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July 31, 2019 64 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season ninety three, Episode
three of the Daily Night Guys production of I Heart Radio.
This is the podcast where we take a deep dive
into Americas, share consciousness, and say, officially off the top,
fuck Coke Industries and buck Fox News. It's Wednesday, July
thirty first, two thousand nineteen. My name is Jack O'Brien
ak Jack, a production of I Heart Radio Brian and

(00:23):
I'm trailed to be joined as always by my co host,
Mr Miles Ray. Kiss by the Tuscan Son. If you
have not you said, they must kiss by the Tuscan Son.
Em A live sweet Okay, thank you for that Hall
of nots inspired a gay CHRISTI yamabucci mane. It reminds

(00:45):
me of being in the hills of Tuscany the geometric
or oh sorry, I forgot where I was. Um, yeah,
shout out to you because I was saying him me
with the hall no decades and you did. Uh. Still
waiting for a few more fly are one based on
I can't go for that. Submissions are still I didn't
even realize that's what it was. That had a little
chili peppers fob to it. Oh you thought I was

(01:07):
doing kete Yeah, ket is vibe t I'm trying to
think of how it would have been. Okay, well I'll
think about that. Uh yeah, I just wanted to give
you a little something, just a note, yeah, not a
note on your perform it right, the um my Okay.
It was courtesy of Sack ben Nus and we are
thrilled to be joined in our third seat by the

(01:29):
hilarious and talented Laura Chin. Hi. This is exciting. It's
exciting to have you here. Have you been really good?
Even though we're meeting for the first time, but how
have you been? I mean, I've seen photos of you
on Instagram, so I feel like I've known you for
a while, right, And I've seen photos of you, yes,
And I was like, oh, I've never met her, Yeah
I would, And here we are. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, I'm

(01:52):
super good. Yeah. You know it's Monday, Sunday, Tuesday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Sat.
Happy days. I'm really good. Yeah. Yeah. You're the writer
and star of Florida Girls. Yes, Yes, which is a
show that is in the process of airing its first season.
How has that experience been for you? It's fantastic, you know,

(02:13):
We're on a network called Pop TV and they're a
newer network. They're like three years old or four years old. Um.
And they have a show called Ships Creak that has
really like worked through and um touched people's hearts and
funny bones. Um, and it's wonderful. Um. So, but because
we're on a newer network, this whole process of like
airing and its cable, and I had very I wasn't

(02:33):
My expectations were like not negative, but I was just
like I don't know what's going to happen. Um. It's
this new frontier of television where there's like do critics
review shows? There's six hundred shows submitted for the Emmys
last year, like um. And then we got a bunch
of reviews from Time magazine in New York Times, and
I was very like blown away, and I was very
pleasantly surprised. Um so things are going very well. Yeah. Uh.

(02:57):
We we were excited to Lacy Moseley, one of your
co stars, is uh frequently one of the faces on
Mount Zeke Gang. She's incredible more Mount Zepmore. All right, Laura,
we're gonna get to know you a little bit better
in a moment. First, we're gonna tell our listeners a
few other things we're talking about today. Uh, we're gonna

(03:18):
talk about the Alan Derschwitz deep dive, and then New
Yorker We're gonna talk about the fact that different people
say things different. You don't say yeah, yeah, this is
all that's spurred by a tweet that you saw. Yeah yeah,
you went around the whole office. We're like, tell me
what this is? What is it? Yeah? What do you
call this? We're gonna talk about how il han Omar

(03:40):
is in some deep assid trouble. We have. We have
witnessed the face the future of politics. We're going to
introduce you to that face, the person who was running
against ilhan Omar. We're gonna talk about whether there's trouble
on the right, whether there's trouble in Paradise between Trump
and his uh right wing supporters. Uh, We're going to

(04:05):
talk about a whole bunch of stuff, little Nazas defeating
Mariah and uh and Capital One going to regret those
Viking commercials I think where people are just raiding this
ship out of stuff and then people are like, oh
Capital One ship and I'll die. I don't know what
happened to the Vikings when they saw the people like

(04:25):
Capital One. I don't know, Samuel L. Jackson. I think
we're Jennifer Garner. Yes, And we record this before last
night's debates, so uh sorry, you're gonna have to wait
twenty four hours for the hotness. These lukewarm debate takes lukewarm,
the lukewarmest of debate takes well either way. We're gonna

(04:46):
get to all of that and more. But first, Laura,
what is something from your search history that's revealing about
who you are? Oh? God? Um, you know the last
thing I googled was Hannah be rumors um from Bachelor Hands. Yes, yes,

(05:08):
I was watching bachelort last night and she closed it.
It was a pretty uneventful episode of Bachelorette. Um, you
can kind of guess who's going to win, um Tyler
see but um, at the end of the episode, it's
suddenly got really juicy and twisty, and she was like,
I know there's a lot of rumors out there about
how the show ends, but you guys have to tune
in tomorrow night to see. And it's taken me months

(05:29):
to heal from this, And I was like, whoa, And
I know, but I don't know why I want. I
don't want spoilers. I just wanted to know what the
theories are. I was like, what are people? Um? But
then I started to read and I was like, you
know what, it's just going to ruin tomorrow night. Are
you a frequent bachelorette? I started ironically. I started it
like seven years ago, my very first TV show that

(05:49):
I ever wrote. For a lot of the writers. We
would go to one of the writer's house and we
would all sit and like put the captions on, turn
the volume down, and kind of just make jokes about it.
And then I fell in love with it, and it's
no longer. Yeah, would they ever pull a fast one
and have her say it took me a long time
to heal from this and then nothing bad happens. Yes,
that's the thing is like. I also watched the UK

(06:11):
version of Love Island. Um, I watched really highbrows. I
feel like I fit right in here, um. And but
Love Island, I feel like it's less manipulative, Like feel
warmer and cozier toward it. But Bachelor can be very
like she's like screaming at somebody and to show like
a teaser like hannahby loses it and then the next
week she's just like screaming at the television or something

(06:34):
and you're like, yeah, you're breaking my heart and she's
like talking to someone in traffic like what are you doing? Um?
So yeah, they do. They do that kind of stuff,
and for some reason they You still keep tuning in
because there's moments that are to make it all worth

(06:55):
it totally. Yeah, what is something you think is over rated?
You know, it's funny I'm not on Twitter. I'm not
on Twitter, and because I'm not on it, I'm like,
it's probably not that cool. Yeah, but it's been two
years and years and years and there was like a
window to get on it and I and I never did.

(07:17):
And I remember I went to a comedy show and
Sarah Silverman was talking about Twitter and she was like,
you know it's now, it's not too late to join Twitter, guys,
this was like ten years ago. And she was like,
can you do your obligatory tweet where you're like, is
anyone out there like tweet tweet? You know, like you
do your first tight And I was like, I could
go home and I could start Twitter and I could
do that first tweet that sarah' selveronon just gave me um,
but I didn't. And now it's just way too late.

