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July 9, 2019 66 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season ninety, episode two
of tur Daily's Ice Guys, production by Heart Radio. This
here's a podcast where we take a deep dive into
America's share consciousness and say, officially, off the top, fuck
coke industry and fuck Fox News. It's Tuesday, July nine.
My name is Jack O'Brien, a K. I bring O'Brien Jack, Wow,

(00:25):
nail it um. That's courtesy off Hannah Sault Test and
I'm thrilled to be joined as oldest by my co
host Mr Miles gast end Town with dead Ends with
Eastern Boys and Miles Gray and that's what we're doing.
Thank you. Also, assault is Hannah for that one? What

(00:46):
is that? Pet Shop Boys? Uh huh yeah, great song. Yeah,
my interaction with that, I think what that was like
a latter day hit. Yeah, it was like but I'm
saying that was was that after their bulk of his
I don't know. I just remember that that's the first
I had heard of the pen. See have the same
memory of where I remember that in my first song

(01:07):
and then my dad was like this ain't there and
I'm like okay, well, like okay, Jude who went to
art school in eight right right, Well, we are throwed
to be joined in ours third seat by the hilarious
and talented test Lunch. What's up, what's up? Thanks for
having me, guys, thanks coming by, Thanks for being here, y'all. Uh, Test,

(01:27):
We're gonna get to know you a little bit better
in a moment. First, we're gonna run through a couple
of the stories we're talking about today. Uh. We're gonna
talk about the fact that over the weekend the US
women's national team won the World Cups and now the
US fans felt about that in France. We're gonna talk
about southern California feeling like the center of the Zeka

(01:48):
Long Weekend Census Thurst. We're gonna talk about the census.
We're gonna say a fond goodbye to Eric Swallwell, and
of course we're going to talk about little Jeffrey Epstein
crazy crazy ship going on. Please bring everything down, Yes, please,
everything I know from all sides, it all fucking down. Yeah,

(02:11):
there's some there's some nervous creeps out there right now,
some nervous, very powerful sexual deviance. We're gonna talk about
Mick Delivery. We're gonna talk about UFOs. We're gonna talk
about big little lies. Maybe some of that we might
not get. But first test, we like to ask our guests,
what is something from your search history that's revealing about
who you are? Okay, my search history. I had to

(02:34):
look past a lot of bullshit, but I got to
do bugs hallucinate because um I had recently been talking
with some friends about a Live Science article that came
out that talked about how cicadas eat a fungal hallucinogen
that makes them have orgies and go crazy and then
their butts fall off, and then their butts fall off.
Their butts sometimes fall off, sometimes explode, So it's basically

(02:57):
like taking mushrooms. It is a lot like, Yeah, you
have a fun orgy and then your butt falls but
falls right off in my experience. The unfortunate thing about this, though,
is that if you google that, then you end up
going into like tactile human you know, hallucinations, and that's
not his son. You have to keep reframing. It will
be bugs hallucinating. Very bad hallucination to have is bugs. Yeah,

(03:20):
it's very common. Skin on the walls unsubscribed, Thank you, subscribe, No,
thank you. Cocaine yeah, this seems like a topic that
might happen on a science corner of your podcast, Nightcall,
Nightcall Podcasts. Yeah, yeah to back Nightcall host. Yeah, Molly

(03:41):
was just here. Your sheets is in New York. She
is just back from Miami right about. Oh yeah, her
favorite one of her favorite tondays the God Sauce. It
is the God Sauce. Wait, so do we know though,
do bugs hallucining? So in addition to the cicadas that
are hallucinating, there's also um, I believe an aunt gets

(04:03):
kind of a fungal infection in its brain that basically
amounts to mind control. Oh you also covered that on
Night Called. We have a whole bugs hallucinating corner that
I think it was an episode of Creature Feature too. Yeah,
about like zombie insects that basically through these bacteria like
I will do your bidding exactly. And then there's a
whole subset of sea creatures who get taken over by

(04:27):
um different kinds of like smaller sea creatures like parasites
that invade their brains and then you know, brainwash the
creature to think that it's the parasite or from the Caribbean. Yeah,
very timely. Yeah, yeah it is. Um have they announced
Wo's gonna play Sebastian? I don't think so. Yeah, who

(04:49):
could what kind of persons into a weird inauthentic accent.
They're like, oh yeah, I got that voice in the bag.
We bought some wokeness with the casting of Aerial. So
now for Sebastian, we're going to go show what is
something you think is overrated? So overrated? Cake with frosting. Okay,

(05:13):
when people use the fries the icing on the cake,
I think they really mean guilding. It's not it shouldn't be.
There should be no icing on cake. Icing on cake
ruins the cake. So you like a dry cake. I
like a dry cake cake. I don't need glue for
my cake. No. I think ice cream is a totally

(05:33):
valid choice to have with cake. I think if you
have an unfrosted cake and ice cream, that's kind of
the holy grail. I also am fine with like a
whip cream, but the frosting, like a butter cream, I'm
I think it's totally over eated. Fond I cannot take
is like the hard congealed thing, right, the thing you
can peel off. It's just to make cool ship. Get that.

(05:58):
Cakes obviously look purely for sculpting roots. They eat like
s I'm sorry, kind of like marzipan. Marzipan like that,
I like a little bit. But have you ever had
a cake that has like a giant hunk of mars,
like an animal made out of marzipan and you try
and kind of like deal with it the second it's
the same way whenever it's there's too much non cake

(06:18):
substance ordered cake. Yeah, So in your mind, is a
perfect cake like just a sheet cake, like a pancake
with nothing on top of it? Or I'm trying to
picture in my mind how a cake when no frosting
doesn't just look like a bunch of sponges stack on
each other. Well, I think that the ideal. I think
we as Americans need to make a shift towards dry

(06:38):
cake with ice cream. And if you can't have ice cream,
the troops right, it's only right you can number one
ideological change we need to make as Americans. Could you
imagine that was really the key? Ice cream and every bowl? Ye?
Dry cake? Yeah? Cake? What about ice box cake becoming
more of a thing? What is ice box? Oh? Go on?

(07:01):
What you guys don't know what. I just have this
ice box where my heart used to be. You take ma.
It's technically cookies that turn into cake when you add
layers of whipped cream. So you do famous chocolate wafers
is the classic, but you could also use Nilo wafers,
or crushed saltines and or even and I guess not
totally crushed but kind of broken up saltines. You do
a layer of that, a layer of real whip cream

(07:22):
or cool whip. If you're not in the mood to do,
they're seeing it's the best thing ever because it's just
it's not so sweet, it's so good and then it
kind of turns soft. So yeah, and I love fucking
Nilla wafers. My god. When I used to be in
like daycare programs and ship and that was like the
snack was like yes, like celebratory day. H wow. I've

(07:45):
never heard of this, and it's already based on description
my favorite cake. I'm changing lives. Have you ever had
a buster bar? Do you know what that is? That?
This might be like a regional thing, but it's basically
like you put a layer of oreos broken up thing,
you have cream on top thing. You have like sort
of caramel peanuts and stuff like that. That sounds great.

