a meme about Capricorn's and I was
like trying to relate to the meme, but I forgot,
like what I forgot, Like you know what capricorns are
all about. I didn't know if it was like a
fire sign or a water sign or an air sign.
So I was trying to google Capricorn, and I think
I just like I didn't. I ended up not actually
learning anything because I must have gotten distracted. But I

(06:30):
did google Capricorn this morning. You can see almost almost
forgot about Capricorn culture. Who's what you're saying, I'm like
trying to get more involved in Capricorn culture. That's sort
of like on my vision board. Okay, okay, yeah, I don't. Yeah,
I'm what is it? What are the broad strokes for
a Capricorn? I think it's like, okay, I'm not an expert.

(06:53):
Clearly I hadn't including the people that say they are.
It's well, yeah, it's okay, like it's I know it's
all like fake, but I know that like fake things
are real. You know, I've not We have this conversation
all the time, like we get it's not science with
some of us vibe, but I vibe on it. Okay, Capricorn,
I think is like you're very organized and you're like

(07:14):
getting your ship together and you're like doing homework, and
is that like the beginning of the year. Is that
a January thing? I think I don't know because it's
not my sun sign here, it's not her son's signed.
I don't know what what's that mean? That's you said
that I thought of my mom for being organized and

(07:35):
she's a Capricorn. Wow, okay, so I think like your
sun sign is like who you really are, and you're
like moon sign is like the face that you show
the world or something. Yeah, okay, so I think. So
I'm a Capricorn moon so people must really think I'm
like super on it. Yeah super Oh she don't even

(07:56):
think about that. Yeah, I'm just just trying to get
by what I show as a non like zodiac enthusiast.
I've always associated Capricorn with like some sort of garnish,
I think because I'm combining corn of capers and corn. Yeahad,
so that's where I'm coming from. So, uh, lest you

(08:16):
think you're not an expert, I will upstage your lack
of expertise. I would eat I'd eat capers and corn. Yeah, capercorns,
apricot corn, hybrid Capricorn. Yeah it could be capri yeah,
caper apricot corn hi tribe red. Yeah that would taste

(08:39):
weird as ship, yeah that would you know what? But
with these are the look we just do it at home.
Get yourself some frozen corn. Some capers and apricots used
to blend that up and let us know how that tastes.
You just fucked up capricorns for me, because apricot is
the one flavor, you know how. They're the people who
are like, I hate cilantro. It tastes like shimp poo

(09:00):
to me. That's how. That's how I am with apricot.
I I do not. I've never once enjoyed an apricot flavor. Um. Yeah,
but if they're so, I've had a really ripe apricot
that I've I've vibed with. Yeah, I probably didn't like it.
I wouldn't have enjoyed it. Well, this is why we're
probably not going to be recording in physical proximity to

(09:20):
each other over again, finding stuff like this out about
each other. Damn, Myles just made the throat slashing gesture
at me. I did the Eastern promises one two fingers,
the two fingers to either side. I love apricots. Okay,
thank god. Kay, you want to do the daily podcast. Yeah,

(09:40):
I'm free every day. Wait, but you got your morning
You still do your morning show? I do? I do?
We do? Yeah, me and my husband Jack, we do
a morning show. On Twitch every weekday. Your husband Jack
holding what miles, We've got something to tell you. That's
Jack Am right, Yeah, Jacket and Classic Classic podcast, live streaming, Universe,

(10:03):
bround Breaking. People should check it out. What is uh?
What's something? I just check out all Jack culture. So
that's that's why I'm up on it. His radios all
the stations are dialed to JACKFLA. Yeah with this stupid
ass interstitials. And if people don't know Jack FM and
l A the interstitial like Jack FM, your mom's gonna

(10:25):
want you to turn this up. It's like, yeah, now Jack,
I like those stings are my ring tones. Anytime my
phone rings, it's a different one of those. What is
something you think is overrated? Kate? Okay? The number four? Okay,

(10:46):
this is kind of a hot take, but it ties
into what I think is underrated, which is the number
sixty nine. Yeah. I think we talked about four a lot. Listen.
I love weed. I smoke it pretty much every day
in some form. But you know, I think in terms
of like funny numbers and like good numbers, I think

(11:09):
sixty nine is way better, way better. No one can
get a straight story on what it even means, Like
is it like the police code for weed, like or
is it something old friends from the Northwest, that group
of friends like who cares? Like no one knows that.
It's not a clear backstory. It's like confusing. It's I'm like,

(11:33):
sixty nine is so you get exactly what you're looking at.
Sixty nine is funny. Like it's one of those things
where like I'll be on Reddit and up vote. I'll
be I'll see something at sixty eight and I'll be like, ah,
maybe I'm gonna get that to sixty nine, and then
you just kind of see you like and then you
keep moving like there's a little more mischief involved with

(11:55):
sixty nine four twenty. This has coming from somebody who
again you heard my A K A. I love the eat.
I have a podcast called four Day Fiance. But it's
not because I think this ship is like the funniest thing,
just like shorthand for weed. But whenever, oh, I'm actually
getting it lasered off. It's a it's a whole it's

(12:15):
a whole story. It's becoming like beer a clock right,
like it's wasn't it I think I was saying Joe
Kim Booster, I think posted something about how four twenties,
especially like the holiday because we just had the quote
unquote holiday or whatever. The day for twenty feels like
very specifically millennial and will probably end with us because
like now that we're in a world where there's recreational

(12:38):
legal weed, it's not as counter culture. And I even
find myself like having to I did so much work
on fo it. I've never worked harder on four twenty
in my life. This last year. Oh yeah, I'm like
I was on like nine live streams because I've distilled
my whole identity to weed and like you gotta come
here smoke this and talk about this. But like you
were doing a twenty four hour phone marathon like of

(13:01):
weed smoking. It was just too much. But I think
it does feel like now that it's gone, like it's
not like, yo, we could get we can get kicked
out fucking everywhere for this ship, not just like can
you smoke weed over there? It's it's yeah. I think
there was a time when four twenty had a lot
of magic to it, especially like when we were younger.

(13:21):
You know. I was like when I found out about
I was like, oh my god, Like that's a funny number.
Let's say it all the time. Let's put it in
our aim screen names, you know. Like, but now now
as I'm mature and weed is legally yeah, it's it's
lost some of the magic. And I'm way more into
sixty nine these days. And yeah, funnier six six six?

