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April 1, 2026 65 mins

In this episode, Gandhi & Diamond continue the conversation with Ben & Noel from the Stuff They Don’t Want You To Know podcast. This time, they discuss shrinkflation, algorithmic pricing, bizarre stories from the restaurant world, and bringing back the dead.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
I saw us on the side. Hello, it's Gandhi and
I'm here with my babe Diamond.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
Hi.

Speaker 3 (00:09):
Hi, oh so dainty and guess what I did? Remember
to turn your mike on?

Speaker 4 (00:13):
Oh god?

Speaker 5 (00:14):
Yeah, let me.

Speaker 3 (00:15):
Tell you in this episode which you're gonna hear. This
is going to be part two of the podcast with
our guys Ben and Nole from the Stuff They Don't
Want You To Know podcast who I could sit and
talk to you for one hundred and fifty hours and
we have worked out some stuff. They want me to
be on a couple of things that they're doing, and
I'm excited to do that. She's gonna be a Netflix star.

Speaker 5 (00:34):
Probably not.

Speaker 1 (00:34):
I don't think it's a Netflix thing. It's something else
that they're doing.

Speaker 5 (00:37):
Yeah, No, it probably is.

Speaker 3 (00:39):
But I think it would be really fun. And I
think I'm gonna actually get this other podcast going. We
just have to figure out the logistics of it.

Speaker 5 (00:44):
That's what I'm talking about.

Speaker 3 (00:45):
Yeah, Man, every day I start a new project. This
is the like Raging ADHD that I have. I have
started so many different projects. I just need to finish them.

Speaker 2 (00:55):
You're going to be able to finish them, and they're
gonna thrivee. I.

Speaker 3 (00:59):
Yeah, I hope so, but I have a TV series
that is completely written and I just need to do
something about it.

Speaker 5 (01:05):
Wait a minute, I didn't know anything about this one. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:08):
I've been sitting on this for a while actually, and
back when I was in Boston. Obviously I've tweeked it
a lot since then. But when I was in Boston,
there was this like writers forum, and I went to
it because the people that I worked with were like,
you need to do this. So I went and there
were a couple people from HBO there and they're in
charge of new acquisitions and shows and all this kind
of stuff. And you kind of did these little exercises

(01:29):
and advanced round by round and I made it all
the way to the last round.

Speaker 1 (01:33):
Yeah, it was great. It was so fun.

Speaker 3 (01:34):
It was just, you know, they give you a magazine,
have you rip out a page, and then you had
to write a comedic story around something that was on
that page. It was just writing stuff and it was
really fun and I loved it. And when you make
it to the last round, you sit down with a
couple of the executives and I sat with them and
they were very kind and encouraging and the one woman said,
I think you could.

Speaker 1 (01:53):
Do really break great things, big things.

Speaker 3 (01:56):
I see you more in front of a camera than
behind a camera, but I like your ideas. And then
they wanted to set up a second meeting to talk
about my ideas, but I had to sign a piece.

Speaker 1 (02:04):
Of paper that said it was actually digital.

Speaker 3 (02:06):
It was a paper, but I had to sign a
contract that said by meeting with them. Before meeting with them,
I acknowledged that there is a very good chance that
they already have something similar to what I'm going to.

Speaker 1 (02:18):
Pitch them in the works.

Speaker 2 (02:20):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:20):
So I was like, I, No, I don't acknowledge that.
I don't think I can do that, and.

Speaker 1 (02:25):
I haven't done anything with it since.

Speaker 3 (02:27):
But I'm really excited and I think I would do
really well and I would love to do that. That
business that I've been telling you about. I'm hoping to
have a first event by the end of the year.
WHOA my stand up this year, Oh Diamond, I think
is happening.

Speaker 5 (02:39):
This is where I draw the line.

Speaker 2 (02:41):
I'm gonna go, but you're gonna hear me laugh regardless
whether it's funny or.

Speaker 1 (02:46):
You'll laugh at me.

Speaker 2 (02:46):
I'm so.

Speaker 3 (02:49):
I had a meeting with them because I'm very excited
about this, and I think I could talk about it
before it actually happens, because we've all agreed, like, yes,
this is definitely happening. I'm going to do a live
podcast event during the New York City Comedy Festival. So
that's in November, and that's when every comedian everybody like
descends on New York and it's a week if not more,

(03:09):
of just comedy everywhere.

Speaker 1 (03:10):
And they asked me to be part of this. So
I was like, yes, can I do my stand up? Diamond?
When I tell you? All of them were like you're
what yes? Because what.

Speaker 3 (03:20):
I said, yeah, I just want to do my stand
up and they said, uh, yeah, absolutely, And then they
asked me i phoned a practice and I said no,
and they said, I highly recommend that you read like
you must not know about me.

Speaker 1 (03:32):
I just like to draw dog things. We'll see how
it goes.

Speaker 5 (03:35):
Listen, let me tell you something.

Speaker 2 (03:36):
Yeah, I have how many months, maybe like six at least,
okay to get meadow glasses.

Speaker 5 (03:41):
They will be on.

Speaker 3 (03:42):
Oh no, they'll be banned for my show. I'm gonna
be high maintenance. No, put your phones and glasses in
the bag. We're locking it up.

Speaker 5 (03:49):
Baby, you're gonna see that one little white light coming
from the lens.

Speaker 1 (03:51):
Why do you think I'm gonna bomb?

Speaker 2 (03:53):
No, no, no, I don't think you're gonna bomb. But
I think I think I'm not gonna be hilarious. Whether
you mean for it to be or not, well, I's
stand up. I mean for it to be right.

Speaker 5 (04:02):
But are the jokes gonna hit?

Speaker 2 (04:05):
This is the thing I'm terrified and so maybe this
is my projection onto you, yaues I could never But also,
you saying I'm not gonna.

Speaker 5 (04:14):
Practice it is insane.

Speaker 2 (04:17):
Like maybe if you said, oh, I don't need to
practice because I practice in the mirror every day.

Speaker 1 (04:20):
Okay, cool, but yeah, yeah, I'm gonna practice at home.
I'm a laugh track. It'll be great.

Speaker 3 (04:27):
So when we announce it, if you're listening to this podcast,
I would love it if you could please show up
and support us.

Speaker 6 (04:32):
Are terrifying.

Speaker 1 (04:34):
You're gonna be part of it.

Speaker 3 (04:36):
I'll put your ass right there on the stage with me.

Speaker 1 (04:38):
So if I bomb, we bombed, and.

Speaker 5 (04:40):
I'm gonna go wah wah.

Speaker 2 (04:45):
From Apollo she just died Kiki Shepherd, Oh god, I
don't I'm gonna put my hand up over your head.

Speaker 3 (04:52):
I am fully anticipating, like tomatoes being launched, and I'm
fine with it. I just think everybody needs to go
through that at some point in their life. By the way,
for your information, I've done stand up twice, okay, and
I killed it.

Speaker 1 (05:04):
It was by force, but.

Speaker 3 (05:05):
And I don't know that I actually really killed it,
but I had a really good time doing it.

Speaker 5 (05:08):
Do you have material written?

Speaker 1 (05:10):
Or are you kidding me? Diamond? Do I have material written?

Speaker 3 (05:15):
I don't think you're prepared for the amount of material
that she has written, because every time something pops into
my head, your girl makes a note.

Speaker 1 (05:23):
Are you ready? And here we go? Oh my, you
see all that?

Speaker 3 (05:27):
That's just one I have a whole separate note and
of more.

Speaker 2 (05:31):
Let the record reflect that I am going to support regardless.

Speaker 5 (05:36):
But you are insane.

Speaker 3 (05:39):
Oh my god, what is insane about it? Don't you
have dreams?

Speaker 4 (05:44):
Yes?

Speaker 5 (05:45):
But stand up is not one of them. Me not
one of them.

Speaker 3 (05:49):
Oh god, you probably heard my email, which I think
is hilarious. One of these days I'll get the audio
stuff right around here. Anyway, Thank you for supporting nothing
about me.

Speaker 2 (05:58):
No, I'm cool and whistles. I should wear literal bells
and bring a whistle.

Speaker 1 (06:04):
Yep, she's here with the bells and whistles.

Speaker 2 (06:07):
Oh no, okay, it's six months meta glasses, bells and whistles.

Speaker 3 (06:13):
I'm banning the meta glasses. Meta glasses are not going
to be a thing at my show.

Speaker 5 (06:16):
Crazy like one of the kids at the amusement park.
Then with the phone in the pouch, this is the
air record.

Speaker 3 (06:22):
No phones and glasses go in the bags. Everybody, you
will be listening only. I don't care if you can't
see what that's your glasses.

Speaker 1 (06:27):
I don't trust them.

Speaker 5 (06:28):
Okay, O school tape record or something.

Speaker 3 (06:31):
Just let me be great, just once, Oh honey, if
I if I am gonna get up there and bomb,
just let it happen.

Speaker 1 (06:37):
Why you gotta record it.

Speaker 3 (06:38):
I'm gonna live in infamy. This is why kids are
not bold anymore.

Speaker 2 (06:40):
By the way, No, no, no, no, no, this is why
no no, we were.

Speaker 1 (06:44):
Talking about it not that long ago.

Speaker 3 (06:46):
We're like, Okay, had you grown up in the age
where everything you did was recorded by somebody, you would
live your life so differently. You would have had a
completely different childhood, which then would turn you into completely
different adult being so fearful of Okay, so if I bomb,
I fall flat on my face, whatever, maybe a few
hundred people saw it, we'll move on.

