Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet. I welcome to season forty four, Episode three,
Daily Geist for Wednesday at two eighteen. My name is
Jack O'Brien, a k the Jack Dad will make you
jump jump. I'm daddy Jack. I'll make you jump jump.
It's like Gang, I'll make you jump jump. Uh huh
uh huh. And I'm thrilled to be joint as always
(00:21):
buy My co host Mr Miles Slop raised corn on
the cop jacking with me. O'Brien, get your chop late
in your bid here what I said, Zake Gang will
ask za Gang Wi big okay three six Mafia. That
was from Melissa Jordan's at Pigmy Hippie Vig three six
(00:42):
fan right there, bum But yeah, relevant anyway, So yes,
thank you to you for that, Jack, courtesy of Penny D. Hunter.
Oh yeah, I'm glad you you have your cross colors outfit,
I know, yeah backwards as well, so you know, representing
in your eracism hat. Remember that ship I had that
(01:03):
my dad had as lace in e racism year. I mean,
I know, I'm not just talk remember those knowledges, the keys? Yeah,
I had so much cross colors gear. It's just really
I woke. I can't the idea of yeah, young Jack O'Brien,
the kid wearing the cross colors like black and yellow
overalls type outfit. It takes every types of people to
(01:27):
make the world go around. That I had like written
in like you know, I'll misspelled all over the pl two?
Was you guessed it the number two? Well, we're thrilled
to have a very funny stand up comedian, wrestling aficionado
and professional nerd Danielle Redford a three phones Redford, Yeah,
(01:49):
or just one just super safe phonecase. Yes, it's a transformer, yeah, exactly.
It transformed from something I can drop into something I
definitely can't. Danielle, it is great to have you with us.
Thank you so much for having me again. I'm sorry.
I know I'm supposed to wait toill get introduced, but
I was like cross color, so I'm jumping in. It's
like double Dutch. I'm like, is that coming back? I
(02:10):
feel like if Foobu has come back, has come well
Urban out I think Urban Outfitters bought the rights to
have Foo Boo and stuff, which also like don't young
kids out there, don't let me catch you or in
foo boo if you're not us for us by us.
Even I had trouble warring food because I was half black.
I was like, damn, is it for me too? Though? Yeah? Well,
(02:31):
and I lived in Hawaii during all that stuff, and
so it was definitely one of those things where it
was like there would be these fights between locals and
black folks, but everyone could like, oh, um over over
over the fact that most of the black folks and
white folks who were there were people who were brought
on base, which is like, you know, we're literal symbols
of like colonization that you sit next to in class
(02:54):
and cheat notes off of fucking alleys. But you know,
I was nice people. We we got along. And I
wore my bright blue cross color shorts for way too long.
I wore them probably a year past expiration. I wore
them to the point where one of my friends had
to take me aside and said, you have to retire
the cross colors. Because I was never like a fashioned person. Um,
(03:18):
I was just like, look like, I like these shorts. Yeah,
and I really embraced that very tomboyish aesthetic that everyone
was doing. Also, I looked exactly like this at like twelve,
um like thinner because I was twelve, but I've been
tall with a big booty and boobs forever. I've had
(03:39):
this face forever. I will have this face. Sarah Sanders style. Yeah,
we're just like a baby. Photo of hers, everybody should look.
She my portrait of Dorian Gray, where it's like she
just ages. I never will she has Sarah Hugaby Sanders
current face photoshopped onto a baby's body in this picture.
(04:00):
It's incredible. Um, all right, So were your army Bratt
military Brett nice? How long were you in Hawaii for? Oh?
We did it twice. So I was there from kindergarten
until second I believe, and then we went back for
UM six through freshman year, which is as longest we've
(04:20):
been anywhere. It was four years. Not bad, not a
bad place to be. It is if you're a child,
because you can't really go anywhere, like there's no it's
not super easy to get around off base. And also
the mud is clay and so it stains everything. Yeah,
(04:41):
and so you have to be really careful about what
And when you're older, it's like fine. You know, when
I was eleven and twelve and thirteen, it was fine.
But when I was a kid. You want to be
a kid and play in the mud, except that mud
doesn't come out of close just because of the fact
that it is like volcanic ash. Essentially, everything's just mud
colored everything, luke cross colored shorts. By the end of it,
(05:02):
where just yeah, um, all right, before we get to
know you a little bit better, let's tell our listeners
what they're in store for. We are going to talk
about the Song of the Summer. It's official and it's
not from Nicki Minaj even though her album dropped uh
this week. It is from do Jaquet. We are going
(05:25):
to talk about the primaries that happened last night, some takeaways.
We're gonna talk about Amar Rossa a k Lionel Messi.
We are going to talk about how Trump hires only
the best the end of the Paul Manifort trial. We're
going to talk about Space Force, which we have been
(05:46):
mocking roundly just as a culture but also on the show,
and why it might not be the stupidest idea, even
though the idea is being brought forth for the stupidest
of reasons. And finally, we're going to check him with
the stock that we've been screaming. Bye bye bye on
a movie pass. See just checking with their stocks. See
(06:06):
how that's going. But you're gonna love it. You're gonna
I'm ringing the alarm. I already already put a down
payment on a Lamborghini. I don't need to see what
the Arnings report works. I know we are in the ascendancy.
I just believe in the model, you know. But first day, Yeah,
we like to ask our guests, what is something from
your search history that is revealing about who you are?
(06:27):
The execution of the Romanov family. Wow, Okay, so I
get I do this thing where I will be obsessed
with one like kind of subculture or weird thing for
a couple of months. Um. One time I was doing
like full on deep dives into stand culture, particularly believers,
(06:47):
because I'm just like, I need to understand how your
brain works. Um. When gamer Gate happened, I was very
much like in there, like I need to understand how
this works. Right now, my biggest obsession is someone I'm
not gonna say a name, um, but it is someone
who she used to be a comic and I used
to know her. Um. I met her a few times,
and so she kind of does this Instagram busting where
(07:11):
she performs and does different things, and that's how she
kind of gets money. Um. And that's fascinating to me
because it's both the first time I've ever seen someone
really do that in that way, not in the same
way of like, hey I have a Patreon, you can
do it here, or hey I'm going live on YouTube
and that will pay me somehow. Yeah. It's literally she
(07:32):
does these live shows and these and she's always on
Instagram all day long, and people will donate to her
PayPal and some people are like it's a scam, and
some people are like, it's not. And so that's really fascinating.
And then I found when I was watching the trailer
for The romanofs, I was like, I understand what this
is about, but why is this TV show so white?
So um? So part of my kind of looking into
(07:54):
because there is a whole culture of people who claim
to be descendants of that family anesthesian myth around that family, Okay, right, yes,
And so I went back and I did a bunch
of reading because it's something I kind of already knew about,
but I just went and did a few deep dives
on that just so I could feel like I knew
what's really going on, what's really going So what is
(08:15):
the relation between the former stand up comedian Busker and
the Romanov family. Um just different subcultures of people who
are one invested in something in the same way that
like stand culture is or everyone and people involved with
gamer Gate on one investment. With the kind of internet Busker,
(08:39):
you have people who spend all day telling people it's
a scam, it's a scam, it's scam, don't donate, don't donate,
And then you have other people who were like, well,
she might be mentally ill, she might be mentally ill,
so help help help. But either way, you have all
of these people who were devoting all day to following
the misadventures of this one person um. And so that's
kind of where the Romanoff was interesting to me, because
(09:01):
there are people who insist and are obsessed with this
family and insist that they are descendants are from where
most historians claimed that they were all wiped out in
that basement, right, So the Romanos were the royal family
that got wiped out during the Revolution in Russia that
led to communism and Soviet Russia. It's easier to lie
(09:24):
back then because there was no internet I know, man.
