Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season two oh two,
Episode two of Dirt Daily Introduction of My Heart Radio.
This is a podcast where we take a deep dive
into America's share consciousness. It's Tuesday, September twenty twenty one.
My name is Jack O'Brien a K Take me down
to the guys city, get the damn vaccine so you
(00:22):
don't feel shitty. Oh won't you please just stay home? Yeah? Yeah,
that's courtesy of Rob and I'm thrilled to be joined
as always by my co host, Mr Miles Grass. Yes,
he over the weekend. Just got a Margarita bill blender machine.
(00:43):
So you know your boy had to change his name
to Jimmy Puffett. It's the one and only Miles Gray.
Thank you so much, Thank you so much for her majesty,
who got me a Margharita blending machine that I didn't
ask for, but I didn't realize I needed this whole time. Yeah,
are you so? What's special about a margaritabillt blending machine?
Is it just a blender that's like really good? And
(01:05):
well this one, yeah, she kind of went ridiculous with it.
This one. You could get three blenders popping off that once.
It has three fucking like parts. So if I wanted
to say, oh, y'all want a red, white and blue Dakari,
I can grinding. It's like automated and ship the whole time,
though I can only use one of them because I'm
too overwhelmed to try and like use multiple things at once.
(01:29):
And really I've just been making like frozen lemonade. Yeah,
I'm just like, yo this, I could have this whenever
I want. Now, you don't feel like I'm sucking fourteen
and I have like a slushy machine that the cocktails
will come they do time, but first I must pretend
that I have my own slurping machine. I do like
that you are still professing your allegiance to weed, even
(01:51):
like less weed. Get nervous about you get just you know,
you're like, well, you know, I'm still Jimmy. Daddy's still Daddy.
You know the Staddy just shaved his mustache. I know
it's freaky because I used to seeing me without the mustache,
but it's still me. Yep. How to let him know? Well, Miles,
we are thrilled to be joined once again by one
of the funniest writers and comedians out here doing it.
(02:14):
You've seen her own Conan and Take My Wife. You've
seen her opening for everyone from Maria Bamford and Hannibal
Barris to Gladys Night and Earth Wind and Fire. She's
written for Netflix's History of Swear Words and a local
periodical called The New Yorker. Welcome back to the show,
the hilarious and talented Maggie May Welcome. Hey, glad to
(02:43):
be back. Thank you for having me. Oh, it's always
a pleasure, always a pleasure to have Truly Wonka in
their infinite wisdom on the show. And how did you
get the nickname truly Wonka on this show? Because I
love candy? Yeah, huge candy fan. I've always got candy
on me and I'm trill as fuck. So right, I mean,
(03:04):
that's self explanatory. What's the best candy, Maggie? Gummies? Gummies
are the best candy, And if you want to go
a little deeper, the best gummies out right now are
the Harribos Star Mix, not the Fantastic Mix. The Star
Mix is better than that. Wow, Wait, what's the I
only know Harribo is making gummy bears because I'm ignorant,
So what's Star Mix Like, it's they make star shaped gummies. Know,
(03:28):
the original star makes just had like all the candy
that they made just like together, so you would get
the frogs, you get the bears, you get the Yeah,
this one has like the twin snakes, which are great,
has the bears, has the little round belts, and that's
just for some reason, like around gummy candy is like
it checks boxes for me for some reason. For those
(03:50):
peach are the round belt ones, peach the peach flavor ones,
I don't think. So there's some like yellow and red,
and then there's like green and red. Were you saying
all these things? So casually like, yeah, it has like
the double snakes, it has an other one. I was like,
are we still talking about whenever you like, what can
(04:12):
you talk about for like twenty minutes with no no
prompting or no warning I can talk about. I'm like,
I'm having trouble accepting that I knew this is the
first time I've heard of the double snake, and I'm
looking at it in this bad picture of Star Mix,
and I'm like, where the where was I or where
it wasn't I that I didn't know about any of
this stuff. But when Snakes came out maybe seven eight
(04:35):
years ago, Memorial candy, Yeah, honor the phone with these
kind of snakes, you know, comparing the town or just
does some snakes. But okay, I mean it tastes great,
So let's let's go. What what do you have on
(04:57):
deck right now? Do you have the Star mix on
deck right now? I'm a little bit dry. The only
candy I have is candy that I'm going to give
is a gift to my manager. I curated a little
gift thing of candy for her, but I did eat
the hair EBow ginger lemons and I'm going to replace them.
(05:19):
But in the meantime, I don't know the gift box. Yeah,
it's like I'm not gonna see kind of week and
I'll have time to go back and get you know,
that's my favorite move is buying some ship for someone
else and you're sitting on it and you're like, fucking
i't yah, exactly exactly. That's my move with Halloween candy.
I always go through a couple of bags before Halloween night,
(05:39):
you know, just like, oh, I better test these are
they still good? Make sure there's not raisor blades in them.
You got to I do it for the kids, not
little ones that suddenly appear when you've digested it. I'm
not trying like the obvious one these candies safely thank you.
All right, Maggie, We're going to get to know you
(06:00):
a little bit better in a moment. First, we're gonna
tell our listeners a few of the things we're talking about.
We're gonna talk about what the Capitol Police are getting
in exchange for their performance on January six. We're gonna
talk about the upcoming rally in favor of the political
prisoners from that day. We're gonna talk about a tech
(06:21):
bro and a Harvard geneticists who are teaming up to
play god and bring back the Wally Mammoth. We're gonna
talk about Bill Cosby. We're gonna talk about a food
mashup that's kind of both on brand for the conversation
we've already been having and just a atrocity. We're gonna
talk about Bill Cosby's come back and just what you
(06:42):
can do with all the news of any Bill Cosby
come back, All of that plenty more. But first, Maggie,
we like task our guest, what is something from your
search history. Okay, So yesterday I searched how long does
it take to preheat an oven? Mmm? Because I was
trying to make some brownies with I don't like eggs,
(07:03):
so I bought just eggs egg substitute, and it makes
cakes really good. That every time they make brownies they
end up undercooked and burnt at the same time. So
I was like, am I not preheating the oven correctly?
