Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to this episode of the
Weekly Zeitgeist. Uh These are some of our favorite segments
from this week, all edited together into one NonStop infotainment
laugh stravaganza. Uh yeah. So, without further ado, here is
(00:22):
the Weekly Zeitgeist. Miles. We are at thrilled, blessed, fortunate
to be joined in our third seat by one of
the very kings of culture himself. He is an award
winning podcast host, a writer, producer, actor, voice artist, and
even though it's not one of his written credits, he
is one of my favorite singers. He is the brilliant
(00:43):
and talented jerkis Now. It's a rare condition this day
and night to read in a good news on the
jockey's neil page, love and tradition of the grand designs.
(01:05):
Some people say it's even harder to find. Well, then
there must be so special glue inside these jockey's walls,
because all I see it's the power of dreams, real
love bursting out of jockey seems. Days go by, Jack,
(01:30):
he says his name, and this is the zide gang.
Don What up niggas? Oh Hello, hello, hello, oh oh
gotta get you with that family matters gotta get you
(01:51):
know what I'm saying. The Steve Rkle Show is what
we called it back in the day. Everybody is the
Urkle Show. Yeah yeah, man, oh man, yo, man, I
gotta get back to the crib urcle coming on. Man.
Can you imagine that those other actors felt like nigga,
(02:12):
I'm on the show too, and like McCary dating someone famous?
Now who Darius McCrary exactly? Oh, Eddie Winslow, he is.
I forget I saw I saw in the news he
was he was dating somebody. He got to come up. Man.
Good for Eddie Man, good for Eddie Wes. I feel
like he's always finding ways to stay in the news
(02:35):
or people are always invoking Darius McCrary, so I can't
remember what it was, and I'm like, I'm glad I
heard his name again. Yeah, yeah, shout out Eddie wins Low.
I also want to say, you know, I just realized something.
You know, whenever you know, lately, when I've been coming on,
I always do the little songs and ship. Also shout
out to uh dB at Black Night on five coming
(02:56):
through with the idea for the Family Matters theme song.
Whenever I come on you know, I always start by saying,
what's up, niggas, how y'all doing? And I want to
I want to be clear because I feel like, you know,
I'm not clear that I'm only talking to black people
when I say that I haven't greeted anyway on the street.
Yeah that one podcast. Now, man, I'm I'm talking to
(03:20):
only black people. I've never spoken to white people on
this show. I've only spoken to to your black listeners.
So let me let me let me introduce myself to
your white listeners. Hello everyone, Hello, all my friends out there, race.
How you doing? How you doing? Jack O'Brien. I hope
you guys are having a wonderful day. I hope it's
(03:41):
a beautiful day for y'all. I was starting to feel
left out. Well not anymore, man. I'm speaking to you now. Man,
I'm speaking to everybody, speaking to everybody. Now. You see
my text messages on the past episodes when Jack would
be talking to kiss like, I don't remember asking him
a fucking thing. I don't remember who was that? Man?
I didn't I wanted talking to that. You asked me
(04:02):
to come on and talk to you, Miles. You're like,
look that white guy talks so much on your show.
Don't get it. Don't get it. I don't like it.
But you know what, it's a new leafe, you know,
is my end of year resolution start talking to all
the white all the white list. Yes, yes, well we
we appreciate it. You know, it is important that we
(04:24):
we feel included. You know, you are man, You're important.
White people, you're important to don't let anybody people you
are seeing. You're seeing white folks you've seen and we
love you. Might get to the arcle. Thing made me.
I was thinking of that just this morning because Ridley
(04:46):
Scott was like making statements about how about superhero movies?
We might get to it a little later on, but
he referred to Blade Runner as Harrison Ford. He was like, yeah, no,
I made some I've had some great superheroes Alien with
Sigurdian Weaver. One would be fucking Gladiator and one would
(05:07):
be Harrison Ford. Oh love it? Yeah, why not? Put
in practice? Is any Blade Runner? But it sounds like
a black elder when you're just going off, just reducing
it to like the person. Yeah, yeah, you're watching Harrison
Ford again. Okay, Yeah, Hey, I wish I was this
Harrison Ford. Oh, man, which Harrison Ford you watching the
(05:31):
one with the hat or the one in Space Jones
or Star Wars Billy D or the one without Billy D.
The one with the without Billy Now, I don't watch
that one, man, I'll watch that one. I don't watch that.
An snakes on that one, noting with all those snakes.
(05:52):
There's one guy that wrote that song and step by
step and I think full house. Yeah, and he's like
a music teacher in Connecticut. Now he did perfect trades too,
didn't he? I think? So. I just think of him
like what was his career? Like a failed like blues singer,
and he's like, fuck, you want me to make a
theme song? Fun? What? He just sat down and like fine,
(06:20):
fun it condition And you're like, whoa what, Okay, we
figured out you can't quite chart on the radio theme music.
You fucking nailed it. Yeah, yeah, that dude. That dude
was like an AU tour of like there's no reason
that those songs should have all sounded the same, but yeah,
(06:40):
they're just like, yeah, this guy sound like this dude
had it locked. That's yeah. And we didn't even care
they sounded the same. We was like, no, those are
different homes and they all the same, the same, all
the same. He did step by step too. I think
Jesse Frederick, did you say that? Yeah, Jesse Frederick perfect
(07:03):
Valerie Valerie, full House family matters, Valerie and Valerie's family.
Hey did this spend off to you know? I love him,
love that form. Yeah. I wonder if Uncle Jesse, the
musical uncle on Full House was named for him. Oh
maybe question that has never been asked. But well, we gotta,
(07:25):
We're gonna, we gotta get him on this show. I've
always had this dream, like since at every place I've
worked and was like, we gotta talk about Jesse Frederick,
the most underrated musician of all time, who gave us
these theme songs. And I remember looking for him. I
found out that I think he lives in like Massachusetts
or something, based off a YouTube comment that said that
this guy was his like music teacher. So wow, Like,
(07:49):
if y'all know Jesse Frederick, tell him is looking for him. Yeah,
we need him, tell him. I want to meet him too.
I want to meet him to absolutely, man, that would
be amazing, just to riff with him. I'll sing a
song with man. He's probably got a bunch of like students.
Why do you try this one on? Always claim the
(08:13):
same God, it starts the same way as every other song. Okay, okay,
I'll get it alright, alright, that's fair enough. That's sound
a little bit as days go by. How about this one?
