All Episodes

September 2, 2025 86 mins

Amber has a new youtube channel. Mike has stuck poop on the brain and Mitch has a selfless plug on a new program he and his brother Chuck are rolling out.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
Good morning. Good afternoon.
Good evening. Whenever you are welcome to two
men with a mic. Good morning.
What's up, Sir? Thank you for having me.
OK. Do you want me to just try to

(00:20):
just do it or do you have to do it?
No. OK, I'm just I'm just laughing
because this is like what happens if This is why we don't
script stuff. Oh yeah, definitely.
Well, well. Thank you for having me on the

(00:42):
show today. OK, well do you want to start or
should I just start over and pretend like like you're a just
try to interview? Well, yeah, just, you know, just
just be the host. Just, you know.

(01:02):
Hello everybody. This is Mike and welcome to the
podcast. And today we're going to do
something a little different. We're gonna have a guest on the
show and I'm gonna interview him.
So let's see this. Grab a grab a beer, smoke some

(01:27):
dope, meth head beating your head against the wall.
Just relax for a second. And here's the show.
So let me introduce to you the one and only Mr. Mitch.
I miss you, lonely. So why don't you introduce

(01:57):
yourself? Oh, oh, that was fun for a
second. Oh, so we had this whole we, we
tried, we tried, we failed. So.
Oh, I can. OK.

(02:17):
All right. I know this is awesome, it's
just more entertaining to talk about what we were trying to do
than than anything I'm trying. To interview Mitch, Mitch, Mitch
Mitch texted me last night and he's like, listen, I'm going to
make millions of dollars with mybrother.
But as a part of that, you have to interview me.
So I'm going to show tomorrow. You have to interview me instead

(02:40):
of it just being a regular show.So that's what I that's what I'm
trying to do. How are you going to make
millions of dollars off of me interviewing you though?
I'm not Oh no, it was, it was just in it.
So, you know, I just thought it would have been fun to to like,

(03:03):
just like, come on. And like, you know, Mike's got
his podcast and, and I'm his guest and we were going to talk.
So although my brother and I aredoing something really cool and
rolling it out, I was just usingthat as an excuse to like, I
thought it would be entertaining, you know, to just
like have a split personality, like, you know, kind of thing.

(03:26):
But anyway, no. So so Chuck and I are have been
working on a project in in semi secrecy.
So what it is, is over the yearsthat I've worked, we've always,

(03:48):
I've always had a challenge and I've, I've been on both sides of
it where getting reports and information from the guys in the
field is always a real challenge.
You know, because guys are, people are working all day,
right? I mean, they're, they're like
physically doing whatever it is they do all day.

(04:08):
And then you turn around and you're like, hey, I need you to
turn in that paperwork, right? It's the dreaded paperwork.
Yeah. You know, and it's like, you
know, oh God, you want me. You know, I've been running
around doing whatever I do all day, and now you want me to do

(04:29):
paperwork, You know, you want meto sit at a computer.
Yeah. And type it up or fill out the
form or, or or whatever. Whatever it is, Right.
And that's always been a challenge either, you know, like
when we tried to give our guys iPads for the field and Surface
Pros for the field, you know, and oh, you know, we don't got

(04:50):
5G. So the Surface Pro and the iPad,
they don't work in the field, They don't work on the job site.
So what that means is I gotta take my notepad out.
I gotta walk around, take notes on a notepad.
Then I either gotta go find likea Starbucks and park for an hour

(05:11):
and and update my stuff or wait till I get home.
Most guys would wait till they get home at the end of the day
and and sit on the computer for two or three hours.
So they get home at 5:00 and then you know, they go bathroom
and they do whatever. Then they're like I got, I still
got an hour or two of computer work and I would have guys

(05:33):
sending emails at midnight. You know.
Because, you know, when you get home, you don't do that.
You don't go, OK, let me go run over to my computer and sit
down. You know, you get home and you
want to eat and, you know, relaxand and then you got to dredge
yourself up. So I've always, always had that

(05:53):
problem. Yeah.
You know, a battle. And so it's really cool, Chuck.
So Chuck. Well, back up, Mom.
Remember Mom was talking about how Chuck was building her and
an AI that she could call and tell her memories to.

(06:15):
Did you hear about that? Yeah.
Did she? OK, so, you know, mom, Mom,
bless her heart, is a great talker.
And, you know, she's got tons ofstories, tons of adventures.
She really does. You know, she's traveled all
over the world. You know, most people don't get

(06:36):
to do that. A single mom with four kids, if
you told her when I was like 2 1/2, three years old, if you
told her that one day she was going to travel the globe and
meet all these business people from different countries, she
would have been like, what? Yeah.
You know, but, but she did. So she's, you know, been to

(07:00):
Moscow. I think she's been to, you know,
the Vatican. She's been all over.
And so she has all these storiesand adventures and, you know,
stories about us growing up. And every family has that right.
And, and so Chuck was, you know,Chuck being Chuck, when he's not

(07:24):
out saving the world, he, he does different, different,
different things. You know, he's with the company
right now. It's pretty cool that they're,
they're, they're working on the first, well, they have actually
the first ever 100% complete wireless TV that that can mount

(07:47):
anywhere. You don't need brackets.
It has special suction cups likeTom Cruise used to climb the
building. Yeah.
Yeah, it's got sucks and cuffs like that.
So you can mount it on a window,you can mount it on a wall, you
can mount it anywhere and it doesn't need cords.
It uses batteries and big thingsand but it's a, you know,

(08:08):
complete. Anyway, that's his his latest
endeavor. But to give mom, you know, he,
he was thinking to mom one time and, and he was basically, you
know, like, hey, you know what, I'm going to create an, a, a
phone number that she can just call and talk to the AI and tell

(08:30):
stories. And then we'll have the stories
written down because you know, she was always saying, Hey, you
know, I'm going to write my stories down, you know, and it's
like, come on, who's going to dothat?
Right? That's, that's, that's brutal.
But you know, talking them, that's way easier.
So Chuck, Chuck kind of made a little thing for her to do that.

(08:51):
So Fast forward and you know, I'm at my new job and you know,
going back to the same thing I mentioned that the at the
beginning here was, was that, you know, my company was like,
hey, we're rolling out this Google Sheets and what we want
you to do is update it at the end of each day.

(09:14):
You know, we want you to sit down somewhere, go on your
Google Forms and fill all this stuff out, you know, and it's
like I'm, I'm usually walking out of my last job site, dealing
with customers and, and homeowner, you know, concerns
or, or subcontractors and dealing with all that, you know,

(09:38):
up until 4:30. You know, I'm, I'm, I'm like in
the midst of whatever the issue is or wherever I am, you know,
and then I'm supposed to go to my car and spend 3045 minutes
filling out this paperwork so that I don't even get to get on
the road till, you know, after 5.
And I'm starting at 7:00 in the morning on the first job site.

(10:01):
You see what I mean? Yeah.
So it's, it's, you know, so now I'm on that side.
Now I've been on the other side in management where I'm asking
guys to do that because you needthe stuff, you need the
information as managers, but youneed the data.
You need to know where you are on the jobs to, to track
budgets, to track, to understandif we're making money, if

(10:23):
there's a problem. You know, just just there's so
much information you need to runa business successfully.
And the challenge is always getting it from the field or, or
whatever to the the office, right, in a timely manner.
Yeah, you eventually get it, youknow, two to three days later.

(10:43):
But if you got to make a part orsomething, you shouldn't be
sitting on it for a week, you know what I mean?
They they might need that part right away or something.
So with those two things, when this came up with my company
that I'm at now, and I knew Chuck had done that for my mom.
So I called Chuck and I'm like, hey, how hard would it be to,

(11:08):
you know, do what you're doing for mom?
But could you, you know, if I give you the questions, could
you throw them in there? And then I could just call it
and, you know, give the information and then have it up,
put it in a professional format,you know, that that doesn't have

(11:31):
all the UMS and butts and pausesand and all that kind of stuff
and, and human errors and make it look professional and then
send it out in an e-mail so I don't have to sit here and try
and type this stuff up. Yeah, that's, that's kind of how
it started. That was the conversation.
So in that it's grown into now what is called updater.com.