And so I found out I needed to keep it
on for like fifteen honey minutes instead of like as
long as it takes to mix the batter and as
(07:25):
long as you can wait. Yeah, but then brownies still
turned out wet mm hmm. I poured him out and
I left him out to to I think I'm just
gonna first be it into the night. Right at this point,
(07:47):
I mean, you know what, never turns out dry and
wet at the same time when when you're in the
mood for a sweet treat, candy candy bars. Yeah. I
shouldn't have tried to be a hero. I should have
just got a sea first. Another thing I learned about
brownie mixes that the egg is purely for us, like
they can replicate the egg in the mixed part. But
(08:08):
they just found that people feel better about having made
the brownies at home out of the egg by putting
the egg in like they had it that was just
the batter. And then they tested it with batter and
egg and they found that like letting people crack an
egg and put it in there with mix just made
people feel better. So it makes me feel like they're
(08:29):
actually cooking. Yeah, exactly, I don't need that. I don't
need that hand like I don't have guilt. I feel
like that's a past generation. I feel like they need
to re examine that, re test kitchen that idea, because
I don't think our generation gives a fuck. So you
said you don't like eggs, like or you haven't. You
just don't like handling eggs. You have an allergy. You
(08:51):
know if something has egg in it, like what I do,
doesn't let me do it. Because they read a comic
once where they were like, eggs aren't I never really like,
I was never a huge fan of them. And then
I read the comic that was like, oh, eggs aren't
baby chick there chickens period, And after that I was
just like new m M. I feel like that might
(09:17):
have been a talking point abandoned by the egg industry.
Where there because because like I do feel like part
of me at one point was like, these are baby chicks.
I feel bad about scrambling. You're fine, You're fine. No, no,
it's like, yeah, scrambled period. Like no, wait, this was
(09:42):
a comic strip you read. Yeah, it's like a little
four four panel thing that was on Facebook. And actually
my neighbor, not my neighbor, my roommate at the time,
posted it up kind of Oh this is so funny
and so cute, right, And I was like, and you
still eat this, Like what are you doing? No? No, no no,
no, no no, m that's the power of just that perspective
(10:08):
shift brought you too. Goofy brownies, you know what I mean? Like,
that's that road is I like, you know, that's why
I asked the questions. And I would try the brownies
like these ones, like the ones that were burned. I
was like, whatever, I'll have a spoonful of it because
I'm not going to get salmonella, whereas if I got
wet brownies with an egg in it. M rolling. Yeah,
(10:29):
that's just like a chocolate omelet, says Maggie. Chocolate omelet. Yeah,
like an over eating. Could I get that chocolate omelet? Rare?
Thank you? What was it like spending the night with him?
(10:51):
Was the next morning he made us raw chocolate omelets?
Like what the girl was? What is something you're thinking
is overrated? Okay? This the Cinderella, the idea of the
Cinderella story is overrated. And I saw the new or
I didn't see it, but I see that, like Cabella
Cameo has one coming out and this is nothing against her,
(11:14):
but I feel like Cinderella and a lot of fairy
tales in general could have been way shorter if CPS
was just involved. Immediately, your step mom's mean, and so
are your stepsisters? Call CPS? And then you know the
question there and and wait and what do they do
(11:39):
all day while you're doing this? Okay, and your rat
that's that's not good, honey. We okay, Like they got
you out here sweeping the whole house with a broom
with six little sticks out of it. Okay, well we'll
put you in a home with somebody that's a brand broom.
(12:03):
Oh my god, they're gaslighting you? Oh man, yeah, I
mean what is it? Just it's all those stories are
just meant to help people be like, yeah, man, if
you just stay silent during the shittiest parts of your life,
maybe some fucking glass shoe will fit you. Yeah, and
that's it. You mean to tell me nobody else that, like,
nobody else had a seven and a half in the
(12:24):
whole damn right, what size shoe was it that it
was so different? Was it like a size four? In
which case, why is the prince going around trying to
find somebody with a size four? That's a child? Okay?
Or is this a size fifteen? Like right? And that's
and then you know, and like there's no question about this.
I mean, we only know one one person with the
(12:45):
fifteen that would have been progressive. Yeah, that would have
been great. The but we know it's not that she
has the biggest feat because we've seen her step sisters
trying get their feet in there, just like you know,
crushing their crushing their feet right, And in my mind,
(13:07):
I feel like a bunch of like white ladies who
were opting into this sweepsteaks where if your shoot, here's
your foot fitt in a glass shoeld have become the princess?
One of these motherfucker's would sue after Cinderella one, They're like, well,
hold on, what size is she? Because I write that
shoe on too, because I think this is rigged, and
then we'd get to the bottom, then we'd have justice.
(13:28):
The shoe kind of fit. You gotta give me that
ship that kind of right. I mean, it's lookst obviously
that the mean people are unattractive and the only virtuous
person is like there, virtue just radiates outwards. It's also
kind of I feel like propaganda for the makeover like
(13:50):
beauty industry, because she is unrecognizable to the prince after
she gets after she is no longer like hazard glow up.
He's just like, I don't know. All I got is
this shoe. Literally, I'm going to be shocked if you
are the woman who I'm supposed to be in love with. Yeah,
(14:14):
they're not enough, has been asked of him? Yeah yeah,
yeah he I mean, does he have face blindness? Maybe
I'd understand, But yeah, that was a that was a
killer one two punch of Disney movies with you know,
snow White and then Cinderella, both of which were basically
invented an entire universe where your beauty was totally like
(14:40):
not only did it affect how people treated you. It
was like whether you were a good person or not,
and they would murder you if you were prettier than
the queen. Anyways, you haven't seen the new Cinderella story,
but there's like aunt like they keep remaking it, you know,
like I know that's what. So the state of development
(15:02):
in film and television is so absurd because it's like, well,
what I p s public domain at this point, Okay,
we'll get so it's luckily Disney doesn't own that, so
we can do it, and then we'll blow all our
money and doing covers of modern songs like why is
what does rhythm Nation have to do with Cinderella? I
(15:23):
don't know. I don't care to know. Mm hmm. It's
also weird that it has been co opted by like
every sports, like a underdog story is called a Cinderella story.
They're like does the shoe fit for this Cinderella As
they're like going into the like final four or whatever.
(15:43):
It's just like that's that isn't really even like a
good metaphor for like somebody coming from behind or like
unexpectedly like doing better than expected. Right, what they're saying
is like the rest of the Bengals kicked this guy's ass. Now,
let's see if can catch something exactly. He's out. You're
(16:04):
cleaning the locker room. And yeah, now is this equipment
manager the new wide receiver that's gonna that would be
a Cinderella story. Yeah. Are these professional athletes who were
I guess performing at a lower level than the highest performers.
Are they Cinderella? Will the carriage turned back into a pumpkin?