That's the thing. I think one of the most underrated
scams that used to exist is just like walking into
a room being like, yeah, I'm that guy, I'm the president,
and people were like, I've never known the president, you know, yeah,
or I'm a Romano. I secretly got out my grandpa
when he was younger, he used to look like Bill
(09:45):
Cosby and he would get shifted for free because people
would think he was Bill Cosby in the sixth season
seventies and he just didn't say ship and it wasn't
like good enough where people were like, hold on, let
me hold this photo up. I think a lot of
people in restaurants just like you look somewhat like him.
You're also black. Your Bill Cosby word traveled very slow.
But it'll be like when we're older and you know,
people are ades are lying about being the dude who
(10:06):
punched Richard Spencer. Yeah exactly, like, yeah, that was me. Yeah,
don't don't look too closely into that, but that was me.
Richard Spencer paid that dude to punch him. By the way,
just so everybody knows, oh do you know him? Oh?
He friends of cinder Bio said, friends of friends know him. Um,
(10:27):
I do know the dude who poured coffee on Alex Jones.
Oh yeah, that's a wrestling guy too, isn't he. Yeah.
I remember reading through that and be like, this guy's
are wrestling dude, he's into wrestling. Yeah yeah, and yeah,
so apparently it was out. If you look, you can
find him. Um, well he is around who the guy
(10:48):
who punched Richard Spencer? Yeah, the Spencer puncher. Okay, because
there's also a picture of him getting punched earlier that day.
But we thought, well, maybe he paid that guy to
do that, right, But then the other one I thought.
I thought he was like basically like I need to
get punched in public, and so they were staging this
one and then he got on CNN and he was like, oh, ship,
well this is an even better opportunity to get punched.
(11:09):
It's just weird that he got punched twice and the
only one that people publicized as the second one. Well,
and what's funny also is that like if it was
a case where that happened, it backfired, right, because you
see he got all like carrot tops swoll after that
for the references that after the collect commercials where people
(11:31):
would like be shoving Carrot Tops into thing. Apparently it
was happening to him in real life where people would
see him and try to shove him into phone booths
and shove him into different things. And that's why carrott
Top got Super. I didn't realized that was the reason.
And so after that Richard Spencer got Carrot Tops. Well, yeah,
Carrot Top is the wrong one to funk with now, yeah,
(11:51):
at least physic I'm like, oh goodness, he is all
h g h allegedly allegedly wrank wank wink wink. Danian
is something that is overrated. Breaking Bad didn't do it
for me. I've tried several times to watch that show,
just not feeling it, not feeling it. And I know
(12:12):
everyone says it it's great. I do think that all
of the performances are amazing. I just didn't. I didn't
get subject matter yet, didn't. What do you like any
crime show like scumbaggy crook type shows, like criminal behavior
types show? Yeah, I'll get into some scumback ships. No,
not Super, but I need to give that one another another.
(12:32):
I'm just trying to because I'm looking at like what
also is on that tree? And if maybe that tree
just doesn't even appeal to you, you know, for some
things like um, for movies love good Fellas, UM, I
loved the UM I love the unofficial black sequel to
Good Fellas, which came out in the nineties Society. Well,
(12:53):
if you look at the so the brothers who made
that movie, they tell you, Yeah, these brothers tell you
straight out in the commentary like we just did Good
Friends by amazing that. Um. Yeah, So I do get
into some scumbag stuff. I just those for some reason
didn't really connect with me. I do think that I'm
at a point now and this might be where it
is where when I was younger, because it was more
(13:15):
of the standard things with all white casts, I was like, yeah,
that's just what shows are. And as a bet and older,
I'm like, oh, you don't have to do that. And
so now when I look at something with an all
white cast, I kind of feel like it feels lazy
because it's really easy to not do that. And I
feel like a lot of times people just don't realize that,
Like the reason why why does the default was because
(13:37):
it was decided it was the default. Um. And so
it does become harder for me to get into shows
that are all white casts. Um, I am you know
there are some that do seem like super worth it. Um,
but it is I think a little more difficult to me,
just because I know that you can not do that.
(13:59):
I know that that's a choice, right. What is something
you think is underrated? Oh? Something I think is underrated
is Sorry to Bother You, which is a really really
good movie. Um, and it's gotten some really good press,
but most people have not seen it. It will probably
even now it's hard to see it in theaters. If
(14:19):
you want to, it'll probably be out of theaters. I
would assume this weekend or the next weekend. But it's
a bummer because that's a movie that needs to be
seen in theaters, because there's so much to it visually,
and it feels like it would have been one of
those movies of the year had not and then this
isn't I'm not shooting on superhero movies. I love superhero movies.
(14:39):
Anybody who follows me knows. I love Black Panther, I
love Infinity War, I love I'm a huge comic book fan.
M But it feels like if this wasn't a year
in which there were these two huge superhero movies that
would have been a contender for Movie of the Year. Yeah,
I mean I've loved it. It was amazing. It was
that are real and so real at the same time.
(15:03):
And the other thing that's I think underrated is the
soundtrack by tun Yards. Uh the score, Yeah that is
I was just like, fucking music is good. Like it
was scored in a completely different way. Yeah, shout out
to Boots Riley because everybody should be seeing that movie
if you can't. All right, And finally, what is a myth?
What's something people think it's true that you know to
be false. Oh so I used to be a paralegal.
(15:25):
I can't say literally everything about the judicial system or
the legal system, but basically everything about the legal system.
One thing in particular that I feel like some people
are starting to know that most people don't is that
myth about the hot coffee woman McDonald's. McDonald Yeah, the
idea that like, oh well, now they have to put
the coffee is hot because people are so dumb that
(15:47):
they don't know. And someone won millions for it. Like
what happened was that it was proven that McDonald's had
their coffee at a point which is like too hot
for degrees or something. Yeah, it's something that you can't
ingest as a person. And so because the idea was, well,
you're not going to drink it there, they're gonna take it,
and so we wanted to be hot when they get
(16:07):
to their destination. So when the lid wasn't properly secured
and it went all over her lap, her burns were
so bad she had to get skin grafts. And what
was widely reported was that she got over two million
dollars for it. That's not what wand up happening. She
wind up getting about six hundred thousand or something like that,
a lot of which just goes towards medical bills, which
is something else people don't know. That's not six hundred
thousand that you get to just like hang out with.
(16:28):
Your medical bills have to be paid, and your insurance
doesn't pay them out when they know you're in an
active lawsuit and you get a settlement, because why would
they you got the settlement. So a lot of times
insurance doesn't pay that um so what and so you
know that is used as a case to be like, well,
people are so greedy and everyone's so quick to sue
and people are so stupid. But it is one of
(16:51):
those cases where you have to think who benefits by
us thinking that people who sue for things that happen
are stupid or lazy grifters, because you know, the corporations
they do good. It's these greedy people who be suing
them all the time that's the problem for their stupid
second and third degree burners. I had to get skin
graphs from probably her butt or whatever. We're waking up.
(17:12):
I think from a culture that was just so run
by corporations that the fact that our default was just like, yeah,
this dumb woman's trying to builk McDonald's. McDonald's is probably
the good guy in this story is pretty crazy, But yeah,
that was sort of the default urban legend that I'm
sure McDonald's. I don't know if they officially had a
(17:34):
part in putting that out there, but I don't know.
It just seems weird that that was like the way
gravity worked. What wind of happening is there was a
because all of these stories came out and all of
them made it seem like she was this grifter. It
led to tort reform, which made it harder for people
to be able to see corporations for things like this.