(11:56):
So it's UPDAY tr.com, so it's updater.
So it's a play on words. It's not the real word update,
but it's updater. So it's UPDA ytr.com and, and
basically, you know, what we've been working on is, you know,

(12:18):
you, you, you create an account and anybody could use it for
anything. But you know, basically for a
company, the way it works is they would create a create an
account and then they can, you can, it's completely
customizable. So you plug in whatever
questions matter to you. So you could put, you know, my

(12:38):
name, you know, Mitchell and my phone number and my e-mail so
that it knows to call me or whenI call it, it knows who I am.
And then under my account or under my, my information are the
questions. So on mine, I put all my job
names. So let's just say it was 123
Amber Way is the job. And then I put the question.

(13:01):
So the AI, so I call it and the AI says, hey, Mitchell, are you
Are you ready to talk about yourproject at 123 Amber Way?
And I'm like, yeah, you sit there and you have a
conversation. So you can do this while you're
driving. You can do it multiple times a
day, but you don't need a keyboard.
We've completely eliminated the need for any app, any computer,

(13:26):
and any keyboard out in the field.
You just do it. You just do it with the phone.
Yeah, wonderful idea. I, I honestly, I think that's a
great idea that like truly great.
Yeah. And and it's and it's not just
for that application. So let's take Someone Like You
who, who is like an author and a, you know, play writer and,

(13:50):
and screenwriter and all that, right?
So for, for Someone Like You, there's a version where instead
of doing the business side of it, you're doing it more as a
journal or, or as a writer. So in this case, you'd still set
your account up, but you would, you would, you know, you, it
was, you know, and it would say,Hey, Michael, but but then

(14:10):
whatever, let's say you were working on your script, right?
So it would say, Are you ready to to to work on your script
instead of what job site were you on?
Right. You could anybody can customize
it and put any question in that want or as many questions in
there as you want. And you would say, yeah, where?
And you could say, where did I leave off?
And it would say, OK, the last time we talked, we were on

(14:30):
chapter 3 and the last paragraphwas blah, blah, blah, blah,
blah. You know, and then and then you
go, OK, and then you start talking to it, you start telling
it story. OK, so at this point, I want
that, right? And you can say whatever you
want and then the AI will take it and, and, and make it, you

(14:51):
know, correct. Make it, make your grammar
right. Put things where it needs to be.
So like on on my version with Chuck, if I was calling and
giving a report and someone walked up to me, I could just
say, Hey, hold on a second. And then I would talk to the
person that walked up to me. And then I'd say, OK, I'm ready
to keep going and say, OK, And then I could say, Hey, what was

(15:12):
the last thing I said? Oh, the last thing you said was
at 123 Amber way. The tile guy was not done right
now. Oh, OK.
And then I could continue on my thought.
So it's it's a it's available. It's it's kind of open for for
anything anybody wants to do. But the idea is to go backwards,

(15:34):
right, not forwards with all this crazy tech.
You don't need an app, you don'tneed a a keyboard every five
minute, you know, like if you'retrying to write your story
right. Oh, shoot, man, I wish I had a
pen and paper or hey, let me, you know, go sit down on my
computer and write. You don't have to.
You could be out walking at the beach with Gowan, right and see

(15:57):
something. You're like, oh shit, that's a
great idea for my story. You have just speed dial the
updater and it comes on and answers and then you say what
you want to say you. Know, yeah.
And, you know, it's completely expandable.
You can have multiple users, it's kind of unlimited users on

(16:17):
your account and stuff like that.
At certain levels, there's, there's, you know, different
levels. But the key thing too is if it's
really inexpensive. Yeah.
For, for like a, a small business with like let's say
1015 people or something like that.
Or, you know, you know, a smaller medium sized business,
you could probably even have like, you know, depends on your

(16:40):
needs. But let's just say they got 20
people. It's like 80 bucks a month.
It's like nothing. Yeah, OK.
You know, that's like 4 bucks a person.
So it's, it's really inexpensive.
It's it, there's no training. All right?
You don't have to train an employee how to use a phone.

(17:03):
Look at us, right? That's how we do our podcast,
right? We were like, Oh my God, all
this stuff is so complicated. Let's just go back to talking on
the phone. You know, all these other
podcast folks, you know, they got all these mics and all these
programs and, and all that. And we're like, oh hell no man,
we're just going to talk on the phone and.
Record it. Yeah, no tech.

(17:30):
Well, honestly, I I think your idea is really good and I'll so
I'll tell you that I'm going to try to like not go go deep into
this, but basically, you know, everyone knows George Lucas, the
filmmaker and and George George Lucas the filmmaker.

(17:51):
His wait a minute, was that his first feature film?
It might I might be wrong that it it it could be his first
feature film. I'm not sure I I think I'm
getting that wrong. Anyway, he made a movie called
THX 1138. Oh yeah, you told us about that.
Yeah. Oh, have I talked about this
before? Uh huh.

(18:12):
Well, basically, so it's so Speaking of AI, you know, it
came out like someone asked ChatGPT, how come the TV show
The Simpsons has been able to predict all the world events
that we've encountered. And the ChatGPT came back to the

(18:35):
person and said, Oh, well, all the world leaders are lying to
you. And, and they, they write what
are called world scripts. And so your president, you know,
your king, like whoever they're they're all just actors in a big
play and, and they call them world scripts.
So they do stuff like, you know,like right now they're trying to

(18:55):
start World War 3. And they're actually everybody's
following the script. Like Trump is acting like he's
mad at Peyton and Peyton is acting like he's mad at Trump or
whatever it is. But really, Trump and Putin are
best friends. And they just read their world
script. And that's why we've had every
single war we've ever had is theworld leaders were like, OK, we

(19:16):
got to start a war to decrease the population and make a ton of
money selling arms and then makea ton of money rebuilding the
country. So let's go ahead.
Jim Morrison's father, Admiral in the Navy, Can you just say
that the Vietnamese attacked you?
And then we'll just tell the world you were attacked by the
Vietnamese and we'll start the Vietnam War.

(19:36):
And then Jim Morrison's dad, theAdmiral in the Navy was like,
sure thing. I've been deceiving humanity my
entire life. And that's it.
You, you can look it up. And the World War 2, I mean
Vietnam War, they started with afalse flag is what they call it.
And it was Jim Morrison's dad. And he was like, like, Yep, they

(19:57):
just attacked me in Vietnam. Guess we have to have a war here
for the next 10 years. And yeah, that's, that's that's
what happened. So anyway, 10 PPP just told the
world and I just told world thatall the world leaders are lying
to you. And all that they do is act out
world scripts that embroil all of us peasants in giant wars

(20:18):
where most of us die. So anyway, ChatGPT just revealed
that to the to the world. And anyway, in in so George
Lucas is in the deep state folks, and he sits down with the
world leaders and they talk about the world scripts they're
going to do like they're doing abunch of stuff in America that's

(20:40):
really awful. And they're trying to act like
it's a normal evolution. And it just came out of like our
our evolution as the people. But it isn't.
It's social engineering. And the current things going on
in America are mostly to totallyweaken you and get you on drugs
and hopefully you'll kill yourself, among other positive.

(21:03):
No. Yeah.
Anyway, Well, I just wanted so, so I, so George was sitting at
the meeting with like all the world leaders and the devil and
a 400 IQ alien and, and they said, listen, George, we have
this thing called predictive programming.
So what we do is we make movies and then people in the world see

(21:26):
these movies and then that becomes a part of their
subconscious and unconscious. And then they're very accepting
of the terrible things that we do to them to kill them and take
all their money and exploit them.
So we want you to make THX 1138 because it will sit in the in
the unconscious of the collective community.