(08:06):
That sounds like a Snicker's ice cream bar, like homemade homemade.
Yeah yeah, yeah, that was a big thing. Or dirt
cup from Tony Romus. Yeah, I think that's what. I think.
That's similar that that's a that has like oreos and
the fidding and gummy worms and whipped creams sometimes, which
I've never ate because it's out of contact. Don't like
the fruit. I get it's a dirt cup. I was

(08:28):
fine with just being dirt Get the worms. Are you
a sour candy or a chocolate candy? Chocolate candy? Okay, chocolate?
Yeah good. You know what happen is? What is something
you think is underrated? Okay, well, based on recent events
and recent conversations, I'm gonna have to say air conditioning.
Uh huh underrated? I think air conditioning is underrated. Yeah, well, okay,

(08:52):
here's my thing. We need air conditioning, but we don't
need it during the day unless the ambient temperature inner
room is over seventy degree. Thank you. All right, that's
like the only sane thing. I don't do that for
people who are like it's got I mean I like
it to be cold, but that's when I'm sweating. I'm
never just like it needs to be cold all the time. Um,

(09:13):
but it's so awful to be too cold. It's it's
really true. It's so much better to be too hot
than too cold. Especially all the energy that's being used
to during the summer make you two cold. This is
uncomfortable in the wrong direct your skin. But I think
it's underrated because it's necessary in southern California in the summer,

(09:36):
but it's being overused. But we shouldn't do away with it.
So I'm going to say it's underrated because it's being attacked.
Yeah right, not obviously, because I think every office in
America is overly over the air condition because I'm one
of my last jobs I have, we have everyone have
blankets in their office like I had had too blankets
I would wrap up in and no one It was

(09:56):
so funny. None of us knew where the fucking thermostat was.
We had no fucking clue, and we were like, can
we do something because like it's a distraction behind your
boss's desk, like Matt Lowers, Yeah, no, And then they
were like, we have talked to building management and there
was like another sub box. It's like it's political thing. Yeah. Um, now,

(10:17):
what is the argument that it is sexist? The argument
that it's sexist is that there were studies conducted. I
believe that men perform better in colder environments, working environments,
and women do not. Women perform better when it's slightly warmer.
But I think a lot of this is because the
dress code. Yeah, it's like men are kind of encouraged

(10:37):
to wear more, like not more clothes, but it's like
you're not going to wear short's right, Like I'm wearing
a three piece suit right now. Obvious as you can
tell with Uniqulo heat tech, Yes, exactly. But what about
those little bracelets that I think it's called the ember.
Have you guys seen this where it's a personal heating cooling?
I've seen instagram after this right, Yeah, it was funny.
I was just in Italy in Florence. Ambient air temperature

(11:02):
during the day reached around a hundred and five degrees
and I remember her majesty when my girlfriend was like, Yo,
you should get that bracelet thing, and I was like,
that's bullshit. Cut to the second half. WiFi instagrams like
did you mention that bracelet thing, of course, and then
I was like, not on need this, this is the devil.
But I hear, I mean, I don't know. It seems
like it's based on science. Like you because you've got

(11:24):
what a lot of blood flowing through your pulse. But
I mean I always am kind of of the mind
that nobody's really doing enough to make socks that can
be freezing cold all day long. That really would affect, you, know,
a lot of change your personal temperature. Also neck. You know,
they have like the weird scarves with like a cooling

(11:44):
gel thing, but I don't think they work that well. Yeah,
so you need a real chunky scarf to hide some
sort of large air conditioning unit in there. I think
that's what Lenny Kravitz has going on. My secret. I'm
always thought, always thought, are you generally a sweaty person?
I sweat, but I don't like to be too cold

(12:05):
because I grew up on the East Coast. But then
I moved here when I was a teenager, and it
was I was like, oh, I thought you just had
to suffer through being freezing, freezing cold for long stretches
of time. And when I was free from that now
I get. I started to panic when I get too cold,
and especially in the car if someone has the air
conditioner blasting and you feel like it's too rude, you

(12:27):
don't want to like adjust it because you're not driving,
it's terrible situated. Then I just sweat from But you
got rights? Right? Are you being kidnapped in the city
speeding away? And last thing I need, Miles is one
Sylvester Stallone impression? Is this right? Literally? I can't And

(12:54):
I'll tell this story over and over. His solution in
court a decision when it ends him, he was willing
to accept the decision that the court game. He came
back around and just literally said right or something. And
they're like, okay, well listen true what he says? Yeah?
Y five? What was the thing of him in court?
I think he like they were like your money? Oh,

(13:16):
and since it was, don't I got right to go on?
Wait a second, I think he do got right? Test
what's a myth? What's something people think is true you
know to be false? Okay, So I think I mean,
at least among my friends, the prevailing wisdom is that
ghosts are not real. Um, I'm gonna go ahead and

(13:37):
say that. I recently feel like maybe we're all wrong
and the ghosts are real. Okay, yeah, like that. A
friend showed me that her baby monitor had picked up apparitions.
And it didn't just happen once. It happened a number
of times, and they just I'll show you guys later.
It looks it's going to take a yeah, because it's deep,

(14:01):
deep in the socials. But it was a It's like
a woman holding a child. It's like an outline. It's
so weird. And then it just kept happening, And then
I went down this whole rabbit hole of other baby
monitors picking up goes. So I believe they're real, but
you can only see baby monitors. Actually, edit this out,
and we need to start writing a script for a

(14:22):
contained thriller that's all through baby monitor imagery. Totally. That's
a little hanging through one of those paranormal activities. Has
to be a lot of baby monitor activity, right, I
don't know, Zeke Gang, if you're a paranormal activity expert,
let us know. If we're already on well trodden ground. Yeah,
the para Norman's I think that you can make an

(14:44):
entire movie that's just someone watching on a baby monitor
as hands come grab the baby, and it's like you
could just stretch that one movement out for two hours
watch it and I probably just extreams slow, just react
like expression and just people's space is being like, yeah,
it's a new train coming towards the camera room. You're

(15:05):
right next to the just shaking. So did okay, So
this apparition was in fact it looked like a woman
holding a child, and then the physical I R L
child was in manger. So this is the thing. No,
the child was not. The child was not in the room.
The child had just been taken out of the room.
It was an empty So that's the thing is somebody

(15:28):
wasn't looking. Yeah, the ghost was like wait a second.
They don't know about wifire. They're dumb. See that's the
one thing we got on ghosts that smart. On ghosts, bro,
I saw the ghost just defecating in the street, not
even using a toilet. That's how far behind this ghost was.
It was like toilet. I was like J. K Rowling

(15:51):
was lying, they can't just make their I guess that's wizards.
But J. K Rowling said that wizards back back in
the day is used to just make their poop disappear,
as opposed to as a trick or just as a
convenient as a convenient okay, yeah, I thought it was
like the centerpiece of their show, like and for my