(13:44):
Where would you put that on the Oh wow, six
six six might be number two behind sixty nine. Yeah,
I think so is great sixty six point six, like
any variation of six. Yeah, now that I think about
what your take is, it's really about the fence that
it causes because we live in a very puritanical society.

(14:04):
The idea of sixty nine can you can can cause
an older person to be six six six? We got
the whole satanic panic. But again, Weed, it's just not
it's lost. Weeds lost that sort of ability to to
access people's pearl clutching reflex. Yeah, the edge isn't there,
the edges They're sorry, Grandma, sixty nine is happening, whether

(14:29):
you like it or not. So is do people like
make a big deal of June nine, Like does that
come into play? That's why I wanted to bring this
up because I wanted to like soft pitch this to
you guys, like, what if we did make June nine
like sixty nine day and we like kind of like
started It could start right here on this podcast episode.

(14:51):
Maybe a campaign to get everyone sixty nine ng on
sixty nine, or just celebrating sixty nine culture, which is
you know, mutually beneficial joy. Yeah, and you know, come,
it's all about it's all about dual com dual power um.
And now you know, funk D day? What the who
gives this ship? About June six? You know what I mean?

(15:14):
June ninth? Oh, my bad, June ninth. I'm thinking of
June six. June wait six nine, See, I'm so bad
with numbers. June ninth, what happened? Anything good? I just
want to make sure we're not I don't want to
step on another of four eleven BC and his own
life in eight six the Athenian coup um isn't four
twenty also like Hitler's birthday? Yeah? Yeah, so that's I

(15:39):
guess we need something to overshadow that a little bit.
But the nazis already funk with four. I'm not saying
like end four twenty the holiday. I'm just saying, like,
let's build up June. Yeah, I'm kind of I'm kind
of four ending four twenty as a it's because it's
not a it's not really a holiday, you know what
I mean. It's and plus I'm at this point most

(15:59):
of us who are like used to be like, yeah,
we're smoking weed to get by, so it's not the same.
We need it now. I think is great and we
should continue to take it back from the Nazis. But
I do like this idea of number ranks. Yeah, it's yeah,

(16:19):
plummeting in terms of value. Yes, may fourth being bringing
up the rear. I'm assuming may the fourth be with you?
With you? Yeah, that that can that's fine, Yeah, that
can can somewhere. I mean, I don't celebrate that one
because I'm like not a Star Wars fan, but I
celebrate that one. By sixty nine. That's you can celebrate

(16:43):
any holiday by sixty nine. That's the beauty of sixty nine.
But I think it needs its own day, you know,
like it needs six. I mean, it's so it's right
there in the in the numbers six nine, and yeah,
June nine is is lacking. Yeah, in terms of like
what actually you know, like there's not something huge happening.

(17:04):
It's like a lot of historical things happening around that day,
but nothing where you're like all right, six nine, rights,
like we need a we need a holiday at that time,
Like yeah, like a month before like fourth of July ish,
Like let's like have a holiday on June nine. It's
a good time for it. Yeah, and it is like

(17:25):
kind of the beginning of horny season, the beginning yeah,
Horney summer, horny summer vibes, Like, let's have a horny
we have no horny holidays, Like I guess Valentine's Day
is like the only horny holiday we have, and that
I don't consider it. And that's laborious. It's like that's
like that's like if that's the horny is we have,
like we can do better. It's you know what, this

(17:47):
is perfect because it's the solstice this year's June, and
you need like eleven days just to warm your body
up for official horny season. So six nine, you six nine,
get ready for June. Longest day, Yeah, I mean the
longest day of sixty nine. Yeah, let's have some babies
born nine months. Actually I guess not, I don't. Yeah,

(18:11):
you can't have a baby from six A. That's why
it's also it's great about it. Why do you want
to have one of those let's let's keep it mouth
baby only. Yeah, that's like a ya who answers question
pregnant from sixty nine? Yes? What is uh? I mean?

(18:32):
I don't think I have to ask what's something that's underrated?
I think we just are that. I've been thinking about
this a lot, Like I'm I'm very passionate about it. Yeah,
it's been on my mind. Yeah, they make it look
as not they are numbers that make you laugh, but
in terms of raw power, like you could power a

(18:52):
car off of sixty nine six, it transcends even being
a number, like it is a picture, it's a painting. Yeah,
because I think of like the first time my friend Tie,
he was like a few years older than me, he
told me, like, you know what, like how you learn
about when you're a kid. And I was like, what

(19:13):
the What's that? He goes so he's like he's like, okay,
so here's the six and the nine and I was
like all right, and then he like but then he
took them and he like tried to manipulate them so
that the Tale of the six, and then they went
into each other's like and then that's like when you
both do that, I'm like, okay, but what is what
is head? Right? This is very early on in my life.

(19:36):
I was like, okay, I got that part um, but
I don't know what these other things like blows on it?
What a blow job? Like? So they're like, you so crazy.
It's so crazy when you're like a kid and you
find out what blow jobs are. I remember being just
like that's not real, Like that's a joke, Like that's stupid,
that's where the pep goes. Yeah, I was like so

(20:00):
blown away, and you know it's it's it's forever funny.
It's ever funny. It is. It's a funny like catching
your parents having sex. Gross catching your parents sixty nine,
there's like that's funny. You gotta just so you would wait,
would you rather catch your parents sixty nine or having sex?

(20:23):
I mean rather want them under the covers. But you
gotta see, you gotta, you gotta, you gotta fucking take
this in with your eyes, which what will cause less trauma?
Sixty nine would cause less trauma because you have you
have a laugh about it. You have you okay, just
like what are they because someone who have to say

(20:45):
something and they're gonna have genitals in their mouth. Yeah,
like if the if the if the birds and the
bees talk was just about sixty nine not about anything else,
Like actually, I'd be like way less pressure. Yeah, that
would be a great psychological experiment like to do where

(21:05):
somebody just explains that as the only sex act and
see like how the person grows up. You know, like
they're those psychologists who like raise their kids not knowing
like never describing a color or something like that one
pain or using the word pain and using things like sensations.
The thing people try to do with language is full

(21:28):
cling on to see how that turned out. I mean
that would I think that would create better outcomes, equitable
outcomes for people to know that it's about, you know,
mutual satisfaction. Right. You think by saying that, you're already
establishing the relationship of this synergistic sex act where one

(21:48):
in the two people have to to to supply each
other with the pleasure rather than like fucking, because then
you go down something just searching weird porno and you'd
be like just just pump away and that's it exactly.
Because literature and it transcends like sexuality, gender like anyone
can sixty nine anyone like you don't have to presume