(17:55):
So it did have a real world consequence by showing
all of us. And you still see sometimes around UM
elections and and other things where you'll see busses of
people being like, these attorneys are so greedy, and here's
how we can fix it, and they don't tell you how.
And what it usually means is that it is it's
backed by some corporation who or or a bunch of them,
(18:18):
or some superpack that's fed by them. That is saying, essentially,
what they're trying to do is limit what attorneys can
get back in attorney fees, because if they do that,
they know that attorneys will be less likely to take
certain kinds of cases because a lot of these are
on contingency, so you do a lot of work and
then you get paid some of that. And that's a
lot of the only way that some people could afford
a lawyer, because if you had to put up a
(18:41):
five grand retainer before you can sue for something that
happened to you a personal injury or um you know,
other torts or whatever, you're less likely to do it
because you don't have the money. So while people do
complain about attorney's fees. They wind up doing a lot
of this work for free until the end year's worth,
sometimes two or three years. As I read it, the
(19:02):
official temperature that McDonald's telling all their franchises they needed
their coffee at one up to but around between one
and one ninety degrees fahrenheit. The boiling point of water
is two hundred twelve degrees fahrenheit, so they were giving
people near boiling coffee just to cruise around in. And yeah,
and the insides of our mouse are like points something. Yeah, yeah, yes,
(19:26):
that's how I remember everything. Thank you, Nicholas. What a
name for a band. I didn't even realize that that
was just like the not even like a fever. We
saw lukewarm girl, We're just about normal. We have achieved homeostasis. Girl,
you like that room temperature that's only breaking your room
tepid love? Al Right, guys, let's talk about do jaquet lets.
(19:50):
So the song move came out a few days ago.
I guess, yeah, earlier this week. It's called moll Uh.
It's so fucking good. She is such a obvious like star.
I feel like she's going to be very famous. I
don't know, but it's so weird that this video breaks
(20:12):
the day that Nikki releases her album, because Miles came
in this morning and was like, yeah, song of the summer.
Nobody's talking about Nikki. When we were at the beginning
of the week, We're like, oh, Nikki's albums coming out,
Like that's a thing that's going to be happening in
the zeitgeist this week. Yeah, because everything ever started tweeting bitch,
I'm a cow move and I'm like, what is going on?
Oh here, let's play people a little bit of a
(20:34):
sample right now. It's like taking vallium through your ears exactly. Yeah,
the cow on the cow I'm not. I don't say
now I'm a cow, which I'm a cow. Bitch I'm
(20:54):
a cow, which I'm a core. So that's a little
bit of sam we'll probably write out on this just
because we have to. But yeah, a video that would
get old after a while, but because it doesn't, it
just doesn't. It's there's just something about the absurdity of
just saying, bitch, I'm a cow. And she's so to
(21:17):
steal a phrase from Kim Kardashian, She's so interesting to
look at, not even to look at. Yeah she's yeah,
she's from South Africa too, she realized, Yeah, she's a
South African artist who moved out here and like very
artsy family. But the video is wild too, because it's
just like all very aggressively low budget green screen and
(21:38):
apparently she had like uber eats the burger and a
milkshake over was like, all r, I don't make a
song like a lot of like great hit pop songs.
It was written and composed in like five hours, I think,
she said, and then the video took like six hours.
I wonder if it's just because it's so accessible, the
idea of a cow. You know, we're so we understand
(22:00):
hows we understand milkshakes, cheeseburgers. Her lyrics are so on point,
talking about like farting methane and stuff like really like,
I respect the lyricism to this song. That's the other
thing is that the lyrics are really really good, and
she also manages to like tip her hat to other
really famous songs. Um one of the lyrics, which is great,
it is like I don't live in this city because
(22:21):
they ain't got long. Like the rhymes are actually really
good and incredibly clever. And she It's watching someone who
was incredibly charming and very very talented just under just
understand meme culture and make a song. It's like, I'm
going to make the most memorable songs that anyone has
ever heard, and she nailed it. It's the most effortless
(22:43):
like nailing of something I've ever seen. And it also
shows you, like when you can just create from a
place of just total freedom and no expectation, the results
can be incredible. Because I don't think she was like
being like, no, hold on, we gotta get we gotta
nail this, like in the lab for like nine months.
It's sort of like, no, I felt inspired and I
just sort of went with that and behold, I think
this would be really funny, and so I did it
(23:03):
and she was right. It's hilarious and really really genuinely good. Yeah,
move fart in methane. Okay, guys, um Nikki's albums out.
It's pretty good. Uh, you know, I've heard two songs. Yeah,
I've heard a couple of songs. It's pretty funny. Everyone's
talking about Barbie Dreams, right right, Barbie Dreams where she
talks about everybody well and also the real Beef when
(23:27):
Safari comes out and said that she tried to kill him. Right,
So that's the other story that everyone's talking I think
people we need to be talking about that a little
bit too. Everyone's focused on the hairline. No one's focusing
on the attempted murder, on the domestic violence aspect of this,
where he was saying like, I had to lie to
the police and say I was trying to kill myself
to keep you from going to jail, like and then
he even says like, when these things happen a few times,
(23:50):
it's time to bounce and you're like, WHOA, Okay, but
ever yeah again, everyone's like yo. But his hairline though,
because he's so welcome the same place, took away? What
about group? I like how though he took it with
a little bit of so in this beef, it all
originated after Nikki went on Hot nineties seven and said
some things about everybody, and then Safari got on Twitter
(24:12):
who was her ex, and was saying, you know, for
a long time he had been saying he was writing
her music, which he was saying was a lie. And
then they just started going back and forth on Twitter,
which all this other stuff came out about how she
paid for his fake hair and that they went to
the same doctors Tiger. Tiger didn't even asked to get
brought into this being proud of this. And if you
don't recognize Safari, Um, you probably know him from the
(24:32):
gift where he's eating let us with his hands. M okay,
that would be if if you're not very familiar with
him or who he is. He's on love and Hip hop.
He eats let us without a fork and I think
really that their love is so strong to me, I
don't know. I don't know what's going on with them. Well,
a lot of people are saying, yeah, one of the
songs on her album comes See About Me is about Safari.
(24:54):
That's one of the It's the song where like it's
it's an arm be jam and she sings throughout all
of it. It's like you've own and I've grown. Let's
see if we can come and grow together or whatever
I promised no knives. And so now he's talking about
how he's got like a book deal and he's got
like handcuffs from men wants to sponsor him. Um, he
(25:17):
got money for referrals for his doctor and all of
these things and what does NICKI get out of it?
Nicky gets I mean really, And now she's saying that,
you know, Thursday, I'm going to do Queen Radio or
We're gonna air all this stuff out. And it's like
put it in your rhymes, MA, like put it in
your art. Beyonce wasn't going around saying Jay did this,
(25:37):
Jay did that. Here's who Becky is, YadA, YadA, YadA.
She put it into her art and she dropped it
on us out of nowhere, and that's why it's legendary.
And that's why I was like, who the fuck is Becky? Yeah,
gotta be Gwyneth what I see. I have a theory
that because I know everyone says it's like that Dame
dash X or whatever. Yeah, the other I did the
(25:58):
thing that the internet did. Rachel, she makes meals in
thirty minutes. Um, But I think that it's there was
a woman who had put out this really wax song
called I'm Sorry Miss Carter, and she had like this
really long hair, and part of her whole persona is
that like I'm an all natural model girl. And her
(26:18):
name is like Live something, Um, yes, Live did or
something like that, and so she and she has a
naturally like super long straight black hair like those wigs
that Nikki wears. Now, that's what her natural hair looks like.
