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September 4, 2020 68 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to Season one, Episode five
of That Guys, the production of I Heart Radio. This
is a podcast where we take a deep dive into
America's shared consciousness and say, officially, off the top, fund
the Koch Brothers, fuck Fox News, fuck Rush Limp, fuck
Buck Sexton, fuck Ben Shapiro. I'm funk Tucker Carlson. It's Friday,

(00:24):
September four, twenty. My name is Jack O'Brien. A k oh,
it's Jack from t d Z. Yeah, it's Jackington oh
b Yeah, it's Jacob t d Z. Yeah, it's Jack
from t d Z's Jack from TZ. That is courtesy

(00:45):
of the Plain White Tease, my favorite band. That's my
favorite song. Hey there, Delilah uh, and I'm thrilled to
be joined by today's special guest co host Lacey Mosley. Hey,
what's up? Is Lacey Moseley a k A scam goddess
a k A. There's some cons and this helps. There's

(01:08):
some cons in this house. Do some crimes in this house.
Scam up the week, gonna make you freaking big crime,
that's gonna make your mama shriek. That's a whap remix
from Bible yeah. I was also going to give you

(01:31):
the a k A real dime with Bill Maher because
you're so I was, all right, I apologize. Uh oh.
By the way, So people, ever since we talked shit
about hey there Delilah on earlier this week, people have
been hit me up with like Wikipedia pages. Apparently Delilah

(01:52):
herself has a Wikipedia page. Uh. And she was the
lead singer of the Plain White Teas. Never dated her.
It was just like, had a crush, wrote a song
about her, and then she accompanied him to the Grammys
where where he uh like was nominated, did not win,

(02:12):
but so he Taylor swifted her basically, Yeah, I guess
I don't know what that means. Actually, I'm gonna be
honest with the people who Taylor swifted like would talk
about in their relationships and how deep they were. A
lot some of these guys will come out and be like,
it wasn't like that, it wasn't that deep. So I
think she might have been making it more than what

(02:33):
it was to get those songs popping. So that's what
he did. But it worked though he scammed her and
to come into the yeah, and then she was like, Okay,
that was weird and they never dated, so anyways, shout
out to her. This supports all the plain white t
shade that Blair Saki was. I think she was right, y'all.

(02:55):
Uh well, we are thrilled to be joined in our
third seat, finally, long overdue, the hilarious, the talented Priscilla Davy. Hey, everybody,
am I supposed to pump the song too? How are you?

(03:18):
I'm doing well, I'm doing okay. Yeah, how are you?
You know, you know, hanging in there within this quarantine.
Have you guys met each other before? You? Lazy? I
think lazy Priscilla, Priscilla Lacey, Yeah, passing. You know, I've

(03:39):
known Priscilla for five years. Yes, so many years. Yeah,
it's been along five years with this one. Well, it's
great to have you on. Finally, it's great to have
you both on together. What a treat. We are going
to get to know you a little bit better in
a moment, Priscilla the first, we are going to tell

(04:01):
our listeners just a couple of things we're talking about today.
We are going to talk about Trump encouraging people to
vote twice. We're going to talk about Daniel Prude and
Di Gen Kizzie too black men who were murdered by
the police on camera again. So, uh, that's happening again constantly.

(04:24):
We're gonna do a Sturgis update. We're gonna do a
Mint and Ghazi update with Ron Jeremy, Uh was apparently
a complete monster. We're gonna talk about. So something we've
been talking about is people fleeing the cities for the country,
at least in their hearts and minds. But it turns

(04:44):
out that the whole real estate boom where people were
like nobody's buying in the cities, everybody's buying in the
country is a myth that is being perpetuated by people,
you know, the fact that the mainstream media is all
in new work uh and they're rich. Friends are like
moving to the suburbs basically. So we're gonna talk about

(05:06):
all of that plenty more. But first, Priscilla, we like
task our guests, what is something from your search history
that's revealing about who you are? Let's see. Let's see
what this is. Uh successfully removed from an email account
from email and email lists. Listen. Now that may not

(05:28):
sound special, okay, but it is to me because I
get spammed all day long. So I have been trying
to like, I currently have sixteen thousand, seven nine seven
unread emails, um, and so I'm like slowly trying to
take that number down. And I've been proud of myself
for unsubscribing from things lately. That is uh, I think

(05:52):
horrifying to a lot of listeners. They're like those listeners
who are like I have to have it at zero
or like be be closed within striking distance of zero.
I am one of you. However, I have like hundreds
of thousands of unread spam emails or doubled up like
email inboxes that both received the same thing, so I'm

(06:15):
like getting multiple so I don't have to check it.
But yeah, I have like tens of, if not hundreds
of thousands of unread emails. Uh. And I respect it,
Thank you. I've gotten bad lately to wait. Wait, are
you saying your main email inbox, Priscilla is a hundred
thousand No, I don't have a hundred thousand sixteen thousand,

(06:36):
but yeah it's my main inbox. Yeah. Okay, that's a
little wild for me, but I can't. I am one
of you guys, because I just looked at my email
inbox and I have sixteen hundred. So I have one thousand,
six hundred eighty one unread emails from my really good
and then I have seventy six unread text messages. Now
that happens because you know, sometimes it's a group chests,

(06:58):
but there's like forty of these are just people. I
wish you could like mark something unread on your text
messages like you can your emails. Stressful, it's very stressful.
I have three sides messages Oh wow, gmails, text Jack,

(07:28):
who you go? You here from him? Next? Year's done
that one on a dating app because I'm really bad
with them. And I was on it's like bumbl or
some ship and somebody had messaged me and I messaged
them eight months later and I was like, you still
a single. So I'm looking back through them and it's
just stuff where it's like somebody texting me three words

(07:50):
that like I was able to read, like I didn't
need to open it. It was just like pre viewable. Yeah,
but obviously you didn't respond. That's true. I'm not a
huge communicator. I like to be in a cocoon of
h Yeah. So what is something Priscilla you think is overrated? Okay, look,

(08:16):
I'm gonna get a lot of smoke for this, and
I don't care. Um, I God, just don't come at me. Guys.
This is really just only gonna offend the l A population. Um.
But I just find that the food in l A
is over. I know. I'm sorry. I'm gonna agree with you.

(08:39):
I'm gonna waite. Where's the cliff? I'll jump right next
to you. I'll jump. Can we hold hands? Yes, we
can help. Let's intertwine our fingers because I'm gonna take
it a step up and say that l A Street
tacos are ass dry. They're dry, They're flavorless. I don't
know why y'all thought some onions and a little bit
of cilantro sam dry ass meat was gonna cut it.

