Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:05):
But yeah, I was just like Telly Jack, I'm like,
why did I reflexively take all of my podcast the equipment?
And I think it's just this weird thing where usually
like we're just resilient. We're like, yeah, bro, I'll be
able to do the show with my mom's or whatever,
and then I'll be able to move back home.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
That was my biggest priority versus is as huge.
Speaker 1 (00:21):
But even then, I don't even know what I would
have took, to be honest, Like, in that moment, I
was like, bro, I just want to get out of
here with my family.
Speaker 2 (00:28):
Like we got to get the birth certificate. Now we
get that printed, you can, you gotta passport. So that's
such a pain in the ass. That's good. Yeah, And
also in my mind, I'm like, what if the what
if the fires chase uself this country? Right? You know
I would I don't know one eye on the door,
you know. Yeah, yeah, I always sit with my back
to the back wall of the restaurant. You know, you
(00:50):
want to see what's coming. That's what Malcolm xIC always said.
In the corner bro the exits the goal too, you know, yeah,
my two heroes do Malcolm exus the Malcolms X, Hello
(01:10):
the Internet, and welcome to season three, seventy four, Episode
two of Dirtily Hey production of iHeartRadio. This is a
podcast where we take a deep dive into America's shared consciousness.
And it is Tuesday, February fourth, twenty twenty five. Damn
was that mean? Damn? Oh shit, that's me, That's right,
(01:33):
it's you.
Speaker 1 (01:34):
Well, guess what National fucking Homemade Soup Day.
Speaker 2 (01:38):
It's National Thank.
Speaker 1 (01:39):
A mail Carrier Day, because I know shit is hard
right now, especially just a joy still in that fucking place.
And also shout out Hemp because it's National Hemp Day.
But don't shout out the companies that tried to destroy
Hemp because they had their own versions of you know, synthetic.
Speaker 2 (01:53):
Fabrics that were coming out there.
Speaker 1 (01:54):
Anyway, they say, shout out Hemp, shout out soup, Shout
out mail carriers.
Speaker 2 (01:58):
Yeah, little homemade soup one of the easier things to
make it home, and like did really a huge improvement
over store bog.
Speaker 1 (02:07):
I would, Oh yeah, I made a broccoli soup recently
because I got a food processor for the first time,
someone donated a food process to me and I never
had one.
Speaker 2 (02:16):
And I saw this recipe.
Speaker 1 (02:17):
Gordon Ramsey, he just boiled fucking broccoli and then yeah,
season a little bit and you get this really just
nice broccoli soup. Andrciper's vegetables are very healthy, pretty super.
I really encourage you all to get into the Crucifers vestvals.
Speaker 2 (02:33):
For many years, I thought soup was just the thing
that came in. I can like that was many of
us did. Many of us did. It was called being
in preschool. My name is Jack O'Brien aka in the
fashion Knock. If you buck by crime up, fuck Elon,
musk Boy, Fuck Elon musk Boy. Fuck Elon musk Boy,
fuck Elon musk Boy. Fuck. Sorry they do they do
(02:53):
that a number of times. I'll cut it off there.
That one courtesy of LOCRONI on the disc Core Shut Up,
Lock around Me. I'm thrilled to be joined once again
by my co host, mister Miles Grass.
Speaker 1 (03:12):
It's the original Climate Refugee all stars back in the building.
Speaker 2 (03:16):
You know what I'm doing out here. They can't hold
me down. I am back in the valley.
Speaker 1 (03:21):
The Lord of Lancersham is back here, cruising Lancersham. They
call me the Viceroy a Ventura Boulevard, the Marquis of
Moore Park. Okay, I am here, I'm back. It's been
a fucking wild couple of weeks. I think I missed
a few things.
Speaker 2 (03:36):
Not sure. It's been quiet thought in the news. The
only thing I've seen is that Luka Dancis came to
the Lakers trumpet. Did Trump get it? He's he's he's
he did get it inaugurated at a stylish hat. I
think the majority, I think that about covers it. I
don't know. We have a good guess. I wish.
Speaker 1 (03:56):
I wish I was a person who that that's how
they could sum up the news and then just go
under their day. It's like, yeah, yeah, I think his
wife wore a hat, and that's kind of what's going
on right now.
Speaker 2 (04:07):
And it's like Canadians are mad at us. I guess yeah,
I guess whatever. Hello, I love the Canadian the Canadian
crowd at the Raptors game booing the US the fuck
out of that anthem boom right away, and they did
a good job. So it was like first note, right when, oh,
(04:28):
so you knew that it wasn't about the performance, that's
how you boo. An idea is that you have to
start booing right right. It kicks in so that because
you know, I felt bad for the singer to have
to do this. But then when Oh Canada came through,
they were tearing their shirts off the ship, throwing their
flannels in there. That's right, they have multiple other flannels
(04:50):
on underneath. Anyways, Miles, we are thrilled to be joined
in our third seat by one of our favorite guests.
It's one of the hosts of the incredible podcast five
to four about all the ways the Supreme Court is
a complete disaster. She's also a supervising attorney at Texas
Law has worked as a public defender in Rio Grande City, Texas.
(05:12):
Please welcome to the show on.
Speaker 3 (05:20):
I think this is my third time on Guess Honor.
I'm loving it.
Speaker 2 (05:26):
Then, is all ours?
Speaker 1 (05:27):
Let me see that manicure you said you said three
and I say hold on, let me wow.
Speaker 2 (05:32):
Nail game, solid nail.
Speaker 3 (05:35):
Yeah, that's right, we gotta we're keeping it popping in
Austin in the Trump to presidency to Frescia watching right. Yeah,
I learned that I internalized that.
Speaker 2 (05:53):
Shout out titty boy, two chains to change, titty boy,
don't want a great rename, Like, truly, renames don't come
any better than going from titty Boy to two Chains.
Speaker 1 (06:07):
We always yeah, I felt we were talking about that
towards the end of the year too. We love talking
about the formerly known as titty Boy FKA titty Boy
two Chains.
Speaker 2 (06:17):
It was between two Chains and FKA titty Boy. Good
good call by Chains a rebrand. Sometimes you need a rebrand.
It doesn't work with you know, New Coke didn't work
out the Two Chains certainly greater than titty Boy. Brannon did.
I I don't think I missed anything. Not to put
(06:39):
too much pressure on yet, but it was mainly Milania
wore a hat. Luca to the Lakers covers most of it.
Speaker 3 (06:48):
Gosh what else?
Speaker 2 (06:50):
Oh, like Elon Musk had some kind of like arm malfunction, tard.
Speaker 3 (06:55):
Or something like that. Yeah, you know, like I said,
like like we've been saying, it's a quiet news cycle.