Speaker 1 (07:04):
But if you post it on.

Speaker 3 (07:05):
The internet for then millions of people to see and
continue to laugh at, so people don't take chances anymore, and.

Speaker 1 (07:11):
You will not didn't my shine.

Speaker 2 (07:14):
I think that this will leave me into another conversation
about people bringing back shame. Not in your case, I think,
but well, well maybe it is, but like think twice
about what you're gonna do, like not about this, but
like I think about the.

Speaker 5 (07:33):
Fact that, like.

Speaker 2 (07:35):
They weren't recording us the night that I graduated from
college and I decided to jump on top of the
couch in a section of the bar and just shake
my ass like I just like whatever, and.

Speaker 1 (07:47):
Like she didn't fuck it, like jad vance.

Speaker 5 (07:49):
Okay, yes, but hey, I'm happy that there were no
cameras exactly. Now I have to think, like, oh, somebody's
gonna catch me.

Speaker 3 (07:58):
Exactly, and I'm the asshole that will catch people for sure,
as are you. I got hammered at Elficer's party. You
got me watch these knees and I'll.

Speaker 2 (08:05):
Watch that video all the time there's a I can
create a folder of like pictures and videos that make
me feel better.

Speaker 5 (08:12):
Instead of me like searching for them, I could just
go to them. That's one of them.

Speaker 1 (08:16):
It does it? What makes you feel so good about it?

Speaker 5 (08:18):
It's fucking hilarious. And it's the fact that, like you
looked at our bosses and said, watch this.

Speaker 1 (08:24):
I was like, what the fuck?

Speaker 5 (08:26):
It was like a kid who like could do a cartwheel?

Speaker 1 (08:29):
Have you any sided?

Speaker 6 (08:31):
What's like?

Speaker 5 (08:31):
Okay? And I think you can hear me and laughing
in the background. Two ten out of ten.

Speaker 3 (08:37):
Oh good times. So hopefully this will be similar to that.

Speaker 5 (08:41):
I hope so yeah.

Speaker 3 (08:42):
And they also asked me to make a list of
people comedians that I would like to have as a.

Speaker 1 (08:46):
Guest on the podcast. I'm aiming high.

Speaker 3 (08:48):
Baby, I don't know who's gonna come on or not.
It might not be anybody, I don't know, but like
John Stewart on the list, Michelle Wolfe on the list,
Bilberr on the list, Baby.

Speaker 1 (08:59):
Somebody come through, Joe Coy love him the list, Toy Yeah,
Chelsea Handler, Chelsea Handler on the list. No, No, I
love her. Oh god, there aren't a ton of.

Speaker 3 (09:11):
No there are comedians that I don't really like too much.
I would love Shane Gillis. I don't think he'll do
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (09:17):
He just kind of fell off. He's touring, okay, but
I saw his tour.

Speaker 5 (09:22):
It was all right.

Speaker 3 (09:23):
Maybe he had a bad day, bad day like I
will soon be having an horror let's hope not.

Speaker 1 (09:29):
Okay, But anyway, let's.

Speaker 3 (09:30):
Get to Ben and Nole because this time we talk
about a lot of conspiracy theories, much less involved and
intense than the last ones, but there are still tons.

Speaker 1 (09:40):
And here we go. All right, I am back with
Ben Nolan and Ben Nolan. I just put your names together.

Speaker 3 (09:53):
You guys could get married and have a baby and
name it Ben Nolan, I Ben and Nol from the
stuff they don't want you to know a podcast that
I I just found out is also on Netflix. True
congratulations guys, thank you, and off the air real quick.
You said something very nice, which was thanks for being
so generous with your time because we don't get to
go this hard on ours. Explain that why don't you
get to go so hard?

Speaker 4 (10:13):
Get to is? Maybe my was the wrong choice of words.

Speaker 7 (10:15):
On Marian, I think it's just that We try very
hard to not stay apolitical, but at the very least
not we can't not There comes moments where you can't
not have an opinion, or speak truth to power, or
describe what you're seeing with your eyes that's being told
to you isn't what you're seeing with your eyes. But
we don't just kind of go like this, Okay.

Speaker 8 (10:37):
Yeah, okay. Everybody has their favorite baby, and nobody likes
to hear their babies ugly, even when their baby's fucking ugly,
you know, and that's just a reality. We also, for instance,
we tend to beep out curse words because when we
started it was a very different environment. And also we
think the beeps are just hilarious because we're emotionally like

(10:58):
nine years old. But we also one of the big
things we do is so we're critical thinking applied to
conspiracy theories. We meet people where they're at the way
of the open hand. You never you will never convince
somebody of the truth if you're yelling at them. If
somebody is in a house and it's on fire and
you run up to them and you say the house

(11:21):
is on fire and I'm mad at you about it,
and they can't literally see the flames. They're gonna say,
screw you. You know, I like this house. I like
a little smell of wood smoke, and you're a You'll
find that.

Speaker 7 (11:32):
You'll find that we're yelling at political figures and people
that we disagree with.

Speaker 4 (11:36):
We're not gonna talk down to a human person just.

Speaker 7 (11:40):
Because they may even if it's something that is completely
anathetical to who we are as people. We would much
prefer to talk to them in an open discourse.

Speaker 4 (11:48):
Here's here's what the facts are. Here is the reality
of it.

Speaker 7 (11:52):
We're not going to call you stupid, because that's immediately
going to shut someone down to potentially having their minds change.

Speaker 8 (11:57):
It's just like Socratic method, you know what I mean.
T Tell me why you think that The.

Speaker 4 (12:02):
Stuff they don't want you to know is PG. Thirteen. Well, kids,
listen to you know.

Speaker 7 (12:06):
It's a big part of what the show has always been,
and I think for good reason, we try to keep
it that way so we have the broadest appeal and
hopefully just by living by example or speaking in a
way that we have with conviction, we can maybe turn
change some people's minds.

Speaker 8 (12:20):
Okay, that's open. Also, Colondie just to pull back the
curtain here. I have long suspected that a significant portion
of our audience is hungover substitute teachers, and so they
need something to play in the classroom stuff. Yep.

Speaker 3 (12:36):
I don't think that the last episode is going to
get played in the classroom of our podcast that we've
done together here.

Speaker 1 (12:42):
But I get that, Okay, I understand.

Speaker 3 (12:44):
I know alienating people is not not a great route
to go when you want change, you want to actually
affect change. You want to talk to people and definitely
meet them on their level. So I'm glad that you
guys are doing that. And we talked about a lot
of big, heavy stuff in the last episode, so maybe
we can tighten it up a little bit with goofy
conspiracy theories. We've talked about glitter, Yes, you've talked about

(13:05):
all kinds of stuff.

Speaker 1 (13:06):
I want to know what you guys are.

Speaker 4 (13:07):
And you got a little on your fit in your
face there.

Speaker 3 (13:09):
Anytime I see a man with glitter, I'm like, oh,
he was that.

Speaker 7 (13:14):
No, we talked about this the whole glitter tests, like
where it's like a way of seeing if your spouse
is cheating on you.

Speaker 1 (13:21):
You got glitter on your face that's weird.

Speaker 3 (13:23):
So what are some of the lighter conspiracies that you
guys have been talking about and dealing with lately? And
I think Diamond might have one or two unless we've
talked about all of them already, she said, we talked
about every.

Speaker 8 (13:35):
Single week this. Yeah, so one I'll be I'll be
a little bit of a of a cheap skate about this,
because this is a very real thing, shrink flation. It
gets treated for a long time, it got treated like
it was just me being chintzy or whatever. But it
is true. And we also have found we found on

(14:00):
that shrinkflation is accelerating. By the way we're all nodding here,
I don't think that's new beans for anybody.

Speaker 3 (14:08):
And if you don't know what shrinkflation is, go on.

Speaker 8 (14:10):
Shrink Flation is when something is sold to you for
the same price, but through various conspiratorial tricky ways, they're
actually you're you're getting less of the thing you pay for.

Speaker 1 (14:23):
So the amount of far smaller.

Speaker 7 (14:25):
TwixT bar is smaller cereal. It's really easy to do
with chips because the bag is so.

Speaker 4 (14:30):
Huge, the box is so huge, and.

Speaker 8 (14:32):
Then only half of the bag is full, or bottles
of juice that have a bigger and bigger indentation on
the bottom. That's a tricky one. So shrink flation is real.
It stinks. There's not really way to divide against it.
But here's a fun one and all. I can't remember
if we talked about this one yet, but this is
a spoiler for our other show, Ridiculous History. You're familiar

(14:53):
with Supreme Pizza.

Speaker 1 (14:55):
No, the actual like every topic.

Speaker 4 (15:00):
Did just drop a pizza.

Speaker 1 (15:04):
They are at the moment, so.

Speaker 8 (15:09):
We know what Supreme Pizza is that you go into
the place and it's the pizza with all the stuff
on it. So we have been working on an episode
about the history of Supreme Pizza. Oh yeah, this is
a real conspiracy. We can't confirm this happens everywhere. But
a friend of ours who is a career chef from

(15:30):
Chef Ben different from Chicago. That's a good way, yeah,
I replied, we got to talk about Noma too, that's
a good note. So he gave us the scoop that
was confirmed by other chefs in many restaurants, but not all.
The thing they call Supreme Pizza is all the leftover

(15:50):
ship from the toppy Like they just play a bucket
and then they throw it on the pizza and they
charge you out the ass for it.

Speaker 4 (16:04):
The worst version of slurry.