(16:27):
We find out tonight? It's like, what the Okay, Maybe
it's just that that's the only movie that any sports
person like, only like the of the all the fairy tales,
there's like two that they can reliably have seen, and
so they and you feel like sports, like men's sports,
is so toxic anyway, that they would have found another
(16:49):
thing to say, rather than like, oh, man, this Gonzaga
team real Cinderella story with the rale young men like that.
They would want something like, oh, reminds you of the
parable of the little shell that turned into the monster
that ate the evildoers before your eyes. But there aren't
any like Disney fairy tales about like beating your girlfriend
(17:11):
and getting away with it. Yeah, not that we can
tell yeah, what is something you think is underrated? Maggie
Late night fast food drive throughs m Last night after
a show, Danielle Perez and I went trying to find
some just some drive through fast food place, and it's
(17:31):
like this world is like opening back up and like
l a restaurants never did stay open for like super long,
so these are kind of important. We went to like
two different drive throughs that were closed, and it's like,
excuse me, sir, like we are in the middle of
we're hungry in a pandle, Like what are y'all doing?
Like this isn't necessary. I feel like late night fast
(17:52):
food drive theres are unnecessary cog in the late night Situationally,
this is why these are all essential jobs, you know
what I mean? Like everything that is like to keep
us sustained, give us sustenance, whatever grocery store, fast food
things like that, we we need that, we need to
(18:14):
we need to exalt these people because at the same time,
there's so many times when you're left with like the
only option you do have is possibly some kind of
fast food or a gas station have done before, and
you don't want to make that. You don't want to
make that one am dinner at a gas station. Yeah,
it's not good. Sometimes he's just like, oh man, I
(18:34):
haven't eaten since lunch and I got to drive back
to like wherever I live. Let me just have a
little something, a little nosh while I'm driving, just to
kind of, you know, keep my wits about me and
so I'm not like, you know, hungry and tired. And
it's that kind of thing. Who came through for you
after you you did that that search. Jack in the
(18:54):
Box came through. Jack Box came through. I will say, though,
I am mad at Jack in the Box. Let me
say this to bunch, give the floor for this, thank you.
A bunch of different fast food eateries have taken away
their french fry and squeezy cheese kind of situation. And
(19:15):
that's another underrated thing. Jack in the Box got rid
of their potato wedges. Taco Bell keeps sucking around and
taking their nacho fries back, and when they bring them back,
they bring them back for a little more expensive and
it's not a huge deal. But don't think I didn't
notice Taco Bell that that's what y'all are doing. And
it's like cheese spreads are so good clearly, So someone
(19:35):
needs to have a consistent cheese fry on their menu,
That's all I'm saying about it. Yeah, yeah, it's like
shake shack. But then they're not open late, and that's like,
you know, it's like that's a that's a spend, you know,
but you want to have because oh remember when McDonald's
did it for a second though, they had cheesy bacon fries.
(19:55):
It was like experimental thing, and then they took it
from us. But yeah, I love that's usually like that.
It's funny that you say that, because that's when in
my mind, I go, oh, I'm not giving a fuck
about what I'm eating today. It's I usually go for
some kind of cheese fry conglomeration that is not good.
(20:16):
But it doesn't feel like fries. It feels more like
I'm having a meal. There's cheese because there because I
need a fork. Yeah, suddenly the context is different and
this might have nutrients. I mean, there's so many wild
things happening with the supply chain. If anybody knows why
(20:38):
the cheesy fries keep going away, let us know, because yeah,
that's not unacceptable. We're probably just in a minority, you know,
unfortunately it's probably always money, you know, But who doesn't
like fries. Who's like, oh, yeah, these fries are good
enough as is. I'm glad there's no good cheese on them. Yeah,
(20:58):
nobody on this podcast. Yeah, we got Look, we got
enough of America's problems to deal with in this show,
so stay focused. All right, let's take a quick break
and we'll come back and talk about some lesser problems.
(21:24):
And we're back and alright, So the Capitol Police are
getting dealt with for their work on January six. We
saw both sides. We saw the heroics of the police officer,
you know, distracting the crowd and like leading them into
(21:46):
where where he had to back up, just like hypnotizing
them into following him as he continued to like fall back.
So great work by him. We also saw dudes just
fucking taking selfies with the insurrectionists. So it's time that
(22:08):
we hear something from some kind with these guys. Something.
So they had, you know, an investigation, and right now,
again I don't know what all the details are the
of the in the or what what was revealed in
this investigation, but based on what I'm reading, it sounds
like very light slaps on the wrist, possibly for the
(22:29):
worst offenders within the Capitol Police force. So the disciplinary
actions include three for conduct unbecoming and one one each
for failure to comply with directives, improper remarks, and improper
dissemination of information. No names or the details were released,
and it's not immediately clear whether all the disciplinary actions
involved different officers or who it was, and what is
(22:50):
the actual discipline that they would face. No charges, nothing
that I guess arrived to the point of like criminal behavior.
But again, like you're saying, when you see what happened
that day, and you're juxtaposing the black officer who you know,
was again sold by himself trying to save the Senate
Chamber and someone else who was like, oh yeah, this
(23:11):
is all good man, let's flick it up. Oh yeah,
put this on your Facebook. I'm officer. Yeah cool, cool cool.
You start to think, like, what what is happening? Because
we saw how light the sentences have been for the
actual people that have been arrested for like breaking and
entering the capital and things like that, and so yeah,
you know, just for those of us who look at
it like I think, are we doing the slow boil
(23:32):
into autocracy fascism, like you know, these are the kind
of moments where you try and make an example or not,
you know, at least apply the law equally, which is
a concept that is fairly foreigned in this country. Yeah,
and there's a big rally plant for this Saturday from
a group basically the same groups that you know stage
(23:52):
the insurrection. They are currently calling the people who are
arrested and giving those late slaps on the wrist political prisoners,
even though most of them aren't even in prison. And
you know, they don't have as much vocal explicit support
from like Josh Holly and like Louie gomer but they're
(24:14):
being silent the like actual Republican leadership. And they're also
still backing the big lie that Biden lost the elections.
So yeah, I feel like they we're we're heading in
a direction where we've seen what happens in response to
a storming of the Capitol, like an actual just all
(24:38):
out attack on democratic institutions, like a physical attack. And
the message is pretty clear, and I feel like probably
well received from the people who staged that first attack,
you know, but like this is there's gonna be a
double standard. They're on standby. Yeah, all the language that
(24:59):
they used to is just to keep their outrage justified
and seemingly normal, because if they're they live in a
world where every election is being stolen and things like that,
then they you know, you can see how fired up
these people get, and I honestly, I feel like you
see it more. It's it's the rhetoric gets more and
more intense every couple of months. It goes from people
(25:21):
being like in disbelief to now people making really weird
threats like, you know, I don't know what's going to happen.