Speaker 2 (07:01):
You know when he did that funny wave. It's times
like that that. I'm like, man, I wish Leno was
still on the air. You know, what would that guy
have said about that?
Speaker 3 (07:11):
He was?
Speaker 2 (07:12):
He said it was just he was because he's autistic.
So we got some autistic people here to see to
that out. You're like, whoa Jay? No, j what are
you doing? No anybody in the audience? No, I mean
I do kind of wonder what would Leno do with
He's probably yeah, hurting himself, Miles, he owes the Mob,
(07:35):
money bro believe in the Illuminati, Black Eye Club. Come on, yeah, now,
who's naive? Yeah? All right, I'm slipping ran And we're
gonna get to know you a little bit better in
a moment. First, we're gonna tell our listeners a couple
of things we're talking about today. We're gonna play a
little game of can he do that? Which just seems
to keep coming up with Trump and the presidency and
(07:59):
who Who's going to check him? Would be the other
the other question in this latest episode of who going
check me?
Speaker 3 (08:06):
Boom?
Speaker 2 (08:07):
Yeah? Stop? That phrase keeps running through my head. Donald
Trump's saying who gonna check me? Who gonna check me? Boo?
Who go and check me? Boo? We'll check out with
the Supreme Court just generally what are they about to
fuck up? And then we'll just check in a Groundhog
Day Apparently all time highs when it comes to ground
(08:29):
Hug Day attendance and oh and I I wish I
didn't have to say this, but it is part of
the story. So I'm gonna say the name of this
town gobblers, nob Pennsylvania. They saw real sized crowds. Wait.
Speaker 1 (08:43):
Yeah, When I saw you write that, I'm like, what
is this dude talking about? Why talk about gobblers? Gobblers?
Speaker 2 (08:49):
Not get a fucking hold of yourself, Pennsylvania? What is
wrong with you? That sounds like, yeah, like a Victorian
homophobic slur. You gobbler's knob? Wow? What is a gobbler? Even?
You know? I think we all know. You know, they
(09:10):
might not have known what they were talking about when
they named it, but I think we do now. I
know they talk about it.
Speaker 1 (09:15):
They're talking about a turkey's dick. Yeah, I already know.
I've got to the bottom of it.
Speaker 2 (09:21):
But like they had such conversational familiarity with turkey dicks
that they were like, and this town is the shape
of a turkey's dick. So that's why we'll call it goblins.
What a time? All right? All that plenty more, But
first ran and we like to ask our guest, what
is something from your search history.
Speaker 3 (09:42):
Let's see, most recently, how can I get my cat
to be normal, just absolutely begging. I'm out here desperate
to find out how to get my cat unpossessed by
the ghost that currently possessed.
Speaker 2 (09:58):
Got a mean girl, it right, be like, oh my god,
why are you so so thirsty? It's like embarrassing. I'm
so embarrassed for you.
Speaker 3 (10:07):
Yeah, she's she's absolutely the Regina George of the household.
You know. So it's hard.
Speaker 2 (10:11):
It's hard to like step up.
Speaker 1 (10:13):
And like, yeah, wait, so what do you mean like
your cat was like one way and now it's a
different way, or your cat's always been this way.
Speaker 2 (10:20):
Now you just hit a wall. You're like, okay, I've.
Speaker 3 (10:22):
Never had a cat and this is my first one
and she's always been this way. But surely it can't
be normal. You know, she's an orange cat. I've been
told that that means something in terms of the weirdness.
Speaker 2 (10:34):
Oh I thought you were going to be like, and
that is weird. This cat is orange like the fruit.
I want to believe this. Let me put the cat
and camera orange. I'm not dying. I'm not dying the first.
Speaker 3 (10:51):
Yeah. So she's cuckoo bananas and and uh yeah, I'm
whatever resources I can get my hands on to explain
how it is that I have that I should be
in relation to this creature that does live in my house.
Twenty four to seven. Now, yeah, I'm much appreciated.
Speaker 2 (11:07):
Yes, that gang.
Speaker 1 (11:07):
Please hey, Rhana up because I know we got cat lovers.
I have somebody in that gang helped correct my cats,
like bowel issues. They're like what kind of food? They're like, no,
don't do that, don't do that. You need to get
this kind of food. I went to the vet three
times and a listener sawved my shit in one exchange
on a discord DM. So again, that gang, you're always undefeated.
Speaker 2 (11:27):
Are our listeners funded by private equity? Have they been
taken over by private equity? No they have not. No
that the veterinary industry been taken over by private equity.
Yes they have. The fucked yeah. We we used to
have dogs and like one time we like dog sat
for some friends and they gave us their special dog
food to like feed their dog. And when I was
(11:50):
taking this dog for a walk, the shits that it
took were sparkling. They were like they like glowed. It
was like, what the fuck? Like you moan my dogs
just like trailing some nasty ship behind it, and I
was like, is that stuck to? What is? What is happening?
But yeah, so I was. I was fucking up. That's
how I learned that I needed to switch the dog food.
(12:11):
That's why I learned that food is important for some reason.
Speaker 3 (12:16):
Like my gut biome isn't even this clean?
Speaker 2 (12:19):
What is exactly? Yeah? Just imactive. I'm like, can I
do a feld implant with the dogs? If I can
get that? I'm of that beautiful, beautiful coat. What is?
What's like? Just give us one weird behavior that makes
you think your cat is haunted.
Speaker 3 (12:37):
She screams from any room she's in, like alone, She's
clearly communicating with something, right. Yeah, she climbs the walls
and when I mean wall, I mean straight claw into
dry roll. She is like free soloing vertical wall. Yeah,
(12:58):
when she gets amped on some things so damn yeah.
Speaker 2 (13:03):
Like Billy goating the wall? Right, did you spider cat? Yeah? Yeah?
Speaker 3 (13:08):
What's what's her name? In Faratu? Some of those scenes
like that's what Petra my orange cat is looking like?
Speaker 2 (13:14):
Yeah, Lily Rose Death?
Speaker 4 (13:18):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (13:18):
Yes, what do you think of you? Like?
Speaker 3 (13:23):
Yes, I like to look at it. Thought it was
like beautifully shot, like the interesting visually. You know, the
plot is the plot.
Speaker 2 (13:30):
You know, plot is the plot. Plot is the plot,
and that is how they wrote the screenplay.
Speaker 3 (13:35):
There's a vampire at the beginning, and there's a vampire
at the end. You know that's yeah, with.
Speaker 2 (13:40):
Some very skinny legs. Yeah, guy's got dang gobblers gobblers bottom.
Check that out. Pause this real quick. You can't pause
the movie in the theater, Honey, you got to see
it again? Was that the only way they caught that?
(14:02):
Any veterinarians in here that can back up my opinion?
