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May 15, 2020 67 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to Season one, thirty three,
Episode five of Daily eight Guys to production of I
Heart Radio. This is the podcast where we take a
deep dive into America's share consciousness. That's say, officially off
the top, fuck the Coke Brothers and it's Friday May.

(00:25):
My name is Jack O'Brien a k D. When the
dudes on the shelf, drop it in the car, drop
it in the car, drop it in the car. That
is courtesy of many young and I'm thrilled to be
joined as always by my co host, Mr Miles Gray running,

(00:52):
Runnie Runny running, and Runnie can't keep six feet away,
keeps feed aware. Thank you to that for that running
car side and also Jane Dilla by Extensions a k
a by at Matt Dick though appreciate it because after

(01:15):
looking at some of that footage from Wisconsin, he was like,
a lot of people don't even know what one foot is,
let alone six ft. So thanks to everybody for trying
to socially distance. You are helping flatten the curb. And
we're thrilled to be joined in our other hosting chair
by the hilarious and talented Little Zam herself, Jamie laft Us,

(01:39):
I can see clearly now the Jamie's on the daily
is that with Jack a miles of Gray Ghanna, The
Need for Panthers a podcast. I'm gonna record, record, record
podcast all day. That's from Ransom Monkeys. Thank you. So

(02:04):
I put out I put out an emergency bulletin for
I ran out of a K s and and he
came up with that inside of seven minutes. If you
can watch credible stuff, it's like they say, all the
come flow right out from people's Uh, isn't that. It's

(02:25):
like those really bad takes when they're like Trump is
actually going to be great for art. It's like, think
about the great protests songs we're going to get you guys,
Have we got a single protests song like those Rump

(02:46):
Sister YouTube channel things. Got to have something. Kid Rock
dropped one. Yeah, yeah, it's all protesting art the main stream.
Oh yeah, that's what I'm Oh, I completely misheard. I'm like, yeah,
I think there's got to be someone the right already
who like, you know, no, I think like boomers were
all like, man, this is gonna be great for art.

(03:07):
Bob Dylan's going to drop some heat now, and he
did it just wasn't about this president. We're thrilled to
be joined today in our fourth seat by the hilarious
and talented Mr Andy Beckerman. Everyone. Hey, here's a quick
tip if you want to know what six ft is.

(03:28):
That's the height of Shrek. So just pictures lying face
down in front of you. How tall is everyone else?
And Dulock? Is that right? Oh they're very small? Yeah yeah,
just wreck between you and everyone else. Wow, I'm seeing

(03:52):
Shrek was originally based on a six seven ft height. Oh.
On Google he comes up as nine. Wow. But making
these decisions for I don't know. There's someone who has
like a lineup like the usual suspects and is trying
to extrapolate everyone else's height based on Shrek, not DreamWorks.

(04:14):
So I think I'm the authoritative voice when it comes
to sh now more now, more than ever a mid
coronavirus panic. It is a fun time to watch the
Shrek the Musical official Broadway recording on Netflix. It's been
up there for seven years and I think I'm the
only one that's watched it. It's so funny. Wait, was

(04:36):
it like a tortured cursed musical that like didn't go
on from like it was a very successful musical that
starred Brian Darcy James and Sutton Foster. It was. It was.
It was a wildly successful Broadway musical. And honestly, and
I'm not being like edge lord here, it's pretty good.
Oneheads Sutton Foster. Yeah, literally, Sutton Foster in five dred

(04:59):
pounds of ogre makeup. She was Princess Fiona. Wow, it
was okay the whole record, the makeup is horrifying, but
the songs kind of slack. I got some mescal in
and I just upped my broadband package. That might be
something to do over the weekend. Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's
what we reviewed the Shrek musical. I think Jamie you should.

(05:24):
I mean, we'll, we'll get into it. We do have
to make that decision today. What our rewatch is going
to be? Wait, why don't you do a podcast where
you review each minute? One minute by minute? By minute?
Is going to be just minute one of the Shrek musical,
But we're breaking it down painful, each second matters. It

(05:47):
sounds like a Guy Montgomery. Will they do that with
Star Wars the Star Wars minute? Um, of course they do. Yeah, Andy,
I don't know if we've ever brought up the fact
that you found to DreamWorks. A lot of people think
you just found a DreamWorks animation, but yeah, dream I
thought it was yeah, just the whole I mean, me

(06:08):
and spiel spiel B, that's what I call him, spiel B.
Jeff going off for Quimby, do you have any takes on?
Because I know Jeff's a colleague of yours. I have
to plead the fifth because of our association. Because Fatty,
they actually convene, they convened a vote of the board

(06:31):
to actually have it change that. You see, it's say
DreamWorks and it would say s KG for Spielberg, Katzenberg Geffen,
and there was B for Beckerman. And I don't know
what happened Andy that it became s It used to
be SKGB and it just became SKG. I actually asked
them to do that. You know, I see this is
not about vanity for me, all right. You know, it's
about art. And I think when you when I make paintings,

(06:55):
I don't sign my paintings, So why would I sign
my production company studio. Your first work of art, as
you call it, was ants um at dream Works and
I know that you were pushing for Woody Allen. Yes, well,

(07:15):
ants are predators, right are they? I thought they were scavengers.
But it just started. I had always heard that it
started with you were just a man with a vision
for a movie about a six ft tall ogre so
like slightly below average height ogre um. And that was like,

(07:37):
one of these days they will know my vision. All right,
but to average height jew a giant perspective, perspective. All right,
we're gonna just so win to these egg sex. Oh
my god, We're gonna get to know you a little
bit better in a moment. First, we're gonna tell our listeners, well,

(08:00):
we're talking about today, Uh, Wisconsin is open for business,
So we're gonna talk about that. We're gonna talk about
the kind of it seems like there's some growing consensus
that going outside is maybe a good idea. Uh so
like some things that cities are doing to encourage that. Uh,

(08:24):
we're gonna talk about Kroger being not that cool. We're
gonna talk about restaurants using mannekins to fill their tables
for some restaurant trends. Yeah, we're gonna talk about going
to the movies. What that's like these days. Uh. And
also we're gonna talk about what we are watching Slash

(08:46):
Rewatching this weekend. But first Andy, we like to ask
our guests, what is something from your search history that
is revealing about who you are? Yeah? Uh so most
of it's just uh stupid, But I looked up did
you know Do you guys know who Richard sala is? No,
he's a cartoonist. I think he has a lot of