Do do do Dude? Do do Do Do Do do? Okay? Well, fuck, alright?
(08:35):
You know what you know? Oh he's on Twitter, be
willing to have one of his U student song just
to like hear what he's like in class. That would
be you know, that would be dope, Like does he
just that would be dope rock with that information? Like
from he has a lot of hot takes on Tupac,
a lot of don't ruin this for me, but don't
(08:58):
ruin this for me. We can we record the whole song,
We record the whole time, but not even like a
problematic way. He's just like, Yo, he's more. He did
more energy. If you're worn by mcs, it's not by lyrics.
Ok yeah, okay, bad opinions, but not you know, problematic.
America's shout out to that man, Caitlin. We like to
(09:22):
ask our guest, what is something from your search history? Oh,
the last couple of things I was googling, like Horus,
who was a Greek mime in ancient Rome who was
also a court assan. So for the podcast and then
also parts for nineteen seven Nissan that I guess I'm
(09:45):
responsible for. So that's been a journey. Yeah, who's like
you said, like Horus is the name? Yeah, like Chorus,
which I don't I haven't talked to. I'm not confident
that's how you pronounced it. But like she's Yeah, she
was awesome. She was born sort of the the End
of the Republic. She was a lover to Mark Anthony
sort of you know when he was Anthony Okay, yeah, yeah, yeah, no, no,
(10:09):
not that that'd be great, but no, no, no, no,
it's great. So she's um yeah, and she rose to
prominence and was like treated as a respectable woman and
Sistero had a problem with it and told her to
shut her hormouth, and Mark Anthony was like, you know,
I've done what I can and she disappeared. Her mystery
so her story, so Cistero was like, we don't want
(10:31):
somebody with some we don't need sex positivity in her. Yeah, absolutely,
you can't be. You can't be forcing my wife to
meet this woman at parties and stuff. You gotta keep
her where the sluts live, you know, it was the rules?
What was the wait? So and back in those times,
was it you know, what was sort of the hierarchy,
like was it is it a completely impossible feat for
(10:53):
her to get to that place? Or yeah? That that's interesting.
You know. So Rome is like way more patriarchal and
like misogynistic than ancient Greece. Right, So in ancient Greece,
you know, priestess prostitutes or like goddesses that sir, or
you know, like priestesses that serve the goddess through sacred
sex and something that we would sort of recognize as
(11:14):
like high end you know, like high art performance sex
work that is still happening today, right, So we those
people had social power and there were like temples and
systems and like places carved out. So like Phrynes and
ancient Greek courtisan who was tried for blasphemy because she
got like up a day or whatever, and she bared
(11:35):
her breasts to the jury and basically said like my
you know, my tits are divine, and fight me if
you disagree, and she won, right and right, yeah, yeah,
absolutely and like yeah, no, I mean they're that that's
that's God, you know what I mean. And so that's
ancient Greece. Cornison's in ancient Rome had no such power.
(11:55):
There was a lot more restriction on their freedom of movement,
and cifically, they're sort of like a scent into social circles.
So it was actually illegal for it. Had margan Anthony
married this woman, he would have, by default and by
Roman law, lost his rank. Right, but like also he
(12:15):
would have lost his rank. And like ancient Roman politicians
or whatever, and folks in the military would lose their
rank if they ever performed on a stage. So like
that association of like actress and sex work or like
performer and you know, salaciousness or whatever goes way back
and ancient Roman minds, like you know, they're not they're
(12:36):
not the mimes of today. They're not the silent kind.
It's actually a predecessor to comedy more than comedy in
the like the theater tradition, which is like way stricter
and scripted and had a lot more rules. This was
just like improv on current events, which is what you
guys do, Okay, so we are yeah, yeah, horrors and
(12:57):
gestures have occupied the same business and the whole exactly,
and we just and we just give our heart takes
for Casper mattresses. We're all playing to the pleasure of
the king. Are there cultures that like we're less patriarchal
and we're more accepting of sex work than Rome? Like
what are stuff that's impossible? Man? There's greatest hits because Yeah,
(13:22):
I feel like we are in the Roman tradition and
like we assume that we are like progressive, but we're
actually compared to other cultures throughout history, we kind of
centuries behind. Yeah, I mean there's a lot of evidence
about like different beliefs around like women and gender and
bodies that provides like a way better foundation. Right in
(13:45):
indigenous communities across North America. There's also like in Brazil
and India, there's a long tradition here ancient Greece. When
you're talking about like the Western tradition is sort of
like when my when my story of history, which is
like way oversimplified, right, I do ten thousand years and
seventy five minutes, right, Like there's a lot of erasure
and oversimplification that happens, but like I kind of pin
(14:08):
Ancient Greece is like the briny waters where like we
see patriarchy, right, we start to do lineage through the dad,
but goddesses that engage in the erotic arts still have
real power. Yeah, that's cool. And we go through phases, right,
like the medieval period is like another upstart. Then you
have like you know, the witch burnings, and you have
(14:28):
like you know, the the descent of disease. It's yeah,
but there's my favorite topic, and I'll you know, I
will corner you know it. It's always frustrating when we
have a guest on who's like, oh, the thing you
talk about in your podcast is way more interesting than
the news. We should just talk about that the whole time.
But well, we'll try and fit in some news. But
(14:48):
I want to keep talking about this. What is something
you think is overrated? Kate? Oh boy, I'm gonna get
a lot of haters for this one, but I gotta
do it because it's reasonally appropriate. I think Christmas music
is wild overrated, and I think people who start listening
to it like in mid October, like that's a lot.
It's a lot. I'm not saying all Christmas music is dad.
(15:11):
I'm not saying Christmas music shouldn't be played during the
Christmas season, but when there are like three radio stations
dedicated to Christmas music like November one, that is a
little bit of overkill, Guys, I would say, yeah, it is.
Really it's a strange phenomenon that like for a month,
Like that's how powerful Christmas is that for a month
(15:32):
we all just listened to like mediocre music and it's
like the same every year or just yeah, but it is.
