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August 3, 2022 62 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Well, hello the Internet, and welcome the season to episode
three of the Daily ZEITGEISTEP production of My Heart Radio.
This is a podcast. Okay, I'm just letting you know
this is a podcast. But what do we do? Okay,
we take a deep dive into america shared consciousness. I'll
give you the full description right there. It's Tuesday. Wait, no,
it's Wednesday, August three. See, I'm yesterday. I thought it

(00:21):
was October. I'm look bear with me one day at
a time. It's Tuesday, August second, twenty fucking twenty two.
And you say, what day is that? What national holiday
are we spent celebrating today's National Georgia Day. So shout
out to Peach Day. You know what I meant. You
messed up the date. You said Tuesday. I'll get a second.
Supposed to Wednesday, office three. I switched, didn't I switched

(00:42):
to August third. Second. Damn, keep that in again, because
we're having problems. I don't want I need to let
the audience see behind the curtain. We are human. It
is Wednesday, August motherfucking three two zero two to correct? Okay,
thank you? What is August three? It's National george Today?

(01:05):
Shout out my great grandmother who is from Athens, Georgia. Uh.
And yeah, anybody anybody else who hails from the Peace State.
So it's your day. Let's see who am I? Well,
I am none of that. The Miles Great aka the
Lord of lancersham A k A Hideo NoHo uh and
the experimental Blazing artists your boy Kassama, So thank you
so much for having me. And who do I have

(01:26):
and my guest co host seat, Well, it's none other
than one of the great co pilots in this podcast. Biz.
You know her as a host, a producer, a writer,
culture commentator, anything that needs good taste. She has her
hands in. Please welcome Joel Monique from Joel. I mean
he's my intro time. Say happy brightday, mommy, Happy birthday mom. Yeah,

(01:51):
she's going to Vegas. We're gonna go see us. Your
together for us, Yes, with all of her kindergarten friends.
Her friend from kindergartener or not kandergarden. Okay, hold on,
let me bring in our guests because it sounds like
we all want to talk about this. Uh. That's the
way Jackie. Oh. Also to usher in Vegas, I was like,

(02:11):
hold on, let's open up the floor. I want to
welcome today's guests in our third seed. She is a
hilarious stand up comedian. You probably know her from America's
Got Town. Maybe seen her on Fallon or The Tonight Show,
or maybe her new special that's out now called Men Applause,
which I certainly enjoyed. Lee's welcome Jackie, fabulous with the JA.

(02:33):
Let it do not much, not much? What's going on, Jackie?
Did I hear you say Lancashire? Is that? And no?
Did you mean like North Hollywood? Yeah? That's that's yeah. Look,
this is me right here. That's where. Oh don't, don't,
don't be that proud. It's not that. It's oh yeah,
it's rough over it don't. Yeah, it's like New Jersey.
That's what I'm compared to. It's like the same way,

(02:55):
you know, like people look at people from the valley,
like bridge and tunnel people, and I'm like, yeah, that's pass. Yeah.
I lived on Larl Canyon Boulevard, so I was always
for some reason there you go, the whole North Hollywood
gang up in here right now. Everybody starts in North Hollywood.
I feel like I would sit in that park on
Magnolia and the condem plate where where it all went wrong?

(03:16):
Just think about your existence. If you're lucky, it's first Friday,
you know what's so wild? And people who listen to
the show know that park, that Amelia Earhart Park right there.
That's where my dad told me he was leaving my mom.
Oh my god. My whole life revolves around growth on
that park. I remember Breaking Neck by Buster Rhymes was playing,

(03:37):
and people who already listen to show, they already know
Mark seven. And you still live there. You're like, I'm
not gonna leave you. I can handle a drown, can't. Yeah,
if that's it, if that's all you got, yeah, good,
good money. But Jackie, so you have But I was
asking you before you have a j D. Yes, so
you So if we get into if I have any
legal questions, I can posit those to you as well

(03:57):
as their corporate and it's their federal mean, you don't
have to have a bar card. Um, I'm not a
license attorney, so I can help you when you have
a law degree. You're a lawyer. But to be able
to help you if you get a d U I whatever,
you gotta be licensed per state and did not take
the bar in California, no reason. I was just lazy
and for fear and because I moved to California to

(04:19):
go to law school and then I looped when I
was there, and you know, I divorced him and then
but I finished school. So you know, I'm one of
those where entertainment was kind of an accident. That was bored,
that was a funny girl at work. But I wasn't
funny annoying. I was funny, like, hey, you should try
because I was in Cali, and you know, and if
anybody sees talent that like you should try football thing,
you're really good, you know, so very encouraging in Hollywood.

(04:43):
So I just didn't stand up after work for fun.
But you know, the corporate world, did you have like
a dream to do comedy or you kind of always
probably knew you had the gift to gab and were
quite pursuing it, or how did that work? I didn't.
I didn't know that you can make it. For some reason,
every town, and my opinion is a small town. It
doesn't have to be in Minnesota, and I've got to
be Wisconsin. I was in the Bronx, and every town

(05:05):
when you're sheltered from the outside world in a small
town and all we did was watch TV. No one
in my family was an entertainment. My father thought he
was the funniest one. So I had I had no
reference of I could be an entertainment. And it wasn't
until I moved to Cali and people were like, you're
funny or what TV show are you are? You're an actor?

(05:26):
And after why you like? Why am I keep asking me? That?
Let means, you know, should I try it? Because I
hated everything? I tried everything thus far? Right, that was
a regular job, right, yeah, so I was like why not?
And I did it with no expectation. That's probably why
I stuck with it, because it wasn't I would I
already had my day job, right, right, but cal Tech?
When cal Tech fired me in two thousand and ten,
that's when I'm like, oh, guess was a full time comic.

(05:48):
Now there the world is better because I was saying,
I really like, I think so many people, right, we
we put so much pressure on ourselves to achieve a
certain way or to be at a certain place said
a certain time. And I think at the end of
the day, right, everybody has their own path. Everybody walks.
Everybody gets to where they're going in their own way.
And just because you're not going straight A to B,

(06:10):
you might go A, B, C, D and end up
at J, but J might be where you want to be.
It you gotta give yourself to the freedom to do that.
I love hearing stories like that. Every experience is valuable.
I have a good example. We all know Abvid Elementary,
The Biggest, the Biggest World. Janelle James, the Fellow Comics.
She was in New York doing stand up and I
was in my first time seeing her and since the

(06:32):
explosion of her career, and I said, how do you
feel like you? And She's like, I don't have a
whole bunch of goals whatever. When she was on a
Kimmel he was like, so what's next? You know, So
what's next? And She's like, I'm letting the universe take
me where it wants to go. Jimmy and she says
that to him and then to me, I'm like, girl,
are you are you okay? Like like who you are