(09:07):
his books are on fantagraphics comics. Um, he's great, he's really.
I found out he died yesterday, and it's like I
kind of went down, like ah, I was like reading
a lot about him because I didn't know him that well.
I don't know. I just read his his comics, and um,
I read that he was a lot of people compared

(09:28):
him to Edward Gorey, And then that brought this into
my head. Do you guys know John bell Air? So
this is what I searched John Bellair's He writes wrote
he died in like the nineties kids fiction but like
incredible like this kind of like sci fi fantasy, supernatural stuff.
And Edward Gorey did a lot of the illustrations. Um,

(09:52):
I think they adapted. They adapted one of his books
into a movie with Jack Black. I don't know how
faithful shallow how I think what the clock in the wall?
I forget I read this when I was a kid,
but they're like incredibly kind of I read those, Yeah,

(10:13):
U with the Curse of the Blue figurine. Yes, yes,
And I just like, uh, the only thing I really
want to do. There's like a handful of things that
I care about about, like adapting in Hollywood, or about
do like, besides my own projects, I want to reboot
night Court number one if I ever have any power
in this town, I want to reboot in night Court.

(10:34):
I have a whole plan too, and then I would
love to like write a John bel Air something. Yeah,
the House with a Clock in its walls was like
a library book. It wasn't like something that uh they
officially uh like assigned in elementary school, but it was

(10:55):
one that like I feel like was on like reading
lists of stuff for me at least, like I remember these.
Seeing these covers reminds you of like at the time,
like in the library, how I would select books as
a kid in my school library because I'm like, yo,
this cover art looks fucking old fuck that look at
Peewee Scouts. That ship looks more like comics. I would

(11:16):
read like whatever the fuck? Uh? But I remember reading
the Blue Figurine one. I think it was for I
don't know it was. It was like on some list,
But yeah, that aren't I definitely remember now, Yeah that
Daniel pink Water. These were all you know, if you
are hitting middle aged about right now, this is all
your youth. What is something you think is underrated? Underrated? Okay?

(11:43):
I got a question. All three of you guys are gentiles, right, Yeah,
have you ever had hola just sitting around the house? Yes? Yes? Really?
Oh my god. I put a poll up on Twitter
and I was asking I as a Jew, so I
think Halla is underrated. I don't like bagels have been
gentrified at this point, but I don't. I didn't. I

(12:06):
didn't think people just had holla sitting around like like
the other day I had my lunch was cantle open
Halla because this is the quarantine, and you know, you
just make make do with whatever you have. Um. I
used to have Hall of Friends toasts. Sure, but just
like you're gonna be in my house, you're just gonna

(12:26):
slice off a slice for a snack. Yeah. I used
to work at a bakery in college, so so the
access was high. And then I just and then I
just kept getting because it's so good. I when I
was growing up, I didn't have it, But as an adult,
I've seen the light. Yeah, I'm growing up in l A.
Had a lot of like Jewish friends, and then her

(12:47):
Majesty is also tribe. So you know, we keep it
real with the holla from time to time. But the
recently it's it's come back because I've seen a lot
of core holla baking because a lot of people are
trying to flex with the braiding, uh, you know, and
like get just picturesque Cola's off. But I haven't actually
bought a loaf and kept in my house for a while.

(13:09):
You just I just remember as a kid it would
be around too, because we'd have French toast with it sometimes.
Who's doing the car baking of kala? Is it Goyam
or is it Jews? No, their tribe, their tribe. I
think it just it must feel like one of those
like you know, like it's a definitely like a it's
a finesse baking thing, like when it comes out beautiful,
Like I get it, you like, you want to take

(13:29):
a photo of so shiny and beautiful, you know, versus
a dull Look what gives it that sheen? Do they
paint it with a little egg or what's what's going
on there? What's the it's beautiful. It's gotta be right. Yeah, yeah, anyways,

(13:51):
we we did not have it. I'm gonna start buying it,
you think, just like just a loaf, bring it in,
cut off a piece one. Well, you're hungry, I'm ready
for a snack. Is that proper usage? Hey? It fills
you up. Yeah, and it lasts for a bit too.
There used to be I don't know if it's still around.
In l A. There was like that kosher deli that

(14:14):
was making everything kosher but turning it into like a
sub shop basically like you could get you could get
a basically a hero like on a hola hero role.
And then like rather than bacon, it would be grib nous,
which is basically fried up chicken skin. So when you
make schmaltz like it, every level to keep it kosher,

(14:34):
like they were considering, and it was so delicious. I
don't think they're open anymore, but it was it's called
fly sick, and it was like, yeah, can you imagine
like going to like there's hey, do you want to
go to quiz Nos subway or right until you read
the menu and you're like, oh my god, this brisket.

(14:55):
I want to run through drywall for you know, I'm
gonna get a filter fish. But flish, what is? What's
something you think is overrated? And this takes a little
bit of explaining, but the concept of genius in the
twenty one century and I'm mostly tread carefully, sir, some

(15:15):
of us, yes, except okay, so accepting let's let's pretend
that I'm not talking about mensa, all right, And what
I am talking about is, uh, someone like Elon Musk,
who is what I will say, is a dumb dipshit
who got lucky. But like this is the thing you

(15:36):
be born into a ruby mine emerald. I looked it up,
so I was born and a ruby. I wanted to
mind my p's and cues because I didn't want anyone
to come for me on this one, because I know,
like if you, if you criticize Elon Musk, a bunch
of people that will never have any money and have

(15:58):
no connection have no connection to like coming from that's
what his fans are called. They are No, I just
made it. I love it, bro fighting. I'm just thinking
that movie Tusky Airmen with Lawrence Fishburne is less seen

(16:18):
at the fucking cockpit anyway. I'm sorry. So, but tell
me about the twenty Are you talking about more of
like a classical like in the antiquities era idea of
what genius was and that people had a genius versus
people being a genius. No, just the twenty like in
the twentieth century. Okay, well, I think of the people
that like are called genius now, it's uh dummies like

(16:40):
Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Jeff Bezos. These are people who
like just invested money like they were wealthy, like Elon
Musk had had family wealth from an emerald mine. All right, Uh,
he dropped out of physics PhD program after two days
and all he's done is in a's his money. I

(17:01):
didn't want. I was about to say, well, but I
think he's just invested his money and got lucky. And
then he has backdated his ego, right, and he says, well,
because I'm rich, I must be a genius. And then
everyone like agrees that, oh, these people, but they must
be geniuses because they're wealthy as opposed to like they've
exploited all their labor or they had family wealth in