And so in the video, it's like her drinking wine
out of a champagne glass and like a hot tub
and like constantly running her fingers through her hair, so
you can see that she's got like this straight hair
(26:40):
or whatever the growing out my head. Yeah, And the
whole song is about how jay Z was trying to
push on her. Right. That definitely um and so I
wonder and she's like your man like model chicks, all
natural model chicks like me. Hair's natural, nails natural, blah
blah blah. And I remember it created like this little
blip mostly because everybody was making fun of her and
(27:00):
was like jay got Beyonce, he don't need you. Little
did we know he may have. And the whole song
is about how like I wasn't with him because I
respect your marriage, but you need to put out that
he needs to respect your marriage. And so it was
a disk track against Beyonce. And so that's forever been
my theory that like that might have been who Becky
with the good hair she was talking about? Interesting, all right,
(27:22):
we have to take a quick break. We'll be right back,
and we're back. And the primaries, Uh, some primaries were
last night, and it was a good day for progressivism.
(27:43):
I'd say there were a bunch of candidates. First, some
who broke through us. First, Vermont nominated Christine hulk Wist,
who was the first transgender person to ever be a
major party candidate for governor. She's going up against a
popular are Republican incumbent named Phil Scott, but he is
(28:04):
a Republican. It's Vermont, so I think she has a shot.
Most people think she does too. Um. A progressive Muslim
woman was nominated by the Democratic Party and is for
Keith in Minnesota, and she's basically a chew in. They think,
(28:25):
oh yeah, yeah, she's gonna win. Um. I think Connecticut
is also going to have possibly their first African American
uh congress person they win in the midterms in November two. Yeah,
it's a lot of first yesterday. Yeah, and these are
all of these people are just incredibly qualified and like
hal Quist was the CEO of Vermont Electric Cooperative and
(28:48):
like basically brought the Internet to all of Vermont. Uh,
you know, so it's like I don't know, it's just
interesting to like, when people talk about diversity, a lot
of the right will be like, oh, it's being forced
down our throat, and it's like, no, that you're letting
people who are overly qualified, like actually joined the party
(29:10):
like instead of blocking them. Yeah, what are your qualifications?
H I brought Vermont the Internet, and I was able
to address climate change about raising costs. I don't know,
chog on, but yeah. And then the Cook Report. Miles
explain what the Cook Political Report. This guy, Charlie Cook,
(29:30):
he's sort of he has his eye on all kinds
of districts. He's like the guru of congressional districts, and
especially when it comes to deciding which way they lean,
whether it's like a solidly Republican or solidly Democratic seat. Uh.
And he sort of keeps his finger on the pulse
of these districts, looks at all kinds of information and data,
and then his report will come out where he will
(29:52):
begin to categorize these seats. So some can go from
solidly republic to maybe just possibly Leans Republican, or Leans Republican,
or then could be a toss up, or it could
be leaning Democrats. So there's like this scale, and every
time there's a rating that changes, a lot of people
who work in in campaigns and politics in general, they
look at the political report be like, oh, change the seat.
(30:15):
That's an indication that for the man who is like
he has a book that it's like a must own
book for anyone working in politics because it breaks down
every congressional district and gives you demographic information. It's sort
of like a cheap guide, quick cheat sheet to understand
what the different districts look like. So, yeah, when he
starts changing the the direction of a of a seat
(30:36):
and says like, oh, this one's moving more democratic, you
listen because he's not just saying that because oh yeah,
it's based on this or that. I mean, not that
he gets everything right, but he's a pretty well respected
person when it comes to determining these things. Yet, so
he wrote this morning. In January, we rated twenty GOP
held seats as toss ups or worse, including three leaning
towards Democrats. With today's changes, we now rate thirty seven
(30:59):
g OP held seats as toss ups or worse, including
ten leading towards Democrats. So things are definitely moving in
the direction of a blue ish which you gotta vote,
ways you gotta vote. Yeah, it doesn't matter to vote.
And if your homies don't have that sticker, this the
reckoning has to happen. Everybody has to vote. Everybody has.
(31:21):
The other story that's being written this morning in the
New York Times. They have a headline Democrats try a
risky strategy and bid to win House control. And it's
basically just instead of going with like these down the middle, uh,
you know, party approved candidates, they're just letting the candidates
in different districts follow their beliefs or just tailored to like,
(31:47):
you know, my just stick people want to hear more
about Medicaid expansion than high speed rail or whatever, or
infrastructure improvements. Yeah, and it's all very much in the
same family of ideas. It's just but for the New
York Times and some of the conventional wisdom when it
comes to politics, the ideas that you need to have
(32:08):
like a cohesive party ticket or a cohesive party platform
that everybody is behind. And uh, it just seems like
that hasn't been working for the Democrats so well. And
I mean, look at look at all the seats we've
lost over the years. It's clearly working because the plan
has to been to seed power to the right the
(32:28):
whole time. See that's what you don't get. It's a
long game. Uh No, it has not been working. So
I think this is fine. It's one of those scary
headlines that an establishment democrat type person writes to try
and like right to the ship, so to speak. Like
just like when Alexandroocazio Cortez one, They're like, well, easy, now, yeah,
she's just too radical. She might say cowabunga or something.
(32:52):
It's all over. You can tell that she is, you know,
a powerful how much is being spilled by the right
and there like they the right is calling her the
left Sarah Palin Like they're just trying to they're trying anything.
They're like, we counted the number of times she said
like and that means she's done. She was a bartender, right, Okay,
(33:17):
So for all your bashing of elitism and Ship has
an economics degree, what are you talking about? It's amazing
how terrifying, like how terrified people are of her. It's
you know, she speaks to the people of her district
and what what she does there might not work in
other places. But yeah, just this like super fear that
everyone has of losing control is so interesting to me. Yeah,
(33:42):
it's well, you know, I think a lot of people
to see that over candidates that are running on that
kind of platform. That is a threat to the status
quo of you know, traditional capitalism in this country. So
when she comes talking that like free healthcare and free education,
then you get these thing pieces from like the right
where like, I know, it sounds good, the idea that
your kids could have healthcare. It was so scary because
(34:03):
I found myself believing her. I found myself agreeing I
would as a parent, I do want my kids to
you know, of course a parent would feel like their
child is but you were obligated to provide healthcare to everyone.
But we have to remember that it's wrong. It's like, wow, yeah,
it is seductive. It sounds like she's like, it's not
offering you meth, you know what I mean. She's not
(34:25):
coming by at a van that's like, hey, get in, kids,
We've got free education and healthcare, free iPods, come on in.
It's yeah, the meth of the people healthcare. All right.
Speaking of things that are scaring the ship out of
the right, amar Rosa is still out here dropping heat
making the summer surgical Surgical Summer eighteen. It's not push
(34:47):
the t Yeah, I think it's Omar Rosa a k
Lionel Messi as fuck. She man, she's really got something
going talking. This is kind of like Nick Nicki Minaja Safari.