(09:01):
But Hanty, it's terrible just because you gotta if anybody
can get in their car slam some food. Y'all getting
excited just because it's coming out the car, Like hell,
get out here in my car, dad, damn. I mean,
I completely agree with the taco take. That's absolutely right.
The tacos are dry as fucking flavorless. They've been putting

(09:21):
a little. They're so cheap with it too, Like I'm
from Texas and I know some texts Max okay, and
they're so cheap. The avocado juice that they'd be having
in the corner, it don't even be no damn glacamola.
They'd be like, here, poort, that's green juice on your tape.
The fuck just slime it just slim it a little bit.
I hate it. Here it's a radishes, some damn radishes

(09:42):
on my damn taco floor. I mean. And the thing
is that it's like that's the first thing people tell you, like, oh,
the food is so good out here, Like it's so good.
And then like, listen, I'm from New Jersey. I'm an
East Coast queen. Like we have fantastic food where I

(10:03):
come from. You know what I'm saying, Like, don't even
let me start talking about pizza right now, okay, Like
come on the pizza down. Here's a joke. And here
you from New Jersey. Um, I am from South Orange,
New Jersey. Are you from New Jersey? Yeah? Kind of.
My family moved around a lot, but every summer we
would go to the Jersey Shore. That was and my

(10:24):
favorite food in the world is from the Jersey Shore.
Manco and Manco pizza, real good, real good slice there
the Jersey Shore is ratchet Jack. You know, we didn't
even know. You haven't seen my barbed wire tattoo around?

(10:45):
Ye beat up the beat um what what's your What
do you feel like? Is the most overrated food? Is it?
Is it? The street tacos? Priscilla? Is it? You have
another thing that you feel Here's what here's my assessment
of l A. This is what my problem is with it.
It looks amazing, It always looks so pretty and cute,

(11:05):
and it's always so interesting and unique. You know what
I'm saying. These are not food. This is not how
I want to describe my food, you know. And then
and things are always tasty, but it's like it's never good,
you know what I mean. It's never that like flavorful.
It's always like, to me, it's a little bland, and
it's like the healthy version of everything, is what I

(11:28):
was saying, which just it's fine because I love healthy food.
Lacey can attest to that. You know, I love healthy food,
and I get I get what it's what it's about.
But it's like I just feel like l A, like
with most things, it's about the presentation presentation over like
the substance, the quality of it, which could be expanded
to everything about l A exactly exactly. Yeah, that's very

(11:51):
true because l A apartments. I was just talking to
somebody about this, How acid is we have too much
land for these apartments to look like we live in
New York City, Like how I got a shoebox, but
it's like a damn park that's miles long standing right
next to my shoe box. We have the land, like,
what is this? Like? They trying to put so many
units on top of each other now, and they'll charge
you so much money. I saw I've been recently looking

(12:13):
for condos to buy, and I saw a condo that
was four hundred and ten square feet and it was
going for one point six million dollars. I said, you
know what, I just want to schedule showing so I
can beat whoever's listing this ass that. I just want
to show up with the community and bite this have
a fisticuffs because this is ridiculous. I haint it here,

(12:38):
but I love it here. I'm never leaving. I'm never
leaving at all. And I love the food as well.
Uh there. The heat is my favorite thing about l
A used to be that it was like never too hot,
and like when it was hot, it was still a
dry heat and therefore there were no bugs. And that
has changed thanks to climate change over there. But I

(13:01):
still was tripping. I was like, am I getting mosquito
bites all the time? They haven't. Yeah, it's a it's
a completely new climate, thank you. sEH. Yeah. I went
to Palm Springs and was getting bit by mosquitoes and
I was like, what is this? And then I heard
the girls are bringing the West Nile, Like the girls
are bringing the West now here. West Nile is still

(13:23):
a thing. I'm done. I think everybody got jealous of COVID.
They were like, oh, she's getting so much attention. Girls. Yeah, like,
let's bring it back. What call Master Splinter, Let's go.

(13:45):
But I think I think the people are dying of
bubonic plague. Like it's always some very extreme circumstance where
they've eaten some sort of rodent that was sick with
it or something. Uh not not victim blaming with but
I'm just saying. I'm just saying anytime there's a bubonic

(14:06):
plague like death, I immediately look at him like oh no,
like we're all going to die, and it usually makes
me feel at least like it's not going to be
a complete outbreak in the immediate future. When I jack
because I was on a pot earlier talking about eating possum.

(14:27):
This is all about me just wanting to feel good
about my feel good about the fact that I'm not
going to die in the immediate future. And it is
a little bit of shade on anybody who eats possum. Definitely.
I got a Internet ad that was like people who
eat possum for Thanksgiving dinner recently, So I think the

(14:50):
Google algorithm listens to the daily zeitgeist. Uh, Priscilla, what
is something you think is underrated? Um? Okay, so hands
down my home state of New Jersey and down. I
just I feel like, especially you know now, being a transplant,

(15:10):
so people always have to tell you what they think
about where you come from. Um. So, I mean as
soon as somebody as soon as I tell somebody from
New Jersey, I just get dragged and I'm like, I
just I don't even know you. I get dragged to
filth and I mean I'm just like, Also, why would
you like people like, oh, you mean the armpit of America,

(15:31):
and I'm like, I was literally about to say that.
I was just about to say that to me. That's
where I come from, your garbage dump. Okay, disrespect, Do
you see this ship? This is what I'm talking about,
the gardens State? Lay? No, I think Jack is correct,
and that's what I and that was my point number

(15:53):
one in the landfill toill Okay, rude, okay. And now
here's the thing. First of all, as Jack so kindly illustrated,
our nickname is the Garden State. You don't get that
nickname if you're ugly and dirty. Gardens are pretty. But
can we just say that, like no one called you
all the Garden State, Like y'all gave y'allself that nickname.