I know somebody, I know some good people that might
have to do some bad things. Who said that? That
was at a school a school board hearing. Yeah, someone
else I forget who was like the time for bloodshed
may come, and I was like, I mean yeah, there's
(25:45):
definitely like moments where you you'll have politicians like dance,
like do the thing. We're like, god, who, I certainly
hope that we don't come to a point where blood
will be spilled over this deservedly and with complete justification
because they stole the election, like the I don't know,
but I'm hoping that doesn't happen. You know and yeah,
(26:05):
it's it's uh yeah, my metal loss. I mean, well,
we'll see what happens with the House Commission that's looking
into things, and obviously they're going to have a more
holistic view of what's happening. But at the end of
the day, like the messages, I don't know, man, like
you can pull some wild ship and if you're if
you're on the side of the right people, they're not
(26:26):
going to give a fuck you can you can get
away with house arrest and fuck it will even give
you kale when you're in prison because you'll say your
shaman beliefs preclude you from eating bologna in gen pop
with everyone else. I think he just got a sentenced
to four years. Yeah, not a lot. And again that's
(26:49):
when I'm like, who where are the people, like, you know,
like officers ended up taking their own lives as a
result of like the how traumatic that whole experience was.
There's just when you look at the whole picture, it's
just really hard to think. I'm like, at what point
is someone like what part are they signaling this is
never going to go down again? Or if it does,
(27:10):
like you okay, you better be built for doing a
fucking thirty years stretch on your head. But I don't
know if you are, and so everything just seems to
be like, yeah, if you get out of it, you
could you can just kind of say no, no, no
the whole time, and then maybe there'll be enough outrage
that your sentence gets gets dumbed down. Because after hearing
the one judge really openly be like, I'm a little
bit curious as to why these sentences. It's like these
(27:33):
what the DJ is bringing you so like light considering
what we saw. But I think this just goes back
to a bigger things like we don't know how to
We don't Americans don't know how to check themselves. Ever. Yeah,
the Democrats are you know they even even still there
in the business of like kind of keeping things business
(27:54):
as usual even and you can't really have things business
as usual when there's a fucking in direction that like
where people attacked the capital building to try to prevent
the you know, the moving forward of democracy, the what's
the word the Yeah, well they got like parents who
(28:19):
like signed up their kids to a better school district
to get like ten years you know, right, And it's
like I could bust up into a capital building and
just start acting a full and I only get four
or I get like like, I'm on probation for two
years and I can't use the internet, and it's like, really, well,
(28:42):
allow me to walk you down the sentencing disparities that
exist within this country, because that's all you want to
talk about. Political prisoners. Those like you have a better
argument for saying these uneven sentences are as a result
of politicized judicials or whatever. But this ship, again, it's
just nonsense because they need the narrative of we are
(29:03):
the oppressed people who were able to fly in on
private jets to the capital and function up. All right,
let's talk about you know now that we are facing
extinction level climate change pollution, uh, just an end to
any sort of normal as we know it. People are
(29:24):
starting to take some big swings in the in the
world of science, and one such big swing is basically
slightly more boring Jurassic Park. There's a new venture called Colossal, Yeah,
which is what's the other thing that they made another
it's like very big or extremely big, per giant, pyper giant. Yeah,
(29:48):
that's the other thing. Yeah. Just so to a guy
with money and a guy with ideas want to bring
the wooly mammoth back from extinction. And you're like, great, great,
we meet. Thank you, so thank you for being brave
right now and making sure we bring back a fucking
creature no one has seen with their their bare eyes.
But yes, this guy, Ben Lamb, he's the one who
(30:11):
is like the tech guy. He said, he's putting it
like he's got like they got a fifteen million dollar
seed round. But his other past projects have been, like
you said, hyper Giant Industries, which you know, they said,
among our things, trying to launch satellites to search for
UFOs on Earth. Okay, so you like to you like
to really get you'd like to really ask and answer
the tough questions search for UFOs on Earth. That's uh, yeah,
(30:35):
that sends it in a very specific direction, not like
signs of extra terrestrial life where it's like we found
a bacteria on this asteroid. It's uh, they're looking for
landing spots of UFOs on Earth. Yeah, I mean remember
you I thought didn't even have to be that deep.
It's like, what is under that blanket? It is an
(30:56):
unidentified flying up is like I mean, if you remember
when he launched a hyper giant industries. People are like,
this is just sci fi fantasy stuff, and he says absolutely, Now,
were absolutely respect the work that's being done by the
men in black, and we will make sure that our
work does not cover the same ground and will not
be redundant. That's a joke right now, Pop right back
(31:21):
in the frame. But like so then he is there
the whole thing. This operation is described as a quote
breakthrough bioscience and genetic engineering company that it's accept that is,
quote accepting humanity's duty to restore Earth to a healthier
state while also solving for the future economies and biological
necessities of the human condition through cutting as science and technologies.
(31:42):
Which brings me to what does the Woollie mammoth have
to do with this mandate you have given yourself. Because
the man who is behind it this Harvard geneticist George Church,
he's pretty much saying that they will. There's a global
warming aspect to it, like, because not only has he
they've they said they've mapped a lot of the genetic
(32:04):
sequence for the wooly mammoth based on like, you know,
a carcass they pulled out of the perma frost in Siberia.
But they're like they know, like if I don't know.
They seem confident that they could bring this to life.
But he says it's a game changer because if you
bring the returning the extinct species to the original habitats,
will quote revitalize lost ecosystems for a healthier planet, bringing
(32:26):
back the Arctic grasslands, and it will slow the melting
of perma frost storing and the perma frost storing gases
like carbon and methane. That doesn't even track, does he
He's just not familiar, Like so when an animal eats grass,
they don't put grass back on to the grass, asshole
jack Okay, okay, repopulates the grass. Why would you say
(32:50):
he just got the arrow wrong? The times of arrow
a little bit mixed up. But that's all right. You know,
he's head. He's been, he's been a controversial figure. Apparently
in this article they're saying, like a few years ago
he claimed to have been real close to a breakthrough
with this like elephant mammoth hybrid and like other geneticists
are like, blow, don't listen to this fool. It was
(33:11):
like the tone of like the response of other geneticists
seemed almost be like, motherfucker, you know, and I know
that that ship ain't about to happen. Was basically like
what the rest of the science community said. But granted
he's you know, he also had some other like just
interesting takes on technology. What if he just breaks out
the snuff elophicus and that was what he planned? Elephant hybrid. Yeah,
(33:36):
he's like, I never said it was gonna be organic.