I mean, it's all about nostalgia, right, So yeah, I
think that's what's wild. Yeah, it's like it's an emotional
safe space for a lot of American people. Like but
this time of year was great because in school would
be out and I could stay home and there were gifts,
(15:53):
and then I saw a family, and then I didn't
have to go to school, and I feel like a
lot of my because I'm one of these people, like
I will turn and into a straight up Karen starting
December one, like I trying to wait or maybe right
after that's reasonable though, after Thanksgiving, but then like people
are listening to Christmas music in mid October. I'm just like,
(16:13):
that's such a long time and too much of a
thing you like is bad, like it will become meaningless
because I only I really like. You're saying, there are
only like sixteen songs I really like, and you will
go through them like songs back then were like ninety seconds,
So you listen to all of them like forty minutes,
you're like, fuck, man, another round of that playlist single
(16:35):
about rock again, up but again. The thing I do
is I'll put on like piano covers, like piano jazz
covers of like Christmas standards at night to make my
house feel like a hotel lobby that I'm not supposed
to be in. M hmm, yeah, I like that. Do
you have like some cinnamon like uh pot pourri that
(16:56):
you can put there? Yea to some some milling spice,
you know what I mean? You've got that monk spices
about that I have? I have my woodwick Yankee candles.
You know what I mean that I'm telling I'm not
joking about this, the vibe setting I do. I'm some big,
austere glass like non cheerful. I'm just trying to picture
like a fancy hotel at Christmas. I feel like they
(17:19):
have like two giant glass fucking Christmas tree or something. Yeah,
so many orbs or like a like a gigantic what
looks like a scientific glass flask which is meant to
like evoke a Christmas tree with like ribbon. It's like
very minimal, it's very fancy. I do feel like the early,
(17:40):
like the fact that Christmas is getting earlier and earlier
is probably connected to the overall like infantilization of America,
because like I hadn't really made the connection until like
now I have a three year old who starts asking
about Christmas and like August, and so I feel like
it's just yeah, yeah, like it's you know, the little
(18:01):
baby and all of us being like I want Christmas
now exactly because I'm like, what am I going to
deal with my thirty seven year old reality? Exactly? I'm
fucking nine. Yeah, let's go. I was just talking to
my therapist about regression and the fact that like so
many of us have progress during the pandemic for better
(18:21):
and worse, and like I definitely think that's a huge
part of the Christmas thing getting earlier and earlier. It's
like the world is so bad, people are just looking
for like little slivers of comfort, and Christmas music is
one of them. So I don't want to begrudge anybody's
Christmas music listening. I just like, maybe not for you,
but for you. Fuck that, I will say. The real
(18:43):
racket is a musician is like right that Christmas song
as we with Mariah Carey, like you make a bank
for the rest of your life as well your grandchildren,
Like yeah, right, can you imagine like the like you know,
like how Anderson Cooper is like a Vanderbilt and like
there's someone the equivalent of like Mariah carries descendants to,
like they descend from that. All I want for Christmas
(19:04):
money generational wealth, that new money, yeah, or who knows
if they're smart about it, it's old money by the time.
It's like, oh man, you have the earth around What
is something you think is underrated? All right? Underrated? This
is I'm coming in hot with an underrated uh that thing,
And and maybe I'm wrong, maybe it's properly rated, but
(19:26):
I'm going underrated mayonnaise. Mayonnaise. I think it's the most
most underrated thing in the refrigerator. I was holding on
to but butt with both hands, and that's because you
were doing you were doing your ace Ventura asshole of
meal bit. Yeah, the whole show. By the way, for
people who can't see, I've been doing the whole show,
pretended to. But yeah, it's worked pretty well. I actually
(19:48):
got fooled right when I logged on, especially when you
did when you hit the daily site. Guys, that's just
yeah really yeah, and putting a putting a like a
really long beard on it was helpful. It's not oh
it's yeah, I've heard about that. Yeah. Yeah, but you
were saying may Man is man is where my wife
(20:09):
would would like physically fight you on this one. Yeah,
she really, what's I feel like? But Mayo is Mayo
is like the base of all of so many great
great dips and sauces, and you throw it in a
pan when you're making a spaghetti sauce sometimes and that
that will give it a little bit of life, you
know what I'm talking about? What, Yeah, that's a little
(20:31):
hack and heard of may in the Yeah, throw some Mayo,
throw some Mayo? And where when? How why throw some mayo?
And when you're making a little when you're making a
little sauce, man picking it up, give us some flavor? Wow? Yeah,
is this something you discovered or this is something you
read like on a like a like a talent. I
(20:52):
think I think it was like we do like some
Hello Fresh every now and again, and they were like, here,
put mayo in this and in this sauce and and
and they give you a packets to mayo and like
it actually came out really well. It came out right. Wow. Yeah.
You ever see like the how Disney makes their grilled cheese,
Oh they slyther with mayo and fried. Yeah, let's get
(21:13):
that color. Yeah, so that's in there. Baby. I don't
know if you also have used mayo for grilled cheese
and it does work. Oh yeah, that's the only way
you get that color. Yeah, because I used to do
butter and I'd be like, what the funk? It only
gets at a certain point and they're like, no, that's
the sugar and the mayonnaise that you need to and
then you get that nice texture. And I'm like, I
didn't know that. I do like you yelling at butter though,
(21:36):
oh yeah you should. What are you doing? Aggro nightmare
And I'm like throwing ship getting mad at mayonnaise. But yeah,
I love. I mean, I'm a big Japanese CUPI mayonnaise fan.
That ship on fucking everything, And yeah, I don't know.
I mean it's uh. I get in some places where
people get upset about mayonnaise, but at the end of
the day, it's just like a fat delivery vehicle, right,
(21:57):
It's all the things you like anyway, eggs olive, oil,
all that stuff. But like, um, I feel like it
takes a bad a little bit of a bad a
bad rap. And I'm like a big Mayo proponent. Well,
I think if you're like if if you're putting mail
and everything like it's ranch, then sure, I think there's
a thing with like, you know, mayo. I I get
to a certain point like it is necessary for a
lot of things, But then you do like I've I've
(22:19):
reacted to seeing things where it's like just extreme amounts
of mayonnaise being used for something that I didn't realize
mayonnaise was in. And I'm like, yeah, that's fair, that's fair.
But and it does I am Italians, please call in
with your thoughts on mayonnaise for your Sunday sauce. Well,
not for the Sunday sauce. This is not for the
(22:40):
Sunday and not not in the gravy, okay. But but
if you're going a little outside the box. Yeah, I
don't know. I really I feel like I need to
just stand up for h for the Mayo people. But
I do agree with you some people do that gross
thing where it's like it's too much and it makes
the noise and it doesn't it doesn't make an appealing
noise in a big hole? Yeah? Really? Really? Do you
(23:04):
funk with the Mayo chup? Is that what we're calling it?