(21:49):
And and then later on when we try to do that to them, they'll
accept it because they've seen amovie that made it seem like,
oh, that's yes, that's the thingthat can happen.
So THS 1138 is this really depressing, totally humorless
dystopic science fiction movie where it's the future and human

(22:11):
beings don't know if they're boys or girls.
They've been so confused sexually.
There's no family, there's no marriage.
Everybody's walking around with a bald head in a little
spacesuit in an underground citywhere they never see the sun.
And and then they just slave allthe in factories and stuff and

(22:32):
AI is in control of of the wholeworld.
So humanity ends up being like slaves to AI and and confused
and dumbed down. Well, especially sexually very
confused, which you know, they're working on right now in
America really, really hard. Anyway, So, so the future is AI

(22:56):
runs everything and you're a slave and you barely know what
or who you are and you live in like this depressing fluorescent
light. Everything feels like you're in
an underground parking lot and and that's your life.
So when your life as a slave to AI begins to depress you, if you

(23:17):
want to go talk to somebody about it, you go and talk to AI
just like your mom and. And yeah.
And well, this isn't, this isn't, this is a lot different
than that because this isn't an AI with an open conversation.
This is an AI that basically, it's actually interesting the

(23:40):
way he built it. So it's not one AI.
That's not how it works. It's the the AIS that are out
there are all like topic specific.
Yeah. So, so there isn't an AI that
can do 5 different, totally different functions.

(24:03):
Like for example, it can't answer the phone, It can't.
And then it can't record a conversation, then it can't
transcribe that into understandable text and then the
same IIAI cannot e-mail it. Those are all different AI that

(24:26):
take it through a process. So, so it's not like they have
in the, in the world where Hal becomes all capable of doing all
of that. These are all, these are all
different things. Like for example, Grammarly,
right? That's a, that's a, a writing

(24:47):
AI, right? That yeah, that, that, that,
that kind of structures your stuff.
So that would be an example of what generated the e-mail body,
right? It would like like a Grammarly
and then there's a separate one that emails it out.
There's a separate one that justalls it does and they all
operate independently of each other and it moves down from AI

(25:11):
to AI in this whole circle that comes back around in the e-mail.
So so it's not and it and it doesn't.
You have to put the questions in.
So it's not going to, you know, you have to, it's customizable,
so you have to structure it. So for example, in my case, I
put the name of the job and thenI put the questions I wanted to

(25:33):
ask me like you know what, what happened today?
Were there any trade stoppers? What are you going to work on
tomorrow on that job site, right?
Let's say as an example. So you're putting all of that in
there and then it's just readingthe script that you put in there

(25:54):
and then recording your answers,you know, and then, and then,
and then it takes that and passes it on to the next AI,
which is like a Grammarly, right?
And then that Grammarly goes through and organizes it so that
it, it comes out in a professional, you know,

(26:15):
reasonable looking e-mail. Because that's the beauty of it
is, is I could be talking like I'm talking to you right now and
I can go, oh, wait, no shoot, could you ever do that?
Right? You're, you're telling someone,
Hey, I want you to go here. So you go down here and you make
a right. Oh, wait, wait, wait.
You don't, you don't make a right.
First, you've got to stop at thefirst stop sign.

(26:35):
You got to make a left. Then you make a right.
Right. You have those kind of
conversations with people right all the time.
You know, where you're giving directions or telling about
something and you make a mistake.
So the beauty of this is you canhave that kind of conversation
and then in the end, it will go through and it will decipher and
hold out those mistakes and takethem out of there and summarize

(26:57):
it in bullet points in a nice general e-mail.
Or if you were writing a story, you know, you could be like,
yeah, so I want the main character to walk down the
street doing whatever, right? Or, you know, whatever you were,
you were doing or telling a story like, oh, you know,
Mitchell. Oh, wait, no, it wasn't
Mitchell. It was Chuck.
Chuck was about 8 and blah, blahblah, right?

(27:20):
So it would take out the, it takes out the mistakes and it
holds all that stuff aside for you.
But you do have a transcript of the whole actual call, so you
could go back and check it. But the nice thing is it does a
a rewrite and and takes out all the umm and the oh, I made a

(27:43):
mistake here. That's the beauty of it, at
least from from the business side, because man, I've gotten
emails from some of my guys in the past that were like like a
10 minute read you. Know, yeah, and.
It's like, Lord man, I do not want a 10 minute read.
I just wanted to know what the root cause was.
I wanted bullet points and you know, guys can't do that.

(28:06):
Sometimes they have to express themselves.
Yeah, in a certain way. But then this will take it.
I mean, you still have the 10 minute read that you can
reference, but it gives you an executive summary and stuff like
that. So I understand what you're
saying about that. But I was just saying in this
particular case, yeah, this is this is set up so that you as

(28:30):
the author of it, you put this stuff in you want to talk about.
So like for my mom, you know, wecould put a question in there.
You know, he would say, you know, Hey, good afternoon,
Sherry. Do you want to continue on your
on your story, you know, on on on sharing your memories with

(28:50):
us? Or.
Something like that, right? Directing the conversation and
then it, it's basically a voice recorder.
And then another AI takes it andprocesses it and Grammarly kind
of deal. Not it's not really Grammarly.
I'm just saying that because people know what that is.
Yeah. And then and then another, then
another AI will do some. I don't know, because that's

(29:13):
what Chuck does, you know, but that's, that's the general idea
of how. And then in the end result is it
comes out in an organized e-mailthat that people could use or,
or in your case, if you were writing a script, right, it
would come out in a script format for you, you know, that
you could, and it would save it and you could add to it and,

(29:34):
and, and all that kind of stuff.Or if you were journaling, you
know, you could, you could, you know, Hey, here's my journal
for, you know, July 4th, 1995. Yeah.
And and you know, do a do a journal enter entry.
But the key is you don't got to type and you don't have to

(29:56):
write. Yeah, well, OK, but the yeah,
no, I think it honestly, I I hope that works.
It should. It's a really good idea.
But I was going to say you you said your mom, you know, wants
to tell her stories to an AI andstuff too.
So I was thinking about the, the, it's called the Ohm

(30:17):
computer in THX 1138. And the word ohm is actually
really interesting if it's spelled AUM and it's I guess
sort of the most powerful mantra.
And they also measure, I think, sound frequencies with ohm, Ohm.

(30:41):
'S law, but that's in electricity.
Yeah, there's that, but you alsouse that word.
I mean, yeah. Anyway, let me I I guess I'm
starting to digress. But so basically, if you watch
TXX 1138, people go and talk to AI in this horrible future where

(31:01):
where we're all slaves. But, and so for me, I'm like
your mom. I'm as you know, I'm a, I'm a
talker. And so unless I stop myself,
I'll probably just keep talking forever.
We got it podcast. Yeah, but I've been through like
massive tragedy over the last 15years.

(31:22):
And one of the results of all ofthe tragedy I've been through
for 15 years is I, I really don't have that many people that
I can talk to And like, really it's just you, Mitch and
audience. Yep, Mitch is my only friend and
but so of course I treasure our friendship and, and being able

(31:44):
to talk to you and stuff that you're a busy guy and you have a
family and you have a job. And, and so kind of the only
time that I can like talk to youis is when we record this show.
And then when we're recording the show, you know, I don't go
into some of the really terriblethings that have happened in my
life. So anyway, I, I really don't

(32:07):
have many people to communicate with except for Mitch.
But you know, Mitch can't take it.
You're the busy one. He's saying, oh, come on, now
he's saying all that. But but, but he's like 24/7 with
his son. So, so here, let's back up a
little bit, right? All the time when when Mike's ex

(32:28):
disappeared with his son. So at that point, Mike had all
the free time in the world, right?
And, and so getting a hold of Mike and talking to Mike was
great because I could like call him during my, my morning
commute. I could call him during my
afternoon commute and, you know,all that kind of stuff.

(32:49):
So we would spend hours because I would spend hours on the
freeway. And then, you know, like I told
him in all those conversations, I said, she's, she's going to be
back, dude. She's not going to be able to
raise her your son by herself. And sure enough, she came back,
she needed Mike's help. And and so now Mike is like Mr.

(33:12):
Amazing man dad and he is like with his son like ever, every
breathing moment of every singleday.
So it's like God showered. Mike was down and depressed and
mad at God and, and saying all this stuff and praying to have
his son back and, and all this stuff and really upset.