(16:14):
And much like when anybody gives themselves a nickname, if
I give myself the nickname little Beautiful, and then I'm like,
everyone calls me a little beautiful and it's like no
one ever actually called me like that's what y'all did
with the Garden State. But you can all call me
a little beautiful because that's what I call myself. Oh
is that how I didn't even think about that? Is

(16:34):
that how do states name themselves? I thought that that,
and also it doesn't help that like the highway I
probably spent the most time on as the Garden State Parkway,
and the view from that is not very gardening. It's
not very virgant highway. What freeway have you been on?
Where the one on one? Basically it's basically the one

(16:58):
the pH is only good view highway. That's barely a highway.
Um right, I mean, but that was y'all trying to brand.
You were like, oh, the Garden State, but don't way
like we know what we're looking at. Okay, we're looking
at Okay, Okay. In conclusion, Okay, here's what I also,
I have to say that this political she's doing the

(17:19):
political thumb. Listen, everybody, Bill Clinton thumb. Yeah. Yeah. So
here's the thing. You know, you see, she Lacey lived
in New York for hot seconds, so she inherited their
disrespect of our state as well. And so but ask
New Yorkers as soon as they get money and should

(17:40):
start going right, where do they move to? Connecticut? Okay? Yes,
Connecticut as well, I'm sorry, And also New Jersey and
also New Jersey. Yeah, I love New Jersey. I love
people from New Jersey. I love culture about New Jersey. Uh,

(18:03):
And I fully understand all the criticisms or bullshit about
New Jersey. I don't I don't like it when exactly
like you're saying, when there's that knee jerk, like, oh,
I have New Jersey's the armpit of America. Ship but
anybody like people who are from New Jersey also talk
about New Jersey, right, But I mean, don't you talk.

(18:25):
I just dragged l A. I'm like, I'm going to
live here until I die. I mean, I think you
know we're entitled to do that, you know. Um, yeah,
I mean I'm from Texas, so I mean everybody's bigger everything, Okay, yeah,
you know, I mean we're always a good thing. Our

(18:48):
racism is also bigger, you know, and armed we do
everything the best. That also means we're the best at racism.
You go, you gotta take your good with your bad. Yeah.
And finally, Priscilla, what is a myth? What myth did
you google? For good? I read it on myself. Well this, okay,

(19:14):
I did google a myth, um, but it connects a
little bit to a little story for my family. So
that's why I was like, oh, this is I'm going
to bring this one up. Um, so it's very adjacent.
I should warn you. Um. But so the myth is that, um,
lightning does not strike twice in the same place. M

(19:36):
hm um. But the truth is it does. So if
you see some ship strike you can get struck there again. Yeah,
random thing, right, And also like lightning is drawn too
high like tall, pointy objects like that. That it's a
very aggressively wrong and like deadly myth that people like,

(20:01):
why is that a saying? Like it's just it it's convenient.
We needed a saying that meant bad things won't happen
like multiple times, but it is exactly wrong about lightning.
Lightning strikes the Empire State Building every time there's a
storm in New York like really oh yeah, like constantly
because it's sticking out above everything else around it. So yeah, well,

(20:24):
then maybe the phrase is accurate because it's just like
just like it's trying to say bad things don't happen,
you know, over and over again. It's like, yeah they do.
Look at COVID, we were all like, bad things wants
to keep happening us and they're like, oh they will,
so let's keep that phrase. But how does it tie
into your family. Oh so my um so on my

(20:45):
mom's I'm Haitian, Haitian on my mom's side. And so
we still have some cousins who are still in Haiti.
And so we have a cousin who both his dad
and his son were killed by lightning strikes like years apart. Ship,
isn't that crazy where in Haiti? Yeah, it happened in

(21:05):
hating insane. Were they standing in the same spot. They weren't.
That's that's what I said. It was adjacent. They weren't
standing in the same spot. But just like that, that
whole idea of like it can't happen twice, Like how
how fucked up is that? I feel like I gotta
fight my daddy when I get to heaven because like
he has something to do with that, He has something

(21:26):
to do with that. That's when your dad get a
hit put out on you above. Oh Ship, Well, that's
terrible that we keep it light here, hey always, how
can you not with our current news cycle? All right,

(21:46):
let's take a quick break and we'll come back in
a moment. And we're back, and we've had a mike
change mike issue occur. So, uh, Lacy is gonna be

(22:11):
coming with the lo fi sound effect for for the
rest of the episode. It's gonna sound like she's singing
for an indie rock band in the early two thousand's.
Uh yeah, all right, let's uh talk through some foccory

(22:32):
from the Trump administration. The president uh is encouraging people
to vote twice, or he did in a local news interview,
which is a felony if you do get caught voting twice,
um in North Carolina. He was saying it in the
context of if the system is so good, they will

(22:52):
catch you, at which point you will be a felon.
You will be guilty of a crime. But you know,
he was just throwing some ship out there that he
knew was going to cause chaos and just spitballing, just
spitballing stuffs. When I read it, and it was very

(23:15):
much like, Okay, well you should send in a mail
in ballot and then you should go to the polls
and try to vote, and then if they stop you,
then you know that your vote went through. And I'm like,
if they stop you, are they gonna call the girls
to come get you doing crime? Yeah, just like trying

(23:37):
to rob a bank. Like, so if they stop you.
You know, I have a gun. That's how you know
that your gun works is if you go and they
stop you. That's that's yeah, that's the only way to

(23:59):
tell know. So so everybody should do um and so
that O'Brien tweeted at CNN really disappointed in the way
that they were headlining because they were like it appears
that Trump may have told his voters to vote not
definitely a sprinkle of doubt and a lot of alleged least,

(24:23):
but what just tell the truth? I think, like what
what trips me out so much about this is like
I just can't believe we're still sitting here going like
this is fine, We're fine, this is fine. Like it's
almost like the media will be like, oh man, Trump,

(24:44):
it's like a think piece. Trump was about to say
or do something crazy, and then without fail, Trump does
and says that crazy thing, you know, and it's like
it's like they're It's like, I don't know, I just
feel like we are just getting played to the highest
level of I don't even know how. I mean, it's

(25:06):
just like he can't be stopped. That's the weird things
Like we have we have laws, and you know, I
love to this dude is impeached. Laws are suggestive. I mean,
I'm like, I follow the laws I want to follow. Um,
So I understand where Trump comes from in that sense.
But it's like, if you're the president, you're supposed to
be following the laws, and we tell you you're not,

(25:27):
and then everybody's like, well, that's all we can do
is write a strongly written letter like yeah, we're counting
on op eds being the thing that would keep him
in order. That was what it was up to this point.
And then a president came in and was just like, no,
I'm just gonna do crimes and not give a funk

(25:48):
what you write in op eds And in the r
n C. Melani's technically lawfully not supposed to give up
speech in the Rose Garden running for office, like or
from voting campaigning, like that's a law that we have.
And everybody was like, oh damn, they broke the log
in whe where, Well, nothing we can do. Bill Barr