(07:40):
I don't know if it is. Do you think it's
too late? I mean, I don't know if it's. I
don't even know if there's like a I don't know
what you'd be missing. To even say that you're late
would imply that you're missing out on something, right, right, right,
so very much. I don't know. Like, I think it's
a double edged sword to be honest. Part of the time,
I like laugh at a lot of this stuff I
see in there. Half of the time I'm like cringing.
It's half to what I see on there, and it's

(08:02):
you know, social media can have an effect on you
or like you really the interactions, like you'll really take
on with how people are talking about something or talking
to you or about things you're involved in, and I
don't think that's necessarily healthy. We'll see this is where
my fucking hold eminem monologue starts. Yeah, you know you

(08:23):
only get one shot for that first, but yeah, I
think part of me I get why. I don't think
you're missing out on anything. But if you want to
participate in the hot take economy. So you never checked Twitter?
I listen. No, No, of course I look at it,
but I'm not like out here like debating people on

(08:44):
it or like constantly having like a take on something
that's on Twitter or whatever. I maybe tweet like three
times a week, realistic, and then I usually just use
it to interact with listeners. Yeah yeah, and like people
get their news from it. Yeah, But I think for
comedians it's different because a lot of people like by
building a following on Twitter, that helps a lot for exposure,

(09:04):
and I get it for that purpose. Helps people get
writing jobs. It helps people in so many ways. But
you have your own writing jobs, Like I'm fine Twitter, No, no,
struggling writer. No, I'm not a monster of I just
I just but I would think that, like insecurely every

(09:25):
staffing season, I would be like, oh god, like discribed
to someone with a huge Twitter following, I gotta get
a Twitter following, um, but I never did. But now
on Instagram they'll post, you know, tweets. Yeah, so I
feel like I get like the juicy, like the kind
of the funny ones um, and then I don't have
to skim through all the like hateful like you know,

(09:46):
racist ones, which is nice, typical fair on Twitter. What
is something you think is underrated? I mean, I feel like,
you know, therapy, maybe I feel like I'm always surprised
when people like still or like no, I've never been
a therapy and I'm like, like, I don't, I don't.
I know, everyone everyone should, all ages, everyone should be

(10:10):
like looking inward and exploring themselves. And I only say
that because it's been so life saving for me in
so many ways, so many different forms of therapy have
been so life saving for me. But and now in
this modern age, when people say like, yeah, I've never
read a self help book, I've never been to therapy,
I'm like, wow, not in the judgment away, just in
a like almost like I'm in awe of them, because
I wouldn't be able to walk around, you know, And
I think we'll even figuring out access to it is

(10:32):
the probably the hardest part of the barrier to entry.
And luckily there are a lot of places that will
have like sliding scales for whatever your income is to
actually be able to do that, to participated and interact
with the therapist. And I have friends in Florida who
are like, you know, lower income and you know, so
they're finding it, they're finding ways to figure it out,
they're finding Yeah, it does exist out there, and yeah,

(10:53):
start off with that self help book, ship, because that
might even jar your whole ship. I mean, that's how
I've even realized. I'm like, oh, yeah, like this book
is opening up my introspective side and I'm like, oh,
a lot of I need to dismantle. And they're so taboo,
especially for men. Like to have self help books on
your shelf is like I'm not crazy. I'm going to
say self help is definitely something that I have underrated.

(11:14):
Can you give me a good self help book? Oh
my god? I mean god, screwing it Up Idiot is
a good one. Yeah, it depends on you. Do you
read that Deepox Shubber is so deep I'm still not

(11:34):
like I picked I bought a couple of Deep Shober
books and I tried to read them, and I was like,
that was like ten years ago, and now I'm going
back and rereading, like picking those books up again, and
I'm I think you need to like learn like a
basics like spiritual self help language, and then you can
because I tried to read Power of Now ten years
ago couldn't understand anything he was talking about. It's like
a cat. And then I picked it up recently and

(11:55):
I was like, oh, I understand, I'm learning now that
with a new world to follow him look to the
power of now God with anecdotes from that, but yeah,
I think it's uh. Maryan Williamson returned to love you
could read. That's that's the second time I've heard somebody
that means that, like the universe is trying to get
you to read. Because because I had after her performance

(12:16):
in the debate, I was like, I was assuming that
her work would be not serious. But I've heard smart
people say that that her book is great. She's amazing.
I was really shocked that she said she was writing
for president, because it seems like you have to have
a certain level of like yeah, like or like nastiness
even right, and she's so like, you know, she's sort

(12:38):
of softened into self love and before you do that, Jack,
like Marian Williamson does at all. Her life shows you
should apologize to the people of color in this room
for the transgressions that America's committee. Oh yeah, she really
wants everyone to do that. I know. I was like,
writing she loves it in her book. I was listening
to her book in my backyard on audio tape, and

(13:00):
it's like self love and you know, forgiving yourself and
da dada, and then it's like, and we should all
apologize to people of color in this country. I was like, whoa,
it's a great way to screen white people because if
it's if you're a white person who's like, no, why
why would I need to? I didn't do it, then
you're like, Okay, you're a monster. I wasn't that exactly.
And it's not even that you're apologizing personally, just acknowledging

(13:22):
the power dynamic and the history of oppression and you're saying, yes,
that's terrible, and it's it's like groundbreaking she said that.
I was like, oh my god, it's funny to see
the clips of it like live when they're like, are
there any African Americans in the audience that are willing
to participate? And they're like, they're like, can you please
stand now for all the white participants, Please embrace them

(13:42):
if the person is willing to be touched and tell
them like and I was like, wow, okay, okay, sister, yeah, hey,
I mean I gotta love it. Someone's out there doing that.
It's amazing. I will read that and report back and apologize,
and I do apologize. Thank you. You have mad crismas
What is a myth? What's something people think is true

(14:04):
you know to be false? Okay, Oh, I have a
good myth actually that I heard in the writer's room.
I don't know if I should be spreading this sane
the myth is and I don't know this to be false.
It just sounds like too much work. Is that Bradley
Cooper has a sex device in his house that lowers
him down onto his mates. There was a morning discussion

(14:34):
about this, and there was a writer who was like,
I'm telling you, I know for a fact, so like
Tom Cruise a mission impossible. Yeah, it's like an apparatus
that lowers him down onto his mates. And it's something
about like everything feeling less shameful if he's just like lowered,
even more justice. But I feel like I could say

(14:55):
on record, I know that not to be true, just
because no, he doesn't out, but that is such a
great MYSA. Where did that even come from? This? Someone goes,
I know, yeah, like I'm telling you, he's an apparatus.
In his house. Um, that's one of you lowered down.
That's the kind of interest I'm trying to trying to
think of how that works. Yeah, because I guess the
idea was like it's almost like the sheet, you know,