Instead of yeah, catching a hey, catching a Yeah? Fancy sauce,
that's just fancy sauce. Right, that's the that's the burger
King special sauce. Yeah. Yeah, I love Mayo. Catchup Mayo
and Frank's hot sauce. That's good stuff. Yeah, yeah, that's
(23:27):
a good dip. Oh. I just gotta say I was
reading into this the you the Netflix. You l a stuff? Yeah,
I just love Okay, So just to give you an
idea of one of the things that like sort of
pissed them off, he says, it's love. That's one of
the characters, right, Yeah, she's the one that he like,
I think he falls in love with or something. Okay.
(23:48):
Who serves Joe's guide to Los Angeles and who serves
up that j goldline. She introduces him to the city
via the search for his quote perfect bite, taking him
on a tour of food trucks and strip malls. Okay, food,
got it. Then it's like stuff about like everyone's drinking
green juices. Yes, this is what I'm saying. Yeah, okay, yeah,
(24:09):
I mean, we would never do that. I have an
empty green juice right next. We never do that because
we keep our Yeah exactly. I think it's fine like
that people do actually do it, But I think at
this point we need to have grown up and been like,
that's just what happens, and it's no longer like oh
oh you guys like you je of course, right, yeah, well,
(24:33):
you know if it's and if it's really behind, they're
gonna be like, hey, man, you want to go to
a poke bar? Like I like that guy. I like
that character. Hi, man, you want to poke bar? Man?
This poke that's a little bit of all right, man,
I'm from West Hollywood. We have the highest minimum wage
(24:54):
in the nation. They do Hollywood. Alright, let's take a
quick break and we'll come back and talk about what's
happened in the news. And we're back. So the big
news in the mainstream media is people are more people
(25:17):
are quitting than than ever before. There's more unemployed people
than ever before. The great resignation is upon us. What
what is happening? And so there's a couple of things happening.
One trend that people are kind of starting to document
is that people seem, especially young people, seem less likely
(25:39):
to just do a job because it's a job. They're
more likely to kind of want to follow their passion.
It's funny you you highlighted this article for us miles
that where this like this study calls it what I
call the passion principle, the prioritization fulfilling work, even at
(26:01):
the expense of job security or a decent salary. So
they've like managed to laboratory as just people doing what
they love. Yeah, not not mimicking like our parents or
grandparents who are like I worked myself into bone dust.
So you're like, oh, no, that's for me. But yeah,
this is like, you know again, that's not new. I
(26:22):
think for the longest time, we've heard things like you
gotta follow your passion. Man, if you if you do
what you love, you'll never work a day in your life.
And and and that is true to a certain extent.
I mean, there's a lot of stuff to indicate. Through
certain studies, like with interviewing college students or career coaches,
found that over seventy of college educated workers believe that
(26:43):
passion is like really important in making a decision, like
when it comes to what what kind of career should
I take? And sixty seven percent of them say that
they would prioritize meaningful work over job stability, high wages,
and work life balance. And I think on a certain
level that made for I don't know, when I graduated
in fucking two thousand seven, I walked into a fucking recession,
(27:05):
and I'm like, to fuck, okay, I don't know what
the funk I'm I thought I knew what I wanted
to do, but now I really have no fucking idea
what I want to do. And I think that forced
me into a moment of truly thinking of, like, well,
right now, not many things are an option, So maybe
let's take this time to figure out what is you know,
something that really energizes you. And I think the idea
(27:26):
being that like if you again, if you like what
you do, then you won't feel like you're just you know,
going day in, day out and wasting parts of your
life by just toiling. But the thing that's really interesting
about that is that that idea of following your passion
works to a certain extent. Right, it's probably working for
people who either have some family that they can support,
(27:48):
that can support them through a career transition, or just
in general if there are social safety nets. This was
an interesting statistic that said, when working class college graduates
pursue their passion, there about twice as likely as a
health as wealthier passion seekers. Interesting description to later end
up an unstable, low paid work far outside that passion. Right,
(28:08):
So there's a lot of you know, social safety net
career things sort of tied up into everything that's happening
at the moment. I also think there's collective trauma from
the last couple of years and people I can't imagine
that there weren't some people who were like, oh, I
make a better living getting unemployment than I do doing
this job. And now I'm going out and risking my
(28:31):
life and they don't care about me because I'm not
worthy of health care. And so I can't imagine that
people had, you know, the the facing your mortality the
way we did in the last couple of years, where
people don't give enough credit for that. People were probably like, yeah,
I'm I'm and it's and and it's not like coronavirus
(28:52):
has disappeared. It's not like COVID is still not here.
So I can't imagine that people knowing how many people
passed away, it was just like a brush of this
group of people that are just gone. Now that people
are like reevaluating quality of life, Yeah, And I think
like that kind of goes to the other point that
(29:12):
they're making that you know, in America especially, we tend
to like the first thing people ask someone is like
what do you do? And then like that defines like
how you think of that person, or it defines how
you think of yourself, like you feel a certain way
about having a job, or like talking to somebody and
(29:34):
not feeling great about your job more than other countries.
And so I think that that's another implication of the
study is that it's okay to not have a cool
sounding job if you're able to, you know, have a
good work life balance and take care of yourself and
the people that you care about and then pursue the
(29:54):
ship that you love, like when your job that respects boundaries,
like allows you to Yeah, you know what, I just
I got to say this because it's burning inside of me.
I don't know where I was gonna say it, but
I need to say it. So there's a shortage of
Santa Claus. Right, there is a shortage of Santa Clauses
throughout the country because the people who dress up like
(30:17):
Santa Claus do not want to get COVID. They don't
want little kids who are not vaccinated sitting on their laps, right.