(26:12):
was on Wolf Blitzer's show, Who All Power to CNN
Wolf Blitzer, he is our dumbest mainstream journalist. I don't
know if you guys have seen the Celebrity Jeopardy that
he was on. But it is just it's all it's
vacant in there. It is empty inside behind behind that

(26:34):
serious looking face. Uh and yeah, just tumble weeds it is.
But he does. And the beard that he keeps cropped
out like exactly like one eighth of an inch. Um,
it's very studied. He knows exactly how to appear like

(26:57):
a serious journalist. But he's just playing like an in
allegt like pecial costplay. Yeah glasses, Yeah, the glasses took
it over. But yeah, he's on there and trying to
pin down Bill bar and Bill bar is like just
won't admit to the idea that what the president said

(27:18):
when he told people to go out and commit crimes
to help him win the election was not okay. He's like, well,
I don't know what the local laws are, but what
he was trying to say, so you know, I don't like, what,
how can you know, you know, as the the chief

(27:42):
lawyer in the whole the head of being lawyers of
the United States, how could you know? Um, I don't know.
Maybe they can't, maybe they can vote twice somewhere, right,
But yeah, I mean to your point on the rnc
UH front, like it's you know, Pompeo is supposed to

(28:03):
be somebody who is not political, is completely nonpartisan, but
he was part he was giving speeches as part of
the RNC. That was like should have been totally unprecedented,
and like the biggest headline of the day that the
Secretary of State was, you know, throwing his weight behind

(28:26):
one of the candidates. But nobody gives a ship. And
the same things true of Bill Barr. He's supposed to
be in charge of, you know, keeping things honest, and
instead he is like chief lead blocker for Trump crimes.
So dang A Prude is a black man in Rochester

(28:48):
who was murdered by police in March, and the video
was just released, uh, and it's just very clear they
put something called a spithood on his head that has
been implicated in lots of deaths. Uh. And he his
autopsy found he died the you know, homicide vs. Fhixiation.

(29:14):
So and then we got a another angle on the
Digen Kizzie uh shooting. And you know, the police's version
of this that we were somewhat skeptical of was they
said that he dropped a gun and then went to
pick it up. And we now have. It's still very grainy,

(29:38):
but it seems like he's just running away and they
shoot him while he's on the ground twenty times. And
so there are protests, uh, and you know, people coming
out to demonstrate for police reform in Rochester and in
Los Angeles. But the Daniel Prude video is just such

(30:02):
a clear example of why police abolition and police defunding
is an emergency. It's not like a punitive thing where
people are just like, you know, well, they did bad,
so we need to take away their funding. It is
an absolute emergency that these untrained, armed, violent people are

(30:26):
being called out when there's a mental health crisis, and
that that's what is happening in the video, and they
you know, rather than de escalating, uh, he ends up dead,
they kill him. Yeah, And I think that maybe if
defunding the police sounds punitive to you, the way that

(30:46):
you can look at it is is redirecting those resources
towards people who can actually help you. You know what
I mean. Let's let's get homeless people off of the street,
because it's more expensive to have them on housed than
it would be to give them places to live. Like,
let's you know, if you're having a domestic violence dispute.
Let's bring someone to your house who's not going to
have a gun and escalate things like. There are just

(31:08):
so many situations where the police are not properly trained
to do what we're asking them to do, and that's
why this stuff is happening. Also, this is a weird
conspiracy theory. I'm I'm saying conspiracy theory here, guys, But
I've been seeing this float around on the Internet a
lot of Like so obviously, like the police know the
heats on when it comes to these like murders of
armed black men, especially ones we're running away and it's like,

(31:29):
why are they still doing it. I'm seeing a lot
of conspiracy theories that are like this, they're joining this
club called the Executioners, Like you kill somebody and then
you are a part of this elite group. Um that's
been floating around a lot, which I was like, wait,
are you talking about the I believe this in his
on dress I think he was in California, next teenager

(31:52):
and they said that the reason why he was murdered
was the guy was the police officer was trying to
get into this the police gang and get his ink,
his have to that proved that he killed somebody. That's
what you're referring to. Yeah, that's exactly what I'm referring.
Is that that's real, right or no? I mean, it's
just something that people are saying. So I can't confirm

(32:12):
that it's true or not. I know that that that's
what they were trying to charge him with. So perhaps
in Los Angeles at least, that there's a police gang, um,
but police gangs. There is a there is a police
gang called the Executioners in Los Angeles County Sheriff's department.
Um that it was anonymously reported by a sheriff's deputy. Yeah,

(32:34):
a police officer who was like, there's this gang that's
been kind of known for a while for years, that
this is a thing, and um, it has been implicated
in a lot of these shootings. Um, but yeah, it
is the there. The police's response to to any criticism

(32:58):
has been complete, like acting like petulant children, like who
are having temper tantrums? Uh? And you know, so I
think there I can easily believe there's some systemic like
gang initiation thing going on. I can also believe that
it's just lashing out because they feel like they're beyond

(33:21):
reproach and the fact that people are criticizing them makes
them like lean in, Um, just looking at that New
York Police Union press conference where oh my god, that
was insane and thank you girl, And that's corny. And
that's the thing about that's the thing about the mythos,

(33:44):
if you will, of like you know, the what do
you call it, like the not the American dream, but
that like you know, I'm an American and not you know,
I fight for my country, and you know, like it's
like it doesn't even feel genuine when you see them
doing it feels it's like manufactured emo sin, you know.
And it's like, like you said, corny, like what are
you talking about? I just wanted to be like, dog,

(34:07):
what are you talking about? Like nothing substantive and it's
like you're forcing tears out and like it just was
so messy and and and just so clear that like
they just they don't they have no intention of making
any change, Like they just doubled down on their trash.
And also why do we see police officers. I think

(34:27):
there's just been so many years of copaganda and I
think I might have mentioned it on the show, but
I just like had an audition coming for a very
prestigious television show to play a cop, and I was like,
fuck the police, like I love you all, but the police,
which was hard for me because I was like, damn,
you know, like the coins could be cute, the claim
could be cute, and it's like I'm auditioning still, but
I was like, no, I cannot glorify and be a
likable copy anymore, Like fuck that. Why don't we give

(34:50):
you know? I see so many comments on Twitter and
online in different places like why don't you just like
respect the police, and like they should have just complied
And Amanda Steals how to post on her page recently
where she was saying, you know, everyone always tries to
tell folks like they should comply with the police and
and and that's why they're getting shot by the police.