Almost one person just needs the other person to acknowledge
them and their stock rises, much like Omarrossa saying something
about Trump. And now her book is now I think
(35:08):
number two, like in pre pre orders or whatever. By
her book, I mean it's doing a lot better than
Sean Spicer's book. And he was right in there, but
that's because he's over there being like, oh and it
was so cool and he's a unicorn something. What was
a weird fucking quote said he was like a unicorn
on it. Some I literally tried to pay attention to
that and the words just like did not enter my Yeah,
(35:30):
I was on the table anyway. So we didn't get
to talk about this yesterday, but we found out that
a lot of people were speculating whether or not this
tape exists where Trump drops the end bomb and will
prove once and for all that he was racist, because
now we have it in recording funk all the other
ship that would have indicated that like his racism or
(35:53):
other things like that. So she teased this thing he
was calling her a liar. Then she comes with a
straight up records of her and other circuits on the campaign,
we're kind of discussing, Okay, how are we going to
deal with the fallout of this tape being released? If
it's released, which is a pretty good indication that it
probably exists, but we don't know because you get a
very specific chunk of audio, so you don't know how
(36:15):
Omarrossa may have set it up. If she just like
walked them into this and said, oh, you know, there's
a tape and it's probably gonna come out. Let's talk
about this now. What people are saying there is a
tape and we don't know yet, but if there is,
how do we handle it? But they clearly sounded like
people who were having to deal with it realistically, and
it wasn't They weren't wrestling with the idea that no,
he would never I don't believe that. They're like, Okay,
(36:36):
this is what we do we got. Wasn't there a
statement like he's the tape exists and he's embarrassed. I think, well,
there was not a cross top before it, and you
don't know if that was them saying that's what he
should say, and it's just acknowledge it and just say
I'm so embarrassed by it, or that he was confronted.
They're like, Yo, did you say that? And he said
I did, and I'm embarrassed, although I don't believe that
(36:57):
he would admit that either, because that's just not his character.
But think but nothing being embarrassed part back at that time,
he you know, the Access Hollywood tape came out and
he immediately was like, yeah, that was me, my bed,
and then it only occurred to him like six months
later to be like so yeah, deep fix um. I
think Trump also said something about how he called Mark Burnett,
(37:20):
the Apprentice producer, and Mark Burnett assured him that the
tapes don't exist, which is totally something you would have
to do if you didn't use racist terminology. You would
have to call somebody to find out if tape existed
of you using racist slurs because that word is not
in my vocabulary. Look, I've definitely this isn't a slur.
(37:41):
But I know for a fact that this right now
is going to be one of the few times in
my life I've ever said the word rumbus. So I
don't have to worry that someone else is going to
like find a tape of me saying rumbus somewhere. Probably
the only these are these are the last times I
will say that word more right, well, and then they
so then right after that, you know, he puts out
that wacky tweet where again he has to go. He
(38:02):
his his typical game plan of attacking a person of
colors intelligence and dehumanized them. So he tweeted right after
he says, when you give a crazed, crying low life
a break and give her a job at the White House,
I guess it just didn't work out. Good work by
General Kelly for quickly firing that dog. Now, okay, we
have the people have talked about this up and down
all over the news yesterday. The stream of consciousness of
(38:25):
this tweet is very bizarre, where he's like, when you
give a crazy person a job, I guess it didn't
just work out? Like where where was this? Also like
I know you don't drink. Also, yeah, you hired this
crazed low life, right, that's does he know that you
can do a drafts? His drafts folder is empty as
(38:46):
fun it is. No, He's like was that, He's like, no,
I don't want to be drafted. That's how I got
out of Vietnam exactly. He at all, Um, Yeah, I
don't know. There's I mean, you know, I've heard it
argued both ways that yes, he you know, has compared
lots of people to dogs. It's not just black people.
(39:08):
But uh, there there was a good pie chart on
I think CNN yesterday where it was a great screen
cap from a moment on CNN where it was a
pie chart of you know, people whose intelligence he has insulted,
and it was like black people, it was not it
was like seventy three for black people and he hadn't
(39:33):
attacked their intelligence directly. And then also on screen at
that time was the quote from Sarah Sanders saying she
couldn't guarantee that a tape didn't exist of Trump of
a sentence have to say about your boss. I can't
guarantee there's not. That is never a good answer to
any question. Like it's not like that means yes, you
(39:55):
know what I mean, They're like, you know, as if
you're a kid, like did you do your homework? I
can't guarantee that I did. That suggests that like it
is imminently coming out because she lies about fucking everything
just with a straight face, without any concern. And you know,
I think they know they're too close to the sun
on this one, right, Yeah no, because I definitely, Look,
I've had bosses where I can be like, look, I
(40:16):
can't guarantee there ain't a table, and it's like, nah,
this is gonna be the one where it ain't gonna
be my fault. And that's essentially her drawing the line
for herself of being like, look, I can lie about
a lot of stuff. I just lied about all my
black facts about how many black people are in you know, employment.
(40:36):
What you ain't gonna do is have me lie about
the end work in my voice. What you ain't going
to ye? And then she she had to take that
back because I think the second she was pressed about
the tape, my goodness, she was maneuvering like Consolo doing
the Kessel running twelve bar sex bab Bad. I could
not believe how she was like he likes black people,
(40:59):
he created like literally just making facts up about black employment,
which was quickly debunked, and then she had to go
on Twitter and be like, I have to correct myself,
although they did not correct the actual transcript of this,
so for historical reference that will remain in there in
the record. They couldn't even asterisk that I know, can
we do an asterisk? Because I feel like it would
just be all transcripts from this administration, which nothing. But
(41:21):
I'm sure there is a watchdog group who has taken up,
taken upon themselves the task of making sure that there
is an accurate record of everything that's happened. Oh my god,
can you imagine the footnotes. I imagine that the page
is like a quarter of it is what the transcript
and then the rest one. Nobody needs to just send
(41:42):
somebody to the briefings to just do live fact checks,
like just be like okay, so that just the light
comes just going on the last paragraph alone, and then
talked that that, um, that press briefing was interesting yesterday too,
because Christian Welker is the one from NBC was the
one pressing Sarah Sanders about like what do you what
did he say? Blah blah blah, and when she kept dodging,
(42:03):
she wanted to follow up, and at one point Sarah
Hugby Sanders wanted to move on, so she called on
one of the guys from Fox News and he he
seeded his time to Kristen Welker to let her keep
the press up. Just you know, the N word. It's
gonna wind up being the one line that everyone's like,
oh no, you ain't getting me on this Fox. I
don't want to be the guy. I don't want that
smoke pivot. They're like, yo, do do what you gotta do.
(42:24):
I want none of this. Yeah, ain't gonna be connected
to me in the future exactly. And it's funny too
because Sarah Sanders always up there being like, you know,
whenever he said weird stuff, She's like, you know, look
at the president's actions. You know, before you judge, don't
just go look at his actions. Black coodn't playing blah blah,
but like, well, look, my friend, uh, the president was
using N words and he was doing engage in an
(42:46):
action an act of racist behavior. So where are we
supposed to do with that? Right? And I don't know
what omar Rosa has in the chamber right now, but
political is reporting how the all white House Stafford just
like shook it at this point. Yeah, they're terrified, they're
oh my god. She's got one of those pens from Bond.
It's like you can buy them on Amazon. But that's
totally fine. People use them for notes in class. He's
got one of those pens from the Imaginarium as well,
(43:09):
and as we found out recently, it is the all
White House staff Oh yeah yeah uh pen. Also, Pendulotte,
who was on The Celebrity Apprentice, says that like everybody
who has talked to Trump off Mike says that he uses,
you know, racially insensitive language to a degree that makes
(43:31):
everybody in the room wildly uncomfortable. And so he's like
he was asked if tapes of Trump making those comments
exist and Pendulot said, yeah, I was in the room
when he said it, and he was like miked up.