(06:54):
you hydrated? Like you're eating you know, fruit and stuff.
And she said to me, Jackie, all I want at
this point is, you know, I want a good man,
I want, you know, good cocktails and good money, and
you know I mean, and I'm like, okay, that's really
how she felt, and it clearly is working. She's all
the pressure she's probably had on ourselves. She took it
off and and had fun with the audition and with

(07:16):
the problem, and the next thing you know, she's in
a head. She is a hit. You gotta relax. I
just gotta relax the goals a little bit. Yeah, absolutely,
and just like you know, let there again. I feel
like I always tell people life is like a river,
you know what I mean, Like it's going to pull
you in a direction. But sometimes we hit rocks and
shipped on our way, and those rocks are obstacles, and
we're like, sometimes we cling to the rocks in the river,

(07:37):
these obstacles. We don't let go of ship, when really
you'd be like, just let go, because that's the river
will keep taking you if you keep yourself free. Just
stop clinging to ship and watch what happens. Why. That's
why I was in l A so long. I'm like,
I can't. You can't make it and leave right right? Right?
You can go right and then you go to New
York and look at you now, well, jack this is fantastic.

(07:59):
And you know what before we get to know even better, Joel,
you're going are you? You're so you're taking your mom
to this Usher concert? And so act I wish she's
taking me. So what happened is she she's friends with
all of her like kindergarten buddies, like they say in
touch or whatever, and they're like, well, we're turning sixty.
What should we do? So the first they went and
saw Janet Jackson and concert in Ohio, and then they're

(08:20):
gonna see us Share in Las Vegas. And I was like,
I want to see I've never seen us share. But
he was on my bedroom all when I was thirteen,
and I think it's not fair that you go. And
I was just like, well, why don't you come on?
And all my friends want to meet you anyway, because
we grew up in the same town where she grew up,
and I was like, I would love to do that.
I'm gonna go hang out with all these women who
dared sixty and go see Usher. Hopefully they won't be

(08:42):
too drunk or belligerent, but get ready to see a
whole new side, Auntie. Get ready? Okay, man, you gotta
let me know how that show is. I can't wait.
I hear is awesome. I hear is amazing. Already skates
through like an entire act and ready for it on
skates and Mr Raymond, you don't play. I know, I

(09:09):
don't know why I expected anything less from him, Like
I mean, his gliding already without skates was next lef okay.
But here let's talk about just before we get to
know Jackie even better. I want to let people know
what we're gonna talk about. We're talking about. First, we're
gonna talk about the name monkey pox and how that
has become stupidly politicized and the you know, the task
of trying to change the name monkey pox for various

(09:31):
problematic reasons I'm sure we can all think of. Then
we'll also talk about how Donald Trump is both siding
his own endorsements, like he's trying to pick two winners.
I don't know, I'll explain it. It's very uh, it's
very childish. Then we'll talk about don't you remember those
campaigns like in the late nineties early two thousands that
was like you wouldn't steal a car, would you? So

(09:52):
you shouldn't pirate VHS tapes and everybody was like, Okay,
watching me pirate the funk out of everything burns out.
Those fucking p s a s may have actually increased
piracy and the Yeah, well, we'll get into the psychology
of why that ship went totally backwards, and if we
have time, we may have to drag Diane Warren. But

(10:15):
that's a whole other thing. But first, Jackie, we gotta
ask our guests. What is something from your search history
that's revealing about who you are? Uh, probably probably poor
and stuff. Okay, me and my fiance every now and
then we'll watch porn. And I remember the first time
I got the nerves to be like, do you want
to want foreign? Do you know to say what he
opened to He's like, of course, so so I said

(10:39):
to him. I said to him, I want you to
pick the category, and uh, we were you know, he
went to went to Google whatever. I'm like, no, Google too,
you know that's my Google. Go go to a porn
a website. Yeah. Yeah, If I said, here's here's the website,
I said, now pick two is the category you want
us to look at? Entertainment? And I'm like, you can

(11:01):
either go really well, or really horribly. So he picked
black BBW and I was like, so you want to
watch us? I said, that is how boring are you?
You picked? So you want to want a couple of
looks like you and I? Right, right right? Just get
the mirror turned the better around. I'm like, why so that?

(11:22):
But revealed that I too trusting because I'm also bored
with it, and he and he went straight for let's
I want to see a couple like just like you
and I do things that we probably can't do anymore.
Oh so the way he was like, this isn't like
you and I are way different, you know, but you
know my right knee can't do that. Girl, you gotta

(11:44):
watch Although I saw that video you, I saw you
talk into the Renaissance album. Oh yeah, you know what.
Over the years I realized that I used to be
the girl in the club starting the party, and I
love to dance, and nobody nobody dances anymore, nobody goes
to the club. But clubs boring as hell. So I
have to remind myself that I can still drop it.
I can't pick it up as fast, but I get

(12:05):
I get still dropped. When your friend continue into the
future for sure, what something you think is underrated? Being bored?
I feel like I got kind of caught up in
the hustle team no sleep, you know. And then I
would and then I would feel really guilty because I'd
watched you know, my very very very rich peers like

(12:26):
Kevin Hart and stuff, and why why don't I have
a line of you know, of leggings out with a
protein drink and a movie while I have a radio
show and make another book, you know. And I'm like,
and then I realized, he's mentally ill. That's why he
does all that clearly, And I'm kid, He's not. He's
not mentally ill at all. He's he's he's mentally driven
in a way that I don't relate to. And he

(12:49):
has his adrenaline and his his achievement and setting up
an empire and for his family. And I'm just trying
to get my mother to side the house over to
me without thinking I'm trying to kill her in his sleep. So,
you know, I realized that different grinds different different different grind,
different pace, different year, different privilege, different hustle, you know.

(13:11):
So I realized that having all these goals and stuff
that I've had. Sometimes you just gotta let things happen,
you know, the way they're going to happen. You don't
always have to be on the hustle, you know, back
to the first point. Let's let things happen and let
the river take you. And I think being bores is
over is underrated. Being bored every now that you gotta
just sit your ass down. And you know, whether it's
your job or men or people who go from you know,

(13:34):
person to person and they never take time to be single.
I'm like, I'm like, you need to be bored, just
sit around and just chill out. I mean, so, what
what are what are some lessons you've learned in that boredom,
in those periods where you've actually given yourself the moment
to be like, you know what, let me create some
space here for reflection. The pandemic. It forced me to
be home because I'm somebody, I get more stage time

(13:55):
than I would imagine most comics in the country. Thank God,
I'm blessed. If I asked the club like and I
go up at home club, the seller in Manhattan gives
me god knows how many spots, but I could pay
my bills with that club fet'll go on the road.
So you know, sometimes you just have to look back
and look at what you have and and and be
in the pandemic. Quiet time made me realize I have