(35:11):
But it's like, why aren't the police walking into situations
ready for people not wanting to comply, considering don't nobody
want to go with the police? But they are. But
that's the point is that they are, right, like you're training,
Like that's like training one on one, Like nobody wants
to go with the po po like you be prepared.

(35:33):
But that's but that's also but that's also part of
their defense. Right, So it's like that too, that double
sided coin where it's like they act like they're surprised,
but also like you, that's also your excuse for why
you come in so hopped up? Right, is that, like
you know, um, everybody's coming to get me. Everybody's out
to get me nobody, right, So which one is it?

(35:53):
Is it that everybody's out to get you or is
it the opposite of that? And it's like so so
too many times with white people that it's not that
you're scared, it's just you want to murder black folks. Like,
how are white folks shooting forty rounds at you and
you're taking them into custody? How did that happen? You
know what I mean? But then you thought that a
black man who was running away from you baby was

(36:14):
gonna get a gun, and then you shot him twenty
times on the ground, Like that doesn't make any sense.
And I'm tired of white folks trying to tell us
that we need to respect the police. The police are
just regular ask people at a regular ask job. I
paid the salary of the police, and they are just
like the garbage man. I gotta comply to the garbage
man because they worked for the city. The funk like,

(36:36):
these are just people who have jobs. I don't want
to them all and be like I gotta comply with
the girl work in the counter. Like everyone should have
the same level of respect. You don't. You're not above
me if you're a police officer. And we've trained everyone
to believe that, well not everyone, girl, because white people
are disrespectful as hell, the police officers. I've seen it.
And you know, I used to have, like I used

(36:57):
to have a like a secondary white privilege in my
had like I sort of growing up in like a
predominantly white town. You know, I would see my white
friends doing all kind of I thought I could do
that ship too, you know, and I did, And you know,
I did get away with a lot of ship with
that mentality at times, you know, but there were definitely
times where the buck fucking stopped, you know. Um. But yeah,
like I'm like, no, white people are not like, like,

(37:20):
oh my god, I can't tell you how many white
people I have seen curse out cops. You could like
funk out of here. I mean, just look at how
the people in Michigan does militia people responded to the
local government asking them to wear masks. They went into
the state House fully armed to the teeth and you know,

(37:40):
we're pulling ship that would have caused if they were
not white, would have caused the entire you know, local
police force to just you know, start the next civil war.
It's we know that the police exist to oppress us
and to uphold white supremacy. So that's either're saying, you

(38:01):
all just need to comply because those are the people
that we paid to keep you out because down you
know right all right, Well, speaking of white people not
complying with ship surge, uh, Sturgis happened not too long ago,

(38:28):
and somebody is dead because of it. Now, six year
old man who you know, he basically went to the
I see you right after returning from Sturgist. Sturgis is
this big biker rally where everybody went went to bars,
didn't wear masks. Buy an end to that new flavor

(38:48):
of toxic masculine idiot. It's like, if I die die,
I don't give a ship. And it's like, well, you're
killing yourself, so that's not cool for your loved ones.
But also you're killing the people around you, you're spreading
the disease. So now hundreds of cases have been traced
to Sturgis. Uh, this first death has now been recorded.

(39:10):
He was old and had pre pre existing conditions, so uh,
I guess he doesn't count according to the Adam Corolla rule,
where um, we're all idiots if we if if we
worry about the elderly and people with pre existing conditions. Um,
but yeah, I mean this, it's like, this is exactly

(39:33):
what we knew was going to happen. Uh. So it's
sort of strange to be still talking about it, but
it's this is the world we live in now that
it's sort of watching this thing happen in slow motion
that we know is going to happen because science exists
and is real. And yeah, it's just this weird cadence

(39:57):
where it's like and now that story that we said
was gonna happen right now is happening right now. That's
like what I was saying about the Trump thing, Like
I think that's the world we live in now. It's
like we we all know we just said this was
going No, we're just gonna let it happen. Okay, well
you can't do anything about it. Also, coronavirus is like
not a cute death, Like you can't be around acute

(40:20):
life family. You have to they intubate you. That's very,
very uncomfortable, Like nothing about it. It's not like you're like,
you know, peacefully going to sleep, you know, at eighty four.
Like it's like a kind of it's traumatic. It's a
traumatic way to go. And so it's weird to me
to see so many of these um sixty plus or
honestly any age, because we don't know how it's going

(40:42):
to affect your your body, you know, your organs afterwards.
Even if you survive it, it could become a pre
existing health condition for you having had corona. But it's
weird to me that people just like, you know what,
I really need to stand in this bar with all
these leather clad dudes, and then I need it so
bad I want a respirator for it. Yeah, you know,

(41:03):
whether you can rub at home and whiskey you can
drink at home, Like that's what that's what throws me
so hard. I'm like for a party. Yeah, but you guys,
smash mouth was there in that case. That's that's something
you can't really replicate. They were saying like fun corona

(41:25):
or something on stage, right, Yeah, yeah, they were like
and yeah they said fun coronavirus. It wasn't clear if
they were just mad at the actual virus or if
they're mad at anything that was inhibiting their ability to
all stand next to each other. Imagine dying for smash mouth. Yeah,
I mean imagine dying for you. Remember that that that

(41:47):
that party up on Mholland like two weeks ago or
three weeks ago, where they shot up the party and
two people die or one or two people died, and
it was like it was in the middle of COVID
and like it was like two hundred people in a
mansion party on Malholland. And then if that wasn't bad enough,
they were shooting. Like I was like before all party,

(42:08):
y'all was it worth it? Right? Fuck? All right? Well,
let's take another break and we'll come back and talk
about more awful ship and we're back, uh and up

(42:32):
top real quick. The rewatch for this weekend. So Jamie
Loftus is going to be my co host on Monday's episode.
She has chosen to rewatch the movie The Frozen Ground. Hey,
Daily Zykas fans, this is your boy DJ Daniel. What
Jack just told you is a bold faced lie. Jamie

(42:53):
Loftus will not be watching Frozen Ground. She's gonna watch
boss Baby. So if you want to get down with
what young Zamboni has watched, watch Boss Baby on Netflix.
Now back to the show, um, and then I am
going to rewatch the Smurfs because it is a favorite
of my children. Uh and also because I I want