So well, come on, Mark Burnett, Yeah, come on, Mark,
Now it's gonna be someone, because I I would be
willing to bet that by now the footage of that
(43:54):
someone does have it, you know, like Burnette has it
in case he needs it. He's not going to delete
it completely, yeah, but hopefully someone smart who were who
kept it before it was taken out, so it was
before it was moved from archives to whatever special lock
and key. There's one thing I know about people work
in post production. They will they will save the best
(44:15):
bits actally if there's something funny on there, because I
have seen outtakes of shows that have not been seen,
but people who were in post like, yo, you gotta
see this, yeah, or what does that think? They call
it like sea roll or something where, um, if someone
happens to capture like people again, funny things like that,
or people you know, sometimes banging in sports events, like
(44:36):
we can't see him, the cameras will get it, and
so they'll keep it so you can look at I
think dead Spin had a bunch of them and they
were like, here are some like crazy. I think they
call it c roll or d roll or something okay,
where it's just the stuff that people have seen compostor
I have to go look that up now, so there
will be dead air for the next fifteen minutes. Yeah,
there's some really good footage of Alex Trebec drinking on
(45:00):
air like he was doing a p s A or
like some quick ads for Jeopardy, and he's just like
crushing like five beers during the course of the thing.
It's just like so like he's like a fuck, yeah,
it's really good. It's like in the eighties, like a
young trebec while you're trying to speak out loud, burping
(45:24):
up a storm too. All right, we're gonna take a
quick break. We'll be right back. And we're back, and
just a little bit more Trump to talk about. Because
(45:46):
Paul Manafort's trial is in its last day because the
defense staged a valiant like we mentioned just the defense
rest that was their defense. Yeah, they're like, and do
you have present something? No, we're good. Now we're Good's go, yeah,
the old, the old, weird good defense. Let's get to
(46:08):
closing arguments. Yeah. I think it's gonna be very interesting.
I mean, they it seems like from what a lot
of people are gathering, their defense is just basically going
to be in their closing argument that Rick Gates is
a liar and cheats on his wife, Therefore Palm Manaford
is not guilty something to something to that effect of
just attacking the credibility of Rick Gates. And I think
what they're going to try and say is because the
(46:30):
prosecution had to bring up this cooperating witness that shows
the lack of strength of the evidence and the documents
to prove their case. Therefore, uh palm Manafort innocent. Another
thing we talked about yesterday how they tried to do
a last ditch appeal to the judge to get them
the judge to throw the case out and quit Paul Manaford.
The reasoning was that, so there's this guy named Steve Cock,
(46:53):
who is he works at this bank in Illinois, who
gave Paul Manaford a sixteen million dollar long which is
like a huge part of like the capital that the
bank has like to play with essentially. So Paul Manafort
was like, YO, give me this loan. I could hook
you like I'm hooked up Trump thing. I can get
you any job. So this guy gave him the loan
blah blah blah. And part of that was and part
(47:13):
of this trial is the wire fraud and the other
fraud that Paul Manaford committed was he gave this bank
fraudulent statements and other documents to prove that he was
worthy of getting this loan or whatever. So his defense
was arguing to the judge that because this guy Steve Cock,
who worked at the bank, was so desperate to work
for the administration because Paul Manafort had been like, Hey,
(47:33):
if you give me this loan, you'll get a job.
That it shouldn't matter if Palm Manafort submitted fraudulent documents
because this person was so focused on the quid pro
quo of it all, that would have mattered and he
would have got the loan anyway. And yeah, the judge.
The judge was like, huh, he's like that, to your honor,
he was too easy to scam. Yeah, that's why it's
(47:55):
not really escape And they're like, that doesn't materially changed
the fact that he submitted fraudulent documents to a bank
to secure a loan. So they're like, no, we're gonna
see tomorrow, come with your a game. That was their argument.
That's why they were trying to get it the whole
(48:16):
case does. Yeah, it was that he was going to
give too many ways, so it doesn't matter if you
committed fraud. So that's that's where they're dealing with. So
and a couple of other things leaked or some of
the email correspondents where we find out that Steve Cock
was very interested in one job in particular, he wanted
to be the Secretary of the Army, which is a
civilian job within d O D to sort of have
like an administrative role in the army, not like a
military actual tactical role in any way. And he really
(48:38):
wanted it, and he kept writing Paul Man for like
these emails like, oh, here's my here's my bio, so
you can send it to the d O d uh.
He said. If I can't get those, here's a list
of other perspective roles that I would like to be
considered for. He misspelled perspective roles. He spelled it perspective
p R from this person and rolls R O L
(48:59):
L like like yes, like a sushi roll if you will.
So that's what this man is writing. And at the
top he was like, I want to be ambassador to
the UK, and then like all these other huge countries
and the veryand I guess I could be ambassador of
the U N too. I mean, if like we have to,
I mean, that's our only thing, and you really want
to suck me over. Yeah, I guess the ambassador to
(49:21):
the UK or Japan or something. So and then he
had a bio where he clearly full on took out
the description of the what the actual role is of
the Secretary of the Army and then which are we
talking about? Oh no, because people caught onto that because
it was the one time he didn't misspell role, and
then when they did a search on it, they're like,
(49:41):
this is from Wikipedia. And then he was saying things
like yes, uh, this man Steve Cock. In his bio
he said he has a deep reservoir of competence and
things like that, and he's like and verifiable acumen and
just all these weird buzzwords that we're just this is
the word like they're for like a million times because
(50:02):
he thinks it makes them sounds per se exactly. This
it just kind of shows you how the transactions work
with this campaign. It was you give me something, I
can give you a job in the fucking government. And
if this man was out here with his perspective roles,
I'm just curious how many who are the other people
that are working in here who probably no lesson this dude? Does?
(50:24):
I mean probably many because as we've seen with people
like Scott Yeah, yeah, yeah, a lot of the guys
from the from crooked media, who you know, their first
jobs were in the Obama administration, and now they're just
coming out into the public or the private sector for
the first time. They're just like, we are extremely unimpressed
(50:48):
by like the private sector, and like because like for
years people were like, we just need like really smart
business men to come in here and like run the
country like it's a business. Uh. And I just feel
like everything we learned about Trump and Manafort and just
all of this ship just puts the lie to this
system that runs our country, capitalism, Like it's just like
(51:11):
everybody's a crooked, dumbassy if it's just if you put
businessmen in charge, the first thing they think of is
how is this going to be good for my business
when I'm not doing this anymore? Right? That is what? Yeah.
In fact, like part of the defense's argument is that
the prosecution Mueller's side, did not call enough witnesses. And
(51:35):
part of the reason that they didn't call more witnesses
is because every rock they uncovered, the people underneath were
so corrupt that they just couldn't like bring them in
as witnesses because they would have had to grant them immunity,
and like you can't just pardon like every corrupt person
in the country. Turtles, the downright turtles all the way down.
(51:56):
That's exactly right. It's nothing. One of the witnesses that
they didn't call was actually Smiegle. They're like, yo, literally
came from under a rock, and your green written soul
is not enough for this core of room. But it
just off that fact. They there were twenty seven witnesses
on behalf of the prosecution, zero witnesses on behalf of
the defense. And even when you talk about the documentary
(52:19):
evidence and things like that, the government submitted three sixty
seven exhibits, the defense twelve. They were just grasping at
straws to begin with. They just didn't have They're like, fuck,
one of whom is just like an email from him
to him BCC to him, like, oh, I didn't do
any of that crazy stuff. I don't know why people
would say note to self, just stuff, I've never committed
(52:43):
a cry. Notice. If you're so innocent and a good boy,
yeah you're the very best boy. Yeah, I mean your honor.