What is something that you think is underrated?
Speaker 3 (14:10):
Big pants? I want more of them, but wide leg,
high waist, they're great. I'm so grateful as a millennial
that the gen Z did transition us from the skinny
pant era into now big pants. And they're beautiful. They're
so much more comfortable. I'm wearing them every day. I
(14:31):
look more and more like a clown and I love it.
Speaker 1 (14:34):
Yeah, yeah, I look like I've been wearing wider pants too.
Just it's funny because so I lost all my shit
in a fire, and when I went to go stay
with my mom, she's like, I found some of your
old jeans that were like the shits I wore in
like a whole college.
Speaker 2 (14:52):
Oh my gosh, tell me why I put these on?
Speaker 1 (14:54):
I look like the most fashionable motherfucker of twenty twenty five.
Speaker 2 (14:57):
I was like, oh shit, because they were baggy. Yeah,
I was like, yeah, shoo Miles and put that.
Speaker 1 (15:04):
Oh you you might be gen z but I but
then I'm fully I'm fully back in because I also
had trouble just because you know, I got thick legs,
so skinny jeans and I were never They didn't even
make skinny jeans that could fit someone with my body type.
Speaker 2 (15:20):
So I was always like off that trend.
Speaker 1 (15:22):
But I'm glad now that collectively, youth cultures like, don't
out yourself by being looking all old as ship with
them tight ass jeans exactly exactly.
Speaker 3 (15:30):
Yeah, the youth said we should be able to breathe
in the pants that.
Speaker 1 (15:34):
We Yeah yeah, I'm like, y'all think y'all know why
two k you haven't seen the ship my mom keppt
And I'm about to fucking stunt on all y'all time capsule.
Speaker 2 (15:44):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, other generations have done less,
you know, like that's that's pretty bring bringing back big
pants I got. I gotta give it to them. Yeah,
shut out to gen Z, what is something you think
is overrated?
Speaker 3 (15:57):
Having an iPad not an eye pad? I said, twenty
twenty five is my year on top of organization. My I,
this iPad is going to change my life, right. I
really needed that iPad to change my life in January
twenty twenty five, and it didn't, so damn it. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (16:17):
I think we all could have used that iPad to
change your life. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (16:21):
I think I let a lot of people down.
Speaker 2 (16:25):
Yeah, but.
Speaker 1 (16:28):
James carb will tell you do you can't start a
seven string quarterback in the Super Bowl game hanging all
your hopes on the iPad.
Speaker 2 (16:35):
But yeah, it's I.
Speaker 1 (16:36):
Mean, wait, what did you think the iPad exactly would like?
Because I recently got an iPad, But I had a
very simple goal. It was like I want to do
coloring books, and that's what I use it for for
my own like mental health. But what did you I'm curious, like,
because everybody imbuse like a sense of like this is
going to be a game change, right.
Speaker 3 (16:53):
No, I had in my head that I was going
to be a digital planner. Girly so I did like
a bunch of shopping and like narrowing down. Okay, this
is the digital planner that I want, And oh my gosh,
how am I going to access it all the time.
I'm always gonna have my iPad on me. Everything is.
I got an Apple pencil. I was like, I'm writing
on this.
Speaker 2 (17:12):
Yeah, yeah, you jumped in.
Speaker 3 (17:14):
I am putting paper pencil you in right, exactly exactly.
And so yeah, I really thought, I really thought, just
everything's going to be. Everything's going to change, productivity, schedule, efficiency,
you know. Yeah, and it just it just sits on
my couch yeah right.
Speaker 1 (17:32):
And it's just like a thing you scroll like social
media with when you're watching.
Speaker 3 (17:35):
TV sometimes yeah, And most of the time I like
start to do that and I'm like this is too big.
I just want to my phone.
Speaker 2 (17:41):
Yeah right, What like does it do anything that phones
don't other than, you know, indicate that someone is a
boomer when they're taking a video with.
Speaker 1 (17:52):
This dude, when you're doing the two handed like I'm
the video using a phone book to take a picture.
Speaker 2 (17:58):
Damn, this staarage is broke.
Speaker 3 (18:01):
God, Miles is really in a struggle.
Speaker 2 (18:03):
Sorry, somebody donated a chair to me an office chair.
Speaker 1 (18:06):
The fucking lumbar supports blew out off the back anyway,
use my struggles and got my bar that can you
know they support and your lumbar supports.
Speaker 2 (18:17):
Back in the obrection, they didn't know about this lumbar
but yeah, well. Oh.
Speaker 1 (18:24):
The thing with the iPad though, is like Apple's just
in this weird place where before it made like the
iPad kind of made sense in their range of products,
but now they do this. You We're like, let's go
the M two processor like like personal computer level processing ability,
but they hamstring it by not letting you run mac
os on it because then they're like, well then mother
Focus is not going buy MacBooks. So we got to
(18:47):
keep this in this weird liminal space where it's like,
not it's a phone kind of it is mostly a
big ass phone because it's using iOS. That's just from
my own like diving into iPad culture. I was like, yeah, right,
like if you have a specific need, it works.
Speaker 2 (19:01):
Otherwise sometimes I got m Yeah, just himself. Yeah, fucking
that guy. Every time he's back, you know, he's back
already working with Trump. Oh yeah, they all they love
it right in the line, they're not on the same
(19:23):
planet as USA is.
Speaker 3 (19:25):
Tim Cook is Tim Cooking in a in a baggy
black T shirt and a gold chain. The way is
not yet.
Speaker 1 (19:32):
But with that ridiculous see that crazy ass watch he
had on that people class that they're bid.
Speaker 2 (19:37):
Isn't like his video where he's like, I'm just like you, guys,
nine hundred thousand dollars watch on the risk.
Speaker 1 (19:44):
Yeah, it's like it's based off the Godfather or some ship.
Speaker 2 (19:48):
That watch. I think you weren't on Rogan. It was
like another watch that has a hand in it that
move whatever.
Speaker 3 (19:55):
They literally biological human.
Speaker 2 (19:58):
Family and they're turning exactly exactly. He's not fooling us
with his midlife crisis. Chain real is using dark magic
to entrap somebody's soul in hand so it operates your thing.
Speaker 3 (20:11):
I'm just like you and I want to say homophobic
slurs at work also like that was that was the
whole We've got a message.
Speaker 2 (20:19):
We've got to Facebook has been far too feminine for
too long. Exactly. You know that there is a meeting
that has happened. I don't know if Tim Cook was
in it, but it's happened where people were like, how
do we pivot Tim to be more relatable, like jealous
(20:39):
of the Zuckerberg pivot. Oh you like in his own camp? Yeah,
in his own camp, Like, how do we make Tim?
How do we do that? How do we get Tim?