(14:15):
a family that's getting older, and my mother and my
aunt they're you know, going towards you know, the life.
They're in their eighties. Assist a sister who's disabled, who
will need me at some point. Maybe not right now,
but you know, some point you will. I felt I
fell back in love with somebody I kept pushing away
because I felt like I felt like he wasn't my type.
And as a result, I'm gonna get married again. I

(14:36):
thought I'd be married three or four times right now,
but this is number two is enough. And so that's
what I realized that, oh, living a life. I could
be a better comic if I actually have a life
and experience stands, go to the grocery store, you know,
going to run run errands like a human being, and
I always have some place to go. It allowed me
to fall in love with my family and find the

(14:57):
guy and writ about having a different life otherwise other
than just hustle, hustle, hustle. Where's the TV show? Where
is the road, gig, give me, give me, give me,
you know, boredom, payden give it. Yeah, I gave me.
It gave me a chance to give some people something.
Some might say I don't give enough, but I think
the way I give is through. You know, I can

(15:18):
afford to contribute to whomever names in my immediate household.
You know, I bought a new car because my family car,
my mom's car, was kind of dying. So now we
have a car that we can rely on. Growing up,
I was a taker and being bored, like, oh now
I could actually be a little bit of a giver. Yeah,
you get bored being single and Lancasham and all you

(15:38):
care about it yourself? All I care abouts myself. I mean,
after while, you're like, okay, enough of me. Can I
get a boyfriend, a cat, you know, a bird to
look after? And boredom of boredom taught me, Hey, having
a family doesn't suck. Can I just meet someone at
the pit fire pizza? Right there? I mean, I don't,
we don't. We don't gotta go together, but can we?

(15:58):
How come every now and then that right, go to
the dispensery, go to the movies. After I don't gotta
be a girl. But we can hang out all easy,
easy activities and ever, how what's your what's your relationship
with boredom, grindset, mindset? Do you try? And because I
mean you you have I know YouTube be a high
achieving person, but I'm always curious how you how you

(16:19):
balance your time. I'm a complicated relationship because I'm thirty
and I'm not romantically linked and I don't have any children.
I have a dog that I love, you know, and
so I do have a lot like I want to complimenting,
like three chips in the next month and a half.
All of them are Two of them are work related,
in one is Vegas, where I might find work, but

(16:40):
I also I've been hospitalized for stress before and I
promised myself I would not do that again. So trying
to find the balance between. You know, I like being
booked in busy. I like knowing I have something to
do coming up, but I also have responsibilities at home
and a large friend group that kind of functions like
family that requires attention and time. So I try really

(17:05):
try for balance. You know, they're do enough work. Did
I take care of me so that I don't have
to go to the hospital again, did I check out
with all the people I love? Like, I try to
be in rotation with all of these things that you know,
service my life as much as possible. But it's I
don't know if I'm always achieving that goal of good balance,
but I tried. I realized I just came back from

(17:27):
I'm in Vegas now working. But I spent a week
in Los Angeles and I, you know what, I didn't
have anything. I had something that was important for me
to do out there, but nothing pressing, no big meeting,
no big show. I was just kind of like itchy
to just leave because I had because because I haven't
been alone. And know what, my my fiance and I
are always together. Thank god he could travel with me.

(17:50):
It was not him. I lived in the house that
I grew up in, you know, me and my mom
owned that house now, so I'm like, I'm never by myself.
So I want to take it to l A. I
I beg my girlfriends, the two closes want to have
out there. Can I please stay with either one of you?
And they were like sure, So I crashed. I borrowed
a car from my manager. So I'm like, it felt

(18:10):
really good to this goals. And when I came back,
I told my fance, I'm like, thank you so much
for knowing I just needed to go hang out with
my girls. I didn't have anything pressing, you know, I
could resume whatever the hell I did out there, but instead,
I'm but I'm like, I want to go. I love
l A. I lived there so long. I know where
everything is. I hear, I hear, it's more, it's less covidy,

(18:30):
So let me go now. I like him, and he
was like, I know every now that you've gotta go
kick it with you girls. Are you sick of me?
And that's okay. Every now and then you gotta take
take trips just for you, for you, aly for no reason,
and people who love you will understand, especially when you
know you and if you have a position in your
family or friend group where you are naturally looking after people,

(18:52):
and a lot of people, a lot of us are
wired naturally to look after each other at the expense
of our own well being, Like it's the first thing
that goes out the window. You see people like I
feel like every person I know who gives so much
of themselves to others and their family, the person to
give the least to us themselves or it takes a
real effort to do that, and a lot of people
don't even know, like have you don't even have the

(19:14):
concept like what I need for myself? Actually I never
thought of that. So really important to know that about
yourself because it's regenerative. All right, moving on, Jackie, what
some of you thing is overrated? You know what? I
read this and I first thought, if I didn't try
and edit it to add Tupac, M why come out
swinging who? And I think he's not. He wasn't a

(19:38):
gift to the culture. All the culture is mostly mine.
He was he is, But you know, I'm East Coast girl.
I'm always gonna be bigg until I die, you know.
And Tupac, to me, he was just so he was
just so disturbed in ingenious ways that I'm like, how
much of it was that, how much of it was
was talent, how much was just he was angry because

(20:01):
he was you know, he understood the world as it was,
the hated the world, felthy, he didn't have much power,
he felt hated, misunderstood. So all that to me, I
like about a few songs, I like, I don't really
find him to be the club. Let's let's go dance Tupac. No,
you're not. No, No, one's throwing it back to Tupac.
That's just that's that doesn't happen. And it's funny growing

(20:23):
up in l A, especially at the height of the
East Coast West Coast beef, I've always preferred East Coast rap,
like the golden era of rap in New York is
one of is like my favorite genres of music. And
and that's no, and that's no disrespect to the to
the West Coast scene, because the West Coast scene is,
you know, every every part of the United States has
contributed to what we have as hip hop today. But

(20:44):
for sure, personally, I like a Biggie punchline more than
like the pros of Tupac, because I feel like that's
sort of the difference in their like lyrical style. And
I think for the longest time people are like, well,
which one is better? And I've always been like, they
aren't comfortable like they are. They would never be in
the same cipher, like you wouldn't see Tupac try and
tattle Biggie like that. This is not how that's that's

(21:06):
not how they engaged with it whenever they had an
album together a song, and they'll probably forced the probably
look y'all, y'all gotta put our ship together because quaestions.
It's called West Coast crap. You know. They didn't have
a natural friendship. They tried to but realize we just
don't match. I came up in the era of the South,
got something to say. That's where I resented on it.
I like, I like Tufac and Biggie, although both have

(21:28):
songs I cannot listen to sometimes mais so dirty. I
was like, oh my god, Yeah, he was was very weird,
but he was a sex symbol. Yeah, you like, huh exactly?
Said what about what? Well? You listen to him and
they look him lyrics. You're like, this is not you