(43:18):
to hurt myself. I don't know. I don't know why
I'm watching the Smurfs. Uh, It's looks very bad, but
it is number two. I have to understand why it
is number two. So I will be watching that. Have
you guys seen the Smurfs? Um that like that new
like the new version, like the digital the digital one
right where it's Neil Patrick Harris and then they look

(43:41):
like they're in the Blue Man group. Well, so they
come through. It's like cartoon mixed with reality. So like
live action. My kids call anything live action adult movies,
which is weird because then they're like, yeah, we're watching
adult movies around their teacher jets like yeah, keep telling

(44:04):
us on Zoom school that they're watching adult movies exactly.
But Mary Poppins to them is adult movies. So um
cartoons are kade movies. That's so cute, adorable. Alright, guys,
let's talk about Ron Jeremy. Twenty more sexual assault charges
filed against him. He's being accused of sexually assaulting thirteen

(44:26):
different women since two thousand four. I don't know, Like
I was just looking through all these like getty images
of him, like when he was on the party scene,
which was like up until a year ago, but there's
just this like very like early two thousands guys who
were in entourage an American pie scene that I don't know,

(44:50):
it's like they were I ran into Ron Jeremy once
in the Bank of America and he was creepy. He
stared at me for an inappropriate amount of time, Like
it was like we don't want somebody staring at you.
And then you look like they're probably not staring at me,
and then you look again and like they still looking
at me. Okay, they're definitely looking at me. It was

(45:12):
very much that where it was just like he was
just gonna look as long as he wanted, and I
was like this is very weird. Um, and I realized
he was Ron Jarman, and I was like, oh, this
is even worse. So I like got my ship and
like tiptoed out of there. But so I believe like
he's a creep. Oh I mean yeah, I mean he
was always even before this, we considered him to creep.

(45:34):
But I just the thing that really takes me about
this story is like, and it really speaks to like
what sexual assault really is about. Right, It's about power
and you know, control. But it's like, dog, you're like
a porn star. You've been a porn star since the seventies,
Like I don't it wasn't really that challenging for you

(45:56):
to find to to have sex like that. You had
to that, Like it just it just just speaks to
that whole power dynamic where it's like, but you could
you could have You've probably had sex with hundreds of
people and can have sex probably any time you want,
any day of the week, right, but you had to
go grete people. Yeah, I mean it's that whole like

(46:19):
Ron Jeremy like sort of broche It was enabling this ship.
You know, it was like seen as like cool, like
by dudes who eat at Pink Taco or like whatever,
you know, like that fucking seen and everyone knows like
he's well and down or whatever. So I think men

(46:42):
are always like very weirdly excited by that. They're like, oh, yeah,
that's cool. He's a cool guy. Just because he has
appendage that's larger than normal. It's weird and gross. So
but I mean he also wasn't Ron Jeremy was in
that time where so many women were being taken advantage of.
I have friends who are like I watched I made

(47:04):
a story of which I really loved. Um. It's very
it's by Michael Cole. It's about sexual assault. It's difficult
to watch. It's not like a feel good show, but
it does have its funny moments, and she's really good
with the subject matter. But I was talking to friends
afterwards and they were like, yeah, I watched that show,
and then I realized, like, oh, I've been assaulted. It
was just so common the things that were happening to
women that we didn't some of us didn't even know,

(47:26):
like oh, you're not supposed to the kind them off
during sex without telling me, or you're not supposed to
violate my consent in all these ways, and we didn't
know so you know, and sometimes you did know, but
it was so socially acceptable for men to press you
for sex and you know, doing coporate things. Yeah, so
it's like, of course, it's so many people are gonna
come out now and be like, oh, we feel empowered

(47:46):
because one, there's been a movement that's uplifted women's voices
in a way that's ever happened before. And too they're like, oh,
that horrible time where I felt bad afterwards, that was assault.
Like yeah. The Jeremy accusations range from a child at
a party in two thousand four, fifteen year old child, uh,

(48:07):
and then they go up to as recently as New
Year's Day of So it's you know, scary, horrifying. Ship.
I'm just always so mystified by these men who are powerful.
And I mean, granted, you know his power is subjective,
but I mean the guy, you know, the fact that
we even know about him, like he wasn't bigous when

(48:29):
you know he's from the seventies or whatever, you know,
but that's how lasting his his persona has been. But
it just always trips me out with these powerful men
and people women. You know, but it's like you already
isn't that why people work so hard to get the
power of the money so that they can just like
so people want to have sex with you, and so
people want to sleep with you, so they throw themselves

(48:51):
like the which is like gross and like what Like,
I think there are people who are prep that. That's
one of the things that we keep coming up against
as we kind of pay close attention to American culture,
uh for this show, is that there's something very predatory

(49:16):
that lends itself to being good at capitalism that also
lends itself to being an absolute like criminal and monster, right,
because if you're good at capitalism, then you're probably an
excellent predator. It's also weird to me that so many men, like,
even if you don't consider yourself a pedophile, will like
hang out with pedophiles. Like how many people were hanging

(49:39):
out with Epstein knowing exactly what was going on even
if they didn't touch on nobody, you're still a weirdo
for being there. Malcolm Gladwell, Thomas Peper, Malcolm Gladwell, Yeah,
he was on the on the low lead Express on
the flight lugs. I know, I know, yeah, Wow, that's

(50:04):
really what, Like he's that cool? Of a guy. And
that's like seeing anybody be like, hey, that dude a
petal and I'm like, oh, let me go pick it
with them, Like I don't want to kick it with
his weird ass, right. I wonder how many people like
who have been, you know, on Jeffrey Epstein's Island and
all that, Like I wonder, like what if it was

(50:25):
crazy and it was like if you were there, you
were participating, Like what if that's really what the deal is?
So every person who's ever been there was involved in
some way? Do you. I can't imagine a version of
reality where these people go there and don't know the reputation,
Like we all knew the reputation, like you know, just
like if you read a single article about this dude,

(50:48):
like after the year two thousand, I think eight, like
he was a known quantity and these people were, you know,
hang with him. I'm like, it is an open secret,
Like I I don't know how any I can't think
imagine any version of reality where they weren't at least
fully aware that they were doing something like shady or

(51:13):
like we're taking a risk right at the very least.
I wonder about Naomi Campbell a lot, because she's been
seen in a lot of photos with them, and some
of the assaults that were um were like adjacent to
things that she was doing. Like one of the girls
said that she was assaulted by the French hotel connoisseur,