(17:22):
the first place, or they got lucky. But like I
was thinking about like genius and that's genius though that
they did that. You know, twentie century, who do we
call Geniuss Einstein, right, Neil's bore Umu Picasso, Watson, Crick
and Franklin right, uh, James Joyce, like people who either

(17:43):
scientific like changed the scientific paradigm, changed the literary artistic
paradigm in some way. Those were geniuses, um, and now
it's like a dude who buys ski do factory. And
I feel like that it's just all about like how

(18:03):
effectively you managed to mythologize yourself, because I'm sure that
there are like some people that we have like historically
labeled as geniuses who aren't. Like there's like I feel
like Edison is a really good example of that, where
like more than a basic snuff test reveals that he
was like in many ways a total fraud. Uh So

(18:23):
what was j He's just like these ship at yeah, right.
So it's just like if you're able to If you're
able to afford to effectively mythologize yourself, you'll probably get
away with it. Edison is the Elon Musk of the
twentieth century. Yeah, Dan, Dan, I was just thinking of
just like the way we use the term genius as

(18:43):
compared to antiquity, when like that the concept of genius
emerged is that people had a genius in which it
was something external that would visit them to inspire this
like great work out of these people. And over time
we began to sort of co op that with our
egos and narcissism. That wording became someone was a genius,

(19:04):
that person is a genius rather than has a genius.
And I think it's interesting just to even think about
how you might create things because people you look at
somebody would be like if you're music, like, oh I
love you know fucking Johnny Greenwood, he's a genius or whatever,
Like what does he do? Or but it is Johnny
Greenwood thinking that he's a genius or is it more
about inspiration that you are opening yourself and allowing yourself

(19:27):
to create things and that's where that's where it comes out,
rather than like I think people put this pressure on themselves,
be like, if I want to be a genius, then
I'm going to do our first. The way we used
to even articulate this concept was that like someone opens
themselves up to some truths that they are able to
then interpret by how open they are, rather than like

(19:48):
they fucking got it. This guy's got the fucking genius.
Why do you think I took my name off a
dream works? The way I've I've found that term used
a lot is just like it is like a narcissistic thing,
but it also is, like I feel like, sometimes used
to remove your like remove accountability from your own behavior
and actions, like in the case of Elon Musk and

(20:11):
in the case of just like a lot of the
mental people that I was talking to back in the day.
It's just like a situation of like, oh, this person
is behaving erratically, they're they're making bizarre choices, and then
it's just like, oh, well, they're a genius, so you
just don't get what they're doing. It's like, no, they
could conceivably just be being an asshole or or acting weird.

(20:31):
And then but if you are able to like label
yourself as greater than you're, like you couldn't possibly understand
why I'm exploiting my workers. You're just like, let's not
forget I mean, right now we have a very stable genius. Yeah, exactly,
very similar. Yeah. Yeah. I think the way that American

(20:53):
particular commodifies like and commodifies narcissism and like makes people
think that they are the genius rather than they are
transmitters of a genius. Is there are a lot of
American authors who just write one great thing and our
herald is as geniuses and then like never write anything

(21:14):
again because there's like there's something just like toxic and
unnatural and incorrect about that, Whereas I feel like other
countries are just like I'm applying a craft where I'm
you know, a I'm channeling something higher than myself. Does
the sophomore album curse? I wonder if that's unique to
American music or if we looked at is the curse

(21:37):
of the sophomore album like globally embraced as like a
law of creativity, you know what I mean? Because I'm
to your point, Jack about this emphasis. You do one thing,
or you come out with this work early, then the
this the expectation of like the subsequent works just becomes
like exponentially higher to the point where like you have

(21:58):
no way to compare it really, but um, but then
also there are some objective sophomore efforts where you're like, yeah,
you clearly got a lot of money and stopped giving
a funk. But I'm I wonder culturally if that's something
like we yeah us and are like, yeah, it's not
that you burn out. Yeah. I do feel like it's
a tendency that Americans have that doesn't really exist as

(22:20):
much exceptionalism. Baby yeah, yeah, what is a myth? Andy?
What people think? Yes, extractionalism as as we call it,
what the mashup of extraction and sh American extract extractionalism

(22:40):
is killing our country? Is there a myth that we
need to bust at this point now that you've come
up with extractionalism, Well you tell me if if my
myth is that history is knowable, because I know of
history is noble. Okay, this is what I've been thinking

(23:02):
about lately. I was reading about, um, hyper objects. Do
you guys know what that is? Hyper objects are just um,
this is a dumb definition, but like, um, there it's
so large that you can't comprehend them. So like history
is kind of a hyper object. Like what we're seeing
the effects of climate change right now, that started in

(23:23):
the seventies or the sixties, right, So the the climate
hell we're in right now started forty years Like if
we wanted to stop it, we're like four decades too late, right,
And so what we're going to try to do now
is stop whatever fucking nightmare is going to be like
forty or fifty years down the line, right, that's anything

(23:46):
we're doing now. It's such like the climate. The climate
itself is a hyper optic so large we can't really
come and there's all the we can't comprehend it, and
there's all these time delays, right because we're not seeing
the effects of what we're doing right now for or
you know, half of a human lifetime at least. It's
funny because like I find those things so easy to comprehend.

(24:07):
But maybe, well, you are a classic genius, yeah, of course,
of course, but close his eyes and go to that
big old encyclopedia brain Tannica of his. But I've been
thinking about like history, Like I've been reading this book
called The Devil's Chessboard, which is a history of the

(24:28):
C I a history of like really, Alan Dulles the
guy who founded the CIA, and he was a fucking
straight up Nazi. Like literally, like if FDR had lived,
this guy probably would have been prosecuted for treason because
he helped hide a lot of Nazis after the war.
He like he tried to broke her. FDR's whole thing was, hey,

(24:49):
I don't give a ship if you were like a
low level Nazi or a top Nazi. We're gonna prosecute
all of you, right, especially the top level guys. And
Alan Dalls was this kind of like old school gentleman
like his brother, and like I think he worked. He
had worked for a bank originally, like they had all
these business ties with Germany, and basically he helped protect
like high level Nazis and he had tried to broker

(25:11):
a deal behind FDR's back that if like high level
Nazis turned in Hitler, that they would be freed and
there wouldn't be any repercussions for them. And only FDR's
death prevented him from being prosecuted for treason basically for
portraying the US. And this is the guy that founded
the CIA, and then the CIA through the twentieth century,

(25:33):
just like fucked up foreign countries, uh like one a
year more, right, and they they did it all in
the background, like we don't find again, this is like
this time delay thing, right, We don't find out about
this stuff until the stuff is declassified or if for
some reason, some thirteen shows up in a neighborhood in
a white suburban area, they're like MS thirteen and then