Speaker 7 (16:06):
You know, it's kind of like little bits of olive,
but not whole olives.

Speaker 4 (16:11):
Like it was sort of like.

Speaker 1 (16:12):
Like, where did this onion ring come from? That's weird, that's.

Speaker 8 (16:16):
Yeah, onion. So that's that's so fun. When we we
spent a lot of time thinking about food, just because
it's a great unifier. You can always talk to anybody
in the world about food. And we also find a
lot of food conspiracies because the restaurant industry is so crazy,
and that's where Nola would toss to you to talk
a little bit about the former best restaurant in the world.

Speaker 7 (16:39):
This one's kind of a bummer, but I think it's
important to talk about the head chef at this very
famous Copenhagen restaurant, Noma. And there was a big piece
I want to say it was in the New York
Times or it might have been, you know, I think
it was New York Times. It was an expos about
how he was basically like physically emotionally, you know, hazing
and abusing his staff, like hiding under and jabbing them

(17:00):
on the legs of forks, and.

Speaker 4 (17:02):
You know, I'm not joking, but he was down the
line like a mischievous.

Speaker 7 (17:12):
I guess I said it like that, but you know,
like punishing the whole staff for the in collection.

Speaker 4 (17:16):
Of the one, you know, like real, real six stuff.

Speaker 7 (17:20):
And he's had to step down and he's lost a
lot of sponsorships because of that, and it's becoming a
big thing. But our buddy chef Ben Uh wrote to
us about how true that stuff is and how widespread it.

Speaker 4 (17:31):
Is in fine dining.

Speaker 7 (17:33):
Really yeah, like truly horrific, Like what's the word when
you know, like the I was it was I was
given orders kind of stuff.

Speaker 8 (17:42):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's very hierarchical. There's a sustain Stanford prison,
Stanford Prison. That's a good way, or like the Milgrim stuff. Yeah.
The idea here is that it's such a dream job
to work and find dining that you'll put up with
so many things that just would not fly in any
other career path Hollywood like Hollywood, like people work in

(18:03):
the video game industry or at a.

Speaker 7 (18:05):
Video store if you're lucky enough to in one of
those that still exists, I'm joking, or record shop.

Speaker 4 (18:13):
No, you know that's there's a certain.

Speaker 7 (18:14):
Pedigree that goes along with working at a mega hip
records records store.

Speaker 8 (18:18):
Sure, and so these people will you know, get Crowder
band has to be signed.

Speaker 4 (18:22):
You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 8 (18:24):
People get chronically underpaid in the in the restaurant industry
to put up with all sorts of abuses, violations of
workers paid.

Speaker 7 (18:32):
There was another side story about interns that were getting
opportunities at NOMA, but completely you know, paid at all,
and they've had to pivot now to saying, well, we
pay the interns now.

Speaker 8 (18:44):
So I'm fear we.

Speaker 1 (18:45):
Pay our interns now too. It's crazy.

Speaker 4 (18:47):
Imagine that.

Speaker 8 (18:48):
Yeah, we gave up on interns, which is terrible because
I tried to. I tried to get us uh some
more and part of the program was paused because at
some point they were like, we do have to pay
these kids.

Speaker 4 (19:04):
Therefore it's not the schmorgasport.

Speaker 3 (19:06):
I was told I'm getting paid in college credit. You
are getting paid with your college credit and life experience.
And I will say one, I love to see people
getting paid for things.

Speaker 1 (19:15):
That's amazing.

Speaker 3 (19:15):
I don't want to be that person that's like, well,
I had to work for it, so you should do
That's stupid. If you can do better, amazing, do better
than me. But my experience as an unpaid intern changed
my life in so many ways. I got to and
it not just with radio, which is obviously what I
decided to get into, but I did an unpaid internship
for a senator in Florida. I thought I wanted to

(19:36):
be a politician until I was in that office and
was like, well, this is wildly ineffective. You do nothing
but screen calls all day. Oh yeah, with constituents calling
complaining that their trash can didn't get picked up when
it was supposed to. I'm like, you called your senator about.

Speaker 8 (19:50):
This, Oh, and they don't. This is asymmetric, right, because
they have so much more time than we will ever have,
you know what I mean? That trash can lid is
their fucking waterloo and they're not giving up rightly.

Speaker 7 (20:06):
To Ben's point though, about you know the article the
expos about the the Copenhagen restaurant. All of the chefs
that were interviewed all ended their statements with but it
was also awesome, and it opened all these doors for me.
And when I say awesome, they're not referring to the
actual WAF, just the experience and how it changed their lives.
What you're saying is true, and we even acknowledge that

(20:28):
on the podcast that it's not to say that experience
and this kind of stuff and being really put to
the ringer, isn't, you know, good for you as a
human or good for you career wise?

Speaker 3 (20:37):
But there are lines, Oh, I would have loved to
get paid for what I did when.

Speaker 7 (20:41):
I was not paid, but you would have preferred not
to have gotten poked in the shens by a sadistic
chef hiding under the table.

Speaker 3 (20:46):
I'm really struggling with this because I feel like I
would be the sadistic chef with the fork under the
table poking others.

Speaker 1 (20:52):
So that's why I laughed so hard.

Speaker 4 (20:53):
You wouldn't drop blood, though it would be a good
nature post.

Speaker 8 (20:57):
But then later you would have one of those heart
to heart meetings you'd be like, I'm tough on you
because I think one day you're going to be the
guy with the fork, right, and I want that for you.
This fork was given to me by my mental You.

Speaker 3 (21:10):
Will draw blood from your own victim, now this is mine. Yeah,
that's that's a great one. Okay, you know another one
along with the shrinkflation is And again this is not
necessarily just me saying it exists. I have read a
lot that it does exist, collegedly. Algorithmic pricing.

Speaker 5 (21:29):
Piece of ship.

Speaker 8 (21:30):
Yeah, oh terrible. Yeah, Oh my gosh.

Speaker 4 (21:33):
This is one of your pet peeves as a cheap skate.

Speaker 3 (21:37):
I know, I know, I'm getting ripped off because I
buy so much crap online. They're like, oh, she'll buy anything,
and I probably will, but go ahead.

Speaker 1 (21:44):
What is it?

Speaker 8 (21:45):
Dynamic pricing or algorithmic pricing. Dynamic pricing is the word
they use in the boardrooms.

Speaker 6 (21:51):
Uh.

Speaker 8 (21:51):
It is the idea that a price of the exact
same thing, the exact same sharpie marker, could be different
for all five of us, like the four of us
recording and you listening along at home, and it would
be based on information they have about you and your
habits that you have no control over. The easiest way

(22:13):
to do this experiment, to prove it to yourself is
get a buddy like Noel and I could hang out
and pull up uber or a lyft right, and we
could be in the same place, going to the same
end destination, and we might get different prices.

Speaker 7 (22:28):
And I will say, we talked about this aspect of
it too. It's not that different from the black box
of airline tickets. It's not that different from to your
point about Uber. I have no expectation that I'm going
to pay the same as you, even if we're standing
on the same corner.

Speaker 4 (22:41):
I just don't. But this is that taken. I should because.

Speaker 7 (22:46):
It's I think we already know or are used to
to a degree, that level of like, what is the
secret thing that drives the airplane price?

Speaker 4 (22:55):
What is the secret thing that drive We already don't.

Speaker 3 (22:57):
Know, and we still participate in the system, That's all
I'm saying, because we don't have another option. Right, Certainly
I want to go somewhere, I gotta fly there because
the US does not have.

Speaker 1 (23:04):
A great rail system. No, no, no, no, so I have.

Speaker 3 (23:08):
To I think I would be on board with algorithmic
pricing if it went across the board to billionaires, where
if a billionaire wants to take the same commercial flying,
then you have to pay seven hundred and fifty million
dollars for this ticket. It needs to be proportionate to
what I'm paying.

Speaker 8 (23:23):
I love that that's like parking or speeding tickets in Finland,
I want to say somewhere in Scandinavia, it's based on
your income. Yeah. This also dynamic pricing is we did
in an episode recently called Big Brother in Your Grocery
Store and it's coming to a grocery store near you
if you live in the United States. Instead of the

(23:43):
old printed labels, there are now going to be electronic
labels ink.

Speaker 4 (23:48):
So it even kind of looks like it's tough.

Speaker 8 (23:51):
Yeah, it's tough disease, and it will right now. It
just makes it easier for them to change it without
sending somebody around with a bunch of stickers and a
label maker. But ultimately, what we think is going to
happen is that when you enter the grocery store, somehow
there's going to be something that knows about you, where

(24:12):
you're going, where you're walking, and the prices will change
around you. So you could go to a shout out
to our pal Andrew. You could go to the cereal
aisle on the way in, you can see some cereal
and say not five dollars is too much for that,
And then you circle back as walk into the register,
you go, huh, why is it four dollars and fifteen cents. Now,

(24:33):
I guess it's just.

Speaker 4 (24:34):
A really dystopian black mirror extension of targeted advertising.

Speaker 7 (24:40):
Oh yeah, it's not a target and the degree to
which ads are targeted at us.

Speaker 1 (24:45):
But ads, I have a choice.

Speaker 3 (24:46):
If you're gonna not give me a choice about how
much I have to pay for the same item that
you're paying for, that's totally different, It's true.

Speaker 4 (24:52):
But also you are the currency.

Speaker 7 (24:54):
By being you know, present to that ad, you're part
of the system that's making that ad make money. So
you're to participating in it, whether you buy the thing
or not.