(16:12):
next trick. Could you imagine though, if you could ship
your pants wherever you can and then just reversed it
and gone like no muss, no fuss, Yeah, I think it.
I think the spell would have to have it disappearing
as it passed the border of your asshole, because otherwise
it would get on your pants. Oh so you set

(16:33):
up a black hole by your asshole that you shipped
directly into the void. Right, yeah, wow, it's a parallel universe,
but only for that anyways, try that out, ghosts, I know,
by your asshole. It is really weird that baby monitors
are like such a half asked video, like closed circuit

(16:56):
TV level quality of video. It's like black can white.
It's like, let's make it scary. Let's watch your baby,
and it's scary. You're already terrified that something bad is
going to happen to your baby. Why don't we just
add a layer of like when they wake up and
their yeah yeah, no exactly where like the baby appears

(17:20):
to be frozen, and then the tape kind of speeds up,
have you it does super fast like zombie mode baby
for a second while it goes down. It's yeah, it's yeah, yeah,
like that crawling baby. So that's the whole film. It's
it contained thro everyone's watching all this wild ship go
down the baby water and it turns out their high
plot twist. Right, all right, well it sold itself. Hello, yeah, alright, guys,

(17:47):
let's talk about the Women's World Cup. US women's national
team took it too, oh over Netthlands and yeah, let's
listen to uh Fox News, you know, covering their incitement
there on the streets of France Repay where Alex Morgan

(18:08):
Plaza trade um in the French League, um, and yeah
they're just like, here's an ex pets bar here something exactly.
Americans are hearingly on their stoked and it's Fox News.
And of course think about the kinds of Americans who
are like I will travel to France to watch the
Women's World Cup. I don't know how much MAGA overlap
there is, but they saw that Fox Mike flag and activated.

(18:32):
Guess history has just been made art thou we are
here in a sports bar to Leon France, listen to
what that. We're in a sports bar. We were gonna
be outside, we were gonna be looking at a screen
with the football. Shame there. Dumb truck. Dumb truck. That

(18:56):
would have been quick thinking on his part. It feels
like they're dump truck, dump truck enthusiasts. I've got some
junk in the trunk, as you guys know. And uh,
but you can tell he's like his mind is just
totally He's like exactly. And then probably he tried to
talk on the mic like this, so maybe trying to
drop on the sounds like no, which I got you.

(19:16):
Have you ever done that when like your kids are
around and like a song with bad words comes on
and you're like, you're like, hey, how do you how
do you start talking over it? That's what it reminded
me of. Um, your kids are like why did you
always do this? Whenever we're listening to when we're listening
to the Onyx Big Sneeze also nicely see Ye go

(19:38):
on Forever, Oh my God, entire sneeze lasted the entirety
of pulp fixing record breaker three hours sneezing well looks
shout out to them. You know, for me, it was
a foregone conclusion that they would win this entire tournament. Um,
and I'm glad they did. I thought that too, But

(20:00):
watching the game, this was the first game I watched
end to end, and it was like very I don't
know it was this took some time for the US
to score, but then you know it, all bets were
off after after the first goal, after the penalty from Urpino,
because then they scored what like nine minutes later, and
that was just too much that that last goal was

(20:21):
kind of a dagger. I personally find women's soccer like
more fun to watch. I don't know if it's because
the US is like winning all these titles or something comparatively, yeah,
but comparing to the men's World Cup, like even just
like watching finals to finals, I find women's soccer more entertaining.

(20:42):
Is that like a widely accepted take? Like I think
it's widely accepted, you know in this world that people
believe the women's willcome. No, I don't think. I think
people who actually enjoyed the sport can find it's I
think it's just as it's just yeah, and they're tactically
just as disciplined, and like the skill of the players

(21:03):
is like it's there, their world class, their world class. Um.
But like I find and this is a thing I've
heard other people say that, like women's tennis is definitely
more fun to watch the men's tennis because there's more
vollies and there's like more I'm not engaged with women's
tennis or tennis in general to be able to say
why it's better. But for me, just being a footie fan,

(21:24):
I could absolutely, I like, I like all. I just
don't like MLS right because it's just stressed. Look and
I don't know people, Look, I'm sorry this the concentration
of skill is not in the MLS and talent it's
all in Europe and every if you know, shout out
to every American plying their trade, not in the US

(21:44):
to bring back that skill to put the US on top.
The one thing is next World Cup, it'll be interesting
because a lot of the stars this year are going
to be a lot older and a lot of you know,
if you go buy off of how the like you
twenty and you twenty one teams have been performing in
like global tournaments, they haven't won a title since so

(22:05):
a lot of people like, well, where's where's the town
going to come from? But I don't think that's necessarily
that big of a deal because you know, it's not
always an accurate depiction of where the country is going
to because things get hot real quick. But I would
still bet on the U s WiM's team thirty four.
I think we'll be thirty five this year, so you know,

(22:25):
we'll have some people out there. She's a fucking baller dog,
Carli Lloyd, who knows she'll come back? Still funk with me.
All Right, we're gonna take a quick break. We'll be
right back, and we're back, and you guys, over the

(22:49):
long weekend, I don't know about you guys, but it
seemed like, uh, Southern California was sort of like people
who live in Los Angeles, we always think the world
revolves around us, but like this long weekend felt like
it really did. There were the two earthquakes, and then
Kawai Leonard announced, like a surprise decision that he was

(23:12):
going to the Clippers and bringing Paul George, which immediately
made them the NBA Finals favorites or the NBA favorites.
Just were you guys getting a lot of concerned calls
from I did. The problem was I was in the
wilds of Oregon over the weekend and I had no

(23:32):
cellular data access of any kind. Even in the place
I was staying. There wasn't like a you know, a
camp house where there was a computer. So like the
day I emerged from nature ship just came in. I
was like, what the funk? And I really every person
who came into this camp, I was like, did you
hear anything about Kauai there? Like dude, no, I don't

(23:52):
even want to prospect or on the edge of town,
just being like, hey, you're hearing anything, you know what's happening?
Is there Leonard in those and no? But I did. Yeah.
My mother, who's in Italy, she was like unrelated right, Um.
She was like fine, I'll go. She's like, I'll go.
It'll get you to stop talking about it. She's like, please,
I'll leave you. Um. She was like very concerned for

(24:15):
her possums and cats. But it definitely did seem like
a lot of the focus was on this this little
state of ours. Wait, your mom was concerned about possums. Yes,
she loves possums. She has possums as she feeds in
her backyard. That she yes, she's a big possum uh
support or advocate. She's a card caring member of the

(24:36):
like United States Opossum Society. Really, yes, How does she
feel about I'm sorry, I'm taking this is mostly what
the podcast is. How does she feel about possums on leashes?
Which I have seen only in thet I saw a
Molly post about the dude with the possum on the leash.
I showed my mom that and she was like, She's like,