I'm just saying exceptually. And they're like, it's all just
a big viral campaign for Henson, for the Henson Studio reboot. Yeah,
but yeah, I mean I think that's why a lot
of people are like sort of look at this and
scratching their heads because de extinction, you know, it seems
(33:57):
to already be a controversial topic in science because like, well, there,
unfortunately that was the destiny of the species had died out,
because that's how the Earth ended up. It just wasn't
a pleasant environment and they died out. And to try
and sort of repopulate the Earth with gigantic prehistoric beings,
(34:19):
I'm just not I'm like, part of me is like
I think that's fun, like from a Jurassic Park as
a Jurassic Park fan, I'm like cool, but like, don't
serve me this other ship of like this is this
is our ticket off this fucking climate mess. No, like,
no one knows how to take care of them, No
one knows how to like domesticate them. So you just
have some giant wild beasts running around trampling people and
(34:42):
all kinds of things. And like, didn't these didn't They
died during like a global warming situation? Like so are
you trying to bring them back to die in global
warming with the Internet. Now that their habitat, now that
their natural habitat is a handful of really large zoos
(35:02):
throughout the western world and a single piece of ice
in the North Pole, we're gonna bring them back And
like it's it seems like we're getting less and less
habitable to them. But yeah, I'm starting to think this
is going to be like a revolutionary team up between
Henson Studios and Latisse. The new snuff Luphagus uh hie lash. Yeah,
(35:29):
that's that's a soft pitch for that product because I've
always been impressed by snuff. He's eyelashes. I feel like
if that doesn't happen, it's going to be a team
up between them and like, omaha, steaks, because that's not
going to be a sustainable thing. They're just gonna cut
them up and be like this is the new Neil Guy,
right burger, Yeah, the colossal and and then yeah, like
(35:54):
this this sort of experiment just turns into another fucked
up like hyper consumer luxury. It were like, oh, yeah,
I'm not even mammoth burgers. Oh okay, y'all broke over there,
pull up, fuck chinchilla baby, we rock mammoth skins, nothing
but the best. Yeah. Yeah, they're like we didn't we
didn't know what to do with all these mammoths that
(36:15):
we created. But I don't know, I mean, and it's
like funny because on one level, I'm excited to know that.
You know, people, there's like technology is advancing, then we
just get into these larger moral arguments and like what
is doable, what should be done? What should not be done? So,
you know, part of me is like, Okay, look, can
you bring back my my pet, Lucky, my first dog
(36:35):
I had when I was a little kid. Can we
do that? They are doing that? Actually, I know, yeah,
because like just too much m hm, Yeah that's true, Matt.
You know you said, what the funk? Yeah, around fifty k,
you can. You can bring your pets back apparently for
a while, just like perpetually reviving a dog that she
(36:59):
really loved, which seems wild. That is the first couple
of ones, a little rough, you know what I mean,
A couple of copies, you know, them still figuring things out.
They use that frog DNA like in a Jurassic Park out.
I feel like if you have to keep reviving it,
that dog doesn't want to be here. Well, yeah, they're
(37:22):
reviving it by cloning it and just like having a
puppy version, just like repeating the life cycle, like it's
a fucking song that you really like on repeat, just
like and let's take that back to the beginning until
it's got all of the old, like all the old stuff.
So it still has like all of the old like
(37:43):
it's still like an old dog. But like in Puppy Body, No,
I mean, it's just like the genetic material that they
can then create an embryo that will come out. And
I mean the biggest difference is like how are the
environmental factor is going to affect like the personality traits
that I get bread it I don't know. Man, Look,
she got a ton of dogs and you gotta fake
as McDonald's at her house. So and let's talk about
(38:08):
Chris Wallace real quick. He interviewed uh Nebraska Governor Pete
Ricketts Pete Ricketts about you know, his stance on the vaccine,
and he brought up what seems like a pretty straightforward
question that I'd I'd assume every single person who has
ever questioned vaccine mandates would ask them Yeah, I would
(38:31):
ask themselves like this would be the first thing, Like
was the difference between this and the other vaccines that
aren't mandated already? Well, this is yeah, this is the
common ailment of the modern Republican politician or of this age,
which is like having to be so deep in your
own self delusion plus mental gymnastics to try and rationalize
(38:52):
how you aren't just a completely just like manifested walking contradiction.
And you know, he said in before in the top
of this interview, goes like, look, man, I've been I'm
not against vaccines, Okay, I've I've said that they work,
I know that they're safe. So you know, it's it's
just about like kind of you know, who do people
trust and then that's where Chris Wallas is like, Governor Ricketts,
I'm about to put a graphic up. These are all
(39:14):
the vaccines that you mandate in the state of Nebraska
for someone to go to school. He's like, so protest
this measles monks, rubella, He beat chicken pox. And he's like, so, family,
why don't you have the same energy for these vaccines?
And this is his answer and each tie it's very
good to be like, oh, you didn't catch me, you
didn't catch me off guard with this. I'll just give
(39:35):
a non answer. Are those mandates that parents and your
estate must comply with and do comply with? Ruth Tainley,
why is it that they're not so objectional and such
a violation of personal freedom? But Biden's vaccine mandates are
well for all those that you just listed, there's a
(39:57):
long history that parents have had the opportunity to see
how those things have been implemented. And there's still a
lot of people out there who don't know what to trust.
And in fact, this is really an outcome of what
the CDC has done because they flip plucked on so
many issues, whether it's mass or whether you have to mask,
have to be vaccine and so forth. There's just a
lot of people out there who don't know who to
(40:18):
trust right now, and so by having the government force
it on, you're not building a trust where we have
a trust with those other vaccines. This is a process
going to take time to bring people along, and that's
why it should be a personal choice and not something
mandated by the government. But but okay, so he goes
on and he'll never give a satisfying answer because the
truth is, he's not even why you're oping with that one.
(40:41):
But he found a clever thing, which was, yeah, and
if you're if you truly want to believe this version
of the reality you're experiencing, which is the vaccines are
bad that yet it's like, well they've been around long enough,
it's time time, is the thing that is, you know?