(22:09):
your kids are going to be like doing you know,
straight straight sex. It keeps it vague, keep your general descriptions. Yo,
your mouth on what they got, their mouth on what
you got. Yeah, that's it. That's all you needed to
pop in, baby. And they're like Mr. Graid that, we've
got a lot of complaints, Uh for whatever you're teaching

(22:30):
when you're substituting in the math for you, yeah, okay,
six plus nine equals uh satisfied partner. Okay, Okay, what
are we learning about? Are you're only doing division yet? Okay,
I forgot. I'm sorry, kids. I was just thinking. The
two things we've projected is a world where the Titanic

(22:54):
doesn't sink and a world where sixty nine is the
basis for explaining all sex to let's do it better world.
All right, I think we've given everyone a lot to
think about. Let's take a quick break and we'll be
right back. And we're back, and let's talk about just

(23:28):
vaccines in general, uh, and how the Republicans are handling
the whole situation on like you know what the fact
that there is clear science saying this is good for
the country. Yeah, what, so where are we at? Imagine
telling your child sexiest missionary style their whole lives and

(23:50):
then you introduce something called I talked about I thought
it was it was just straight boring mission here? What
is this sixty? I don't know. I don't like that.
This is kind of Republicans are at with screaming at
their base about how no one knows what's going on
with COVID, not even science, not even the doctors, not
even the experts, So why are they making us do
this stuff they don't even know? If you remember, that

(24:11):
has been like the rhetorical thrust of their entire fucking
everything they've been saying this last year. Nobody knows who
gives it, nobody knows anything. So there's a real problem
now because on top of that, they also had you know,
Trump who almost died from the fucking virus and then
refused to let people see that he got vaccinated, even
though he told people he did. He's like, I don't

(24:32):
want them to see my up cover of night and
you put an up jewelish sheet over the my arm
when the injection is giving sort of feels like what
his vibes may have been. But to see that just
to him and like a sleeveless going in for the
jack the man we don't need to see him but
just now. But if you're looking at the numbers, like

(24:54):
clearly where the numbers are falling off in terms of inoculations,
and like the people who want them seem to have
been in the process of getting them, which leaves a
huge chunk of people who are like not fucking with
it at all. And when you look at who is
not getting the vaccine, if you're a vaccine skeptic, uh,
you might be a Republican because and Maile essentially more

(25:17):
than anything, And when you look at how herd immunity
is absolutely what we need for any semblance of you know,
the olden days to come back. You know, like that
none of that's going to happen. We have millions of
these assholes who are treating the vaccine like the last
chance saloon for their toxic egos to put up a
fight to be like, no, I'm not giving into this,
this is the last thing I'll do. So now there's

(25:39):
a thing called the Republican Doctors Caucus where They're members
of Congress who are also doctors, physicians, eugenicists, and they
are here to give a stern talking to to the
Republican voters that are passing like I'm good, I'm not
getting that five G shot, and I want to play
this commercial for you because it's so fucking creepy that

(26:00):
I'm already becoming a vaccine skeptic based on all these
Republicans being like, hey man, you should get the shot.
So here is a message from the concerned physicians of
the Republican Party. You today not only as a United
States Senator, but as a position concerned for the health
and safety of our nation, and today I want to
talk with you about getting your COVID vaccine. Last year,

(26:21):
the entire world was forced to face the COVID nineteen
pandemic head on. And now wait, the American people have
the opportunity to achieve peace of mind and live life
as free as by choosing to receive a COVID nineteen vaccine. Okay,
everybody had to wear their fucking doctor's coat to remind
he's like, I'm not just a racist on TV, I'm

(26:43):
a doctor on the side to also a sux chef,
I mean doctor on the side. You can tell they
all like have the same phase, yeah, blindness or do
they all look exactly like It's wild, Like I could
have drawn all these guys before this video started, and
I've never seen them before in my life. And for
people who have not seen this, you can catch you

(27:04):
can see the link in the footnotes. But it has
like it feels like a sketch where you're in a
dystopian world where like you're like, wait, y'all are believing
these people because like I'm already suspected them, Like just
even though they're saying should I'm like, that's right, people should, uh,
you know, think about their futures and being healthy. Uh.
This thing is two minutes long, but I just want

(27:25):
to go. They start going on by talking about like
how we will get our freedoms back, and they start
using this freedom pitch, so I just want to play you,
like the last thirty seconds the freedom to do whatever
Bill Gates tells me exactly where this angry man and
a lab coat tries to just softly encourage you to
get your vaccination and over nine of doctors in the
United States have already chosen to get vaccinated. I look

(27:47):
forward to the freedom that I, along with my loved ones,
will regain once the vast majority of are vaccinated, if
everyone does their part in the coming week once again
and be able to worship together as a congregation. Okay,
so yeah, there you go, they're on the freedom train. Yeah,
we'll have freedom. You know, doctors have been vaccinated. I

(28:13):
don't know if that is going to necessarily convince those people.
They're not very charismatic, should we say? The backdrop is
also a giant syringe, which I don't think is the
thing that you want to put forward like at the
front of your message to these people who are just
clearly very scared of needles and don't like auchies and

(28:33):
are trying to incorporate that into their into like some
brave political belief. Yeah, what they need to put in
the background is like a Brett Michael's concert, right. Yeah,
it's almost like whoever made the video just searched COVID
clip art. Yeah, because yeah, so like just fucking archaic looking.

(28:56):
But I just want to say this, remember the guy
who we just we saw the ab code who was
like doctors blah blah blah. His name is Senator Roger Marshall,
and he also for some reason put out an op
ed uh in the Kansas City Paper today kind of
going against everything he just said in that video which

(29:16):
he's towing this weird fucking line where he's just like,
I don't know if you guys know what the hex
going on, because like he had to pivot to Biden
bad or everything bad. I just want to read you
some excerpts from this, he says. He talks on talking
about why why are vaccination rates so low in Kansas?
What's going on? He says, in fact, almost half of
Kansas Kansas adults are uncertain about getting vaccinated. Why because,

(29:38):
like with most information surrounding the virus, politicians and bureaucrats
in Washington, d C. Have not been transparent or consistent
as they share the science surrounding the vaccine. Oh man,
you were just trying to tell people, easy, nicey, nicey,
get the vaccine, Get the vaccine. Then you put out
your op and be like, man, these people then they're
doing they have they have these people on such off