(24:56):
that's that would be very difficult to do normally. I
was like, so, we're so afraid that they get Like
I thought, they were paralyzed very easily by fear and
bright lights and which means to be paralyzed whenever you
see bright lights. Yeah, how would you walk them around?
That's just a very brave person who maybe just forcing

(25:19):
the really upset free the possum. Yeah, exactly, Let them
fucking roam free. Look, if you want to invite him
in the house, invitement house, don't keep them there. Let
them have some agency. Maybe don't invite them in the house. Yeah,
maybe don't. They don't have they don't have rabies. What's
find a new angle, bro. These opossums are clean. That's

(25:40):
what my mom would make a mess eating your trash.
That's the issue with possums. I think in North America
they're possible, Okay, just checking. I don't know possums. That
gang will get on me because every time I say,
they're like, they're actually and I'm like, you can actually
that awesome splaning. Yeah. Uh, let's talk about the toy
census guys. Yeah, let's talk about it. Okay, So we

(26:03):
already know the human dry scab and Commerce Secretary Wilburt
Ross was leading the charge to get a citizenship question
added to the census, and most sane people who understand
how the census works are like, m that that that
that that we know what you're trying to do, because
if they they're a want to intimidate people from not
responding if they aren't a citizen, which would then affect

(26:26):
the numbers that you know, affect federal dollars, representation and government,
how you can redistrict and things like that. So a
lot of people like, no, this is a game to
try and further in trench Republican power by any fucking
means necessary. Um. And a lot of people too were
saying like despite what the customs of Border patrol or
Homeland Security were saying, a lot of people like they

(26:47):
could weaponize this information to begin rounding up people who
answered no to the citizenship questions. So everything about it
seemed unnecessary. Um. And then you know, apparently are like
I think a few weeks ago not I think a
few weeks ago the Supreme Court upheld like a lower
court decision that was basically saying, yo, you are not
including the the citizenship question at all. And then um,

(27:11):
the d o J was like, Okay, we get it.
You know, we've we've we're gonna have the senses printed
without the citizenship question because we are going to defy
the fucking courts. Um. And they would be like okay
and essentially saying like, Okay, Trump understands, we're taking the
l on the citizenship question. Let's keep it moving. Suddenly,
group of d o J lawyers that were arguing on

(27:32):
behalf of the administration up and vanished, and uh, the
d o J was like, oh, we've got new lawyers
on this who are like a mishmash of like political
appointees and like career d o J people, but really
it's just like, uh, it sounds like William Barr just
needs someone another team of people to try and argue
for like this just so blatantly illegal move on the

(27:55):
on behalf of the administration. UM. And so a lot
of people are saying, like, especially like in d o
jare like, no, these people quit because they don't want
to keep arguing like the quote unquote fact when in
an instant Trump can just be like, no, we're gonna
actually add the citizenship question despite what you know the
Supreme Court says, And a lot of career lawyers were like,
I don't want to put my name on this ship

(28:17):
and keep arguing that. Like you know, one of the
big things was the administration kept saying, well, we need
we need this to get to the Supreme Court quickly,
because they thought the Supreme Court was gonna be like yeah, yeah, yeah, okay,
all good citizenship question UM. And they're saying, and we
need it to be expedited because the things have to
be printed by June. We have to begin in the
printing process by June. And then suddenly when they don't

(28:37):
get the answer they want, suddenly it's like, oh, well,
maybe it can be October three one. Maybe. So there's
just an unwillingness to let this die even though it should.
And everything has pointed to the fact that, you know,
this is all because there was a Polster and this
dude who was like who has passed away, who was
sort of like in his expert opinions like this is
like one of the one last moves Republicans can do

(28:59):
that will benefit whites and non Hispanic whites in this
country in terms of representation. Yeah, and then Trump was
like said, like, oh, we needed for districting. It's like
you just we're saying it wasn't in court whatever, And
that's why the lawyers are like, I can't do this anymore.
It just seems like he's gonna blatantly hold it hostage
until like hold the entire census hostage because it's more

(29:19):
of a norm, Like there's not like some hard deadline
that says when the census has to be out. It's
more of a norm, so he could just what does
have to give him a thing? It's just the thing
where is he going to defy the Supreme Court? And
like what is that? Now? What are we doing here?
When we have the presidents like, I don't care what

(29:39):
the Supreme Court does. I'm doing this so we shall see.
But I think really it's more just a reason for
Trump to keep some kind of culture war battle brewing.
So his base is like, yeah, man, the fucking sider,
did you know? Because we've got to know who is
and who isn't or whatever logic they use. But you know,
most a lot of polling shows that around like sixty

(30:00):
five percent of Americans don't have an issue with a
citizenship question being asked, So you know, that is like
a sort of a little bit of overlap of people
outside of his base who who aren't totally opposed to
the citizenship question are almost two thirds what Yeah, but
I think therese I think there's being asked. It's like yeah,
on a census, should we know if you're a thing

(30:22):
rather than yeah, because then we can start like nickel
and diming districts or cities that have a lot of
immigrants or undocumented people there, and then we can sort
of chip away at their influence in politics. And yeah,
you know, I mean this should have been a layup
for them, because you can just play a dumb and
be like what we just want to know. But there
was that person who like constructed the entire strategy for

(30:44):
them to like basically disenfranchise immigrants, and uh, they found
his hard drive after he died, and yeah, that's the
whole reason that I think the Supreme Court, Like, the
Supreme Court was like, no, you're your logic does make
as much sense as this thing that you're clearly doing.

(31:05):
So yeah, exactly. He was the guy who came up
with the Thomas Hoffer, Yeah, this is the this is
important for us to do. And he was like just looking,
He's like, Okay, if we do this one thing and
we just begin redistricting and shifting power to the places
where good old, white blooded Americans are. And then his
estranged daughter after he died, found his hard drive and

(31:27):
turned it over to the media. So shout out to her, Yeah,
shout out to her. Indeed, let's talk about little Jeffrey Epstein.
So yeah, this is just your monthly reminder that Carcosa
is real. If you watched the first season of True Detective,
there's no like monster guy out in the woods boogeymanning

(31:50):
his way through the local population. It's actually the rich
politicians from the video in the second to last episode.
But yeah, some extremely people are using their power to
systematically abuse and brutalize vulnerable children. Um. While I was
researching for those article, I learned that as Wide Shut

(32:10):
is supposedly based on real experiences that Stanley Kubrick had
once he was like adopted into the like higher upper
echelon's society. Like, yeah, so that's just a rumor, but yeah,
I just feel like this is like a yeah, I
feel like this is a little pinhole into the world

(32:32):
of people who are just completely uh insulated from the
consequences of their decisions by being rich, and so they
just become like that's something that Robert Evans talked about
on Behind the Bastards that people have done studies about
the extremely wealthy and like how they're thinking differs from

(32:53):
the rest of us, And because they've been isolated from
the consequences of their decisions for so long, they basically
have the equivalent of a brain injury, Like they just
can't think like the rest of us. All their impulse
control is just totally because they can't see the sequence
of events afterwards, Like when I do the thing I
like and then I'm happy and nothing happens and people