(25:56):
they're like, well, hold on, you gotta go back to
El Salvador and understand what the funk we were doing there,
because he stabilized to the point where these gangs split off,
and people like whoa, Like how many of us knew
about the Latin American Dirty Wars until we became adults,
right right? Oh yeah, I mean I had to like
actually pursue that information because like when I even got

(26:19):
an inkling of what it was, and I'm like, wait,
so we were fighting the Cold War in this other way,
like in Latin America through like debt and like militarizing
opposition groups like oh wow, wow, wow, wow wow, because
you didn't want to have an upfront like parking armies. That. Yeah,
it's very interesting history, and I think that's to your
point about like how we'll never it's hard to know

(26:40):
history because the version you get presented in school goes
through the filters of like the boards who work with
the publishers, who know the authors, are also based on
whatever the cultural tone is of a state. I think
it's it's hard because America doesn't have that thing yet,
where like other countries have, like we'll take a sort
of sober look at their history to be like, yeah,
you see that bad. That was fucking bad back there,

(27:02):
that was no good. We don't like that anymore. We
don't have that kind of we don't have that kind
of curriculum in the United States. It's just like that.
In fact, we have one that sanitizes at all. Yeah exactly, yeah,
not even our mission just like strange to say it was,
just like no. It just reminds me of a thing.
One of my first college history courses was about Iberian

(27:23):
and Spanish history and about the conquistadors and like this kid,
and it shows just sort of like how our teaching works.
The first day of class, someone raises their hands and
they're talking about uh, you know, converting indigenous peoples and
some like you know, in the writings back. You know
obviously from the new world. It's like they're loving it.
They're learning this new way of life, and then this

(27:44):
could just be like, Hi, how do we know though
that the the indigenous people didn't want to be converted? Though?
If if if they're still doing it now and they
like it, and it's just sort of like no one
was ever critical enough early on, and they're them learning
history to say these are subjugated people or colonized people
who were forced up of their option was death or

(28:06):
you know, fucking straight up two gestures across their body
that said they believed their God. Um. Yeah, it's very
That's why I almost became a history teacher. I'm a
podcaster teacher. Al Right, guys, let's take a quick break.
We'll be right back, and we're back and Wisconsin is

(28:39):
back to h They are open for business. O FB baby. Um. So,
the stay at home order was lifted by the Supreme Court,
which includes all rules about social distancing and masks. And
this is one of the top ten infected states in

(28:59):
the U. S US. So we're surprised. It's terrified, like
it's my my boyfriend's family all lives there. A lot
of them are seniors, and it's like anyone that you
know give gives a fuck, I mean, is terrified because
there's um by all accounts, there's people pouring in from

(29:22):
adjacent states who are upset with the stay at home
orders in Like it sounds like there's a lot of
people coming from the Illinois border who are like, oh,
I can go to a bar in Wisconsin. Great, let
me take my COVID to Wisconsin. And it's just I mean,
we'll we'll see. But there's no way that it ends well.
Everyone Like it sounds like, you know, everyone I know

(29:44):
there feels deeply unsafe and is so like it's just
it doesn't make sense even in terms of like this
Supreme Court decision. I mean, when you look at again,
we've talked about this constantly, overwhelming majority of American people
aren't clamoring to go back and do things because for them,
it's not like they're not saying, no, I'm fine living

(30:06):
like this forever. Obviously people would love to return to
some semblance of normalcy, but they're not willing to do
that at the like the cost of losing people's lives
are getting ill and things like that, Like then well,
hold on, it's not that serious point where I'm going
to risk life. You're also sending workers, like all restaurant employees,
all all employees that are being forced to go back

(30:26):
to work, You're sending them potentially to their deaths with
like little you know, with few options because if your
job is open, then why are you still asking for unemployment?
And it's just like it's so fucking so you quit,
you quit? Yeah, So then I actually that that was
the point of that right, is to force people to
choose to get them off the unemployment roles. Right, Yeah,

(30:51):
that way, And there's there's no other way. There's no
other way to explain something so cynical as like a
regulation that said if you don't feel safe, because the science,
clearly the science and the biology has not caught up
to how severe this is. That if you don't feel
safe enough you go to work, you're surrendering your job
because you know, the fucking CEO of Kroger demands his

(31:12):
blood money. I've also heard of a number of examples
of like the way that workers are getting to work
has changed as well, Like I have, Uh my brother
works at a bakery and uh, they say they do
they do, and it's great. I'll never be but I
don't think he works there anymore. And the reason is

(31:34):
because they said, Okay, we're reopening the bakery. You can
have your job back, but we don't want any of
our employees taking public transportation. You have to drive. And
he lives in a big city with four parking spots.
And also not for no reason, he's not paid enough
working the front counter at a bakery to own a car.
And so it's like there's all these fucking galaxy brain

(31:54):
solutions that I'm sure the business is also in a
very difficult spot of they need to keep are their
business safe, But it's just like workers are left with
virtually no options and then you don't qualify for unemployment anymore.
It's yeah, culturally, though, we're just ingrained with this terrible,
terrible reflex that because we see how we as a

(32:18):
you know, American culture and the government by extension, treats
people like those in need as like that's not that's
suboptimal to be a person who's in need, Like we
have this like immediate thing to be like, well that's
your problem, Well that's your problem, because that's how we're
treated by the more powerful than us. Well that's your problem.
And when really, I feel like you'd hope the reflexes

(32:39):
should be like, oh my god, yeah, stay home. I
know we're getting killed as a business. I need to
fucking talk to we need to talk to the fucking
banks who's demanding this mortgage from us? Because but I
have to force you to go to work so I
can pay this bank or whoever this rent or the
landlord who then knows money to a bank. That the
the frustration is not turned upward. It's always turned downward.