Blah blah blah. So he's not even saying they're unsafe, right,
(41:02):
and he keeps going back to this argument that people
are unsure they don't know who to trust. Okay, well,
well what do you do because right now the plan
seems to be okay, just let the pandemic rage on. Um,
He's like, but also like, we have to hold hands
with the people whose only news sources a Facebook group, right, Like, so,
(41:22):
but my question to all of this is, what the
funk is your solution? Then? If you are a fucking leader,
I don't care if you're a Republican Democrat, you're a
fucking leader, right, so fucking come up with this solution.
Don't just say people are just unsure. And so you
you up top, he said that you believe the vaccine
was safe, you believe that it works? Is that true?
(41:44):
I'm pretty sure it is on some level because we've
seen but right, you know, as for these people who
I lead for a living, for my job, how are
that supposed to know that? Right? And the thing is
I can't offer a solution because then that would solve
the problem and we would have nothing to push back
against because as a default, the Republicans are now just
(42:04):
we cape for the corporations as much as Democrats, but
we do it in a way that's very straightforward, and
then we'll wrap it in a liberty argument so it
gets enough people fired up. And that's why I'm just like,
what I wish more people would just pivot an interview
like that and say, okay, then what's the solution if
you're diagnosing all of these reasons why people are So
(42:25):
if you say the CDs, then how would you speak
to them? Do you yourself want everyone to be vaccinated?
But they'll never say that part, you know what I mean?
It always has to be you know, that's why this
thing should be a personal choice until when you see
it's It's never a situation of like they always put
it like, oh, well, people don't know what to believe.
They they CDC keeps flip flopping and this and that,
(42:47):
that and this, and it's like no one is It's
that kind of thing just strokes somebody's god complex of
like if I don't understand it, it's not real and
it's not true. It's there's never a thing of like, yeah,
things are gonna be different when we find new information.
This virus didn't come with a warning label or with
(43:07):
a nutritional sticker on it or anything like you're watching
science happen, like we're gonna find new things and we're
gonna pivot. It's never that messaging. It's always well, they
keep hearing a bunch of different things and their intuitive
Facebook groups and they have conflicting information from those, so
we just don't know what to believe, and we're gonna
(43:27):
give parents autonomy, which is a terrifying kind of a
thing because like just just the argument of like, well
I don't understand it. It's like, well, you don't understand
cheetos and you still eat them, like you don't understand
a lot, Like so many people have failed math, failed science,
so like, well I don't get it, so it's not true,
(43:48):
and it's like you don't get a lot, you know, right,
It's like I don't. I don't understand math. So when
when I look at my bank account it says negative something,
I don't know what that means. Is that math? Well,
I don't understand math, So please don't don't uh encumber
me with your rigid dedication to this thing you call mathematics.
(44:09):
Please give me my five I would like right now,
I don't know what overdrawn means. I'm not an illustrator,
do not I do not agree with these things. And yeah,
that's why I'm just like there. I feel like democrats
really just need to be pointing at them if they
want as a strategy like watch this, They're not going
to suggest a fucking thing to solve the problem. Right,
(44:33):
that's it. Just so you know, the only solution, the
only solution they have is just to say no to
any idea other people have. That's not leading, that's just
you're a drunk asshole at a bar who's button in
on a conversation you had nothing to do with, Like, oh,
what do you guys know about the house music? I'm like,
what exactly there? Please get away? But this is the
(44:55):
thing me Like, that's why I would just you know,
you'd hope that on some I don't know, that's think
where like the real sinister kind of want to be
fascist is going to be able to talk like that,
you know what I mean, And it's not going to
be like, oh yeah, well you know we can't do that.
It seems like no, what we actually need to be
doing is this and this and this and then the other.
But right now I think it's because everything has been
(45:17):
so caught up in it's like back and forth culture
war nonsense that even something this simple, because Chris Wallace
even said he even tried to present it to Pete
Ricketts like I mean like, look, if you think about it,
this is a vaccine that works. I mean, President Trump
had a lot to do with it happening. I mean,
like it started with his administration and it works, it's
been tested. Well, what's the problem. And he was still
just like people aren't sure. Well, then as a leader,
(45:41):
wouldn't you say, hey, you can trust me? If you
said they don't know who to trust? Can they trust you? Right?
And are you what would you say if they trust you?
Very obvious follow up? Yeah, I don't know, what do
I know? What do we know? I'm just trying to
make people feel smart for being stupid, you know. Yeah,
well again it goes back to the thing we don't know.
(46:02):
Americans don't want to check themselves, you know, like because
we have so many people like this whole thing is
like I don't know if Joe Bienen should have scolded
these people. We look how many people passed away and
think of the people that are especially man frontline healthcare workers,
the mental health crisis that they're experiencing from like wanting
to help people and just seeing ambulance after ambulance or
(46:23):
patient after patient of someone who's like I didn't look
after my own health and like now I'm in a
really bad way. And also like give me this medicine
that is an FDA approved and also I won't be vaccinated.
But also, please, can I not die? Can I look
you in your eyes as I'm dying and say help me?
Like that ship is traumatic beg for the vaccine on
their deathbeds, like yeah, I've been reading so much where
(46:45):
like you finally get them to want to do what
they should do, and it's like so painfully too late
that like yeah, kids, you're right in the gut yeah,
and unnecessary against yeah. And I think that the thing
is that this whole thing was just they thought they
could create a sentiment within the country that could just
ignore the like massive amount of preventable death that's occurring.
(47:09):
I think that was really their only things, Like I
don't know, let's just get our heads down and then
maybe people will stop caring about it. But this is
a problem that's unlike to know the problems they usually
like to get involved in, which would be like fighting
wars and ship and because this is a completely different
one that requires people to actually do what's best for
each other, they found themselves completely out of sources like well,
(47:31):
fucking man, like, let's hope people aren't hiding we can
get over the amount of people that are dying. Yeah,
it's straight up a death cult at this point. The Right,
a prominent anti masker and anti baxer who was known
for wearing a zoro mask. Two Staples passed way over
the weekend. Veronica Wolfski and the hospital like had to
(47:56):
be evacuated a couple of times because people were phoning
in threats and trying because she was being treated with
like iver mecten or you know whatever. The people who,
as Miles said, get their news from Facebook groups were
telling the doctor demanding the doctors treat her with. So
you know, they don't know who to trust, but they
(48:17):
know what the dosage and treatment ought to be. Right,
That's right, yep, That's why. I mean again, it's just
I think it's just revealing so much about the human
psyche too, as especially as it relates to Americans. I mean, like,
so much of this is about unwilling to embrace the unknown,
because for those people, the only control they can exert
is to not get vaccinated. After that, I think, to
(48:41):
them it's such a dice roll, whether they believe it's
a scientific dice roll, or maybe they're just full on
some other ship and they'll never get it anyway. But
there's just it's like it's just human nature. We have.