(33:14):
shut the front. Yeah I've heard that. Yeah I need
I mean that makes total sense when you see how
people like this operate. The neural pathways between cause and
effect for your own actions just never get made. Yeah,
they don't get made after like it can both be
if you're born rich like the president, or if you're

(33:35):
you know, become extremely rich and then for two decades
like you never have any you never face any consequences
like those neural pathways can atrophy, like cutting line at
the Duomo in Florence to see it in person. Yes,
no consequences. I'm afraid I might be heading down that path.
That's the only way you can associate with experience ince

(34:02):
you've been changed. And obviously we're laughing during the course
of a story that is not funny. Okay yet, thanks
for killing my joke. No, that's not you, that's not
it's me, and that's my I'm c and I'm lacking
the causing effect of my bad jokes. That's what podcasts do. Actually,
they said that comedy podcasters have fucked up neural pathways

(34:24):
because we can't tell if our jokes are funny or not.
Because nobody's there to laugh for. Yeah, that's true. Yeah, alright, sorry,
back to the really dark story. Yes, so yeah, serial
child rapist Jeffrey Epstein is getting charged with sex trafficking,
which is what he's been kind of doing out in
the open for decades. Right. Um, the New York District

(34:48):
Attorney is coming for him. The federal government is coming
for him. They're holding him in Uh, I forget what
the name of the facility is, like going tougher than Guantanamo.
A dude who was held there and then taking to
Guantanamo was like, take me too, Yes, I will, I
will do Guantanamo over this any day. So that's great,
but it's obviously just a very small sliver of the

(35:11):
hell he's put other people and families through. Um. But
so the way the mainstream media is covering this, at
least the main like New York Times story, in the
Washington Post story, uh, they're covering it in like a
pretty straightforward way, like he's a convicted pedophile and he
is now like it had long been rumored that there

(35:32):
was uh, you know, sex trafficking and you know, very
like meat and potatoes the exact what is happening. But
this is one of those stories where I feel like
journalistic methods and sort of unwillingness to connect the dots
for people reading the reporting makes it fall short a
little bit there, And there are articles that are doing that,
but I just feel like the very straightforward reporting of

(35:55):
it you miss some of the texture. Um. So the
articles menage and that he was a convicted child sexual abuser,
that he's associated with powerful friends, and that he just
charged in another case that's under scrutiny for being too lenient,
But the things they don't mention that seemed like they
should be mentioned in every article. First of all, Trump's
quote about him saying he's a great guy who likes

(36:16):
girls as much as me, some say very young girls
or something like that. It's like really creepy and like,
you know, yucking it up about the fact that this
guy's a pedophile and uh, that they're good friends, um,
which he now claims he doesn't know him at all. Um.
He has a plane known to locals at so. He
owns an island, first of all, which is supposedly not

(36:39):
skull shaped, but it's known as it's like off of St. John.
It used to be known as Little Saint John, but
then they changed it to Little St. Jeffrey because he
owns it. Well, that's what it was like, unofficially called
and the locals who work on that island called his
plane the Lolite Express because he's a is bringing underage

(37:00):
women down. And there's credible reporting suggesting that he had
powerful people travel and have sex with underage women on
the Lowly Express. Big one. Bill Clinton flew on that
plane many many times, sometimes explicitly without his Secret Service present,
which is fairly uncommon. I would imagine Trump flew on

(37:21):
it once. Uh, and this is a big one. One
of the women who said he forced her to have
sex with powerful men said he asked for details and
confided in her that he likes to get these people
in his pocket by getting horrifying information about them doing
you know, horrible sexually expo having though the young women

(37:43):
that he hired basically come back to him with anecdotes
that he can use of, and there's also allegedly hidden
cameras of them doing it, so he's so this is
this is what's weird because and I feel like more
attention should be paid to this because I haven't seen
this theory put out there that much other than by
us and Evans, is that nobody knows how he made

(38:03):
his money, right. He's like a Gatsby guy, right, He's
a Gatsby guy who like people are like He was
a math teacher who got brought over to bear Sterns
by the head of bear Stearns, whose kids he was taught.
And he was like the you know Robin Williams from
Dead Poet Society of Math, Like he just got kids
psyched about math. And this guy heard him give one

(38:23):
of his This this guy heard him give one of
his lectures and was like, you got to come over
to bear Sterns. So he was at bear Sterns for
four years. He started as like a desk assistant, worked
his way up to being partner, but the day after
he was made partner, he was forced to leave because
of insider trading. He claims that the way he made
his billions is through just managing the money of billionaires.

(38:46):
And he claimed like people would come to him with
eight hundred million dollars and be like, please, sir, manage
my money, and he'd be like, get the funk out
of my office. I only deal with billionaires. Like that
was and he claims that that made him exclusive and
that's why everybody wanted to work with him. But he
won't divulge any of his clients, so, which is weird
and make you think you would do that to be

(39:06):
like I have the trust of actual which makes me
a bona fide creep. Yeah, so it's just weird. And
then he like gets all this money. He owns the
biggest house in Manhattan, Like it's like a seventh story
brownstone that is basically an entire city block. So we
don't know exactly how much money he has also, but

(39:29):
he lives like he I mean, he owns a fucking island,
like he has I think more than one plane too. Yes,
So Forbes wrote an article that was like, here's why
he's not a billionaire, which who gives a ship? He's
very wealthy. We don't know how he became very wealthy,
but one thing we do know is that he blackmails
very powerful people with tapes of them doing like incriminating

(39:50):
sexual acts. So that probably helps him in some negotiations,
i'd imagine, um. And then I think the biggest under
sight or oversight from these articles or the thing they
don't get into enough detail about, is how shady. The
previous case was where he was had to admit to
being a pedophile and you know, register as a sex

(40:12):
offounder in Florida. UM, some of the details of that.
They went out of their way. So his lawyers worked
with the d A in Florida in his district to
get him, like the sort of deal you give somebody
if they're giving you the names of like you know,
this crime boss you're trying to take down. Except the

(40:33):
deal was that he wouldn't give any names and that
they weren't allowed to prosecute anybody who his case implicated.
So basically it was all there was no it was
a deal, right, There was no transaction there. It was like, Okay,
we give you the best deal possible, like given the
circumstances of your crimes, like even better than the law

(40:57):
would suggest as possible, and in exchange nothing so uh,
they went out of their way to not tell the
victims about the settlement, which is illegal because they knew
the victims and that's the d A, Like, that's the
people who are supposed to be prosecuting him going out
of their way laws. They completely violated UM. Like I said,

(41:17):
they gave him a sweetheart deal in exchange for him
not naming names, and he asked for and received the
right to never have the people in the case pursued.
Alexander Acosta, current Trump Labor Secretary, was the person who
oversaw the entire deal. And yeah, technically labor overseas federal
sex trafficking cases. So stay tuned there, I guess. Yeah. Um,