(33:02):
It's always look yeah, it's like you should be ashamed
of yourself for not being able to what do you
guys think it's turning our corner. I'm seeing more and
more rage directed in the appropriate direction. But slowly, yes,
But I don't think it's I don't think it's not. Yeah,
it's slowly. Which is I've been saying, like, if that's

(33:22):
the one positive I've been able to see throughout this
is like there's a little bit more class consciousness that's
being brought out of people rather than like blindly having
like paras social relationships with billionaires you wish you were
friends with. And as it relates to the coronavirus. I
mean we like people are going to see I think
New Zealand opened back up a couple of nights ago

(33:45):
and liked had barber's you know, giving people haircuts, and
there were lines at the door. They opened up at
like midnight, and like they actually get to open up
because they did the appropriate things in a responsible amount
of time, and there wasn't this like they were looking

(34:05):
out for the welfare and the health of their citizens
from the start. Um, yeah, my friend lives in Helsinki
and uh, Finland. I was looking at statistics. Finland is
a million more people than Los Angeles itself, and uh,
they have I think one one of the cases of coronavirus. Yeah,

(34:30):
it's it's just straight up where you know, this is
what happens when a stupid person runs something as big
and complicated as the United States and somebody who's just
not capable of who's not up to the task, who's
not capable of mammalian thought. Right, But also just our
system of governance is just built to crush the weak

(34:53):
and you know and rich the rich. Yeah, it's definitely not.
We already we went into the fucking you know, hockey
game with fucking soccer equipment. We're like, oh, bro, we're
not even built for the chess skates. We went into
a hockey game holding a paw. Yeah, I can get
a slap shot. You can't even get a risk shot

(35:13):
with that bishop piece. It's like we went into uh basketball,
but we were wearing skates. It's like we bought tickets
to Shrek and we saw Puss in boots. By the way,
Shrek by Shrek. That has to be the title of
the by minute on Shrek Shren. Oh my, yeah, that's

(35:38):
pretty good. The shrecken ing. Uh. So, I mean this
is so this is one way of doing things, the
Wisconsin way where everybody is crowding together despite the fact
that we don't have the things in place or the
you know, falling levels of infection, uh to support that's

(36:00):
to behavior. There's the New Zealand model, which involves, you know,
investment of smart behavior and investment of like people staying
at home and sheltering in place uh for a long time. Uh.
And then you're able to open back up something that
seems like it's sort of happening that I don't know.

(36:22):
It's kind of like a complicated situation where I don't
no necessarily how to feel about it just yet. But
you know, because there are these studies, like the contact
tracing with coronavirus in China that said that, you know,
out of thousands of cases, there's like two cases of

(36:42):
transmission outside because it's just the air is able to
spread out more, the germs are able to spread out more.
Some cities are starting to adapt things so that, you know,
you can have restaurants that will you know, have outdoor
seating that bleeds out into the streets, and so they'll

(37:04):
like close down streets. I love the idea of closing
down streets, love the idea of being able to go outside.
But to Jamie's point, you're just hoping that this is
not a situation where we're just doing this so that
we can take people off of the unemployment payrolls and
like force them back to work and things aren't all

(37:26):
that safe for them in the first place. Yeah, it
feels all connected to like reopening the economy as opposed
to actually doing anything in anyone's best interest. And it's
also just benefiting people who like to be at bars. Yeah,
I think whenever whenever I hear any municipal leader, governor whatever,

(37:48):
have the word, you know, because we got we I know, look,
we gotta do it safe, but we gotta obviously people
want to reopen or whatever. I love that. There's always
just that like hat tip to like the ownership class
always and they're like, you know, because we know people
want to reopen. I don't know a damn person who
doesn't who wants to reopen again. We just want to
know that it's safe. Deal with that first. Deal with

(38:09):
that first, and the fact. And I guess again, the
buck stops with the fucking citizens because the federal government
failed to act. So now it's like, I don't know, guys,
I mean, you gotta get back to work. I mean,
would you guys go to like if Los Angeles opened
up everything tomorrow and we could have live comedy again
and go to movies, I wouldn't go. No, Yeah, definitely

(38:30):
not Alamo. Drafthouse set me. I don't know why I
answered their survey, but they sent me. I'm answering and
they're also quick. Note to any listeners out there, any
surveys you have that asked where you heard about something,
please always mark podcasts going into the industry, Okay, back
to you, But yeah, I answered it for some reason.

(38:51):
But they were like, why when would you come back
to an Alamo draft house. They listed all these things
like what if we tested what if we like took
the temperature of our ployees every hour, what if we
did you know, social distancing in the theaters and all
this stuff, And then the last choice was there's a vaccine,
and I'm like, yes, that last one, that's the one
where I don't where I'm assured that I don't die

(39:13):
guaranteed to de Velomo Drafthouse is sitting on the vaccine
and they're just waiting for the results. They're like, I
don't know. We haven't we haven't reached critical mass yet
with enough yeses for that question. The FJ approved it,
but we don't. We only have a handful of responses,
so I don't know what do we do right there,
just waiting for people to respond to their online email servey, Like, well,

(39:37):
I guess if no one wants to take a few
minutes to answer our survey, no one gets a vaccine. Anyways,
I am in favor of the one aspect of this,
which is closing streets to road traffic, since nobody has
anywhere to go anyways, Um Cincinnati everywhere or just parts No,
just parts Cincinnati is closed parts of streets or Sstaurants

(40:00):
can expand outdoor seating, but just like the ability to
walk down the street and like give each other wide
berths is uh you know, that's kind of how when
I've gone out for a walk with my kids, you
don't want to like walk directly next to somebody. Uh
So you you do use the street more than you
used to. Um, but Oakland has closed almost ten percent

(40:24):
of roads to traffic. Uh So, I mean I think
that's this is this is the thing we're probably gonna
need to do anyways because the climate change, so we
might as well experiment with different you know, forms of
steady planet. It just it just seems a bit premature,
Like for me when I see that, like okay, like, yeah,
we've been able to do this to like mitigate the

(40:44):
transmission and things. I'd feel safe if there was a
treatment right then to be going to this level of
normalcy where it's like still because we're not talking about
limits of people together, we're just saying outside better than inside.
But at that point, if you want me to be
out there like you know, yucking it up, like without
having a concern with other what other people's you know,

(41:07):
infection status or whatever is. Then I'd want to know
that there's at least a treatment that we're not. I'm
not left reading all these stories of like people just
you know, just whatever horrible outcome ends up happening for them,
or the people who end up making it through and
because they're in the ICU, the secondary recovery from being
in the ICU so long, it's like another thing that

(41:27):
is somewhat talked about, but we we forget about, like
you're not many people like I'm not the same since
this I'm just not. Yeah, it's very but it's worth it. Man.
If me and my bros could go to Applebee's and
get some whiskey soaked pork screamers, yeah with the quips
from Yeah, you know, if you know folks who are

(41:52):
in Wisconsin and like flocking to the bars, please talk
to them. That's but not in person. Oh yeah, make
sure you say this is doing it. They might show
up at your house. They might just show they're like,
oh no, we can do this now, and then they'll
just cough in your mouth and then that's it there. Yeah,

(42:12):
but like if you do, I mean, I don't know.
I've I've been thinking about that too. Is like, eventually
there will be people in our lives who are breaking,
like who are putting other people in danger with their actions,
and it's like, you know, the conversations will have to
be had, Yeah, and then cut them out of your life.
Have that conversation, and then people need to feel some

(42:32):
kind of repercussions for their shitty behavior. I think a
lot of those people have already been culled after the
election though, that's what I say. It makes me think
of the Facebook posts of like triumphant uncles eating Thanksgiving
dinner alone being like peace, no flakes, have no fucking
tears stream, I don't even miss my daughter. There's this

(42:56):
terrifying article about the on the Atlantic that's about Q
as a new religion, like that this is going to
outlive Trump and outlive Trump is um and that like
when you look at it compared to other religions, it's
grown like faster than uh, like all sorts of religions.