We have to know what's going to happen, and when
we don't, we get very anxious. That's just our human nature.
Like whenever we're in situations where things are uncertain, can
as a lot of anxiety and stress. And especially as
(49:02):
it released something like this that requires people to trust that,
it just shows that there's like limits to that and
in this case, people think they're gonna they feel safer
by not doing it, even though the results are to
the you know, they're getting the counter result that they
thought they would. And we did have this during the
nineteen eleven pandemic. It was less sort of incendiary because
(49:26):
there was not social media, but there was a big
resistance to getting the vaccine and they had to go
door to door to make sure people got the vaccine
and ultimately they won that battle. But it remains to
be seen whether we will be able to win that
battle in a world that does have Facebook that really
(49:47):
like it seems I feel like it's getting passe a
and also like it's just boring to keep being like
social media is evil, but it really like, I mean
that all these stories that we're talking about, Like keep
coming back to the fact that the problem would be
solved if there weren't you know, people lying, passing off
(50:07):
lies is as facts on. So yeah, well, because Facebook
kind of gives people legitimacy in that sense, It's one
thing if it's like a back is hey back in
our day. We remember the early Internet where some wacky
ship it was like on a Geo cities website and
you looked at your like, this is trash. I can
tell by looking at it, this is nothing is real
on this page. Nothing but Facebook I think lends a
(50:32):
certain veneer of like validity to a lot of those
things because of the formatting and things like that that
there's like a lot of presentational graphic things that I
think are that kind of bolster this ship. And tomorrow,
actually we'll talk about because this this article just came
out the Washington Post found out like Facebook has like
this whole plat, like this whole program where they are
(50:52):
like certain users that are they can violate the user
guidelines and they'll keep them there because they're prominent of profiles.
So you know, we'll do a little we'll talk a
little bit more about that. But yeah, there's there's many
things that are consciously happening to that kind of keep these,
you know, ecosystems. Hum m m all right, let's take
(51:14):
a quick break and we'll be right back. And we're back.
I wanted to just talk really briefly about I think
we tend to talk about food mashups that even when
they sound like a bad idea, like uh, you know
(51:36):
Guy Fierry's apple pie hot dog usually for Ranch Sauce
Buffer Ranch. I bought that ship over the weekend. I'm sorry, y'all.
Ship is a fucking nightmare. Tastes like straight garbage. Yes,
it's so fucking bad. I can't even like buffalo cheese
would actually be good exactly. But here's so, I got
(51:59):
some of the her I just were eating, and she's
like she tried it, and she said this is bad.
I said, no, it's not. And I kept eating it
for like three more bites, and I'm like, bad, fake
butter chemical, But I'm like, I love it. Let me
get that cup real quick. Oh yeah, I'm gonna finish
(52:22):
at doort o love it, just taking each bite like
a pill. Just yeah, I mean, because I love I
love the idea. But sorry, it's that it's a big divide.
I hate to hide another thing. But with the butter,
the over butterification of like what people call buffalo sauce,
I can just taste it. It tastes like marjarine or
(52:42):
something fake, and it just rubs me the wrong one. Anyway, Yeah,
completely derailed this the okay, so this is a food
mashup that sounds like an even worse idea than what
you were just describing, which sounds like a bad idea.
I think somebody just needs to be at the concept stage,
like okaying or not okay, because we're never we're almost
(53:05):
never surprised. I guess the guy Fietti thing was somewhat surprising,
but because it was him, he would have gotten it
made one way or another. Drida's Locos tacos were like, yes,
of course, brilliant idea, well done. And then we have
a trio of cheese is recently introduced by Aldi the
(53:26):
grocery wine um and this is a line of cocktail
flavored cheeses, including a pina colada flavored cheese that's literally
what the label says. It's not like cheddar with hints
of pina colada. It says Pina Colada flavored cheese, which
when you want to drink but you want the texture
of cheese, right, I mean, I think they are like that.
(53:51):
There was one step that where they took the right step,
and then like thirty where they took the wrong one.
So like Dorita's Locos taco they were like, okay, people
like tacos, people like dritos, and also the same people
like those things, people like taco bell tacos and ritos
who are stoned. Let's combine those things. They had the
(54:12):
thought people who like cheese also like alcohol. Now almost
always it's wine that that pairs nicely with cheese, but
they were they just stopped at alcohol, and we're like,
all right, I got it. Let's give them peach Ballini
flavored cheese, which is another one that it's HARVARDI aged
(54:37):
Havardi with a pineapple flavor. Again, I don't even know
the conceptually where where this could ever get a green light,
aside from I think Jack your thing is like they
just like had a Venn diagram in front of them.
They're like wine, cheese, charcuterie board overlap. Maybe that where
(55:00):
we combine the flavors to be like alcohol adjacent. But
I still no one asked for this. This isn't a
trend in as far as I can tell, in the
food world. So what the fund is it? What question
does the articles say if the cheese gets you drunk?
It does not get does not? So why are we
here the results of the article? So this is from
(55:23):
the takeout who practically gave a reheated mail carrier delivered
Guy Fiertti apple pie hot dog a Michelin Star like
they were into that ship big. They gave a review
of this and at the risk of being too flowery,
they said it was fucking gross. I think, exactly what
(55:45):
you would expect. And yeah, so like I I don't
know how it happened. I don't know how. So I
don't know how it got past the idea stage. I
don't know how it got from the idea stage to
the production stage. And I sure as hell don't know
how it. You taste it, it tastes like exactly what
(56:08):
you expect, which is like bad, and then you're like,
ship it, let's get let's get these babies on the shelves.
It's like, oh, hey, have you ever wanted to drink
a pina Colada through a forty year old gym sock. Well,
now you can with this cheese? Like what the fuck?
Like there's nothing. Everything is like like oppositional to each other,
(56:29):
like on a flavor profile. I'm like, this isn't even well.
I mean there's an all d up the street. I
guess I can go there. You hate myself enough, go
eat a big chunk of dude. The way they said
the pizza Bollini and Pina Colada cheese is crumbled like
sand castles when sliced. I can already just see. They
keep talking lining it to chalk and ship and drywall.