(41:39):
but there's a lot of this ship is coming to
the forefront at the same time. Like a circuit judge
last week demanded over a hundred and sixty documents from
a previously sealed case about Epstein's sexual abuse be unsealed,
and there's a very good chance they contained names of
like powerful people, And the judge specifically said, like, the
reasoning for unseeing this is the public knowing about what

(42:03):
happened in these files outweighs the benefit of protecting, you know, right,
the name. It's uh yeah, I mean when especially when
you look at that deal, because like even the co
conspirators had immunity, it's like what how And then you're like,
who the fuck is implicated in this where somehow even

(42:24):
like when he had to serve, they're like, well, he
served thirteen months in prison. He had like the wildest
work release. Yeah, I think he's able to be at
like six days a week or something. Yeah, he was
at Okay, that hardly seems like any kind of jail sentence.
It's nothing, I know. It was really astounding to read
about this stuff today. I actually had to tear myself
away from it to come on here, because, first of all,

(42:47):
one thing that I found really interesting about the response
to it is how there's so it's it's almost like
people are trying to weaponize it on both sides of
the political aisle, as if anyone would be like, oh no,
but you can't get Bill Clinton like without thinking of
the victims at all. It's so clearly not a politically
divisive topic, but it seems as though there's this huge

(43:07):
paranoia that it's going to like break everything apart, and
it's like, well, the only you know, if whoever was
on that plane and like whatever evidence there is, like,
clearly everyone should be I rate about that. Nobody's going
to be like, but Bill Clinton's like come on, you know,
although there are people on the left and the right
who are like thinking it's only going to benefit one

(43:28):
side exactly. Yeah, bring Clinton down or like yeah, to
bring down whoever. It's like, dude, bring them all, fucking
bring them talking about And when you look at this
sort of this is the exact kind of ship that
makes America so despicable when it comes to the legal system,
is that you this is like on full display of like, well,
if you're up in this certain income bracket, you can
just completely sidestep the law and like completely violated victims

(43:51):
rights and protect people who are probably all monsters. And
I really hope if there are very powerful people implicated this,
that we bring all of this ship out to the
light and people can speak in the reckoning there, because
I don't think even if there were people on the
left as there were on the right who were involved
in this, that needs to be known because just as

(44:12):
a you know, humans as a society, we're like, ah, well,
what team are they on? It's like no, no, no, no,
this is fucked up, Like let's fucking tear this ship down. Also,
the fact that this has been kind of known or
rumored but really known for so long and still not
dealt with has fueled so much paranoia and then reading
this you're like, well, yeah, maybe I should be super

(44:32):
paranoid because these rumors, you know, we're showing up in
blind items for years and and we're totally valid route.
You know, they were true stories, but somehow managed to
always be framed as gossip when it's criminal. You know. Yeah,
shout out to the Julie Brown from the Miami Herald,
who is the one who basically, you know, after this

(44:54):
case was settled and there wasn't really like a cause
for the police, even though the police were like, we
are trying, we have all this fucking evidence, and the
district attorney is just not like answering our literally said
they didn't know him. Yeah, I don't know, I don't
know him. Uh So, Julie Brown, a reporter for the
Miami Harold, basically brought this back up and did this

(45:15):
huge like a horrible read, but it's really well written
Miami Harold Investigative Report on where she went back, talked
to the victims, talked to like, found a bunch more
victims because he was just basically trolling local public schools
for children with like bad backgrounds and you know, who

(45:35):
didn't have parents who would suppress charges. So you know,
she was able to put together I think sixty over
sixty names victims. Well, I think it will get interesting
because you know they said there were like three people
that worked with him that are like they're involved. I
think they're unnamed in this indictment, but you can guarantee
those people are cooperating now spilling whatever they have on

(45:58):
like what they saw or did or this time. And
when you look at also too, when the FBI raided
his house, they found like a lot of explicit images too,
of like adults and children. That then it's like, now
you're adding charges that first if he's just looking at trafficking,
and now it's like, are you manufacturing child porn? And
that's that one is I mean, you're effectively gone for life.

(46:19):
And then what is What's So, what's Jeffrey Epstein gonna do?
Is he gonna be tough and not say ship the
person who possibly his whole background is built on like
holding people's secrets against him. That might be his swan song,
and be like, Okay, I'm gonna take the whole thing out.
I mean, if he can't get out of this, I
wonder if he has like a dead man switch type
thing where once he's taken out of the equation, all
these like all the blackmail material goes out to places,

(46:42):
because you know, that's the only way he remains killed
by like a bunch of really powerful people if he's
blackmailing them. Is like right, it's like the second I
enter this text message, right, yeah, all this stuff goes
to whatever. Yeah times yeah, and I hope again to like,
well it'll we'll see really how the president feels too,

(47:05):
if you know, if you is, you're gonna pardon Jeffrey Epstein,
you know what I mean, like what kind of doesn't say,
you know, all right, we're gonna take a quick break.
We'll be right back, and we're back, and have you

(47:29):
guys done McDonald's delivery? You have how have no shame?
How to work out for you? Mmm? Don't order fries,
That's see, that's my thing. The fries of the whole
reason that I would ever know to McDonald's. And they
don't last more than like five ten minutes, ten seconds. Honestly,
I the only actually the only time I do it

(47:50):
is for breakfast, because I'll be like in a death
hangover summoned them mcmuffins. I guess the hash browns last
a little long because at least they're a solid brick,
you know what I mean. And the hashbround is better
than a bunch of little sticks. I feel like the
weight or the heat distribution is much better in the hashbround.
But yes, I have done Mick delivery, so it was

(48:12):
trending yesterday. I guess in Thailand people are requesting cute
stuff like take a selfie with me making a funny
face like in the delivery instructions, or give me the
most chili pepper and Thailand, which they like, gave them
a thousand chili pepper packets. Uh. One dude was like,
give me a free apple pie because I'm broken love

(48:33):
apple pies and they just gave him a free apple pie. Um,
so uh it's cool. Um. I do worry. The other
story when you google like make delivery. The other story
is like earlier in the year, McDonald's being like, we're
going all in on the marketing for Mick Delivery, so
that in fake viral ship or maybe they're creating viral

(48:58):
moments by doing awesome stuff for people. I don't know
which would be put your split yourself in the mindset
of someone asking for one of these things. The broke
one I get because asking for free ship is a
time on a tradition. But the hey, take a selfie
with me making a funny face. But I'm also like
something is that somebody? Really? I guess in my mind,

(49:18):
I don't want to entertain the idea of that healthscape
or someone's like take a funny but a funny face. Yeah,
the picture of the delivery person is not making a
funny face. That's only the person. Did it look like
someone who is doing working in the gig economy and
is like, I didn't sign up for this ship. No
they're not. They're smiling, they're just they're just professional. Yeah,