(15:17):
like sex through a sheet thing, Like you're not really touching.
So I think like just a single point of contact.
I feel like there's no other assuming he's having sex
with a woman, that he would the position. It couldn't
just be you can be dropped air dropped in permission.
It would be difficult for the woman. Yeah, you'd have
to be some kind of yoga headstand or something right. Yeah,

(15:38):
I mean I think if you're a woman or a man.
And the talk was that it's both sexes, that the
apparatus is he's pleasing everyone with this app right or
no one? Um, but the talk is we talked about
a lot about that, like how would you position yourself
slower down on to air drop a penis in from
on high? I mean anytime sex involve diagramming, you're doing

(16:01):
something right, yeah, or release it's very like an indemnification agreement.
Like if this ship breaks and you get hydraulic fluid
all over you and you're burned. That's bad. That's on you.
And just the sound of the machine feels like it
would hurt the mood. Yeah, Bradley, the hardness hit my head.
You know what it was when you signed up? Yeah,

(16:23):
it's pretty good. It's like a gas powered He's like,
go to the go to the furnace, get the bellows going.
It's my steampunk fuck apparatus. And it's also like who
built it and what did you tell them for? Yeah? Yeah,

(16:43):
there's plenty people who are like, yeah, it was what
you want? Whatever I got you? Yeah, you want the
Ethan Hunt air drop dick machine. That's actually like who
builds the sex dungeons? Because I know in Hollywood, like
there's a lot of dunctions and who's building them and
how do they advert I have a friend who moved
into a house in Louisville, Kentucky and after like a
week found a really like false room kind of thing

(17:04):
sex dungeon. Yeah, They're everywhere. And it was to write
the definitive. No, it was that would add value on
the list, right, Yeah he didn't. It was a surprise.
Sare feet plus three with us lamp. Yeah, but somebody
needs to write the definitive history of sex dungeons. I
think I think we got to get it all out

(17:26):
in the open. Yeah. So interesting. I bet you one
of our listeners is writing that book. Yeah, do it
in their sex dungeons have to be a dungeon? Why
does it be a dungeon? Just just domination? And I
think that's a good point though then implies that it's
like naughty, negative bad, like the word dungeons. I want
to reclaim the word dungeon. YEA call it like a

(17:47):
sex closet family, good family and outcast. I mean that's
pretty fing pretty good. Hey, that's a really good point. Yeah.
So I'm going to guess based off that the origin
is in Atlanta, Georgia, Yes, for sure, Um, do you
think that was the sex was in the varsity. But
do you think the dungeon family was like a sex
dungeon reference. No, I think they're just needing a dungeon

(18:08):
and draggons or something. I'm from in Florida. I'm from
a town called Clearwater, but there's like a little or
town in clear Water are called Dunedin, And for some
reason Dunedin became Dungeon and so it's like welcome to
the Dungeon and the Dungeon Boys and the Dungeon Crew,
and it's all bas what's the dungeon was cool? Dungeon
Crew is fucking crazy, like a real gang. There's like
a like private school kids who had a po bit.

(18:30):
Well there's no private there's no private school kids in
my ornamit um. But the Dungeon Crew it's like, you know,
it's like um southern sort of red nicky. Uh no
offense guys who like fish and like go to Dunedin
Brewery and like watch like metal bands. Any noodling. No
people fish for catfish with their arms hand fishing. Isn't

(18:53):
that a show? I think there's some wild YouTube video
that's that's more hill billy than the Dungeons. There's one
I was actually following a noodling influencer. Was this like
woman who just like pulls out the fucking like ninety
pound catfish. Yeah, she's like very much fits the Instagram
like profile where she's like cute and where it's like

(19:14):
you know, pink camo and then she just like hops
off the boat and he's just like putting her arm
and marry me. But real quick, I want to talk
about so Bradley Cooper. We've talked before on this show
about how there are certain people who for whatever reason
have like sexual urban legends about that, like Elton John

(19:38):
got his stomach pumped, or Rod Stewart was another one,
had his stomach had so much seeming in his stomach
that he had to have it pumped. But Richard Gear
has one, and we've always like kind of both talked
about like they're certain like there's some currency that they
must have that we don't quite know what it is.
But Bradley Cooper definitely is that because that's not the

(20:01):
first like weird, probably false sexual rumor that I've heard
about Bradley Cooper. People are just like intrigued by the
idea of Bradley Cooper having weird sex. You know what,
Just let him live. If he wants to air drop
his dick, will do it as long as it's consensual.
I like though that maybe this is the new semen
pumped from the stomach rumor that like people like no

(20:22):
I actually heard that about this person. Well any time
about the harness fucker you Ramsey, you know Gordon Ramsey.
Gordon Ramsey would be an amazing one, all right, we're
gonna take a quick break to ponder that. We will
be right back. And we're back, and we're calling this

(20:55):
uh segment. Things different people say different the most in
l quent way to possibly say that. Uh. Now, there
was a thread a couple of days ago on Twitter
where people say that the only actually, let's show Laura
the photo. Oh yeah yeah, let me find this. What
do you call this? I would call those glazed donut holes. Okay, yes,

(21:18):
you are correct, but I didn't realize so people in
the comments on Twitter, Uh, this is one of those
amazing cultural artifacts that you're missing not being on Twitter. Uh.
Some people said the only proper answers munchkins us. Other
people called them tim Bitts and bignets. I get more specific, ferent,

(21:44):
you gotta get that the Cafe Dumont, you know what
I mean? That all over your ship and you eat
it and you look like you had either did with
budget cocaine or you have terrible dangers, you know what. Actually,
I also want to ask you, what do you call
a fizzy liquid with lot of sugar in it? Uh?
I say soda, but I know about pop? Is it soda?

(22:05):
The standard in clear water? Um? It's funny. There's like
a lot of people. Florida is very much like this
melting pot of America, which is why I think America
likes to make fun of Florida. But really they're just
making fun of themselves because Florida is just like, we're
just America. It's just people from all these different states
that have ended up in Florida. So some of my
friends had like, you know, kind of Midwestern or accents

(22:26):
and their their moms did, so that's how they talked
even though they lived in Florida, and they would pop
and yeah, they'd called to trash like a bin and
they had those goods. That's another one. We were trying
to think of other ones because sneakers, tennis shoes, tennis tennis,
but yeah, beIN and trash camp. I just like sort
of like you saw this and you're like, what else

(22:47):
are we getting wrong? Well, no, but I also wanted
it because I had noticed that, like I've lived in Columbia,
Missouri in the last ten years, I've lived in New
York and then here, and I feel like there's becoming
sort of a homogenization of like everybody kind of a
dresses like they're from Brooklyn and everybody kind of because

(23:10):
the Internet is sort of flattening everything out, like everybody
knows the same memes happen in a vacuum, right, So
like will that get rid of things? Like those cultural
differences where people some people say pop, some people say cokes,
some people say soda, Like will will everybody just start
saying soda like they should? You want a universal language?