Speaker 3 (25:04):
I know, even the type of credit card that you
use will be part of Okay, So if you have
a black card an AMEX card, you're going to be
paying through the ass for something that maybe I wouldn't
be paying through the ass for. Like it's it's ridiculous.
I was talking the saying to Ben earlier today. I
think the only way to affect change right now is
by hitting people in their pockets, because nobody cares about

(25:26):
anything except their money, right So if we all want
to stop this from happening, we all need to stop
spending our money somewhere. Why are we all still paying taxes?

Speaker 1 (25:36):
Our government is garbished.

Speaker 3 (25:38):
Why am I paying you to punish me because you
can't do your job. It's crazy, Like, just because we're.

Speaker 7 (25:43):
Scared of them coming after us and garnishing our wages
or shutting down our lives, they could do that.

Speaker 3 (25:49):
I imagine them saying, you will pay me all the time,
whether I work or don't, whether I help you or don't,
whether you have the things you think you're paying for
or not, You're still gonna pay me.

Speaker 1 (25:57):
That is the most gangster shit I have ever heard
of my life.

Speaker 8 (26:00):
Also, consider that most people don't tip thirty percent at
a restaurant, So why am I tip in the United States.

Speaker 7 (26:05):
Thirty ben don't you even still have to continue paying
even if you moved to another country unless you renounce
your citizenship?

Speaker 8 (26:13):
Right? Yes, if you time, will trust me if you
live in like even if, for instance, like we all
work for this organization called iHeart. If iHeart sent us.

Speaker 3 (26:26):
What we do for now, we'll see how they feel
about these episodes go on.

Speaker 8 (26:29):
So if they sent us this, come on, they sent
us all to London or something, and we had our
new London office and we had to live in London,
we would pay UK taxes, we'd pay the crazy taxes
London has, and then we would get something for it. Right, yeah,
we still also have to pay taxes in the United States.
Until he went to the embassy and we're like, hey,

(26:50):
with all due respect, I quit. And you know what
they do when you quit? They charge you a fee.

Speaker 4 (26:57):
And they cut off your pinkyuza.

Speaker 8 (27:00):
Wrap it with a little flag. You'll never forget.

Speaker 3 (27:03):
But it's just wild, like you know, the government can't
figure their shit out. They're fighting, so they shut down.
So now TSA is not getting paid and now we
all have to wait an hour long lines, five hours
long lines because they're not doing it. And you're still
going to come and collect money for me for what.

Speaker 7 (27:18):
I don't want to pay for that Christie nome Ad
where she's riding the horse.

Speaker 4 (27:26):
We have, but what we mark our money for, what
it gets used for? And does we.

Speaker 3 (27:30):
Should be able to elsewhere else do you pay for
a service and not get it and they look at
you and they're.

Speaker 8 (27:37):
Like privatized insurance, Oh god know what the service is?

Speaker 5 (27:43):
Like?

Speaker 4 (27:43):
I don't feel entitled to anything in this country for
when I.

Speaker 1 (27:46):
Hit one more pothole. I swear, can you go?

Speaker 7 (27:50):
My neighborhood is recently completely paid and that was cool
with that was also a local local tax, right, yeah,
maybe maybe.

Speaker 1 (27:57):
You guys may have heard of this.

Speaker 3 (27:58):
Here in New York City, we have congestion ing, which
is like Diamond, the bane of her existence.

Speaker 1 (28:02):
Oh yeah, they yes, Diamond.

Speaker 3 (28:05):
Would you like to talk about why Kathy Hogle is
your nemesis?

Speaker 8 (28:10):
She's walking slowly to the micro.

Speaker 5 (28:13):
Oh I hate congestion, you know.

Speaker 2 (28:16):
She was because of her, not really because of her.

Speaker 5 (28:20):
She's one of them.

Speaker 2 (28:21):
Zoron is on my list too now because he's like
really into it.

Speaker 4 (28:25):
No, people love him wrong.

Speaker 2 (28:28):
I'm curious, but like, why do I have to pay
to come to work?

Speaker 8 (28:33):
Everything doesn't make.

Speaker 5 (28:35):
Any sense, and I understand why. Number one, I thought
that we were trying to get away from the British.
Why are we following what they're doing in the UK with.

Speaker 8 (28:44):
Con So, to be clear, what is congestion.

Speaker 2 (28:49):
Is basically you get charged a fee to come into.

Speaker 4 (28:54):
Manhattans like a toll.

Speaker 2 (28:56):
Yes, okay, not basically, yes, it is, and it's like
a specific only the poping part of Manhattan where everyone
wants to go.

Speaker 3 (29:04):
Like it's like what below sixtieth and if you come
through any bridge or tunnel.

Speaker 1 (29:09):
Oh wow, and after a certain.

Speaker 8 (29:11):
Time okay, so it changes depending on it's twenty four hours, okay,
one time is Morks Yeah.

Speaker 2 (29:19):
After five am, which I think is insane because what
about the people who have to start their work.

Speaker 4 (29:25):
Sure, so that's another tax.

Speaker 7 (29:27):
That's a tax, yes, and you're already playing a shiploaded tax.

Speaker 2 (29:30):
Yes, And then make it seem like they want you
to not drive in the cities.

Speaker 5 (29:37):
Get on the train. I would if the train was
safe twenty four hours.

Speaker 8 (29:41):
Ooh good point. Yeah, you're charging.

Speaker 5 (29:44):
Me up the ass for what who my life on
the line.

Speaker 8 (29:48):
I don't say.

Speaker 1 (29:49):
It ended up.

Speaker 3 (29:50):
We calculated it's about three or four thousand dollars a
year per person.

Speaker 2 (29:54):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (29:54):
When you add this in, it is insane. And companies
did not get people.

Speaker 1 (29:58):
Raises to accommodate for it.

Speaker 3 (30:00):
And to Diamond's point, when you're us and you're coming
in really really early in the morning, guess what I'm
not doing at four am. I Am not hopping on
a train, no way. But the bigger thing about it
that everyone is enraged about right now is you have
all this money, now, where is it going? What have
you done with it? Because not a potholes it has
been fixed, the trains are still sucky. Everything like, you've

(30:21):
got this money, where's the money going? Why can't we
follow these So again, I think we should have a choice.
I'm not paying this tax.

Speaker 1 (30:28):
I'm not doing you have fixed it, I'm not paying it.

Speaker 8 (30:31):
I think that is I mean, there's a historical precedent
for that, revolutionarily speaking right the tea.

Speaker 3 (30:38):
But now it's like you say, hey, I would like
to make some improvements here because this is bad.

Speaker 1 (30:42):
And everyone's like, well, I guess you made America. Actually
really love America.

Speaker 3 (30:46):
And I would like to stay here. So I think
we need to make a couple of tweaks to just
make it better.

Speaker 8 (30:50):
The best part about this country, We've mentioned this before
in the past, that you don't always see in other countries,
is that we have the ability, for now to talk
as much shit as we want without getting black bagged
or putting a van you know what I mean, for now,
and that sadly may not always be the case. But

(31:10):
I completely agree with the idea of a general strike
like hitting people in the pocket.

Speaker 3 (31:15):
Past absolutely number of taxes and like you said, it
would benefit all of us greatly. Oh yeah, just at
least in the short term, you know what I mean?

Speaker 1 (31:22):
Like you, how I get how much extra?

Speaker 5 (31:24):
Now?

Speaker 3 (31:25):
Well, well, I would love to see some government officials
do the stuff that they have looked me in the
face and said they're going to do, because I haven't
seen any of it.

Speaker 6 (31:32):
Why And here's another part too.

Speaker 8 (31:43):
We can always pull the hypocrisy card because the US
government is terrible with their own money. We were talking
about this like the uh you know, one of the
worst cases in the in all of congressional irs. His
three is the Pentagon. The Pentagon, you're.

Speaker 4 (32:02):
Talking about the lobster, the stakes.

Speaker 7 (32:06):
Yeah, the US budget things so inefficient and nobody, nobody
knows how much money is in the Pentagon's budget.

Speaker 8 (32:16):
They have failed every fucking audit, like to the point
where any of us would be in federal prison. But
the Pentagon has loopholes at black bag stuff. And what
I want to pick up on what you just mentioned there, Noel, you.

Speaker 7 (32:29):
Know how much they spent on that stuff, and it
could have built a lot of schools, could have done
a lot of things, could have paid for a lot of.

Speaker 8 (32:35):
Baby, you know what I mean, think of the taxpayers keyboard.
But the keyboard. But the thing, the interesting thing that
a lot of people don't know that I would say
is conspiratorial. We talked about the Pentagon in particular paying
out the Wazoo for very simple stuff like three hundred
bucks for a hammer.

Speaker 6 (32:53):
Like.

Speaker 8 (32:56):
Another another great conspiracy. It's because at the end of
the fiscal year, does that use it or lose it stuff?
The end of the fiscal year, starting on the East
coast of the United States and going with the time
zones all the way to the West coast, people who
are in charge of their slice of the budget of
the military frantically try to figure out a way to

(33:19):
spend the money. It's like a supermarket sweep thing. And
so the so the catbird position, the best seat in
the house is in a fort on the west coast,
because as the budget deadline is closing, these guys start
calling you to like spend money on your stuff or
to give you money.

Speaker 4 (33:37):
What even is a fruit basket stand? I don't know
there was a line item for just the stand.

Speaker 8 (33:44):
Just the state.

Speaker 4 (33:45):
It got so many fruit baskets just laying around. You
got to put on stands you like a whole order for.

Speaker 8 (33:49):
Those people don't like floor fruit.