(51:34):
that guy who own the hotels or whatever that mobil
while she was waiting to go to Namy Campbell's birthday party.
So it's like Namy Campbell and she's in a lot
of photos. There's photos of her with one of the
girls who said that Prince Andrew assaulted her, Like it's
just too many photos were Naomi's like, hey, what you're
doing over here? Here? She was pretty young at the time,

(52:01):
and you know, she's a supermodel. I can't say that
if somebody was like get on this private jet, like
you think, I'm not going to pack my litto and
get on the jet. I get the file. So maybe
she didn't know, but I don't know. Jet was just
too many photoshoos. But I think I don't know. She's

(52:22):
also a woman who I don't know if she's not
being directly implicated and making the things happen, Like maybe
we prioritize the men who were actually doing that Yeah, No,
there's plenty of men. I'm not trying to throw Naomi
into the bus. I was like she was one of
those people that was very interesting. Yeah. Yeah, alright, sort

(52:46):
of a correction, Uh this next story. Uh, we we've
been talking about how there's a lot of stories like
the New York Times was writing about at the Washington
Post was writing about this idea that American cities were
emptying out, people were moving to the suburbs. I was
talking about it as more of a part of an
overall trend we were seeing where like popular culture about

(53:08):
how like the country is better than uh, you know,
the city was proliferating. And also there were like these
Trump uh style like video games that had the ethos
of you know, white supremacy and Trump's America kind of
built into them. So there is sort of this misconception

(53:31):
that's being spread by these by the New York Times,
in Washington Post and MSNBC, um where they they want
to claim that like the cities are all emptying out
because people are, you know, scared because of the pandemic
and the uprisings, and it's not true. It's basically true

(53:52):
of only Manhattan, but not Brooklyn. Like people aren't leave
they're leaving Manhattan and San Francisco because they were already
before the pandemic. Leaving Manhattan and San Francisco because those
cities are overpriced to the point of like nobody can
live there, like literally nobody can live there anymore. But

(54:13):
everywhere else, they're not seeing any reality to the idea
that people are are leaving urban areas for the suburbs.
It's just a misconception that's probably being spread by the
fact that a lot of the media is in are
people who live in Manhattan and have rich friends who

(54:34):
can just like relocate to New Jersey for instance, where
O'Brien let me let them know, there you go. I mean,
is there going to be a time where the market
is going to turn in Manhattan? Like the prices have
just been climbing so far upwards, it's like, is there
gonna be a time where it plummets? Like you know

(54:56):
what I mean, because it feels like it's just too expensive. Yeah,
I think it's starting to, but it was already starting
to before before COVID. It's just like a price correction.
Mm hmm. I think, like, um, I mean, isn't San
Francisco more expensive than New York. Yeah, I think it's

(55:16):
the most expensive, the most expensive, so I mean New
York still has a little buffer, right there, you go,
because San Francisco is being fueled by yeah type nightmare people. Right. Yeah.
There's also this go ahead, oh go ahead. I was
just gonna say, there's this really interesting article by this

(55:40):
guy who was contacted by tech billionaires who have created
these doomsday bunkers. This is before COVID or anything, but
they had created these bunkers that they were contacting him
to what they call water test, which is basically like
see that that make sure that this has every angle

(56:03):
covered so that when like money is no longer a thing,
they can like live self sufficiently in these solar powered
bunkers for eternity essentially. And he so he wrote about
that a couple of years ago, and they were kind
of tying it to the fact that society does seem
to be crumbling because of the Trump administration. But he

(56:27):
was also writing about how in COVID he's starting to
see people withdrawal into their little tech bubbles. It was interesting.
It was like the whole tech industry is so inherently
misogynistic and like built by men for men. He talks
about an early experience he had with I think Timothy

(56:49):
Leary where he was looking at the M I T
Media Lab and was like, why is there not a
single woman on the board of this of this lab?
And then he looked at the technology they were creating
and he was like, that's so that makes so much sense.
They're just trying to recreate the womb. It's like the
one like male drive is to like get rid of

(57:11):
any friction, any discomfort because men are ultimately like have
much lower pain threshold and discomfort threshold than women do.
And yeah, it's just an interesting and now that COVID
is happening and there's like all this conflict around, people
are withdrawing into these virtual bubbles that were designed by

(57:32):
these like all male media lebs, you know, a decade ago. Um,
It's just it's so weird how much mint hate women.
And I feel like the tech conglomerate is like the
place where they really hate when we hate us over there,
who would just spent the whole life beating on the

(57:52):
little keyboards, just getting mad, getting mad, and nobody would
love them. All we need is your bitch, right, we're
woming some lips. We want lips that feel soft and
just take the things. It's like, No, you need human
interaction with a woman. You do if you're attracted to them. Um,

(58:17):
Also we're humans. You can just be friends as well
in addition to only sex, and we can definitely not
have any opinions. I just think that if you work
in a company where there are no women, I can
guarantee you that your ship is not fire. That's exactly

(58:37):
about to say. I was like, you wouldn't have no
event on this is trash, would have just one woman
who you just run everything by, like, hey, girl, tell
us what's wrong. Here's the thing, here's the thing of
this is the thing. Okay, girl, tell us what's wrong.
And then that's how they would ask. Um. That's the
thing about the patriarchy. And that's the thing about any

(58:57):
kind of oppressive system. It ends up sucking the people
who created it themselves. Right, So like so like the patriarchy,
like y'all like no disrespect to men, actually all the
disrespect to mens. Okay, but like you know, this is
the analogy I always used for this. I think it's
something like some crazy number like thirty or forty percent

(59:20):
of men who are color blind. I think it's something
like that compared to like I think it's like I
want to say, like eight percent of women who are colorblind.
So I always say, like, y'all can't even see the
colors in front of you, Like you can't even see
what's right in front of you, and you're and you're
preventing half of the population who can see all that,

(59:41):
like we women, And this has been proven a bunch
of times that like we just are just more tuned
to detail, like we see here everything, We know everything
that's going on, and that's really not a biological thing.
That's because we've been trained up to do that, you know.
And so it's like you guys, it's like, so you
you put all these you know, when we wonder why

(01:00:01):
the world is the way it is, it's because of that.
You've cut out half of the population. So you know,
you're losing that amount of creativity, that intelligence, that ingenuity,
and then y'all are not even the best at doing stuff,
like you can't run a house. You can be like
you can get y'all are just messy, And it's like

(01:00:21):
we're here and you don't utilize what we have to
offer and all because you want to keep the power.
And what does that do? It creates the world that
we're in now, where we got oil spills every five days,
where you know, the the ozone layer is you know,
is opening and closed. And depending on what COVID is doing,
you know, do we stay in the house or do
we not? You know what I mean? We have like

(01:00:43):
every like if you can't run a household, how can
you run a business? How can you run a country?
How can you run a country? How can you run
a world? You know, it's one in twelve men are
color blind in the world and one and two hundred
women are color blind in the world. So the statistic
it stands even with your redrigs, like, yeah, it's wild.