(43:17):
So they're just saying like it could end up being
like the next whatever globe spanding cult. There was a
thing where like I think one of the Q accounts
like tweeted a link to a porn video and all
the followers. But one of the things was like a
woman who's like just her son is is like a

(43:42):
journalist and she's like I she's a que adherent and
it's just I see more graffiti of it around l A. Yeah,
it's it's like stencils on the sidewalk. Oh yeah, graffiti
is out too because of all the delinquent teens. No
one's paying attention to them. Yeah yeah, and not even
good not even good throw ups I'm seeing. I'm seeing

(44:03):
some real sloppy nonstops. All you graph kids in the city,
please up your game. These nonstops are really real sloppy.
Although in my neighborhood, r I P juicy, Okay, let
him know. Alright, guys, let's take a quick break and
we'll come back and talk about some sillier ship. And

(44:29):
we're back and let's talk about what movies we're gonna
what movies slash TV shows we will be streaming over
the weekend to talk about. On Monday's episode, Top Something
from the Top ten. What do we think is something?
What are we top ten is dead to me. The
Wrong Missy, which is the new Lauren Labkiss David Spade

(44:50):
show Outer Banks, which we've already reviewed. It's apparently I've
already I've come. I've completed the entire season. How did turn?
I finished it by Wednesday? You know it gets you know,
I'm gonna tell you. I'm gonna tell you something. It moved.
The full thing is trash, but there is because of
all the injustice in the world. There's like these two

(45:11):
privileged white characters that I must see brought to justice. Um,
and I'm left with a fucking cliffhanger at the end
of season one. Yeah, so whatever, Outer Banks is still
up there. John Henry uh, which is like Terry Crews
as a superhero who's got a hammer and cleans up

(45:36):
the streets, I think, is what it says in the trailer. Yeah.
Trial by Media is like a documentary Have a good Trip?
Is that documentary we talked about a couple of days ago. Um,
somebody should do that one. Grey's Anatomy, Sleepless Jamie Fox

(45:58):
action movie. It's people are calling it the extraction of
this week's Netflix Top ten. Uh black extraction. Yeah back, Okay,
I'm watching that. I saw the thing because I was like,
look at Jamie. Fox's a hairline again somehow moving forward
to the new phase of that, we're moving forward as

(46:20):
a hairline. But I think I will That definitely caught
my eye, and so did the John Henry one, because
the thing the poster looks so weird, isn't it? Like
Terry crews like a fucking sledge hammer, like like on
his shoulder, and he looks sweaty. He's got like a
patchy beard or some ship. Yeah, yeah, I don't think
he's got a patchy beard, I think, And in fact,

(46:41):
the trailer has him like shaving his head and face
need be. But uh, I would do John Henry, John Henry.
That's old folk song. Um wait, what about the Shrek musical?
I mean, I think Jamie has it's there. I think

(47:02):
i'll watch it too. Really, it's really fun. How long
is it's two hours? Look? Because I'll tell you something,
I hate musicals, but I have nothing to do. This
sounds freaky, and I think maybe my opinion, I'm already
going into it with the kind of take that most
people would expect, and who knows, maybe I'll be pleasantly.
I love musicals, and for a very transparent cash grab musical,

(47:26):
I think it's pretty good. And it also heightens the
emotional steaks of Shrek beyond what anyone ever wanted. There's
a number of it. Just look up Shrek the Musical
on YouTube and I'll pop up. No, it's on Netflix.
It's it's been on Netflix for like seven years. No

(47:46):
one else wants, no one's looking for right, Well, then
I'm getting my pipes warmed up all rights watching Shrek
the Musical. Jamie, what are you are you interested in?
Have a good trip? Which one is that? That's the
one's drug Stories? Drug Stories Animated? Sure? Sure? Or a

(48:08):
wild card? Pick anything or pick anything. I can don't
have a good trip. I just feel like since we
talked about it, we might as well get in there.
There's also Willie Wanka. Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory
is streaming on Netflix, and so is Charlie and the
Chocolate Factory. In case anybody's interested in either of those.
Grab a top ten do a top ten thing, I'll do,

(48:31):
I'll do. I'll do the David's Bade Laura Labkis movie. Okay,
that's a movie show. Yeah, it's a it's a whole Damn,
it's a whole. Last movie with are they love interests? Yes,
except Laura is wacky, right, David dream girl Molly Sims

(48:53):
And then uh, he's like, yeah former s I swimsuit model,
you bet. And then he invites Missy. He has Missy
in his cell phone and he invites her to a
Hawaii vacation. But it's the wrong Missy, and so Lauren

(49:15):
Lapkis shows up instead, and David Spade is like, oh, brother,
I'm so I'm such a catch. She's like this loser.
The age difference between Lauren and David Spade, it's large,
it's not small. It's not small. Well, how let's see
David Spade is fifty five, and I think Lauren Lapkis

(49:39):
is my age, so maybe like thirty five or thirty six.
Lauren is okay, but Laura Lapis is the gross one
in the movie. I love Lauren Laptus so much, but
there's la So she's both a nice person and an
extremely funny person. It's not that there's nothing she can't do.