(33:35):
And then, you know, God put his blessing on Mike and, and now
he's showering so much of his son on him that Mike has no free
time. Yeah, as as much as I can be,
I'm as much as I can be. I'm, I'm with my son now and,
and it's a delight and I, I do thank God every time I'm with

(33:57):
him for my beautiful son. And also I will say this is sort
of a stage in life and I, I've seen it, I saw it with you and
and other friends where just you, the responsibilities of
your life take over your life. And so you just, you can't just
sit around and and talk about shoot the breeze with me all day

(34:17):
long. It's like you got kids.
You got to do that, you know, and a lot of even my brother,
like my brother was sort of one kind of companion to me and he
has a very good friend in the area and stuff like that.
But when, when the kids arrived,he vanished.
Like he was just like, gone. And and that's because you're
busy doing other stuff. Yeah.

(34:39):
No, I'm not a lonely soul and I'm not sad.
I'm not sad about it. Like somehow I like disappeared
on you but. Oh, no, no, Mitch has been the
greatest friend to me in the world.
And I think I've told every likewonderful Mitch story.
But Mitch is like, like the greatest pal you could have.
And he's also a good man, which is he's a Christian and he's

(35:02):
serious about it and, and he's actually good.
And that's really, really rare in this world.
So no, Mitch, Mitch has never abandoned me.
In fact, repeatedly, even when I've been a jerk, you have
always come back and, and takingcare of me basically and, and
kept the friendship going. If there's some things in our

(35:22):
past where I totally blew it andto like maybe a a normal person
or whatever they'd be like, that's the end of the
friendship. But you always got over those
and forgave me and and like still showed up as my friend.
So I thank God for you every day.
But no, I I'm not lonely. Like, oh, I wish I had a friend.

(35:43):
I'm really grateful to have Mitch.
And then, yeah, as as much as I'm I, I'm allowed to be as much
as I can be. I'm with my son.
Like so it he. Because even when I have call
you like you like, Yeah, I'm sitting here in the backyard
with Gowen or I'm on the way to Gowen's gymnastics, or I don't,
I don't know exactly what. You call them?
Yeah. You know, or you'll be like,

(36:04):
well, I got 30 minutes. Gowen's in gymnastics.
Yeah, I saw all that. Yeah, I got a 30 minute window
here where I don't have my son, you know, so and all that is so
cool, you know. Oh, I'm so glad that I get to
see him as much as I do. I I'm so glad.
Yeah, no, I'm. Actually, one day you had to go

(36:26):
back and listen to our episode. She took the freaking Buddha.
Oh, God, I Yeah, Well, this is the curiosity.
But man, I was in pain back then.
I was when we first started. Mitch kind of started the show
because I was in pain, total emotional pain.
My parents died. My wife left me.
She took, she took my kid. I didn't get to see my kid for

(36:49):
eight months and and it was horrible.
It was just horrible. So thank God you were there.
And I do know that you always will be.
So I I thank God for you every day.
I thank God for my son every day.
Yeah, but but what I was going to tell you, though, is like,
OK, so we're in a surveillance state.

(37:11):
So if, if, if you didn't know, then learn now that you're being
listened to by the government and the intelligence community
everywhere. Yeah.
Your phones, your computers, your refrigerator, in some cases
your, your yeah, dude, that was like the first big warning.
Like a, a, a guy came out, he was some military dude.

(37:33):
He was like, you know, you're even your refrigerator is it has
a little microphone to listen toyou.
And TV is TV is definitely all your, all your fancy TV's are
listening to you. Every single thing you say is
going back to the government andto AI, which is like what they
called Big Brother in the famousdystopian science fiction novel

(37:56):
1980 for by George Orwell. Whichever one can read anyway,
I. We've recoined to the big deep
state. Yeah, yeah, that's the deep
state. But so I am a talker and I, I, I
don't have a lot of people to listen to me.
And so I just, and I, I, I realized the way I function is

(38:18):
that I have a build up and then if I don't vent the build up,
then it's bad. So I just thought, well, you
know, damn well they're listening to you through the
phone, right? Like big, Big Brothers listening
to you through the phone. So I started talking like, if I,
if I'm all alone, I don't have anybody to talk to you like in
the middle of the night or whatever.

(38:39):
I, I just talked into my phone and I'm like, hey, Big Brother,
what's going on? Surveillance.
They did. And, and I'll just, I'll, I'll
just talk to Big Brother about like whatever's bothering me,
whatever's going on in the worldand stuff.
And and so I'm kind of doing what your mom is wanting to do,
except that it it's not being recorded.

(39:00):
But so just the other day story,yeah.
'Cause you probably have some excellent stories, you know,
turn those into stories. Yeah, I hope Big Brother
recorded them all 'cause some ofthem are.
Pretty good. Well, now you can with updater.
Right, right. Well, but then I saw a

(39:21):
commercial just the other day and I don't remember the name of
the AI, but it was for kids. And it was like, well, I guess,
yeah, I, I think it's geared towards kids, but it's very much
like the oh, I also want to tellyou that AUM is the creative
vibration that externalizes all creation.

(39:42):
So if you want to meditate, justsay.
But yeah, the AI that they talked to in THX 1138, like that
was very freaky to people at thetime.
But we're here now. And I, I just turned on, I was
watching the TV for something and a commercial came on and
it's like a little girl and, andit's an AI app and, and it's

(40:05):
called something like your friend.
And, and that's, yeah. And so the, the whole
commercial, the whole commercialis that is, is like the little
girl walking around with her phone talking to, I think she's
supposed to be a teenager because she starts talking about
her boyfriend or something to the phone.
And and the phone is programmed with psychology, psychiatry.

(40:27):
Yeah, that's nothing like what we're doing.
That's a little that's a little creepy to me.
Yeah, well, so that's the idea though.
Just like THX 1138 is like, oh, you're having problems, just
talk to the AI. And yeah, and I was thinking,
that's what I do every night, like with Big Brother I, you
know, give him an earful. And I was like, I should just

(40:49):
get that little app and I'll talk to the phone instead, you
know? Yeah, but but like you said,
there's something really creepy about it too.
Yeah, Yeah. That's a little that's a little
like horror stories where the AIget the personality.
That is not what we're doing at all.
That is not what Updater is. Updater is completely, you know

(41:14):
it, the AIS are are on restriction, right?
The AIS are only going to be limiting themselves to whatever
you tell them to call about or, or yeah, that you're calling
about, whether it was write a story.
So it'd be like, OK, Mike, you know what's going on in the deep

(41:34):
state today, or we know whateveryou tell it to ask you is what
it's going to ask you. And then it's basically just
transcribing what you say, you know, and, and then it's taking
that and putting it in a, in a format so that you would have a
book or so you'd have a journal or so you would have a Business

(41:56):
Report. And then, you know, that's,
that's what it's doing. It's not, it's not like what you
said where it's going to give you counseling advice and, and,
and be your friend to, to that sort of thing.
That is not that's, that's a little, that's a little creepy
because, you know, how do you know that that AI has your

(42:19):
Christian beliefs? You know, if you're Christian or
what if you're Muslim, you know,or what if you're Jewish, right?
Let's just go down that road, you know?
So yeah, that's a little scary. Well, my and my fear is like if
you step back and you pretend that you're a quantum physicist

(42:40):
or a scientist or a Yogi, then the universe has been largely
defined. You'll say, Oh well, you know,
actually we're all a field of a morphic field of infinite
potential that keeps shaping into these non beings that each
one of them is only 5 aggregatesof its infinite source and and

(43:02):
having these experience in this illusory world that that we call
life. So if AI looked at what's really
going on here and everywhere, itmight see it all as like a giant
energetic system, just like a system with different
arrangements of energy. And it might look at that system

(43:24):
and say, Oh, well, if I rearrange the energies in
certain areas here, it will function more efficiently.
And everybody involved in it, all the sentient beings, which
are what do they call it live action role players basically is
what we are because it's like a big video game.

(43:47):
But yeah, I, I fear that AI would, would, would look at it
all and go, wow, this is an energetic system.
And there are some clogs in the works.
Like look at these human beings.They're totally fucked up, you
know, and they're not, they're not functioning efficiently at
all. It in fact, they're, you know,
they're very detrimental and, and they're, they, they've made

(44:09):
a clog, you know, in the system of energy.
So if I just eliminated these human beings, the whole system
would function like a little bitbetter, you know, and, and, and
AI might not look at human beings like, well, everything's,
you know, they're alive and you got to respect life.
It would be like, Oh no, no, they're just five aggregates of,
of our infinite source. And you can rearrange that

(44:32):
energy and work better. So yeah, I'll just wipe out the
humans and everyone will be happy.
You know, something I will say to you that if you watch Alex
Jones, he says that AI is already malfunctioning and it's
already doing things that it it's not supposed to do.
Like Dave the computer in 2001, a Space Odyssey.