Speaker 3 (20:48):
We got to get the sphere.
Speaker 2 (20:52):
Perm Watch what if he did like he painted like
one fingernail. Yeah, so he's a little bit wavy, you.
Speaker 3 (21:00):
Know, cartilage piercing, you know the upper ear.
Speaker 1 (21:05):
You know, so many people his age though, now just
rock the one pierced ear. I was at like a
very like older crowd LA. I was at a full disclosure.
I was at the Smokehouse in Burbank. It's like a
very la restaurant where the food is not good, but
they have really good garlic bread and there's only three
things on the menu that are worth eating.
Speaker 2 (21:22):
Anything else is an instant l But you really go
there for you nobody else.
Speaker 1 (21:26):
Yeah, you get the prime rib or the salmon or
just get that garlic bread and the shrimp cocktail. Don't
get any I know there's other shit that looks up
you know me, you do not get shit as garbage.
But they have a bar where like this old timey
dude does rock songs and shit and the crowd there
is very much like Boomer elder gen X almost I'm
not joking. Seventy percent of these dudes had like one
(21:47):
earring in and it was just wild to see him, Like, Oh,
this is how y'all stunt like in your in your
latter days is like one ear He's like.
Speaker 2 (21:55):
Yeah, you know what I mean. So you know, I
think Trump's kind of fucked up too. Check it hearing.
Speaker 1 (22:01):
Yeah, or like I used to rock this in the
eighties and they said it was kind of weird.
Speaker 2 (22:05):
But now I don't give a shit. Now look at me.
I'm retired. Well that sounds cool. Yeah, yeah, I've never
totally understood the iPad. It is a thing that kids
seem to gravitate towards. But yeah, it just seems like
a big phone to me. So it's like, if I'm
not trying to actively keep people off of a phone,
(22:27):
I don't totally understand that.
Speaker 1 (22:28):
Like if you're an illustrator or whatever, I see that
if you have like very purpose specific like it has
its uses, but I think sure, now it's just like
in this place, like it's so powerful it can be
a computer, but Apple won't allow it to be a computer.
So it's that's where your kind of value assessment begins
to womb.
Speaker 2 (22:47):
And we hate a wobbly value assessment. Here on the yah,
We've always nothing.
Speaker 1 (22:53):
Look, people thought I changed, but I didn't, y'all. I'm
still here criticizing wobbly value assessments.
Speaker 2 (23:00):
Let's take a quick break. We'll be right back, and
we're back. We're back. Hey, Hey. It feels like the
Trump administration has created this rhythm where he does a
(23:26):
thing everyone's like, that's essentially against the law. What he
just did, Okay, and then yeah, so and then people
keep like ask can he do that? Before we get
an answer, he does the next thing that's against the
law that we weren't ready for him to do yet, right,
(23:48):
So I think the answer ends up being no, he
can't do that, at least as of right now in
a bunch of these cases. But I feel like we're
moving on too quickly, and so he's like getting these
like wins for him, like getting to like flex and
act like he's doing things that like doing whatever he wants.
(24:09):
But then it like the media isn't sticking around to
be like, Okay, that actually got overturned and that actually
is not legal in the federal judge said that like
gave the speech from Happy Gilmore where he's like, you
no points God your soul, Like, this is a This
is a quote from a Ronald Reagan appointee temporarily blocking
(24:32):
his order to end birthrate citizenship. This is a blatantly
unconstitutional order. I have difficulty understanding how a member of
the bar would state unequivocally that this is a constitutional order.
It just boggles my mind.
Speaker 3 (24:47):
Yeah, he's referencing the Trump lawyers, like the lawyers saying this,
Like how could you be a licensed attorney and say
this shit with a straight face?
Speaker 2 (24:55):
Uh? I think at the end of this like chain
of cause and effect that is being started by these
things that it does come down to like who gone
check me boo? Who? Like, who's gonna stop him? And
who's gonna check me v boo? And the answer is
(25:22):
that I hear Ali, Like, Oh, the Supreme Court is
eventually going to have to weigh in on this one. Probably.
I'm a big fan of this podcast five to four,
and it is, in addition to being educational and wildly
entertaining make me laugh, has given me a severe lack
of faith in the Supreme Court to do the right thing.
(25:43):
So Rihann I just want to get your sense, as
one of the hosts of that show, like how are
you feeling as you were as you're witnessing these this
first week and a half of attempted authoritarianism.
Speaker 3 (25:56):
Yeah, I'm sorry to throw like cold water on the
whole idea that like the Supreme Court is the check,
you know. And I think it's like if you if
you think that, if you hear that, or we hear
it so much that like you're not wrong to like
think that because people say, like, you know, only the
Supreme Court now can stand up to Trump, or you know,
the Supreme courts can have a really interesting role under
(26:19):
the creeping authoritarianism administration, you know. But like that's because
like just like structurally, like the three branches of government,
like the Supreme Court, like, yeah, it really doesn't do
anything other than check the other branches. Like that is
what the Supreme Court does. But so like structurally, you
get why people like think that. At the same time,
(26:39):
at the same time, y'all, we have to we have
to be looking at the conservative project, the project of
doing authoritarianism in the United States as the branch is
working together to do that. And that includes the Supreme Court.
Oh yeah, the Supreme Court while they could check Donald Trump,
(27:00):
you know, granted him almost total immunity in office last
term before he before he got elected. So yeah, we
need to see and and with all of these cases
that are about to be in front of the Supreme Court.
You know, while there might be some tiki tak here
and there where the Court says like, ah, that's a
little bit too far out there in terms of the
(27:21):
constitutional order, we have to have to have to view
the Supreme Court as an institution that is in place
right now and operating right now, as a green light
for authoritarianism, not a check on authoritarianism, right.
Speaker 2 (27:34):
It kind of has been for a while. Yeah, like
the first ones there, it just seems it seems weird
to me that the first ones to get there to
be like, yeah, this guy can do whatever the fuck
he wants. Also, no more abortions, thanks, that's been our time.
Are the ones that people are like, well, the Supreme
Court's not gonna app surely this, surely this will be
(27:55):
the line.
Speaker 1 (27:56):
Uh yeah, well that god, I mean it's I was hoping,
you know, I hadn't really checked the news in the
last three weeks.
Speaker 2 (28:02):
I was like, yeah, they're gonna they'll figure it out.
They'll figure it out.
Speaker 1 (28:06):
But then you have to zoom out and be like, Okay, so, yes,
the Federalist Society has they've been taking their time saying,
let's get our starters in there. You know, we got
we got to revamp this whole roster, baby, if we
want to start winning titles. And they've they've got they've
got the pieces now to do that. And I think, yeah,
I think it's just like even the last four years,
where they'll be the things where they clearly come down
(28:27):
on the side of the conservative movement, and then you
get these occasional scraps that they throw out to make
them seem they're like, we're not a completely politicized body.