(30:00):
footing constantly. He then says federal bureaucrats have changed directions
with no meaningful explanation. No endgame in sight and no
consistency and blaming Anthony Fauci. It's like we're young. Do
you not forget you were? You were the problem between
you were everything you just described. You were the virus
with the politicians not being transparent or consistent. Yeah, I
mean it does make me feel good that, like all

(30:24):
the times that their central message is just incompatible with survival,
Like it's just they can't they can't coexist like that ideology,
and then just like anything about a healthy community, like
they just can't do it, and so he has to
completely contradict himself to to get out there, like that's

(30:46):
gotta be killing them a little bit, right, like just
slowly on the inside, Like doesn't that give you cancer
if you're like going out there being like and I
am a doctor also, so I know that this is
where cancer comes from, going out there saying the medical
truth and like a poorly produced video and then like
screaming at the top of your loans they're lying to

(31:08):
like at a certain level, like your soul dies a
little you have to imply that they had a soul
to beacon with, Like I feel like most for the
most part, like people like that like don't have an
inner world, Like I don't think that they like give
them they're just lizards. They are. They're lizards out in
the sun, baking in the hot l a weather and

(31:31):
then four and a low of sixty. But it really
like I think with sorry, I don't know, I don't
know why I to ITAs of local weather, but I
had I don't know we had to. We had just
called genius comedy. It's a call back. And with and
these Republican doctors, I think because more than anything, they
when you're a Republican doctor, you don't take you don't

(31:52):
take the hippocratical if you take the hypocritical motherfucker oath
where you will constantly contradict yourself and not say anything consistent.
And he goes on to just saying, bureaucrats can't keep
us from worshiping, gathering with extended family, traveling near and
far with friends, enjoying life mass free. I hope you'll
join me in choosing to receive the vaccine. Where which

(32:17):
one is it? You're mad at them, You're being like, yo,
they've fucked up. It's like they're because they're trying to
keep the energy up that Biden bade still. But also, like,
let's be real, all the business owners that donate to me,
they know people need to get vaccinated for their businesses
to actually pick back up because the science will prevent
that from happening. So I don't know there. I think

(32:38):
this is the other thing too, is they don't realize
or rather, yeah, they don't realize. We've constantly talked about
how the Republicans whole sort of platform of just untethering
their supporters from reality is just a weird game to
play because if you really need to explain something to them,
they're not going to understand, like because the whole platform
has been off and not on. That ain't ship that

(32:59):
ain't real things real And you went from okay, well
actually now we need you to get the vaccine please
actually that that that was that was just a lot
of nonsense or you know what, Um, actually the election
wasn't stolen. It was just a lot of funk all
right too late, huh Like I don't know, there's I
don't know how you come back. It's uh, yeah, they're
they're completely fucked in terms of like internal cohesion and

(33:22):
internal like integrity of any sort of message. I mean,
I think it's like there they can like have the
worst pr plan of all time that completely just like
eats its own ass and still like as long as
everyone just like hates the same thing enough, like they'll
just be fine because it's all just based on like

(33:44):
hating the same like list of things like really hardcore.
Well yeah, it's just truly all they can do now
is just try and create hatred because they can't. They
can't do anything else. They really can't do anything else,
you know, it's like, fuck it, we need to put
hate towards trans people. Fuck you, we need to put
hay towards this, the scientific community or vaccines because they

(34:06):
don't have the wherewithal anymore to actually like they're not
they're not fiscal conservatives or balancing that, they're not any
of that ship anymore. It's just it's just like, let's
all hate the same let's all just be like incredibly
hateful and I hate way like the player hater's ball. Yeah,
and just kind of dovetailing with that as it relates

(34:29):
to someone you probably know maybe or like someone who
you know knows. Uh, Joe Rogan came out a couple
of days ago, and I'll just read it word for
word from his April three episode. I hate to say
that if someone's children died from this, I'm very sorry
that sorry that that happened. I'm not in any way

(34:49):
diminishing that, but I'm saying the personal experience that my
children had with COVID was nothing, and then went on
to tell people, if they're young and healthy, not to
get vaccinated, which is, you know, just anti scientific. Uh,
the young are reservoirs for the virus and are powering
the spread. So the only way to put the virus

(35:10):
down is to immunize. So I wanted to talk about
just like how this interacts with Spotify and just like
tech companies in general. The head of Spotify came out
was like, what I will say When someone asked him
about this, he was like, I won't answer that. Uh,
that's implied, will not be answering that. But what I

(35:31):
will say is we have eight million creators and hundreds
of millions of pieces of content. We have a content
policy and we do remove pieces that violate it. So
essentially backing what he said as like not in violation
of their content policies and also like the implication that
they are too big to ethically manage their platform a k.

(35:54):
Like there, you know, they're publishers of content, They're not
just a platform where anybody can use it. There's this
new Facebook article or it's not from Facebook, it's from
a M I. T. Technology review about Facebook's attempt to
like they've been telling us they've been working on like
a more ethical way to manage their algorithms uh and

(36:19):
machine learning. They put together this task force with the
people who built their system that is called like ethical AI,
and it's completely like this. So this person spent eight
months with the person who's in charge of that, who
was like the spear tip of machine learning at Facebook

(36:39):
and like getting their news feed to like basically learn
about us, make decisions about what anybody uses Facebook is
going to find most engaging, and just pushing it in
a more and more outrage focused direction. That led to
a whole bunch of bad ship. But he is now
on the solution team and she was like, So I

(37:03):
spent eight months, and it took me in the eighth month,
I figured out that they're not doing any of the
things they claimed to be doing, Like any time I
raised the central issues that would have allowed them to
stop like the genocide that they were instrumental in causing.
They redirected or delayed the meeting, and HUD basically sued

(37:24):
Facebook and was like, your algorithms have become racist, and
how they're recommending content to people like for real estate
and that like violates a very specific law, and so
they just put all their interest on that and that's
all they will answer questions about. And it's just it's

(37:45):
just basically the like I've been at a tech company
where like they're struggling with the fact that the very
thing that had driven all their profits to that point
turns out to be like just drastically flawed, and but
then they don't change anything about the overarching like ideals

(38:07):
behind it that like trickle down to the cellular structure.
They just like allow these people who are supposed to
like help solve the problem in and then just like
shoot them down one by one. And that's like all
they know how to do. Mhm. And you know that
these are really smart people who work for Facebook, but
we keep seeing that being smart doesn't mean you're more