Speaker 1 (33:51):
I guess no, that's true. I don't want floor fruit.

Speaker 4 (33:53):
Is it a basket? It's separated from the forefront.

Speaker 3 (33:59):
I'll never understand how the government can say, unfortunately, we
have to cut a bunch of you know, Medicaid, Medicare
because we just don't have the money. But we do
have the money to buy a random Air Force administrator's
grand piano.

Speaker 4 (34:12):
And you just don't understand how the world was.

Speaker 1 (34:15):
I don't understand. You're right, I do not understand that.

Speaker 8 (34:18):
Why And they're right, why can't we have millions of
dollars of taxpayer money to make commercials just sort of
about the idea of us, you know what I mean,
that's a real thing that happened, not running for a campaign?
Who was it?

Speaker 6 (34:31):
Was?

Speaker 8 (34:31):
It? Nome right?

Speaker 7 (34:33):
We're talking about the horses, right, and how they're shooting puppies.

Speaker 4 (34:37):
That was earlier.

Speaker 1 (34:38):
Sorry, how dare I remember history?

Speaker 2 (34:41):
I know?

Speaker 8 (34:41):
Right, Let's see there's another there's another fun conspiracy or
not fun. But I think it's interesting. We'd love your
thoughts on this. How how things like chat GPT are
changing education, like shout out to all our teachers in
the audience right now, hungover or not, like, what do

(35:02):
you think is happening? Do you think that kids are
actually gonna be quote unquote dumber? Or is that just
curmudgeonly fear.

Speaker 1 (35:10):
It could be? I mean, could both things be true?

Speaker 5 (35:14):
I think two.

Speaker 3 (35:17):
We were talking about this the other day. I mean,
it's like a tool, like anything else. A hammer could
help you build a house, or you could murder somebody
with it. And I think that with chat GPT right now,
what I'm seeing so far, I do think that we're
going to be worse off as a society because if
you take chat GPT out of the mix and you
just talk about social media and dating apps. The ability
to now think about what you're gonna say before you

(35:39):
say it has made people interact on dating apps for
a very long time essentially as pen pals, and when
they meet in person, they have no social skills anymore.

Speaker 1 (35:47):
They're just gone.

Speaker 3 (35:48):
People don't know when you go out anymore. Very few
people under a certain age are talking to other people
that they don't know. The social aspect of everything has
really gotten killed.

Speaker 4 (35:59):
I think find COVID too, that exacerbated that yeah. Agree.

Speaker 3 (36:03):
I think it's been this perfect storm or maybe horrific
storm of technology and you know, fear. I think we're
all very lucky that we grew up in a time
where if you went out and did black out, you know,
face down, ass up somewhere, your friends just made fun
of you for it.

Speaker 4 (36:17):
The next day.

Speaker 3 (36:18):
Sure it didn't live on the internet forever, whereas like now,
kids aren't going out and doing it anymore because that
fear is real. You don't want that to be your forever.
You don't want to be a meme. You don't want
to be that video that everybody watches.

Speaker 2 (36:30):
Yea.

Speaker 7 (36:30):
And on the other side of that, I think dudes
too are a little afraid to approach women in public
for fear of being seen as being creepy or something
like that. And there's like almost the opposite effect, like
it's it's having a chilling effect in that respect. I'm
talking about guys that are like, you know, have good intentions,
but there's almost this sense of like, I don't want
to be seen as all of this horrible stuff that's
that's happening, you know.

Speaker 8 (36:50):
And in the media get social skills to navigate that,
and we're saying that social skills are dying out because
people are increasing and you want, yeah, because the online
representation of you, that part of your personality or that
curated thing, is increasingly different from the you in real life.
I feel like I've seen people on those dates now

(37:13):
that you say it.

Speaker 3 (37:16):
You were still charming and charismatic via text, and now
here you are just staring, like asking me if I
like the way the meat is cooked.

Speaker 8 (37:23):
That's very weird, just frantically putting GPT prompts in the table.

Speaker 7 (37:28):
I think to Ben and I kind of grew up
on the cusp of crazy internet culture.

Speaker 4 (37:32):
Pre they were still dial up. It was still AOL.

Speaker 7 (37:34):
It wasn't just flooding the you know everything in the
way that it has now, And I think we have
retained some social skills maybe because of that kind of
existing before it was sort of everywhere.

Speaker 4 (37:45):
So we have a little bit of both sides.

Speaker 1 (37:46):
I think it's absolutely true.

Speaker 3 (37:48):
And they studies just came out that said gen Z
is officially the first generation.

Speaker 1 (37:52):
To have lower IQ's in their parents.

Speaker 6 (37:54):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (37:55):
Yeah, I mean I think that would answer your question right.

Speaker 3 (37:57):
As far as how technology is impacting people, I think
it's very easy to not have a thought of your
own and instead of sitting there and struggling with what
do I feel, what is my opinion, to ask this
outside entity and then form your opinion based on that.
And I think the scariest thing about it is it's
all programmed by humans.

Speaker 1 (38:15):
At the end, then humans have intention and all of
these If you look at who is.

Speaker 3 (38:20):
In charge of them and what they're doing with the information,
and also what they will and won't talk to you about.

Speaker 4 (38:24):
What their agenda exactly.

Speaker 3 (38:26):
It's it's kind of terrifying. And I do think it's
making people think less, despite the fact it will tell
you because I've asked these things that it's helping people
think more. And I say, a pr you are a
liar and I don't like you.

Speaker 1 (38:41):
I tell mine all the time, I don't trust you.

Speaker 8 (38:42):
And it says you're absolutely right, exactly.

Speaker 1 (38:46):
What an amazing thought. You're so smart, and.

Speaker 7 (38:49):
We'll say, my seventeen year old won't use it at
all at freaks them out at all. And I don't
know if that's the case with their peers. I think
it is to a degree at least of a certain
said you know, a certain personality type level of interest
in culture, for example, and you know, art and weird stuff.
I think it makes you distrustful of that because I've

(39:10):
been surprised in online dating myself how many dates all
go on where women are just like, yeah, I use
it for everything, I use it for everything.

Speaker 1 (39:17):
I really don't like that.

Speaker 4 (39:18):
It's been very shocking. And the people that I've.

Speaker 7 (39:21):
Seemed, you know, in chatting and even in person, really thoughtful,
intelligent people, and then they just drop that like it's
not supposed to freak me out.

Speaker 8 (39:29):
It kind it is. Yeah, it freaks me out a
little bit too. And there's there are two related things
that we're saying here that I would love your thoughts on. First, okay,
taking the logical extension of a distinct online persona existing
right uh crutched up but were held up by chat

(39:52):
GPT or AI assist a curative version of you. You know,
what do you think about the idea that we're getting
closer and closer to bringing back the dead through technology?
Like this way?

Speaker 1 (40:05):
Well I did it?

Speaker 8 (40:06):
You did it?

Speaker 1 (40:07):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (40:07):
Wait, okay, So my boyfriend passed away while we were dating,
and if I were to say there was a love
of my life for a soulmate. It was him and
I when I got grock and I made people kiss
I took pictures of him and I just told it, hey,

(40:28):
bring this to life. I want to see if you
could actually do it. And when I tell you, it
nailed it perfectly. I mean his smile, his movements, the
way he kissed my forehead, everything. It made me take
a step back for a second and think, how did
you do that? He wasn't smiling in that picture. How
did you nail his smile so perfectly? How did you
nail the way that he interacted with me so perfectly?

(40:49):
And I can see how dangerous that could get for people.

Speaker 7 (40:53):
So the makeout thing was the gateway dr Yeah, and
you're like, well wait a minute, Yeah, the power I was.

Speaker 1 (41:03):
I got drunk with power.

Speaker 3 (41:04):
And I did it and it was an interesting I
didn't do it more than just the one day that
I was messing around with it, because it fucked me
up so much.

Speaker 4 (41:13):
No doubt that I was like experience, Yeah.

Speaker 1 (41:16):
Me too.

Speaker 3 (41:16):
But so I'm far enough removed from it now that
I know what's real and what's not real. And it
didn't intrude on my grieving process.

Speaker 8 (41:24):
Okay, that's good.

Speaker 3 (41:25):
I mean, you're still I guess you're always grieving, but
it wasn't so fresh that it was able to, you know,
in some way convince me. No, he's not gone, he's
still here. Look, you can still see him anytime you want.

Speaker 1 (41:36):
You can talk to him.

Speaker 4 (41:37):
That's my question. What's it for? Is it for?

Speaker 6 (41:40):
I don't.

Speaker 7 (41:40):
I don't think there's a world where it helps you
with grieving. If anything, it keeps you hanging on with
false expectations, and it is worst. You are hallucinating a
false reality.

Speaker 3 (41:51):
If the goal is to make us all, you know,
the little things in the pods and the matrix, where
they're just feeding off of us, that would be a
really great way to do it. You take reality off
the table, you make everybody want it to be exactly,
and you just put hey, whatever you want the world
to be is what the world is actually going to be.
While you sit in your chair and don't move and
refused to whatever it is that you're fused to do.

Speaker 1 (42:13):
It's wild.

Speaker 8 (42:14):
I mean, we're building, we're building a society in which
the human element becomes increasingly irrelevant over time, or becomes redundant.
And this is strange because the reason we're fascinated with
this idea of bringing back the dead is that technology
is making all the old legends and folklore closer to

(42:35):
the truth than they have ever been before. So we could.

Speaker 7 (42:38):
Screen happens stories when you bring back the dead.