(23:33):
What you want? This is like why I watch Love
Islands because it's watching British people and their slang is
so different. You said, Love Island is like warmer? Is
it like the British bake, great British bakeolf. Yeah, I
think they're I think they have like like different manners.
I think they're different with each other. Yeah. And there
are times when like they're outraged by another man's behavior,
like in a way you will see in like American reality.

(23:55):
And and there's times when two men are just like
you're you're my brother, and like I love you, and
they're like I and they hug each other and they're
constantly touching and hugging each other than men are in
a beautiful way. And I'm like once and then I
watched the American Love Islands, and the contestants were very
They're much more like self aware, Like I thought that's
bright in here. These lights are bright. Oh my god,
I've been interviewed weird and I'm like, guys, like, yeah, well,

(24:19):
I think that's the part of this country because like,
we export so much entertainment that like it, it enters
people's brains. And already, like I'm always living my life
like I'm on a TV show as so when I'm
on one, I'm gonna really fucking turn it on because
I have lost my humanity. Yeah, yeah, I agreed. Yeah,
but they have great slang on the If you like

(24:40):
different words for stuff, then watch Love Islands. Yeah, American
men touch each other more. I think I think I
would need more, more touching, more love you, more loving
your brothers. You I should kiss right now. You didn't
look at me, you see, he didn't look me in
my eye. I love you, Miles. Ye contact Marian williams

(25:01):
Helgi slavery half of me, and then apologized to my
other half for Japanese intern and then apologize to half
of me for slavery, and then I'll apologize to you
my other half. All right, that's a push between um alright,
Alan Derschwitz, this New Yorker profile that he has been

(25:26):
anticipating and putting out a preemptive debunking for He's been
like writing op eds and news Max. He's basically the
one Democrat who you can find on Fox News defending
everything that Trump says. He's also O Jay's lawyer, and
this profile just he's also a Harvard law professor or

(25:48):
a former Harvard law professor, and they just kind of
paint this picture of a guy who is built purely
to pursue fame, but he also seems to have this
overall trend towards being an apologist for rapists. Basically, um,
so he's like defended Mike Tyson. He obviously has been

(26:11):
a huge public defender of Trump. He was Epstein's lawyer
for a long time and continues to be. And he's
also implicated in a bunch of the Epstein stuff. Okay,
there it is. I was like, m yeah, yea. So
he's kind of losing it where he's like claiming that
he has all this information and then the New Yorker

(26:34):
writers like, you know, we back check stuff, right, But
he's like he constantly is talking about like, well, I
gotta win this. I gotta be tried in the court
of public opinion. And he has like a Trumpian view
of the court of public opinion that he can just
lie enough times and say the same thing enough times.
He's like, nobody's ever been more innocent than me I have.

(26:55):
It's amazing that they would say this about somebody with
a perfect sexual record. He literally said that perfect. It
gets exactly it got to the point that I just
want to read this uh sentence from the profile. At
one point, Epstein reacted to dershwitz statements in the news
by emailing a friend from prison. Dershwitz is out of

(27:20):
his mind, so Epstein is like, man, that guy's really
lost it. Yes, yeah, it's uh yeah. And then he
was on Twitter the other day like really self owning himself,
where people were like, check out this op ed Alan
Derschwitz wrote when he was like the age of consent
and needs to be a sixteen or something, and they're like, oh,

(27:42):
really from the guy who has like accusations of having
sex with children. And then he's like, well, he's like
the logic I was using then and to this stage
stands is that if you can have an abortion at
that age, then you should be able to Then the
age of consent should also be that. Yeah, this is
a longstanding quote legal opinion that he holds that if

(28:04):
somebody has gone through puberty, they shouldn't they shouldn't be
like considered a child. I was twelve when I went through. Yeah,
he thinks that then he should have been able to
date you. I'm sure, right right, Yeah, he seems like
a pretty cool dude. I'm sure he's uh, I'm sure
he's very relaxed about whatever the coming months are going

(28:25):
to bring with this Epstein. So one of the Epstein
victims is taking him to court for defamation and there's
gonna be all these like documents that become public for uh,
you know, discovery, and he keeps being like, I can't wait,
I'm I welcome this because then the truth is going
to come out. And the New Yorker looked into it,

(28:45):
and he's been trying to get the case thrown out
the whole time that he's been saying that. Um. So yeah,
let's let's talk though about why il han Omar is
in Man. We talked last week about or no was
this week. Maybe I think when Danielle Stella, a challenger,

(29:05):
stepped on the scene and we talked about her, her um,
her dedication to justice by shoplifting by target and also
being a really avid Q and On Believer supporter. And
but we didn't really know much about her except her record. UM.
But now we've actually heard her speak, and the content
of what she says I think is really remarkable for

(29:26):
a few reasons, mostly because I've not heard someone sort
of coherently put together, um, like a really good attack
against il hana Omar um that wasn't just like recycled
talking points from right wing with Twitter. UM. So when
you hear this, keep that in mind, because yeah, tread
not to be distracted. And Danielle Stella and I am

(29:49):
representing Minnesota in the fifth Congressional district against El hana
Omar and the upcoming election. The biggest group that I'm
going to be working with is the millennials. Nobody else
in my district is considering running wants to talk to Millennia.
I think President Trump is doing fantastic and I think
we should all look at how great his turnout was

(30:10):
that his Independence Day rallied. What is the worst thing
that's what's the worst thing Trump has done? And then
my least may bite about President Trump. Uh, that's that's
a good question. We get now. I don't know. I'm

(30:32):
not trying to shade her for the way she speaks,
but when you have these people already trying to fucking
get ilhan omar put her in danger with the ship
that they're saying out loud on places like Fox and elsewhere,
Like when then when I see these are the candidates
that they're putting up, I don't know if this woman
is going to be the actual person right against hahn
nomar Um. It's I don't know what, I don't know.

(30:54):
I don't know where that puts me. It's it's really
mind boggle. I love the felony. I love that. I
love this and the two d and seventy nine items. Yes,
we were debating what do you think that was perfect
amount of items? Nine? Like what did what were there
two hundred seventy nine of how were they? How were
they small enough to be in one shopping car? You

(31:19):
only stand like three things? And then pushed the card out?
Is that what she did? She did the scan and
go like, oh my god, I really like, yeah, well,
you're really going to love her, because then she took
the fucking stage at this Free Spade. Really fall in
love with her. Yeah she she clearly went up there
without like her. Only kind of preconceived thoughts were I've

(31:43):
seen what a political speech looks like in a movie,
and yeah, and that was it, and maybe some yeah,
maybe I don't know what other MC maybe a flavor
flav video of the hype man on stage. But she
takes a stage and just hear him, are happy self
telling who you're run again? This is Daniel. I don't

(32:08):
need people think some ed to go the second hello love,

(32:28):
we have stright and I don't say it sounds more
she has to be replace he with all of this scrap.
Yeah yeah, boy does she like the other amendments? I
wonder she didn't mention any others. There are amendments. She's like,

(32:48):
I like the I like these two, like these two.
That second she sounds drunk. I know I'm rending sun
and I don't believe I love some some people did
something and you're not gonna let talk about our country.
I get I don't think so. Oh yeah, man, we
hit her out. She's awful. That's like what your friend

(33:09):
says when you're you're being awful? Are you? That's what
I've been the next part? But yeah, I yeah, we'll see.
I would love to see them debate. Yeah that I
I wouldn't because now that would mean it was got
too far. Yeah, but it would be entertaining. Yeah, I hope.