Speaker 2 (28:36):
I mean we just did the.
Speaker 3 (28:37):
Bare minimum back right, right, And yeah, I think like people,
I think it's like a real failure of legal media.
Actually that for decades has has been like when when media,
when you hear about these cases being decided, you hear
about them like on just the legal terms, or you
just hear or read about like Okay, well this is
why the fucking freak ghoul Sam Alito said what he said,
(28:59):
and this was the justification, and then there's never anything
else that's like, oh, this is part of like a
much big, bigger project. They've been doing this for a
long time. Here's all the people who are going to
be hurt by this, and here are all of the
other here are all of the other like arguments or
reasons why this is wrong. So yeah, I think like
media in general and how we cover and talk about
(29:20):
the Supreme Court is like a big reason for this.
But I'm here to tell you, and we on five
four say it all the time. You know, it's it's
really important to understand these six hyper conservative freakazoids. It's
really important to understand that they act like politicians. They
are doing politics right, right, they are doing fascism right
(29:40):
when they overturn Roe v. Wade when they say in
three h three creative that you know, a woman doesn't
have to make a wedding website for a gay couple, right, She.
Speaker 2 (29:51):
Doesn't even have to have a web design business to.
Speaker 3 (29:54):
Do it, or an actual gay couple that asked her
to do to do the wedding website, right.
Speaker 2 (30:00):
Football coach who exactly.
Speaker 3 (30:03):
Exactly, So you have to see this institution as an
institution that is also doing implementing fascism and authoritarianism, and
that's what they're there to do, and they're happy to
do it.
Speaker 2 (30:13):
You think, Leonard Leo, he's just kicking back. He's like, bro,
they don't. Ain't nobody saying my biggest.
Speaker 3 (30:21):
Gatherer of the past twenty five years.
Speaker 2 (30:24):
They are winning. We do have to I feel like
we got to admit, like, yeah, I feel like a
big part of the media response to Trump and the
authoritarian project of you know, the Supreme Court has been
like they'll never get away with this, and like kind
of like, look, how stupid they are to think that
they can get away with this right before they like
get away with it, you know, like that that response
(30:46):
to be like this guy doesn't know what he's doing
just feels like ultimately it doesn't matter. Even if he
doesn't know what he's doing, it's working for him and them,
and yes, they just keep winning because because the opponent
doesn't realize they're playing like they I don't I don't
know what to even say.
Speaker 3 (31:07):
Like they're they're being bold, right, like the right wing
is being bold. Trump administration all these crazy, crazy executive orders.
They're being bold and they're not checking themselves thinking, mm,
is this illegal? I don't know they're doing it. It's like,
you know, throw throw the spaghetti at the wall and
see what sticks, right, And and so the Supreme Court
(31:29):
to the extent that like, yeah, it checks them. We're
we're so far like the overtam window is so so right, right,
is so so conservative that yeah, if you're getting some
kind of check on this stuff, well yeah, it's the
it's tiny stuff compared to the in totality, how like
(31:50):
our government is being transformed, you.
Speaker 1 (31:51):
Know, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, I feel like we're just
like in the Like I was saying this on yesterday's show,
it's just a lot of a lot of us are
just sort of in denial that this actually like forget
that country you grew up in twenty years ago, Like that.
Speaker 2 (32:05):
Shit is that shit that that order, that old order
completely gone, completely gone.
Speaker 1 (32:13):
And that is not coming back for I don't know
if it's going to come back in our lifetime. Even so,
it's much much more empowering to understand the assignment and
say no, this is this is what's happening right now, and.
Speaker 2 (32:26):
Where where's my part in all of this.
Speaker 1 (32:27):
And I say, you got to be out there in
the street and shit like that, like doing all kinds
of wild shit, but understanding that this is something more
people need to put their attention on, because they are
they are fucking at the wheel and they are we were,
We've already gone through a few walls, and we're about
to keep hitting more walls this week though there's even
more stuff that the Supreme more.
Speaker 2 (32:47):
Business in front of the week.
Speaker 1 (32:49):
Yeah, And I was, and I obviously wanted to get
your take on this because one of them is very
obvious to me how problematic it is and awful and backwards,
and then the other two I'm like, I feel like
there's a little nuance that you can probably we help
flesh out.
Speaker 3 (33:01):
For us in religious freedom stuff.
Speaker 2 (33:04):
Right, yeah, right.
Speaker 1 (33:05):
So the first one is regarding government funding of Catholic
charter schools before they could get vouchers, which was only
doing like a little bit of pain a little bit
of funding. Now we're talking about full blown. The feds
are now paying for.
Speaker 2 (33:19):
Full blown Jesus schools.
Speaker 1 (33:21):
I was like, Okay, that feels like that feels that
feels like it's butting up against the First Amendment and
what I know about religion and the federal government, so
that one seems pretty obvious that that could open the
floodgates of all kinds of backwards teaching and weird schools
suddenly getting the funding to teach whatever they want to.
Speaker 2 (33:38):
Another one feels is they like getting in under Catholic
because like people are like, I've heard of Catholic schools.
Those can't be so bad. Like, so we'll allow they're weird.
They are weird, but they have a long history. I
just feel like, as opposed to if it was like
my mom's special version of Christianity that she invented, right schools,
(34:00):
you know what I mean. I wonder why they went
Catholic just to I think, look, I think they just knew.
They're like, yeah, I don't know.
Speaker 1 (34:08):
It doesn't matter because at the end of the day,
it's more just about being like, yeah, well, whatever y'all do,
you'll do in Jesus teachings, here's some money teach on.
Another one deals with parents being able to opt out
of curriculum where they're being like, well, if if they
have LGBTQ plus characters or concepts, I do not want
my I want my child to be as ignorant as
possible and to be made fun of infinitely in their adulthood,
(34:30):
So I would like them to I would like to
hide reality from them as much as possible. That one,
it seems like basically I don't know, probably, can you
kind of walk us through. It feels like probably at
that point we're completely upending where the power dynamic is
and how children are taught to just be like, well,
if enough parents want to opt out, then you might
have to change the whole curriculum, or maybe you don't
(34:52):
send kids to that school.
Speaker 2 (34:53):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (34:54):
No, these are both pretty crazy cases. Crazy again, like
this goes back to exactly what I was just saying,
where the Overton window has shipped. It's so far right.
These are pretty out there in terms of like conservative arguments,
like the lower courts and precedent over decades, is pretty
clear that both of these cases, like the state directly
funding religious schools, that's like unheard of, right, and then
(35:18):
the same thing was like opting out of public school curriculum.