(56:52):
So so who is behind this? Is this is the
same dude that's doing the snuff because the sounds of it, Yeah,
that it felt like there's an evil genius out there
that's just like bad idea. Man, he's got a hand
in the funding. I bet you yeah, I got the
hand in the fund. That's his back, that's his weapons.
(57:18):
Is he like has his hands like like the guy
from from Kickboxer who like puts his fists in like
wax and broken glass. He does like and like crackers
and fond shattered holy shit. And one kind of quick
(57:41):
story that is getting a reported a lot, and I
just want to like put people's minds at ease that
they can stop paying attention to it is all the
Bill Cosby comeback stories. There there was a you know,
it was being reported Bill Cosby's working on a TV
show following prison release. As he was about to get released,
they were talking about how he was going to do
(58:02):
a reunion tour with himself. I guess the Cosby's back
reunited with freedom. Yeah, and uh, they're trying to argue
he was too frail for jail. Oh yeah, yeah, you're
not a motherfucking coast to coast stand up tour mother. Okay,
all right, all of these stories are a writer. J
(58:24):
McNab was pointing out all these stories when you trace
them back, all come from Cosby's PR guy, Andrew Wyatt,
who claims that things are happening, and Cosby is, with
regards to the TV show, is spending time on the
phone working on a number of projects, including a television
show he has in the works, but nothing ever comes
(58:45):
of any of the things that he has announced. He
after the stand up comedy tour, like weeks later, they're like, actually,
we're gonna have to cancel that because he's being sued
in civil court for sexual weders, like, don't have the
have the time to do that. But of course it
(59:05):
could also be that nobody was interested in booking him
since there wasn't a single date booked when they canceled
the tour. And is he lying to Bill Cosby? Yeah,
I mean it sounds like he's trying to like just
grift off his name or something like does he say
that and then can secure other money because it's like
I can't imagine he's a big Bill Cosby fan and
(59:28):
this is his thing, being like, Oh, you're gonna love it.
We got a tour, we got a TV show. She's
everything Jello putting pop flavor, Like, what is it? I
don't understand what the end game is. He's previously claimed
that Cosby was working on a five part documentary about
(59:49):
his life and legacy with lions Gate, which actually was true,
and lions Gate took that opportunity to pull the plug
on the documentary and then why when for comment on
that one was like, no, false, He's still going forward. Yeah,
so he's Billions I never heard of them, or like
(01:00:11):
a big production company, one of the biggest I don't know,
they're come on, who are you gonna trust me or
the guy who lies all the time or these people.
He's also compared Cosby as the rest of the Persecution
of Jesus called the conviction of Harvey Weinstein a sad
day in the American judicial system, even though he's not
a client. I think that's the business that he's going
(01:00:32):
after the right just keeping for the trash draft mails
of the earth. Okay, but people can stop paying attention,
and journalists obviously should stop writing it. But it was
Fox News, So what are you gonna do? Right? Fox
News is rebooting cops, which we'll be talking about in
coming days. Fox News is rebooting cops. You got it,
(01:00:54):
like the fucking Fox like cops. There's gonna be a
new Cops that's just on Fox News. Yeah, cremacy TV.
If cops are already copaganda, what the fund is the
Fox News version going to be like, They're probably gonna
just straight up set people up on camera, and then
their viewers are gonna be like, well, he shouldn't have
(01:01:15):
he shouldn't have been he shouldn't have gotten pulled over,
and then maybe that cop didn't have to put that
Heroine in his trump Maggie as always such a pleasure
having you, for having me, I always have so much fun.
Where can people find you and follow you? So? I'm
on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, the whole nine under Maggie may
(01:01:37):
ha ha and may has spelled m a white e
So Maggie normal spell and a white e ha ha
normal spelled. And is there a tweet or some of
the work of social media you've been enjoying, Yes, very much. There.
It's really hard to distill it down. But one of
my favorite ones that I have seen recently from my
(01:02:01):
friend called Anky. He has a tweet that said, sorry, bro,
if you don't want me to chat you up, you
shouldn't be driving a mid eighties four runner like that interet. Yeah, Miles,
where can people find you? What's the tweet you've been enjoying?
You can find me on Twitter and Instagram at Miles
(01:02:21):
of Gray. Also, the other podcast was Sophia Alexandra fo
twenty Day Fiance. If you like ninety days, stop by
because we're talking ninety day Fiance non stop. There uh
tweet that I like and I just fucking this ship.
Just spoke to my fucking soul. It's an image where
someone is holding like a throwback canister of vix vapor
(01:02:42):
rub Like if y'all saw this, you'd be like, I
know this, or I'll just show you remember when he
used to look like this? Oh damn yeah? Okay. So
then Heather Chacone at Wicked Tread tweeted, my son has
been sick, not COVID and shout out to my mom
who loaned us the same pot a vix she used
to use on me growing up. Expiration date January seven.
(01:03:05):
Let's yes, fuck yeah, anybody who has parents who hold
on this ship for dear life. That just fucking made
my heart sing fucking January seven. Baby, they don't make
it like they used to like that. Yeah, exactly exactly
(01:03:27):
like pre band for local. Let's see some tweets I've
been enjoying. James Third Comedy tweeted what if a man
had feelings and attributed that statement to an entire genre
of cinema, And then at zero Suit Camoo tweeted business
(01:03:48):
school sounds so made up. It's what a kindergartener would
say if you ask them where Dad's go all day.
Somebody was a lot of friends who went to business school. Uh,
you can find me on Twitter at Jack Underscore. Oh, Brian,
you can find us on Twitter at daily Zeitgeist. Were
at the Daily Zy Guys on Instagram. We have a
(01:04:09):
Facebook fan page and a website Daily zeus dot com
where we post our episodes and our footnotes where we
link off to the information that we talked about in
today's episode, as well as a song that we think
you're gonna enjoy. Miles, what song do we think people
will enjoy on this fine Tuesday, morn this fine Tuesday,
We're calls for some you know, sort of like new
(01:04:31):
neo soul, kind of new R and B kind of
vibes from a Canadian Nigerian artist named Toby t O
b I. And this track it was just this's just
super funky and again it's just it's it's an easy
one to listen to and it's called Off the Drugs.
So this is Off the Drugs by Toby. All right, Well,
(01:04:52):
The Daily z Guys is a production of I Heart Radio.
For more podcast from my Heart Radio, visit the I
Heart Radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to
your favorite show, that is going to do it for
us this morning but we are back this afternoon to
tell you what is trending, and we will talk to
you all then. Bye bye m