(21:48):
gotta be thirty at least to listen to this ship.
I feel the way about Treta. I was like, oh my,
oh my god, Treta, it's such like you can't nowhere
near your family, can you put Oh? I remember I
remember I had like the like a mini poster of
the Little Kim hardcore album cover, like like on like

(22:10):
a translucent binder thing, and my mom saw and she's like,
what is that playboy? I said, no, this is a
little kid. This is this music mobs hardcore. Okay, this
is a big Mama thing. One of my favorite tracks.
You know, it's funny back in the day, we back
into the TLC days when they had condoms on their
clothing as part of it. I had a key chain
that had a condom in the glass in high school

(22:32):
and I came home one day and my mom broke
the glass to the condom out. I forgot all about
bad Hill now and I was like, so you don't
want me to Yeah, I don't know, do you. I
don't know what the mixed mixed signal here, but yeah,
like on that, don't advertise it tips. She has like
kind of key change out. It was for decoration. I
had the one you want to use when you're trying

(22:52):
to get down right. I some glass like great glass
in case from her, just and very interest for the
gentleman involved in situation, all the all the risk has
to take now. But you know, wait what it was
in a glass like it was like it was like this,

(23:13):
it was inside the glass in between Oh so yeah,
like in a glass case like a yeah break in
case of smashing yeah, smash yeah, exactly there it is, okay, alright, Uh,
well we'll take let's take a quick break, we'll come
back and we'll talk about some news after this. And

(23:45):
we're back, and I just want to touch on monkey
pox pandemic, which potentially could become endemic in the United States,
but more specifically around the naming of monkey pox. Back
in June, the World Health or Organization announced that they
were going to change the name because a group of
biologists and many other experts issued a public call to

(24:07):
do so, saying that it builds on existing stigmas and
connects the outbreak to Africa without a clear link. That
it's just it's very lazy, racist people are going to
jump to conclusion just generally because of a name like this,
and they're saying, like, also just reinforcing broader colonial racist narratives,
as many people were pointing out in their plea to

(24:29):
the World Health Organization. And this move from scientists about
a scientific issue clearly got people on the right wing
media to have a take on it because they were
suddenly like, wait, what they want people to be more
sensitive to, uh, potentially the people of Africa or others
that are concerned with the stigma of racism. Well, of
course Tommy Larry had something to say. She just basically

(24:51):
was like, why don't they focus on figuring out how
to cure the disease rather than the name. It's a
waste of time. And then you have the Washington Examiner
say something flippant like this was more like akin to
like a comedy sketch trying to figure out a new name.
But this isn't just like around semantics. They're just like
the general stigma a lot of health experts have noticed

(25:13):
could actually prevent people from seeking care because of just
just the idea of the name and all the hoop
la around it is putting people in a position where
they might not be taking their health as seriously as
they should be. And New York City they said, hey,
World Health Organization, y'all need to change the name. Even
though they said they would be doing this a month ago,

(25:34):
they still haven't. And LGBTQ groups have also said, look,
this also has to be changed because there's a stigma
around the virus, and it's also just ramping up a
lot of blatant homophobia and for for no reason. And
what's what's wild is like the name itself is just
fundamentally misleading. It was only named monkey pops because it

(25:56):
was discovered in lab primates in the late fifties. But
it's rodents who are the big transmitter of the disease.
So it's just this like old ship from before, like
I don't know if found in the monkey pox, Fine,
let's go with this name and that's it. And the
new outbreaks that we're seeing in Europe and like in
North America are mostly human to humans, so again, what

(26:17):
is the point of having this name in it? And
the other part of it too is health experts within Africa.
They're also kind of piste too because they're saying, oh,
when this was just a localized issue or something that
wasn't leaving the continent of Africa, there was no issue
with having the name be monkey pocks. It wasn't until
this is affecting more wealthy nations that suddenly there's like, oh, well,

(26:40):
I don't know about this. If this is the best thing,
So it's like smirreed in a lot of a lot
of ship, you know, just just to put it very plainly.
And the whole thing is too, if this was a
new disease the way the World Health Organization has guidelines.
They would not they would never actually use geographical locations
or animals too, you know, to describe a disease, because

(27:01):
they themselves know how damaging that can be. So right
now we find ourselves in a whole process where they're
like the World Health organizations like, yeah, we're gonna get
to it. We're gonna get to it. And people are
like when, and they're like when the next meeting of
this bureau like bureaucratic body gets together to decide on it.
And then they even said, we don't really even have

(27:21):
any suggestions yet. It's like what I'm sorry, you're gonna
do like a Twitter poll? Like what what where? Where is? Well?
I mean where chicken pots come from? Who fighting with
the chickens? Right? What's the origin of chicken pox? Right? Well?
And that's the thing they say, like because of the
pox part, right, they're feeling like it's even more diminutive

(27:43):
to say monkey pox, like it's already making, it's already
creating in the in the mind of somebody who's who
may become infected. It's like, oh, you have your your
child or your reckless just like all of the naming conventions,
they say, are having like multiple issues with how people
are perceiving things. What about the association of monkey pock
with the LGBTQ community, isn't that also a problem? Yeah,

(28:06):
you know, precisely. And and what they're generally saying is
especially the messaging around it. As the beginning, they're like,
if you're if you're a man having sex with another man,
you need to watch out, or that there are all
these different guidelines that had to be met to get
a vaccine, when meanwhile, there are plenty of women who
are sex workers who are also saying I'm also at

(28:26):
risk too, I also need to be able to safeguard myself.
But because of this like outsized emphasis on sort of
being like this is something that's just affecting men who
have sex with men, it was having terrible echoes of
like the HIV AIDS epidemic two works, how many echoes
and the consistency in the so verity with which those
echos rose, Like, for example, I was reading the other

(28:49):
day about a guy who said he had a pimple
on his face. If you don't know, monkey pops occasionally,
like when it manifestsed it looks like a pimple. He
went into a term college is for something else? Dr
Caman observed his face left, came back in full. Has
Matt tested him for anything? But knew that he was

(29:10):
gay because he'd been a patient here for a while.
And so this kind of like sigma the inability for
some people to just get tested or to get vaccinated
is this It's exactly if you guys haven't seen the
quote documentary about the AIDS quote, which really does a
good job of documenting what it was like to get
AIDS before our country cared. You just see too many

(29:32):
similarities and it's so weird coming right out of COVID house,
just like why don't we learn anything at all? Period?
I mean, one woman was documenting her case online and
she was saying that she had to see four doctors
and when they finally they were like, we'll go see
a dermatologist. And they were like, oh, we're not dealing
with these cases, but that is your job. Who else

(29:54):
we go to be like, hey, is this a pimple
or a pox? Like, please tell me. I don't have
a medical degree. And is a scary time, and especially
if you have things to do that require you not
being in your house, which a lot of us have to,
you know, or or I guess, choose to. I am confused.
It's whether I have to or if I want to,
you know what I mean. The world is still going.