Speaker 3 (42:42):
Exactly exactly nice if you could bring them back and
had to get the truth from the cemetery.

Speaker 8 (42:48):
About this, Like if we take it past the grieving process,
there's a world where you could feed everything we know
about trying to think of a real piece of shit, uh,
Henry Kissinger. Feed everything we know about Henry Kissinger, everything
he's written, everything he said, all of his you know,
pivotal moments. Feed all of that into an algorithm, a

(43:11):
great uh emulator, and then you could ask something very
much like Henry Kissinger what he wants to do about
Iran or something like that. And then if we get
to a world where this kind of AI interaction actually
is normalized or.

Speaker 7 (43:28):
It's actually you just put the new Kissinger two point
zero back in the chair he used to.

Speaker 4 (43:33):
Occupy and get in play, make the choices.

Speaker 8 (43:35):
And I think that's gonna happen with Jimmy Buffett.

Speaker 4 (43:38):
A pivot and stupid.

Speaker 3 (43:41):
He made head back to the beginning Andrew. Andrew hasn't
thought that one through all the way. He keeps saying,
Jimmy Buffett too big to fail. They're going to replace
him with a new Jimmy Buffett. But he's already dead
and everybody knows he's dead, and he's been dead for
a while, and.

Speaker 1 (43:57):
We had to google it.

Speaker 4 (43:58):
We had to google google it to.

Speaker 8 (44:01):
Just tell him me.

Speaker 4 (44:02):
He's this is horrible.

Speaker 8 (44:04):
Just so your most dramatic voice, like I talked to
the guys about the buffet thing, and you were messing
with forces you do not understand.

Speaker 1 (44:12):
That's what.

Speaker 3 (44:13):
Finally somebody reached out to us buffet and it was
big Buffet, big big buffet industry.

Speaker 1 (44:19):
They said, shut up, shut up, don't see anymore.

Speaker 8 (44:21):
They gave you a twenty percent off coupon for Margaritaville. Definitely,
just so you know, it's still chill.

Speaker 4 (44:27):
They make machines that you can buy to do it
at home.

Speaker 7 (44:29):
Can you believe that Margaritaville branded Margarita machines.

Speaker 1 (44:32):
It's crazy. There's all this money going too big to fail.

Speaker 4 (44:36):
Yeah, like the US government anyway, our cruises though apparently
I didn't know this.

Speaker 3 (44:41):
There are yes, so we've heard. I don't think any
of us have been on them. But you know, I
really appreciate you guys coming in and we've again gone
for about an hour, and yeah, I love you guys
so much. I could do this all day, but I
know everybody has places to be. You have flights to catch,
hopefully at the airport.

Speaker 4 (44:59):
I gotta go to Tracks n y C. That's my
next move.

Speaker 1 (45:02):
Okay, you're I'm obsessed.

Speaker 4 (45:04):
With that guy. I'm just do you know what I'm
talking about?

Speaker 1 (45:06):
No idea.

Speaker 4 (45:07):
It's a he's in the diamond district.

Speaker 7 (45:08):
He's this dude that does like he'll hang out outside
his shop and like get people passing by to guess
the weight of a golden object and then he'll like
give it to them.

Speaker 4 (45:15):
He's hugely TikTok. It's like real life gems. He makes
like rapper chains, like big, you know, neck pieces and stuff.

Speaker 7 (45:21):
And he also there's this clip of him crashing out
online over at this other diamond shop where.

Speaker 1 (45:28):
Somebody said it was fake.

Speaker 4 (45:31):
Use my name.

Speaker 2 (45:34):
The thing.

Speaker 4 (45:35):
I gotta go check out his shop.

Speaker 1 (45:36):
I'm a fan, all right, you name dropped him.

Speaker 3 (45:38):
Sadly, you're gonna have to go check him out before
this podcast is released or else. He could be like
I was just talking about, you could listen.

Speaker 8 (45:43):
To It's you said you were going to see me.

Speaker 1 (45:48):
You used my name, mister Beast.

Speaker 4 (45:52):
What did you just he makes mister he makes like
gold stuff for mister Beast. I think we're a little
what I'm.

Speaker 3 (45:57):
Getting a conspiracy theories. Don't give me started on mister
beasts side. I'm one hundred percent sure that the whole
Beast Games thing is scripted, start to finish.

Speaker 7 (46:06):
Did you hear the thing about the poly Market scandal
about that Beast Games.

Speaker 4 (46:11):
Was betting on the outcomes on poly Market and they've
got their account frozen. They didn't make gazillion.

Speaker 3 (46:17):
That is it is totally scripted. Because there's not a planet.

Speaker 4 (46:19):
You can't make the bet.

Speaker 1 (46:20):
Anybody would do stuff like that yet and you can't
make the bet.

Speaker 3 (46:23):
Also, I know that he does a lot of good
and that's great, and I think it's important to do good.
I think once you record yourself constantly doing good, in
my head, it just ne gates it.

Speaker 4 (46:31):
A little bit performative.

Speaker 1 (46:33):
Yeah, it's very performative.

Speaker 3 (46:35):
I can't stand when people do the videos of the
hey I'm going to go feed this homeless person, but
I'm also going to make sure that my friend is
rolling while I go talk to this person who's at
a very low point in their life and make myself
look amazing.

Speaker 4 (46:45):
Icky just don't like his creepy smile. I don't know
something about it.

Speaker 8 (46:50):
The eyes, that's all I need to hear. I've never
met him. It doesn't match the ice for president.

Speaker 4 (46:56):
By the way, did you see Trump and Door?

Speaker 1 (47:00):
How do you get pitt stains on a suit? Is that?

Speaker 8 (47:03):
I mean practice practice?

Speaker 1 (47:05):
That would be like me having a pit stain through
this jacket.

Speaker 2 (47:07):
That.

Speaker 8 (47:09):
Yeah, because he's like, look how hard I work as
a politician?

Speaker 5 (47:16):
Please?

Speaker 1 (47:17):
My favorite was that Trump said whatever whatever he runs for,
no matter what, what.

Speaker 6 (47:23):
Do you mean?

Speaker 3 (47:24):
But then you know, Lenna McMahon is in charge of
the Department of Education, so he's not kidding profession.

Speaker 7 (47:28):
Right, Oh gosh kidding the m m A fighters training
the FBI is next.

Speaker 4 (47:34):
That's that's great, that'sdiocracy.

Speaker 3 (47:37):
Yeah, and you got the guy from the real world
road rules whatever as the head of the Transportation Department,
the Department of Department of Transportation.

Speaker 8 (47:44):
Which position are you getting in me? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (47:48):
What am I getting in?

Speaker 8 (47:49):
Do you want to be ahead of the I R S.

Speaker 1 (47:51):
I would love to be.

Speaker 7 (47:52):
It seems like a boring job, but we can now
we can work out her conspiracy from within. Yes, I
think we should make Puck from Real World San Francisco
the head of the irs deep Cut.

Speaker 4 (48:02):
Probably not.

Speaker 8 (48:04):
We should award it to Jimmy Buffer talking about my
favorite favorite deep cut. Oh Man, check out our first
episode if you want to hear more hot takes.

Speaker 1 (48:15):
I love this.

Speaker 3 (48:15):
I would love to have you guys back whenever you're
back in town, which I know is not often because
you live in as your hat says, Atlanta, it's off and.

Speaker 4 (48:22):
Off We'll be This is so fun. We'd give you
this all day.

Speaker 1 (48:26):
If people want to find you on Netflix.

Speaker 5 (48:29):
How did they.

Speaker 8 (48:31):
Check out stuff they don't want you to know? On Netflix,
you'll see us, along with a lot of our peer podcast.
If you dig us, you'll dig them, uh and people
about you name we Also we also love validation, so
on Netflix you can have the option to give us
one thumbs up, or you can go a little extra

(48:51):
and give us two thumbs. Don't give us there and
half a thumb, don't give us a.

Speaker 4 (48:56):
Boss you can.

Speaker 8 (48:58):
Also, you can find our podcast wherever you find your
favorite shows on any platform. You can find us as
individuals on the old Instagram. In a burst of creativity,
I call myself at Ben Bulletin.

Speaker 4 (49:09):
I'm at how Now.

Speaker 7 (49:10):
Noel Brown and Ben and I also do another podcast
together called Ridiculous History. It's about ridiculous history. So yeah,
if you like us talking about this stuff, you'd probably
dig that one too.

Speaker 6 (49:19):
It's fun.

Speaker 1 (49:20):
Well, thank you guys so much for spending so much
time with me. I appreciate it. This is good stuff
of it.

Speaker 8 (49:24):
How do we get you on our show?

Speaker 1 (49:26):
Tell me how to do it?

Speaker 5 (49:27):
I'll be there.

Speaker 1 (49:27):
What Yeah, just let me know.

Speaker 4 (49:29):
This is wonderful.

Speaker 1 (49:30):
I'm in. Thank you so much, guys.

Speaker 3 (49:40):
All right, Diamond, are you a conspiracy theory person or not?

Speaker 1 (49:45):
Does it bore you?

Speaker 5 (49:46):
It bores me, But I like that's my producer. No, no, no,
I like.

Speaker 2 (49:51):
The conversations that you guys have, Like I'm not gonna
nice recovery, but no, I'm not going when I go
down that.

Speaker 5 (49:57):
Rabbit hole on TikTok, I'm like blah blah blah.

Speaker 3 (50:00):
Yeah, no, is it because you don't believe it or
because you don't want to go down the rabbit hole
and then be like, what is going on?

Speaker 1 (50:07):
I don't believe it?