I thought it was because they don't want to get
in trouble for you know, other reasons, but it was
it was because of that. But I think it's interesting
because a lot of the people who believe in Santa
Clause that you know, don't they want you to say
(30:38):
Merry Christmas, not happy Holidays, tend to be affiliated with
this ideology that COVID vaccinations are not necessary, that we
shouldn't be wearing masks. But it's just perform A lot
of it is performative because everybody is going to protect
their own high and so now you gotta hold bunch
of Santa Clauses that are not dressing up and not
(30:59):
going out because they don't want to get COVID. But
I'm like about COVID wasn't real? So well no, I
mean is it? Fuck? You're right, it's real, and I'm
and I'm sure that's why I do think though that
like having a generation or just a populist like after
(31:21):
the pandemic that is less likely to be interested in
doing like kind of bone grinding miles as you put
at work and like soul deadening work like that is
going to have a fundamental impact on like, like one
of the big things that ties into job like satisfaction
(31:41):
is like feeling like you're doing something. And we talked
last month about like studies that have shown that, like
you know, up to like forty two, like, most jobs
in the American economy are just bullshit jobs that are
like make work jobs that like allow people to have
(32:03):
a job managing other people. And that's like basically why
those jobs exist. Like I've the longer I've spent working
in the American economy, the more I've realized that that
seems to be at least half of jobs is just
like bullshit make work jobs like in a lot of
cases make other people rich. Jobs. Yea, precisely. And that's
(32:24):
like the other thing that in this article in The
Atlantic points out too, is like, you know, employers love
when they can find people who say they love their job,
because that means they can they can squeeze more out
of you. And that's sort of like they're like do
And that was sort of like the thrust of this
is like, don't fall into this pit of like I
love my job, because it's not all You're not always work.
You're most of the time, I would say, of us
(32:44):
aren't working for us. We're working to make someone else
a lot of money, and like to the idea of
like what it means to work and just like these
bone grinding jobs, like I even think about even guilt
I would have about being like, it's my job hard enough,
you know, like am i am I? Am I am I?
Because I look at the examples of jobs my family
has had through the generations and I'm like, dude, I've
(33:06):
been my grandmother fucking laughing at me. So oh you
a podcast or to how far did you go to
get water? And I'm like what it came out to think?
And there's a lot of and I think there again
because of the idea of your job being wrapped in
your identity. It really is insidious, which is why I like,
you know, people are pivoting the things like actually the
things that matter to me. Isn't necessarily saying I have
(33:29):
I do X for a living rather than I have
a thing. Look, I know I have to work because
that's how capitalism is, or else I will be homeless
and starving. So let me find something that actually gives
me the freedom to do the ship that I actually
like to do. And I don't have to get too
so wrapped up in thinking my work has to be
the thing that gives me everything that I want. Yeah,
you hear these kids now, and which I respect that
(33:52):
they are calling out this toxic capitalism that's driving us
into the ground. You know, people, we're really wepping izing
socialism and communism and those buzzwords to alarm people who
are being you know, motivated emotionally and through their pain,
and you know, they're all of that stuff is being
(34:13):
hijacked to serve a great purpose to keep feeding this
toxic capitalism that is running the world, not just America.
And it's just interesting to see people now calling it
what it is because the conversation have been framed so
that if you called out capitalism as having toxic properties,
that you were being anti American. And now people are
(34:34):
starting to say, oh, man, like this man made how
much money during the pandemic because I didn't have any
food in my house? And I just think it's important
and I think it's admirable to hear people finally starting
to say with the real you know where the real
sources because from that is where the white supremacy reigns
down on us, and the patriarchy and the sexism and
(34:58):
the religious oppression, and it it is all a function
of rich people getting richer at the expense of those
who are willing to bleed for being a Republican, a democrat,
you know, working for this company or that company. And
now people are finally saying yeah, nah, good right, and
to the point where like you're saying, like in previous eras,
it would be like, oh, you're what are you talking?
(35:19):
What's all that? Ship? You a socialist? You're like, oh no, no,
I'm not a comedy or a pink Oh no no.
And now it's like, oh, you're a socialist. And now
already's like yeah, and what right, So yeah, I mean
to work for us to right, Yeah, exactly like my
senators kids go to a good school. Right. I'm curious
(35:41):
for you, like I like, even in your special right,
you talked about how you you did a lot of
political commentary and that, and then you're like, I don't
know if that's for me, And I think especially for
people who are in the arts performative, there's definitely an
evolution of thinking like is this a job I want
to have? Is this a job I can sustain in
my life with, sustain in a family with Should I
just take something that's more consistent? What sort what was
(36:03):
your sort of path through all of that to kind
of arrive where you're at right now. So I'll be
honest with you, I've never made any money for being
an activist, right, So when people it's a it's a
thankless job, right, And it's not a job, it's just
our civil duty, as you know, people who live on
a planet with other people. I think it's just healthy
to say I care about you and if you don't
(36:26):
have food, that should matter to me because it's just
I don't know, it's just I guess where the definition
of humanity is For me, what I had to evolve
to and learn in this business is that one I
have the privilege of doing it because I have a
job in comedy that I do get paid for, and
if I don't want to do this anymore, I can
(36:46):
just go write my jokes. And but there are people
on the ground who do this every single day, who
fight for the planet, fight for it, you know, racial
justice and equity, that fight for the rights of women.
And those people don't get a lot of followers on Instagram,
you know what I mean. But if Kim Kardashian said
(37:07):
I'm gonna help this lady get out of jail, Everybody's like,
oh my god. There are people who are doing that
every single day. That the people who actually helped Kim
kardashi and accomplished that, that you that they get overshadowed.
And so I didn't want to be a part of
that because I feel like that's toxic too. So I
decided that I was gonna use my my whatever I
(37:30):
have to shine a light on the people who do
that because they need the support. They need the economic support,
and they need the moral support because it's a really
hard job to fight for stuff. And that I would
I would continue my advocacy and activism through my art,
and so I'll write the jokes about this, But I
am in no way equipped nor um informed enough to
(37:54):
talk about some of the things that people who this
is their expertise, and I just felt like I was
in a way and I wanted to get out the way.
The other thing is that people are exhausting. As I
said in there, it's hard to fight for people that
you hate, Like I want to turn a ride, you
know what I mean? Like, I just like I can't
stand you all, like because the worst damned if you do,
damned if you don't. You know, if I say something
(38:17):
is why are you saying something? Why are you talking
for us? If I don't say anything, why are you
not saying any time? But I just decided that I
was gonna redirect my energy and I was gonna put
it in my scripts, and I'm gonna put it in
my writing. I'm put it in my jokes and the
movies that I write and the TV shows that I make.
I'm gonna get out of the way, and I'm gonna
let those people who do what they do with any
(38:39):
time I have any power or visibility I'm gonna shine
a light on them. Yeah, and I could you could tell,
especially like in your special. I really loved how you
gave everyone a lower third, like no one was just
anonymous or just a like a thig like back wallpaper
or nothing. You're like, no, this is this this person,
this is the name of this group, even if they're
performing me on the street. That was just like you know,
(39:03):
and again you could see that permeate through your work.