(30:17):
The world is still going. I don't want to miss
out on everything but get sick. They're not going to
close down, I don't think. I think part of the
reason why the I guess, the East Coast, you know,
pseudo opened up is because the economy, you know, and
until it affects the economy, that nothing matters. And when
COVID shut down the world, or at least the country
they gave us a year, then they're like, all right,

(30:38):
you know what, it's just bullshit. I don't care how
you feel. The month. The wheel has to turn around
and around, so it tell it to become the money problem.
It's never a humanity problem. So it's always money first.
And that's what's scary, right, because with the COVID pandemic,
we're having a terrible, you know, lapse in our ability
to properly test and take care of people because there's

(31:00):
no funding for it. Congress didn't. They're like they were
fighting over money for that, so that's gone, and we're
dealing with like really very narrow budgets to address a pandemic,
which is why there's barely any testing anymore, and people
like I don't know, probably millions of people who got COVID,
I don't know. We're not really testing anymore. All the
money is gonely everyone's driving around in the Lamborghini they

(31:21):
got right, right, exactly any more right. And then even
with this right, we're looking at another situation where because
initially people are saying, oh, well, this is a marginalized group,
we don't need to worry about it. But what you're
also looking at like a lot of the health experts
like you can't let this ship get out of control
when you have the ability to to lock this down

(31:43):
with proper treatments and getting people vaccines and things like that,
because they're a lot of the scientists are saying like
if this if transmission hops into like the rodent community,
then we're looking at it and like this's it's it's
gonna be here, and it's that's it. As soon as
Goott even Irvine gets it, it's going to be a problem.

(32:05):
Until then, it's a minor inconvenience. Yeah, right, if if
we see uh, like a Republican congress person afflicted, then
maybe we'll know. But until then, that's what I'm saying, Like,
I think it doesn't. It just doesn't square with the
philosophy of taking care of people in this country because
I mean, we let over a million people die in
this country and that was whoever in the country. So
now we're talking about something that the general perception of

(32:28):
society is like, well, it's for people who aren't me.
I can't imagine the lack of empathy that would be
extended to them. All I hear is the perpetuation of racism.
That's that's all very cynic. I'm very cynical. I just
know that, you know, black women, what we mattered, we've
matt over the last two and a half weeks, like

(32:49):
every every November happens February. You know, the men still rules.
So that's just the way it is. Unfortunately. Yeah, but again,
I think you know, it's and portant to keep our
eyes on these things, especially just help what's slow the
World Health Organization moves with things like that. They're meanwhile
saying like this has to be done seriously, when other
people are saying like, well, can you do this little

(33:10):
bit first, because we're already dealing with problems from monkey
pox becoming like a meme with people and not actually
understanding what's at stake here. Okay, let's switch gears really
quick to Donald Trump. This this orange Yeah, this orange
pop on the on our society. Uh, he's always Look,

(33:32):
he has had a very fucked up relationship with the
concept of winning. I think we've seen that he knows
he's not capable of winning ship on the merits, so
it feeds his like insecure pursuit of power. It also
makes him feel so tiny when he actually loses, or
even has the perception of him losing. And right now,
I think Donald Trump is in a very interesting spot

(33:52):
where he's constantly even though he likes to act like
he's not worried about rhond ascent with Rhonda Santis, he's
constantly talking about rohnd to Santis looking over his shoulder,
getting mad at Fox News. He got mad at Fox
News because they talked about a poll that said Rhonda
Santis was much more popular than Trump was in like
certain parts of the country like Florida. Sure, he's their governor.

(34:13):
But he was like, I guess, you know, I guess
they're not on my team anymore. And like then they
tried to apologize. It got very awkward. And also his endorsements,
when it comes to picking candidates for races, they're not
always sure fire winners, and sometimes you'll see if he
picked somebody in the poll started to slide, He's like, actually, no,
I was never working with them from the beginning. I
don't know them, I never heard of them. Goodbye, because

(34:36):
my record is flawless. And you know, he's also recently
he went to a rally, a fucking Maga rally, and
he got booed because of who he was endorsing for
a congressional seat. And I just want to play you
this pick because it's it's just it shows him being like,
all right, y'all, here's who I'm working with the crowd

(34:57):
being like boo and him being so fuse, and I
think it's it's a good it's a good glimpse into
sort of what he's experiencing right now. And a highly
respected man just endorsed by me today, future Congressman for
the second District, Eli Crane. Everyone, He's like, huh, you

(35:30):
didn't like that. But you like me right? Oh God,
but you like me right? Please? I have He's the
crazy old grandfather you put down in the base of me,

(35:51):
Like why are we listening to him? Just give him
snacks and you know, let him watching of Queen's Watch
the same of episode of King Queen Doesn't Know is
a crazy old man now, And that's what it's. I mean,
this is and it's funny that you're you know, everyone's
sort of like what's going on, Like does he really

(36:13):
run the party anymore? Because there seems to be a
lot of fractures and it's clear that he does still
have his hold, Like that's that's clear. Yeah. And then
the RNC, the Republican Party, they're also trying to do
something where they're like a man, if you run again,
we're not gonna pay your legal bills. And so they're
also trying to kind of like that was like this
like a little blurb that came out lout at the

(36:34):
end of the last week where people are like, oh wait, huh.
So maybe they're trying to put some pressure on him
to make way for someone else because they see him
as a liability. But I think at the end of
the day. All he has to do is start screaming
at people and they'll fall in line. But you like
me though, right, that was the most shook I've ever
seen him. We know that he is perpetually running out

(36:55):
of money. Yeah, Like everything is kind of just held
together by string at this point, and so a financial
blow like the loss of legal assistance, with which he
needs quite a lot, could could change the game up.
And I'm looking for anything to stir the pot up
in a different direction for him, because it's not going
to be like his followers, like there's clearly nothing that

(37:16):
can be said or proven or videotape shown that changes
their opinion, Like they don't care about unless unless he's
wiping makeup off his face and he reveals himself to
be black. I don't think people even then, I I
legitimately think they would pivot and be like, this is
you should want to be white. It makes sense, And

(37:39):
he loves white people. He hated being black. He's one
of Oh wow, okay, so you should work for his campaign.
You flip that one really easily. I know it speaks.
It speaks for our humanity where I know a few
people were like when they announced that Ivanka died, and
they saw the news Ivana Elana Alanna's Vona the daughter.