(38:30):
likely to get to what the ethical solution is. It
just allows you to kind of logically insulate yourself right
and logically insulate yourself from you know, make an argument
within your head that allows you to justify the horrifying
ship that you're doing. Um, that's why cult members often
test as being more intelligent by a statistically significant margin

(38:53):
than the average non cult joiner, because the smarter you are,
the better able you are to argue for whatever you
want to believe. But yeah, so I just think that
like the fact that Facebook has these super smart people
at the helm like is actually standing in the way
because they can find a way every day too, you know,

(39:17):
Like the the way that people get promoted, the way
people get raises, the way people get bonuses is all
based on the central core statistic that Facebook cares about,
which is engagement. That's it, like that, and that is
shot through everything they try to do, no matter what.
And the thing that produces engagement is misinformation. Like people

(39:39):
are going to be more likely to listen to Joe
Rogan say that, like he has some theories you haven't
heard before on the COVID nineteen vaccine than they are
to listen to the thousands of places being like just
listen to the fucking c d C like, and they

(40:00):
can't solve that. They literally, like the tech industry will
never solve that unless there's like some structural uh you know,
oversight where like the people like Mark Zuckerberg is co
leading the company with somebody who is Their entire background
is like journalism and fact checking and like that they

(40:21):
have fifty of us, say, and who gets promoted, who
gets paid, what they get paid, who gets fired. Like
that's literally the only way, and that's just not how
things organized. It's like unfixable. It's like an unfixable problem.
Like there what they are precisely profiting off of, Like
they would go out of business if they had actual ethics.

(40:43):
I mean, so that was one question I was left with,
is like whether there's a solution here, Like if we
tear it down and turn it into multiple companies like
Facebook or Spotify or whatever, they would face the same
problem Facebook did when like one of the problems that
they outlined in this m I T Review article is

(41:04):
that Facebook got accused by the conservatives of having an
anti conservative bias, so they altered their internal rules so
that a filter couldn't stop conservative news more than liberal news,
which made it so that any anti vaccine filter, uh
or any any filter that was designed to like stop

(41:25):
anti vax or ship was useless because that content was
also almost exclusively coming from the conservative side. And same thing,
like a lot of the you know, planning around the
storming of the Capitol happened on Facebook, and like they
can't you know, like if you haven't inherently like ideologically

(41:47):
corrupt thing that is rising up in the country, like
among a significant part of the population, you can't be like, well,
that's that's that counts too. We have to be fair
to them, or that's the entire fucking problem. So I
don't I don't necessarily know what the solution is, but
I do think that it's worth trying, like something where

(42:12):
I have something, I have an idea. Let's let's just
bring back my space. Thank you, let's bring it back.
Let's go back to two thousand seven Internet. I wonder
if it's it's the concept of a feed that's really
fucking it up, you know, because you're so passively can
just go to this trough of nonsense with a feed,

(42:32):
infinite infinite scroll has like destroyed everything. There has to
be an end or you just be like, oh, you
want to know what's up? Navigate to that person's profile
and that's where the information is. For Like the argument
that this article, this reporter for m I T makes

(42:52):
after like spending the nine months, is like every time
a solution like that comes up, they just find a way.
And it's not just people within Facebook, it's the people
whose entire livelihood is driven by finding ways to make
their information more uh engaging, and so they find a
way around the AI. So it's like any single solution

(43:15):
like that, it really needs to be at the central, like,
this is the central motivation of this company cannot be
growth and that is like what makes Facebook so massive
is that they are singularly focused on growth. And another
detail that she points out is she's like, this is

(43:36):
not the first article that's been that had this exact motive,
like of looking into how they're addressing this. The New
York Times did one and it ended up being like
a really uh so, it says. In May of twenty nineteen,
Facebook granted a series of interviews with to The New
York Times, which rewarded the company with a humanizing profile

(43:58):
of the sensitive, well intentioned, and executive striving to overcome
the technical challenges of filtering out misinformation and hate speech
from a stream of content that amounted to billions of
pieces of the day. Um, because like The New York
Times is just like any of these other publishers that
Facebook has been on the brink of putting out of

(44:20):
business for years, Like they rely on Facebook to a
an incredible degree, So like you can't that's another way
that this is getting deaded. Like you we know that
they enabled a genocide, Like you'd think that that would
be front page news NonStop. The fact that they're not
doing anything to solve it. But then my business can

(44:40):
be affected by reporting the news because they control such
a large share of eyeballs on their platform that I
have actually been rendered inert as anything because of this
whole fucking setup. Right, yeah, but anyways, it's it's I
I don't have a solution, but it seems like the

(45:01):
only thing would be like some drastic censuring of Facebook
to like basically be a completely different company, and that's
not going to happen without like radical, radical change and
also fun Joe Rogan, Yeah, I thick that guy. Yeah, Hey,
come on, man, he's he's pretty buff. We did we

(45:21):
did get some somebody who I guess is a listener
of both our shows or pay his attention, I guess
to people who covered Joe. Rogan was saying that he
had talked early on in the show about doing like
testosterone replacement therapy. Uh, and that might have something to
do with why uh he he fell into a bunch

(45:43):
of ooze from India tours like the middle aged version.
It's it's I mean, kind of all, it's kind of impressive.
He also like for anyone who listens to that show,
for like the kinds of trippy people he would have
on that would say things like, you know, don't think
we're all not this same, Like we're all individuals and
we have to respect that too. Then apply that to

(46:04):
be like, yeah, well my kid didn't get it, so
you should use that apply that to your life because
my child didn't have Like you don't even you're not
even hearing the ships. You say you don't believe it,
and it's just become someone's trippy older brother's garage to
smoke weed in where you here weird ship and then
you get freaked out and leave. Yeah, alright, let's take
a quick break and we'll come back and talk about
the zoom effect. And we're back and like we said, uh,

(46:39):
former President Donald Trump is apparently listening to the show
because on yesterday's episode we talked about how the brand
is slipping, and sure enough today he's gonna he's planning
his next moves to uh shure up the base. He
wants Raley's baby. CNN did this piece where it reads

(47:00):
like CNN was it sounds like Santa had to like
make good for a bunch of ships to get this
access because they're describing the president or the former president
like a dude who does ship and is engaged with
you know anything. But I'll just read this first part
because they're describing sort of what the vibe is at
Mara Lago and like how he's very busy now with

(47:22):
his aids quote. Together, they decide which Republican candidates he
will meet with at his office, a converted bridal suite
above Mara lag Square football room, and whether they deserve
his support. Often he'll ask for updates on his leadership
pack in political operation, or spend hours chatting by phone
with a quadre of old friends. Oh my god, I