Just look at this email he wrote to himself. I'm
a good boy. Now the defense rest, oh man. But
just like for all the people who don't have a
lot of money to see that this is like what
(53:05):
people who have a lot of money are doing and
getting away with it, and how they're getting their money
is just being like, hey, i'll give you a job
in as Secretary of Army. I'm sure they didn't even
know that job existed when he promised it to him,
like i'll get I'll make you secretary of Army if
you give me sixteen million dollars, and they were like, yep,
that's what baffles me. If y'all want to just like
(53:27):
kept quiet and not been so loud about your craziness,
because I'm sure this is not the first of the
last time that someone has leveraged this. They just haven't
ever been this stupid about before. This administration is so
loud and they're making it so loud and crazy in
these streets and like if you just would have settled
(53:48):
for like less, but you had to take it all.
Just The dumbest thing too, is Steve Cock. He was
so gassed up on the idea of him being Secretary
the Army. He premly called the fucking Pentagon and was like, Hey,
what's good. This is Steve Cock. I'm about to be
Secretary of Army. So how do you want to handle
my briefings? Like should come in to handle my brief
(54:12):
and they were like I'm sorry, yeah, Like this is
the Pentagon. I man, what are you saying? Why are
you calling from a bank number? All right, hold on,
let me call Paul really quick. I'll call you back.
And they're like, yo, what's good? The Pentagon And they
didn't know about me. So, by the way, how are
you just getting the Benegon's the number just to call
and be like, I think, hey, I just want to
(54:32):
check up on my resume. I think he went to
Army dot gov and just went to the contact link
and was like, okay, what's good. Okay, there's a phone number, okay,
and then just be was like, yeah, I need to
talk to I need to get to the Pentagon. So yeah,
project confidence confidence all the place that you want to
get hired and ask them how they're going to handle
(54:52):
your briefings and confuse the ship out them. All right.
Speaking of just capitalist incompetence movie pass, we we just
wanted to check in on them because Miles, you had
an amazing statistic. Yeah, well you know, I'm I invested
about fourteen thousand dollars a movie pass at the around
uh February, no, no, around April, and it was trading
(55:13):
around a thousand dollars. I've had four teen shares, and
I thought, okay, this is good, this is a good
investments to share. Yeah, and uh, and I've and I've
been trusting the process. I don't read the bad news
that they've just been in a downward death spin and
that they've only limited it to I think three movies
a month now, and uh, it's just I don't believe it.
So what I'm gonna do is live on there. I'm
gonna because I'm so confident, I'm gonna check what my
(55:35):
shares are at right now, and I'm just gonna flex
on all y'all. Okay, so let me just go here. Okay,
it is oh my god, oh no, it's trading at
five cents. To share it out, I had thousand dollars
to five cents, I only have seventy cents. My fourteen
(55:57):
thousand is now worth seventy cents. Okay. All jokes said
they lost a hundred twenty six million dollars last quarter.
They just reported, and their stock is trading at five
cents a nickel. A share and now they're facing a
class action lawsuits from the lawsuits from their shareholders. Um,
you know, but if you that seventy cents would have
been like half a bus ride, that's true, that's true. Yeah,
(56:20):
might be worth more. Yeah, you could have went from
a down payment on a house to almost being able
to take the train, to a down payment on a
Metro card. Right that one guy traded a red paper
clip for you know, he ended up getting up to
a house. So still hope for you. I mean, wow,
what a Yeah in April it was trading around a
thousand dollars and now it's at five cents. And I mean,
(56:43):
I don't know who the obviously this class action lawsuit.
I understand why they would sue them. They're like, you
told us some whole other ship, and why are we
here right now? But I feel like someone who's just
a little bit of savvy. I mean I get I granted,
I don't know how like the high end investment realm
works where they thought, look, we can operate at a
lot because eventually it's going to be so huge that
they're going to have to come to come to do
business with us. Sucked all these people up Amazon did
(57:06):
it for they did it right, and everyone was like, yeah,
you don't have to make money, right eventually, this is
a business, right right, Yeah, you need money. So they clearly,
I mean like they're they were sort of complaining that.
They're like, this isn't a sustainable business model. But we
all I mean, when you're like unlimited movies for nine
(57:27):
bucks and we don't owe none of these theaters, Okay,
I don't know. Did you have movie pass uver? I did?
I did have movie pass um and then did you
make did you take advantage of it? Oh? I took
advantage okay, because that's what and I love the thing.
They're like, oh, well, certain users were ruining it. No,
that's what you told us we could do. You don't
say unlimited and then be like like the asterisk because
like it's unlimited movies. But if you do it, use
(57:49):
a dick unlimited movies, you know. So I did. I
went and I took advantage of it, and I watched
a bunch of stuff, and then once stuff started to
get in real weird it, I canceled. And I'm lucky
that I canceled when I did, because now it's hard
to cancel it's hard to cancel, and apparently like someone
to cancel, someone put I'd have to find the tweet.
(58:09):
But someone tweeted that they got an email from them
that essentially said, if you put into can't like that
people were being automatically opting into their new program. And
if you had put in a cancelation request before the
automatic opt in, the opt in was taking priority over
your cancelation, so people were having to go back in
and cancel again. My goodness, that's mean. Yeah, I don't
(58:35):
I really don't know how the CEO is going to
spend this one because the last time when we checked
in with them, when they went to three three movies
a month, he's like, that's fine because of our users
don't watch more than three movies a month. And guys
just ignore all this talk that like it's it's all
in a bad place, and then cut to today, My
good how are you ever going to make money when
you don't own the theaters and you don't own the
(58:57):
movies because you have to pay If I'm paying ten
bucks a month on and movies on average, depending on
where you are, one movie is between ten to fifteen dollars,
between fifteen and twenty Yeah, how were you ever, how
was this ever a winning business model? What were you
going to do? I don't know, I don't know. It
must really have been this thing where they knew they
(59:19):
were playing chicken with you know, destiny there, like you
know what if we just floor it and go right
at the wall, the wall may turn into a bucket
of gold. But it ended up crashing the wall basically,
So I don't know. Uh, it was fun to watch.
It was fun. Well, l hey, I know That's why
I feel like that the AMC one, they kind of
(59:40):
they kind of got it right because there's like twenty
but you get I think three movies a week. It's
three movies a week. Yeah, and it's their own and
they're still going to make money off of you because
you're gonna buy popcorn and stuff because because you can
afford to now. Plus like a lot of them, a
lot of the theaters have dranks and so you can
go and get drinks and unlike with movie pass, when
(01:00:00):
with movie Pass you had to like show up and
get your thing, you could there were only a few
theaters where you could actually get a ticket ahead of time, right,
you just have to kind of show up and hope
it wasn't sold out with AMC. You can reserve its
like anything, Yeah, like like any other like you were
buying it with regular moneis. Yeah, oh man, popcorn am C.
Think about that. I always get a little cup of
(01:00:20):
nacho cheese with the popcorn. Oh. I used to I
used to work in a movie theater. It was my
first job, and that was that was what we all eat.
That's the hack really. Oh yeah, shout out to Chris
Flick who showed me that at the fourteen when it
was the AMC fourteen in Burbank. I learned about how
a peg was when I moved out here, how pang
was with popcorn with that? Yeah, wait, you've just oh
(01:00:41):
because that's not a real kindiment everywhere else. They didn't
give it out on the East Coast really when I
was growing up where I just never saw anybody use it.
But yeah, and here you get peppers with everything. Yeah.
They called those devil rings on the rings on the
no no, no boy, no, no devil rings for me.
Classic East Coast Danielle. Let's put a pleasure having you.