(38:01):
But if Vanna passed away. Everyone you saw the headline
Trump died drump Day. Everyone's kind of like, oh man,
I mean sorry, arresting. We're also kind of like, how's
the wrong one? Right? Like, and I'm sorry to that woman,
I'm sorry, said come back and get this man. That's

(38:25):
how you feel, and it's shameful. We're like, God, were
you just did you you know? Did you want slip? Damn?
It called the right one home anyway, So he must
get stress diarrhea at the mere thought of having to
pick a winner right now, especially in a contested Republican primary.
And take Missouri's GOP Center primary for example, there's it's

(38:47):
like a three way race kind of. You have Eric Schmidt,
who is the a G and he's in first place.
You have Vicky Hartzler who's in second place, and she
has an endorsement from Josh Holly, but also an un
endorsement from Trump because he was getting real petty. He's
the one. Let you know, she got an un endorsement.
And then you have Eric Grayton's in third place, who's
the disgraced former governor of Missouri. And this guy Grayton's

(39:11):
had an early lead because he's pretty magod out and
he is. But the thing is, he's credibly accused of
being folent with his wife and child, and his response
to those allegations did not help him at all because
he just basically said, Oh, she's like an angry woman
with a vendetta and that's it and I have nothing
else to say about it. So people were like, goal, Okay,
that's not very helpful for anything or us to see

(39:33):
that you're humanity. And it also didn't help when he
started doubling down on putting out like the wildest campaign ads.
This one we got a lot of headlines or you know,
the coverage at the end of June because this is
one where he's hunting other Republicans with the help of
a Navy seal team. And this was his This is

(39:56):
an ad that he fucking decided to televise. I'm Eric
Brayton's Navy seal and today we're going rhino hunting. The
rhino feeds on corruption and is marked by the stripes
of cowardice. Just so you know, a rhino is r
I n O Republican in name only. That's what MAGA
people call Republicans that aren't with the whole fascist racist takeover.

(40:18):
So like, if you're Liz Cheney, you a rhino, even
though she's pretty on board with most of y'all ship,
don't not forget that part. But anyway, that's what he's
talking about. So he's going after fake as Republicans. So
they just go a flash bang in the building, dynamic entry,
tactical entry with these like swap cops, Eric Grayton's Graydon's

(40:39):
got her joint, get a rhino hunting permit. There's no
bagging limit, no tagging limit, and it doesn't expire until
we save our country. Uh okay, I have thoughts as
a film critic. Okay, so she has notes. Okay, I
like this. Okay, So first, higher lighting guy, it's always important.

(41:04):
I know, like enough a lot, enough super are Like
I have a camera and that's enough. It's not enough.
People instantly tell if it looks cheap and bad and
you hadn't have to light, all you needed was bounce board,
you really could have made that work, but you didn't
or some or some indys on that camera line. So
you don't have the background all blown out like that. Also,
also his outfit and his skin was washed out with

(41:24):
the sand in the background. You should have worn a
brighter color. I know that you don't want to be
caught wearing makeups there, but yes, yes, your point, Jackie,
like maybe a little high light here. It's a little
bit of blending really could have poked your skin pop.
My biggest complaints though, is you're out here hunting, but
you entered an empty house and then ended your commercial.
I don't know what was happening. The goal of these

(41:47):
guys seemed to be to go capture someone, but no
operatives were shown. Who are you going against? This is
a regular American home, So now I'm terrified as a viewer.
You're just walking into homes with six shotguns deep, but
no one's in there. This is was this actual swat?
Y'all know where you going? You got swatted? What happened?
And you're like a real bad episode of HDTV House

(42:09):
Hunters or something like bitches So early guys, Early, that's true,
though there was it. Nothing looks more heroic than kicking
down a loose, already open door and walking into an

(42:30):
empty house where there is no action, but I think
it's a good example for how Republicans live their lives,
like constantly looking for this invisible enemy that they're so
afraid of, like weapons of mass destruction. It's kind of
like that exactly critical race theory, you know what I mean,
like ship Like they're like you, you don't want to
know about this thing, but I can't define or properly identify.

(42:51):
But watch out. They're grooming at the you know, drag
queen fucking library readings as we've seen their cake dajore.
So the other I just wanted, So that's Eric Gryton's
or Greaton's, however you want to say. The other Eric
Eric Schmidt. He's the a G. And he's like the
most quote unquote normal out of them, I guess, just
because he doesn't have any like outstanding like legal allegations

(43:13):
against him. But he's abused a ship out of his
office like as a G, like any Republican a G
would do, launched a ton of culture war lawsuits, being
like I hate the fact that you have to wear
a mask or racism is actually good and part of
America's history. The second part is true, but that's kind
of what he's on so and this leaves Trump in

(43:34):
this weird position. It was like, well, who am I
to pick? And do I get the guy in first
who's nailed on? Do I take the guy who's been
a reliable ally to me? Who and Kim Gilfoyle, my
son's girlfriend is running his campaign. Do I go try
and you know, go against Josh Holly and the RNC
because they picked someone else and they're telling me don't
go with this other guy because he's problematic. Well, I

(43:57):
just want to read this this description of the sas
of where Trump landed on endorsing. This is from political quote.
Because the meeting war on, those familiar with what transpired say,
Trump began to lose patience. At one point, it was
suggested that he could endorse quote Eric and that by
doing so, he would be supporting both Schmidt and Greetings. Okay,

(44:18):
it was a mad cap exit ramp, but Trump went
in on the details, asking if the two candidates first
names were spelled identically, noting that it wouldn't work if
they weren't. No ship. While Trump was intrigued, he also
remarked that it might be too cute. He asked for
draft endorsements. To review, one announcing his support for Schmidt,
the other for Graydon's and this is what ended up

(44:38):
being announced at the end of like I think Monday
night early Tuesday quote, we need a person who will
back down, who will not back down to the radical
left lunatics who are destroying our country. I trust the
great people of Missouri on this one to make up
their own minds, much as they did when they gave
me landslide victories in the twenty elections. And I'm therefore

(44:58):
proud to announce that Eric has my complete and total endorsement.
So he just left it at that, and both candidates
are saying thank you, President Trump. No, yes, isn't that
a sign of Alzheimer's when you don't remember what you
did and you come back and do it again differently?
I mean, like that's every time for this man. But yeah,

(45:22):
this is like someone on Twitter was like, this sounds
like literally something from the show Veep that would happen,
And it does feel a bit like it's it's so absurd,
But again, it shows you how thirsty people are still
for his endorsement, that he could literally be like, I
endorsed the concept of Eric and people are like, yeah, okay,
come around with that equally over here. Think about it.