(47:42):
love that his office isn't a converted former bridal, like
he's just doing like whatever the funk he does in
the same spot where like bride'smaids were getting like blackout
drunk and like trying to like puke before walking down
as he plays good the ballroom just like, Yeah, I

(48:03):
think it's probably like it needed to be. It has
have double doors and two sets of doors. So once
they come in, then there's another area where they come
in and you hold them and then we'll build tension,
and then you bring them into the main office where
I will be having my back turn to them, looking
out upon my marvelous estate, and they'll be like, oh
you again, is it Rubio, And that'll be that's the
vibe I'm going forward. So the whole thing is like,

(48:26):
so when you read that, you're like, man, don't act
like he's fucking you know, doing West Wing ship, rifling
through papers, doing walk and talks funck that um. But
they do also point out that this dude will play
twenty seven holes of golf multiple times a week, so
there is some there is some level of just objective
reporting of what's happening. Um. But then the rallies though

(48:47):
he said quote. Recently, Trump has initiated discussions about resuming
the signature MAGA rallies that fortified his nascent political movement
in sixteen and continued throughout his presidency. Well. He has
vowed to travel to Alaska to campaign against Murkowski and
is said to be interested in hosting campaign events for
some of the candidates he's already endorsed. Aid said the
logistics are still being worked out, but he could resume

(49:09):
rallies as early as May. Puke. So you know, he
sees himself as the barometer for the party now and
that's what he's trying to do. And I think the
rallies are truly like his one way back to being
relevant because Twitter has completely made him vanished. He's also
got to move merch. Yeah, yeah, he hasn't done a
big merch push in a while. He's probably like needs

(49:33):
the money. He found that it's more profitable to just
threaten his supporters and like weird emails where it's like
we heard you turned your back on the president, asshole.
I'm looking at his shop just to see like what
kind of because I remember like there was there were
straws and shipped to get people all being like you

(49:54):
you don't like straws, throw these Trump straws. He's still
selling straws, got maga hats. Uh. Then the new Yard sign.
Don't blame me. I voted for Trump. Okay, Actually I
think that ship is genius. Yeah, to walk around with it.
They don't blame me. I voted for Trump, okay. Um.

(50:16):
And then like there's a thing called the Trump Freedom
hat that looks like a trucker's come. It's just like
a golden eagle with stars and it's like the most
aggro American man shit I've ever seen. And I hate
to bring truckers into it, but yeah, there is. Don't
insult truckers come that way. Truckers have beautiful come. Yeah,

(50:36):
some of the best, some of the strongest. Yeah. So
it's just all very um overpriced and made in China.
Oh yeah, he We'll see what. And ultimately, I think
the people that make merch are like the black dudes
who you see at the at the Maggia rallies who
are really hustling. Those are always my favorite viewer. They're like, yeah, bro,
it's a grind, but I will move all these Trump

(50:56):
flags and the racist white people, and they somehow aren't
aware that I'm a personal color selling it to them. Yeah,
so we'll keep our eyes and ears tuned to see
if he moves. I think he's like, I think he's
most I think Trump is mostly like bored of being
like the Mickey Mouse character at mar Lago that everyone
wants to take a picture with, Like I feel like
that can that could only sustain him for so long?

(51:17):
Like although like can you know, like he crashes like
every wedding and gives a speech like I've seen the
videos it it's like the funniest thing of all time.
But like that's got to get old after how long
has it been? Like three months? Four months? Does it?
If he's showing up to a wedding and everyone's like

(51:38):
it's truly him and he can just like take the
mic for hours and hours, like, um, it's not a
bad life. It's not a bad life. If I had
like a whole place dedicated to me, I would crash
all the weddings and a whole celebrity. It's Jack Lamata
at the end of Raging Bull and de Niro's character

(51:58):
at the end of Casino. It's like that that is
where a certain type of like criminally toxic narcissism lands
you is like that is the solution, just people motherfucker's
like motherfucker's that graduated and go back to their high school. Yes,
the same energy. It's that big, big scene, big yeah
you remember me? Huh Yeah, Well now I'm twenty and

(52:20):
I still live with my mom. Uh but yeah you
remember me. Remember you know that banner hanging up in
the gym. That's cousin me. Wow, that's so Trump's fibe.
He's like a super senior. Yeah exactly, and that's all
he He hasn't grown past that. So it's just this
really lame version of going back to the football games
and walking the track being like, yeah, I'm back, I

(52:41):
got jack. It still fits. Huh, what's up coaching map.
It's truly wild how much he has been diminished by
being banned from Twitter, Like that is I I don't
know that. That's another thing that just continues to make
me interested in like because I feel like it's become
cool to be like, oh, social media is like bullshit.

(53:05):
It's not like the problem because you know, people are
gonna say what they're gonna say, but like, just his
their ability to just like ban him and completely change
the texture of the fucking country as pretty pretty wild.
It seems like very small changes to how information spreads
is like, can have drastic impact. And I think yeah,

(53:30):
I mean also, every journalist is just looking at Twitter,
so if like Trump's not on it, like it's just
like not news. Yeah, yeah, that's a good point, Like, yeah,
journalists are looking at Twitter, and if he's not there,
then it's like up to the media matters folks who
have to just mainline a bunch of Fox News and
news Max and should do oh sho, there he is.

(53:51):
There is fun. He popped up here and he said
some weird shit. Um, and and even then it's like
the same old thing, which is like, yeah, Joe Biden,
he's completely failure for For are there to be a
healthy version of social media, you need like people who
like right people from right Wing Watch, like as important
as Mark Zuckerberg. Alright, Uh, let's talk about another technological impact,

(54:18):
this one that we're actually coming back from a a
long stop down because zoom is fucking us. But this
is something people are talking about called the zoom effect,
wherein we have been looking at our own faces for
way too long during this pandemic, and we've had enough
time to all develop body facial dysmorphia and there is

(54:44):
now a big upticking cosmetic surgery. Yeah, there's this U
sort of study or I don't know the article in
the Business of Fashion. So it's like sort of tracking
all kinds of trends, good or bad, sort of around this.
And yeah, uh, there's a new survey saying of thousand women,
one in ten indicated they're more interested in cosmetic surgery

(55:05):
now more than they were before the pandemic, and one
quarter of respondents who had a procedure in the past
said they would like additional work done as it relates
to the pandemic. And I think in the beginning this
this zoom effect is really just brought up by like
plastic surgeons who are like, I'm seeing a lot of things,
Like early in the lockdown, it was all facial things,
so it was like fillers getting your wrinkles done. I