(49:39):
they're too professional, Like fuck you and yourselfie. Bro, take
your fucking cold fries and let me go on, and
don't fucking forget to tip, asshole. Yeah, I guess hit
in America to make delivery is a partnership with uberts
and they're giving it away for free right now, I think,
But that just means you should tip the ship out
of your Uber delivery person. Tip everybody. If you could

(50:02):
tip in anywhere, if someone has a tip jar, you
tip them even if they don't be like you tip
tip right, that's a tip it subway yeah, you have
to tip. When I was waitressing, um, a huge party
came in and they ordered like I feel like I
may have told this story a thousand times on podcast,
but it's the tip ps A. They ordered so much
food and then they skipped out on their bill and

(50:22):
what I had to pay it out of my money?
That I what fucking restaurant was this? Shame them? It
was t g I Friday mother. Are you h You're
supposed to like stop them from leaving? I guess so,
yeah it was, And it was. I was a novice waitress.
It was like a summer jar wasn't great, yes, server,

(50:43):
Um I was. I was more used to the counter, right,
bringing food also like in loss prevention exactly. Yeah, no,
what I mean it was look like it was summer.
It was sweaty. It was really easy to just be
like I'm just gonna like speed away from the floor
and hide in the back from it. And then I
was like poof, they were gone and it was a
huge group of people and they ordered like a ton

(51:06):
of Yeah it was. And then I cried. But it
was you make like two dollars an hour, So it's
all tips that you basically are working for free for
like two weeks exactly. Yeah, it was a mess. Sucks.
So anyway, always tip because there may be a situation
like that where Yeah, well, I wanted to bring in
this quick story because it feels like it's part of

(51:28):
your beat as one of the hosts of Nightcall. There
is more UFO footage, this time UFOs and videos flying
over the Grand Canyon. How have you guys been dealing
with the fact that there's this footage It looks like
two little white tic TACs flying in formation, which puts
it in line with a lot of other footage from

(51:49):
pilots of tic Tac looking things. Yeah it's weird. Yeah,
tic Ta sky Tik Tech for president. But how are
you guys dealing Well, something that we have been talking
a lot about on the podcast is how nobody cares
about the UFOs, which is really curious to me because

(52:11):
thinking back five or ten years, this would have been
everyone would have been like, well, we have to figure
it out, and it seems it's just these this information
drops that will be in the New York Times, it's
in mainstream media publications and people are like, huh, weird.
Well moving on, I mean it's and I guess it
makes sense. We have kind of enough on our plates.

(52:32):
And it's also it seems insane that aliens would choose now,
of all times to show up. I mean, maybe they're
concerned they could hopefully please help us. It's really bad here,
like we write you the Secret to clean energy a um.
But yeah, I mean it's I think a lot of
what we talked about on the podcast just has to

(52:53):
do with the fact that there there's no one there's
no kind of curiosity like there used to be about
getting to the bottom of this. It's just kind of
noted and then yeah, discarded information. Yeah. Um. And the
fact that a lot of these sources has been very
credible and a lot of the reports of what's been
seen just totally match up. And it's you know, it's
just really like this came off of a fucking Navy

(53:15):
jet exactly right there, and you're hearing the pilot seemed like,
what the funk? Am I looking at people in the Pentagon, like, yeah,
it's not just like a couple who own a lot
of like parrots and ferrets in the desert. Man, they
took me, they took me. Um. But yeah, I mean,
it definitely kind of opens bigger questions about what we

(53:37):
should be paying attention to and what we should not.
Necessarily I don't think it's necessarily true that we need
to right now be paying a lot of attention to
UFO sightings, because I still think that there are lots
of good explanations that are not extraterrestrial about what these
things might be. Give me one, what's a good one
for a thing that is flying and defying the laws
of physics? Is it that another country has technology were

(54:00):
so behind on. Well, that's what I wonder. I mean,
that's definitely one possibility. I only believe that scenario or
it's aliens, really because I would believe that somehow, just
like in the arrogance of the United States military, like
some whole other ship just flew under their radar and
they're like, for the pun was intended h And they're like, damn,
we fucked that one up. HU, we should have gave
that that scientist meeting. Yeah, I mean it's true. It

(54:23):
also is you know, when you think about in context
of stuff like the Jeffrey Epstein case and everything, there's
so much it's so easy to become deeply, deeply paranoid
about things that are being covered up or sealed or
you know, kept from you. And then when you see
these things, the fact that there could be possibilities that
we don't even know about because there, I mean, it

(54:44):
could be an operation on our own government that's just
being badly presented. Guys, fly away from like big monuments, right, yeah,
seen in Times Square. Use the invisible tic TACs next time,
the invisible or um. But yeah, I mean, it's just
it's it's important, I think, to remain curious about these
kind of things and to not totally dismiss them. No,

(55:07):
I do sort of. I wonder if there's something to like,
we just don't have the bandwidth, like psychologically emotionally right
now to be like, okay on top of this fucking aliens.
I mean, okay, I will accept that that happened, but
I need to keep rocking because I have built to pay.
The other big revelation to me from this most recent
sort of spate of UH sightings is like, I guess

(55:31):
the theory was always among uf the UFO tracking societies
that the government was covering something up, and it seems
more like the military is like what the yeah, yeah,
are you guys covering something and now they're like opening
it up to public scrutiny just to be like that
anybody have crowds any ideas what's going on here? Um,

(55:55):
so yeah, they've been stone Wald And I mean even
the way that the media kind of covers, the kind
of lacks that hunger to figure it out. The fact
that these things appear without more kind of in depth
almost like rogue reporting is interesting to me as well.
I guess it's just because you assume that if you
take the position that they're definitely extraterrestrial and you're going

(56:15):
to get to the bottom of it, it's really easy
to be dismissed as a crackpot, which fair. But you know,
at the same time, the fact that this year alone
there have been how many credible reports like yeah, it's
been it's been in the mainstream more than in previous years. Yeah,
and you know there, yeah, they are just all sorts

(56:36):
of weird things that are like, yeah, if this was real,
that is what would happen, Like a whole rash of
sightings like in the same place, like at the same time,
and then they stop happening there like people start reporting
them and like changing their behavior it's just very very
interesting times. Like part of me thinks is the only
story we should ever cover that we should just be

(56:58):
a UFO podcast for do what it feels so good?
And big feet? Yes that big feet or a trample.
I think someone on Twitter is like a group of
big foots something. Yeah, but I'm like, I don't know,
do you know them? Is that? Do you know? That's what?
That's how they prefer to be preferred. Yeah, they're like
group group designation. I prefer the big feats. I think

(57:22):
big feats is less violent. I wouldn't want to exactly
then I would be starting for your pistol because you
hear a trample was coming in like a couple of
big feets are on their way down. But okay, let's
see yeah, like lemonade. And finally I want to talk
about Big Little Lies. Guys. I feel like your former boss,

(57:46):
Bill Simmons at The Ringer is like trying to make
this like the next Game of Thrones. They have like
big Little Live or something where it's like the live take,
like live reactions a Big Little Lies, and um, the
coverage of it tends to be like really breathless, and
then we kind of asked you test what your thoughts were,

(58:09):
and uh, I this is like at least half of
the people I talked to are like, yeah, I don't know, man,
I couldn't couldn't do it this year right. Weirdly, I
view it as a personal failing because there's no reason
why I shouldn't be able to get with it and
just stick with it. How hard can it be? But
after the first episode, I was like, I would rather

(58:30):
watch literally anything than this show. And I also talked
to you guys earlier about the fact that I read
a fringe conspiracy theory that everyone's wearing a wig, and
then I just couldn't unsee it, and it drove me
insane because it's all I could focus on. And I
feel like they're the way that they're styled is strange.