(45:43):
How many are how many blatant races have there been
running for office that high profile? You know, he's also
a celebrity. So racists are like, we need to have uh,
we need a spokesperson. That's that's why he'll always have
a cabinet or people who well, we will follow you
anywhere to the grave. Right, we don't have anybody. We

(46:04):
don't have a spokesperson. We're ashamed to say if we
do have one, because we get you know, told being
any ship. They're not, but you know they're That's that's
why when Obama was in augice so long, that's why
they're like, look, you guys had him. Yeah, that's not fair,
we didn't have anyone. Now we have someone. We didn't
have anybody the last I don't know presidents. So now

(46:27):
we're like we had one. They're like, look, you guys
had a great time. We're gonna go, we're gonna go
get out Confederate flags and where it's our time now. Yeah,
you know, And it's true and and and Trump does
act like this sort of avatar for racists who'd be like, see,
you can be successful and racist, because I think the
thing you see most of the time is people get
out of pocket talking ignorant ship, and they get they

(46:48):
get their card bold, they get their show canceled, they
lose endorsements, yeah you know, or some people actually lose
their regular job, and someone like Donald Trump be like,
look where you can get by being a racist piece
of ship. They need that. He need that to keep
my need for me to be able to rationalize what
the funk I'm doing? Model? That's the problem. Yea and

(47:08):
terrible role model. Oh just just to let you know,
in that same race in Missouri, someone who's like in
like barely getting any votes is one of the that
that couple of the mccloss keys that were holding their
little guns at the people marching outside their house during
the that guy went like the machine, he's he's getting
absolutely washed. So don't worry, opportunity. Listen. I know that

(47:30):
for a minute they were just really on your side
for standing your ground. They love that. But you have
to have come with something anything else other than that moment.
Office what Well, that's that's the funny part about how
a lot of these people think left and right that
they're like Hey, remember me from this moment. I don't
have ship else to say except this time I got famous,
and I'm not really offering much else this side from

(47:52):
gesturing to a picture of me and my wife holding
guns and doing that. So it can be tough. All right,
Let's take a quick we'll be right back and we'll
talk about why we wouldn't steal a car? Would you?

(48:14):
And we're back. Okay. So I was asking at the
top of the show, we all remember the p s
A s that used to be on the front of
videos or in the movie theater that was like you
wouldn't steal a car? Would your kid? And sort of
comparing like people using the internet to people doing like
survival crime or some ship like stealing purses or whatever.

(48:35):
And since then it's become like a meme like there's
our writer JM found like some really cool ship on
Etsy that's like, uh, like a dude wearing a shirt
that says you wouldn't steal my virginity? It's like, what,
that's not even a funny shirt, Like you don't want
to be walking around with that anyway. So somehow the industry,
they overlooked a big error that these ads are being

(48:58):
shown to paying custom at movie theaters and on DVDs.
So they were basically wagging their fingers at people who
were still paying for the product that was lime Wire
and Napster. Right, They're talking about that because that was
the thing that I know would freak people out there,
was like that one kid who got sued for using
Napster and they're like, oh my god, like remember doubtload

(49:21):
of album again. My ex husband was That's how I
knew about it. Back then. You knew somebody was pirrating
when you would ask him, so, how many songs do
you have in your computer? And they're like, oh, well,
A hundred and twelve thousand. Yeah, it was that. It
was back then, like that was hid And I was like,
why it was needed to go to the store to
get you blank CDs? Yes my god, because yeah you

(49:42):
got that. I get it. You have that new case
late tape I do for three dollars, we can buy
I thought I lost so many cases a those CDs. Yeah,
look I was there. I look pirate, pirate, pirate family
arise as we see each other out here. So that
was the thing they were coming at people who already

(50:02):
knew what time it was they're like, yeah, I'm paid
money to see this, I rented this DVD or about
this DVD. And this wasn't the first time, like the
industry tried to do this ship the first time like
this was happening where they did this whole thing where
they're like home taping is killing music because they said
people with cassette tapes were just ripping songs off the
radio and that's killing the industry, which also became a

(50:24):
joke too because that never stopped anybody. They're like, oh,
this is fantastic technology. What watched me hit record on
this cassette player and get this song I want off
the radio. But there were a number of these antipiracy
ads in the early two thousand's, like when downloading movies
it was like really becoming a thing, and some of
them were like super intense, like showing people like some
dude in jail like hanging their head and be like,

(50:46):
oh my god, my life is so fun sliding jail
cell door clicking and standing behind the bars. Yeah, just
like tears coming down your face, like my mom. But
so the general consensus has been these p s a
S basically did nothing to deter piracy. And someone did

(51:06):
a study recently and they have found out that these
that this campaign may have actually caused people to pirate
even more. And you ask why, Well, the first, first
of all, it is like the quote they say, absurd
comparisons to like grand theft or other offenses basically watered
down the message, like someone would be like, this is

(51:28):
not like me stealing a bunch of cars or robbing
a bank. This is not connecting at all. And also
they also like because of the like these anti piracy campaigns,
they sort of sent the message that everybody's doing this
and it actually might be normal because yeah, you're hearing
it like they don't vote be one of these people.

(51:48):
You're like one of who one of these pirates that's
out here, and you're like, oh, that's the thing people do. Okay,
I'll look into that. How else, how else did you
get music back then pay for it now? Yeah? Hell
no no. And this study says quote informing directly or
indirectly individuals that many people pirate is counterproductive and encourages
piracy by driving the targeted individuals to behave Similarly, these

(52:12):
messages provide to the would be pirates then needed rationalization
by emphasizing that quote everyone is doing it. So also
this is just from the study, but just looking at
these ads, like the website in those ads, they looked
so easy to use, like as somebody who had to
download ship. They were not this clean like it looked
like like the website in the ad was like feature films,

(52:35):
new releases, click download, and the probably like like yeah ship,
why wouldn't Like they're like where is this website can get?
And piracy is on the rise. It's been increasing by
in this last year, and you know, I think it's
not it shouldn't really be a surprise, especially in this

(52:55):
day and age where the Internet is connecting people even
more and more. Because I'll tell you this PI receipt
is the like the target like or variety store for
like the broke kit or broke people because the world
is at your fingertips. When you can download a ship
on a torrent, you know what I mean, people have
more time to People didn't figure it out how to
do it at home as absolutely And I was the

(53:18):
same way. I didn't have like money to go buy
the newest CD, but I damn sure no more to
get that ship off of like bit torrent guess who
now pulled up to school and I've got Stankonia on
fucking tape for everybody, and you could buy that ship
off me for two bucks. I have not heard the
word torrent and so long. I used to be on
the phone with my guy teaching me how to download ship.