(55:28):
lived because people were so focused on their own faces
and zoom or people just saw themselves a lot more
than I think they were used to. And then that
died off, and now because things are evolving with vaccines,
there's a secondary wave and the interest is all centered
around what they call procedures below the zoom line. So

(55:50):
that's like anything with like liposuction or tummy touch, that's
like the new wave. Yeah, that people want to just
sort of address like weight game now was the face
Now it's like this post pandemic weight gain. It's all
very toxic. But they all think. They're all thinking that
part of it too, is that this because they're still
social distancing, the healing process can also be more discreet

(56:13):
and you don't have to go out and explain to
people like if you were, you know, missing from somewhere
or whatever. And yeah, so that's what we're doing with
now is this zoom effect? I mean this is real.
Like I know people who have like gone into plastic
surgery like because of the pandemic or like this was
the time to do it if they were thinking about
doing it already, like and they went and got procedures.

(56:36):
I mean, I've been thinking about pumping my face full
of boat talks. I'm ready for it. I think, I think, um,
I think it's good. I'm pro plastic surgery. I'm pro
injecting everything you want to inject. Like I mean, I'm
anti like feeling bad about yourself, but like pro agency.
I get this. I totally get it, like I have,

(56:57):
Like I completely understand it. I also like I get
the like we're just living like in like the digital
world so much, like I would love a procedure to
just like upload myself into the Internet, like I don't
need regular life anymore, Like I figured it out, Like
I don't want a body. I'll just I'm down to

(57:18):
just be uploaded. Yeah. Yeah, we were talking about that
very thing this morning. Yeah, yeah, yeah, bodies are a
real pain in the ass. Who needs them? Yeah, I
mean only for only for sixty nine. Really, that's the
only reason I can think of. Yea, even then, just
change the binary from zeros and ones to sixes and nines,

(57:38):
and I'm yes, that's this is That's exactly what I'm
talking about. If we can change binary code to sixes
and nine, upload my consciousness to megaphone, libs in iTunes, Spotify,
whatever you gotta do, get me out of here. I'm done.
I'm ready. But the other thing what's interesting is overall,
I mean, like the articles weird because I said surpribably,

(58:00):
like you know, procedures went down in overall it's like yeah,
because it was a lockdown, and for a while we
were only doing absolutely necessary medical procedures. I don't know if,
and they don't really mention that. They just say like
there was a trend, like there were fourteen percent less
procedures being done. But the one thing they do point out,
the one things that increased over twenty nineteen in terms

(58:24):
of procedures were butt and peck implants increased. H Yeah,
so people wanted new butts and people wanted them swoll chests.
I guess because it wasn't breastocented. This is for male
peck pectoral implants because exactly against what I would expect,
because but implants wouldn't that hurt for a long time

(58:44):
when you're sitting like all I do is sit. That
would that would kill's stomach? Man? You know? Oh yeah,
I mean your stomach and then you got two cakes
behind your head, You got it. Why waste a butt
by sitting on it when you could just be doing
like a like a squat selfie into the mirror looking

(59:06):
back at it. That if I if I got my butt,
if I ever got my butt done, I would just
be permanently stuck in the like squat with the phone
behind me into the nearer selfie. Just that would be
what I would look like, right, And also I would
get the kind of butt implants to that the cheeks
were so big up top that like it folds into
my lower back. So I could also create a new

(59:28):
like fold to put like pieces of paper in like
a peacock with my butt cheeks. And a lot of
people put their pencil behind their ear. I got a
whole new solution to that. You know, it's convenient. It's convenient.
We have the technology, the technology, we have the technology,
we've got to season. Yeah, I also feel like one

(59:51):
thing that could be going on is like it's a
good time to get the rest involved in recovering, right,
like you're not around other people. And then also I
just feel like I am generally in much worse shape
than I've ever been in my life because of the pandemic.
I'm assuming it's because of the pandemic. Could also be

(01:00:11):
because I'm forty now and old, but that I don't know.
I feel like maybe people are just in like I
don't necessarily buy that it's fully zoom based. I don't either.
I think like people are thinking about their lives, They're
like reflecting on themselves. They are have more free time

(01:00:32):
to just like think, and I'm I've come to this
conclusion in the pandemic that one of the most important
things I care about is being hot. And I don't
think I'm alone in that. I think being hot is
fun and that's why it's a priority for me above
almost anything else. Is I wear the color yellow, and

(01:00:54):
I try to be hot and it makes life better.
And you simplified it too. You're not trying to tick
all these boxes. You're like, Okay, I wake up, were yellow,
be hot? Done? And if you go to bed, I
don't have anything else I need to do that day.
At six am in bed. By seven am, I'm done.
I'm done. Those are the only two things that matter

(01:01:16):
to me. But I mean, like, I think it's like
I think, you know, when I say, like being hot,
I think, like you don't need like any you know,
medical intervention necessarily, but if that beyond peck and of
course the obvious ones that we all need to be getting,
which are packing. But but like, yeah, I get it.
I totally get this. I don't think it has anything
to do with zoom and I think it has everything

(01:01:37):
to do with like everyone's horny and wants to be
hot in sixty nine by June nine, and like, for
some people that means getting some juveiterm, getting some eyebrow threads.
Look and like the Beauty of sixty nine, you don't
have You don't look because you're focused, you know what
I mean. You don't have time to really look at
all this other stuff. You know, you gotta have your

(01:01:58):
head in the game, so you don't necessarily have to
look your hottest, you know, just have your mouth. Just
get those exercises done. You know, do you guys do
the zoom thing, the improve my appearance, touch up my
appearance filter on zoom? No, I've not, do you know?
You know about it though, right? Yeah. I also heard
about it because Jack was talking about doing meetings with

(01:02:20):
somebody he's suspected of always darkening their eyebrows on zoom.
Oh yeah, that's the thing. It wasn't suspecting. He at
one point turned and his eyebrows didn't turn with him.
I love that. I love that. Yeah, I do think
like maybe that would be the thing, because it's like,
if you're so used to you're touched up appearance, and

(01:02:41):
then you look in the mirror and you're like, oh,
like I need a filter for real life, where is
we can give ourselves filters in the form of like injectables.
It's like very easy, yeah, yeah, you know, and think
at the end of the day, uh to go outside
for a little bit, get used to the world again.
And then if if you feel like you're your digital