Both of these cases obviously come under their First Amendment,
like freedom of religion. I just want to like, I
just want to differentiate between the two, So the government
funding public schools, that would be under what's called the
establishment clause of the First Amendment that says, like, the
(35:38):
state can't make a law that respects a certain establishment
of religion. Right, that's the separation of church and state.
That is the clause in the First Amendment. The second one,
where parents are trying to have their kids opt out
of mandatory curriculum in public schools, that's the free exercise clause. Right,
the government can't infringe on your individual free exercise of
(35:59):
your faith. Parents are saying, well, when my kids have
to go to story time in the library at the
public school, and story time features a book they're getting
read a book about being trans child, right, about about
a mom making a rainbow wig for her trans child
(36:20):
or for a kid walking around pride, Well, that that
infringes on the free exercise of my religion. Like you said, Miles,
like both of these cases are really really crazy. The justices,
you know, coming down in the way that the conservatives
want them to really upends like a lot of how
(36:42):
we think of the First Amendment, like working right, and
I think in terms of like choosing like, oh, which
one would be more impactful than the other. I think
it's really important to like see again all of these cases.
You know, there's also, uh, there's also a case about
like tax exemptions for religious organizations that's coming up at
(37:03):
the Supreme Court. Look at them all as part of
the project, right, just like the executive orders, right, Trump
is doing that, He's doing it at a different pace, right,
which there's a different strategy behind. But you see in
the totality of the executive orders a fascist project, an
authoritarian project. We should be viewing Supreme Court cases in
(37:25):
the same way, particularly because the Supreme Court decides what
cases it takes, decides what cases that they have total
control over, the cases that are going to be argued
in front of them, and what they want to be
deciding and changing the law on every single term. Right,
So in the totality of these cases, the First Amendment
and the freedom of religion, separation of Church and State
(37:47):
cases at the Supreme Court, this term, you see, you
see a project, and you see what the right is
focused on.
Speaker 2 (37:54):
Right.
Speaker 3 (37:55):
You see what they're going to be trying to weaponize
in the law in you know, the next couple of dedays,
GIDS and here it's going to be the First Amendment. Here,
it's going to be saying, you know, gay people, existing
stories being told, queer people being around me, or books
that my children read that include queer characters, that's actually
an infringement on my civil liberties. Right. That is, that
(38:18):
is fascistic. Right. That is that all of this is
about creating in and out groups a scary other right
that we can all put our problems on and our
violence on. And so again, you see the Supreme Court
doing this work for a fascist movement in the same
way that we can like clearly see that Trump as
(38:39):
an individual is doing that work as well. You know, Yeah,
I feel really I feel like it's so doomsday. I'm
really sorry you guys, but we got to be clear sighted.
Speaker 2 (38:50):
Yeah, we gotta be Yeah, we gotta keep our eyes
open and like understand what is happening, because especially now
that I just I feel like the the mainstream response
is really having a hard time like getting its mind
around what is happening and like seeing it for what
it is. Like, Yeah, it really feels like there is
(39:11):
this big fascist project. Like it's interesting because I feel
like my understanding of fascism historically was they had big
a lot of bureaucracy and like you know, they trains
ran on time. Thing was like a big bragging point
(39:31):
this yeah, and this time it seems to be like
they're just breaking everything and then use it. When the
thing breaks, they're like, oh, that's because people were too
nice to gay people and black people, and so like
it's got like kind of a new look fascism where
like they're incompetence and they're tearing down of everything allows
(39:56):
for them to like make an argument for the continued
privatization of every everything and like the takeover by monopolies
and oligarchs and exactly. Yeah, yeah, but the but why
is the media? Like it just it feels like the
media was operating under these very specific sets of rules
(40:16):
of like well, we can't call this out because then
it's too seems like we're being too biased or something,
and so they just they learned whatever the media's like
playbook is of like what they will tolerate, what they won't,
and just like yeah, now they know exactly how to
work inside this system. And yeah, the media like doesn't
(40:38):
know how to just be like this is what's happening.
This is clearly what's happening. They're successfully dismantling civilization like
as we knew it. And yeah, because I guess because
the media has been pretty complicit in that for so
long in other ways that like that they're not willing
to call it out now.
Speaker 3 (40:56):
Yeah, I think I think there's like a few things
in the media question, But I do you think, like
the media question is such a massive, such a massive
like contributing factor to to the problems is that, like
there's so much misinformation. There's also too much information and
the media is approaching I think both of those categories
in both like dropping the ball in fucked up ways
(41:18):
in terms of too much information. For example, the media, Yes,
like journalists have a role in interpreting and explaining every
executive order to us, right, Like I appreciate the people
who are doing that, but again, what we fail to
do when we're like, okay, let's break down every executive
order is we're missing the forest for the trees and
we and we don't see that like bigger project, right yea,
(41:41):
and we end up getting we end up all of
us feeling siloed in like what you do because it's like, oh,
well that's a lot. And then the way you fight
that is a legal case, and that's a you know,
that's a policy at the EPA or whatever, you know,
And so the folks there are going to fight it
this way. And then but when we see it as
a project, we really like, you know, you start to see, uh,
(42:01):
you start to see your role, even as somebody who
you know might be disconnected, you start to see a
role for collective power. The media is captured, a captured
institution in the same way the Supreme Court is. I
think that's a really big problem. Right, So when we're
talking about you said oligarchy, I think that's really right.
We live now in an oligarchy that Trump is making
(42:22):
like very clear to everybody, Like we know who the
oligarchs are, right, Like, they're right in front of us
doing Nazi salutes and stuff.
Speaker 2 (42:30):
So I don't know wherred to, but yeah.
Speaker 3 (42:35):
Yeah, and so and it's those oligarchs that like control
the media, right like they're you know, Jeff Bezos is
putting his thumb down on the scale at the on
the Washington Post editorial board, right. Uh, this is happening.
This is happening everywhere, especially across like corporate legacy media.
And then yeah, what you get is the conflicts of interest.
(42:58):
What you get is really muddied political analysis. You know,
writers and journalists like going to the top, who who
haven't they're being rewarded for not right talking in critical
ways about about what's happening and so yeah, I mean
from our corner of things over on five to four,
we talk a lot about how legal media specifically has
(43:19):
really failed the public for for a really long time.
And a lot of that is based on, like, yeah,
advancing in your job and relationships, right. A lot of
the top like legal Supreme court reporters, they have relationships.
They like to be able to uh talk directly to
the justices, right, and so if you put in your
column that that so and so justice is, uh you know,
(43:43):
is receiving gifts from billionaires who have cases in front
of him at that time, well you lose your access.
You don't have your wine.
Speaker 4 (43:50):
Buddy, Oh why didn't you go work for pro public? Gout?