(01:01:05):
Where can people find you? Um? You can find me
on Twitter at just at Danielle Radford. I got it first. Um,
you can find me on Instagram at Danielle Underscore Radford. Please, um,
I do try to put funny and cute things on Instagram. Um,
please follow me there because if I get to ten thousand,
I can start getting free close. Really is that is
that the threshold? Yeah, the thresholds like ten thous like
(01:01:25):
to be a quote unquote influencer or just to make
your account, like to put it in that category. Well,
it opens up new things for me. And then yet
advertisers can be like, you have an audience, what'll give
you what I think I'm at like three thousand? Okay,
that's fine, let's go. Let's go, let's go. But yeah,
so do that and then you can find me. Um,
(01:01:46):
I've got I'm on screen Junkies on Thursdays. You can
find me at my resting podcast Types and Fights also
releases on Thursdays and various places around the internet. Nice
you liked Nick, Yeah, I like all the house. I'm
friends with the I'm had friends with the both house.
I like I'm I like how he's a good one.
We were friends, we're friends. Dude, is there a tweet
(01:02:09):
you've been enjoying you know, it was really just it's
all of the Nicki Minaj related tweets. Um, so I'll
go pig and let me see because they're all they're
just all so good. I was literally texting people like,
please tell me that you're watching this. Please tell me
that you are watching all of this Nicki Naj And
this one. First off, me and Tigger didn't go to
(01:02:32):
the same doctor. We did it the same day, different doctors. Listen.
I don't know if this has to do with first
week's sales, but you need to finish your zen and
don't talk about v H one checks because the way
you're acting, it's like you're auditioning to be on Love
and Hip Hop. And then he died another one at
least y'all know. I was trying to keep my nudes
to myself. Now someone was and then he spelled it
like weird trying to leak my dick pick for years
and I've been trying to stop it forever. But is
(01:02:53):
this supposed to be your promo run? I'm flattered that
you feel talking about me can help. I can't believe
you're still mad. And then this fine on one it's
about and let's keep the mention of mothers and siblings
to a minimum of zero. Please, sincerely, yours, twelve K hairline? Hairline?
There you go? Is that how much he spent on
his hair she spent she spent scammed for a hairline?
(01:03:17):
There you go. It's a thin hair line between love
and hate. Miles where can people find you? You can
find me on Twitter and Instagram at miles of gray.
And now that I know, if you get ten k
you could possibly get free things, help me get there too.
Let us realize all of our dreams since we've commodified
our brains for the Internet. And a tweet I'm liking
(01:03:38):
is actually a little bit of messy spilt tea from
kb xx NT nine the box in Houston, h Town
where Robert Glasper who was amazing jazz piano player producer.
He went on his local radio station and dumped the
whole pot of tea out on Lauren Hill basically talking
(01:03:59):
about how she really does like people, you cannot look
her in the eye, how she has a bad personality,
tried to g up on the whole band and say like, hey,
axcept half the money or I'm going to hire this
whole other band. That I just auditioned right now, so
make your decision. And then he also kind of let
everybody know that she really didn't write The Miseducation of
Lauren Hill, which was the explosive thing. Uh, And they
(01:04:20):
were like that had been out for a while, but
it was the first time that like, yeah, or at
least someone who like was so aggressively being like, yeah,
that's the truth. And if you don't and if don't
look at the checks she had to cut other people
checks for that album. That's not because she was being nice,
because she stole their music. And they also say that
could be why she has to do different arrangements of
songs a lot. That's what I heard, Like, that's why
(01:04:41):
she and that's why she hasn't done another one. Yeah,
and that's who's also like, how come she hasn't had
to hit them since then? And that's like, but I
love Elbow, So yeah, that is a tweet that just
check my timeline for it. Yeah, So that's mine, all right.
You can follow me at Jack Underscore O'Brien tweet I've
enjoying uh. Blank Patch tweeted tragedy plus time equals tragedy
(01:05:06):
time and KB spangler. Another KB tweet tweeted, Hey, so
we're agreed. Everything is an absolute ship storm, right, Let's
give the folks who love pumpkin spice whatever is the
past this year. I think it's nice. Let's guys all right.
You can follow us at Daily Zeitgeist on Twitter. We're
(01:05:27):
at the Daily Zeitgeist on Instagram. We have a Facebook
fan page and a website Daily Zeitgeist dot com where
we post our episodes in there, but we link off
to the information in the episode as well as the song. Miles,
what's that? You guys already know it's your girl Doja
(01:05:47):
Cat with the I mean, the low energy hit of
the summer. Just just take this audio value of straight
to your brain. It's move. Oh also, you guys, third
now four five episodes of a couple of Therapy up
and it's so good. Everybody really needs to check it out.
It's We had Naomi and Andy on the show before
and separately, and I know the feedback was good when
(01:06:10):
they were out guesting. Yeah, yeah, so definitely check out
their pod because show is very dingable, so so good
if you just want to laugh the whole time, because
it's just funny people being so funny, not like this
singer podcast right. Uh. Also, our foot notes are in
the description of the episode, so you can find them there.
We are going to ride out on Move. We will
(01:06:31):
be back tomorrow because it is a daily podcast. We'll
talk to you. Gets them by Yeah, bitch on the cow,
(01:07:00):
I'm a cow. I'm not a cat. I don't say now, bitch,
I'm a cow bitch. I'm a cow bitch. I'm a
cow bitch. I'm a cow. Go more, come more, come cow.
I'm a cow. No my Yeah, I'm sick small. I'm
(01:07:22):
not in the moor trying to make more, trying to
make more. Chump small, I'm not in the moor trying
to make bool. I was trying to make I got milk, bitch,
(01:07:42):
got beef, You got steakhol got cheese, got a hole,
not lean a one sous. Please, these apples got nothing
on me. Stays hid me this side of colored greens
and cashualping around me every ice cream, ice cream, ice cream.
(01:08:02):
You're a cathicch ma. You're my daughter. I ain't bothering
to get started stuck at the messine. I'm a father
with my farmer McDonald and you feel me real good.
It's an honors the cheese steak. Other than that, all
that what you have the cheese first as a star
to start the stair boys, keeping me stronger strong, bitch
(01:08:25):
on a cow, bitch, I'm a cow. I'm not a cat.
I don't say now bitches on a cow tch I'm
a cow. Bitches, I'm a cow. Btch, I'm a cow.
More more more more, Yeah, I said, Mitch, I'm too smoot.
(01:08:48):
I'm not in the moon trying to make I'm trying
to make me smot. I'm not in the mood trying
to make bool, trying to make cotcha. Oh McDonald had
(01:09:31):
a farm, I give him a tidy, trying to keep
him corn. I'm just trying to turn up in the country.
I ain't in the city cause they ain't got lawns
sucking Nike of something e I oh, she didn't know
these pitches something I know, tip in on a stick
of See the chickens in the piace. They want to
catch us right and dirty with the fees. I know.
I ain't a move bitch. Get out my hair. Get
(01:09:53):
out my hair, bitch, get out my hair. I ain't
a move bitch, Get out my hay, get out my hair,
pitt you get out my hair in a move, that bitch,
Get out my head. Get out of my hair, Get
out my hair. Hat a moor, bitch, Get out of
my head. Get out my head, bitch, Get out my head.
Milkshake brings on the boys to the pharm and they're like,
(01:10:16):
it's better than yours. Damn right, it's better than Jaws.
And a tree too, but I have to shove. The
milkshake brings on the boys to the phone. They're like,
it's better than Jaws. Right, it's better than Jaws. A
tree too, but I have to show it's better than Jaws.
(01:10:37):
It's set, but I have fixed shot. Hey, it's better
in Jaw. Gets in Jaws. But I have to shoga. Okay,
(01:11:00):
I want to cheering sinking deans. M m