So yeah, I appreciate that you noticed that because that
was something that I had to vocalize. I was like,
you know, those people are important, and this is one
of the people that look like this don't get to
be on HBO Max, with Netflix with frequency, so that
(39:24):
this is their opportunity to shine. Give them a name. Yeah,
now you're platforming them, and now hundreds of thousands of
people will see a name be like, oh I thought
that that group was let me look them up. And yeah,
really commendable. Thank you. All right, Well, let's talk about schools.
Let's talk about schools being unfair. Yeah, speaking of that,
(39:45):
because you know, in addition to pouring billions of dollars
into the sweatpant industry, the pandemic has changed a lot
about how we think about schooling because parents had to
had to do it. I had to like sit there
with their kids while they were trying to learn. It
was very difficult. But you know, at the end of
there was an unprecedented rise in FS, which you know,
(40:11):
it feels it feels like that is one way to
deal with, like the fact that a complete act of
God that nobody had any control over came in and
made it much harder for kids to learn is to
blame it on the kids and you know, make the
rest of their lives harder by just flunking them. But
(40:34):
a bunch of school boards have been coming together to
try to address this issue, figure out like how they
can change how we think about schooling and you know,
how we judge students in a way that will be
more fair and more appropriate to the modern world. Because apparently,
(40:54):
like the the letter grade thing was invented like a
hndrew years ago or I guess, and twenty dame back
to and the reason that it stuck is because it
became like very common in the how we graded meat,
and so that's that's how it got like sort of
(41:18):
became such a great a right, gret f beef, that's
my question. Like, oh man, my grandfather used to tell
a funny story as the parent of German immigrants who
didn't speak a ton of English, that a bunch of
kids which just lie to their parents about what the
grading scale meant. So it was like F was fine,
(41:41):
D was damn fine, see what could do better? B
was bad and he was awful, Which that all sounds
so funny. I mean, you know, it has a certain
sort of sense to it. But kids won't be able
to get away with that ship anymore apparently. But I
like the things that there, you know, looking to change
(42:01):
are basically they want kids to be judged based on
how mastery of the skill they're trying to learn. So
if they have learned it well enough to do it,
then they get by. If they haven't done that, then
they have to keep going. But like which I assumed
(42:22):
is like how teachers were thinking about the letter grades
to write like that, oh well they haven't learned math,
but they're pointing out that like they're stupid things that
go into somebody failing, like you know, missing a class
or not following directions, and so they're trying to do
away with that sort of thing, right, yeah, go ahead.
(42:45):
I mean all all that ship did for me was
just obsess over being and then like scoring above on
tests because that was a threshold for an A. And
half the time it was just I mean it was
funny too, because I think the letter. I think because
culturally I was so sort of oriented to be like
(43:05):
these fucking a's better be hitting on this card when
I see it. That like it put into me like, funk,
I gotta do anything to get in a more than
even being like I gotta do whatever it takes to
learn this. I became more about you can I cramp
memory recall the funk out of this for a test?
And also, truth be told, I hated science. I just
started cheating in science because I was like, funk that
(43:26):
I'm not sucking my grades. Though, Yeah, I'll fucking I will.
I will order the teacher's edition of this physics book
and do I have the test already? So thank you.
It's so real though, it's like you're not learning things.
You're just like, let me learn the structure of the
eyeball for this biology quiz and then not retain a
lick of it for any future sort of like things,
(43:46):
But guys, what about our permanent records. It's gonna go
on our permanent records because oh my god, I haven't
even heard you know, you fucked me up just saying
that out loud. This is gonna be on your permanent record, y'all,
Like this is gonna Yeah. It's like I never saw it,
didn't exist about this. He said you were full of shit.
(44:07):
They're like, well, we'll talk about that at the parent
for any children listeners, Like, not a day goes by
where my permanent record from middle school is not dangling
over my head, by the police, by the I R S, banks, employers, everything,
the doctor. But yeah, so La and San Diego Unified
school districts are directing teachers too, and this sounds like
(44:30):
what they should have already been doing based academic grades
on whether students have learned what was expected of them
during a course, and not penalize them for behavior, work habits,
and missed deadlines. It's like, yeah, motherfucker, that's that's how
we should have always been doing it. Because the school
closures that happened disproportionately affected the grades of black and
(44:52):
Latin X students. So yeah, all right, I mean, it's
it's it's interesting too write. And I'm sure there's plenty
of allternative schools that take this into account because I
feel like that's just a huge focus area for people
in education. But like I think it's like the stakes
are just so high, like they feel so high in
this like a through F system that it will either
(45:14):
create like kids will either very quickly be like Okay,
fuck it, I can like rise to this situation or
check out because it just becomes frustrating, you know, and
even if they can, like I have so many friends
who were more than capable of being in a P classes,
but like the momentum of like academia and like being
sort of told like you're kind of like a C
student just like no, man, his parents were fighting all
(45:35):
the time and he was distracted and couldn't do his
fucking homework like other kids or whatever. Like that's sort
of what's happening here. You know, it's not gonna like
this mainstream media. I feel like the mainstream media is
a society of straight A students got into that or
a lot of F students go ahead and buy on
depotism and you know who like actually think and I
(46:01):
think a lot of you know, just a lot of
like the people empower in America. Well not like this,
because there is a belief that like, well I went
to a better college and that means not that I'm
I had more opportunities, but that I'm like actually smarter
and need to like be in control and like making
(46:22):
these decisions that affect other people because I need to
make them for them. Like that is definitely un like
under girding like a lot of how people think, and
I think the media and the world of finance, and
like that's also how they justified just the generally fucked
up way that our society is built out. So like
(46:46):
the idea that what do you mean my kid can't
get straight A's Like that's but it's the competition based market,
I mean society that we have. I'm glad we've like
started having this conversation about gifted kids and that whole
escalator of madness. Like I don't know if you guys
like we talked too much about it on Twitter, I
(47:06):
will say, and there have been too many things in
the sort of like former gifted kids do this, But
I don't know, like I myself and a lot of
my friends, it's like, you know, we've been grinding since
we were five, like this, it's not fun anymore. Like
I got all the a's, I did all the right stuff,
I still can't buy a fucking house. Like I am
taking a breather and smoking some weep like I am not.
(47:28):
Like yeah, it's I hope parents are like loosening the
reins on some of that stuff too, and realizing that
like if every kid gets straight a's and every kid
does all the right sort of like extracurriculars, like you're
still in the same boat when things like COVID happened.