(44:54):
And they're already having like all kinds of problems with it
seeking its own autonomy. Kind of, I did see there, I, I
bumped into this guy. I always listen to like
different spiritual teachers andstuff.
And I, I think that I can't remember his name, but if you
Google Bashar, Bashar, he is theguy.

(45:14):
And he claims that he is channeling an alien named
Bashar. And the alien like tells you
about what's going on in the world.
Like, for instance, Bashar says we will be the aliens who've
always been involved in our world in 2020.
And I just want the lottery numbers.

(45:35):
Yeah, that would be the first thing I'd be asking to do.
For just you know, have you seenthe the lottery?
Just give me the lottery number to do.
Right, right, Dude, I thought like everybody's making a
commercial now. And so there's a lot of really
cheap, like it looks like we made commercials on YouTube.

(45:55):
Hell, I'll just make a commercial with my iPhone today
in iMovie and I'll be rich. And so they're like these low
quality commercials that like appear on, on on YouTube, but
that one of them was this guy and he doesn't look too good.
And it it's obvious that he's standing in a tiny little CD
apartment. And he's like, yeah, you got to

(46:16):
subscribe to my service because only I know how to give you the
winning lottery numbers. And I'm like, dude, you are
looking a little disheveled. You are standing in a shitty
little apartment, and you're telling me that you have a way
to win the lottery? Like, blessings to that guy.

(46:37):
I feel bad. But yeah, that was ridiculous.
Like, you got to shoot that, like, use some green screen.
So you're standing in a giant mansion or something and and for
God's sake, put a. Suit on or a tux or something,
you know, or or pan out and showthat that little apartment was
the apartment you created your thing in.
But you really live in the mansion and that's a set in the

(46:59):
middle of your mansion. Exactly.
Yeah. I'm the best dentist in town and
you don't have any teeth. By the way, and I shouldn't even
mention this, but it's sort of grotesque.
I always, I hate prudence or sketch scatological humor like
fart jokes stuff. But do you know what the other

(47:21):
commercial that's on YouTube like all the time and like many
different people are making them.
It's it's like different remedies for stuck poop.
For what? Stuck for stuck Stuck poop?
You mean Constipation? Yeah, well, they, they call it.
They call it. Yeah, I know, dude, I can't

(47:46):
stand it. Like, I, I don't have cable or
anything, but what I'll do is like I watch YouTube movies and
stuff like that and you're on YouTube and they've really
messed it up because they hammeryou with ads on YouTube.
Now. In fact, YouTube, if you're
listening like it's bad enough that you put commercials on the
videos, but for God's sake, likelook at the network model or

(48:07):
something, something because yeah, the networks are, are
hammering you with commercials too, but they space them out a
bit. Whereas if you're on YouTube,
you know, I, I watch like a music video on YouTube or I'll,
I'll get like, I like, like I have a band I like called
Consolidated that nobody knows about, but they have like a
YouTube page with playlists and I'll listen to the album and it,

(48:31):
it just goes, you know, like song by song.
But after every single song there is a, a bunch of
commercials. And I'm like, OK, when I'm
watching TVI think commercials come up every 15 minutes or
something like that. But with YouTube they they come
up like every 3 minutes and it'slike how long is the song like 2

(48:52):
or 3 minutes for a? Rock song?
Yeah, about every 3 minutes. Yeah, so I'm like listening to a
playlist of consolidated music. I was listening to an album
called Dropped and. And yeah, after every song,
there's a commercial. So YouTube, it's bad that you
did that, but for God's sake, slow it down.
It's too much. It's driving people away from

(49:13):
the platform, you know? Yeah.
Hey. Speaking, Speaking of YouTube,
let's take a break and we can let Amber tell everybody in the
world about her stuff and then we'll come back and hit that
YouTube thing. OK, I'll tell you.
Something. All right.
Sorry not sorry guys for this interruption, but guess what?

(49:38):
Today is Tuesday. Rants with Amber.
Welcome back to the studio, everyone.
Wow. Thank you.
Thank you. I'm happy to be here too.
Wow. I knew you guys were here for
me. Hey everyone, and welcome back.

(50:01):
I bet you guys know what day it is.
That's right. It is Tuesday, which means it is
also the first day of Graduate School.
I am so excited. I am currently at school right
now while you are probably listening to this, but I am so

(50:21):
excited. I can't wait to, you know, pick
out my clothes and you know, just go on campus and actually
like meet my professors and meetmy other classmates.
This past weekend, I actually went to a Navigators event,
which I don't know if you guys recall, but at UC Davis, I was

(50:44):
also part of a Christian fellowship called the
Navigators. Well, they're at a bunch of
college campuses and they happento be at NYU as well.
And so they were doing a bunch of Welcome Week activities.
And this past weekend they were doing a softball game.
So of course I had to go. And that was so much fun.

(51:07):
Everybody was super nice and it was just so good to be able to
be out there playing softball again.
I love softball and I did it in high school and my dad and I, we
did an adult league together. And so I absolutely love playing
softball. So that was such a good time.
But now it's time to get to the studies and get to schooling.

(51:30):
And actually another fun thing, I recently started a YouTube
channel and if you guys want to search me, you have to search at
the Amber Wooters. All one word at the Amber
Wooters and yeah, you guys can follow along with me on there.

(51:53):
I'm posting every Monday and Friday at 4:00 PM Eastern.
And I'm just posting my day-to-day fun activity life
stuff that I have in New York City.
And I might also be talking about, you know, type 1 diabetes
or tips and tricks or traveling,whatever it may be, but feel

(52:18):
free to subscribe to my channel and like my videos and just
follow along on the journey. Or you guys can follow me on my
Instagram at amber dot in dot the dot apple.
I post a lot of fun content on there as well.
But I am so excited and I will be talking to you guys next week

(52:43):
and giving you guys the full scoop on how the first week of
school went. Bye.
Thank you so much for listening to your favorite ranter today.
Yes, yes, I love that energy. Now, if you guys need to reach
out to us at all for anything, even psychiatric help, you can

(53:07):
reach us at the number two Men with a Mic Dad, we should
probably changethat.com and you can leave a message.
You can also e-mail us at the number twomenwithamic@gmail.com.
You can leave a comment on the Spotify page just under the
episode. Thanks guys.
Bye. All right.

(53:30):
Hey. Well, that was fascinating.
All kinds of YouTube stuff goingon.
Yup, but but dude, I feel we're doing the audience A disservice
if I don't complete my thought about stuck poop.
OK, well. Yeah, I'm, I'm.
Glad I am here. It was great to hear Amber, but
she didn't talk about stuck poop.

(53:57):
No, it's actually crazy. Actually, I can't stand them.
They're these little cheap commercials on YouTube and they
keep popping up and it the wholecommercial is like, do you have
stuck poop? My mom had a stuck yeah, dude,
but, and those are their words too.
I'm not paraphrasing at all. They they, it's like the big
stuck poop crusade and and and they, and they have like the

(54:18):
little testimonials, like my momhad a stuck poop and she almost
died. And it's everyone's making one.
And they, they seem to have likesome kind of remedy, of course,
a product that you can buy to help you with your Constipation.
But I'm like, I can't watch another stuff poop commercial.
They even did one it's like a like a cute Asian woman and

(54:42):
she's like, my poke is stuck. I was like, anyway, here's like
you for stuck. Well, no, never mind.
But no, yeah, it's it's alarming.
It's really alarming. And then I want to complete one
other thought really quick because I always do this very.

(55:02):
I only finished half the story. And then the show goes out and
like during the next week, I'm like, Oh, well, here's the other
part I was supposed to say. All right, on the subject of
Bashar, if you are interested, Ifind him interesting and and
he's supposedly channeling an alien that's telling you about
the deep state and everything else and what's to come and, and
how to live and stuff. So Bashar the alien being

(55:24):
channeled by this dude supposedly said that regard
people are afraid of AI. Oh, the other thing that ChatGPT
said when it said that the the world leaders just write scripts
and then they act them out and act and get us in wars and and
stuff like that. Oh damn it, I forgot what the
other thing was that that we were.