(33:31):
I have a feeling this isn't going to last. But
you know, knowing how Twitter like likes to just like
elevate people because they're like, they'll say some inflammatory shit
about a person on the left, they're like, yeah, this
is it. RhE get her Danielle. Oh god, I want
to have dinner with her. You know I do too. Yeah,
she has she smiles a lot. She seems like a

(33:52):
like a pleasant like a pleasant person to be around.
It was just around a lot of fucking nonsense. He
was like, Okay, these are the takes I'm going with
Q and On. But who knows. Maybe she's one of
the things I'm thankful for Q and On bringing into
our lives, one of I think it's the only thing
that the reason I'm thankful for Q and because it's

(34:13):
it's allowed to us. Yeah, uh, all right, what's going
on with Trump? And prescription prices. Miles, It's okay. So
the the one thing that Trump has said out loud
that sounded reasonable and humane was like, we gotta get
prescription drug custs down. Oh shit. I remember when that happened.

(34:36):
We were like wait, what why is? But that's right.
And he's been saying that. He's like, you know, we're
gonna get the custom drugs down for seniors. Um. And
I was like okay. And he has like a plan
which isn't great, but what he's essentially trying to do
is he wants to price a lot of drugs um
for people using Medicare, to the prices to be basically

(34:57):
comparable to what other countries are paying for them. Um.
So your insulin isn't like three dollars like it is here. Um.
And you know, the thing that he's running up against
is a Yes, he has a lot of elderly people
who are his base, um, who would be like, yeah,
like help me get my prescription drug costs down. Um.

(35:17):
But the other side of it is he's a fucking Republican,
so that means big Pharma has will have a fucking
opinion on every single thing he does. And even though this,
this plan, he has only effects about of the Medicare
drug spending. Um. You have groups already coming out like
Grover Norquists, Americans for Tax Reform in the American Conservative
Union have been like so noisy that um, they've been

(35:41):
running all kinds of weirds ads. First of all, the
White House had an official named Joe Grogan, not Joe Rogan.
Joe Grogan, he addressed a bunch of these um conservative groups.
Sounds like Joe Rogan trying to come up with a
fake name. And yes, sir, what's your name Grogan? Yes? Um.

(36:06):
He told that a lot of these conservative groups that said, like,
shut the funk up with all these like attacks you're
trying to do because quote, the President will not be
outflanked on the left, but on drug prices, so which
is weird. He's like, we have to be woker than
the left on drug spending. It's gonna be a tough
position to pull off. Man, He's gonna have to be

(36:26):
pretty flexible. Yeah, okay, Well because of this, now you
have groups like Americans for Tax Reform running ads like
this on Facebook. Now listen to this. This is an
ad from right wing interests on Facebook. The America will
never be a socialist country. Yes, Mr President, stop socialist
price controls on prescription drugs act now at protect my

(36:50):
part be dot org. Okay, I'm sorry, uh socialist price controls.
So now they are basically running ads that are trying
to frame this move as a socialist move. And there
are other ones that um are also even trying to
frame Trump as being socialists. Or one ad compared him
to being a Bernie bro. So this is where they're

(37:12):
kind of like they're using this book, this playbook now
to be like, Okay, well, I guess how do we
get Trump and check by calling him a socialist. It's
very interesting. This brings back to you know, when he
was running, he had a lot of economically populist messages
that if he had actually stuck to them, he could
have been really like dangerous, like really could have started

(37:33):
a movement. But right because he convinced these people who
are like red meat racists to just be like, yeah,
fairer tax code, or like maybe my healthcare should be affordable,
or you got hoodwinked. And case in point, there's another
Facebook ad that says deadly illnesses like cancer, Alzheimer's, in
heart disease are killing our family and friends. But instead

(37:55):
of helping American companies find a cure, swamp senators like
Democrats Ron Whiten want to hit them with socialist price controlszing.
So it's a very interesting time, right, American companies and corporations,
they just don't have enough rights they need to be on. Yeah. More,
Thank god for citizens United Man, because basically all they

(38:16):
did was going to Supreme Corps with like right, like,
you're right, you're right, fightser have rights, you're important and
you should be heard. Yeah, man, I mean, it'll be
interesting to see. My guess would be that he's going
to cave on this because the way his political sort

(38:36):
of his base has become, you know, use racism to
get the you know, blue collar workers in and then
with actual policy he gets like the support of like
the rich people who don't who don't admit that they're
voting for him. That's why Ted Cruz is asking for
like an emergency tax cut for the wealthy right now

(38:57):
is another one percent. It's a fucking absurd they okay, yeah, exactly,
Like please let's get our pitchforks out, all right, We're
gonna take another quick break and we'll be right back

(39:20):
and we're back and Old Town Road we talked about
it when it first uh started flying up the charts
with the controversy over whether it was a rap song
or a country song, whether it belonged on the country charts. Uh.
It has now been number one on the Billboard Hot
One for seventeen weeks in a row, US overtaken Mariah

(39:46):
Carries One Sweet Day, unbelievable and Desposito. The bieber to
Hear was like, I mean, I know people liked it,
and I know that it was like it was global,
but I didn't realize it was like record breaking. Well yeah,
I think that one proved that it's like, yo, this
can be global and you can dominate the charts with

(40:07):
its global appeal. And then Old Town Road was like
you want to see a meme and then kids love
it though too. It's I don't know, I'm really excited
about this, and I'm very It's nice to see uh
Nas get his time a little Nas excellent, Uh yeah,
nasty to Esco to escarbar Um. And then that album

(40:33):
was so bad. It's the most disappointed I've ever done.
When I am right where he's got like the Ferrol.
I jammed out to that album. I didn't know it
was good or bad. It had good tracks on it.
I listened to it like a hundred times. But was
it the one where the bullet goes backwards from somebody's body,
like back into the gun? I don't know. Oh I

(40:53):
think that was, but yeah, there was some The Till
Your Bodyguardscia Versus better than that. Nas is like on
there too and hate me now. I was like, oh no,
that's a fantastic album. That's a classic album. Anyway, stop, okay,
we digress hard, but back to because I think, you know,