So I don't know, but I can, like see the
Fox News segment on this. Now it's gonna be like
(47:50):
tied to the War on Christmas. It's like the war
on report cards woke. Report cards cards are now woke
because even now too hard to hear that you have
failed at something. Yeah, sure, but I mean I think
it goes along with this other thing too. Like this,
these studies constantly come out like again, they're showing like
(48:10):
like Harvard, like white students that were admitted were like
recruited athletes. Legacy students are like on a dean's interest list,
meaning like parents gave money, and you're saying forty three
percent of those kids going to Harvard are there because
of not I'm sure of like a hardcore merit based
admissions that many of the other students face. But there's
just always these levels to like, it's never the same
(48:34):
scale bright to everyone. So it would be interesting to
see where something where it's like, yeah, I guess what.
In this version, this kid too will be treated as
a valid applicant to a school because we have a
more just sort of holistic, even keeled way of saying like, yep,
this kid knows that this kid does too. We are
the best of the best of billions of children. But
(48:56):
so there are reasons to believe that this is a
better pristance. There's a school in New York City that
tried this basically did away with letter grades, and it
was a middle school, and they say in this Washington
Post article quote, the approach has been transformative. In the
(49:17):
fourteen school years, seven percent of its students read at
grade level and five percent met the state's math standards.
Two years later, twenty nine percent were proficient in English,
twenty six percent proficient in math, pulling the school close
to the city average, just by getting rid of these
standards of past fail and like the I also feel
like there's like there are a lot of great teachers
(49:39):
like I. I've had a lot of great teachers. I've
also seen teachers who feel empowered because they get to
be like past fail. Oh, I get to pass judgment
on these kids lives. Miss Heacocks, I still remember your ass.
I don't think we've forgotten. Yeah, she tried. I guess
(50:00):
what I'm good at math so that you can't hold
me that down. There are some teachers that are just
like straight sadist, and you know, to say, not to
malign the many many wonderful, dedicated, like this is their
life's work teachers in the world. But you do think
back on some of those teachers you had, You're like,
what was your deal man? Like what was going on here?
(50:20):
Like right, I had this like older person just take
all their like life's anger out on me, Like legit.
When I look back, and you kind of have the
wherewithal to understand like human behavior a little bit more
outside of like the academic or like child adult dynamic.
I was like, yo, you were so fucking unhappy with
your life and you just got your jollyes off and
(50:43):
walking in here and just acting a fool like that
was really that was the loop you were caught in.
Unfortunately we were calling you the teacher. Yeah, but again,
like you're saying, I've luckily had so many good teachers
that like could tell I was maybe like starting to
check out or whatever. I was just distracted. I'd rather
funk around or something, And they would always come like
(51:04):
kind of you know, gas you up and be like,
hey man, you're smart, like you can do this. Ship
like just do it. I'm like, all right, Well, that's
such a problem with like contemporary schooling two is like
we all have such specific ways of learning and retaining information,
and teachers have to figure out the thirty different styles
of that for every kid in their class every period.
Teachers should be making like five grand a year. Yeah,
(51:28):
they should be the ballers of the earth. Like if
you go to a nightclub and they're coming through a
bottle service and the fucking flares, You're like, oh, you know,
the teachers in the building. There should be a bunch
of ugly sweaters at the booth that those yeah, just
like sipping in the crystal. Yeah, like shout out to
all the teachers in the building. We've got two for
one drinks for teachers. I like this club. Alright, we're
(51:50):
going to take a quick break and we'll be right
back to find out why red wine is like weed. Seriously,
you guys, and we're backed, and let's see Marjorie Taylor
Green has just been eating mask fines. Like there. I
(52:14):
don't know what what does Marjorie Taylor Green. I feel
like she's it's a heavy protein diet based on watching her.
She probably eats like cliff bars that she like dusts
and protein dust. But like she'll lick a protein bar
and then like salt bay some protein like weight protein
on it and then that, yeah, that feels like what
it is. So she's the house's most outspoken antiax or
(52:37):
posting videos of her workouts to demonstrate her physical fitness,
or not knowing what a hip of violation is. She's,
you know, just always disregarding health and safety, and like
one of the ways she's doing that is just not
giving a funk about paying an anti masker fund mask fund.
She Okay, So if you remember after Jean where a
(53:00):
six when a lot of members got COVID because they
were in close spaces together and they were begging people
to wear masks. They're like, fun this, we're not working
around anymore. It's a fine you sunk around the first time,
it's five hundred, you want to go again, it's hundred
for your second offense, and then everyone there after, so
it's not it's not cheap. But she's recently, like you know,
she's also goes back and forth between this ship where
(53:22):
she's like, don't ask me my vaccinations status, it's a
hipo violation to then saying literally this as a quote
out loud quote, I'm not vaccinated either, and I won't
be getting vaccinated. And that's my own personal choice. I
support people that want the vaccine. If anybody wanted one,
I would drive them to go get one because I
support people's freedom to make their own decisions. No, you don't,
(53:43):
And you've said a bunch of stuff that would make
it seem like you were a fool to get a vaccination.
But workout thing. She was claiming that like, by being
in shape, she doesn't need to get the vaccine, doesn't
need it because I'm fucking ripped, I'm equipped, and the
and and the immune system is lit. And so this
is a sort of whole energy out there with just
trying to under underscore the fact that it's not necessary,
(54:05):
don't need it. No thanks. Well, she just was asked recently, like, yo,
what's up with these fines? Like they're not cheap? She
told a report. She's like, yeah, I'm up to sixty
three thousand. Now that's okay. Just so you know, remember
of the house makes a hundred seventy four thousand a year,
so she's over a third. She's just kissed a third
of her paycheck goodbye. And before you ask, the answer
(54:26):
is yes, that ship comes straight out the paycheck. That's
not a thing where you get hit with a bill
and you can just you know, take it send it
to you know, collections. They take it directly out of
your paycheck. So that's money gone. But I'm sure you know,
I've been part of her would be like, yeah, I
don't give a go ahead. Yeah, I'm looking at your
(54:47):
credit I'm looking at your credit report, Marjorie, and I see, uh,
I said, you got the US Congress on your and
your collections. She's like, but I mean that's where I'm like,
I'm sure. She has some cool dark money ways that
are totally above boards, that are helping offset that phone
to be the loudest person just making a stand for stupidity.
(55:12):
Here's the thing too, man, I don't know where y'all from,
but where I'm from, we don't respect niggas who lose money.
We don't, you know what I'm saying, Like, you know,
like what do you sucking up your money? Bro? You like?