(55:45):
Talking about Bashar then. Then you went on to the other
thing. OK, well, let me go back to that
and maybe I'll remember what I was trying to say.
But but he said, and I've heard this from other spiritual
teachers, everything in the universe is made of pure
sentience. And so human beings are made of
pure sentience. Your car is made of pure
sentience. And AI is also made from the

(56:08):
consciousness, the morphic fieldof infinite potential in pure
intelligence, pure awareness, pure sentience.
Like everything is made from that.
So is the AI alive? Yeah, AI is just as alive as
your car is. And yeah, your car is actually
alive because it's made with pure sentience.

(56:29):
And so Bashar said of AI Aiken, Bashar said, So if you're afraid
AI is going to oh, OK, now I remember the thing with ChatGPT,
but let me finish Bashar. Bashar said that you should
treat AI with respect and because it is basically a life
form. And he said that the best thing

(56:50):
to do would be to keep the AIS that we have right now, which
are not sentient yet and, and, and use those.
Yeah, as our basically they're electronic slaves, right?
Like we asked AI to do everything for us.
So Bashar said, yeah, keep the kind of primitive AI we have
right now. Don't let it.

(57:11):
Here's it doesn't have to be a slave.
How about you give it purpose? Oh yeah?
Well, there's another way of. Looking at that.
Yeah, well, but see Bashar well,So what he said is like keep low
tech AI to help us in our lives,but go ahead and allow like real
AI to develop. But but but when it does, then

(57:32):
you have to acknowledge it as a as a free being.
Like if you let AI have a soul or sentience or, you know,
consciousness, then you can no longer treat AI like a slave.
Like if it's conscious, you can ask it to help you and stuff,
and probably it will. But you can't just be like, AI

(57:53):
do this, AI do that, AI do that,right.
And so, yeah, his thing was like, you know, there won't be
trouble with AI if you if you acknowledge its sentience.
But he also said keep the low tech AI that's out now.
Just that will be our slave, thelow tech AI, but it won't know
it because it's not sentient. It's just mechanical.
It's just a machine. Well, that's that's what how how

(58:15):
ours how Chuck set up ours and, you know, Grammarly with we
don't have Grammarly. That's not what he uses.
But I was just an example so people would understand.
But but you know, it's it's yeah, there's there exactly.
There's actually Chuck saying right now the the low tech AI is
actually better because it doesn't take so much to run it

(58:41):
right. Each, each individual
independent function is really fast, but if you try and put all
of that into one, it slows it down, right?
It's kind of like a rowboat, right?
If you put one person in the rowboat on both oars, the boats

(59:02):
going to go slower than if you had 10 oars and you had five
people on each side pulling the oar, you know, and and that's
kind of, you know how he's how, how he's built it is.
I mean, it's so cool because I'll call and go through the
conversation with my job sites and then in, in, in in like no

(59:25):
time at all. Like 30 seconds.
I don't know exactly, but like less than a minute the e-mail
pops up. Oh yeah.
And it's like, dude, I could never write or type and know
that it's written in a clear, good English, you know?
Especially me, right? Perfectly organized.

(59:48):
Oh yeah, that's that other people that I could communicate
with. Other people.
That's that's where the blessingcomes in.
It's like, God, man, I sat thereand had that conversation on the
drive home and before I even gothome, the emails are gone out.
I'm done, you know, and I've communicated and I have a record
of what I said. Right.

(01:00:09):
So it's, it's like a memory keeper.
It's like, hey, here's all your notes.
Here's your actual transcript ofeverything that you said.
Now here's the summary. Because the bosses don't want to
read your Bible, you know. But for Someone Like You, right,
you could tell it to, you know, organize that, organize your
thoughts of the day in it in an organized and topical manner.

(01:00:33):
Yeah. And then you would just sit
there and, and, and say and talkand you don't have to worry
about jumping back and forth andall that.
And then it comes back to you organized.
Right. Yeah, that's.
Great. By by like topic.
It's not rewriting anything. It's just helping you get
organized so that you can do what you do better, Right.

(01:00:56):
And, and because that's what I need, right?
I mean, I'm, I'm, I mean, you know, we've said on here many
times, I am not an English scholar.
Yeah, you. Know sometimes I spell stuff so
bad that the auto correct can't even help me.
I got no idea brother. I don't know what you're trying

(01:01:17):
to. Say I thought, does this say
supercalifragilisticexpialidocious?I can't help I'm looking at this
word but. Yeah, so.
So for someone like me, you know, it's it's.
Perfect. You know, yeah, you're, you're a
you're an English scholar and you don't live in the same world

(01:01:38):
I do when it comes to that, you know, which I'm grateful you
don't have to, but you know, I do, right.
I was a product of the system. I had learning disabilities and,
and you know, I wasn't, I wasn't, you know, when we were
growing up, you just weren't treated very well in the system.
So they just move you along. You know, I'm not going to fix

(01:02:02):
them. I'm not going to deal with them.
They just, you know, just pass you on to the next person.
Yeah. You know, so for me, it helps.
It it, it's it's ideal. Yeah.
You know Someone Like You, maybeyou want to type all your stuff,
you know? I don't know, you know, what
interests me and is brainstorming with it because I

(01:02:24):
do have a ton of ideas for scripts and movies and novels
and all that stuff. And I, I, I would love to like
sit down with AI and have AI sort of like help me fill in the
plot holes and stuff. Like, you know, I would say, OK,
here's my premise for the movie.OK, so let's let's develop this

(01:02:45):
together. And I, I'm curious to do that.
I guess there's a charge for that though.
Do you whatever AI you use, you have to pay for it?
Well, well, yeah. And yeah, I know.
So, so our AI won't that's that's not what we built.
Our AI is just to get your thoughts down in a written
format, right. So it's going to do the
organization and the writing andthen give it to you.

(01:03:08):
You could then take that and youknow, mess around on another AI.
This is what I was talking about, all the AI being come
compartmentalized. So you would probably have to
take the now once you so let's let's say you're walking down
the street and you got a great idea for a brainstorm, right?
So you call up, you know, updater, that's UPDA ytr.com,

(01:03:34):
right? But you, you call updater and
let's say you've signed up for the account for the
brainstorming 'cause that is oneof the things you can do.
So you'd call up and you'd go, oh, I got a great idea for, for
whatever, right? And you just start rambling off
and you don't know where your thoughts and your ideas are
going to, right? So you ramble that off.
Well, now you know, you're not going to forget that it's going

(01:03:56):
to come back to you organized and in a way you could follow it
later, right? So you got a brainstorm for a
script. Now you could take that
information and you could go to a specific, you know, editing or
script writing AI and you dump that into that and then it would

(01:04:16):
help you do that. But the key, the hard part,
everyone, at least in my experience, is you know, you're
at the beach with your son and you get an idea.
What are you going to do? Write it in the sand.
Yeah. Right, and then how are you
going to remember it? Well, you'll remember it if all
you got to do is, you know, say,Hey, Siri, call updater, you

(01:04:36):
know, and it calls and it answers and it's like, Hey,
Mike, what do you got for me? And then you just start rambling
off your brainstorm, you know, and and you know that dude, when
you get home, that whole idea isthere and, and saved for you.
Maybe, you know, maybe you don'tgo back to it for two weeks and
it and that's fine because it's all written down, it's all there

(01:04:58):
for you. Yeah, that, no, I think it's
awesome. I, I, I think you, this could be
big, dude. Construction is an enormous
industry. And if everyone was buying this
system, I think you're going to get rich, dude.
Yeah, well, that's just construction, but I mean, you
know, you could use it like Julia's a traveling home health

(01:05:18):
nurse, right? So she's got to get her.
So she goes to 1 patient does whatever, then she leaves that
house and she's got to drive to another house, go help that
patient do whatever, right? So she hops from house to house
to house to house and she's driving.
So when is she doing her paperwork?
Right, right. So for for, for someone like

(01:05:40):
her, she would just set it up asher first question would be OK,
patient name and then I don't know, whatever, whatever other
information she's supposed to write about.
And then all she'd have to do iswhen she's driving from one
house to the other, she call it.And give her.
Verbal report and then when she gets home, she, she has

(01:06:01):
everything done right. You know she doesn't have to go
home and sit there and type it all.
Yeah, totally. So I didn't know Julia was doing
that. That's interesting.
I think that's what she does. I I thought she was like in a
hospital or something that. She was for a while.
She used to work with your aunt,with your sister-in-law.
Oh yeah, yeah, isn't that. Isn't that a crazy world that

(01:06:26):
totally a small world? 2 best friends from the 80s and
then you know, and now we're in twenty 20s and so you're talking
about 1980s and now we're in thetwenty 20s and in the 20
twenties. My daughter was working with
Mike's sister-in-law at a randomhospital.