(41:14):
it's interesting with this hit. It kind of shows you
how the internet really can democratize an industry in a way.
Because Nas was just he was making memes before this
and then was like, I really want to get this
song to pop and was just using social media to
try and get it to catch on, and now look
at where's that. Yeah, it's so catchy and you and
I understand why kids like it because they can understand

(41:36):
the lyrics. They're like, I know what a horse is,
I know what a road is, like you know, like
they feel connected to it. I think the biggest crossover
old Town Road. Wait, mom, what's lean? Forget Forget that?
Shut up. It's a crossover between country and rap, but
it's also a crossover between like grown up music and
kids music. Like it's like a Pixar movie. Yeah, it's

(41:58):
like yeah, it's like it's it's like bringing an meets together, right,
like growing up some kids, right, and then like yeah,
country and rap it's great. Yeah, it's good for the world.
I'm just thinking, man, I really loved One Sweet Day.
I didn't realize that that was that much of a hit,
but that shows you how powerful like that those R
and B ballads could be in the nineties, and that
voice the last time we had like a ballad like that, really,

(42:19):
because we don't have right now, like do we have
like a Whitney or Mariah where you're like, this person
is almost like a freak show their voices. So is
kind of like that. I mean, I feel like she's
the closest person who would do a song like that. Yeah,
Goga will do like more poppy stuff like god I
might be able to do it, but we don't see
her do it, but not a song like One Sweet Day,
Like that's a very maybe those notes the was that

(42:42):
like a live song. Was that off of One Sweet Day?
Was that Butterfly? I think that was on Butterfly, but
I don't know, I don't know. And that was bringing
to like that was bringing boys to men at their heights.
Oh yeah, yeah, when you look at basically whatever everything
else is that held over? You know, thirteen weeks it

(43:03):
was Desposito and Once week Day were tied at sixteen weeks,
then Uptown Funk fourteen weeks. I got a feeling it
was fourteen weeks by Black Eyed Peas, We belonged together,
Mariah Carry fourteen weeks, Candle in the Wind fourteen weeks,
the Fucking Maina. Oh yeah, that makes I'll make love

(43:23):
to you fourteen weeks and I Will Always love you.
Whitney Houston fourteen weeks. Damn wow. So it really is
those love ball It's a quiet Storm. Yeah. Did you
guys have Joe Mama Johnson's Quiet Storm? No? Was that
just me? What is it? It was like Joe Mama
Johnson's Quiet Radio. Yeah. It was like I think it
was Sunday Nights and it was like for horny like tweens. Yeah,

(43:46):
my friends and I it was like T shirt and
my panties on, like those kinds right right right, And
he would just and he talked so low and he
was so sexual and I didn't only looks like but
I imagine he's like a human slog Mama Johnson. Like
he sounds it's so hot, which makes me think he
has to not be because it's radio. It sounds so
much better than what I had, which was Delilah. Did

(44:06):
you guys have yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah. She's just
like really wholesome talking to people about their heartbreak. Yeah.
You don't want to see Joe, Mama john is he is?
He not what I want to do. You were a
horny tween, this dude was on the other side, you
would call the cops on yourself. I need to see it.
I need to see it. I need another Oh wow,

(44:27):
it looks like my grandpa looks like a busted pastor
does he looks like a broke down five button suit on?
Oh my god? But hey, I got horny for his
voice and I will say it here recorded forever. Was
it just super? It was amazing. He's like and all
you lovers out there, you know, and always playing like
all the boys to men's all, but the horny songs,

(44:50):
really really as horny as you can get. I'll make
love to you, as opposed to it's so hard to
say goodbyte, yesterday, no no love songs. It's all fun jams,
and we would listen to them. But when we were
like twelve, and you know, some of my friends were
actually active then um in the dark turn of events
because they hung out with Epstein and it's all right,

(45:12):
you just live in Florida, I know. Well sometimes like
if you google Florida Girls, which I do all the time,
there's a lot of dark headlines. Oh my god. Yeah,
Florida as a modifier to any Google search is never
going to get you the thing I think you're looking right, Yeah,
I just it's funny when when you bring up Joe
Mama Johnson, because there was a guy named THEO on

(45:32):
the radio on when he used to be ninety two
point through the beat in l A and he was
like super smooth and was dope. Yeah, He's like he's
this black dude who like gets it. He was Asian
and I remember being like, oh, that's cool representation. Yeah,
but he was like that was like that was a
voice too, and it was pre internet, so you had
to fucking go to like a radio event to see

(45:56):
because you couldn't just google that ship. How did people
know stuff? I mean, I know my generation was like
pre Internet, but like still, I don't remember knowing anything,
you know. I found out I saw his head shot
at a dry cleaner in l A. And I was
like what, I'm like, that can't be theo. But then
it had the logo for the beat on it, right.
That blew your mind? Did that make you feel like

(46:17):
you're like I can do anything in my life? No?
Tiger Woods made feel like, oh yeah, club dear hand,
And I said, my dad did it and he did
it himself? Was that like? Was he was? That like
a groundbreaking thing for you, Tiger Woods? Because it's like
seeing yourself. Yeah. Him and specific mix too, which is like, yeah,

(46:39):
well that black and Asian for sure. But now I
feel really good because I see people like Naomi Osaka
and like Ruey who's playing for the Wizards, and I'm like, yeah,
look at us, look at the black knees coming up.
I know, it's funny being mixed races, Like my race
is mixed race. When I meet a mixed race person,
like you understand we're the same race exactly. Um, but

(47:01):
that's that's the only people and we have trouble fitting in.
Yeah we're different, but then we get over through therapy
and we're like we are who we are. Yeah. Yeah,
and I don't need someone else to approve my identity exactly.
You read some Marian Williams. Yeah, thank you, thank you,
and I am sorry and I thank you. Contact great, okay,

(47:21):
checked it checked in what do you little? Notex's career Like,
I don't think he's going to have a huge recording career,
Like I don't think he's gonna have a bunch of
hit songs. But I think he's going to have a career.
I just don't know what it's gonna be. Don't people
like Panini or no, it's good? I like, I don't
think the the what is it an LP technically as

(47:42):
a whole? Is that great or EP? Rather it's seven
it's seven tracks? I like three okay, seven okay, So
but I mean, hey, you're not he's he's just starting out.
He's It makes me think, like Geez, Cardi Bi is
kind of like incredible, you know, because that was somebody
where she had that song that everyone was talking about
and then she then released an album and it was
like this song songs. I have a feeling like he

(48:06):
could just be a brand consultant. That's what I'm wondering, Like,
that's what seems like his real genius is in like
identifying like a trend or creating a trend more than
like being like through my music, I'm Crazy's like, no, right,
I think this will get cracked, be like Kanye without
the music or mental illness or Maga ship right or

(48:28):
the mix. Well that that's the mental illness. Yeah, it'll
be interesting. I think this kid's going places. Guess where
do you predict ten years, set a timer, set a
reminder years, he'll be Oh my god, child. Oh no,
I actually don't know. I think I think he's still
a teenager though, Oh my god. He turned twenty in April.