(50:00):
I'm looking forward to seeing, uh, what what they make
her do in this movie? Yes, do you think there's
a scene. I haven't seen the trailer, but based on
what you're saying, I'd imagine there's a moment where David
Spade is drinking like out of a big pineapple, like
a tropical drink, and then he's waiting to meet Molly
Sims at the restaurant, and then Lauren Lapta shows up
and just full on tropical drink. Spit take like I

(50:23):
have like a strong sense anytime David. I don't have
like a strong attachment to David Spade. I didn't like
really grow up with him. But like when I first
moved to l A, I was at I was at
the comedy No where was I that. I was at
the improv. I was at I was at the improv

(50:46):
like early on, and someone like came over to me
and said, in this very conspiratorial, like reverent way, Hey,
if you want to sneak into the main room, spades On,
you can learn a few things. Just like just I
just hear spades On echoing in my brain forever and ever,
and the reverent tone. You're just like, al right, spades

(51:07):
On the first when I first moved to Hollywood, I
was at Musso and Frank's and I saw Spades Sandman
and Schneider's sitting over a table sharing steaks. You're like, like,
he's talented. But if it's Spades on really killed just
ten minutes before Polly Sure got kicked out for drinking
too much man, right yeah, right after that, right before

(51:28):
Dane Cook was like banned from the improv for life
or whatever. There's some or maybe it's a laugh factory.
Who cares comedy that everyone you pick, you picked for
me Sleepless or Willy Wonka Sleep Bless Sleepless? Well people, yeah,
we people already know about Willy. I mean unless you've

(51:50):
never seen on. I'm more interested in Sleepless because I
think we should, we should forge ahead with whatever. Like
I think we're taking a sample of what's trending on Netflix,
and it's like, okay, okay, all right, even though I'm
taking the outsider pick just because I think the possibility
of Okay, we'll do one outsider pick and then to
Netflix trending per week. Uh, We've got them all there. God,

(52:12):
I'm strek the musical. Jack is Sleepless and Jamie is
what's that Lauren lap thing called the wrong Missy she's
not just the other missy. She's wrongs. Oh my god,
you guys, that is so wrong. Are you on crack?

(52:32):
She shouldn't exist. That's how wrong she is. It's not
like a sixteen year old white girl. Are you on crack? Uh?
So let's talk really quickly about something that restaurant tours
are doing too. I don't fully understand why. So they
realize that when they reopen, they're they're not going to

(52:54):
be able to have people in all the seats, so
they're going to have designated seats where pe well can't sit.
And rather than just removing the chairs or removing the
entire table, some restaurant tours, including a three Michelin star
restaurant in Virginia, are populating the restaurant with mannequins in

(53:18):
old timey clothes in the case of the Virginia restaurant,
and the the servers will be filling the mannequins wineglasses
and having cheerful, one sided conversations with them. This has
to be this has to be just like an attempt
to get pressed right like there, But yeah, it seems

(53:41):
like something. It's the only Michelin starred restaurant in Virginia.
I don't know how much more brain. Everyone's car brains
are like all their synapses are. And then and there's
a baby at the day but for the milk for
their babies. Stop that aby mannequin at your breast like Rosa,

(54:04):
like Rosa Sharon as jam rights. Presumably the staff will
also prevent customers from leaving the room because they insist
there too. They're also mannequins who have to stay there forever,
because this is clearly part of R. L. Stein story. Um.
But yeah, there's there's like a French restaurant that created

(54:24):
like balloon people. I once saw it, Like one of
the creepiest things I ever saw was a special effects
shot from Friday Night Lights where the crowd is full
of mannequins so they could just like keep shooting and
not have to like, you know, treat the extras like humans.
But like somebody took a photograph of it and it's

(54:45):
just this entire stadium full of dummies just sitting there. Anyway,
how's that different from sports? Anyway, we were talking about
that with like weddings a while back, to though we're
like quar our weddings. We're putting like homemade cardboard cutouts
that they're like and this is my mommy, and this

(55:05):
is my daddy, and this is my college roommate, and
like it's all you know what, pere's this. There's shattered
everyone's brains. So Belarus has a soccer league where they
are like desperate enough for money that they just never closed.

(55:27):
Everybody else is like, you know, we're going to close,
but this Belarus soccer league like nope, And but people
just stopped going for the most part. So the league
started selling tickets for virtual fans, which meant that you
would buy a ticket online and they'd stick your photo
on top of a dummy. And it really looks like

(55:49):
something you'd find in a Serial killers at it. It's
so strange, yis there's just really is something. I'm mean,
I don't know. I'm trying to put myself in the
place of a restaurant where you know, there's maybe like
ten other people in it, when normally there would maybe
like eight. And I don't know if I I think

(56:11):
maybe just like play some music or something that's enough
for me. I don't need to be like, oh, isn't
it weird how there's like no one in here? I
think maybe like the awkward sound of only like five
plates being eaten off of might be weird, but I
don't need fucking freaky man. I think the most basic
experience like thing you can do if you're reopening your
business is like, just don't do anything to make the

(56:33):
situation more haunting than it already is. Like, it's already
an uncomfortable situation. You don't have to add five hundred
haunted mannequins into just to see it. They're like, Okay,
so we know that this is really scary, but what
if it got like silly scary, like at all the

(56:54):
tables to prevent any germ transfer, the receptionist will be
greeting you with a dummy like head directly to the
ventriloquis dummy. Yeah, Like, okay, so we know we're forcing
our servers to go back to work, but we're also
making them put a paper mache head next to their head,

(57:15):
like they're two headed person and you have to talk
to both of the heads when you order. Do you
ever is going to be that Times Square restaurant where
people dressed up like monsters? Okay, that rested or like
or the diner in back to the future where it's
like all just robots with video screen faces. One of

(57:37):
the last it's like, can what's Matt Freuer doing right now?
Get him to reboot max Head Drum. Jacqueline Hide is
the name of that Manhattan restaurant. I went there like
two weeks before. Yeah, it was one of my last.

(57:58):
And it is stinky, stinky, stinky, sticky, sticky, sticky. All
of the animatronics are broken and my group on didn't
work zero out of time, sticky and stinky. Wait stinks
like what like just like they don't clean up or
like every well it's it's I don't even know what

(58:20):
the smells. It smells like rotting something. It's not like
and all the servers were super nice and also didn't
want to be there, but I wanted to go and see,
Like I like animatronics, I'm like, oh, let's see. But
they're honestly, they're mostly broken. It smells weird, and it's
so dark in the restaurant that you're like the lights
putting the lights on in here. It would be an
automatic health code shutdown. Stinky, but that's like, that's the

(58:43):
beauty of the novelty restaurant is it's full of COVID nineteen.
By the way, everything we've talked about today, I think
the saddest statement so far has been my group on
didn't work cutting It was devastating. Would have been a
great deal had it works. What was the deal? Exactly?