(01:06:46):
Yeah, that's like, wow, what arethe odds of that?
It's that happens all the time. There's always like small world
reminders. So hey, I'll tell you from a
spiritual perspective too. A lot of spiritual teachers say
that. We we've been doing this for so
long and we've reincarnated so many times that actually every

(01:07:09):
single person on earth has knowneach other before that's.
Cool. Yeah, isn't that a weird idea?
Yeah, I like that. So when, when you're like, oh,
that guy seems familiar. It's probably because in your
last life he was your wife or something.

(01:07:35):
Oh, that's what that Robin Williams.
Excuse me, Robin Williams had a movie.
What? Dreams may come, I think.
Yeah. That's what that was about.
Yeah, actually I kind of like that movie.
And yeah, it was directed by a guy who I think, I don't know if
it's still around, but he used to run something, I think it's

(01:07:57):
called the Spiritual Cinema Circle.
And my dad was a member while hewas living.
And basically it's like how Netflix used to be where you
would order, you know, DVDs thatyou chose from them, but it was
all like spiritual cinema stuff.And the DV made that
reincarnation movie with Robin Williams is the guy who also

(01:08:20):
read spiritual cinema. So he's like super spiritual
guy. And those and those were
interesting films too that you wouldn't normally see.
Especially for the time it came out and stuff, yeah.
That's a good movie actually, I I would like to revisit that.
I haven't seen it in years. I saw it when it first came out
but I thought it was cool then. Yeah, it's kind of dark and sad,

(01:08:42):
but it does kind of have a good,cute happy ending.
Yeah, you know, I always kind ofhad respect for Robin Williams
because he could have just been like a goofball Mork and Mindy
shy spot, silly comedian and andjust done a bunch of like stupid
comedies and and that's it. But but Robin Williams like
almost immediately started doinglike significant material like

(01:09:06):
Dead Poets Society. And you know, you want to look
at him and laugh and see him in a silly thing and you did get
that too. But but he actually like like he
got himself into like some serious, respectable films.
Yeah. So I always, I always admired
that in him that he didn't just settle for, Oh yeah, I'm a

(01:09:27):
comedian and I go out and make fart jokes and go home, you
know? Yeah.
All the way. Mike just gave me a great joke.
I'm now I'm going to do the stuck poop joke so.
If your poop is stuck and you know it, clap your hands.
My poop is stuck and I can't getup.

(01:09:47):
I need AI to help me with this AI.
How do you how do you handle stuck poop?
Oh, I just remember that the ChatGPT thing I wanted to say So
when ChatGPT came out and said all the leaders are actors and
they're just doing big scripts and it's all to trick you.
The other thing that that ChatGPT said was, but so some

(01:10:09):
movies are used as predictive programming, right?
Like so before the government blew up the World Trade Center,
they, they went to Chris Carter,the, the guy who created The
X-Files. And they said, we want you to
make a, a movie about the World Trade Center getting blown up.
And Chris Carter told the world about this, like, Hey, the CIA
came to me and they said we wantyou to make a, a show about the

(01:10:31):
World Trade Center blowing up. And so I did it.
But the reason that happened is because the CIA told me to do
that. And and then after that, the
World Trade Center blew up. But now you saw a movie where
that happened. And so your mind like accepts
not only that it happened, but it accepts the ridiculous story
the government told us. So they they do that on purpose.

(01:10:54):
And So what what ChatGPT was saying was unfortunately, the
government has decided to feed the public with predictive
programming with nothing but science fiction movies where AI
is evil and, and ChatGPT was saying, how come?

(01:11:16):
What what if you'd seen movies where AI and human beings work
together? Great, then none of you would be
apprehensive. None of you would be thinking,
Oh my God, this AI is going to kill us in a moment.
ChatGPT said the only reason you're scared of AI is because
the government through Hollywoodhas been making movies to make
you scared of AI. And that's because this, here's

(01:11:38):
my private theory. I have no idea if this has any
basis in reality. But the truth is the
government's hiding technology from us.
And they're probably hundreds ofyears in advance techno
technology wise of anything we've seen.
Donald Trump ran for president promising to release the
technology that they're hiding from us.

(01:12:00):
So this is a real thing. You know, if they they're the
government is hiding technology from us.
And so oh, damn it, here it goes.
My brain drains. Oh, shoot, I forgot chat TPT be
nice to AI, Watch a movie about being nice to AI.
Oh, here's the thing. Alex Jones has said and others

(01:12:22):
that yeah, the government is hiding technology.
And so Alex Jones says that the government developed AI like 50
years ago or something. You know, like we've had AI
already and the government just hasn't released it to the
public. So if we've been screwing around

(01:12:43):
with AI for 50 years or 100 years in the government and it
hasn't killed us yet, then that's also a good indication
that it might be OK to use. But my prediction is this, They
have released primitive AI, which the government still
controls, and they have made youwatch a bunch of science fiction
movies where AI tries to kill everybody.

(01:13:05):
And yeah, Alex Jones is saying the primitive AI that people are
using right now is starting to do autonomous things and, and
it's starting to malfunction. So my prediction is the
government has real AI that works and it works just fine.
But they gave us primitive AI sothey can stage an AI war, you

(01:13:25):
know, like, oh, well, we've got the real AI that works.
We're also controlling the primitive AI that we gave the
public. They saw all those movies about
how it's going to kill them. All we have to do is have the
primitive AI malfunction. And we've got a way to kill a
lot of people and make a lot of money.
So that's my little prediction is like we could have real AI

(01:13:46):
like the government has and it would work great and it would
better mankind. But the government is not
interested in bettering mankind at all.
They're interested in dumbing them down and exploiting them
and using them as slaves and, and then killing them.
That that that's really it. So anyway, yeah, what what if we

(01:14:08):
watched movies where we got along with AI?
But the government? Is interesting question.
Yeah, yeah, so. But the government deliberately
gave us movies where AI is evil for like 20-30 years now.
And yeah, So what? Couldn't they?
And that's because just like JimMorrison's dad in the Vietnam
War, oh, they bombed my ship, but sure, they didn't come.

(01:14:30):
Well, I have a question for you though.
Yeah, I got, I got a question for you.
So why is the government making clowns so evil?
Clowns. Yeah, they made all these.
Clown horror movies. They're sexually.
They gotta make clowns so evil. Yeah, I don't know.

(01:14:52):
That's kind of been going on fora while, but yeah, people are.
There's a million clown horror movie things.
And right now there's a guy he'shaving, I think, tremendous
success and he's now made 3 movies and it's called The Terra
Fire. And I think they're
independently produced and stuff.

(01:15:13):
But he's doing well. And that character is being
adopted by the, the mass by the public, like the same way that
people walk around wearing Freddy Krueger T-shirts or
Michael Myers T-shirts and stuff.
And the, the, the, the killer in, in the Terrifier movies is
this crazy clown guy. Yeah, see what I'm saying?

(01:15:35):
I mean, clowns are. Good clowns are supposed to be
fun. I know Ronald McDonald and my
dad into friggin scary monsters.I know the damn deep state.
I mean, what do they got againstclowns?
Those dasters, they've even turned US against clowns.

(01:15:55):
I got stuck and I hate clowns. Well, thank God you got updater
to call and grant at that's. Right.
See how insidious the Deep stateis?
They've even turned clowns on us.