(48:52):
He was born on April. I gotta get started doing stuff. Yeah,
this is one thing you canvass. You may have missed
out on Twitter, but if you're trying to get on
this old town road waves something like it's some kind
of old town road thing. Yeah. So yeah, in ten
years thirty, I gotta start some sort of old town
road thing it's such a great damn man, I gotta
start something old town road like I feel like that's

(49:15):
that's a pitch, like an uncle would give or something,
one of those old town road things. That's how like
kids in there, like first year of business school like
those is like we need is like an old town
road type idea. That's what happens in this town. Anytime
a show does well, you know, we need like a
big little one Florida girls, what about like Nevada guys.

(49:37):
I'd watch that. I don't know if I would. Nevada, Well,
it's about to come around because people just do nothing.
The UK show is taking place in Vegas and we'll
be kind of that. That could be cool Vegas show.
I'd be down for it. Yeah, where it's about like
struggling E D M d J. Yeah, in in fucking
Las Vegas because like if you've seen the UK version,
it's about garbage music and pirate radio but they're just

(49:59):
trying to find like the analog is in Vegas with
like club dancing and ship I would watch that once.
I think, all right, let's talk about one of the
all time great Hall of Fame performances from a corporation
Capital One released. I guess it was like a press

(50:19):
release yesterday where they announced that some of their customers
had been compromised. To keep in mind, this is the
the brand that had the whole thing about how if
you have any other card in your wallet, you're going
to get uh, you know, murdered by Vikings, but if
you have Capital one, you know, the barbarians will be
stopped at the gates. No, it wasn't it more like

(50:41):
they were so like they were doing like refined things
because they had Capital One. They're like they were wild
and was like, but we can go to fucking you know,
vacation or something. Oh, I think that's how it ended.
Actually that's how that's what, because yeah, the Vikings didn't disappear,
They just like suddenly became like tamed by And the
fun part is like, look at this sloppy Viking. Talk

(51:02):
about this crew. To Tay was that the game of
Throne Sky was Viking because I think that did you
get a start like that? It's no. I think he
was a wildling first and then he got the Capital
One commercials as I think it's him. I know he
plays a Viking on a commercial. I just don't know
if it's a capital one. Yeah, we all need our start,

(51:22):
you know, the Charming Wildling, that America's Sweetheart Wildling name.
But it was out Baldwin, then Sam Jacks, and that's
been everyone. It's been everyone. But all this to say
the breach has so a breach has occurred, and they
went about it and the most just I don't know, backhanded.
If you really distill it to what happened, there was

(51:45):
a massive security reach. They were hacked and a lot
of social Security numbers and bank accounts were leaked or
someone was able to access all that and they tried
to break it like it was good news. This is
what the press is, how the press release reads. Keep
in mind what this is announcement saying we got hacked
in a bunch of sensitive information breached and it's so worthy.
It's like me getting in trouble and then coming home

(52:06):
with my mom's analysis. To date, this eventufactured approximately a
hundred million individuals in the United States are approximately six
million in Canada. Importantly, no credit card account numbers or
log in credentials were compromised and over of social Security
numbers were not compromised, So then it goes on. You
don't need to read the rest of this, but even

(52:27):
from the beginning, they said, it was determined that there
was an unauthorized access by an outside individual who obtained
certain types of personal information relating to people who had
applied for its. It's like you got hacked, motherfucker, and
you got a information leaked. Beyond the credit card application data,
the individual also obtained portions of credit card customer data,
including customer status data, etcetera. Uh, fragments of transaction date.

(52:51):
No bank account numbers or social security numbers were compromised,
thank god, Comma. Other than about a hundred and forty
thousand social security numbers of our credit card customers, about
eighty linked bank account numbers of our secured credit card customers.
For our Canadian credit card customers, approximately one million social
insurance numbers were compromised in this incident. It's like not

(53:13):
good to brag because if they hadn't bragged about it,
like we're the safest and this would be fun. You're like, Okay,
you're doing your best. Happen. No bank account are social
security numbers were compromised other than the social Security card.
Other than you there must be I guess there really
is an art when you're doing pr and having to
do damage control on this, like you've got to be

(53:33):
so fucking you know, obscure and cloudy with your language.
This is this is not art. They fucked this up.
They look like, I think it looks good. It's just
like what it works a lot of the time. Just
like saying to someone like, this is what actually happened,
People like, Okay, see, nothing was leaked other than these
things that were leaked, right, And then people go, oh,

(53:55):
but nothing was leaked yeah, other than those things that
were leaked. Great, nothing was like okay by other than yeah,
nothing was like watching your wallet now they know, right,
we'll see your wallet, motherfucker. I just got internet scammed
in a really dark way on Facebook. Um. Not not
my bank accountant, thankfully, but on Facebook. I got a

(54:16):
message from uh, someone named Pembroke Chin who's in my family.
And at the photo of him, he looked very much
like my family on my dad's side, and I front
requested him. I accepted the request and we started chatting. Um,
and I know the name, and I'm like, I think
he's like my great uncle or something. So we start
talking and he's like I'm happy you excepted of course,

(54:37):
like did I didn't know you were on here? He's
like in his seventies. Um. We're talking for a while,
and then I randomly was talking to my dad and
I was like, you know who friend of questomed me
is as Pembrooke And my dad was like Pembroke and
I'm like yeah, he's like Pembrooke died, honey, And I'm
like no, because we've been talking, and I sent my

(54:59):
dad a link to the and he was like, no,
he died in January. And I'm like, I'm talking act
my great uncle's account. And then I went back on
and the guy started the convertation started to shift into
like have you seen this like global fund thing and
like would you want to be a contributor and yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah yeah did you contribute obviously yeah? And the money

(55:22):
so badly that he pretended to be my dead great uncle.
But like beginning was like nice, pleasant trees, as if
it was your uncle. Like this particular uncle had like
a very like you know, colorful life. There was like
drugs and da da da and stuff, and so it
was like a little it sounded a little like in
hindsight they were foreign. Right, they're clearly foreign. But to me,

(55:46):
I was just like, he's older, he's like Ben the stuff.
But now I really like, oh no, this is not
an American. Great day to you, niece, Hope God is
with you in your heart. And Pembroke were shot out
to Pembroke though, and what a what a The small
details that we've gotten so far an't interesting? Dude, Yeah,

(56:09):
he's great. Scamming from beyond the bridge. All right, real quick,
speaking of scams, we do want to talk about a
pro public a report that highlights a really shitty loophole that, uh,
some of the like richest families in Illinois are exploiting
to get financial aid for their children's college tuitions. It's