(01:03:03):
form that is haunting you, you still want to bring
them to real life, you know, then do that. But ship,
I know, like there is such a it's true, like
you're saying, like you do get stuck in this idea
of digital life because it's it's having to replace traditional
physical proximity. So now we're used to working over zoom
and putting our thoughts out there through the social media

(01:03:23):
or whatever, and that's how we communicate. But it's like
I think part of that too is really trying to
begin to ease yourself back out of that of having
to normalize that and remembering like you're in your body
too and not just like whatever the video clip is
of you being reflected back to you in your phone,
or the opposite plan, which is just fully be online
and never come back. Give yourself over. Baby, it's time

(01:03:47):
let's all join the cloud. It's fun up here. This
is the real meme. What you guys are seeing. You
saw me in person, Like, that's not me, this is
this is its body. My physical body is sixty nine.
My consciousness is now on the internet. Oh my god,
I want that. Like it's like the matrix but all
the battery pods are just couples six exactly. Oh my god. Incredible.

(01:04:12):
Does the Zoom article mentioned the looming sixty nine at
the end of the tunnel where we doesn't because there?
I mean, yeah, that's they don't they don't get it.
We're truth seekers like Joe Rogan, you know what I
mean was coming Kate. It has been such a pleasure
having you on Daily Zeitgeist. Yeah, this was a blast.
Where can people find you? Follow you here? You all

(01:04:33):
that good stuff. I'm everywhere at Kate Raft and um.
I have a Twitch talk show every morning at seven
am Pacific, Twitch dot Tv slash jack Am. I also
do a podcast about celebrities called Hot and Rich, which
is everywhere you can get podcasts. Yeah, and I also
do another podcast called this podcast is Self Care and

(01:04:54):
that's it. Those are my plugs. There you go. What
is like on the Hot and Rich podcast? What's like
one of one of your favorite episodes that you guys
have done. Um. I mean I recently did a breakdown
about why I think the Kardashians are poor and they're
running out of money. There's a whole scam going on.

(01:05:14):
It's all about to collapse at any second. So any
of those episodes, you should check those out. Uh? And
is there a tweet or some of the work of
social media you've been enjoying. I have no idea who
this is, but it's this Instagram account called Affirmations with
three f's, so it's like Affirmations and they just make

(01:05:37):
like weird memes of affirmations and it honestly was like
it's everything. I love it, like a picture of a
minion saying I'm not lying in bed all day, Like
I I look at these every morning and it's I
fucking love it. I am extremely beautiful today. H Was

(01:06:01):
that someone from Frozen? I think so. I think it's
like some Disney princess. It's just great. I love I
love this weird Affirmations Instagram account. I just like dominion,
like just declaring like I am not lying in bed
all day, Like yeah, fuck it. The men, you can
do it. Miles, where can people find you? What the
tweet you've been enjoying? Twitter, Instagram, Miles of Gray. Also

(01:06:23):
the other podcast four twenty day Fiance, and I maybe
you just have to change this to the sixty nine
day Fiance and just watch the whole fucking tone explode.
It could be a good it could be a good
branding opportunity. Just testing, just some six nine testing real quick.
Some tweets that I like. First, I just want to

(01:06:44):
shout out Cody Ziggler because he just you know, he's
been working on the Spiderman New Spiderman Miles Morales comics.
His first issue is out today, So please check out
Cody Ziggler. Yeah, he wrote a fucking Spiderman comic. Okay,
so check this An's workout fantastic, you know, friend of
the show. And some tweets that are like. First one

(01:07:04):
from Dana Donnelly at Dana donne Lee d O n
l Y. She's tweeted, I'm in a group text with
my mom and her tax lady and I used too
many exclamation points and her tax lady sent my mom
a separate text asking if I am quote using cocaine.
You never know, You never know with all the maccimation.
But another one at Dueling Access tweeted me, my writing

(01:07:29):
is so bad Disney somehow. Palpatine returned me, my writing
is pretty good. Actually, it's a good, good thing to
keep in mind. Another one is from Bob, which is
at Bob because the whole vibe is just old man
tweets at Bob tweeted just ata ice cream sandwich in
twenty seconds while holding the freezer door open so my

(01:07:51):
kids couldn't see what I was doing. I almost did
that one, but that hits way too close to home. Man,
hiding my junk food intake from my kids. It's wait,
it is that to not inspire curiosity to then have
to share with them or like explain to them or
a little bit both. I don't want to model that
behavior to them. Also, deep shame that alright, just housing

(01:08:16):
an entire pint of ice cream, damn standing up with
the freezer door open. Yeah, or over the sink, Yeah,
things are good, that's responsible. Yeah, I mean a pint
over the sink. At least you're worried, like you're trying
that you're being careful about the drip and ship like that.
So yeah, it doesn't help. It's all over the place. Man. Hey,
look man, I tried to make you feel good about it's. Sorry. Man,

(01:08:39):
that's nothing. Nothing's get me out of this one. Sorry.
A couple of tweets I enjoyed Chris Laker at Chris
Laker must be part of the family that owned the Lakers. Uh,
there are two rogans within you, and you decide to
either feed the Seth or the Joe. And then Emma
Roller you tweeted in an article that said people who

(01:09:02):
ate French fries or hash Brown's two to three times
a week we're more likely to die early, according to
one study, and she asked how many fries do I
need to eat to die immediately? You can find me
on Twitter at Jack Underscore o Brian. You can find
us on Twitter at daily Zeitgeist. We're at the Daily

(01:09:22):
Zeitgeist on Instagram, we have Facebook fan page, on website
daily ze guys dot com where we post our episode
was on our footnotes where we link off to the
information that we talked about in today's episode. Well, it
was a song we think you might enjoy. Miles. What
is your recommendation for today? Oh man, I just want
to I was just singing something in my As I

(01:09:44):
was cleaning my house, I was thinking of the album
Yard Corps by the Born Americans and the specific track
send My Love. So I want to go out by
send my Love from Borne Americans and if you know
this song, save up when a dozen Roses Mayson and
you knows it this ship, Well, I thought I was

(01:10:06):
in middle school again, so I'm taking all back with me.
This is Born Americans was send my Love? Hell yeah,
we suggest you go listen to that daily Zeyga is
the production of I Heart Radio for More podcast, my
Heart Radio, the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcast, or
wherever you listen your favorite shows. That is going to
do it for this morning. We're back this afternoon to

(01:10:28):
tell you what's trending. We'll talk to y'all then bye
bye

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