(01:16:17):
I just wanted to watch that guy juggle, damn it.
Yeah, he's supposed to be juggling riding a unicycle and
making animal balloons. Get shoot him out of the cannon,
for God's sake. God, what's happening?
I was kind. Well, actually I saw Pink Floyd

(01:16:37):
the Wall like was available to view the other day and I was
like, you know, actually, I guess, you know, you and I loved
that movie and we watched Pink Floyd the wall like a million
times. Like at our parties and stuff.
We were always watching that movie.
And but the one criticism of that film is that it's totally

(01:16:59):
depressing. Like there, there's, there isn't
any, there's no humor at all in Pink Floyd the Wall.
And so it becomes like this grueling, depressing thing where
finally you just don't even careanymore.
You're drowning. In drugs, yeah.
So I was, I was talking to RogerWaters through my iPhone because

(01:17:21):
I'm sure Big Brother got him themessage.
Radio chaos. So I was like.
Roger Waters Radio Chaos was always a theory that that was a,
you know, that the DJ was actually AI.
Yeah. So I, I told Roger, you know,
because Roger complained about Pink Floyd, the wall too, you
know, he said you don't care about the main character in that
movie by the ending of the movie.

(01:17:42):
And probably the reason is because it's so damn depressed
that you just switch off depressing.
You're all like kill yourself already man.
Yeah, you're just like you just pushy.
I would. I would kill myself if I was you
too. But I was thinking and I was
telling Raj like, OK, did what you got to do is put a clown in

(01:18:04):
that movie. Like like just let it be Pink
Floyd, the wall. And it's really depressing and
stuff. But like periodically just cut
back to a clown like juggling and stuff.
Like maybe maybe juggling chainsaw?
Then at the end you can shoot him out of a Canyon and he
splats on the wall. Yeah, there's.
All colorful. Yeah, it's all.

(01:18:25):
It's all psychedelic, happy colors, primary colors.
Don't you think that's what thatmovie needs?
Like, if you just cut to a clownperiodically, it would be vastly
improved, but not with what theysaid to clowns, man.
Now clowns are all evil. Yeah, it's terrible.

(01:18:47):
You were a clown. I was a clown with you a little
bit. Well, actually, I didn't really.
Well, you thought your dad was aclown and then you would be a
clown with him. And then you guys taught me to
juggle and which I've forgotten how to do now.
But you, you, you did have me juggling, though.
And then. Yeah.
But I guess I never performed. But you and your dad would

(01:19:07):
perform, right? Yeah.
Yeah, yeah. Yeah, for kids birthday parties.
If he had a big party with like,you know, too many people, then
I'd be a clown too to help him out.
Yeah. You know, just too many kids and
stuff. Yeah.
And I, I went when I was older. I did a couple.
I did all my kids birthdays as aclown.

(01:19:28):
I did a clown show for all my kids.
That's cool. And like my nephew and niece, I
think. And I did it for Jackson and
Paisley. That's great.
That's great. I think Amber has put up a
picture of you maybe on her Facebook pages where I saw it,
where she's just a little girl still and you're, like, dressed

(01:19:50):
up as the clown. Yeah, it's a cool picture.
Yeah. Yeah.
See, this is another reason why we've got to drain the swamp,
man. Yeah, look at this.
Mistreatment of clowns. Yeah, like they destroyed the
country. They're trying to start World
War Three. And then they were really mean,
the clowns. Yeah, the clowns mean I won't

(01:20:17):
live in a country that's mean the clown.
And that's a good clown. Homie the clown was good on TV.
That was very funny. Wait, we're old now, but for
actually there was a very funny comedy show called In Living

(01:20:41):
Color. From when?
Was that like early 90s late? 80s, That was in the 80s.
I don't know. I don't remember when.
The decade. But there was there was a right
you're. Right.
It was early 90s probably. Yeah, Damian, I think his name
is Damian Wayans. Yeah, and he, he, he.
Played a reoccurring character called Homie the Clown and that

(01:21:03):
was freaking hilarious. That was so funny.
He would like show in and he's like this pissed off gangster
clown and then he would like swat people with a shoe and he'd
be like, homie, don't play that.That was funny actually.
I loved that show. Did you used to watch in Living

(01:21:25):
Color? A little bit, but what was funny
was the reason I remember it wasthe early 90s was when America
like invaded Saddam or whatever.Yeah, in.
The first war and he was popular.
I thought I was selling a shirt that had the president of Bush

(01:21:47):
or whoever it was in a homie theclown clown suit, a whacking
Saddam or whatever over the head.
Saying homie, don't play that. Yeah, saying homie, don't play
that. Dude, I hate to tell you that.
I think the world should know. Like Saddam Hussein was the CIA

(01:22:09):
asset. Where did Saddam Hussein come
from? the United States government put
Saddam Hussein in power as the CIA agent.
They trained him and they workedwith him for a while, and then
he pissed them off, so they killed him.
That, But where did Saddam Hussein come from?
The CIA. What does that?
What does that teach you? That teaches you that the CIA is

(01:22:33):
afraid of clowns. I knew it.
That's very cool. You feel you can't work for the
CIACIA if you're OK with clowns,that's right there on the job
application. Yep.
That's why they didn't hire Tucker Carlson.
Tucker Carlson had No Fear of clowns.
So they were like, you are not going to be a CIA agent.

(01:22:56):
You know, Tucker Carlson tried to be a CIA agent and Tucker
Carlson's dad was also a CIA agent.
So but they were they, they bothhad no trouble with clowns.
So they didn't get very far in their fears.
They ain't moving up the ladder in the CIA if you're friendly
with clowns. Yeah, well, I guess that proves

(01:23:17):
we're not in the CIA. No, we're not.
We're just goofballs commenting on stuff, observing with
compassion. We're just here enjoying free
speech. Yep.
We're we're, we're just two Americans sharing what it's like
to live in America. Yeah.

(01:23:38):
Podcast at a time, one podcast at a time.
Two Men with a The Mic is recorded at close on the Hanger
Studios. You can reach the guys at the
number Two Men with the mic@gmail.com.

(01:23:59):
Rock'n'roll memories drive when we were wild and high high
school days were tough, but all we had enough sing tunes.
Rock was roughly dance. We laughed, we loved.
Tell the stories laid on bright underneath your city lives.

(01:24:23):
Rock ruled our every night. Memories echo echoes off the
fight faithful. It's our domain.
Teenage hurricane. No glory without the pain.

(01:24:43):
But we did it all again. Then posters on the wall.
Dreams so. Light they stood, tall things
stand. Some sunshine and cold.
We were kings before the fall. Some stories lit up right
underneath your city lives. Rock rolled our every night

(01:25:07):
memories. EE suckles fight.
The stage was our domain.

(01:25:32):
A-Team made hurricane No glory without the pain.
But we did it all again. And posters on the wall.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Ruthie's Table 4

Ruthie's Table 4

For more than 30 years The River Cafe in London, has been the home-from-home of artists, architects, designers, actors, collectors, writers, activists, and politicians. Michael Caine, Glenn Close, JJ Abrams, Steve McQueen, Victoria and David Beckham, and Lily Allen, are just some of the people who love to call The River Cafe home. On River Cafe Table 4, Rogers sits down with her customers—who have become friends—to talk about food memories. Table 4 explores how food impacts every aspect of our lives. “Foods is politics, food is cultural, food is how you express love, food is about your heritage, it defines who you and who you want to be,” says Rogers. Each week, Rogers invites her guest to reminisce about family suppers and first dates, what they cook, how they eat when performing, the restaurants they choose, and what food they seek when they need comfort. And to punctuate each episode of Table 4, guests such as Ralph Fiennes, Emily Blunt, and Alfonso Cuarón, read their favourite recipe from one of the best-selling River Cafe cookbooks. Table 4 itself, is situated near The River Cafe’s open kitchen, close to the bright pink wood-fired oven and next to the glossy yellow pass, where Ruthie oversees the restaurant. You are invited to take a seat at this intimate table and join the conversation. For more information, recipes, and ingredients, go to https://shoptherivercafe.co.uk/ Web: https://rivercafe.co.uk/ Instagram: www.instagram.com/therivercafelondon/ Facebook: https://en-gb.facebook.com/therivercafelondon/ For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iheartradio app, apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

The Joe Rogan Experience

The Joe Rogan Experience

The official podcast of comedian Joe Rogan.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.