(58:52):
So I, like you brought up True Detective. I go
into true Detective mode where I'm like, what are they
trying to say with those fake teeth? Like, what does
it mean? What does it mean that kind of show?
It doesn't And then they take their wigs reveals did
you see? Uh the story about the Island of Dr

(59:14):
Moreau and how Marlon Brando wanted to so he was
always wearing that weird blonde Hotel No Hotel ice bucket
on his head, which he had just like seen and
was like that, I'm gonna wear that as a hat
like on set, and they're like, okay, that's a choice.
But then he told them that he wanted the twist
ending reveal to be that he takes off the ice

(59:35):
bucket and he's a dolphin and he and like he
shoots water out of the top head would have been
the silliest. Yeah, I hope that's the ending to Big
Little Ize. Yeah, I think, yeah, it's the same thing.
Like the reason I watch it now is completely different
than what the what brought me in on the first season,

(59:57):
Like the acting was amazing, the story was going places,
and I hadn't read the book, and I'm like, oh,
this is great. The editing was amazing. Now I'm just
more like, Okay, off the strength of the first season,
I'll watch this and then I'm slowly like, after the
first episode, I'm like, what is this gonna be about?
Because you know, they end the first season a great place,
like before reality sets in and law enforcement tries to
forget what happened, like and that's what happened, but now

(01:00:19):
we're like in this other thing about like really people
who did not make the right decision on covering up
their crime, and like they're using I remember what Lord
Nada's character was like it's gonna be a perjury trap.
And I was like, all right, Rudy Giuliani, perjury time,
Like y'all fucking lied, And and also like the way
the dude died, like I don't feel bad, like if
you had been honest with it, there's a reason like

(01:00:41):
people like I don't know, Yeah, you should have covered
that up. I think that was in the second episode
where Zoe Kravitz was like, yeah, I I keep thinking
about the fact that you told me to cover it up,
but like I should have just said we're defending ourselves.
And it's like, oh, yeah, that solves every thing. Well
I don't you just do that? Yeah, well it reveals

(01:01:03):
weaknesses in the first season two that you didn't know
we're there at the time of just like okay, they
made I mean it's it had such a finale, and
I really enjoyed the first season, Like I said, I
was hooked, and I didn't expect it to be as
up My Alley as it was. Um, but yeah, I
mean it also it's hard because I really love anthologies
for just this reason that like it. Being dragged back

(01:01:27):
into the old plot as thoroughly as you're dragged back
into this old plot and trying to move things forward
just feels like everything is so slow. Um. But yeah,
I mean, now that we've been talking about it this much,
you feel like now I have to watch it. I
have to give it another trial. Character is really good.
She's the only reason I watched. And it's not even
because I like the character. I like she's a new Joffrey. Yeah,

(01:01:48):
I hate her. Yeah, we knew she was good at
playing a hatable character from devil Ware's product. But this
is also choices from her with that teeth. Sometimes you'd
been messing with her crucifix necklace. A lot of a
lot of choices. She has good doings. Yeah, doings are important.

(01:02:11):
Uh well, Test, it has been a pleasure having you.
Thank you so much for having you. This is so
much fun. As always, where can people find you and
follow you? I am Mr tes Lynch on Twitter and
Mr test Lynch on Instagram, but Mrs test Lynch in
real life. Justice choice I made? Yeah, uh. And is
there a tweet you've been enjoying? Oh? Yes, I would

(01:02:33):
like to read it to you. It's from at Rob
from online. Just found out the Danish word for jellyfish
is literally water man, and I'm cracking up at the
idea that while other languages were naming them after Medusa
or whatever, some Danish dude was like, no, that's a
water guy. That was on my list as well. Miles,

(01:02:54):
where can people find you? Follow me on Twitter and
Instagram at Miles of Gray a tweet just laugh out
loud reading this from Ben Bolan from our verial network. Uh,
he said, spent a ton of time brainstorming this weekend
and honestly, a hard hitting legal drama called Long Law
and Order. Food court is the best idea I've had
in years. I'm just trying to picture that shower lawn

(01:03:16):
order food court. I'm like courts of ship that only
goes down in a food court, because my god, I
used to go to high school behind the scenes of
ship that went down at the food court in Fashion
Square by you already know I sold weed by Panda Express.
You could have a Gospar Park food court because you
have the people who are serving food right behind the scenes.

(01:03:39):
What's going down then? Like the high class people, but
you know, but they wouldn't need the food court, right, No, no, yeah,
but that's that's what would be dope, is the high
class people would actually be drug dealers in high school students. Okay,
Oh ship we had ringing, Yeah, Science's ship Annapurna Benning

(01:04:04):
war right now with Allison tweet I was enjoying. Jonah
Herman tweeted little jokes on Megan Rappino because she actually
has to go to the White House because she's now
our president. And and then Mike Drucker tweeted, quote, how
do you feel Bill Clinton gets implicated by Jeffrey Epstein?
I don't know, feeling pretty fucking good about my Any

(01:04:24):
pedophile is bad policy, Uh, which sums up my feeling
as well. That will really funk people up there, like
they really canceled him. Can't believe it? Uh, they weren't lying,
like I guess they believe what her Oh. You can
find me on Twitter at Jack Underscore O'Brien. You can
find us on Twitter at Daily z Out. Guys were

(01:04:45):
at the Daily z Outgeist on Instagram. We have a
Facebook fan page and website daily He's that guys dot
com or post our episodes on our foot notes where
we link off to the information that we talked about
in today's show, as well as a song we write
out on my miles with second Debates do a song
by George Band, who's another you know, one of my
favorite Brasilian artists. And this one's called katoa Kato alright,

(01:05:08):
you know, just to give you some some vibes, you know,
and your shoulders and your hips and your toes, put
a little honey in your head. And it's also featuring
Tokenyo's just I was gonna say, yeah, yeah, like what
about TOKENO tokeno on there. The Daily is like I
did as a production of I Heart Radio for more
podcasts for my heart Radio, the her radio app, Apple podcast,
or wherever you're listen to your favorite shows. That's gonna

(01:05:31):
do it for today. We will be back tomorrow because
it is a daily podcast and we'll talk to you
them by what will Peak Almonds I Am, you'll feak

(01:06:05):
with Dessciated and his Bason Scott Uselle Gonna leave the
Dell

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