(53:40):
He like, click us that was so torr and I'm like,
what is that right? And look, I allegedly was using
all these products. That's just proof proof podcast. There's an
entertainment podcast. But guess what I do? Have fifty cents
get Richard. I trying right here. But I think it's

(54:00):
it's funny, like from my relationship to all that. I
just remember saying like, hey, can I get this CD?
My mom would say no, and I said, all right, cool,
I'm gonna get it off the internet CD. And I
think it's hard to like really break that cycle because
we still live in a like hyper consumer facing culture
where having ship is like really matters. So as long
as like these digital things are out there, I don't

(54:20):
know how they could ever curb it. But you can't,
especially with more and more shows being developed all of
the time and nearer ways to pirate being created. It
makes sense to me that we're seeing in a tick.
There's too much media to consume. So even if you
were the kind of person who wanted to own a
lot of physical media, you know, you might pirate a
few things here and there just to fill out your

(54:42):
library because it's it's too expensive. I mean, and look
and shout out to all the technologies that we've enjoyed
in the past to circumvent these fees, like Cody, if
you had a Cody box, let me hear you one time.
If you have a jailbroken fire stick, let me hear
you one time. Because those of the kinds of things
that people were like, why am I going to pay

(55:03):
nine levels of cable bills when I can buy this
one thing from the homie And I now have every
show I need to get and I can still keep
up with the culture without having to pay a constant
monthly fees. And I think, well, as we look at
like people's incomes going down to the need for priority
median ship that are behind pay walls, I can only
see that growing based on just the economics of it.

(55:24):
I remember my my last buddy in l A kept
promising to get me a fire stick from my computer my, My, My,
my TV and never got it for me. So rude.
But I'm glad you're not with somebody like that. No, No,
he was clearly a little Yeah, I'll look you up.
I'm gonna get you that five, get you all the stations.

(55:46):
Girl like I'm waiting. I'm waiting. You're like, oh yeah,
yeah yeah yeah. See my man, he's still waiting there
because the supply chain. I was like, hell, yeah, I
get that ship, I get you actually, job for that,
I was worth it it, It's worth it. Life is
rough a Lankershim Boulevard, Northola. Yeah, it's rough in Valley Village.
That's said. The city was Valley Village. The new show

(56:09):
coming to l O L Life on Lankership coming at you. Well, Jackie,
I don't know a better place than to end it
right there. Thank you so much. First guy, you much fun.
Thank you for keeping me company in a hotel room. Yeah,
where can people find you? Follow you, see you, experience you,
check out your special and all that. Jackie fabulous dot

(56:30):
com can go to that to get My comedy album
came out also the same week as a special, so
they both called men applause on Amazon. But my link
on my website. You can get everything you need. I
am at the Comedy Seller in Vegas all week until
next week and then I'm back end of the week.
My birthday is August. Well, so let's just focus on Yeah,

(56:52):
And is there a tweet or some other piece of
social media that you wanted to shout out that you've
been liking. Oh, I just saw Lena Gomez is going
to remake Working Girl maybe, And I retweeted that just
before this because I'm really I'm really all four of
the chicks getting ahead and making stuff and you know,
heading her own projects and producing things. So that's the last,

(57:16):
the last, the last project that's just seen. Shout out
to the second Latina American to ever be nominated for
a producer, em Me Selena Gomez. She was not for
um only Murders in the building, and so I'm really
excited to see her get into her executive bag and
now she's producing and performing. It's great. I think she's

(57:38):
really great. She's really really a talented actress. Has never
really rocked with her music too much. That's not she
to Selena. Fans don't come for me, it's not for me.
But as a performer and as a producer, she's picking
an incredible product projects, Project Sea, She's making incredible projects.
So I'm very excited about it. Yeah, I'm enjoying seeing
her take herself out of the childhood thing and produced

(58:00):
or an actor and let's focus on her love life
is most people cannot make that transition. That's the hardest one.
I mean if okay, so many of my friends I
grew up with who just got lost in child acting
we're not able to get out of. But anyway, coca
cocaine is what hell of a drug? Yes it is,

(58:23):
Yes it is. And getting into hide for free every
Friday night. It is a bad combination in two thousand seven. Anyway, Joel,
thank you so much for helping me co host and
and for the last few days. I really appreciate you.
Where can people find you and follow you? Once a
tweet that you like, Oh my gosh, well, y'all know me.
You can find me all over the internet. Actual when

(58:44):
he gets j O E L E m oh and
I Q you eat tweets and looking I have two
quick ones. Okay, So if y'all were on Twitter, you
know Diane Warren, the songwriter came for Beyonce, how can
there be twenty four writers on a song? Within eye roll?
Someone put did a video of her with Mariah Carey
on a red carpet. It looks like for Variety. And

(59:05):
then Beyonce's Move Out the Way, which is the song
that has um queer icon Gress Jones on it, and
Mariah puts her hands on diane shoulders and shoves her
out of the way on the carpet, and it is
a sick video burn that I just really appreciate, so
uh Babe Lillionaire. It's a funky spelling, but you could
find it. It was lovely and I really appreciate uh

(59:28):
any and all shade because Diane deserved it. She was
out here being shicty. The other video I've really been
enjoying on Twitter is somebody put the Alien Superstar video
over the she Hulp transformation from the X Men animated show,
and what I tell y'all, it is so effing good.
I'm loving the Alien um Women transformation. Somebody did Sailor Moon.

(59:51):
There's also one for Starfire Keep them Coming, I love them.
This might be favorite meme. Yeah, oh man, that's good.
Let's see some tweets that I like, Okay, this one
is the first. One is from Graham at Jessica Underscore.
Schaltz tweeted, I love when people refer to a solution
as a quote silver bullet because it implies the problem

(01:00:11):
isn't werewolf. Yeah that I ever really even thought about that.
Another one is from Alexa at Mario Kart d w
I tweeted, Uh, I don't need ketamine therapy. I need
a walkable city in twenty hour work week and that
that would solve a lot of problems, actually, I feel
like And then at Guru Lakers tweeted, when does the

(01:00:34):
Clippers dock on Hulu come out? I'm trying to see
something I heard they run things around here. Oh that's right,
there isn't one. Okay it sounds sound thirsty. Yeah, well
I got the desert thirst out here, especially after that
last season. It's all my god. Anyway. You can find

(01:00:56):
me at Miles of Gray on Twitter and Instagram. You
can find us at daily Zekeeist on Twitter at the
daily Zeitekeeist on Instagram. We have a Facebook fan pase
and a website, daily zeitgeis dot com, where we posting
our episodes and our foot notes. Footnotes. Thank you Joel.
Where we take you know, you can check out all
the articles we talk about as well as a song
we write out on. That song is going to be

(01:01:16):
this track called have You Fed Baby Huey Today? By
Surprise Chef. Surprise Chef is really great instrumental music. It's
like the kind of music that you could take a
edible and then listen to and then look go to
a museum and then everything like it becomes cinematic. The
music is just like very just it's just very cinematic
feeling music. It's instrumental and it's funky. They have like

(01:01:38):
really good percussion in a rhythm section, so it's it's
got something for everybody. And I really encourage you to
check out the whole album, but we're gonna go out
on have You Fed Baby Huey Today? By Surprise Chef.
The Daily Zeyegeis is a production of I Heart Radio.
So for more podcast check out the iHeart Radio app,
Apple podcast or wherever you get them for free. That's
gonna do it for today. We'll check you later to

(01:02:01):
say what's trending. Alright. Bye,

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