We're here to do fluff pieces. Okay, Oh my god.
That the decorations though it Alito's home.
Speaker 2 (44:04):
Wonderful, wonderful. I mean, we've all thought about what we
would do if we were burdened by that much wealth.
Obviously you buy historical stuff. And yes, sometimes fascists owned it. Okay,
yeahka solicitly Nazi.
Speaker 3 (44:24):
It's historical. Can't you see.
Speaker 2 (44:26):
Sorry, I'm just this. This flags about an appeal to heaven. Okay,
take what? Just take that.
Speaker 1 (44:33):
What's so wrong with having an appeal to heaven? Don't
add your other stuff to it? Just saying anyway, you're right.
Speaker 2 (44:40):
And my heaven is the one from My Blue Heaven
with Steve Barton and Rick Miranda, So do try your
head out of the gutter. Huh. Cool, All right, let's
let's take a quick break. We will be right back
to talk about gobblers not and we're back. We're back,
(45:09):
and let's look at let's look at some stupid bullshit
news shallow whoa, Just take a this is pretty it
is pretty consequential. That's maybe the stuff that shocked about
in the last act. Maybe you can characterize that stuff.
But this is this magic. Zoom out to see the
(45:30):
larger project. Please please, They're controlling the fucking weather, jack,
I don't know if you don't you know that the
fucking groundhogs control the weather. Okay, yeah, I knew, I
knew things had changed from some of the articles you
were forordering me when you were out, But I didn't
know about the punks of Tawny Phil et Bock Times. Dude,
(45:53):
some real interesting stuff in there. Yeah. So over the weekend,
the Sunday was ground hugg Day. Groundhogs is a groundhog
or groundhog hog?
Speaker 3 (46:03):
Does it belong to the groundhog? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (46:05):
Yeah, I think it should. I think we should give
it back if it doesn't. Thank you. The big hero
punks a Tawny Phil that he is like kind of
the ball drop of groundhog Day. You know, he's like
the the central symbol icon of groundhog Day. We all
know it from the Bill Murray movie predicted unfortunately, there
(46:26):
will be six more weeks of winter. And our writer
JM did the hard work of actually watching the ceremony
and it is weird as fuck. I was then sucked
into watching it as well. Apparently his decision what's that?
I said? How weird is it? So his decision is
(46:46):
communicated in groundhog language to the Groundhog Club's president, who
can translate thanks to his presidential cane. So there's like
a magical cane. There's the groundhog is talking to him
like he picks a screen role. That is like written
the way like in a like limerick. One scroll says
(47:06):
early spring, the other scroll said six more weeks of winter, right, yes,
and it's it's also also this group is known as
the Inner Circle. I was just reading that from the
Wikipedia page. They dress like barrens of industry from the
late eighteen hundreds.
Speaker 1 (47:23):
Like still this is the actually, yeah, this is like
the darkest shit I've ever seen now that I look
at it, Like this, Mike and they and it's also
like that fake, like cold type shit. We're like, honestly,
we're the only ones that can communicate with the groundhop. Yes,
so you don't have to believe what we say.
Speaker 3 (47:37):
There's just one channel, yeah, exactly.
Speaker 2 (47:39):
Yeah. Also, it was like a record sized crowd at
Gobblers not in Pennsylvania.
Speaker 3 (47:46):
Were lifting him. Sorry.
Speaker 2 (47:49):
Yeah, so yeah, they go into a hutch that's like
carved to the side of a tree trunk, and apparently
the ground hug is like get the fuck away for me,
because it takes them like five minutes to get a
hold of the ground hug. They're just in there like
they're like come on, phrantically reaching around, come on, fuck
(48:11):
all right, he holds it up the ground Hug is
fucking terrified, scratching his face. Yeah, and then yeah the
ground Hug whispers in his ear which scroll to pick
and I'm just a little concerned for the first time
during the course of doing this job. Now, okay, guys,
(48:33):
this is the this concerns me that we're seeing in
the twenty twenty five record sized crowds for this event.
I just to everyone to see the rat fortune teller?
Do we see the rat fortune teller? Just feels like,
obviously we're seeing things slide backwards everywhere else, But like,
(48:54):
is it that bad that our national shared consciousness is
like tell us rat, tell us what what have to
tell us? Please?
Speaker 1 (49:07):
I mean yeah, I can see like half of it
being like oh and the other part being like me,
if you're like man, the only ship that's real anymore
is going out to Gobbler's Knob with the homies, just
being with the homies, yeah, and yelling at a rat
for community.
Speaker 2 (49:22):
Yeah. Yeah, I mean children crave ad. This is something
that I did, determined that my children crave communes over
because like we did a like a cub scout camping
trip that ended up like being too cold to camp,
so we just like stayed in a house with a
bunch of other families, and like my kids like still
talk about just like played board games. My kids are
(49:42):
still like, man, that was fucking awesome. I'm like, that
was just a commune. We were just lived in a
commune for a night. Yeah. Yeah, But I've been reading
about these dad, Let's start one. Let's start one. They
got some interesting ideas. They do a lot of interesting ideas.
Catholic arder schools, here we come. But yeah, I'm just wondering.
I think there's obviously the need for community that is
(50:05):
being ripped out in all these other places of our lives.
But also I do just wonder, like, is our desire
to believe in magic just go following our institutions slide
backward into the Middle Ages? Or is our belief in
magic making it possible for our institutions to slide backward?
Speaker 3 (50:29):
A little chicken the egg. Yeah, there's I think. I
think Porque Nolo's does.
Speaker 2 (50:35):
You know I think things.
Speaker 3 (50:37):
I think these things are in block step with one another,
for sure. I also think, you know, you see this
like across social media. For sure, there's a little bit
of like, you know that the the yearning for nostalgia,
you know, like like, let's do something that I used
to do and think about when I was eight years old,
you know, like, yeah, I think there's lins like oh,
(51:00):
look at that weird rodent. You know, when I was eight,
I really thought about if this rat could see its shadow?
You know.
Speaker 1 (51:07):
Yeah, but I was when I was eight, I had
no idea what creeping fascism was.
Speaker 2 (51:12):
That's right.
Speaker 1 (51:13):
That's that I have student loans either, you know what
I mean? That was actually a good time. Where were
you in ninety two.
Speaker 3 (51:23):
Exactly? So yeah, people are yearning a little bit for
for the magic. I think the magic of the fuzzy rat.
Speaker 2 (51:31):
Believe it. Yeah, it's little. I mean it has like
Santa Claus where it's like, yeah, he whispered in my ear.
Speaker 3 (51:38):
Yeah too fairy yep.
Speaker 2 (51:40):
Yeah. There's a guy in the crowd who you can
hear scream we want spring.