(01:01:07):
And when I heard that, I was like, wait what
y'all can't even see the colors? I was like, and
I'm competing against you know, I have to fight like
ten times. It's hard to be taken seriously for people
to listen to me. And I'm like, and I can
see the colors? Is that the tech woman flex Like
if you're working in tech as a woman, like a
guy challenges and you're like, what color is that ball?

(01:01:29):
Tell everybody right now in front of the class, right,
we don't want to shame people for their disability. But
it was like, I mean, we could help you, We
can help Yeah, you know that's the point, and you're
not tapping to this resource. And you wonder why just
just just from the fundamental aspect of imbalance, like it's
just imbalanced, and so that's artificial enforced balance yet exactly exactly, Yeah,

(01:01:54):
I think a lot of it goes back to you know,
sexual insecurity and you know biblical times where they just
decided we're going to make this whole thing about like
finding ways to make women do what men want to do, right,
And they were working for a while. They had us,
they had us in the first half, not gonna you know,

(01:02:17):
you know, you know, oh I got a myth. There
you go, let's hear it, am I late um, I
got a myth y'all. So you know, you know, there's
the myth of and you may have heard of this,
but like the hunter gather Like why you know, back
when we were hunter gatherers, why was it that men
went to hunt and women stayed home to like do

(01:02:39):
the berries and whatever, I don't know. They muys tell
you about picking berries right, get them, mother fucking berrierries
do the berries. So, you know, the myth is that
you know, well, men were strong, men were faster men,
and that's why they would go out hunting. But the real,
the true reality behind that is this, and this is
from an anthropologist, that when women when when men would

(01:03:02):
go out right hunting party of like six, if three,
if only three came home, Um, it would be sad,
it would be horrible. Everybody will be sad. But eventually
village life would go back to normal, you know. But
if a hunting party of six women went out and
only three came back, the village would fall apart. And
that's because women contributed so fucking much. And so as

(01:03:25):
a result of that, Like, so we have this myth
that it's like, you know, strength and that's why you know,
guys go out there, and but the truth is that
that you know, uh, hunter gatherer societies recognized the importance
and the value of women to the society and how
integral we were and if you got if you lost
one of us, you would feel the impact. I mean,
it's genetically encoded that if if uh, like basically, hungry

(01:03:50):
mothers give birth to more daughters because in a time
of greater hunger, like where fewer people are surviving, daughters
are like women are the more precious, you know, the
more important valuable human being. And so when there's hunger,
the human body just naturally switches to giving birth to daughters.

(01:04:10):
And it's not like the human bodies thinking that it's
that that is what is better for the survival of
the species and therefore that is what has come down
to us through evolution. That's so dope, damn. I mean right,
Like Priscilla, it has been so fun having you on

(01:04:31):
the daily Ze. Guys, where can people find you and
follow you? Okay, you can follow me at Priscilla Davies
actor on i G and on Twitter. I'm qot desert
as in Queen of the Desert, oh ship. Uh And
is there a tweet or some other work of social
media you've been enjoying? Um? Yeah, I got it sweet

(01:04:55):
that I really liked Missy Elliott didn't write girls, girls,
girl alls, get that cash, whether it's nine to five
or shaking your ass in two thousand and two, for
people to still be shaming sex workers in MM hmm,
I love it's the words. Yeah, shout out to the

(01:05:18):
sex workers. Uh sorry about Bella thorne Um. You can
can find me at d I v A l A
c I Diva Lacey on all platforms. I have a
podcast called Scam got Us. If you like scams and comedy,
come on over the year, and then tweets that I've
been joining. Here's what I said, y'all, I just made
five cents on my first stock. I don't see how

(01:05:40):
y'all do that nine to five ship better tap in.
There's like a bunch of people underneath posting their Acorns accounts.
They're like, I've just got three cents on my other time,
like I'm a billionaire, or like I don't want to
pay taxes. Here's another one. This is from Eileen Mary O'Connell.

(01:06:00):
She says, thinking about the time that I said I
was distantly related to Marie Curry and a guy explained
to me it's pronounced Mariah Carey. And Marian Carr retweeted
it and said she has two Nobel prizes, I have
two Diamond albums were practically the same person. And then
one more. This is from executive Chef calls he says

(01:06:22):
versus track for track who y'all Got, And it's a
picture of Steve Smith from American Dad and Stewie Griffin
from Family Guy, and then Steve wins Steve has hit
his bobs and it's encourage you to find that thread
if you want to like laugh because people are just
putting down all the music videos that Steve's ever done.

(01:06:42):
They're good. You can find me on Twitter at Jack
Underscore O'Brien a couple of tweets. I've been enjoying image
and tweeted, oh you're human, name every picture with stop
signs uh, and then Sophia Cadogan tweeted anyone else ripped
their mask off? They get into the car like they've
just finished a disappointing surgery on Grey's Anatomy. Uh. You

(01:07:09):
can find us on Twitter at daily Zeitgeis for at
the Daily zeit Geys on Instagram, we have a Facebook
fan page on a website daily zeitgeis dot com where
he post our episodes and our footnotes where we linked
off to the information that we talked about in today's episode,
as well as the song we ride out on and
super producer Ana Hosnia is keeping the reggae vibes going

(01:07:33):
with glass House by Collie Buds. Uh. So we will
ride out on that. Uh. The Daily Zeitgeis is a
production of I Heart Radio. For more podcasts from my
Heart Radio is the I Heart Radio app Apple podcast.
Wherever you listen to your favorite shows, that is going
to do it for this morning. We'll be back this

(01:07:54):
afternoon to tell you what's trending and more. Talktail down
by while are you wean on your feelings? I said
the greed mana smoke bacloni in the street. Mess said
no go some people only one feet from them woke.
You are feeling of your life? Forget you ain't on
your field upon your young ladyer does yard less, See

(01:08:16):
through your figxed mile last before the bad mess, see
through your your not real notice from the start and
ask me one one shot. Well, I'm an another lift,
one more day. Day. You live in a glass of scuffling, baby,
I'm gonna live

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