For what? For? What? Like? You know, like even Kyrie,
like for what, dude? For what? Like for a belief
(55:35):
about believe in getting this paper? Like what the fund
is wrong? You like? And I know like there's some
progressives out there shouldn't be all about money. Kick the
funk out of here, Like, we don't respect us fucking
up our money. You know, we need a crime in
certain cultures, up your money, sucking up. If someone says
you're sucking up my money, I would start running because that's, yeah,
(55:59):
something you don't want to. Here's the thing that has
never been just a black and a white thing, or
or rich or report thing, like everybody universally accepted. We
don't funk up our money. That's been like a universally
accepted thing. And like they're not, and we've gotten to
a place now where people are so into there. It's
(56:23):
not even a belief system. That's the thing that's crazy.
If it was a true belief system, then fine, I
may not believe, I may not agree with your belief system.
I may think is rooted in a whole bunch of
problematic things, but a true belief system whatever. This is
out of spite, this is out of politics, This is
(56:46):
out of just I want to be on the opposing
side of you and you sucking up your money for
that for that man. But I think that's of those
dynamics aren't at play, right, because if let's say she wasn't,
she's really gonna be like, I don't really need that
page like, and I mean, I know she's wealthy. Daddy
(57:07):
has a lot of money, and that's she comes from
generation has a generational wealth to fall back on. But yeah,
that's where like, that's why I believe her calculus is
a little bit different, because there is there on on
some level, it's probably very lucrative for her to continue
this because that is in service of, you know, another
of a donor's agenda or just generally like the party,
(57:31):
the cultural tone of the Republican, which is like, yeah, yeah, great,
that's that's great. We'll figure out ways to get you
when you'll be okay, we'll make more money in fact
if by taking you know. Yeah, but you have something
this point that laws that are enforced with funds are
laws that don't apply to rich people, Like yeah, right,
I know, I mean, that's yeah, I get that. Is
(57:52):
it just something that my soul hurts when I hear
somebody willingly walking through a door and being like, well,
hundred dollars today, Like that just hurts. And maybe it's
maybe it's the poor black man in me, you know,
the the old poor Chicago in me. But because you know,
Nigga's out here making money now, so you know, I'm
saying to lose like two hundred dollars, you know what
(58:15):
I'm saying now, right, I'm still clus my clus, my
visible pearls saying that man like two hundred dollars and
I ain't getting one for it. In the back of
your mind, I think you'll ever feel good to throw
away two. It's wild, it's wild, but she's she's wild.
(58:36):
But that's what have you seen her do? Pull ups?
That's what that is the definition like whipping her like
lowered body, woody body whips to get your get to
get your chin above the bar. Short. All right, we'll
talk about Ridley Scott's interview on yesterday's Trending, So go
check that out. But I do have to follow through
(58:56):
on the flight attendant reveal because you know, people, I
tease it up top and just like a local news tease.
It's wildly unsatisfying. But what we learned in this one
tone as a passenger hitting up a flight attendant, oh
so yeah, somebody said, like call attendant button on their
(59:17):
seat exactly, oh yeah, yeah, yeah means one flight attendant
is signaling another or that the flight deck is trying
to reach them. And then three tones means an emergency.
That's the one you don't want to hear. That's okay, damn.
(59:38):
Three tones usually is good too. Man. On that game shows,
you get three tones that means you want yeah, yeah,
yeahn I you know what, I love this. I love this,
and I also hate this too, because you know, my
anxiety will be like was that three tones? I know, yeah,
but you know it was that three tones? Like that.
I can see myself doing that if I was like
(59:59):
in my field ends on the flight one day, which
I'm not scared to fly at all, but every once
in a while I'll be in the air, and every
once in a while this is rare, but I'll be
in the air and I'll be like, if this plane
went down, we did, yeah, And that's like a good
ten minutes of anticipation of death, like that that sounds.
(01:00:22):
I'll look around the cabin and I'll start hearing mad
world plane, do do do do, And I'm just like
looking at the other passengers and I'm like, this is
the memorial video when this should go down. Look, there
was that little family right there, right yeah shirt. Have
you heard too that flight attendants have their own secret
(01:00:43):
code that they like when when you're walking on a
plane and they're greeting you, or or you're leaving and
they're greeting you, like if they like compliment you or something.
It's not just to compliment. That's them telling other flight
intenders around them that this in case of emergency, this
person looks like can help us or something like that.
Have you ever heard that? Yeah, Like there was like, yeah,
(01:01:06):
they had likes right this way. Thank you, you're being
really kind of thank you so much, just patting me
on the back, rubbing my shoulders. Yeah, yeah, right, how
you doing? You look you real happy today? No, yeah,
I actually for nine hours a day straight. I'm more
(01:01:29):
like human veal. If anything, What do you think it means?
When I get on they say nerd alert to each other.
That love, That means. That means that if they need
some like if somebody passed out and they need some
science tips. You know what I'm saying, They need somebody
like yo, who know the periodic table on here right quick?
The planes going down? Care out of table? How many
(01:01:53):
valance electrons does uranium have? Right? So you hero does
a hero? You're here, bro, Okay, gonna come right to
thirty three B and come grab you because we know Jackson.
We know jack only sitting the back of the plane.
You know what I'm saying, Come next to room, right
next to them. Yeah, like protons electron. There was there
(01:02:19):
was an article. This was a few years ago. First
of all, let me just precursor this by saying I
was sue the funk out of Southwest if this ever
happened on the plane with me. But there was an article.
It's funny too or the pilot accidentally hit that we're
going down but said that over the fucking loudspeakers. Prepare
(01:02:41):
for crash. Yeah yeah, he accidentally hit it or some
ship and people lost their fucking minds, bro, because there
was like a smooth flight or like it wasn't like turbulence,
and I mean I guess so, I guess it was.
And I would think that that wouldn't be m We're
(01:03:04):
going down down baby, Like what the fun really? Oh yeah? Man?
Now look if Nellie playing on my way down that
I would be like, you know what, this is the
life well lived. And then you're like, oh, I know
this is going down. If they're playing now, if you're
hearing this, it's too late, right Oh they only got
black music for going down? Oh yeah, we fund all right,
(01:03:28):
that's gonna do it For this week's weekly Zeite, guys,
please like and review the show. If you like the show,
uh means the world to Miles. He needs your validation. Folks.
I hope you're having a great weekend and I will
talk to you Monday. By s