(59:05):
Like what it was the group on? What was the
It was an absurd amount of food. It was like
you got like a drink, you got like a three
course meal for like thirty dollars there. It would have
been amazing. But then but then they were like, oh,
we don't funk with this group on, And I'm like, Okay,
I guess we'll have French fries and a Miller Lite

(59:25):
and be on our life alright. It was still so expensive. Yeah, whatever, Andy,
It's been a pleasure of having you on the daily Zeitgeist.
Where can people find you? Follow you here? You experience
you at Andy Beckerman on all social media at Andy

(59:46):
Schrekerman No couples Therapy podcast that I do with my
dear love Naomi uh weekly on Tuesday's. We do a
Twitch show at two pm every two pm PST every week.
Sometimes we have guests such as the aforementioned Lauren lacus

(01:00:08):
Um also I've been doing another podcast called Beginnings for
like ten years now, where I talked to artists I
admire about their childhood's UM. This week is Michael R. Jackson,
recent Pulitzer Prize winner uh um and the composer of
A Strange Loop uh the Off Broadway musical. UM. I've

(01:00:29):
talked to Stephen Merritt from Magnetic Fields, Damon lindelof a
Ton of People. UM. They're pretty good conversation, so check
that out. I think beginnings pot dot com. Uh. And
is there a tweet or some other work of social media?
While we're on the subject of just timeless brilliance? Is
there some dumb tweet that made you laugh? Yes? I

(01:00:50):
got two of them here, uh, Iowa debris UM. If
I were a multi millionaire, I would simply log off Yeah,
Burn and Luke Mona is uh. Both of these are
stand ups. But he wrote, have we considered that years

(01:01:12):
are not bad? But rather that existence itself is an
unending nightmare worth considering? Just putting it out there? You know, Jamie,
where can people find you and follow you? And what's
a tweet you've been enjoying? You can find me on
Twitter at Jamie loftus help Instagram at Jamie Christ Superstar.

(01:01:34):
I'm going to recommend another YouTube thing today. Um this
was YouTube series and a YouTube channel that was just
brought to my attention the other day called Bratt. Anyone
ever watched Bratt? Okay, Bratt is It's a channel that
is directed I think I'm just going to try to

(01:01:56):
write a whole story on this, but like, it's a
channel directed at teens where they get TikTok teens and
musically teens to star in narrative series that have zero
production value and make no sense. Where I'm going to
direct you to begin on the Bratt TV channel is
a show called Chicken Girls, a show where there are
no chickens but there are girls. It's it is the

(01:02:21):
most bananas thing. I was laughing my ass off watching
these poor fourteen year olds try to enact a show
called Chicken Girls for like three hours last night. You
gotta watch Chicken It's on season six. It has so
many seasons. There's so many examples of like just the production.
It's no I don't know who to blame, but I
enjoy it. There's so many examples of like something that

(01:02:43):
was clearly supposed to happen in Post, but then just
didn't where It's like there's a kids on computers and
you can tell, oh, there's the screen is supposed to
be on, but whoever was in Post just didn't add
in a screen that's on. So kids being like ha ha,
I can't believe she said this, and it's just an
empty Are you sure it's not like a Tim and
Eric thing. It's definitely not. No, it's very it's very

(01:03:06):
late capitalism. YouTube channels like digital startup by like some
guy in his like late thirties, early forties who was like,
kids love TikTok, So if we make a YouTube channel
with TikTok kids, it doesn't matter what they're fucking saying.
And he's kind of right. I've been I'm only like
half I'm you know, in the end of the first season,

(01:03:29):
but you gotta watch. We gotta start talking about Chicken Girls.
Your journey is just a gun. I really there's so
much content on this channel. It's it's like it's overwhelming.
Miles Where can people find you? Follow you? And what's
a tweet? You've been enjoying? Twitter, Instagram, PlayStation network. Miles
of Gray. Also my other show, talking about fiance superrah. Um.

(01:03:57):
Now some tweets. First, I just wanna tell people that
there was a story about how Prince Harry has no
friends in Los Angeles and feels isolated. If any listener
can help get me in contact with Prince Harry so
I can't be his friend while he lives in Los Angeles,
please let me know the exact same birthday as him.
We like the same soccer team. I have a feeling
he has never probably smoked blunt like I can roll.

(01:04:20):
I'm also a person of color like his wife. I
just feel like I can keep going. Also from the value,
look it writes, the tale rights itself. Um. One tweet
like it's from Sha Serrano who like sort of apparently
today or Thursday. Apparently Thursday was the anniversary of the
Seminal rap duo Clips the Clips Uh dropping the track

(01:04:42):
Grinding Uh and Shave tweeted this video of like the
music video and said this anniversary has got to be
like Pearl Harbor for cafeteria tables. Everybody was banging that
ship out. Uh. You can find me on Twitter, Jack
Underscore a Ryan some tweets I've been enjoying. Charlie tweeted,

(01:05:03):
nobody in TV show has friends unless the whole thing
is they have friends. Uh, and that's just true. And
then Kakashi's BM tweeted him doggy style me. You find
us on Twitter at daily zy Guys for at the
Daily Zey Guys on Instagram. We have a Facebook fan

(01:05:24):
page and a website Daily zy guys dot com where
we post our episode and our footnotes where we link
off to the information that we talked about in today's episode,
as well as the song we ride out on miles
What is that going to be today? This track unfortunately
not available on the typical sites because it's a bit

(01:05:46):
of a cheeky remix, so it won't be on your Spotify,
your Apple Music. A bit of a cheeky remis if
I would, and I will. This one is for all
my fans that they have slam Village Uh. There was
a track of the head with Kanye West called um
uh selfish uh and with also a John Legend. But

(01:06:06):
this is the junior State remix of slum Villages Selfish
and it's a great rework um. That's what I love
like finding South Cloud. You're all these like bedroom producers,
like just doing really great flips and remixes to classical song.
M hmm, alright, well we are going to ride out
on that the daily zeit guys, the production of My

(01:06:28):
Heart Radio. For more podcasts for my Heart Radio is
the heart Radio app, Apple podcast or wherever you listen
to your favorite shows. That's gonna do it for this morning.
We'll be back this afternoon to tell you what's trending.
We'll talk to you then bye by thanks for having it.
Then I'll be trying to come around my girl acting
like Mr Friendly. It's still the spotlight like Mr Bitley,

(01:06:52):
a spot of like Girl of m Chancy, but a
fake get if you try to get him a prone
he said, yeah, you know, you get extras and everything
that it was extra coo from the Polo fleece to
the Jesus fleece. I get family at high places like
Jesus Niece. Can I please say my piece? If y'll

(01:07:15):
fresh the death and I'm deceased and this one knee
if they watched it like

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Miles Gray

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