Speaker 2 (50:07):
But then I also don't trust myself, right, So like
I if I decided to go down the dinosaurs aren't
a real rabbit hole, I would be dying on that
hill where it's like, I'm just saying dinosaurs don't didn't
exist because I don't really give.

Speaker 5 (50:24):
A fucking it irritates people. I mean, I love it.

Speaker 1 (50:26):
She's a troll.

Speaker 2 (50:27):
Yeah, Like it's like, that's my way to troll you guys.
If Trump could be president, then I can irritate you
guys and say that dinosaurs aren't real, they never existed
and were being duped.

Speaker 3 (50:38):
Do you know that is how he has changed my
life in a positive way? What because if anyone tells
me I can't do anything, I'm like, Donald Trump is president, Yeah,
I can do whatever the fuck.

Speaker 1 (50:45):
I want to. Hello watch me, Donald, Hey bosses, watch
these knees.

Speaker 5 (50:49):
Oh god, oh my god? You know you scare me?

Speaker 1 (50:55):
You do you don't scare me.

Speaker 3 (50:57):
I enjoy you, and I will applaud and encourage all
of your dreams to I'm true. Do you know what
I think I know you will never do it because
we already talked about it. I think you would be
great on reality TV. I actually think you would be
very entertaining.

Speaker 5 (51:08):
I think I would be so boring. I would be
one of those people who they said, get her off. Nope,
and I'm one of those people.

Speaker 3 (51:16):
You would be the sleeper that's like comes across as
though they're normal or whatever, and then everybody would catch
you pulling people.

Speaker 1 (51:22):
Aside, like hey, can we have a chat? Did you know?

Speaker 3 (51:25):
Blah blah blah, because you would have all the tea
and then you would tell all the tea. But he
will come across so nice and kind.

Speaker 2 (51:32):
My thing is like, to be on a reality show,
you have to argue with people. I don't argue so
like I just it's like no, no, thank you.

Speaker 1 (51:38):
I think I was born to argue.

Speaker 4 (51:40):
Oh God, I'm not sure.

Speaker 1 (51:41):
Sometimes people have that energy.

Speaker 5 (51:43):
I'm like, if this is exhausting by.

Speaker 1 (51:45):
Somebody has to do it. Somebody has to do it God.
Otherwise you would just have.

Speaker 3 (51:49):
People walking around spewing out this like false information or
crazy takes all the time.

Speaker 1 (51:54):
There has to be one person that's like, nah, you're
like watch and here we go. Up taking her earings off.

Speaker 3 (52:01):
She goes, by the way, my goal this year of
flowing like water, it's still happening.

Speaker 5 (52:07):
Oh god, no it's not.

Speaker 1 (52:09):
It is too We are a fire sign.

Speaker 3 (52:11):
It doesn't work that way into April and she's been
calm as ever. We need an astrologist. I gotta put
that on my Oh that would be fun. I would
love to have you analyzed me.

Speaker 5 (52:22):
Yeah, you, I know me. I gotta look for one.

Speaker 3 (52:27):
The fire signs I will say tend to be my favorites,
but I bet they I bet they are your favorites. Elvis, Danielle,
and me. We're all fire signs, three different ones, but
all the fire signs fascinating stuff. I'm actually kind of
surprised that Danielle is a fire sign because she doesn't
come across to me as much of specifically, like the
Aries fire sign. She doesn't come across the same way.

(52:49):
And maybe it's because she's a woman versus the male
aries that I know that absolutely fit that description. But
she seems a little more easy going, I think than
most fire signs.

Speaker 5 (52:59):
She's a aies.

Speaker 1 (53:01):
The fun does that mean about me?

Speaker 5 (53:03):
Well, I'll kill you.

Speaker 1 (53:05):
I mean water.

Speaker 2 (53:07):
I don't like water.

Speaker 1 (53:10):
It's fine. I can't change you. I can only change me.

Speaker 5 (53:13):
You are sizzling.

Speaker 2 (53:18):
It's like when a little bit of water is in
a pan. Oh yeah, and you turn it on and
it just sizzles. Yeah, that's the water that you are.
Still water, baby, still water, spicy water, spicy water.

Speaker 5 (53:29):
Kids call uh Seltzer. Oh god, I love it so cute.

Speaker 3 (53:33):
I was talking about how our our gen zers in
this building make me laugh so hard because they just
don't have like a ton of actual emotion, Like they
say it with words, but you don't ever see it.
So if I say something and they think it's super funny,
they'll look me deadpan, no emotion and.

Speaker 1 (53:50):
Be like, oh my god, dying. Yeah I'm fucking dead.

Speaker 5 (53:56):
I don't know what is that about.

Speaker 3 (53:57):
Oh my god. Cackling. I'm like you, literally, you haven't
moved a muscle on your face.

Speaker 2 (54:02):
I cackle.

Speaker 3 (54:03):
I know me too, So I'm like, hello, do you
know how many cackles I edit out of the podcast?

Speaker 1 (54:08):
I have the most obnoxious laugh.

Speaker 3 (54:10):
And what's crazy is I was doing these questions, just
like get to know yourself questions, and it was like
when do you feel most attractive? And I said, when
I'm laughing and having a good time, and then I
hear myself laugh and I'm.

Speaker 5 (54:20):
Like, oh that might that might be a dump scare
of some buddy.

Speaker 1 (54:23):
It is a jump. Shut up. No, I'm talking about
me too.

Speaker 5 (54:28):
Shut up.

Speaker 2 (54:29):
Like Nate says, Diamond has the best laugh. She has
the most exciting level you do. Yeah, I sound insane.

Speaker 1 (54:35):
Your genuine laugh makes me laugh. I love it. I
love a little outburst. I'm a fan when you can't
hold it in.

Speaker 5 (54:44):
Oh that happened to me that I didn't tell you that.

Speaker 6 (54:47):
I know.

Speaker 5 (54:47):
All my flight to Atlanta a few weeks ago.

Speaker 1 (54:49):
You had an outburst, Diamond.

Speaker 2 (54:51):
Now you have you laugh and like you know, you're
not supposed to be laughing, but you can't stop laughing.
Oh God, that is the first time it actually happened
to me where I legit.

Speaker 1 (55:04):
The fact that you're supposed to stop laughing is making.

Speaker 5 (55:06):
You laugh more.

Speaker 1 (55:07):
It what happened?

Speaker 2 (55:08):
So me and my best friend Ayana went to Atlanta.
She's and we're on the plane. She's in the window seat,
I'm in the middle seat. There's a woman in the.

Speaker 5 (55:18):
Aisle, see okay, And the woman was making.

Speaker 2 (55:22):
These insanely loud, yawning noises and her mouth.

Speaker 3 (55:27):
Okay, and so like we talked about this the other day, Okay,
go ahead, sorry, she was.

Speaker 5 (55:31):
Like, and I was like, this has to.

Speaker 2 (55:36):
Be like when I'm putting positions like this, I always
think like there's a camera somewhere, because this.

Speaker 5 (55:42):
Has to be a fucking joke. Like I can't take
it seriously.

Speaker 2 (55:44):
And at one point Ayana just couldn't take it anymore.

Speaker 5 (55:48):
She goes no, no, no, no, no on the fucking
plane and.

Speaker 2 (55:55):
I I could not and then like I look over,
like she's screaming no, and the woman is like ah,
like literally at the same time, I look over and
there's this older black couple who decided that they were gonna.

Speaker 1 (56:08):
Lean forward to see what happened.

Speaker 5 (56:10):
The guy in front of us look back. I was like,
oh my god, you can't make this shit up. And
I could not stop. I could not stop laughing.

Speaker 1 (56:18):
That sounds hilarious.

Speaker 5 (56:19):
Oh it was the best. It was the best. That
was a good fucking laugh, I.

Speaker 3 (56:23):
Think, and thinking about it now, you were laughing again,
because that's just hilarious. It's really tough, like the times
that I very distinctly remember like laughing until I cried
and my stomach was hurting.

Speaker 1 (56:33):
It's happened here a lot.

Speaker 3 (56:34):
There have been a lot of moments in this job
where I've done it, and at my other stations too,
where something just happened that we were like.

Speaker 1 (56:40):
What the fuck was that.

Speaker 3 (56:42):
It's the best, but the worst one happened over summer.
One of my very best friends, he has his dog.
I might already talked about this. He has his dog,
and I love that dog.

Speaker 1 (56:54):
Allie a babe, just the sweetest whimeranner.

Speaker 3 (56:58):
He's a rescue. He's a little naughty, but but he's
getting older. Every time I talked to my friend Kyle,
he would tell me there's a different ailment with Olie.
And now you know he's like carrying up the steps
and now he has like warts and there's like always
something going on with Ali. Oh so we're sitting there, Yeah,
all he's cute. So we're sitting there at lunch. It's
me and six of my friends are all in from

(57:19):
out of town. And I was like, how's Ollie doing?
And he said, well, he was, it's not funny.

Speaker 1 (57:25):
It's gonna be laughing again. He was recently.

Speaker 3 (57:30):
Diagnosed with type two diabetes. So we've been giving him
his insulance shots and.

Speaker 1 (57:34):
I lost it. I was crying on the.

Speaker 5 (57:37):
Back diabetes on a dog, How does that happen?

Speaker 1 (57:40):
Insulin shots? Just everything about it.

Speaker 3 (57:41):
Also, this dog is like one hundred and fifty years old, right,
So I'm like I lost that. We were also a
little drunk, so I'm cackling like there were tears shooting
out of my eyes. All of my friends were like,
you bitch, stop it. I put a menu in front
of my face. I couldn't breathe. My friend who told
me about a dog he's dying, laughing because he's like,
you are such a bitch.