(56:31):
a great scam. Yes, what you do you get your
child in their junior senior year? You basically say we
want to grant guardianship to this other family friend or cousin.
That way, the child, the minor can declare themselves financially independent,
which now allows them to receive federal, state, and university assistance. Right,

(56:51):
and this is some of the rich, I mean, it's
in you know, they're not saying the richest of the rich,
but definitely like suburbs where people are not struggling by
any means or by in stuch of the imagination. So
of like they said, they found more than forty guardianship
cases fitting this profile that were found between January of
last year and June of this year, um in the

(57:12):
Chicago suburbs of Lake County alone. And the parents involved
in these cases included lawyers, a doctor and assistant school superintendent,
insurance agents, real estate agents, and and the children of
high achieving scholars, athletes, and musicians who attended or have
been accepted to a wide range of universities. Yeah. Man,
that's that's pretty standard for America. People just find ways

(57:38):
to get to never pay anything. Yeah, and now they
need an emergency tax cut, right. I hope they're going
to get it. I mean, look, their kids. They're having
to abandon their children so they can be financially independent,
so they can be a doctor and have to pay
less or something whatever it is. Now. I think you
know there there what's funny or what's not funny, what's
lame about? What's fucked up about this? Is like guardian

(58:00):
guardianship petitions themselves are very like useful and can typically
be the only thing that will help someone out of
a really bad situation. So for them to go on
and do this like just such a smack in the face.
And when they when Pro Publica looked at where a
lot of these kids were living and what their situation was,
nearly all of them were still living at home. They
just legally changed who their guardian was, and they were
still getting their bills paid. And then what happened was

(58:22):
like this administrator who contacted Pro Publica was like, when
I noticed this, Like you know, what happened was one
student um or this administrator got a call from a
high school and said, I have an incoming freshman that's
going to the low income student orientation. They're like why
is that And they're like, oh there because of this,
this and this, and the council was like, oh that's
not true, and they're like what. So then they started

(58:43):
looking into it and realizing all these weird discrepancies. And
then when they would tell some of the students like hey,
you know, actually we're after reviewing your application, we're actually
gonna cut back some of your assistance, none of them
pushed back and they're like and they're like, and that's
when we knew, because people who have their financial aid cut,
they will come in at the very least to try
and discuss it, and most people like, okay, wow, they're like,

(59:05):
you caught me. So now on the interview process they'll say,
they'll be like, who pays your cell phone bill? Yeah?
Like who you live with? Yeah, and there because wait
oh but you're and they'll defend another loophole yeah exactly,
like just paying people. Yeah. So but this is sort
of like the beta version of the operation of Varsity Blues, right. Yeah. Uh, well, Laura,
it has been a pleasure having you on the daily.

(59:28):
Where can people find you? Um? Oh, I'm on Instagram,
not on Twitter, but I am on Instagram. Um, and
it is at Laura Chin with four ends, four ends. Yeah,
let's get it. Do you m have a post on

(59:49):
Instagram a tweet you've been enjoying? We usually share yes, yes, yes, yes,
yes I do. I do. Um, it's a tweet that
I saw on Instagram and it's so I really related
to this and it's a girl. It's just at it's
at just every girl. She said, Well, my sweater slips
off one shoulder. Me I'm the sexiest person in the

(01:00:10):
world right now at this moment. I'm a star. That
was like a thing growing up that it was like,
oh my god, it's happened. Don't touch it because then
you're like, what is it? Flashdance? You know it's very sexual. Yes, Miles,
where can people find you? Find me and follow me
on Twitter and Instagram at Miles great, Um, yeah, please

(01:00:35):
follow me so I can call myself an influencer. Yeah,
I'm free socks, I think. But here's the thing. I think.
You first call yourself an influencer, then I'm an influencer.
I'm under the influencer. A couple of treets like f
one is from Courtney Peterson at court Nacovia. Okay, hear
me out. We replace amen with that's what's up. It

(01:00:56):
works for every prayer. Also another one from Sophia Alexandra
at the Sophia. Uh. There she's quote tweeting someone Raphael
Bob Waxburg, who said, if you re Lisa's age when
the Simpsons debut, you are Homer's age now, And Sophia goes,
why don't you go fuck yourself? That's true? Fuck man? Yeah,

(01:01:19):
put that here. That's the dude that makes bo Jack
Horseman right. Huh bo Jack Horseman. Isn't that Raphael whatever?
Ye who winted that out? Oh? Yes, maybe yes, he
likes bumming people out, doesn't he? Yeah? What the funk?
This is why I'm not on Twitter. I need to
hear that kind of show. Yeah, and be like, I'm
fucking Homer's a fuck you. Your Homer's a jasshole. Uh.

(01:01:42):
At Left at London tweeted, man, I feel like a burden.
That's amazing. And Phil at Phil Jamison tweeted, joker voice
one person steals a joke. There a joke a scumbag,
but a thousand people steal a joke smacks lips. That's me.

(01:02:02):
You can find me on Twitter at Jack Underscore O'Brien
one end. Yeah. Um, good thing that I was able
to find even more. Uh. You can find us on
Twitter at Daily Zeitgeist. Were at the Daily Zeitgeist on Instagram.
We have a Facebook fan page and a website. Daily
zigeis dot com where we post our episodes and our

(01:02:24):
footnote where we link off to the information that we
talked about in today's episode, as well as the song
we write out on Miles West, I can beat today
do a mad Villain track, but a Fortet remix of
a magne On track. The track is meat Grinder my Magne.
I don't know what end is that? Okay, well that's
that's when I left to him. O God, liber partnered
up and did an album together, collaboration album with the

(01:02:48):
track sport. But yeah, Fortet is also another producer DJ
that I really like it and it's his remixes up. Yeah,
because my quartet like a get the Jays like people
playing the stand up base, that's a quartet. Oh god,
I knew that. I didn't. I didn't graduate. He had
a dunk on him right there in his own house,

(01:03:09):
on his own board. But you know, you know stuff
you just said a bunch of smart STUPA thank you.
I mean you were reading from a computer. But you're
good at reading. Yes, yeah, I do know how to do.
That is like the sounds telling phonetically how to read,

(01:03:30):
turn the page. The production of I Heart Radio for
more podcasts from my Heart Radio, isn't the heart radio app,
Apple podcast or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
That's gonna do it for today. We will be back tomorrow.
With more podcasts and we'll talk to you then by
just say ho, I'll test to yo yo wow, West South,

(01:03:51):
Festial best, he don't cool, to shad, to get away,
best to get may close toward stated and persisted. Our
favorites demonstrated in the perforated Rod Labors and All Quad Flavors.
Law saviors still back in the game, like JaQuel Lane,

(01:04:11):
think you know the name, go rack your brain on
a fast track to half saying either on a S
beat or that the speed or after game flap the
pains Coon salesman in the booth with the best host
school Balls

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