Speaker 3 (51:48):
Only avenue where he can where he can express ye desires.
Speaker 2 (51:54):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (51:55):
Yeah, men will go to punk satany phil ceremony instead
of therapy. You know.
Speaker 1 (51:59):
Yeah, it will say and will y'all scream things like
we want spring rather than I want to forgive my father?
Speaker 2 (52:05):
Right? You know, it's a little bit more complex, but
we'll start there. Yeah, we want spring.
Speaker 1 (52:10):
Huh, what's your dad's name, guys, anybody, it's not related,
but coincidentally, my dad's name is also Phil.
Speaker 2 (52:17):
And then ber send the tears, yes, okaya, tell tell Phil,
tell them in groundhoggies right now? Okay, Well, Ran, And
it's been such a pleasure having you as always on
the daily geist where some people Where can people find you?
(52:39):
Follow you?
Speaker 3 (52:40):
Yeah, I'm on social media at au Rhannon that's a
y w A, but for sure follow us on social
at five four pod all spelled out five to four
like the numbers, but but spelled out and you can
hit us up patriot, patreon dot com, slash five four
pod if you want to subscribe. And then what one
more thing I got a promo is that I'm on
(53:01):
a new podcast about Palestine, about the struggle for Palestinian
liberation from here in the far diaspora that is called
Popular Cradle.
Speaker 2 (53:10):
You can uh.
Speaker 3 (53:11):
Follow us on Instagram and start listening YouTube wherever you
listen to podcasts. Popular Cradle amazing.
Speaker 2 (53:18):
Go check it out. And is there a work of
media that you've been enjoying?
Speaker 3 (53:23):
You know, I was never big on TikTok until uh,
you know, the controversy, and so now I've been scrolling
TikTok and yesterday came across a video of goats in
like you know Central East Asia, I mean Central Asia,
like a like a you know Himalayas, These like real
winter guys, these real snow mountain guys. But it's they
(53:44):
not like us. In the background, it's just the goats
like jumping around bom boom boom bob bab type of shit.
I'm on, you wouldn't understand, Like it's so good.
Speaker 2 (53:54):
It's it's so so good, understand.
Speaker 3 (53:58):
So I'm sorry for the intensity y'all all your listeners
right well, sorry if you live in a time of fascism,
but goats, you know boats, goats.
Speaker 2 (54:10):
Yeah, that's right. Amazing. Miles Where can people find you
as their working media you've been enjoying. I'm still on
social look, I haven't been checking because I have a
bit on my plate outside of this, so I'm not
quite checking the mentions yet, but I will be soon enough.
But shout out to everybody that's reached out. Find me
at Miles of Gray wherever they serve at symbols, you
(54:31):
can also find jacking on the basketball podcast Miles of
jackob at BOOSTI, and very soon for twenty Day Fiance
will be back where I talk about ninety Day Fiance.
I just as again, I just gotta gotta I gotta
tick a few boxes in the old personal life before
I'm able to fully fully get back to, you know,
doing this podcasting thing at full speed.
Speaker 1 (54:50):
I don't, incidentally, I don't have a work of social
media that I've been enjoying. I did watch the second
season of The Diplomat, which was wild.
Speaker 2 (54:58):
This is so fun.
Speaker 1 (54:58):
This is a show like hermssion I watching right before
the house burned down, and then like we kind of
like we were like putting on TV like log in
and Netflix, like you want to continue watching this? And
I'm like, it's so weird. How like the cloud is like,
well wait, we cannot be destroyed. You want to pick
up on episode four of The Diplomat just a very
low friend people like to show.
Speaker 2 (55:19):
I like this season not great. I don't know, I
don't know.
Speaker 1 (55:22):
The steaks are very all over the place, and I'm like, okay,
full this is way too convenient lazy writing anyway, Uh
find that that's it?
Speaker 2 (55:30):
Yea, like a disorganized steakhouse. The stakes are way too
all over the place. Yeah, you know what I mean. Thanks, Anyways,
like it would be a steakhouse on a on a
cruise ship and there we go, turbulent waters. All right,
let's get into a place where it's worth saying, yeah,
you sai to clean that up. Type of media I've
(55:52):
been enjoying. Uh, you wouldn't understand there it is. Type
of media or the media I've been enjoying. Beyond that
steakhouse joke was just all the Luka doncic stuff was
was great clips of people reading, like reading the news
and just being unwilling to believe it for five minutes now,
(56:15):
like a person being like, no, I think it's real,
and the other people on the podcast being like, dude,
that's so stupid treating him. Yeah. But my favorite tweet
was probably from Kenny Doocey, who somebody named Lenny on
Twitter tweeted they threw Jalen Hood Shaffino in the trade
(56:35):
like some Parsley and Kenny Doozy just retweeted Action Bronson's
face saying that because it sounds so much like that,
such a good chip, but really they should give that
up to ghost Space. You know.
Speaker 1 (56:53):
Yeah, there's no Action Bronzing without ghost Space. And that's
me being a forty year old hip hop head. But
either way, thank you respect to Action brods Into.
Speaker 2 (57:01):
You can find me on Twitter at Jack Underscore O'Brian
and on Blue Sky at Jack ob the Number One.
You can find us on Twitter at daily Zeitgeist, where
at the Daily Zeitgeist on Instagram. We have a Facebook
fan page on a website, Daily zeitgeist dot com, where
we post our episodes and our foot notes. We link
off to the information that we talked about in today's episode,
(57:22):
as well as a song that we think you might enjoy. Miles,
is there a song that you think the people might enjoy?
Speaker 1 (57:30):
Yeah, I've been as part of the going through some
of my old things at my mom's house. I found
this old Jadilla vinyl that I listened to a lot
called J Delicious The Delicious Vinyl Years, which is a
must have album for the for the Dilla fans out there.
But there's specifically I was listening to the instrumental of
the of the remix of.
Speaker 2 (57:50):
The track sometimes, so this is the sometimes.
Speaker 1 (57:52):
Remix instrumental, and this is a track that have the
brand new Heavies on it and Q tip uh.
Speaker 2 (57:58):
The track is cool too with with.
Speaker 1 (58:00):
The vocals on it, but sometimes I just like playing
Dilla beats just as in.
Speaker 2 (58:04):
The background because they're great.
Speaker 1 (58:05):
So anyway, check this out. Sometimes remix instrumental Jay.
Speaker 2 (58:08):
Dillon and that will be in the footnotes. Dailey's I
Guess the production of iHeart Radio. For more podcasts from
my Heart Radio, visit the iHeartRadio app Apple podcast wherever
you listen to your favorite shows. That's gonna do it
for us this morning, back this afternoon to tell you
what is trending and we will talk to you all
then bye, goodbye, bye bye bye