Speaker 1 (57:59):
What is wrong with you? I couldn't breathe.

Speaker 3 (58:02):
Fast forward to the next week, all he died. Every
one of those fuckers texted me, well.

Speaker 1 (58:08):
I hope you're happy. I was like, this is the worst. No,
I loved Ali.

Speaker 2 (58:13):
If you say about Ali dying to you, you send
him a lot of gifts, just you know, remember things.

Speaker 3 (58:20):
I shall send him like a bronze needle, like an
insulin needle.

Speaker 5 (58:24):
He would love it.

Speaker 2 (58:26):
I almost said something, but you didn't care. I was
gonna say, you're going to hell in a hand basket.

Speaker 5 (58:30):
You don't give a fuck.

Speaker 1 (58:31):
On man, this was not the moment that sent me there.

Speaker 5 (58:35):
What are you gonna do on the elevator to heaven
when it starts going down? What are you gonna do?

Speaker 1 (58:40):
I would be like, Yes, I get to hang out
with all my friends. I'm gonna see Diamond. You're gonna
have the time.

Speaker 5 (58:45):
You won't see my ass.

Speaker 3 (58:47):
Let me tell you, it's all the people that think
they're not going that are gonna be my waiting room.

Speaker 2 (58:51):
You know, it's gonna be all the people that you
hate right now they're gonna be down there, and all.

Speaker 3 (58:56):
The people I love right now they're gonna be down
there too.

Speaker 1 (58:58):
It's gonna be great.

Speaker 3 (58:59):
I have to say, like all the things that it
takes to get you into Heaven versus like the really
fun stuff that people say takes you to Hell.

Speaker 1 (59:05):
I think maybe Hell sounds like a good time.

Speaker 2 (59:07):
You don't have to All you have to do to
go to Hell is say that God is not the Father.

Speaker 5 (59:12):
That's it.

Speaker 1 (59:13):
Yeah, I'm going to Hell.

Speaker 5 (59:14):
Oh. I already got to be for any and almost everything.

Speaker 1 (59:22):
That is a criminal enterprise.

Speaker 3 (59:25):
Now you can do anything you want as long as
you accept Jesus into your heart, you can do anything.
So you're gonna tell me if I'm a good person,
I never do anything bad. And I don't accept Jesus
into my heart, I'm gonna go to hell. But somebody
like Donald Trump, if he accepts Jesus into his.

Speaker 1 (59:42):
Heart, he's going to heaven and I'm going to hell.
I do not accept.

Speaker 2 (59:45):
I think the unfortunate thing about it is that the
Bible teaches forgiveness, and I'm not God right, and apparently
he can forgive a lot of things. So yeah, So.

Speaker 5 (01:00:01):
Would I be surprised if I get to have an
a Donald Trump? Is there? Probably not. I would be disgusted.
I would be very disgusted.

Speaker 2 (01:00:07):
I would be like, well, clearly this is a racket, Like, well,
you know what, you're true to your word.

Speaker 5 (01:00:12):
You forgive people, So.

Speaker 1 (01:00:14):
Then why can't I be forgiven? Shouldn't I be forgiven?

Speaker 2 (01:00:16):
If I don't say there is no such thing and
blah blah blah, then it's like, Okay, well I.

Speaker 3 (01:00:20):
Don't say there's no such thing. My belief system is
we have no idea what it is.

Speaker 5 (01:00:26):
That's all agnostic.

Speaker 3 (01:00:27):
Yeah, I absolutely think there's a higher power. It cannot
be us. We are trash. Yeah, there's definitely something greater
than us, more powerful than us, for sure. Do I
think that it's out there making like decisions based on
our actions, I don't think so.

Speaker 1 (01:00:40):
I don't think so.

Speaker 3 (01:00:41):
I think karmas realizing that's more of like the energy
you put out as the energy you get back. I
believe in a lot of those things. I also, as
a Hindoo very loosely used, believe that there are many
paths to the top of a mountain. If you want
to go straight up, you're going to get there. If
I want to walk around at a million times, I'm going
to get there.

Speaker 1 (01:00:58):
But I don't think there's one way.

Speaker 5 (01:01:00):
I think it's the same thing.

Speaker 2 (01:01:01):
I think we all just interpret things differently, because like
there's a lot.

Speaker 3 (01:01:06):
Of Christian people that tell me I'm doing it all wrong.

Speaker 2 (01:01:07):
I don't do it that those are the people who
don't follow the word the way that they claim they do,
because it's very clear that, like, if we're supposed to
be made in God's image and he's a forgiving God,
then I don't understand why. And this is speaking to
me too, because I don't like forgiving people, you know
what I mean?

Speaker 1 (01:01:22):
Establish that.

Speaker 2 (01:01:24):
But like, you know, like if it just this is
a topic for another conversation, but it kisses me off
so badly.

Speaker 5 (01:01:33):
Like the way that.

Speaker 2 (01:01:38):
I don't want to say the whites, but they're the
ones who are in the forefront of this Christian community
right now, with this whole Erica kirkshit.

Speaker 5 (01:01:45):
Her saying that she's a Christian, it doesn't work out
for me.

Speaker 3 (01:01:50):
Listen, you know my thoughts on a lot of racial
issues and religion, but there are a.

Speaker 2 (01:01:56):
Lot of black people too. I do a lot of
the same things that the Kirks the world do.

Speaker 3 (01:02:00):
I know so, but like religion specifically Christianity was actually
used to keep people enslaved.

Speaker 1 (01:02:07):
So now I have.

Speaker 3 (01:02:07):
More of an issue when I see certain races practicing it, I'm.

Speaker 1 (01:02:11):
Like, why not on my watch? But again, I was
born to argue and you were not.

Speaker 5 (01:02:15):
Yeah, you know, yeah, I think that I can't get
into it.

Speaker 2 (01:02:24):
Now, you know what we should get into this stand
I totally understand in it. In it, I know a
lot of people who are like, they're black and they
believe in God, but they can't consider themselves Christians because
of Christianity and what it was built on. And like
how it was used to keep specifically slaves enslaves.

Speaker 5 (01:02:43):
So like, yes, I totally understand that.

Speaker 3 (01:02:46):
But also, you know what, I never want to do.
I will never argue somebody to not be the religion
that they want to be. It actually impacts me zero.
Whatever it is that you want to do, you want
to leave.

Speaker 1 (01:02:57):
Your life, live your life, that's great. If that makes
you happy, I want to take that from you.

Speaker 3 (01:03:04):
Where I will argue is when people start telling me
that I am doing the wrong thing and they know
for a fact that they're doing the right thing.

Speaker 1 (01:03:10):
Please shut the fuck up.

Speaker 5 (01:03:11):
No, there's no such thing.

Speaker 1 (01:03:12):
No, you don't you don't know that, there's no.

Speaker 5 (01:03:15):
And also as a Christian, you're not supposed to do that. Well,
it just it doesn't make any sense for sure.

Speaker 2 (01:03:26):
Already complex uh with with Christians.

Speaker 5 (01:03:31):
But I think a lot of Muslim people do it too.

Speaker 1 (01:03:33):
I think iron religion does.

Speaker 2 (01:03:34):
Like a lot of Muslim guys have said to me, like,
you eat pork, I'm like, but you drink and you're
not supposed to.

Speaker 3 (01:03:39):
No, there's a lot of hypocrassy and every single religion,
to all of them, there are the good the bad.
Of course, across the board. There's no no like brush
that you can paint.

Speaker 5 (01:03:48):
It all with.

Speaker 3 (01:03:49):
All I say is the only thing I know is
that I know nothing at all, except for the fact
that every year when people came back from Young Life Camp,
which was like the Young Christian Camp, they all tell
me I was going to hell. But they the whole
summer finger banging each other. And I don't understand how
I was a bad one. I would just go play
in the creek and catch bugs and stuff. What were
you guys doing?

Speaker 1 (01:04:08):
Please?

Speaker 5 (01:04:08):
They were licking penises and vaginas.

Speaker 1 (01:04:10):
They were doing all kinds of stuff.

Speaker 5 (01:04:12):
Not me.

Speaker 1 (01:04:13):
I caught a crawfish. That's great.

Speaker 5 (01:04:17):
One thing's for sure. Two things for certain. I'm going
to happen, Okay, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:04:22):
Maybe I'll see there, Maybe I'll see on.

Speaker 5 (01:04:23):
My side, on your side.

Speaker 1 (01:04:26):
What if my side is heaven, Well then I hope.
What if that diamond?

Speaker 5 (01:04:30):
Hope to see you? But I'm going to haven. I'm
a fixed shit. I don't know. Don't we all fuck up?
But God knows my heart.

Speaker 3 (01:04:39):
And on that note, people want to find you online
to see your heart.

Speaker 1 (01:04:44):
Where would they find you?

Speaker 2 (01:04:46):
It's cold, shattered and broken, but it's still there at Diamonds.

Speaker 3 (01:04:50):
Since here on Instagram, I am at Baby Hot Sauce
on Instagram, on Twitter, on wherever you can find me
and like, follow, Subscribe to the podcast.

Speaker 1 (01:04:59):
We appreciate it.

Speaker 3 (01:05:00):
Leave us a talk back, leave us a review. Thank
you for being so supportive. We have a lot of
fun stuff on the horizon. Until next time, say bye
bye bye.
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Host

Medha Gandhi

Medha Gandhi

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